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Cheddi Jagan

Cheddi Berret Jagan (22 March 1918 – 6 March 1997) was a Guyanese politician and dentist who was first elected Chief Minister in 1953 and later Premier of British Guiana from 1961 to 1964. He later served as President of Guyana from 1992 to his death in 1997.[2] In 1953, he became the first Hindu and person of Indian descent to be a head of government outside of the Indian subcontinent.

Cheddi B. Jagan
Jagan in 1962
4th President of Guyana
In office
9 October 1992 – 6 March 1997
Prime Minister (also First Vice President)Sam Hinds
Preceded byDesmond Hoyte
Succeeded bySam Hinds
1st Premier of British Guiana
In office
5 September 1961 – 12 December 1964
MonarchElizabeth II
GovernorRalph Grey
Richard Luyt
Preceded byInaugural holder
Succeeded byForbes Burnham
Additional ministry
In office
5 September 1961 – 12 December 1964
Minister ofPlanning and Development
Preceded byInaugural holder
Succeeded byForbes Burnham
1st Chief Minister of British Guiana
In office
30 May 1953 – 9 October 1953
MonarchElizabeth II
GovernorAlfred Savage
Preceded byInaugural holder
Succeeded byInterim government
Additional ministry
In office
30 May 1953 – December 1953
Minister ofAgriculture, Forests, Lands and Mines
Preceded byJohn Sydney Dash
Succeeded byFrank McDavid
Minister of Trade and Industry of British Guiana
In office
1957–1961
MonarchElizabeth II
GovernorPatrick Muir Renison
Ralph Grey
Leader of the Opposition of Guyana
In office
1966–1973
Succeeded byMarcellus Fielden Singh
In office
1976–1992
Preceded byMarcellus Fielden Singh
Succeeded byDesmond Hoyte
General Secretary of the People's Progressive Party
In office
1970[1] – 6 March 1997
President of the Guyana Rice Producers Association
In office
1952–1953
Personal details
Born
Cheddi Bharat Jagan

(1918-03-22)22 March 1918
Ankerville, Port Mourant, Berbice, British Guiana (present-day East Berbice-Corentyne, Guyana)
Died6 March 1997(1997-03-06) (aged 78)
Washington, D.C., U.S.
Political partyPeople's Progressive Party (after 1950)
Other political
affiliations
Manpower Citizens' Association (1945–1946)
Political Affairs Committee (1946–1950)
Spouse
(m. 1943)
ChildrenCheddi "Joey" Jagan Jr.
Nadira Jagan-Brancier
RelativesDerek Chunilall Jagan (brother)
EducationQueen's College, Georgetown
Alma materCentral YMCA College (BS)
Northwestern University (DDS)
OccupationDentist and Politician
Awards
Signature

Jagan founded the People's Progressive Party along with his wife Janet and Forbes Burnham, and served as the first leader of the party. Jagan was a leading figure in the campaign for the independence of Guyana from the United Kingdom, and advocated for increased powers for trade unions at a time when British Guiana's economy was dominated by powerful foreign enterprises. Jagan lost his position as Prime Minister to Forbes Burnham following the 1964 British Guiana general election, and Burnham would become Guyana's first Head of Government following independence. 28 years later, Jagan was elected president in the 1992 Guyanese general election, which was regarded as the first "free and fair" election since 1964.[3]

Early life edit

Cheddi Berret (Bharat) Jagan was born on 22 March 1918 in Ankerville, Port Mourant, a rural village in the county of Berbice (present-day East Berbice-Corentyne). He was the eldest of 11 children. His parents were Indian Hindus who were Kurmis.[4][5] They emigrated from British India to British Guiana as indentured labourers. They were both from the Basti district in the then North-Western Provinces in the Awadh and Bhojpuri regions of the Hindi Belt in North India (in present-day Uttar Pradesh, India). His mother Bachaoni came to British Guiana as a child with her mother, while his father Jagan also came as a child with his mother and brother. Both his mother's and father's family immigrated to British Guiana aboard the Elbe in 1901; his father being two years old and his mother 18 months when they arrived. His father's family were indentured to Albion Estate and his mother's family was indentured to Port Mourant Estate.[6]

The Jagan family lived in rural poverty, working in the cane fields to support themselves. His mother had worked on the estate till Jagan was nine years old. His father had worked his way up to become head driver on the estate, but it did not amount to much change in pay, and he had to retire at 50 due to ill health.[6] Jagan received his primary education at Port Mourant Primary and the Rose Hall Scots School. He went on to pursue secondary education at R. N. Persaud's private Secondary School.[7] When Jagan was 15 years old, his father sent him to Queen's College in the capital city of Georgetown (about 160 kilometres (100 mi) away) for the next three years. Upon graduation, Jagan found his employment options in Guyana limited to agricultural work or converting to Christianity and becoming a teacher, so his father sent him to the United States to study dentistry[6] with $500, the family's life savings, so that he would not end up in the cane fields and he would not have to compromise his Hindu faith.[2]

Education and early career (1935–1946) edit

Jagan left for the United States in September 1935[6] or 1936[7] with two friends, and did not return to British Guiana until October 1943. He lived in Washington, D.C., for two years, enrolled in a pre-dental course at Howard University. To cover his expenses, Jagan took a job as an elevator operator. During the summers, he worked in New York City as a door-to-door salesman.[2] Jagan's performance helped him to win a scholarship for his second year at Howard. In 1938, he was admitted to the four-year dental program at the dental school at Northwestern University in Chicago. He graduated in 1942 with as Doctor of Dental Surgery. From 1938 to 1942, Jagan was also enrolled at the Central YMCA College in Chicago and graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree.[6]

After returning to British Guiana, Jagan established a practice in Georgetown on 68 Main Street.[7] During this time, he began to become politically engaged, and became involved with trade unions in the sugar industry. In 1945 he was made the treasurer of the Manpower Citizens' Association, though he was removed after a year after objecting to union policy.[6]

Political career edit

Early political career (1946–1953) edit

Jagan co-founded the Political Affairs Committee (PAC) in 1946 along with his wife, Janet, as well as H.J.M. Hubbard, and Ashton Chase.[6] He was subsequently elected to the Legislative Council in November 1947 as an independent candidate from Central Demerara constituency. In 1949 Jagan became the president of the Sawmill Workers Union.[7]

On 1 January 1950, the People's Progressive Party (PPP) was founded by a merger of the PAC and the British Guiana Labour Party (BGLP), with Jagan as its leader, former BGLP leader Forbes Burnham as its chairman and Jagan's wife Janet as secretary.[8]

The PPP quickly gained a mass following when they organised protests against the colonial administration, following an incident where colonial police shot dead five workers at Enmore sugar plantation in 1948 when they were participating in strike action.[9][6]

Chief Minister of British Guiana for 133 days (1953) edit

On 27 April 1953, Jagan won the 1953 British Guiana general election, with his PPP party winning 18 of 24 seats.[10]

Jagan's government immediately dissented against British rule. Jagan encouraged strike action against important sugar company Booker, refused to send a delegation to the Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II, repealed a law on "undesirable publications" passed by the colonial government, and repealed another law banning immigration of politically left-leaning individuals from the West Indies.[9]

Taking place in the middle of Second Red Scare and McCarthyism, Jagan's actions and policies led to British worries about a possible communist revolution in Guyana. Winston Churchill expressed fears that Jagan was a Marxist-Leninist, and claimed Jagan could allow the Soviet Union a foothold in South America, saying “[W]e ought surely to get American support in doing all we can to break the Communist teeth in British Guiana … [P]erhaps they would even send Senator McCarthy down there.”[9] Declassified documents from MI5 show that the intelligence service concluded that the party were "not receiving any financial support from any communist organisation outside the country".[11][12] However, Jagan's wife Janet may have been a member of the Young Communist League USA before she moved to Guyana.[13][14]

On 8 October 1953, the PPP government passed the Labour Relations Act (modelled on the Wagner Act[9]). The next day, on 9 October, the British administration suspended the constitution of British Guiana and troops were deployed.[15] The queen had signed the order to dispatch troops on 4 October. On 9 October, a contingent of Royal Welsh Fusiliers arrived in Georgetown on HMS Superb, and Jagan was dismissed from his position[9] and arrested.[12] According to MI5, Jagan was unaware of the possibility of British intervention or of his arrest. Jagan appealed to British Labour leader Clement Attlee, who responded "Regret impossible to intervene."[12] Jagan was forced to resign as Chief Minister after 133 days. Britain installed an interim government.[16]

Interim Government (1953–1957) edit

After the suspension of the constitution, Jagan departed for London with Forbes Burnham on 19 October 1953 to protest the suspension[17] and attended the debate in the House of Commons[6] on 21 October.[18] During his time in the United Kingdom, both Jagan and Burnham were subject to covert surveillance by American[19] and British intelligence services.[20] He would subsequently arrive in India with Burnham on November 20, 1953, and meet Jawaharlal Nehru in an attempt to garner support.[17]

Jagan's movements were restricted to Georgetown from 1954 to 1957, and both him and his wife were closely monitored and kept under house arrest.[12] During this period of time, colonial police would routinely raid the residences of senior members of the party to seize subversive literature. In 1954, Jagan was sentenced to 6 months in prison with hard labour for violating a restriction on his movement, travelling to the countryside and as a result leaving Georgetown. In court, Jagan likened British Guiana to a "vast prison".[9]

Senior member of the party Forbes Burnham split with Jagan politically in 1955, dividing the PPP into two separate factions named "Burnhamite" and "Jaganite".[3] These two factions in the PPP would both go on to contest the 1957 Guyanese election as PPP candidates. Burnham as a candidate was generally further to the right of the political spectrum. Support for the two factions followed mostly racial lines, as Burnham was the leading Afro-Guyanese figure in the PPP. However, the split was not entirely racial; prominent Afro-Guyanese politician Sydney King remained in the Jaganite faction, and Indo-Guyanese J.B. Lachmansingh supported Burnham.[21] However, Sydney King and Afro-Guyanese Martin Carter and Rory Westmaas would both leave the party one year later due to being "ultra-leftist".[22] Clem Seecharan made the claim that they left because they believed that Jagan was compromising Marxist ideals for racial pragmatism (i.e., supporting Indo-Guyanese policies to appeal to his support base). This further reduced the number of active Afro-Guyanese politicians within the PPP.[22]

Minister of Trade and Industry (1957–1961) edit

 
Cheddi Jagan meeting with Levi Eshkol during a visit to Israel in 1961

Jaganites won a majority of seats in the 1957 British Guiana general election winning 9 seats to the Burnhamite 3, and 2 seats for other parties. Following this outcome, the Burnhamite faction split entirely from the PPP, and Burnham founded the People's National Congress (PNC). Jagan became minister of trade and industry,[6][23] remained as PPP leader and was a member of the cabinet.[6] He did not become Prime Minister during this time – there was no such position.[23] The PPP government did not have possession of the Ministries of Finance, Foreign Affairs or Administration, and power resided mostly with the Governor, Ralph Grey.[6]

During the lead-up and aftermath of the 1957 elections, Guyanese politics began to strongly follow racial lines. Jagan's faction was majority Indo-Guayanese, and advocated for policies that would benefit mainly Indo-Guyanese, such as an increase in land for rice production and sugar industry reform through increased union powers. Jagan's veto of West Indies Federation membership further alienated Afro-Guyanese voters- the Federation was majority Afro-Caribbean. Similarly, Burnham merged the PNC with the United Democratic Party to consolidate his grip on middle class Afro-Guyanese support. This style of politics along racial lines in Guyana became known as apan jhaat, which is Guyanese Hindustani for "vote for your own kind".[24]

Premier of British Guiana (1961–1964) edit

 
Jagan with John F. Kennedy in Washington DC, 25 October 1961

After a PPP victory in the August 1961 elections, Jagan became Premier, serving for three years. The elections were held as first-past-the-post, with 35 members of the Legislative assembly;[25] the PPP won 20 seats, almost twice the number won by Burnham's PNC, and 10 seats in the 13-seat senate, which led to mass demonstrations led by the PNC, a general strike and racially motivated violence.[3] This violence would peak in early 1962, after Jagan's government proposed what became known as the "Kaldor Budget". Advised by economist Nicholas Kaldor, on 31 January 1962 the PPP government proposed an increase in tax and import duty which was opposed by opposition parties.[26] The budget imposed austerity, the tax increases would have significantly impacted the Afro-Guyanese community, and the opposition was not consulted. However, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. expressed the opinion that the tax scheme was entirely orthodox and suitable for Britain,[27] and the budget was praised by both the New York Times and the London Times.[26] Following the budget, action was taken against the government, which culminated on 16 February 1962 in the destruction of 56 businesses, 87 businesses damaged by fire and 66 looted. One Police Superintendent was killed and 39 injured, Four looters shot and 41 injured. The rioters also attacked the Electricity Plant, the Water Works, Parliament, and Jagan's residence. The British response was to send two warships, HMS Troubridge and HMS Wizard, to stop the violence.[26] Jagan's official residence suffered fire damage during the riots.[27]

Following the 1961 elections, Jagan met John F. Kennedy in person in Washington, D.C., on October 25, and on December 18 he addressed the United Nations calling for a date for Independence from the United Kingdom.[6]

The lead-up to the 1964 elections included a concerted effort by officials from the United States to ensure that Jagan did not win the election, due to fears about Jagan supposed communist views. A March 1961 CIA estimate opined that Jagan's wife, Janet, was a communist, and that Jagan was under communist influence.[27] Jagan had also expressed support and encouragement for the Cuban Revolution.[28][22] The United Kingdom and United States differed on their opinions of how to solve the situation, with the British suggestion being that Jagan should be educated rather than removed from power. Jagan's meeting with Kennedy in 1961 did not significantly change the American opinion of his political leanings. The Americans decided that Burnham's policies were preferable to those of Jagan, and began to take actions against Jagan, including delaying independence from Britain, advocating a proportional representation electoral system which would be to the detriment of Jagan's electoral chances, and providing support for strike action. These actions continued despite Jagan contacting Kennedy to protest his case.[27] The CIA helped fund and organise the protests that led to the February 1962 demonstrations, and in April 1963 the CIA used $1 million of allocated funds to support the 80-day general strike. This strike action would later be cited as evidence that Jagan was not capable of governing British Guiana.[29]

In October 1963, a constitutional conference was called. British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan summoned the three main Guyanese political leaders (Jagan, Forbes Burnham and Peter D'Aguiar)[29] to London[6] where Colonial Secretary Duncan Sandys announced the holding of fresh elections[29] (previously the agreement was that independence would be granted before any further elections were called),[6] a delay in the date of independence from 1963 to 1964, and a change in the electoral system from first-past-the-post to proportional representation. In a letter to President Kennedy, MacMillan explained that if Jagan refused to cooperate, Britain would suspend the constitution.[29] Jagan agreed to elections in 1964 under proportional representation, but John Prados posits that this was only because he received assurances from Forbes Burnham that a coalition between the two parties would be acceptable. The Guiana United Muslim Party and Justice Party were both set up with the assistance of the CIA to split the Indo-Guyanese voting bloc, and the United States funded Burnham's campaign activities against Jagan's party.[27]

The months preceding the December 1964 elections were marked with extensive civil disorder. Arson was a daily occurrence, nearly 200 people were murdered and 1000 were injured, and more than 15,000 people were forced from their homes. Violence came from both PPP and PNC supporters. On one occasion in August, a conference between the three political party leaders was interrupted when the PPP party headquarters was bombed on the same street.[27] An article in Time Magazine accused Jagan of quietly encouraging the violence. There were multiple examples of racial violence across the country, including the fatal shooting of an elderly Afro-Guyanese couple on their farm, the death of a pregnant Indo-Guyanese woman at Bachelor's Adventure near Enterprise and the deaths of four Indo-Guyanese at Afro-Guyanese hands in Wismar.[30] Further violence included the sinking of the Sun Chapman on 6 July and the following murders of 5 Indo-Guyanese individuals at Mackenzie.[31]

In the December 1964 elections, the PPP won a plurality of votes and actually increased their vote share to 46%,[29] but Burnham's party, the People's National Congress, and the conservative United Force held a majority of seats and were invited to form the government[8] by Governor Richard Luyt. However, Jagan refused to resign, and had to be removed by Luyt.[3] Jagan would begin his role as leader of the opposition.

Clem Seecharan would later point to Jagan's ideological inflexibility and his poor diplomatic handling of the electoral situation in Guyana as reasons for the strong American preference for Burnham over Jagan, and as a result Burnham becoming Guyana's first leader after independence.[22]

Leader of the Opposition (1964–1992) edit

 
Jagan at a press conference in the Netherlands, 1972.

Following Burnham's election in 1964, a constitutional conference was held in London. Jagan refused to attend in protest at the imprisonment of PPP members at Mazaruni Prison.[6] As agreed at the conference, Guyana gained independence from the United Kingdom on 26 May 1966. Jagan opposed this date for independence, as it was the anniversary of the Wismar Massacre of 1964.[32] The same year, Jagan published "The West On Trial: My Fight for Guyana's Freedom", concerning his experience working towards Guyanese independence, which remains his most popular written work.[33]

In 1965 Jagan attempted to enter the United States to join a protest against the Vietnam War but he was denied entry.[34] He was again denied entry in 1967 to attend a planned speaking tour which had to be cancelled as a result.[35]

He was elected as Leader of the Opposition and Minority Leader in 1966, and would remain in the role until 1973 when Marcellus Fielden Singh took over the role. He subsequently took the role again from 1976 until his election as president in 1992.[36] During this time, Jagan would repeatedly protest at the authoritarian policies of Burnham's administration, with electoral fraud being reported in 1968, 1973, 1980 and 1985.[3]

In 1969, the People's Progressive Party attended the 1969 International Meeting of Communist and Workers Parties, with Jagan attending personally.[37] Jagan was subsequently elected General Secretary of the PPP.[6]

In 1973, the PPP boycotted the National Assembly in protest at the fraudulent 1973 elections, and at the deaths of two Indo-Guyanese on election day. In 1974, a raid on Jagan's home found parts of a revolver and he was charged with illegal possession.[6]

Starting in 1975, the PPP began a period of closer collaboration with Burnham's PNC, offering "critical support" when the PNC pushed for pro-socialist policies and was under the pressure of Venezuelan border claims, as well as proposing a national government with the PPP forming part of the ruling party in 1977. In 1978, Jagan was awarded the Order of Friendship of Peoples by the Soviet Union at the Kremlin.[6]

The 1978 Guyanese constitutional referendum was strongly opposed by Jagan. The referendum would prolong the parliamentary term and would expand presidential powers. Jagan's party led a boycott of the vote. The referendum passed with 97% of the vote, and the vote is considered to be fraudulent.[3]

Following the death of Burnham in 1985, Desmond Hoyte came to power. Influenced by Jimmy Carter, Hoyte would put forward electoral reforms which would lead to the 1992 elections being internationally recognised as free and fair.[3]

President of Guyana (1992–1997) edit

 
Presidential Standard of Cheddi Jagan.
 
Cheddi Jagan (second from left) photographed with other heads of state and US President Bill Clinton in 1993.

After 28 years in opposition, the PPP won the 5 October 1992 elections with about 54% of the vote, and Jagan became president. Contrary to earlier foreign fears, he governed as a democratic socialist and not a Marxist–Leninist.[38] Jagan would pursue policies to attract foreign investors and move towards free market policies. Jagan also had a cordial relationship with the Clinton Administration in the United States, unlike his difficult relationship with Kennedy in the 1960s.[2]

Following the previous administration, the Guyanese economy was still recovering from flawed economic policies and high national debt,[39] and low prices for major Guyanese exports such as bauxite, oil and bananas.[40] Jagan would pursue a policy of investment in national infrastructure, including sea defences, irrigation and drainage systems, road and bridge projects and investment in health, education and electricity generation.[7] Jagan would also try to improve free trade in the Americas.[40]

During his time in power, Jagan would advocate for a New Global Human Order.[7] This proposal was aimed at the need for developing countries to acquire the means to eradicate poverty and reduce inequality.[39] This involved debt relief,[7] pollution tax, a Tobin tax on currency exchange[39] and cuts in arms spending.[40] These proposals did not gain significant support.[39] Jagan announced this proposal in a speech at the United Nations in late 1995.[40]

Political opinions edit

Jagan has been labelled as communist or Marxist by many different sources.[41][42][22][43] Clem Seecharan said that the Jagan couple were both communists, although Cheddi was more ideological.[22] In a discussion with V.S. Naipaul, Jagan elaborated on his appreciation of Marxist literature.[22] Jagan also had regular communication with communist Billy Strachan.[22] Political rival Forbes Burnham in 1957 classified Jagan and his allies as "dogmatists whose aim is communism and who abuse everyone with whom they do not agree".[22] In 1984, Jagan stated that "I am not only fighting for the people of Guyana. I am fighting for the people of the world. I am contributing to that struggle. That struggle is winning. That is why the United States is so hysterical at the moment, because of that very fact, that what I stand for is winning". Jagan also went on to claim in 1990 that it was socialism in Eastern Europe which was failing, rather than communism, and stated that "Communism, as a system, has not been tried in any country as yet, and remains a highly moralistic and humanistic ideal and destination."[22] If Jagan was a Marxist, he would have been the first democratically elected Marxist in the Western Hemisphere, ahead of Chilean leader Salvador Allende.[41]

Percy Hintzen stated that "characterization of Jagan as a communist misses the complexity of his political philosophy… if Jagan was indeed a communist, it was certainly not reflected in the policies and programs that his party attempted to implement while in office."[44] Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. said Jagan was not a communist, but rather a “London School of Economics Marxist filled with charm.”[27]

Personal life edit

After graduating from dental school in 1942, Jagan met Janet Rosenberg, a student nurse, in spring 1943.[7] They married in 1943, and had two children: Nadira and Cheddi Jr. (who in turn produced five grandchildren).[2]

Jagan and his wife shared a lifelong friendship with Billy Strachan, a leading British communist and a pioneer of black civil rights in Britain.[45]

Janet Jagan followed her husband's footsteps and held the positions of prime minister and president in 1997 (succeeded as president by Bharrat Jagdeo in 1999).

Personality edit

Clem Seecharan characterised Jagan as a man of integrity, "who did not steal and never construed the political vocation as a means of amassing wealth". He would also label him as an "attractive and incorruptible man" known for his frugality. However, Seecharan would also accuse Jagan of ideological inflexibility and an "apparent inability to comprehend or empathise with African insecurities".[22] An article by Indo-Guyanese author Frank Birbalsingh also praised his integrity, pointing out that "Never, in his half-century of involvement in politics, has anyone been able to point a finger at him, while charges of financial corruption, sexual misconduct or electoral fraudulence have been levelled at most of his contemporaries."[46]

Death edit

 
Jagan in later life

Jagan suffered a heart attack on 15 February 1997 and was taken to Georgetown Hospital before being flown by U.S. military aircraft then by U.S. Air Force helicopter from Andrews Air Force Base[47] to Walter Reed Army Hospital in Washington, D.C., later that day.[2][47] He underwent heart surgery there and died in Washington on 6 March 1997, 16 days before his 79th birthday. Prime Minister Sam Hinds succeeded him as president and declared six days of mourning, describing Jagan as the "greatest son and patriot that has ever walked this land".[2] His funeral was postponed by a day to allow mourners time to visit who were caught in massive traffic jams, caused by the immense number of people traveling to Port Mourant for his funeral. More than 200,000 mourners attended.[citation needed] He had a state funeral in Georgetown and his cremation was at the Babu John (Jan) Crematorium in his hometown of Port Mourant.[48] His final rites were done per Hindu customs and he was cremated on 12 March 1997.[49] The site of his cremation became a samadhi (memorial) to him and later his wife, known as the Jagans' Memorial Monument.[50]

Legacy edit

The People's Progressive Party, which Jagan founded with Janet Jagan and Forbes Burnham, remains one of the two dominant political parties in Guyana, along with the PNC. Support for both groups continue to follow the racial divide between Afro-Guyanese and Indo-Guyanese.[51][52][unreliable source?] There are claims that Jagan may bear partial responsibility for the racial divide present in Guyanese politics. Walter Rodney said that "...more than one political party has been responsible for the crisis of race relations on this country. I think our leadership has failed us on that score." Rodney also pointed to external intervention as a catalyst for poor race relations.[53]

The Cheddi Jagan Research Centre in Georgetown commemorates his life and work, complete with a replication of his office.[54] The centre is located in the Red House which served as Jagan's official residence from 1961 to 1964.[55] The Cheddi Jagan International Airport, the largest and primary international airport of the country, has been renamed after Jagan.[56]

In 2007, Jagan was posthumously awarded the Order of Liberation of Guyana (OR).[57] This award surpasses the Order of Excellence of Guyana, but was granted without an amendment to the constitution of orders and it does not appear in the list of national awards.[58] Jagan also received the Order of the Companions of O.R. Tambo from South Africa in 2005.[59]

Jagan's wide regard as "Father of the Nation" in Guyana is stated by several different sources, the Cheddi Jagan Research Centre,[6] the Guyana Chronicle,[57] the Times of India[60] and important political figures in the PPP such as Irfaan Ali.[61] In contrast, PNC member and at the time Minister of Social Cohesion Amna Ally in a 2015 speech named Forbes Burnham the "Father of the Nation".[62]

Awards edit

Selected publications edit

Jagan was also an important political author and speechwriter, and his publications include:

  • Forbidden Freedom: The Story of British Guiana (Hansib, 1954)
  • The West On Trial: My Fight for Guyana's Freedom (Harpy, 1966)
  • The Caribbean Revolution (1979)
  • The Caribbean: Whose Backyard? (1984)
  • Selected Speeches 1992–1994 (Hansib, 1995)
  • The USA in South America (Hansib, 1998)
  • A New Global Human Order (Harpy, 1999)
  • Selected Correspondences 1953–1965 (Dido Press, 2004)

See also edit

Notes edit

^a This award surpasses the Order of Excellence of Guyana, but was granted without an amendment to the constitution of orders and it does not appear in the list of national awards.[58]

References edit

  1. ^ "Jagan–a name intrinsically woven into Guyanese history - Guyana Chronicle". 5 March 2010.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Larry Rohter, "Cheddi Jagan, Guyana's Founder, Dies at 78", The New York Times, 7 March 1997.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Nohlen, D (2005) Elections in the Americas: A data handbook, Volume I, p355 ISBN 978-0-19-928357-6
  4. ^ Naipaul, V. S. (2012-03-15). The Writer and the World. Knopf Canada. ISBN 9780307370648. One of the daughters had married a brahmin, and the family was anxious to live up to the high connection. They didn't want Cheddi to sleep on a bed in their house. They required him to sleep on the floor, because the Jagans were of the kurmi caste, a caste of cultivators. Chhedi Jagan says in his book that he had heard about caste problems only from his mother. But, in fact, as a caste, the kurmis are interesting.
  5. ^ "In Tribute to Dr Jagan's Late Mother Bachaoni". The West Indian. 9 September 2020. Retrieved 24 June 2023.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u "Biography of Cheddi Jagan". jagan.org. Cheddi Jagan Research Centre. from the original on 13 February 2023. Retrieved 13 February 2023.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h Mangar, Tota (21 March 2021). "DR.CHEDDI B. JAGAN: HIS LIFE AND TIMES, 1918- 1997". Guyana Chronicle. from the original on 23 March 2023. Retrieved 3 March 2023.
  8. ^ a b History of the PPP 2011-06-16 at the Wayback Machine, PPP website.
  9. ^ a b c d e f Bahadur, Gaiutra (30 October 2020). "In 1953, Britain openly removed an elected government, with tragic consequences". The Guardian. from the original on 2 January 2023. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  10. ^ Biographies of former presidents 28 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine, GINA.
  11. ^ . www.guyana.org. Archived from the original on 2022-04-06.
  12. ^ a b c d "MI5 files reveal details of 1953 coup that overthrew British Guiana's leaders". The Guardian. Associated Press. 26 August 2011. from the original on 11 March 2023. Retrieved 13 February 2023.
  13. ^ Ramotar, Donald. "JANET JAGAN: A Pioneer and Revolutionary" (PDF). jagan.org. Cheddi Jagan Research Centre. (PDF) from the original on 5 April 2023. Retrieved 13 February 2023.
  14. ^ Ramharack, Baytoram (29 January 2023). "Janet Jagan: Marxist radical or Guyanese liberator?". Stabroek News. from the original on 13 February 2023. Retrieved 13 February 2023.
  15. ^ "History of Guyana. Source: Area Handbook of the US Library of Congress". Mother Earth Travel. from the original on 13 February 2023. Retrieved 13 February 2023.
  16. ^ "Guyanese President Cheddi Jagan dies". CNN. 6 March 1997. from the original on 13 February 2023. Retrieved 13 February 2023.
  17. ^ a b Reece, Maggie (27 March 2014). "Forbes Burnham & Cheddi Jagan on their way to London and India - 1953". Guyana Graphic. from the original on 13 February 2023. Retrieved 13 February 2023.
  18. ^ "Suspension of Constitution, 21 October 1953". api.parliament.uk. UK Parliament. from the original on 17 August 2022. Retrieved 13 February 2023.
  19. ^ "CIA Covert Operations: The 1964 Overthrow of Cheddi Jagan in British Guiana". The George Washington University. National Security Archive. April 6, 2023. from the original on 2023-03-07. Retrieved 10 June 2023.
  20. ^ "Examining the secret surveillance of Jagan and Burnham during 1953 visit to Britain". Stabroek News. 9 January 2022. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  21. ^ "The Interim Government, 1953-57. Source: US Library of Congress". countrystudies.us. from the original on 2022-12-16. Retrieved 2023-02-13.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Seecharan, Clem (22 March 2018). "Cheddi Jagan, Communism and the African-Guyanese". Stabroek News. Retrieved 14 February 2023.
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External links edit

  • Cheddi Jagan Research Centre, an informational site maintained by Jagan's daughter, Nadira Jagan-Brancier.
  • Cheddi Jagan Archive at marxists.org
  • Posted at Center for Cooperative Research
  • "An Appreciation of Dr. Cheddi Jagan". Indo Caribbean World, 12 March 1997.
Political offices
Preceded by
Office established
Chief Minister of Guyana
1953
Succeeded by
Office abolished
Preceded by
Office established
Premier of Guyana
1961–1964
Succeeded by

cheddi, jagan, cheddi, berret, jagan, march, 1918, march, 1997, guyanese, politician, dentist, first, elected, chief, minister, 1953, later, premier, british, guiana, from, 1961, 1964, later, served, president, guyana, from, 1992, death, 1997, 1953, became, fi. Cheddi Berret Jagan 22 March 1918 6 March 1997 was a Guyanese politician and dentist who was first elected Chief Minister in 1953 and later Premier of British Guiana from 1961 to 1964 He later served as President of Guyana from 1992 to his death in 1997 2 In 1953 he became the first Hindu and person of Indian descent to be a head of government outside of the Indian subcontinent His ExcellencyCheddi B JaganJagan in 19624th President of GuyanaIn office 9 October 1992 6 March 1997Prime Minister also First Vice President Sam HindsPreceded byDesmond HoyteSucceeded bySam Hinds1st Premier of British GuianaIn office 5 September 1961 12 December 1964MonarchElizabeth IIGovernorRalph GreyRichard LuytPreceded byInaugural holderSucceeded byForbes BurnhamAdditional ministryIn office 5 September 1961 12 December 1964Minister ofPlanning and DevelopmentPreceded byInaugural holderSucceeded byForbes Burnham1st Chief Minister of British GuianaIn office 30 May 1953 9 October 1953MonarchElizabeth IIGovernorAlfred SavagePreceded byInaugural holderSucceeded byInterim governmentAdditional ministryIn office 30 May 1953 December 1953Minister ofAgriculture Forests Lands and MinesPreceded byJohn Sydney DashSucceeded byFrank McDavidMinister of Trade and Industry of British GuianaIn office 1957 1961MonarchElizabeth IIGovernorPatrick Muir RenisonRalph GreyLeader of the Opposition of GuyanaIn office 1966 1973Succeeded byMarcellus Fielden SinghIn office 1976 1992Preceded byMarcellus Fielden SinghSucceeded byDesmond HoyteGeneral Secretary of the People s Progressive PartyIn office 1970 1 6 March 1997President of the Guyana Rice Producers AssociationIn office 1952 1953Personal detailsBornCheddi Bharat Jagan 1918 03 22 22 March 1918Ankerville Port Mourant Berbice British Guiana present day East Berbice Corentyne Guyana Died6 March 1997 1997 03 06 aged 78 Washington D C U S Political partyPeople s Progressive Party after 1950 Other politicalaffiliationsManpower Citizens Association 1945 1946 Political Affairs Committee 1946 1950 SpouseJanet Rosenberg m 1943 wbr ChildrenCheddi Joey Jagan Jr Nadira Jagan BrancierRelativesDerek Chunilall Jagan brother EducationQueen s College GeorgetownAlma materCentral YMCA College BS Northwestern University DDS OccupationDentist and PoliticianAwardsOrder of Friendship of Peoples 1978 Order of Solidarity 1988 Order of the Liberator 1993 Grand Commander of the Order of the Star and Key of the Indian Ocean 1994 Order of the Companions of O R Tambo 2005 Order of Liberation 2007 Signature Jagan founded the People s Progressive Party along with his wife Janet and Forbes Burnham and served as the first leader of the party Jagan was a leading figure in the campaign for the independence of Guyana from the United Kingdom and advocated for increased powers for trade unions at a time when British Guiana s economy was dominated by powerful foreign enterprises Jagan lost his position as Prime Minister to Forbes Burnham following the 1964 British Guiana general election and Burnham would become Guyana s first Head of Government following independence 28 years later Jagan was elected president in the 1992 Guyanese general election which was regarded as the first free and fair election since 1964 3 Contents 1 Early life 2 Education and early career 1935 1946 3 Political career 3 1 Early political career 1946 1953 3 2 Chief Minister of British Guiana for 133 days 1953 3 3 Interim Government 1953 1957 3 4 Minister of Trade and Industry 1957 1961 3 5 Premier of British Guiana 1961 1964 3 6 Leader of the Opposition 1964 1992 3 7 President of Guyana 1992 1997 4 Political opinions 5 Personal life 5 1 Personality 6 Death 7 Legacy 8 Awards 9 Selected publications 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 External linksEarly life editCheddi Berret Bharat Jagan was born on 22 March 1918 in Ankerville Port Mourant a rural village in the county of Berbice present day East Berbice Corentyne He was the eldest of 11 children His parents were Indian Hindus who were Kurmis 4 5 They emigrated from British India to British Guiana as indentured labourers They were both from the Basti district in the then North Western Provinces in the Awadh and Bhojpuri regions of the Hindi Belt in North India in present day Uttar Pradesh India His mother Bachaoni came to British Guiana as a child with her mother while his father Jagan also came as a child with his mother and brother Both his mother s and father s family immigrated to British Guiana aboard the Elbe in 1901 his father being two years old and his mother 18 months when they arrived His father s family were indentured to Albion Estate and his mother s family was indentured to Port Mourant Estate 6 The Jagan family lived in rural poverty working in the cane fields to support themselves His mother had worked on the estate till Jagan was nine years old His father had worked his way up to become head driver on the estate but it did not amount to much change in pay and he had to retire at 50 due to ill health 6 Jagan received his primary education at Port Mourant Primary and the Rose Hall Scots School He went on to pursue secondary education at R N Persaud s private Secondary School 7 When Jagan was 15 years old his father sent him to Queen s College in the capital city of Georgetown about 160 kilometres 100 mi away for the next three years Upon graduation Jagan found his employment options in Guyana limited to agricultural work or converting to Christianity and becoming a teacher so his father sent him to the United States to study dentistry 6 with 500 the family s life savings so that he would not end up in the cane fields and he would not have to compromise his Hindu faith 2 Education and early career 1935 1946 editJagan left for the United States in September 1935 6 or 1936 7 with two friends and did not return to British Guiana until October 1943 He lived in Washington D C for two years enrolled in a pre dental course at Howard University To cover his expenses Jagan took a job as an elevator operator During the summers he worked in New York City as a door to door salesman 2 Jagan s performance helped him to win a scholarship for his second year at Howard In 1938 he was admitted to the four year dental program at the dental school at Northwestern University in Chicago He graduated in 1942 with as Doctor of Dental Surgery From 1938 to 1942 Jagan was also enrolled at the Central YMCA College in Chicago and graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree 6 After returning to British Guiana Jagan established a practice in Georgetown on 68 Main Street 7 During this time he began to become politically engaged and became involved with trade unions in the sugar industry In 1945 he was made the treasurer of the Manpower Citizens Association though he was removed after a year after objecting to union policy 6 Political career editEarly political career 1946 1953 edit Jagan co founded the Political Affairs Committee PAC in 1946 along with his wife Janet as well as H J M Hubbard and Ashton Chase 6 He was subsequently elected to the Legislative Council in November 1947 as an independent candidate from Central Demerara constituency In 1949 Jagan became the president of the Sawmill Workers Union 7 On 1 January 1950 the People s Progressive Party PPP was founded by a merger of the PAC and the British Guiana Labour Party BGLP with Jagan as its leader former BGLP leader Forbes Burnham as its chairman and Jagan s wife Janet as secretary 8 The PPP quickly gained a mass following when they organised protests against the colonial administration following an incident where colonial police shot dead five workers at Enmore sugar plantation in 1948 when they were participating in strike action 9 6 Chief Minister of British Guiana for 133 days 1953 edit On 27 April 1953 Jagan won the 1953 British Guiana general election with his PPP party winning 18 of 24 seats 10 Jagan s government immediately dissented against British rule Jagan encouraged strike action against important sugar company Booker refused to send a delegation to the Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II repealed a law on undesirable publications passed by the colonial government and repealed another law banning immigration of politically left leaning individuals from the West Indies 9 Taking place in the middle of Second Red Scare and McCarthyism Jagan s actions and policies led to British worries about a possible communist revolution in Guyana Winston Churchill expressed fears that Jagan was a Marxist Leninist and claimed Jagan could allow the Soviet Union a foothold in South America saying W e ought surely to get American support in doing all we can to break the Communist teeth in British Guiana P erhaps they would even send Senator McCarthy down there 9 Declassified documents from MI5 show that the intelligence service concluded that the party were not receiving any financial support from any communist organisation outside the country 11 12 However Jagan s wife Janet may have been a member of the Young Communist League USA before she moved to Guyana 13 14 On 8 October 1953 the PPP government passed the Labour Relations Act modelled on the Wagner Act 9 The next day on 9 October the British administration suspended the constitution of British Guiana and troops were deployed 15 The queen had signed the order to dispatch troops on 4 October On 9 October a contingent of Royal Welsh Fusiliers arrived in Georgetown on HMS Superb and Jagan was dismissed from his position 9 and arrested 12 According to MI5 Jagan was unaware of the possibility of British intervention or of his arrest Jagan appealed to British Labour leader Clement Attlee who responded Regret impossible to intervene 12 Jagan was forced to resign as Chief Minister after 133 days Britain installed an interim government 16 Interim Government 1953 1957 edit After the suspension of the constitution Jagan departed for London with Forbes Burnham on 19 October 1953 to protest the suspension 17 and attended the debate in the House of Commons 6 on 21 October 18 During his time in the United Kingdom both Jagan and Burnham were subject to covert surveillance by American 19 and British intelligence services 20 He would subsequently arrive in India with Burnham on November 20 1953 and meet Jawaharlal Nehru in an attempt to garner support 17 Jagan s movements were restricted to Georgetown from 1954 to 1957 and both him and his wife were closely monitored and kept under house arrest 12 During this period of time colonial police would routinely raid the residences of senior members of the party to seize subversive literature In 1954 Jagan was sentenced to 6 months in prison with hard labour for violating a restriction on his movement travelling to the countryside and as a result leaving Georgetown In court Jagan likened British Guiana to a vast prison 9 Senior member of the party Forbes Burnham split with Jagan politically in 1955 dividing the PPP into two separate factions named Burnhamite and Jaganite 3 These two factions in the PPP would both go on to contest the 1957 Guyanese election as PPP candidates Burnham as a candidate was generally further to the right of the political spectrum Support for the two factions followed mostly racial lines as Burnham was the leading Afro Guyanese figure in the PPP However the split was not entirely racial prominent Afro Guyanese politician Sydney King remained in the Jaganite faction and Indo Guyanese J B Lachmansingh supported Burnham 21 However Sydney King and Afro Guyanese Martin Carter and Rory Westmaas would both leave the party one year later due to being ultra leftist 22 Clem Seecharan made the claim that they left because they believed that Jagan was compromising Marxist ideals for racial pragmatism i e supporting Indo Guyanese policies to appeal to his support base This further reduced the number of active Afro Guyanese politicians within the PPP 22 Minister of Trade and Industry 1957 1961 edit nbsp Cheddi Jagan meeting with Levi Eshkol during a visit to Israel in 1961 Jaganites won a majority of seats in the 1957 British Guiana general election winning 9 seats to the Burnhamite 3 and 2 seats for other parties Following this outcome the Burnhamite faction split entirely from the PPP and Burnham founded the People s National Congress PNC Jagan became minister of trade and industry 6 23 remained as PPP leader and was a member of the cabinet 6 He did not become Prime Minister during this time there was no such position 23 The PPP government did not have possession of the Ministries of Finance Foreign Affairs or Administration and power resided mostly with the Governor Ralph Grey 6 During the lead up and aftermath of the 1957 elections Guyanese politics began to strongly follow racial lines Jagan s faction was majority Indo Guayanese and advocated for policies that would benefit mainly Indo Guyanese such as an increase in land for rice production and sugar industry reform through increased union powers Jagan s veto of West Indies Federation membership further alienated Afro Guyanese voters the Federation was majority Afro Caribbean Similarly Burnham merged the PNC with the United Democratic Party to consolidate his grip on middle class Afro Guyanese support This style of politics along racial lines in Guyana became known as apan jhaat which is Guyanese Hindustani for vote for your own kind 24 Premier of British Guiana 1961 1964 edit nbsp Jagan with John F Kennedy in Washington DC 25 October 1961 After a PPP victory in the August 1961 elections Jagan became Premier serving for three years The elections were held as first past the post with 35 members of the Legislative assembly 25 the PPP won 20 seats almost twice the number won by Burnham s PNC and 10 seats in the 13 seat senate which led to mass demonstrations led by the PNC a general strike and racially motivated violence 3 This violence would peak in early 1962 after Jagan s government proposed what became known as the Kaldor Budget Advised by economist Nicholas Kaldor on 31 January 1962 the PPP government proposed an increase in tax and import duty which was opposed by opposition parties 26 The budget imposed austerity the tax increases would have significantly impacted the Afro Guyanese community and the opposition was not consulted However Arthur M Schlesinger Jr expressed the opinion that the tax scheme was entirely orthodox and suitable for Britain 27 and the budget was praised by both the New York Times and the London Times 26 Following the budget action was taken against the government which culminated on 16 February 1962 in the destruction of 56 businesses 87 businesses damaged by fire and 66 looted One Police Superintendent was killed and 39 injured Four looters shot and 41 injured The rioters also attacked the Electricity Plant the Water Works Parliament and Jagan s residence The British response was to send two warships HMS Troubridge and HMS Wizard to stop the violence 26 Jagan s official residence suffered fire damage during the riots 27 Following the 1961 elections Jagan met John F Kennedy in person in Washington D C on October 25 and on December 18 he addressed the United Nations calling for a date for Independence from the United Kingdom 6 The lead up to the 1964 elections included a concerted effort by officials from the United States to ensure that Jagan did not win the election due to fears about Jagan supposed communist views A March 1961 CIA estimate opined that Jagan s wife Janet was a communist and that Jagan was under communist influence 27 Jagan had also expressed support and encouragement for the Cuban Revolution 28 22 The United Kingdom and United States differed on their opinions of how to solve the situation with the British suggestion being that Jagan should be educated rather than removed from power Jagan s meeting with Kennedy in 1961 did not significantly change the American opinion of his political leanings The Americans decided that Burnham s policies were preferable to those of Jagan and began to take actions against Jagan including delaying independence from Britain advocating a proportional representation electoral system which would be to the detriment of Jagan s electoral chances and providing support for strike action These actions continued despite Jagan contacting Kennedy to protest his case 27 The CIA helped fund and organise the protests that led to the February 1962 demonstrations and in April 1963 the CIA used 1 million of allocated funds to support the 80 day general strike This strike action would later be cited as evidence that Jagan was not capable of governing British Guiana 29 In October 1963 a constitutional conference was called British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan summoned the three main Guyanese political leaders Jagan Forbes Burnham and Peter D Aguiar 29 to London 6 where Colonial Secretary Duncan Sandys announced the holding of fresh elections 29 previously the agreement was that independence would be granted before any further elections were called 6 a delay in the date of independence from 1963 to 1964 and a change in the electoral system from first past the post to proportional representation In a letter to President Kennedy MacMillan explained that if Jagan refused to cooperate Britain would suspend the constitution 29 Jagan agreed to elections in 1964 under proportional representation but John Prados posits that this was only because he received assurances from Forbes Burnham that a coalition between the two parties would be acceptable The Guiana United Muslim Party and Justice Party were both set up with the assistance of the CIA to split the Indo Guyanese voting bloc and the United States funded Burnham s campaign activities against Jagan s party 27 The months preceding the December 1964 elections were marked with extensive civil disorder Arson was a daily occurrence nearly 200 people were murdered and 1000 were injured and more than 15 000 people were forced from their homes Violence came from both PPP and PNC supporters On one occasion in August a conference between the three political party leaders was interrupted when the PPP party headquarters was bombed on the same street 27 An article in Time Magazine accused Jagan of quietly encouraging the violence There were multiple examples of racial violence across the country including the fatal shooting of an elderly Afro Guyanese couple on their farm the death of a pregnant Indo Guyanese woman at Bachelor s Adventure near Enterprise and the deaths of four Indo Guyanese at Afro Guyanese hands in Wismar 30 Further violence included the sinking of the Sun Chapman on 6 July and the following murders of 5 Indo Guyanese individuals at Mackenzie 31 In the December 1964 elections the PPP won a plurality of votes and actually increased their vote share to 46 29 but Burnham s party the People s National Congress and the conservative United Force held a majority of seats and were invited to form the government 8 by Governor Richard Luyt However Jagan refused to resign and had to be removed by Luyt 3 Jagan would begin his role as leader of the opposition Clem Seecharan would later point to Jagan s ideological inflexibility and his poor diplomatic handling of the electoral situation in Guyana as reasons for the strong American preference for Burnham over Jagan and as a result Burnham becoming Guyana s first leader after independence 22 Leader of the Opposition 1964 1992 edit nbsp Jagan at a press conference in the Netherlands 1972 Following Burnham s election in 1964 a constitutional conference was held in London Jagan refused to attend in protest at the imprisonment of PPP members at Mazaruni Prison 6 As agreed at the conference Guyana gained independence from the United Kingdom on 26 May 1966 Jagan opposed this date for independence as it was the anniversary of the Wismar Massacre of 1964 32 The same year Jagan published The West On Trial My Fight for Guyana s Freedom concerning his experience working towards Guyanese independence which remains his most popular written work 33 In 1965 Jagan attempted to enter the United States to join a protest against the Vietnam War but he was denied entry 34 He was again denied entry in 1967 to attend a planned speaking