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Forbes Burnham

Linden Forbes Sampson Burnham (20 February 1923 – 6 August 1985)[1] was a Guyanese politician and the leader of the Co-operative Republic of Guyana from 1964 until his death in 1985. He served as Premier of British Guiana from 1964 to 1966, Prime Minister of Guyana from 1964 to 1980 and then as the first Executive President of Guyana (2nd President overall) from 1980 to 1985.[1] He is often regarded as a strongman[4] who embraced his own version of socialism.[5]

Forbes Burnham
Burnham in 1966
2nd President of Guyana
In office
6 October 1980 – 6 August 1985
Prime MinisterPtolemy Reid
Vice PresidentPtolemy Reid
Shiw Sahai Naraine
Hugh Desmond Hoyte
Hamilton Green
Bishwaishwar Ramsaroop
Mohamed Shahabuddeen
Ranji Chandisingh
Preceded byArthur Chung
Succeeded byHugh Desmond Hoyte
1st Prime Minister of Guyana
(British Guiana until 1966)
In office
14 December 1964 – 6 October 1980
MonarchElizabeth II
PresidentArthur Chung
Preceded byCheddi Jagan
Succeeded byPtolemy Reid
Personal details
Born
Linden Forbes Sampson Burnham[1]

(1923-02-20)20 February 1923[1]
Kitty, Georgetown, Demerara County, British Guiana[1]
Died6 August 1985(1985-08-06) (aged 62)[1]
Georgetown, Demerara-Mahaica, Guyana[1]
Resting placeGuyana Botanical Gardens
Political partyBGLP (1949)
PPP (1950–1958)
PNC (1958–1985)
Height1.88 m (6 ft 2 in)[3]
Spouse(s)Sheila Bernice Lataste[2] (1951[2]–1966)
Viola Victorine Harper (1967[2]his death)
RelationsJessie Burnham (sister)
Children6
Alma materUniversity of London
Nickname"Odo"[3]

Educated as a lawyer, Burnham was instrumental in the foundation of two political parties (the People's National Congress and the People's Progressive Party) that would come to dominate the Politics of Guyana.[3] During his time as Head of Government, Guyana moved from being a British colony to being a republic with no constitutional ties to the United Kingdom.[6] His premiership was characterized by the nationalisation of foreign-owned private industries,[1] membership of the Non-Aligned Movement[3] and authoritarian domestic policy.[7][8] Despite being widely regarded as having a significant role in the political, social and economic development of Guyana,[9][10] his presidency was marred by accusations of afrocentrism,[11] state-sanctioned violence,[12][13][14] corruption,[7] and electoral fraud.[15]

Early life and Education

 
Queen's college, which Burnham attended and where he later worked as an assistant master

Burnham was born in Kitty, a suburb of Georgetown, Demerara County, British Guiana,[1] as one of three[2] or four (Olga, Freddie, Jessica, and Flora)[3] children. His parents were James Ethelbert Burnham, a schoolmaster,[2] and Rachel Abigail Sampson,[16] and he grew up in an Afro-Guyanese, Methodist household. Burnham's father had his roots in a slave family from Barbados, and his family name came from the surname of the plantation owner. On the abolition of slavery, Burnham's ancestor migrated to British Guiana.[17]

According to Burnham's sister Jessie, the family grew up on 4 Pike Street, Kitty. Jessie also attests that their father was the headteacher at Kitty Methodist School for 37 years, and sat on the Village Council.[18] Forbes Burnham attended Kitty Methodist School and Central High School[2] before attending the prestigious secondary school, Queen's College, where he met future political rival Cheddi Jagan.[1] His sister said that Burnham was ambitious from a young age, and that he was bullied at Central High School for his small stature and academic prowess.[18] At Queen's College, Burnham excelled academically, receiving the Centenary Exhibition (1936), the Government Junior (1937), and the Percival Exhibition (1938).[3]

In 1942, he won the British Guiana Scholarship to study at the University of London, as the top student in British Guiana.[2] Burnham was unable to travel to the United Kingdom due to World War II, instead working as an assistant master at Queen's college and completing a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of London through external examinations.[3] After he was allowed to travel to London, Burnham received a law degree from the London School of Economics,[2] at the time a constituent college of the University of London, in 1947[1] or 1948[2] and was the President of the West Indian Student Union at the University[2] for the year 1947-1948[3] He went on to pass the bar in 1948, and became a member of Gray's Inn.[2] Burnham met many African and Caribbean students – including Abubakar Tafawa Balewa of Nigeria, Seretse Khama of Botswana and Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana as well as Michael Manley of Jamaica and Errol Barrow of Barbados – during his studies in London.[19]

In London, Burnham won the Best Speaker's Cup, awarded by the Faculty of Law. He also attended the Student's Congresses in Prague and Paris, and was a member of the League of Coloured Peoples.[3]

He left the United Kingdom to return to British Guiana on December 20, 1948, departing Liverpool on the Empress of France bound for Halifax, Nova Scotia, and arrived in Georgetown in 1949.[2]

1949–1955: The People's Progressive Party (PPP)

Founding the People's Progressive Party

In 1949, after returning from his studies in the United Kingdom, Burnham entered the private law chambers of Cameron and Shepherd[3] before setting up his own private law practice,[20] Clarke and Martin.[3] Also in 1949, Burnham became the leader of the British Guiana Labour Party (BGLP),[21] which had been formed in 1946. In the 1947 elections the Labour Party had won 5 of 14 seats in the Legislative Council, making them the largest party.[22]

Less than a year after his return from the United Kingdom, Burnham was one of the founders of the People's Progressive Party (PPP), which was launched on 1 January 1950. The Indo-Guyanese labour leader Cheddi Jagan became Leader of the PPP, Jagan's wife Janet Jagan became the secretary and Burnham became the first party chairman. Jagan had been the leader of the Political Affairs Committee, which merged with the BGLP to form the PPP.[23] Burnham chose the name of the new party.[3]

Minister of Education

In 1952, Burnham became the president of the party's affiliated trade union, the British Guiana Labour Union,[24] and was elected to Georgetown City Council in 1953.[20] In the 1953 British Guiana general election on 27 April 1953, the PPP won 18 of 24 seats in the first election with universal suffrage in Guyana, with both Burnham and his sister Jessie elected to the House of Assembly. In the short-lived PPP government that followed, Burnham served as Minister of Education.[24] Burnham initially threatened to split the party if he were not made sole leader of the PPP, but a compromise was reached by which Burnham and his allies in the party received ministerial appointments.[25] The newly-formed government began to dissent against colonial rule, refusing to send a delegation to the Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II, urging strike action and repealing several laws which the Colonial Office wanted in place. This dissent took place during the Red Scare, and British statesmen were worried about a possible communist revolution in Guyana; Winston Churchill remarked that “(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.”[26]

On October 9, 1953, the British administration suspended the Constitution of British Guiana and sent in armed troops after the PPP government passed the Labour Relations Act (modelled on the Wagner Act[26]) the day before, marking the end of the PPP government. Burnham and Jagan would travel to London to unsuccessfully protest the decision, where they were subject to secret surveillance by British intelligence services.[27] Following this, Burnham and Jagan travelled to India in an unsuccessful attempt to find support for their cause against the British.[28] The interim government appointed by the British would last until 1957.[29]

During the suspension of the constitution, the interim government gave Burnham fewer restrictions than other senior members of the party, he was not imprisoned while the other senior members were, and he was given tacit encouragement to begin a breakaway faction within the party, which he would do two years later.[26]

1955–1964: Leader of the People's National Congress (PNC)

Origins of the People's National Congress

 
Burnham in 1962, serving as Mayor of Georgetown (fifth from left), in the presence of the Venezuelan mixed commission on Guayana Essequiba and advisors.

At a conference at the Metropole Cinema in Georgetown on 12-13 February 1955, the PPP split into two factions, one led by Burnham ("Burnhamite")[15] and the other by Jagan ("Jaganite").[15][30] Jagan supported a socialist domestic policy,[31][32] but Burnham's faction was more moderate.[8] The two also had personality differences.[33] After the 1957 election, where Jagan's faction won 9 seats and Burnham's won only 3, Burnham went on to form the People's National Congress[15] (PNC) in 1957,[2] becoming leader of the opposition.[3] The PNC entered its first election under that name in 1961.[34] Also in 1957, Burnham became President of the Guyana Bar Association, a position he would hold until 1964.[2] In 1959, Burnham was elected Mayor of Georgetown, a position he would hold until 1964[2] when he was re-elected[3] until 1966.[20] The United Democratic Party merged with the PNC in 1959.[35]

The political split deepened the racial division between Afro-Guyanese and Indo-Guyanese.[36] Guyanese politics continues to largely follow racial lines, with PPP support mainly of a South Asian background and PNC support mostly of African descent.[37] This would follow the rural-urban divide as well, Afro-Guyanese tending to live in urban-coastal areas and Indo-Guyanese tending to live in rural-interior areas.[3] After the split, Jagan's PPP and Burnham's PNC largely became the political expressions of the Indo-Guyanese and Afro-Guyanese aspirations respectively, and advocated for their supporter's interests.[38]

1961 general election

In the 1961 election, Burnham's PNC party won 11 seats in the Legislative Assembly with 41% of the vote. Despite only winning 1.64% more of the vote than the PNC, the PPP won 20 seats, nearly double the number of seats won by the PPP. This led to mass demonstrations, racial tensions and a general strike. The Governor declared a state of emergency and British troops were deployed.[15]

The Kaldor Budget and Black Friday

On 31 January 1962 the PPP government announced what would later be known as the "Kaldor Budget", advised by economist Nicholas Kaldor, including an increase in tax and import duty, which was opposed by opposition parties, who started taking action against the government, including mass demonstrations led by the PNC. According to the Wynn Parry Commission, on February 12, Burnham gave the following speech: "Comrades, the fight starts now. Tomorrow at 2 o’clock in the afternoon there is a demonstration organized by the Trade Union Congress, a demonstration against the harsh proposals of the budget, which make life unbearable. No doubt the Riot Squad will be there. Do you still want to go? Comrades, remember that tomorrow Jagan’s army is coming down from Cane Grove and Windsor Forest. Do you still want to go?"[39] the mass action would culminate February 16, 1962, later called "Black Friday". 56 businesses were destroyed, 87 damaged by fire and 66 were looted. One Police Superintendent was killed and 39 injured, while four looters were fatally shot and 41 injured. The rioters also attacked the Electricity Plant, the Water Works, Parliament, and Jagan’s residence.[39] The riots were responded to by HMS Troubridge (R00) and HMS Wizard (R72). Black smoke covered Georgetown and a large fire was evident.[40]

