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Guyana calls British High Commissioner a 'pariah' over aid withdrawal threat | |
(3 months later) | |
Guyana has labelled its British High Commissioner a “pariah” after he suggested the UK could withdraw development aid over President Donald Ramotar’s suspension of parliament last year. | |
Ramotar in November took the rare constitutional move of “proroguing” parliament to avoid a no-confidence vote, a move heavily criticised as a threat to democracy in the former British colony on the north east shoulder of South America. | |
The 64-year-old president insists the measure is constitutional, and his government has described British High Commissioner Andrew Ayre’s comments on the issue as an infringement of sovereignty. | |
“High Commissioner Ayre is terribly dishonourable, knowingly misrepresenting prorogation in Guyana as a crime,” Roger Luncheon, of the Guyanese presidential office, told reporters. | |
“He needs to be accorded the status of pariah, and his departure is eagerly awaited by the government,” Luncheon added, calling the threat to withdraw aid “dastardly.” | |
Ayre was anyway scheduled to return to Britain this month. | |
The High Commissioner’s Office did not respond to requests for comment. Ayre said in a press conference this week that Britain was concerned over the suspension of parliament. | |
“Against the background of our doubts about the process that is taking place here, there is a reluctance to send development funds,” he said, without giving figures. “Of course there is. How can we even justify that to our own tax payers?” | |
High Commissioners are the top British diplomats to countries belonging to the Commonwealth of Nations, most of which are former British colonies. | |
Guyana opposition parties, which have a small legislative majority, in November called a no-confidence vote to protest spending of some $22.5 million without parliamentary approval. | |
Ramotar in response prorogued parliament, leaving the 65-member body suspended but not dissolved. At the time he argued he had “given democracy a better opportunity to breathe.” | |
The decision could force him to call elections before the next scheduled vote next year. | |
Guyana has a population of just 740,000 people. Much of the country is covered in dense jungle, the site of both legal and clandestine gold, diamond and bauxite mining. |