Latest update February 21st, 2025 6:25 AM
Jan 15, 2015 Letters
DEAR EDITOR,
Please permit me to respond to Freddie Kissoon’s letter of January 11, 2014 captioned “The names of those who judged my intellectual ability at UG,” in which he states, “Prior to my contract termination by the Council of the University, there has never been a single instance where the council since the birth of the university in 1963 fired an academic without a request for such coming from the academic/administrative organs of the university.”
Firstly, congratulations to Mr. Kissoon for this vindication to what he has stated all along: that his ouster from UG was illegal. He was right. I have seen elsewhere Mr. Kissoon stated that he does not expect UG to compensate him, I believe strongly that the institution should, in the spirit of the dictum in R v Sussex Justices ex.p. McCarty, ‘justice should not only be done, but should manifestly and undoubtedly be seen to be done.’
Secondly, for historical accuracy I humbly submit that the termination of Mr. Kissoon’s employment, contrary to what he has stated, may not have been the first instance of an academic whose employment was brought to an end by the Council “without a request for such coming from the academic/administrative organs of the university.” UG’s Council has been too long at the behest of the political directorate of this and the previous administration. This must change.
In July 1973 the University’s Board of Governors decided not to renew the contract of a Sociology lecturer, Mohamed Insanally, the headline in the Sunday Graphic read, “Insanally fired from university.” The Faculty Board and Staff Association objected to the decision.
Insanally believed that he was fired because he was a leading figure in the then Guyana National Liberation Front and a strong critic of the government. He was not given an opportunity to respond to the charges against him by the Board and no substantial evidence was presented to the Board. Additionally, the Appointment Committee, headed by the Vice Chancellor (Dr. Dennis Irvine) had recommended that Insanally should be employed for another three-year period.
By the end of July 1973 the UG Group of the Progressive Youth Organization (PYO) had put out a strong statement, “This latest move of the Board of Governors packed with adherents of the People’s National Congress, is a naked and brutal show of discrimination calculated to silence dissidents who express their criticism of the establishment.”
October 1973 saw a “Six point demand on the Government” by the PPP which included, “1. The fullest respect be given to academic freedom or the right to dissent, at the institution.” And, “2. Immediate end to discrimination and harassment of students and teachers.” Also, “4. Reconstitution of the UG Board to reflect all shades of opinion.”
UG was by this time celebrating its tenth anniversary, and on the occasion of the October UG Convocation, Insanally in public protest used the opportunity to return his Bachelor of Science diploma torn to the Vice Chancellor. Insanally had graduated with honours, winning the Chancellor’s medal for outstanding performance.
Sherod Avery Duncan
Feb 20, 2025
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