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Granger pushing high quality education; no room for “handouts”

Last Updated on Sunday, 22 September 2019, 18:37 by Writer

2nd Annual General Assembly of the International Decade for People of African Descent Assembly-Guyana (IDPADA-G).

President David Granger says his administration’s priority is ensuring that Guyanese have access to high-quality, free education across the country instead of doling out “handouts” to the population.

“It does not speak about gifts, it does not speak about handouts, it does not speak about vouchers. It speaks about education…if you follow me,” he said in reference to the United Nations Programme of Activities for the implementation of the 2015-2024 International Decade of People of African Descent.

That document, he says, commits Guyana and other United Nations (UN) member states to support research and educational initiatives and ensure that quality education is accessible to areas where communities of African descendants live particularly in rural and marginalised communities as well as improving the quality of public education.

Granger made known his position just days after the Working People’s Alliance (WPA) said it would be insisting that the coalition’s list of promises for the upcoming elections includes the yearly transfer of some oil revenues to the poor.

WPA executive member, Professor David Hinds has already said that education is Granger’s People’s National Congress Reform’s platform, while direct cash transfers is the WPA’s. Hinds has declined to say what would be the WPA’s next step if the direct cash transfers initiative is not listed among the coalition’s election manifesto.

Finance Minister Winston Jordan and former Finance Minister Carl Greenidge have both suggested that there is no immediate appetite by government for direct cash transfers.

Addressing the 2nd Annual General Assembly of the International Decade for People of African Descent Assembly – Guyana (IDPADA-G), the President said free education from nursery to university would be reintroduced as part of his proposed Decade of Development 2020-2029 would be inaugurated. “That decade will aim, among other things, at enforcing the constitutional entitlement of every Guyanese child to free education,” he said. “We aim at a first class education system which will ensure that every child has a place in school and there is a school in every village; no street children, no skulking; every child must go to school and we will help that child to go to school,” Granger added.

His other plans include the construction of Grade A secondary schools in regions 1 (Barima-Waini), 7 (Cuyuni-Mazaruni), 8 (Potaro-Siparuni) and 9 (Upper Essequibo- Upper Takatu), as well as other administrative regions.