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FM
Former Member

PPP, Afro-Guyanese groups slam each other over “Indian” vs “Afro” GECOM Chairman

 

Retired Justice James Patterson taking the oath of office before President David Granger as the new Chairman of the Guyana Elections Commission.

Several African Guyanese organisations on Friday lashed out at the East Indian-dominated People’s Progressive Party for submitting 18 mostly East Indian nominees for the post of Guyana Elections Commission in a bid to force President David Granger to select one of them.

“The recent Constitutional appointment by His Excellency David Arthur Granger has publicly revealed what Africans in Guyana and the Caribbean all know, Indians do not want to be ruled by an African Leader because they believe they are superior to Africans,” the African Cultural and Development Association, Pan African Group (Guyana) Branch, The All African Guyanese Association and Concerned Citizens in the Diaspora said in a joint statement.

Those Afro-centric organisations endorsed President Granger for courageously responding to Jagdeo’s strategy by following Guyana’s Constitution and exercising his constitutional Presidential prerogative.

He has shown leadership in bringing closure to a PPP designed agenda to frustrate the appointment of a Chairperson for GEOCOM.  He has signaled his intention to get on with the serious business of government.  He has sent a clear message to international observers and investors that Guyana’s development and progress will not be impeded by the racist political and economic agenda of Jagdeo’s disgraceful PPP.

Reacting to the joint statement issued through the African Business Roundtable, the PPP reminded that both Afro-Guyanese and Indo-Guyanese have been nominated by the Opposition Leader and leader of the Afro-Guyanese-based People’s National Congress Reform (PNCR). “While, government apologists attempt to make the issue of race, facts are forgotten, including that the Indo-Guyanese appointed as GECOM Chairpersons in the past were persons nominated by then President Desmond Hoyte. Another fact forgotten is that Mr. Rudy Collins, an Afro-Guyanese, who was appointed by Hoyte, was nominated by Dr Cheddi Jagan,” said the PPP which was in power from 1992 to 2015.

In addition to stating that President Granger’s decision to unilaterally appoint Retired Justice James Patterson as GECOM Chairman represents a departure from, not only the Carter formula, but from a process that has been adhered to for 25 years, the PPP said the 18 names had included several fit and proper Afro-Guyanese.

“The fact that there were qualified and competent Afro-Guyanese nominated by Opposition Leader, Bharrat Jagdeo, seems to have also been forgotten. In an effort to divert attention from a breach of the Constitution to a race issue, the government and its apologists have, themselves, exposed their intentions to the Guyanese people – in that, the issue is not about having an Afro-Guyanese being the new GECOM Chairman, but about having a GECOM Chairman that is both Afro-Guyanese and pro-PNC,” the PPP said in its statement.

The PPP has already filed High Court proceedings to quash James’ appointment because he was not picked from among the 18 nominees and that he appears to be closely linked to the PNCR, the largest partner in the governing coalition.

The People’s Progressive Party (PPP) Headquaters- Freedom House.

For its part, the  the African Cultural and Development Association, Pan African Group (Guyana) Branch, The All African Guyanese Association and Concerned Citizens in the Diaspora lampooned Jagdeo for engaging in an Indian insult of democracy, the spirit of the Constitution, Guyana and the Presidency when he on December 21, 2016, the names o  Rhyaan Shah, Christopher Ram, Ramesh Dookhoo, Major-General (retired) Norman Mc Lean, Lawrence Lachmansingh and Professor Dr. James Rose.

The groupings noted that Retired Major General Norman Mc Lean would be 82 years old next month, Shah is a well-known partisan Indian supremacist “and most of the others had long and deep political”and other relationships with the PPP.”

The PPP, however, condemned what it termed the “scurrilous attacks on the integrity of 18 professionals whose names were submitted as the Opposition Leader’s nominees for the post of GECOM Chairman while pushing a race agenda. “The party also condemns the attempts by government and their apologists to divert attention from the core issue – the unilateral, illegal and unconstitutional appointment of a GECOM Chairman by President David Granger – to discussions on race.”

Politcal Science Professor, David Hinds has said that race and the need to find someone in whom there is political confidence appeared to be major considerations behind Granger’s pick of James.

Those pro-Afro Guyanese organisations  accused the the Private Sector Commission and its highly questionable network of business and civil affiliates of knowing and supporting by their silence the behavior of Bharrat Jagdeo who ruled Guyana unconstitutionally for 12 years. Others similarly criticised are the Guyana Human Rights Association (GRHA)  “which has never championed land rights or equal rights for African Guyanese,” lawyers, accountants and so-called business persons.

The Private Sector Commission (PSC).

“These now “recently converted and born again moral agents” said nothing when Jagdeo conspired with a convicted Indian drug lord Roger Khan to kill over 400 Africans,” the organisations said. “This was not the end of democracy in their eyes. This genocide and extra-constitutional killings were normal in their version of a democracy or ethnic state.”

The PSC, GHRA, lawyers, accountants and businesspersons, the organisations charged, never said anything when Jagdeo allegedly unilaterally transferred hundreds of thousands of hectares of land to Indians in Guyana and from India and gave away lucrative licences, contracts and other state patrimony to Indians.

“They hid their faces and remained silent when the UN investigators in 2009 announced the PPP marginalized Africans in Guyana economically, culturally, politically and socially. Their silence was conspicuously loud when Donald Ramotar prorogued parliament in 2015.  In fact, they continue to be silent in the face of irrefutable and compelling evidence that Jagdeo is “not fit and proper” person to be in Parliament.

The African Cultural and Development Association, Pan African Group (Guyana) Branch, The All African Guyanese Association and Concerned Citizens in the Diaspora labelled as “the second opposition force in Guyana” those groups and persons that are critical of Granger’s appointment of Justice Patterson as GECOM Chairman. However, they said those entities and persons were not calling for an investigation into crimes against humanity  just as the recent call by African organizations when the Working Expert Group on People of African Descent / United Nations Human Rights Committee group recently visited Guyana.

The organisations dismissed fears that future elections would be rigged, saying those were the utterances of  liars, cheats, scamps and racists. ACDA and the other organisations said critics of the Granger-led administration know that GECOM has seven votes with the governing and opposition parties having three each. They reminded that it was then Chief Elections Officer, Gocool Boodoo who had been implicated in the alleged rigging of an election.

Regional security

The Guyanese Afro-based organisations urged Africans, the international community and well-intention Guyanese to support President Granger in lawfully interpreting the constitution, even in the face of certain organisations, Indian supremacists and others “who have illegitimately benefited under the PPP are showing their true colours as they continue to sabotage our “democracy” with the hope of again plundering Guyana with its new found oil wealth.”

Saying that never again would Africans sit idly by and be marginalised see Guyana being run by international drugs and narcotics smugglers, the Afro-Guyanese organisations called on the international community to be vigilant against transnational crimes and racism.  “The international community must never allow itself to be fooled again by the PPP at the expense of a racist and international narco-business agenda targeted against this Government and the long suffering people of Guyana,” they said.

Further, they cautioned about the dangers  another PPP-led administration would pose to Caribbean security. “In this state of heightened global terrorism and far reaching terrorist financial and other networks, the PPP can never be trusted ever again to administer the affairs of Guyana.  That frightening proposition could threaten the peace, stability and security of the entire Caribbean Region,” the African Cultural and Development Association, Pan African Group (Guyana) Branch, The All African Guyanese Association and Concerned Citizens in the Diaspora.

http://demerarawaves.com/2017/...afro-gecom-chairman/

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Anything of fairness ends up with racism in Guyana. What you see here is the essence of racism that is alive and kicking since post-colonial independence. Guyanese should lick their wounds and get rid of the PNC and PPP altogether. We will argue over racism until we're crippled and there will be no change. We are the ones contributing to the disease of racism in Guyana. When we can't accept our own mistakes, we will never be the foundation of change for all Guyanese. 

