by Randy Gopaul
Once again, the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) has opened its vault to the Guyanese government, tossing another $30 million into the bottomless pit of cronyism, incompetence, and brazen corruption that defines this administration. The July 27th announcement from DPI Guyana, breathlessly detailing the loan to “enhance water and sanitation infrastructure,” is less a promise of progress and more a chilling invoice for future generations to pay. It’s a grotesque spectacle, international lenders, eyes wide shut, funding a regime whose primary expertise lies not in development, but in diverting public funds into private pockets.
To be brutally clear, IDB money in Guyana is not development capital; it’s patronage fuel. The well-documented, sickeningly predictable pattern is this, an IDB loan is secured with lofty promises. A “competitive” procurement process is staged, a thin veneer quickly stripped away to reveal the same cast of PPP-connected contractors, consultants, and cronies emerging victorious. Projects like the water treatment plants touted in Diamond, Onderneeming, or Wales, are then executed with shoddy workmanship, plagued by costly delays, and delivered as substandard monuments to graft. The citizens endure broken pipes, inconsistent supply, dirty water, low water pressure and promises unfulfilled, while the chosen few laugh all the way to offshore banks.
Where does the IDB think this $30 million is really going? Straight into the same labyrinthine system that has failed Guyanese for years. The talk of “digital transformation” for GWI and “reducing Non-Revenue Water” is a cruel joke when the procurement process itself is a hemorrhage of revenue. How can “modern technologies” fix a system fundamentally corrupted by political favoritism? How can “public awareness campaigns” about leaks compensate for the gaping hole in accountability where billions vanish?
The loan terms themselves are an insult wrapped in bureaucracy, 25 years of debt bondage for the Guyanese people, a 5.5-year grace period allowing the current architects of this plunder to skip town before the bills come due, and an interest rate tied to volatile markets. This isn’t investment; it’s indentured servitude imposed by the IDB on a populace already drowning under the weight of elite theft. The co-financing from JICA ($36.33 million) only magnifies the tragedy, more international goodwill being cynically exploited.
The DPI article trumpets “transformative journeys” and “100% potable water coverage by year-end.” Such claims are fantasy, deliberately detached from the harsh reality of how PPP governance operates. This isn’t transformation; it’s looting facilitated by the IDB’s willful blindness. The only things reliably “transformed” are the bank balances of the ruling elite and the desperation of ordinary Guyanese left with crumbling infrastructure and mounting debt.
The IDB pats itself on the back for “enhancing resilience,” while systematically undermining the resilience of Guyana’s economy and democracy by bankrolling a kleptocracy. They fund “sustainability” projects that are inherently unsustainable because they are built on the quicksand of corruption. They speak of “benefiting 151,560 people,” ignoring the countless more who will suffer for decades under the debt incurred for projects that will inevitably fail to deliver as promised.
Enough is enough. The IDB must be held accountable for its complicity. Continuing this lending spree without ironclad, independently verified safeguards against corruption isn’t development assistance; it’s financial malpractice and a betrayal of the Guyanese people. It’s time for the IDB to freeze all further disbursements until genuine, transparent procurement mechanisms, free from political interference, are demonstrably in place and enforced.
The people of Guyana deserve clean water, not another torrent of dirty money flowing into the hands of the corrupt. They deserve infrastructure that works, not crumbling white elephants built by cronies. They deserve a future free from the crushing debt incurred today to enrich thieves tomorrow. The IDB, by unconcernedly writing checks to this government, is actively denying them that future. This $30 million water loan isn’t progress; it’s poison, and the IDB is the pharmacist handing it out with a smile. Shame on them. The bill for this betrayal will be paid in the tears and taxes of Guyanese citizens long after the PPP elites have fled with their billions.
