Looking forward to improved, professional service from DPI

Dear Editor,

Please allow me to begin by wishing President Granger every bit of strength he needs to overcome his illness, and it is my sincere hope that nothing I state further will cause him upset should he read the online newspapers as he undergoes treatment in Cuba.

Editor, I am writing to express my displeasure with the manner in which information is dispersed by the APNU+AFC administration. We learned of His Excellency’s diagnosis and treatment via an online news outlet with close links to the Administration and later via a press release from our Ambassador to Cuba.  Editor, when the Department of Public Information (DPI) was created it was my belief that it would be a central clearing house for information for all government ministries, agencies, departments and public offices, I expected the DPI to be staffed with persons capable of explaining government actions and policies in layman’s terms for the edification of the general public and to expound on matters of public interest in anticipation of the needs of the populace.

Editor, I am sure my fellow Guyanese would have appreciated an official release from our DPI on His Excellency’s illness; one that would have included details on Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma, the treatment details including how much time same is expected to take. Editor, I used Google to inform myself further on this form of cancer and felt immediate sympathy for our President and his family. It appears to be a particularly painful cancer and the treatment is often more painful than the disease; this information was in direct contrast to the glib ‘expected to recover fully’ included in the Newssourcegy.com story, which in its haste to reassure us does a disservice to our need for truth, newsourcegy.com is not however funded by taxpayers’ money and is free to operate in any manner they see fit.

Editor, during the period when we needed information the most, our DPI was engaged in preparing and disseminating patently false Local Government Election results with the prefix ‘unofficial’ as a disclaimer; an act that is both reckless and dangerous, one that if not curbed now will lead to public danger come General Elections. DPI staff must be cognizant of the potential harm that fake election results can generate as was the case when a home was torched in Sophia on election night 2015. In this modern age a ‘Nuremberg defence’ is not acceptable.

I am a firm believer in redemption and look forward to an improved, professional service of information in the near future from the DPI.

Yours faithfully,

Robin Singh