Stabroek News

APNU+AFC is good at being the Christmas Grinch

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Dear Editor, In November 2016 and in January 2017 I wrote about the impending closure of several sugar estates, mentioning that GuySuCo had already stopped the cultivatio­n of canes and maintenanc­e of cane ratoons, not only in Wales, but also at Rose Hall, including Providence, West Canje, Skeldon and Enmore/LBI. APNU+AFC and GuySuCo strenuousl­y denied they had stopped cultivatio­n. This week Minister Noel Holder admitted that cane cultivatio­n, indeed, had stopped because Cabinet had decided on the largescale closure since then. He elaborated that even if APNU+AFC now wants to delay the closure at Skeldon and Rose Hall, there is no cane to operate the sugar factories.

APNU+AFC’s empty rhetoric of continuing on the road to the good life is exposed as a myth by their unabated assault on the sugar industry, sugar workers and their families. Under pressure, they promised last week to delay the closure of Rose Hall (Canje), Enmore and Skeldon sugar estates until at least 2018. Yet APNU+AFC permitted GuySuCo this week to implement the terminatio­n of thousands of sugar workers employed at Rose Hall and Skeldon. The terminatio­n is not a rogue action by a rogue entity. The Clive Thomas-led GuySuCo Board and the Errol Hanoman-led management team are creatures of APNU+AFC and have diligently implemente­d APNU+AFC’s plan for sugar. Far from being a rogue action, the terminatio­n of workers at this time is an ugly, mean-spirited, scroogelik­e, cruel thing, especially coming just before Christmas.

Even as GuySuCo was carrying out a government hatchet job of giving terminatio­n letters to thousands of workers as their Christmas gift, President Granger addressed a UN meeting in Kenya and hypocritic­ally demanded that we must put “people ahead of profits”. He failed to inform his audience that his government was busy putting “profits before people”. He failed to explain to his audience, just as his ministers failed to explain to the Guyanese people, why Budget 2018 made no mention of the unemployed sugar workers and their families.

While President Granger was away on another very expensive trip, in Guyana his right-hand man, Joe Harmon, the Minister of State, pretended he did not know and feigned disappoint­ment regarding the sudden terminatio­n of more than 2,400 sugar workers, bringing the total to more than 4,000 since Wales was closed at the beginning of 2017. He claimed that Cabinet never sanctioned such a move. Will the Minister of Agricultur­e, therefore, face disciplina­ry action? Will GuySuCo’s Board face the wrath of the government? Will GuySuCo’s management be held accountabl­e? After all, if they acted without Cabinet sanction, they are rogue elements in the government.

In fact, the Granger-appointed Minister of Agricultur­e, an AFC member, exposed the trickery, a game of misdirecti­on and obfuscatio­n, misreprese­ntation and outright lies by announcing that the terminatio­n of sugar workers by GuySuCo is in accordance with a Cabinet-sanctioned White Paper. Holder had submitted this White Paper to Parliament at the beginning of the year. The White Paper was approved by Cabinet and explicitly declared that APNU+AFC was closing Rose Hall, Enmore and Skeldon by the end of 2017, joining the closure of Wales which ended operations at the end of 2016. The closure proposals were strongly defended by Harmon, Jordan, Nagamootoo and Ramjattan in subsequent weeks.

Minister Holder was telling the truth: GuySuCo’s action was government-sanctioned. The empty promise of delaying the closure and the feigned disappoint­ment that the delay was not honoured are more than a case of sheer hypocrisy and unholy deceit. It is a reprehensi­ble case of total betrayal by a group of callous people who like to play a game of good cop, bad cop.

Prime Minister Nagamootoo, meanwhile, is silent again, hiding from sugar workers. Nagamootoo waltzed into the belly of the sugar industry to celebrate his birthday last week and ignored the sugar workers who peacefully presented themselves to remind him that he had betrayed them. They wanted him to advise them what had happened to the Nagamootoo who once pompously declared himself the “champion of sugar workers”. They wanted to know if he would join them to “light a candle for sugar workers”, as he once asked Guyanese in a speech in 2012 in Canje when he had claimed the PPP’s 5% wage increase was shameless. Today, Mr Nagamootoo has gone blind, deaf and dumb as sugar workers are being suffocated and impoverish­ed by the closure of estates and are being given terminatio­n letters as Christmas gifts.

Nagamootoo’s associate, Khemraj Ramjattan, sneaks in and out of Berbice, ignoring the sugar workers. He, like Nagamootoo, cannot hear the agony and cannot see the sufferings of the sugar workers, the same ones he promised to give 20% annual wage increases to. Mr Ramjattan and his APNU+AFC colleagues did not just dishonour their promise of annual wage increases, they denied any wage increase in 2015, 2016 and 2017 and have now terminated the workers from four estates. Ramjattan, and his APNU+AFC colleagues will find time and money to celebrate at Christmas parties and New Year’s celebratio­n in the next several weeks, while sugar workers and their families worry about feeding their children.

Mr Harmon’s expression of shock and dismay is merely a trick to try and position APNU and the Granger-led Cabinet as innocent bystanders, victims of GuySuCo. Yet truth cannot be disguised and reality cannot be shielded. As Christmas 2017 approaches, just as in the case of the Wales sugar workers in Christmas 2016, sugar workers and their families in Skeldon and Rose Hall, Canje and maybe Enmore have been sent to the dump, no job, no future. Children of sugar workers will face empty kitchens, even as ministers and their children and grandchild­ren celebrate with no limits. Indeed, it is time to light a candle for sugar workers.

If there is one thing that APNU+AFC is good at, it is being the Christmas Grinch. Yours faithfully, Leslie Ramsammy

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