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FM
Former Member

Cheryl Miles named Ambassador to Venezuela

 

Career diplomat Cheryl Miles has been named to be Guyana’s new Ambassador Venezuela, but that appointment has been delayed over a grievance of President Nicolas Maduro. Miles was expected to become the first new Ambassador appointed by the David Granger administration since the May elections which gave the APNU/AFC coalition victory, Minister of State Joseph Harmon has confirmed.


Maduro has suspended further talks with Guyana on the appointment of Miles over statements made last weekend by Foreign Affairs Minister Carl Greenidge at an overseas conference. Harmon said he hopes the matter can be resolved soon and the Foreign Minister will be in touch with the Venezuelan authorities to decide on the “best way” to resolve the issue.


“We wish to stand behind the credentials of Ambassador Miles,” Harmon said, describing Miles as someone with “a tremendous repertoire of skills.”


Mile served a seven-year term as Ambassador to Venezuela until she was recalled in 1993 to serve as Director General of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. She spent six years in that post and she then headed the Embassy in Brazil until 1999 when she left the Foreign Service.

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Breaking News : Maduro suspends talks for new Guyana Ambassador

 

The Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro has suspended further talks with Guyana on the appointment of a new Ambassador to Caracas. According to the Venezuelan Foreign Ministry, Maduro decision followed statements made by Guyana’s Foreign Affairs Minister, Carl Greenidge at the Florida Conference on Current Caribbean issues put on by the Institute of Caribbean Studies (ICS) and the Greater Caribbean American Chamber of Commerce  last weekend.

 

Among his statements, the Foreign Minister has said that Maduro’s latest claim on the Essequibo, which includes this country’s maritime space, stemmed from attempts to access oil and other resources.

 

As a result, Maduro has ordered his Foreign Affairs Minister Delcy Rodríguez to halt negotiations on the appointment of a new Guyanese Ambassador in Caracas. The new David Granger administration has announced plans to appoint new ambassadors at diplomatic missions around the world. The current Ambassador is Geoff DaSilva.

FM
Originally Posted by Kari:

Very deserving. Congrats to Cheryl. She has served Guyana well in the past in the diplomatic arena.

IF she is appointed she will be the best person, as I recall that she was previously in Venezuela, before being posted to Brazil, and so has the best knowledge of how that country works, and is best positioned to get around the madness.

FM
Last edited by Former Member
Originally Posted by Bibi Haniffa:

Are you kidding me?  Look at that woman.  Things are going to get really "ugly" now!!!!

Do you know anything about that woman, or is it because she is black that she in incapable?

 

I see that the Indo KKK now has a new member.

FM
Originally Posted by caribny:
Originally Posted by Bibi Haniffa:

Are you kidding me?  Look at that woman.  Things are going to get really "ugly" now!!!!

Do you know anything about that woman, or is it because she is black that she in incapable?

 

I see that the Indo KKK now has a new member.

Nothing against her physical appearance.  But image is everything - especially in the world of diplomacy.  And Yo hablo espanol tambien!

Bibi Haniffa
Originally Posted by Bibi Haniffa:
Originally Posted by caribny:
Originally Posted by Bibi Haniffa:

Are you kidding me?  Look at that woman.  Things are going to get really "ugly" now!!!!

Do you know anything about that woman, or is it because she is black that she in incapable?

 

I see that the Indo KKK now has a new member.

Nothing against her physical appearance.  But image is everything - especially in the world of diplomacy.  And Yo hablo espanol tambien!

So how come the PPP had a whole raft of ugly Indians as their ambassadors if beauty is every thing?

 

And you know full well that your rant is only because she is a black woman.  The woman is a highly competent diplomat, and clearly will be more effective than some bimbo with huge breasts.

 

I bet, even now she is busy working on this problem, as she has  sources within Venezuela.

 

She is also very fluent in Spanish AND Portuguese, but big breasts are what you deem more appropriate.

FM
Last edited by Former Member
Originally Posted by caribny:
Originally Posted by Bibi Haniffa:
Originally Posted by caribny:
Originally Posted by Bibi Haniffa:

Are you kidding me?  Look at that woman.  Things are going to get really "ugly" now!!!!

