Uncharted Territory in Guyanese Legislative Elections
Uncharted Territory in Guyanese Legislative
Elections
As Guyana prepares for its upcoming
parliamentary elections, tensions between its two major
political parties ride high. The People’s Progressive
Party (PPP) and the People’s National Congress (PNC),
bitter adversaries since their inception in the 1950s, are
the main contenders for the presidency, with the majority
party’s presidential candidate assuming office. Guyana, a
small nation of fewer than 800,000 people, is a former
British colony and South America’s lone English-speaking
country. The ramifications of British colonial influence
have played a significant role in the development of the
country’s turbulent post-independence political profile.
Racial tensions often have ignited widespread riots and
violence, and citizens are increasingly voting along
strictly ethnic lines. To better understand the
contemporary nature of Guyanese politics, it is worth
examining how the nation arrived at its current
state.
The Land of Many Waters
Before
the arrival of the Europeans, the native Carib and Arawak
peoples named the land Guiana, which means “land of many
waters.” The Dutch colonized the territory in the 16th
century, but the British assumed control in 1796, and in
1815 the Dutch formally ceded Guiana to England. Recognizing
the fertility of the land, the British quickly set about
cultivating sugarcane on plantations, and importing Africans
as slaves. The practice was abolished in 1834 but persisted
until 1838, when freed Africans settled in urban areas.
Facing labor shortages on the plantations, the British
contracted poorly paid Indians as indentured servants,
setting the precedent for rural Indo-Guyanese settlement and
later urban Afro-Guyanese consolidation. Today, 43 percent
of the Guyanese population is of East-Indian origin, 30
percent is of African origin, 17 percent is mixed, and 9
percent is Amerindian.
This analysis was prepared by
COHA Research Associate Tristan Mohabir.
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article, click here.
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