GUYANA No. 104018 FRIDAY NOVEMBER 21, 2014
The Chronicle is at http://www.guyanachronicle.com
GUYANA’S MOST WIDELY CIRCULATED NEWSPAPER
PRICE: $60
Havoc in G/T as…
Torrential rains flood City – businesses affected, traffic impeded
– Public Schools remain closed today – Gov’t to invest more in City drainage
Centre
INCLUDING VAT
CARICOM SG stirs hope for ‘Free Movement’ Page
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116-year sentence for duo accused of murder Page 5 246 Guyanese students currently studying in the U.S. Page 14
Eight new Land Surveyors sworn in Page
‘ROADS UNDER WATER’: Vehicles are idle in the floodwater along Homestretch Avenue
Father of two commits suicide Page
‘NO ROAD’: This minibus misjudged the location of the flooded roadway and ended up in the Sussex Street canal
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Stakeholders’ input important to Guyana achieving developed country status
– says President at opening of GBTI’s Bartica Branch Page
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GUYANA CHRONICLE Friday November 21, 2014
Highest volume of rainfall recorded in years
– Gov’t to invest more in City drainage BASED on an assessment done by engineers following the heavy rainfall, the highest recorded in Georgetown with 186 millimeters, (7.25 inches) of rain in a 24 hour period, Government will have to invest more resources in drainage infrastructure in the City and along the Coast. This was told to the media yesterday by Minister of Public Works, Robeson Benn during a press conference, at which Local Government Minister, Norman Whittaker and Minister within the Ministry of Finance, Juan Edghill, Town Clerk (ag) Carol Sooba and City Engineer, Colvern Venture and Ministry of Works’ Chief Engineer, Walter Willis were present. Teams of engineers and ministers, prior to the press conference, visited several sluices around Georgetown, including Sussex and Princes Streets, Ruimveldt, Riverview, J.P Santos, and Kingston, among other areas. “We will work with Ag-
riculture (Ministry) to see where we can put in pumps and enhance draining, that is making some embankment
we can install some pumps,” Minister Benn told reporters. The heavy rainfall had resulted in extensive flood-
Ministers Robeson Benn, Norman Whittaker and Juan Edghill, along with Town Clerk (ag), Carol Sooba and City Engineer, Colvern Venture, and Ministry of Works Chief Engineer, Walter Willis, during a press conference yesterday
Minister Norman Whittaker engaging a staff at the Muneshwar’s pump during a visit around the flood-hit City yesterday
cuts…the chute further to the south. The affected areas we will look and see where
ing in Georgetown, the lower East Bank Demerara and West Demerara, and Essequibo Coast. Minister Benn explained that the drainage systems
located on the Coast are designed to take off 1.5 inches of rainfall in any 24 hour period, hence the reason for the significant flooding. “We have 5 or 6 percent more than the normal rainfall that can be handled through the drainage infrastructure on the coast…given the difficulty of excessive rainfall, we expect over the next two to three days, there will still be water on the ground…we are not the only affected country, you might know that there is this low pressure system also hanging over Trinidad which resulted in significant flooding in that country,” Minister Benn further noted. He said that the ministry’s staff have examined the drainage infrastructure
in terms of the pumps and kokers and looked at the outfalls, and they will be closely monitoring the drainage over the next few days to enhance reduction of the water. The sea and river defence engineers are also monitoring the situation on the Coast. Despite the massive clean-up across the city under the ‘Clean up my country’ initiative, targeted areas are still under flood with significant amount of bottles and Styrofoam boxes floating. Minister Whittaker noted that despite the cleaning, persons are still dumping waste in the drains, causing blockage. He charged persons guilty of such act to desist from doing so.
Meanwhile, Minister Edghill pleaded with citizens to ensure that every effort is made to ensure minimum damage at the household level, and urged citizens to take the necessary health precautions to ensure that there is no outbreak of any epidemic. “We are all in this together…climate change is a reality, these kind of systems will come from time to time and we have to ensure that we have adequate measures in place so I will think that we need to commend both the Ministry of Public Works and Local Government for quick actions, but there is some responsibility that citizens have to take on,” Minister Edghill pointed out.
MV Sabanto will resume operation today THE MV Sabanto, which ran aground on November 17 on Wakenaam Island enroute to Supenaam from Parika, was back in water late yesterday afternoon. Marclene Merchant, Transport and Harbours Department (T&HD) General Manager confirmed that the vessel came off on its own power around 16:00 hrs. “The tide was high [2.88 meters], so the vessel was able to come off without us having to utilise tugs,” she stated.
Provisions were in place by the Ministry of Public Works to remove the vessel by week-end. According to Ms. Merchant, checks indicate there was no damage to the vessel. In light of this, the MV Sabanto will resume its operation under the command of another crew today at its scheduled time. Around 00:35 h on November 17, the vessel ran aground. No injuries were reported and passengers disembarked at first light by
MV Sabanto
water taxis. The following day, nine of the 10 vehicles aboard the vessel were removed. The other came off yesterday when the vessel docked
at Supenaam. Investigations into the incident are still ongoing, according to the Transport and Harbours Department.
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GUYANA CHRONICLE Friday November 21, 2014
Stakeholders’ input important to Guyana achieving developed country status – says President at opening of GBTI’s Bartica Branch
President Donald Ramotar, Finance Minister Dr. Ashni Singh and GBTI’s CEO, John Tracey, with staff of the new bank branch
THE Guyana Bank for Tr a d e a n d I n d u s t r y (GBTI) has commissioned its twelfth branch that will seek to offer quality service to Guyanese citizens. On Wednesday evening, President Donald Ramotar joined the bank’s Chief Executive Officer, John Tracey, Chairman of the Board of Directors, Robin Stoby and other officials for the symbolic ribbon cutting ceremony. The new $60M facility which is located at Second Avenue, Bartica opened for business four weeks ago. DEVELOPMENT PARTNER President Ramotar said this investment, yet again, “demonstrates the confidence that the business sector has in our economy because they see the changes that have occurred over the years; they see they have a partner for development.”
The President reiterated his administration’s preparedness to partner with investors, to make concessions towards boosting the productive sector of the economy. While GBTI has demonstrated its confidence in Bartica, with its latest initiative, the administration is convinced that the bank will continue to carry out its civic duty in terms of holding up to its corporate responsibilities. “We have partnered with GBTI on many projects - the Women of Worth (one example), and we found them to be a good Corporate citizen and we hope by establishing here that they will continue to demonstrate the civic mindedness to contribute to other areas of development in Bartica.” President Ramotar said his administration has confidence in its citizens and the business community work-
ing hand in hand in order to build a better Guyana. He noted that while investors continue to play their role in the country’s development the government is also doing its part. GOVERNMENT’S ROLE “We are also investing a lot in Bartica, and the Region as a whole. Only yesterday (Tuesday) at Cabinet we took the decision to fix the airstrip…this is needed for many economic and emergency reasons. This infrastructure is very important to ensure that we can have good services,” the President said. Looking forward, the Guyanese Head of State said he believes that it was a wise decision to invest in a community such as Bartica since, like the rest of the country, that community has a bright future ahead. Further, with collaborative efforts the President said
he believes that in his lifetime, Guyana can achieve the status of being a developed country as it has all the necessary ingredients. He noted that in order to move Guyana to this status, the administration has been making investments that will ensure this happens. “We have all the ingredients for that, we have the natural resources and talented people, and we have been investing in our people.” One of the administration’s main policies, which it has been working on over the past two decades, is investing in the country’s human capital. He pointed out that each year; the national budget clearly reflects this as a significant portion goes into the social sector, more importantly the education sector. “…we have a sweeping education bill to modernise and revolutionise our education system. We are going to lay the social and physical infrastructure to ensure that our people are second to none, that they would be capable of taking our country to achieve the potential that we all know it has,” he asserted. The President again spoke of the administration’s continuous effort to realise the plan to bring cheap and reliable energy to all Guyanese as this is seen as the biggest impediment in the country’s development. DIVERSIFICATION He noted that while Guyana has made significant strides in the midst of an
atmosphere which has not been conducive to economic growth, it is the administration’s sound governance policies that have made these possible. The President further lauded GBTI for the initiative, as he noted that their focus on diversification ties it perfectly with the Government’s policies. Meanwhile, the bank’s CEO, John Tracey in his remarks, expressed his admiration for developments in Bartica and its surroundings, and the growing role it
be overlooked.” The bank’s CEO said he is of the belief that Bartica is at the juncture of its history when it needs to engage in more broad based economic activities. “GBTI with its wide suite of products and banking services is ready to support this diversification,” he said. Tracey said the bank would be focusing on small business loans, loans to single mothers, and low-income mortgage loans that can help in expanding the
The $60M Guyana Bank for Trade and Industry branch, which was commissioned at Second Avenue, Bartica in Region 7
is playing in national development. Tracey pointed out that Bartica is situated at the confluence of two of the mightiest and most travelled rivers in Guyana, Essequibo and Mazaruni. “And from time gone back Bartica has been described as the gateway to the interior and that interior as we know is vastly rich in natural resources below the ground and therefore its strategic geographic and logistical importance cannot
economic base of the mining community. During the first month of operation, the bank has facilitated the opening of 242 savings accounts, 3 current accounts, one loan and 71 loan enquiries, rented 12 safe deposit boxes and distributed VISA debit cards. This facility will offer all of its modern services including, a 24-hour ATM service, international transfer, visa debit cards, and safe deposit box among others. (GINA)
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GUYANA CHRONICLE Friday November 21, 2014
Two Land Court Judges sworn in
Wismar Secondary defeats QC in JOF Haynes debating competition CHRISTIANSBURG Wismar Secondary School, Region Ten, on Wednesday last, claimed a well-earned victory, defeating its opponent Queen’s College (QC) during a battle of words, fluency and eloquence in the 2014 JOF Haynes Memorial Inter-Secondary Schools debating competition at the Theatre Guild, Kingston. Minister of Education, Priya Manickchand and Permanent Secretary, Delma Nedd were among education officials, teachers, students and parents who were treated to highly competitive presentations from both the opposition and the proposition. Wednesday’s event culminated the national competition which commenced in September as part of Education Month activities where Region Ten and Georgetown remained undefeated throughout the various rounds.
Ms Nicola Pierre and Mrs Priscilla Chandra-Haniff with Prime Minister Samuel Hinds and Chancellor of the Judiciary (ag) Justice Carl Singh following their swearing in as Commissioners of Title
ATTORNEYS Priscilla Chandra-Haniff and Nicola Pierre were, on Wednesday, sworn in as Commissioners of Title (Land Court judges) by Prime Minister Samuel Hinds at Office of the Prime Minister in Kingston, Georgetown. They will be involved in granting of prescriptive titles. Attorney Pierre boasts a Certificate of Legal Education at Hugh Wooding Law School, Bachelor of Law studies at the University of Guyana, and 16 years of work experience which includes legislative drafter, lecturer at the University of Guyana (UG) and Attorney-at-law in the Chambers of Oliver M. Valz, S.C. Chandra-Haniff also obtained her Certificate of Legal Education from the
Hugh Wooding Law School, a Bachelor’s Degree in Law from UG, and has eight years of work experience ranging from Attorney-at-Law to lecturer at UG. Prime Minister Hinds delivered words of advice to the newly appointed Commissioners, and urged them to be ready for all challenges that lie ahead, noting that operating in such a capacity as this is almost unnatural. He pointed out issues they have to deal with such as land dispute, which in Guyana is a particularly challenging area. The Prime Minister also congratulated the attorneys in their new posts, noting the importance of their job. “It is necessary that people take up the challenges of offices in a society if it is to do well. I want to commend you for accepting this position in our
country, congratulations and thanks.” Chancellor of the Judiciary (ag) Justice Carl Singh also offered his congratulations to the attorneys on this bold step. An elated Chandra-Haniff expressed gratitude for being given the opportunity to serve Guyana. She committed to serving to the best of her ability. “I would like to reiterate my commitment to ensuring that the judiciary remains transparent, fair and highly efficient.” Pierre reaffirmed that she will do her best to function in her new position as Commissioner of Title. “I will do my best, endeavouring to uphold the office and perform my duties efficiently, confidently, and as the oath said, without fear or favour.” (GINA)
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The Christiansburg Wismar Secondary School, which also copped the best speaker prize, argued that the private sector has a corporate social responsibility to invest resources to tackle pollution, while QC opposed. The Christiansburg Wismar Secondary provided very strong factual points to match their argument and demonstrated confidence during their presentation. The debating competition officially began during the period April to July where the regional competitions were held in each education district. The winning school was given the opportunity to represent the education district at national level. Region One was represented by the Santa Rosa Secondary; Region Two, Anna Regina Secondary; Region Three L’Aventure Secondary; Region Four, Diamond Secondary; Region Five, Bush Lot Secondary; Region Six,
New Amsterdam; Region Seven, Three Miles Secondary; Eight, Paramakatoi Secondary; Region Nine, St. Ignatius Secondary; Region Ten, Christiansburg Wismar Secondary and Georgetown, Queen’s College. The JOF Haynes Memorial Inter-Secondary Schools debating competition is used to celebrate the oratorical experience of the late Joseph Oscar Fitzclarence Haynes who in his day, was identified as the most brilliant and eminent lawyer of his generation. Mr. Haynes started this competition 24 years ago, and the Education Ministry has since continued it. The winning school received new computer compliments of Metro Office Supplies which has been supporting the competition for several years. Each participating student was presented with a trophy and cash prize.
Taxi driver shot in $4M robbery on Brickdam TAXI driver Fazil Ali, 46 years, of Triumph, East Coast Demerara was yesterday morning attacked and robbed by three men, one of whom was armed with a firearm, outside of a Hotel on Brickdam, Georgetown. Police investigations revealed that Ali was waiting
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in his motor vehicle outside of the Hotel, when he was confronted by the three men and held up. The armed man shot Fazil Ali to his left shoulder and the perpetrators took away a bag with $4M and escaped in a waiting motor vehicle. This newspaper understands that Ali was sitting
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in his taxi, HB 9454, which was locked, when the bandits pulled up in a silver grey tinted Toyota 212 car, PPP 8371, and bashed Ali’s car window with a gun, shot him to his left shoulder and then escaped with the cash in a bag. Ali was then taken to the Georgetown Public Hospital where he was treated and sent away. Only on Monday the Guyana Police Force unveiled their Christmas Policing Plan and businessmen were cautioned about being security conscious when carrying large amounts of cash during the busy Christmas period. (Asif Hakim)
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GUYANA CHRONICLE Friday November 21, 2014
Eight new Land Surveyors sworn in
116-year sentence for duo accused of murder
- Christopher Singh jailed for 66 yrs, ‘Bird Brains’ 50 yrs
By George Barclay
Minister of Natural Resources and the Environment, Robert Persaud; Commissioner of the GL&SC, Doorga Persaud; Head of the Lands and Surveys Association, Rudolph Choo-Shee-Nam; and Surveys Division Manager, Rene Duesbury with the new surveyors yesterday
EIGHT new land surveyors were yesterday sworn in by the Guyana Lands and Surveys Commission (GL&SC) to boost the capacity of the Commission and other government agencies that require this specialised skill. Minister of Natural Resources and the Environment, Mr. Robert Persaud, during his remarks congratulated the successful surveyors and highlighted that, “nearly every aspect of national development, both from the public sector and the private sector requires some level of surveying”. He told the surveyors at the swearing-in at the GL&SC, D’Urban backlands that “you have been given essential skills and tools for national building, but also for the prosperity and progress of this nation and that must not be ignored or taken lightly”. Minister Persaud also pointed out that the newly sworn-in surveyors will be
essential in realising development projects moving forward as the natural resources sector is continually expanding, particularly in forestry and mining, including housing and other infrastructure development. He further pointed out that land use and administration is taking on a greater prominence in society in terms of the government’s vision in moving the country forward. As such, Minister Persaud made reference to the recently finalised national land use policy and the approved national geospatial policy which will allow for better coordination and support for GIS in Guyana. The Natural Resources and the Environment Minister said the skills acquired by the surveyors will give greater impetus to adequately support development and land management. Minister Persaud also urged the successful surveyors to value their importance
and to make full use of the opportunities, while at the same time recognising some of the challenges ahead. According to Surveys Division Manager, Rene Duesbury, the eight successful surveyors came from a batch of 36. He said a lot of emphasis was placed in Mathematics in 2014, but performance in this area still remains low. However, more emphasis will continue to be placed on this subject. Additionally, it was also pointed out that the course for 2015 will include new subject areas as part of a requirement under the recently assented Land Surveyors Act. Also present at the swearing-in were Commissioner of the GL&SC, Mr. Doorga Persaud and Mr. Rudolph ChooShee-Nam, Head of Lands and Surveyors’ Association. Meanwhile, Mr. Linden Grey was recognised as best student of the batch. (GINA)
Police destroy 9 acres of marijuana plants
– after finding 10,000 plants on five fields POLICE ranks yesterday conducted drug eradication operations along the Canje Creek in Berbice where they discovered, at Baracara, five fields of marijuana plants. The marijuana fields were about nine acres in size, with approximately 10,000 marijuana plants ranging in height from
one foot to eight feet. These were destroyed by the Police as well as four wooden camps. The Police also noted that at Tacoba, an unoccupied house was searched during which an improvised shotgun and the barrel of a shotgun were found. No one was arrested.
