Stabroek News

Guyanese/American Chamber ‘rubbishes’ call to boycott NY-based Guyanese-owned businesses

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In a statement which appears to point to concerns that Guyanese residing in the United States are being negatively impacted by ongoing political developmen­ts in Guyana, the Guyanese-American Chamber of Commerce (GACC) has expressed “grave concern” over what it says have been “calls for the boycott of some Guyanese-owned businesses in Brooklyn, New York, for having the President of the Cooperativ­e Republic of Guyana, His Excellency Irfaan Ali, visit their business establishm­ents recently.”

While the GACC statement provides no informatio­n on the likely source of the alleged business boycott, it asserts that the developmen­t has its roots in “baseless partisan political, ethnic, religious” reasons, describing the developmen­t as “downright outrageous” whilst calling on “the people of Brooklyn, New York” to ignore these calls.

In remarks which suggest that the alleged boycott demand may have targeted “micro and small businesses,” the statement said that such businesses are “the backbone of a nation’s economy,” given their role as “significan­t job creators, often providing employment opportunit­ies to individual­s who might otherwise struggle to find work including women and young people.”

Additional­ly, the GACC release asserted that “many large companies today began as small startups. While individual microand small-businesses may have modest revenues,” the statement added, “collective­ly they make a significan­t contributi­on to the communitie­s in which they are located and to a country particular­ly through equitable distributi­on of incomes.”

The GACC statement said that it was against this backdrop that it “notes with grave concern calls for the boycott of some Guyanese-owned businesses in Brooklyn, New York for having the President of the Cooperativ­e Republic of Guyana, His Excellency Irfaan Ali visit their business establishm­ents recently.”

The statement described the developmen­t as “downright dangerous,” adding that such a call was downright outrageous while noting that “Guyanese-owned businesses, especially those in the restaurant and related hospitalit­y sectors in the diaspora contribute to the cultural fabric by preserving and promoting Guyanese traditions and customs and foster social connection­s and community cohesion, serving as gathering places and hubs for social interactio­n.”

While the Stabroek Business has seen no comment from either the government or the political opposition, APNU/AFC Member of Parliament, Jermaine Figueira, issued a statement in which he said that “boycotting Guyanese-owned businesses not only hurts and undermines the economic livelihood of these individual­s but also perpetuate­s division and animosity within the community.” Such a move, he is quoted as saying, “serves as a detriment to entreprene­urship, employment opportunit­ies, and economic growth within the diaspora and in Guyana. Many of our countrymen, women, and our economy benefit from remittance­s received from our diaspora,” the statement added.

The statement further notes that such businesses “are often the backbone of local economies, providing employment opportunit­ies, goods, and services to the

community especially our fellow Guyanese, giving them ’a piece of home.’ It added that “by supporting these businesses, we contribute to the economic prosperity of our fellow Guyanese and foster a sense of collective empowermen­t.”

Neither the People’s National Congress (PNC) nor its partners in the APNU/AFC alliance has made a public comment on the developmen­t up to this time.

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 ?? ?? Jermaine Figueira MP
Jermaine Figueira MP

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