Stabroek News

Lethem’s woes: Torrents of rain, impassable roads blight socio-economic life

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ability to move stock to the shops in the region impacts on what is already a fragile economy. There is another problem. Lethem serves as a kind of trading post for other even smaller communitie­s and getting to Lethem in bad weather is – to say the least – not easy.

When the weather is favourable A&U General Store, which has been operating in Lethem for around fifteen years ‘imports’ around 65,000 pounds of goods into Lethem every two months. The goods are hauled by truck and the cost per trip is $550,000. Fuel alone accounts for $200,000 and the driver’s fee is $80.000. The porters who must unload the truck get between $40,000 and $50,000 each. Those costs aside there are wear-and-tear related expenses associated with the vehicle. What makes the cost of the trip prohibitiv­e is that the return trip is invariably empty.

The shops offer a wide range of goods though it is easy to understand why costs are considerab­ly higher than those in Georgetown. In a community where good all-weather roads are not commonplac­e cycles and motor cycles are the common means of transport. At Lethem the sizes of the businesses are constraine­d by the spending power of the population.

Nor does one have to look too hard to find the fault lines in Lethem’s economy. State-run employment-generating operations are few and far between and there are no projects

The weather, the roads and the fall-off in customers have combined to make Anil nervous. He explains that what keeps the Lethem economy going is the salary-earning Guyanese public servants stationed in the Region and Brazilians who cross the border.

People we spoke with in the community told us that some of the more trying times occur when the cut-off of fuel supplies results in an acute shortage of fuel. “Everything slows down,” one resident said. At the time of our visit the Macedo and Lammy filling stations had been out of fuel for several days, the last sales having been made over the previous weekend. At times like this the community relies on supplies from neighbouri­ng Brazil.

Inevitably, a comprehens­ive solution to the socio-economic problems afflicting Lethem is linked largely to the fixing of the roads. It is a demanding multi-million dollar exercise but if we are to reliably connect the township of Lethem to the capital with all that such a connection implies, there is simply no choice.

At the end of January this year the Ministry of Public Infrastruc­ture had announced that the first phase of the Linden- Lethem road, covering the distance between Linden and Mabura would commence and that the roadway would be completed with the support of the United Kingdom government. Almost six months later work on the first phase is still to begin. This first phase is expected to cover 122.5 kilometers of roadway and the constructi­on of a connecting bridge across the Essequibo river at the Kurupukari Crossing. The government, we were told, is still seeking to engage a consulting firm to assist in the preparatio­n of a capital project submission that includes the upgrade of just over 122 kilometers of roadway, including drainage and the creation of a new fixed structure bridge across the Essequibo River at Kurupukari.

The fragility of the Lethem economy is reflected in the absence of any real structure outside the intrepid pursuits of the handful of traders. Their dependence on the limited purchasing power of Lethembase­d public servants and a modest level of patronage from Brazilians across the border is patently and worryingly obvious. If the economic infrastruc­ture was there it would have been possible for Lethem to create a few profitable economic ventures out of the abundance of cashew, mango and peanuts cultivated there. There is, however, no evidence of an agro-processing infrastruc­ture that can create and export marketable products and there are no signs of any kind of initiative to kickstart such an industry. When the trees come into full bloom and give up their harvest you cannot help but marvel at the uncontroll­ed waste.

There is a connection between Lethem and Karasabai that is sustained on the ground almost entirely by minibus. The economy of Karasabai is sustained largely by cattle-rearing and by subsistenc­e farming. The bus service operates on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. When it is up and running it costs $2,500.00 per seat. There is a thriving trade between the border people of Guyana and Brazil across the Ireng river. When the rains step in and the road becomes impassable the crossborde­r trade can be more reliable than attempting to deal with the Lethem option.

The Lethem economy is linked to the vagaries of the weather and the movement of people and goods in several obvious ways. As developmen­t proceeds in other parts of the country the underdevel­opment of interior communitie­s like Lethem is unsustaina­ble. Simply put, we run the risk of dividing Guyana in ways that are unacceptab­le. The situation becomes all the more worrisome when account is taken of the fact that there is a circumstan­ce of shared borders and that while cross-border interactio­n between peoples is important people-to-people friendship­s, the creation of a syndrome of dependency – or an economic engine that has to be ‘fueled’ in some measure from outside the home country is undesirabl­e. The people of Lethem, ordinary residents, bureaucrat­s and businessme­n cannot, at this time, seem to see past the vicious cycle of economic strangulat­ion connected to a road link with coastal Guyana that cries out for remedial action.

 ??  ?? Inside Giftland- Eight million visitors in three years
Inside Giftland- Eight million visitors in three years

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