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Jul 28, 2018 News
A week after a New York Times story on the coming of oil and this country’s readiness, there is still anger at the publication.
The Private Sector Commission (PSC) yesterday disclosed that it has written the Publisher, Arthur Sulzberger, stressing that the articles contained some misrepresentations about Guyana.
“The article, written by Mr. Clifford Krauss, an energy business correspondent for your
newspaper based in Houston, Texas and headlined, ‘The $20 Billion Question for
Guyana’, grossly misrepresents three facts about Guyana,” PSC said.
Before identifying the misrepresentations, the PSC made it clear that it has an unyielding commitment to freedom of the press and to freedom of expression.
“It is also our firm belief that the press has the responsibility to report fairly, accurately and without bias. The PSC sees the New York Times as a beacon of professional journalism and it is against this backdrop that we are writing to you to express our concern about this rare diversion from your publication’s well- established tradition of unbiased reporting.”
The business advocacy body said that the article painted a picture of Guyana as a vast, watery wilderness with only three paved highways.
“There are a few dirt roads between villages that sit on stilts along rivers snaking through the rainforest. Children in remote areas go to school in dugout canoes, and play naked in the muggy
heat,” the opening paragraph of the article.
“The first misrepresentation is Mr. Krauss’ assertion that Guyana has only three paved highways. As we Guyanese would say, even if Stevie Wonder were to visit Guyana, he would see many more than three paved highways. We are baffled as to how the writer could have concluded that Guyana has only three paved highways.”
PSC also disagreed that “Hugging the coast are …clapboard towns like Georgetown, the capital, which seems forgotten by time, honeycombed with canals first built by Dutch settlers and African slaves.”
The Commissioner said that Krauss’ depiction of Georgetown as a clapboard city is another misrepresentation based on the definition of the word clapboard, which is taken from a variety of dictionaries.
“Indeed, Georgetown, and much of Guyana, boasts of wooden structures but the majority of these are certainly not clapboard structures. These structures for the most part are elegantly built utilizing the timber resources of Guyana, as represented most aptly by our historic St. George’s Cathedral, reputedly the tallest wooden building in the world.”
PSC argued that Krauss’ third misrepresentation is contained in the following paragraph:
‘The first chance was independence from Britain in 1966, and that chance was blown. A plague of ethnic tribal politics has produced a fragile state with an economy propelled by drug trafficking, money-laundering, and gold and diamond smuggling. A vast majority of college-educated youths emigrate to the United States or Canada, while those who stay behind experience high rates of H.I.V. infection, crime and suicide.”
While there is drug trafficking and gold and diamond smuggling in Guyana, it is a gross misrepresentation that the economy is propelled by these activities, PSC said in its letter of complaint.
“Our economy is propelled by the hard and smart work of thousands of Guyanese workers in a range of productive sectors such as agriculture, mining, manufacturing along with a robust private sector and strong public service.
“The most vexing, if not harmful, misrepresentation however is Mr. Krauss’ definitive statement that our college educated youths who opt to remain in Guyana experience high rates of HIV infection. On what basis, based on whose statistics, does he make such a statement?”
PSC insisted that responsible journalism requires that such a statement be backed by credible and verifiable statistics.
“This reckless assertion is an unfair indictment of the young people of Guyana and one which they do not deserve. Based on this single misrepresentation, we at the Private Sector Commission feel that the New York Times is obligated to remedy its potential negative impact.
PSC said that it must note that it is unfortunate that in exposing Guyana to his readership, Mr. Krauss did not see it fit and proper to mention that we are home to the internationally famous
Kaieteur, the highest single drop waterfall in the world, the St. George’s Cathedral to which we referred earlier in this letter and to the fact that rums produced in Guyana continue to win the top spot annually at international wine and spirits competitions. And these are just a few of the many positive facts that he could have highlighted.”
PSC said that it stands ready to engage with the New York Times and its Editorial Board to address the concerns raised.
The letter was copied to Prime Minister Moses Nagamootoo; Carl Greenidge- Minister of Foreign Affairs; Dr. Riyad Insanally – Ambassador of Guyana to the United States of America and Perry Holloway- Ambassador of the United States of America to Guyana.
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