FOLLOWING the jury’s guilty verdict, Justice Navindra Singh sentenced Better Hope murder accused Christopher Singh, 21, to 66 years and his friend Devindra Bushram, 22, to 50 years. They were found guilty of the savage murder of Javed Mohamed, who was knifed to death on the Better Hope public road outside the Community Centre Ground on the night of September 11, 2010, when a floodlight cricket match was being played. Upon hearing the jury’s verdict, Singh spat on the head of Lawyer Raymond Ali, who defended No. 2 accused Davindra Bushram, called ‘Bird Brains’. Unfortunately, Lawyer Ali did not report the
DECEASED: Javed Mohamed
matter to the judge until the prisoner had left the dock to begin serving his sentence. Reacting to the verdict, Singh asked the court for leniency, but Prosecutrix Mrs. Judith Mursalin, who conducted the case in association with Miss Narissa Leander and Mr.
Michael Shahoud, asked the court to show Singh the same mercy he had showed Javed Mohamed. The fatal injury was the puncturing of Mohamed’s heart.Mr. Raymond Ali had, among other things, said that his client had done a lot of religious courses in prison. He too asked for leniency and was told that he had been involved in a joint enterprise and although he did not strike the fatal blow, he was equally guilty. Singh, who himself had injuries, had told the police: “Me and a man had a fight and as a result of the fight, I get these injuries.” Davendra Bushram, w h e n re p l y i n g t o t h e caution put to him by Detective Inspector Burnett, had said: “Me nah stab nobody nor did I take any body’s band.”
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GUYANA CHRONICLE Friday November 21, 2014
EDITORIAL
GUYANA
Guyana’s potential to become a developed country PRESIDENT Donald Ramotar has expressed both confidence and optimism in Guyana’s growth potential, saying this country can become a modern and developed country in his lifetime. “As I have said before, although I am no spring chicken any longer I still believe I have enough in me left to witness Guyana moving from a middle-income developing country as it is so described to being in the not-too-distant future as a developed country,” the 64-year-old Guyanese Head of State said. He was speaking at the commissioning of Unicomer’s new and one-of-a-kind US$6M Distribution Centre on Wednesday where he lauded the massive investment which he said is very much a part of the “whole idea of making Guyana a modern and developed country.” The President, however, alluded to the fact that for Guyana to achieve such a status, it has to be a joint effort. “This project itself is a grand partnership among
the Government, private sector and other stakeholders to work together to make us a modern society,” he said. This foresight and expressed confidence by the President that Guyana can become a developed country in his lifetime is not merely an optimistic hope; but a doable and achievable reality. One can easily allude to the fact that Guyana was rated on international developmental indices as being on par with Haiti before the PPP/C administration assumed the primary executive offices in the land in October of 1992. Graphed during the PNC administration as the least developed nation in the world, with a crippling debt burden – the repayment of which seemed improbable to International Funding Institutions, Guyana’s development, under the astute leadership provided by successive PPP/C Presidents, guided by the brilliant developmental blueprint crafted by the visionary Father of the Na-
tion, Dr. Cheddi Jagan, took off like a runaway train. And after a relatively short time-span of approximately two decades, Guyana is now being recognised by the world as a middle-income developing country, and described by one Caribbean leader as “The only shining star in the Caribbean.” So with such a track record the President’s prognosis heralds great things for this nation. As he explained, “The whole idea is to make Guyana a modern and developed country.” The Guyanese Head of State went on to elaborate on some of the measures the Government has put in place to expand and strengthen people power, with education and its facilitation being central foci. Indeed Guyana has come a long way since the PPP/C first took control of the affairs of the state, with a transformation that amazes those who ran away during Guyana’s dark years, who are visiting for the first time without recognising the destroyed
country from which they had escaped; so greatly has the national socio-economic landscape been altered. But one can only imagine what levels this country would have reached if there had been a co-operative political Opposition, instead of a destructive cabal bent on stymieing, and even reversing social development and economic growth in the country. One of the worst disincentives to private investment in Guyana is the high energy costs, which sends overheads skyrocketing, especially in the manufacturing sector; and the Government has attempted to address this problem through Hydropower, but had reached the usual developmental roadblocks in the form of the Opposition, which used every armament in their arsenal to shoot down the project. The President elucidated: “… we can give (and are giving) our people more skills in the antici-
pation that we were close to having cheap energy.” He explained that it is very well known that not having cheap energy is one of the most important factors that have not allowed Guyana to go forward as fast as it could have. However, he was adamant that, despite the recent setback with the Amaila Falls Hydro Project, “… we are still determined that we will have that project built here in Guyana so that we can provide cheap energy for the development of a strong industrial manufacturing sector and a strong processing sector… We have a progressing agricultural sector and we can easily develop an agro-industrial complex,” he said. As the President spoke, outlining future transformative plans geared to making the dream of taking Guyana from a middle-income de-
veloping country to a developed country, one could only hope that the joint Opposition could allow good sense and patriotism to prevail over self-centred agendas to work along on these visionary plans and projects that would benefit all Guyanese and create of this country, not only “the only shining star of the Caribbean, but the shining star of the world.” The Government has always held an outstretched hand out to the Opposition and all stakeholders in the nation, but with scant success of co-operation from the joint Opposition; and history will record their contributions to the development of this nation. History will also document the contributions made to the inhibition of progressive endeavours. The ball is in the Opposition’s court.
NCFC Chairman skirts the fundamental issues IT was instructive to see Mr. E.B. John’s critique last Saturday on the “organisational lacuna” that plagues the National Cane Farming Committee (NCFC). Instead of the inanities and ad hominem which characterised the response of the NCFC Chairman to the critical issues which I had raised, it would help if he (and I may add the Cane Farming Officers of
GuySuCo) were to heed the comments and advice of Mr. John who is an ‘originator’ and ‘authority’ on the development and administration of the ‘private’ cane farming sector. As a private cane farmer and concerned Guyanese, I had drawn attention to the diminishing output from private cane farmers and the apparent anachronism/obsolescence/uselessness of the
NCFC. My specific calls for an examination of these issues by the relevant authorities initially in GUYSUCO and then the NCFC were met with minutiae, irrelevant defensiveness and personal acrimony. The obvious failure by GUYSUCO and the NCFC to address the real issues of diminishing outputs from current farmers and the aban-
donment of several farms by long established private cane farmers and cooperatives to which I had alluded is alarming. The Chairman’s reference to ‘the leasing of more lands to farmers at Wales, Uitvlugt, Albion and Wales raises another set of questions such as the persons/organisations to whom these lands were leased, when and how they were leased and what has
been their production so far? Finally, the Chairman mentioned two contributions made by the NCFC, namely, the reduction of fertilizer charges and the establishment of a revolving fund; but his doing so prompts more questions than provide answers to the real issues. For example: When was the “revolving fund” established? What is its purpose and its utilisation so far?
What about the more long-standing, more critical issues of overhead charges of 30% to 50% levied on farmers by the Estates? What about the silence surrounding the EU funds? Can the NCFC Chairman and GuySuCo address these issues, instead of engaging in personal attacks on farmers? NOWRANG PERSAUD
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GUYANA CHRONICLE Friday November 21, 2014
Dialogue is the way forward I HAVE had the opportunity of listening to President Donald Ramotar on the election campaign trail and his Inauguration speech. Mr. President, I would like to suggest that what are at stake in the negotiating norms I have proposed are not simply the niceties of procedural form. What is at stake is a realisation of how a genuinely democratic society has to function in practice, at the level of its political relations, operations and indeed at other levels, if we are to avoid a mindless regimentation on the one hand, or a senseless anarchy on the other. Power in a modern society does not reside in any single source. In virtually every important context, if the underlying approach is simply an effort to determine who can wield greater countervailing power, who can threaten more or browbeat better or coerce more effectively, then the laws of nature – and the history of politics – suggest that sooner or later, the side with greater underlying strengths and better strategy will emerge ‘victorious’. Mr. President, both logic and history teach us – if we are disposed, that is, to learn – at the political level, most of such ‘victories’ are pyrrhic ones. Politically, the ‘victor may simply find himself presiding over a sea of bitterness, a landscape from which morale is conspicuously absent and an overall condition in which human alienation is such a pervasive factor that the notions of greater laissez-faire become empty, meaningless slogans, wholly incapable of practical realisation, it does not take, Mr. President, either much intellect or much imagination, to work out likely political consequences of ‘victories of the kind I have described. My view is that modern societies, especially those that wish to preserve some functioning model of democracy – as distinct from empty rhetoric about that much abused word – should diligently seek a better way of resolving serious differences, whether at the political or any other substantive level. This is especially true of developing countries like our own, beset with a multitude of fundamental economic problems which have not been solved – and will not be solved – merely by ideological posturing or high-flown phrases. Ideology is important and words are important: on the first, I have already publicly declared myself as a social democrat on the left of that particular spectrum of political opinion; on the second, I endeavour to
choose my own words carefully, conscious of the interpretations various individuals and groups may put upon them and of the potential good or harm they may do. In essence, Mr. President, I am once more saying, in public, that for societies like Guyana, given our history, our traditions, the reality of our ethnic diversity, the somber and adverse nature of our economic condition, our acute political sensitivities and complexities – given all this – there is no viable alternative way forward other than the kind of dialogue I am advocating, for the resolution of important national and sectorial differences in this society. If there is a viable alternative way forward, my view is that alternative must clearly be founded on a vision of the organisation of our society, which I feel will do violence, literally as well as metaphorically, to what is best and most enduring in our societal traditions. I believe that a majority of the citizens of Guyana, if given an opportunity to express themselves freely on a choice between these two broad, alternative ways forward for our country would endorse the model which exalts dialogue and compromise and reject the model which must inevitably lead to violent confrontation and to pyrrhic victory. It is possible for societies like ours to survive such ‘victories’: But it is not, I submit to you Mr. President, possible after such ‘victories’, both to maintain democracy as well as to promote prosperity and it may turn out that in the pyrrhic victory model, neither democracy nor prosperity can be sustained and the so-called ‘victors’ would then simply inherit the worst of both worlds. As a society, we will have to choose which path forward we elect to pursue. Mr. President, in speaking on behalf of workers, I want to raise some issues with a dual purpose in mind: first, to raise issues which have relevance to some of the problems which relate to modern trade unionism in general; and secondly, from a consideration of such relevant but general issues, to draw some morals and some tentative conclusions for trade unions like our own, moving and having our being in Guyana. It will be necessary, Mr. President, for me to preface an examination of such issues as I wish raise with you, with a general philosophical premise. That necessity is founded on this basic proposition: that in essaying comment on a range of
societal issues, some crucial and others important, it is, I think, essential to be clear as to what type of society we are assuming. For that assumption critically determines the nature and form of possible models we can propose for analysis and debate and this is true whether the issue at stake is the role of the Opposition parties, or the role of the media or the role of the trade unions. It is in that context Mr. President, that intellectual honesty compels me to preface my raising of issues relevant to trade unionism; with some brief comment on the underlying assumptions which flow from my concept of the basic kind of society I believe we should be trying to create in this country. That concept and that vision are bound to inform the nature of the issues I choose to raise, as well as the way in which I seek to analyse them before putting them to you for your own decisions, individually and as President of the Republic of Guyana. There is no such thing as a concept or a vision of society which is free of ideology of some kind, of principles of some kind, of biases of some kind: what is important is that we declare, right at the very start, what that ideological stance is, what those principles are, what those biases seem to be, although the last-named will be evident to most persons once the first two are clearly stated. Mr. President, on philosophical, analytical and evidential grounds, I reject both a laissez-faire capitalist model of society for Guyana, as well as a repressive, totalitarian one-party model. Our own history – as well as that of others – can inform us about the distortions, inequities and the inhibitions to production of the traditional laissez-faire model. We have no personal history of a full model of the other kind: but those with even a nodding acquaintance with international affairs would not have to search for convincing evidence of the essentially coercive nature, profoundly anti-libertarian indeed almost anti-human nature of full-scale totalitarian régimes, whether of the left or right; and of the profound economic and social liabilities which systems of that kind visit on societies which have the misfortune to have to endure them or of the immense human suffering and tragedies which inevitably result from the unchecked activities of the dominant elements in such societies One of the worst aspects of totalitarian models is their inherent intolerance of dissent:
this intolerance flows, in my view, partly from an insufferable arrogance on the part of the controlling authorities in such countries, which leads them to assume not only that they are in exclusive possession of the truth, but that such exclusivity is foreordained and eternal. And partly from fear, arising from a private realisation of the inadequacy of their stated positions, the vulnerability of those positions to rigorous analysis and examination, all leading to a basic unwillingness to discuss or debate even the premises, let alone the logical support of the policies adumbrated by the controlling authorities in totalitarian states. My fundamental position, Mr. President, is diametrically opposed to either of the two basic models I have so far mentioned. I believe in an open, democratic society by which I mean one in which the legitimacy of the governing authorities clearly derives from the free, periodic, unfettered consent of all those ordinarily eligible for the exercise of the franchise: the era of kings and emperors with real power, that is or of self-proclaimed dictators is or ought to be over, especially in developing
societies like ours. I believe in a society where the broad mass of the people can be actively involved in the decisions which actually affect their lives, whether at work, in their unions or in their legislatures. I believe in a society which consciously tries to achieve the highest degree of congruence between justice and equity on the one hand – which I mean a sustained attack on poverty, ill health and other forms of backwardness or disadvantage, economic and social – and levels of freedom and tolerance on the other – in the sense of a strict observance of individual human rights and freedoms, including, especially, the freedoms of expression and association. Mr. President, I am not as naive or unread as to assume that congruence of justice and freedom, of bread and liberty, is an easy one to achieve. On the contrary, I know quite well that it teems with practical difficulties. But the over-riding concern must be with a clear, unambiguous statement of belief, a declaration of intention – an open and continuing effort to move the society in those general directions. The inexorable logic of
this position means that anyone who holds it must be against the restriction of voluntary associations and entities pursuing agreed, non-subversive goals; against monopoly of the media by the controlling authorities in the society; against the infringement of normal, judicial process other than in clear, genuine emergencies, the genuinely of which is open to public scrutiny and comment and which is buttressed by convincing evidence, itself available for review. Mr. President, against that necessarily limited overview, is the vision of the kind of society which I am personally in favour of creating. I was accused by the Guyana Trades Union Congress (GTUC); it is conflict of interest because we share a difference of opinions. In my response to the GTUC, Abraham Lincoln said: “We are not enemies but friends. We must not be enemies. Though passion may have strained, it must not break our bonds of affection.” SHERWOOD CLARKE General President Clerical & Commercial Workers’ Union (CCWU)
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GUYANA CHRONICLE Friday November 21, 2014
President: ‘We would have won the debate, but lost the vote’ By Vanessa Narine
PRESIDENT Donald Ramotar has maintained his contention that his Government could have aptly defended itself in the face of the Alliance For Change (AFC) sponsored no-confidence motion, but would have lost the vote, given the combined O p p o s i t i o n ’s o n e - s e a t majority in the National Assembly. To this end, he reiterated that his decision to prorogue Parliament was intended to encourage dialogue among the parliamentary political parties, which have been gridlocked since the commencement of the 10th Parliament. However, the AFC and the main Opposition, A Partnership for National Unity (APNU), have since rejected Mr. Ramotar’s invitation for talks, which was made via a letter dispatched on Tuesday to Leader of the Opposition in the National Assembly, Brigadier (rtd.) David Granger. Both parties have public-
ly indicated that there will be “no talks” unless the prorogation of Parliament is lifted. In proroguing Parliament last Monday, President Ramotar was also emphatic that the move to prorogation would have kept the 10th Parliament alive, which currently has several critically important matters before it. The effect of ending the first session of the 10th Parliament via prorogation is the termination of the business of the National Assembly. As a result, the AFC sponsored no-confidence motion was not considered. Also, APNU had, prior to Monday, signalled its intent to support the push through of the motion. Had it not been for the proclamation to prorogue Parliament, if the no-confidence motion was passed, Guyana would have been headed to early general elections within three months. However, Mr. Ramotar has made it clear that if these efforts prove futile, there will be a move to early general elections; the last general elections were held in No-
vember, 2011. MUDSLINGING Prime Minister Samuel Hinds, who is also leader of Government’s business in the National Assembly, has indicated his agreement with the President’s reasoning. “The President firstly wanted to give dialogue a chance. On Monday afternoon we were looking at the no-confidence motion. As Leader of the House, I could not give the President any guarantee that we could avoid this…we would have had a big ‘cuss down’ and a ‘buse down,’” he told the Guyana Chronicle, in an invited comment. According to PM Hinds, it is no credit to the combined Opposition that they were planning a “cuss down” of the Government, when faced with an alternative for talks to break the political gridlock in the interest of Guyana and the Guyanese people. “It is to them no credit that they were planning to go ahead with a ‘cuss down’ of the Government…I agree
- if Opposition was allowed to proceed with no-confidence motion
President Donald Ramotar with the President, that the best thing to do was to save the 10th Parliament,” the Prime Minister said. He stressed that there is merit in “saving” the 10th Parliament, considering the issues before the National Assembly. These matters include the Anti-Money Laundering and Countering the Financing of Terrorism (AML/ CFT) (Amendment) Bill
Prime Minister Samuel Hinds
Opposition Leader David Granger
which is in Parliamentary Special Select Committee; the Education Bill 2014, the Land Surveyors Bill 2014 and the Broadcasting (Amendment) Bill 2014 are up for a second reading. Also among the Bills scheduled for a first reading are the Food Safety Bill 2014 and the Motor Vehicles Insurance (Third Party Risks) (Amendment) Bill 2014. Other important matters be-
fore the National Assembly include the appointment of members for the Rights of the Child Commission (ROC) and the Women and Gender Equality Commission. “The President, by proroguing the House, has avoided that mudslinging to give dialogue a chance in the interest of the Guyanese people,” Prime Minister Hinds concluded.
