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Forbes Burnham
as
Prime Minister
of Guyana.
Some individuals make for difficult subjects to write on. Linden
Forbes Sampson Burnham is such a person. He is either well admired or passionately despised. Either way, or altogether, he
remains, unquestionably, one of the Caribbean’s most controversial personalities of the twentieth century. Forbes Burnham
was born on February 20, 1923, in Kitty, Georgetown, one of three children born to poor but strict parents. He received his
early education from his father who was the headmaster of a Methodist Primary school.
At eleven, young Burnham began his secondary education at Central High School, and remained there briefly
before going to the colony’s elite Queen’s College (QC), where his academic brilliance earned him at least two
internal scholarships with which he paid for the remaining years of secondary education, his family unable to afford the fees.
Described in his school report as a "diligent and studious" student and a "natural leader," Burnham wins the prestigious Guiana
Scholarship in 1942, as the colony’s top student.
Delayed by World War II in Europe, he completed a Bachelor’s Degree externally, and taught both at
a private secondary school and as an assistant master at his alma mater. Guyana’s premier poet-revolutionary, Martin
Carter, a close friend of Burnham (QC days) under whom he served as a minister, wrote an impressive forward to Burnham’s
collection of speeches, A Destiny to Mould (1970), noting that Burnham was "acceptably the most intellectually gifted of the
masters at Queen’s College." Burnham arrived in England in 1945 and attended London University where, as the best debater,
he won the Best Speaker’s Cup of the Laws Faculty. Two years thereafter, he received an LL.B. (Hons.). In 1948 he was
called to the Bar Gray’s Inn. In London, he became involved in students’ activities, a platform used then for
colonials’ call for "self-rule," and joined other activities such as those held by the League of Coloured Peoples (LCP).
As the President of the West Indies Student’s Union in 1947, Burnham led its Delegation to the World Youth Festival
in Czechoslovakia.
Back home in 1949, a qualified professional with some grass-root political exposure, he established a private
practice and plunged into local politics, joining Dr. Jagan’s Political Affairs Committee (PAC), which became the People’s
Progressive Party (PPP) shortly thereafter, due to Burnham’s suggestion. Burnham joined the British Guiana Labour Union
(BGLU), the oldest union in the British Commonwealth which held considerable de facto power in the colony, and by 1952, his
growing reputation made him the union’s president, a position he would not relinquished two decades later. "It is impossible,"
he said in 1969, addressing the Fourth Caribbean Congress of Labour, "for a trade union to have any vitality and play its
proper role in the scheme of things in the context of developing nations unless it takes an intelligent interest in politics."
Burnham is one of those people who were fortunate to recognize a destiny. According to his sister Jesse Burnham
who distributed a provocative pamphlet, warning against her brother, "Beware of my Brother Forbes," young Burnham’s
ambitious list of goals includes becoming mayor of Georgetown, chief justice, prime minister, and the non-existing position
of prime minister of the West Indies, reflecting the canvassing nature of his political inclination. Busy with studies in
London, Burnham maintains contact with home activities via letters to his mother, one that expresses his disapproval of the
rise of Indians in commercial Georgetown; "I feel strongly about the Indian attitude but the time has not come for me to broadcast
these feelings and muddy my waters after all…"
In 1952, as President of the BGLU and a senior member of the PPP, Burnham began his grapple for political
leadership. Popular in Georgetown, he convinced Dr. Jagan that the PPP congress should be held in the city instead of Jagan’s
stronghold Berbice, with a members’ instead of a delegates’ voting session. Although his supporters outnumbered
the delegates, his intention to outvote Jagan failed when Sydney King (Eusi Kwayana), a senior and popular Black PPP member,
realizing Burnham’s objective, objected strongly in a passionate speech against Burnham’s wishes. Protesting that
he should be "leader or nothing," Burnham settled for chairmanship in place of the previously favored Aston Chase, who was
regarded as less "educated." After the PPP won the general elections in 1953, Burnham became the minister of education. Jai
Narine Singh is included on the legislative team in place of Janet Jagan who is dropped to accommodate Burnham’s request.
When the PPP is removed from office after 133 days, and the constitution suspended by the British, and PPP officials (Jagan
included but not Burnham) are jailed on technicalities, Burnham again seized the opportunity to become party head.