tour which had to be cancelled as a result 35 He was elected as Leader of the Opposition and Minority Leader in 1966 and would remain in the role until 1973 when Marcellus Fielden Singh took over the role He subsequently took the role again from 1976 until his election as president in 1992 36 During this time Jagan would repeatedly protest at the authoritarian policies of Burnham s administration with electoral fraud being reported in 1968 1973 1980 and 1985 3 In 1969 the People s Progressive Party attended the 1969 International Meeting of Communist and Workers Parties with Jagan attending personally 37 Jagan was subsequently elected General Secretary of the PPP 6 In 1973 the PPP boycotted the National Assembly in protest at the fraudulent 1973 elections and at the deaths of two Indo Guyanese on election day In 1974 a raid on Jagan s home found parts of a revolver and he was charged with illegal possession 6 Starting in 1975 the PPP began a period of closer collaboration with Burnham s PNC offering critical support when the PNC pushed for pro socialist policies and was under the pressure of Venezuelan border claims as well as proposing a national government with the PPP forming part of the ruling party in 1977 In 1978 Jagan was awarded the Order of Friendship of Peoples by the Soviet Union at the Kremlin 6 The 1978 Guyanese constitutional referendum was strongly opposed by Jagan The referendum would prolong the parliamentary term and would expand presidential powers Jagan s party led a boycott of the vote The referendum passed with 97 of the vote and the vote is considered to be fraudulent 3 Following the death of Burnham in 1985 Desmond Hoyte came to power Influenced by Jimmy Carter Hoyte would put forward electoral reforms which would lead to the 1992 elections being internationally recognised as free and fair 3 President of Guyana 1992 1997 edit nbsp Presidential Standard of Cheddi Jagan nbsp Cheddi Jagan second from left photographed with other heads of state and US President Bill Clinton in 1993 After 28 years in opposition the PPP won the 5 October 1992 elections with about 54 of the vote and Jagan became president Contrary to earlier foreign fears he governed as a democratic socialist and not a Marxist Leninist 38 Jagan would pursue policies to attract foreign investors and move towards free market policies Jagan also had a cordial relationship with the Clinton Administration in the United States unlike his difficult relationship with Kennedy in the 1960s 2 Following the previous administration the Guyanese economy was still recovering from flawed economic policies and high national debt 39 and low prices for major Guyanese exports such as bauxite oil and bananas 40 Jagan would pursue a policy of investment in national infrastructure including sea defences irrigation and drainage systems road and bridge projects and investment in health education and electricity generation 7 Jagan would also try to improve free trade in the Americas 40 During his time in power Jagan would advocate for a New Global Human Order 7 This proposal was aimed at the need for developing countries to acquire the means to eradicate poverty and reduce inequality 39 This involved debt relief 7 pollution tax a Tobin tax on currency exchange 39 and cuts in arms spending 40 These proposals did not gain significant support 39 Jagan announced this proposal in a speech at the United Nations in late 1995 40 Political opinions editJagan has been labelled as communist or Marxist by many different sources 41 42 22 43 Clem Seecharan said that the Jagan couple were both communists although Cheddi was more ideological 22 In a discussion with V S Naipaul Jagan elaborated on his appreciation of Marxist literature 22 Jagan also had regular communication with communist Billy Strachan 22 Political rival Forbes Burnham in 1957 classified Jagan and his allies as dogmatists whose aim is communism and who abuse everyone with whom they do not agree 22 In 1984 Jagan stated that I am not only fighting for the people of Guyana I am fighting for the people of the world I am contributing to that struggle That struggle is winning That is why the United States is so hysterical at the moment because of that very fact that what I stand for is winning Jagan also went on to claim in 1990 that it was socialism in Eastern Europe which was failing rather than communism and stated that Communism as a system has not been tried in any country as yet and remains a highly moralistic and humanistic ideal and destination 22 If Jagan was a Marxist he would have been the first democratically elected Marxist in the Western Hemisphere ahead of Chilean leader Salvador Allende 41 Percy Hintzen stated that characterization of Jagan as a communist misses the complexity of his political philosophy if Jagan was indeed a communist it was certainly not reflected in the policies and programs that his party attempted to implement while in office 44 Arthur M Schlesinger Jr said Jagan was not a communist but rather a London School of Economics Marxist filled with charm 27 Personal life editAfter graduating from dental school in 1942 Jagan met Janet Rosenberg a student nurse in spring 1943 7 They married in 1943 and had two children Nadira and Cheddi Jr who in turn produced five grandchildren 2 Jagan and his wife shared a lifelong friendship with Billy Strachan a leading British communist and a pioneer of black civil rights in Britain 45 Janet Jagan followed her husband s footsteps and held the positions of prime minister and president in 1997 succeeded as president by Bharrat Jagdeo in 1999 Personality edit Clem Seecharan characterised Jagan as a man of integrity who did not steal and never construed the political vocation as a means of amassing wealth He would also label him as an attractive and incorruptible man known for his frugality However Seecharan would also accuse Jagan of ideological inflexibility and an apparent inability to comprehend or empathise with African insecurities 22 An article by Indo Guyanese author Frank Birbalsingh also praised his integrity pointing out that Never in his half century of involvement in politics has anyone been able to point a finger at him while charges of financial corruption sexual misconduct or electoral fraudulence have been levelled at most of his contemporaries 46 Death edit nbsp Jagan in later life Jagan suffered a heart attack on 15 February 1997 and was taken to Georgetown Hospital before being flown by U S military aircraft then by U S Air Force helicopter from Andrews Air Force Base 47 to Walter Reed Army Hospital in Washington D C later that day 2 47 He underwent heart surgery there and died in Washington on 6 March 1997 16 days before his 79th birthday Prime Minister Sam Hinds succeeded him as president and declared six days of mourning describing Jagan as the greatest son and patriot that has ever walked this land 2 His funeral was postponed by a day to allow mourners time to visit who were caught in massive traffic jams caused by the immense number of people traveling to Port Mourant for his funeral More than 200 000 mourners attended citation needed He had a state funeral in Georgetown and his cremation was at the Babu John Jan Crematorium in his hometown of Port Mourant 48 His final rites were done per Hindu customs and he was cremated on 12 March 1997 49 The site of his cremation became a samadhi memorial to him and later his wife known as the Jagans Memorial Monument 50 Legacy editThe People s Progressive Party which Jagan founded with Janet Jagan and Forbes Burnham remains one of the two dominant political parties in Guyana along with the PNC Support for both groups continue to follow the racial divide between Afro Guyanese and Indo Guyanese 51 52 unreliable source There are claims that Jagan may bear partial responsibility for the racial divide present in Guyanese politics Walter Rodney said that more than one political party has been responsible for the crisis of race relations on this country I think our leadership has failed us on that score Rodney also pointed to external intervention as a catalyst for poor race relations 53 The Cheddi Jagan Research Centre in Georgetown commemorates his life and work complete with a replication of his office 54 The centre is located in the Red House which served as Jagan s official residence from 1961 to 1964 55 The Cheddi Jagan International Airport the largest and primary international airport of the country has been renamed after Jagan 56 In 2007 Jagan was posthumously awarded the Order of Liberation of Guyana OR 57 This award surpasses the Order of Excellence of Guyana but was granted without an amendment to the constitution of orders and it does not appear in the list of national awards 58 Jagan also received the Order of the Companions of O R Tambo from South Africa in 2005 59 Jagan s wide regard as Father of the Nation in Guyana is stated by several different sources the Cheddi Jagan Research Centre 6 the Guyana Chronicle 57 the Times of India 60 and important political figures in the PPP such as Irfaan Ali 61 In contrast PNC member and at the time Minister of Social Cohesion Amna Ally in a 2015 speech named Forbes Burnham the Father of the Nation 62 Awards editOrder of Friendship of Peoples Soviet Union 1978 6 Order of Solidarity Cuba 1988 Order of the Liberator Venezuela 1993 Grand Commander of the Order of the Star and Key of the Indian Ocean Mauritius 1994 Order of the Companions of O R Tambo South Africa 2005 59 Order of Liberation Guyana 2007 aSelected publications editJagan was also an important political author and speechwriter and his publications include Forbidden Freedom The Story of British Guiana Hansib 1954 The West On Trial My Fight for Guyana s Freedom Harpy 1966 The Caribbean Revolution 1979 The Caribbean Whose Backyard 1984 Selected Speeches 1992 1994 Hansib 1995 The USA in South America Hansib 1998 A New Global Human Order Harpy 1999 Selected Correspondences 1953 1965 Dido Press 2004 See also editCheddi Jagan Bio Diversity Park Cheddi Jagan International AirportNotes edit a This award surpasses the Order of Excellence of Guyana but was granted without an amendment to the constitution of orders and it does not appear in the list of national awards 58 References edit Jagan a name intrinsically woven into Guyanese history Guyana Chronicle 5 March 2010 a b c d e f g Larry Rohter Cheddi Jagan Guyana s Founder Dies at 78 The New York Times 7 March 1997 a b c d e f g Nohlen D 2005 Elections in the Americas A data handbook Volume I p355 ISBN 978 0 19 928357 6 Naipaul V S 2012 03 15 The Writer and the World Knopf Canada ISBN 9780307370648 One of the daughters had married a brahmin and the family was anxious to live up to the high connection They didn t want Cheddi to sleep on a bed in their house They required him to sleep on the floor because the Jagans were of the kurmi caste a caste of cultivators Chhedi Jagan says in his book that he had heard about caste problems only from his mother But in fact as a caste the kurmis are interesting In Tribute to Dr Jagan s Late Mother Bachaoni The West Indian 9 September 2020 Retrieved 24 June 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Biography of Cheddi Jagan jagan org Cheddi Jagan Research Centre Archived from the original on 13 February 2023 Retrieved 13 February 2023 a b c d e f g h Mangar Tota 21 March 2021 DR CHEDDI B JAGAN HIS LIFE AND TIMES 1918 1997 Guyana Chronicle Archived from the original on 23 March 2023 Retrieved 3 March 2023 a b History of the PPP Archived 2011 06 16 at the Wayback Machine PPP website a b c d e f Bahadur Gaiutra 30 October 2020 In 1953 Britain openly removed an elected government with tragic consequences The Guardian Archived from the original on 2 January 2023 Retrieved 2 January 2023 Biographies of former presidents Archived 28 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine GINA The Suspension of the British Guiana Constitution 1953 Declassified British documents www guyana org Archived from the original on 2022 04 06 a b c d MI5 files reveal details of 1953 coup that overthrew British Guiana s leaders The Guardian Associated Press 26 August 2011 Archived from the original on 11 March 2023 Retrieved 13 February 2023 Ramotar Donald JANET JAGAN A Pioneer and Revolutionary PDF jagan org Cheddi Jagan Research Centre Archived PDF from the original on 5 April 2023 Retrieved 13 February 2023 Ramharack Baytoram 29 January 2023 Janet Jagan Marxist radical or Guyanese liberator Stabroek News Archived from the original on 13 February 2023 Retrieved 13 February 2023 History of Guyana Source Area Handbook of the US Library of Congress Mother Earth Travel Archived from the original on 13 February 2023 Retrieved 13 February 2023 Guyanese President Cheddi Jagan dies CNN 6 March 1997 Archived from the original on 13 February 2023 Retrieved 13 February 2023 a b Reece Maggie 27 March 2014 Forbes Burnham amp Cheddi Jagan on their way to London and India 1953 Guyana Graphic Archived from the original on 13 February 2023 Retrieved 13 February 2023 Suspension of Constitution 21 October 1953 api parliament uk UK Parliament Archived from the original on 17 August 2022 Retrieved 13 February 2023 CIA Covert Operations The 1964 Overthrow of Cheddi Jagan in British Guiana The George Washington University National Security Archive April 6 2023 Archived from the original on 2023 03 07 Retrieved 10 June 2023 Examining the secret surveillance of Jagan and Burnham during 1953 visit to Britain Stabroek News 9 January 2022 Retrieved 2 January 2023 The Interim Government 1953 57 Source US Library of Congress countrystudies us Archived from the original on 2022 12 16 Retrieved 2023 02 13 a b c d e f g h i j k Seecharan Clem 22 March 2018 Cheddi Jagan Communism and the African Guyanese Stabroek News Retrieved 14 February 2023 a b Cheddi Jagan premier Guyana britannica com Encyclopedia Britannica Archived from the original on 14 February 2023 Retrieved 14 February 2023 The Second PPP Government 1957 61 and Racial Politics countrystudies us Country Studies Archived from the original on 2022 12 16 Retrieved 2023 02 13 Historical information events and dates on the Parliament of Guyana from 1718 to 2006 Archived 2018 11 29 at the Wayback Machine Parliament of Guyana a b c Seeram Ralph 30 March 2014 Kaldor Budget and Black Friday February 16 1962 commentary Guyana Online Archived from the original on 3 January 2023 Retrieved 3 January 2023 a b c d e f g Prados John CIA Covert Operations The 1964 Overthrow of Cheddi Jagan in British Guiana nsarchive gwu edu National Security Archive Archived from the original on 2023 02 14 Retrieved 14 February 2023 Waters Jr Robert Anthony Daniels Gordon Oliver 24 November 2010 Striking for freedom International intervention and the Guianese sugar workers strike of 1964 Cold War History 10 4 537 569 doi 10 1080 14682741003603102 S2CID 154080206 Archived from the original on 15 March 2023 Retrieved 15 March 2023 a b c d e Curtis Mark 12 February 2007 The coup in British Guiana 1963 an extract from Unpeople Britain s Secret Human Rights Abuses markcurtis info Vintage Archived from the original on 20 January 2023 Retrieved 15 February 2023 British Guiana Race War Time 5 June 1964 Retrieved 15 February 2023 Shah Ryaan 21 May 2017 The Wismar Massacre Guyana Times Archived from the original on 2 January 2023 Retrieved 2 January 2023 Cheddi Jagan Quotations jagan org Cheddi Jagan Research Centre Archived from the original on 23 January 2023 Retrieved 2 March 2023 Jagan Cheddi 1972 West on Trial The Fight for Guyana s Freedom International Publishers ISBN 0717803570 JAGAN DENIED ENTRY INTO U S The New York Times Archived from the original on 2023 04 25 Retrieved 2023 04 25 Villeneuve Hubert 2020 Teaching Anticommunism Fred Schwarz and American Postwar Conservatism McGill Queen s University Press Historical information events and dates on the Parliament of Guyana from 1718 to 2009 Archived 2023 05 05 at the Wayback Machine Parliament of Guyana Osmanczyk Edmund Jan Mango Anthony Encyclopedia of the United Nations and International Agreements Taylor amp Francis 2002 p 428 Reuters Cheddi Jagan Elected As Guyana s President Archived 2021 12 11 at the Wayback Machine The New York Times 8 October 1992 a b c d Jagan s New Global Human Order was never taken seriously Kaieteur News 4 November 2022 Archived from the original on 5 November 2022 Retrieved 3 March 2023 a b c d Decker Ed Jagan Cheddi 1918 1997 encyclopedia com Cengage Archived from the original on 5 April 2023 Retrieved 3 March 2023 a b Edmonds Kevin 29 March 2023 Guyana Remembering Dr Cheddi Jagan NACLA Archived from the original on 20 February 2023 Retrieved 20 February 2023 Leurs William 12 July 1976 DEPARTMENT DISCUSSES ALLEGATIONS OF COMMUNIST INFLUENCE IN CERTAIN WESTERN HEMISPHERE COUNTRIES PDF The US Department of State Bulletin LXXV 1933 50 Archived PDF from the original on 14 February 2023 Retrieved 14 January 2023 Renwick Robin 1996 Fighting with Allies 1 ed London Palgrave MacMillan p 189 doi 10 1057 9780230379824 31 ISBN 978 0 333 65743 0 Archived from the original on 14 February 2023 Retrieved 14 February 2023 Rohee Clement 27 May 2017 Was Jagan a communist Stabroek News Retrieved 14 February 2023 Horsley David 2019 Billy Strachan 1921 1988 RAF Officer Communist Civil Rights Pioneer Legal Administrator Internationalist and Above All Caribbean Man London Caribbean Labour Solidarity p 17 ISSN 2055 7035 Birbalsingh Frank 7 March 1997 Obituary Cheddi Jagan The Independent Archived from the original on 7 April 2023 Retrieved 3 March 2023 a b In the Americas The Miami Herald nl newsbank com 16 February 1997 Letters to the editor The government should build sanitary facilities at Babu John Stabroek News 3 April 2015 Guyanese President Cheddi Jagan cremated Rediff on the NeT Archived from the original on 2023 02 20 Retrieved 2023 02 20 Jagans Memorial Monument National Trust Archived from the original on 2023 03 26 Retrieved 2023 03 26 Mendes Franco Janine 8 March 2020 Guyana s 2020 general election results mired in controversy globalvoices org Global Voices Archived from the original on 1 January 2023 Retrieved 1 January 2023 Palash R Ghosh 28 November 2011 Guyana Elections Expected to Break Down According to Racial Lines IB Times International Business Times Archived from the original on 3 January 2023 Retrieved 3 January 2023 Rodney Walter Street Speech historyisaweapon com History is a Weapon Archived from the original on 2 March 2023 Retrieved 2 March 2023 The Cheddi Jagan Research Centre Guyana International Times Archived from the original on 30 November 2021 Retrieved 30 November 2021 RED HOUSE KAMANA COURT National Trust of Guyana Archived from the original on 26 November 2021 Retrieved 30 November 2021 About us CJ Airport GY Archived from the original on 30 November 2021 Retrieved 30 November 2021 a b Cheddi Jagan The Liberator Guyana Chronicle 13 March 2022 Archived from the original on 5 April 2023 Retrieved 3 March 2023 a b Order of liberation raises eyebrows questions Stabroek News 7 January 2008 Retrieved 3 March 2023 a b National Orders awards 27 April 2005 South African Government Information Archived from the original on 10 May 2017 Retrieved 29 January 2016 Shukla Vivek 26 October 2022 Cheddi Jagan to Rishi Sunak The Times of India Archived from the original on 8 April 2023 Retrieved 3 March 2023 Dr Jagan s contributions to democracy will never be forgotten President Ali Department of Public Information Government of Guyana 13 April 2021 Archived from the original on 5 April 2023 Retrieved 3 March 2023 Samaroo Sunita 7 August 2015 Burnham hailed as nat l hero father of the nation at commemoration of 30th death anniversary Kaieteur News Archived from the original on 1 January 2016 Retrieved 3 March 2023 External links editCheddi Jagan Research Centre an informational site maintained by Jagan s daughter Nadira Jagan Brancier Cheddi Jagan Archive at marxists org Cheddi Jagan Timeline Posted at Center for Cooperative Research An Appreciation of Dr Cheddi Jagan Indo Caribbean World 12 March 1997 Political offices Preceded byOffice established Chief Minister of Guyana1953 Succeeded byOffice abolished Preceded byOffice established Premier of Guyana1961 1964 Succeeded byForbes Burnham Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cheddi Jagan amp oldid 1215806219, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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