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Improving Ethnic Relations in Guyanese (II)

ravi-dev

Photo : Ravi Dev

ROAR of Ravi Dev

This concludes the presentation to the “National Conversation on Ethnic Relations” s with proposals to improve our ethnic relations. Below are the proposals to which I could only allude, because of time constraints: 

  1. Group Narratives: Continue and deepen these national discussions at all levels of society so that our ethnic groups can understand the perspective of each other from the narratives they recount. Work towards consensus building on those aspects of the narratives that clash so that national narrative includes the contributions and perspectives all groups in an equitable fashion. 
  2.  Civic and Cultural Nationalisms: We must distinguish between Civic Nationalism – based on the values inscribed in the Basic Structure of our Constitution, which guarantee our equal civic rights- and Cultural Nationalism, based on our ethnic cultures. We must emphasize they do not necessarily have to conflict once all are treated equitably. We there should be no conflict between our ethnic identities and our common National Identity.
  3. Multicultural State: Multiculturalism should be made the official policy of Guyana, declaring that all cultures will be treated by the state equitably. We should launch a Ministry of Multiculturalism to institutionalize multicultural policies to ensure that the identity of the Guyanese people reflect our diversity.
  4. Anti-racism: Anti-African must be confronted not only in its Guyanese manifestation but in its universality, which implies it is not a locally but globally generated phenomenon. Its genesis lies in the European-African dipole developed after the slave trade. The educational institutions must take a lead in this area, as also all social and religious institutions. Anti-Indian and Anti-Indigenous racism, practiced within that dipole must also be confronted.
  5. Group Worth: The educational institutions from nursery to university must also deliver curricula that give substantive worth to all our ethnic groups and to the contributions of s to the development of Guyana. 
  6. Political Democracy: the African Guyanese Ethnic Security, in reference to being denied the Executive has been resolved because of recent demographic shifts that has created a nation of minority groups. We must allow this new, fortuitous circumstance to take root as occurred in 2015 and 2020 and for the democratic politics of “in and out” to be practiced as it now does Trinidad, for instance.  The major groups can form alliances with smaller groups (as APNU did) or craft programs (as the PPP did) to win crossover votes and institutionalize democratic elections to handle our political competition.

We do not need contrived “power sharing” arrangements to fix what is no longer broken. It is now irrelevant.

Such programs for African Guyanese were initiated during the several development plans of the PNC 1965-1992; he PPP between 1992- 2015 and APNU/AFC 2015-2020 and there must be an investigation why African Guyanese are still lagging. The problem might be cultural/social rather than economic. Much blame can be laid at the feet of African Guyanese leaders who perpetuate the myth that their constituency “don’t have a head for business”. 

The recent efforts to develop the hinterland where most indigenous peoples live must be accelerated. 

  1. Decentralization: Integrative Federalism will: Reduce the struggle for power at the Centre. 
  2. Foster intra- ethnic groups rivalries.
  3. Encourage cooperation and coalitions at the centre, 
  4. Bring Govt closer to people and revive the village economy.
  5. Vertically split the powers of an always potentially tyrannical Government.
  6. Abolish “winner takes all politics
  7. Reduce disparities between groups especially since states dominated by Indigenous will be equal to others.
  8. Facilitate the formation of a second, moderating chamber in the National Assembly
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