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International civil servant and former central executive committee member of the PNCR, Dr Richard Van West Charles proceeds on pre-retirement leave early next year and is making preparations for a return to an active community and political life within the party.

Van West Charles, a Pan American Health Organisation (PAHO) Special Advisor on Partnerships with Financial Institutions based in Washington DC, told the Stabroek News during his vacation in Guyana last week that he had enough of working in the international arena. He said he now wants to participate in the country’s developmental process.

Towards this end, he said, he has established a non-governmental organisation, called ‘Partnering and Nurturing for Development in Guyana’ which has as its focus, networking to look at community based development, poverty alleviation and capacity building.

He said that his NGO along with the US-based GUYDA (Guyana Development Association) of which he is also a member is seeking to establish computerized learning centres to provide easy access to information on critical issues in communities. The objective is also to build community kiosks to improve internet access in some rural areas, particularly farming communities, as has been done in some places in India and Egypt. “This will help with information on topical issues,” he said adding that it was also, “education for democratic citizenship, to teach people their rights and responsibilities and to be involved in direct way in the decision-making process.”

He opined said that if there were more citizens’ involvement, partisan and race issues would begin to dilute because the process would be more transparent.

“No one institution,” he said, could tackle the problems that exist at the community and national levels and he stressed the need to network to bring greater value to the limited human and other resources available.

He said he felt he could contribute to Guyana’s development given his skills at the managerial level, view of global issues, understanding of the active role of the citizenry in development and decision-making, as well as understanding issues of transparency and accountability as part of efficient governance.

Van West Charles worked for the past 18 years with PAHO/WHO in various capacities in the Caribbean with responsibilities that covered Barbados and the eastern Caribbean islands, Jamaica, Cayman Islands, Bermuda, the Bahamas and the Turks and Caicos Islands before going on to Washington DC. Even though he lived overseas, he said, he kept abreast with developments taking place at home. “My experience can and will make a significant contribution in terms of human capital.”

He added that he would like to look at the inhibitory factors that are preventing Guyana from using its vast potential in natural and human resources. Asked what these factors were, he said that the main ones were clearly governance and the race issue. The latter, he said, must be addressed “or this country would not evolve. It must be dealt with at the school level right up from nursery to tertiary. There is also need for grassroots discussions, or community levels, on the issue of race because of its deep cultural underpinnings. The education system has to address it.”

Over the years, Van West Charles said, Guyana has not put the race issue on the table to address it directly. “Retrospectively, the PNC in government did not do enough,” he said, even though the government at the time did give equitable religious holidays to the Christian, Hindu and Muslim communities. There remain insecurities in different parts of the country and not only among the two major ethnic groups, East Indians and Africans, but among the Amerindian communities as well.

In response to whether the Ethnic Relations Commission (ERC) was addressing the issue of race sufficiently, Van West Charles said he did not think the ERC was being proactive, but reactive.

“The political parties need to get involved,” he said. “The political parties have to make the change. People need to understand that race in the Guyanese political scenario is linked to power, economics and the political culture.”

Asked about his involvement at the political level and future involvement at that level in Guyana, Van West Charles, a son-in-law of the late PNC founder leader, said, even though he was overseas, he always maintained his membership of the party. He was present at the party’s last biennial congress and he said, “I am going to be engaged in a more direct way in the role of party in the country in the future. I will be working with others to strengthen the institution.”

Asked whether he was satisfied with Party Leader Robert Corbin’s performance, he said, “I think we need to have a more effective performance from the leader of the party.

“The leadership is all of the governance bodies of the party. However, there is room for improvement in a number of areas and one of these areas, is how we connect in a more effective way with the communities.”

The party at this stage, he said, needed to have a more dynamic system of relating to community issues, “a language that speaks directly to the community and address in a very direct way the issues of poverty and some of the social exclusion issues.”

Asked whether PNCR members were being socially excluded at various levels, Van West Charles said that was not the case since the party’s membership was about 16,000 to 18,000 and clearly many more people were involved. He said there were members of the PPP/C and other political parties and those not politically affiliated who were socially excluded but it was not a deliberate act of the government; some of it had to do with incompetence at the governance level.

He gave the example of unemployed youths without skills and the need to work with them to build their self-esteem and to convert their energy to human capital for the development of themselves, their communities and the country.



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  1. Andy UNITED STATES says:

    It is a fact that despite Robert Corbin’s shutting out Vincent Alexander from vying for party leader position, the PNC has failed its constituency big time. The PNC does not challenge the PPP government vigorously, bust seems to be playing nice in the hope that one day the PPP will reach out with an olive branch and ask the PNC to enter into shared governance. In the meantime, the PPP is doing to the PNC and the people of Guyana what the PNC did to the PPP and the people of Guyana. That means the people of Guyana are getting shafted twice!

