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Submitted by Rickford Burke, Former Special Assistant to the Leader of the PNCR
Submitted by Rickford Burke, Former Special Assistant to the Leader of the PNCR

The June 28, 2009 election for chairman of Guyana’s opposition People’s National Congress Reform (PNCR) Georgetown District, has been sullied by credible allegations of fraud.

The party said that Ms. Volda Lawrence, a party vice chairman and supporter of party leader, Robert Corbin, in the ongoing leadership crisis, allegedly beat then chairman, Aubrey Norton, by 220 to 96 votes.

This debacle was an indictment of the leadership. The allegations of fraud have undermined Ms. Lawrence’s legitimacy as chairman and has further shattered the party’s image.

Aubrey Norton has categorically stated that “the elections were fraudulent,” and has presented a compelling case. Norton is no petulant outsider who hates Corbin and Lawrence, who is motivated by avaricious politics. He is a Corbin insider as well as a PNCR Central Executive Member and Member of Parliament. He supported Robert Corbin in the leadership challenge at the last elections, and two months ago, defended Corbin in the press, against criticism from Dr. Richard Van West-Charles, a former PAHO/WHO official, former PNC Minister of Health and a new contender for leader.

Norton has been bitten by his own serpent, but his allegations are legitimate. He did not complain after the vote. He began to object to the process as it unfolded and discovered it to be corrupt. He and other members objected to the manner in which ballots were distributed and to whom. They alleged that some persons had received more than one ballots while others received none. He was right to object; as such “racketeering” affects the outcome of elections, as it apparently did.

The media gave an account of what transpired, even Norton came public. Those accounts corroborated his subsequent public complaints and objections. On June 29, Stabroek News papers reported that “As the ballot papers were being distributed for the voting for chairman, chaos erupted as persons were heard shouting that they were not receiving any ballot papers while others said that some were receiving more than one. This saw some of them jumping to their feet and engaging in shouting matches. One man who wanted to make his voice heard stood at the microphone screaming that the process was being rigged. Norton and his supporters left the voting area and were overheard saying that the process was being rigged. Some persons produced ballot papers which did not have the standardized stamp at the back of them. Even before the elections some persons were openly heard voicing their objections to their names not being found on the list of delegates.” The party is yet to answer allegations that even the Stabroek News reporter was given a ballot in error.

Individuals who were present informed me that Mr. Corbin was central to the voting; that he acted in a supervisory capacity and was designating when and how each row should vote. They emphasized that he said nothing as his supporters shouted profanities and engaging in vulgarities.

Corbin’s manoeuvrings and hands on approach at the election is no happenstance. The Georgetown district sends the most delegates to congress. Corbin is up for re-election at the next congress in August. Therefore, I am sure he would like to influence who represents Georgetown at the congress. Norton, it appears, may no longer support him for leader.

This notwithstanding, what is the leader of the PNCR doing meddling in and countenancing an allegedly fraudulent and lawless election?

I have fastidiously analyzed the media reports on this issue, as well as comments by Aubrey Norton, Robert Corbin and PNCR General Secretary, Oscar Clarke, and have juxtaposed them against each other. The assertion my Messrs Corbin and Clarke, that the election results represent the will of the membership, is baseless and not supported by the facts as they have been reported. The two are therefore merely engaged in spurious demagoguery which strains credulity.

Referring to Norton’s public complaints of fraud, Mr. Corbin further said that “This behavior is highly unsatisfactory.” Excuse me! It is Mr. Corbin’s sanction of what appears to be appallingly fraudulent elections, that is “highly unsatisfactory.” It is the antithesis of democracy.

I loathe Mr. Corbin’s dictatorial and Machiavellian politics, which gives succor to an ethos of roguery and mendaciousness. He has cultivated a hideous culture where members, who attempt to challenge him through the use of the legitimate election process, as outlined by the party’s constitution, are branded traitors, and accused of and sanctioned for dividing and bringing the party into disrepute.

Such aspirants are forbidden from discussing their candidacy or views in public. If they do, disciplinary proceedings are instituted against them. They are harassed, intimidated, sidelined as well as relieved of official party duties, and where relevant, removed from Parliament. This is contemptuous. I call on Mr. Corbin to end such “thuggery” and Stalinist practices, and allow democracy to flourish in the party.

The party was not bequeathed or willed to Mr. Corbin. It is not his or anyone else’s private estate. It is a political party for the people of Guyana. The leader works for the membership and people. He is not the master of the people. Hence, he must embrace full internal participatory democracy, and sanction electoral processes that have complete integrity and the full confidence of “the people.”

