Illicit wealth, influence thrive under the current status quo

Dear Editor,
GUYANA stands at a moment that demands far more vigilance, yet sections of our media landscape appear to be moving in the opposite direction.
At a time when allegations of money laundering, gold smuggling, and transnational criminal influence are drawing international scrutiny, one would expect our democratic guardrails—especially the press—to strengthen their resolve. Instead, what we are witnessing is a concerning erosion of critical distance.
This drift away from scrutiny is not merely a journalistic lapse; it is a democratic hazard. The situation creates a permissive environment for those who benefit from confusion, ambiguity, and glamorised misinformation.
In such an environment, illicit wealth and influence do not merely survive—they thrive.
History is replete with examples of states where criminal networks quietly infiltrated political, regulatory, and media institutions during periods of economic boom. The pattern is always the same: reputations are sanitized, influence is normalized, and by the time the public recognises the scale of infiltration, the damage is already entrenched. Guyanese only have to look to Colombia for a lesson.
The press must ensure that it does not become a megaphone for individuals facing documented legal jeopardy. Journalism’s first duty is to the public’s right to an unsentimental, unvarnished understanding of the stakes.
To highlight these concerns is not to disparage the diligent reporters who continue to investigate and expose wrongdoing. Their work is essential. But their efforts are undermined when other outlets choose spectacle over scrutiny or prioritise access to power over accountability.
The question before us, then, is simple but urgent. Will the press act as a buffer between the public and those seeking to manipulate institutions for private gain, or will it continue to lower its guard at precisely the moment when vigilance is most needed?
Yours Truly,
Attiya Baksh

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