Do you know anything about that woman, or is it because she is black that she in incapable?

 

I see that the Indo KKK now has a new member.

Nothing against her physical appearance.  But image is everything - especially in the world of diplomacy.  And Yo hablo espanol tambien!

So how come the PPP had a whole raft of ugly Indians as their ambassadors if beauty is every thing?

 

And you know full well that your rant is only because she is a black woman.  The woman is a highly competent diplomat, and clearly will be more effective than some bimbo with huge breasts.

 

I bet, even now she is busy working on this problem, as she has  sources within Venezuela.

 

She is also very fluent in Spanish AND Portuguese, but big breasts are what you deem more appropriate.

You are wild!!  I like that.

Bibi Haniffa
Originally Posted by Bibi Haniffa:
Originally Posted by caribny:
Originally Posted by Bibi Haniffa:

Are you kidding me?  Look at that woman.  Things are going to get really "ugly" now!!!!

Do you know anything about that woman, or is it because she is black that she in incapable?

 

I see that the Indo KKK now has a new member.

Nothing against her physical appearance.  But image is everything - especially in the world of diplomacy.  And Yo hablo espanol tambien!

You would not use the "you" Si hablas bien el español. That is a juvenile mistake linked to book learning than to real world communication. It is also quite facile to believe this lady's credential is diminished by her looks. You would be over fifty now and possibly with a pot belly and skinny asses legs as come with age. Be gentle with others and they will be gentle with you.

FM
Originally Posted by Danyael:
Originally Posted by Bibi Haniffa:
Originally Posted by caribny:
Originally Posted by Bibi Haniffa:

Are you kidding me?  Look at that woman.  Things are going to get really "ugly" now!!!!

Do you know anything about that woman, or is it because she is black that she in incapable?

 

I see that the Indo KKK now has a new member.

Nothing against her physical appearance.  But image is everything - especially in the world of diplomacy.  And Yo hablo espanol tambien!

You would not use the "you" Si hablas bien el español. That is a juvenile mistake linked to book learning than to real world communication. It is also quite facile to believe this lady's credential is diminished by her looks. You would be over fifty now and possibly with a pot belly and skinny asses legs as come with age. Be gentle with others and they will be gentle with you.

Mi Querido, lea este del diario venezolano:

 

EL UNIVERSAL

Wednesday September 16, 2015  11:07 AM
"Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro said on Tuesday that the government of Guyana requested the agrément for its new ambassador to Venezuela, but the approval was put on hold following some alleged offensive remarks made by Guyanese Foreign Affairs Minister Carl Greenidge against Venezuela."
Bibi Haniffa
Originally Posted by Bibi Haniffa:

Are you kidding me?  Look at that woman.  Things are going to get really "ugly" now!!!!

Bibi, your Trumpian aside notwithstanding, Cheryl is very well qualified, seasoned and experienced in the diplomatic world and especially in Caribbean and South American affairs. I can speak from personal experiences. She is a friend of mine and I was on a diplomatic trip with her and saw her in action.

 

I'm not sure how you get off on her on this, but please, if you do not know Cheryl ask about her. In fact ask Odeen Ishmael about her.

 
 
Kari
Originally Posted by Django:
Originally Posted by Bibi Haniffa:

Are you kidding me?  Look at that woman.  Things are going to get really "ugly" now!!!!

Oh skites one more join the brigade.

Is who is this person? LOL

FM

At this critical point in Guyana-Venezuela relations, the coalition has made a superb decision to post Cheryl Miles to Caracas. She will represent Guyana's interest competently.

FM
Originally Posted by Itaname:
Originally Posted by Django:
Originally Posted by Bibi Haniffa:

Are you kidding me?  Look at that woman.  Things are going to get really "ugly" now!!!!

Oh skites one more join the brigade.

Is who is this person? LOL

Dunno bhai..the crew got one more follower.

Django
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:

At this critical point in Guyana-Venezuela relations, the coalition has made a superb decision to post Cheryl Miles to Caracas. She will represent Guyana's interest competently.


In fact reports are that she penetrated social circles in Caracas way more than did the PPP ambassadors.

 

She not only knows much about Venezuela (and yes she speaks Spanish), but also is known to folks there.

