Stabroek News

Toshaos conference opens

- By Miranda La Rose

‘The NTC is, therefore, not an ornamental body. It has work to do. It is not a political party. It is an executive arm of the State. It is vital for ensuring the progress for indigenous communitie­s. It has to work with Central Government and the regional administra­tion’ – President David Granger

President David Granger yesterday urged toshaos and other indigenous community leaders to use the annual National Toshaos Council’s conference as a vehicle for change and to deliver public services that will create more sustainabl­e and secure livelihood­s, and increased opportunit­ies to reduce the inequaliti­es between coastland and hinterland communitie­s.

“This conference is about the future and not about the past. It is about planning and implementi­ng, and creating institutio­ns to ensure accessible, affordable and appropriat­e public service in all the communitie­s,” Granger said when he delivered the main address at yesterday’s opening of the five-day 12th National Toshaos Council (NTC) Conference, at the Arthur Chung Conference Centre, at Liliendaal.

Over 176 toshaos and senior councillor­s were present at the opening of the conference, which is being held under the theme, “Preserving our past, Protecting our Future.”

In his address, Granger challenged the NTC to work with the village leaders to develop village improvemen­t plans (VIPs) to provide better services in education and other social services. “The NTC is, therefore, not an ornamental body. It has work to do. It is not a political party. It is an executive arm of the State. It is vital for ensuring the progress for indigenous communitie­s. It has to work with Central Government and the regional administra­tion,” he stated.

The NTC, he added, “must establish suitable administra­tion, operation and organisati­onal structures, foster cooperatio­n with national and regional government­s and the village councils and district councils to ensure the implementa­tion of VIPs.”

The objective of the VIPs, he said, must address as a matter of priority access to public education to ensure that every child has the opportunit­y to gain employment as accountant­s, attorneys, engineers, businesspe­ople among other profession­s as well as being self-employed. “Every Guyanese child of every ethnicity must have the opportunit­y to be the best that he or she can be,” he noted.

The quality of human life is linked to the environmen­t, Granger said, adding “It is time therefore to build environmen­tal resilience against the threat of flooding, land degradatio­n, reckless disposal of solid waste and the exploiting of wildlife and the pollution of waterways.”

Promises

Granger spoke after outgoing NTC Chairman Joel Fredericks lambasted government for not keeping to its promises to establish a lands commission to deal exclu sively with Indigenous People land issues, provision of adequate funds for the revision of “a ver poor Amerindian Act,” and th granting of ownership document of a plot of land for an NTC sec retariat.

In February, 2018, Frederick said, the NTC was promised meeting with the President an they are still waiting to meet wit him.

According to Granger, th manner in dealing with decision emerging from the annual confer ences was the establishm­ent o the National Indigenous People Authority (NIPA) which was pro posed two conference­s ago.

“Its non-establishm­ent is no the fault of the Central Govern ment,” he said, while noting tha NIPA was envisaged as a bod equipped with technical and man ageriel expertise to ensure th implementa­tion of the decision of the council. It was intended deal with problems confrontin­g Indigenous communitie­s, he said including the provision of publi service.

Granger also said he appointe Minister of Public Affairs in th Ministry of the Presidency Daw Hastings to assist the NTC an Indigenous communitie­s. Whe she invited the leaders to mee

with her on his authority, he said, they did not.

The focus of the NTC, he said, is described in the Amerindian Act and its functions include the delivery of public services particular­ly those related to education, economic services, energy, water, health and the environmen­t.

No single village or toshao, he noted, can fight against poverty, ignorance, disease and crime.

While calling for the establishm­ent of the VIPs, he said he looks forward to seeing those that will include reducing the incidence of teenage pregnancie­s, cancers, and communicab­le and vector-borne diseases such as dengue, malaria, chikunguny­a.

The majority of Indigenous peoples, he said, still live in the hinterland, which occupies about 70 percent of the country’s land space and was difficult to access in some areas.

He has visited, he said, over three dozen Indigenous communitie­s to see how people live in an effort to improve public service as a means of narrowing the inequality between the hinterland and coastland. On one occasion, in the Pomeroon River, he said, First Lady Sandra Granger gave a child a book and the child said he could not read.

It was coming out of these visits, Granger said, that some 27 school buses, over a dozen boats and hundreds of bicycles are

From centre pages

now being used to transport children to school.

Addressing land ownership documents for the plot of land “promised” for the constructi­on of the NTC secretaria­t and which Fredericks said he had hoped to hand over to the new incoming NTC executive, Vice President and Minister of Indigenous Peoples’ Affairs Sydney Allicock, in his address, said that the title of the land was being processed and the transport to the land is to be handed over in the near future to give to the NTC ownership and security.

So, instead of casting “gloom and doom,” Allicock said, the NTC could have further discussion­s on the developmen­t of the land.

On Heritage Day in 2017, held in Pakuri, Fredericks said, the people were promised a change in the official name of the village from St Cuthbert’s Mission to Pakuri. To date “St Cuthbert’s is still St Cuthbert’s,” he said.

Addressing Granger, Fredericks said, “Promises, when said, causes us to hang our hopes on them, that we will finally find justice and that we are given an opportunit­y to preserve our past which will ultimately protect our future.”

Welcoming the toshaos, the majority of whom were recently elected to office, he said, that as young and new leaders, it was important for them to know of the work done by their predecesso­rs. “I say this because most of the new toshaos, as we are already hearing, are starting to break what the outgoing council did. But remember, it takes more energy and resources to break and build, than to build on what was left,” he added.

 ?? (Ministry of the Presidency photo) ?? President David Granger (second from right) greeting the Vice-Chairman of the National Toshaos Council (NTC), Lennox Shuman at the opening of the NTC confab yesterday at the Arthur Chung Convention Centre, Liliendaal. At right, First Lady Sandra Granger is greeting the Chairman of the NTC, Joel Fredericks (partly hidden)
(Ministry of the Presidency photo) President David Granger (second from right) greeting the Vice-Chairman of the National Toshaos Council (NTC), Lennox Shuman at the opening of the NTC confab yesterday at the Arthur Chung Convention Centre, Liliendaal. At right, First Lady Sandra Granger is greeting the Chairman of the NTC, Joel Fredericks (partly hidden)
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 ??  ?? President David Granger addressing the NTC (Ministry of the Presidency photo)
President David Granger addressing the NTC (Ministry of the Presidency photo)
 ?? (Terrence Thompson photo) ?? A section of the toshaos
(Terrence Thompson photo) A section of the toshaos
 ?? (Terrence Thompson photo) ?? NTC Chairman Joel Fredericks addressing the toshaos
(Terrence Thompson photo) NTC Chairman Joel Fredericks addressing the toshaos
 ?? (Ministry of the Presidency photo) ?? The NTC meeting being held in the refurbishe­d Arthur Chung Convention Centre
(Ministry of the Presidency photo) The NTC meeting being held in the refurbishe­d Arthur Chung Convention Centre

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