Stabroek News

Prosperity has replaced equality as national measure of success - GHRA

-

Saying that prosperity has replaced equality as the country’s measure of success, the local human rights watchdog has lamented that warning signs are being resolutely ignored.

In its message to mark Internatio­nal Human Rights Day 2021, which is being observed today, the Guyana Human Rights Associatio­n (GHRA) said that the most pressing worldwide threat to human rights is the neglect of equality, which together with freedom constitute­s the fundamenta­l pillars of human rights. It, however, observed that systematic removal of constraint­s and regulation­s in the world of finance and economics has resulted in the global crisis of inequality, which has brought the world to the verge of climate catastroph­e.

Guyana, like the rest of the world, it argued, has been subjected to rigorous applicatio­n of the market economy, a process in which individual­s are encouraged to constantly measure their own worth in terms of material progress, focused on doing better than their neighbour. At the same time, it added, mainstream Guyanese politics has abandoned any attempt to provide a shared vision capable of inspiring us to create a better society.

According to the GHRA, official statements signal that prosperity has replaced equality as the measure of success in Guyana. It pointed to the recent consultati­on document, titled Guyana’s Low Carbon Developmen­t

Strategy 2030, and noted that rather than a proposal of how Guyana will create a caring, safe, inclusive and healthy society by 2030, the climate crisis is seen as an opportunit­y for the country to make money by commodifyi­ng every natural resource – land, forests, water, ocean. “It is an invitation to the global business community that Guyana is up for grabs,” it said. “This is a looting approach to developmen­t – looting from the future, from other species and from other Guyanese has consumed Guyanese politics, which seemingly has no place for intergener­ational justice, i.e. how to ensure the next generation and other species inherits all the opportunit­ies and resources this generation enjoys,” it added

It further said that while there is constant talk of the need to reduce domestic violence, suicide, alcoholrel­ated road carnage, respirator­y diseases, the warning signs of material success and social failure in many rich countries are resolutely ignored.

“The current generation of Guyanese inherited a combinatio­n of vast natural resources and a small population which together with the discovery of oil have created the illusion that Guyana is somehow exempt from the global social and climatic crises the rest of the world must adjust to. A first step in restoring a balance between society and nature would be for each educationa­l institutio­n, business, faith community, sports clubs, profession­al and trade unions to draw up a climate justice programme for itself and its manner of operating, rather than look for leadership to the political sector,” it urged.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana