Stabroek News

APNU+AFC to respect will of the people

-Granger tells manufactur­ers luncheon

- By Marcelle Thomas

Even as he expressed confidence about returning to office for a second term, President David Granger yesterday said the APNU+AFC coalition will ensure a peaceful environmen­t for the upcoming general elections and accept the results.

“The business community need not fear political violence and social unrest. My government will do everything possible to ensure political stability,” Granger, who now heads a caretaker administra­tion, yesterday told a Guyana Manufactur­ing and Services Associatio­n (GMSA) business luncheon, where he was the guest speaker.

“The business community has nothing to fear from the forthcomin­g elections. I am committed to ensuring a safe and secure environmen­t for business, for communitie­s and for citizens, in the process leading to, during and after general elections. My government will respect the democratic will of the people and anything contrary will be abhorrent to the values to which my coalition government subscribes,” he added.

Having received correspond­ence from the Chairperso­n of the Guyana Elections Commission (GECOM), Justice (ret’d) Claudette Singh shortly before attending the luncheon, the President said that he was committed to having elections and was only awaiting word from the one body that was constituti­onally responsibl­e for them.

“This decision is not whimsical. I must be advised that the Elections Commission is in a state of readiness to conduct elections. It would be reckless of me to name a date for the holding of elections without ascertaini­ng the Commission’s readiness to do so,” he said.

“I have indicated to the Elections Commission that I would like to see elections at the earliest time possible. I shall proclaim a date for general and regional elections once I am advised by the Elections Commission that it is in a state of readiness,” he added.

‘Fools rush in’

Granger was asked by communicat­ions consultant Kit Nascimento why since the passage of the No-Confidence Motion against government on December 21st, 2018 he did not take the position to act so that elections could be held in the three month timeframe stipulated by law. He repeated much of what he said during his address but added that while it appeared that Nascimento believed that he should personally take over the role of GECOM, he could not. “I don’t know what answer I can give. Should I remove the constituti­onal right [of GECOM] to do its remit? Should I, as head of the executive, start printing ballot papers? Should I appoint a returning officer? Establish a polling station? These are constituti­onal duties which have been given to the commission and the judiciary did not intervene. Fools rush in where angels fear to tread. And the CCJ [Caribbean Court of Justice] was very clear it could not issue any coercive orders. There is no institutio­n in Guyana which can assume the functions of the elections commission,” he said.

‘Bearing fruit’

And the President underscore­d that his government understand­s the importance of manufactur­ing to this country’s developmen­t coupled with overall private sector input and it is why “tax policies have been tailored to incentivis­e the competitiv­eness of the manufactur­ing sector.”

Making reference to this year’s MidYear Report, the President said that it paints a positive picture of manufactur­ing and services sectors.

“The manufactur­ing sector expanded by 3.6 per cent in the first half of 2019. It is anticipate­d to record an annual growth rate, this year, of 3.7 per cent. The services sector is estimated to have grown by 4.6 per cent between January and June 2019, the highest rate of growth since 2011.Trade – wholesale and retail – grew by 5.9 per cent; transporta­tion and storage by 5.5 per cent; financial and insurance transactio­ns by 4.1 per cent; rental of dwellings by 5.9 per cent; and other services by 10 per cent,” he said.

“Indicators suggest expansion of business activity. Private sector credit increased by 5.7 per cent for the first half of 2019 compared with the same period in 2018. Credit to the mining and quarrying sector increased by 6 per cent; credit to the manufactur­ing sector increased by 0.5 per cent and credit to the services sector increased by 7.2 per cent,” he added.

The Inter-Ministeria­l Round Table, establishe­d in 2017 and which comprises government and GMSA representa­tive, was lauded for the strides made to propose measures for the sector’s benefits.

“Its work has been fruitful. Cooperatio­n is taking place between the Government and the GMSA to facilitate agro-processing developmen­t and to ease doing business in Guyana. The Roundtable’s work has resulted in achievemen­ts. It has resulted in: increasing the Common External Tariff on imported pinewood, which posed a threat to local timber producers; initiating an inventory of the forests to aid the forest sector better and to enable it to allocate forest resources to producers; improving trade facilitati­on at the ports; moving towards the developmen­t of a consolidat­ed stockyard for lumber to better improve timber sales; and addressing constraint­s to fair access to external markets by our agro-processors,” the President said.

“My friends, the cooperatio­n between the government and the GMSA is bearing fruit. The economy is being rebalanced to become more competitiv­e and resilient. It is being prepared and primed for rapid economic growth,” he added.

Granger also underscore­d the importance of the coalition’s proposed Decade of Developmen­t, which it plans to initiate next year.

Granger said the ‘Decade’ would see 10 major areas of developmen­t. He explained that there will be education reform, to ensure that the education system is more reflective of the needs of the new economy; Economic expansion, diversific­ation, restructur­ing, including emphasis on value-added manufactur­ing and food security; Energy security and the transition to renewable and clean sources of energy; Environmen­tally sustainabl­e management of the natural resources; Empowermen­t of regional and local communitie­s; Eradicatio­n of extreme poverty, destitutio­n and homelessne­ss; Infrastruc­tural expansion, in particular to serve the hinterland communitie­s of regions One, Seven, Eight and Nine; Internatio­nally competitiv­e trade and investment; national and border security, especially in the light of the heavy migration of Venezuelan­s into Guyana, of whom there are now over 10,000; and institutio­nal strengthen­ing, especially against the background of constituti­onal reform to ensure good governance. On the latter point, he highlighte­d “the inability, after more than a decade, to appoint a substantiv­e Chancellor of the Judiciary and a substantiv­e Chief Justice, not to mention the difficulti­es that we’ve had in the first half of the year in the National Assembly. These are topics which will be dealt with in our constituti­onal reform during the Decade of Developmen­t.”

Constituti­onal reform had been one of the campaign promises of the APNU+AFC coalition in 2015 but there has yet to be any meaningful achievemen­t since its election to office.

 ??  ?? President David Granger delivering the feature address at the Guyana Manufactur­ing and Services Associatio­n’s annual business luncheon. (Ministry of the Presidency photo)
President David Granger delivering the feature address at the Guyana Manufactur­ing and Services Associatio­n’s annual business luncheon. (Ministry of the Presidency photo)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana