BY JANELLE PERSAUD
President Bharrat Jagdeo says his administration will not stand idly by and allow any organisation to stymie the development of Guyana and its people. He was making reference to the delayed release of the forest funds Guyana has qualified for through its Low Carbon Development Strategy.
The president was addressing scores gathered at the Guyana International Conference Centre at Liliendaal, East Coast Demerara for the official opening of the fifth annual National Toshaos Council meeting. “We haven’t received the money from Norway; it was paid by Norway in an account, so it’s in an account for Guyana, but by the time the money gets from that account to us here, we have to overcome a number of things,” Jagdeo told the indigenous leaders.
At the last NTC meeting, Jagdeo had revealed that it was his administration’s intention to use US$8 million of the then US$30 million fund to provide solar panels for homes in hinterland areas, advance the land demarcation process, and create an Amerindian Development Fund.
Today, government is forced to use some US$3 million from the treasury to finance the solar panel distribution project, for which a Danish company has won the bid, Jagdeo informed.
He added that this project will also benefit non-Amerindian, remote and riverine areas without electricity.
The president’s audience included members of the diplomatic corps, and in addressing them, he said “If we can’t (access the funds), we will have to use our own money. I’m not waiting on any international organisation to slow down development in this country. We will use it because it’s an important part of what we stand for. A lot of you have requested demarcation; we don’t have enough money in the budget, because it’s very costly to do the demarcation on the ground. All they have to do is to pay the surveyors to do the demarcations … we already have a process where(by) many communities were demarcated in the past. It’s nothing, and yet they are saying ‘we have to come and assess the entire process’,” the seemingly frustrated head of state pointed out. Jagdeo has by now become well known for his open criticisms of certain international organizations; and he opined that the World Bank and some UN organisations were “bureaucracies dedicated to creating jobs for people from northern countries.”