Press Release 17/07/2009

Mark Benschop (l), Norris Witter (c), Lincoln Lewis (r)
Mark Benschop (l), Norris Witter (c), Lincoln Lewis (r)

GTUC condemns the human rights violations of its General Secretary on Leave, Lincoln Lewis, its acting General Secretary Norris Witter and Journalist Mark Benschop. GTUC holds the Guyana Police Force, Commissioner Henry Green, Minister of Home Affairs Clement Rohee, Head of the Joint Services and President of Guyana, Bharrat Jagdeo, accountable to the people of this land, for this abuse of power and violation of human rights and dignity which these very public figures, engaged in peaceful protest, were made to endure at the hands of a misguided Police Force.

The words of Commissioner of Police Henry Green that guns can “accidently “ be fired during protests are seen as a clear threat to the lives of Lewis , Witter and Benschop. This is intimidation and lays the foundation for defence of the Guyana Police after shooting , maiming or committing extra judicial murder against these three respected activists. GTUC warns that should any harm befall these labour leaders and journalist, this government will be held personally accountable as we hold them responsible right now, for their safety .

GTUC calls on President Jagdeo to desist forthwith the transgressions and bullyism defining his governance and which are fast becoming the staple of Guyanese existence. We call on all law abiding citizens of Guyana to condemn this atrocity and demand that the Jagdeo regime uphold the dignity and respect  for, Lewis Benschop and Witter in the same  fashion that he and his government  seek  Caricom  to respect the dignity and rights  of illegal and undocumented workers who break the immigration laws of Barbados and other Caribbean lands.

GTUC sees the abuse of Lewis , Witter and Benschop in the context of President Jagdeo and the PPP entrenching dictatorship. They are seeking to outlaw protest and limit resistance.

It is seen in the parliamentary bill to limit workers right to protest. It is seen in the uncalled for arrest of Trade Union Leaders Lincoln Lewis, Norris Witter along with journalist Mark Benschop.  GTUC also notes that accompanying the three were former Chief Magistrate, Juliet Holder Allen and a Canadian Immigration Consultant, Baldeo Persaud.

It is seen in the activities of the phantom squad which is the sort of tactics Hitler used with the feared Gestapo, where dissenters and other ethnic groups were targeted for annihilation.

It is seen in the destruction of public property and records under investigation, as with the burning of the Ministries of Finance, Labour and Housing, MMA, Ministry of Works and now the Ministry of Health, which Office and its Minister are currently under the microscope for gross financial irregularities and links to Roger Khan.

It is seen in the trend of destruction of evidence: records are destroyed when public buildings are burnt down. So naturally there can be no further investigation or no conclusive findings when the evidence is gone. GTUC calls for an immediate   and independent forensic investigation into the recent destruction of the Ministry of  Health building  and for those responsible to be held accountable .  We remind citizens that this is a tax payers loss and that  each of us have a responsibility to hold   this government accountable for any negligence or criminal act associated with this loss.

Evidence is also destroyed when alleged wanted men and criminals are killed before being placed before the courts. Law and order does not win, Guyana does not win when people are murdered extra-judicially. When this happens, those who need to cover up crimes benefit, as dead men tell no tales. The dictators who seek to drive fear and limit resistance win. They also win when they use these circumstances to create racial nexus and animosity, sacrificing getting to the root of crime, peace and national unity for political expediency.

The state of the Brickdam lock ups have been brought to the fore of this nation before and whereas the Minister of Home Affairs Clement Rohee declared that it was not intended to be a five star hotel, GTUC reminds him that it is supposed to be temporary housing for human beings with constitutional rights. GTUC reminds Minister Rohee and President Jagdeo that these citizens of Guyana need no less treatment than their counterparts in Barbados.  This is a matter that the GTUC will be following up more  intensely locally and internationally.

The time has come for Civic society and social partners to seriously evaluate the seventeen years of PPP rule. This is more than an adequate marking period to determine the effectiveness of the management of the nation’s resources.  What we are seeing before us is score card which shows failure, particularly from 1997 to present and moreso under President Jagdeo.

