GUYANA
UNDER SIEGE
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Forbes
Burnham
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by Rakesh Rampertab | ||||||||
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THE judicial system also became replete with PNC sympathizers
and members and as early as 1968, those who did not approve of Burnham
were quietly forced to practice the legal professions in other countries.
One such person was J.A. Luckhoo Jr. (the first Guyanese to hold the post
of Chief Justice, 1960). It was also necessary for the head of the judicial
system, or attorney general, to favor Burnham’s opinions. The PNC presence
in the judicial system was confirmed by the flying of the party flag on
the Court of Appeals building. This presence also stretched itself over
to the media and unions. The Guyana Broadcasting Corporation (GBC) and
the Daily Chrocicle, Guyana’s primary newspaper, fell under
the direct governance of the PNC. Newsprint for other papers, primarily
for the PPP, was seized, especially at elections. Two Trade Orders (no.
86 of 1971 and no. 86 of 1972) infringed the freedom of expression once
guaranteed under the Article 12(1) of the constitution. Although cost
for damages was awarded to the New Guyana Company (publisher or the Mirror),
in 1998-79, the court found that the fundamental right to import newsprint
was not an essential part of the right to free expression. Trade unionism in independent Guyana has always been, for the most
part, divided like the politics along race and party affiliation, with
the PNC garnishing the supports of industrial organs representing the
civil service or public sector and Bauxite industry, and unions for the
rice (e.g., Guyana Agricultural and General Workers Union [GAWU] and sugar
industry aligned with the PPP. However, under Burnham’s tenure, trade
union activity became heavy suppressed, eventually forcing most unions
to move in favor of the PNC. This included the body that headed the umbrella
of unions, the Trade Union Congress (TUC), and the massive Guyana Public
Service Union (GPSU). Where the PNC could not impose its influence in
union activities, it infiltrated the industry itself via other methods.
This was particularly true in the rice and sugar industries, areas traditionally
dominated by Indians. Both received less minimal financial support from
the PNC; with time, the government replaced competent people at the Guyana
Rice Board with its own supports. The previously profitable rice industry
began to crumble due to a reduction in paddy prices paid to farmers, unavailability
of machinery parts and foreign exchange to make these purchases, and the
break from lucrative markets like Cuba. By the eighties, average acreage
under cultivation plummeted from 250,000 to 90,000. By 1976, the socialist revolutionary plan to “feed, house and clothe”
Guyana began its final plummet. The ETB became a channel that stifled
trade due to party favoritism, and the imported economic model faltered
due to a lack of international investors (unlike in the US territory).
Millions spent in nationalization resulted in staggering losses as most
projects failed. The hydroelectric dam in Mazaruni amounted to a US$100
million loss. Ineptitude, corruption, and willful mismanagement (yearly
audits neglected etc.) resulted in little production, forcing the government
to turn to the IMF/World Bank by 1978. By the time of Burnham’s death,
Guyana was some US$2 billion in arrears (US$150 million to Trinidad and
US$100 million to Barbados). In addition, despite the lavish foreign tours
Burnham undertook with enormous entourages and social projects that failed,
millions remained unaccounted for by the PNC. To have unfettered access to private lands for “public” purposes,
Burnham had the constitution amended. The new Acquisition of Land for
Public Purposes Act allowed free access to lands with compensation to
be provided bases on his economists’ dictates, as opposed to current market
value. Burnham’s sprawling but extravagant Hope Estate (Hope, ECD), which
included such things as a helipad, and where public servants (primarily
weeders and cleaners) were brought to work, was once such acquisition.
While Burnham had been able to win US support by claiming to be an anti-communist
government, by 1976, US-Guyana relationship became strained when a Cubana
airliner exploded over Barbados, killing 11 Guyanese of the 76 dead. Burnham,
shockingly, accused the CIA, to which the US State Department in turn
called Burnham a “bald-faced liar.” Throughout his political reign, Burnham had maneuvered as necessity
dictated. Or, as Mr. Partrick Walker (head of a British parliamentary
delegation to Guiana in 1953 after the constitution is suspended) noted,
Forbes Burnham would “tact and turns, as advantages seem to dictate,”
and that “his whole political approach is opportunistic.” In the West
Indies and Africa (Burnham, Nkrumah, and some West Indian leaders had
met secretly in 1957 [despite Jagan’s initial request to such a meeting,
he is ignored], during the independence celebration for a new Ghana),
he convinced Black leaders that a PPP government meant an “Indian” state.
In Washington and London he criticized the PPP as communist and in Havana
and Moscow, Burnham announced himself as an anti-imperialist. He benefited
from critical US support while having ties with Cuba. Burnham was, in
essence, a politician. By the seventies, he monitored the action of the UNITA forces fighting
in Angola, and also Nkomo’s ZAPU in Zimbabwe. He offered Guyana as a refuge
for all African freedom fighters (and Black militants), and also made
financial contributions. In his book, Journey
to Nowhere—A New World Tragedy, Shiva Naipaul notes that Burnham,
on his way to a Conference of Nonaligned Nations held in Lusaka (1970),
writes a check for $50,000 that is handed over to President Nyerere of
Tanzania, for African freedom fighters. In the Caribbean, the People Revolutionary
Government of Grenada was offered both money and Guyana army’s training
facilities. Not to be ignored, he welcomed cult leader Jim Jones (paid
US$2 million to the government) and Black militant, David Hill (Rabbi
Washington), despite the latter having a criminal record in the US, to
have residence in Guyana. Jim Jone’s People’s Temple that offered a program
of socialist self-sufficiency was filled overwhelmingly with Blacks. Andrew Salkey, in his Georgetown Journal, (1972), writes, “Everybody
knows Cheddie…People say he is too far behind to catch up with Burnham…Burnham
is a better politician…Burnham is the sort of politician that leaves you
guessing….American really doesn’t understand him the way they think they
understand Cheddi.” Salkey goes on to note that “Burnham is the sort of
man who sells the Party paper in Bourda Market on Sunday morning,” that
he “understand power…I think that Burnham understand the Indian majority,
Black minority think better than most people believed.” But as Guyana
approached the end of the seventies, Guyanese understanding of Burnham
the man and the politician was clear—he had become an erroneously idealistic
and ruthless leader taking Guyana deep into a territory of immense economic
stagnation. Despite his military expansionism and party policies to elevate the
country’s Blacks, such as the building of housing schemes, many at critical
points in being near Indian-populated villages (e.g., Samantha Point near
Grove, EBD), hardship prevailed. In 1977, the PPP was able to call a strike
along the sugar belt, and another massive strike even began in Linden
(names after Burnham), a PNC stronghold. Dissension began to pervade the
society as food shortages became commonplace. Burnham called upon Guyanese
to consume what is produced locally; the ranks within the party are made
to recite lines advocating national self-sufficiency by poet, Kahlil Gibran;
“Pity a nation that wears a cloth it does not weave…” The early eighties
brought an official ban on numerous imported items like wheaten flour,
which Burnham replaced by rice-flour (milled rice). Bread was interpreted
as an “imperialist” food. Traditional food outlets (shops) were barred
from selling food items and instead, the government established a series
of food distribution centers called Knowledge Sharing Institute (KSI).
As antigovernment criticism reached the doorsteps of the government
and the army from within their own ranks of supporters/members, Burnham
the ingenious politician became intensely selective in choosing loyalists
(e.g., Cecil “Skip” Roberts). To prevent any government or military figure
from becoming overtly popular, he exercised a policy of reshuffling, which
included the appointing of such individuals to foreign posts. As people
anticipated the 1978 general elections amidst a renewed wind of opposition,
Burnham arrested their expectation with the Referendum Bill (1978), which
gave the PNC 2 more years in office. It passed in parliament because the
PNC held the required two-thirds majority (37 of 53 seats, gained in the
1973 elections). Repression of political activity always existed under Burnham, but
it became an unofficial government policy in the seventies, beginning
with the attempted murder of UG lecturer, Dr. Joshua Ramsammy (PPP) in
1971. In 1972, Dr. Walter Rodney was refused a teaching post at UG. The
Registrar noted that there was “no suitable vacancy in the Department
of History for someone with your qualification and experience.” On a second
attempt, the academic appointment committee considered him, but according
to Rupert Charles Lewis in his Walter
Rodney’s Intellectual and Political Thought, the “Burnhamites on the
Board of Governors” at UG “overturned the decision.” PPP activist, Arnold
Rampersaud, is framed by the PNC for a shooting. He is freed after a third
trial in a case that became internationally known. By the end of the decade,
tens of opposition activists, primarily from the WPA, are arrested, jailed
on false grounds, and beaten. Members of the Ratoon
group (UG academics and intellectuals for democracy), are also targeted
(e.g., a kidnapping attempt is made on Dr. Clive Thomas). Shortly before
Rodney is assassinated in 1980, Edward Dublin and Ohene Koama, men closely
associated with Rodney, are murdered. In 1978, leading members
of the WPA, including Drs. Rodney and Roopnarine are falsely accused and
tried on arson charges for burning down the OGSMND building. They are
eventually found innocent in another internationally known political trial,
which included Maurice Bishop as part of the defense team. Unfortunately,
Father Bernard Darke (Jesuit priest and photographer for the Catholic
Standard) is stabbed to death (1979) in police presence during this trial.
Responsible were members of Rabbi Washington’s House of Israel. The House
had become a “military organization” with its members being used by the
PNC as scab labor and to break up opposition rallies. At one such rally
in Kitty, Dr. Rodney is forced to flee the scene by running as House members
in police clothing converged. According to Eusi Kwayana, Burnham soon
thereafter “commented on Rodney’s prowess as an athlete and promised to
send him to the Olympics” to represent Guyana. Yet, Rodney’s statement of
the “Burnham Touch” is not all encompassing, although it summed up the
general feeling of the times. By the end of the seventies, non-Christian
holidays such as Phagwah and Youman Nabi were made into national events,
both the Canji and Demerara Rivers had bridges, free education existed
“from nursery to university,” and major roadways such as the Linden Highway,
became realities. One should note, however, that some of these accomplishments
were not originally the ideas of Burnham, but were carried across from
the pre-Burnham era of rule. Indian Leaders like J.B. Singh long called
for Indian holy days to become days of national celebration. The blueprint
for the Linden Highway and the beginning of “free “ education, including
the birth of the UG originated during the Jagan administration. Some “national”
symbols and institutions including the National Cultural Centre (NCS)
were not without their controversies. The NCS was Burnham’s idea.
He used money from the Indian Immigration Fund (belonging to and for indentured
servants) for this construction. Initially, a committee was established
to determine what should be done with this money; its proposal to built
three Indian cultural centers in the three counties were discarded by
Burnham who, to appease the Indian community, awarded the construction
contract to an Indian firm and had Indian religious groups (e.g., Guyana
Pandit’s Council) bless the project. The Golden Arrowhead has been criticizes
as being a flag that does not truly symbolize the makeup or cultural presence
of all six racial groups in Guyana, but is a pseudo-replica of flags to
be found in Africa and the flag of a Black power movement headed by Marcus
Garvey. Burnham, however, survived because, as he once declared in an
interview with the New York Times, he was “all things to all
men” in Guyana. Somewhere between the politician and the man, one realizes that Burnham
not only was capacitated with immense practicality and intellectual foresight,
but held views that were supposed to mature into panoramic, national visions.
But somewhere between the man and the politician, the distinction became
blurred, and the man became too much a politician instead of the politician
becoming essentially a man. Thus, for a moment, the Guyanese community
was offered a glimpse into what could have been, but were then radically
urged back to what really was. Martin Carter once noted that Burnham’s
pragmatism was “political and not philosophical,” meaning that “a man,
like Burnham, who finds himself engaged in the heart-fracturing task of
transforming an underdeveloped country, soon isolates what he knew all
along—the fact of difference between theory and practice, between what
is desirable and what is possible. And becomes impatient.” Perhaps this is the least polemic but most impartial a conclusion
one can arrive at in assessing the legacy of Forbes Burnham, the consummate
politician, and Forbes Burnham, the pragmatic opportunist. In the vein
of what he represented to both his admirers and those he has suffered,
it is not ironic that Forbes Burnham is the only Caribbean leader embalmed
for posterity—at the Seven Ponds in the Guyana Botanical Gardens, Georgetown,
two blocks away from Cuffy, Guyana’s first national her |
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Copyright © Rakesh Rampertab 2001 | ||||||||
©
2001 Guyanaundersiege.com
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