Letter to the Editor
The darkest day for democracy in Guyana
By Hon. Brigadier David A. Granger
To The Editor:
A Partnership for National Unity (APNU) is enraged at President Donald Ramotar’s promulgation of a proclamation to prorogue parliament on Monday Nov., 10, 2014. This is the darkest day for democracy in Guyana.
This ‘Proclamation’ has effectively paralysed the parliamentary process and smothered the voices of the people’s legitimate representatives in the National Assembly. It is an affront to the Guyanese people who three years ago, in November 2011, voted for A Partnership for National Unity (APNU) and the Alliance for Change (AFC) to have the majority of seats in the National Assembly.
President Ramotar has now single-handedly engineered a constitutional crisis. The main purposes of the ‘Proclamation’ are to allow the People’s Progressive Party/Civic (PPP/C) to avoid parliamentary scrutiny while it attempts to:
- prevent debate on the Opposition ‘no-confidence’ motion;
- prevent the holding of local government elections;
- prevent debate on financial excesses and impropriety;
- protect the reputations of his ministers from parliamentary sanction;
- permit the PPP’s campaign for general and regional elections to proceed;
- permit the continued expenditure of state funds without parliamentary scrutiny.
The president’s ‘Proclamation’ to prorogue parliament is a challenge to the entire nation. He has no grounds for his crude smothering of parliamentary independence.
APNU will not accept this denial of democracy and will not be intimidated by the PPP/C’s dictatorial behaviour.
APNU is resolved to resist the president’s ‘Proclamation’. APNU calls on all the good people of Guyana everywhere to join in a civil movement for the restoration of parliamentary democracy by peacefully resisting the PPP/C’s resort to dictatorship and to call for the revocation of this ‘Proclamation’.
Leader of The Opposition
Hon. Brigadier David A. Granger, MP
A Partnership for National Unity
Catherine Holder
Office of the Leader of the Opposition
61 Hadfield and Cross Streets
Georgetown, Guyana
Monday, Nov. 10, 2014
Related story
Guyana president suspends parliament to avoid confidence vote
From Caribbean News Now
By Caribbean News Now contributor
GEORGETOWN, Guyana — Amid ongoing accusations by opposition parties in Guyana of widespread corruption and over the failure to hold local elections since 1994, President Donald Ramotar on Monday suspended parliament to avoid a vote of no-confidence by the combined opposition, the Alliance For Change (AFC) and A Partnership for National Unity (APNU), which has a one seat majority in Guyana’s 65-member parliament and was therefore certain to bring down the government.
It would have been the first ever in the history of independent Guyana that a vote of no confidence has been brought against an administration.
Ramotar justified his action as a difficult one that is in the interest of Guyana, as he worked to “reach an agreement” with the opposition.
However, the opposition claimed that discussions with the government have been exhausted and none of their concerns were met.
Leader of the opposition, Brigadier David Granger, said in a press statement on Monday, “President Ramotar has now single-handedly engineered a constitutional crisis. The main purposes of the ‘Proclamation’ are to allow the People’s Progressive Party/Civic (PPP/C) to avoid parliamentary scrutiny.”
Granger accused the Ramotar administration of suspending parliament to avoid “debate on the opposition ‘no-confidence’ motion; prevent the holding of local government elections; prevent debate on financial excesses and impropriety; protect the reputations of his ministers from parliamentary sanction; permit the PPP’s campaign for general and regional elections to proceed; permit the continued expenditure of state funds without parliamentary scrutiny.”
However, Ramotar’s pledge to have his “administration use that time during the period of prorogation to continue to engage the parliamentary opposition in constructive ways, in addressing the issues confronting Guyana,” has been dismissed by the opposition as a ploy to buy time to “campaign” for the next election and spend state funds.
The constitution of Guyana, which is also known as the Burnham Constitution, for the former dictator of Guyana, gives the president executive power. It is the same constitution that the governing PPP party condemned while in opposition. Ramotar will have up to six months to reconvene parliament according to the constitution, which gives the president sweeping power. But according to former speaker of the house, Ralph Ramkarran, the PPP will soon have to return to parliament to pass the next budget.
The two largest political parties in Guyana are race-based that appeal to Afro- or Indo- Guyanese. However, people are beginning to break that cycle and also the PPP has been losing some of its Indian voters to the AFC, and also to rapid migration among Indo-Guyanese. Afro-Guyanese have accused the government of discrimination.
The Indo-dominated PPP has been in power since 1992.
There were peaceful protests around parliament square in Georgetown on Monday after Ramotar’s announcement. Opposition leaders, who were among the protestors, said that they are “enraged by President Donald Ramotar’s decision to prorogue Parliament,” and called it “darkest day for democracy in Guyana.” They also threatened to internationalise the issue at the OAS, CARICOM, the UN and UNASUR.
IMAGE: Protestors around parliament square in Georgetown on Monday. Photo: Leonard Craig
For more on this story go to: http://www.caribbeannewsnow.com/topstory-Guyana-president-suspends-parliament-to-avoid-confidence-vote-23576.html