Under the eyes of  Caricom and despite the signing of the Herdmanston Accord, Guyana has become a failing state characterized by many as  an immoral , lawless  government that has demonstrated it is prepared to have relationships with the criminal underworld, notably Roger Khan , Axel Williams and the Bacchus brothers;   It is characterized by President Jagdeo’s transgression of  the constitution ; undermining the separation of legislature, Judiciary and Executive powers of the State -a fundamental tenet of democracy. Further it is seen in the  abuse of authority, disrespect for the law of the land , the Guyana Police Force and other security forces;  the Presidential Office and violation of  the rights of citizens even as  corruption within its ranks is ignored, covered up even destroyed , and   government and PPP officials , enrich themselves with finances,  gouged from  and redirected away from the government treasury as evidenced in the recent Auditor General’s report. The World Bank’s report showing that 43% of the Guyana Gross Domestic Product is from foreign remittances shows  failure and the  lack of  an effective economic plan and development of the country’s capabilities.

The only ones who are seemingly able to enjoy betterment under this regime are the anointed and well connected criminals such as Roger Khan.

Human rights are being trampled upon and fear is being instilled into the minds of the people to create a state of quietness and compliance that is unreal.  Whereas supporters of the government seem prepared to settle for the crumbs off the PPP table it is the role of the GTUC, labour and all people to demand of this government a living wage, workers and human rights, equality, justice, the right to association, freedom of expression and dissent. The people of Guyana are fast being left behind. Even PPP supporters would rather fight and breach another country’s laws than remain to develop Guyana. The writing is on the wall.


  1. The Ministry of Health under Ramsammy had circumvented the tender process in place and had purchased over a billion dollars worth in pharmaceutical over a period. The pharmaceuticals could not be found and most were never delivered to Guyana. this same Minister had problems also accounting for a multi-million dollar equipment to be used in the fight against cancer.


  2. Before he became Minister of Government he was also at one time under investigation for supplying millions of dollars of substandard lab supplies to government. yet he was rewarded with a ministerial post.


  3. All across the world the subject of immigration and how to build/foster an integrated and meaningful society is being discussed. Some like Norman Girvin, Annalee Davis, David Commission (who seems to have gone underground since being shown up as a grasshopper) et al would make Barbadians feel like we are monsters for wanting to shape OUR society the way WE want. The government must know this is a tricky issue 3 year out from the next election. Many Barbadians are watching very carefully. The BLP has pained themselves in a corner on the issue hence their retreat. Here is a sensible commentary on the Guyana situation coming from a Dr. Dr Bertrand Ramcharan, Ph.D (maybe George Brathwaite can give him a call.

     

     

    Inclusive governance in Guyana

    Dr Bertrand Ramcharan, Ph.D. (LSE), Barrister-at-Law, is a former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Chancellor of the University of Guyana, Commissioner of the International Commission of Jurists and Professor at the Geneva Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies. He is one of the founders of the newly-established Guyana Institute of Public Policy, of which he is a Director. The Institute aims to generate thinking on issues that can help in the future cohesion and development of Guyana.

    By Dr Bertie Ramcharan

    Dr Bertie Ramcharan

    Guyana is not doing as well as it could, and the crucial issue is the system of governance. Every four or five years, around election time, we fall into crisis and, many times, violence. Our development is hobbled by this.  We can avoid this in the future.

    Proposals and views on power-sharing are many. Some are well meant, and some are partisan; they may be well received in some quarters while, in others, they may be received negatively for partisan reasons. We need to analyze our situation from scratch, and not lock ourselves into views on the independence constitution, the Burnham constitution, the revised constitution after the reforms around the turn of the century; or diverse formulas for ‘power-sharing’. The crucial concept should be inclusive governance.

    Guyana is a plural nation and we need to proceed from constitutional recognition of this plurality. During the wars in the former Yugoslavia this writer spent four years with the peacemakers and peacekeepers as Director of the International Conference that led peace efforts in the Balkans. In the former Yugoslavia, Bosnia in particular, they had the concept of ‘constituent peoples’, and the present constitution of Bosnia recognizes three constituent peoples, Bosniaks, Serbs, and Croats. The concept of constituent peoples may be found in other parts of the world.

    In Guyana it would be helpful for the constitution to recognize constituent peoples. These would certainly include the indigenous Amerindian people, the Afro-Guyanese people, and the Indo-Guyanese people. There could be discussion about recognizing other constituent peoples, such as Portuguese, Chinese, and people of mixed ancestry. The numbers of Portuguese and Chinese, which were small from the outset, have dwindled due to emigration. The number of people of mixed ancestry is sizeable. It could be justified to recognize them as a constituent people, but political choices are needed in national constitution-making and it would probably simplify matters to recognize three constituent peoples.

    The recognition of three constituent peoples requires, practically, that they must see themselves reflected in the governance arrangements in the country. There are different ways of achieving this. Guyana now has an Executive Presidency. This should change to a patriotic presidency, rotating annually. Each year, in turn, the presidency should pass to an Amerindian Guyanese, an Afro-Guyanese, an Indo-Guyanese, in that order of rotation. People of mixed ancestry can self-identify under one of these three categories.

    Bosnia has a collective, three-person Presidency, consisting of a representative of each of the founding people. The presidency there is more of an executive presidency and the collective nature has given rise to problems. Guyana does not need a collective, executive presidency. A patriotic presidency, rotating annually would be preferable. The rotating president would be chosen from among those elected to parliament. Consultations among the parties represented in parliament should facilitate the selection of the president. The Swiss have an annual, rotating presidency. It works well.

    Guyana has a system of proportional representation at the national level. The constituency system has broken down. The system of proportional representation should be retained as it would be too divisive to change it now. However, proportional representation should operate at the regional level. Parties vying for election in a region would name their electoral candidates and named candidates would be elected according to the number of votes their parties receive. This would establish a bond between elected parliamentarians and their constituents, and would break the stranglehold of party leaders who now determine which of the persons on their lists sit in Parliament. This is not only undemocratic, it is inefficient.

    There are details to be worked out, to be negotiated, particularly the allocation of seats among the regions. An independent commission could study this and make proposals.

    The number and name of Ministries should be designated in the constitution. A small country like Guyana does not need a large amount of Ministries. The President of the country would call upon the party with the largest number of seats in the Parliament to designate a Prime Minister. Ministers of Government would be distributed among the parties represented in parliament according to the percentage of their numbers in Parliament. The Prime Minister would negotiate the sharing of ministries and the President would decide on ministerial allocations if need be.

    Guyana needs one strong national human rights commission. It can have different chambers, if desired. UN advisers can be asked to offer the blueprint of such a commission.

    The system of local government can be negotiated in a second stage after the national constitutional changes have been settled and a new system of inclusive governance introduced. A Presidential Commission on local governance can be established to make recommendations.

    The ideas advanced above are not taken out of thin air. They are based on the structural realities in Guyana and are designed to turn those realities into positive attributes. Guyana originally belonged to its indigenous people but they are still among the most disadvantaged group in the country. They are now pressing their case for communal and land rights and for their needs to be addressed.  This should be a national priority. Their story has not been adequately told in our historiography. Walter Rodney, in his history of the Guyanese working people, dealt with the aspirations of Afro-Guyanese for dignity and traced instances of working class cooperation between Afro- and Indo-Guyanese in the early years of the country. Eusi Kwayana, in his book, The Morning After, cites a feeling among some Afro-Guyanese nationals that, as a people who were here well before the Indians, their historic contribution and status must be recognized. We should be ready to talk openly about these things in a spirit of national dialogue. Dale Bisnauth, in his history of indentureship in Guyana, analysed the factors that led to distinctive cultural development among different groups of Guyanese, especially the Indians. He noted a movement back to their culture in recent decades. At the same, all Guyanese share some distinctive Guyanese traits. He correctly argues that nation-building must proceed on the basis of recognition of the cultural aspirations of all of Guyana’s people. Here again, we must be ready to discuss these issues in open dialogue.

    Jamaica’s national motto is ‘Out of many, one people.’ It is inspiring. Guyana’s motto is ‘One nation, one people, one destiny’. Yes, we are one nation; we are one people; and we have one destiny. But our destiny will be better moulded by recognizing our cultural attributes and turning them into strengths. We must build our constitutional structure on recognition of our historical and cultural factors.

    The ideas for inclusive governance advanced in this essay have this in view. These are fundamental, but simple, structural ideas. A short bill in Parliament, endorsed subsequently by referendum, cannot be difficult to achieve if Guyanese want it in large numbers. The legislation can be quite simple:

    “The Constitution of Guyana shall be modified to provide, immediately after endorsement in a referendum, as follows:

    Guyana is a nation of constituent peoples, notably Amerindians, Afro-.Guyanese and Indo-Guyanese. The culture of all constituent peoples shall be fostered.

