As I
understand it, these contracts are checked at every stage before payment is
made for work.
It
is surprising that such a call should come from Mr. Corbin because as I recall
during the PNC Government, of which Mr. Corbin was a Senior Minister, there
was no audit for the books of Guyana for ten years.
Besides
the audit of the books of Guyana, there was no audit of Upper Mazaruni
Disaster Area, the Glass Factory, the Bicycle Factory, the GEC Barge and other
disasters.
There
was no audit of the privatisation deals. There was no audit of the US$2B
external debt either. These need to be audited. It is not too late.
N.
Persaud.
Entire
region affected by migration
I
notice that the Assistant Secretary General of the Caribbean Community (Caricom)
Mr. Byron Blake, has noted that migration is affecting not only the teaching
but other professions and the problem is not restricted to Guyana. He further
said that the entire region is affected and that migration did not start
recently. At the same conference the General Secretary of the Guyana
Teacher’s Union, Mr. Lance Baptiste, also admitted that migration of
teachers “did not start now.” It started many years ago during the
previous government.
The
comments by the two gentlemen will serve to debunk the propaganda that
migration from Guyana is a result of the depressed living conditions in this
country, and more especially, the low salaries received by government workers.
Mr.
Blake alluded to the worldwide nature of the problem when he referred to
India. This should cause people to be more alert when some elements, with
their own political agendas, start casting blame on the Government for the
high rate of migration from this country.
The
Government has done quite a lot to lift the standard of living of Guyanese,
and more especially, the level of wages and salaries to its workers. Over the
last decade the Government has raised salaries by almost 600 per cent which
works out to about 60 per cent annually. For the last year the Government
again paid out a 5.5 per cent salary increase to public servants although the
economy was experiencing difficulties. In fact teachers received much more
than this: from 6 to 17 per cent increases for last year. In addition the
inflation rate has been contained and the exchange rate of the Guyana dollar
in relation to the US currency has been kept stable. These are all solid
achievements and the Government should be commended for its efforts.
However,
there are those who would like us to believe that migration from this country
is unique and it is a consequence of low salaries and it is only of recent
origin. The Guyana Public Service Union (GPSU) must tell us where in the world
salary increases to Government workers have surpassed those in Guyana over a
sustained 10-year-period. If they cannot produce this information, then they
are in fact admitting that the Government had done a remarkable job in the
raising of salaries here.
By now
people realise that the salary issue is just a smokescreen by some elements to
put pressure on the Government with the hope that they could eventually topple
it. Salaries and living conditions are being used as political weapons against
this Government. The GPSU, TUC, and some other disgruntled elements are
aligned to the PNC in this campaign to effect an unconstitutional removal of
the Government. Their constant bleating about salaries and living condition
fools no one since their agendas are crystal clear.
There is
still a lot to be done to bring salaries and living conditions up to
acceptable levels but there is hope that we will get their not too long from
now. In the meantime Guyanese need to be on guard against those propagandists
who continue to portray migration as an issue unique to Guyana and link it to
living conditions.
The
PPP/C Government has a proud record and it can hold its head high.
Hemraj
Jaggernauth.
April, 07, 2002