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..Dr Rampersad calls on PM, Pres in her mission to protect T&T’s national heritage
Published:
Sunday, October 12, 2014
Dr Kris Rampersad
An online petition has been started by heritage educator, author and researcher Dr Kris Rampersad as well as open letters to President Anthony Carmona and Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar calling for the safeguarding of T&T’s natural heritage, the “other Magnificent Seven of the South.”
“It is something of a suicide pact if a state opens the doorway for destruction of its natural heritage without proper safeguarding as it is for an activist to embark on a fast to the death,” said the outspoken Rampersad, who refused at this time to specifically name the other Magnificent Seven given the sensitive and exclusive nature of her research.
Evidence of what may be clues to the ‘missing links’ in the story of human history and evolution may lie in south Trinidad are in danger of disappearing by negative development actions, she said. Rampersad has been piecing together the comparative pre-and post-colonial heritage of T&T in the context of the Caribbean, South America and its global connections.
She is also the T&T representative on the Unesco Executive Board in Paris and chair of the National Commission for Unesco. An independent multimedia journalist, Rampersad is also a Unesco/Commonwealth/Caribbean trained heritage educator, and member of the scientific committee of the International Culture University and the International Institute of Gastronomy, Culture, Arts and Tourism.
Rampersad has written an impassioned letter in her blog Demokrissy (www.kris-rampersad.blogspot.com) to Carmona and Persad-Bissessar to safeguard these valuable heritage elements in their home districts of south Trinidad, which she calls “The Other Magnificent Seven”—of south Trinidad/South America/Global South and the globe.
She said these efforts must be part of and contribute to a holistic approach to reviewing and revising misrepresentations of the islands in national symbols as the Coat of Arms and the National Anthem. The open letter calls on the President and Prime Minister ‘to lead’ in safeguarding the endangered and neglected heritage including these valuable assets which she claims have outstanding universal value.
The blog which is receiving the thumbs up across her extensive social media network, has inspired a Change.org petition to Carmona and Persad-Bissessar (http://goo.gl/EEzSc6) calling on them to act now, before all is lost.
Banwari site and other Magnificent Seven of the South Rampersad, who is the author of the first book on Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar, Through the Political Glass Ceiling, that maps the PM’s journey from rural Trinidad to Prime Ministership from speeches, said the letter was inspired by her own impulse to act because it was the responsibility of citizens to motivate and encourage public officials to act in the best interests of the country.
She said, “While a responsible citizenry has a duty to hold officials to account, we also must take responsibility for our actions that impact how authorities may react or act.
“There has been an increasingly hyped national environment that makes it almost impossible to recognise what is empty noise and what may be constructive criticism. “It is on us to find the tone to make the authorities listen. I hope my blog achieved that.”
Speaking to the Sunday Guardian on her way to the biannual Unesco Board meeting in Paris, Rampersad said unplanned and unchecked development actions can cost us valuable evidence contained not just around the Banwari site—the 7,000-year-old humanoid skeleton discovered in 1968—but of the ‘Magnificent Seven’ elements that span across the entire peninsula for southeast to southwest Trinidad.
Much focus on PoS and city heritage She said there had been much focus on Port-of-Spain and the city heritage that included the seven European-styled buildings in disrepair, but the fundamental and valuable heritage of global scale importance have been overlooked as part of general neglect in development planning for the South.
“Maybe that has been a good thing and it has allowed these assets to remain undisturbed, but development focus in this district now means we have awakened a sleeping giant, and we must pause, take actions to secure and safeguard, document and explore what really we are sitting on before we allow what may be another course of development.”
She said focus on heritage had contributed to enhancing national revenue, employment and substantially diversifying economies of many countries which is why so many hanker after being admitted to the Unesco World Heritage lists or any of the recognition Unesco offers on the global value of tangible and intangible heritage.
“But there are steps to be taken which we have not been entertaining,” she said, claiming her research included interviews and examination of oral and literary culture, maps, comparative charts and other evidence from across more than 50 countries. Rampersad said, “The traditional confrontational stance between development and conservation has resulted in a kind of public fear and deafness.
“One such I have encountered, apart from a general apathy and indifference to act, is the erroneous belief that the operations of the oil sector or Lake Asphalt may be negatively affected. “This is very far from the truth as the model I am developing has a central place for the oil sector and other industrial heritage.”
