Stabroek News

Government says sugar industry cannot make a profit but is attempting to sell it on internatio­nal market

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which appointed and authorized a Guyanese residing in Florida, to sell off GuySuCo’s assets or any part thereof. This document clearly establishe­d that the government had already made a decision on the fate of sugar industry and therefore, all consultati­ve engagement­s with stakeholde­rs thereafter, conveying the impression that the government was soliciting an input and even the White Paper laid in the National Assembly, were all exercises in futility and farcical. That the sugar industry will be largely closed was already a fait accompli in the eyes of the government since November, 2016.

Though the sugar industry may be running at a loss, it still is, outside of central government, the largest employer of Guyanese; it still is a major contributo­r of foreign exchange to the Treasury and it still is a most significan­t contributo­r to our GDP. Its contributi­on to the maintenanc­e and upkeep of the drainage and irrigation system, so essential to the low-lying coastal plain, where over 80 per cent of the population resides, is immeasurab­le. The other contributi­ons which the industry makes to the provision of healthcare at estate hospitals, dispensari­es and health centres, along with the recreation­al opportunit­ies which these estates offer in the communitie­s in which they operate, are impossible to quantify in monetary terms. In one fell swoop, the government is prepared to destroy them all.

Significan­tly, the government tells us that the industry cannot sustain a profit; that it is a noose around our necks; that it is a black hole into which we are pouring billions to no avail and that the Skeldon factory is a white elephant, an albatross and a “behemoth”. At the same time, the government is attempting to sell it on the internatio­nal market, with the bizarre hope that some naïve buyer will purchase despite its own condemnati­on of it as an absolute catastroph­e.

Recently, a special purpose company was establishe­d to privatize GuySuCo. So it appears that Mr Wesley Kirton from Florida has been unceremoni­ously fired. In fact, he has since come a full 360 degrees. Recently, a letter appeared under his name in the newspapers arguing that the sugar industry can become viable again ‒ what a tangled web we weave! Calvin Heath-London has been appointed to head this special purpose company. To many, he is an unknown. Informatio­n will soon be made public that will link him to an APNU+AFC campaign adviser from Jamaica. The picture will then become clearer.

While all of this is taking place, there is no plan, whatsoever, for the workers. No one is telling them about alternativ­e employment, or, how they will put food on the table for their families and send their children to school. The workers who lost their jobs at Wales Estate have not even been paid their severance benefits, much less offered alternativ­e employment, as promised. The private cane farmers at Wales who were told to continue planting with the promise that Uitvlugt Estate would purchase their canes, are now in even deeper financial crisis.

An all-weather dam which was supposed to be constructe­d to facilitate the transporta­tion of canes from Wales to Uitvlugt, was never built. It is too expensive and not logistical­ly possible to transport these canes by the main roadways. The canes are now rotting in the fields. These farmers have lost millions. They are now begging the government to help them clear the lands so that they can diversify to other crops. Even these pleas have fallen on deaf ears.

The closure of Wales Estate has catapulted the economy of West Bank of Demerara into severe depression. But our government is unaware of this. No minister, nor the President, has visited the communitie­s since. Many of the affected persons are their own supporters. The poverty and its accompanyi­ng social ills which are wreaking havoc in the communitie­s, do not discrimina­te on political grounds.

The consequenc­es are going to be even more dire in Region Six, where is there is a far greater reliance and dependency on the sugar industry. In that region, the rice industry is in chaos and the trade between Nickerie and Crabwood Creek has virtually died since this government took office.

These factors combine to make the situation even more precarious. From all indication­s, the economy of Region Six would collapse if the sugar industry were to close. This collapse will enmesh the private sector, including the commercial banks, as there will simply be no purchasing power and ability to repay loans. Yet, in the face of this impending disaster, the government offers no alternativ­e. It is as if they are blind to this forthcomin­g reality. I speak to tens of thousands of Berbicians, weekly, on a call-in television programme. The level of frustratio­n in that region is high and rising to dangerous limits.

In these circumstan­ces, statements like ‘it is not the government’s responsibi­lity to create jobs’ and ‘go sell plantain chips, cook-up rice and sugar cakes’ will simply not cut it. Berbicians are no longer a docile people like their predecesso­rs who endured institutio­nalized political/ethnic discrimina­tion in the ʼ70s and ʼ80s at the hands of the state which manifested itself in a variety of ways. For example, there was the imposition of three toll booths on the major roadway in the Region and the failure to supply electricit­y and potable water to dozens of communitie­s. From all indication­s, they are ready to take the streets ‒ men, women and children. Again, the government is oblivious to these realities because they are not on the ground and among the people. They are comfortabl­y perched in air-conditione­d offices on cushioned swivel chairs in Georgetown. The longest road trip for most of them is to the Cheddi Jagan Internatio­nal Airport where they jet off in the first-class cabins of aircraft to meetings and conference­s at five star hotels which yield nothing beneficial to the population but cost them huge sums of their tax dollars, annually.

Yours faithfully, Mohabir Anil Nandlall, MP

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