With many PPP officials still imprisoned in 1955, Burnham and others weary of Jagan’s communist leaning,
jointly called for another congress in Georgetown. Upon his release, Jagan agreed to a meeting but one in which no motions
were to be made. However, when one of Burnham’s supporters motioned that all rules be ignored, Burnham (chairman) recognized
the motion. Consequently, the Jagans walked out denouncing the motion as a vote of no confidence. Nevertheless, Burnham assumed
his victory and declared himself party leader. For the first and only time, the PPP headed into the general elections (1957)
as two separate factions, each with a version of the Thunder, the PPP newspaper. The one headed by Burnham was called the
PPP Burnham Faction.
Defeated in the elections, Burnham disappeared from public politics, appearing in court where he developed
a formidable reputation between 1957 and 1959. In 1959, he was elected President of the British Guiana Bar Association and
the following year, became a Queen’s Counsel. When Burnham returned to the political scene in 1958, his PPP was revitalized
under its new name, the People National Congress (PNC). Dr. J.P. Latchmansingh and Jai Narine Singh as chairman and party
secretary respectively, represented the crux of the PNC’s Indian minority. By 1960, the PNC had become essentially a
"Black" organization with Latchmansingh dead, and Jai Narine Singh forced to resign after publishing a memorandum (against
party rules) criticizing the PNC’s "Africanisation." Burnham, Singh wrote, had become a man whose "head has grown too
big for his hat."
Under Burnham, the PNC entered its first general elections in 1961, as did the United Force, led by the colony’s
leading entrepreneur, Peter D’Aguiar. This third consecutive elections victory for the PPP convinced Burnham that the
PPP was unbeatable unless his strategies changed. He appealed to his constituents intensely, suggesting that a PPP government
meant an "Indian" government (and "Indian racial victory") and the destined subjugation of Blacks. He intensified his campaign
to change the voting system. Desperate to remove the "communist" Jagan from power, the British acquiesced, replacing the "first-past-the-post"
method with proportional representations (PR) for the 1964 elections. Under PR, despite increasing its share of total vote
cast, the PPP won fewer seats than it had previously. Thus, Burnham became prime minister in 1964 through the PNC/UF coalition
which resulted in more seats than the PPP’s 24.
The period of 1961 to 1964 is extremely critical because it involved the orchestration of the demise of the
PPP by Burnham. He led the public servants in crippling strikes against the government (1962 Kalder Budget and 1963 Labour
Relations Bill). Instead of exhausting the parliamentary process, Burnham took central issues to the streets, making it difficult
for Jagan to rule via parliamentary democracy. As president of the Guyana Labour Union, Burnham did not object to CIA involvement
in local union activities (financing strikes and striking workers’ wages), which helped deteriorate PPP’s image
in London and Washington. The violence culminated in the racial and communal violence of 1964 between Indians and Blacks,
leaving at least 170 dead, thousands injured, and more than 1,000 homes destroyed. Dispossession of thousands led to the establishment
of today’s "squatting areas," as people moved to neighborhood dominated by their own race.
Leading from the streets, Burnham challenged his supporters through racial fears, reinforcing their sense
of "power," saying, "In fact, comrades, you do not realise your power, but I do not want you to use your power recklessly."
By mid-year of 1963, PNC’s campaign of violence reached government officials (Senator Christian Ramjattan was attacked
and hospitalized) and buildings. Some foreign ships (Cuban tanker, m.v. Cuba) also became targets for sabotage. Horrified
with his party’s campaign, Dr. D.J. Taitt, a founding member of the PNC, accused Burnham of leading its members into
a "blind alley of improvised tribalism at variance with the economic and social realities of the two major ethic groups of
our country…"
At Bourda Green, in May, 1963, Burnham suggests that the PPP plans to form "an authoritarian regime" in the
Legislature, and if such occurs, then "there would have to be a shifting of the scene of agitation and opposition from the
Legislature to the places where they grow rice." A message loaded with racial overtones, "rice," of course, symbolizes Indian-populated
districts. Despite the discovery by the police of plan X13, an insurrectionary plot to overthrow the PPP by force and national
instability, as well as arms, ammunition, chemicals for bomb making, etc. at Congress Place, the PNC headquarters, Burnham’s
rhetoric about violence intensifies, suggesting that the "PPP plan violence and propose to execute violence," and thus, his
supporters "must be in a position to apply the remedy." Thus, when asked why he refused to travel in Georgetown and assist
in the arrest of the disturbances (asked by Governor), his response was that "we were very short on petrol and we felt that
if we went around Georgetown using up this petrol…we would have no petrol for the vehicles to carry out Party work."
He aligned with leaders he once regarded as "traitors"(e.g., Lionel Luckhoo and businessman John Fernandes
who supported the suspension of the constitution), in their anti-PPP attacks. Regarding the racial zeitgeist, the Commonwealth
Commission of 1962 (reviewed role of CIA), noted that the "political professions of the PNC were somewhat vague and amorphous.
There was a tendency to give a racial tinge to its policy. Mr. Burnham expressed the opinion that it was Dr. Jagan who was
responsible for this unfortunate development. We do not, however, think that there is much substance in the contention of
Mr. Burnham and it seems to us that whatever racial differences existed were brought about by political propaganda." And "political
propaganda" became instrumental in Burnham’s campaign theme for the 1964 elections, called the "New Road."
It is not surprising that a few months after the Wismar massacre, in which a majority Black population engaged
in an orgy of violence, including rape and murder, against the small Indian community there, Burnham appealed to Indians in
his first radio broadcast after assuming office; "We wish to let our Indian citizens know therefore that they can depend on
this government as they could not upon the previous administration for justice and fairplay, peace and security, ordered progress
and economic advance." However, whatever confidence existed amongst Indians for Burnham from the early days of the PPP had
been dissolved entirely by this tragedy.
On one critical issue, the right to self-rule—Forbes Burnham must be credited for his continual and
emphatic efforts toward this end. Despite advocating that the PPP and PNC can never form a coalition government, Burnham announced
that he would have supported whichever party won the 1964 elections, in the fight for independence. Some PNC members protested,
particularly Sydney King (by now a PNC member), who resigned the day before the elections. A Guyana under Jagan, arguably,
was an easier target to usurp than one governed from London. In 1966, the year that Burnham eventually received the instruments
of independence, he created the National Security Act, giving the police sweeping powers to search, seize, and arrest at its
will. For the 1968 general elections, he introduced the "overseas vote" which was used heavily to rig the elections. By the
end of the sixties, he turned opinions in the West by establishing ties with China and the Eastern Bloc, essentially communist
and socialist nations.
The 1970s belonged essentially to Forbes Burnham. It is in this era, the most important in the history of
Independence Guyana, that Burnham became transformed from the "intellectually gifted" and cunning politician into the pragmatic
but overtly vainglory national leader. No English-speaking Caribbean personality wielded more power over a section of the
region, as nationalization of assets, extensive electoral fraud, political repression, party paramountcy, cult activities,
IMF/World Bank intervention, mass migration, and Burnham’s own "cooperative socialism" all became tenets of a political
landscape substantially reflecting the leader’s dreams.
Burnham was not disillusioned, nor was his plans altogether impractical. In 1970, Guyana became the world’s
first Cooperative Republic by ceasing ties with Britain, thus, replacing the Governor General with an Executive President.
The Guyana National Cooperative Bank was opened to help finance "cooperative" ventures in particular, such as the Sanata Textile
Mill, the hydroelectric plant on the Mazaruni River, and the Yarokabra Glass Factory at Timehri. The "cooperative" Burnham
tells us, is to be the "principal instrument for achieving socialism…making the small man the real man." Under this
theory, the "cooperative sector" is to be the "dominant sector." He imported a successful economic model of production used
in Puerto Rico, and began nationalizing companies with heavy foreign interest, such as the Demerara Bauxite Company (DEMBA),
a subsidiary of the Canadian bauxite company, ALCAN. The massive sugar industry was nationalized in 1975. An External Trade
Bureau (ETB) was established to monitor imports and exports. All seemed well for the citizens.
Under Burnham, Guyana’s status in international affairs even elevated. World recognized leaders such
as Indira Gandhi and Fidel Castro visited Guyana. Burnham hosted the first Caribbean Festival of the Arts (CARIFESTA) (1970),
importing fleets of luxurious cars as part of the grand arrangement for the historic occasion ("Festival City"). A key person
behind the formation of CARICOM in 1973 is Burnham, who had also played host to the Conference of Foreign Ministers of Nonaligned
Countries in 1972. That same year, relationship with Cuba was reinstated. Later in the decade, Burnham allowed the Cuban Army
to use Guyana as a transit point on its way to Angola, a polemic move since Barbados had withdrawn its support (due to US
protest), and Trinidad announced that it would not honor such a request if it were made. Unquestionably, Burnham’s image
was greatly improved, especially in Cuba, Eastern Europe, and in the West Indies.
