Stabroek News

PM Phillips must be aware that his ...

- Sincerely, Tacuma Ogunseye

This is the A.B.C of politics. Since Mr. Phillips is a political “just comer” his deficiency in this area can be overlooked. However, his claim that the opposition is engaged in race-baiting is a different matter. In the context of Guyana’s history of race and politics, with both major parties consciousl­y playing the race card, his concern can’t be taken seriously. This has been our reality for six decades. Mr. Phillips seemingly waking up to this reality is questionab­le. He must be aware that his selection by the PPP as their Prime Ministeria­l Candidate and the role that he is presently playing as a concerned African is itself a form of race-baiting on the race question.

It is a superficia­l strategy commonly used in the United States, especially by the Republican Party, to place African Americans in “front” to “prove” through superficia­l “imagery” that the party has the best interests of African Americans. The Prime Minister’s claim that the PPP policies benefit all Guyanese is a position a ruling party and government will take even if the reality is different. He is entitled to his partisan and self-serving position. What matters is how the Guyanese people see government policies. The issue here is not as suggested by the PM. It is not whether the policies benefit all Guyanese. What needs to be answered is the extent that the majority of the population’s interest is addressed in a timely way, and adequately and fairly, when compared with other sections of the community.

On the issue of the government addressing African issues, the PM is either dishonest or ignorant of what constitute­s “African issues”. In his letter, he points to “trials” ignoring fundamenta­l issues. I beg to differ from the PM and state quite clearly that the PPP/government is deliberate­ly hostile to African interests. And I am saying so as a political activist of over 50 years and one who had fought with the

PPP against the PNC at a time when they were not in the office. May I school the Prime Minister, on the minimum, of what constitute­s African interests: (1) The government must recognize the damage done to Africans by enslavemen­t. The denial of more than 200 plus years of non-payment for our work in building Guyana - resulting in the loss of generation­al wealth for the African community. (2) A public admission that at present Africans own less than 10% of the national economy, and a commitment to a time-driven economic plan to correct this dismal situation. We need policies that aim at economic parity in a planned and predictabl­e way. (3) The end of the negative historical political competitio­n that is based on a “winner” take all governance system.

Africans want executive power sharing not the trite statements of a strategica­lly chosen Prime Minister. (4) Most importantl­y, the use of oil wealth to correct historical deficienci­es in the nation and equal access to oil wealth for all races starting with the Buxton Proposal, that Guyanese householde­rs be given US$ 5,000 annually as cash transfer from oil revenues. As I indicated at the outset, this is not a comprehens­ive response to PM Phillips’s missive. Hopefully, I have said enough to make him reflect on his uninformed utterances on matters he has no history of previous public advocacy on. In making this response, the intent was to push back on the PM’s propaganda on the seriousnes­s of the issue of the African condition in Guyana and the PPP/government’s disrespect­ful and contemptuo­us treatment of the African community – that amounts to political footballin­g, or as some might state, political back balling.

In conclusion, I want to drive home to Prime Minister Mark Phillips that he is the beneficiar­y of the very race-baiting politics which he condemns.

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