The stigma caused by perennial allegations of Mr. Corbin and the PNC “rigging” elections, be they true or false, is insufferable, and has badly tarnished the party’s image. Although both major political parties in Guyana now suffer the same fate, the PNCR cannot afford to perpetuate this sordid aura. Let me be clear, I have faith in the PNCR as an institution but I cannot same the same of the leadership.

I no longer repose any confidence in Messrs Corbin and Clark’s ability to conduct free and fair elections within the party. For his own sake, Mr. Corbin should not go, or be allowed anywhere, close to any future elections, except to exercise his right to vote.

In order to restore confidence in the party’s internal election process, I call on the Central Executive Committee of the PNCR to invite a reputable independent observer to oversee its next election at its August 2009 congress. Former Jamaican Prime Minister, P.J. Patterson, is an ideal candidate for this role.

This can only enhance the democratic process in the party and ensure that its election is conducted with the highest level of integrity. It is only through such independent certification of the PNCR’s next election results, that the party can seriously begin to resuscitate its image and inspire confidence in its leadership.


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  1. @Ruel/Rickford

    Reading your comments over the months on the conditions in Guyana we are forced to ask the hard questions:

    Why if these atrocities perpetrated by the PPP are known could you explain why this matter would not be raised at the Caricom level by the opposition, NGOs and other stakeholders in Guyana?

    Did we not read somewhere that in 2009 the Guyana press received a fairly decent rating? If we recollect clearly it was up there with Barbados.

    If what you are purporting to be happening is true in Guyana why is the Afro-bent Corbin led party not more vocal, traveling the Caribbean building a case?


  2. David, Please don’t say that the PNC is Afro-bent OK. The PNC is a Guyanese poltical party, meaning every Guyanese, regardless of race, ethnicty and religion.


  3. Anonymous
    Why people like you like denying the truth? You and the whole world know that the PNC is prodominately a black man party and the PPP the indians party. What part Roxanne Gibbs playing in the elections?


  4. Additionally:

    Has there been any professional poll conducted by political parties or interest groups in Guyana to judge public opinion? If not why not?

    Has the Jagdeo government declared a national strategy document on how they have/will move the country forward socio-economically?

    Have the political parties in waiting done the same?

  5. Rickford Burke Avatar
    Rickford Burke

    David:
    1. I am doing this hurriedly, so excuse the rushed presentation.

    2. The human rights and political atrocities committed by the Guyana government are well known to Caricom and the international community. The political opposition in Guyana has been emasculated. It is very weak and impotent, mainly because Corbin has been allegedly bought out, according to the people. Corbin is compromised and corrupt. He depends on Jagdeo for financial resources to run his opposition leader’s office. Jagdeo recently had his MP pass a special bill designating more recourse to Corbin.

    3. Hoyte never received any government resources to execute his functions as opposition leader. But then Hoyte never did the Texas two-step with Jagdeo and the PPP. Corbin does the Two-step and the tango with them. And so as to avoid challenge, he has driven out all of the youth and intellectuals out of the party. What is left of the PNC is mainly the hard core Corbin brigade, which attempts to destroy anyone who attempts to challenge him. But he has to go as he commands absolutely no respect in Guyana. He is seen as a PPP/Jagdeo puppet who has soled out his constituency for “thirty pieces of silver.”

    4. The PNC as it is presently constituted and managed cannot win a general election. The party under Hoyte and Burnham was truly a multi-racial/multi-ethnic party that was a microcosm of the wider Guyanese society, while the PPP was always an Indian Party, with five or six blacks, who joined because they were basically disenchanted with the PNC or Burnham. To this day the PPP remains just that. As a government, it is a repressive ethnocracy, which fundamentally usurps the resources of the state, almost exclusively for the Indian collectivity.

    5. NGO’s in Guyana are harassed, intimidated blackmailed and get their funds taken away when ever they complain about the PPP government. Under the PPP Guyana has become a Stalinist society, more like “animal farm.” Civil society organizations do make recommendations to Caricom. They have been doing this for several years and have been ignored. The need the political backing of the opposition, which Corbin does not permit, for the most part. The civil society organizations presented a petition to the Caricom heads in Georgetown last week, but the PNC’s name was absent. Plus they held a protest outside the meeting. During the picket, Corbin was seated inside applauding Jagdeo. There goes the picture.

    6. Our group, CGID, has made representations on atrocities in every international forum imaginable; Caricom, the OAS, UN, American Human Rights Court, UNHCR, Committee Against Torture, the US State Department, US Congress, Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International.

