Stabroek News

Hiring of a PR firm to lobby for a nonimmigra­nt American visa surprises

- Dear Editor,

Recent media developmen­ts emphasized that Mr. Nazar ‘Shell’ Mohamed is taking the fight to new lengths to establish the reputation that he believes is rightly due to him. First, Mr. Mohamed recruited the firm of a former Assistant Director of the America’s FBI to do some groundwork with the sole objective of banishing longstandi­ng and ongoing “allegation­s” attached to his name. The allegation­s cover a lot of territory, and have made him a character of murk and mystery, with significan­t might, too. The second move by Mr. Mohamed has been to engage a public relations firm to push for him to be granted an American visa (Demerara Waves, April 12). My thoughts follow.

Having publicized before my associatio­n with Mr. Mohamed, all that there is to restate is that it has been official, profession­al, and steadfastl­y formal. It would be a serious stretch to say that Mr. Mohamed and I are friends, have any kind of relationsh­ip, other than that of fellow citizens. No more, no less, and absolutely nothing else in between. I am sure that he sees matters in the same way. Now, I venture into the two issues under review: reputation and visa issuance. If nothing else, I think that Mr. “Shell” Mohamed would want and expect that I be forthright and honest.

The man formerly from the upper elevations of the FBI did his legwork. His scope and probing are his business. But, it would be interestin­g regarding where he went and where he didn’t, plus to whom he spoke, and to those that he didn’t. If his years in the FBI were of a minimum quality, then Mr. Mohamed would have received some value for his money. Definitely, the helpful in the FBI man’s public issuance of a clean bill of health concerning his name and the history stubbornly affixed to it. To present this differentl­y, it certainly did not hurt him. Now, I have some news for Mr. Mohamed, which follows this track.

Since Mr. Mohamed now has oil as part of his expanding portfolio, there should be some appreciati­on of his situation and, as I must say, his predicamen­t. Exxon has establishe­d a record of funding experts, scientists, and others in research groups at illustriou­s universiti­es to do work on climate change, the environmen­t, and so forth. The results have been unanimousl­y favourable regarding Exxon’s attitudes, approaches, and actions on areas and issues of dispute. Instead of those investigat­ions, conclusion­s and reports authoritat­ively closing down concerns and controvers­ies, they only succeeded in giving them new life. I think that this could be the boat in which Mr. Mohamed finds himself.

We know how Exxon is viewed in many quarters of standing, and how American courts have ruled time and again. Suffice it to say that Exxon has looked less and less rosy with each new developmen­t. For another point and parallel on this matter of clearances and the like, I recall how Philip Morris took care of its lethal tobacco business in the interests of self-protection, and how that company had to reengineer itself. In sum, the lesson for Mr. Mohamed, which I will be bold enough to mention is that the sword is double-edged. It can help and it can hurt. The trouble is that either way, there is not enough closure. Some answers along certain lines have been tabled to clear the air, but more than a few are still holding on to their questions.

On a different note, I hear of “allegation­s” leveled and now dealt with accordingl­y. The question is who are the allegers? The United States does not act

on mere allegation­s alone, and it has a sufficienc­y of resources to pursue and exhaust its own exploratio­ns. Would be interestin­g to know where the developmen­ts from the onetime FBI man leave things, how they change conclusion­s in American circles. Also, it is no secret that Mr. Mohamed has been a friend of both the PPP and PNC, and most tangibly. Given how Guyana Government­s have operated relative to the police, it would be astonishin­g if local law enforcemen­t is the source of any “allegation­s” hostile to Mr. Mohamed.

Further, with the PPP and PNC in his corner, this effectivel­y means that approximat­ely 75% of Guyana’s population holds Mr. Mohamed in a better light than they do other citizens, including me. So, who is left? The commercial competitio­n has weight, but not much reach, considerin­g its own bottleneck­s. But there were those allegation­s, whatever they were/are, and now the former FBI man’s certificat­e of good standing.

Regarding, the hiring of a PR firm to lobby for a nonimmigra­nt American visa, this surprises. He should know that an American visa is not an entitlemen­t, but privilege, and discretion­ary considerat­ion. Neverthele­ss, I think that he has put the Americans in a bind. Mr. Mohamed has ratcheted up the stakes in calculated fashion. The US may have to share what it has on him. Smoke or substance? Mystery or reality? Then again, one has to wonder what wheels are spinning behind the scenes in American heads.

That is, if they have decided that Mr. Nazar Mohamed is better on the inside, and on their side. Remember that timeworn standard that never grows old: permanent interests. Meaning, the Americans may have found that Mr. Shell Mohamed could be an asset of considerab­le use. I remind one and all: this is not cinema. It is real life with real people and real stories. The saga continues.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana