Utter shamelessness, absolute disgrace and more betrayal – pay the full severance

Dear Editor,
Having been exposed again that they had no intention of paying the more than 4000 sugar workers who were terminated their legally-guaranteed severance this month as promised, President Granger had the self-proclaimed “champion” of the sugar workers read a message in Parliament that the A Partnership for National Unity/Alliance For Change (APNU/AFC) will provide a 50 per cent severance payment by the end of the month. The announcement comes with another promise that the remaining 50 per cent will be provided in six months’ time. This is a total breach of the law and in no way is a reflection of the generosity of the Government, as they want people to think.
The Minister with responsibility for labour, Keith Scott, must know that this announcement means the APNU/AFC stands indicted as breaching the labour laws of Guyana. He must act in defence of the workers. A crime is openly being committed against the workers of Guyana by their own Government.
The Agriculture Minister had promised that the sugar workers whose jobs were taken away by APNU/AFC would be paid their severance before the end of January. The sugar workers themselves doubted that he was speaking the truth. Many of us believed the sugar workers had reasonable doubts that APNU/AFC had no intention of keeping that promise and we raised our voices. In an article earlier this week, I expressed my doubt that the APNU/AFC had any intention to stand by the Minister’s promise. Now Moses Nagamootoo in Parliament this afternoon has confirmed that the Agriculture Minister was not telling workers the truth and that, indeed, APNU/AFC had no intention to keep their promise.
In his pompous style, the PM presented his confirmation in such a way that he and the APNU/AFC were doing the workers a favour by turning the broken promise into a kind of half-truth.
This is nothing but utter shamelessness, an absolute disgrace and another callous, cruel betrayal of the sugar workers. The termination of the sugar workers were done suddenly and without any consultation with the unions or with the workers themselves. The severance payment to the terminated sugar workers is not an option for the Guyana Sugar Corporation and APNU/AFC. It is a legal requirement. The payments are due immediately, not in accordance with a timetable established by Government. To first promise the sugar workers that they would be paid in January and then announcing that Budget 2018 did not cater for such payments is an insult to the workers, but also a breach of the labour laws of Guyana.
Hopefully, the 50 per cent payment being promised now is not another empty promise announced only to buy more time and avoid the enormous pressure from the workers and their families and from decent Guyanese. Personally, I do not believe APNU/AFC will honour this promise until it actually takes place. The problem sugar workers face is there is no way they can survive on this 50 per cent payment and there is no way they can be confident that the other 50 per cent will ever be paid. There are still sugar workers from Wales Estate who lost their jobs and are still awaiting their severance payments, more than a year after.
The boast that APNU/AFC is providing $100 million for loans to sugar workers is even more shameful. With the loss of almost 6000 jobs since January 2017 and more to come in the coming months, this means that APNU/AFC is making available a paltry $20,000 per worker as a loan, a measly sum that the worker will need to repay to the Government. PM Nagamootoo should have been ashamed to read that statement. Did he not ask why the statement could not have been issued directly from the Office of the President? He was chosen to read the statement because both the President and the Minister of the Presidency know the hypocrisy and shamelessness of the announcement.
Place the $100 million loan promise in perspective with other recent actions of the Government. They did not have to scrape to give a $68 million handout to an organisation linked to APNU. Budget 2018 provides for $68 million to be given as a grant to this organisation through the Office of the President. In the meanwhile, the Government will spend close to $100 million to pay two lawyers from Barbados to represent the AG in court in the challenge to the appointment of the GECOM chair. The Ministers will spend more than $100 million in entertainment payments in 2018 at the various hangouts, including the Marriott, where they daily spend taxpayers money to have a good time.
Having terminated the sugar workers, they must pay the full severance now. The payment is due upon termination and that is not negotiable. The workers are now owed interest on this payment. The failure to pay severance is a severe breach of the law and the APNU/AFC must not feel that it is doing a favour for the sugar workers by promising a 50 per cent payment soon and the rest six months later. They should all hang their heads in shame.
The self-proclaimed “champions of the sugar workers”, Moses Nagamootoo and Khemraj Ramjattan and their fellow MP from Region Six, Charandass, must go and face the sugar workers and explain why they have allowed themselves to become the “hatchet” men in this ultimate betrayal of the workers.
Nagamootoo did not appreciate that he publicly and arrogantly in the hallow chambers of our Parliament confirmed APNU/AFC intends to break the laws of Guyana. He announced a crime that he and the APNU/AFC Government has committed.

Yours truly,
Dr Leslie Ramsammy