Guyana chronicle 26 01 14

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Lindeners reject call for shut down No. 103720

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President Donald Ramotar, Minister within the Ministry of Finace, Juan Edghill Neil Kumar, and Zulfikar Mustapha singing the party song at the recommissioning of the Linden Freedom House office

-massive turn out at PPP’s re-commissioning of Linden Freedom House office -President reiterates government’s commitment to take Region 10 to new level

President Ramotar to attend CELAC Summit in Cuba

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Chandrabhan Persaud

Guard found dead at burgled Corentyne 3 store Page

World Leprosy Day…

Guyana moving towards Page 12 eliminating leprosy at the sub-national level Young cop shot by aggressive visitor to Meadow Brook home

Unlucky motorcyclist hit down by allegedly speeding car, Page 14 allegedly run over by minibus Army ranks receive on Page the spot promotion for 3 exemplary performance

- police hunting suspect

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Roberto Thomas-miraculous five-year old survivor of Lusignan massacre Centre

Roberto Thomas

-six years after

Substantive Corporal Robert Pyle of the G2 Branch was also elevated to the rank of Acting Sergeant


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SUNDAY CHRONICLE January 26, 2014

Lindeners reject call for shut down

-massive turn out at PPP’s re-commissioning of Linden Freedom House office

-President reiterates government’s commitment to take Region 10 to new level By Leroy Smith

AMIDST much speculation and threats of a drama yesterday in Linden, President Donald Ramotar, Prime Minister Samuel Hinds and other senior Peoples Progressive Party/Civic (PPP/C) and government members rolled into the mining town to re-commission the party’s Freedom House Regional Office which was destroyed by arsonists in July 2012. PPP and government officials yesterday reaffirmed its commitment and support for the people and development of Region 10 (Upper Demerara/Upper Berbice). During the re-commissioning party leaders reminded of an era when the PPP’s existence in Region 10 was doubted and said the re-commissioning of the building was a direct result of what they say is a growing support base. President Donald Ramotar while addressing the gathering

of Region 10 residents, said the opening of the office is just the beginning of the government’s efforts to rebuild the mining town from the unrest which devastated residents and destroyed critical infrastructure in July, 2012. Hundreds of persons residing in the region had succeed-

‘This I pledge to you. For as long as I am President I will work for all the people of Guyana’ -President Ramotar ed in shutting down the town for almost a month in protest against moves to integrate the town’s electricity supply into the national grid. This resulted in the burning of schools, roads, private property and Freedom House. “There are no arsonists among us that burn schools and

hospitals” President Ramotar said, adding that “we build we don’t burn.” The Head of State told the gathering that the rebuilding of the town, including the OneMile Primary School may have been delayed but it will be done by his administration. According to him there is however a callous opposition which has no regard for government’s efforts in improving the quality of lives for all Guyanese. President Ramotar said while the opposition claims that the administration discriminates in its support for Linden because it has proven to be an opposition ‘strong hold’, it cannot be proven. “This I pledge to you. For as long as I am President I will work for all the people of Guyana” the President stated. Meanwhile, Prime Minister Samuel Hinds recalled how difficult it was for the PPP to exist and have a presence in Region 10 during the 1990s.

Prime Minister Samuel Hinds, President Donald Ramotar and PPP executive member Zulfikar Mustapha cutting the ribbon at the re-commissioning of the Linden Freedom House office There was much talk of a growing support base for the PPP in Region 10 at today’s event, though the party has never managed to win the region electorally. According to Hinds it is never good for one group to dominate an area while underscoring the importance of further democratisation and diversification of the region. He believes the fundamental

problem however is the absence of the will to adjust to change. He said the PPP/C administration did not inherit a perfect system when it took office in 1992 but maintained that the PPP has never withheld support for Linden. Following the unrest in 2012, the government had committed to allowing the electricity system to remain as it was while Technical, Social and

Economic committees examine the situation. According to the PM these committees are not barren, he said work has stalled because of failure to meet consensus on chairs for the committees which must be selected by the Opposition Leader and President. The Prime Minister maintains that the subsidised electricity which Lindeners have enjoyed for years must be normalised. He explained that the strain on the national budget to subsidise the region’s electricity is increasing. Supporters were also urged to remain resilient in face of the pressure. Meanwhile the People’s Progressive Party (PPP) congratulated its members and supporters of Linden for the holding of a successful relaunching of the party ‘s office in Linden, Region 10 yesterday. “Hundreds of persons

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SUNDAY CHRONICLE January 26, 2014

Guard found dead at burgled Corentyne store By Michael Khan.