Win-win model
She said that there was an absolute win-win model that had been workshopped at various regional Unesco and other forums and to senior officials of the World Heritage Centre, all of whom had urged and were eager to see us step forward. Rampersad said that will be quite a breakthrough for many other societies also trying to strike the balance between meeting the needs of growing populations while conserving for the future.
“I have many examples of our working successfully with governments, industry and communities to find the perfect fit between what has traditionally been seen as competing actions. “As a small island, T&T with its wealth of human, natural and industrial financial, intellectual and other resources is ideally positioned to impact on and make a difference on the world’s drive for sustainable development.”
Rampersad said that she feared that “the trigger effect of one kind of development to others can now destroy valuable evidence that has not been thoroughly investigated and so unless we move to safeguard them and establish parameters where this can co-exist with development, we stand to lose a legacy that is of value to not just us in the islands, in the region, but also in defining and establishing our pre-and post-colonial connections to the world.
“We have the resources, financial and human and intellectual to position T&T as a model small island nation that effectively strikes the balance between development and conservation—that was the goal of the recently held United Nations Summit which Prime Minister Persad-Bissessar attended. “So I am asking the President and the Prime Minister to lead us and take the necessary steps to do this.”
Over 150 officials and journalists from African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) countries have gathered in Brussels, Belgium for a conference that aims to bridge the gap between agriculture development in rural areas and coverage of this sector by media.
The conference, which is being held under the theme ’The Role of the media in Agricultural and Rural Development of ACP countries’, commenced on Monday with a briefing session for participants at the European Commission building at the Borschette Centre in Brussels.
The gathering is part of the Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation (CTA) 25th anniversary celebrations and aims to bridge the gap between agriculture development in rural areas by reaching target audiences in ACP countries via the mainstream media. Participants hail from more than 40 ACP countries.
In his remarks at the opening briefing, Ian Barber of the European Union emphasized the importance of the media in the various democracies. He said that the media acts as a watchdog and gatekeeper, ensuring that presentations by democratic governments are important to all areas of governance
Former CNN news anchor Tumi Makgabo (left) chats with Trinidadian media consultant Dr Krishendaye Rampersad.
CTA director, Hansjorg Neun said that the media strengthens and collaborates within the confines of good governance. He stated that this year’s conference intends to provide answers to the question; “why do we only read about agricultural issues when there are natural disasters such as tsunamis, food crises, flooding”. Neun emphasized the need for the media to provide coverage to agricultural issues; its potential and success stories, noting that agriculture needs to be urgently boosted to feed some nine billion people worldwide by 2015.
According to the CTA head, while most governments and private entities are investing in agriculture, there is also a simultaneous need for such entities to invest in media and communication. He said that most media houses /journalists are not specialists where coverage of agricultural matters is concerned. In this light, he pointed out that the CTA has undertaken several strategies to ensure that key messages are conveyed on agricultural issues; making agriculture a better, more appealing theme where journalism is concerned.
Among the reasons highlighted for agriculture issues receiving little recognition within the mainstream media were poor infrastructure within media houses, lack of equipment, lack of education on agriculture activities on the part of journalists and poor output resulting out of the latter. Recommendations brought to the fore within the first session on Monday were the need for improved skills where journalists are concerned; improved relationships between government agencies and the media; as well as the recognition of the important roles technology plays within the field, the latter being highlighted as advanced in the Caribbean as compared to Africa and parts of the Pacific.
Trinidad and Tobago’s Dr Krishendaye Rampersad – one of several Caricom representatives attending the conference, stated that there is an urgent need for investment in training to develop the sector. She said that on the part of the agriculture sector, officials there should also think of how the agency can strengthen itself where media relations are concerned.
Ignatius Jean, the Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture (IICA) representative based in Guyana told participants that there have been moves to improve relations between the mainstream media and the agriculture sector within Caricom. According to the former St Lucia government minister, “we love and hate the media but we can’t live without them”. He noted that it is important for partnerships to be a part of the media/agriculture development relationship. The agriculture official said the media has a symbiotic relationship with democracy, noting that it plays a powerful role as an agent for change in some societies.
Among the points raised at Monday’s session, which was moderated in part by former CNN news anchor Tumi Makgabo and Trinidad’s Dr Eugenia Springer, were the communication strategies used by various players within the mainstream media; the need for skills development of journalists; and access to more readily available information. Gender issues regarding cultural or personal issues preventing women in some societies from playing a part was also discussed.