 

Pity some are so blinded by hate for a black woman that they cannot see this. I don't know who Bibi is, but interestingly enough even cobra and yuji havent peddled their usual poison on this thread.

FM

I am sure Ms. Miles is a fine and well-qualified lady.  I do not judge people based on the color of their skin. My issue is not even with her.  My issue is with the sudden break-down of Guyana/Venezuela relations.  And, Kari I do not think you know her in the capacity that you claim.  You have never served or have ever been involved in any type of foreign relations. 

Bibi Haniffa
Originally Posted by Bibi Haniffa:
Originally Posted by Danyael:
Originally Posted by Bibi Haniffa:
Originally Posted by caribny:
Originally Posted by Bibi Haniffa:

Are you kidding me?  Look at that woman.  Things are going to get really "ugly" now!!!!

Do you know anything about that woman, or is it because she is black that she in incapable?

 

I see that the Indo KKK now has a new member.

Nothing against her physical appearance.  But image is everything - especially in the world of diplomacy.  And Yo hablo espanol tambien!

You would not use the "you" Si hablas bien el español. That is a juvenile mistake linked to book learning than to real world communication. It is also quite facile to believe this lady's credential is diminished by her looks. You would be over fifty now and possibly with a pot belly and skinny asses legs as come with age. Be gentle with others and they will be gentle with you.

Mi Querido, lea este del diario venezolano:

 

EL UNIVERSAL

Wednesday September 16, 2015  11:07 AM
"Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro said on Tuesday that the government of Guyana requested the agrément for its new ambassador to Venezuela, but the approval was put on hold following some alleged offensive remarks made by Guyanese Foreign Affairs Minister Carl Greenidge against Venezuela."

perdon senora no somos amantes. Me complace mirar a los ojitos oscuras que ahora va a me lado.

 

Maduro is nuts. He makes a claim. We are obliged to respond. If that is offensive to him then he is more than a bare faced looser. His people will take care of him.

 

FM
Last edited by Former Member
Originally Posted by Bibi Haniffa:

I am sure Ms. Miles is a fine and well-qualified lady.  I do not judge people based on the color of their skin. My issue is not even with her.  My issue is with the sudden break-down of Guyana/Venezuela relations.  And, Kari I do not think you know her in the capacity that you claim.  You have never served or have ever been involved in any type of foreign relations. 

They want our land on spurious pretext. Nothing is broken down. They are greedy.

 

I will have to agree with you the lady need to lay off the burgers. It is not healthy to her weight and I am not fat shaming her. I am advising her to look in the mirror and reflect on it.

FM
Originally Posted by Danyael:
Originally Posted by Bibi Haniffa:

I am sure Ms. Miles is a fine and well-qualified lady.  I do not judge people based on the color of their skin. My issue is not even with her.  My issue is with the sudden break-down of Guyana/Venezuela relations.  And, Kari I do not think you know her in the capacity that you claim.  You have never served or have ever been involved in any type of foreign relations. 

They want our land on spurious pretext. Nothing is broken down. They are greedy.

 

I will have to agree with you the lady need to lay off the burgers. It is not healthy to her weight and I am not fat shaming her. I am advising her to look in the mirror and reflect on it.

Ah common be nice.  And thanks for tolerating me in this discussion.

Bibi Haniffa
Originally Posted by Bibi Haniffa:
Originally Posted by Danyael:
Originally Posted by Bibi Haniffa:

I am sure Ms. Miles is a fine and well-qualified lady.  I do not judge people based on the color of their skin. My issue is not even with her.  My issue is with the sudden break-down of Guyana/Venezuela relations.  And, Kari I do not think you know her in the capacity that you claim.  You have never served or have ever been involved in any type of foreign relations. 

They want our land on spurious pretext. Nothing is broken down. They are greedy.

 

I will have to agree with you the lady need to lay off the burgers. It is not healthy to her weight and I am not fat shaming her. I am advising her to look in the mirror and reflect on it.

Ah common be nice.  And thanks for tolerating me in this discussion.

I am mean to everyone. That way I have no favorites.

FM
Originally Posted by Bibi Haniffa:

And, Kari I do not think you know her in the capacity that you claim.  You have never served or have ever been involved in any type of foreign relations. 

I do not need to engage you given the tone and obvious lack of know of what you speak of and whom you know or don't know, but I'll indulge this once.

 

Cheryl and I were on a Trade Finance team to Colombia in 1981. I was a Foreign Trade Officer at that time and our group became the Department of International Economic Cooperation  (DIEC) with Winston Murray my boss. Cheryl worked at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

 

I know Cheryl's family, speaking at times to her father, and being a good friend of her brother.

 

I'm not sure what you're trying to accomplish here, but I'm glad to provide you with an education.

Kari
Originally Posted by Bibi Haniffa:

I am sure Ms. Miles is a fine and well-qualified lady.  I do not judge people based on the color of their skin. My issue is not even with her.  My issue is with the sudden break-down of Guyana/Venezuela relations.  And, Kari I do not think you know her in the capacity that you claim.  You have never served or have ever been involved in any type of foreign relations. 

Relations broke down because Maduro had a mental break down.

 

What do you think that President Jagdeo would have done when Maduro ran out and made a map claiming almost all of Guyana's marine assets?  Applaud?

 

Relationships with Colombia have also broken down as Maduro continues to implode.  Is that APNUs fault too?

FM
Kari you do not need to convince me of who you know and who you don't know.  And since I have no way of verifying the information you have chosen to provide, I will now proceed to file your information under GARBAGE. Ms. Miles accomplishments speak for itself.  You should be tooting your own horn - if you have one.
 
Originally Posted by Kari:
Originally Posted by Bibi Haniffa:

And, Kari I do not think you know her in the capacity that you claim.  You have never served or have ever been involved in any type of foreign relations. 

I do not need to engage you given the tone and obvious lack of know of what you speak of and whom you know or don't know, but I'll indulge this once.

 

Cheryl and I were on a Trade Finance team to Colombia in 1981. I was a Foreign Trade Officer at that time and our group became the Department of International Economic Cooperation  (DIEC) with Winston Murray my boss. Cheryl worked at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

 

I know Cheryl's family, speaking at times to her father, and being a good friend of her brother.

 

I'm not sure what you're trying to accomplish here, but I'm glad to provide you with an education.

 

Bibi Haniffa
And as it turns out we know each other if your bougie is Sandra's sister.  Haha
Originally Posted by Django:
Originally Posted by Bibi Haniffa:

Are you kidding me?  Look at that woman.  Things are going to get really "ugly" now!!!!

Oh skites one more join the brigade.

 

Bibi Haniffa

The "Bibi Haniffa" handle surely must belong to a man; a man who has a problem with Cheryl Miles and with me. No sweat. This person can post anything he/she wants, and it won't change the truth. Be my guest. Some people post here for solutions and analysis. Some post just to vent. No problem with venting. It can either be productive or unproductive. Like Trump is being tuned out, useless poutings will be treated in  the same manner.

 

file under GARBAGE.... ....that's a new one. A GNI hall of Fame moment....hehehehehe

 
 
Kari
Originally Posted by Bibi Haniffa:
And as it turns out we know each other if your bougie is Sandra's sister.  Haha
Originally Posted by Django:
Originally Posted by Bibi Haniffa:

Are you kidding me?  Look at that woman.  Things are going to get really "ugly" now!!!!

Oh skites one more join the brigade.

 

Well I'll be damned ..relation is to the sister that

married at WCD.

Django
Last edited by Django
Originally Posted by Kari:

. Like Trump is being tuned out,

 
 


The GOP is in panic about Trump.  He isnt being tuned out.  This is why the mass attack on him in the last debates. 

 

Remember that not every one watches debates, so do not draw strength in the fact that he didnt perform all that well.

 

Or maybe you should draw strength as Trump the GOP candidate will lose every where except a few Jim Crow states.

FM
Kari - your poor level of analysis and careless assumptions are starting to bore me.  I do not have a problem with Cheryl Miles.  I have a problem with you.  You are a sicko.  If fact, I am buying you a one way ticket to Suriname now.
 
