|
April
1, 2009
Guyanese urged to join in nation building -
a process started by the Jagans
Georgetown, GINA, April 1, 2009
During his final tribute to former President and first lady
Mrs. Janet Jagan O.E. at Babu John, Port Mourant yesterday,
President Bharrat Jagdeo called on Guyanese to join with the
PPP/C Government in the enterprise of nation building which
began with the former President and her husband Dr. Cheddi
Jagan.
“It’s national unity not based on threats of violence or
bullyism, it’s national unity based on decency, principles and
working for the good of all the people of this land. That is the
kind of unity we want, but we’ll continue to struggle as we go
forward,” President Jagdeo said.
The President was referring to the Opposition leader Robert
Corbin’s remarks during his tribute to Mrs. Jagan at the State
funeral ceremony at Parliament Buildings earlier yesterday.
Corbin had said that “from now on, maybe we can work for
national unity”.
President Jagdeo said that although the Jagans are absent from
the leadership of the party, their imbedded legacies will live
on.
“The Jagans are not just personalities, they are ideas, they are
principles and therefore, although they are not there in living
flesh, they will continue to guide this party long into the
future and we have to make sure that their legacy doesn’t fall
by the wayside,” President Jagdeo said.
Janet Jagan O.E. gave over 60 years of her life to Guyana and
President Jagdeo challenged his supporters to work towards
ensuring that her efforts and those of Dr. Cheddi Jagan remain
evergreen.
Born in the United States of American (USA) Mrs. Jagan was
instrumental in the formation of the Women’s Political and
Economic Organisation (WPO) and the Political Affairs Committee
(PAC) in 1946, and along with Dr. Jagan formed the PPP.
She served as Deputy Speaker in the National Assembly and
Minister of Labour Health and Housing during the period 1953 to
1963. In 1997 Mrs. Jagan became the first female President of
Guyana.
Mrs. Jagan was given a State funeral at which
stirring tributes were paid including from the PPP’s General
Secretary Donald Ramotar, President Jagdeo and the children and
grandchildren of the former president.
TOP
More tributes pour in
Georgetown, GINA, April 1, 2009
Condolences from around the world continue to pour in on the
passing of Guyana’s Fourth Executive leader and former First
Lady Mrs. Janet Jagan.
Mrs. Jagan died at age 88, on March 28 at the
Georgetown Public Hospital Corporation following a brief
illness. She was cremated yesterday at the Babu John
crematorium, Port Mourant Bebrice, where her late husband and
former President of Guyana was cremated 12 years ago.
Mrs. Jagan was described by many as an
outstanding icon and heroine of the land with her many notable
contributions to the political and economic arenas of the
country and her struggle for the empowerment for women.
Honorary Consul of Grenada
Honorary Counsul Deodatt Singh in a condolence message said that
it was with great regret that he learnt of the death of Mrs.
Jagan.
“For those who knew her, she was a friend and to the wider
world, a fighter of immense capability whose tireless and long
life service and commitment to the people and politics are
beyond conception,” Singh said.
He noted that her contribution to Guyana’s social
and economic development was enormous and that the nation will
be deprived of one of its greatest citizens who exhibited
strength, courage, humility, and commitment to the development
of Guyana.
Singh said that Mrs. Jagan struggled against
colonialism and fought for peace, democracy and justice both in
Guyana and globally. Through her determination she worked
tirelessly to enhance the lives of all Guyanese, especially poor
women and children.
Embassy of the Republic of Korea
Ambassador Won-sun Choi expressed deep regret on the passing of
Mrs. Jagan. Ambassador Choi described the former President as a
major political force whose work will continue to inspire the
Guyanese people.
Prime Minister of Belize
Belizean Prime Minister Dean Barrow expressed his deepest sorrow
on the passing of the late former President and conveyed
condolences on behalf of his Government to the Government and
people of Guyana.
Saint Kitts and Nevis
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Federation of St. Kitts
and Nevis stated that it was saddened by the death of Mrs. Jagan
and conveyed its profound condolences to the bereaved family and
the people of Guyana.
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
The Government and people of sister CARICOM country St. Vincent
and the Grenadines said that the passing of Mrs. Jagan not only
leaves a void in the lives of the Guyanese people, but also in
the hearts of all who knew her.
“Let the memories of her survive in this time of
sorrow,” the country’s condolence message reads.
Embassy of Japan
Japan’s Ambassador Tatsuaki Iwata has expressed his heartfelt
condolences to the people and Government of Guyana on the
passing of Mrs. Jagan.
Mrs. Jagan’s position as the first woman President
of Guyana has most certainly left the people with an immense and
enduring legacy, the Ambassador said in a letter dispatched to
President Bharrat Jagdeo.
CARICOM Secretariat
CARICOM’s Secretary-General Dr. Edwin Carrington has expressed
deep sadness on the passing of Mrs. Jagan.
Although born in the United States, she devoted her
life to the development of Guyana and the people, especially
women. In pursuit of that goal, she co-founded the People’s
Progressive Party (PPP) along with her late husband and former
President Dr, Cheddi Jagan, he said and that through that
vehicle, she waged a tireless struggle to improve the lives of
Guyanese.
Mrs. Jagan served her country in tumultuous times
and displayed fortitude and uncompromising commitment to her
ideals which ensured that she maintained her focus through the
most difficult of circumstances.
Her invaluable contribution to Guyana will long be
remembered, the Secretary General said.
Dean of the Diplomatic Corps
Dean of the Diplomatic Corps Manorma Soeknandan on behalf of the
Diplomatic Community expressed sincere condolences and profound
sadness on hearing of the demise of former President Mrs. Jagan.
She has conveyed their sympathies to the family and people of
Guyana.
Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on
Agriculture (IICA)
IICA also extended condolences to the Government and people of
Guyana on the passing of Mrs. Jagan.
IICA said it shares the country’s loss and further
extended its deepest sympathy, prayers and best wishes to the
family of Mrs. Jagan, at their most difficult time.
Permanent Mission of Grenada to the United Nations
The Government and people of Grenada, the Permanent Mission of
Grenada expressed deepest condolences to the Government and
people of the Guyana and to the family of Mrs. Jagan.
Permanent Mission of the republic of Indonesia to the
United Nations
Permanent Mission of the Republic of Indonesia to the United
Nations expressed its sincere condolences and conveyed its
deepest sympathy to the family of Mrs. Jagan.
Permanent Mission of Turkmenistan to the United
Nations
The Mission in a letter to the Permanent Mission to Guyana
expressed deep regrets on the passing of Mrs. Jagan.
The Mission expressed its sincere condolences most
especially to the bereaved family of the late President.
TOP
TOP
New York Times carries obituary of former President
Janet Jagan
Georgetown, GINA, April 1, 2009
The New York Times in its March 31 issue carried an obituary
to former President Janet Jagan who died on March 28, after a
brief illness.
Mrs. Jagan was born a United States citizen in 1920
in Chicago, Illinois but gave up her citizenship in the 1940s
after marrying Cheddi Jagan who later became President of
Guyana.
The obituary written by Simon Romero in the New
York Times stated briefly on Mrs. Jagan’s political life after
migrating to Guyana in the early 1940s and her role in the
formation of the People’s Progressive Party (PPP) in 1950.
The obituary also encapsulated various aspects of
the former President’s life and her involvement in changing the
political landscape in Guyana during the time when the colonial
powers used force to restrict political ideologies to suit their
beliefs.
It was during the 1950s that both Cheddi and Janet
Jagan were jailed after the intervention of then US President
Winston Churchill who sent warships and troops to topple the new
Jagan Government. This led to racial division between Indo and
Afro Guyanese, the obituary said.
It was stated that the US intervened again in
1957 when President John F. Kennedy ordered the Central
Intelligence Agency in 1961 to destabilize the Jagan Government.
Labour unrest, false information and sabotage led to race riots
and eventually Forbes Burnham, who was once a leader of the PPP,
became an opponent of the Jagans and acceded to the Presidency.
Despite this Janet Jagan and her husband Cheddi
remained in political life. During this period Mrs. Jagan
remained active as a member of parliament while being the editor
of The Mirror newspaper.
During Burnham’s rule Guyana became one of the
poorest nations in the Western Hemisphere. In 1992 Dr. Cheddi
Jagan was elected President where he served until his death in
1997 when Janet Jagan became Guyana’s first female Prime
Minister and later contested the elections and won. She served
as President until 1999 when she resigned because of health
reasons.
Mrs. Jagan was also Guyana’s first female President.
March 31, 2009
Mrs Jagan, an incomparable patriot, nationalist, and
extraordinary woman - President Jagdeo - at State
funeral ceremony at Parliament Buildings
Georgetown, GINA, March 31, 2009
In a stirring tribute to former President Mrs. Janet Jagan
this morning at Parliament Buildings, during the State funeral
ceremony, Head of State Bharrat Jagdeo described her as an
outstanding citizen, one whose contributions have shaped this
nation, who was a pioneer that fought for Guyana’s freedom, a
crusader for the restoration of democracy and an advocate for
human rights and human dignity.
“Time is not ours forever. Mortality is our common
denominator; and death an inevitable and inescapable reality of
human existence. And yet, accepting the loss of some one dear
and close, someone whose imprints in the Guyanese sands of time
are inerasable, is never easy. So it is with Janet Jagan. Death
snatched from us an incomparable patriot and nationalist, an
extraordinary woman who dedicated her life to the fight for
freedom and for the social and economic advancement of all
Guyanese,” the President noted.

President Bharrat Jagdeo paying tribute to the former
President at Parliament Buildings.
Before a large gathering comprising members of the Diplomatic
Corps, the former president’s family, People’s Progressive Party
members, other Officials and overseas delegations, President
Jagdeo stressed that her strongest legacy however, would be the
party she co-founded.
“The PPP which she cultivated remains, as it was in 1950, a
party wedded to national unity and working class solidarity,” he
said as he hailed the former President first and foremost as an
enlightened humanist.
“She was always deeply concerned about people. Throughout the
many years that I have known her, she always showed a deep
concern for the effects of public policy on the ordinary
citizen. Her working class orientation was a product rather than
a source of this humanism which placed the individual at the
center of social relations. Janet Jagan remained, to her dying
day, a very approachable person, always willing to listen to the
problems of the ordinary person, and ever ready to offer
whatever assistance she could muster. She helped thousands of
Guyanese without ever craving attention or public accolades for
her kindness.”

Immediate family members of the late President at the
State funeral at Parliament Buildings.
The President also told the crowd that Mrs. Jagan was a radical
and militant non-conformist. “She was not one to be found on the
sidelines. She was an active protagonist on behalf of those on
the margins of society,” he said.
“Life in the colony, except for a small privileged group, was
below acceptable conditions of human decency. Social and
political freedoms were limited, political agitation ineffectual
and the existing political movements impotent and servile.
Leadership and direction was needed.
This was the situation that greeted the Jagans on their
arrival in British Guiana. It would have been easier and
convenient for Cheddi and Janet Jagan to fit snugly into the
privileged elite which dominated life in the then depressed
colony. The Jagans were however, extraordinary human beings
imbued with a degree of social consciousness that would not
allow them to ignore the plight of the poor, the exploited and
the oppressed.”
The ideals for which they fought were the very ones
proclaimed as the essential principles of liberal democracies:
freedom, prosperity and equality, the Head of State explained,
noting that they strove to end human want, exploitation and
bondage, to promote the rights of all citizens and to create a
free and independent Guyana where the potential of all its
citizens could be realized.
He explained that in those days, and in the eyes of the
plunderers of “our national patrimony, this amounted to
political subversion and communism; and the Jagans were so
branded. Firm in their commitment to the freedom of our people,
it was a label they wore without a hint of shame or guilt,”
President Jagdeo noted.

The casket bearing the remains of the later President at
Parliament Buildings.
The President also praised Mrs. Jagan’s organizational
skills, political stamina and strong character and stated that
her legacy would live on in the political party of which she was
a founding member.
Mrs. Jagan was particularly influential on two fronts: the
struggle for women’s rights inclusive of the extension of the
franchise to women; and the struggle for the rights of workers,
President Jagdeo outlined.
In the case of the women’s rights, it was in great measure
because of the struggle she and others waged that the colonial
powers finally agreed to have the franchise extended.
Despite the constraints placed on the government, a great
deal was achieved, the President said, as he went on to outline
some of her achievements.
“Doors were opened and barriers broken down to provide
greater opportunities to all Guyanese. Food production and
exports increased; trade relations expanded; considerable
strides were achieved in education, health, housing, electricity
and water sectors,” he said.
As Minister of Labour, Health and Housing, significant steps
were made; programmes were launched to eradicate malaria and
filaria, a mass children’s vaccination against polio was
undertaken, and several health centers and cottage hospitals
were built, while water supply was extended to several unserved
communities. Additionally, housing developed in both rural and
urban areas.

Opposition Leader Robert Corbin paying tribute to the
former President.
At the ceremony, Minister of Home Affairs Clement Rohee read
the eulogy, while tributes were paid by PPP General Secretary
Donald Ramoutar, Opposition Leader Robert Corbin, Nadira
Brancier, daughter of Mrs. Jagan and Vrinda Jagan, grand
daughter.
Mrs. Jagan, the first and only woman to be elected President
of Guyana, passed away on March 28. She was 88 years old.
Janet Rosalie Jagan née Rosenberg was born on October 20,
1920 to a Jewish, middle-class family in Chicago, in the United
States. She became the sixth and the first female President of
the Republic of Guyana on December19, 1997. She served in that
position up to August 11, 1999 when she retired for health
reasons.

The casket bearing Mrs Janet Jagan being wheeled out for
the journey to PPP's Freedom House Headquarters.
She served as Prime Minister from March 17 to December 19,
1997 in addition to holding several other elected offices some
of which included, Deputy Speaker of the National Assembly and
Government Minister.
After migrating to Guyana with her husband Dr Cheddi Jagan
whom she had met and married in 1943, while working as a student
nurse at Cook County Hospital, she founded the Women's Political
and Economic Organisation and co-founded the Political Affairs
Committee in 1946, and later along with her husband Dr Cheddi
Jagan and others, the People’s Progressive Party in 1950.
Janet Jagan is recipient of the Guyana's highest national
honour - Order of Excellence (O.E.), Woman of Achievement award
from the University of Guyana and in 1997, the Gandhi Gold Medal
for Peace, Democracy and Women's Rights by UNECSO.
TOP
Janet Jagan made an indelible mark on Guyana’s
history - PPP/C General Secretary
Georgetown, GINA, March 31, 2009
Mrs. Janet Jagan has made an indelible mark in the history of
Guyana and throughout the history of the country her name and
her work endure, General Secretary of the People’s Progressive
Party (PPP/C), Donald Ramoutar said today as he recounted the
life of the late President during the State Funeral, Parliament
Buildings.
Ramoutar said Mrs. Jagan and her husband Dr.
Cheddi Jagan shared similar views that injustice, oppression and
poverty should end.
Mrs. Jagan had a personality that many who knew
her including her husband described her as someone being shy and
who preferred to be in the background. Nevertheless, she thought
that women must be part and parcel of the struggle for freedom
to enhance the quality of life in Guyana and never shied away
from her responsibilities in that regard, Ramoutar stated.
“In Guyana she sought out persons of similar
views and very early she found, together with her husband,
colleagues Ashton Chase and Jocelyn Hubbard to form the
Political Affairs Committee (PAC) which saw independence as a
stepping stone towards ending oppression in Guyana and bringing
social justice to the people of the country In 1950 they formed
the PPP and also saw that as an instrument and a tool to
organize the people of this country to fight for the objectives
that they set themselves,” he said
The General Secretary noted that despite
opposition and constraints during her struggles, she withstood
them with dignity.

General Secretary of the People’s Progressive Party
(PPP/C), Donald Ramoutar
“After the suspension of the constitution Mrs.
Jagan was imprisoned and it was done in such a cruel way…but she
bore all those things with dignity. The British colonialists
were the first to try to demonize her…She was probably the most
potent weapon in that regard and that is why they sought to do
that but the people of this country loved her and she
distinguished herself as the Minister of Labour, Health and
Housing. Much of her work still stands today in the form of
cottage hospitals and housing schemes in the Ruimveldt,
Campbellville and other areas,” he said.

Mrs. Jagan, he said, was an outstanding journalist since the
inception of her career in Guyana.
“She was one of the editors of the PAC, (Political Affairs
Committee) bulletin. She edited the ‘Thunder’ from time to time
and she also edited the ‘Mirror’ newspapers over many years. She
was in Parliament again in 1973 and was the spokesperson on
issues of health and social affairs. After the death of Dr.
Cheddi Jagan she found herself in comfort and influence of
people whose outpouring of grief was so great. She once again
was at the leadership of the PPP who asked her to be the
presidential candidate for that election which made her
extremely busy.
She continued to work in this job until ill health in August
1999 which forced her to resign.
Despite this, she continued to work in the party, she wrote
articles for the newspaper almost every week even when she was
abroad…she outshone some of the younger comrades who held that
position before because during this last period of her life she
got out every single issue on ‘Thunder’ on time and her last
issue was finished on the day before she passed away,” Ramoutar
said.
TOP
Mrs. Janet Jagan - a woman of outstanding
achievements
Georgetown, GINA, March 31, 2009
One of Guyana’s greatest leaders whose life was motivated by
a strong, caring concern for people, particularly those of the
poorer marginalized classes has passed on.
In a passionate eulogy today at the Parliament
Buildings, Minister of Home Affairs Clement Rohee recalled the
exceptional life that she led and noted that she was a
perceptive, practical political strategist and visionary.
In 1992, following the victory of the PPP, Mrs.
Jagan became First Lady, a role she filled with dignity, charm
and simplicity, Minister Rohee said.
However, desirous of a change from the demands of
the role of First Lady she went on to serve as Ambassador to the
United Nations during the 48th Session of the UN General
Assembly from 1993 to 1994.

Minister of Home Affairs, Clement Rohee delivering the
eulogy of former President Mrs. Janet Jagan at the Parliament
Buildings.
In an extraordinary change of events, after the death of Dr.
Cheddi Jagan on March 6, 1997, she was sworn in as Prime
Minister of Guyana.
Later on with the advent of the 1997 elections,
Mrs. Jagan became the Presidential Candidate of the PPP/C and
won the elections receiving a larger percentage of the votes
than in the elections of 1992 and with that victory she became
Guyana’s first female to hold the highest office of the land
from December 19, 1997.
Minister Rohee posited that this was one of the
most painful periods in her political life, and that of the
Party. “For it was during this period that the vilest and
wickedest forms of protest including public recourse to obeah,
political manoeuvres and subterfuges were used to dislodge her
from Office, eventuating in the reduction of her term by two
years. This undoubtedly contributed to her illness. But she bore
the indignity with dignity, the insult with courage, and the
gamut of indecency with resilience. Such was the nature of the
woman!”
He was adamant that, “For a woman who struggled
all her life for the advancement of our country, our people and
for future generations, to have been treated in that manner, the
only decent thing for those who are guilty of these acts to do
would be for them to offer her, even in death, an apology in
their quiet moments for what they did to her while she was
alive.”
He noted that the Jagans did not have much time
to settle as by 1945, two years after they arrived, they were
already in the maelstrom of political debate and controversy.
Mrs. Jagan from the inception was fighting for
the rights of women, as in the early days in Guyana she
advocated for birth control and family planning.

A founding member of the Political Affairs Committee (PAC)
and the Women’s Political and Economic Organization (WPEO), she
secured an increase in wages for town council watchmen,
successfully defending the cause of town constables. She also
fought for the rights of quarry workers to have meetings with
their Union representatives at quarries and struggled for better
conditions for domestics.
In 1950, the People’s Progressive Party (PPP) was
formally launched with Mrs. Jagan as General Secretary. Minister
Rohee noted that at the first party Congress held one year
after, she had this to say; “The aim of our Party is one
firstly; to win for our country complete and absolute
independence; secondly, to externally unite our country with
people of other colonial and semi-colonial territories in a
common struggle.”
History shows that at this stage in her life Mrs.
Jagan contested and won several offices. In 1950 she became the
first representative of the working class to enter the
Georgetown Municipal Council and in 1953 General Elections; she
won the Essequibo and West Demerara Constituency, thus
contributing to the victory of the PPP. She was also the Deputy
Speaker of the Legislative Assembly following the 1953
elections.

Minister Rohee noted that the situation was
drastically changed when the PPP was only in Office for only 133
days at which time the Constitution was suspended and the
movements of Mrs. Jagan and other prominent leaders of the PPP
were restricted to Georgetown.
Her love for her new country was tested in 1954
when she was imprisoned for six months. She was later released
on January 18, 1955.
“Where lesser spirits would have been broken,
this lady of substance, Janet, showed remarkable resilience and
courage that would inspire and embolden Party colleagues
nation-wide,” the Minister said.
The PPP foundation was rocked in 1955 when there
was a split in the party; however, due to the work of the Jagans
the party remained united.
In 1957, the PPP succeeded in winning the
elections and during that term, she made her mark as Minister of
Labour, Health and Housing. Later on after the 1961 elections
she was appointed Minister of Home Affairs and remained there up
to June 1, 1964 when she resigned in protest due to the
non-cooperation of the local Police Force and the complicity of
the Colonial authorities, Minister Rohee said.
He noted that from 1964 to 1992 with the PPP in
the Opposition, Mrs. Jagan displayed much strength of character,
grit and determination.
The Minister said her contribution to
Parliamentary debate was “characterized by precision in language
and practical wisdom.”
Mrs. Jagan served as a member of the Elections Commission from
1968 to 1979 and exposed the State-sponsored rigging of the 1968
and 1973 elections.
“It is no exaggeration to say that the People’s
Progressive Party is a living monument to the vision,
discipline, energy and organizational skills of Janet Jagan… As
Executive Secretary of the Party she made a tremendous
contribution to the strengthening and consolidation of the PPP
while working for the unity and cohesion of the Party at all
levels,” Minister Rohee declared.
Long before attaining the Presidency, she was
International Secretary and due to her work was awarded the
Golden Medal for Peace, Democracy and Women’s Rights.
Mrs. Jagan, a native of the United States of
America was born on October 20, 1920. She married on August 5,
1943 to one of Guyana’s founding fathers, Dr. Cheddi Jagan who
brought her to the then British Guiana in December 1943.
Mrs. Jagan leaves to mourn her two children Cheddi
Jagan Jnr. and Nadira Brancier, her party and country.
TOP
The loss of an icon
Georgetown, GINA, March 31, 2009
Former President Mrs. Janet Jagan who died after a brief
illness on March 28 was given fittingly, a State funeral held at
Parliament Buildings. She was cremated at the Babu John
Crematorium today in the presence of thousands of Guyanese,
government officials, her party members and members of the
Diplomatic Corps.
The Government Information Agency (GINA) today spoke with
persons from around the country who expressed their views on the
passing of the former President.

Peter Atkinson
Riverview
The other night I was looking at an interview on
her 50th wedding anniversary and from that I draw conclusion and
to me from that interview I said she was a role model. She was
very good.

George Edwards
Annandale, ECD
At least she was a very good person and I am sorry for her
passing. It was a very good role she played in helping Guyana to
get independence. I am very sorry.

Anand Dharampaul
Annandale, ECD
I would always say good things about her since she fought for
this country and made people understand the full nature of life.
Every young person should adopt the principles of her and know
exactly what life has to offer. She had done well in her life.

Allan Burnett
Georgetown
I feel very sad personally for her death because from the
time I knew her she fought for this country. She did so much
especially for women. She formed good organisations and she took
off where her husband left off and I am very thankful they way
she treated the country and what she tried to do when she was
alive. Let’s hope that somewhere along the line we could have
another woman and be a role model and keep doing the good work.

Zenia Carter
Linden
I came to bid Cde JJ a send off and a welcome to her new
home. I know I will miss her dearly. She is the cause of me
having my own home in Linden, in providing my materials and I
can boast to the world, to Guyana, that Mrs. Jagan was a very
pleasant person. She was very nice and may God grant her eternal
peace and rest. I feel very sad. She has done her best for the
country. She give up her home to be in Guyana to fight for women
and she did it with all her might and all her heart.

Shanta Springer
Essequibo Coast
I think that Cde. Janet Jagan deserve my presence because of
the things that she has done in Guyana. She has made a great
contribution since she had an input in Guyana. In fact, she was
a visionary. Her passing has caused an entire gloom over Guyana
and we have lost a mother of the nation. She is gone and we will
all miss her. She leaves a legacy that we can pattern so we
could pattern and we can stand and fight for democracy and
equality for women.

Badewattie Kandial
Georgetown
It is a great loss to us. She was so active and she was an
inspiration. We loved her. We learned from her. She was always a
guiding light to us. She is gone. Nobody is gone in a sense
because she will live on for us. She will always be there. We
will always have a legacy. We will look at her teachings as
guidance. I would like to express condolences to the immediate
family and country as a whole. Everybody learnt from her views.

Myrtlene McLennan
Plaisance
It is so sad you know but I mean to say we all have to go
someday and she has done a lot of good. No one is perfect. We
all have our “buts” but at least she fight for the women and she
was a very thoughtful woman.

Anita Thorne
Parika
I felt very sad because you could come to her and tell her
your problem and she would make sure you get help. She didn’t
turn down anyone. Everyone should miss her because she was a
mother and she always played a mother role in Guyana, a hard
working struggler and I am proud because she is a woman. She
made us dignified and we are recognised. We could stop violence
from our husband, no man can take advantage of us because of Cde.
Janet. She has empowered women and proud women of today,
dignified women that we could stand up as women, anywhere we go.
We miss her and love her.

Bibi Safiran Bajan, Berbice
I think that she was a woman of the people and her passing is
like saying farewell to a matriarch of the nation. She was so
kind in her ways to everyone. She was approachable and she made
a contribution to this country. She really felt for the working
class and fought for the elimination of prejudice, not only for
the working people but class prejudice also.
She has done so much for us especially working side by side
with Dr. Jagan. You know that they say behind every successful
man there is a woman. I think that she really came to this earth
to do a job and everything that she has done impacted on all of
our live.

