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Rickey Singh || Gayle Gonsalves || Prem Misir What
Jamaat's bossman and Guyana's PNC share? The
relevance assumes a particular significance when examined in the context
of what the religious/political organisation, Jamaat-al-Muslimeen of
Yassin Abu Bakr, and the main opposition People's National Congress
(PNC) in Guyana seems to share in common. Guyana
and Trinidad and Tobago are both multiracial societies, where national
elections often serve to heighten social tension and polarise along
ethnic lines. Currently,
Guyana is experiencing a mixture of destabilising politics, orchestrated
by the PNC, and a nerve-wracking criminal rampage. Just last Wednesday
night, four more people were shot to death and eight others wounded by
armed criminals while socialising at a popular liquor restaurant in the
city. That
was followed by the chilling spraying of gunfire at the Prison Officers
Club and the Georgetown Prison, almost simultaneous with an armed attack
on the Vigilance Police Station. In
the words of Martin Carter, "this is the dark time" - a time
when party politicking must speedily give way for bold decisions to save
this society from disintegrating at the hands of armed criminals, some
of whom had originally been nurtured by those who found it expedient to
cry "discrimination" and "marginalisation". In
Trinidad and Tobago, with the intensification of campaigning for the
October 7 poll has come a disturbing, arrogant stance from the man who
had led the abortive July 27, 1990 coup, Imam Abu Bakr. It
was a troubling statement of Abu Bakr and a threat last week by Guyana's
main opposition party, currently on a boycott of Parliament, that
brought a reminder of the warning by the philosopher George Santayana
that "those who do not remember the past are condemned to repeat
it". Not
willing to say sorry for past wrongs against a society, or show some
kind of remorse, poses the threat of recurrence in the future that could
be worse than before. First,
the Guyana scenario, where the PNC is yet to apologise, or in any way
express regret, for its gross misrule over some 24 years of successive
governments that were rooted in documented electoral fraud. During
that period, assassinations (remember Walter Rodney?); serious erosion
of the independence and integrity of the judiciary, the police force and
the army, as well as the throttling of press freedom were abominable
features. So
dangerously overwhelming was the influence of the PNC in all facets of
Guyanese society, while thousands voted with their feet to metropolitan
centres and Caribbean lands, that it facilitated another cult, `House of
Israel’, under the hypnotic leadership of another foreigner, `Rabbi’
Washington, to terrorise opponents of the PNC regime. Until,
that is, when the Roman Catholic priest Bernard Darke, a photographer
for the 'Catholic Standard', was murdered by a member of `Rabbi’
Washington's `House of Israel’. Recognising it was riding the
proverbial tiger, the PNC was at pains to distance itself from the
'Rabbi' and his organisation. In
opposition since 1992, when electoral democracy was finally restored,
the PNC was, however, to further affect its reputation by the manner of
its tributes at funerals of fallen criminal elements, at the hands of
the police, and its threats to make Guyana "ungovernable". By
last week, while the people of Trinidad and Tobago were considering the
implications of the language of abuse and threats from the Jamaat's Abu
Bakr and his disciples at a public meeting, the PNC again stayed away
from parliament and threatened non-cooperation with consultations
involving civil society, government and political parties. It
did so, rather than participate in last Thursday's sitting of the House
of Assembly to debate a package of anti-crime legislation at a time when
the criminals continue to be on the rampage, killing and terrorising
people in various communities. In
Trinidad and Tobago, Abu Bakr, famous for switching political loyalties
as he deems expedient in his own self-interest and that of his Muslimeen
group, was reported by the 'Daily Express’ of September 18 that he
could give "no assurance" against a repetition of events of
July 27, 1990. That
arrogant stance was in reference to the coup launched by the
Jamaat-al-Muslimeen in 1990. Among the hostages taken was then Prime
Minister ANR Robinson. Instead
of any apology, or expression of remorse for that reckless grab for
power by the gun, Abu Bakr, as if to rub salt in the wounds of a nation,
mockingly claimed that he and President Robinson "are now friends
again". That
proved too much for the President, who last Thursday issued a firm
denial of any relationship or meetings with the Jamaat's leader, clearly
wishing to convey no wrong impression to either the public in Trinidad
and Tobago or in the Caribbean region where he is very well known. Now,
even as Prime Minister Manning's PNM desperately manoeuvres to distance
itself from Abu Bakr - while the Jamaat's leader continues to campaign
for the PNM's return to power on October 7 - Trinidadians, as well as
Guyanese, must be reminding themselves of Santayana's warning. For
calling on Abu Bakr to apologise for the 1990 coup, Keith Rowley, one of
the leading party and cabinet colleagues of Prime Minister Patrick
Manning, was given a tongue lashing by the `Imam’ who spoke of him in
derogatory terms as "a bald-headed uncle Tom politician". Surprisingly,
after somersaulting on his plan to give state land to the Jamaat,
Manning was, nevertheless, to welcome the declared election support from
Abu Bakr for the PNM. The
Jamaat's leader seems to find virtue in being defiant with threats
against all those he perceives as his "enemies", including the
media. Intriguingly,
last week, while the police were still working to bring kidnappers to
justice, Abu Bakr was disclosing how he had engineered a
"truce" with alleged gang leaders in depressed communities
that may have had a positive impact in the reduction of the spate of
armed abductions. How
much does he really know about such `gang leaders’ and the criminal
activities that have brought such deep fears to so many? What
Abu Bakr's Jamaat and Guyana's PNC do seem to share in common, is a
callous refusal to apologise for any of their respective notorious
misdeeds of the past which can only be forgotten at the expense of the
future. This
is as relevant a reminder as Erica Willams-Connell's warning of racial
conflagration by political parties seeking to exploit what divide a
multi-ethnic society, rather than encouraging celebration of our
"similarities". Such "similarities" are quite in evidence in the culture and politics of Guyana and Trinidad and Tobago. |