Amandala Newspaper Online

Home General Politics Crime Education International Sports Features Editorial Publisher Letters Classified
   Article search: Site Web Last Updated: 30/08/2010 - 10:40 PM Make this site your Homepage e-mail us
Latest news: Sustainable Tourism Program promises upgrade for northern downtown area and Tourism Zone  -  Season of stress  -  From The Publisher  -  Immediate action to fight commercial sexual exploitation of children  -  Is customer health a priority in Chinese “fry chicken?”  -  
Yesterday when we were young
Rating: 4.45 / 5 (11 votes)   Printable version Email to a friend Discuss this article
Posted: 28/12/2006 - 06:14 PM
Author:

On New Year’s night thirty-eight years ago, a group of young university graduates carried placards and demonstrated on North Front Street in front of the Eden Cinema. The Belizean graduates and intellectuals – including Assad Shoman, Said Musa, Evan Hyde, Lionel del Valle (deceased), Derek Courtenay, Ronald Clarke (deceased), and others, said that they were objecting to the showing of an American movie named “The Green Berets,” which extolled the United States’ war effort in Vietnam.
 
Six years later, in 1975, the United States gave up and admitted defeat in Vietnam. By that time, Messrs. Shoman and Musa were standard bearers and officials within the ruling People’s United Party of Belize.
 
The people of Belize had a good idea of what the PUP stood for, what it represented, but in 1969 the masses of the Belizean people were surprised, quizzical or skeptical about the demonstration of the so-called “Ad Hoc Committee For The Truth About Vietnam.” It was the first time in the colony’s history that university graduates had taken to the streets to make a political statement. Looking back, the Ad Hoc Committee ushered a more modern, more sophisticated kind of politics into Belize.
 
But, the most important thing about the Ad Hoc Committee, in retrospect, is that it marked the political debut of the man who is the Prime Minister of Belize, Rt. Hon. Said Wilbert Musa. At the time of the Ad Hoc Committee, the man who was the moving force and leading figure in the group was Assad Shoman, Said Musa’s best friend. Assad Shoman withdrew from electoral politics in 1984 after he lost his Cayo North seat to Dito Juan. But Musa, who lost his Fort George seat in 1984 to Dean Lindo, remained in politics. He regained his seat in 1989, was elected PUP Leader in 1996, and then became Prime Minister in August of 1998 after leading the PUP to the most overwhelming general election victory in Belize’s post-independence history.
 
It may be that Said never shared all of Assad’s flamboyant militancy and scientific socialism. Perhaps Said was more a friend to Assad than a fellow traveler of Assad’s. The thing is that as we look at eight plus years of Said Musa’s leadership of Belize, none of us Belizeans could have foreseen that this would be the way he would lead when we considered what he stood for on New Year’s night in 1969. 
 
Politics is many things, but it is certainly not religious, and it is definitely not truth. So this essay is not a morality trial.   What it is, is an attempt to encapsulate and juxtapose the Said Musa of 1969 and the Said Musa of 2007.
 
Many thousands of Belizeans have been born and have grown up in the thirty-eight years since 1969. It appears to us that those younger Belizeans are not Said Musa fans. Would the Said Musa of 1969 be a fan of the Said Musa of 2007?
 
Men grow, and they mature. And yes, they change. But there are some fundamentals in a man’s life he holds sacred. As Mr. Musa prepares for general elections which he is likely to lose, and lose disastrously, this year of 2007 will be a year when he looks within himself and does serious soul searching. The Catholics call it an “examination of conscience.” Who am I and what do I stand for? 
 
Two months ago, the Society for the Promotion of Education and Research (SPEAR) released the results of a poll which showed that Prime Minister Musa’s popularity among the Belizean people is alarmingly low. The SPEAR poll must give the Prime Minister pause, because that was their second poll, and the results of the first poll were vindicated by the statistics in the March 1 national municipal elections of 2006.
 
There is an irony here. SPEAR was founded in 1969 by the same Ad Hoc Committee group we referred to earlier – Shoman, Musa, Hyde, del Valle, etc. In a sense, then, it is as if a voice from Mr. Musa’s past has spoken to him. Yesterday when we were young …
 


Last Edition
1st overseas military tests for unmanned chopper in Belize
• Fitted with camera and radar, the Hummingbird flies a 10-mile by 10-mile zone in the Mountain Pine Ridge area, near Central Farm... “In 18 hours, it could fly over Belize I’d say maybe 40 to 50 times...:” Dortch, BDF Chief of Staff.. “Belize could have such a platform from which we could do monitoring and surveillance”
Larry Williams, 71, dies at Northern Regional
• Hip replacement patient suffered from ants biting him in bed; hospital investigation finds “no neglect”... Hosts of KREM Radio’s Wake up Belize Morning Vibes, Evan “Mose” Hyde and Sharon Marin, and many of their listeners were left shocked by a report during the show on Wednesday morning from an Orange Walk woman who alleged negligence of an elderly patient at the Northern Regional Hospital in Orange Walk Town.
Frustrated Cuban climbs prison tank to summon Immigration
• Immigration Director Gareth Murillo told Amandala Thursday that his department is working to see what it can do for Cuban national Pedro Venereo Castro, 44, who remains behind bars a half-a-year after serving out his sentence for coming to Belize illegally.
Henry Patnett, 21, charged with stabbing wife, who was pregnant
• Patnett was charged with attempted murder of wife, but not for death of fetus.. Henry Patnett, 21, a construction worker of #94 Boots Crescent, was this morning arraigned in Magistrate’s Court #1 to answer to charges of wounding, attempted murder, aggravated burglary and two counts of aggravated assault.
Audit details land grab before 2008 general elections
• Bill Lindo claims both PUP and UDP “quitar” lands from him... Every Belizean who has ever tried to get a piece of land knows how frustrating the process can be for the average citizen. According to the government policies, it should take no longer than a month and a half for an application to be processed, but many have complained of being pushed around for years without getting their papers.
Armed robber kills girl, 14
• Three thieves hold up shop; one shoots father and daughter, who dies... 14-year-old Hellen Yu, a student of Edward P. Yorke High School, will not get to see her second year at the school two weeks from now, because she died while undergoing treatment at the Karl Heusner Memorial Hospital for two gunshot wounds she sustained to her lower back.
Protect Belizean businesses from Guatemala
• Your editorial in your mid-week issue hit the nail on the head concerning Guatemala coming to Belize and taking everything from us. You mentioned our Cross Country, The Lion Man, recently Costa Maya, but you forgot to mention our commerce. They’re already doing it, starting with Social Security Punta Gorda Branch with the windows, printing and how about our southern cayes, Ranguana and Sapodilla, which they seem to enjoy and we can’t do anything about it.
GOB “undermining” CriqueSarco project?
• Please publish this letter in your weekly newspaper, concerning the extreme alarm and frustration of the “sustainable forestry group” due to the holdup and delay we are experiencing from commencing with our project here in Crique Sarco Village in Toledo District.
Talk sense, says Randolph Cruz
• I am writing in reference to Miss Garcia’s article on sea cucumbers in your August 1, 2010 issue. I learned some of the technical information concerning the cucumbers; it was interesting.
Here is a copy of a reproduced report on the Battle of St. George’s Caye 1798
• Letters of which the following are copies were yesterday received from the Earl of Balcarras, by His Grace the Duke of Portland, one of his Majesty’s Principal Secretaries of State.
Justice for pregnant woman stabbing?
• The stabbing of a pregnant woman, Valerie Sheran, 28, which occurred last week, made headlines as it was discovered that the woman was in month 7 of her pregnancy and was attacked, allegedly, by her ex-boyfriend and father of her unborn baby, while she reportedly was lying in bed with her current boyfriend, a 70-year-old man, and her daughter, 2.
Belizean reported dead in Afghan war still alive
• Multiple reports in the US press today, Thursday, August 12, claimed that a Sergeant 1st Class Edgar N. Roberts, who was reportedly born in Belize but grew up in Chicago, had died on Tuesday, August 10, after nearly two months of hospitalization from injuries he sustained in Afghanistan, in Operation Enduring Freedom, following a June 26 explosion.
DR. GAYLE’S RESPONSE
• TO THE RESPONSES TO THE MALE SOCIAL PARTICIPATION AND VIOLENCE STUDY... I want to use this medium to respond to the varied responses to the Report – ninety percent of which have been positive, the other 10 percent ranging from misguided to plain disappointing. I want to inform the 10 percent that most of the very shallow things whispered in Belize about the research reached me within 24 hours from people I have never met – strangely not from my research team (that seems to believe that it is better not to inform me of these things).
Subscribe To Amandala
 


Calendar
 
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30

Amandala Weekly Poll
How would you rate our site
Excellent
Good
Not bad
Bad
Poor

Listen To Krem Radio Online

About Us | Advertising | Contact | Subscription Info | Useful Links