Latest update April 24th, 2026 12:40 AM
Dec 02, 2025 Letters
Dear Editor,
An alarming opinion piece by a Govt-aligned analyst recently sought to discredit the European Union (EU) Election Report, arguing that its critical findings were “flawed” and suspiciously driven by partisan “back-channel diplomacy.”
This analysis, rather than engaging with the substantive issues raised, is a blatant attempt at deflection, seeking to assassinate the character of a crucial international assessment instead of addressing its findings on governance and accountability.
The central premise of the attack—that the EU Report is flawed because it deviates from the conclusions of CARICOM and The Carter Center—is fundamentally misguided. Different observer missions operate with different mandates, scopes, and funding.
The EU, through its substantial investment, undertakes a far more comprehensive and longitudinal assessment that extends well before and beyond the peaceful conduct observed on Election Day. Its focus on institutional integrity, particularly the alleged “misuse of state resources,” is not a diplomatic error; it is a vital service to democratic sustainability.
The peaceful and credible conduct of the vote count is one metric; the integrity of the entire electoral playing field is another. The EU Report’s focused on the latter highlights a structural flaw—the potential for incumbent parties to use state funds and machinery to gain an unfair advantage. It is this crucial distinction—the focus on the environment versus the event—that makes the EU Report the most valuable blueprint for institutional reform, not a flawed outlier.
The insinuation that the EU Report was compromised by “back-channel influence” involving Guyana’s resident Ambassador or any political party is a baseless conspiracy theory designed solely to discredit a finding the powerful find inconvenient.
This is a classic political manoeuvre: when the findings of a credible international body prove difficult to dismiss on their merits, one must resort to attacking the messenger and alleging malice. The claim that the criticism is “suspiciously biased towards the We Invest in Nationhood (WiN)” is an unsubstantiated ad hominem attack used to distract from the actual content of the report—content that demands a robust, evidence-based response from the government, not veiled accusations against diplomats and observers.
The Ambassador, like any other citizen, has a past. To weaponise a historical political association to discredit an international mission’s findings is an act of desperation. We must debate the facts of the report, not the personal history of those peripherally connected to its process.
The contention that media narratives are disproportionately driven by the EU Report is not a sign of media bias; it is a reflection of the report’s gravity and relevance. The issues of misuse of state resources and the fairness of access to media are not minor administrative details. They go to the heart of what constitutes a genuine democracy. They are structural weaknesses that determine whether an opposition party, regardless of its size, can compete fairly.
The media’s duty is to highlight the findings that demand the highest level of accountability from the governing power. The EU Report does exactly that, which is why it receives, and deserves, extensive coverage. To accuse WIN or any other party of “selective amplification” when they focus on a report that highlights issues critical to their ability to function is to demand that they ignore evidence beneficial to democratic fairness.
The call for the EU to “disclose which Guyanese voices and groups shaped their position” is a barely concealed attempt at intimidation. Sources who provide critical, sensitive information to observer missions must have their confidentiality protected. Demanding disclosure is a tactic aimed at silencing dissent and undermining the ability of Guyanese citizens to provide honest feedback to international bodies in the future.
A confident, mature democracy must welcome critical feedback from its international partners. The reaction to the EU Report should not be a scramble to find a political scapegoat or an attempt to deflect with accusations of bias. It should be a dedicated commitment to implementing genuine, institutional reforms that ensure the integrity of the entire electoral process—from campaign financing to the fairness of state media access—for all parties. It is time to hold the government accountable for the findings of the EU Report, not the Ambassador for his past associations.
Sincerely,
Hemdutt Kumar
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.
Apr 24, 2026
Kaieteur Sports – Guyana’s sprinting future announced itself in emphatic fashion on the track in South American Youth Games 2026, as Ezekiel Millington powered to gold in the boys’ 100m final...Apr 24, 2026
(Kaieteur News) – For years, we have called May 5, “Arrival Day.” It is a name that sounds inclusive but, in reality, obscures more than it reveals. It is time to end the confusion and call the day what it was always intended to be: Indian Arrival Day. In 2003, during the tenure of the...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...Apr 24, 2026
(Kaieteur News) – “Never has any single company…” in a single country beaten almost every single citizen into a state of paralysis. Frankly, I’m disappointed in Chartered Accountant, Attorney-at-Law (and civil society advocate), Chris Ram. Aside: does this chap ever sleep? Mr....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