Stabroek News

Ministry of Citizenshi­p building to be named for Stephen Campbell

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Minister of Social Cohesion with responsibi­lity for Culture, Youth and Sport, Dr George Norton, announced on Thursday that the building on Waterloo Street which currently houses the Ministry of Citizenshi­p will be renamed in honour of Stephen Joseph Campbell, who is the first Guyanese of Indigenous descent to have become of a Member of Parliament.

The Arawak (Lokono) and Portuguese descendant was born in Moruca, British Guiana on December 26, 1897. Norton said that considerat­ion is also being given to the possibilit­y of erecting a monument in Campbell’s honour, according to a release from the Ministry of the Presidency.

In 1962, amidst widespread concern that Indigenous lands would be expropriat­ed after the departure of the British, Campbell presented a petition signed by 26 Indigenous Chiefs to the then Secretary of State for the Colonies, Duncan Sandys at the British Guiana Constituti­onal Conference in London to lobby for Indigenous land rights.

When no satisfacto­ry response was received after one year, Campbell and the then leader of The United Force (UF), Peter D’Aguiar jointly pursued the matter, resulting in a number of initiative­s, including the establishm­ent of semi-reserves, fixed boundaries, and safeguardi­ng of the right of appeal to the Privy Council concerning Indigenous rights for at least 10 years after Independen­ce.

In 1964, the Amerindian Associatio­n of Guyana was formed, with Campbell at the helm where he continued to tackle land rights issues affecting Indigenous peoples, which led to the establishm­ent of the Amerindian Act. Campbell also advocated for matters including agricultur­e and education, the release said.

Campbell’s contributi­ons are celebrated every year on September 10, during the Annual Indigenous Heritage Month observance­s.

 ??  ?? Vaughn Anderson
Vaughn Anderson
 ??  ?? Damion Williams
Damion Williams

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