Originally Posted by Kari:

The "Bibi Haniffa" handle surely must belong to a man; a man who has a problem with Cheryl Miles and with me. No sweat. This person can post anything he/she wants, and it won't change the truth. Be my guest. Some people post here for solutions and analysis. Some post just to vent. No problem with venting. It can either be productive or unproductive. Like Trump is being tuned out, useless poutings will be treated in  the same manner.

 

file under GARBAGE.... ....that's a new one. A GNI hall of Fame moment....hehehehehe

 
 

 

Bibi Haniffa
Originally Posted by Demerara_Guy:

Cheryl Miles named Ambassador to Venezuela

 

Career diplomat Cheryl Miles has been named to be Guyana’s new Ambassador Venezuela, but that appointment has been delayed over a grievance of President Nicolas Maduro. Miles was expected to become the first new Ambassador appointed by the David Granger administration since the May elections which gave the APNU/AFC coalition victory, Minister of State Joseph Harmon has confirmed.


Maduro has suspended further talks with Guyana on the appointment of Miles over statements made last weekend by Foreign Affairs Minister Carl Greenidge at an overseas conference. Harmon said he hopes the matter can be resolved soon and the Foreign Minister will be in touch with the Venezuelan authorities to decide on the “best way” to resolve the issue.


“We wish to stand behind the credentials of Ambassador Miles,” Harmon said, describing Miles as someone with “a tremendous repertoire of skills.”


Mile served a seven-year term as Ambassador to Venezuela until she was recalled in 1993 to serve as Director General of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. She spent six years in that post and she then headed the Embassy in Brazil until 1999 when she left the Foreign Service.

It tek real LAANG LANG for them to appoint one 'hambassador.

 

When will the UK hambassador be appointed?

FM
Originally Posted by Demerara_Guy:

Cheryl Miles named Ambassador to Venezuela

 

Career diplomat Cheryl Miles has been named to be Guyana’s new Ambassador Venezuela, but that appointment has been delayed over a grievance of President Nicolas Maduro. Miles was expected to become the first new Ambassador appointed by the David Granger administration since the May elections which gave the APNU/AFC coalition victory, Minister of State Joseph Harmon has confirmed.


Maduro has suspended further talks with Guyana on the appointment of Miles over statements made last weekend by Foreign Affairs Minister Carl Greenidge at an overseas conference. Harmon said he hopes the matter can be resolved soon and the Foreign Minister will be in touch with the Venezuelan authorities to decide on the “best way” to resolve the issue.


“We wish to stand behind the credentials of Ambassador Miles,” Harmon said, describing Miles as someone with “a tremendous repertoire of skills.”


Mile served a seven-year term as Ambassador to Venezuela until she was recalled in 1993 to serve as Director General of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. She spent six years in that post and she then headed the Embassy in Brazil until 1999 when she left the Foreign Service.

Make note this lady is 70 years old.

 

 

FM
Originally Posted by KishanB:
Originally Posted by Demerara_Guy:

Cheryl Miles named Ambassador to Venezuela

 

Career diplomat Cheryl Miles has been named to be Guyana’s new Ambassador Venezuela, but that appointment has been delayed over a grievance of President Nicolas Maduro. Miles was expected to become the first new Ambassador appointed by the David Granger administration since the May elections which gave the APNU/AFC coalition victory, Minister of State Joseph Harmon has confirmed.


Maduro has suspended further talks with Guyana on the appointment of Miles over statements made last weekend by Foreign Affairs Minister Carl Greenidge at an overseas conference. Harmon said he hopes the matter can be resolved soon and the Foreign Minister will be in touch with the Venezuelan authorities to decide on the “best way” to resolve the issue.


“We wish to stand behind the credentials of Ambassador Miles,” Harmon said, describing Miles as someone with “a tremendous repertoire of skills.”


Mile served a seven-year term as Ambassador to Venezuela until she was recalled in 1993 to serve as Director General of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. She spent six years in that post and she then headed the Embassy in Brazil until 1999 when she left the Foreign Service.

Make note this lady is 70 years old.

 

 

This is her picture from 10 years ago.

FM

Heard Burnham son in law was offer hambassador to Canada.

 

 

Richard Van West-Charles

Vice President Health Programmes and Institutional Development at St.Helen University

 
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FM
Last edited by Former Member

hallenging Corbin!

