Dear Mr President,
I respectfully pen this open letter to you via the media in the hope that you would realise the national importance I have attached to taking this step.
I am placing my neck on the line that you are being manipulated by persons who do not have the best interest of our beloved Guyana at heart, and who are prepared to hold you hostage to their own evil intentions, and to manipulate you and the Constitution of this country to achieve their own personal and collective goals, unbothered by the catastrophic impact their actions to date are having on national morale; on the fears and anxieties of all Guyanese, whether or not they are supporters of your political party.
If perhaps you had read my earlier letters, you would have noted that I hold no brief for any political party. By choice, I have never voted in any national and regional elections, because I pledged to serve my country and not any political party. My loyalty is to the Constitution, and you and all of your predecessors, as presidents and commanders-in-chief, knew this and respected me as a professional.
How else do you think I was appointed to, or held very senior positions in, the Armed Forces; then as Chairman of GECOM, as head of Conservation International Guyana, CEO of GTT, Chairman of NAREI, Chairman of the GGMC, Chairman of the Protected Area Trust; and as a non-political special assistant to three presidents, including you, sir, until after having been deemed by you to be not a ‘fit and proper person’; whereupon, as a principle, I chose to resign from all government appointments?
I record these things not to beat my own drum, but to emphasise that there are certain principles which must be held as sacred if we are to live our lives in unselfish service to our country and to our fellow citizens. You are at the crossroads, where you have to now choose between pampering a cabal who bode you no good and who certainly have neither the national interest nor your interest at heart.
In their warped, self-centred way, they are manipulating the Constitution, the Supreme Law, and their allies in various national institutions and services of this land to serve their purposes.
It matters not to me which political party has the majority votes and forms the Government. What matters to me — and I am sure to all right-thinking Guyanese, as well as the regional and international communities — is that the electoral process reflects the will of the people through democratically held elections that are managed through processes that reflect transparency, integrity and adherence to the rule of law and to the Constitution.
Puzzled
Mr President, I am puzzled by the fact that an election, which for all intents and purposes went smoothly on March 2, has degenerated into a witches’ brew of mismanagement by GECOM; where there are misinformation, threats, violence, excessive use of force, manipulation of officers and ranks, and propaganda spun by spin doctors weaving a web of deceit; and in which you seem to be entrapped.
The assessments of accredited local, regional and international observers must have been known to you, and yet you seemed to shelter under the false premise that because you allowed the GECOM to function without interference, you were somehow absolved of complicity in the deteriorating governance of the electoral process, which has made this country the laughing stock of the region, and is causing this country to rapidly degenerate into a pariah state in the assessment of those who, rightly or wrongly, are the determinants of what constitutes a failed state.
I was heartened, Mr President when, last Sunday, in this Season of Lent, and like Saul on the road to Damascus, you had an epiphany, perhaps finally awakening to the realization — as your courageous son-in-law Dominic Gaskin did — that something was rotten in the governance of the electoral process, and that you needed to act independently and decisively to salvage your legacy and redeem the pride lost. This was acknowledged in the statement made by the Chair of Caricom on Tuesday, 17 March 2020.
Hon Mia Mottley stated that the fielding of the Caricom Team had been at your request on Saturday, 14 March 2020, and that “its mission was to supervise the recounting of the ballots in Region 4 of the General and Regional Elections of 2 March 2020 in Guyana”. She further stated: “Given that the tabulation process has been widely viewed as not being transparent or credible, President Granger and Mr Bharrat Jagdeo, Leader of the Opposition, agreed that the only possible solution was by way of a recount supervised by an independent team. This was seen as a significant contribution to bolstering the transparency and legitimacy of the electoral process”.
Not surprisingly, the Chair of Caricom yesterday conveyed to us this telling message: “It is clear that there are forces that do not want to see the votes recounted, for whatever reason”. And dramatically, she stated: “Any Government which is sworn in without a credible and fully transparent vote count process would lack legitimacy”. Mr President, this statement comes from your colleague, the Hon Prime Minister of Barbados, and not from some foreign representative of a super power, whom we seem fond of accusing of interference or of “talking down” to us.
Serious allegations
In my book, the Chair of Caricom made serious allegations, and since you were the one to request the Caricom team to supervise the recounting of the ballots in Region#4 (subsequently extended to all the ten Districts), I believe we are owed an explanation from you, sir, as to what conspiracy is afoot that would sabotage your laudable initiative, which was agreed to by the Leader of the Opposition and made possible by the Chair of Caricom and her colleague Heads of Government, three of whom accompanied her to Guyana to send a strong message of support, care and concern for our country, a member of the Caricom family, and for the wellbeing of all Guyanese.
That such a commendable initiative should be stillborn as a result of an injunction originating from your own party sends a worrying message that, either you are being Machiavellian, or being manipulated, or you have simply lost control over the actions of members of your own inner circle.
Whatever may be the reason for this embarrassment to you, to us citizens, and to our country’s image, it is no trivial matter. If the minions who are behind this conspiracy are not identified and excised like a cancerous tumour from the body politic, we will all suffer from the contamination, and the penalties we are likely to be faced with are an illegitimate Government and being deemed a pariah State.
Mr President, I have always held you in high esteem as a colleague and friend of nearly six decades. I have forgiven you for classifying me and other nominees for the Chairmanship of GECOM as “not fit and proper persons”, but I will not forgive you if you fail to do the honourable duty of calling off the dogs of war and excise them condignly from wherever they are hatching their moves and counter-moves.
Long-suffering
We, longsuffering Guyanese, fooled by mirages of a good life, are hurting, are embarrassed, and are angry. Let this poisoned chalice pass, Mr President. If you feel you are boxed in a corner and need reinforcements, then there are enough Guyanese of goodwill and decency who would rise to the occasion and ensure the recount is completed transparently and with alacrity.
Whichever political party is finally declared to have the majority votes must be acknowledged as legitimate, and be allowed to form the Government. Such a Government must be prepared to govern in the best interest of all Guyanese, and with such inclusivity and consensus as would facilitate a sustained process of reform that all have promised yet failed to deliver to successive generations.
Mr President, when the Chair of Caricom was about to depart Guyana, she had an engagement with the media in which she stated to all Guyanese that the stability of our country was in the hands of the Returning Officer of District 4. You know only too well what has transpired since that statement. It is now your duty to exercise the leadership responsibilities vested in you, and to direct, with GECOM, the peaceful and orderly completion of the electoral process by ensuring the mission is accomplished; that is, the agreed recount of all ballots cast in the Guyana 2020 General and Regional Elections in an environment conducive to security, transparency, integrity, and credibility of the results.
If the mission succeeds, it will be a positive contribution to your legacy. I have high expectations that you will not fail us.
Thank you, Mr
President,
Yours sincerely,
Joseph G Singh
Major General (retd)