In Berbice…
BRHA to host historical health exposition today THE Berbice Regional Health Authority (BRHA) is set to host its historical health exposition, today, where over 60 booths will showcase varying elements of health care delivery along Main Street, New Amsterdam. The expo will commence at 15:00 hrs, followed by a cultural presentation four hours later. Speaking at a press briefing at the BRHA complex at Fort Canje, Special Projects Coordinator Ms. Melissa Ramdeen noted that while the theme is ‘Stay Strong, Live Long’, the main objective is to
encourage Berbicians to practise healthy lifestyles. “We are trying to educate people in that direction, to let them know what are some of the things that they need to caution themselves about, and what are some of the necessary steps they need to take for themselves in order to ensure that they live longer, in a healthy manner,” she said. “We know many people living with diabetes and some who would have had amputations done, so the Ptolemy Reid Rehabilitation Centre will be here to educate us,” Ramdeen added. She pointed out that, among other participat-
ing agencies are several Non-Governmental bodies, the health institutions in the region, the Guyana School of Agriculture, the Guyana Marketing Corporation, Massay Industries formerly AINLIM , Sterling Products Limited, the Guyana Livestock Development Authority, the Ministries of Health and Agriculture, and the Pan-American Health Organisation (PAHO), together with several fun booths which will include face painting for children, and a kids quiz booth, hosted by BRHA. Additionally, Meditron, a company which sells medical equipment, will
BRHA CEO Dr Vishwa Mahadeo along with Special Project Coordinator Ms. Melissa Ramdeen briefing the media about the Health Fair
have on display several pieces of apparatus which persons can access for their private use, such as blood pressure machine. And to add a treat for the attendees, glucose monitors will be distributed freely to early visitors. Meanwhile, BRHA Chief Executive Officer, Dr
Vishwa Mahadeo, recalled that the event, formerly a health fair, is being hosted after a two year absence. “We have recognised that a healthy nation costs less on the taxpayers. Health, like religion cuts across boundaries - old, young, disabled, healthy. It cuts across all races ,
and it has no politics. We feel that the more educated the population is, the more they will take care of themselves; and not only themselves, but also those who are dear to them; and in the long run, we will have fewer people to treat,” he posited. (Jeune Bailey)
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GUYANA CHRONICLE Friday November 21, 2014
East Bank corridor has undergone great transformation, massive development - says President as he visits several projects
The team also gratulated the Minister of visited one of the several Housing and staff for the secondary roads that are excellent job they have done. He said, “I am very hapbeing constructed among the housing schemes on the East py to see a lot of working Bank to assist with the vast people being able to have volume of traffic emerging their own home, not paying a out of the massive develop- rent any longer and this will ment taking place along the also give them an enormous amount of personal security.” corridor. He noted too that curPresident Ramotar noted that they are good all-weath- rently, the ministry is in the er roads that will accommo- process of building infradate the future development structure to connect the East and expansion of the new Bank with the East Coast. East Bank housing schemes, He said that the roads are being constructed strategically in a more structured way. About 10 of these sec- with the low and middle inondary roads are being con- come home owners in mind, structed on the East Bank where “the road network to facilitate the movement here will improve the value of traffic between the East of the low income houses” Coast and East Bank. They and will alleviate some of also have the goal of linking the transportation cost for residents. Housing & Water Minister Irfaan Ali explains the progress of the housing projects to President Ogle to Providence. Also speaking briefly Speaking with media Donald Ramotar and Finance Minister Dr Ashni Singh; looking on is Mr. Motielall (a Contractor) operatives at Perseverance, was Finance Minister Dr. OVER the years, the East ects, which all have the aim poles and putting in wires to in fact as soon as the houses President Ramotar recalled Ashni Singh, emphasising Bank Corridor has under- of continuing the transforma- facilitate power to houses, the are completed, wiring is that when he visited the that this is yet another exgone tremendous trans- tion of the East Bank into a ministry has taken on this and facilitated. area almost a year ago for ample of the kind of develformation as the Govern- thriving residential, business ment has invested heavily and educational hub. The President visited the in transforming a geographical space that was once a ‘Turnkey 1000 Homes’ projfarming area into one where ect at the new Perseverance modern amenities are now Housing Scheme, located directly behind the Guyana taking over. This transformation has National Stadium, which is seen much support from the moving apace and is creating private and public sectors employment for close to 500 a n d w h i c h h a s r e a l i s e d persons, who are employed such features as a number in the construction of two of modern housing areas, and three-bedroom houses a system of interlocking that will be sold at $4.9M r o a d s , s e v e r a l c o m m e r- and $9M to qualifying bencial banks, businesses and eficiaries. As Government moved branches of city businessto construct the housing ares. On Wednesday, whilst on eas for Guyanese, emphasis a visit to the area, President has also been focused on Donald Ramotar, accompa- putting in the social support nied by Minister of Housing infrastructure. Minister Ali An aerial view of Courts Guyana new Distribution Centre, with other and Water Mr. Irfaan Ali and explained that where historconstructions ongoing Minister of Finance Dr. Ashni ically the ministry has relied Singh, visited a number of on the Guyana Power and on-going government proj- Light (GPL) for planting
Contractor Mr. Motielall explains the ongoing construction of the access road at Perseverance to President Donald Ramotar, Housing and Water Minister Irfaan Ali and Finance Minister Dr Ashni Singh
the commissioning of the ‘1000 Homes Project’ by the Housing Ministry, it was overgrown with bushes and very swampy. “I was here when the ‘1000 Homes Project’ was commissioned and I am now pleasantly surprised that, in less than a year, this place has already been transformed,” he said. He pointed out that these areas now boast features such as modern housing schemes, a system of interlocking roads, several commercial banks, businesses and branches of city businesses. The Head of State con-
opment the government has sought to promote. “The construction activity alone here has created more than 400 jobs,” he said. “The average young Guyanese professional can now own his/her own home, quite comfortably, now this is not something that is beyond his (or her) dreams. Some 20 years ago, owning your own home was beyond the reach of the average Guyanese person; only a wealthy person could have owned his own home,” the minister said. He further explained that the PPP/C Government has changed this.
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GUYANA CHRONICLE Friday November 21, 2014
NAPS successfully completes 3rd phase of Biological & Behavioural Surveillance Survey THE third phase of the National Aids Programme Secretariat’s (NAPS) Biological and Behavioural Surveillance Survey (BBSS) has been deemed the most successful since the pilot survey commenced in 2013. A meeting held at Cara Lodge, on Wednesday, saw a wide stakeholder group, comprising Coordinators of the National HIV/AIDS Programme, representatives from Civil Society groups, members of the key populations, international technical agencies, external funding partners and other stakeholders, being presented with the results of the survey. The meeting was aimed also at identifying ways to deal with the situation as it relates to gaps and the way forward. Compared to the previous studies this BBSS has had a greater appreciation of the transgender population and a more in-depth approach towards identifying gaps in this regard. The project covered nine of the country’s ten administrative regions of which 1,233 persons were for the first time tested for the Human Immunodeficiency Virus/Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (HIV/ AIDS). In addition, the survey which was conducted in
two phases; the Hinterland and Coastland Phases also saw individuals undergoing Malaria, Anemia, Syphilis and Hepatitis B testing. The objective of the project was to estimate the prevalence of infections and HIV prevention programmes in the identified areas. The goal was to better understand the level of HIV education and to gather information on persons’ behaviour towards the said topic and the utilisation of the level of education that is available to them. The Hinterland aspect focused on logging and mining sites while the Coastal aspect emphasised on the towns and the more popular social spots where sexual activities were more prevalent. One Neighbourhood Democratic Council in each region was also chosen to be a part of this survey. Speaking at the dissemination meeting on Wednesday, NAPS Director Dr. Shanti Singh pointed out that overall 196 sites were identified in the Hinterland while 751 on the Coastland, bringing the total figure to 947 sites being identified. A total of 3,804 interviews were conducted with persons who were more familiar with the areas such as bar owners and workers, miners, taxi drivers and other
Dr. Shanti Singh, Director of NAPS, presenting the overall results of the project
such individuals who were able to identify the regular spots. These venues were then compared and the ones that were popular or mentioned by several interviewees were chosen. In terms of locations, informal bars have been identified as the most popular spot for persons to meet sex partners or to engage with potential sex partners. This was recorded to be 43.5%. Dr. Singh noted that the survey shows that of all the locations identified, 44.5% offer free condoms while 27.1% have them on sale. It was also noted that most of the areas saw persons between
USAID’s Representative, Dr. Oleksander Cherkas, delivering remarks to the gathering
Dr. Brigit Lampe, Representative of the Pan Caribbean Partnership against HIV/ AIDS
the ages 15-16 being sexually active and in the male population the age range was lower in some areas. In terms of HIV prevalence, the project saw 3,663 tests being conducted of which 65 cases were positive. In the area of Sexually Transmitted Infections/ Diseases (STIs/STDs), 21 out of 3,011 Syphilis tests were positive, while 2 out of 271 Hepatitis B cases were also positive. With respect to Anemia 1,006 out 3804 cases were positive and were noted to be found mostly in females, primarily sex workers. In addition, 1,047 Ma-
laria tests were conducted in the Hinterland phase which resulted in 15 positive cases. Field work in the Hinterland phase was conducted at Landings in Regions 1, 2, 6, 7, 8, and 10. Data collection commenced in December 2013 and concluded in October this year. This survey methodology has also allowed for Guyana to collect data which will assist the country in estimating the size of the sex worker and men who have sex with men populations. The project is funded by a number of agencies including the Pan American Health
Organisation (PAHO), United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and the Ministry of Health (MOH) among others. The meeting also saw brief remarks from representative of USAID, Dr. Oleksander Cherkas who said this survey has thus far been the most successful one. Also delivering brief remarks to the gathering of health care workers from various agencies and regions was Health Ministry’s Deputy Permanent Secretary (DPS), Trevor Thomas, who lauded the efforts by NAPS and the teams that worked on the project. He also pointed out that there has been a lot of improvement in the area of HIV and stigma as persons are now more open to speaking of the disease. In addition, he noted that this project goes hand in hand with numerous plans that the Ministry has on board for the national health sector. The project was also lauded by representative of the Pan Caribbean Partnership against HIV/ AIDS (PANCAP), Dr. Brigit Lampe who encouraged the continuation of works in this regard. She said, “let us all continue to strive for an AIDS free Guyana.” (GINA)
CARICOM Secretary General stirs hope for ‘Free Movement’
By Rickey Singh - in Bridgetown
CURRENTLY faced with the challenge of securing a realistic compromise with the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) over a threatened US$42 million lawsuit against the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB), the decision-makers of our Caribbean Community are, encouragingly, also revealing a new zeal to inspire popular confidence in the future of the region’s economic integration movement. At the core of new initiatives to stir region-wide optimism is the removal of lingering bureaucratic paralysis and other hurdles that continue to fester disenchantment in the critical area of free intra-regional movement for CARICOM citizens. Free, or unrestricted movement of nationals across borders, has been and remains a core feature of the
Ambassador Irwin LaRocque, CARICOM Secretary General
European Union. CARICOM governments, organisations and nationals would do well to familiarise themselves with the policies and protocols governing cross-borders movement by European citizens for either private visit, do business, or the right to live and work. This, more so, at a period when tensions are developing
among some EU member states and the United Kingdom over increasing flows of European migrants into Britain, the former colonising power of the independent English-speaking states of our 15-member Caribbean Community (CARICOM). One particularly irritating problem for CARICOM that continues to stick out like a sore thumb, is the recurring failure by governments of the Community to inform and sensitise citizens on the modalities of intra-regional free movement consistent with objectives and programmes of the still emerging single market and seamless economy (CSME). Six CARICOM states had ceremonially signed at the Mona campus of the UWI on January 30, 2006 to adopt the CSME -- Barbados, Belize Guyana, Jamaica, Suriname and Trinidad and Tobago. OECS member countries had pledged to do so by the end of that year.
A consensual inauguration date for the CSME remains elusive—after two projected dates had failed to materialise. Nevertheless, there has been a growing sense of increased awareness of the importance of the CSME in the face of the challenges posed by a widening globalised economy and the evident inter-dependence of CARICOM states for survival with dignity. A fortnight ago, Secretary General of the 41-year-old Community, Irwin LaRocque, chose to further stir optimism - amid recurring pessimism in some quarters across the region on the way forward for CARICOM. LAROCQUE’S PLEDGE Addressing the 48th Convocation and Graduation Ceremony of the University of Guyana, Mr LaRocque noted that the Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas provides for the free movement of skilled Community nationals, and the first category identified was that of university grad-
uates. “That’s why”, he assured, “the Community remains dedicated to achieving the objectives of the CARICOM Single Market and Economy, notably the free movement of skilled persons; of providers of services; of the self-employed and of those establishing businesses.” Conscious of prevailing cynicism, LaRocque, nevertheless, admitted to being “acutely aware of the difficulties still being experienced at ports of entry in some of our member states by those who seek to exercise their rights to hassle-free intra-regional movement. He has explained that there were categories of eligible citizens who also have the right to work and live in any participating state in addition to those eligible to the “right of an automatic stay of six months - subject only to circumscribed exceptions….” He pointed to new educational initiatives soon to be announced to better
inform CARICOM citizens on their rights in relation to free intra-regional movement. These would include online access of CARICOM skills certificates - currently a recurring problem - “in order to seek professional opportunities. LaRocque disclosed that some 14,000 such certificates have already been issued to Community nationals. And, without attempting to minimise, or rationalise problems being encountered by nationals at some ports of entry, he observed that it should also be appreciated that with respect to hassle-free travel, “the vast majority of persons travel throughout our region every day without problems.” We m u s t l o o k f o rward to the unfolding of Mr LaRocque’s promised new initiatives to sensitise Community nationals on their RIGHTS to free intra-regional travel without the recurring examples of unnecessary hassle, and worse, at some ports of entry.
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GUYANA CHRONICLE Friday November 21, 2014
At Berbice Assizes…
‘Paulie’ gets 13 years for killing his ‘Buddy’ JUSTICE James Bovell Drakes imposed a 13-year sentence on Dharmpaul Gopaul who killed his ‘buddy’, after he, the deceased, chided him for misappropriating his mother’s pension. Gopaul, has since revealed to this reporter that he will appeal the severity of the sentence. Meanwhile, in passing his ruling, the Judge described the act as, “a disaster which was perpetrated on your ‘Buddy’, a word used by Senior Probation Officer Claudia Munroe to describe the relationship between the accused and the now deceased. “You acted impulsively. You acted as a result of what you drank. You were no longer the master of yourself nor master of your mind. You were overwhelmed by liquor. That was your fault, purely your fault,” he emphasised. “For this disaster, the Law has to punish you. You are a father of two daughters, they sure missed you for the five years you have been imprisoned. As you stand there, you no longer want to see a bottle of alcohol. I do hope it is your steadfast resolution because a life is lost. I have to sentence you for breaking the Law. In my assessment, the sentence
is 22 years. However, for the offence of murder for which you were indicted, you were not afforded conditional freedom; you were not placed on bail. I deduct 6 years. I exclude 3 years for your guilty plea, as you did not waste the court’s time. I find no other motive to reduce the sentence. My sentence to you is 13 years. I hope during that time you can conduct yourself in a positive way,” the Judge concluded. Meanwhile, Senior Probation Officer Mrs. Claudia Munroe, in her report on the prisoner’s background, said Gopaul, of Lot 52 Sideline Dam, Portuguese Quarters, was born to legal union of Gopaul Bhudoo, a labourer and Kamlawattie Budhoo a housewife, both now deceased. He is the fourth of sixteen siblings, fourteen of whom are deceased, and had attended the St Joseph Anglican School, now Port Mourant Primary. He ceased his formal education after demitting school at Standard Four, now referred to as Grade Six. Accompanied, then by his brother, the convict would resort to his grandmother’s home, where fruits were picked and sold at the market place, and the proceeds would
Dharampaul Gopaul, known as ‘Paulie Gulliver’
purchase food for the family . As a result of this practice, he would be late in his attendance at school. Therefore, he found it difficult to cope and dropped out of school. He is illiterate, but can sign his name. After leaving school, he was employed at his uncle’s baker shop, then he caught fishes preferably ‘Hassar’, before joining the staff of the Guyana Sugar Corporation as a cane harvester, after which he returned to fishing in the savannahs. At age 26, the prisoner cohabitated with Sunita Mangar, who bore his three daughters. However, the relationship soured, resulting in
separation. Thereafter, the convict cared for his then ailing mother and two daughters. The daughters claimed that he was a loving and caring father, who cared and nurtured them single-handedly. According to them, he was never violent and his only difficulty was his over imbibing of alcohol. This sentiment was shared by some members of the community, while others alleged that he was hasty under the influence of alcohol. Meanwhile, members of the community had indicated that the deceased and Gopaul had been friends since school days and were drinking pals. As a matter of fact, they were relatives, since his father and the deceased father were cousins. They lived seven houses away from each other and would often cook together and sleep at each other’s homes. The prisoner has indicated that on three occasions, the deceased had attempted suicide, and he had taken him to hospital. He stated that they had no previous altercation or animosity against each other. State Prosecutrix Ms. Renita Singh, relaying the facts last month said, on February 6, 2009 at 10:00 hrs, Gopaul
was at his home in company with two friends Seenarine Mangar and Mukesh Nandkissore. Mukesh was cooking, and Gopaul had sent Seenarine to the shop to ‘buy rum’. Thereafter, Gopaul’s mother enquired from her son, his reason for taking her pension money to by rum. As a result to the pensioner’s query, Nandkissore shoved Gopaul, who, in turn did likewise. At about the same time, one Julia Griffith, aged 82 years, was walking towards her farmland aback Portuguese Quarters, Port Mourtant, when she saw three men in Gopaul’s yard. She heard quarrelling and stopped to hear the reason for the dispute. Ms. Griffith heard Gopaul tell Nandkissore: “What you want I will give you,” and she heard him say this three times. The third time, Gopaul, picked up a cutlass which was on the stairway, some fifteen feet away, and asked Nandkissore, “Tell me now what you want,” before striking him on the neck with the weapon. As a result, Nandkissore fell and blood sprayed from the wound. After seeing that, the eyewitness walked out and
returned to her home. Under caution, the convict said, “He struck me, and I struck he back, me get vex and I pick up the cutlass and chop he.” Meanwhile, at the crime scene, sleuths on searching the yard in the vicinity of a coconut tree, found a cutlass, with blood stains on its blade. On February 9, 2009, Dr Vivikakand Brijmohan performed a post mortem and gave the cause of death as shock and haemorrhage, and incised wound to the neck, which was deep, severing muscles and jugular vein. In an unsworn statement from the dock, Dharampaul Gopaul told the Judge, that he was drinking (alcohol) on that fatal day. However, he could not recall the events of the day as he was under the influence of alcohol. “I can’t really remember what happen. Sorry for what happen, Sir.” Gopaul, known as Paulie Gulliver, had initially pleaded not guilty to the capital offence but, ‘threw in the towel,’ and pleaded guilty to the lesser offence of manslaughter, which was accepted by the State. Defence Counsel was Ms. Kim Kyte John.
Teen murderer term of imprisonment for review – to return to court on December 15 TEEN murderer Rayan Ali, who was imprisoned at the Court’s pleasure, appeared before Justice James Bovell Drakes, in chambers, in order to have his term of imprisonment reviewed by the Court. The review resulted from a historical order made by then presiding Judge Roxanne George, who had ordered that the teen be reviewed every two years on or about the anniversary of his sentence. The purpose of the review is to determine whether the accused should be released or not. “We need to keep track. I don’t want him to fall through the cracks,” Justice George had stipulated. Meanwhile, as a result of that decision, Justice Bovell
Drakes has ordered a probation and prison report which will be presented on December 15 when the Judge will make his ruling. The case for the prosecution, presented then by State Counsel Prithima Kissoon, was based on the evidence of eight witnesses, including two eyewitnesses. Thirteen-year-old Gomattie Singh recalled that she was hanging clothes on a line when she observed Premchand Sugrim, called ‘Copper’, walking along a dam at Number 53 Village backlands, Corentyne. Having been earlier ruled as competent to give sworn testimony, the Grade Seven student told the mixed jury that she saw Ali, known as Karran, run out from nearby
black sage bushes and before she could shout: “Copper watch out,” Karran struck the latter on his head with a three-foot long iron pipe which he threw aside before fleeing the scene. The witness said she called Bibi Baskh (Shabanna), who lives two houses away, and told her Karran knocked Copper on the dam. Singh said she cried and Shabanna went to the scene, placed Copper’s head on her foot and wrapped it with his shirt. His head was bleeding and his son called the police and they took him away. Another eyewitness, Ram Singh, had recounted that, shortly before 10:00 hrs, he was walking with the victim who had a cutlass. Singh said Copper never
used the weapon as it fell from his hand on to the dam when Karran hit him on his head. However, in his unsworn statement from the dock, Ali, who attempted to lead self-defence, told the Court that, after he awoke at his uncle’s house, he left and went to his Aunt Kamani’s home where he had breakfast. Moments later, he was standing on the ‘middle walk’ dam where he saw ‘Uncle Copper’ with a cutlass that he used to broadside him on his buttocks, telling him to return to his mother’s house at Black Bush Polder. Ali said: “I walked away but he followed behind me cursing. I saw an iron pipe on the dam. I picked up the pipe and my Aunt Kamani hollered out. I dropped the pipe. Uncle Copper walked away and, shortly afterwards, he
returned. I was sitting on the culvert and he fired a chop with the cutlass. I picked up the iron bar and gave him a lash to his head. He fell to the ground and I dropped the iron pipe. If I had not lashed him, he would have killed me.” After the forty-eightyear-old Sugrim was struck on his head, on July 10, 2011, he was taken to New Amsterdam Hospital, from where he was transferred to Georgetown Public Hospital, and succumbed ten days later. A post mortem report, prepared by Government Pathologist Dr. Nehaul Singh, said death was due to cerebral haemorrhage with necrosis as a result of blunt cranial trauma During the trial, Defence Counsel Kumar Doraisami had tendered the teen’s birth certificate which confirmed
that he was 15 years at the time the offence was committed. Prior to sentencing the prisoner, the judge noted that he was much younger than she had initially thought, as the caution statement attributed to him had misguided the court. It indicated that the convict was 17 years old when the attestation was signed by him and witnessed by his mother, Shamdai Ali, on July 10, 2011. State Counsel Kissoon, rehashing the evidence, noted that if ‘Copper’ had intended to fatally injure his nephew, he would have done so while the killer was unarmed. Ali was found guilty, on November 12, 2012, of killing his uncle by the mixed Berbice Assizes jury who had returned a unanimous verdict. (Jeune Bailey)
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GUYANA CHRONICLE Friday November 21, 2014
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GUYANA CHRONICLE Friday November 21, 2014
Urgent need for dialogue on developing framework for Regional trade in energy – CARICOM Energy Programme Manager
Dr. Devon Gardner
THERE is an urgent need for dialogue that identifies the commitments and the steps that are necessary for developing a framework for Regional trade in energy, said Dr. Devon Gardner, Programme Manager, Energy at the CARICOM Secretariat. The existing Regional trade framework is focused on market access for goods and services and is not designed to tackle energy trade and investments. The framework should be comprehensive, dealing with trade in
multiple energy supplies: oil, gas, solid and liquid biofuels, as well as electricity. Dr. Gardner was, at the time, speaking in Lowlands Bay, St. Vincent and the Grenadines at the launching of CARICOM Energy Week 2014. The Week was officially launched by Dr. Ralph Gonsalves, Prime Minister of St. Vincent and the Grenadines. Other speakers at the launch included Ellsworth Dacon, Director of St. Vincent and the Grenadines Energy Unit; Rene Baptiste, Chairman VINLEC Board of Directors; Dr. Andreas Tauber who represented the German Technical Cooperation agency, GIZ; and Libby DeLucia who represented the Clinton Global Climate Initiative. CARICOM Energy Week is being observed Region-wide from 16-22 November 2014 under the theme ‘Achieving Climate and Economic Resilience through Sustainable Energy’. A framework for Regional trade in energy, Dr.
Gardner said, would have the effect of decreasing dependence on extra-Regional supplies, which would strengthen Regional energy security and “deepen the CARICOM integration process through the treatment of energy resources – both conventional and renewables – in individual Member States, as a Regional good.” Continuing within the context of using energy as a tool for integration, Dr. Gardner drew attention to the fact that the CARICOM Energy Policy, approved by the COTED of Energy Ministers in March 2013, addresses Regional energy security and energy trade. He however pointed that there was an “absence of a Regional mechanism” through which this would be implemented so that, for example, the biofuel potential in Guyana would provide St. Vincent and the Grenadines with increased energy security, with respect to both the “predictability in pricing and supply” that is desired in a
In Berbice Courts…
‘Popcorn’ gang members sentenced on robbery under arms charges THE late ‘Popcorn’ gang m e m b e r s , Ta m e s h w a r ‘Rambo’ Khemraj, 26, of Lot 178 Nigg Settlement; Deon Fraser, called ‘Bucko’, 23 , of Adelphi, and fugitive from justice Abdulssalam Azumullah, alias ‘Sato’, 29 , of Lot 183 Hampshire, were each sentenced to six years at the Reliance Court on Wednesday, after they were found guilty on two counts of robbery under arms. However, they will just serve three years, as presiding Magistrate Sherdel Marcus Isaacs stipulated that the period of confinement must run concurrently.
A c o n f i n e m e n t w a rrant has since been issued for Deon Fraser, who was sentenced in absentia. The fourth defendant, Deodat Seecharran, known as ‘Popcorn’, of Edinburgh Village, has since been shot and killed by police. The repeat offenders were jointly charged for robbing Inderjeet Persaud and his wife Melissa Fernandes, on June 2, 2012, at Cumberland Public Road, East Canje. The quartet, armed with a gun and knife, robbed Persaud called Chris, of two gold chains valued at $450,000, four gold rings
valued at $200,000, a gold bangle valued at $200,000 a stainless steel and gold band worth $30,000, and $11,000 in cash. Fernandes too was robbed of $185,000 in cash, TT$1,080 in cash, four cell phones worth $220,000, and a quantity of gold jewellery valued $550,000. It is alleged that on Saturday, June 2, 2012, the men, masked and armed with gun, knives and a cutlass, invaded the premises of Persaud and his spouse Fernandes, robbing them, in the process. The incident occurred in the full view of others.
sustainable energy economy. He told his audience that the biggest inhibitor to sustainable growth in the majority of CARICOM countries was the unpredictable and mostly high cost of imported fuels on which Member States were almost completely dependent. “…the cyclical escalation of global crude oil prices makes the CARICOM economies extremely vulnerable to oil price shocks, and the establishment of stable and affordable energy prices can lower the cost of input into the various productive sectors, thereby endowing
the economies of Member States with increased competitiveness,” said Dr. Gardner. According to a statement from the CARICOM Secretariat, he said the volume of GDP and foreign exchange resources that CARICOM Member States continue to pay for expensive, energy imports could have otherwise been directed to making the investments necessary for driving sustainable growth. Such growth, he said, would, in turn, provide significant portions of the capital that was required for adaptation to climate change and sea level rise, and other critical interventions which
were necessary for sustainable development and resilience building. The five-year CARICOM Strategic Plan identifies energy as one of the Region’s key economic growth drivers. In this regard, the Plan focuses on energy efficiency across sectors; development and use of renewable energy; legislative and market reform to allow for access of renewable energy to the electricity network; building awareness and capacity within Member States; and facilitating public private partnership in energy development and building on the CARICOM Energy Policy.
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GUYANA CHRONICLE Friday November 21, 2014
246 Guyanese students currently studying in the United States - Embassy commits to guide potential students with admissions, visa, and financial information they need to study in U.S.
