Chinese Landing: a problem of resolving and reconciling the conflicts

Dear Editor,
Development inevitably brings changes, new arrangements, new views, and hence is full of contradiction. More often than not, the conflict is between different rights. Often, too, certain improvements are required, but not some of the features that accompany the improvements.
The “legalities” must be taken into account as the base on, and from, which some reconciliation is sought. In consideration of the “traditional/natural” rights of Amerindian villages, recall that at Independence, when the British left, there were sixty-five Amerindian villages listed. It was towards the end of the 1980s that movement from coast to hinterland generated amounts of evident contradiction that required resolution.
Dr Jagan and his PPP/C administration moved to demarcate, and mark on the ground the original 65 villages, whilst opening the door to the proclamation of new Amerindian villages. Now more than 150 are listed, and the door has been opened to extension of earlier villages. In the extension and proclamation of new villages, conflicting situations with existing mining and forestry rights were inevitable, and in the case of the Kaieteur National Park, somewhat reversed. The Park was extended to the village boundary, while the village wanted to be expanded to the earlier KNP boundary.
Most of the conflicting mining and forestry situations were resolved generally by encouraging the miner/logger to accept alternative areas, but a few intractable knots remained, and the parties approached the courts, as they were free to. Was it noticed in a recent newspaper one article denouncing the mining at Chinese Landing, and another by some resident women villagers bemoaning no opportunities in that area to earn money? With all protections in place, a win-win solution is a possibility if mutual respect could be attained and retained.
President Ali’s proclamation of, and urging the development of, a sense and reality of “One Guyana”, within what many sense as “One World”, would be a good starting point. History is full of wrongs that could not practically be righted today. Mutual understanding, respect, and reasonable accommodation are what are called for, and are possible now. The case could be made that all Guyana was Amerindian, just as all the Americas were held by the Indigenous Peoples. We must go forward. We can hustle forward under a banner of “One Guyana”, a part of “One World”.

Sincerely,
Samuel A A Hinds
Former Prime Minister and Former President