    For Richard Van West Charles to make a major difference, he has to wrestle the party leadership from Corbin, and I don’t know if Corbinis going to give up this without a fight even though he has retired from fighting the PPP intelligently. Van West Charles has finger on the pulse, and together with Hamilton Green, can turn the tide against the PPP by reforming the PNC to make it more amenable to changes affecting Guyanese of all races.

  2. birds CANADA says:

    Van-West Charles- is this guy is Burnham son-in-law where did he come out now from. Where was Van -west Charles sin Burnham died? What did he contributed to the PNCR?

    Mr. Charles stated that we need more effective performance from the leader of the party. The people will speak about your performance Mr Charles. Why wait until you retire to do things for the party of which you were part off.

  3. torbo UNITED STATES says:

    MR. CHARLES have the knowledge give him a chance to lead the party, when jagdeo goes corbin should too.

    • bishnu R CANADA says:

      torbo remember baby doc?
      it sounds like you are saying
      give the pnc another chance
      you should ask andy

    • What knowledge are you talking about TORBO, Mr Charles is the
      shadow of his father-in-law forbes.

      Guyana don’t need what we had and what we are seeing today.

      This man is retireing G/T need young men and women to stepup.

      Go back relacks and enjoy your retirement Mr Charles.

  4. michael tannassee UNITED STATES says:

    …… is this the van west charles who was made MINISTER of HEALTH ??????????????????…..

  5. zainno CANADA says:

    torbo, I don’t think you come from guyana, let me name a few things the pnc did in Guyana,
    1, They ban wheat flour, chick peas,dhaal and a number of food products.
    2, They stop the milk and biscuit program that were in place at schools.
    3,Kick down robbries and killings started at their time.
    4, They implemented free education by name only.
    5,Unquailifiedpeople were getting jobs only because of their ethnic background.
    6,Drop out from school were prevelent in their time, and i am sure fineman was one of them fromthe pnc time.
    7, They cause people like you and I and many others to run from Guyana.
    Yes they did a lot. Get the picture torbo.

  6. bitte-danke schon UNITED STATES says:

    Dr. Van West Charles,
    Do you have any specific plans to help PNC win elections?
    PNC is an afro-ethnic party – it only need african votes. The African proportion of the population is only 35%.

    Seems pretty dumb – I mean the politics and the strategy are pretty dumb.
    Reinventing the PNC as a genuine multi-racial party allows you to broaden your appeal to the other races.

    At any given time, 15% of the Indian population is disenchanted with the ruling Indian party, but would you expect them to vote for an afro-ethnic PNC?

    Be realistic Dr. Charles, use your influence to reinvent the PNC. Let an Indian guy from within the ranks take over. How about Winston Murray? Why do you always have to have an African guy to head the PNC.

  7. melvina cummings UNITED STATES says:

    Zainno i do not think that you came from GUYANAlet me tell you what the P.N.C did for GUYANESE. 1. they taught us to stop being foring minded and learn to grow our own food.at one time we were the food basket of the carribbean.2 the indians gain a lot under the P.N.C.RULE.E.G PEOPLE LIKE KAYMAN SANKER and others and the list goes on and on.

    • CURIOUS GEORGE UNITED STATES says:

      Yet still we were starving. Everybody and everybody were trying to leave Guyana to anywhere they could go. Guyana had a brain drain. Maybe you cannot relate. I understand because you are one of them. I mean Burhmanmite. Yes that President…the one that is known for Guyana’s Dictatorship. Wake up. Stop dreaming he is dead, but history will tell.

  8. bing TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO says:

    Van west charles should stay out of politics. Given him power is like bringing back burnham from the dead.

    • decanadianCarlVeecock FRANCE says:

      I writing this for my buddy Ulric as he looking out for my writings

      No… Van West Charles will not be given power, he has to earn it

      So he will have to join the rank and file and work like all party members
      to assert himself

      At least there will be a refreshed kid on the block, so there will be action.

  9. George UNITED KINGDOM says:

    Welcome Van West,
    Your father-in-law,was a member of the P.P.P.He and Cheddie split and the rest is now History.Read the Political History,of Guyana from 1947 and you will,see for yourself that your best option is to join the P.P.P.
    Give it a try.Our people need to work together for the common good.Rigging election,is a thing of the Past.The P.N.C.is like a spent cartridge.Give it a try Van.Ask some of those who left the P.P.P.and joined the P.N.C for some advice.Still ,judge for yourself.

  10. torbo UNITED STATES says:

    yes bishnu in HAITI

  11. torbo UNITED STATES says:

    THEY DID ALOT WITH VERY LITTLE BISHNU

  12. torbo UNITED STATES says:

    LOOOK AT WHAT WE HAVE NOW IN GUYANA MR. WESTBANK YOUNG AND
    VISIONLESS LEADER



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