Home Letters Christopher Ram deliberately misinterpreted the final paragraph of my letter
Dear Editor,
I expected that the Editor-in-Chief of the Stabroek News would have staunchly defended his newspapers’ Editorial by arguing that our Government should force ExxonMobil into agreeing to renegotiate the 2016 Production Sharing Agreement (PSA).
In his response to me, the Editor-in-Chief offers as grounds for our Government forcing ExxonMobil into renegotiations that “ExxonMobil literally forced Guyana in 2016 to renegotiate the Extant Agreement”.
The Editor-in-Chief chooses to ignore the point I made in my letter: “that 2025 is not 2016”, and that, since 2016, our country has palpably advanced its development and has tremendously benefitted from the resources flowing from that very Agreement.
Any government acting so foolishly as to demand renegotiation would drag the country into a legal battle lasting years, wholly compromising the benefits so far gained, and with an entirely unpredictable result.
What I did not expect was for Christopher Ram to deliberately misinterpret the final paragraph of my letter, in which I stated that any attempt to renegotiate the contract “would be a prescription for losing the election”. Ram dishonestly attempts to claim that this somehow represents the Government’s position, when in fact it was obvious that I was responding directly to the Stabroek News Editorial’s proposal that “it is not inconceivable that some party could contest the 2025 election on this single issue – renegotiation of the contract”.
Indeed, I expressed the view that I found this suggestion amusing, and went on to ask, “Are the owners of the Stabroek News contemplating entering into politics?”
Needless to say, the Stabroek News wickedly and falsely headlines Ram’s letter “Nascimento clarifies that the President’s position on renegotiation was not about contract sanctity but rather electoral calculations”. Words that not even Ram used in his letter.
Yours sincerely,
Kit Nascimento