Stabroek News Sunday

IDPADA-G calls upon the Gov’t to demonstrat­e its commitment to UN Resolution of 2013

- Dear Editor,

For the last few months, IDPADA-G and things African Guyanese have been in the headlines. Unfortunat­ely, not apparent in most of this is a real articulati­on about, and understand­ing of, the lived experience of African Guyanese. In instances, where attempts have been made to address those realities, they have been greeted by the denial of antagonist­s. Some of those antagonist­s are kin but not kith and others neither kith nor kin.

In this circumstan­ce, it would be remiss of me, as the Chairperso­n of IDPADA-G, not to share my perspectiv­e and shed light on the state of African Guyanese and the location of IDPADA-G on that landscape.

The world community, to wit the United Nations` (UN) fora, over a period of time and after much discussion and critical analysis has concluded that the state of the people of African descent, world-wide, requires a period of attention, hence the declaratio­n of the Internatio­nal Decade for the Peoples` of African Descent, 2015-2024, and action aimed at addressing the issues of Recognitio­n, Justice and Developmen­t for the people of African descent. This globally agreed effort is in itself an acknowledg­ment of the fact that the people of African descent have been dealt with unjustly, have not been duly recognized, or allowed equal opportunit­ies for developmen­t. That is to say that we have been the victims of disrespect, unfair treatment and not acknowledg­ed for our current contributi­ons nor that of our ancestors to human developmen­t. We are also not treated fairly, based on the view that we are not equal to others or entitled like others. Consequent­ially, we were and continue to be deprived of the means and resources required for our spiritual and material growth.

The plantation, colonial and neo-colonial states epitomize all of the above, generally, since they were built, and operated, on the premise of inequality, subjugatio­n and exploitati­on. For the realizatio­n of that form of society and to maintain the plantation, colonial and neocolonia­l status quo, institutio­nal arrangemen­ts as the basis of interperso­nal and inter-community relations and a complement­ary psycho-social outlook were articulate­d and enforced.

The aforementi­oned, generally characteri­zed what befell both our Ancestors, who were enslaved, and those of us who live in the post-slavery, colonial and neocolonia­l state.

Given that my first objective is to examine the lived experience of Guyanese of African descent, the question which arises is whether the construct outlined above characteri­zes the present state of African Guyanese?

It is undoubtedl­y true that enslavemen­t of Africans in Guyana and subsequent generation­s (people of African descent) was done in a manner reflective of the aforementi­oned construct. The institutio­nalized economic relations reduced the Africans to the status of property and all of the inferiorit­y associated with Master and Slave relations. The imposed belief system ingrained an inferiorit­y complex, and the social relations were premised on the inferiorit­y of the enslaved.

The institutio­ns of the state maintained the status quo through coercion and force and all of the tangible institutio­nal arrangemen­ts, such as those providing economic and social services and the intangible ones, such as spirituali­ty, all, either reflected and or enforced the fundamenta­lly exploitati­ve relations.

What happened after the abolition of enslavemen­t was that the form of things changed but the more things changed, the more they remained the same. Exploitati­on merely continued in different forms. Things may have changed quantitati­vely but remained the same qualitativ­ely. Labour was still exploited in the interest of the planter class. Education was skewed to prepare the ex-enslaved for jobs at the lower levels and only where the system needed their services at higher levels were they allowed. Financial institutio­ns were not at their disposal, especially for the granting of seed money for entreprene­urial activities. Their indigenous religious and other practices were outlawed. The justice system defined much of their behaviour as deviant; targeted it and protected the upper class. Negatives stereotype­s, and prejudices were peddled about them in such a manner as to stigmatize them. Services were denied, such as proper irrigation for their agricultur­al undertakin­gs. Burdensome taxes were imposed on them. The oppressive, exploitati­ve and degrading measures against them were endless. The impact was economic and social degradatio­n and subservien­ce.

With the attainment of independen­ce, some of the obstacles were removed, others remained in place, while equal opportunit­ies were introduced in some spheres and equitable policies in others. However, the stark reality is that equality of opportunit­ies could be quite inequitabl­e if the competing forces are not starting from the same base and even in instances where the material base is equalized, the induced psycho-social state may still pose difficulti­es as far as actually equalizing the base is concerned. It is in this context that the Internatio­nal Decade for the People of African Descent was envisaged and declared.

