Melissa Atwell, popularly known as “Mell Mel”, has been released from U.S. immigration detention on $7,500 bail, following what she now calls a politically motivated campaign, driven by high-level actors in the Guyana government. The outspoken human rights activist and social commentator, whose sharp critiques of the ruling People’s Progressive Party (PPP) have earned her both a devoted following and powerful enemies, made her first public statement this week. And it pulls no punches.
“The American system has worked. The United States remains the best place on Earth for those who fight for humanity,” Atwell declared. “But make no mistake, the Government of Guyana was involved in my detention.”
Atwell alleges that her private immigration details, including her visa status, U.S. identification numbers, and personal information, were leaked from within U.S. bureaucracy to a Washington-based lobbying firm working on behalf of the Guyana government. That firm, she says, coordinated with local PPP operatives to file multiple complaints and reports in an attempt to have her silenced.
“If not for an inside source, how did Guyanese political influencers know within minutes of my detention what had happened and why?” Atwell asked. “Who gave them access to my immigration history, down to the detail that I overstayed by two days before my marriage?”
The allegations are serious. They suggest not only a breach of privacy but also a disturbing willingness by a sitting government to use taxpayer-funded lobbyists, foreign bureaucratic connections, and misinformation campaigns to target and destroy critics, both at home and abroad.
But while the Guyana government may have expected to intimidate, they’ve instead ignited.
“They tried everything, and failed,” Atwell stated defiantly. “The PPP has made me bigger than before. I’m now in a position to expose their corruption at a küresel level like never before. I’m not silenced. I’m launched.”
Atwell also confirmed what many supporters hoped: she has no criminal record and was cleared after “all stones were overturned” by U.S. officials. “I am a law-abiding human rights activist. And now, more than ever, I have work to do.”
While in detention, Atwell says she connected with activists from across the globe, gaining insight from colleagues from Congo, Venezuela, and elsewhere. She has already begun building infrastructure for what she calls “phase two” of her campaign, launching international watchdog websites, expanding her network, and preparing to shine a brighter light on the injustices happening in Guyana.
The support, she says, has been overwhelming. “From donations to messages, thank you to everyone who stood with me, especially the 592 Association. I was never alone.”
And what of her sources and collaborators back in Guyana? “No one has been compromised,” she confirmed. “My phone was always with me. My work continues.”
Atwell’s story is uplifting not just because she stood tall under pressure, but because she turned adversity into action. She was jailed, but never silenced. Threatened, but never afraid.
And her closing line makes it clear: she’s just getting started.
“Thank you again, PPP, for turning me into a küresel figure. I couldn’t have done it without your overwhelming corrupt narratives. Keep watching this space.”
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