Latest update March 13th, 2026 12:35 AM
Feb 11, 2026 Letters
Dear Editor,
The recent revelations by Christopher Ram regarding the Auditor General’s request for a two-year tenure extension are not merely a matter of administrative “paperwork.” They represent a calculated assault on the financial integrity of Guyana. When the office designed to guard the Treasury becomes an extension of the Executive, the Constitution isn’t just being ignored—it is being subverted.
The Auditor General (AG) is a constitutional office under Article 223, carrying the same security of tenure as a Judge. Ram’s reminder that the current appointment was “accidental”—confirmed only due to an opposition absence from the PAC years ago—highlights a foundational lack of democratic legitimacy. This is further compounded by the staggering claim that the office holder lacks professional accounting qualifications. Under the Audit Act 2004 and global INTOSAI standards, “professional competence” is not a suggestion; it is a prerequisite. To have a non-accountant auditing billions in oil revenue is akin to having a layman preside over the Court of Appeal.
Perhaps the most damning “skullduggery” involves the de facto management of the Audit Office by the spouse of the Minister of Finance. This creates a loop of accountability that is legally and ethically indefensible. The Finance Minister prepares the budget, while his spouse, exercising effective authority within the Audit Office, oversees the verification of that budget’s execution. This arrangement violates the gold standard of “Auditor Independence,” which demands independence in both fact and appearance. It is a structural conflict of interest that effectively turns the Audit Office into a family business.
The claim that an extension is needed due to a lack of succession planning must be viewed as an admission of deliberate governance failure. The AG and the Public Accounts Committee have a statutory duty to ensure the office is staffed by qualified professionals. By failing to groom a successor, the administration has manufactured a false choice: retain an ineffective incumbent or formalise a spousal conflict of interest.
The depth of this crisis can be summarised by several key illegalities and ethical failures:
Guyana is currently experiencing an unprecedented explosion in public spending. To allow the Audit Office to remain in this compromised state is to invite corruption on a scale the nation cannot afford. We do not need an extension of “executive convenience”; we need a substantive, qualified, and fiercely independent Auditor General who answers to the Constitution, not a spouse or a political benefactor. To grant an extension under these circumstances is to formally endorse the death of independent oversight in Guyana
Sincerely,
Hemdutt Kumar
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