Tell Guyanese the truth

Dear Editor,
The preamble to the Guyana Constitution says:  “We the Guyanese people…forge a system of governance that promotes concerted effort and broad-based participation in national decision-making, in order to develop a viable economy…”
When you are the Government, you make the rules. Blaming all and sundry, except yourself, for policy mistakes is the act of weak leaders. Today the private sector is being accused of not investing in the economy, but the Government refuse to alettersccept this state of affairs is a direct consequence of their own policy paralysis.
Worse yet, the workers are being penalized with oppressive taxes on essentials such as electricity and water, and yet the Granger Administration expects them to be highly motivated and productive. This is being utterly delusional!
Leadership is about delivering for the people in an environment permeated by high morals and ethical standards. When one observes the financial happenings in this Granger Administration, one wonders what changes they were advocating for on the 2015 campaign trail.
It is unfortunate that President Granger seems to be trapped in this web of deception. It makes him less impactful when it comes to acts of state abuses being committed under his watch. This leadership lethargy just continues to undermine his potential legacy. Who really is making the decisions in this PNC-led Government?  Is there an “Imperium in Imperio” in the Granger Administration?
The latest allegation of massive corruption involving this Granger Administration are the revelations that the Public Health Minister found the need to bypass the National Tender Board and sole-source some G$605 million in medical supplies from an alleged financial sponsor of the PNC in past elections. So, was the PNC promise to bring an end to sole-sourcing in the procurement of medical supplies during the 2015 campaign just a ruse to fool the people?
Then there is that abomination on the appointment of Permanent Secretaries, which happened in March 2017. Of the sixteen (16) identified Permanent Secretaries, only one person of East Indian ancestry was deemed qualified to serve in the Granger Government at this senior level. This state of affairs was quite a letdown for many people, who have ancestors that served our country at all levels for over 175 years.
This situation is nothing but a grave insult to many East Indians, and exposes how indifferent and insensitive the Granger Administration is to this whole question of social cohesion and national harmony. It is nothing but a big joke!
But it is also a grave insult to the right-thinking non-East Indians who are open to moulding a society where merit is the principal criteria for getting ahead, not which tribe you belong to, or whether you have a military buddy in the Ministry of the Presidency.
Shame on you, President Granger, for allowing such a situation to occur under your watch!  This new low from the PNC would never have happened under the more ethnically sensitive Mr. Desmond Hoyte.  Even Burnham was more ethnically sensitive with his appointments. Only a fool would think that this act of tribal supremacy could develop a multi-racial, multi-religious country like Guyana.
When a leader refuses to commit in words and deeds to the growth of all of the people of the nation, then that leader must know he would never be able to tap the primal energies of the majority of the people.  In such a situation further economic collapse is guaranteed, and thus, as a consequence, there would be rapid expansion of poverty. Do you expect any right-thinking UG graduate would stick around for that eventuality?
If we continue on this road, we can kiss goodbye to any thought of economic recovery in 2018 and 2019.  An opportunity to serve should be driven by competence and suitability, not by the criterion of “who has a godfather” in Plantation Sophia, or who is acquainted with a former military buddy.
If you want to inspire the best from all of your people, the ground rules must be well-defined and clearly communicated, so that all have a fair shot at getting ahead in an environment saturated with fairness.  Such an environment does not exist under President David Granger and Prime Minister Moses Nagamootoo.
As I reflect on President Granger’s Inauguration Speech, and to these specific words that he said: “Let us co-operate for Guyana”, I wonder whether they were merely words.

Sincerely,
Sase Singh