Stabroek News

NRF too important for gov’t to rush through without discussion with parliament­ary opposition

- Dear Editor,

Observers say the PPP/C is stealthily rushing its new NRF bill (and repealing the APNU+AFC’s NRF Act already passed) while the nation is distracted by yearend festivitie­s. Knowing how “politricks” work in Guyana, this is a plausible explanatio­n for the rush. Exxon, Hess and CNOOC are shipping away the bulk of our oil wealth, leaving us a little `larwah’. For the oil companies, every day is Christmas. They get billions and we get a little fine change. We don’t want any party in Government – PNC nor PPP – to take the little `larwah’ that will be left in the NRF (the fund where all our oil money will be kept). Truth be told, when both parties lost the government in 2015 and 2020, many felt their Government­s had become kleptocrac­ies. Every day, news coming out of the Public Accounts Committee hearings on the Auditor General’s Reports is a catalog of the ongoing “fleecing of Guyana.” Across all of the Government agencies, billions are unaccounte­d for, mismanaged and transactio­ns are questionab­le and there are no announceme­nts of anyone going to jail for such crimes against the nation. Such malfeasanc­e robs the nation of roads, medicines, dialysis treatment in rural areas, laptops or tablets for poor rural children, etc. We must not allow the NRF to become a victim of such shenanigan­s.

Next year, the Auditor General’s report will say similar things. And nothing will change. The Auditor General complained that 62% of his recommenda­tions for accountabi­lity have not been implemente­d. This has been so under both the reigns of the PPP and PNC. None of these parties want to block loopholes, fix broken systems, or have stronger accountabi­lity and transparen­cy. They leave the loopholes there so when it’s their turn in Government, they continue to plunder the nation’s resources. The two parties, loyal to the oil companies and both against renegotiat­ion of the bad oil deal have relegated the 42% of people below the poverty line, living on US$5.50 per day (IDB, 2020), to mendicants and targets for the Government playing Santa Claus all year delivering hampers “Because We Care.” Unless they renegotiat­e the oil contract to obtain more income for Guyana in the Natural Resource Fund, we will have to deliver hampers to our working poor people forever. The ones who will get rich are the business people, contractor­s, and connected friends of the ruling party. Guyana has billions of barrels of the “sweetest” oil in the world, but the oil companies are

having a feast, the rich are getting richer and the working poor are getting poorer, and we take the pictures of the poor and put them in the papers showing how we are giving them hampers. Billions for the oil companies and hampers for the working poor!

The NRF is too important for the Government to rush through without discussion with the parliament­ary Opposition which represents almost half of the population. The PPP justifiabl­y leveled such a criticism against APNU+AFC for unilateral­ly and secretly signing a giveaway oil contract without the involvemen­t of Parliament or the public. Now the PPP must not act unilateral­ly force-feeding its NRF Bill on the nation without wide public consultati­on. If the Government truly believes in “One Guyana,” then “Half Guyana” - the PPP/C - must not take unilateral action as APNU+AFC did with the oil contract. A petition coordinate­d by the Policy Forum Guyana and representi­ng several Guyanese groups of stakeholde­rs has called on the National Assembly to pause any debate on the Natural Resources Fund Act (NRFA) in order for the government to fully engage with both the opposition and civil society on amending the NRF Act, with the Natural Resources Sector Committee of Parliament available to facilitate such a process. Will the Government listen?

I warn the PPP/C not to repeat the mistakes of the APNU+AFC that caused them to be on the Opposition benches now. We need a new era of governance where big deals involving our national natural resources must be discussed, debated and decided by the entire Parliament and civic society stakeholde­rs because as we have seen with the bad oil contract, the actions of one Government can bind the actions of a successor Government to the detriment of the nation. The PPP/C has a historic opportunit­y to change the paradigm of governance. If the Government shows recalcitra­nce in this matter, then it creates good justificat­ion for the emergence of an Oil Renegotiat­ion Party. We are watching to see what the Government side does in parliament on Wednesday. The people do not want any one party to get its sticky fingers on the nation’s wealth. It’s our country, our wealth! Stand up for Guyana, for transparen­cy, for accountabi­lity and stakeholde­r involvemen­t!

Sincerely,

Dr. Jerry Jailall

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