Dear Editor:
Statements made by President Granger at the opening of the PNC office at Vreed-en-Hoop two weeks ago, clearly indicates his contempt of the provisions of the Constitution and the ruling of High Court Chief Justice, Roxane George. When the Head of State took the Oath of Office four years ago he swore to uphold the Constitution and the laws of the country.
In declaring ‘I was elected for five years’ and will not leave office until then is a clear violation of the Constitution.
The President has shot himself in the foot and such remarks embrace the attributes of his late political idol in his dictatorship reign. It is superfluous to add that Article 106 (7) of the Constitution clearly states that the elected government can be removed by a no confidence vote and that Elections must be held within 90 days. The President has accepted this, in his swearing in, and now his legal squadron is challenging the validity of the Article to determine whether or not 33 votes are required for a no-confidence to pass. This cross current is nothing new to Guyana’s political climate where arrogance and power flaunting from both major Parties have become quite normal.
At the meeting, President Granger declared, ‘…You will see the transformation, the change in every community, the change in every region, the change in every village…’ This is reminiscent of the late Forbes Burnham’s program of “Feed, Clothe and House the Nation by 1976.”
Years after the colossal failure of this apparition and other policies of the Burnham’s regime, this generation of leaders from both parties have also had several failed policies that have cost the nation hundreds of millions of dollars. The construction of D’Urban Park Stadium, the renovation of Cheddi Jagan Airport, the Drug Bond scandal, the Amaila Falls Hydro Project, the white elephant Skeldon sugar factory, Enmore Packaging Plant and the shady arrangements for the Marriot Hotel, the Berbice Bridge and the 14 irrigation pumps from India, some of which did not arrive but were paid for.
And if these scandals/failures were not enough, consider this: President Granger told the crowd that he has not dissolved Parliament yet. ‘Irfaan Ali and Bharat Jagdeo cannot make me leave office because I was elected for 5 years…’ And the crowd cheered in the same bizarre manner to what was recited in 1976 by the late Forbes Burnham to a large gathering at the National Park. (Sugar workers were fighting for their regular bonuses at Christmas). “Why because of some white boy born 2000 years ago, we have to pay Christmas bonus to a certain type of people? Do you think these sugar workers- these former Bookers people, should get any Christmas bonus?” And while the crowd chanted NO, NO… many did not realize a simple fact: That they would not receive any Christmas bonus either. In regards to respecting the Constitution, moving the country forward and accounting for state monies, successive governments have failed the accountability test. Not much has changed in Guyana by the two main parties over the last 50 years. As the saying goes, the more things change the more they remain the same.
Leyland Chitlall Roopnaraine, New York |
Dear Editor:
Several weeks ago, I asked where is the $30B the government, through SPU/NICIL, took on behalf of GUYSUCO? To this day, no one in Government is providing answers to the people. Now I am asking again, where is the US$18M EXXON bonus money? These enormous sums of money, amounts that exceed the total amount paid to the entire public service as salaries and benefits for an entire year, have become State Secrets. People ask these questions not because they are prying into other people’s business, but because it is their right to want to know about their assets. While people are still waiting to hear an answer for the $30B GUYSUCO loan, they also want answers for the US$18M EXXON money.
Why is APNU+AFC so secretive about the EXXON US$18M? Where is the money? How has it been spent, if any has been spent? The stewardship of the US$18M EXXON money has been illegal from the start and is in total violations of all the relevant laws of Guyana. As the Leader of the Opposition, Bharat Jagdeo, reminded people, the money was not accounted for in the 2017, 2018 and the 2019 Budgets, as required by law. Political malfeasance is a horrendous indiscretion by any government, but the unaccountability and non-transparency with which the US$18M EXXON money has been handled is totally illegal; breaching all the laws of Guyana. SARA and SOCU have become complicit in the breaches because neither of them see it fit and proper to be even a little inquisitive.
APNU+AFC kept the EXXON contract a secret for almost two years. They received US$18M from EXXON and hid it in a secret account at the Bank of Guyana. Later, the Minister of Finance claimed the money was in a secret account in a secret foreign bank. As the Opposition and civic society demanded answers and demanded transparency, Raphael Trotman dug in and claimed the contract had to be kept secret because of national security. When the secret bank account with the US$18M was exposed, Trotman led the denial and even had the President denied, even when the truth was staring every Guyanese citizen. It turned out to be a secret in plain sight. The contract was then released, as APNU+AFC succumbed to the intense political and civic pressure. We have now known the details of the contract for almost two years; we know there was an EXXON payment of US$18M since 2016. We do not know where the money is and if any has been used.
Trotman now admits hiding the contract and the payment was wrong. Now that the successful No-Confidence Motion of Parliament has forced APNU+AFC to act, Ministers who for almost four years, since May 2015, were too busy to visit and discourse with the people, have found time to do so.
They are suddenly regretting many things that they know were corruption, mismanagement and incompetence, not because of any genuine epiphany, but in a continued effort to fool people. Trotman still insist they were correct because of national security reasons. Yet for almost two years now, since they were forced to release the contract and concede that they received the money, he cannot show us what national security was compromised.
More importantly, he still refuses to tell the nation about the location of the US$18M. The Guyanese people want to know. The parliament demanded answers. People have gone to court for answers. Mr. Jordan, Mr. Trotman, Mr. Greenidge come clean and account for the $US18M. President Granger, you have a duty to let the Guyanese people know what happened to the $US18 EXXON money. The nation does not need admission and regrets; the nation wants a simple, plain answer.
Dr. Leslie Ramsammy via email
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