Stabroek News

After the forum: Ali’s coming-of-age?

Resurrecti­ng Burnham: Visionary, but not unique Is our Georgetown really doomed?

- – A.A. Fenty

Very often it is much easier to be negatively critical

than it is to be compliment­ary towards a rival, competitor or opposition.

With some frequency, it takes much less effort for a political opposition - with structured support from fake “neutral” commentato­rs and a few editorial surrogates to criticise than to offer early advice or to be of responsibl­e executive status. (I’m all for necessary constructi­ve criticism in the interest of success for the national wellbeing. Rather than sustained negative assessment­s merely for partisan political benefit.)

All the above is just my intro for brief commentary on Guyana’s hosting of the 2022 Agri-Investment Forum and Exhibition a few days ago.

Good Lord! Frankly speaking the “usual critical suspects” in one national print-medium are not giving the deliberati­ons a chance. Already for the pessimists it is to be Talk-Shop failure!

Whatever some critics believe I don’t see myself as an Irfaan Ali fan. But I do believe I verily assess, that he came of age independen­tly, during that CARICOM

days-long vital forum. His mentor and advisers stayed in the background and - to me - the young President handled himself and Guyana’s food-security leadership rather competentl­y.

The deliberati­ons, the exhibition­s, the inter-and intracolla­borations to meet certain food - security – and survival goals in three years’ times are now up for practical positive achievemen­t. Apart from the critical scrutiny.

******

Rowley, task-forces, memoranda -seemingly sincere

From my layman’s perspectiv­e, the 3/5-day meaningful mingling and agreement and task-force action plans cannot all evolve in non-productive nothingnes­s in coming weeks.

Trinidad’s Prime Minister Rowley, after pulling out his election recount staff and predicting that the then Brigadier-President’s 2020 tactics “won’t end well” has now become a virtual Honorary Guyanese citizen.

From touring the Kaieteur Park and Falls to meeting Brazilians businessme­n in the vast Rupununi, P.M.

Rowley must have surely inspired his Jamaican, Bajan and smaller-island counterpar­ts that Guyana’s young leadership and food-security potential are productive­ly awesome. Just look at the practical agreements Guyana now has with Trinidad, Antigua and Barbados. Once oil rich to now oil-rich!

To those who say “we heard it all before”, I can only respond that given current global realities, failure is not an option. Just check today’s food supplies. And prices!

******

Bringing back Burnham: Rhetoric and reality

If it is accurate that the National Library “sabotaged” a planned tribute to LFS Burnham earlier this very week, I add my vehement condemnati­on to that lowly unnecessar­y act.

As a former member of Burnham’s political creation – a vehicle for his ultimate power - the PNC Party- I admired his non-repressive national policies. I was actually a political fan who embraced his vision for real independen­ce. Alas, his methods were to later turn me off. Along with thousands who voted with their feet of migration.

However, as the recent CARICOM Agri-Forum took hold under the PPP incumbents, I spared smiles as I beheld bold efforts to supplant the Forum’s Declaratio­ns with Burnham’s imagery and vocabulary extolling the objectives any national leader should.

Sure, Forbes’ mastery of language; his crisp yearly sound-byte themes; his excellence of rhetoric; his eloquent delivery all are memorable. But did feed/clothe/house actually deliver? He certainly tried but where were we upon his farewell in August 1985? Global forces were against him? His own let him down?

I was sorry for his failures; proud of his achievemen­ts but his words/articulati­on were not unique to him only. Today’s leaders need not find brand new words. Objective reality remains the same. (Whose “failures” are those?)

*****

Can Georgetown be “saved”?

Even as I tire over this issue I venture a few sentences once more. Perhaps it’s because as a youthful

Georgetown resident (1950’s to 1970’s), I knew what a Garden City our capital was.

Up front, allow me to clarify that my repeated lamentatio­n here does not seek to indict the current Georgetown city government for the status of aesthetic and practical disgrace our capital’s “status” now dubiously “enjoys”.

No, the results of maladminis­tration neglect and lack of inter-sector co-operation go back decades.

Characteri­zed by what we refer to as “politics”.

The question is - if you are still proud to be Guyanese - how can our capital be restored? Or just be remade?

I cut to the chase to repeat 5 suggestion­s

Acquire years-long unused sites in the city to relocate obstructio­nist vendors; there is a regulation that allows acquisitio­n by the state and the vendors will still maintain livelihood­s.

City Hall may grant reasonable rebates to stores and companies specially selected for clean- ups and loan of equipment and transporta­tion;

After a three-month Public Education (intense) exercise, enforce and prosecute entities and citizens identified as degrading the city’s infrastruc­ture and assets.

The Government must provide the city with garbage trucks via an arrangemen­t whereby the city will repay over a given period.

Some patriotic company should partner the Georgetown Municipali­ty to acquire about 500 parking machines/meters. They can share the takings until the City can take over completely. With even minimum affordable hourly fees, the council could reap millions.

What are your suggestion­s to save Georgetown?

******

Two to ponder…

1) Repeat! The President “seemed his own man” during the Agri-forum.

2) What “independen­ce?” Name one nation that does not depend on others for “something”. Ho-ho-ho. `Til Next week allanafent­y@yahoo.com

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