Setting out to realize his "co-operative" socialist revolution, Burnham gathered technocrats and skilled
intellectuals par excellence to his ranks. Vincent Teekah, former senior PPP member, defected to become a minister under Burnham
(Teekah was mysteriously murdered in his car). Another Indian intellectual, Shridath Ramphal, was attorney general before
becoming General Secretariat for the Commonwealth, a position used to cushioned Burnham’s messages. The military expanded
as defense allocation increased from $8.76 million in 1973 to $48.72 million in 1976 (500% increase). The Guyana National
Service (GNS) (1974) and the Guyana People’s Militia (1976) began. Having established the 1763 Monument, a key national
symbol with which primarily Blacks align, Burnham ordered and partook in the supervision of the construction of the Enmore
Martyrs Monument in 1976. Long told by Burnham that this progressive "cooperative socialism" would "feed, house and clothe"
Guyana by that same year, Guyanese, it seemed, had good hopes.
But Burnham’s agenda was, from the inception, overloaded with much of his own will, and by the end
of the seventies; his dream had became a colossal nightmare. His 1973 elections campaign began unofficially with the seizing
of paper stock from the PPP organ, Mirror. Days before the July elections, the government announced that ballots will be transported
for their "protection," by the armed forces and government bodies to army headquarters at Thomas Lands, Georgetown. They remained
there for more than twenty-four hours. Two PPP supporters, Jagat Ramesar (17) and Jack Parmanand (35), in an attempt to prevent
the seizure of ballot boxes, are shot and killed in Corentyne. While the police harassed and intimidated Indian voters outside,
PNC party members and government officials at the polling stations employed technicalities to curtail the PPP vote.
Despite the rigging, Burnham declared 1973 as the "year of the breakthrough," claiming that the PNC won the
"Indian" vote in Berbice. He also proclaimed the birth of the New Guyana Man. Back in office, the "Founder Leader" crystallized
his paramount presence in his "Declaration of Sophia" (1974) speech, in which he declared that the PNC "party should assume
apologetically its paramountcy over the government which is merely one of its executive arms." Consequently, the government
created the Office of the General Secretary of the PNC and the Ministry of National Development (OGSMND) (1975), which, as
the name suggests, became a conduit between the PNC party and the PNC government, making government business and resources
those of the PNC party. A party card became essential for access to social benefits, civil service positions, contracts, and
such things as business permits. By the mid seventies, an estimated 80% of the economy fell under the eyes of the PNC government
whose workforce more than doubled since 1964, becoming replete with PNC party members (replacing the "old guard").
The judicial system also became replete with PNC sympathizers and members and as early as 1968, those who
did not approve of Burnham were quietly forced to practice the legal professions in other countries. One such person was J.A.
Luckhoo Jr. (the first Guyanese to hold the post of Chief Justice, 1960). It was also necessary for the head of the judicial
system, or attorney general, to favor Burnham’s opinions. The PNC presence in the judicial system was confirmed by the
flying of the party flag on the Court of Appeals building. This presence also stretched itself over to the media and unions.
The Guyana Broadcasting Corporation (GBC) and the Daily Chrocicle, Guyana’s primary newspaper, fell under
the direct governance of the PNC. Newsprint for other papers, primarily for the PPP, was seized, especially at elections.
Two Trade Orders (no. 86 of 1971 and no. 86 of 1972) infringed the freedom of expression once guaranteed under the Article
12(1) of the constitution. Although cost for damages was awarded to the New Guyana Company (publisher or the Mirror),
in 1998-79, the court found that the fundamental right to import newsprint was not an essential part of the right to free
expression.
Trade unionism in independent Guyana has always been, for the most part, divided like the politics along
race and party affiliation, with the PNC garnishing the supports of industrial organs representing the civil service or public
sector and Bauxite industry, and unions for the rice (e.g., Guyana Agricultural and General Workers Union [GAWU] and sugar
industry aligned with the PPP. However, under Burnham’s tenure, trade union activity became heavy suppressed, eventually
forcing most unions to move in favor of the PNC. This included the body that headed the umbrella of unions, the Trade Union
Congress (TUC), and the massive Guyana Public Service Union (GPSU). Where the PNC could not impose its influence in union
activities, it infiltrated the industry itself via other methods. This was particularly true in the rice and sugar industries,
areas traditionally dominated by Indians. Both received less minimal financial support from the PNC; with time, the government
replaced competent people at the Guyana Rice Board with its own supports. The previously profitable rice industry began to
crumble due to a reduction in paddy prices paid to farmers, unavailability of machinery parts and foreign exchange to make
these purchases, and the break from lucrative markets like Cuba. By the eighties, average acreage under cultivation plummeted
from 250,000 to 90,000.
