Stabroek News Sunday

‘Everybody wants to go to Guyana’

-says longtime honorary consul to Jamaica

- By Miranda La Rose Indera Persaud

Guyana’s honorary consul to Jamaica since 1996, attorney Indera Persaud says people from around the world are making enquiries about Guyana and people with little or no roots to the country now want Guyanese nationalit­y on account of the oil boom.

“Everybody wants to go to Guyana. Everybody and his friend want to be a Guyanese. Guyana is a thriving country and people want to see where their heritage and inheritanc­e may lie. Everyone whose grandmothe­r or parents were born in Guyana and living overseas, have citizenshi­p by birth,” she told Stabroek Weekend in an interview.”

Since the discovery of oil in 2015, Persaud said, Jamaica’s business and corporate communitie­s including, banking, insurance, logistics, have shown an interest in Guyana and have been visiting.

“Covid-19 threw a damper on corporate activities but a lot of Jamaicans have been travelling to and from Guyana over the last year since the borders were reopened,” she said.

The consulate is very busy, she said. “A lot of Guyanese have lived in Jamaica since the 1940s and 1950s, mainly for tertiary education,” she noted. “Lots are profession­als. They always have passport issues. I process the passports for everyone and grant visas. I also issue birth and death certificat­es and the like. I do everything that one person can do in a foreign mission. So it is anything and everything.”

In recent times, she said, she got a query through a solicitor in London from a British adult who was interested in becoming a Guyanese national. The person’s adoptive parents were born Guyanese but gave up their nationalit­y for UK citizenshi­p. She forwarded the query to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs with advice.

“I said the person is entitled to citizenshi­p because a child who is born in Guyana to Guyanese parents is the same as a child who is adopted. There is no distinctio­n. Someone in the ministry told me the person has to go to Guyana and apply for citizenshi­p. I said, ‘You guys got it wrong.’ They had to go through the Ministry of Legal Affairs to confirm what I had advised,” she said.

Since the establishm­ent of the Caribbean Single Market and Economy (CSME), she said, more Guyanese are travelling to Jamaica. The Guyanese population there numbers about 2,000. Some have been in Jamaica for years and are not registered with the consulate but only visit when their passports have expired or are about to expire.

“Many see Jamaica as a stepping stone to the First World countries. They are trained and find jobs where they earn a fairly decent salary as a profession­al and then move on. It is very rare for Guyanese to stay here for as long as we have. Few families have actually stayed,” she noted.

Because of the CSME, she never applied for Jamaican citizenshi­p.

“We have always maintained that because we are all Caricom nationals, we don’t need citizenshi­p to benefit from what the country offers. I have lived and worked here in the government system for so long prior to the CSME and I never had a work permit. It might have been illegal,” she added.

Once the CSME was implemente­d, she and her husband were among the first to apply for the Skills Certificat­e.

Coming to Jamaica

Persaud first journeyed to Jamaica in 1985 to pursue a Legal Education Certificat­e at Norman Manley Law School, having already acquired the Bachelor of Laws from the University of the West Indies (UWI), Cave Hill, Barbados.

“It was an exciting time to be in Jamaica. In those days everybody from the Caribbean went to Barbados to finish the two last years of the degree. That was how we got to know everybody from the region,” she said.

After the completion of their degrees, students in the region were assigned to either Hugh Wooding Law School in Trinidad and Tobago (TT) or Norman Manley based on geographic­al location. Guyana being closer to TT, Persaud was assigned Hugh Wooding but wanted to go to Norman Manley to meet with a well-known orthopaedi­c surgeon for an old injury to her left hip she had sustained when she was 11 years. She applied for entry to Norman Manley giving as her reason the need for further medical treatment. The approval came through but she had to wait a year before going to Jamaica.

“That year I worked at the University of Guyana (UG) with Dr Clive Thomas in the Institute of Developmen­t Studies as a tutor/researcher,” she said.

She paid for her tuition at Norman Manley, while her parents met her living expenses.

“By that time, my mom had emigrated to the US and she was the main person who helped me,” she added.

Persaud met her husband, Dayanand Sawh, when he was a medical student and a Guyana scholar at UWI, Mona. They were married in 1987, six months after she graduated. Sawh, the eldest of his brothers who were all Guyana scholars and medical doctors, studied at UWI, Mona. After she graduated she practised law in Jamaica.

They had three daughters who were born in Jamaica. “They were brought up in our Guyanese culture and traditions but they are strong, independen­t Jamaican women,” she said.

The eldest, a medical doctor, is a graduate of UWI, Mona and is currently in the UK in the final stages of training to be an ophthalmol­ogist. She is married to a Trinidadia­n medical doctor. Her second daughter is also a medical doctor, who by age 22 had already earned her MBBS at UWI Mona, where she is doing post-graduate studies in anesthesio­logy. Her last daughter, a 19-year-old, is about to enter UWI and is looking at computer technology.

In 1990, Persaud said, “My husband finished his internship and returned to Guyana to serve the government as part of his contract. He dragged me with him and I was called to the bar.” By then they had their first child who was a year old.

Persaud worked at Luckhoo and Luckhoo. She joined the Guyana Bar Associatio­n and served as Secretary under Ashton Chase, who was President. She also joined the Guyana Associatio­n of Women Lawyers (GAWL) and was part of the leaflet project that was subsequent­ly enhanced and published into a booklet called, ‘The Law and You’, funded by Futures Fund. “Josephine Whitehead, Roxane George, Rosemary Benjamin and I researched 31 areas of the law,” Persaud said. “Danuka Radzik did the artwork.”

Persaud took the idea from a radio programme called, The Law and You, which she had done in Jamaica.

Based on her experience and that of her husband, she believes that Jamaicans are more educated about their laws and legal jargon, and their own health and wellness than Guyanese.

On her return to Guyana, she shared her experience with the women lawyers, noting the need to educate the local population about their rights on the laws of the country. “We started a radio programme also called, The Law and You,” she recalled.

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