By Staff Writer On August 20, 2009 @ 5:16 am In Guyana Review

Richard Van West Charles wants to lead the PNC into the  2011 general elections
the fact that we differ does not mean that we are enemies.We have to shift away from the notion that if we differ we are forced into separate camps. There is one camp and that camp is the PNC. Unity of purpose has to be the first objective of the new leadership

 Dr Richard Van West-CharlesDr Richard Van West-Charles

Richard Van West Charles says that he will serve the People’s National Congress (PNC) under whoever the party may choose as its leader over the weekend. His only caveat is that the process by which a leader is chosen is free and fair. “The issue is not about power for me. The issue is about the development of the country. I believe that the PNC has had some of the best policies for this country and I believe that we still have the intellectual power to be able to provide some of the better solutions for the development of Guyana.”

His statesmanlike views on his preparedness to give service in a lesser capacity does little, however, to conceal the desire of the former Health Minister and son-in-law of Founder Leader Forbes Burnham to supplant Robert Corbin as Leader of the PNC and to lead the party into the next general elections.

His point about the importance of the veracity of the forthcoming leadership elections process is made against the backdrop of persistent rumours that there are issues that remain to be settled if the poll is to be free and fair; and while he says that some of those issues have been settled he believes that the outstanding ones, not least the secrecy of the poll itself and whether delegates’ use their national identification cards during the voting process or whether they use some other instrument issued by the Party Secretariat.  His  concern over the fairness of the poll, he says, reposes in a fear  that if this weekend’s voting process becomes mired in controversy, the implications for the PNC at the 2011 national elections could be dire.

Van West Charles has a point. Accusations of electoral fraud at the level of national elections  has long been the weapon of choice of the People’s Progressive Party in its unyielding quest to continually diminish the image of the PNC. That weapon may well have been re-enforced recently through controversy over the fairness of a recent party poll in Georgetown. A botched elections process at the Congress could prove a huge boost for the ruling party’s 2011 elections campaign.

 Winston MurrayWinston Murray

His  acknowledgement of the underlying importance of the will of the people at the level of the  process through which the PNC elects its leader, is, Van West Charles says, a microcosm of his awareness of a broader national concern with freedom and democracy. “My perception is that the wider Guyanese population wants to have a democratic society in which the electoral process is free and fair. We cannot achieve a democratic state without political parties themselves making the change; and here I speak not only of the PNC but of the wider political culture.”

If Van West Charles embraces the cut and thrust of a fair contest for the leadership of the PNC he is, he says, concerned that the attendant controversies over the likely fairness or otherwise of the poll is serving as a counterproductive distraction  from what he believes is the real significance of the Party’s Congress. “The importance of the Congress really reposes in the fact that Guyana is at an important juncture with respect to governance as a whole. Apart from the governance crisis there is the economic crisis and, perhaps most significantly,  a serious crisis in terms of the erosion of the rights of the people of Guyana. It is not difficult to see, therefore, that the significance of the Congress reposes in the role of the PNC in seeking to arrest these issues. In that sense the Congress really ought to have a focus on 2011,” he says.

His own blueprint for the process which he says the PNC must begin to pursue now in preparation for the 2011 poll, addresses three issues, the leadership, the membership and what he describes as ‘the restructuring that will enable us to reach beyond our membership and to communicate with all sections of the society.”

As for what he ‘brings to the table’ there is perhaps more than a hint of suspicion that his experiences as a cabinet minister then as an international civil servant in the health sector may have cast him much more in the role of a technocrat than a populist politician. He disagrees, asserting that during the course of his ministerial duties he has always been “a person on the ground, in the field, working with different groups” including youth groups, social, religious and cultural organizations.  “I have always reached out to different organizations in building partnerships and alliances in the cause of health and development.”

He talks too about his involvement in ‘Town Hall meetings” in order to secure feedback from communities “as a result of which we were able to make some significant changes in personnel who were not serving the public well. I believe that part of my own strength lies in my ability to work well with people of different views, different orientations and different persuasions.”

