Truth and accountability matter when people are paid from public funds

Editor,
Ms Laura George of the Amerindian Peoples’ Association (APA) has said repeatedly that she was misquoted by a section of the media when a newspaper claimed she said that the Amerindian Land Titling (ALT) project had been started under the David Granger Administration.
As Ms George has since stated, this is inaccurate – the project was started under the previous PPP/C Administration, and only restarted in the last year under the Administration of President Irfaan Ali.
Ms George has repeatedly stated – including on her Facebook page of 14th July, 2022 – that she asked a local newspaper to correct its inaccurate report, but the newspaper has not done that.
Given that the Executive Chair of the APA, Ms Jean La Rose, was the Deputy Leader of the APNU+AFC list of candidates in the 2015 elections – and was subsequently appointed by President Granger to senior Government positions – it is particularly important that the newspaper quotes Ms Laura George correctly when she is talking about the Granger Administration. Moreover, the media person who wrote the article, Miranda La Rose, is the sister of Jean La Rose, the APA’s Executive Chair and parliamentary candidate for President Granger’s 2015 coalition.
Editor, can you please explain why the newspaper did not correct its publication after Ms George said she asked the newspaper to do this?
The APA receives a lot of public funding, including from Norwegian and French taxpayers. As with others who are paid from public funds, the APA therefore needs to be held accountable for telling the truth. And the media entity does the APA a grave disservice when it implies that Ms George said something she did not.
It is not too late; can the newspaper please apologise for misquoting Ms. George, and put the record straight about what she actually said?

Regards,
Thomas Cole