Burnham, for more than a decade, refused to recognize GAWU as the union of sugar workers, but in 1975, to
win support in his aim to nationalize the industry, acquiesced a poll calling for this recognition. Yet, it did not prevent
the police, army troops, and members of House of Israel from breaking up strikes, the suppression of trade union activities,
and the PNC’s own attempt to form a new union for the sugar workers. In some cases, wages were not only frozen; anti-labor
legislations (e.g., Labor [Amendment] Act of 1984 [No. 9 of 1984]) were implemented to make judicial decisions favoring workers
nugatory or void. When an increase in sugar demand due to the 1973 Middle East war resulted in an increase in profits for
sugarcane farmer, Burnham implemented the sugar levy, a tax placed on farmers to divert part of this profit to the government.
It is ironic considering that Burnham had accused the PPP of providing civil service jobs to the "blue-eyed
boys of the [PPP] Party." Loyalty to the PNC became of paramount importance; criticism meant possible dismissal or harassment,
and workers were strongly encouraged to attend PNC rallies, as reflected in this memorandum by the personnel director of GEC,
Mr. W.N. James, to all staff (October, 1980), urging an attendance of a PNC rally to be addressed by Burnham; "The importance
of the attendance of this historic rally cannot be under-estimated. Your future and indeed the future of your children will
be discussed and therefore you must attend." By 1979, Martin Carter who had now become a fierce critic of the Burnham regime,
who would be beaten up by PNC’s loyal thus, wrote in the Working People’s Alliance (WPA) paper, Dayclean, 1979;
"The PNC’s method of ensuring self-perpetuation consists of indulging in a deliberate policy of degrading people." Under
Burnham’s PNC, corruption, he noted, had become "a way of life, in which people were made to accept that stealing, cheating,
lying, bearing false witness…was a positive sign of loyalty to the regime…"
By 1976, the socialist revolutionary plan to "feed, house and clothe" Guyana began its final plummet. The
ETB became a channel that stifled trade due to party favoritism, and the imported economic model faltered due to a lack of
international investors (unlike in the US territory). Millions spent in nationalization resulted in staggering losses as most
projects failed. The hydroelectric dam in Mazaruni amounted to a US$100 million loss. Ineptitude, corruption, and willful
mismanagement (yearly audits neglected etc.) resulted in little production, forcing the government to turn to the IMF/World
Bank by 1978. By the time of Burnham’s death, Guyana was some US$2 billion in arrears (US$150 million to Trinidad and
US$100 million to Barbados). In addition, despite the lavish foreign tours Burnham undertook with enormous entourages and
social projects that failed, millions remained unaccounted for by the PNC.
To have unfettered access to private lands for "public" purposes, Burnham had the constitution amended. The
new Acquisition of Land for Public Purposes Act allowed free access to lands with compensation to be provided bases on his
economists’ dictates, as opposed to current market value. Burnham’s sprawling but extravagant Hope Estate (Hope,
ECD), which included such things as a helipad, and where public servants (primarily weeders and cleaners) were brought to
work, was once such acquisition. While Burnham had been able to win US support by claiming to be an anti-communist government,
by 1976, US-Guyana relationship became strained when a Cubana airliner exploded over Barbados, killing 11 Guyanese of the
76 dead. Burnham, shockingly, accused the CIA, to which the US State Department in turn called Burnham a "bald-faced liar."
Throughout his political reign, Burnham had maneuvered as necessity dictated. Or, as Mr. Partrick Walker
(head of a British parliamentary delegation to Guiana in 1953 after the constitution is suspended) noted, Forbes Burnham would
"tact and turns, as advantages seem to dictate," and that "his whole political approach is opportunistic." In the West Indies
and Africa (Burnham, Nkrumah, and some West Indian leaders had met secretly in 1957 [despite Jagan’s initial request
to such a meeting, he is ignored], during the independence celebration for a new Ghana), he convinced Black leaders that a
PPP government meant an "Indian" state. In Washington and London he criticized the PPP as communist and in Havana and Moscow,
Burnham announced himself as an anti-imperialist. He benefited from critical US support while having ties with Cuba. Burnham
was, in essence, a politician.
