Stabroek News

Outgoing head of Guyana’s Geneva mission voices concern over unconclude­d elections

-voices concern over unconclude­d elections here

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With his tour of duty having come to an end, Guyana’s Ambassador to the United Nations in Geneva since 2016 has resigned as chair of a key World Trade Organisati­on Committee (WTO) and in a comment to Stabroek News has voiced concern over the unconclude­d elections process here.

Ambassador John Deep Ford on Monday informed the Director General of the WTO that in light of his exit, he would be giving up the chairmansh­ip of the WTO Committee on Agricultur­al Negotiatio­ns.

The Ambassador also said in a statement that he is prepared to continue to work for Guyana in contributi­ng to “advancing the food security and agricultur­e developmen­t of Guyana and the Caribbean. Given the electoral challenges facing my own country right now, I also wish to explore opportunit­ies to contribute to improved governance and national healing”.

In relation to the unconclude­d elections, he told Stabroek News “I join the consensus of Guyanese that are disappoint­ed with the instabilit­y of our political situation and those who yearn for the electoral results process to be concluded and for Guyana to get back on a path of developmen­t that serves all Guyanese”.

An announceme­nt on the WTO’s website said that Ford made the announceme­nt of his resignatio­n during a virtual meeting of the Committee on Agricultur­e in Special Session, and indicated that his term as Chair will come to an end on June 30. Ford chaired the Committee on Agricultur­al Negotiatio­ns for the last two years and was the first Ambassador from Latin America and the Caribbean to hold the position.

Ford said Guyana’s commitment was always to Chair the Agricultur­e Negotiatio­ns up to the 12th WTO Ministeria­l Conference in Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan in June 2020. However, that has been now postponed for at least one year and since his tour of duty was coming to an end and it was important for the next Chair to establish a new mode of working, taking into considerat­ion the impacts of COVID-19 and the extended time period for negotiatio­ns, he felt this was a good time to step down.

Speaking directly on the electoral situation in Guyana, Ford reiterated that there is almost a consensus of disappoint­ment that the March 2nd elections have not yet been completed. He said that despite COVID-19, the uncertaint­y of not concluding the elections and the ambiguity of the political environmen­t in which everyone has been operating detract from Guyana’s sense of stability and do not encourage investment and dampen dreams of prosperity.

“Guyanese, at home and abroad, are longing for an urgent and credible conclusion to the electoral impasse so that the economic, social and, importantl­y, the political developmen­t of the country can fully resume,” the Ambassador said.

In his remarks the Ambassador also commended former Vice-President Carl Greenidge for having the vision to open a mission in Geneva, Switzerlan­d, which enables Guyana to be actively represente­d at the World Health Organizati­on, the Internatio­nal Labor Organizati­on, the Internatio­nal Telecommun­ications Union, the United Nations Human Rights Council, the World Intellectu­al Property Organizati­on, the World Trade Organizati­on, the Internatio­nal Trade Centre, and many others, all of which have their headquarte­rs in Geneva.

During his tenure in Geneva, Ford represente­d Guyana to the government­s of Finland, Italy and Switzerlan­d.

For most of his working life Ford has been a public servant, either employed in Guyana by the Livestock Developmen­t Company (LIDCO), the University of Guyana, and Inter-American Institute for Cooperatio­n on Agricultur­e (IICA) or internatio­nally at the Commonweal­th Secretaria­t and the United Nations Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on. He considered his recent stint with the Government of Guyana as a continuati­on of that service.

The WTO’s committee which the Ambassador chaired consults on the rules governing global trade in agricultur­al products and is critical to enabling developmen­t of a country’s agricultur­al sector and ensuring its food security.

Prior to serving as the Chair of the Agricultur­e Negotiatio­ns, Ford served as the Chair of the Africa, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) Group in Geneva and coordinate­d the shared trade positions of the group at the WTO Buenos Aires Ministeria­l in December 2017.

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John Deep Ford

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