Vasco Jardine,
Crabwood Creek
Comrade Janet has paid an ultimate price for all of us
Guyanese. She has sacrificed her entire life, she and her
husband and if it wasn’t for her, her husband would not have
achieved what he did. They worked collectively for the benefit
of all Guyanese.
What we are inheriting today is what they have worked for and
they have paid for it with their life.

Omar Dowlat,
Triumph, East Coast Demerara
Janet has fought for freedom and adult suffrage in this country
that every woman and everybody must have their right. No matter
what religion you are from, you must have access to school and
job. She was good, she was the live wire of this country.

Leila Mahabar,
Success, East Coast Demerara
It is indeed a sad day, but yet we are also proud of the most
powerful fighter Janet Jagan. We are very saddened by her
passing, but we so very proud of her. We share the nation’s
sorrow, but I want to say that her legacy will live on because
we love her. She made us proud.

Sandra Tilaram,
Enmore
It was sad to lose a hero, she was a mother and she dedicated
herself to Guyanese people so much. Her contribution was
numerous, especially for women. She taught us how to be strong
and I don’t think that there is another Guyanese that can fight
the way she fought for us.
It is really sad to lose a great person like Janet Jagan. We
are going to miss her very much; her absence means much to us.

Sasenarine Singh,
Enmore
I feel more of a personal loss. She was much more than a
leader of the country, she was like a mother to me as well and I
am deeply hurt inside.
I think Guyana has gained a lot from her contribution. We
must all remember, she was from the United States initially and
when she started her fighting in the 1940s I don’t think that
anybody would do the things that she did, besides her husband,
and that is a great loss not only for Guyana but internationally
as well.

Ivy Dindial,
Auchlyne, Berbice
She has impressed me and I will always use her work in my
education programme. She has done a lot for children in terms of
story telling and her views on the news and I will never forget
that.
She has shown us women what we can do, she has left a legacy for
me and in my women’s group; I will share what she has done.
I hope women, who would have read about her, can take a leaf out
of her life and do something for this country.

Roy Rajman
Herstelling, East Bank Demerara
I feel it is a great loss to the nation. I don’t know how the
nation will be able to recover from the loss. I know that
although she was not a person who was in the forefront of
recent, I know that many of the ideas, ideologies and principles
shared were her knowledge.

Tajram Persaud,
Blairmont, West Coast Berbice
We cannot have asked for more than what she has done for us
and Guyana. She has gone and I hope that the legacy is there and
what she fought for in this country and that is the most
important thing.
She fought for many things more to make us free, she fought for
democracy for Guyana and to free our people and our country.
TOP
TOP
Glowing tributes dominate at State funeral for late
President
Georgetown, GINA, March 31, 2009
Guyana today bid farewell to former President Janet Jagan
with an official State funeral at Parliament Buildings,
Georgetown. The former President who celebrated her 88th birth
anniversary October last, passed away on Saturday following a
brief illness.
The day’s proceedings began at about 6:00h with
the body of the late former President being removed from the
Newburg Funeral Home, Bent Street to the New Haven residence,
which she shared with her late husband and President Cheddi
Jagan for many years, for a private viewing for relatives and
close comrades.
The cortège proceeded to the Castellani House,
Vlissengen Road, the official Art Gallery of Guyana and where
she served as Chairperson of the Board up until her death. There
it was joined by a military detachment complete with officers,
honour guard, military band, and escorts on foot, motorcycles
and horses, including the ‘riderless horse’ with boots reversed
(the symbol of a fallen Commander-In-Chief ).

The cortège proceeded, with the military slow march with weapons
in reversed order, south along Vlissengen Road, before turning
west into Brickdam and onwards to Parliament Buildings.
There the body was received by comrades of the ruling Party
including Cecil Belgrave, Minister within the Ministry of Health
Dr Bheri Ramsaran, Minister of Amerindian Affairs Pauline Sukhai,
the son-in-law of the late President, Mark Brancier, his son
Alexander Brancier and Personal Assistant to the late President
Bernard Veersammy.
The Official ceremony chaired by Presidential Advisor on
Governance Gail Teixeira saw tributes interspersed with
renditions from the Military Band.
The eulogy was presented by Minister of Home Affairs Clement
Rohee while tributes were given by President Bharrat Jagdeo,
Leader of the Opposition in the National Assembly Robert Corbin,
General Secretary of the People’s Progressive Party (PPP) Donald
Ramoutar, daughter Nadira Jagan-Brancier and a granddaughter
Vrinda Jagan.
Teixeira said that the former President’s life was so
inextricably intertwined in the history of Guyana that the two
could never be severed. She posited that Janet Jagan belonged to
Guyana and Guyana gave her its recognition when it elected her
its first female President in 1997.
Minister Rohee during the eulogy traced the sacrifices made
and commitment displayed for Guyana, her adopted homeland.
She was elected to the Georgetown Town Council and later the
National Assembly and served as the Deputy Speaker following the
1957 elections. Following the 1992 electoral victory, she
represented Guyana at the United Nations General Assembly and
was appointed Prime Minister in 1997 following the death of
President Cheddi Jagan. She successfully led the PPP/C to the
1997 election and served as President from 1997 to 1999 when she
retired.
Highlighting her humanitarian side, he said that it was
common for her to give her last to someone in need often leaving
herself without. He spoke of her love for the arts and
literature which saw the establishment of the National Art
Gallery at Castellani House and her supporting local artists by
purchasing their works to encourage them.

President Jagdeo spoke of her strength of character which saw
her rebounding from insults, indignities and other hardships she
suffered as a result of her involvement in struggles first for
Guyana’s independence and later for democracy in Guyana.
He posited that she was an extraordinary woman who dedicated
her life towards the advancement of Guyana as she brought an
enlightened humanism which was her guiding philosophy from which
she never departed or wavered.
He recalled her concern for people in that she paid keen
attention on the impact of public policy on the lives of
ordinary citizens.
Opposition Leader Robert Corbin in his tribute on behalf of
the Opposition Parties in the National Assembly said that the
late former President has left a lasting legacy of rich service.
He posited that she gave of herself to the Party, her beliefs,
and the working class struggles of Guyana and that she
distinguished herself working for the rights and liberation of
women and in the independence struggles of Guyana.
Donald Ramoutar said that her struggles for independence were
to achieve social justice for the poor and bettering the
conditions of the working class.
Identifying some of the hardships faced during the struggle,
he reminded of her being barred from returning to her native
United States of America to visit her sick father and to later
attend his funeral.
Outlining her achievements as a Minister following the 1957
election, he pointed to the strides in conditions of service of
workers, the malaria eradication programme, the construction of
cottage hospitals and the establishment of housing schemes in
Ruimveldt and Campbellville.
Describing her as a person who never shied away from
responsibility, he said that she willingly accepted to serve as
Prime Minister following her husband’s death and later to lead
the party in the 1997 elections.
The Late President’s daughter and granddaughter Nadira
Jagan-Brancier and Vrindra Jagan respectively both portrayed her
as a person who showered her family with love and care. They
reminisced about outings in the Zoo and creeks as she juggled
her political and family life.

Following the tributes, the cortège departed the Parliament
Buildings Compound for Freedom House where party supporters had
gathered from early in the morning to bid farewell to their
icon.
At Freedom House, the Party supporters draped the coffin with
the Party flag and placed flowers around the coffin before
joining the procession to the Babu John Crematorium for the
final farewell.
TOP
TOP
Thousands bid final farewell to former President
- legacy of the Jagans will live on - President Jagdeo
assures
Georgetown, GINA, March 31, 2009
Following a well orchestrated funeral procession for Mrs.
Janet Jagan O.E, the nation said a final farewell to the former
President at Babu John, Port Mourant, in the same manner that
her late husband and former President Dr. Cheddi Jagan was
cremated.
President Bharrat Jagdeo was among the many who looked on as
members of the Jagan family performed the honours of beginning
the cremation ceremony for the former First Lady.
The final military rites were performed with the removal of
the Golden Arrowhead by the Guyana Defence Force (GDF). It was
then handed over to members of the Jagan family after which the
casket was removed, while the GDF performed the 21 gun salute.