Most participants at the conference are from the African continent while the Caribbean is represented by media houses from Jamaica, Barbados, Belize, Suriname and Haiti. The Caricom Secretariat is also participating while Guyana is represented by Stabroek News and Prime News. The conference ends today.
An international publication has stated the stage is set in Trinidad and Tobago to have a drug trafficker as political leader of a party, and be elected to the post of Prime Minister in the next five years.
The report also alleged there are businesssmen who are associated with senior public officials linked to political parties who are involved in various front businesses used to cover their illicit drug business.
The report was produced by a France-based organisation that specialises in research on geopolitical drugs. The organisation is partly funded by a group which conducts research that informs drug treaty policies of the United Nations.
Its newsletter, published in March 2002, alleged this country's political system has now been totally subverted and co-opted by various cartels in the country. It identified ethnic-based cartels - defining "cartel" as a word it states is used in Trinidad to describe criminal groups according to their communities of origin.
This, it stated, was in keeping with what it called the Colombian model, as it stated this country's drug-trafficking groups do not produce what they transship.
It identified the supply of illicit drugs across the Gulf of Paria from Venezuela as the weakness of the transshipping organisation and their allies/partners in the political institutions.
The US Drug Enforcement Administration office in Caracas recently estimated that up to 13 metric tons of cocaine a month is transshipped through Venezuela to the Caribbean.
The publication alleged the relative of a politician was said to be involved in the trafficking of cocaine and heroin from Venezuela, via such areas as Guiria, Carupano and Maturin, which it described as staging grounds for illicit drugs such as cocaine and heroin to be transshipped through the Caribbean to Europe and the USA.
It also claimed some persons who were associated with the 1995 to 2001 regime was involved in the trade.
The report alleged the businessman relative of a politician is associated with a recent cocaine haul at Guiria harbour by the Venezuelan Guardia Nacional. That haul was to be consigned to a Trinidad cartel after being picked up by the politician's organisation, it stated.
Sunday Guardian checks revealed a haul, believed to be destined for the Caribbean, did take place on the date mentioned, but could not ascertain any Trinidadian link.
The report further stated a politician and his close relative are involved in the illicit drug trade, concentrating on retailing crack cocaine.
It alleged another politician is the minion and serves the interests of prominent members of one of the cartels in various capacities, including against the criminal justice system and money-laundering charges.
It further alleged a functionary has been given a position which allows him and his business partners to further their illicit activities.
The publication claimed there was also an official who served the Venezuelan crime families in Trinidad.
The newsletter further stated the drug-politics connection in Trinidad has weakened the country's political institution, which has been rendered powerless to protect itself from being subverted and co-opted by the illicit drug transshipping cartels. It stated such subversions are aimed at provoking crisis in the functioning and legitimacy of the political institutions.
More on the report http://www.geodrugs.net/gb/minilettre.php3
Former National Security Minister and UNC leader Basdeo Panday has said allegations contained in the report should be investigated.
Presented with a copy and asked to comment, he admitted he was confused by the report. He said it clearly identifies "two people".
"They must be damned bold to write that sort of thing," he said. He said as Minister of National Security, he was never asked to investigate involvement by officials of any party in the drug trade.
"We have the Drug Enforcement Agency down here, and they never reported any such thing to me or the police. I would like to know if my people are involved in this. No such information came to me when I was Minister of National Security," he said.
Panday said his Government "executed the Indian connection" so he "couldn't understand the reference to an Indian Cartel. This should be investigated. If people are committing that kind of offence someone will have to do something about it."
Panday also said he has had "no dealings with the drug trade. "We were hounding them, remember. The Americans have always commended us for the hard line we took in the pursuit of drug traffickers," he added.
When asked to comment on the contents of the publication Minister of National Security Howard Chin Lee said he had no knowledge of the report nor the organisation that produced it.
Told briefly about the contents, he said "from the sound" of it, it was libellous.
Although the Sunday Guardian offered several times to show him the report so he could make a more studied comment, he said: "I don't want to deal with that story. It sounds like propaganda."
Chin Lee, who has been a Minister for almost five months, instead questioned why only the Sunday Guardian had a copy of the report, stating "no other media house knows about it; I was not approached by no other reporter about this."
In May 5 news reports, Chin Lee is quoted as saying Venezuela has clearly been identified as the primary staging and transshipment area for drugs into the eastern Caribbean and Trinidad.
He identified a simultaneous escalation of arms trafficking and called for co-operation between the armed forces of Trinidad and Tobago and Venezuela.