On Thursday we reported that Guyana was about to reopen its
High Commission in India, and that a senior Foreign Ministry
official would travel to New Delhi shortly to identify suitable
premises. The intention to reopen the mission had been announced
by President Bharrat Jagdeo a few years ago, but not much had
been done thereafter to implement the decision.
Citing reasons for the current move the report said that it
was seen as crucial for securing Guyana's interests given New
Delhi's growing clout in international fora. In addition, GINA
was reported as saying that Guyana had benefited under the
Indian Technical and Economic Co-operation programme, with an
increase in the number of annual awards for study in India from
15 to 35 this financial year. Currently there are 38 Guyanese
undergoing training in various institutions on the
sub-continent.
GINA also referred to the demonstration vehicle donated for
the purpose of teaching entrepreneurs agro-processing at the
cottage-industry level, and the collaborative research between
the two countries in the agricultural field. As a result of
President Jagdeo's visit to India this year and last, the agency
said, the Indian government had extended US$25.2 million in
concessional credit for the modernisation of the sugar industry.
Finally, of course, there is the matter of the cricket stadium
to be built at Providence with Indian financing in the form of a
US$14M soft loan and a grant of up to US$6M.
One wonders what has changed recently to cause the
powers-that-be to suddenly act on a decision which was made a
long time ago. The reason for action not being taken prior to
this was probably financial, and certainly where that is
concerned, nothing much appears to have changed. The question
over the last few years has never been whether we needed a
mission in India; it has always been accepted that ideally we
did. The question was whether we could afford to pay for it in
our current circumstances.
Why, for example, are we opening another mission at this
point when for more than a decade we have been unable to appoint
an ambassador to Beijing where there is an existing embassy? No
one can say that China does not have growing clout in
international fora, and in fact, that it does not have more
clout in our own region than India does. In addition, it too has
given us assistance in one form or another - although
admittedly, not a cricket stadium. And considering the
shrillness of the government's response when Mr Corbin went to
Taiwan, one must assume that it takes its relationship with
China very seriously. That being so, one must conclude that the
failure to fill the post in Beijing was a consequence of
monetary constraints, and not a reflection of the state of
relations between Georgetown and Beijing.
It might be added too, that we have no Permanent
Representative based at the United Nations in New York at the
moment either; Foreign Minister Insanally who was there prior to
accepting his present post, still serves in that capacity too.
As a nation which is extremely limited in terms of its
diplomatic reach, having a representative with ambassadorial
status living in New York has always been seen as a
cost-effective way of making direct contact with a range of
countries. This is important not just in terms of protecting
one's own interests, but also in terms of influencing
international appointments, etc. Again, one can only assume that
the failure to appoint a Permanent Representative in our UN
office could only be connected to governmental perceptions about
the need for austerity.
And then there is the matter of the 2003 United Nations
report on the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which strongly
recommended that the government adhere to the conventions not to
leave diplomats in their overseas posts beyond the customary
three or possibly, four years. This recommendation was made in a
context where there are some heads of mission whose appointments
date back almost to the advent of this administration in office,
our High Commissioner in London being one obvious case in point,
and our Ambassador in Paramaribo another. It might be noted in
passing, that where the latter is concerned, the public has
never been offered an adequate explanation of what the
Paramaribo embassy knew or did not know prior to the expulsion
of the CGX rig, and why the intentions of the Surinamese were so
misread; all we know is that Ambassador Arjune is still very
much in place.
It has always been presumed that the reason why officers were
not moved around to various foreign postings was again an
economic one. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs did say that the
issue was being looked at, but all they have managed to achieve
to date is to send the Ambassador to Washington to Caracas, and
the Ambassador to Caracas to Washington. If they cannot afford
to act on the UN's recommendations with regard to the diplomatic
service, how can they now afford to open an entirely new
mission?
One only hopes that the intention is not to siphon off funds
from existing under-funded embassies, etc, in order to pay for
New Delhi. We are at a critical juncture in several respects,
and we must ensure that sufficient resources, both human and
financial, are provided to the missions of Brussels (which has a
new ambassador designate), Washington, Brasilia, Caracas and
Paramaribo, and that our others are not completely starved.
Once we reopen the High Commission in New Delhi, we cannot
close it again in two years, say, if we find it too heavy a
burden on the Treasury. The government will have to be able to
sustain it in the long term, without, as stated above, placing
our other missions under economic pressure, and while still
retaining the financial flexibility to invest in rebuilding an
effective foreign service.
Since we must conclude that the administration has done its
arithmetic, can we now expect further announcements on the
appointment of an ambassador in Beijing, of a Permanent
Representative to the United Nations, the recall of some
long-established mission heads, the re-shuffling of other
mission personnel, and the making available of resources to our
various embassies, particularly the critical ones?
Can the government assure us that it will put enough money
into the foreign service following the opening of the New Delhi
High Commission, to enable us to get the level of foreign policy
analysis a country this size can reasonably expect, and the
quality of representation it needs?