Guyana's President Swears in New Members of Teaching Service Commission

GEORGETOWN, Guyana – President Irfaan Ali Wednesday administered the oath of office to the seven-member Teaching Service Commission (TSC) despite the absence of a leader of the opposition, whose “meaningful consultation” is needed regarding the appointments.

alijgyaPresident Irfaan Ali (fifth from left) with members of the Teaching Service Commission (CMC Photo)Among those appointed is the Chief Education Officer, Saddam Hussain.

The Guyana Constitution stipulates that the TSC be made up of seven members with three of them being appointed by the President after meaningful consultation with the Leader of the Opposition.

However, Guyana has been without an Opposition Leaders since the September 1 general elections that resulted in the ruling People’s Progressive Party/Civic (PPP/C) being returned to power and the newly formed We Invest In Nationhood (WIN) party being the one with the second most seats in the National Assembly.

WIN leader, Azruddin Mohamed, have been seeking so far unsuccessfully to be sworn in as Opposition Leader, despite the new Parliament having officially met for the first time since the election in November.

While he did not address the issue during the ceremony, President Ali later told reporters that it was important for him to appoint the Commission even without consultation with the Leader of the Opposition as is required by the Constitution.

“It is an important constitutional responsibility that has to be executed. The minister came to me and explained the importance for the system itself, and I don’t want a new term to start without having the commission in place to make important decisions that would allow the quality of teaching to improve, and also allow more opportunities to be given to our teachers,” Ali said.

He told reporters that whenever an Opposition Leader is elected, as the President; he will fulfill his constitutional responsibility but made it clear that with or without an Opposition Leader, the work of the Government must continue.

A member of the coalition, A Partnership for National Unity (APNU) that had been the main opposition party in the last parliament, said the party had warned that in the absence of an Opposition Leader, President Ali would move to make unilateral appointments in breach of the Constitution.

“This is precisely the kind of constitutional erosion we in the APNU have been warning about. A maturing dictatorship is unfolding before our eyes, fed and sustained by none other than President Irfaan Ali,” Ganesh Mahipaul, an opposition legislator said in a statement.

He said the non-election of a Leader of the Opposition is no fault of the Opposition, as it is the Speaker of the Assembly, who was appointed by the Government and was one of the governing party’s candidates at the elections, who has been refusing to allow the election of the Opposition Leader to take place.

In his address, President Ali said the Minister of Education, Sonia Parag, had made out a case for the Commission to be reconstitution, and in doing so provided a statistical analysis of the vacancies, and the need for promotions and other advancements with regards to the teaching profession.

He said there are an estimated 2,700 senior vacancies within schools across the country.

“Now, these are not senior vacancies that exist in the system in a traditional way, these are senior vacancies created also by this government so that we can have a more qualitative delivery of holistic education.

“Several new positions have been created to facilitate the faster, upward mobility to teachers and for teachers. As you know, teachers in the traditional sense had to wait all their lives, close to retirement to become a head teacher sometime,” Ali  said.

Additionally, he said the Education Minister has advised that a second deputy head teacher in Grades A and B secondary schools would be appointed as well  as 60 second deputies.

Ali said that the TSC is entrusted with safeguarding the integrity, professionalism and fairness of the teaching profession, and was created as an independent institution to ensure that appointments, promotions and disciplinary actions are based solely on merit, fairness and process.

“An independent Teaching Service Commission helps safeguard professionalism, builds confidence among teachers that they will be treated justly and thereby assist in maintaining stable and high standards in national education.

“It is for this reason that the Constitution of the Cooperative Republic of Guyana at Article 209 (1) of the Constitution vests the Teaching Service Commission with ‘the power to appoint persons as teachers in the Public Service, and to remove and exercise disciplinary control over persons holding or acting in such offices,’” Ali added.