Dear Editor,
There is a peculiar irony in watching a self-proclaimed “world-class” republic falter at the very moment it claims to be modernising. The launch of the cash grant registration portal was heralded as a bold stride into digital governance, but it now stands as a monument to unpreparedness and misplaced pride. What was meant to signal efficiency and progress has instead exposed the fractures beneath the glossy rhetoric — an administration still struggling to understand that technology is only as effective as the systems, competence, and empathy that sustain it.
For countless citizens, even the simplest act of registering online has become a trial. Faces are failing recognition tests; forms collapse midway; help desk numbers ring endlessly into the void. The latest insult comes courtesy of a facial recognition system that cannot reconcile a citizen’s fifteen-year-old National ID photo with their present face — as though aging itself were a bureaucratic offence. The same photograph was good enough at polling stations and accepted when last year’s grant was paid in person. Yet now, citizens find themselves shut out of a process that was promised to “ensure fairness and security.” What fairness is there in exclusion born of technical incompetence?
And then there is the new hurdle: citizens must now own a bank account to receive what was once a straightforward benefit. A policy that imposes more paperwork, more verification, and more errors, supposedly in the name of modernisation. For many—particularly the poor, the elderly, or those living in rural districts—this feels less like progress and more like punishment. The irony is stinging: a digital reform that boasts of inclusion has instead multiplied barriers.
Rather than bringing the nation together through a simple, humane process, this initiative has laid bare the disconnect between citizens and the self-assured technocrats who design systems they never have to use. The Government’s loud boasts about going digital serve now as a mirror—one reflecting the shallowness of its own competence. If this platform represents our digital capacity, then it also represents how little consideration went into planning for its inevitable failures.
The natural question arises: What contingencies exist? What backup plan can rescue an exercise that has stumbled so dramatically at the starting line? None have been shared. None, it seems, have been made. Once again, citizens are left stranded by a system that promised speed and convenience but has delivered delay and disillusionment.
The plight of the elderly, the non-tech-savvy, and the rural poor must not be lost in this national embarrassment. Many of them cannot navigate portals or apps, yet they have the same right to equal, timely benefit. A government that fails to understand this betrays the very social contract on which it stands. Governments, after all, are the contrivance of human wisdom — born to meet the needs of their people. Citizens have a moral right to demand systems that work, not spectacles of pretense. What is unfolding before us is more than technical failure; it is a crisis of empathy and good sense. A world-class republic, we were told.
What we have seen instead is a digital illusion—brilliant in theory, broken in practice, and cruelly unmindful of the people it was meant to serve. A touch of practicality could have spared the nation this collective frustration. Something as simple as segmenting registration by surnames — Mondays for A and B, Tuesdays for C and D, and so on — could have brought order to the exercise and eased the burden on both citizens and the system. It isn’t rocket science; it’s thoughtful planning. And that, more than any flashy slogan or digital boast, is what real progress demands. The hope now is that those entrusted with this digital vision will pause, listen, and adapt. For all our exasperation, Guyana’s people remain willing partners in progress — ready to meet competent leadership halfway when reason and respect guide the way.