It explained why, despite setbacks, the appetite of Burnham the man remained undaunted. His face became synonymous
with national colors for national celebrations. He started Mass Games, based on Korean mass dramatization that bordered on
propaganda, in which thousands of youths are used to praise their leader and the revolution in splendid costumes, colors,
and patriotic fervor. For this, Korean technicians were imported as our students are trained to depict Burnham’s image
in revolutionary motifs. Burnham’s interest in diamonds and precious metals that became obvious as early as 1965 when,
on a trip to an Amerindian village, he said to the locals, "I know of those who come with the Bible and leave with the diamonds,"
grew. Rumors of his massive personal wealth became confirmed when he is listed in international magazines as one of the world’s
richest Black men. While he is lauded for replacing the "imperialist" tie and jacket with the shirt jack, as an official formal
wear, his reputation of being an unscrupulous individual who enjoyed imposing his will on others magnified. A former University
of Guyana (UG) lecturer, Mr. Colin Cholmondeley, noted that Burnham "derived a kind of sadistic pleasure in making people
be at his beck and call. He would call ministers, bureaucrats and treat them with such abandon…He dedicated himself
to subordination."
This is one reason for Black supporters referring to Burnham as the "Kabaka" (from Ugandan Baganda tribe,
a kingly title), when he began making public appearance in flowing, white robes usually worn by African tribal leaders. The
Comrade-Leader also wore dashikis. His strong affinity for Africa, his ancestral homeland, had long been in existence but
it is as national leader that Burnham increased his interest in the freedom movements in the oppressed continent. Speaking
of Rhodesia, he invoked the image of a universal suffering Black man, noting that in "two world wars, in the War of American
Independence, the black man gave his life in the cause of freedom. But today the giants stand still, shackled by technicalities
and ‘impotent’ in Rhodesia…This day, however, cannot last for eternity." After Patrice Lumumba’s murder,
Burnham spoke of a connection from the slain leader to himself and his struggles; "He was a man who stood for the right of
a people to run their own affairs. He was a man who stood for a strong Congo, and those things for which he stood are sufficient
to recommend him to people like me."
By the seventies, he monitored the action of the UNITA forces fighting in Angola, and also Nkomo’s
ZAPU in Zimbabwe. He offered Guyana as a refuge for all African freedom fighters (and Black militants), and also made financial
contributions. In his book, Journey to Nowhere—A New World Tragedy, Shiva Naipaul notes that Burnham, on his way to
a Conference of Nonaligned Nations held in Lusaka (1970), writes a check for $50,000 that is handed over to President Nyerere
of Tanzania, for African freedom fighters. In the Caribbean, the People Revolutionary Government of Grenada was offered both
money and Guyana army’s training facilities. Not to be ignored, he welcomed cult leader Jim Jones (paid US$2 million
to the government) and Black militant, David Hill (Rabbi Washington), despite the latter having a criminal record in the US,
to have residence in Guyana. Jim Jone’s People’s Temple that offered a program of socialist self-sufficiency was
filled overwhelmingly with Blacks.
Andrew Salkey, in his Georgetown Journal, (1972), writes, "Everybody knows Cheddie…People say he is
too far behind to catch up with Burnham…Burnham is a better politician…Burnham is the sort of politician that
leaves you guessing….American really doesn’t understand him the way they think they understand Cheddi." Salkey
goes on to note that "Burnham is the sort of man who sells the Party paper in Bourda Market on Sunday morning," that he "understand
power…I think that Burnham understand the Indian majority, Black minority think better than most people believed." But
as Guyana approached the end of the seventies, Guyanese understanding of Burnham the man and the politician was clear—he
had become an erroneously idealistic and ruthless leader taking Guyana deep into a territory of immense economic stagnation.
Despite his military expansionism and party policies to elevate the country’s Blacks, such as the building
of housing schemes, many at critical points in being near Indian-populated villages (e.g., Samantha Point near Grove, EBD),
hardship prevailed. In 1977, the PPP was able to call a strike along the sugar belt, and another massive strike even began
in Linden (names after Burnham), a PNC stronghold. Dissension began to pervade the society as food shortages became commonplace.
Burnham called upon Guyanese to consume what is produced locally; the ranks within the party are made to recite lines advocating
national self-sufficiency by poet, Kahlil Gibran; "Pity a nation that wears a cloth it does not weave…" The early eighties
brought an official ban on numerous imported items like wheaten flour, which Burnham replaced by rice-flour (milled rice).
Bread was interpreted as an "imperialist" food. Traditional food outlets (shops) were barred from selling food items and instead,
the government established a series of food distribution centers called Knowledge Sharing Institute (KSI).
As antigovernment criticism reached the doorsteps of the government and the army from within their own ranks
of supporters/members, Burnham the ingenious politician became intensely selective in choosing loyalists (e.g., Cecil "Skip"
Roberts). To prevent any government or military figure from becoming overtly popular, he exercised a policy of reshuffling,
which included the appointing of such individuals to foreign posts. As people anticipated the 1978 general elections amidst
a renewed wind of opposition, Burnham arrested their expectation with the Referendum Bill (1978), which gave the PNC 2 more
years in office. It passed in parliament because the PNC held the required two-thirds majority (37 of 53 seats, gained in
the 1973 elections).
