Leader Joe berates Chairperson Claudette

Welcome back Atlantic Symphony

Joe was naughty! Belligerent! Pugnacious! Even vicious in his repudiations, assertions and rejections. What am I going on about?

I’m referring to the feral responses by PNC parliamentary Opposition Leader Joseph Harmon to GECOM Chairperson Claudette Singh’s vote in favour of the just-appointed Chief Election Officer (CEO) and Commissioner of National Registration.

An incensed Harmon was fluent in his indignation; aggressively judgemental in his assessment of the retired Justice Singh’s vote which was in tandem with the pro-government GECOM commissioners. Before Joe’s blasts, the three pro-opposition GECOM fellows had already promoted their reasons for opposing any appointment of Vishnu Persaud to CEO status. But it was leader Harmon’s conclusions about chairperson/Justice Claudette which struck me in the stomach. Why?

These are just a few quotes from reliable sources: “The Chairman (sic)… has shown that she cannot be impartial and is willing to continue to use her position to further place the entire GECOM in a tenuous position. Guyanese confidence in GECOM has been struck another blow by this political decision by the chairman”. Now just look who’s talking!

Faithful to the collective cause, the three pro-PNC commissioners and even PNC leader – hopeful comrade Norton used anti-Claudette language like “shifting goalposts, changing rules to suit the governing PPP”; “The whole process was a travesty”; “The appointment was a collusion between the chairperson and the PPP commissioners to put a PPP hack as CEO…”

What strong, even incendiary language! And how political circumstances can drastically modify and change positions.

I recall, and some other observers have pointed out, that the Brigadier President ignored numerous candidates proposed by Dr. Bharrat and imposed old Justice Patterson as chairman of the commission. That chairman then bypassed Vishnu Persaud for one Myers as DCEO. The highest court later found that the Brigadier was constitutionally unjustified in imposing Patterson.

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Comrade Harmon, the chairperson, the CEO…

I just alluded to political circumstances changing. So I wonder what Comrade Harmon now thinks of leader-Brigadier Granger then welcoming the retired Justice Singh as chairperson as proposed by Dr. Jagdeo?

And can’t Joe recall how the GECOM Justice did her reputation no favour during the region four ballot counting last year?

My own final observation: frankly speaking the entire selection episodes cry out for drastic reform. Is not even the Carter-Price formula for constituting GECOM “foreign/colonial”? Even pro-coalition commissioner Trotman’s suggestion of a neutral professional panel to select the CEO had some strong merit.

But what has both the PPP and the PNC done to review the way GECOM is constituted and managed? Ho-ho-ho…

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“The First Black”, the Big Picture

The little powerful book which, it seems, I’ll never write, will remind the world that all human-kind originated in the geographic space known as Africa thousands of years ago. Every human in those days, because of the ever-present sun there, was dark, was black or brown!

So what happened? Those who managed to migrate to Asia, Europe and the Americas had their whole “brain-set”, attitudes and complexions change. Along the way they forgot their origins and felt superior to these origins. Darker compatriots were discriminated against and left behind.

That’s the bigger picture whenever you hear of the “first Afro-American to do this” or “the first black to achieve that…” of course any top-class accomplishment must be celebrated but frankly speaking I do know that there is always a bit of condescension when hailing some “black or Afro first”

Fair opportunities were denied for decades. The Afroes or blacks could have achieved long long before! So now artificial praise is showered to hint at fair-skinned “generosity”. It should never have been necessary to say “first Black” in the first place. That should have been the norm for all! So let me be “the first black to denounce that state of affairs”.

A warm “welcome-back” for the Atlantic

Two Wednesday evenings ago the resurgence of one of Guyana’s premier orchestras was made reality after years of effort.

The (Chronicle) Atlantic Steel and Brass Orchestra – (the founder rejects the mere description “steel band”) – was a top flight band which once attracted some jealousy from the proud Trinidadians. Rudy Bishop assembled some forty pannists and trumpeters – as well as dance troupes – to fashion a steel orchestra that toured the world.

Both at home and overseas Atlantic promoted our musical culture and identity as a nation. Bishop migrated and things waned for decades even though there were incarnations in New York.

But it was a joy to hear new youngsters, under the guidance of veterans Bishop and arranger Desmond Fraser, bring back the sound of the Atlantic. And yes, there is steel and there is brass. Congrats from me on giving a boost to that art-form here.

I’ll care little about competitions. But I yearn to hear Tyndall’s National Steel Band alongside the “new” Atlantic. Joy! Joy!

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Til next week!

(allanafenty@yahoo.com)