GUYANA | Rickford Burke Unleashes Scathing Attack on PPP Over "Economic Genocide" of Black Guyanese

Georgetown, Guyana, August 4, 2025 - A media dispute over crowd numbers at Guyana's largest Emancipation celebration has exploded into damning accusations of systematic racial exclusion, with diaspora activist Rickford Burke launching a blistering assault on the ruling People's Progressive Party's three-decade track record of “stagnated Black economic empowerment”.
Burke, President of the Caribbean Guyana Institute for Democracy, used what he termed a "deliberate lie" by Stabroek News about attendance figures to unleash a comprehensive indictment of PPP governance that he claims has relegated African Guyanese to second-class citizenship in their own country.
The flashpoint came over wildly divergent reports of the African Cultural and Development Association's Emancipation Festival at National Park. While Stabroek News reported "hundreds" attended the August 1 event, Burke countered that over 10,000 people witnessed international reggae star Maxi Priest's performance, making it "arguably the largest Emancipation commemoration in the Caribbean."
But Burke's response transcended mere crowd counting. In a scathing social media statement, he weaponized the attendance controversy to expose what he characterizes as the PPP's systematic campaign to marginalize, economically exclude, and culturally suppress Guyana's Black population during 28 of the past 34 years in power.
The Numbers Tell the Story
Burke's most damaging allegations center on the stark funding disparities that he claims reveal the PPP's true priorities. The annual Emancipation Festival carries a GYD $55 million price tag—approximately US$273,000. Yet Burke revealed the PPP government contributed a paltry GYD $3 million, less than six percent of the total budget.
Even more striking was ExxonMobil's contribution: just GYD $1 million from a company Burke noted has extracted over US$39 billion from Guyanese oil since production began. This marked the oil giant's first-ever contribution to the cultural celebration.
"This paucity of Black empowerment and equality explains pellucidly why ACDA's Emancipation Festival and other African Guyanese cultural events struggle for sponsorship, viability and sustainability," Burke wrote, introducing a term—"economic genocide"—that cuts to the heart of his allegations.
Beyond Tokenism: The Representation Gap
Burke's attack expanded beyond cultural funding to structural exclusion across Guyana's key institutions. He accused the PPP of pursuing contradictory diversity policies—pushing for more East Indians in police and military ranks while simultaneously ignoring what he termed "gaping disparities" faced by African Guyanese in the financial sector.
Drawing on unpublished 2022 census data showing African Guyanese comprise 30 percent of the population, Burke painted a picture of systematic underrepresentation in the financial and commercial sectors, which he claims remain dominated by East Indian and foreign interests.
The activist dismissed recent PPP outreach to Black communities as hollow political theater. He characterized the presence of PPP officials and private sector elites at Emancipation events as "political correctness" rather than genuine support, warning that the party believes it can "pay off Black social media influencers and opposition politicians to lie about their history, and buy Black votes."
A Party Under Pressure?
Burke's timing appears calculated. He suggested the PPP's recent Black outreach stems not from newfound commitment to equality, but from declining support within their traditional East Indian base. This analysis positions the party's engagement with African Guyanese as damage control rather than authentic policy reform.
The allegations carry particular weight given Guyana's complex ethnic political history, where the PPP and the predominantly Black-supported People's National Congress have alternated power along largely racial lines since independence.
The Unrepentant Charge
Perhaps Burke's most damning assessment was his characterization of the PPP as "unrepentant" in their approach to Black marginalization. He called on African Guyanese to reject what he framed as superficial overtures and instead unite for "true economic empowerment, justice, and self-determination."
"Guyana is developing, but we are being left behind," Burke concluded. "There is no plan for our economic empowerment. The PPP has no intention to ensure equal rights and justice prevail."
Silence from the Ruling Party
As of publication, the PPP has offered no response to Burke's sweeping allegations, maintaining the same silence that characterized their reaction to his initial attendance dispute with Stabroek News.
This silence may prove more damaging than the original controversy. Burke has moved far beyond disputing crowd numbers to questioning the fundamental commitment of Guyana's ruling party to racial equality and economic justice—charges that demand more than statistical corrections to address.
The PPP was contacted for comment but had not responded at press time.