International intervention in British Guiana

According to declassified documents, in the early 1960s The United States Government led by John F. Kennedy became increasingly convinced that Jagan's PPP government had communist ideals. Due to the radical views of Cheddi Jagan (who leaned towards communism) and Jagan's alliances with the Soviet Union and Cuba, Burnham was supported by Western nations.[41] In May 1962 Kennedy held direct talks with British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, and Burnham visited Washington. Senior officials in the United States decided that Burnham's proposed socialism was preferable to Jagan's ideology, but also concluded that Jagan would become Head of Government of an independent Guyana without US intervention. Burnham readily agreed to US action against Jagan. In 1962, Kennedy approved intervention against Jagan's government. Independence was delayed by British officials, allowing time for a covert operation by the Central Intelligence Agency. Both Peter D'Aguiar (leader of the third largest party, The United Force) and Burnham pledged to support the notion of proportional representation (opposed by Jagan), and Burnham began to receive financial aid from the CIA.[42]

Burnham was appointed as President of the Guyana Labour Union in 1963.[2]

The CIA has been accused of assisting strike action against the PPP government beginning in 1963. This action would eventually turn to violence, with arson and bombing at government buildings. Burnham was mentioned in police reports.[42]

Lead up to the 1964 election

In 1963, further talks between President Kennedy and British Prime Minister Macmillan led to the British decision to impose a December 1964 election using proportional representation, after which British Guiana would be granted independence.The Americans received assurances from Burnham and D'Aguiar that they would mutually support each other in the election, and US money would be used for political campaigning. The lead-up to the election was marked by widespread violence, with nearly 200 murders and 2,600 families displaced.[42] A series of racially-motivated incidents took place in and around Linden, including the Wismar Massacre on 26 May, the sinking of the Sun Chapman on 6 July and the following murders of 5 Indo-Guyanese individuals at Mackenzie.[43] In one incident in August 1964, Jagan, Burnham, and d’Aguiar were conferring about reducing the spate of violence when the headquarters of the PPP were bombed just down the street.[42]

Just before the election, the CIA estimated that the PPP and PNC would take about 40 percent of the vote, United Force would take 15 percent, and the false-flag Justice Party (aimed at Indo-Guyanese voters and backed by the CIA), would take 5 percent.[42]

1964–1966: Premier of British Guiana

 
Burnham in the presence of Queen Elizabeth II in February 1966, during her state visit to British Guiana.

In the 1964 election on 7 December 1964, Jagan's PPP won the highest percentage of the vote (46% to the PNC's 41%), but it did not win a majority. Burnham succeeded in forming a coalition with the United Force (TUF) (which had won the remaining 12% of the votes) and became premier of British Guiana on 14 December.[2] Jagan refused to resign, and had to be removed by Governor Richard Luyt.[15] Burnham would remain as Head of Government of Guyana for the next 21 years.

In 1965, Burnham along with Errol Barrow of Barbados were the founders of the Caribbean Free Trade Association (CARIFTA), which came into operation on 1 May 1968. CARIFTA would, in 1973, be superceded by CARICOM.[44]

On 26 May 1966, British Guiana became an independent country and was renamed "Guyana".[45] Under the country's constitution, the Head of State would be the British monarch, represented in Guyana by the governor general, who served in a largely ceremonial capacity, and the Head of Government would be the Prime Minister (Forbes) appointed by a majority in the National Assembly.[6]

1966–1980: Prime Minister of Guyana

In one of Burnham's first acts upon independence, he passed a sweeping "National Security Act", permitting unrestricted search-and-seizure powers and the ability to detain individuals for up to 90 days without trial.[1]

Burnham still had a significant electoral disadvantage, as voting support mostly followed racial lines, and about 50% of the Guyanese population on independence was Indo-Guyanese[46] and would likely support Jagan's PPP, making a fair election nearly impossible to win for Burnham.[47] A telegram from the US Ambassador stated that "he intends to remain in power indefinitely" and "if necessary, he is prepared to employ unorthodox methods to achieve his aims".[47] In a meeting with US President Lyndon B. Johnson in July 1966, Burnham discussed a scheme to promote immigration of Afro-Caribbean people in an effort to improve his electoral chances in the 1968 election. This scheme was unsuccessful.[47] In 1967, Burnham stated that “overseas vote figures could be manipulated pretty much as he wished”. Burnham later stated that he would "identify and register all Guyanese of African ancestry in the United Kingdom, Canada, and the United States in order to get their absentee votes in the next election", and suggested that Indo-Guyanese living abroad may have trouble getting registered or receiving ballots.[47]

In October 1966, Venezuelan soldiers occupied Ankoko Island in Guayana Esequiba. Burnham demanded the withdrawal of Venezuelan armed forces, but his request was denied.[48]

1968 general election

The PNC attained a majority government in the general elections of 1968 through electoral fraud, using an inflated "overseas vote" to skew the results in their favor.[49][15][50] The PNC won 93.7% of the 36,745 overseas ballots, allowing Burnham to claim an absolute majority. An independent review by the Opinion Research Center of London was only able to verify 15% of the entries on the overseas list.[3] An investigation looking into the identity of some of the voters found that two horses near Manchester, a closed butcher's shop in Brooklyn and a railway in London had been counted as registered voters, and there were many addresses where the reported voters had never been resident. Only just over 100 voters of 900 checked in the United Kingdom were genuine, and in New York only 40% were genuine. Peter D'Aguiar called it "a seizure of power by fraud, not an election."[51]

Rupununi Uprising and Tigri Area dispute

In 1968, a conference of 40,000 Amerindian people presented demands to Burnham, being dissatisfied with his afrocentrist policies.[11] The Agriculture Minister declared that the inhabitants' land ownership certifications would no longer be recognized and the zone would be occupied by the Afro-Guyanese population.[52] A provisional secessionist government was declared and attacks on Lethem began. The uprising was ultimately quelled by the Guyana Defence Force (GDF).[53]

In 1969, following the establishment of Camp Tigri by Surinamese authorities, the Guyana Defense Force would take Camp Tigri and assert authority over the Tigri Area.[54] Guyana continues to hold the camp despite a 1970 agreement to withdraw military forces.[55]

Establishment of the Co-Operative Republic of Guyana

Before 1970, Burnham mostly pursued moderate political policies.[8] In 1970, he veered sharply to the left and established relations with Cuba (8 December 1972)[56] and the Soviet Union (17 December 1970)[57] and a strong relationship with North Korea.[58] On 23 February of that year, he declared Guyana a "co-operative republic".[1] Adopting a policy of autarky, he banned all forms of imports into the country, including flour and varieties of rice that had been integral to the diet of Guyanese. Burnham also nationalised the major industries that were foreign-owned and -controlled.[1] By 1979 his policies had reduced the private sector’s share in the economy to only 10%.[8] In declaring the Co-Operative republic, Burnham replaced the Head of State, removing the British Monarch and installing Arthur Chung as the first president (in a mostly ceremonial role), though Guyana remained a member of the Commonwealth of Nations.[6]

Port of Spain Protocol

On 18 June 1970 Burnham signed the Port of Spain Protocol with Venezuela. The protocol, in place for 12 years, promoted co-operation between the two countries on the Border Dispute in Guayana Esequiba.[59] The protocol was not renewed after 12 years.[60]

Membership of the Non-Aligned movement

Burnham, after attending the 1970 summit of the Non-Aligned Movement in Lusaka, Zambia, paid official visits to several African countries—Zambia, Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania and Ethiopia—over the period 12–30 September 1970. The Guyanese government remained fully involved in the African liberation movement throughout the 1970s.[19]

Burnham sent more than a hundred Guyanese public servants to various departments of the Zambian Government. Many Guyanese doctors, engineers, lawyers and secretaries worked in Southern African states throughout the 1970s.[19]

House of Israel

In 1972, Rabbi David Hill arrived in Guyana. He established the House of Israel, a religious sect that the opposition would accuse of operating as a private army for Burnham's PNC.[61] In 2014, Joseph Hamilton, a former House of Israel priest, testified that the House of Israel committed “oppressive and terrorizing acts on behalf of the PNC.”[62]

1973 general election

In the 1973 general election, Burnham received 70% of the vote and 37 of the 53 seats in the National Assembly. It is generally accepted that Burnham had significant influence on the results of the elections, and the elections were fraudulent.[15] During the transportation of ballot boxes by the military, the army shot dead two Indo-Guyanese poll workers, who became known as the "Ballot Box Martyrs".[51] Shortly after the election, Burnham expanded powers of preventative detention, allowing for restrictions on movement, possession of firearms, and search without warrant.[63]

Declaration of Sophia

On 14 December 1974, Burnham issued the Declaration of Sophia where he stated that "the Party should assume unapologetically its paramountcy over the Government which is merely one of its executive arms."[64] The Declaration also called for a transition to a socialist state, and a nationalisation of its economy.[65] The declaration would also lead to the founding of the Guyana National Service, a paramilitary organisation under the control of the party.[66]

1978 referendum

The PNC government's five-year term was due to end in 1978, forcing a new election. On 1 April 1978, Burnham announced a referendum to allow the constitution to be changed by a 2/3 majority in parliament (which the PNC had) rather than a referendum. The opposition presented a united front against the referendum. During the campaign, the PNC terminated the contract of critical newspaper "the Catholic Standard" with a state-owned printing company, hampering their ability to distribute critical material. Advertisements for opposition parties were banned in state media, and violence was used to break up opposition meetings and gatherings. Public employees were forced to sign blank proxy forms allowing others to vote on their behalf. It was also noted that there were more individuals on the electoral role than the United Nations estimate of the number of eligible voters by around 65,000 people (>10% of the electoral roll). The opposition groups would eventually urge the Guyanese population to boycott the referendum.[67] During this time, prominent Guyanese poet Martin Carter was beaten by individuals affiliated with the PNC while protesting the government's refusal to hold elections.[68]

Burnham won the 1978 referendum. Anecdotal evidence from hundreds of Indo-Guyanese (and Afro-Guyanese who were PPP supporters) claims that PNC enforcers aggressively (and often violently) denied PPP supporters of the opportunity to vote. Official figures showed the referendum passing with an implausible 97.9 percent of the vote.[15] There were accusations that PNC supporters voted multiple times.[67]

One week after the referendum, On 17 July, 1978, the government used its new powers to change the constitution to postpone the scheduled election. These powers would also be used to introduce the new constitution introduced in 1980.[67]

Involvement in Jonestown

On 18 November, 1978, a total of 909 people of the Peoples Temple died in a mass suicide in Jonestown. Burnham had previously allowed the group, led by Jim Jones, to move to Guyana from San Francisco,[36] and had a good relationship with the group. The incident drew international attention to Guyana,[36] and an inquest established by the opposition blamed Burnham for the deaths.[69] Burnham was considered an ally of Jones.[12]

There are suggestions that Burnham's government participated in a cover-up of the affair. Burnham's wife Viola and his Deputy Prime Minister Ptolemy Reid were among the first to the scene and may have returned from the massacre site with nearly $1 million in cash, gold and jewelry. In addition, one of Burnham’s secretaries may have visited Jonestown only hours before it occurred, a visit that was never explained.[70]

1979 Fire and Murder of Bernard Darke

In 1979, a fire destroyed many of the official government records, including official communications with the Peoples Temple. There is some speculation that the fire was started deliberately by Burnham's government, and there are reports that men in Guyana Defense Force uniforms were seen running from the fire.[12] Two different government offices were burned. Walter Rodney was arrested and charged with arson. The trial was deferred three times and later dropped due to lack of evidence.[71]

During civil unrest after the fire and arrest, Jesuit Priest Bernard Darke was stabbed to death by members of the House of Israel,[72][73][74] a religious cult closely associated with Burnham and his PNC party.[13] Darke was associated with the Catholic Standard, a newspaper described as being "extremely critical" of the PNC.[73] According to a 2013 article by Kaieteur News, the editor of Catholic News, Andrew Morrison, may have been the target of this attack, making it a failed assassination attempt.[75][76]

1980–1985: President of the Co-Operative Republic of Guyana

 
Heads of state at the 1981 Cancun Summit. Burnham is fifth from the left in the back row.
 
