Former attorney-general of Guyana,
Dr Fenton Ramsahoye has lambasted Guyanese politicians
for bringing destruction to his country and he
appealed to Trinidadians to resist the same thing
happening there.
He also passionately urged Trinidadians
to retain the Privy Council as the final Court
of Appeal. Ramsahoye, a Queen's and Senior Counsel,
was speaking at the Trinidad Maha Sabha Indian
Arrival Day celebrations in Penal/ Debe, South
Trinidad on Sunday.
Dr Ramsahoye charged that politicians were
responsible for the destruction of Guyana and were
immune to good advice. "Politicians have
mismanaged the affairs of the country. It is not only
the affairs of the Indian immigrants they have
mismanaged. But they have mismanaged the affairs of
those Christian people who were emancipated on August
1. They have mismanaged the affairs of the entire
country.
"Guyana is twice the size of Scotland but it
does not have the kind of living you have in Trinidad.
It cannot even match the kind of living I see the
islands. Everybody has a kind of standard of living
better than that of Guyana," said Ramsahoye.
He told the large Indian gathering that Guyanese
are surviving because of a US$300 million a year
remittance which is sent by their brethren overseas,
who managed to do well in foreign "free"
countries. "That is how those who are left in
Guyana are managing to survive."
Ramsahoye said misfortunes in Guyana had caused him
and his two brothers to go into self exile. He said
one of his brothers, the first descendant of an Indian
immigrant to become a geophysicist at the Imperial
College of Science and Technology in England, is in
exile. Another one, who is in exile in Canada, was the
first hydropower engineer that Guyana produced.
"He used to sit and design hydropower stations
from the little waterfalls in Guyana, and when
discrimination hit him, he went into exile and carried
all his plans with him. Since then, he has built
hydropower stations in Malaysia, Nepal, the North West
Frontier, Pakistan and one country in the Caribbean,
but in his own country it is very hard today to get a
light."
Ramsahoye beseeched Indo-Trinidadians to save their
country. "You have the qualities where you can
stand up and fight and you can demand rights and get
them. You can tell all the politicians that they hold
your interest in trust.
Politicians are your trustees. They have no benefit
to get from being in politics, but they are in
politics to serve you. They must not make a mess of
it. They are the trustees for you and everybody who
walk this land. They must fulfil their trusteeship and…
everybody will move ahead."
He said ending appeals to the UK Privy Council (PC)
was a prime determinant of the destruction of law in
Guyana and he appealed to Trinidadian politicians not
to end appeals to the PC.
The attorney, who went to study law in England at
20, was also honoured on Friday at the Holiday Inn in
Port of Spain by the Maha Sabha. Present at the
function were several politicians and political
leaders from the Caribbean. The Maha Sabha honoured
Dr. Ramsahoye for his contributions to Trinidad and
Tobago and specifically towards the Indian population
of the twin island republic. Dr. Ramsahoye, who turned
75 last week, practices law throughout the Caribbean
and England before the Privy Council.
In attendance at Sunday's function were Prime
Minster Patrick Manning and his wife Education
Minister Hazel Manning.