President Bharrat Jagdeo in discussion with Nadira
Brancier, daughter of the late Mrs Janet Jagan.
Only recently the People’s Progressive Party (PPP) assembled
at the same venue to honour the 12th death anniversary of its
founder leader and former President of Guyana, Dr. Cheddi Jagan.
President Bharrat Jagdeo who delivered his final farewell
speech, considers Babu John a holy place.
He described the large gathering as people who had profound
love for the two stalwarts.
“You have been coming here year after year to pay tribute and
to remember Cheddi Jagan and I hope that from now on we will
continue to do so but we will also come here to pay tribute to
Janet Jagan,” President Jagan said.
Although the party has lost its founder leaders, President
Jagdeo said their ideas and principles remain and will continue
to guide the PPP long into the future.
In this regard, he called on the dedicated supporters of
today to be resilient in ensuring that the legacy of the Jagans
is perpetuated
“Janet Jagan gave over 60 years of her life in service to
this nation. What are you prepared to give so that her memories
and the memories of Cheddi Jagan remain evergreen? How are you
going to help so that their legacy to the people of this country
is never forgotten?” President Jagdeo challenged.
President Jagdeo assured that the party will grow from
strength to strength and will continue to serve the Guyanese
people as it fulfils the legacy of the Jagans.

Joey Jagan lighting his mother's pyre at Babu John.
“This enterprise of nation building was started by Dr. Cheddi
Jagan and Janet Jagan but it has not ended and we have to make
sure that we move it forward and the only way it could move
forward is if all of us work at it together. This party will
never become parochial,” President Jagdeo said.
Son of the late President Dr. Cheddi Jagan (jr) began his
tribute by extending appreciation to President Jagdeo and the
leadership of the PPP for the overwhelming support given through
the state funeral of his mother.
He recalled how proud he felt to have sung the party song “Oh
Fighting Men” and proudly waved his hands in the same manner his
mother and father did as he reminisced on how they embodied the
gesture.
He described his mother as someone who gave her all for
Guyana noting that her contributions are unmatched.
“Sixty five years of service is like a world record, no one
can beat that. In the 1960s Mrs Jagan held two ministries; the
Ministries of Labour, Health and Housing… when desperation and
trying times hit this country Mrs Jagan accepted the role of
Home Affairs Minister and handled that quite capably,” Dr Jagan
(Jr) said.

The gathering at Babu John for the last ceremony as the
body of Mrs Janet Jagan was cremated.
Granddaughter Natasha Brancier, in her tribute, recalled some
of the fondest memories of her grandmother although the
relationship was mostly of a long-distance nature.
“Although she didn’t spend an infinite amount of time with
us, she always seemed to find the time to show us the true
beauty of Guyana. as a young child, I remember her as a kind but
soft spoken woman and someone who you could talk to with ease,”
Brancier said.
The ceremony ended at around 16:00 h with President Jagdeo
joining government officials, other party members and other
cohorts in singing the party song “Oh Fighting Men.”

Joey Jagan, his children and other family members as the
body of the former President Janet Jagan is being cremated.
Mrs. Jagan an American, became linked to Guyana after she
married Dr Cheddi Jagan in 1943.
She was instrumental in the formation of the Women’s
Political and Economic Organisation (WPO) and the Political
Affairs Committee (PAC) in 1946, and along with Dr. Jagan formed
the PPP.
She held the position of Deputy Speaker in the National
Assembly and Minister of Labour Health and Housing during the
period 1953 to 1963.
In 1997 Mrs. Jagan climbed to greater heights by becoming the
first female President of Guyana in 1997.
March 30, 2009
Diplomats, MPs pay tribute to Mrs. Jagan
Georgetown, GINA, March 30, 2009
Several members of the Diplomatic Community, Members of
Parliament and other prominent figures in society turned out to
pay tribute following the death of former president Janet Jagan,
O.E.
Books of Condolence were opened at the National
Cultural Centre, Freedom House, Parliament Buildings and the
Cheddi Jagan Research Centre (Red House) between 9:00 and 20:00
h.
Thousands have already signed the Condolence books since they
were opened on Saturday.
The Government Information Agency (GINA) caught up with some
of the diplomats who shared their sentiments about the former
first lady and first female President of Guyana.

Caricom Secretary General Dr. Edwin Carrington and US
Ambassador to Guyana John Melvin Jones signing the Book of
Condolence.
Former European Union (EU) Ambassador to Guyana
John Caloghivon who served as Ambassador under the leadership of
President Dr. Cheddi Jagan and later Mrs. Janet Jagan during the
period 1995 to 1999 also signed the book of condolence.
He considers both past leaders fantastic people
who dedicated their lives to what they believed in to develop
the lives of the people and the country. He also recalled some
wonderful memories of that period working under the two leaders.
Secretary General of the Caribbean Community Dr.
Edwin Carrington considers the former first lady a personal
friend and her death a great loss to Guyana. After signing the
condolence book he said she was a great nation builder and
called on all to take an example from her courage and
longstanding efforts to build the nation.

Canadian High Commissioner to Guyana Charles Court
signing the Book of Condolence for former President Janet Jagan
O.E.
Being a native of the United States of America
(USA), Ambassador of the US to Guyana John Melvin Jones said
that her death is also a loss to the USA.
“We are proud that she also was an American and
this is an indication of the outpouring of sympathy that our
nation has for her. She’s very impressive, dedicated and
certainly going about her business to better the lives of those
who are less fortunate,” Ambassador Jones said.
Canadian High Commissioner Charles Court also
shared some of his personal experiences with Ms. Jagan,
describing her as a unique person. He used the occasion to
extend condolences to her family and the country.

PNCR Member of Parliament Clarissa Reihl signing the
Book of Condolence for former President Janet Jagan O.E.
The Cuban government is also saddened by her passing
according to the Ambassador Pedro Arteaga Cardenas
who said that it is a
sad moment to bid farewell to a magnificent individual.
Also signing the book of condolence were Indian
High Commissioner to Guyana, Subit Kumar Mandal, Mexican
Ambassador to Guyana Fernando Sandoval, Inter-American Institute
for Cooperation on Agriculture (IICA) Representative to
Guyana Ignatius Jean, People’s National Congress Reform (PNCR)
Member of Parliament Clarissa Riehl, and Region Two Member of
Parliament Parmanand Persaud.
TOP
TOP
Late President Janet Jagan remembered
Georgetown, GINA, March 30, 2009
As preparations continue for the State funeral of Guyana’s
first female President, Janet Jagan, members of Parliament
turned up at the Parliament Buildings, Georgetown, to sign the
book of condolence and reminisce on her life and work.
Minister of Transport and Hydraulics Robeson Benn said the
memories of the late President Janet Jagan are poignant, having
being born to parents who were part of the early struggles for
independence with she and her husband Dr Cheddi Jagan. He said
that even in the most difficult days in Guyana she never gave up
on Guyana or Guyanese even when the party was cheated out of
electoral victory.
He recalled her organizing ability and her
engagement with ordinary Guyanese in the early struggle for
independence, when the majority of Guyanese lived and worked
under very poor conditions similar to that of apartheid.

Minister Benn attributed the work of Janet and Cheddi Jagan
and other members of the Political Affairs Committee (PAC) who,
in those days “both literally and figuratively started the
rendering asunder of that society.”
He said that the sacrifice that she made for Guyana will
become more apparent as a proper study and history of Guyana is
recorded. He highlighted her contribution to women and children,
health and housing in Guyana.
Labour Minister and Leader of The United Force, Manzoor Nadir
said that Janet Jagan was a long serving member of the political
landscape and Government of Guyana. His association with her, he
said, was both in opposition and as a Government Minister.
Recalling her ‘generosity of spirit’ he said that after the
bitterly fought 1997 election when she was called all sorts of
names by opposition parties, during the campaign, including his,
she still remained pleasant to everyone. He recalled that in the
height of the controversy of that election she took time to call
him on New Year’s Eve as an opposition party leader to wish him
all the best.

In recalling her reaction to him being appointed a Minister in
the PPP/C Government, he said that after congratulating him, she
told him that when she was informed about him being asked to
join the Government, she said, ‘Why not? It is the young people
of this country that have to carry it forward; they have to
build on the foundation laid in the past by us older folks’.
He recalled as a Minister receiving notes from her,
encouraging him in particular aspects of the Ministry’s
activities. The penultimate note to him requested that the
Amended Trade Union recognition Bill be passed before her death.
He said that she should be remembered as someone who married
into the country and took on the struggles and sacrifice to make
it better.

Kwame Gilbert Member of Parliament described the former
president as a true ‘Guyanese’ woman who has been an inspiration
to many people and a champion among women.
He said that considering the fact that she was not a native
Guyanese she carved a path that all Guyanese women could take
strength from knowing that there is a path carved out by a great
Guyanese woman.
Finance Minister Dr Ashni Singh said that the history of the
struggle for independence will record the important role that
the former president.
He said that this marked the passing of a great Guyanese who
has contributed to the development of Guyana over several
decades in a very meaningful way.
Dr Singh said that as the nation mourns it would be an
opportune time to learn from the principles that she stood for
and recommit to the development of Guyana. He said that it is
important that her contribution to the development of Guyana be
recorded so that the younger generation could learn from the
past.
TOP
TOP
Large official Surinamese delegation for former
President’s funeral
Georgetown, GINA, March 30, 2009
A delegation from neighbouring Suriname has arrived in Guyana
to attend the State funeral of the late former President Janet
Jagan to be held tomorrow at Parliament Buildings.
The delegation includes the Minister of Foreign
Affairs, Minister of Justice and Police, the deputy speaker of
the National Assembly, parliamentarians and the Permanent
Secretary of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
TOP
TOP
Condolences continue to pour in - as
Guyana mourns
Georgetown, GINA, March 30, 2009
As the nation continues to mourn the late former President
Mrs. Janet Jagan, more condolences keep on pouring in as persons
both locally and internationally share the grief of Guyanese.
Mrs. Janet Jagan died on March 28, 2009 died at
the Georgetown Public Hospital Corporation after a brief
illness.
Government of Antigua and Barbuda
The Government of Antigua and Barbuda said that it was saddened
at the passing of the former president who it said was a
monumental figure of her time and an inspiration for the people
of Guyana and the Caribbean region, within government and
politics.
Her commitment to the full emancipation of women in Latin
America and the Caribbean, including equal education, equal
housing opportunities, equal pay for equal work and free
maternity leave will long be remembered.
The message signed by Prime Minister Mr Baldwin
Spencer said she will be remembered for the sterling service she
gave to her country as Guyana’s President during 1997 – 1999 and
her work along with her husband, former President Dr. Cheddi
Jagan in the founding of the PPP which lead to Guyana attaining
political independence from Britain. It added that she leaves a
model of service which needs to be emulated by aspiring leaders.
Mexican Embassy
The Mexican embassy expressed deepest condolences and profound
sympathy over the passing of Mrs Jagan whom it said was a
relevant personality in the modern history of the country.
The embassy took the opportunity to renew to the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Trade and International Cooperation
of the Republic of Guyana the assurances of its highest
consideration.
British High Commission
Acting British Commissioner, Simon Bond in a message to
President Bharrat Jagdeo stated that, “I was very saddened to
hear the news of the death of former President Mrs. Janet Jagan.
I wish to take this opportunity to extend my sincerest
condolences to Mrs. Jagan’s family, to you, the Government and
people of Guyana.”
Mrs. Jagan’s tireless and lifelong service and
commitment to the people, politics and Government of Guyana is
well known, Mr. Bond said and added that, “her contribution to
Guyana’s social and economic development was enormous. She will
be greatly missed in Guyana, the region and beyond.”
Guyana Press Association
The association described Mrs. Jagan as an “indomitable fighter
for press freedom” and one of the longest-serving journalists in
the country.
GPA noted that as the Editor of the Mirror
newspaper, Mrs. Jagan lived through those terrible years of
state-repression of the privately-owned media, characterized by
restrictions on the importation of news-print and the
acquisition of a modern printing press.
Mrs. Jagan often offered critical analyses and
insights on media issues some of which were met with broad
agreement, but were nevertheless valuable perspectives in
ongoing discourses and debates, the association said.
GPA noted that she will long be remembered for
her indefatigable work in the preservation of Guyana’s oral,
written, and cultural history; a significant part of which was
inextricably linked to her party’s role in the fight for
Guyana’s independence, adult suffrage and women’s rights.
It noted that as an overwhelming majority of
media workers are women, the passing of Mrs. Jagan offers the
women of the media an opportunity to pause and reflect on the
role that she played in fighting across the political divide for
equality of opportunity and the best available treatment of
women.
Castellani House
The members of the management committee of the National Gallery,
Castellani House expressed profound sadness over the passing of
Mrs Jagan who was the Chairperson of their Committee.
Mrs. Jagan exercised great knowledge and love of
the arts with her characteristic modesty, determination and
zeal, preferring to play a limited role at public gallery
events.
The Committee said she instigated Castellani’s
House popular Evenings of Literature as well as its Classic
Tuesday film evenings. Mrs. Jagan was also interested in art by
and for children.
Guyana Agricultural and General Workers Union (GAWU)
GAWU described the late former President as a political icon,
matriarch and patriot for her country and recalled Mrs. Jagan’s
heroic struggles on behalf of the working class for their
industrial and labour rights.
The Union noted that Mrs. Jagan toiled alongside father of
Guyanese trade unionism, Hubert Nathaniel Critchlow and was
involved in the tireless struggle for sugar workers.
GAWU stated that Mrs. Jagan saw no distinction amongst the
working class representatives and under her watch as Minister of
Labour saw the first of May become Labour Day.
The Union said she acted as legislator and her love for
children is legendary.
Professor David Dabydeen
In his tribute to the late former president, Professor Dabydeen
said he met her in November 1992, and she wanted to talk, not
about politics, but literature and arts generally and she became
a friend and like a mother to him.
Professor Dabydeen said she expressed her admiration for
Chekhov and believed the English novel superior to American
fiction.
She was engaged with writers of the ilk of Wilson
Harris, V.S.Naipaul, Jan Carew, Derek Walcott, Martin Carter and
others from the 1940s.
The Professor saw it as a privilege to listen to
her talking about her meetings with Edna Manley, Phyllis Alfrey
and other pioneers of Caribbean creativity. He said her support
of the arts was fierce, hence the efforts she made for
Castellani House to become the location of Guyana’s National Art
Gallery.
Dabydeen said she believed that the
reconstruction of Guyana was bound up not only with political
reform but with a literary, artistic and intellectual
renaissance.
He expressed his gratitude for the insights she
gave him in the unfolding of West Indian literature in the 1940s
and the inspiration she provided for his own writing.
TOP
TOP
PPP holds Memorial service for late former President
Janet Jagan
Georgetown GINA, March 30, 2009
The People’s Progressive Party (PPP) today held a memorial
ceremony for the late former President Janet Jagan at Freedom
House, Robb Street that was attended by party officials, family
and friends of Mrs. Jagan, many of whom offered tributes to her
as they hailed her as Guyana’s freedom fighter.
Prime Minister Samuel Hinds, said working
alongside her husband Cheddi, Mrs. Jagan brought a political
awakening to Guyana at a time when colour and class held great
sway in people’s lives. He said they both demonstrated that they
held all people worthy with equal potential.

President Bharrat Jagdeo and relatives of the late Mrs
Jagan.
The Prime Minister said, the late former President broke old
ideas about women’s role in Guyana and established that all
women should play an equal role as men. He posited that 65 years
later this is a reality thanks, to Mrs. Jagan.
Head of the Presidential Secretariat Dr. Roger Luncheon said
Mrs. Jagan stood for the struggle that is so much a part of
Guyana today. He said she stood strong and majestically as she
joined with her comrades.
He noted that she was an avid internationalist who recognised
the benefits that accrued to the working people around the
world.

President Bharrat Jagdeo in discussion with Joey Jagan,
son of the later former President Janet Jagan.
Mrs. Jagan’s daughter Nadira said her mother Mrs. Jagan was a
warm, kind and loving person and even though she was involved in
the political life she was still able to spend time with her
children, taking them on family trips to the Zoo and seawall.
She said, the Cheddi Jagan Research Centre will now be
dedicated to both of her parents’ work.
Aston Chase, the only surviving co-founder of the PPP
described Mrs. Jagan as a devoted, dedicated and determined
fighter.

A section of the gathering at the Memorial service in
honour of late former President Janet Jagan at Freedom House.
Remembering the times when Mrs. Jagan allowed her house to be
used as a meeting place to carry on party business, Chase said
he always wondered how Mrs. Jagan and her husband found time to
spend with their children. He said the Jagans left an indelible
record in this country, noting that the record of the late
former President is one that no one will be able to discredit or
blemish.
He reminisced on her being instrumental in raising finances
to keep various strikes going because unionist did not have
reserves to keep workers on strike but she got contributions to
ensure that they could stand up for their rights.
Chase said she also helped through the Thunder paper to tell
workers in various parts of the country what their counterparts’
struggles were by publicizing their grievances. This he said,
helped to gather support for the workers and eventually they
succeeded in breaking the racial barriers that existed there.
With her husband and others she was instrumental in getting
sustenance for the workers in Enmore and other sugar estates
across the country.

