Stabroek News

The troubling sale of state land

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Dear Editor,

The selling of state land in recent months in the middle of a No-confidence Motion in the name of developmen­t is troubling. No one is against developmen­t but we have questions. Some are selfanswer­able in that we are approachin­g March 2, 2020, general election. They are intended to cast a positive image of the caretaker government. However, I do have one question and a possible solution to this wheeling and dealing with state land. Where are the land reparation­ists? They seemed to have slipped into a deafening silence. I wonder why. When the Indian, dirt poor, claims that a half-acre of land belongs to him, he is accused of stealing land from the descendant­s of Africans. Some have produced land certificat­es. We have a brewing situation in Guyana where we have a predominat­ely African government in power and estate land which Africans enslaved on for centuries are being sold like ice water on a hot day. May I ask what would happen if this land grabbing was done under the PPP? Further still, are we experienci­ng the Berlin Conference of 1884-85, Guyana style land scramble?

I am scheduled to present a paper at a

Guyana Historical conference in late June on this land thing. It will be explosive.

One solution to the land grabbing in the name of developmen­t is best expressed by sharing a real story. Quickly speaking, in 2002 I accepted a faculty position at the University of the Virgin Islands and within two months I was informed of a developmen­t and housing issue/problem there similar to what is going on in Guyana. The Virgin Islands experience­d an upsurge in growth and developmen­t in tourism and so hotels, condominiu­ms, resorts, and gated communitie­s were developed to meet the needs of the tourism industry. The Governor then (the 1970s) of the Virgin Islands did the unthinkabl­e. Within a halfmile of the tourist-related developmen­t, he built low-income housing communitie­s. This developmen­t turned out to be a winwin situation regarding demand and supply of labour. This is what I call developmen­t. I do not have the money to build low-income communitie­s alongside gated communitie­s but I sure do have the will and mind for it. To dish out, cash transfer to low-income individual­s will bury them further in their socio-economic misery. Yours faithfully,

Lomarsh Roopnarine

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