Headline in Venezuela's El Nacional newspaper concerning Burnham's unwillingness to cede territory to Venezuela
 
Forbes Burnham presidential standard
 
Burnham at a meeting of the Commonwealth Heads of Government in New Delhi, 1983 (Fourth from left)

In 1980 the constitution was changed to make the presidency an executive post (before this time, the post was held by Arthur Chung in a ceremonial head-of-state role). Burnham won election as president that year, winning 76% of the vote to 20% for Jagan in the official results. International Observers protested that Indo-Guyanese voters were prevented from voting in several polling locations, and there were widespread accusations of vote fraud.[3] This presidential role came with the powers to dissolve Parliament at will, veto legislation, and to appoint or dismiss almost all senior members of government.[3]

Burnham introduced mass games to Guyana. They were first held in February 1980 to commemorate the founding of the Co-operative Republic of Guyana.[77]

Assassination of Walter Rodney

Walter Rodney died on 13 June 1980 in Georgetown at the age of 38 in a car bomb explosion. His brother Donald, who was injured in the explosion, said that a sergeant in the Guyana Defence Force and a member of the House of Israel,[78] named Gregory Smith, had given Rodney the bomb that killed him.[14]

In 2014, Donald Ramotar launched an inquiry into the murder of Rodney despite resistance from the PNC. In 2016, the Commission of Inquiry released findings that state that President Forbes Burnham, aided by the Guyana Defence Force and Guyana Police Force, was part of the conspiracy to assassinate Dr. Walter Rodney. Rodney was the leader of the Working People's Alliance (WPA) which posed a threat to Burnham. Rodney's WPA believed that different ethnic groups (including Afro-Guyanese and Indo-Guyanese) historically disenfranchised by colonialism should all have a part in the governance of Guyana, a position that challenged Burnham's hold on power.[79][14]

Last years of Presidency

In the last years of Burnham's presidency, his quasi-socialist policies led to economic stagnation. Guyana was not able to export sufficient goods (especially Guyana's main exports, bauxite, rice and sugar) to earn the foreign exchange for vital imports, leading to a trade deficit[8] and massive foreign debt.[3] Commodity shortages and a near-breakdown in public services occurred, and Burnham enforced austerity measures and looked for economic support from Soviet-leaning countries.[45] Burnham's authoritarian policies continued to lead to mass emigration,[8] contributing to a net decrease in the population of Guyana that continued throughout the 1980s.[80]

In Burnham's state-controlled economy, Afro-Guyanese held most jobs and the media was government-controlled. Jagan claimed that in addition, economic suppression was also in place, as people remained politically inactive in fear of losing their jobs.[3] Burnham would remain president until his death in 1985.

Political philosophy

Burnham's leadership was characterized by authoritarian rule.[21] According to Dr. Walter Rodney, "Burnham's style of rule has many similarities with that of the late Nicaraguan dictator, Anastasio Somoza. Somoza oppressed not only the exploited classes of his country but also sectors of his own class (the bourgeoisie) who refused to go along with his personal style of political domination."[81]

Walter Rodney referred to Burnham's political philosophy as "pseudo-socialism".[5] Rival Cheddi Jagan said that “Burnham is like a cork in the ocean and moves with the tides.”[36] According to Manning Marable, "The Carter Administration viewed Guyana in the same political league as Somalia and Communist China, a nominal socialist regime which outlawed democratic rights at home and was willing to become a junior partner with US imperialism."[82]

Burnham was a supporter of the Non-Aligned Movement,[3] which Guyana joined in 1970. Membership of the Non-Aligned movement was seen as a cornerstone of Guyana's foreign policy. Burnham's other foreign policies included establishing maintaining membership and good relations within CARICOM[83] (including being a founding member of CARIFTA and being the man behind the first 1972 Caribbean Festival of Arts)[84]) and in the Commonwealth of Nations.[83] Burnham also advocated regionalism.[3]

Burnham was staunchly opposed to apartheid policies. On one occasion, English Cricketer Robin Jackman's visa was rescinded once he arrived in Georgetown due to his connections with apartheid in South Africa, and a boycott of the 1976 Summer Olympics was also put in place by Burnham in protest after the New Zealand national rugby union team had toured South Africa earlier in 1976 and were not banned by the International Olympic Committee. South Africa would award Burnham the Order of the Companions of O. R. Tambo for his support of South African interests.[19]

Burnham made education free during his time in office, including tertiary education.[85][86]

Burnham was accused of corruption during his premiership by opposition parties.[7] Walter Rodney said that "Burnham encourages around himself individuals who are weak or corrupt because he then exercises vicious control over them," and called his administration a "corrupt dictatorship".[82]

Afrocentrist policies and accusations of racism

Burnham's administration has been accused of afrocentrist policies[11] and discrimination against the Indian population.[51] Burnham's administration was mostly Afro-Guyanese.[7] The Guyanese armed forces under the Burnham administration were majority Afro-Guyanese[51] after Burnham purged the armed forces of Indo-Guyanese from 1968,[87] and under the state-controlled economy Afro-Guyanese took up the majority of jobs[3] despite making up a minority of the population.[46] The resettlement of Afro-Guyanese in Amerindian lands was a major contributing factor in the Rupununi Uprising.[52]

Guyanese journalist Freddie Kissoon expressed the opinion that Burnham was not racist, but was aware that his support was predominantly Afro-Guyanese, the Indo-Guyanese would mostly support Jagan, and therefore he had to deliver policies to please the Afro-Guyanese racial group and maintain his popular support.[88] Kissoon went on to criticise Burnham for his authoritarian policies regardless of intention, stating that "The reign of Forbes Burnham was frightening and demoralizing"[89] and also stating that during Burnham's tenure "almost 99 percent of Indian Guyanese felt that Guyana had no place for them and that its president, and his party were treating them as second class citizens," and that Indo-Guyanese "lived in fear of Burnham".[90]

Walter Rodney stated in an essay that a pamphlet by Jessie Burnham[18] described Forbes' "racist attitude towards Indians".[82] In the pamphlet, a letter is shown in which Burnham states "I feel strongly about the Indian attitude but the time has not come yet for me to broadcast those feelings".[18] In 1962, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. stated that Burnham was regarded as racist by the US state department and British colonial office.[91]

Authoritarian policies

Burnham passed many authoritarian policies during his tenure, starting with the "National Security Act" after independence.[1] Burnham would pass laws to restrict movement, increase police powers to search and detain, and restrict firearms.[63] He would come to tightly control media coverage.[3][7] He would also make constitutional changes that would provide him with the power to veto legislation, make further constitutional changes without a referendum, control governmental appointments and dissolve parliament.[3]

Role in state-sanctioned violence

In 2016, Burnham's government was found to be complicit in the assassination of Walter Rodney[79] and has been accused of using violence to break up opposition meetings and gatherings,[67] being complicit in the deliberate arson of government buildings,[12] and having a role in the Murder of Bernard Darke.[13] Burnham was Head of Government when the army killed two Indo-Guyanese poll workers in 1973 (the "Ballot Box Martyrs").[51]

Prior to taking control of the Guyanese government, Burnham was mentioned in police reports in the violent demonstrations of 1963[42] and his PNC party were accused of leading the mobs that caused extensive property damage in the Black Friday riots of 1962.[39]

Covert involvement with the CIA

According to declassified documents from the National Security Archive, From 1962 to 1968 Burnham was provided with support from the Central Intelligence Agency. During this time, Burnham agreed to CIA intervention in Guyana, and received financial assistance in the lead-up to both the 1964 and 1968 elections.[42]

Personal life

Burnham's sister Jessie Burnham was also active in politics, and was one of the first female members of the House of Assembly.[92]

Burnham's first marriage was to Trinidadian Sheila Bernice Lataste-Burnham, having met her in London when they were both students. Lataste was born in Woodbrook. They married in Tranquility Methodist Church, Port of Spain[93] in May 1951.[2] With Lataste, Burnham had three children: Roxanne Van West Charles, Anabelle Pollard and Francesca Onu. The couple would later divorce. Lataste-Burnham died in 2011 at the age of 91.[93]

In February 1967[2] he married high school Latin teacher Viola Victorine Harper (Viola Burnham),[94] who also became involved in politics, serving as Vice President of Guyana under Desmond Hoyte. Viola died in 2003 at the age of 72. With Viola he had two daughters, Melanie[95] and Ulele,[96] and adopted a son, Kamana.[97]

Burnham was a Methodist. His hobbies included swimming and horse-riding, and he also enjoyed playing chess, billiards and patience.[2] He also enjoyed cricket, tennis and fishing.[3]

Burnham lived in Castellani House from 1965 to 1985. During this time it was referred to as "The Residence".[98][99]

Personality

After a meeting in 1962, Thomas J. Dodd described Burnham as "an intelligent, well-educated gentleman". by contrast, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., also in 1962, said that Burnham was regarded as "an unprincipled opportunist, racist and demagogue, only interested in personal power."[91] Jessie Burnham described her brother as ambitious and manipulative.[18] In a book by Neil L. Whitehead, it is claimed that Burnham was superstitious and engaged with obeah, employing an obeah advisor known as Mother Monica and devouring raw duck eggs and 100-year-old Chinese eggs to increase his potency or power.[13]

Death and Burial

 
Tomb of President Forbes Burnham

Burnham died in Georgetown on 6 August 1985 at the age of 62,[1] dying of heart failure during throat surgery.[36][8][24] There are several sources that suggest that Forbes had heart problems in the years leading up to his death, and may have had diabetes. A man who worked for Burnham said he heard that the president had had a "heart scare" about 3 and a half years before his death.[36] The throat surgery was conducted with the assistance of two specialists from Cuba.[100] He was laid to rest in the Botanical Gardens a few days later. After his burial, Burnham's body was exhumed and transported to the Soviet Union to be preserved for permanent display. His body was returned to Guyana for his final burial a year later. The reason why Burnham was receiving throat surgery was never confirmed.[100] It was suggested he may have had a polyp,[36] or had throat cancer.[100] There are also theories as to why Burnham's body was buried after being prepared for permanent open display.[100]

His body lies in Burnham’s Mausoleum (built in 1986) in the Guyana Botanical Gardens in Georgetown. The Mausoleum is built mostly from reinforced concrete, with a floor of granite sourced from the Mazaruni and Upper Essequibo regions. It was designed by Guyanese architect George Henry in a crucifix shape. It is now maintained by the National Trust of Guyana.[16]

Legacy

 
1763 monument, erected by Burnham's administration

Burnham is considered a controversial figure.[1] Burnham's successor, Desmond Hoyte, called Burnham a "great leader".[36] President of Guyana David A. Granger said "He was a brilliant man, a futuristic thinker, a man of honour, having integrity and a high degree of discipline,"[101] and Granger would call Burnham the "author of social cohesion and architect of national unity".[102] Indira Gandhi named Burnham as one of the twentieth century's outstanding figures.[3] Moe Taylor, a historian at the University of British Columbia, called Burnham's premiership a "deeply divisive chapter in Guyana’s recent history."[5] In a review of Burnham's rise to power published in 2020, John Prados characterised Burnham as "corrupt, arbitrary, and self-dealing", and referred to him as "a dictatorial figure".[42]

As of 2022, the two political parties that Burnham founded remain the two most popular and influential parties in Guyanese politics, with Burnham's People's National Congress Reform party now being the most important member in A Partnership for National Unity, and these two parties closely contesting the 2020 Guyanese general election.[103] Support for the two parties continues to follow the racial divide between Afro-Guyanese and Indo-Guyanese.[37]

Burnham's administration put in place many of the national symbols of Guyana during his premiership, including the Flag, the Coat of arms, the National Anthem, the national flower, national bird and the national motto. The 1768 monument to commemorate the Berbice slave uprising and the Non-aligned monument with busts of Nasser, Nkrumah, Nehru, and Tito were both erected during Burnham's premiership. Burnham instituted national holidays including Pagwah, Diwali and Mashramani. National projects completed during his premiership include the Soesdyke-Linden Highway, Demerara Harbour Bridge and Cheddi Jagan International Airport.[3]

Burnham improved women's legal rights in Guyana with the release of the State Paper on Equality for Women in 1976, which was aimed at "securing equality of treatment by employers of men and women workers" and "making sex discrimination unlawful in employment, recruitment, training, education and the provision of housing, goods, services and facilities to the public." Burnham also opened the door to women serving in the Guyana Defense Force.[104]

Guyana obtained massive debts during Burnham's tenure,[3] experienced no GDP growth between 1973 and 1993,[105] and experienced relatively high inflation of around 10% per year in the same period.[106]

Following Burnham's death, Desmond Hoyte became President. The 1985 Guyanese general election was also considered to be fraudulent; the next "free and fair" election would come in 1992, the first fair election since 1964, where Cheddi Jagan was elected President.[15] The Guyanese electoral process remains subject to voter fraud; the 2020 Guyanese general election was marred by an attempt by PNC leader David A. Granger to alter the results, with Bruce Golding stated he had "never seen a more transparent attempt to alter the result of an election."[107]

Awards

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Political offices
Preceded by Prime Minister of Guyana
(until 1966: British Guiana)

1964–1980
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of Guyana
1980–1985
Succeeded by

forbes, burnham, linden, forbes, sampson, burnham, february, 1923, august, 1985, guyanese, politician, leader, operative, republic, guyana, from, 1964, until, death, 1985, served, premier, british, guiana, from, 1964, 1966, prime, minister, guyana, from, 1964,. Linden Forbes Sampson Burnham 20 February 1923 6 August 1985 1 was a Guyanese politician and the leader of the Co operative Republic of Guyana from 1964 until his death in 1985 He served as Premier of British Guiana from 1964 to 1966 Prime Minister of Guyana from 1964 to 1980 and then as the first Executive President of Guyana 2nd President overall from 1980 to 1985 1 He is often regarded as a strongman 4 who embraced his own version of socialism 5 Forbes BurnhamOEBurnham in 19662nd President of GuyanaIn office 6 October 1980 6 August 1985Prime MinisterPtolemy ReidVice PresidentPtolemy ReidShiw Sahai NaraineHugh Desmond HoyteHamilton GreenBishwaishwar RamsaroopMohamed ShahabuddeenRanji ChandisinghPreceded byArthur ChungSucceeded byHugh Desmond Hoyte1st Prime Minister of Guyana British Guiana until 1966 In office 14 December 1964 6 October 1980MonarchElizabeth IIPresidentArthur ChungPreceded byCheddi JaganSucceeded byPtolemy ReidPersonal detailsBornLinden Forbes Sampson Burnham 1 1923 02 20 20 February 1923 1 Kitty Georgetown Demerara County British Guiana 1 Died6 August 1985 1985 08 06 aged 62 1 Georgetown Demerara Mahaica Guyana 1 Resting placeGuyana Botanical GardensPolitical partyBGLP 1949 PPP 1950 1958 PNC 1958 1985 Height1 88 m 6 ft 2 in 3 Spouse s Sheila Bernice Lataste 2 1951 2 1966 Viola Victorine Harper 1967 2 his death RelationsJessie Burnham sister Children6Alma materUniversity of LondonNickname Odo 3 Educated as a lawyer Burnham was instrumental in the foundation of two political parties the People s National Congress and the People s Progressive Party that would come to dominate the Politics of Guyana 3 During his time as Head of Government Guyana moved from being a British colony to being a republic with no constitutional ties to the United Kingdom 6 His premiership was characterized by the nationalisation of foreign owned private industries 1 membership of the Non Aligned Movement 3 and authoritarian domestic policy 7 8 Despite being widely regarded as having a significant role in the political social and economic development of Guyana 9 10 his presidency was marred by accusations of afrocentrism 11 state sanctioned violence 12 13 14 corruption 7 and electoral fraud 15 Contents 1 Early life and Education 2 1949 1955 The People s Progressive Party PPP 2 1 Founding the People s Progressive Party 2 2 Minister of Education 3 1955 1964 Leader of the People s National Congress PNC 3 1 Origins of the People s National Congress 3 2 1961 general election 3 3 The Kaldor Budget and Black Friday 3 4 International intervention in British Guiana 3 5 Lead up to the 1964 election 4 1964 1966 Premier of British Guiana 5 1966 1980 Prime Minister of Guyana 5 1 1968 general election 5 2 Rupununi Uprising and Tigri Area dispute 5 3 Establishment of the Co Operative Republic of Guyana 5 4 Port of Spain Protocol 5 5 Membership of the Non Aligned movement 5 6 House of Israel 5 7 1973 general election 5 8 Declaration of Sophia 5 9 1978 referendum 5 10 Involvement in Jonestown 5 11 1979 Fire and Murder of Bernard Darke 6 1980 1985 President of the Co Operative Republic of Guyana 6 1 Assassination of Walter Rodney 6 2 Last years of Presidency 7 Political philosophy 7 1 Afrocentrist policies and accusations of racism 7 2 Authoritarian policies 7 3 Role in state sanctioned violence 7 4 Covert involvement with the CIA 8 Personal life 8 1 Personality 9 Death and Burial 10 Legacy 11 Awards 12 ReferencesEarly life and Education Edit Queen s college which Burnham attended and where he later worked as an assistant master Burnham was born in Kitty a suburb of Georgetown Demerara County British Guiana 1 as one of three 2 or four Olga Freddie Jessica and Flora 3 children His parents were James Ethelbert Burnham a schoolmaster 2 and Rachel Abigail Sampson 16 and he grew up in an Afro Guyanese Methodist household Burnham s father had his roots in a slave family from Barbados and his family name came from the surname of the plantation owner On the abolition of slavery Burnham s ancestor migrated to British Guiana 17 According to Burnham s sister Jessie the family grew up on 4 Pike Street Kitty Jessie also attests that their father was the headteacher at Kitty Methodist School for 37 years and sat on the Village Council 18 Forbes Burnham attended Kitty Methodist School and Central High School 2 before attending the prestigious secondary school Queen s College where he met future political rival Cheddi Jagan 1 His sister said that Burnham was ambitious from a young age and that he was bullied at Central High School for his small stature and academic prowess 18 At Queen s College Burnham excelled academically receiving the Centenary Exhibition 1936 the Government Junior 1937 and the Percival Exhibition 1938 3 In 1942 he won the British Guiana Scholarship to study at the University of London as the top student in British Guiana 2 Burnham was unable to travel to the United Kingdom due to World War II instead working as an assistant master at Queen s college and completing a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of London through external examinations 3 After he was allowed to travel to London Burnham received a law degree from the London School of Economics 2 at the time a constituent college of the University of London in 1947 1 or 1948 2 and was the President of the West Indian Student Union at the University 2 for the year 1947 1948 3 He went on to pass the bar in 1948 and became a member of Gray s Inn 2 Burnham met many African and Caribbean students including Abubakar Tafawa Balewa of Nigeria Seretse Khama of Botswana and Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana as well as Michael Manley of Jamaica and Errol Barrow of Barbados during his studies in London 19 In London Burnham won the Best Speaker s Cup awarded by the Faculty of Law He also attended the Student s Congresses in Prague and Paris and was a member of the League of Coloured Peoples 3 He left the United Kingdom to return to British Guiana on December 20 1948 departing Liverpool on the Empress of France bound for Halifax Nova Scotia and arrived in Georgetown in 1949 2 1949 1955 The People s Progressive Party PPP EditFounding the People s Progressive Party Edit In 1949 after returning from his studies in the United Kingdom Burnham entered the private law chambers of Cameron and Shepherd 3 before setting up his own private law practice 20 Clarke and Martin 3 Also in 1949 Burnham became the leader of the British Guiana Labour Party BGLP 21 which had been formed in 1946 In the 1947 elections the Labour Party had won 5 of 14 seats in the Legislative Council making them the largest party 22 Less than a year after his return from the United Kingdom Burnham was one of the founders of the People s Progressive Party PPP which was launched on 1 January 1950 The Indo Guyanese labour leader Cheddi Jagan became Leader of the PPP Jagan s wife Janet Jagan became the secretary and Burnham became the first party chairman Jagan had been the leader of the Political Affairs Committee which merged with the BGLP to form the PPP 23 Burnham chose the name of the new party 3 Minister of Education Edit In 1952 Burnham became the president of the party s affiliated trade union the British Guiana Labour Union 24 and was elected to Georgetown City Council in 1953 20 In the 1953 British Guiana general election on 27 April 1953 the PPP won 18 of 24 seats in the first election with universal suffrage in Guyana with both Burnham and his sister Jessie elected to the House of Assembly In the short lived PPP government that followed Burnham served as Minister of Education 24 Burnham initially threatened to split the party if he were not made sole leader of the PPP but a compromise was reached by which Burnham and his allies in the party received ministerial appointments 25 The newly formed government began to dissent against colonial rule refusing to send a delegation to the Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II urging strike action and repealing several laws which the Colonial Office wanted in place This dissent took place during the Red Scare and British statesmen were worried about a possible communist revolution in Guyana Winston Churchill remarked that 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 26 On October 9 1953 the British administration suspended the Constitution of British Guiana and sent in armed troops after the PPP government passed the Labour Relations Act modelled on the Wagner Act 26 the day before marking the end of the PPP government Burnham and Jagan would travel to London to unsuccessfully protest the decision where they were subject to secret surveillance by British intelligence services 27 Following this Burnham and Jagan travelled to India in an unsuccessful attempt to find support for their cause against the British 28 The interim government appointed by the British would last until 1957 29 During the suspension of the constitution the interim government gave Burnham fewer restrictions than other senior members of the party he was not imprisoned while the other senior members were and he was given tacit encouragement to begin a breakaway faction within the party which he would do two years later 26 1955 1964 Leader of the People s National Congress PNC EditOrigins of the People s National Congress Edit Burnham in 1962 serving as Mayor of Georgetown fifth from left in the presence of the Venezuelan mixed commission on Guayana Essequiba and advisors At a conference at the Metropole Cinema in Georgetown on 12 13 February 1955 the PPP split into two factions one led by Burnham Burnhamite 15 and the other by Jagan Jaganite 15 30 Jagan supported a socialist domestic policy 31 32 but Burnham s faction was more moderate 8 The two also had personality differences 33 After the 1957 election where Jagan s faction won 9 seats and Burnham s won only 3 Burnham went on to form the People s National Congress 15 PNC in 1957 2 becoming leader of the opposition 3 The PNC entered its first election under that name in 1961 34 Also in 1957 Burnham became President of the Guyana Bar Association a position he would hold until 1964 2 In 1959 Burnham was elected Mayor of Georgetown a position he would hold until 1964 2 when he was re elected 3 until 1966 20 The United Democratic Party merged with the PNC in 1959 35 The political split deepened the racial division between Afro Guyanese and Indo Guyanese 36 Guyanese politics continues to largely follow racial lines with PPP support mainly of a South Asian background and PNC support mostly of African descent 37 This would follow the rural urban divide as well Afro Guyanese tending to live in urban coastal areas and Indo Guyanese tending to live in rural interior areas 3 After the split Jagan s PPP and Burnham s PNC largely became the political expressions of the Indo Guyanese and Afro Guyanese aspirations respectively and advocated for their supporter s interests 38 1961 general election Edit Main article 1961 British Guiana general election In the 1961 election Burnham s PNC party won 11 seats in the Legislative Assembly with 41 of the vote Despite only winning 1 64 more of the vote than the PNC the PPP won 20 seats nearly double the number of seats won by the PPP This led to mass demonstrations racial tensions and a general strike The Governor declared a state of emergency and British troops were deployed 15 The Kaldor Budget and Black Friday Edit On 31 January 1962 the PPP government announced what would later be known as the Kaldor Budget advised by economist Nicholas Kaldor including an increase in tax and import duty which was opposed by opposition parties who started taking action against the government including mass demonstrations led by the PNC According to the Wynn Parry Commission on February 12 Burnham gave the following speech Comrades the fight starts now Tomorrow at 2 o clock in the afternoon there is a demonstration organized by the Trade Union Congress a demonstration against the harsh proposals of the budget which make life unbearable No doubt the Riot Squad will be there Do you still want to go Comrades remember that tomorrow Jagan s army is coming down from Cane Grove and Windsor Forest Do you still want to go 39 the mass action would culminate February 16 1962 later called Black Friday 56 businesses were destroyed 87 damaged by fire and 66 were looted One Police Superintendent was killed and 39 injured while four looters were fatally shot and 41 injured The rioters also attacked the Electricity Plant the Water Works Parliament and Jagan s residence 39 The riots were responded to by HMS Troubridge R00 and HMS Wizard R72 Black smoke covered Georgetown and a large fire was evident 40 International intervention in British Guiana Edit According to declassified documents in the early 1960s The United States Government led by John F Kennedy became increasingly convinced that Jagan s PPP government had communist ideals Due to the radical views of Cheddi Jagan who leaned towards communism and Jagan s alliances with the Soviet Union and Cuba Burnham was supported by Western nations 41 In May 1962 Kennedy held direct talks with British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan and Burnham visited Washington Senior officials in the United States decided that Burnham s proposed socialism was preferable to Jagan s ideology but also concluded that Jagan would become Head of Government of an independent Guyana without US intervention Burnham readily agreed to US action against Jagan In 1962 Kennedy approved intervention against Jagan s government Independence was delayed by British officials allowing time for a covert operation by the Central Intelligence Agency Both Peter D Aguiar leader of the third largest party The United Force and Burnham pledged to support the notion of proportional representation opposed by Jagan and Burnham began to receive financial aid from the CIA 42 Burnham was appointed as President of the Guyana Labour Union in 1963 2 The CIA has been accused of assisting strike action against the PPP government beginning in 1963 This action would eventually turn to violence with arson and bombing at government buildings Burnham was mentioned in police reports 42 Lead up to the 1964 election Edit In 1963 further talks between President Kennedy and British Prime Minister Macmillan led to the British decision to impose a December 1964 election using proportional representation after which British Guiana would be granted independence The Americans received assurances from Burnham and D Aguiar that they would mutually support each other in the election and US money would be used for political campaigning The lead up to the election was marked by widespread violence with nearly 200 murders and 2 600 families displaced 42 A series of racially motivated incidents took place in and around Linden including the Wismar Massacre on 26 May the sinking of the Sun Chapman on 6 July and the following murders of 5 Indo Guyanese individuals at Mackenzie 43 In one incident in August 1964 Jagan Burnham and d Aguiar were conferring about reducing the spate of violence when the headquarters of the PPP were bombed just down the street 42 Just before the election the CIA estimated that the PPP and PNC would take about 40 percent of the vote United Force would take 15 percent and the false flag Justice Party aimed at Indo Guyanese voters and backed by the CIA would take 5 percent 42 1964 1966 Premier of British Guiana Edit Burnham in the presence of Queen Elizabeth II in February 1966 during her state visit to British Guiana In the 1964 election on 7 December 1964 Jagan s PPP won the highest percentage of the vote 46 to the PNC s 41 but it did not win a majority Burnham succeeded in forming a coalition with the United Force TUF which had won the remaining 12 of the votes and became premier of British Guiana on 14 December 2 Jagan refused to resign and had to be removed by Governor Richard Luyt 15 Burnham would remain as Head of Government of Guyana for the next 21 years In 1965 Burnham along with Errol Barrow of Barbados were the founders of the Caribbean Free Trade Association CARIFTA which came into operation on 1 May 1968 CARIFTA would in 1973 be superceded by CARICOM 44 On 26 May 1966 British Guiana became an independent country and was renamed Guyana 45 Under the country s constitution the Head of State would be the British monarch represented in Guyana by the governor general who served in a largely ceremonial capacity and the Head of Government would be the Prime Minister Forbes appointed by a majority in the National Assembly 6 1966 1980 Prime Minister of Guyana EditIn one of Burnham s first acts upon independence he passed a sweeping National Security Act permitting unrestricted search and seizure powers and the ability to detain individuals for up to 90 days without trial 1 Burnham still had a significant electoral disadvantage as voting support mostly followed racial lines and about 50 of the Guyanese population on independence was Indo Guyanese 46 and would likely support Jagan s PPP making a fair election nearly impossible to win for Burnham 47 A telegram from the US Ambassador stated that he intends to remain in power indefinitely and if necessary he is prepared to employ unorthodox methods to achieve his aims 47 In a meeting with US President Lyndon B Johnson in July 1966 Burnham discussed a scheme to promote immigration of Afro Caribbean people in an effort to improve his electoral chances in the 1968 election This scheme was unsuccessful 47 In 1967 Burnham stated that overseas vote figures could be manipulated pretty much as he wished Burnham later stated that he would identify and register all Guyanese of African ancestry in the United Kingdom Canada and the United States in order to get their absentee votes in the next election and suggested that Indo Guyanese living abroad may have trouble getting registered or receiving ballots 47 In October 1966 Venezuelan soldiers occupied Ankoko Island in Guayana Esequiba Burnham demanded the withdrawal of Venezuelan armed forces but his request was denied 48 1968 general election Edit Main article 1968 Guyanese general election The PNC attained a majority government in the general elections of 1968 through electoral fraud using an inflated overseas vote to skew the results in their favor 49 15 50 The PNC won 93 7 of the 36 745 overseas ballots allowing Burnham to claim an absolute majority An independent review by the Opinion Research Center of London was only able to verify 15 of the entries on the overseas list 3 An investigation looking into the identity of some of the voters found that two horses near Manchester a closed butcher s shop in Brooklyn and a railway in London had been counted as registered voters and there were many addresses where the reported voters had never been resident Only just over 100 voters of 900 checked in the United Kingdom were genuine and in New York only 40 were genuine Peter D Aguiar called it a seizure of power by fraud not an election 51 Rupununi Uprising and Tigri Area dispute Edit Main article Rupununi Uprising Main article Tigri Area In 1968 a conference of 40 000 Amerindian people presented demands to Burnham being dissatisfied with his afrocentrist policies 11 The Agriculture Minister declared that the inhabitants land ownership certifications would no longer be recognized and the zone would be occupied by the Afro Guyanese population 52 A provisional secessionist government was declared and attacks on Lethem began The uprising was ultimately quelled by the Guyana Defence Force GDF 53 In 1969 following the establishment of Camp Tigri by Surinamese authorities the Guyana Defense Force would take Camp Tigri and assert authority over the Tigri Area 54 Guyana continues to hold the camp despite a 1970 agreement to withdraw military forces 55 Establishment of the Co Operative Republic of Guyana Edit Before 1970 Burnham mostly pursued moderate political policies 8 In 1970 he veered sharply to the left and established relations with Cuba 8 December 1972 56 and the Soviet Union 17 December 1970 57 and a strong relationship with North Korea 58 On 23 February of that year he declared Guyana a co operative republic 1 Adopting a policy of autarky he banned all forms of imports into the country including flour and varieties of rice that had been integral to the diet of Guyanese Burnham also nationalised the major industries that were foreign owned and controlled 1 By 1979 his policies had reduced the private sector s share in the economy to only 10 8 In declaring the Co Operative republic Burnham replaced the Head of State removing the British Monarch and installing Arthur Chung as the first president in a mostly ceremonial role though Guyana remained a member of the Commonwealth of Nations 6 Port of Spain Protocol Edit On 18 June 1970 Burnham signed the Port of Spain Protocol with Venezuela The protocol in place for 12 years promoted co operation between the two countries on the Border Dispute in Guayana Esequiba 59 The protocol was not renewed after 12 years 60 Membership of the Non Aligned movement Edit Burnham after attending the 1970 summit of the Non Aligned Movement in Lusaka Zambia paid official visits to several African countries Zambia Uganda Kenya Tanzania and Ethiopia over the period 12 30 September 1970 The Guyanese government remained fully involved in the African liberation movement throughout the 1970s 19 Burnham sent more than a hundred Guyanese public servants to various departments of the Zambian Government Many Guyanese doctors engineers lawyers and secretaries worked in Southern African states throughout the 1970s 19 House of Israel Edit Main article House of Israel In 1972 Rabbi David Hill arrived in Guyana He established the House of Israel a religious sect that the opposition would accuse of operating as a private army for Burnham s PNC 61 In 2014 Joseph Hamilton a former House of Israel priest testified that the House of Israel committed oppressive and terrorizing acts on behalf of the PNC 62 1973 general election Edit Main article 1973 Guyanese general election In the 1973 general election Burnham received 70 of the vote and 37 of the 53 seats in the National Assembly It is generally accepted that Burnham had significant influence on the results of the elections and the elections were fraudulent 15 During the transportation of ballot boxes by the military the army shot dead two Indo Guyanese poll workers who became known as the Ballot Box Martyrs 51 Shortly after the election Burnham expanded powers of preventative detention allowing for restrictions on movement possession of firearms and search without warrant 63 Declaration of Sophia Edit Main article Declaration of Sophia On 14 December 1974 Burnham issued the Declaration of Sophia where he stated that the Party should assume unapologetically its paramountcy over the Government which is merely one of its executive arms 64 The Declaration also called for a transition to a socialist state and a nationalisation of its economy 65 The declaration would also lead to the founding of the Guyana National Service a paramilitary organisation under the control of the party 66 1978 referendum Edit Main article 1978 Guyanese constitutional referendum The PNC government s five year term was due to end in 1978 forcing a new election On 1 April 1978 Burnham announced a referendum to allow the constitution to be changed by a 2 3 majority in parliament which the PNC had rather than a referendum The opposition presented a united front against the referendum During the campaign the PNC terminated the contract of critical newspaper the Catholic Standard with a state owned printing company hampering their ability to distribute critical material Advertisements for opposition parties were banned in state media and violence was used to break up opposition meetings and gatherings Public employees were forced to sign blank proxy forms allowing others to vote on their behalf It was also noted that there were more individuals on the electoral role than the United Nations estimate of the number of eligible voters by around 65 000 people gt 10 of the electoral roll The opposition groups would eventually urge the Guyanese population to boycott the referendum 67 During this time prominent Guyanese poet Martin Carter was beaten by individuals affiliated with the PNC while protesting the government s refusal to hold elections 68 Burnham won the 1978 referendum Anecdotal evidence from hundreds of Indo Guyanese and Afro Guyanese who were PPP supporters claims that PNC enforcers aggressively and often violently denied PPP supporters of the opportunity to vote Official figures showed the referendum passing with an implausible 97 9 percent of the vote 15 There were accusations that PNC supporters voted multiple times 67 One week after the referendum On 17 July 1978 the government used its new powers to change the constitution to postpone the scheduled election These powers would also be used to introduce the new constitution introduced in 1980 67 Involvement in Jonestown Edit Main article Jonestown On 18 November 1978 a total of 909 people of the Peoples Temple died in a mass suicide in Jonestown Burnham had previously allowed the group led by Jim Jones to move to Guyana from San Francisco 36 and had a good relationship with the group The incident drew international attention to Guyana 36 and an inquest established by the opposition blamed Burnham for the deaths 69 Burnham was considered an ally of Jones 12 There are suggestions that Burnham s government participated in a cover up of the affair Burnham s wife Viola and his Deputy Prime Minister Ptolemy Reid were among the first to the scene and may have returned from the massacre site with nearly 1 million in cash gold and jewelry In addition one of Burnham s secretaries may have visited Jonestown only hours before it occurred a visit that was never explained 70 1979 Fire and Murder of Bernard Darke Edit Main article Murder of Bernard Darke In 1979 a fire destroyed many of the official government records including official communications with the Peoples Temple There is some speculation that the fire was started deliberately by Burnham s government and there are reports that men in Guyana Defense Force uniforms were seen running from the fire 12 Two different government offices were burned Walter Rodney was arrested and charged with arson The trial was deferred three times and later dropped due to lack of evidence 71 During civil unrest after the fire and arrest Jesuit Priest Bernard Darke was stabbed to death by members of the House of Israel 72 73 74 a religious cult closely associated with Burnham and his PNC party 13 Darke was associated with the Catholic Standard a newspaper described as being extremely critical of the PNC 73 According to a 2013 article by Kaieteur News the editor of Catholic News Andrew Morrison may have been the target of this attack making it a failed assassination attempt 75 76 1980 1985 President of the Co Operative Republic of Guyana Edit Heads of state at the 1981 Cancun Summit Burnham is fifth from the left in the back row Headline in Venezuela s El Nacional newspaper concerning Burnham s unwillingness to cede territory to Venezuela Forbes Burnham presidential standard Burnham at a meeting of the Commonwealth Heads of Government in New Delhi 1983 Fourth from left In 1980 the constitution was changed to make the presidency an executive post before this time the post was held by Arthur Chung in a ceremonial head of state role Burnham won election as president that year winning 76 of the vote to 20 for Jagan in the official results International Observers protested that Indo Guyanese voters were prevented from voting in several polling locations and there were widespread accusations of vote fraud 3 This presidential role came with the powers to dissolve Parliament at will veto legislation and to appoint or dismiss almost all senior members of government 3 Burnham introduced mass games to Guyana They were first held in February 1980 to commemorate the founding of the Co operative Republic of Guyana 77 Assassination of Walter Rodney Edit Main article Assassination of Walter Rodney Walter Rodney died on 13 June 1980 in Georgetown at the age of 38 in a car bomb explosion His brother Donald who was injured in the explosion said that a sergeant in the Guyana Defence Force and a member of the House of Israel 78 named Gregory Smith had given Rodney the bomb that killed him 14 In 2014 Donald Ramotar launched an inquiry into the murder of Rodney despite resistance from the PNC In 2016 the Commission of Inquiry released findings that state that President Forbes Burnham aided by the Guyana Defence Force and Guyana Police Force was part of the conspiracy to assassinate Dr Walter Rodney Rodney was the leader of the Working People s Alliance WPA which posed a threat to Burnham Rodney s WPA believed that different ethnic groups including Afro Guyanese and Indo Guyanese historically disenfranchised by colonialism should all have a part in the governance of Guyana a position that challenged Burnham s hold on power 79 14 Last years of Presidency Edit In the last years of Burnham s presidency his quasi socialist policies led to economic stagnation Guyana was not able to export sufficient goods especially Guyana s main exports bauxite rice and sugar to earn the foreign exchange for vital imports leading to a trade deficit 8 and massive foreign debt 3 Commodity shortages and a near breakdown in public services occurred and Burnham enforced austerity measures and looked for economic support from Soviet leaning countries 45 Burnham s authoritarian policies continued to lead to mass emigration 8 contributing to a net decrease in the population of Guyana that continued throughout the 1980s 80 In Burnham s state controlled economy Afro Guyanese held most jobs and the media was government controlled Jagan claimed that in addition economic suppression was also in place as people remained politically inactive in fear of losing their jobs 3 Burnham would remain president until his death in 1985 Political philosophy EditBurnham s leadership was characterized by authoritarian rule 21 According to Dr Walter Rodney Burnham s style of rule has many similarities with that of the late Nicaraguan dictator Anastasio Somoza Somoza oppressed not only the exploited classes of his country but also sectors of his own class the bourgeoisie who refused to go along with his personal style of political domination 81 Walter Rodney referred to Burnham s political philosophy as pseudo socialism 5 Rival Cheddi Jagan said that Burnham is like a cork in the ocean and moves with the tides 36 According to Manning Marable The Carter Administration viewed Guyana in the same political league as Somalia and Communist China a nominal socialist regime which outlawed democratic rights at home and was willing to become a junior partner with US imperialism 82 Burnham was a supporter of the Non Aligned Movement 3 which Guyana joined in 1970 Membership of the Non Aligned movement was seen as a cornerstone of Guyana s foreign policy Burnham s other foreign policies included establishing maintaining membership and good relations within CARICOM 83 including being a founding member of CARIFTA and being the man behind the first 1972 Caribbean Festival of Arts 84 and in the Commonwealth of Nations 83 Burnham also advocated regionalism 3 Burnham was staunchly opposed to apartheid policies On one occasion English Cricketer Robin Jackman s visa was rescinded once he arrived in Georgetown due to his connections with apartheid in South Africa and a boycott of the 1976 Summer Olympics was also put in place by Burnham in protest after the New Zealand national rugby union team had toured South Africa earlier in 1976 and were not banned by the International Olympic Committee South Africa would award Burnham the Order of the Companions of O R Tambo for his support of South African interests 19 Burnham made education free during his time in office including tertiary education 85 86 Burnham was accused of corruption during his premiership by opposition parties 7 Walter Rodney said that Burnham encourages around himself individuals who are weak or corrupt because he then exercises vicious control over them and called his administration a corrupt dictatorship 82 Afrocentrist policies and accusations of racism Edit Burnham s administration has been accused of afrocentrist policies 11 and discrimination against the Indian population 51 Burnham s administration was mostly Afro Guyanese 7 The Guyanese armed forces under the Burnham administration were majority Afro Guyanese 51 after Burnham purged the armed forces of Indo Guyanese from 1968 87 and under the state controlled economy Afro Guyanese took up the majority of jobs 3 despite making up a minority of the population 46 The resettlement of Afro Guyanese in Amerindian lands was a major contributing factor in the Rupununi Uprising 52 Guyanese journalist Freddie Kissoon expressed the opinion that Burnham was not racist but was aware that his support was predominantly Afro Guyanese the Indo Guyanese would mostly support Jagan and therefore he had to deliver policies to please the Afro Guyanese racial group and maintain his popular support 88 Kissoon went on to criticise Burnham for his authoritarian policies regardless of intention stating that The reign of Forbes Burnham was frightening and demoralizing 89 and also stating that during Burnham s tenure almost 99 percent of Indian Guyanese felt that Guyana had no place for them and that its president and his party were treating them as second class citizens and that Indo Guyanese lived in fear of Burnham 90 Walter Rodney stated in an essay that a pamphlet by Jessie Burnham 18 described Forbes racist attitude towards Indians 82 In the pamphlet a letter is shown in which Burnham states I feel strongly about the Indian attitude but the time has not come yet for me to broadcast those feelings 18 In 1962 Arthur M Schlesinger Jr stated that Burnham was regarded as racist by the US state department and British colonial office 91 Authoritarian policies Edit Burnham passed many authoritarian policies during his tenure starting with the National Security Act after independence 1 Burnham would pass laws to restrict movement increase police powers to search and detain and restrict firearms 63 He would come to tightly control media coverage 3 7 He would also make constitutional changes that would provide him with the power to veto legislation make further constitutional changes without a referendum control governmental appointments and dissolve parliament 3 Role in state sanctioned violence Edit In 2016 Burnham s government was found to be complicit in the assassination of Walter Rodney 79 and has been accused of using violence to break up opposition meetings and gatherings 67 being complicit in the deliberate arson of government buildings 12 and having a role in the Murder of Bernard Darke 13 Burnham was Head of Government when the army killed two Indo Guyanese poll workers in 1973 the Ballot Box Martyrs 51 Prior to taking control of the Guyanese government Burnham was mentioned in police reports in the violent demonstrations of 1963 42 and his PNC party were accused of leading the mobs that caused extensive property damage in the Black Friday riots of 1962 39 Covert involvement with the CIA Edit According to declassified documents from the National Security Archive From 1962 to 1968 Burnham was provided with support from the Central Intelligence Agency During this time Burnham agreed to CIA intervention in Guyana and received financial assistance in the lead up to both the 1964 and 1968 elections 42 Personal life EditBurnham s sister Jessie Burnham was also active in politics and was one of the first female members of the House of Assembly 92 Burnham s first marriage was to Trinidadian Sheila Bernice Lataste Burnham having met her in London when they were both students Lataste was born in Woodbrook They married in Tranquility Methodist Church Port of Spain 93 in May 1951 2 With Lataste Burnham had three children Roxanne Van West Charles Anabelle Pollard and Francesca Onu The couple would later divorce Lataste Burnham died in 2011 at the age of 91 93 In February 1967 2 he married high school Latin teacher Viola Victorine Harper Viola Burnham 94 who also became involved in politics serving as Vice President of Guyana under Desmond Hoyte Viola died in 2003 at the age of 72 With Viola he had two daughters Melanie 95 and Ulele 96 and adopted a son Kamana 97 Burnham was a Methodist His hobbies included swimming and horse riding and he also enjoyed playing chess billiards and patience 2 He also enjoyed cricket tennis and fishing 3 Burnham lived in Castellani House from 1965 to 1985 During this time it was referred to as The Residence 98 99 Personality Edit After a meeting in 1962 Thomas J Dodd described Burnham as an intelligent well educated gentleman by contrast Arthur M Schlesinger Jr also in 1962 said that Burnham was regarded as an unprincipled opportunist racist and demagogue only interested in personal power 91 Jessie Burnham described her brother as ambitious and manipulative 18 In a book by Neil L Whitehead it is claimed that Burnham was superstitious and engaged with obeah employing an obeah advisor known as Mother Monica and devouring raw duck eggs and 100 year old Chinese eggs to increase his potency or power 13 Death and Burial Edit Tomb of President Forbes Burnham Burnham died in Georgetown on 6 August 1985 at the age of 62 1 dying of heart failure during throat surgery 36 8 24 There are several sources that suggest that Forbes had heart problems in the years leading up to his death and may have had diabetes A man who worked for Burnham said he heard that the president had had a heart scare about 3 and a half years before his death 36 The throat surgery was conducted with the assistance of two specialists from Cuba 100 He was laid to rest in the Botanical Gardens a few days later After his burial Burnham s body was exhumed and transported to the Soviet Union to be preserved for permanent display His body was returned to Guyana for his final burial a year later The reason why Burnham was receiving throat surgery was never confirmed 100 It was suggested he may have had a polyp 36 or had throat cancer 100 There are also theories as to why Burnham s body was buried after being prepared for permanent open display 100 His body lies in Burnham s Mausoleum built in 1986 in the Guyana Botanical Gardens in Georgetown The Mausoleum is built mostly from reinforced concrete with a floor of granite sourced from the Mazaruni and Upper Essequibo regions It was designed by Guyanese architect George Henry in a crucifix shape It is now maintained by the National Trust of Guyana 16 Legacy Edit 1763 monument erected by Burnham s administration Burnham is considered a controversial figure 1 Burnham s successor Desmond Hoyte called Burnham a great leader 36 President of Guyana David A Granger said He was a brilliant man a futuristic thinker a man of honour having integrity and a high degree of discipline 101 and Granger would call Burnham the author of social cohesion and architect of national unity 102 Indira Gandhi named Burnham as one of the twentieth century s outstanding figures 3 Moe Taylor a historian at the University of British Columbia called Burnham s premiership a deeply divisive chapter in Guyana s recent history 5 In a review of Burnham s rise to power published in 2020 John Prados characterised Burnham as corrupt arbitrary and self dealing and referred to him as a dictatorial figure 42 As of 2022 the two political parties that Burnham founded remain the two most popular and influential parties in Guyanese politics with Burnham s People s National Congress Reform party now being the most important member in A Partnership for National Unity and these two parties closely contesting the 2020 Guyanese general election 103 Support for the two parties continues to follow the racial divide between Afro Guyanese and Indo Guyanese 37 Burnham s administration put in place many of the national symbols of Guyana during his premiership including the Flag the Coat of arms the National Anthem the national flower national bird and the national motto The 1768 monument to commemorate the Berbice slave uprising and the Non aligned monument with busts of Nasser Nkrumah Nehru and Tito were both erected during Burnham s premiership Burnham instituted national holidays including Pagwah Diwali and Mashramani National projects completed during his premiership include the Soesdyke Linden Highway Demerara Harbour Bridge and Cheddi Jagan International Airport 3 Burnham improved women s legal rights in Guyana with the release of the State Paper on Equality for Women in 1976 which was aimed at securing equality of treatment by employers of men and women workers and making sex discrimination unlawful in employment recruitment training education and the provision of housing goods services and facilities to the public Burnham also opened the door to women serving in the Guyana Defense Force 104 Guyana obtained massive debts during Burnham s tenure 3 experienced no GDP growth between 1973 and 1993 105 and experienced relatively high inflation of around 10 per year in the same period 106 Following Burnham s death Desmond Hoyte became President The 1985 Guyanese general election was also considered to be fraudulent the next free and fair election would come in 1992 the first fair election since 1964 where Cheddi Jagan was elected President 15 The Guyanese electoral process remains subject to voter fraud the 2020 Guyanese general election was marred by an attempt by PNC leader David A Granger to alter the results with Bruce Golding stated he had never seen a more transparent attempt to alter the result of an election 107 Awards EditOrder of Excellence of Guyana 1973 108 Order of Jose Marti Cuba 1975 101 Grand Cordon of the Order of the Nile Egypt 101 1975 2 Honorary doctorate Dalhousie University 1977 109 Ordem Nacional do Cruzeiro do Sul Brazil 1983 101 Star of Planina Order of the Balkan Mountains Bulgaria 1984 101 Order of the Red Star Yugoslavia 1985 101 Order of the Companions of O R Tambo South Africa 2013 110 Order of the National Flag First Class Democratic People s Republic of Korea 3 References Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Francis Berl 18 March 2015 Forbes Burnham 1923 1985 www blackpast org Black Past Retrieved 1 January 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Reece Maggie 6 January 2012 Linden Forbes Sampson Burnham February 20 1923 August 6 1985 Guyana Graphic Retrieved 1 January 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad Forbes Burnham encyclopedia com encyclopedia com Retrieved 1 January 2023 George K Danns 1 January 1982 Domination and Power in Guyana A Study of the Police in a Third World Context Transaction Publishers pp 141 ISBN 978 1 4128 2190 2 a b c Moe Tyler 26 March 2020 Walter Rodney Forbes Burnham and the specter of pseudo socialism Canadian Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies 45 2 193 211 doi 10 1080 08263663 2020 1733850 S2CID 216304044 Retrieved 1 January 2023 a b c This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Georges A Fauriol January 1992 Independence Constitution In Merrill ed Guyana and Belize country studies Federal Research Division Library of Congress LCCN 93010956 a b c d e Treaster Joseph B 13 October 1979 Guyana s President Facing Biggest Challenge in 15 Years New York Times Retrieved 4 January 2023 a b c d e f g Ray Michael Forbes Burnham www britannica com Britannica Retrieved 1 January 2023 THE LIFE amp LEGACY OF LFS BURNHAM Part 1 Kaieteur News 8 August 2010 Retrieved 3 January 2023 Granger pays glowing tribute to Forbes Burnham Guyana Times International Guyana Times 11 August 2017 Retrieved 3 January 2023 a b c Gonzalez Pedro 1991 La Reclamacion de la Guayana Esequiba Caracas a b c d Jim Jones and the Guyana Government A Symbiotic Relationship jonestown sdsu edu San Diego State University Retrieved 2 January 2023 a b c d Vidal Silvia Whitehead Neil L 2004 Dark Shamans and the Shamanic State In Whitehead Neil L Wright Robin eds In Darkness and Secrecy The Anthropology of Assault Sorcery and Witchcraft in Amazonia Duke University Press pp 74 75 ISBN 9780822333456 Retrieved 14 May 2015 a b c Azikiwe Abayomi 28 February 2016 Guyana commission confirms Burnham gov t murdered Walter Rodney Workers World Retrieved 16 March 2021 a b c d e f g h i j Nohlen D 2005 Elections in the Americas A data handbook Volume I p355 ISBN 978 0 19 928357 6 a b Burnham s Mausoleum ntg gov gy National Trust of Guyana Retrieved 1 January 2023 Samaroo Shaun Michael 7 August 2014 How we feel about Burnham and Jagan Stabroek News Retrieved 2 January 2023 a b c d e Burnham Jessie Beware My Brother PDF jagan org People s Progressive Party Retrieved 1 January 2023 a b c d David A Granger Forbes Burnham and the Liberation of Southern Africa PDF Archived from the original PDF on 8 December 2015 Retrieved 1 August 2015 a b c Appiah Anthony 2005 Africana The Encyclopedia of the African and African American Experience 2 ed Oxford Oxford University Press Retrieved 2 January 2015 a b Guyana general and regional elections 2001 report of the Commonwealth Observer Group aceproject org Commonwealth Observer Group Retrieved 1 January 2023 The 1947 parliamentary elections in colonial British Guiana Stabroek News 6 May 2010 History of the PPP PPP website a b c Biographies of former presidents Archived 28 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine GINA Guyana PREINDEPENDENCE GOVERNMENT 1953 66 countrystudies us Retrieved 19 February 2021 a b c Bahadur Gaiutra 30 October 2020 In 1953 Britain openly removed an elected government with tragic consequences The Guardian Retrieved 2 January 2023 Examining the secret surveillance of Jagan and Burnham during 1953 visit to Britain Stabroek News 9 January 2022 Retrieved 2 January 2023 Sires Ronald V December 1954 British Guiana the Suspension of the Constitution Western Political Quarterly 7 4 536 720 doi 10 1177 106591295400700403 S2CID 153730642 Retrieved 1 January 2023 Guyana The Interim Government 1953 57 countrystudies us Retrieved 19 February 2021 The Life and Legacy of LFS Burnham Conclusion Kaieteur News 29 August 2010 Retrieved 2 January 2023 The Guyana story from prehistory to independence Cheddi Jagan s the West on trial Guyana Political Parties globalsecurity org Global Security Retrieved 3 January 2023 http www guyana org features guyanastory chapter133 html see also Forbidden Freedom by Cheddi Jagan The organisation of the PNC Guyana org a b c d e f g h Long William R 7 August 1985 Guyana s President Burnham Dies at 62 Los Angeles Times Retrieved 1 January 2023 a b Palash R Ghosh 28 November 2011 Guyana Elections Expected to Break Down According to Racial Lines IB Times International Business Times Retrieved 3 January 2023 Collins B A N June 1966 Independence for Guyana The World Today 22 6 260 268 JSTOR 40393870 Retrieved 3 January 2023 a b c Seeram Ralph 30 March 2014 Kaldor Budget and Black Friday February 16 1962 commentary Guyana Online Retrieved 3 January 2023 Pfennigwerth Ian 4 March 2007 Georgetown Guiana The Riots of February 1962 Naval Historical Society of Australia Retrieved 3 January 2023 Jagan C 1994 Forgotten Freedom Hansib Publications Limited Guyana 3rd edition a b c d e f g h Prados John CIA Covert Operations The 1964 Overthrow of Cheddi Jagan in British Guiana nsarchive gwu edu National Security Archive Retrieved 2 January 2023 Shah Ryaan 21 May 2017 The Wismar Massacre Guyana Times Retrieved 2 January 2023 The 2009 ERROL BARROW MEMORIAL LECTURE PDF Archived from the original PDF on 21 October 2013 Retrieved 14 September 2012 a b Richardson Bonham C Guyana Independence Britannica Britannica Retrieved 2 January 2023 a b United Nations Statistics Division Demographic and Social Statistics unstats un org Retrieved 3 October 2017 a b c d Ramharack Baytoram 14 November 2014 Rethinking Forbes Burnham Revelations from the 303 Committee on laying the foundation for Guyana s dictatorship Stabroek News Retrieved 3 January 2023 Raul Leoni paro en seco a Guyana en la Isla Anacoco documento La Patilla 26 September 2011 Archived from the original on 2 December 2011 Retrieved 17 January 2020 Ishmael Odeen 29 September 2005 The December 1968 Electoral Fraud in Guyana www guyanajournal com Guyana Journal Retrieved 10 March 2022 Westmaas Nigel 2009 1968 and the Social and Political Foundations and Impact of the New Politics in Guyana Caribbean Studies Institute of Caribbean Studies UPR Rio Piedras Campus 37 2 110 111 JSTOR 25702371 Retrieved 10 March 2022 a b c d e Bahadur Gaiutra 2 August 2015 Guyana CIA Meddling Race Riots and a Phantom Death Squad Pulitzer Center Retrieved 3 January 2023 a b Guyana De Rupununi a La Haya En El Tapete in Spanish 4 July 2020 Retrieved 13 March 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Braveboy Wagner Jacqueline Anne 2019 The Venezuela Guyana Border Dispute Britain s Colonial Legacy In Latin America Routledge ISBN 9781000306897 De Gids Jaargang 133 Digital Library for Dutch Literature in Dutch 1970 Retrieved 16 June 2020 Tracy 12 May 2014 Suriname Guyana in Dispute Over Mineral Rich Land Atlanta Black Star Retrieved 27 February 2021 President praises massive Cuban contribution to Guyana s development Stabroek News 23 December 2022 Retrieved 2 January 2023 Ginsburgs George Slusser Robert M 1981 A calendar of Soviet treaties 1958 1973 BRILL p 819 ISBN 90 286 0609 2 Retrieved 17 July 2009 Farley Robert 28 June 2016 A Strange Cold War Partnership North Korea and Guyana The Diplomat Retrieved 2 January 2023 Port of Spain Protocol PDF peacemaker un org United Nations Retrieved 2 January 2023 Secretary General Chooses International Court of Justice as Means for Peacefully Settling Long Standing Guyana Venezuela Border Controversy UN 30 January 2018 Nishani Frazier The Other Jim Jones Rabbi David Hill House of Israel and Black American Religion in the Age of Peoples Temple San Diego State University Retrieved 23 November 2021 Corbin delivered guns to House of Israel Guyana Chronicle 3 June 2014 Retrieved 23 November 2011 a b Legislative acts as a form of social control British emergency detention bill and the preventive detention act 1966 1991 Stabroek News 29 March 2012 Retrieved 3 January 2023 The State under Burnham Guyana Times International 4 March 2016 Retrieved 6 December 2021 Chandisingh Rajendra 1983 The State the Economy and Type of Rule in Guyana An Assessment of Guyana s Socialist Revolution Latin American Perspectives 10 4 59 74 doi 10 1177 0094582X8301000405 ISSN 0094 582X JSTOR 2633448 S2CID 145724717 David A Granger 10 December 2008 The Guyana National Service Stabroek News Retrieved 6 December 2021 a b c d Ishmael Odeen The Rigged Referendum of 1978 guyanajournal com Guyana Journal Retrieved 3 January 2023 Martin Carter poetryfoundation org Poetry Foundation Retrieved 4 January 2023 Reiterman amp Jacobs 1982 p 576harvnb error no target CITEREFReitermanJacobs1982 help Judge John The Black Hole of Guyana The Untold Story of the Jonestown Massacre jonestown sdsu edu San Diego State University Retrieved 2 January 2023 Edward Kamau Brathwaite June 1981 A poem for Walter Rodney Index on Censorship The Caribbean 10 6 26 doi 10 1080 03064228108533287 S2CID 152261408 Retrieved 23 November 2021 Thirty Years Since Guyana Based Priest s Murder Bahamas Spectator The Caribbean World News Network 14 July 2009 Retrieved 14 May 2015 a b Rose Euclid A 2002 Guyana The Adoption of Cooperative Socialism Dependency and Socialism in the Modern Caribbean Superpower Intervention in Guyana Jamaica and Grenada 1970 1985 Lanham Massachusetts Lexington Books p 210 ISBN 9780739104484 Hinds David 2011 Ethno politics and Power Sharing in Guyana History and Discourse ISBN 9780982806104 Rooplall Dwijendra 25 December 2013 A closer look at The Catholic Standard Kaieteur News Retrieved 11 May 2015 A GREAT GUYANESE DIES Stabroek News via Land of Six Peoples 28 January 2004 Retrieved 8 September 2020 Only a disciplined people can build a nation North Korean Mass Games and Third Worldism in Guyana 1980 1992 The Asia Pacific Journal Japan Focus Retrieved 13 April 2021 House of Israel was hit squad Rodney s brother Stabroek News 30 April 2014 Archived from the original on 23 November 2021 Retrieved 23 November 2021 a b Gregory Smith dead www landofsixpeoples com 24 November 2002 Archived from the original on 14 December 2018 Retrieved 23 November 2021 Final 2012 Census Compendium Bureau of Statistics Guyana Retrieved 27 July 2017 Rodney Walter 1981 People s Power No Dictator Latin American Perspectives 8 1 64 78 doi 10 1177 0094582X8100800106 JSTOR 2633131 S2CID 144410850 Retrieved 2 January 2023 a b c Rodney Walter Walter Rodney and the Struggle for Democracy in Guyana Jacobin Retrieved 4 January 2023 a b Brotherson Jr Festus 1989 The Foreign Policy of Guyana 1970 1985 Forbes Burnham s Search for Legitimacy Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs 31 3 9 36 doi 10 2307 165891 JSTOR 165891 Retrieved 1 January 2023 History of Carifesta caricom org CARICOM Retrieved 2 January 2023 Burnham s legacy of free education will continue Guyana Chronicle 7 August 2019 Retrieved 4 January 2023 Burnham and education Stabroek News 21 October 2007 Retrieved 4 January 2023 Indians and the army Guyana Times International Guyana Times 1 June 2012 Retrieved 3 January 2023 Kissoon Freddie 27 January 2022 Burnham and Kwayana Iconoclastic notes on racism Kaieteur News Retrieved 3 January 2023 Kissoon Freddie 30 August 2020 We must never forget those 5 months of 2020 Kaieteur News Retrieved 3 January 2023 Kissoon Freddie 9 August 2021 Forbes Burnham Granger s vulgarisation of history Kaieteur News Retrieved 3 January 2023 a b Lincoln Evelyn BRITISH GUIANA SECURITY 1961 1963 jfklibrary org John F Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum Retrieved 5 January 2023 Historical information events amp dates on the Parliament of Guyana from 1718 to 2006 Parliament of Guyana a b Burnham s first wife laid to rest Stabroek News 7 August 2011 Retrieved 1 January 2023 Milestones Mar 3 1967 Time 3 March 1967 ISSN 0040 781X Retrieved 17 December 2022 Melanie Damishana Guyana Chronicle 30 November 2013 Retrieved 1 January 2023 Paul Jomo 10 May 2015 Daughter of Burnham joins Jagan s son in endorsing APNU AFC i News Guyana Retrieved 1 January 2023 Kissoon Freddie 18 August 2015 Bharrat Jagdeo misled Guyanese on Forbes Burnham s family Kaieteur News Retrieved 1 January 2023 Kandasammy Lloyd F 24 April 2008 Around the Museums of Guyana Stabroek News pp 20 22 Retrieved 20 August 2012 National Trust of Guyana Historic Bourda National Trust of Guyana Official Website Retrieved 20 August 2012 a b c d The mysteries surrounding the death and burial of the Founder Leader Kaieteur News 9 August 2016 Retrieved 1 January 2023 a b c d e f Croker Elvin Carl 18 August 2019 The majesty of the man L F S Burnham Guyana Chronicle Retrieved 1 January 2023 Forbes Burnham transformed Guyana from divided colony Pres Granger News Source Guyana 7 August 2016 Retrieved 4 January 2023 Mendes Franco Janine 8 March 2020 Guyana s 2020 general election results mired in controversy globalvoices org Global Voices Retrieved 1 January 2023 Grainger David WOMEN IN THE GUYANA DEFENSE FORCE Guyana under siege Retrieved 3 January 2023 Guyana GDP 1960 2023 macrotrends net The World Bank Retrieved 3 January 2023 Guyana Inflation www indexmundi com World Bank Retrieved 3 January 2023 Golding exposes electoral fraud at OAS meeting Stabroek News 14 May 2020 Retrieved 10 June 2020 Prime Minister Hinds bestowed with Order of Excellence Guyana Times International Guyana Times 2 June 2011 Retrieved 1 January 2023 1892 1999 Honorary Degree Recipients www dal ca Dalhousie University Retrieved 1 January 2023 Lubisi Cassius 22 April 2013 South African National Orders 2013 The Presidency politicsweb South African Government Information Retrieved 29 January 2016 Political officesPreceded byCheddi Jagan Prime Minister of Guyana until 1966 British Guiana 1964 1980 Succeeded byPtolemy ReidPreceded byArthur Chung President of Guyana1980 1985 Succeeded byDesmond Hoyte Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Forbes Burnham amp oldid 1140433963, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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