FM

The groupings noted that Retired Major General Norman Mc Lean would be 82 years old next month, Shah is a well-known partisan Indian supremacist “and most of the others had long and deep political”and other relationships with the PPP.”

 

Patterson is 84 years old, so what's wrong with these Africans. Granger picked someone that would stay silent, too old to be bothered about his future and would obey orders. Rig,Rig.

K

"These now “recently converted and born again moral agents” said nothing when Jagdeo conspired with a convicted Indian drug lord Roger Khan to kill over 400 Africans,” the organisations said. “This was not the end of democracy in their eyes. This genocide and extra-constitutional killings were normal in their version of a democracy or ethnic state.”

These mufkers deliberately forgot what was really going on during this time

They throw that 400 number around williy nilly...what about the all dem people that got killed on the East coast because of most of these 400 bandits!

FM
kp posted:

The groupings noted that Retired Major General Norman Mc Lean would be 82 years old next month, Shah is a well-known partisan Indian supremacist “and most of the others had long and deep political”and other relationships with the PPP.”

 

Patterson is 84 years old, so what's wrong with these Africans. Granger picked someone that would stay silent, too old to be bothered about his future and would obey orders. Rig,Rig.

iT MEANS aFRO ARE SPECIAL AND EXEMPT FROM THE rULES!!  tYPICAL pnc BULLY-ISM.

Nehru

Granger wants Patterson to serve until 2020 election. He would care less if he drops dead after that. By then, he will be better prepared to mobilize his army to win future elections. The PNC embarked on the most important era of wealth in Guyana, and Granger will do everything in his power to keep the PNC family well fed for a long time. Third-world countries with new-found wealth, and a history of corruption are deadly combinations to destabilize a country's economy. Instead of having the hope of a brighter future; the possibility of greater poverty is more likely without good governance and accountability. 

FM

This article is what I feared most and as Cain indicated it is Tit for Tit.

Carib indicated that the elections in 2020 will be the most divisive and race based. I have to agree.

Guyana has been experiencing this ongoing Tit for Tat since independence and has gotten us to a boiling point. This is quite scary, peace loving and decent minded Guyanese need to act responsibly and not allow themselves to drawn in this race politics that is engulfing Guyana today.

Let us assume for a moment that Afros Guyanese preferred someone from their community, Granger should have done so but after serious and broad based consultations with the opposition, business leaders, civic leaders and Guyanese organizations abroad.

The fear among Indos is that an Afro GECOM head will rig and Afros feel the same about an Indo head of GECOM. This impass required consultation rather than a unilateral decision by Granger and as such we are at this stage of great mistrust.

I honestly do not have a solution but a recommendation that Patterson should step down and both leaders should first have a open conversation perhaps with ABC countries as guardians of good faith. Leaders from Church, Temples and Mosques should also become part of the consultation of process.

Failing this, we are headed into 2020 election with great fear of rigging, race based voting and possible post election violence.

 

 

 

FM
Last edited by Former Member
RiffRaff posted:

"These now “recently converted and born again moral agents” said nothing when Jagdeo conspired with a convicted Indian drug lord Roger Khan to kill over 400 Africans,” the organisations said. “This was not the end of democracy in their eyes. This genocide and extra-constitutional killings were normal in their version of a democracy or ethnic state.”

These mufkers deliberately forgot what was really going on during this time

They throw that 400 number around williy nilly...what about the all dem people that got killed on the East coast because of most of these 400 bandits!

Exactly. They forgot that Eve Leary Police Headquarters had to hire security guards to keep the police safe from those criminals. They also forgot that the criminals used to forewarn the police not to show up at place where they were going to rob someone and possibly kill the person they were robbing. Carib also tend to overlook those facts.

It is only after President Jagdeo took those drastic steps that those strings of terror was eliminated.

During the LA riot, Mayor Bradley said that it is never an easy decision to place National Guards in a civilian area but he still had to do it. People in authority sometimes are forced to do things because it is the better option.

FM

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