    Guyana shall henceforth have a President who shall serve as the political and moral leader of the nation. The President will be elected annually in Parliament from among the parliamentarians, with high consideration being given to the designation of a female president.. The Presidency shall rotate annually, in this order, among an Amerindian, an Afro-Guyanese, an Indo-Guyanese. Persons of mixed ancestry are eligible to serve as President under one of these categories, on the basis of self-identification.

    Parliament shall be constituted of X persons elected under a system of proportional representation in each of Guyana’s ten regions. The persons sitting in parliament shall be those elected in the regions in accordance with the number of votes received by their parties.

    The Prime Minister shall be selected by the President from among the parliamentarians of the party with the highest number of seats in the parliament.

    The Ministers of Government shall be X in number and shall be drawn from among Members of Parliament in proportion to the number of parliamentary seats held by their party. At the start of each Parliament, the President, after consulting the Prime Minister and the leaders of the parties represented in Parliament, shall decide on the allocation of core Ministries among the parties represented in Parliament.

    Guyana shall have a strong national commission for the promotion and protection of human rights. The UN Secretary-General shall be invited to designate an international expert who would draw up the mandate of the Commission for endorsement by Parliament.

    A Presidential Commission shall be established to make recommendations for consideration by Parliament on the system of local governance. Parliament shall decide on this within three years.

    Let us start anew, Guyana; and let us turn our cultural diversity into strengths in our future constitutional structure. Let us build for the future, rich cultures, constituent peoples, one nation, one people nationally, one destiny.

    The future beckons.


  4. re GTUC release and its acolytes…..yaaaaawn.
    There was a court case in Guyana for the trio accusesd of disorrderly conduct,etc. Lewis was absent. Is he above the law ? Shouldn’t an APB (all points bullein) be out for him?…


  5. marx
    Do you know why he was absent? Do you know if an excuse was given for his absence?. I know you really want to jail this man again but you and the other moongoose gang may be biting off more than you can handle. Don’t you not realise Guyana is on the brink of civil unrest all because of a greedy, dictator call Jagdeo? All that he is trying to do is contaminate the entire region. It’s up to us bajans not to allow that to happen here. I intend to do my part, hopefully in a peaceful but decisive manner.


  6. yaaaaaaaawn.


  7. Marx you just shame! Scout aint lying!


  8. Marx, can yawn all he likes that is because the truth bores him. He would rather be spilling the dirty propaganda of the PPP about 28 years. Just take note of the willful distortion of Lewis not being at court when it was stated in the news papers that he had to read for information. This is the nature of the the people and party which Marx represent


  9. Marx is bored, We are sick and disgusted by the meagalomanic and despot Jagdeo, his dictatorship and evil which engulf Guyana and now threatens Barbados and the Caribbean.
    Maybe marx is too busy yawning and sleeping and may be missing how his government busy thieving, burning, and corrupting the laws of the land.


  10. This is what these men are protesting against. This is the handywork of the Jagdeo Regime that is accusing Barbados of harrassing Caribbean citizens. These were not soldiers. These were members of the Indian Government janjaweed Militia based at Freedom House, the PPP Headquarters.

    Guyana has now become to the Caribbean, what South Africa, Zimbabwe, Angola and Mozambique was to Africa back in the 80s. The regime in Guyana is comprised of the most nasty and Godless bunch of bastards. Fire bun dem rass
    ###########################
    Ministry fire suspect… BRUTALISED

    Thursday, 23 July 2009

    Visibly battered, shaking uncontrollably and unable to walk, Troy Small called ‘Cats’ was finally released from the Alberttown Police Station and was immediately rushed to the Georgetown Public Hospital Corporation for medical attention. Small, an alleged victim of torture at the hands of men believed to be members of the Guyana Defence Force, was released on $10,000 bail around 17:45 hours, after spending two days and nights at the Alberttown Police Station where he was dumped on Monday night. The grimacing man’s legs were strapped with what appeared to be bandages and he was assisted to a waiting car by two male individuals, believed to be relatives.

    Police say they are still treating Small as a suspect in the arsonist act that flattened two buildings housing the Ministry of Health on Brickdam.
    However, they have not revealed if there is anything incriminating against Small, who works as a labourer building tombs in Le Repentir Cemetery.

    Even up to yesterday, senior officials of the Guyana Police Force refused to confirm Small’s detention at the Alberttown Police Station although this newspaper had observed him lying on a bench in the enquiries room on Tuesday.

