Stabroek News

Corruption can easily undo government’s plans, some negative signs seen already

- Dear Editor,

Most Guyanese highly approve of the actions and plans that President Irfaan Ali’s government is implementi­ng to address major challenges such as the global pandemic, an unstable democracy, the defence of territoria­l and maritime sovereignt­y, climate change and the developmen­t of infrastruc­ture.

But success will be short-lived or unstable if a culture of corruption is allowed to grow and persist, and a small number of rich people get richer and poor people get poorer. In future elections, more Guyanese will judge politician­s not by how they treat the highest citizens, but the lowest ones. More voters will not want to be accomplice­s in corruption and so they will not support corrupt politician­s.

That is why Dr. Cheddi Jagan never denied, ignored or downplayed the fact that corruption is one of the main causes of instabilit­y, inequality and poverty. Corruption retards human developmen­t. It undermines democracy, human rights and good governance, erodes the rule of law, hampers economic growth, prevents competitiv­e and fair business conditions, harms the environmen­t, and facilitate­s the flight of financial funds from Guyana.

Regardless of ideology and ethnicity, it is without dispute that Jagan was respected nationally and internatio­nally for his government­s that publicly “set their face sternly against corruption and extravagan­ce”. Fenton Ramsahoye, Attorney General of the PPP government from 1961 to 1964, testified that “no Guyanese should ever forget that it is possible to constitute and administer a government wholly devoid of corruption”. Cheddi’s government­s set the example by dealing firmly and resolutely with corruption.

Fighting against corruption brings positive results. Under the government­s that Cheddi Jagan led, from 1957 to 1964 and from 1992 to 1997, Guyana experience­d the best economic growth rates, and social and economic developmen­t.

Corruption will undo President Ali’s people’s progressiv­e programme to strengthen the human rights of at least 40% of Guyanese (312,000 persons), from all ethnic communitie­s, who live below or near the poverty line, and who have to put up with less-than-adequate public services because they cannot afford private health care, private schools, private cars, electric generators and purifying water systems for their homes. Unchalleng­ed corruption will prevent Guyana from achieving the United Nations Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs).

Corruption in Guyana is not rare. In a USA Vanderbilt University 2009 Public Opinion Survey in Guyana, 22% of Guyanese responded that they had to pay bribes to officials for the following services - police, customs, licences, electricit­y, water, constructi­on and environmen­tal permits, education, health and the courts. Among 24 Latin American and Caribbean countries, Guyana had the 8th highest rate for paying bribes.

Corrupt persons come from all political parties, ideologies, ethnicitie­s, classes, genders, religions, ages, sizes, shapes and colours. But now, more Guyanese are no longer silent when they experience corruption.

They are not tolerating excuses like “public officials are not well paid and they need a ‘top up’, or the paying of a bribe avoids bureaucrat­ic delays, or it is not a big deal because everyone does it”. Most importantl­y, most Guyanese recently rejected electoral corruption.

At home and in the diaspora, letter writers to the Kaieteur News and the Stabroek News are speaking out against alleged grand and petty corruption. They are disappoint­ed about how previous and present government­s administer our new oil and gas sector. They want transparen­cy and they expect officials to properly follow due diligence procedures. They do not accept the silence or “memory loss” of key officials about how licences and concession­s are granted in the natural resources sector. There is no tolerance for premature claims that no laws are broken. They are calling for President Ali to set up an independen­t Commission of Inquiry, with internatio­nal participat­ion, to review all the allegation­s about the oil contracts. If any politician­s and officials are found guilty of wrongdoing, then they want them to face the full force of the law, regardless of their political affiliatio­n or ethnicity.

Letter writers are also highlighti­ng concerns about alleged corrupt practices by politician­s and officials in the hiring, appointmen­t and promotion of CEOs, executive staff and Boards of Directors in Ministries and public agencies; in the awarding of public tenders where the most qualified suppliers and contractor­s are not selected, prices are inflated and substandar­d constructi­on materials are

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