THE GLITTER OF AMBITION
THE 592 GUARDIAN
GOVERNANCE & ACCOUNTABILITY
THE GLITTER OF AMBITION
When foreign appointments can’t mask domestic failures
The Ali administration has perfected the art of international optics. But a closer look at the legislative record at home — including a sexual offenders registry sealed from public view — raises questions that no UN nomination can answer.
The nomination of Carolyn Rodrigues-Birkett for the position of UN Secretary-General and the election of Human Services Minister Dr. Vindhya Persaud to the executive body of the OAS Inter-American Commission of Women have been received in certain quarters as proof of Guyana’s ascending global stature. Commentators speak of a “quiet but unmistakable internationalism,” of Guyana earning a seat at the tables where the rules of food, energy, climate and finance are written. It makes for elegant copy.
But elegance is not analysis.
Everyone in the diplomatic community wants proximity to petro-wealth. The offshore fields do not confer wisdom on their beneficiaries — they confer access.
Let us be direct: the international bodies offering appointments to Guyanese politicians are not doing so as recognition of governance excellence. They are doing so on the premise of Guyana’s economic standing. Everyone in the diplomatic community wants proximity to petro-wealth. The offshore oil fields do not confer wisdom on their beneficiaries — they confer access. These are two very different things, and the distinction matters enormously when we are asked to evaluate whether our government’s reach abroad reflects genuine diplomatic capital or merely the gravitational pull of a resource windfall that any administration, competent or otherwise, would have inherited.
The Rodrigues-Birkett nomination for UN Secretary-General is a case study in ambition mistaken for vision. The Secretary-Generalship is among the most demanding executive roles on the planet — part moral arbiter, part crisis manager, part institutional statesman. It demands a record of multilateral leadership that commands consensus across adversarial blocs. We wish Ambassador Rodrigues-Birkett no personal ill; she is a capable diplomat. But the nomination, originating from President Ali’s desk, tells us far more about his appetite for symbolic gestures than about a sober assessment of what the position requires and what any Guyanese candidate can currently offer in this crowded field.
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The more troubling case, however, is that of Minister Persaud.

Her appointment to the OAS Inter-American Commission of Women has been celebrated as placing “Guyana at the centre of regional decision-making on gender policy for the first time in nearly a quarter of a century.” What has gone conspicuously unremarked is what Minister Persaud brought to Parliament in her domestic portfolio: a Sexual Offenders Registry that would be closed to the public.
A closed registry serves, above all else, the registered — which is to say, it protects predators from the social consequences of their crimes.
Let that register fully. A registry of sexual offenders — a tool whose entire logic rests on community awareness and the protection of vulnerable people, particularly children — was proposed as a document to be sealed from the very public it is designed to protect.
One must ask, with full seriousness: for whose benefit is a secret sexual offenders registry? It does not serve survivors. It does not serve parents. It does not serve communities.
A closed registry serves, above all else, the registered — which is to say, it protects predators from the social consequences of their crimes.
Had the OAS Inter-American Commission of Women been fully briefed on this legislative proposal when it was weighing its appointment, the outcome may well have been different. International bodies operate on representations and reputations.
They see the press release, not the bill. They see the nomination, not the fine print. And the Ali administration is extraordinarily skilled at managing what international bodies see.
This is the core deception at work. When a government’s domestic record on gender protection is a closed sexual offenders registry while its international profile features an appointment to a hemispheric gender commission, we are not witnessing statesmanship. We are witnessing brand management.
The 592 Guardian has consistently argued that resource wealth tests the character of governments more severely than poverty does, because it supplies the means to perform competence without ever having to demonstrate it. You can host summits. You can fund alliances. You can nominate your diplomats to prestigious offices. And you can do all of this while failing the woman in Berbice who cannot access justice, while failing the child in a Region Seven community who deserves to know where registered offenders live, while continuing the pattern of legislation drafted for the protection of the powerful rather than the governed.
Schumacher’s “Small Is Beautiful” has been invoked in defense of the Ali administration’s vision. But Schumacher’s argument was precisely that scale divorced from human welfare is not development — it is displacement.
A humane economy is not measured by where your nominees sit at the UN. It is measured by whether your laws protect the most vulnerable people in your society.
By that measure, the glitter dims considerably.
The 592 Guardian calls on the OAS Inter-American Commission of Women to request a full briefing on the Sexual Offenders Registry Bill and its provisions before Minister Persaud assumes her executive responsibilities. We further call on civil society organisations to elevate this legislative contradiction to every regional and international gender body that was presented with Guyana’s nomination materials.
Ambition dressed as vision is still ambition. And a secret sexual offenders registry is not a footnote. It is a verdict.
The 592 Guardian is an independent accountability journalism outlet focused on Guyanese governance, public finance, and regional geopolitics.
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