    Small related a harrowing tale of being picked up on Mandela Avenue by the men and being dragged along the road all the way to Le Repentir Cemetery where he was mercilessly beaten.
    He recalled that he was with a friend when three men, one of whom was dressed in what appeared to be an army uniform, approached them. According to Small, one of the men asked him where he could purchase $5,000 in Guinness. Small said this aroused his suspicions about the men’s motive since according to him the men were already drinking Guinness when they posed the question to him.

    Eventually one of the men gave his friend $1,000 and sent him away.
    Small said that unexpectedly, the man grabbed him and forced him towards the car which was already in motion and attempted to force him inside.
    “I hold on pon de top of de car and he trying fuh force me in. One inside vice me round me neck and the one jump in and de car drive off with half me body outside. All I know was they driving and me body deh out de car while one holding me neck,” Small related, while trembling uncontrollably.

    He said that several persons saw what was happening and he was dragged along Mandela Avenue through Cemetery Road and into the cemetery.
    There the men placed a bag over his head and while one of them held a gun to his chest, another placed a gun into his mouth and began asking him questions about the Ministry of Health fire.

    “Dey ask me fuh tell dem is who pay me fuh bun down de place and how much I get pay fuh bun it down. I tell dem I ain’t know bout no fire, I does wuk in de burial ground. Then dem ask me whey de thing deh, and I ask dem wha thing. Dey say de thing wah been in de coffin,” Small related. He said that he told the men that he only knew about a dead he had buried recently which had arrived from America and offered to take them to the tomb. But the men continued to beat him and persisted in asking him how much he was paid to burn the Ministry down.

    Another vehicle with more men arrived on the scene and Small overheard a voice saying, “shoot him”. The labourer said he begged for his life telling the men that he had a child to live for.
    Still blindfolded, Small was eventually taken to a house where the bag was removed from his head and he observed several men. “A man tell dem wha bring me, ‘Y’all gone gat fuh carry dis man to de station and tell dem dat he and two man had a fight’ and that is how I get these injuries.”

    He said that that was the eventual report that the men gave to the police when he was finally taken to the police station. This newspaper understands that Small was first taken to the headquarters of the Criminal Investigations Department and then to the Brickdam Police Station.
    However, officials there refused to accept him in the condition he was taken there in. He was eventually dumped at the Alberttown Police Station where he stayed until his eventual release.

    Yesterday when this newspaper turned up at the Alberttown Police Station, Small was still lying on the bench although ranks there insisted that the man had been sent away.

    Reporters from this newspaper and other media houses did not buy that and waited outside the station for several hours as the police played cat and mouse with the man’s release.
    Family members are upset that Small was kept in that condition at the station for so long.

    They said that had it not been for the media, Small might have been kept in custody until he could walk before he was released. One family member even disclosed that the police had informed her not to engage the media.

    Colleagues of the injured man who visited him at the station yesterday said that Small worked up to 15:00 hours on Sunday. “We left shock because we never know that a man like he would have something like that done to he. That is cruelty fuh me,” one colleague said.

    Meanwhile, this newspaper understands that the police have invited African Cultural Development Association member, Archie Poole, for questioning. A police source declined to confirm if Poole is wanted in connection with the fire at the Ministry of Health. Kaieteur News understands that members of the security forces had visited Poole’s home on two occasions within the past three days.

    The police are also questioning several other persons in connection with Saturday morning’s blaze.


  11. Why would Alberttown Police station accept a person deemed a suspect by the GDF and who obviously needed medical clearance when the CID from Brickdam did not.
    Who is the officer at Alberttown ? Sure it is a PPP.


  12. Ruel Daniels
    I agree with you, Guyana is becoming an embarrassment to the region, Caricom. It is time the leaders of Caricom nip this in the bud instead of turning their heada in the opposite direction. The excuse is that they don’t want to get into another country’s internal affairs. One day when this escalates they WILL be forced to intervene, by then it may be too late. By then the guyanese refugees would have contaminated many other countries in the region and the epidemic will be worse than Type 1 H1N1, or Sars, or Ebola. We would be doomed, it would take a modern day Christopher Columbus to invade this region again. However, again we will be forced into captivity, modern day indentured servants. This time you would have to be quilfied as of 2010

Leave a Reply to I double NSCancel reply

Trending

Discover more from Barbados Underground

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading