← Back

Your message to the BLOGMASTER was sent

Submitted by The Caribbean Guyana Institute for Democracy


President Jagdeo's second house under construction

The tax payers of Guyana are being raped. Guyana’s ruling PPP government officials are building lavish, hundred million dollar homes, which they cannot afford on their normal salaries and with finances for which they cannot account.

There is Pradoville (I) and Pradoville (II); two of many housing developments where PPP government officials have constructed or are constructing sprawling, multi-million dollar homes, allegedly with drug money as well as monies allegedly stolen from Guyanese taxpayers.

President Bharrat Jagdeo Information Liaison, Kwame McCoy, is allegedly also constructing a 100 million dollar home on a regular public servant’s salary. Many more crooks of Jagdeo’s criminal regime, have built or are in the process of constructing such mansions with monies for which they cannot account.

Tax and anti-narcotics laws of Guyana provide for the forfeiture of property in cases where crimes were committed in contravention of these statutes. I wish to go on record as calling for an immediate investigation in to the acquisition of monies by PPP government officials to finance their multi-million dollar homes, including President Bharrat Jagdeo who is now building the second of such homes, on the East Cost Demerara.

 

President Jagdeo's 120 million dollar house in Paradoville

General elections in Guyana are constitutionally due in 2011. It is heavily anticipated that the election will be in August 2011. PPP officials, it would appear, are in a mad rush to embezzle from the treasury, as well as wrest from drug dealers, billions of dollars in order to finish constructing their extravagant mansions.

If the elections result in a new government, it would be imperative for the new administration to immediately take action to, or enact legislation to, seize and forfeit the properties in question and dispose of same via auction, and revert those monies that were either stolen from the tax payers, for which income tax was not levied upon and/or paid, or which were proceeds from narcotics transactions, to the national treasury.

 

President Bharrat Jagdeo Information Liaison Kwame McCoy's 100 million dollar house

Discover more from Barbados Underground

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.


  1. Others are asking the hard questions of Guyana.

    Will Facebook and Twitter be blocked in Guyana, too?
    MARCH 4, 2011

    BY KNEWS | FILED UNDER FEATURES / COLUMNISTS, STELLA SAYS

    Online communication tools played a huge role in recent government changes in Tunisia and Egypt. Social media such as Facebook and Twitter played large roles in both countries. These revolutions also showed how easily governments can interrupt Internet traffic and cell phone transmissions.

    In a March 1, Voice of America (VOA) article, Jillian York, with the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard University, says the Tunisian government used old-school “Phishing” attacks to get Facebook users’ passwords and hijack their accounts.

    York said, “A user would try to log in to Facebook.com and would be redirected to a page that looked just like the login page. When they logged in, their password was captured and their account was thus taken away from them.”

    I found this article interesting because of another article I read on February 28 in the Guyana Chronicle entitled, “Teenage girls face off over Facebook.” As I read the Chronicle article, which detailed an argument on Mash Day between two teenage girls about material posted on their Facebook pages, I could not help but think the article was a waste of print page.

    Who really cares about two teenage girls getting into a spat? This happens dozens of times a day and it is certainly not newsworthy. However, when I reached the last two paragraphs of the article (I read it that far to see if the article had a redeeming reason for being printed), I discovered the only reason the state media could have for wasting their time on this non-story.

    Here is what those paragraphs said, “In recent times, Facebook has been known to contribute to countless breakdowns in marriages, identity theft, stalking, rape, and even murders because of the volume of information it dispenses openly about the user, unless they stringently employ the security settings offered by the site.”

    The next paragraph said, “The site, and its Twitter friend have been blamed for aiding communication during the current uprising in the Arab world. Other countries are now examining methods aimed at curtailing Facebook’s influence on its younger population.”

    I read the Chronicle because it often foreshadows the government’s next move. It is almost as if a decision is made to move in a particular direction by those in power, and then articles are written for the Chronicle in such a way that it supports the decision that has been made before it is announced publicly. In other words – it is government propaganda.

    The wording of these paragraphs is especially worthy of note because it paints Facebook and Twitter in a very suspicious light by attributing them to “breakdowns of marriages, identity theft, stalking, rape and even murder.” Then it “blamed” the sites for aiding communication during the recent revolutions in the Middle East.

    Blamed? While the rest of the free world cheers the role these Websites played in those revolutions, Guyana’s state media uses the word blame – as if Facebook and Twitter did something wrong by helping the people of Egypt and Tunisia fight for freedom.

    There is something very wrong here. Could this article be another foreshadowing of government’s intention? Although at present it seems unlikely the government would feel it necessary to block Facebook and Twitter in Guyana, the fact that this is an election year forces us to look at the possibility.

    In light of the way this article was phrased, it would seem the government would be protecting the young people of the nation by “curtailing Facebook’s influence on its younger population.” In other words, Facebook would be restricted for your own good.

    Aside from Egypt and Tunisia, government-sponsored service interruptions of the Internet and cell phone service have occurred in Iran, Syria, Iraqi Kurdistan and elsewhere in the Middle East. According to the aforementioned article in VOA, governments can still maintain a so-called “kill switch” particularly if the government owns or licenses the communications networks or fibre optic cables.

    The article said that in some cases, governments control the infrastructure to which social media are connected – as it did in Egypt and still does in countries like China, Iran and Syria – and Internet access can be hindered.

    However, York said, “Even with Facebook or Twitter being blocked, there are numerous ways to get around that. There are circumvention tools, when https is enabled it is very difficult and unlikely that a government is going to block all https communications.”

    Guyana is a free country and I am hoping this article in the Chronicle was simply written by someone who sorely dislikes modern social media – and not at the behest of those in power with an agenda to undermine the freedom of the citizens.

    However, it would be irresponsible of this commentator to discount this unusual propaganda as a reporter’s rant given the political climate of the world today, the fact that the article in question held no other significant information and the fact that this is an election year.

    Could it be that a Guyanese leader (or leaders) felt these dictators of the Middle East made a genius move in attempting to cut their people off from the rest of the world? Could it be this move is now being considered for the people of Guyana to curtail outside “influence”?

    If this is even a remote possibility, now is the time for those who are tech savvy to begin preparations to circumvent any such plan. After all, it is better to be safe than sorry.


  2. The Editor,
    Stabroek News

    Georgetown

    Dear Editor,

    Indigenous people, and many others of Guyana also, feel that there is  something sacred about burial grounds and funerals. This applies to people of all beliefs  and even to those without attachment to a religion.

      President Jagdeo is a notable exception. I say notable because, there are of course those of us who get drunk and noisy on these occasions.  I doubt that he gets drunk on drinking, but then there is power . I do not know the President’s personal habits, so I do not include him in this noisy group.

    Two things strike me about the report of his last speech at Babu John cemetery at a memorial for two political pioneers of Guyana, Dr and Mrs Jagan. After he had spoken on the topic, it seems he “departed from  his theme ”  and launched the election campaign. I am forced to recall his abuse of his own Hindu marriage ceremony, and a previous oration of his at the same Babu John cemetery, before the 2006 general elections.

    Taking  together those  cases  and his recent oration, in which he targeted a not yet nominated presidential candidate, we can perhaps claim a  pattern of similar conduct in these events.

    Does the President really respect these ceremonies and these sacred places?

      Or has he come to the belief that nothing in the society but his presidency is sacred?

    Funerals should at least remind us that we all die. If he holds that his oration was privileged because of the occasion, why then were there spies at the late MP Murray’s funeral taping what speakers like Mr Greenidge felt called upon to say.

    He attacked this likely Presidential candidate in relation to the shooting of PPP supporters at the close of the 1973 elections. ( burnham’s army killed 3 indian ppp supporters trying to stop them taking away ballot boxes). Yet he admitted giving orders as president to “shoot to kill” during the  east coast disturbances. (200-500 DEAD-).

    The 1973 shooting was a perhaps a “shoot to kill”  moment, which many, including ASCRIA, an African organisation, denounced at the time.  I was, and I remain, against the shooting of unarmed civilians, except in cases of strict and established self- defence.

    The government in 1973 went through at least the form of a judicial enquiry into the shootings. Moreover, a President should be more cautious in applying collective guilt to an entire army, and criminalisng officers unless he knows that they gave the order or were present in a position of command.

    At the same time the President is unwilling to pronounce on torture   of young people by members of the security forces on his own watch as Commander in Chief and under his own nose.

    President Jagdeo, despite calls from all sides, has refused to enquire into the Buxton centred post 2001 election disturbances, but he continues to  boast of evidence at his disposal.

    Boasting about his videos is one thing. But at a law enforcement conference, addressing police personnel whose working material is evidence, President Jagdeo put before him this high example.

    He  told them of the videos and said that he that might make use of them after leaving office.

    Any rogue cops sitting in the audience must have felt very justified.

    Yours  respectfully,

     

    Eusi Kwayana-elder in walter rodney’s party-the wpa..

The blogmaster invites you to join the discussion.

Trending

Discover more from Barbados Underground

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

Continue reading