Repression of political activity always existed under Burnham, but it became an unofficial government policy
in the seventies, beginning with the attempted murder of UG lecturer, Dr. Joshua Ramsammy (PPP) in 1971. In 1972, Dr. Walter
Rodney was refused a teaching post at UG. The Registrar noted that there was "no suitable vacancy in the Department of History
for someone with your qualification and experience." On a second attempt, the academic appointment committee considered him,
but according to Rupert Charles Lewis in his Walter Rodney’s Intellectual and Political Thought, the "Burnhamites on
the Board of Governors" at UG "overturned the decision." PPP activist, Arnold Rampersaud, is framed by the PNC for a shooting.
He is freed after a third trial in a case that became internationally known. By the end of the decade, tens of opposition
activists, primarily from the WPA, are arrested, jailed on false grounds, and beaten. Members of the Ratoon group (UG academics
and intellectuals for democracy), are also targeted (e.g., a kidnapping attempt is made on Dr. Clive Thomas). Shortly before
Rodney is assassinated in 1980, Edward Dublin and Ohene Koama, men closely associated with Rodney, are murdered.
In 1978, leading members of the WPA, including Drs. Rodney and Roopnarine are falsely accused and tried on
arson charges for burning down the OGSMND building. They are eventually found innocent in another internationally known political
trial, which included Maurice Bishop as part of the defense team. Unfortunately, Father Bernard Darke (Jesuit priest and photographer
for the Catholic Standard) is stabbed to death (1979) in police presence during this trial. Responsible were members of Rabbi
Washington’s House of Israel. The House had become a "military organization" with its members being used by the PNC
as scab labor and to break up opposition rallies. At one such rally in Kitty, Dr. Rodney is forced to flee the scene by running
as House members in police clothing converged. According to Eusi Kwayana, Burnham soon thereafter "commented on Rodney’s
prowess as an athlete and promised to send him to the Olympics" to represent Guyana.
Rodney’s presence marked the single most potent threat that Burnham faced as ruler. Rodney was Black
and therefore capable of drawing the "Black" vote. Secondly, he too was an intellectual though unlike Burnham. As an expert
on African history (Burnham’s history) who was extremely recognized in the Caribbean and Africa, and untainted by the
vicious politics of the sixties, he interpreted Black history from a perspective free of political motives. Guyana’s
situation became so intolerable that Rodney described it in his pamphlet, "People’s Power, No Dictator," "in terms befitting
filth, pollution and excrement…This is why the WPA repeats the legend of King Midas who was said to have been able to
touch anything and turn it into gold. That was called the ‘Midas Touch.’ Now Guyana has seen the ‘Burnham
Touch’—anything he touches turns to shit."
Yet, Rodney’s statement of the "Burnham Touch" is not all encompassing, although it summed up the general
feeling of the times. By the end of the seventies, non-Christian holidays such as Phagwah and Youman Nabi were made into national
events, both the Canji and Demerara Rivers had bridges, free education existed "from nursery to university," and major roadways
such as the Linden Highway, became realities. One should note, however, that some of these accomplishments were not originally
the ideas of Burnham, but were carried across from the pre-Burnham era of rule. Indian Leaders like J.B. Singh long called
for Indian holy days to become days of national celebration. The blueprint for the Linden Highway and the beginning of "free
" education, including the birth of the UG originated during the Jagan administration. Some "national" symbols and institutions
including the National Cultural Centre (NCS) were not without their controversies.
The NCS was Burnham’s idea. He used money from the Indian Immigration Fund (belonging to and for indentured
servants) for this construction. Initially, a committee was established to determine what should be done with this money;
its proposal to built three Indian cultural centers in the three counties were discarded by Burnham who, to appease the Indian
community, awarded the construction contract to an Indian firm and had Indian religious groups (e.g., Guyana Pandit’s
Council) bless the project. The Golden Arrowhead has been criticizes as being a flag that does not truly symbolize the makeup
or cultural presence of all six racial groups in Guyana, but is a pseudo-replica of flags to be found in Africa and the flag
of a Black power movement headed by Marcus Garvey. Burnham, however, survived because, as he once declared in an interview
with the New York Times, he was "all things to all men" in Guyana.
One of those "things" was the brute in the political animal, or, the practical will to eliminate critical
opposition figures. The assassination of Dr. Rodney in June 1980 (which the PNC regarded as a "misadventure") marks the end
of any threat to Burnham. One month after, with magnanimous support in the legislative and judicial systems, the government
passes a referendum requiring a heavy revision of the Guyana Constitution. The new (1980) constitution gave Burnham unprecedented
sweeping authority that could not be challenged in court without his approval (the right to redress in the privy counsel in
London was abolished). He became Guyana’s Executive President for Life and Commander-in-Chief of the Army. With these
new credentials, he contested the 1980 elections that were, according to the Report of the International Team of Observers
at the Elections in Guyana, "rigged massively and flagrantly." The PNC claimed that it received 77% of the votes; including
34, 784 overseas votes as opposed to the PPP’s 741. Of the 205 regional seats nationwide, the PNC garnished 169. By
the year’s end, Burnham single threat was the failure of the meeting in Venezuela over the border issue, which pointed
to a possible invasion, prompting the government to issue Defense Bonds in order to boost the military.
Burnham reached his sixtieth birthday in 1983, 20 of those in power. As his role as a politician became less
"public," his legacy is nevertheless exercised through PNC activities. His cabinet grew even larger, twice as large as his
first, including his wife and a son-in-law. Despite the economic crisis, the government refused to make foreign exchange available
for the purchasing of food or drugs. Instead, the police began a crackdown on the illegal importation of "contraband" goods.
Mass exodus of citizens skyrocketed. Meanwhile, a small PNC elite thrived through shareholding, contracts, and ownership of
local businesses financed by the party/government. The foreign airline, GUYAMERICA, was allowed to compete with the locally
owned Guyana Airways, primarily because government officials held shares. According to the Latin America Bureau, the PNC even
ventured into the cinema business briefly, purchasing the film rights of Gandhi, for an estimated US$50,000.
It is interesting that the PNC purchased this particular film right, for although Ghandi was shown
in Guyana to mammoth crowds, as expected, and was very appealing to the psychological image of the Indian, the Indian psyche
was experiencing severe social and psychological repercussions. It became commonplace to find Indians being bullied by their
Black counterparts in any social arena; school, the car park, or at the work place. This was the direct result of PNC policies
that advocated that Guyana belonged to Blacks. In no other avenue was this most dramatized than in the culture of crime that
proliferated under Burnham’s tenure. Indians became targeted for both the daytime "choke-and-rob" crimes, while at nights,
the more violent "kick-down-the-door" robberies during which where people of Indian descent are brutalized, shot, and women
raped. If one is to truly acknowledge the legacy of Burnham, one cannot possibly ignore this atmosphere created by Burnham
and the PNC under which the Indian had become a demonized being.
As the mid-eighties approached, Burnham made fewer speeches. One reason was a failure in his voice. In August
1985, after importing all the required machinery and an entire Cuban team of specialists, he underwent surgery to his throat.
The operation failed. He died on August 6, with the operation at the Georgetown Hospital, still an obscure affair. No Guyanese
doctor was allowed to operate on him, and it is alleged that only his son-in-law (a doctor) was present. The Trinidadian
Guardian, on August 11, 1985, in a special article read: "There is always sorrow in death and its uncertainties, and it
is traditional and correct to hope that one will be kind to the dead. Forbes deserves no less. His methods and systems, however,
deserve no sympathy or support…"
Somewhere between the politician and the man, one realizes that Burnham not only was capacitated with immense
practicality and intellectual foresight, but held views that were supposed to mature into panoramic, national visions. But
somewhere between the man and the politician, the distinction became blurred, and the man became too much a politician instead
of the politician becoming essentially a man. Thus, for a moment, the Guyanese community was offered a glimpse into what could
have been, but were then radically urged back to what really was. Martin Carter once noted that Burnham’s pragmatism
was "political and not philosophical," meaning that "a man, like Burnham, who finds himself engaged in the heart-fracturing
task of transforming an underdeveloped country, soon isolates what he knew all along—the fact of difference between
theory and practice, between what is desirable and what is possible. And becomes impatient."
Perhaps this is the least polemic but most impartial a conclusion one can arrive at in assessing the legacy of Forbes Burnham,
the consummate politician, and Forbes Burnham, the pragmatic opportunist. In the vein of what he represented to both his admirers
and those he has suffered, it is not ironic that Forbes Burnham is the only Caribbean leader embalmed for posterity—at
the Seven Ponds in the Guyana Botanical Gardens, Georgetown, two blocks away from Cuffy.
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