Stabroek News

‘Closed sugar estates were absolutely useless’ - PM at Whim rally

-

In his home village of Whim, Corentyne, Prime Minister Moses Nagamootoo last evening defended his government’s decision to close several sugar estates by saying that these were “absolutely useless as producing sugar estates.”

He said, “We realised that the sugar industry was going down and those one[s] at Skeldon, Canje, Rose Hall, those at LBI, Enmore, that they were absolutely useless as producing sugar estates. We decided to close them down and in doing so we saved the jobs of 10,000 sugar workers.” According to Nagamootoo, after the APNU+AFC was elected to government, in order to rescue sugar workers they had to subsidise the industry with $1 billion for 38 months. He then told the gathering at Whim Middle Walk Dam that it was the Skeldon Estate which “pulled down the rest of the sugar industry.”

He said the PPP/C administra­tion spent some $50 billion on the Skeldon Estate, “... and (former President Bharrat) Jagdeo said without Skeldon, sugar is dead.” However, he opined, that sugar died at Skeldon since the estate remained a “white elephant.”

According to Nagamootoo, Guyana then was producing sugar at 50 cents per pound while the internatio­nal price was 16 cents per pound but “Doctor Jagdeo said if you have a modern estate we would produce sugar cheaper, we never had the sugar, all we had was the bitter - no sugar.”

He continued, “All of the redundant workers they got severance, we paid them in equivalent [of] $6 billion dollars, so they collected money. Some of them opened chicken farms, some buy minivan, some started pig farms, some alternativ­e employment, but we never cut them loose without a gill.”

He stated, “We are compassion­ate, we are caring, we understand the tragedy that Jagdeo and company brought to the sugar industry, they run it down and they use the sugar workers as a voting machine.”

According to Nagamootoo, the only reason opposing parties are using the drama of the sugar industry is to stir racism, “... and to show that this government spite … Indo Guyanese.”

Speaking from a stage that was completely surrounded by security, Nagamootoo told the gathering that while they were subsidisin­g the sugar industry, teachers, nurses, police and soldiers, were getting the “raw end of the stick because we had no money to improve their wages.”

He noted, that they must be a caring government for all of the people hence they increased the public servants‘ wages within four years by 77 %, the old age pension from $7,500 to $20,000 per month, and when we return to office we will increase the old age pension because we respect our senior citizens, we will increase the social assistance because then we will be in a position to do so.”

As he then spoke of the oil industry, Nagamootoo told the gathering that they will fund their promises by the revenues garnered from

as he broke into singing a few es of “Magic moment.”

He told the gathering, that uyana will have 6 billion barrels oil and that the country is pected this year to grow the onomy by 85%, “We will be able keep those promises that have en made not only by us but by her government­s. It is from that nd that we will be able to have s decade of developmen­t that esident (David) Granger spoke out.”

He said, they would be able to fer free education at the iversity level to produce an ucated nation, “We don’t want to oduce a generation of your ung people to fetch bundles of ne on their head, we want them use their brains not their heads.” He then spoke of his late brother ho was a cane cutter, “I use to ok at him and say ‘James you tting bald boy’ and he said ‘is the ne boy, the cane does eat out my ir’. Then he started to shave the ad in order to avoid the hair opping out. Cane cutting is hard d it is not the life that you want condemn your children to, so ose who are now praising up gar workers and saying how eat the sugar workers are, they ust know that they are not ading our children to a future to mpete in an oil and gas sector.” Nagamootoo, who has been placed as prime ministeria­l ndidate for the upcoming ections, also charged that the P/C administra­tion failed to lp rice farmers but it was he who ent to Mexico and pleaded with at country to purchase Guyana’s e.

Further, he said, his government lped farmers by providing six assive pumps in Region Six to sist with drainage and irrigation d also assisted with the paddy g situation, “We are constantly ing to get better prices for rice d paddy but they now andalising our names [saying] e promised $20,000 per bag for rice and $9,000 per bag for paddy, which is a blatant lie. They could never establish that anyone of us could have made such an irresponsi­ble statement but again they are playing on the sentiments of the rice farmers because they want to divide us according to race...”

Noticeably, while the crowd was bussed from Eversham Village, Auchlyne Village, Skeldon and New Amsterdam, a few residents of Whim Village gathered at the head of their streets to listen to Nagamootoo deliver his speech in his home village, which was once deemed his stronghold.

As he normally does, he started his speech about his life growing up in Whim Village, Corentyne, and sought to remind the gathering that he walked on mud dams and slept on rice bags.

He said he grew up with honesty in his home and to make do with whatever they had and those were the values that attracted him to Cheddi Jagan and the PPP/C. However, he added, that when Jagan passed away, the dream that he (Nagamootoo) had of a better life died with him, “When you hear the song just now that we want PPP no more it is not Jagan’s PPP the people want no more, it is Jagdeo’s PPP.”

He said next year will mark 60 years of him being in public life, “I have one house, I have one wife, I have the things I have I worked honestly for. I built my house before I became a minister, seven years before I became a minister. I built my house one board at a time, one beam at a time but I have seen after Cheddi died, a guy who was living in a rat hole in Campbellvi­lle building a mansion on a land that didn’t belong to him that was called Pradoville, they helped themselves to land, prime land.”

In his hour-plus long speech, he also touched on Whim directly noting that the villagers had asked his government for road, lights and clean drains which they fulfilled but instead at the recent local government elections, the village elected the PPP/C to govern their local affairs.

“The people said they want light, we brought in 14 lights initially, they wanted a road, we improved the road and we put the road to the Kali Temple, they wanted to clean the garbage we brought some brothers and sisters out of Liverpool and Manchester and they came one time with their own tractor and trailer and they cleaned the garbage, all along the people of Whim, they elect the PPP councilors to run their affairs who can’t clean the drains, who can’t remove the garbage.”

He said, when persons complained of the scent of the village they were told to “tell Nagamootoo.” “Well Nagamootoo mamma man didn’t vote for those people over there, is the Whim people who voted by majority to put those people there.”

Calling the Regional Chairman, David Armogan, a profession­al protester, Nagamootoo then pleaded with the crowd to return them to office and give them a second term.

 ??  ?? Some supporters from New Amsterdam at the Whim meeting last night
Some supporters from New Amsterdam at the Whim meeting last night
 ??  ?? Moses Na
Moses Na
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana