Thursday, November 27, 2008
Dear Editor,
The recent arbitration in the sugar industry is a real slap in the
faces of all the sugar workers of this country; a 6% increase
is a serious blow to the working poor who struggle each day with the
most difficult and stressful jobs in this nation.
Guysuco has
already received over $4 billion in loans from the government and
continues to mismanage and mishandle the workers’ interests and
indeed, the nation’s interests.
Every day that passes, our country
loses money due to the strikes, slow-downs and the frustration of
the workers in the sugar industry, and the Guyanese taxpayer is
realizing that the US$180M borrowed to finance the Skeldon sugar
complex will come back to haunt our children who will have to pay
back this huge debt for a ‘dead duck’ instead of a ‘golden
goose’ investment.
This money could have been used to really
rehabilitate the sugar industry while investing in new
agricultural areas to create job opportunities.
The sugar workers and their families have to realize that the
albatross around their necks which keeps them in perpetual financial
bondage is the same government they voted for − the same
government which brought in the horrendous 16% VAT, has failed them
in terms of fiscal responsibility ($600M to repair the harbour
bridge; $700M on
Carifesta; millions on helicopters which are
inadequate; millions on travel and allowances by government
officials and the list can go on and on) and has colluded with the
leadership of GAWU to deny the sugar workers a good and
prosperous future.
How come the President fired Mr Ronald Alli from GPL as that
company faced serious problems, and he keeps Mr Alli in place while
the sugar industry falls apart and the workers cry out for help?
How
come the Minister of Agriculture is contented with the arbitration
results?
How come the Berbice ferry crossing is in shambles, the
water and light situation is in shambles − especially in
Berbice − and there is nothing doing at Black Bush Polder
which should be a breadbasket?
The answer to these questions all
lead back to what President Cheddi always criticized in government:
square pegs in round holes. President Cheddi is in heaven and in
heaven one looks down to see what is indeed happening to one’s
life-work; and as he looks down at the mess this government has
created in the sugar industry and in this country as a whole, I know
that he is angry because the sugar industry was his roots and
his political blood-line.
The workers in the sugar industry have got to open their eyes and
understand that just as they stood up over the decades to injustice
and exploitation, they have to pull the wool from their eyes and see
clearly that this government is not the government of Cheddi Jagan;
things have changed and the principles of that great man’s
life have been chucked aside and locked away in this government’s
agenda to increase taxation and spending while borrowing so much to
leave our children broke and destitute. They only open the locked
vault of President Cheddi’s political attributes during election
time in order to fool the poor workers of the sugar industry into
voting for them so that the vicious cycle of square pegs in round
holes can be propagated.
There are many answers to solving the crisis in the sugar
industry, but the need for change is apparent. Some will say that we
need to contract the industry and specialize in organic and white
sugar; others might feel that we should abandon sugar and really
diversify into other agricultural fields of endeavour. The bottom
line is, however, that this government does not institute policies
which will create jobs and expand the role of the private sector, so
any conjecture about fixing any part of our economy is useless as
long as we keep electing this government. The sugar workers
have to realize that in reality it is their vote which keeps this
government in place, not only to weaken their own standard of
living and limit their children’s future, but to cripple the rest
of our fragile economy with square pegs in round holes.
Yours faithfully,
Cheddi (Joey) Jagan (Jr)