The situation in Guyana today is even starker and begs for redress. While historical wrongs have to be righted, the multiethni­c nature of the society and the uneven competitio­n that was fostered, even as the African Guyanese faced the realities of post enslavemen­t, created a basket case of the African Guyanese. The presence of race politics and ethnic dominance and a lack of empathy for the state of Guyanese of African descent have exacerbate­d their plight and calls for special attention. Much of what confronts Guyanese of African descent is as a consequenc­e of deliberate acts of the state, both pre and post independen­ce. The successor state therefore has a responsibl­e to treat with the Guyanese of African descent in a manner, in principle, similar to the attention being given to the Indigenous tribes. Platitudes of equal opportunit­y and one Guyana cannot work. We are better described as Different Peoples, One State, One Destiny. That one destiny can only be realized if each people at their level of separatene­ss and peculiar circumstan­ce is given the necessary and requisite treatment.

IDAPADA-G came into existence as a protagonis­t rather than an antagonist. It establishe­d a programme of work aimed at empowering the African Guyanese, hence it embarked upon efforts to resource African Guyanese by providing them with skills and knowledge that would equip them to create pathways to opportunit­ies and developmen­t. Mega empowermen­t conference­s across the country, skills training, youth entreprene­urial developmen­t, promotion of entreprene­urial activities, cultural engagement­s and organizati­onal developmen­t are some of the areas addressed by IDPADA-G’s work programme, 2018 to present. None of these were antagonist­ic, in their orientatio­n. IDPADA-G, in recognitio­n of the fact that in the absence of policy shifts and institutio­nal realignmen­t in areas like the ones identified above, also embarked on an advocacy and communicat­ion progamme and in that regard reached out to Government in relation to the teaching of Guyanese History in our school system; the decriminal­ization of ganja; and the reintroduc­tion of village councils, in the local government system. All of these initiative­s received lukewarm responses across the political regimes and may have ruffled the feathers of some of the current regime, who commenced a campaign of besmirchin­g the name of the organizati­on and its leaders by insinuatin­g, in public fora, that the subvention that was being provided was being misused, skimmed off, and that the community was none the better off for all that was intended to be of benefit to it. This seemed liked the emergence of an antagonist, intent on bringing the efforts of the organizati­on to its knees even as the President paid tribute to the people of African descent on occasions such as the Emancipati­on celebratio­ns. However, paying tribute does not necessaril­y mean an understand­ing of the current plight and a commitment to its resolution.

In its protagonis­t mode, IDPADA-G sought audience with the President; and received commitment­s, which have never been honoured, while agents of his Government have terminated the subvention without notice or explanatio­n. The non-attendance by the Government of Guyana at the 1st Forum of the Permanent Forum on People of African Descent, recently convened in Geneva, may will be indicative of the Government`s true dispositio­n to the protagonis­m of IDPADA-G and ultimately the African Guyanese community.

IDPADA-G is committed to a protagonis­t mode of operation, in pursuit of the goals of the Decade: Recognitio­n, Justice and Developmen­t and calls upon the Government to demonstrat­e its commitment to the UN Resolution of 2013, which it supported, and to treat transparen­tly with IDPADA-G, which has brought together 65 African Guyanese organizati­ons; crafted a programme of action, based on community consultati­ons; conducts its affairs in keeping with the principles of Good Governance and corporate responsibi­lity; and been accountabl­e to its stakeholde­rs, including the Government for the conduct of its affairs.

While experience­s of individual African Guyanese are acknowledg­ed and respected, none of those should be supplanted as the experience of the community of African Guyanese. The world at large has recognized the dilemma of the Peoples of African Descent. The case of African Guyanese, generally, is irrefutabl­e and must be addressed by the state which has inherited, and in many instances perpetuate­d, the situation, even as the African Guyanese community seeks to overcome the challenges, which are mainly grounded in imposition­s and systemic constructs.

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