Friday, November 21, 2014 - 14:30 hrs Saturday, November 22, 2014 - 14:30 hrs Sunday, November 23, 2014 - 05:30 hrs
THE Georgetown-based U.S. Embassy said 246 Guyanese students are currently studying in the United States, which is an increase of 19.4 percent from the previous year. The Embassy, in a statement yesterday, said it is committed to continue working with potential students to guide them with the admissions, visa, and financial information they need in order to successfully prepare and apply for study in the United States. The Embassy noted that during the 2013/14 academic year, the number of international students at colleges and universities in the United States increased by eight percent to a record high of 886,052, confirming once again that the United States remains the destination of choice for higher education. The Embassy also indicated that, based on a report, more American students – a total of 289,408 – studied abroad for academic credit from their U.S. colleges and universities, although the two percent increase represents a slightly slower rate of growth than the previous year. “Through President Barak Obama’s 100,000 Strong in the Americas initiative, innovative new partnerships are being
PAO hands over computers to Chief Librarian
developed with the business sector, higher education sector, and governments from across the hemisphere to dramatically increase opportunities for educational exchange between the United States and the Americas,” the statement said. The statement also highlighted the fact that the Embassy observed the 15th Annual International Educational Week from November 17-21 by donating four computer systems and four back-up battery power supplies to the National Library of Guyana to increase access to information. In brief remarks to the Chief Librarian (acting) and staff at the November 19th donation, U.S. Embassy’s Public Affairs Officer Mr. Bobby Adelson stated, “Education is a right. With the donation of these computers, the U.S. Embassy hopes to provide greater access to research and reference materials to the people of Guyana.
Specifically when thinking about young people, access to information is one way in which they can augment their intellectual capital and support their educational framework.” Through its American Spots located at the National Library and University of Guyana library, the Embassy also offer resources year round to assist young people is pursuing university studies in the United States. The American Spots features guide books on selecting a college or university, information on the university application process, scholarship guides, books on how to write strong college application essays, and resources to help students prepare for standardised tests. International Education Week 2014 is being observed under the theme, ‘International Education is for Everyone’. “International education is cru-
cial to building relationships between people and communities in the United States and around the world. It is through these relationships that together we can solve global challenges like climate change, the spread of pandemic disease, and combatting violent extremism,” said Evan M. Ryan, Assistant Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Affairs. “We also need to expand access to international education for students from more diverse backgrounds, in more diverse locations of study, getting more diverse types of degrees. Only by engaging multiple perspectives within our societies can we all reap the numerous benefits of international education increased global competence, self-awareness and resiliency, and the ability to compete in the 21st century economy,” Assistant Secretary Ryan remarked.
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GUYANA CHRONICLE Friday November 21, 2014
ANSA McAL launches 10th Carib Soca Monarch competition ANSA McAL, on Wednesday, announced the launch of its 10th Carib Soca Monarch competition as they began preparations for a thrilling Mashramani 2015 competition. The team behind the franchise expressed how happy and ecstatic they are for the growth and support the competition has been receiving over the years. The Carib Soca Monarch competition is known for setting the vibes and rhythms for Mashramani, with exciting music, thrilling performances and an explosion of lyrics from competitors that try to outdo each other. Public Relations Officer of Ansa McAl Trading Limited, Darshanie Yussuf, noted at the launch at the ANSA McAL Trading Ltd Head Office at Beterverwagting, the competition has grown to become the biggest franchise of the company and it shows the commitment of the company to the culture and entertain-
ment industry in Guyana. She stated that this year parts of the competition will be held in Berbice, as they customarily strive to take the event around the country. Subsequently, Coordinator of the Soca Monarch Competition, Nigel Worth disclosed that the semi-finals are proposed to be held on January 31st 2015 in East Berbice and the finals on February 14, 2015 in Georgetown. The first prize will remain Gy$1.5M, with second, third and fourth-place prizes being Gy$500,000 and Gy$250,000 and Gy$100,000 respectively. There will also be a People’s Choice Award prize for the competitors. The coordinator also reminded that entries will close on January 5, 2015 and entry forms are available at the Mashramani Secretariat located in the Ministry of Culture, Youth & Sport Building on Main Street, Georgetown, and at the ANSA McAL Trading Ltd Head Office at Beter-
verwagting, East Coast Demerara. Present at the launch was Brand Ambassador for Carib Beer, Richard Singh, who is known for his exciting promotions. He said the public may look forward to the ‘jump start’ in January which will promote the music, electrifying performances, and the lyrical sensations that have become synonymous with the Carib Soca Monarch competition. The reigning Carib Soca Monarch, Kwasi ‘Ace’ Edmondson who will be participating in the International Soca Monarch Competition in Trinidad and Tobago, urged his fellow Guyanese and the Guyanese Diaspora residing in the twin-island republic to support him. He will also be defending his crown in Guyana and noted that his fans can look forward to ‘something different’ that is going to be creative and innovative. Persons are reminded that the rules of the competition
are as follows: only persons over 18 years of age can enter; each composition must be original, and must not be longer than five minutes; no composition must have been entered in any other song competition(s); the tempo of each composition must be over 95 beats per minute; each composition will be judged on lyrics, melody, rendition, diction and musical arrangement; and no composition must contain any scandalous, libellous, or lewd material. The Carib Soca Monarch competition was first hosted
The reigning Carib Soca Monarch, Kwasi ‘Ace’ Edmondson performing at last year’s competition
in 2004, and had a successful run until 2010, after which there was a year’s hiatus before
returning in 2012 with a bang that did not disappoint its many fans. (Raveena Mangal)
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GUYANA CHRONICLE Friday November 21, 2014
Law-breaking GDF, GPF members a serious concern – says Crime Chief following confirmation AWOL GDF rank was gunman in LBI robbery WHEN members of the Guyana Police Force (GPF) and the Guyana Defence Force (GDF) are involved in criminal activities it becomes a very serious concern for the security forces, according to Crime Chief, Leslie James. James was at the time responding to the capture of a Guyana Defence Force (GDF) Coast Guard rank and another accomplice moments after they had robbed an East Coast Demerara mother of three at her home with the use of an unlicensed firearm, just as she returned from a city bank on Tuesday.
According to James, the GPF and the GDF would usually become very concerned when cases such as these involve men and women in uniform, who by virtue of being members of those two organisations demonstrates to the nation that they are part of a mechanism that is designed to combat crime. Asked if the force will try to acquire from the GDF a list of the ranks who are absent without leave (AWOL) for a lengthy period in an effort to track their movements and with whom they are associating, James said that it is something worth looking at,
while commenting that he is confident that the GDF itself would be doing its own work to track its AWOL ranks. On Tuesday the police arrested two men, Trillion Munroe of Tucber Park, New Amsterdam and Kevin David, after they robbed 37-year-old Jasdai Persaud, also known as Nalani Mohamed, of 45 Cherry Field La Bonne Intention, East Coast Demerara, shortly after she returned from a city bank. Kevin David was identified as a Guyana Defence Force Coast Guard rank who has been absent without leave (AWOL) for some time be-
fore his arrest on Tuesday. Munroe and David, at gunpoint, robbed the mother of three of a bag containing approximately $750,000 causing her to raise an alarm. The woman’s husband and other relatives responded and shots were fired in their direction by the pillion rider on the motorcycle. However, the unrelenting family members and other relatives gave chase and rammed a car into the motorcycle they were riding, causing them to fall over. One of the men was pinned by the car while the other was pitched several metres away
The two bandits in a police vehicle after they were captured
and lay in an unconscious state as the police were summoned.
When the police arrived a search of the men was conducted and the bag containing the cash was recovered; the police also retrieved an unlicensed .32 revolver with four live rounds, a spent shell and a GDF identification card. Meanwhile, on Wednesday police sources confirmed that the injured bandit who was hospitalised on Tuesday was still being treated at the Georgetown Public Hospital under police guard. His condition was reported as semi-stable by persons who are close to the investigation.
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GUYANA CHRONICLE Friday November 21, 2014
Another suicide rocks Essequibo Coast
– as father of two ends life by poison A 45-YEAR-OLD father of two has ended his life by suicide on the Essequibo Coast. According to reports, Indarjeet known as ‘Buckoo’, who was a mechanic drank a quantity of poisonous substance (gramoxone) last Friday night at around 21:00 hrs while in a drunken state. Reports are that he was rushed to the Suddie Hospital where he was admitted but succumbed on Tuesday, after battling for his life for some four days. The man was reported to have been suffering from domestic problems. He frequently drank alcohol and would then verbally abuse his wife. However, Friday he was said to be sober and during the afternoon he worked in his garden and went and bought groceries for his home. But during the early part of the night, he reportedly could not resist the temptation of consuming alcohol, after which
Domestic worker charged with stealing $1.3M gold jewellery A 20-YEAR-OLD domestic worker, who allegedly stole a quantity of gold jewellery from her employer, was ordered to post $100,000 bail by Magistrate Sherdel Isaacs Marcus at the New Amsterdam Court. Nicola Bagot, of Lot 39 Stanleytown, was employed by Valincia Ali of Pope Street, New Amsterdam, where, between October 20 and 28 last, she stole pairs of gold bangles, bracelets, earrings, and a necklace, totaling $1,390,000. The defendant, who has denied the charge of larceny from the dwelling house, is expected to report to Central Police Station once weekly until the determination of the matter. The case will be heard again on December 9, for report.
he began to curse while he lie in a hammock under his lay house. Reports said he even
called out to his neighbour that he will drink poison and kill himself. (Rajendra Prabhulall)
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GUYANA CHRONICLE Friday November 21, 2014
Havoc in G/T as…
Torrential rains flood - businesses affected, traffic impeded SCHOOLS were called off, and several commercial activities and the operations of agencies which offer critical services to citizens were affected, following close to seven hours of torrential rainfall, mostly along Guyana’s coastland. The heavy downpour began in the wee hours of Thursday morning and continued during the day, leaving several parts of Guyana’s capital, Georgetown, and a number of coastal areas flooded. The deluge, said to be the highest rainfall recorded within a 24-hour period for almost a decade, saw the Ministry of Education announcing that the flood has forced the closure yesterday of all Government schools in Georgetown, as well as in Regions Two, Three and Four. The Ministry of Education said it “wishes to advise the public that all public schools in Georgetown will remain closed on Friday, November 21, 2014 (today) to facilitate the sanitisation of the facilities.” Meanwhile, schools in Regions 2, 3, and 5 with the exceptions of the Bygeval Secondary school will be reopened. The Ministry of Education, in an advisory issued late yesterday, said parents and guardians of Region 4 (East Bank and East Coast) are asked to note that most schools will be reopened today (Friday), with the exception of the following: Clonbrook primary, Clonbrook nursery, Enmore Primary, Ghandi Memorial Nursery, Providence Primary, Chateau Margot Primary, Chateau Margot nursery, Ann’s Grove Primary, Ann’s Grove Nursery, and Unity Nursery. The flooding also forced the closure of several businesses and stores, market places, and social service offices, including the Guyana Water Inc. on Vlissengen Road. Even some critical services of the Guyana Power and Light (GPL) were unable to be executed for the most part of yesterday due to the rainfall. Commercial banks did not, however, close their doors to customers and it was business as usual, although the lines were not as long as they usually are on a normal, sunny day. Certain streets in Georgetown were inundated with water and vehicles were damaged with some even slipping off roadways; offices were flooded out and in some cases employees of several establishments were asked to return home after their bosses had assessed the situations at their respective places of employment and determined that the environment was not conducive for working or entertaining customers. Speaking with the Guyana Chronicle on Thursday morning, several operators of businesses lamented that they would have suffered some amount of losses and damage as a result of the heavy downpour which caused their establishments to be inundated.
One woman said that she has grown accustomed to the occurrence, since the flooding along Regent Street has been happening for years owing to poor drainage maintenance. The woman said that she had recently bought several items to retail to customers for the Christmas season and some of those were damaged when the store was flooded. Another store operator further up Regent Street, between Camp and King Streets, said he was at home when he realised that the rain was continuous. Consequently, he took a decision to travel down to his business establishment and elevate items from the floor to safer ground to prevent loss or damage. Others were forced to bail water and place sandbags at entrances to prevent floodwaters from causing any further discomfort. The Minister of Education early yesterday morning suspended classes at public schools and in some other parts of the country along the coast which were affected by the heavy downpour. Some private schools however, kept their doors open, but did not receive many students as the rain did obstruct the smooth flow of public transportation. The heavy rains exposed the enormous problem which has been plaguing especially the Capital City of Georgetown: the issue of indiscriminate dumping of garbage and other waste along the road shoulders and directly into main drainage canals, which has grown into a monster of a problem due mainly to the seeming impotence of the Georgetown Mayor and City Council to address the problem. Several public officials were present checking the conditions of areas and the operation of pumps in and around the city, which were expected to be operational to drain the water off the land. Minister within the Finance Ministry, Juan Edghill, visited the South Ruimveldt area where he interacted with some residents and checked on the situation there. He told this newspaper that he was very concerned about the level of water that was on the land and which had settled in residents’ bottom flats. He said all efforts at the time of his visit were being made to ensure that the water was drained off the land in a timely manner to minimise damage to residents’ properties. Meanwhile, at the Guyana Chronicle, there was extensive flooding around the compound even as rising water caused damage to some of the materials used in the production of the newspaper. Over at the National Communications Network Inc., the Guyana Fire Service was called in to pump water out of the radio studios, as the floodwater threatened some very vital equipment and cables which are integral to the operations of the national radio stations. The accumulated water did not however, cause the stations to go off-air.
- Public Schools rem
‘SANDBAGS TO THE RESCUE’: Furniture giant, Courts Guyana Limited, was opened after precautionary measures were taken (Photos by Cullen Bess-Nelson and Sonell Nelson)
‘NEWSPRINT UNDER THREAT’: Chronicle’s Production Manager Mr. Sam Bynoe moving rolls of newsprint to higher ground in wake of rising flood waters in the Press Room
‘WHAT NEXT he was displa
‘A HELPING HAND’: An elderly w public-spirited citizen
‘ LEANING DANGEROUSLY’: GPL’s utility poles buckle under pressure of the wi
‘OPEN FOR BUSINESS’: Produce on sale amid the floodwater at the Bourda market yesterday
‘NOWHERE TO GO’: Pi
GUYANA CHRONICLE Friday November 21, 2014
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d City
main closed today
T?’ - This homeless man secured his belongings s displaced from his resting place on the pavement
woman is assisted through the floodwaters by a
ind along a City street yesterday.
iles of garbage near Bourda market yesterday
‘SCHOOL’S OUT’: The prestigious Bishops’ High School in Georgetown was among those which the Education Ministry ordered closed, yesterday, as well as today
‘ON AIR’: Flood waters in the 98.1 FM radio studio at NCN on Homestretch Avenue did not prevent the station from broadcasting
Hydromet reports….
Highest rainfall recorded in Georgetown
THE highest rainfall reported yesterday was recorded at Strathavon in Region 4 (Demerara/ Mahaica) with 244.0 mm, followed by Helena No. 2, also in Region 4, with 202.4 mm of rainfall. This was according to the Ministry of Agriculture’s Hydro-meteorological service, which indicated that as at 8:00am, yesterday, its reports indicated that Region 4 was the hardest hit by the heavy rains, with some 186.6 mm of rainfall. The Ministry’s Hydro-meteorological service also reported that most of the heavy rains occurred during the early morning hours. Following the heavy rains, yesterday’s weather conditions saw cloudy to overcast skies across coastal and inland areas, with occasional to frequent moderate to heavy showers and scattered thundershowers. Other areas across Guyana expected mostly cloudy skies with brief showers. Rainfall for yesterday was expected between 5.0mm to 50.0mm, with the highest rainfall expected over coastal areas. This data is expected to be confirmed by the hydro-met service. Additionally, above normal high tide is in effect until Thursday November 27, 2014. Residents of coastal, low lying and riverine areas are advised to take necessary precautions.
Weather Forecast: FRIDAY: Cloudy skies can be expected in Regions 1 to 4 and 7 with frequent showers and scattered thundershowers. Other areas, partly cloudy skies becoming cloudy with scattered showers. Rainfall is expected between 0.0 mm to 45.0 mm. SATURDAY: Cloudy to overcast skies with showers can be expected throughout Guyana with scattered showers over coastal areas with isolated thunderstorms during the morning becoming partly sunny into the afternoon. Other areas, isolated showers can be expected. Rainfall is expected between 0.0 mm to 30.0 mm. SUNDAY: Mainly overcast skies can be expected throughout Northern Guyana with intermittent rain and scattered to occasional thundershowers. Rainfall intensities are likely to be moderate to heavy and accompanied by gusty winds. Southern Guyana, partly sunny skies can be expected. Rainfall is expected between 0.0 mm to 60.0 mm. Highest in areas of Regions One to Three. Rainfall in the regions for the 24-hours as at 8:00am yesterday
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GUYANA CHRONICLE Friday November 21, 2014
ts’ yet another dose of the Carlberg Fever, and a bellyful of laughter as predators become the prey. Hot saucy babes, party lineup, versatile artistes and so much more... As the Bombshell brings a steamy showcase in this cold, bleaky weather. Grab a mug of hot cocoa, curl up on your sofa and just lose yourself in the Bombshell moment. Trust me you will definitely be back for more. Do enjoy folks...
