

Important
page in the struggle for freedom
DECEMBER 11, 2001 will be
remembered by bauxite workers of Linden -particularly the victims - even
though they may no longer by employed by the company, as the date 25 years ago
when 42 of their number were arrested, taken to the Mackenzie Police Station
and tear-smoked in the narrow confinement of the cells.
This most barbaric and inhumane act
took place during a strike by bauxite workers who were engaged in a lawful and
peaceful picketing exercise to protest a 6% increase in wages/salaries.
The arrest of the workers began on the
Friday night with 16 of the brothers and by Saturday a further 26 were taken
for their show of solidarity with those in the lock-ups.
The sounds of screams and the sight of
smoke coming from the cells sent neighbours and curious passers-by rushing to
the scene anxious to know what was taking place.
Inside the cells workers were reeling,
gasping for air, crying, some vomited, some fainted as the effects of the
tear-smoke took toll.
As the horror of what was taking place
became known to the crowd, which had gathered outside the police compound,
women screamed and cried, men cursed, others ran away as they were ordered by
the police to clear the roadway or face arrest.
That was the second time that the
repressive arm of the then ruling PNC had attacked peaceful and harmless
bauxite workers at Linden - struggling for a just cause - whose only weapons
were their unity and solidarity and only crime their right to manage and
control their union and its affairs.
As the horror news spread beyond
Linden, messages of solidarity and concern for the well-being of the victims
were expressed by fraternal unions GAWU; NAACIE, CCWU and the UGSA. The Guyana
Human Rights Association, the Catholic Standard and the Guyana Council of
Churches condemned the action of the police and called for an investigation.
Medical examination of the workers was
done at the St Joseph's Mercy Hospital in Georgetown although they were not
allowed to issue medical certificates to the workers.
The then opposition People's
Progressive Party as well as the Working People's Alliance condemned the act
as well.
How have the victims of December 11,
1976, the workers as a whole, their families and the Linden community
responded to the horrors and brutality unleashed by the agents of the once
ruling paramount party?
Well, there had not been a single call
from any source for `slow fire' or `more fire'. No damage or destruction by
the victims or supporters; they have found ways and means to survive.
As this is being written to remind or
inform others of an important page in the universal struggle of working people
for freedom, bread and justice, the PNC, which has demonstrated its capacity
to marginalise, create hunger and poverty, to terrorise and brutalise whether
in or out of office, has not issued a singe word of apology for the inhuman
acts committed by its agents against bauxite workers, their families and the
Linden community for the years 1971, 1976 and 1978.
It is our hope that such acts against
peaceful and harmless working people will never again be repeated by agents of
any administration in this dear land of Guyana.
DESMOND MOFFETT
December 15, 2001