Stabroek News

Coupling African and Amerindian land issues

- National Toshaos Council claimed that as ‘a body comprising all Toshaos of Guyana and a representa­tive body of the indigenous peoples of Guyana, having never been consulted in the formation of such a body, [it] cannot, with any degree of sanity nor confid

Given its historical developmen­t and situationa­l context, outside of pure formalism (an emphasis on form rather than content), to which this regime appears particular­ly prone, there are no good logical, historical, political, economic, social or other reasons why it should have decided to couple the generally settled Amerindian land issue to the yet to be consensual­ly formulated African demand for ancestral land. Mind you, as we have seen from the surprising payment of hefty salary increases to itself in its first days in office, through its handling of the issues having to do with the sugar workers, public servants, etc, to the present fiascos over VAT and parking meters, this regime has not been immune from regularly making substantia­l political blunders, and I am afraid that its decision to link the above issues is certainly one for which it is likely to pay a political price for some considerab­le time.

The independen­ce agreement that preceded Guyana’s political break from the British crown required that `the ownership of lands, rights of occupancy and other legal rights held by custom or tradition be legally recognized without distinctio­n or disability’ and the 1967/69 Amerindian Lands Commission was establishe­d to make this a reality. That commission, which included foreigners to help the extant PNC/United Force government enhance its neutrality, travelled widely in Guyana and held discussion­s with most of the indigenous communitie­s and leaders. It recommende­d that ‘128 indigenous communitie­s receive title to 24,000 square miles’ at the time the first peoples were demanding 43,000 square miles or one half of Guyana (‘Our Land, Our Life, Our Culture: The Indigenous Movement In Guyana:’ Cultural Survival Quarterly Magazine, December 1999).

The 1976 Amerindian Act designated 77 areas comprising about 16% of Guyana as Amerindian land (in passing, perhaps because of his Amerindian heritage and/or being far ahead of his time in trying to develop an holistic national culture, Forbes Burnham instituted and left us significan­t national indigenous imageries: the Golden Arrow Head, Mashramani, the Cacique Crown, Timehri district/airport, etc (SN: 11/09/2009)). Notwithsta­nding the noise the PPP/C now makes in support of the indigenous land issue, up to 1999, only 6,000 square miles had been titled, all under the PNC regime, and the indigenous people were complainin­g that the PPP/C ‘government is going to great lengths to ensure that additional areas are not recognized. More than 50 communitie­s remain without any legal guarantees for their lands’ (Ibid).

However, whatever its initial inclinatio­ns were towards the indigenous land issue, once it became clear that its dependence on the Indian population to keep it in office was tenuous, the PPP/C vigorously set about trying to win first peoples’ support. The Amerindian Act of 2006, with its clear commitment­s to indigenous land demarcatio­n, was an important part of that strategy, and between 2001 and 2015 the party made significan­t headway, increasing its support in the hinterland regions of 1, 7, 8 and 9 by nearly 55%.

With this as a backdrop, in August 2016, during one of his public interest programmes, President David Granger is reported to have promised to create by December 2016 a ‘form of the Indigenous Peoples’ Lands Commission which was first establishe­d in 1966’ (SN: 04/09/2016). The country now knows what that ‘form’ is and it would be no exaggerati­on to say that the main indigenous peoples’ stakeholde­rs are understand­ably up in arms against it. The ‘Commission of Inquiry’ is ‘to examine and make recommenda­tions to resolve issues and uncertaint­ies surroundin­g the claims of Amerindian Land titling, the individual, joint or communal ownership of lands acquired by freed Africans and any other matter relative to land titling in Guyana.’

After their historical struggle and achievemen­ts, it is hardly surprising that that the president’s proposal has sent shivers down the spine of the first peoples and their leadership. Perhaps the establishm­ent of a COI is merely reflective of the formal military response to these types of situation, but the indigenous peoples must have thought that their issue had gone long past inquiry and should be firmly in the implementa­tion stage!

To make matters worse, in spite of the fact that in his August statement the president indicated that at least he formally understood that, ‘Land is life for the Indigenous People’ and that the demarcatio­n process ‘is not something that can be embarked on unilateral­ly.’ The ink was not yet dry on his pronouncem­ent when the

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