Leaders of Guyana, Barbados should face the undocumented issue squarely

Dear Editor,

People of goodwill, people of good sense, in both Guyana and Barbados will recognise that it is time the two countries put behind them the ghosts of past that have haunted their relations these past months.

No Caribbean government has openly offered to mediate and bring about a comprehensive and intelligent settlement between the two nations’ illegal nationals, save Prime Minister Ralph Gonsalves of St Vincent and the Grenadines, President Bharrat Jagdeo, Mia Mottley and Owen Author as reported in the media. In the meantime, the minds of the undocumented people of Guyana and other Caribbean islands are being prepared by their respective governments for an open solution; only something positive, such as an offer by an intelligent intermediary interested in the welfare of both nations can, it seems, bring about a peaceful and comprehensive solution satisfactory to all sides.

Within recent times, after a series of unfortunate incidents by the Barbadian immigration officers the whole controversy had been lying dormant under the Caricom Free Movement Protocol, and the two nations had, it appeared, taken a new direction toward closer understanding. But this no longer seems to prevail and, instead, there is an infuriated backlash. Unless something tangible occurs, to pacify the minds of both sides, a tremendous showdown is in the offing, building up at a very fast rate. In these circumstances a great responsibility rests upon the leaders of both nations to avert the crisis of confrontation which looms ahead.

For this to be done, they should face the issue squarely and come to grips with it in a dispassionate manner and find a satisfactory solution.
They should take immediate steps by consultation, conversation and compromise, which are far superior. In the approach to the undocumented illegal nationals, the leaders should seek to set aside concern for their personal political standing, as it would be affected by any settlement, and set a course expressing the clearest intention to settle the dispute once and for all in a manner satisfactory not only to themselves but to the people of both lands.

Yours faithfully,
Mohamed Khan