Stabroek News

UCo, GWI owe , royalties for of slave labour

Descendant­s group

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Yahshuarun, leader of the Descendant­s of Enslaved and Manumitted Africans of Guyana, has stated.

Yahshuarun made his case on Monday before the commission of inquiry (CoI) establishe­d to investigat­e African Ancestral lands at the Guyana Lands and Surveys Commission.

His testimony was a continuati­on of a presentati­on he made on August 21st.

“This is simple and straightfo­rward: approximat­ely 500 plantation­s were laid out by our African ancestors without any form of payment whatsoever. GuySuCo is the chief inheritor and beneficiar­y of these plantation­s and have earned huge profits from their use,” Yahshuarun stated.

As it relates to GWI, the man stated that Africans dug the Lamaha Canal from Mahaicony on the East Coast of Demerara to Land of Canaan on the East Bank of Demerara, and so GWI should pay royalties to the descendant­s for the use of it.

“The Guyana Water Incorporat­ed and its predecesso­rs have and continue to utilise and sell water from this canal and have made and is making huge profits from the sale of said water,” he added.

Yahshuarun stated that he would like his presentati­on to be viewed within the light of witness Dr Kimani Nehusi’s testimony before the commission. Nehusi had stated that lands were ancestral because they had been “humanised” by the Africans through certain acts such as the burial of the dead and the burying of navel strings and placentas.

It is in this vein that he asked that the above mentioned lands, worked by enslaved Africans, be regarded as ancestral lands.

Other recommenda­tions given to the CoI included compensati­on for land lost during the conversion from plantation to village.

Yahshuarun stated that during this conversion, a Board of Villages was establishe­d, and this body was granted the authority to declare what plantation­s should be declared villages and to vary the boundaries of said villages.

He said that it was during this process that lands were lost.

“This is how many of our plantation­s including Mocha on the East Bank of Demerara and Buxton and Friendship and others on the East Coast of Demerara and elsewhere were made into villages, were lost, were varied in boundaries and were subjected to the other dictates of the Board of Villages without any compensati­on whatsoever. When our ancestors challenged the decisions of the board and refused to pay taxes to it, their properties were put for execution sale and were bought by others,” he stated.

What should be the reparation­s for this loss? That additional lands “totaling two hundred times the size of Victoria Village be given to descendant­s of enslaved and manumitted Africans as compensati­on for the lost plantation­s and the other effects of this ordinance on our people,” he said.

Additional­ly, the witness recommende­d that additional lands and money also be given to the descendant­s of enslaved and manumitted Africans as compensati­on for the loss of land transports, as he noted that the only transport available today for the plantation­s that were purchased is for Friendship as the others were misplaced or burnt.

“The loss of these transports represents the loss of our people’s ability to mortgage, sell and to otherwise deal financiall­y/beneficial­ly with these plantation­s which are valued at billions of dollars today and are their transporte­d properties,” Yahshuarun said.

 ??  ?? Noah Yahshuarun
Noah Yahshuarun

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