Another section of the gathering at the Memorial held at
Freedom House.
Also giving tributes were Mrs. Jagan’s son Joey Jagan,
Minister of Culture, Youth and Sport Dr. Frank Anthony, General
Sceretary of the Women’s Progressive Organisation (WPO) Indra
Chandarpal, President, Guyana Agricultural Workers’ Union (GAWU)
Komal Chand and General Secretary of the Rice Producers
Association Dharamkumar Seeraj,
Present at the memorial ceremony were President Bharrat
Jagdeo, Government Officials, PPP members, and members of the
public.
Mrs. Jagan will be given a state funeral on tommorrow, where
persons will be afforded the opportunity to pay a fitting
tribute to her.
The former President and First Lady succumbed on March 28
after being admitted to the Georgetown Public Hospital
Corporation (GPHC). She was 88 years.
March 29, 2009
President Jagdeo cuts short Middle East visit
-on learning of the death of former President Janet Jagan
Georgetown, GINA, March 29, 2009
President Bharrat Jagdeo today, returned to Guyana after he
cut short his official visit to the Middle East due to the
passing of former President Janet Jagan.
The President, who was in the Middle East to
attend a series of official visits to various countries and was
also slated to attend the Arab South American Summit to be held
in Qatar, said he received a call from Prime Minister Samuel
Hinds who informed him of Mrs. Jagan’s passing and this prompted
his decision to immediately return to Guyana.
Speaking to members of the media the President
said, “I have been traveling continuously over the pass 24 hours
to be back here I just met with the family, with Joey and Nadira
and we decided on the arrangements that will be put in place to
give the fitting tribute to comrade Janet and we have to respect
the wishes of the family. At the same time Comrade Janet belongs
to the whole country so we have to balance the two interests.”
Remembering the late former Leader, President Jagdeo said
“it’s a sad time for our country; we know that Comrade Janet
lived a full life but her passing makes us poor, our country
poor.”
President Jagdeo noted that Janet Jagan was involved in
every major cause to enhance the lives of Guyanese as far back
as the 1940’s.
“She will long be remembered not just as Janet Jagan the
person, but for what she stood for, for the ideas that she had,
the strength of character that she displayed and her commitment
and love for this country.”
Noting Mrs. Jagan’s contributions to the People’s Progressive
Party (PPP), he said along with her husband Cheddie Jagan, she
played a significant role in imbuing the PPP with their
philosophies and ideas.
“Our party remains strong today and that was her life’s work;
to ensure that the party remains strong so that it can continue
to serve the people of this country, our party’s ideals will
always be evergreen because they believe in countries that cater
for all of its people, regardless of the race or religion. This
was the core value of the PPP largely because these were the
core values of Janet and Cheddie Jagan,” the President said.
The President added that, any party that works for the good
of the people of the country will always be relevant and the
character and nature of the PPP is owed to these two great
people, “one passed some years ago and now Comrade Janet has
joined him,”.
President Jagdeo said, in remembering the late former
President, all Guyanese should try to learn more about the
things that she stood for and struggled for because these are
things that they enjoy today, freedoms that are taken for
granted.
Mrs. Jagan will be given a state funeral where persons will
be afforded the opportunity to pay a fitting tribute to her.
The former President and First Lady succumbed on March 28 after
being admitted to the Georgetown Public Hospital Corporation (GPHC).
She was 88 years.
After migrating to Guyana with husband Dr.
Cheddi Jagan, whom she had met and married in 1943, while
working as a student nurse at Cook County Hospital, she founded
the Women's Political and Economic Organisation and co-founded
the Political Affairs Committee in 1946, and later along with
her husband Dr. Cheddi Jagan and others, the People’s
Progressive Party in 1950.
She served as Prime Minister of Guyana from March 17 to
December 19, 1997 in addition to holding several other elected
offices some of which included, Deputy Speaker of the National
Assembly and Government Minister.
After her husband’s death, Mrs. Jagan was sworn in as Prime
Minister on March 17, 1997 and ran as the Presidential candidate
for the PPP/C in the December 1997 election. She assumed the
Presidency of Guyana following the PPP/C victory in that
election and became the first democratically elected female
President in the entire South America.
TOP
TOP
Private Sector mourns former President Janet Jagan’s
passing
Georgetown, GINA, March 29, 2009
With the passing of former President Janet Jagan, Chairman of
the Private Sector Commission (PSC) Captain Gerald Gouveia
joined with those in the wider community who paid tribute to
her.
The private sector mourns the loss of the former
President who has always been supportive of the PSC’s work,
Gouveia said.
According to Gouveia, she was a champion of the
private sector as was seen in her unwavering support for the
development of the Ogle Airport during her tenure as Prime
Minister, when it was only a dream for the private sector.

Chairman of the Private Sector Commission (PSC) Captain
Gerald Gouveia
“She came to the fore at that time and championed the
development of Ogle and she also assured us that she will use
all her influences and power at the time to support its
development,” Gouveia said. The Ogle Airport development today
will serve Guyana for generations to come, he added.
Referring to her role as a politician, Captain Gouveia said
that Mrs. Jagan had become a senior statesperson in Guyana who
had widespread international respect as well. He said that Mrs.
Jagan was in the forefront of trying to move Guyana forward to
being an independent state and played a pivotal role in
restoring democracy in Guyana. He described her as a champion of
this cause.
On a personal note Captain Gouveia reminisced on the
adventurous person that the former President was, since she was
among the first persons who went to the bottom of the Kaieteur
Falls.
“Here was a woman as the wife of Cheddi Jagan, she became a
Guyanese in the true sense of the word and she did things like
other Guyanese in terms of the discovery of our hinterland and
as an adventurer, that is how I remember her,” Captain Gouveia
said.
TOP
TOP
No way that history could be recorded without former
President-ERC Chairman
Georgetown, GINA, March 29, 2009
As the nation mourns the loss of the former President Janet
Jagan, Chairman of the Ethnic Relations Commission (ERC), Bishop
Juan Edghill joined the thousands to offer condolence to the
Mrs. Jagan’s family, the People’s Progressive Party and to the
wider Guyanese community.
Bishop Edghill believes that in mourning the passing of Mrs.
Jagan, Guyanese should “honour her in death and continue to be a
people that work towards our nation’s motto where we can embrace
each other knowing fully well that we’re a Guyanese family we
are one people one nation one destiny.”
The ERC Chairman highlighted the gracefulness
with which the late former President took criticism “even in the
days when she was literally being verbally abused by bad
language and actions that could have annoyed and irritated.”
He said during those difficult days, she always kept a smile
and would always say “think about the big picture and how this
would all end.”
Bishop Edghill noted the significant contributions Mrs. Jagan
made to the development of Guyana. “There is no way that history
could be recorded without her being central in terms of Guyana’s
history,” he said.
He posited that Mrs. Jagan has taught her peers and the
younger generation, valuable lessons which they can exemplify.
Janet Jagan born October 20, 1920 to a Jewish, middle-class
family in Chicago, Illinois, in the Unite States of America,
became the sixth President and first female President of the
Republic of Guyana on December 19, 1997. She served in that
position until August 11, 1999 when she retired due to health
reasons.
TOP
FUNERAL ARRANGMENTS FOR THE LATE
FORMER PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF GUYANA, H.E.MRS. JANET JAGAN
The Government of Guyana wishes to announce that the State
Funeral of the late Former President of the Republic of Guyana,
Mrs. Janet Jagan, O.E., will take place on Tuesday, March 31,
2009.
The hearse accompanied by the family will move off from Mrs.
Jagan’s Residence, New Haven, Bel Air, at 08:00 hrs proceeding
west then north onto the Railway Embankment Road thence into
Sheriff Street, turning into Campbell Avenue/Sandy Babb Street,
then turning south onto Vlissengen Road.
The entourage will stop on Vlissengen Road directly in front
of the Office of the President and Castellani House where the
military procession will commence. The procession will proceed
south and turn west into Brickdam then proceed west to
Parliament Building, arriving at 08:30hrs for the State
Ceremony.
The Cortege departs Parliament Building at 10:00hrs and will
stop briefly in front of the Headquarters of the People’s
Progressive Party, Freedom House, Robb Street, for a ceremonial
farewell.
The procession will then leave Georgetown for Babu John,
Corentyne where speeches and the final military honours will be
performed. It is anticipated that the final ceremony and the
cremation will commence at 14:00hrs.
In keeping with Mrs. Jagan’s wishes for a simple send-off,
there will be no viewing of the body.
The Traffic Police, GPF, will provide further details of the
route and ancillary matters relating to the funeral procession
in Georgetown.
March 29, 2009
TOP
TOP
Late former President, Mrs. Janet Jagan, a champion of
the arts – Curator of National Art Gallery
Georgetown, GINA, March 29, 2009
Curator of the National Art Gallery, Elfreida Bissember today
remembered former President Janet Jagan as not only a leading
politician but as someone with a genuine interest and love of
the arts.
The Curator said that she was fortunate to have
worked with this great individual in her capacity as the Curator
of the National Gallery, Castellani House and the Director to
the gallery to which positions she was appointed by Mrs. Jagan
in 1996.
Bissember stated that in the early period she
became aware of Mrs. Jagan’s keenness and enthusiasm for the
job, this was in fact to manage the national collection of arts
and to share these with the Guyanese public.

Elfreida Bissember, Curator Director of the National
Arts gallery
Bissember said that she became aware of the depths of Mrs.
Jagan’s knowledge of the arts literature, novels, poetry, dance
and film since she had been pursuing these activities for
decades.
She described Mrs. Jagan as a “champion of the
arts” and added that the late former President was without
pomposity, self importance and given the fact she played such an
important role in politics, in shaping contemporary history, it
was admirable that she was so unassuming and humble.
“With her knowledge and understanding she was on
top of everything that came up and made for a very stimulating
and also at times demanding boss but it was an enjoyable
situation to be working in because I had confidence that I was
working with somebody who so fully appreciated what we were all
trying to do at the National Gallery,” she said.
She noted that Mrs. Jagan was succinct in her writings, “she
got to her point even as she began her articles, she made her
points and she expounded with logic and this is a skill that
people tend to take for granted to be succinct and to be clear
in your writing and to make clear arguments whether it was about
politics or anything else,” she said.
She said Guyanese are lucky to have had someone of that
caliber who was so willing to give so much of her self to
Guyana.
March
28, 2009
Former President Janet Jagan dies
Georgetown, GINA, March 28, 2009
Many were awakened this morning to the sad announcement of
the passing of Guyana’s former President Janet Jagan who
succumbed after being admitted to the Georgetown Public Hospital
Corporation (GPHC) yesterday. She died at age 88.

Mrs Janet Jagan-1920-2009.
The former President and First Lady was taken to the hospital
at around 17:00 h after complaining of feeling unwell.
She leaves to mourn her two children Dr. Cheddi Jagan Jr. and
Nadira and five grandchildren.
A native of Chicago Illinois in the United States of America
(USA), Janet Jagan was born on October 20, 1920 to the
Rosenbergs and attended the Wayne State University and the Cook
County Nursing School.
Janet Rosenberg, a student nurse, married Cheddi Jagan on
August 5, 1943. He became President in October 1992.

The late former president Janet Jagan and her husband,
the late Dr Cheddi Jagan.
She was instrumental in the formation of the Women’s
Political and Economic Organisation (WPO) and the Political
Affairs Committee (PAC) in 1946, and along with Dr. Jagan formed
the PPP.
She held the position of Deputy Speaker in the National
Assembly and Minister of Labour Health and Housing during the
period 1953 to 1963.
In 1997 Mrs. Jagan climbed to greater heights by becoming the
first female President of Guyana. Although she retired in 1999,
she continued serving behind the scenes in Guyana’s politics and
was also active in literature and culture.
In October 2008, she celebrated her 88th birthday in the
company of a large number of Government officials and
well-wishers at her Party’s Headquarters, Freedom House.
TOP
TOP
Guyana’s first female president, freedom fighter,
activist passes on
Georgetown, GINA, March 28, 2009
Janet Rosalie Jagan née Rosenberg born October
20, 1920 to a Jewish, middle-class family in Chicago, Illinois,
in the United States of America, became the sixth President and
first female President of the Republic of Guyana on December19,
1997. She served in that position up to August 11, 1999 when she
retired due to health reasons.

A youthful Janet Jagan
Janet Jagan served as Prime Minister of Guyana
from March 17 to December 19, 1997 in addition to holding
several other elected offices some of which included, Deputy
Speaker of the National Assembly and Government Minister.
After migrating to Guyana with her husband Dr
Cheddi Jagan whom she had met and married in 1943, while working
as a student nurse at Cook County Hospital, she founded the
Women's Political and Economic Organisation and co-founded the
Political Affairs Committee in 1946, and later along with her
husband Dr Cheddi Jagan and others, the People’s Progressive
Party in 1950.

Janet Jagan and her husband Cheddi Jagan (1943)
After her husband’s death in 1997, Janet Jagan
was sworn in as Prime Minister on March 17, 1997 and ran as the
Presidential candidate for the PPP/C in the December 1997
election. She assumed the Presidency of Guyana following the
PPP/C victory in that election and became the first
democratically elected female President in the entire South
America.
Political activism
Janet Jagan’s political activism began after her arrival in then
British Guiana in December 1943. she worked as a Dental Nurse in
her husband, Dr Cheddi Jagan’s, clinic. She became involved in
the labour struggle and was a member of the first trade union,
the British Guiana Labour Union, working with hero, Hubert
Nathaniel Critchlow, to organise domestic workers.
As a co-founder of the People’s Progressive Party (PPP), she was
elected as the party's General Secretary and held that post from
1950-1970.

Janet Jagan about to be jailed.
Janet Jagan first ran for political office in an
unsuccessful bid to represent Central Georgetown in the 1947
general election. In 1950, she was elected to the Georgetown
City Council and subsequently elected to the House of Assembly
in the April 1953 general election. She was one of three women
to win seats in that election. Following the election, she was
chosen as Deputy Speaker of the Legislature.
After the PPP’s electoral victory in April 1953
and the subsequent suspension of the constitution by the British
Government, Janet Jagan was among those jailed. After five
months in prison she was released but kept under house arrest
for two years.

Mrs. Janet Jagan, her husband Dr. Cheddi Jagan and two
children Joey Jagan and Nadira.
In 1957, she was re-elected to the House of
Assembly and became Minister of Labour, Health and Housing and
in 1963 Minister of Home Affairs.
Janet Jagan served as a member of the Elections
Commission for the opposition in 1967.
She was elected to Parliament in 1973 and was
re-elected in 1980, 1985, 1992 and 1997, eventually becoming the
longest-serving Member of Parliament. She represented Guyana at
the United Nations for three months in 1993, temporarily
replacing Rudy Insanally when the latter was President of the
United Nations General Assembly.
Personal achievements
Janet Jagan was educated at the University of Detroit; Wayne
University; Michigan State College and Cook County School of
Nursing.
She was involved with the literary and cultural
life of Guyana. She published early Martin Carter poems in
Thunder (which she edited) and supported the publication of
early Carter collections such as “The Hill of Fire Glows Red”.
In 1993 Peepal Tree Press published her “When Grandpa Cheddi was
a Boy and Other Stories,” followed by “Patricia, the Baby
Manatee” (1995), “Anastasia the Ant-Eater” (1997) and “The Dog
Who Loved Flowers”.

Mrs. Janet Jagan and her husband Dr. Cheddi Jagan 1995
at the State House.
She was also the editor of the PPP newspaper
Mirror from 1973 to 1997.
Former President Janet Jagan was a member of the
Council of Women World Leaders, an International network of
current and former women presidents and prime ministers whose
mission is to mobilize the highest-level women leaders globally
for collective action on issues of critical importance to women
and equitable development.
She was the mother of two, Cheddi Jagan, Jr.,
born in 1949 and Nadira, born in 1955, and grandmother of five.

To the supporters and workers of the People’s Progressive Party
who worked along with Dr Jagan and her in the early years she
has been a mother, sister, confidante and helper.
Janet Jagan is recipient of the Guyana's highest
national honour - Order of Excellence (O.E.), Woman of
Achievement award from the University of Guyana and in 1997, the
Gandhi Gold Medal for Peace, Democracy and Women's Rights by
UNECSO.
TOP
STATEMENT ON THE PASSING OF FORMER
PRESIDENT OF GUYANA, MRS. JANET JAGAN.O.E,
The Government of Guyana officially announces the passing of
Former Executive President of Guyana , Mrs. Janet Jagan, O.E.,
who died this morning at the Georgetown Public Hospital (GPHC)
after a brief illness. Mrs. Jagan was 88 years old at the time
of her death. Mrs. Jagan nee Rosenberg was born on October 20,
1920 in Chicago. She married Dr. Cheddi Jagan and adopted Guyana
as her home from 1943.
She was sworn in as Guyana’s first female President of the
Republic on December 18, 1997 and served until 1999.
The nation has been deprived of one of its greatest citizens who
exhibited strength, courage, humility, and commitment to the
development of Guyana.
Her selfless and dedicated service to Guyana was rendered
during her long, varied and honourable career in public life
over six decades. She was the co-founder of PPP and also among
the first female Members of Parliament, the first Female Deputy
Speaker, the first female Minister and the first Minister of
Labour, Health and Housing and Home Affairs. She was also Guyana
’s first female Prime Minister.
Mrs. Jagan struggled alongside her life-long partner and
husband, the late President Dr. Cheddi Jagan, against
colonialism and fought for peace, democracy and justice both in
Guyana and globally. Through her determination she worked
tirelessly to enhance the lives of all Guyanese, especially poor
women and children.
She received the country’s Highest Honour, the Order of
Excellence, O.E., and the Ghandi Gold Medal for peace, democracy
and women’s rights.
Mrs. Jagan was a modest and simple woman who carried herself
with great dignity and integrity.
The Office of the President extends condolence to her
children Nadira Jagan-Brancier and Cheddi Jagan Jr., her
grandchildren, all her relatives and friends and members of the
PPP at this time of grief.
Mrs. Jagan will be given a State Funeral, the details of
which will be announced later.
March 28, 2009. |