Stabroek News

US was preparing economic sanctions against APNU+AFC officials prior to declaratio­n- Gouveia

- Gerry Gouveia

Five days before President David Granger acceded to the GECOM declaratio­n that his coalition had lost the 2020 General Elections, the US White House had told the Private Sector Commission (PSC) it was preparing to institute economic sanctions against persons here, according to National Security Advisor and former PSC Chairman Gerry Gouveia.

According to Gouveia, himself, current Deputy Ambassador to the US, Zulfikar Ally and now Minister in the Ministry of Public Works, Deodat Indar who were then part of the PSC’s governance committee, kept the United States updated on elections events here and were called to a virtual meeting to be briefed by the White House on proposed sanctions, shortly before Granger acceded.

“We were called on the 28th of July [2020]. And they said that they wanted to have a video call; a Zoom call. It was a Zoom call that they wanted and the three people that were always dealing with them were Indar, myself and Zulfikar… we activated the Zoom call. And when they came on, they said they wanted us to know that the White House had just agreed and instructio­ns and a decision has been taken to take the sanctions to another level, which was going to be economic sanctions against the individual­s,” Gouveia told Stabroek News in a recent interview.

The US had already imposed visa sanctions on APNU+AFC officials and persons connected to stalling the declaratio­n of the results. How many visas were affected has never been disclosed.

“Economic sanctions is a very serious matter because that is where people’s bank accounts and their assets and so on and their families’ and friends’ [assets are frozen]. And so that conversati­on happened and I can’t tell you what else happened after that. What I did know is that we did tell [only] a few people about what had happened, because we thought it would have been the responsibi­lity of the US government to make that announceme­nt,” he added.

Gouveia explained that at the time of the elections, he was the Chairman of the Private Sector Commission, Ally was the president at the time of the American

Chamber of Commerce here and Indar was the President of the Georgetown Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

He explained that the PSC’s representa­tives never communicat­ed directly with then US Secretary of State Michael Pompeo but with staff of the National Security Council and the State Department.

“We have never been in direct, direct communicat­ion with the Secretary of State. We’ve been in communicat­ion with staff, members of the National Security Council. But we’ve never been in direct communicat­ion with him. But certainly, the discussion­s we would have had [were] with staff of Congressme­n, staff of the State Department [and they] would have been keeping him informed as well,” he said.

One of the founding members of the PSC, Gouveia said that the organizati­on has always had a very constructi­ve engagement with the diplomatic community, and he singled out the US, the UK, Canada and the European Union.

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