President Ramotar slams U.S. diplomat over Local Gov’t poll remarks
President Donald Ramotar
President Donald Ramotar

(CMC REPORT): Guyana’s President Donald Ramotar, on Wednesday, forthrightly dismissed a statement by the outgoing United States Ambassador, Brent Hardt, who accused the head of state of selectively abiding by the country’s Constitution, even as the country awaits long-overdue local government elections.

Hardt, addressing a function earlier this week, said that President Ramotar’s reason for not assenting to one of the local government bills was because it was unconstitutional, while at the same time was not holding the local

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US Ambassador Brent Hardt

government polls in keeping with the dictates of the Constitution.

“He cannot be an inconsistent defender of the Constitution, ignoring the Constitution’s very clear requirement to hold local government elections and, for that matter, to return bills to parliament no more than 21 days after they are sent to him,” said Hardt.
The American diplomat said none of the “seemingly array of excuses” by President Ramotar and the ruling People’s Progressive Party (PPP) for not holding local government elections (LGE) since 1994 were valid. “By not even setting a date, the Government keeps LGE always off in the elusive distant horizon. This purposeful delay after 20 years without elections is, it bears repeating, contrary to the constitution and laws of Guyana,” Hardt said.
However, President Ramotar, who is in Antigua attending the 35th summit of Caribbean Community (CARICOM) leaders, told the Caribbean Media Corporation (CMC) that Hardt spoke at the function “as if he is the governor in the country and not as an ambassador.
“I think he would have properly done much better in doing his business as an ambassador. However, if he was so concerned about democracy, I think he should probably think about the fact that the United States has been passing laws in their Congress where Guyana nor the rest of the Caribbean doesn’t have a say but we are forced to implement those laws like the financial laws that they recently passed where banks must report American citizens who have their deposits here.”
Ramotar said that “many of the issues raised by the American diplomat are really way out and the ambassador would do very well, instead of getting involved in local politics, to really represent the interest of his country properly.”
President Ramotar said the outburst by the U.S. envoy is not a “one off shot” issue, adding “if you look also at the Wikileaks, this very ambassador, when he was ambassador in other parts of the Caribbean has been sending all kinds of personal things about leaders of the Caribbean.
“So I am not worried about his comments, I think that if he was really concerned about democracy, there are many, many places like Egypt where the United States has very close relationship; there they have serious democratic problems, maybe they should go and talk to them.”
An angry Guyanese Head of State also suggested that the diplomat should go to his own country “where you have governors in different states taking decisions…where public servants don’t have collective bargaining. Those are things that are trampling democracy. If he is so mindful he should get involved in that type of politics,” Ramotar told CMC.

(By Peter Richards)

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