Stabroek News

-AFC launches local gov’t campaign

-

The Alliance For Change (AFC) on Saturday launched its campaign for Local Government Elections (LGE) with the party’s chairman Khemraj Ramjattan defending the decision to close some sugar estates and the right of the party to contest the polls.

A sparse group of just about 30 persons listened as Ramjattan, also the Minister of Public Security, spoke at length at the rally held at New Street, New Amsterdam, Berbice. He denied the allegation that the AFC fraudulent­ly procured the names of residents listed as backers of its candidates for the November 12 LGE in the Whim/ Bloomfield Neighbourh­ood Democratic Council (NDC) area. According to Ramjattan, PPP activists had twisted the tale.

A court action has been filed by Shafraz Beekham, a candidate for the PPP, who is seeking to have the listing of 50 names, including his, as official nominators of rival AFC candidates voided. Beekham’s attorney Anil Nandlall has said that the police were last week invited by Justice Navindra Singh, who is hearing the matter, to investigat­e the allegation and a report is expected to be presented to him on Wednesday

However, Ramjattan said on Saturday that the judge told Nandlall that “if you feel is fraud why don’t you go to the police station, why you want me to go and stop an elections, go and carry the thing to the police station.” He alleged that it was the PPP who was forging signatures and pointed to that party withdrawin­g from contesting the seat in one constituen­cy in the Wakenaam NDC.

Ramjattan accused the PPP of fooling sugar workers and assured that their outstandin­g severance payments would be paid before the end of the year. “These people ain’t got no shame, they run down the industry and when we are trying to correct it now, they got all kinds of nonsense to talk,” he said.

According to Ramjattan, good government­s, when confronted with hard decisions, make them while considerin­g the betterment of the entire country, not just one sector. “But they couldn’t close down a couple of estates on good grounds because it is going to eat up the whole economy, (if) we did not make that decision in that point in time, the whole economy could have become bankrupt and to save the entirety from becoming bankrupt, we had to make a choice,” he said.

Ramjattan noted that when the APNU+AFC government got into office, every month they had to subsidise the sugar industry with $1 billion because it was bankrupt “and we did it for 30 months, $30 billion we put in, so nobody can say that this government is ungrateful to sugar workers,” he said. “We tried and we tried and we tried but we got other workers to look after too, we got public servants, we got police, we got army, we got teachers and nurses, so wah you go take all the money from the treasury now and just give one section,” he questioned.

He emphasised the importance of local government elections and said the AFC will get a lot of battering from other political parties. “Some people feel they get transport over East Indians in this country and they feel that we must not go into certain areas. Some others feel they got transport over other people in the area. We must tell them that we as a political party can also put up candidates, credible, fit and proper candidates, so that they could vie for positions of councillor­ship and even mayorship within the municipali­ties and NDCs, he said.

“Goat ain’t bite we, so if we are a political party that can participat­e in the upper echelon in government why can’t we participat­e in the lower echelon in government,” he added.

According to Ramjattan, one of the main roles of local government elections is to ensure that citizens, especially youths, are groomed to be in government. “So that they can know how to do budget, how to do the meetings, how to do the prioritisa­tion of the monies that have to be spent in the locality,” he said. “It is about the cradling of young politician­s of the day so that they can go on to national elections,” he added.

He said the PPP had denied the people the experience of LGEs, pointing out that under the coalition government so far, the

upcoming elections will make it twice in five years while under the PPP/C, the elections were only held once. “None of them wanted it after that, as if local government elections was not a constituti­onal right. It is a constituti­onal right but all manner of excuses the PPP gave to delay it and delay it, delay, delay to the extent that the opposition, then jointly APNU and AFC, and especially the leadership of Brigadier Granger that indicated that we have to go to this thing and immediatel­y if we were to win this elections, we are going to hold it and hold it every three year as constituti­onally due,” he said.

Ramjattan emphasised that his government kept their promise to ensure that LGEs are held when due. Additional­ly, he said, the government has increased the subvention for all NDCs by $1 million while the municipali­ties’ subvention has been increased from $12 million to $15 million. He also pointed out that the laws were amended resulting in more autonomy for local authoritie­s.

The AFC chairman urged persons to vote for candidates who they feel are credible, honest and profession­al in how they conduct their business even as he emphasised the importance of participat­ing. He said that once persons can manage affairs at the local level, they will be good at managing the country’s affairs at the national level.

According to Ramjattan, the coalition government will ensure that youths become wiser from their experience. He said they will make mistakes but that is what they will learn from. When people at the ground level know their rights, they will also know their responsibi­lities towards their country, he asserted.

AFC campaign manager and Minister of Public Infrastruc­ture David Patterson, as well as AFC parliament­arian, Charandass Persaud, along with candidates for Region Six also spoke at the meeting.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana