PNCR will not participate in Walter Rodney’s COI

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Walter Rodney
Walter Rodney

[www.inewsguyana.com] – The People’s National Congress Reform (PNCR) has taken the decision not to participate in the Commission of Inquiry (COI) into the assassination of Walter Rodney.

The Party in a statement on Friday, April 18 noted that it took this decision after a meeting of its central executive committee. The PNCR’s participation in the COI has always been iffy, as its Chairman Basil Williams had told the media that the COI is targeting the time when the Party was in government.

However, this was rebuked by the country’s President, Donald Ramotar, who has maintained that the COI was established following a request from Rodney’s wife.

The PNCR had expressed its concerns with the Terms of Reference of the COI.

“When you look at some of those recommendations, especially recommendation four, which says the Commissioners are to examine a report on the actions and activities of the State, such as the Guyana Police Force, the Guyana Defence Force, the Guyana National Service and those who were in command of those agencies to determine whether they were tasked with the surveillance of and the carrying of those actions and whether they executed those actions for the period January 1, 1978 – December 31, 1980,” Williams had said in March.PNC

Williams told reporters that the government has a desired outcome from the inquiry and believes that it started “on the wrong foot.”

The PNCR had also questioned the appointment of Trinidadian Senior Counsel Seenauth Jairam as a Commissioner to the Inquiry. In 2012, after the Parliamentary Majority in the National Assembly reduced the Budget, Seenauth Jairam SC was retained by the People’s Progressive Party/ Civic Administration to represent the Government in the case that was brought against the Leader of the Opposition, David Granger and Speaker of the National Assembly, Raphael Trotman.

 

“Given the very sensitive political nature of this Commission, the Partnership would have hoped that the PPP/C Administration would have selected Commissioners that are politically neutral, and individuals with no links to the PPP/C Government so as to at least give the perception of impartiality. There would be a likelihood of basis… We are not questioning the competence but certainly a man who has been involved in partisan politics against the opposition in Guyana ought not to be sitting to determine what was the involvement of the main political opposition party during that period,” the PNCR had noted.

Walter Rodney had traveled widely and became very well known internationally as an activist, scholar and formidable orator. He taught at the University of Dar es Salaam in Tanzania during the period 1966-67 and later in Jamaica at his alma mater UWI Mona.

He was sharply critical of the middle class for its role in the post-independence Caribbean. He was also a strong critic of capitalism and argued for a socialist development template.

On October 15, 1968 the government of Jamaica, led by Prime Minister Hugh Shearer, declared Rodney persona non grata. The decision to ban him from ever returning to Jamaica because of his advocacy for the working poor in that country caused riots to break out, eventually claiming the lives of several people and causing millions of dollars in damages.

These riots, which started on 16 October 1968, are now known as the Rodney Riots, and they triggered an increase in political awareness across the Caribbean, especially among the Afrocentric Rastafarian sector of Jamaica, documented in his book The Groundings With My Brothers.

Rodney was killed on June 13, 1980 while sitting in his car on John Street outside the Georgetown Prison. His car exploded.

 

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