    7. I know most of the Caricom leaders and enjoy very good relations with them. CGID has honored some. I have written the leaders personally on every political and human rights matter which has emerged in Guyana. They sympathize with Guyanese and some have taken action, (Manning, Gonsalves, etc). But generally speaking, they are reluctant to intervene. Most of them have their own political problems and don’t wish to establish a precedent of intervention in what they see as, or claim to be, a member state’s domestic political affairs, except in extreme circumstances; less it comes back to haunt them.

    8. On the developmental front, Guyana has made serious blunders; geo-strategically, politically and developmentally. The country, seventeen years ago, underwent a fundamental misfortune, when the PPP “happened” to accede to power. I sincerely believe that they had no vision for the country and certainly lacked the intellectual and strategic depth to grasp the developmental needs (infrastructural, economic and social) of the country and thus, could not and still have not engaged in forward thinking and planning, for sustained national development.

    9. The World Bank, the PNC, IMF, etc., helped them develop a national development strategy several years ago. The processed failed due to political bickering but out of it emerged a road map. But implementation is stalled. Honestly, I doubt that they even know how to read the plan.

    10. If you analyze Guyana’s developmental path you will easily realize that the country has not really developed beyond where Forbes Burnham, with all its faults, brought it. Even the Berbice Bridge that Jagdeo built suffers from ancient engineering technology – metal spans on floating pontoons. A floating bridge in this day and age? Does the country have the capacity to maintain it? NO. They cannot even maintain the Demerara Harbor Bridge, which is a disaster waiting to happen.

    Guyana, by the way, is not in the West Indies or the Caribbean. But it had to supposedly join Caricom because, at the time, the world was morphing/merging into mega geo-political and trading blocks. Caricom seemed to have been the only way to go then, especially culturally as Guyana was out of sync with South America in every way. Unfortunately, we lacked the foresight to see Brazil as an emerging major world economy, and hence align our strategic national interest accordingly. Hoyte, Manning and some other South American leaders had pushed the Association of Caribbean States, which is basically Caricom plus Latin America, but it hasn’t worked.

    But even the road to Brazil which was Desmond Hoyt’s project, would not bring much “legitimate” economic activity to Guyana at this time; although the drug dealers would benefit enormously – some people believe this would include some of the PPP boys. Why? There is no vision for economic development along that corridor.

    We all know the age long adage/proverb/revelation: “where there is no vision, the people perish.” Guyanese and Guyana have perished!

    Rickford


  6. This man Burke ain’t real. Him @#ss pass PJ to think that him should intervene in a political party in house fight and struggle. If him feel that CGID is reputable then let them man get involve. Don’t bring PJ in this crap. Sh@# man.


  7. @David BU,

    The points raised about Guyana merit attention. Caricom leaders know Guyana is in crisis. A failed state but I guess they don’t want to interfere.

    It brings us to the next point. If they don’t interefere the problem of Guyana will become the problem of Caricom. We saw Jagdeo, Ramphal, Singh, Faria and Bourne angry reaction to B’dos enforcing immigration laws and offering amnesty. These people are threatening B’dos way of life and laws.

    Don’t you think the time is now for Caricom citizens to demand governments intervene to correct Guyana’s problem since these problems-(racism, poverty, anti-social beahviour, drugs) are exported and destroying the island way of live, economy and values?


  8. Instead of washing him party dirty clothes and bumba clath here , the man would do better holding the Guyana government answerable for the problems them got so Guyana people can stop rushing to the Caribbean. The man even make him r@#% pass Caribbean as though him country joining Caricom was a mistake. Further, how the man talk he don’t even understand that Caribbean and West Indies definition is not limited to the Islands in the Caribbean sea but also include cultural and historic considerations that places the certain mainland South American Countries pat in the identification of Caribbean. This is history man. But it does not take away from Guyanese them because of strategic location spanning two blocs from being in a South American alliance. Them problem of course is that them don’t easily connect have little similarities apart from borders. Guyanese don’t even speak the languages of the continent and they look like Island people more than the typical south American. Them stand out like bruise thumb in South America. So is joke to think that they feeling they are better off with Brazil. We all know how Brazilians treat Black people. So where best for Guyana? If nothing more them lucky them could fit both ways.
    This man one time cussing out Barbados, him country, now him cussing out political party.


  9. Can anyone point the BU family to information which articulates the positions of NGOs et al from Guyana or beyond sent to the Caricom Secretariat, Jagdeo, Caribbean leaders etc. So far BU sees a disconnect between a concern outside Barbados about the affairs burning in Guyana and the behaviour of Caricom Heads.


  10. David, how does one get in contact with you?


  11. @anonymous

    Click on button top right of this page or on the feedback option top of page.

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