Latest update May 2nd, 2026 12:30 AM
Jan 15, 2018 Letters
Dear Editor,
The urge to write again, on the manifest racial onslaught of the sugar workers is visceral. I had first written to the primary media publication houses on the destruction taking place in the sugar industry in February 2017. The letter was carried by: Stabroek News – ‘Descendants must benefit from the toil and sacrifice of ancestors on the sugar estates – February 26, 2017; Kaieteur News – Walter Rodney’s description of the cosmic forces – February 27, 2017; and Guyana Times – Placing the tiger outside the room – February 26, 2017.
By the first quarter of 2017, I had stopped submitting letters to our state-owned “”Nations Newspapers””, the Guyana Chronicle; as my letters to them were not published; however, space was given to the administration’s obedient supporters to respond to my letters.
The letter herein, takes precedence over the appointment of Justice James Patterson as Chairman of the Guyana Elections Commission (GECOM); in my view the President had the full authority under our poorly drafted constitution to execute the appointment (no pun intended), in the manner it was done.
Why the president tortured the Opposition Leader by asking for unnecessary subsequent lists – is a question for the president’s royal viziers.
As the President, once he found the first list unacceptable, he had the power and authority, vested in him by the constitution to unilaterally appoint the Chairman of GECOM.
Of course, one could write on the tragicomedy of our mostly discombobulated Ministers, from the mismanagement of the Durban Park Jubilee event to the mixing up of two of our National Holidays: Diwali – the festival of lights, and Phagwah – the festival of colours and love.
The mix-up or clustered pronouncements, were further compounded by the inference in December 2017 in the National Assembly that only Guyanese of Kshatriya Indian descent, would know the difference between Diwali and Phagwah; thus, making Guyana 99.9% a nation of Kshatriyas and also members of a noble and military class.
Also, writing on the cruel and unusual punishment of the sugar workers; must take priority over the bungling of the Production Sharing Agreement between Exxon and the Government of Guyana, where the mouse has claimed to have had his way with the elephant.
Of course, malicious efforts by government to take possession of Red House, inflated rental fees for the conversion of a house to a pharmaceutical bond, unjustifiable pharmaceutical supply contracts and the exponential increase in the number of contract workers along with the bourgeoning contract monies for contract workers or the findings or biased findings of the quote unquote – neutral Speaker of the National Assembly, are subordinate, though related to the termination of sugar workers.
The current flaccidly (sic) of our unlearning political columnists/commentators, such as David Hinds, Freddie Kissoon and GHK Lall, to name some of our prominent scribes and their post 2015 elections inability to call a spade a spade or identify racism as racism, when it happens under the current administration to the terminated sugar workers, who are largely of one racial group.
These learned gentlemen commentators, have suddenly become tongue tied or restrict themselves to platitudes. Their pronouncements become twisted and biased by confusing persecution and racism with economic policy or by failing to say President Granger is ultimately responsible for the tragic treatment of our sugar workers and the oversight of the sugar industry.
These same named writers are unhesitant to invariably blame former President Jagdeo for debacles that happened in Guyana from 1999 to the current date.
What manner of people are we, to see the suffocation of our Guyanese brothers and sisters in the sugar industry, as some of our writers and politicians exhale hot air in the form of words like praxis, uneconomical, impractical, and wax philosophical theorems, while entire villages, communities, and regions are economically choking – symbolically, metaphorically, and literally; with the unjust termination of sugar workers?
Two terminated sugar workers have suffocated themselves so far, evidently collapsing under the weight of poverty, enabled by ‘kith and kin’, be it a Smith or a Singh, in Guyanese parlance.
How many more lives must be lost? How much more suffering must be endured by those whose livelihood depends on the operations of the sugar industry; before our Government acts in a righteous manner?
While the suffering continues, our government has set aside US$18 million in a “funds account” for some logically inexplicable and indefensible reason; while two terminated sugar workers commit suicide due to absence of funds.
Guyana with billions of barrels of oil reserves, and recording the largest oil find in the last decade, has leadership that has seemingly opted for the destruction of villages and communities in the sugar industry, under the rubric of the sugar industry not being economically viable, instead of leveraging our assets and considering the plight of the sugar workers.
It is unfortunate that the administration does not think it fit and proper to be our brother’s keeper and to create solidarity from our economic good fortune.
A good parent does not neglect one child and favour another because each child has a different father, or because one child seems to be a better economic investment at a particular moment in time.
Maybe, Guyana’s new parent company, ExxonMobil Corporation, will show the heart needed to save the sugar industry by allowing for a fair Production Sharing Agreement.
Guyana is on the verge of quadrupling its economic value twice over, and then some. Yet, this politically racist, callous and calculating policy to terminate sugar workers, destroy the sugar industry and the kith and kin in the communities, seems to have the full support of those in power.
Nigel Hinds
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Your children are starving, and you giving away their food to an already fat pussycat.
May 02, 2026
Kaieteur Sports – It all comes down to the final two schools in the 12th Annual Massy Distribution Secondary Schools Under-18 Football Tournament, and what a journey it has been. Chase Academic...May 02, 2026
(Kaieteur News) – Imagine inviting everyone to dinner and then allowing only the wealthiest guests to eat, while the rest are encouraged to admire the cutlery and wait patiently for “future dining opportunities.” Now, I am told that in Guyana, the government has invited Expressions of...Apr 19, 2026
By Sir Ronald Sanders (Kaieteur News) –As with all my commentaries, this one is strictly in my personal capacity, drawing on more than fifty years of engagement with Caribbean affairs and a lifelong commitment to the cause of regional integration. I do not speak on behalf of any government or...May 02, 2026
Hard Truths by GHK Lall (Kaieteur News) – It’s a long-held mantra. The best policies and best procedures are nothing, if there are no people with the required energy, care, and ethos to breathe life into them. Minister of Health, Dr. Frank Anthony, made his moves, proved me right. He engaged,...Freedom of speech is our core value at Kaieteur News. If the letter/e-mail you sent was not published, and you believe that its contents were not libellous, let us know, please contact us by phone or email.
Feel free to send us your comments and/or criticisms.
Contact: 624-6456; 225-8452; 225-8458; 225-8463; 225-8465; 225-8473 or 225-8491.
Or by Email: glennlall2000@gmail.com / kaieteurnews@yahoo.com