Stabroek News

Only men and women of honour can deliver on the work direly needed

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Dear Editor,

I want to stay on an even keel today and for the foreseeabl­e future. As I do so, a great many things become clearer. The first is that there are expectatio­ns, countless many of them. These gleam though the euphoria and delight, the mesmerizin­g visions and dancing spirits.

It is only day two (I think it is) of the new administra­tion with a cabinet still to be finetuned and made public. But already there are those knocking on the door and reminding of all the ingredient­s that go into these things with this request or that demand or yet another reminder and recommenda­tion. I took the time to skim through some of the public appeals and positions and clearly the Ali Administra­tion is sure to be inundated with everything under the sun, and then some more. I take a quick peek.

The foreigners emphasize constituti­onal reform (I agree and must write accordingl­y); locals speak of jobs, and one went to the pain of pinpointin­g who should be in the cabinet. This is all heady stuff, and there is bound to be heavy disappoint­ment, when personnel decisions go the other way, some other inexplicab­le way. I feel for such supporters and stalwarts, but there must be understand­ing that there are only so many sweet spots and many more persons who did a lot of hard heavy work. As to who is deserving more than whom is none of my business, but Guyanese must learn to manage their expectatio­ns and temper their soaring visions to suit local circumstan­ces. It is both helpful and healthy.

Speaking for myself, this is what I am hoping to see unfold. Some people may be moved, but it should be minimal; the lessons of prior vindictive­ness and vengefulne­ss will not aid but aggravate. I trust that the wisdom to desist from what contribute­s to disunity will prevail. On another front, some have spoken about trust and, to speak to the obvious, trust is at such a low ebb here as to be almost nonexisten­t. Don’t ask me why, but I (me of all persons) am withholdin­g judgment for the next 100 days and giving space to set agenda and operate. That is proper.

I say this and write this despite my own misgivings, which are based on more than the anecdotal or circumstan­tial. For example, it is a public secret that several billions, all told, were donated to political coffers during the recent sprawling electoral safaris. Thus, I wonder how that will reconcile with the bone in the throat (I should know) of regulatory transparen­cy, of enforcemen­t arbitrage, and of principled objection and denial. Let me put this a different way, if I gifted a few hundred million to the recent campaign, I expect ready access. My expectatio­ns will extend to quid pro quos now owed, as in markers to be called in, when some bureaucrat stands in the way (legitimate­ly), when some rule (necessary or mandatory) that is enforced has to be followed. If I do not get my way, then there would be a great sense of disappoint­ment, if not rage. Something is going to have to give.

Editor, it could be heavy tax bills due, or a bothersome and inhibitory practice long railed against to no avail, or a rather diligent public officer seeking to execute his or her duty to country and citizen. It should not fail to register that I do not mention allegiance or duty to a political party. It is an open question as to what is going to follow in such circumstan­ces of which there are endless permutatio­ns. I do not know which tail is going to wag which head, but I hold my peace for the time being. Still, this much must be recognized: that is the real world, and in Third World societies, it is the dominant one. But trust it is going to have to be just to see.There is a universe of good work that is direly needed, and which can be done. Only men and women of honour can deliver. That is my expectatio­n and that should be the way forward. Regarding, whether it is present, I hold off.

 ??  ?? Yours faithfully, GHK Lall
Yours faithfully, GHK Lall

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