If Van West Charles openly admits that over time the party which Forbes Burnham founded has lost support among its traditional following he remains, he says, optimistic that that loss is not irretrievable. “I do not think that the loss is permanent. I believe, however, that it is clear indication that the PNC needs to “reconnect   to the people in terms of its role in community development and  providing aggressive and effective representation for people’s issues. I think that there are critical weaknesses in terms of the strength of our groups and the performance of our groups.”

Nor does Van West Charles believe that the decline can simply be attributed to a loss of interest and energy ;linked to the party being out of power. “An opposition party,” he says, “has to be in a state of readiness to govern, It therefore has to be in a position where it understands the issues and where its analyses, its solutions and interventions can have a direct bearing on people’s problems. Hence the concept of Shadow Ministers. As an opposition party you have got to be on top of your game.”

What if Van West Charles emerges as “the chosen one” at the party congress poll? “I believe that my first duty is to reach out to those who, for one reason or the other, have been disaffected and to send a message that the fact that we differ does not mean that we are enemies. We have to shift away from the notion that if we differ we are forced into separate camps. There is one camp and that camp is the PNC. Unity of purpose has to be the first objective of the new leadership.”

Then there is the task of confronting what is perhaps the PNC’s most formidable challenge – creating a support base that can mount an effective challenge to the ruling party at the 2011 polls. This too, Van West Charles believes, is achievable. He believes, he says, that the PNC has always been a party of reaching out across divides. “This is where, I believe, we will be challenged to hold true to partnerships and alliances. It has to be seen that the driver of all of our actions is development for all of the citizens of our country. Our parliamentarians, councillors and other representatives have got to understand that  while they have come to these positions from the PNC slate, they are, in fact, representatives of all of the people. The party must seek to reach out and gain an understanding with all organizations and all ethnic groups as part of its preparation for 2011.”

Perhaps surprisingly, Van West Charles says that reuniting and rebuilding the PNC “will not be as difficult a challenge as some people feel;” and he believes that his own particular skills and experiences gleaned “from working with ‘different peoples and different groups” makes him eminently qualified to take up that challenge. “Much of it has to do with a preparedness to listen, to deal with different issues and to know when to put things in the parking lot. You have also got to ensure that the systems which you put in place can effectively deal with those issues so that you dispel any doubts that people might have that you are only playing games.” He insists too, that transparency is a key prerequisite for the success of the PNC in the future. “We have to be transparent; everything has got to be above board and there must be no suspicion of underhand movement. This will allow people to trust the PNC and to have confidence in the organization.”

At the national level Van West Charles says that the most worrying issue is the quality of governance. “There is manifest evidence that the present government has not been fair with all groups. They have set a preferred status for their supporters and they have sought in many ways to force people to align themselves in a manner that is consistent with the way in which the resources are aligned and managed. Those who get contracts, for example, are those who are either of the party and those who behave well and are prepared to give the kickback. Part of the whole approach to dealing with the governance issue is creating a culture in which people understand that bribery is not the rule of the day. As it happens,  access to some of these privileges is very often connected with race. That too has to be dealt with.”

Race, Van West Charles says, is an issue which Guyana can no longer afford to ignore. “It has to be confronted. It has to be put on the front burner and we have to be able to take the discussion about race to the ground level. We have played with this issue for far too long. I suspect that  once we take it to the ground level we will defeat some of the actions of the PPP. They are comfortable with playing the race card and creating insecurities among the races in order to control and manipulate. That is why the PNC must take the issue down to the ground level.”

Van West Charles clearly recognizes that his family tie to Burnham is not an issue that can be wished away. Whether or not it will serve him in good stead in his quest  which he seeks to unseat a long-time Burnham loyalist is unclear. What is almost certain, however, is that his connection with Burnham is bound to become an issue if and when he has to seek out a constituency that extends beyond the traditional confines of the PNC. He understands the circumstance but disacknowledging Burnham is not an option. “For me Burnham was a leader, a father-in-law and a friend. I firmly believe that he was a strong and highly intelligent man who was committed to Guyana’s development and to Caricom’s development. I would not divorce myself from Forbes Burnham because, for me, he has contributed significantly  and sacrificed a great deal for the development of this country. Every human being makes mistakes and we are different personality types. People react differently to Forbes Burnham. Some people love him and some people don’t understand him.”

FM

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