Dear Editor,
When Halim Khan, the Head of the Region Three Private Sector Inc. (R3PSInc), hailed the commissioning of the Guyana–China Friendship Park as a “transformative investment” attributed to President Irfaan Ali and his government, his comments may have sounded flattering — but they were also historically inaccurate. It’s time to set the record straight about how this landmark project actually came to be, and whose vision and generosity truly made it possible.
The idea of the Guyana–China Friendship Park predates any presidential fanfare or government announcement. The initiative first took root with businessman and philanthropist Mr. Joe Vieira, a respected son of Region Three, who donated the land on which the park now proudly stands. This act of private generosity and civic spirit formed the cornerstone of the project long before any political ribbon was cut.
Mr. Vieira’s motivation wasn’t political; his vision was patriotic. His gesture reflected a desire to see a part of Region 3 heartland developed into a shared public space — something that eventually evolved in a project that would symbolize international friendship, cultural exchange, and local community pride. Without that gift, there would have been no land, no project, and no park to commission.
A $12 Million Investment in Friendship
Following the land donation, it was the Government of the People’s Republic of China that stepped forward as the project’s sole investor and builder. The $12 million (USD) undertaking was financed, designed, and executed by China through its embassy in Georgetown, under the theme of deepening bilateral relations.
The project’s scope reflects this investment: modern landscaping, open green spaces, cultural pavilions, and sports areas — all constructed to meet world-class standards. The work was conceptualized, funded, and completed by China, without financial input or technical direction from the Guyana Government. It stands as a gift to the Guyanese people — not as a government achievement, but as a symbol of enduring diplomatic friendship.
To claim that President Ali “delivered” the park, as Mr. Khan asserted, is misleading. The president may have attended the opening ceremony, but the park’s existence owes nothing to his administration’s policies or budget allocations. What should have been a straightforward moment of gratitude for a foreign partner’s generosity has instead been twisted into another round of self-congratulatory political theater.
In a developing society like ours, truth too easily gets lost in the noise of rapid growth. In the rush to headline every project as a government success, we risk erasing the contributions of ordinary citizens and international partners whose collaboration actually makes these spaces possible.
The Guyana–China Friendship Park deserves proper historical recognition. It is the product of one man’s civic-minded gift of land and a friendly nation’s generous investment — not a showcase of political achievement. Mr. Khan’s remarks may have been well-intended, but they underscore a deeper problem: the creeping tendency to politicize everything, even acts of friendship and goodwill.
As the tempo of development quickens and Guyana’s landscape transforms, preserving the truth about how each project comes to life becomes ever more important. The Friendship Park, by its very name, teaches a lesson: that progress often comes from partnership — not from propaganda.