Stabroek News

Insights for Guyana from two of its great diplomats

- By Dr Bertrand Ramcharan Formerly Special Adviser to the UN Secretary-General and Chancellor of the University of Guyana

At the start of Guyana’s foreign service in 1966, Ms. Joan Seymour and the late Miles Stoby were among its first batch of diplomats. Both have just had published important books on their journeys that are parts of the history of Guyana, joining earlier contributi­ons from their batch-mates such as Rudy Insanally, Rashleigh Jackson, and others.

Joan’s book is My Unplanned Journey (2022) and Miles’ book is Life in the Glass House. Tales from the United Nations (2022). Both authors transition­ed from the Guyana Mission to the UN in New York into the UN Secretaria­t where they served with distinctio­n, both becoming Directors in the UN service. I knew them both as UN colleagues and enjoyed their friendship.

Miles’ book is a reproducti­on of fascinatin­g diary entries from September 1999 to December 2006, when he served in the Executive Office of Secretary-General Kofi Annan. In the introducti­on to the book, he referred briefly to his education in Guyana and in England. He occasional­ly provides insights into the times when he served in the Guyana Mission to the UN. What comes through distinctly from the book is Miles’ attachment to profession­alism in the foreign service and in the internatio­nal civil service. This is a salutary lesson for today’s Guyana: profession­alism in service.

Miles’ insights are on internatio­nal issues that he witnessed from his UN vantage point and are of interest to students and practition­ers of internatio­nal affairs. There are occasional insights from his service as a Guyanese diplomat. He writes, for example, of the Turkish invasion of Cyprus: “For Guyana, with our still innocent perception of internatio­nal affairs, the issue required no debate

- Turkey had violated internatio­nal law by invading Cyprus and occupying the Northern region where the Turkish Cypriots were concentrat­ed. We were prepared to admit to some complicati­ng factors such as the coup d’etat which had brought a junta to power…But, for us, none of these factors outweighed the essential principles that were the pillars on which we thought the UN stood – noninterfe­rence in the internal affairs of states and respect for state sovereignt­y.”

He was, however, to discover the nuances that invariably accompany internatio­nal problems: “A group of five nonaligned countries were selected to craft a resolution suitable for the circumstan­ces. Guyana was a member. We took the lead and prepared a short text demanding Turkey’s withdrawal…We soon learnt the reality of religious and ethnic politics…The resolution that emerged from the Group, and which was overwhelmi­ngly adopted by the General Assembly, balanced respect for non-interferen­ce with appreciati­on of the Turkish Cypriots’ minority status. When we joined the Security Council the following year, we found that it was not possible to move the Council to act decisively on Cyprus.” Internatio­nal political considerat­ions had intruded – something that Guyana needs to remember when it comes to its border controvers­y with Venezuela.

From the perspectiv­e of the history of Guyana, Joan Seymour’s book is an engaging, fascinatin­g one, full of precious insights and feeling. She writes of the Georgetown of her childhood: a wellplanne­d and well-kept city with clean gardens, parapets, trenches and drains, a Georgetown of high standards. She writes of the emphasis on manners and learning in the Seymour family and gives glimpses of the poetic world of her famous father, A.J. Seymour. She opens a window into the world of learning and striving at Bishops’ High School, which she attended.

Joan writes of her quest for a higher education, which would take her to the University of the West Indies, in Kingston, Jamaica, Puerto Rico, Paris, and other European cities. In the process she visited some of the great theatres, operas, and galleries. I worked closely with her when we both served in the UN Political Department. She is a very cultured person.

The start of the Guyana diplomatic service would see her stationed, in this order, in London, Ottawa, Caracas and New York. Next to the Ambassador in London, Ottawa and Caracas, she would be the mainstay of the Embassy, carrying out the diverse tasks that an Embassy officer is required to do. One gets an insight into how the Guyana diplomatic service operated at this time, and one takes one’s hat off to officers like Joan, who did the ‘yeoman/yeowoman’ work in the embassies.

After her service in the Guyana Mission to the UN in New York, Joan transition­ed into the UN Secretaria­t, first joining the UN Institute for Training and

Research (UNITAR) as Special Assistant to the Director, then moving, successive­ly, into the UN Decoloniza­tion Department, the Offices of the SecretaryG­eneral, where we were colleagues, and the UN Department of Political Affairs, where we were also colleagues.

In the UN’s Decoloniza­tion Department, Joan undertook several missions for the UN to colonial and dependent territorie­s, writing fact-finding reports for considerat­ion at the UN. Throughout the book, one comes into contact with Joan’s profession­alism, of which I have firsthand knowledge as a colleague. Here again, as with Miles Stoby, one comes to appreciate the emphasis on profession­al standards – decidedly an insight to be kept very much in mind in the foreign service of today’s Guyana.

As a historical account of a Guyanese young lady aspiring to a profession­al career, and as an account of a Guyanese woman navigating her way in the world of Guyana’s diplomatic service and the world of the UN Secretaria­t, Joan’s book offers invaluable insights. She is refreshing­ly candid about how Caribbean men treated Caribbean women, and about the attitudes of African men towards women.

She writes about how she sought and found love, and how she had her fair share of challenges. She is refreshing­ly honest in writing about these matters. I venture to suggest that Guyanese and Caribbean women would find her experience­s utterly fascinatin­g. At the end of the book, one gets the impression of a person at peace with the journey she has travelled.

To conclude, I find these two distinguis­hed Guyanese diplomats offering to Guyanese some treasured insights: strive for manners, education, and quality; enrich Guyana by the quality of one’s self-developmen­t, one’s appreciati­on of our shared human dignity; strive for profession­alism in service; and strive to be able to write well – as both authors have done.

 ?? ?? Dr Bertrand Ramcharan
Dr Bertrand Ramcharan

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