KI for Carlsberg launch party
S
OUTHLAND International Inc, a subsidiary of the Pereira Group of Companies, will be hosting its official launch of Carlsberg Beer on November 22 at the 704
Lounge, Albert and Lamaha Streets, Georgetown. As part of that launch, Trinidad’s Chutney King Kris Persad, popularly known as KI, is expected to perform live. In ad-
dition, Trinidad’s hottest DJ, Sheriff, will be in the house to set the right atmosphere. Carlsberg Beer was recently made the official drink of the VIP Section of Golden Boys Entertainment’s “Boombastic” Concert, billed for November 29 at the Guyana National Stadium, and set to feature the best in dancehall and reggae music. arlsberg, which retails at $360 each, will also be available at leading supermarkets and bars throughout the country. With a great taste that goes down smoothly, the beverage is expected to stay on the market and compete with other brands such as Stag, Banks, and Heineken. Carlsberg is the flagship beer brand in the Carlsberg Group’s portfolio of more than 500 beer and beverage brands, ranging from alcoholic to non-alcoholic products, including MOUSSY & SOMERSBY Apple Cider, which was introduced to the Guyanese market last year. Carlsberg beer was first popularised locally in 2006, and is now back with an even more attractive and modern packaging, synonymous with its rich heritage and authentic appeal to inspire and be relevant to people’s lives today. At this historic moment for the company, Southland International Inc is proud to be the sole official distributor in Guyana. At the party, Carlsberg beer will be retailing at a special price all night, and will be served ice cold by the Carlsberg Models. Tickets are only $2000 for the event, with free giveaways accompanying the purchase of every ticket. Tickets can be uplifted at Southland International Inc’s office at 23 Brickdam, Stabroek in the Buddy’s Building; at 704 Sports Bar, or by calling 223-1040, 223-1490 and 223-1496 for more info. Be sure to set aside November 22 and head down to the 704 Lounge for the official launch party.
C
Telephone contact#: 616-0301 or 699-6156
abes…
ottest B H ’s ll e h s b m o B
Shannie Singh is every man’s dream come true
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VERY man dreams of the perfect woman, and would most definitely want her to come in a package reeking of sauciness, fantastic sex appeal and distinct sophistication. Our ‘Bombshell Babe’ this week possesses all these qualities, besides enticing portions of intelligence, creativity, sensual allure, and a provocatively charismatic personality. This 21 year-old bubbly damsel strangely enjoys chasing pond flies in wide open pastures, and can still somehow transform into a ‘sexy siren’ that will certainly ‘make your teeth sweat’. She adores travelling, dancing, and meeting creative individuals, and has her sights set on the finer things of life. Shannie is, of course, single and is an ambitious customs broker on the local shores. While she still awaits her dream guy to come along, focusing on higher education is her ultimate goal. If any of you gentlemen reading this think you are ‘Mr Right’, then email Shannie at hinata8585@ yahoo.com You asked for a dream come true and we heard your appeal, so what are you waiting for fellas? Get to know Shannie; you will be happy you did.
GUYANA CHRONICLE Friday November 21, 2014
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Miss Bootilicious pageant postponed --Inclement weather decides fate of keenly anticipated lingerie pageant
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UE to inclement weather that has caused flooding of the venue, the 2014 Miss Bootilicious Lingerie Pageant has been postponed to a new date to be announced in December 2014. Promoters informed the Bombshell yesterday that they had been rooting for an open-air venue, and the same became flooded after Wednesday night’s torrential rainfall. They are now soliciting other locations to have the event hosted in the month of December. Meanwhile, the lineup of curvy divas who are guaranteed to create a ‘sensual earthquake’ has been increased from eight to ten. When they take to the stage in December, I am quite sure you guys would remember all the excitement, and the controversy stirred up last year when Sukerpunch Promotions hosted the third leg of the provocative ‘Miss Bootilicious Reloaded Lingerie Pageant’
for the very curvy women. Patrons flocked the venues from far and wide to soak up the scandalous routines and very provocative presentations, as very attractive and curvy contestants demonstrated their sexual creativity on stage in vying to determine who was best at entertaining their mates, in suggestive (but not vulgar) ways; and which woman was more gifted in implementing strategies to keep her mate from the clutches of wanton vultures. The ladies took to the stage in some of the sheerest and most revealing lingerie last year, and in most cases smothered their male counterparts with the smoldering intensity of their showcases. Patrons saw an alluring flurry of sexy school teachers transforming themselves into raging sirens, professionals by day and erotic dancers by night; not to mention those coy and seemingly harmless librarians and cooks who trans-
formed themselves into some of the most irresistible divas of the night. The choreography was electrifying and the air was pregnant with sensual chemistry. Females who are interested
in participating in Ms Bootilicious Lingerie Pageant are urged to call phone numbers 616-0301 or 6288476 to be shortlisted in the line-up. Divas of any ethnicity are most welcome to apply. The only stipulation
is that they must have a male counterpart who is willing to help them perform their routine. The eventual winner with the most scorching choreography would be rewarded with a whopping cash prize, bragging rights, a crown and trophy; while the second place winner will take home cash and a trophy. The third place contestant will be awarded cash, a trophy and a pampering package from a popular city salon. Participants will be competing in three segments -- ‘Mingling’, Wet Pulse’ and the ‘Ultimate Bootilicious Showdown’. The promoters wish to remind that this pageant is more associated with the curvy ladies who are ready to affirm that one can be ‘big yet bold and sexy’. Here is a showcase of one of the ‘electrifying ladies’ from the very first Miss Bootilicious Lingerie Pageant.
You Shouldn’t Do That!!!
Bedroom Confessions ready to It brings great joy to my heart to see… serve up the ‘ultimate bargain’ WHEN THE PREDATOR BECOMES THE PREY
G
uyanese were, just recently, able to appease all their erotic, chocolate and dandy fetishes when Bedroom Confessions/ Meena’s Sweet Treats open its doors to the public with a lavish ceremony at 161 Charlotte Street & Orange Walk, Georgetown. Well, folks there have worked all week to create an amazing package that will ensure you appease your most erotic desires and unleash you ‘forbidden fantasies’ with the likes of just about any imaginable ‘novelty toy’. Come on now dears; don’t be bashful. The items there are those you have never heard of, nor ever imagined existed!!! Talk about taking your fetishes to the very limit… Well, this very sizzling offer is served up to your likeness on a golden platter of confidentiality and with ulti-
mate professional standards. So what are you waiting for? Call them and make an appointment to indulge in your exotic yearnings. Or you can just visit them at the above address so that you can get a firsthand experience in exploding like a blinding kaleidoscope of shooting stars…. Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Haaa!!! This new entity allows you to ignite and fan your sultry flames with enticing chocolates, sexy lingerie, breath-taking candles, finest wines, and sizzling novelties to provide the experience of a lifetime. To top things off, you can also indulge in the most dazzling evening gowns, swimsuits and more... Planning a special ‘candies fiesta’? Then you can splurge in the Veena’s Sweet Treats section that offers only
A
US-based confectionery. These include Dentyne gums, Jordan almonds, ring jellies, heartthrobs, marshmallow twists, tootsie rolls, ice cubes, yogurt pretzels, Hershey’s chocolate and so much more. Positioned in an ideal location (Opposite Sweet Point Hangout Bar), folks there can be contacted on phone numbers 226-6568, 621-9048, or 694-0907.
LL around our city today, citizens are in fear of their lives and valuables as several unemployed young men pounce, in broad daylight, on unsuspecting individuals and rob them of very valuable items. These young men have become so daring these days that they just don’t ‘give a damn’ who is around when they commit their hideous crimes. And they don’t care that their nefarious actions are painting a horrible picture of our beautiful Guyana to foreigners on business and to visiting tourists alike. Well, a certain group of social vultures that operates in the Stabroek Market area got the shock of their lives whilst they were lurking around in search of human prey, their wild, venomous eyes darting here and there as they looked for the fragile and less menacing members of society. They certainly did not bargain for the two police officers who were observing them nearby. As they prepared to pounce on the busy after-work crowd, the police officers swooped down on them like eagles, and smashed all their dreams of bountiful booty that hovered in their minds’ eyes. Two of them tried to put up a fight with the men of the law, but these two police officers meant business and just bundled them away unceremoniously to face the wrath of the law.
It good fuh dem!! Arrest dem hooligans afficah; dat is how Ah like tuh see yuh doing yuh wuk!!
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GUYANA CHRONICLE Friday November 21, 2014
‘Blu Martini Club’ to promote sizzling ‘Kanghan Nite’ on Fridays
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VERYONE craves and dreams of a club that offers ‘real time entertainment’ and can still manage to serve up on a platter a regal serving of comfort, coziness, sophistication and entertainment bliss. And the Blu Martini Club, located at Lot
161 Lamaha and De Abreu Streets in Newtown, Kitty, Georgetown is taking things to the edge of insanity to do just that. Starting now, the club has launched a campaign to bring to the entertainment platter their smashing ‘Kanghan Nite’ event, slated for Fridays. The aim of this event is to
showcase East Indian traditions, and to keep them revolving in an atmosphere that is upbeat, pulsating and exciting. The interior of the club will be transformed to reveal a real-life- event-styled ambience that allows patrons to believe they are still revelling in the outdoors. Come soak up reverberating drums and twitch your hips to the Kanghan sounds. And the Blu Martini Kitchen will of course be serving up steaming hot mutton, duck and chicken curries, not to mention the fact that you can enjoy your finger licking ‘seven curries’ a little later. It is truly exciting to know that this club brings a festivity from open yards to the glossy interior of a nightclub. And man, the Blu Martini DJs will be blasting an ethnic storm with music just suited for the occasion. Meanwhile, folks there are informing that families can now also make bookings
and have their Kanghan Nights hosted at the very spacious venue. Patrons are urged to rush down to this venue, which begins its ‘Weekend Fiesta’ on Fridays with mixed music to tease your senses. Then, on Saturdays, the fun continues inside this location which was built and decorated to ooze fun, romance and tropical sizzle. Their platter of snacks and cutters is mouth watering, and would certainly leave you clambering for more. Their stately kitchen and immaculate washrooms, and so much more, will certainly make you feel that the Blu Martini is your home away from home. What are you waiting for, folks? Hurry down to the Blu Martini and indulge in that inimitable ‘Blu Martini Experience’. Of course you can call them on phone numbers 231-9480, 231-9481 or 231-9482 for bookings and more information.
This year’s contestants pose with Mr and Mrs Texila University (centre)
Texila American University to host second annual cultural night and pageant
T
EXILA American University (TAU) will, at the National Cultural Centre, host its second annual cultural night and pageant on November 29th, 2014 under the theme “A Royal Affair.” The event commences at 20:00hrs and will showcase the rich cultural diversity of TAU students, who have come from three different parts of the world: Asia, Africa and the Caribbean! The event will also include a night of pageantry, with contestants from across the globe vying for the crown of Mr. and Miss Texila 2015. The cultural segment will be packed with exotic dances, exquisite cultural fashion displays, drama, and talents from around the world. The
TAU cultural event will be one of a kind, with its rich originality and ethnic diversity. This year, the pageant will have 10 contestants (5 males, 5 females) competing for the honour of being called Mr and Ms. Texila American University ‘2015’. Last year saw the crowning of the first King and Queen in Bonaventure Atulomah of Nigeria and Umadevi Bux of Guyana. An added feature of this year’s event is the launching of TAU’s first annual magazine, called ARUBAH, which will focus on the lifestyle of medical students and offer readers a rich variety of medical articles from TAU faculty and students. It will be the first of its kind to be launched in Guyana at such an eventful
night, filled with entertainment from homebased medical students as well as international students from across the globe studying here in Guyana. A ticket for this event costs $1500, and can be uplifted from the National Cultural Centre, from the TAU Medical School Building at Sparendaam, East Coast Demerara, and from the TAU Campus 2 at Critchlow Labour College. The University will also host its sports finals competition & fund-raising event, on November 22nd at the Guyana Defence Force Ground at Camp Ayanganna. This event will feature the football and cricket finals, and the 100 & 400 metres and relay races.
Field events on the card include shot put and discus. Entrance is free. The contestants of this year’s pageant are from Nigeria, Venezuela, Guyana, Congo and India. The student body uses funds garnered from these events for community outreach programmes. Texila American University (TAU) is an international university providing quality tuition on health sciences education to students from around the world. TAU awards degrees in Medicine, Nursing and Dentistry. The University has been operating in Guyana since 2010 and attracts a wide cross section of students from countries in Africa, Asia, and Europe.
GUYANA CHRONICLE Friday November 21, 2014
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Tips from ‘Madame Suave’…
Five things NOT TO DO if you want to save your failing marriage
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AVING your marriage involves two people: you and your spouse. Saving your marriage is something only you and your partner can do: marriage, like life, is one of those things where you save yourself or you stay unsaved. Yet, this doesn’t mean that saving your marriage is something you need to do alone: most relationships are easier saved when they have outside help, or, at the very least, an objective point of view. Still, a marriage counsellor or the words of a friend who swears they can stay neutral (they like you both equally, they swear!) will only get you so far. Saving your marriage requires you and your spouse doing the vast majority of the heavy lifting, especially when it comes to emotions. But sometimes it’s not so much knowing what you should do that will lead to a successful reunion; sometimes it’s knowing what you shouldn’t do. So, as you embark on the task of making ‘till death do us part’ a very literal thing and saving your marriage, consider refraining from any of the following:
IGNORING YOUR PROBLEMS: One of the biggest mistakes people make when saving their marriage is ignoring their problems. The whole “ignore it and it will go away” concept never
works in relationships. Ignoring your problems won’t solve anything, even if it does lead to times of truce. So face your problems head on and communicate with each other. Your marriage has zero chance of continuing if you don’t. STAYING TOGETHER FOR THE KIDS Yes, divorce is hard on children. But do you know what else is hard on children -- Having parents who don’t like each other (especially if you fight). For this reason, having kids isn’t always a good reason for saving
your marriage. There are, of course, exceptions: if your kids will be out of the house in a year, staying together isn’t all that difficult. But if your children are young, staying together may not save them from stress, and ulti-
mately only teach them that being unhappy is acceptable. CARING WHAT OTHERS THINK People can’t help but care what others think. We want to make our families proud and we care what our friends think of our actions. We may even secretly care what that popular girl from high school still thinks. However, when saving your marriage, you should only focus on what YOU AND YOUR SPOUSE think. No one else matters, because no one else is part of your rela-
tionship. NEVER GETTING ANYWHERE Sometimes trying to solve a marital spat can feel like you’re a mouse in one of those mazes being studied by scientists: even though you get shocked every time you grab the cheese, you keep on touching it. With matrimony, people tend to fight about the same things over and over and over again; but this will get you nowhere. So, instead of bringing up the same issues, sit down and make a plan and figure out how to resolve them once and for all.
S
BEING IMPULSIVE aving your marriage and impulse are not friends. In fact, they are mortal enemies. This is due to the fact that impulse (words said, things thrown, affairs had out of spite) damages a relationship, rather than mends it. Even if you make up, your harsh words will still have been said and your actions will still have been done. In other words, there are no take backs. So, instead of acting on impulse, act on rationale and work on saving your marriage only when both you and your spouse are calm, collected and composed.
WIST to host Christmas production at Cultural Centre
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IST (Worship In Spirit & Truth) Ministries International was started in September 2002 as a Christian dance school. WIST was inspired from the Bible in the book of John 4:24, which says: “God is a Spirit, and they that Worship Him must worship Him in Spirit and in Truth”. Today WIST is comprised of a dance school with over twenty-five (25) students ranging in age from four to over 35; a dance company of fifteen (15) members, and several partnering singers, poets, actors and musicians. The group is comprised of persons for various Christian denominations and locations across the East Coast Demerara, East Bank Demerara, West Bank Demerara, Soesdyke Highway, and West Coast Demerara.
On November 28, 2014, WIST will be hosting a Christmas production at the National Cultural Centre at 8pm, under the theme “Celebrating the King”. This event will be held in keeping with the group’s mission to use the performing arts to share the gospel. It will also be a conduit to give encouragement and raise funds for its charitable projects. There would be dance, drama, poetry, songs, steel pan music and lots more. WIST has promised that this event would be a breath taking night of quality performances and ministry. Some of the churches involved are Grove Full Gospel, Kuru Kururu Assembly of God, Community Life – Buxton, Elim Pentecostal at Albert Street, Pearl Assembly of God, Winners Cathedral, and many more.
Teaspoon and Johnny Braff to explode at Magic Rose Garden ‘Jazz/Oldies Fantasia’
M
ANY have been longing for the return of Jazz to these local shores, and some have even raved that we are very lacking where Jazz talent is concerned. Well, leh me hush alyuh mouth once and fuh all: My dear folks, have you forgotten the saying, “Seek and thou shall find”? Well, that’s exactly what ‘Promoter Magic’ did just recently. He tumbled the ‘nooks and crannies’ of Guyana for Jazz talent he knew was hidden somewhere, and bumped into one of Guyana’s legendary Jazz sensations, Wayne Proctor. And that’s how the folks at the Magic Rose Garden Bar (Regent Street, Georgetown), starting this Sunday, October 26, 2014, will stage their weekly ‘Jazz/Oldies Fantasia’. Come on folks, you should not miss this opportunity to be whisked away on bubbles of scintillating romance, or be engulfed in frothy puffs of heady sensuality as some of Guyana’s most talented artistes of old take you back in time. This Sunday, the legendary ‘Johnny Braff’ (Madison Square Garden performer) will take to the stage live alongside the renowned ‘Tea Spoon One Man Band’. Performing live also will be songbird ‘Debbie I’ and our own Alex Wayne, amongst others. Persons loving a good ‘after work lime’ can surely pop in, since things will start heating up at the venue from about 17:00 hrs (5 pm). Meanwhile, patrons can enjoy succulent cutters from the MAGIC Catering Service housed at the same venue. Folks are urged to gather on Thursday nights for the best in karaoke with DJ Kenny. Soon to come is the ‘Magic Rose Get Wet Fete’, and fans are urged to call phone numbers 616- 0301, or 6288476 for more information or reservations. ingful contribution to the Ruimveldt Children’s Home and Care Center, an orphanage in Ruimveldt. During the year 2014 the group launched a street feeding programme through which more than 70 persons were fed. IST truly believes that it is more blessed to give than to receive. In uniting on charity ventures, persons around our country can benefit in a significant way. Hence, from this event on Nov 28, 2014, “Celebrating the King” WIST is looking forward to making a meaningful donation to Carib Kids International. This is a charity project that helps over one dozen families where grandparents are tasked as the sole bread winners and caregivers for their otherwise orphaned grandchildren. It would be a joyful experience to be able to bless these families at Christmas, the season of love, sharing and giving. WIST will also be taking this production to Canaan Full Gospel Church at Port Mourant Corentyne, Berbice on December 13, 2014. WIST is known for its passion for service to God, dedication towards charity and high quality of output.
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ickets are available at the National Cultural Centre, Roxie’s Fashion on Church Street, any other company members, or at the dance school at the Open Bible Church at the corner of Lamaha and Oronoque
Streets in Queenstown, Georgetown. Tickets cost only $1000 and $1500. In December 2013 WIST hosted its first Christmas production with the theme “Mary. Did you know?, from this event the group made a mean-
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GUYANA CHRONICLE Friday November 21, 2014
Rain forces abandonment of Nat. Schools’ Championships By Leeron Brumell MILLIONS invested, millions lost and hearts broken as rain forces organisers to abandon this year’s National Schools Swimming, Cycling and Track and Field Championships in the City. Heavy overnight showers and into yesterday morning caused widespread flooding in and around Georgetown and the Camp Ayanganna ground was not spared. With only the centre of the field visible, Guyana
Teachers Union President Mark Lyte, Minister of Education Priya Manickchand and the Director of the event Ceon Bristol turned up at the venue and were left with no choice but to cancel. The decision was taken sometime after 09:00hrs. Lyte said the abandonment was ‘disappointing’ and the result has ‘broken the hearts of many students who trained all year’ for the event. He said all avenues were considered before
the decision was taken as they hoped to salvage the championships. After the decision was taken, the organsiers called the Team Managers and District Reps together in the Games Village to inform them of the decision and urge them to make alternative arrangements to have their athletes return to their respective districts. Just 24-hours earlier, Lyte had made the call for serious discussions to be had on the future of the
championships and sports in Guyana. He made a pitch to hold the 2015 event on the Synthetic track at Leonora. On this he said ‘I hope a decision from the powers that be make a decision to hold future championships on the synthetic track and I hope they do some serious work on it so by next year we will know early where they (championships) will be.’ Mr. Lyte could not put a dollar value on the event, he said the Ministry of Education handled the spending,
however, Public Relations Officer for the event Edison Jeffords said more than 30 million dollars was invested in the week-long event. In the 55 th edition of the championships in 2015 – the GTU will not have to add to its record book – a fourth time that rain has forced the abandonment of the event. Almost 15 years ago, it was last abandoned – Anna Regina in 1995. Records show it was first abandoned in 1961, in the 3rd year and then again in 1964.
But organisers, students, teachers and fans weren’t the only ones robbed of two days of the event, concessionaires as well. They were forced to cut their losses and ‘closeshop’. Jeffords met with and informed them of the executive decision. They are to be reimbursed for the days they were unable to sell their goods. North Georgetown gets to keep their title as defending champions for another year, albeit by default.
Hockey women register first CAC win GUYANA’S hockey team to the Central American and Caribbean Games in Vera Cruz, Mexico has registered its first win. In the cool afternoon wind at the Vera Cruz hockey centre, the Guyanese women went into their second match of the Central American and Caribbean Games against Bermuda. The Guyanese won by a comfortable 6-0 margin on the last occasion that the two teams met, which was the 2010 PAHF Challenge. On this occasion however, only one goal was scored. From the opening whistle Guyana seemed the aggressor as they weaved the ball through the Bermuda defence with relative ease, creating several chances in the early minutes. This set the tone for the duration of the match as Bermuda opted to fall back into their own defensive area to quell the green and black Guyanese
attack. While Guyana piled the pressure on, however, several shot attempts went wide and two near goalmouth scrambles in the opening 20 minutes failed to produce a score. The half time clock would meet the scores still at 0-0 despite the overwhelming ball possession by the Guyanese including seven penalty corners to Bermuda’s one. Guyana adjusted their strategy for the second half pushing forward midfielder Leigh Sandison to the strike line. With the additional player forward Bermuda struggled to get their offense going but continued to defend relentlessly. It was not until the 20th minute of the second half that Guyana finally made their breakthrough. Sandison intercepted a poor pass forward and attacked the Bermuda scoring circle with speed. Her quick shot as she entered the scor-
ing circle seemed to catch goalkeeper Antoinette Rabain by surprise as the ball threw the goal net into a Mexican wave and the Guyanese celebrated their first lead of the match. The one-nil victory for Guyana sees them needing a win and full three points from their tie with defending champions Trinidad today if they are to secure a place in the semi-finals. Guyana has not beaten Trinidad in recent years but the team has shown marked improvement as they adjust to the playing conditions and remain optimistic. Trinidad drew 2-2 with surprise of the tournament, the Dominican Republic, in the other Pool B encounter of the day. In pool A action, Cuba remained unbeaten by defeating Barbados by 3-1 while hosts Mexico, the other unbeaten team in the pool, earned an easy 4-0 victory over Jamaica. Cuba faces Mexico im-
mediately following the Guyana versus Trinidad clash to determine the top of pool A. Meanwhile, word out of Mexico from Guyana’s Chef-d-Mission Deion Nurse is that Delroy Murphy lost his first Judo match and will be trying to make amends today in his second. In Table Tennis, the quartet of overseas-based Trenace Lowe, Chelsea Edghill, Akecia Nedd and Nathalie Cummings failed to get past the round of 16. At Swimming, Brittney Van Lange and Hannibal Gaskin did not make podium finishes. Van Lange in the Women’s 100m free style finished 12th overall. She also did not touch the wall in the top bracket in the 50m free. Gaskin in the Men’s 50m butterfly finished 14th overall and 11 th in the 100m butterfly. Athletes in Table Tennis
FIFA ethics chiefs agree next step for 2018/2022 report ZURICH, (Reuters) - FIFA ethics judge Hans-Joachim Eckert and investigator Michael Garcia met yesterday and agreed on the next step for their probe into the bidding process for
the 2018/2022 soccer World Cups. They decided that Garcia’s report on his investigation would be sent to the chairman of FIFA’s audit and compliance committee, Do-
menico Scala, who would in turn decide how much of the report would be sent to the FIFA executive committee. Eckert, head of the ethics committee’s adjudicatory chamber, said in a 42-
page statement last week there were no grounds to reopen the bidding process which led to Russia and Qatar getting the tournaments run by FIFA, world soccer’s governing body.
and Swimming departed Mexico last night and are expected to arrive home
South Africa Racing Tips Fairview 08:15 hrs Abstract 08:45 hrs Covariance 09:25 hrs Rushing Lark 10:00 hrs Wogsy 10:35 hrs Sacred Hills 11:10 hrs Ideal Countess English Racing Tips Haydock 08:50 hrs Maggie Blue 09:55 hrs Stephanie Frances 10;30 hrs Virak 11:05 hrs Vago Collonges 11:40 hrs Midnight Shot Ascot 09:00 hrs Saint Charles 09:30 hrs Puffin Billy 10:05 hrs Jolly’s Cracked It 10:40 hrs Noceonefrankie 11:15 hrs Howard’s Legacy 11:50 hrs Sweet Deal Wolverhampton 12:10 hrs Insolenceofoffice
today, while those in Badminton and Squash arrived in Mexico yesterday.
12:40 hrs Silver Mirage 13:15 hrs Quenelle 13:50 hrs Cape Cay 14:20 hrs City Of Angkor Wat 14:50 hrs Les Gar Gan 15:20 hrs Dream Child 15;50 hrs Footsstepsintherain Irish Racing Tips Dundalk 13:40 hrs Enter The Priority 14:10 hrs Whaileyy 14:40 hrs Pour La Victoire 15;10 hrs Emiest Rose 15:40 hrs Anner Queen 16:10 hrs Minot Street 16:40 hrs Luso’s WAY 17:10 hrs Kadayma American Racing Tips Aqueduct Race 1 Mischieviously Race 2 Le De Luge Race 3 Talladega Race 4 Pierce’s Prize Race 5 Financial Mogul Race 6 March Reward Race 7 Masons Dreams Race 8 Keen Katanza Race 9 Zimbabwe Lady
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GUYANA CHRONICLE Friday November 21, 2014
Sarfraz, spinners bring Pakistan back in contest
New Zealand 167-6 in second innings (REUTERS) - SARFRAZ Ahmed struck a defiant century and Pakistan’s spinners wrecked New Zealand’s top and middle order to leave the second Test in Dubai nicely poised yesterday. New Zealand had reduced Pakistan to 287 for eight to appear on course for a healthy first innings lead but Sarfraz (112) added 81 runs for the last wicket with Rahat Ali to dash their hopes. By the time New Zealand got the better of Sarfraz’s grit, Pakistan had posted 393 runs, finishing 10 behind New Zealand in their first innings. Batting a second time, New Zealand suffered a top order collapse to finish day four on 167 for six. The Kiwis have an overall lead of 177 and Ross Taylor (77) and the scoreless Mark Craig will return on Friday to stretch it and set Pakistan a difficult target. Brendon McCullum (45) gave New Zealand a breezy start in the second innings before Yasir Shah and spin partner Zulfiqar Babar took over claiming three wickets apiece. Leg-spinner Shah drew first blood dismissing the inform Tom Latham for nine and left-arm spinner Babar dismissed Kane Williamson and McCullum to peg back the Kiwis. Corey Anderson, Jimmy Neesham and BJ Watling also succumbed to spin and only Taylor looked confident against the slow bowlers. It was quite different from the way New Zealand began the day with Tim Southee’s double strike reducing Pakistan, who resumed on 281 for six, to 287 for eight in the morning session. Realising he was running out of partners, Sarfraz accelerated, hitting two fours in a Trent Boult over and was undaunted even after losing Babar at the other end. Sarfraz hit off-spinner Mark Craig for three boundaries in an over and meted out the same treatment to leg-spinner Ish Sodhi in the next over to storm into the 90s. The wicketkeeper-batsman cut Southee past gully for a boundary to register his third test century and broke into an animated celebration which ended with the batsman kissing the turf.
Sarfraz Ahmed’s stubborn century helped Pakistan reduce their deficit and rally to 393, keeping the Dubai Test fascinatingly poised heading into day five. Sarfraz’s patient 195ball knock, which included 16 boundaries, came to an end two overs after the lunch break when he offered
a return catch to McCullum. It was the Kiwi skipper’s first test wicket as a bowler. Pakistan lead 1-0 in the three-Test series.
NEW ZEALAND 1st innings
- 67 – 3,
403 (T. Latham 137; Z.
M. Craig 28 - 5 - 117 – 1,I.
Babar 4-137)
Sodhi 39 - 9 - 92 – 2,
Pakistan 1st innings
C. Anderson 7 - 0 - 26 – 0, J. Neesham 11 - 2 - 12 – 1,
(Overnight: 281-6) S. Masood b Sodhi
13
NEW ZEALAND 2nd innings
T. Umar st Watling b Craig
Az. Ali b Sodhi
16
T. Latham c Shafiq
75
b Shah
72 28
A. Shafiq c Taylor b Southee
44
S. Ahmed c&b B. McCullum
b Babar
45
K. Williamson c Umar b Bab
Misbah-ul-Haq c Taylor b Boult
9
B. McCullum lbw
Y. Khan c Craig b Neesham
B. McCullum 2 - 1 - 1 - 1
112
ar
11
R. Taylor not out
77
C. Anderson b Shah
0
J. Neesham b Babar
11
B. Watling c Shafiq b Shah
Y. Shah c Watling
11
b Southee
2
M. Craig not out
0
E. Adil lbw b Southee
0
Extras (lb-3)
3
Z. Babar c Watling b Boult 5 R. Ali not out
16
Extras(b-7 lb-2 nb-1)
10
48.2 overs)
167
Fall of wickets: 1-42 T. Latham,2-63 K.
Total (all out, 147 overs)
Total (for 6 wickets,
393
Williamson,3-78 B.
Fall of wickets: 1-28 S.
McCullum,4-79 C.
Masood,2-32 T. Umar,3-
Anderson,5-125 J.
145 Y. Khan,4-195 Misbah-
Neesham,6-166 B. Watling
ul-Haq,5-220 Az. Ali,6-
To bat: T. Southee, I. Sodhi,
279 A. Shafiq,7-285 Y.
T. Boult
Shah,8-287 E. Adil,9-312 Z.
Bowling: Az. Ali 4 - 0 - 19 –
Babar,10-393 S. Ahmed
0, E. Adil 5 - 1 - 20 – 0,
Bowling: T. Boult 30 - 8 - 69
Z. Babar 21.2 - 5 - 60 – 3,Y.
- 2(nb-1), T. Southee 30 - 5
Shah 18 - 1 - 65 - 3
GUYANA CHRONICLE Friday November 21, 2014
Clarke ‘hopeful’ for first India Test - physio
* Haddin could play Sheffield Shield next week By Nick Mulvenney SYDNEY, (Reuters) - Australia are hopeful that captain Michael Clarke will be available for next month’s first test against India despite a recurrence of his hamstring injury, physiotherapist Alex Kountouris said yesterday. Clarke has missed just one of Australia’s 39 Tests since he assumed the captaincy in 2011 despite a degenerative long-term back condition which contributes to his frequent hamstring injuries. The 33-year-old damaged his hamstring for the third time in 12 weeks in the first one-dayer against South Africa in Perth last Friday and Kountouris said he was not yet ready to play cricket again. “As he is right now, he hasn’t started running, he hasn’t started doing any of the functional things that we want him to do,” Kountouris told reporters at the Sydney Cricket Ground nets. “So he’s not ready to play at the moment ... (but) I’m still hopeful that he might be right for the first test because that’s two weeks away.” Australia play India in four Tests, starting in Brisbane on Dec. 4, before turning their focus towards the Feb. 14-March 29 50over World Cup, which they are co-hosting with New Zealand. Kountouris said Clarke was highly frustrated by the injury but was not at the stage where he needed to consider retirement because of the recurring injuries. He also thought it unlikely that Cricket Australia would be forced to choose between Clarke playing against India or in the World Cup.
Michael Clarke
“Time is not the magic healer here,” Kountouris added. “There comes a point when there’s no more healing to be done, it doesn’t give you any more benefits “He could rest now for five months and the first time he comes back he could tear his hamstring again.” Clarke’s leadership has been integral to the turnaround in Australia’s fortunes since the humiliating 201011 Ashes series and the World Cup that followed, where Ricky Ponting’s team went out in the quarter-finals. Regarded as one of the most tactically astute captains in international cricket, Clarke has also led from the front with his batting and scored 13 centuries and 3,555 runs at an average of 57.33 in Tests since succeeding Ponting. Test vice captain Brad Haddin, who will stand in for Clarke if he is unfit, was training in the nets as Kountouris was speaking and the physio said he was approaching full fitness after damaging his shoulder. “He’s pretty good,” he said. “We’re hopeful he’ll play Sheffield Shield next week.”
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GUYANA CHRONICLE Friday November 21, 2014
Schaefer points to team spirit, discipline as Reggae Boyz revel in football supremacy M O N T E G O B AY, J a maica, (CMC)- Jamaic a ’s h e a d c o a ch Winfried Schaefer says discipline, team spirit and a d e q u a t e p re p a r a t i o n are factors which helped propel Reggae Boyz to another CFU Caribbean C u p t i t l e o n Tu e s d a y night. Jamaica out-shot Trinidad and Tobago 4-3 on penalty kicks after scores were locked nil-all following regular and extra time in the finals at the Montego Bay Sports Complex. “This is a team with very good spirit, big discipline and very strong, and today was the highlight of it,” noted Schaefer. “ I h o p e ev ery b o d y knows now what is possible in Jamaica when we have good preparation, when we have good time with our team, good service for our
CFU Caribbean Cup champions Jamaica celebrate. team; only then we can I’m very proud of my perfect start when he denied Martinique. make success”. “This team is fantas- team, they are fantastic skipper Kenwyne Jones. Reggae Boyz victory However the win was and we have to do all over Soca Warriors was tic, everybody should be sealed when T and T’s that is necessary for this the sixth time they have proud of this team,” said Khaleem Hyland blasted team, or else we go down won the CFU Cup and their Schaefer during a postover the cross bar to set (regress)”. second title in the last five game interview. Outstanding Jamaican “I’m very proud of years. goalkeeper Andre Blake, this team. I have won the In 2010 they defeated who won the Golden Glove Guadeloupe, also on penal- African Cup, the CaribAward, gave his team the bean Cup, the Dubai Cup, ties, in the final staged in
NBA suspends Hornets’ Taylor 24 games for domestic violence By Steve Ginsburg (REUTERS) - Charlotte Hornets forward Jeff Taylor was suspended 24 games without pay by the NBA on Wednesday after
pleading guilty last month to misdemeanor domestic violence assault and malicious destruction of hotel property. Taylor had been on paid leave since the start of the
CRICKET QUIZ CORNER
(Friday November 21, 2014) Compliments of THE TROPHY STALL-Bourda Market &The City Mall (Tel: 225-9230) & CUMMINGS ELECTRICAL CO. LTD-83 Garnette Street, Campbellville (Tel: 225-6158; 223-6055) Answers to yesterday’s quiz: (1) 102 Tests; 6 at Bourda (2) Deryck Murray & David Williams Today’s Quiz: (1)How many runs the Indian batting star Sunil Gavaskar made in his very first Test series? (2) Which WI player was known as ‘The Master blaster’? Answers in tomorrow’s issue
Jeff Taylor
National Basketball Association season, missing 11 games, and he will have to sit out the next 13 games. NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said the 25-year-old Taylor, in his third season in the league, will suffer a financial penalty equal to 24 games. “This suspension is necessary to protect the interests of the NBA and the public’s confidence in it,” Silver said in a statement. “Mr. Taylor’s conduct violates applicable law and, in my opinion, does not conform to standards
of morality and is prejudicial and detrimental to the NBA.” During an argument at an East Lansing, Michigan, hotel room in September, Taylor pushed a woman into the hallway, where she fell to the ground and slammed her head on a door, the player said. The woman had marks on her upper arm and a bump on her head but declined medical treatment, police said, adding that there was also damage to a wall near the hotel room. Taylor, who pleaded guilty last month, was sentenced to 18 months of probation. As part of his probation, he must complete 26 weeks in a domestic violence intervention program. A second-round pick by Charlotte in the 2012 NBA Draft, Taylor has averaged 6.6 points a game during his two seasons with the Hornets.
off ecstatic celebrations across Jamaica. “The aim of the team was to win the tournament,” declared an excited Schaefer. “The players went over the limit despite their many problems and fatigue and they did everything to win the cup.” The top four teams from the Caribbean Cup, including third-placed Haiti, who beat Cuba 2-1 in the bronze medal match, had already qualified for next summer’s CONCACAF Gold Cup. The victory also guarantees Jamaica’s participation in a special edition of the 2016 Copa America Centenario slated for the United States.
Task Force begins probe into aborted Indian tour BRIDGETOWN, Barbados, (CMC)- A task force set-up to probe the circumstances that led to the controversial pull-out by the senior West Indies cricketers from their tour of India has begun its work, the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) has reported. The Task Force comprising Chairman Michael Gordon and members Sir Wes Hall and Sir Richard Cheltenham held its first meeting in Bridgetown on Monday, a WICB release has stated. Meetings are expected with all parties, including the West Indies Players’ Association (WIPA) and the players, before findings are reported to the board. “While it is regrettable that the situation into which we are enquiring occurred, the Task Force recognizes the responsibility to West Indies cricket and is honoured to have been chosen for this assignment,” said Chairman Gordon. “We commit to pursuing the facts and circumstances in a fair and unbiased manner and to allow for all the critical matters to be highlighted and ventilated”. The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) cancelled tours to the Caribbean and demanded compensation
Wes Hall of US$42 million after striking West Indies players left their tour to India with five fixtures still to play, including three Tests. The pull out was linked to a pay dispute with WIPA over a change in their Collective Bargaining Agreement with the WICB. The WICB has reported that talks with the BCCI are progressing well and that it remains confident a resolution with India can be reached. According to the WICB release, the task force has been asked to investigate the cause of the players’ actions, recommend measures to improve the relationship between WICB and the players and design a fasttrack dispute resolution mechanism.
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GUYANA CHRONICLE Friday November 21, 2014
Jaguars take on Volcanoes Assad Fudadin would have to buckle down and put a total to his name at the top of the order, where he starts things with Rajendra Chandrika, with Johnson, first round centurion Narsingh Deonarine, Chanderpaul, Raymon Reifer and all-rounder Christopher Barnwell to follow. The form of the Guyanese batting line-up should not be questioned, as wicketkeeper/ batsman Anthony Bramble and spinners Veerasammy Permaul and Devendra Bishoo are all capable lower order batsmen, proving such time and time again for Albion Cricket Club. Against the Leewards, 22 year old West Indies ‘A’ fast bowler Ronsford Beaton bowled with pace and aggression, especially midway during the second day just after lunch and tea, when he had the frontline batsmen on their back foot. With the weather that has been prevailing over Guyana for the past 72 hours, the ground staff
would not have had much time to work on the track, which means it can be lively, hence Beaton, Reifer and Barnwell can do some magic with the new ball, making way for Permaul, Bishoo and Deonarine in the spin department. For the Volcanoes who will be led by Liam Sebastien and have a lineup that includes discarded West Indies opener Devon Smith, Andre Fletcher, Johnson Charles and Sunil Ambris, they will fancy their chances against their host, especially after a good first round showing against Jamaica. Even though they lost by 10 runs, there were some individual performances that would have brought smiles to the faces of Sebastien and his coach Ian Allen, as Smith and fellow opener Tyrone Theophile posted 97 for the first wicket, commencing the hunt of 261 for victory, after Alston Bobb set things up with his 5 for 48, backed by Mervin Matthew’s 3 for 19. Bobb also contributed 39 to rally the lower order who failed to respond amicably well and in addition to such, the last time the two sides met in the WICB Regional 4-Day season earlier this year, Sunil Ambris made his debut and
chalked up a ton - 114 in the process, while Permaul had a 10 wicket haul for Guyana. Ambris, Charles, Fletcher, Romell Currency and wicketkeeper/batsman Lindon James would all be looking to contribute with the bat, while Matthew, Sebastien, Bobb, Kenroy Peters and Nelon Pascal will take care of the bowling department. Peter Nero and Nandkumar Shivsankar are the men calling play at 09:30hrs, after Match Referee Colin Stuart would have tossed the coin at 09:00hrs weather permitting, with Imran Moakan as the third official. Teams: Guyana Jaguars: Leon Johnson (Captain), Rajendra Chandrika, Assad Fudadin, Narsingh Deonarine, Shivnarine Chanderpaul, Raymon Reifer, Christopher Barnwell, Vishaul Singh, Trevon Griffith, Anthony Bramble, Veerasammy Permaul, Devendra Bishoo and Ronsford Beaton. Windward Volcanoes: Liam Sebastien (Captain), Devon Smith, Alston Bobb, Keon Peters, Keddy Lesporis, Nelon Pascal, Mervin Matthew, Romel Currency, Tyrone Theophile, Lindon James, Andre Fletcher, Johnson Charles and Sunil Ambris.
Steve Ninvalle cilities,” Ninvalle said. The first meeting was held in
June and attended by 13 presidents. The GBA boss, who was recently elected to the AIBA Executive Committee, said that he envisions more countries being represented at the next meeting since the Caribbean has been energised by recent developments. “We are now on a crusade to wake up the sleeping nations of this region. At present there is a strong sense of Caribbean unity.
We want to harness that. We were able to plan our strategy for the AIBA Congress at the first meeting in Barbados and have seen the results. It is imperative that we meet, and early, to plot the way forward.” The meeting in Barbados attracted countries from the English and French speaking Caribbean. According to Ninvalle, the second week in February is the likely date for the meeting.
WICB/PCL second round fixture today
By Calvin Roberts WITH one eye on the weather, points leaders Guyana Jaguars take on Windwards Volcanoes in the second round of their West Indies Cricket Board/Professional Cricket League Regional 4-Day contest, which bowls off at the Guyana National Stadium from 09:30hrs today. The Guyanese have 17 points, following their innings and 10 runs victory over the Leeward Islands inside three days, when the two sides met in the first round at the same venue last week, but what will be of concern to their coach Esuan Crandon and his team of assistants is the catching. They put down five chances on what turned out to be the final day against the Leewards, catches if taken would have seen the margin of victory being larger, while the victory would have been achieved earlier.
-With eye on weather
Guyana Jaguars’ first innings centurion Narsingh Deonarine plays a forward defensive stroke during his side’s first round contest against Leeward Islands at the Guyana National Stadium, Providence. (Photo by Adrian Narine) Against the Volcanoes, play an unchanged side for who suffered a 13- run loss this contest, giving skipper to Jamaica, the Jaguars would Leon Johnson and dependhave to ensure their paws cling able middle order batsman onto each and every chance Shivnarine Chanderpaul offered, even the fingernail much needed batting practaking opportunities, while tice before their departure their ground fielding would for South Africa with the also have to be of the best. West Indies team, which The possibility exists, means Trevon Griffith and that the home team will Vishaul Singh will be relegated once again to towel and water duties. However, vice-captain
Harris leaves for Mexico Sunday GBA to propose hosting meeting here FORMER WBA Junior Welterweight champion `Vicious’ Vivian Harris is scheduled to leave his training camp in Las Vegas on Sunday and head to Mexico for a November 29 ring date with Ramon Alvarez. Harris will clash with Ramon for the vacant International Boxing Federation (IBF) North American Junior Middleweight title. The fight would be held in Guanajuato. “I am in just about the best shape. I leave here on Sunday and head down to Mexico. I am heading down there on a mission, and that is to win the title. My eyes are on the prize,” Harris declared yesterday. Next week’s fight would be the second in the Junior Middleweight division for the 36-year-old Guyanese who has campaigned mostly at the 140 pound limit. “Right now I am just working on educating my hands a bit more as I cannot take anything for granted. I can’t say if I would remain in the junior middleweight division after this fight. I am taking it one day at a time. Focus is my word,” said Harris.
Alvarez, a 28-year-old from Jalisco, Mexico, has never fought outside his home country. He has been defeated four times in 26 fights, the last being a 12-round decision to Mario Alberto Lonzano on October 10, 2012. Alvarez is the current World Boxing Organisation NABO Junior Middleweight champion. Harris was crowned champion in October 2002 following a stunning second round Technical Knock Out of champion Diosbelys Hurtado in Huston, Texas. He successfully defended the title three times before being dethroned by little known Colombian Carlos Maussa via seventh round knockout. The gifted Guyanese would secure three victories before unsuccessfully challenging Junior Witter of England for the WBC Junior Welterweight title. Harris’ would then lose six of his next nine fights over a four year period. The USA-based Guyanese returned to winner’s valley in 2013 and has had a three fight victory streak since.
GUYANA will be proposing to host the next meeting of presidents of Caribbean boxing associations, president of the Guyana Boxing Association Steve Ninvalle has announced. The meeting of Caribbean presidents started this year in Barbados but according to Ninvalle it is now an annual event. “I think the time is ripe for us to host such an event and we have all the fa-
Notable Dates EIGHT months after b e i n g d e t h ro n e d b y a wild-swinging Ricardo Mayorga, former World Boxing Association Welterweight champion Guyanese Andrew `Six Head’ Lewis, came back to life on November 22, 2002 with a first round knockout of Mexican Oscar Delgado. The fight was held in Caguas, Puerto Rico and was used as a warm up for Lewis to launch another world title
Andrew ` Six Head’ Lewis,
bid. After devouring Delgado, Lewis, the first Guyanese to win a world title, rushed into `The Express Train’ Antonio Margarito in February of 2003. The World Boxing Organisation champion took less than six minutes to end Lewis’ hopes of gaining another title as the Guyanese was TKOed at two minutes and 11 seconds of the second round. Thereafter, Lewis apparently lost the urge to be competitive.
He would have four fights in as many years (three of them against `Deadly’ Denny Dalton) winning one, drawing one and losing two. `The Albouystown Cyclone’ called it quits in 2008 after a controversial points defeat at the hands of Howard Eastman. After a 15-year professional career Lewis walked away with a record of 23 victories (20 Kos) four defeats, two draws and one No Contest.
Sport CHRONICLE
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Jaguars take on Volcanoes
See Story on Page 35
Rain forces abandonment of Nat. Schools’ Championships See Story on Page 31
A wide shot of a flooded Camp Ayanganna ground.
GTU President Mark Lyte
Minister of Education, Priya Manickchand briefing officials at St. Joseph High School sports village.
Hockey women register first CAC win See Story on Page 31
Homeward bound! Athletes leave the Games Village.
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FRIDAY, NOVEMVER 21, 2014