Latest update April 19th, 2024 12:59 AM
Dec 07, 2011 Letters
Dear Editor,
The Private Sector Commission, in its negative attitude to shared governance, seems to be in a profound alliance with the PPP/C.
At its post election press conference on Friday December 2, last, the Private Sector Commission (PSC) Chairman Ramesh Dookhoo stated that he was not in favour of power sharing/shared governance in Guyana. Given that such a form of government is presumably a product of negotiation, rather than an imposition, the PSC’s categorically stated position is rather strange in the current plural society of Guyana in which any uplifting benefits from cooperation are overwhelmed by the downside of fierce political competition, divisiveness and partisanship.
The result is tension, instability, lack of cohesion and a failure to realize the country’s full potential, with adverse effects on the fortunes of the very private sector and development in general.
The PSC remark is all the more unfortunate because it reflects the position of only one of the three parties that will be in the new Parliament and that Party (PPP/C) now represents a minority of voters. The other two parties have called for a Government of National Unity, which represents the highest form of shared governance.
Note, also, that certain elements of the private sector are said to have been behind the constitutionally illegal campaign for a Jagdeo third term and are said to benefit from a high level of cronyism in the form of tax waivers, land and other concessions and single source contracts. These constitute significant Government revenue foregone and contributing to the widespread perverting of the integrity of the State.
Moreover, kickbacks probably constituted a major source of the estimated $250 million that the PPP/C is reported to have spent in its recent election campaign.
In addition, the private sector is not entirely clean, since drugs have been found in almost every commodity exported from Guyana and a number of so-called businessmen have been fingered (including Roger Khan) without any denunciation heard from that organization.
It should also not be forgotten that the names of several of the members of the PSC have been inextricably linked with Roger Khan and his nefarious activities in Guyana by the evidence which featured in Khan’s trial in New York.
Very perplexing is the sudden waking up of the PSC, a few days before voting on November 28, to vociferously call for a peaceful election and for the media to be responsible in their coverage, although the organization remained silent over the last few months while the PPP/C denied the opposition access to the state-owned media (TV, radio and the Chronicle newspaper) and waged a war of words using such terms as “vultures and vampires”.
A fair electoral process would certainly have reduced the anger and tension that the private sector feared may lead to violence on polling day or immediately after. The PSC has now confirmed its alliance with the PPP/C. It is therefore very understandable why it cannot be more objective and evenhanded in its judgment
Finally, shared governance is an imperative in the Guyana situation with its all powerful Emperor-style presidency. (Ultimately, the constitution has to be radically changed). While the combined opposition have managed to wrest control of the legislature from those practising one-Party rule and winner-take-all politics, it will find great difficulty in containing the Ramotar Government. The struggle for shared governance (for the benefit of ALL Guyanese) continues.
Desmond Trotman
Please share this to every Guyanese including your house cats.
Apr 19, 2024
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