Dear Editor,

The least surprising alliance in Guyana’s political history took place when Azruddin Mohamed’s We Invest in Nationhood (WIN) party teamed up with A New and United Guyana (ANUG) last weekend. Instead of a press event— even a limited one like that of Amanza Walton at the launch of her own coalition— the signing ceremony was held secretly during the day on Saturday. A press release stating it had taken place was sent out in the pre-dawn hours of the morning, and the next day, the two signatories (Mohamed and Dr Mark France, ANUG leader) were out of press range on an outreach in the interior.

The ANUG-WIN coalition has since come up with all the obfuscations, deflections, and gaslighting that anybody observing the two men for the past months could have expected. Before they even started, you had the Clipart logo from Mohamed that was a jaguar, then a leopard, and then a jaguar again when he was caught saying it was a jaguar— and finally a letter of apology to the same GECOM he had threatened legal action against, admitting that he had inadvertently called it a jaguar, but it is really a leopard.

In teaming up with Dr. France, Mohamed seems to have found his smarter, more slippery, but still as obvious, partner in duplicity. After months of representing no policy positions for ANUG, engaging in no political outreaches, and not even updating the party Facebook page— despite writing libraries’ worth of Facebook posts and comments in support of Azruddin— the ANUG Chair finally signed off on a ‘secret’ deal to enter a coalition.

Even with this coalition agreement, both men are insisting on calling a jaguar a leopard, and referring to their coalition as a “collaboration” as if Guyanese are stupid. Under the law, once two parties come together with a shared list and still retain their individual party structures, that is a coalition. The reason they don’t want to call it what it is, is twofold.

First, Azruddin is a man who likes sticking to his story, no matter what evidence you bring up to contradict it. Therefore, since he was caught clearly stating that he was not coalescing with any party because he could win the elections on his own, for him to now coalesce with ANUG would be to contradict himself and expose what is well known: he is struggling to get candidates on his own and had to settle with the only small party desperate and unscrupulous enough to risk sanctions by teaming up with him.

As for the craftier France, he knows that saying openly that he has entered ANUG into a coalition with the OFAC-sanctioned Azruddin would not only expose him to sanctions himself— and likely already has. Naming a coalition a “collaboration” will not fool the American authorities.

To enter into a coalition with Azruddin also contradicts France’s own supposedly ethical postures. Just a few weeks ago, as Chair of ANUG, France charged GECOM with adhering to standards of transparency, integrity, and accountability. In keeping with that spirit, France has to explain to the public: if it is that ANUG was starved of resources up to last week— as evidenced by the fact that he and his executive have had no public outreaches for the entire year— how did he and several of his executives suddenly get the resources to go on a political outreach to the interior?

The Representation of the People Act obligates the single list, not the constituent partners of a coalition, to report its expenses. How is France accounting for ANUG’s financial involvement on that single list with Mohamed, particularly with regard to verification of the sources of list funds?

He also has to, in the spirit of transparency, directly address how many members of ANUG— already a skeleton crew party— have sent in their resignations in the wake of his coalition with WIN. Who exactly are the ANUG members, other than himself, who would be signing on to the coalition with Mohamed as presidential candidate?

As for Mohamed, every single time he opens his mouth to speak to the media directly, he further indicts himself and his integrity. When he was last at court on the tax evasion charges, he claimed— without any evidence to support it— that he had a poll conducted of 80,000 respondents, about one-tenth of the entire population of Guyana and about one-seventh of the electorate, and that 65 percent of those people said they would vote for him. If that were true, that would be the largest elections poll in the history of global politics.

France, in contrast, has predicted that the PPP, being the best party at this time to run the country, would win the elections— but that his intention was to provide them with a minority executive. How are the two reconciling these vastly different predictions?

Then there is the issue of policy and integrity. Early on the morning of the release of the NGSA results last week, you had Mohamed with his teleprompter stating clearly that education was in a crisis and spiral. Nothing could be further from the truth, yet the video in which Mohamed spoke— with his full chest— about a non-existent crisis and downward spiral in primary education is still on his page, with over 238,000 views.

Dr. France, the clearly more educated of the two, instead praised the historical achievement and congratulated Priya Manickchand on her consistent high performance in the education sector. When confronted not just about the contradiction in their perspectives on the education system but about the clear dishonesty in his coalition partner’s statement, France predictably runs away.

The secret coalition signing ceremony, the foreday morning press release, and then the running off into the interior is not a bug of the ANUG-WIN coalition— it is a feature. For France, hyperactive on social media, whenever he faces a tough question on one forum, he immediately runs to another. When he is caught up there, he runs to yet another forum.

Azruddin is even more evasive. His social media engagement is the most ironically contradictory. Both Team Mohamed and We Invest in Nationhood are plural in title but focus exclusively on one man. That man, however, does not have his own social media identity and never engages directly. On the two occasions that he engaged the media, ten minutes did not pass before he got flustered and had to be shielded by some protector.

In the first instance, when he was giving his 65 percent support comment, and questions about the sanctions and the tax evasion charges became too hard, he was whisked away by his lawyer. When Trinidadian journalist Ian Alleyne (whom he notably invited to an interview while running from the local media the day after the coalition signing) pressed him about the same things, Alleyne was aggressively confronted by his supporters, and he himself was whisked away by his ‘campaign manager’, Odessa Primus.

Both men continue to prove themselves the cowardly, mediocre, and entirely inconsistent pity po boys of Guyanese politics— two insipid peas in a pod of self-delusion, all ego and bluster on social media but deathly afraid of the press, even for basic scrutiny.

I am calling on Azruddin Mohamed and Mark France to man up and have the courage to hold a press conference where they open themselves up to direct questions from the media. The time for running and hiding behind skirttails every time the questions get too uncomfortable is over.

I told a drinking buddy of mine that I was going to issue this challenge to the dodgy duo, and his response was, “They gun mek it, man.” Let’s see.

Sincerely,
Don Singh

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