Latest update April 13th, 2026 12:59 AM
Apr 13, 2026 Letters
Dear Editor,
I am Mohamed Zafar, a 65-year-old Ontarian barrister, former resident of De Willem, Demerara, and a man whose conscience will no longer permit silence on this issue. I write to you about poverty: not as an abstract statistic, but as a living, breathing crisis unfolding right now in the heartland of our beloved Guyana.
My spouse is in Corriverton today, attending her mother’s funeral. Amid her grief, she has been moved to call me — not to speak of loss alone, but to bear witness to something that shook her deeply: the scale of abject poverty, which she is seeing across the Corentyne. Families without enough. Children without enough. Futures, quietly extinguished.
This is not a political abstraction. This is happening to our people.
Approximately 19% of Guyanese live in poverty — nearly one in five of our brothers and sisters teetering on the edge of survival. While government expenditure flows toward projects that are neither urgent nor essential to our nation’s foundational growth, the poor are being left behind. Our rural planners must reckon with this moral failure and redirect priorities accordingly. I offer four urgent, actionable imperatives:
Those of us who have the means and the platform must bear responsibility for those who do not. This is not charity — it is justice. I have personally transitioned from military service to law, and throughout that journey I have maintained deep admiration for individuals like Azruddin Mohamed, Hana Khamelia, and Nazar Mohamed — people who have dedicated themselves tirelessly to uplifting the lives of the poor. Their example must inspire us all.
Editor, what Guyana’s poor need now is urgent, courageous, and unflinching action. Land. Income. Education. Health. These are not luxuries — they are the minimum conditions for a dignified human life.
I call on every policymaker, every community leader, and every Guyanese who reads these words: let us not look away.
Yours sincerely,
Mohamed Zafar
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