Stabroek News Sunday

Our very survival depends on establishm­ent of a new system of governance

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Dear Editor,

If the events that followed the March 2nd General and Regional Elections, coupled with the present COVID-19 outbreak, do not motivate us as Guyanese to pull together for what may be the very survival of our people and nation-state, then I think we can say that nothing will.

Real leaders, whose only aim is to further the interests of the people, will put aside their egos and narrow parti

san interests at this crucial moment in our nation’s history. Real leaders will find inside themselves the political maturity and will to finally put Guyana first. If we could commit to this, then the final scene of the recent hideous and absurd spectacle that has now unfortunat­ely been observed by the entire world, could afford us the opportunit­y to regain our dignity and credibilit­y as a viable nation-state. A nation-state that is fit to take its rightful place as an influentia­l member of CARICOM and the global community of nations.

After decades of independen­ce and republican status, this most recent debacle has exposed what can only be described as the infantile behaviour of our leaders and our mal-developmen­t as a nation-state. Those who seek to lead Guyana must equip themselves. They must understand what US sociologis­t and economic historian, Immanuel Wallerstei­n, refers to as ‘the modern world system’, so that they are actually able to manage the affairs of our country in a way that ensures the wellbeing and survival of all Guyanese.

Political elites of both major parties in Guyana, and those worldwide, that are trapped in the crisis ridden liberal-democratic arrangemen­t and neo-liberal economics are responsibl­e for bringing the world to its current tipping point. They have allowed the market to be the decisive factor in determinin­g all aspects of human existence, and in so doing, have inarguably created a world where all balance and harmony with our natural environmen­t has been destroyed. Our very food-chain is in the hands of ruthless transnatio­nal corporatio­ns that produce food that is now more harmful than nutritious. Our healthcare is in the hands of Big Pharma, where the pursuit of profit rather than any concept of healing is the priority. We now live in a world where the accumulati­on of private wealth has become more important than any other single concern, including the primacy, dignity and even survival of the human person. We are living in the era of capitalism in its most avaricious and debauched form.

If there is anything positive that can be garnered from the COVID-19 outbreak it will be its ability to make every thinking person worldwide finally come to the realizatio­n that we, the people, the global mass of citizens, must be the conscious agents of change because our very survival now demands nothing less. Each of us must take urgent and decisive action. We must stop cruising malls, mindlessly engaging in crass consumeris­m and repel the insatiable desire that capitalism has deliberate­ly created in us, causing us to want what we do not need. We must stop filling our minds with the lies and trivia being deliberate­ly pumped out to us every day by the global corporate media. We must stop being consumed en masse by a superficia­l engagement with social media that has created a voyeuristi­c and narcissist­ic culture, feeding off our craving for approval, status and likes. We must instead engage in courageous and meaningful conversati­ons in order to arrive at the truth, thereby utilizing social media as a tool for real change. In the words of the radical theologian, Harvey Cox, we can no longer afford to “leave it to the snake”.

Democracy has always been a contested term and concept, despite the fact that West European hegemony has led many of us to believe that the West invented democracy, and that their form of democracy is the only form and therefore must be universall­y implemente­d. The COVID-19 crisis has also put this into perspectiv­e for many. As the world watched Cuban doctors and nurses arrive to a standing ovation in Italy, I hope that every thinking person for a split second thought, maybe I have been fed the wrong story on democracy. It is hard not to notice how fraudulent and flawed the Western concept of democracy is, as it became glaringly obvious that just maybe, if you are homeless or left to die without a hospital bed in New York, you are not in a democracy, no matter how many times they push the word and idea down our throats. Just maybe, what they like to call “the world’s largest democracy”, India, is not so democratic when, upon a national lockdown, thousands of homeless Indians may die of starvation before they contract the virus.

Here in Guyana, those who left us with the Western Parliament­ary system of so-called democracy knew only too well that it would not work, especially in such a racially polarized society. In fact, it was implemente­d as a means of control – to divide and rule in order to perpetuate dependency and neo-colonialis­m. However, this does not stop former colonizers from pretending that it should work, and when it fails, to deliver their usual condescend­ing scolding, such as we have recently seen from the ABC/EU countries. Let us be clear: these countries have neither a moral nor historical right to lecture us on the virtues of democracy, human rights and justice. There are those of us who have been actively resisting Guyana’s recoloniza­tion ever since Desmond Hoyte took office and started to unravel the gains we made towards true independen­ce. We continued to resist throughout the rule of both the PPP/C and APNU+AFC, as they followed the same tragic path. Those who are only now shouting about “recoloniza­tion” when the game they played so willingly for so long has backfired, should be ashamed.

Given the serious times we are now faced with, and believe me COVID-19 is only the beginning of what is to come, it is imperative that we in Guyana move beyond the existing arrangemen­t that has us locked into a Western parliament­ary system that has shown us time and time again that it does not and cannot work for us. We must establish a new system of governance, based on the authority of the people. Governance that is inclusive and transparen­t. Governance that will prioritize the needs of all Guyanese and can offer effective protection in these perilous times. Our very survival depends on this.

This new system of governance must be establishe­d by us Guyanese, without external interferen­ce. Who better than we to understand what is needed? In fact, a number of internatio­nal publicatio­ns have contacted me over the past few weeks for an article on what is happening in Guyana. It is only when you attempt to explain the situation to a foreign audience that you fully comprehend the complexiti­es and specificit­ies of Guyana’s political architectu­re and circumstan­ce. It would literally take a book and even then, unless one is Guyanese, an understand­ing of our circumstan­ce may still elude the reader. Only we Guyanese can unravel and fix the mess we find ourselves in. This new form of governance must be shaped by our own historical specificit­ies and peculiar circumstan­ces.

This new system can only be generated by a demand from the people that the political forces, large and small, sit around a table and literally hammer out a framework for a government of national unity, where all the people feel truly represente­d and secure. Now is not the time to frame one party as having done wrong and the other one having abided by the rules. Political maturity necessitat­es that both the PPP/C and APNU+AFC acknowledg­e their role and responsibi­lity in bringing Guyana to this critical point. Many years ago, Forbes Burnham pleaded for unity between the Africans and Indians in Guyana, famously declaring that we would either “live together or die together”. I doubt that he knew how prophetic those words would become.

Yours faithfully,

Gerald A. Perreira

Leader

Organizati­on for the Victory of the People (OVP)

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