Latest update December 18th, 2024 5:45 AM
Feb 18, 2020 Letters
DEAR EDITOR,
As we approach a very crucial moment in our history in Guyana, we have heard and continue to hear, from all of the political rivals. We can therefore gather a mental picture, therefore, what each will bring to bear; how each will manifest his/her party’s thrust in tomorrow’s Guyana; hence the word ‘manifesto’.
The manifestos are printed plans of what each party will do, or how each party will manifest itself in the hinterland, on the coast, in Linden, Corriverton, etc. I do wish each party the best of luck. But here’s what the burning question is: barring a tie, there will only be a sole winner, and in Guyana, the winner rarely ever gets the support of the other side(s), which is always brutal to nation building. It always results in a quandary. Nobody seems to want to grapple with what causes this in our body politic, purely because no one seems to want to cite the obvious: tribalism.
The syndrome of apathy normally steps in, in-fighting begins, callous reprisals from the ‘other’ side(s), as if neither of the manifestos did mean something to the whole construct of the development of our nation.
No politician should have such tunnel vision as to erroneously assume that only his/her party can govern. That question is perhaps the general malaise that has been gripping our politicians for far too long. When this becomes the trajectory, the evil manifests when election results are published and scapegoats are instantly created.
But Guyana can ill afford any mayhem at anytime. Let us not fall prey to what others might be hoping for, to capitalise on our weaknesses, our divisions, thereby conquering us as a nation which is on the rise. There is evil outside our borders, and there is testimony that we can simply become party to our own national demise.
How much more, for example, could we have bargained for from multinationals had we reached out to each other? Had we trusted each other, had we become more accommodating? But no, we suffer from the ‘go it alone’ syndrome; or from the other side of the house, “you try deh” attitude. All we will be doing is adding fuel to the proverbial burning down of Rome.
Now, is representation made in each political party’s manifesto how they hope to aid in governance should his/her party fail in the political contest? None. Why? Because each is launching its manifesto on the premise of being a winner, not a loser. And when it loses, battle lines are drawn.
It must be mentioned, though, that Guyanese are in their silent ways praying for more supportive, constructive, mature politicians on all fronts, regardless who is the winner. The posturing as conquerors, as in tribal warfare, is not a good gesture; not in these enlightened days.
The cases in the far North and elsewhere, too, could be cited. If one party loses, it does not mean it cannot meaningfully participate in decision making for the good of the whole.
Personally it is in the opinion of this writer that whichever party wins or loses is not vitally important. What matters is what each party can do to make solid contributions to make our country better.
Joseph C. Atkinson
Dec 18, 2024
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