Contrary to what the newspapers report Guyana is on the move

Dear Editor,

Please allow me the use of this medium to communicate with the Guyanese diaspora population. I would especially like to open up a conversation with Guyanese in the United States and Canada, two countries that I lived in for extended periods.

The first thing I want to bring up is the media, and especially the newspapers. This is a good place to start because I know from experience that the diaspora is especially dependent on the newspapers for keeping up-to-date with developments in the country.

Let me go to the point directly. Given what makes news and how that news is represented in the newspapers they might feel as if the country is in turmoil. For those who have strong feelings about their homeland that must induce feelings of sadness. Many of them may even contemplate throwing in the towel. Others might develop feelings of anger and those feelings might push them to supporting forms of extremism.

I ask them to be careful with this stuff. Guyana is alive and well. The stores are stocked to the ceilings and there is no shortage of customers. In the Guyana of today people can find most things they have in North American stores. I know some will say yes, but things are so expensive. Fair enough, but not everyone in Canada and the US can shop at Macy’s or Lord & Taylor as a matter of routine. This is why Wal Mart, K-Mart, and Target are so popular. And then of course, there is no shortage of dollar stores, places where you will also find Guyanese shopping.

On the fast food scene they will find Pizza Hut, KFC, Church’s Chicken, and Popeyes. I am not thrilled with this development, but they are here. What they have to keep in mind is that these outlets are considered a ‘big-thing’ here.

I must also mention New Thriving Restaurant on Main Street. It is without qualification one of the very best Chinese restaurants I have ever been to anywhere in the world, and say this having been to Asia on many occasions. 

Last night a bunch of us visited GuyExpo. This is a trade fair, much like the county fairs they have in the United States. I, for one, went to the Montgomery County Fair outside Rockville, Maryland, every year over the past decade. GuyExpo is much more interesting and much more fun. Twenty-five thousand people attended on Saturday, and Sunday pulled in a figure close to that.

This year’s GuyExpo has nearly 300 exhibition stalls and many of the products are top notch by any standard. I know the members of the Guyanese diaspora will be proud of these products and many might even doubt that they are made here. My pick of the lot is Summerson’s Furniture. If they lay eyes on their kitchen cabinets I feel sure they will import them into North America. This is the real wood. 

Most of them must have heard about how people dress in Guyana, they know, better than overseas. This one is simple. It is true.

Developments are popping all over the country, something that some in the newspapers refuse to acknowledge. Incidentally I saw the Berbice Bridge and I can tell you it is rather handsome. It makes the Outerbridge Crossing in the New Jersey/New York area look ugly. There is no bridge in Toronto that has the scale and beauty of the Berbice Bridge. Come and take a look.

For those who haven’t been here for a while they will be taken aback by Don Valley Parkway quality lighting on the major roadways here. Imagine Vreed-en-Hoop to Parika will soon get ‘wall-to-wall’ street lights.

Last month I went to the commissioning of the Skel-don Sugar Factory. It is a gem. Visiting Guyanese must insist on seeing it. When it is up to capacity, the Skeldon Factory will also produce enough excess electricity to light up most of Berbice.

Last week I passed by the water front and saw with my own eyes the new GPL generators being installed. The blackouts that have dogged the Georgetown area over the last little while will soon be history.

When overseas-based Guyanese come they may want to stop by the Diamond Housing Scheme. Take even a cursory look and tell me if things are that bad. They may want to also go to Tuschen and Cornelia Ida where they also have giant housing schemes. On top of that, the indefatigable Minister of Housing and Water, Irfaan Ali and his staff have, in one fell swoop, modernised the housing sector by developing One-Stop-Shops.

Major developments have also surfaced in health care. Let’s take a good look at this sector. In 1964 the life expectancy was 60; it moved up to 65 by 1975, but then plummeted to 59 in 1990. Today it is 70 years! In 1991 per capita expenditure from the fiscal budget was US$7 per person; in 2008 it was US$80. This is expenditure from the fiscal budget. It does not include grants and other funding from external sources. In 1990 the MMR (Maternal Mortality Rate) was 34:10,000. The comparable rate today is 11:10,000. In 1989 the Infant Mortality Rate was 78:1000; today it is 19:1,000. In 1990 Guyana was administering 6 antigens (ie vaccines), today it is administering 14. My friends in the diaspora may know what it costs for one of these vaccines. If they do not, I can tell them that the yellow fever vaccine in the US costs US$600. All of these vaccines are now provided free of cost in Guyana. The H1N1 vaccine is coming next.

These are measurable improvements. There is more, but for now let me just remind my overseas friends that today Guyana does open heart surgery, hip and knee replacement, and radiation therapy for cancer! There is a new Ophthalmology Centre in Berbice. Cataract cases that had people in the dark for a long time have now been taken care of and older people can now see their grandchildren for the first time. President Jagdeo stated recently that apart from the obvious service to Guyanese, the centre will provide care for other Caribbean nationals free of cost! 

Yes, things are challenging, but that is no different from where expatriate Guyanese are now. As in any country, some people have it relatively easy while others do indeed find it hard to make ends meet. I am confident that President Jagdeo and his cabinet would acknowledge that we have quite a distance to go in order to have the kind of Guyana we all want. The difference here is that this President and his cabinet are out there every day working to make this a better Guyana. President Jagdeo must be one of the hardest working leaders in the history of the Caribbean.

There are so many things happening in this country that would make those who live overseas proud to call themselves Guyanese. I urge them to be careful with the daily dose of dread that has become the signature of the newspapers. Perhaps I should go back to where I started, that is back to GuyExpo.

Yesterday [Sunday] about 25,000 people went to this event. It is nowhere to be found in print. Not newsworthy enough I suppose. Yet, if one – I mean that literally – if one person had engaged in an act of protest, there is a good chance it would be on the front page. Absent that, one newspaper opted for a story of a man and a horse caught in an act of sexual perversion.

Guyana is on the move. If anyone wants the evidence, they should come and see for themselves.

Yours faithfully,
Randy Persaud