March 2002












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Ambassador of Guyana Odeen Ishmael
Trying to Lift Little Guyana to New Heights
by Larry Luxner

One recent morning, while waiting to interview Guyanese Ambassador Odeen Ishmael, the embassyís receptionist was heard trying to assist a long-distance caller with information on tourist visas. Finally, after several minutes of polite conversation, the receptionistóher patience wearing thinótold the caller: ìWeíre very sorry, sir. You want to call the Embassy of Ghana, which is in Africa. This is Guyana, in South America.î

An everyday occurrence at the embassy, this anecdote illustrates how little the majority of Americans know about Guyana, an Idaho-sized nation located north of Brazil and east of Venezuela. Even most inhabitants of South America are completely ignorant of the only English-speaking country in their midst.

Ishmael wants to change that. The gregarious envoy says heíd like to boost Guyanaís trade with Latin America and lift his sparsely populated country out of poverty and isolation.

ìWe have to think in terms of our markets,î he says. ìCulturally, we are a Caribbean nationówith similarities in food, language, music and customs. But we have a continent al destiny. We are physically located in South America, and we cannot deny the fact that we have neighbors who speak Spanish and Portuguese.

ìFor example,î he says, ìwe produce rice, and we need markets for our rice. We also need goods from these countries because products coming from neighboring Brazil or Venezuela are much cheaper than similar goods imported from Europe or the United States.î

To that end, says Ishmael, ìWe have been promoting Spanish education in our schools, so that hopefully, within the next 10 years, most of our young people will be bilingual. Thatís if the Ministry of Education sticks to its plans.î

Ishmael, 54, has been Guyanaís man in Washington since 1993ómaking him the undisputed dean of the Latin American and Caribbean diplomatic corps. In fact, only seven ambassadors, including Prince Bandar Bin Sultan of Saudi Arabia and the envoys of several obscure African states, have been here longer.

In early January, Ishmael spoke with The Washington Diplomat about his country, his career and his mission.

ìSmall countries like Guyana do not have a large diplomatic corps, so their ambassadors are normally here for long periods,î he notes. ìSecondly, any ambassador who comes here has to establish contacts and cultivate them. When you change, the new person has to build that up all over again.î

In Ishmaelís case, he says, ìIím not only Guyanaís ambassador to the United States, but also to the Organization of American States, and that in itself is more than a 24-hour-a-day job. So many different meetings are taking place, and things are happening every day in the region. Right now, Haiti is a big boiling pot, so weíre trying to see what assistance can be rendered there.î

Ishamel is also the coordinator of a 16-nation project on distance education, which is being supported by the OAS, the Inter-American Development Bank and the World Bank. As if thatís not enough, heís currently writing a comprehensive history of his country; the diplomat has already completed ìAmerindian Legends of Guyanaîóa collection of 20 short stories based on the oral traditions of Guyanaís indigenous Amerindians.

In fact, Europeans first knew Guyana in the 16th century, when it was believed that the legendary golden city of El Dorado existed there. Sir Walter Raleigh even made two trips to the region, though he never found El Dorado.

In 1831, the territory became a British colony known as British Guiana, and in 1838óthe same year slavery was abolishedóindentured servants began arriving from India by the thousands to work the colonyís vast coastal sugar fields. Today, nearly half of all Guyanese are Hindus and Muslims of Indian origin. This includes Ishmael, who traces his roots to the Indian states of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar.

In 1950, an eloquent dentist also of Indian origin, Cheddi Jagan, founded the left-leaning Peopleís Progressive Party (PPP) with his Jewish-American wife, Janet Rosenberg Jagan. Together, they led Guyanaís struggle for independence, which finally came in 1966.

After many years in the opposition, Jagan eventually became president, serving from 1992 until his death five years later at Washingtonís Walter Reed Army Medical Center at the age of 79. His wife, who resigned three years ago for health reasons, replaced him.

Guyanaís current president is 37-year-old Bharrat Jagdeo, a longtime PPP activist and economist trained in the former Soviet Union.

ìBharrat Jagdeo used to be my student,î says Ishmael. ìI taught him in high school. Iíve known him since he was a little boy.î

Yet itís not Jagdeoís portrait hanging above Ishmaelís desk, but that of Cheddi Jagan, the man who appointed Ishmael to his current post.

The friendship between Ishmael and Jagan goes back to the early 1960s, when the Kennedy administrationóconvinced the Jagans were communists following in the footsteps of Cubaís Fidel Castroóhelped force the PPP from office. According to several recently declassified documents, Kennedy may have even tried to have Jagan assassinated.

Asked if the PPP is still Marxist in natureóas the opposition Peopleís National Congress regularly chargesóIshmael is somewhat ambivalent.

ìI donít think so,î says the ambassador, who himself joined the PPP at the age of 16 and later moved into the party leadership as a member of its Central Committee. ìBoris Yeltsin was a communist, but he made Russia capitalist. You can apply the same thing to Jagdeo. We believe in the free-market system.î

Marxist or not, Guyana today ranks as one of South Americaís poorest countries, with a per-capita income believed to be less than $1,000 a year. Yet its 97 percent literacy rate is among the continentís highest, thanks to the countryís British past. Aside from being South Americaís only English-speaking nation, itís also the only one whose population has not increased at all the past two decades.

According to the latest numbers, Guyana has only 750,000 inhabitantsóvirtually the same as in the 1980s, when political and economic difficulties sparked massive migration of Guyanese residents to such places as the United States, England and Canada. Today, nearly 300,000 Guyanese live in the United States, including at least 8,000 in Silver Spring, Md., and elsewhere in the Washington metropolitan area; the largest communities can be found in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles and Miami.

These days, says Ishmael, bilateral relations are generally very good, but he adds that late last year, ìwe had a little problem with the United States over the deportee issue.î

What happened was simple: The U.S. government wanted to deport 113 people with criminal records back to Guyana. But the Jagdeo government insisted first on verifying that all the deportees were in fact Guyanese and not Jamaicans or nationals of some other Caribbean countryóand that required extensive background checks.

ìIn many cases, these people have been living in the United States since they were children, so when they go back, they donít have any family to look after them,î says Ishmael, adding that many are recruited by gangs and are generally not welcomed back in Guyana.

ìThe U.S. claims we were dragging our feet on issuing travel documents,î he says. ìSo the next thing they did was impose visa sanctions on Guyana, meaning that government officials and their families could not get visas to the U.S. Fortunately, we were able to process these 113 persons, and they lifted the sanctions just before Christmas. Except for that little blotch, relations are very good.î

From a business point of view, U.S. companies are among the largest foreign investors in Guyana. These include Reynolds Aluminum, which has been active in the countryís mining sector for years, and Atlantic Tele-Network, a U.S. Virgin Islands-based company that owns 80 percent of Guyanaís telephone monopoly.

Yet critics say foreign investors are nervous about coming to Guyana because of political tensions. Early last year, violent demonstrations erupted following Jagdeoís election as president. Opposition forces within the Peopleís National Congress say the elections were riggedóa charge the PPP vehemently denies.

As a result, foreign investment is at a virtual standstill, and a much-talked about ìdialogueî between Jagdeo and PNC leader Desmond Hoyte has produced few, if any, positive results.

ìThe oppositionís tactics after March 2001 and the 1997 elections are factors which can certainly scare off foreign investors,î says Ishmael. ìBu t personally, I think weíve passed that period, and I really do not believe that at the present time, the memories of what happened then are having an effect.î

Another factor that has kept hundreds of millions of dollars worth of investments away is Guyanaís perennial border disputes with neighboring Venezuela and Suriname.

