Culture Minister’s performance

Dear Editor,
Some may say it’s hard to judge a book by its cover; but oftentimes, after a few chapters, it gets easier to grasp the gist of the story. It has been close to two years now since the Guyanese public has had a chance to read some of the chapters in that book defined as “The Performance of the Minister of Youth, Sports and Culture, Ms. Nicolette Henry”.  letters
More and more, as the people delve deeper into this book, they are asking this question: How on earth can such a person become a Minister, after exhibiting so much ignorance in regard to her portfolio?
Is this a systemic problem? It can become a bit disconcerting to glance at the line-up in the cabinet room.  One can easily conclude that the competent are clearly in the minority in the Granger cabinet.  Of course you have the likes of Carl Greenidge and Raphael Trotman, who can hold their own in any cabinet room on any day of the year, because of their sound technical competence. But at the other end of the spectrum, you have the likes of Nicolette Henry, who clearly seems not capable of differentiating between Phagwah and Deepavali. But if my memory serves me right, this is the kind of stuff that I learned in primary school in the hard PNC days, when students struggled to access textbooks.  Today, I am told, all primary school students are learning this lesson from a textbook called “Social Studies for Our Children, Book 1”.
I saw this video of the Minister’s performance, and clearly if this was a Freudian slip, shame on no one; it is human to err.  But after slipping once, it is clear from the video that the Minister remained clueless as to her error, and pressed on like a “be-righter” (someone who is always right).  I could not believe my ears or my eyes as I watched the video. Like a programmed robot, the Minister continued to force her message down the throats of her audience, even after they protested.
Where are her cultural intelligence (CQ) and cultural manners?  Those are our customs she was mashing up, and those cultural norms in the Hindu community are not meaningless, otherwise they would not have been followed for centuries.
In the modern world, according to the Harvard Business Review, CQ has become a vital aptitude and skills test for any executive before being granted a job or promotion.  But it seems that President Granger was heavily engaged in a game of “inee-minee-miney-moo”, when he picked some of his 27 Cabinet members.
Anyone close to the dominant party in the coalition (the PNC) will tell you that a more suitable candidate for this role of Youth, Sports and Culture Minister was PNC Executive Mr. Christopher Jones, who today has proven he is multiple time more culturally intelligent than Ms. Nicolette Henry.
And when you consider this Minister gets paid close to a million dollars a month plus benefits to dish out such high-grade incompetence, you wonder where have the PNC minds like Shirley Field-Ridley gone?
When you evaluate this situation by comparing performance vs. benefits, only words like “public squander,” “financial skullduggery” and “public waste” appear to be consistent commonalities when it comes to some of the choices in the Granger cabinet.  Shame on President Granger for diverting some G$3 million per year for God knows how long from the Treasury, to send this Minister back to school to train in a field totally irrelevant to her current job.  Isn’t this wanton abuse of the Treasury?  Will SARA, SOCU and the Police investigate this public squander, come 2021?
I call on President Granger to do right by the people and withdraw this portfolio from Nicolette Henry.  She has proven herself unfit and unsuitable for this role.  She has disrespected a significant portion of the population with her careless statements, and has lost the right to lead the nation on the cultural front.  If the Minister is busy studying healthcare on the job, to the point that she has become tardy at her work, then it is imperative for the President to act. For how long more will her cabinet colleagues have to carry such deadweight by covering up for these acts of underperformance and unpreparedness? What next to expect from this part-time Minister and full-time student?

Sincerely,
Sase Singh