Latest update November 26th, 2024 1:00 AM
Nov 26, 2013 Letters
DEAR EDITOR,
In Tony Vieira’s recent letter featured in the Kaieteur News, is he really asking the public to decide who the dinosaur is? I found his question to be distinctly rhetorical and self-abasing on his part. Even so, the tone of Vieira’s letter is deeply shocking, because he has the boldness to recite a court ruling and history.
If I may, Guyanese would recall Tony Vieira was a member of a political outfit that was and still is dictatorial. Tony Vieira advocated the People National Congress (PNC) that has a record of dismal governance which tyrannically suppressed the freedom of expression and media rights. In history, no other commonwealth of the Caribbean has stifled and usurped this fundamental entitlement of freedom of expression. Furthermore, no member that is associated with the PNC regime such as Tony Vieira should dare to speak about freedom of expression.
I think it is also right of me to reminisce on the events that transpired throughout the PNC era to monopolize and prohibit freedom of expression. As this was the autocratic political platform Vieira’s allied with. I would recount the PNC government had banned Dr. Cheddi Jagan the privileges of speaking in the National Assembly and barred him from any media rights. Frontally, why did Vieira elude citing this eventful disregard for freedom of expression action against Dr. Jagan?
Meanwhile, during this time, many journalists were murdered and imprisoned simply because they were critical of the PNC government. The self-empowered PNC administration that Vieira supported painstakingly did everything to control the media and freedom of expression. In such a manner, between 1971 and 1972, Mr. Burnham issued two trade orders which prohibited the importation of newsprint, book binding and printing equipment. These orders alone undermined the guaranteed constitutional right of freedom of expression article 146.
Mr. Burnham also seized the licencing and prevented newsprint of Mirror Newspaper. The Mirror Newspaper was eventually forced to halt its publication. Is this the form of change and fair media rights Vieira wishes to revive?
I am undoubtedly sure that Justice Lennox Deyalsingh who ruled in the 1985 Trinidad and Tobago proceedings that Vieira extracted, would also find the PNC’s dictatorial position in breach of the constitution.
The Catholic Standard was another media the PNC regime inflicted repressive actions against when the state-run Guyana National Printers Limited refused to continue printing the paper. This was followed by the assassination of Father Bernard Darke, who was murdered by thugs. The murder of Father Darke illustrated PNC’s callous measures to maintain exclusive media control.
On June 13, 1980, a dark day in Guyana’s history realized the assassination of world renowned scholar and historian Dr. Walter Rodney. Dr. Rodney’s death also amplified the autocratic stance the empowered regime exercised over freedom of expression. Simply because Dr. Rodney who was a member of the Working People’s Alliance (WPA), worked publicly and collaboratively with the People’s Progressive Party (PPP) to organize referendums against the PNC government.
These unforgettable occurrences are well entrenched in our history. Vieira should have been more cautious about how he tapped into the context of history. These were the PNC’s draconian attempts to stifle freedom of expression and press. Hence Vieira, a person that associated himself with these immoral principles, should be the last person on planet earth to preach of freedom of expression.
It was the PPP’s government from the advent of office in 1992 that broke the twenty-eight years of monopolized control that hung over free press and expression. In particular, the PPP administration led the challenge against PNC’s decision of the 1970s to restrict newsprint. The PPP advocated freedom of press and stood in solidarity with all journalists to restore their constitutional entitlements.
Under the PPP’s government, the environment for free expression and free press flourished. It was in the newly created forum, Guyana saw the establishment of two privately-operated daily newspapers and the creation of television outlets that covered the three counties of Guyana. The distribution of radio licences to both public entities and individual were granted to launch radio broadcasting hubs in Georgetown, Linden, Berbice and Essequibo.
So for Vieira to utter, “it’s part of “the PPP’s agenda from day one to exclude the opposition from any participation in the state-owned media” is a blatant misconception. All media entities, including state-owned outlets, have operated freely without any suppressive interference by the PPP government. Even the forums that are critical of the government still enjoy the rights of free expression and free press.
I would also recall the debate series aired on National Communications Network (NCN) at many times, when the opposition was invited for public dialogue. However, the opposition absented themselves. The debate series was overseen by Mr. Al Creighton to discuss various issues. The Honourable Attorney General and Legal Affairs Minister Anil Nandlall on countless occasions invited the opposition for open debates on NCN but they disregarded those invitations. Honourable Minister of Finance Dr. Ashni Singh also explicitly expressed several invitations for the opposition to discuss budgetary and finance affairs but they also ignored those media time. His Excellency Donald Ramotar extended requests for collective discussions with the oppositions but they also avoided those.
Therefore, Vieira’s claims about the opposition parties not receiving fair media time to exercise freedom of expression are a blatant lie. I am still optimistic that one day the opposition will accept these requests and engage in public discussions. Nevertheless, the principal purposes for government information services and media outlets are to convey government ideas. This fundamental principle is applicable in all parts of the world.
Vieira also made two statements in this pathetic writing and I quote, “…force the PPP to comply with their [opposition] demand” and “…to hold the government to ransom for concessions…” Any civilized nation would find such statements treasonous. Is this the democratic view he endorses?
I think Vieira is also challenging your journalistic judgment to label a letter published under your approval as illiterate. Vieira is solely attempting to discredit my writings by all means and hypocritically stated, “[I] must learn to live with freedom of expression,” perhaps he should.
Vieira also has the audacity to call me an illiterate without having any clue of my academic accomplishments. Even so, to make matters worse, he strenuously invested his time responding to letters he coined foolish and illiterate. I would venture to say he is totally confused and beyond illiteracy.
When we assume postures and speak, we must ensure the records support us. In his letter he explicitly advocates Guyana being blacklisted for non-compliance of the Anti-Money Laundering and Combating the Finance of Terrorism legislation. I am even more convinced now that Vieira has lost his marbles. Moreover, he is in fact the dinosaur of a bygone era and the sooner society realizes he is extinct, the better for Guyana.
Mahendra Hariraj
Nov 26, 2024
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