
 
        
         
		Jamaica votes, tensions rise in Guyana 
 By Bert Wilkinson 
 While nearly two million  
 Jamaicans  prepared  to  vote  in  
 general elections on Thursday,  
 Guyana’s  main  opposition  party  
 Monday confidently filed a petition  
 against the results of the  
 country’s disputed March 2 polls  
 as one of the busiest years for  
 adult suffrage continues with two  
 more scheduled in the regional  
 bloc by yearend. 
 By the time Jamaicans decide  
 whether the governing Jamaica  
 Labor Party (JLP) will win a second  
 consecutive term or whether  
 the opposition People’s National  
 Party (PNL) will unseat the  
 administration of Prime Minister  
 Andrew Holness, the focus in the  
 bloc  of  15  nations  will  soon  to  
 turn member states Belize where  
 fresh elections are due by the end  
 of December. 
 As the region awaits the Jamaica  
 results,  protests  erupted  in  
 Guyana last weekend as angry  
 APNU-AFC  Coalition  supporters  
 blocked the main east-west  
 highway to Suriname and burned  
 tires protesting the arrest of six  
 electoral officials including Clairmont  
 Mingo, the controversial  
 returning officer for the main  
 electoral district number  four  in  
 Guyana. 
 Mingo, 69, was arrested a week  
 ago, detained and slapped with  
 electoral fraud related charges  
 linked to alleged fraudulent numbers  
 Caribbean L 20     ife, Sept. 4-10, 2020 
 he had tendered a day after  
 the March 2 polls that had shown  
 a win for the coalition, now in  
 opposition. 
 Angry with his treatment by  
 the police and fanned by suspicions  
 that  the  government  
 was using the police vindictively  
 against Mingo, angry residents of  
 the coastal village of Belladrum  
 staged protests, blocking the  
 main highway for hours, snarling  
 traffic for miles as they railed  
 against his continued detention. 
 Police fired tear gas and rubber  
 bullets at the opposition protesters, 
  injuring one man in the process. 
  An officer was also injured  
 after being hit by an object. The  
 protests subsided after Mingo was  
 placed on $3,000 bail after an initial  
 court appearance on Monday. 
 His appearance in court came  
 a day before the governing People’s  
 Progressive Party (PPP) convened  
 Guyana’s parliament for  
 the first time in nearly two years,  
 electing a speaker and a deputy  
 and preparing the way for a mini  
 2020 budget by mid September. 
 Guyana has been without a  
 functioning parliament since late  
 2018 when the previous administration  
 of former President David  
 Granger was defeated by an opposition  
 no confidence motion, rendering  
 it as a caretaker government  
 until March and until the  
 PPP was sworn into office on  
 Aug. 2 after a five month period  
 of court challenges and a 33-day  
 recount that had delayed the declaration  
 of official results. 
 Opposition Leader Joseph Harmon  
 said the coalition is confident  
 that its allegations about  
 widespread and systematic rigging  
 by the PPP will be borne out  
 by the evidence it will present in  
 the petition including 49 ballot  
 boxes mainly with votes for the  
 PPP with not a single supporting  
 document. There was, he said  
 also, evidence of a few thousand  
 migrated people voting as well as  
 other irregularities the grouping  
 will present to the court. 
 Meanwhile,  Jamaican  security  
 forces, its para military and  
 essential workers voted at the  
 start of the week ahead of the  
 main population. The electoral  
 commission  said  it was  printing  
 nearly two million ballots for the  
 63 districts for which 139 candidates  
 are contesting. 
 Authorities have already outlined  
 COVID-sensitive voting procedures  
 including for those who  
 have tested positive. These won’t  
 be denied the right to vote but  
 would have to be taken to polling  
 stations under strict supervision. 
 PM Holness said he was forced  
 to name a date six months before  
 fresh elections are constitutionally  
 due because of fears that the  
 steadily increasing positive numbers  
 could worsen as the months  
 went by and would discourage  
 people from joining lines to vote. 
 Jamaica Prime Minister Andrew Holness.   Yhomo Hutchinson 
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 the community with dignity and compassion.  
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