THE BEACON OF TRUTH
www.caribbeantimesinternational.com
ISSUE NO. 75
CANADA EDITION
CN $1.00
Guyana’s remigrant housing drive attracts overwhelming response See story on Page 11
Guyana’s President Donald Ramotar hands over the keys of a new house to a resident of the North Rupununi last Friday while housing and amerindian affairs ministers, Irfaan Ali and Pauline Sukhai, look on. (Sandra Prince photo)
TT has highest cancer mortality rate in the Caribbean Page 2
Jamaica Labour Party ready for Sunday's leadership election Andrew Holness
Page 8
Audley Shaw
WEEK ENDING november 7, 2013
Page One Comment
Media Fear and Intimidation
T
he simultaneous resignations of three reporters from the Guyana Times newspaper following the refusal of one of them to read a story involving the proprietor of the Kaieteur News (KN), as an anchor on the affiliated Evening News of TV-G, raises the issue of fear that has been generated in the hearts of many by Glenn Lall and his newspaper. It is now clear that the fear of being harmed by Lall has now spread into the journalistic fraternity, which is supposed to investigate entities and individuals who exert such a chilling effect on such a wide swathe of society. The launching of the newspaper in 2008 earned the ire of the Kaieteur News and its owner, who up to then had been very supportive of the incumbent government and its officials. The announced strategy of the newspaper, to adopt a "developmentalist" approach to its reporting, which rejected a reflexive antagonistic approach to the government in the quest to further human development in Guyana, must have stirred fears of the Kaieteur News' viability. This was made clearer when early on, the Guyana Times, garnered wide acceptance, even though it also eschewed the sensationalistic approach of the KN. Using its well-honed techniques of yellow journalism, however, the latter went after the Guyana Times, accusing it of benefitting from "favours" from the government. One of those was the receipt of advertisements from the government of which the KN had a monopoly when it's older rival Stabroek News did not receive such ads and was forced to protest. The KN, during that period, reaped the benefits of its monopoly and never once displayed support for the SN's complaint. It fact it derided that newspaper. But with the three private papers sharing the government ads with the state-owned Guyana Chronicle, the KN yet kept up its vendetta against the Guyana Times, its owner and soon, the other companies owned by the latter. When the government did not relent in its policy of encouraging a widening of the media space, the government itself became the target of the KN's yellow journalism. A campaign to expose "government corruption" soon became a weapon to settle scores with anyone who dared to disagree with Glenn Lall. Lall's reputation also intimidated many of his victims from responding. In a cable from the local U.S. Embassy's Political Officer to the U.S. State Department, as revealed by WikiLeaks, Lall had been described as having a "sketchy past" with ties to the criminal "underworld", and engaging in backtracking or "alien smuggling". It was revealed that he regularly passed on information about his friends and acquaintances in the business world to the U.S. Embassy, accusing them of criminal activities. His visa had been revoked in 2006 and it is surmised he engaged in such "snitching" to have his visa renewed, which it eventually was. In the wake the recent efforts of the CFAFT to have Guyana comply with its international proposals to curb the international flow of funds from illegal activities by passing the Anti Money Laundering and Countering Funding of Terrorism Bill (AML/CFT), Guyana Times and it's affiliated media outlets decided to conduct a series of investigative journalistic pieces about the practices of Glenn Lall as alleged by the U.S. Embassy. This investigation into Lall's public reputation began as far back as the early nineties when he was allegedly involved in the killing of an individual in Agricola. Numerous stories of his backtracking activities which breached the vaunted Homeland Security, which the U.S. threw up in after 2001, surfaced. It was also alleged that he was the real owner of a Georgetown Shopping Mall, hidden by a wall of frontmen and paper corporations, which suggested a massive money laundering operation by Lall. The fear by the reporters of Glenn Lall is real and was also expressed by others who have remained with the company. If the journalistic fraternity of Guyana is to be taken seriously it must not back away from investigating the source of this fear. The Guyana Times remains committed to its duty.