Ricky Singh on SVG Politics
ANALYSIS by RICKEY SINGH Sunday, September 05, 2010
INTERFERENCE in the domestic affairs, and election politics in particular, by foreigners in North America and Europe has been an old problem for some Caribbean countries ever since their independence from Britain.
Best known victims of such interference with money and so-called "experts" are known to have been Jamaica, Guyana, Grenada, Dominica, St Lucia and Antigua and Barbuda.
But it's difficult to recall an outstanding example of the sort of brazen public interference by some American business people, one a former employee of the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), as well as that of a British agency as is currently occurring in the Caricom member state of St Vincent and the Grenadines.
With a new general election expected to be called within the next two to three months, the foreign groups and agents have been increasing their profiles under the guise of "preserving democracy" (what else is new!) in that Windward Island whose prime minister is being targeted for, among other "sins", his "unholy alliance" with Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez.
Ralph Gonsalves, leader of the governing Unity Labour Party (ULP), and currently a second-term prime minister, suffered a political setback in November last year when the Opposition New Democratic Party (NDP) of Arnhim Eustace won a surprising "no" vote campaign at a referendum to change the country's constitution in favour of a constitutional republic. Foreign involvement was then also an issue.
The popular margin of victory at the referendum was about 7,000 (29,000 for NDP and 22,493 for ULP). But Gonsalves has been on the offensive ever since.
He went public last week with the release of an 'Open letter to the people of the Caribbean' to expose groups and individuals said to be passionately working to "undermine" his government and Vincentian "sovereignty".
Opposition NDP
Apart from the specific information provided on the American and British groups and business people, Gonsalves referred to the Opposition NDP as the primary beneficiary of the ongoing "foreign interference".
He also mentioned Sir James Mitchell, former prime minister and founder-leader of the NDP, as an "Advisory Board member" of the Strategic Communications Laboratories (SCL) of Britain.
This agency actually promotes as "its principal business, the art and science of mind-bending" as well as boasts of having borrowed techniques from Adolph Hitler".
Since Prime Minister Gonsalves' open letter and simultaneous forwarding of copies to all Caricom Heads of Government, in addition to "sensiting" leading civil society organisations, I opted to get a response from both NDP Opposition Leader Eustace, and Sir James Mitchell.
I failed to reach the NDP leader, at the time of writing, in telephone calls to his home and his party office. I did, however, reach Sir James, the former long-serving prime minister.
Sir James' response
After I informed him of the relevant sections of Gonsalves' three-and-a-half-page open letter, Sir James said that as former leader of the NDP and prime minister, he "never saw anything wrong in having foreign consultants for elections..."
So far as his presence on the board of SCL of Britain was concerned, all he was prepared to say was that "I have never been in the business of mind-bending of electoral support of the Vincentian people".
In relation to Americans operating out of St Vincent and inviting financial contributions to help "protect democracy" that was being endangered by the Gonsalves administration, the former prime minister said that "using Internet technologies to raise funds for any cause has now become a way of life". He preferred not to get into "the details".
However, for his part, Prime Minister Gonsalves has provided a two-page "attachment" outlining specific names of personnel and groups, websites and Facebook posting of those involved in the brazen campaign, a few operating from within St Vincent and the Grenadines, "to raise money starting from a low of US$5:) in a campaign to destabilise his administration and make a mockery of his country's sovereignty".
Dr Gonsalves is very categorical in his statement that, "over the past 11 months, commencing around October 2009, and continuing, foreign elements out of Britain and the United States of America have aligned themselves to the opposition NDP in an insidious campaign of defamation of this blessed country and of attempting to destabilise the Unity Labour Party Government led by me".
NDP leader Eustace has since dismissed Gonsalves' claims of the party's involvement with foreigners to destabilise his Government.
INTERFERENCE in the domestic affairs, and election politics in particular, by foreigners in North America and Europe has been an old problem for some Caribbean countries ever since their independence from Britain.
Best known victims of such interference with money and so-called "experts" are known to have been Jamaica, Guyana, Grenada, Dominica, St Lucia and Antigua and Barbuda.
But it's difficult to recall an outstanding example of the sort of brazen public interference by some American business people, one a former employee of the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), as well as that of a British agency as is currently occurring in the Caricom member state of St Vincent and the Grenadines.
With a new general election expected to be called within the next two to three months, the foreign groups and agents have been increasing their profiles under the guise of "preserving democracy" (what else is new!) in that Windward Island whose prime minister is being targeted for, among other "sins", his "unholy alliance" with Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez.
Ralph Gonsalves, leader of the governing Unity Labour Party (ULP), and currently a second-term prime minister, suffered a political setback in November last year when the Opposition New Democratic Party (NDP) of Arnhim Eustace won a surprising "no" vote campaign at a referendum to change the country's constitution in favour of a constitutional republic. Foreign involvement was then also an issue.
The popular margin of victory at the referendum was about 7,000 (29,000 for NDP and 22,493 for ULP). But Gonsalves has been on the offensive ever since.
He went public last week with the release of an 'Open letter to the people of the Caribbean' to expose groups and individuals said to be passionately working to "undermine" his government and Vincentian "sovereignty".
Opposition NDP
Apart from the specific information provided on the American and British groups and business people, Gonsalves referred to the Opposition NDP as the primary beneficiary of the ongoing "foreign interference".
He also mentioned Sir James Mitchell, former prime minister and founder-leader of the NDP, as an "Advisory Board member" of the Strategic Communications Laboratories (SCL) of Britain.
This agency actually promotes as "its principal business, the art and science of mind-bending" as well as boasts of having borrowed techniques from Adolph Hitler".
Since Prime Minister Gonsalves' open letter and simultaneous forwarding of copies to all Caricom Heads of Government, in addition to "sensiting" leading civil society organisations, I opted to get a response from both NDP Opposition Leader Eustace, and Sir James Mitchell.
I failed to reach the NDP leader, at the time of writing, in telephone calls to his home and his party office. I did, however, reach Sir James, the former long-serving prime minister.
Sir James' response
After I informed him of the relevant sections of Gonsalves' three-and-a-half-page open letter, Sir James said that as former leader of the NDP and prime minister, he "never saw anything wrong in having foreign consultants for elections..."
So far as his presence on the board of SCL of Britain was concerned, all he was prepared to say was that "I have never been in the business of mind-bending of electoral support of the Vincentian people".
In relation to Americans operating out of St Vincent and inviting financial contributions to help "protect democracy" that was being endangered by the Gonsalves administration, the former prime minister said that "using Internet technologies to raise funds for any cause has now become a way of life". He preferred not to get into "the details".
However, for his part, Prime Minister Gonsalves has provided a two-page "attachment" outlining specific names of personnel and groups, websites and Facebook posting of those involved in the brazen campaign, a few operating from within St Vincent and the Grenadines, "to raise money starting from a low of US$5:) in a campaign to destabilise his administration and make a mockery of his country's sovereignty".
Dr Gonsalves is very categorical in his statement that, "over the past 11 months, commencing around October 2009, and continuing, foreign elements out of Britain and the United States of America have aligned themselves to the opposition NDP in an insidious campaign of defamation of this blessed country and of attempting to destabilise the Unity Labour Party Government led by me".
NDP leader Eustace has since dismissed Gonsalves' claims of the party's involvement with foreigners to destabilise his Government.
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