Latest update February 18th, 2026 12:35 AM
Feb 18, 2026 Letters
Dear Editor,
The hallowed halls of the National Assembly are meant for the articulation of policy, not the weaponisation of personal data. Yet, in a jarring display of administrative overreach, Minister Sonia Parag recently utilized her access to sensitive public service records to “shame” MP Dr. Gordon Barker, detailing his exact teaching tardiness down to the minute.
While the Minister framed this as a call for accountability, the reality is far more chilling: it was a calculated data dump designed to silence dissent. This incident isn’t just a political spat; it is the “canary in the coal mine” for Guyana’s digital future.
Minister Parag’s defense—that no confidentiality was breached because she was “leading by example”—suggests a dangerous misunderstanding of governance. In any modern democracy, personal employment records are protected. By airing them to win a legislative argument, the Minister has effectively signaled that any citizen who critiques the government is fair game for doxing.
This behavior is particularly alarming when viewed alongside the 2025 cash grant distribution, where voter lists were allegedly repurposed as partisan canvassing tools. When state-held data becomes “political artillery,” the line between public service and partisan surveillance evaporates.
Despite the Data Protection Act receiving assent in August 2023, Guyana remains in a state of “legislative paralysis—a law without teeth.”
This vacuum allows officials to pillage sensitive files unchecked. While the government pushes the e-ID project as a “voluntary pilot,” it is simultaneously consolidating biometric data into a centralized vortex. Without the Data Protection Act being fully operational, this “vortex” is a weapon waiting to be fired.
To address this, we must create a roadmap for accountability, if we are to reclaim our digital rights by ensuring that “no one is above the law,” we must move beyond social media outrage and toward rigorous institutional correction.
The Verdict: Predation, Not Politics
Minister Parag’s actions have turned the National Assembly into a theater of privacy violations. If we allow this to go unpunished, the upcoming e-ID system will not be a tool for development, but a ledger for state-sponsored intimidation.
We must demand a freeze on biometric collection until a fully independent, “teeth-baring” watchdog is operational. Data protection is not a luxury; it is the final frontier of our civil liberties.
Regards,
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.
Feb 18, 2026
– Persaud holds overall lead Kaieteur Sports – Brian Hackett produced a masterclass in precision golf to capture top honours in the latest round of the Promotech Guyana Inc.-backed National...Feb 18, 2026
(Kaieteur News) – In exactly one week we will once again host Mash Day, that annual exercise in patriotic perspiration where we celebrate becoming a Republic by borrowing someone else’s party and adjusting it for inflation. Now, before I am deported to Lethem for cultural treason, let me say...Feb 01, 2026
By Sir Ronald Sanders (Kaieteur News) – When the door to migration narrows, the long-standing mismatch between education and economic absorption is no longer abstract; a country’s true immigration policy becomes domestic — how many jobs it can create, and how quickly it can match people to...Feb 18, 2026
Hard Truths by GHK Lall (Kaieteur News) – What kind of country is this? What does it say of the quality of the society that the best that can be produced and hailed as success stories, are so wanting? Wanting in what inspires trust. Wanting in what fosters belief. Consider the facts in...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