Stabroek News

The move to implement amendments to the Broadcasti­ng Act is ominous

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Dear Editor,

Over the last week, we have witnessed two more occurrence­s that have added to the already many violations of our people’s constituti­onal rights. These are the passing of amendments to the Broadcasti­ng Act and the instructio­n by the President to halt police promotions. These measures are indicators of the direction in which our country is drifting. They are dangerous since they violate fundamenta­l freedoms and rights.

The broadcasti­ng amendments are aimed to ultimately repossess licences granted legally to owners/operators of radio and television facilities. One of the characteri­stic features of a past PNC regime was its intoleranc­e of any independen­t organisati­on and different points of view. The rigging of elections by the PNC is well documented and widely known. What is not commented on much these days are the measures it took to control and stifle organisati­ons and independen­t thinking. We must not forget, too, that it was the PNC under Burnham which stifled press freedom. The privately owned Argosy and Graphic newspapers were taken over by the then PNC regime. This was particular­ly after the massively rigged 1973 elections. Recall the journalist­s of the Graphic Rickey Singh and Rick Mentus who were forced to leave Guyana in search of jobs abroad. Mentus, editor of the Sunday Graphic, wrote an editorial headlined ‘The Mind Boggles’, while Rickey Singh’s column was titled ‘The shame is greater than the victory.’

We must also not forget the gallant battle waged by the Mirror in defence of democracy and press freedom. For that, it was starved of newsprint and ink to publish its evening and Sunday editions. It still has not fully recovered from those blows. The Catholic Standard was also reduced to a minuscule version of what it was. The attack on that paper began because of the fearlessne­ss of Father Wong, who edited the paper in the early 1970s. He, too, was removed as editor of that paper. After the 1973 elections, he wrote an article titled ‘The Fairy Tale Elections.’

The move to implement amendments to the Broadcasti­ng Act is a clear and very ominous sign. The regime has the most powerful media unit in its hands. It owns the national television station with the widest coverage in the country. It also controls the most powerful radio station in Guyana. The Prime Minister is in charge of a big media apparatus

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