ìThe Venezuelan border problem has existed for a long time,î says Ishmael, who is regarded as somewhat of an expert on the subject. ìA solution was arrived at in 1899, and Venezuela and Guyana agreed to arbitration. But in 1962, Venezuela reopened the claim, saying they were not recognizing the agreement. That subsequently led to what we have now. This matter is now in the hands of the UN secretary-general, who is responsible for finding a way to solve the issue. Based on the Geneva agreement of 1966, Venezuela has to show why the agreement of 1899 is null and void.î

The border dispute may have already cost Guyana its single most lucrative foreign investmentóa controversial venture by Texas-based Beal Aerospace to build a satellite-launching facility near the Venezuelan border to compete with the European-funded space center in Kourou, French Guiana.

ìThis would have easily been an investment of over $1 billion,î says Ishmael, who was at the center of the failed negotiations. ìThat area is not very populated, so it was an ideal place for doing this sort of business. At first, Beal was very gung-ho about this. It was easily accessible to the U.S., closer than French Guiana, and the fact that everybody speaks English in that area made life easy.î

But Venezuela protested loudly over the deal, and in the end, Beal pulled out, though it never publicly cited the border conflict as the reason for its withdrawal.

Guyana also has a problem with Suriname, its Dutch-speaking neighbor to the east. ìA Canadian company, CGX, was supposed to begin drilling at the mouth of the Corentyne River, and the Surinamese sent gunboats to move them out,î says Ishmael, adding that the disputed area ìhas been described by the U.S. Geological Survey as having one of the worldís best potential for offshore oil.î

Meanwhile, the massive Omai gold mine south of Georgetownóone of the largest in the worldóis expanding, thanks to slowly recovering prices for gold. But thatís one of the few bright spots in an otherwise stagnant economy.

ìGold prices are coming back, but bauxite is taking a beating,î says Ishmael. ìWe only produce the raw material. There is no manufacturing of any sort in Guyana. There was a time when we were producing alumina, but that plant closed down. So we just depend on bauxite prices we get on the world market.î

Guyanaís other important export commoditiesórice, sugar, timber and diamondsóare also depressed because of low market prices, although certain export products such as shrimp and premium rum are doing well.

One of the countryís biggest problems, says the ambassador, is Guyanaís external debt, which he says the PPP has been able to reduce substantially in the 10 years it has been in office.

ìGuyana was very highly indebted. In 1992, we were $2.2 billion in the red, and our [gross domestic product] was around $600 million. Weíve been able to reduce that to about $1.1 billion. I was involved in that, and I still am,î he says, adding that heís busy helping to negotiate debt relief for other poor countries around the world.

In that regard, Ishmael finds inspiration from the works of Shakespeare, from which he enjoys making analogies. ìThe merchant of Venice wanted a pound of flesh,î he says. ìThe international debtors are getting their pound of flesh, but theyíre also getting the blood, in the form of little children in Africa, because these countries donít have the money to pay for social services.î

Ishmael is also involved in negotiations toward a Free Trade Area of the Americas and is the only remaining Caribbean ambassador in Washington who was at the original Summit of the Americas in 1994, when the idea of an FTAA was first proposed by President Clinton.

And as the only Muslim among Guyanaís overseas envoys, it is also Ishmaelís responsibility to represent his country at meetings of the Organization of the Islamic Conference, which Guyana joined several years ago.

Finally, Ishmael is quite active in cultural affairs, and on Jan. 21, he was awarded the King Legacy Award for International Service for 2002 by the Committee for the International Salute to the Life and Legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

Between these activities, Ishmael manages to spend time with his wife Evangeline and their two children: 25-year-old Safraz, who studies law at Georgetown University and maintains the Guyanese Embassyís Web site at www.guyana.org, and 21-year-old daughter Nadeeza, who works at a genetics company in Maryland.

Asked how long Ishmael will remain at his postóa few more years in Washington and he may very well become the dean of the entire diplomatic corpsóthe Guyanese ambassador smiles and says: ìItís up to the president. When the president says itís time to come home, thatís it.î

Larry Luxner is a regular contributor to The Washington Diplomat and has been to Guyana four times. He can be reached via e-mail at larry@luxner.com.


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