FIFTY-five-year-old Chandrabhan Persaud of Whim Village, Corentyne, a security guard attached to RK’s Security Service, was discovered dead behind his work site, the Lucky Dollar Branch store at Rose Hall Town, Corenytne, Berbice, at 3 a.m. yesterday morning. The Guyana Chronicle understands that Persaud’s hands and feet had been bound, and his mouth gagged; while the building had been burglarised of several articles of undetermined value.

Yesterday’s discovery sent shockwaves throughout Region 6, and several persons crowded the crime scene, with many expressing profound shock at the dastardly act and sympathy for Persaud’s family. Gopaul Kissoon, the security supervisor in charge at the Lucky Dollar branch, related that during the wee hours of Saturday morning he received a call from his manager, who had been alerted to the crime by occupants of the top flat of the building. He said the occupants related to his manager that ‘irregular sounds’ had been heard emanating from the bottom flat of the building, and the alarm

Army ranks receive on the spot promotion for exemplary performance CHIEF of Staff Brigadier Mark Phillips on Friday awarded on-the-spot promotions and special incentives to eight ranks of the highly professional Three One Special Forces Squadron (31 SF Squadron) of the Guyana defence Force (GDF), and another from the Force’s G2 Branch. The ranks gained their promotions for exemplary performance and service with excellence. The eight 31 SF Squadron Ranks were members of the Search and Rescue team responsible for locating and recovering the remains of the Trans Guyana pilot and baggage handler who died when the company’s CESSNA aircraft crashed in the dense jungle at Olive Creek in the Mazaruni. Brigadier Mark Phillips in his commendation of the ranks said that, the Special Forces Team showed all Guyana that the GDF and its Special Forces were ready. “You have lived up to the Special Forces Motto which was crafted some 30odd years ago. But it was not the Special Forces alone who were ready; the Air Corps were, as always, ready and relevant in being of service to Guyana and her citizens. The GDF will

Substantive Corporal Robert Pyle of the G2 Branch was also elevated to the rank of Acting Sergeant always be ready to deal with should communicate with the national situations,” he said. “In subject Minister for Transport getting the job done, the GDF and that we put our resources to persevered. You persevered. We work. However, before doing will continue to do the best, the that, I communicated with my very best we can, with the little personnel in Air Corps and the we have!” he added. “Today, Special Forces and as expected, it is about showing you our our troops were ready to go into appreciation for your collective action. Armed with the relevant hard work. information, I then contacted The congratulations folthe Minister and indicated that lowed a brief outline by the the Force was ready to serve the Chief of Staff, of the sequence nation in the unfolding scenario. of events leading to the GDF’s Today, we thank you and the involvement in the Search and nation thanks you,” he said. Rescue. “I received a call from Earlier, in introductory rethe President and Commandmarks, Deputy Chief of Staff, er in Chief indicating that I Kemraj Persaud, noted that; “...

Massive turn out at PPP’s re-commissioning ...

From page 2 from the Region 10 community displayed firm commitment and resolve as they participated in the rededication ceremony which several party leaders addressed, including His Excellency President Donald Ramotar and General Secretary Clement Rohee, among others.” “The party further wishes to recognise the thousands of peace-loving and law abiding people of Linden who ignored today’s call for a shutdown by extremist elements of APNU. Also the efforts of the security forces in ensuring that the activities of the hardworking Lindeners were not disrupted today must be commended.” “The PPP today has once more reinforced the reality that it is the nation’s only national party and will not be deterred from its historical mandate of uniting the people of Guyana.”

President Ramotar in discussion with Lindeners

it is not very often that we get a chance to do what we are trained to do, but when we do, we do it at the very best of our ability.” Those promoted from the Special Forces are: Acting Sergeant Jason Khan who has been confirmed in his rank, Corporal Roland Williams who is now a Substantive Sergeant, Acting Corporal Darwin Archer who has been confirmed in his rank, Lance Corporals Rock Watson and Kleon Chase who are now Substantive Corporals, Privates Timeon McPherson, Ronald Corlette and Alex Williams who have been elevated in rank to Substantive Lance Corporals and Private Michael Hamer who is now an Acting Lance Corporal.

was going off. Kissoon said that while he was trying to contact the security rank on the site, he received a second call from his manager, informing she had heard that “Persaud died.” At that point the police were contacted. “When I arrived at the scene, police had just arrived, and we rushed to the back of the building, where we found (Persaud) ChandrabhanPersaud tied up. His hands and feet were tied with a piece of canvas rope and some old cloth, while a piece of black cloth had been tied around his mouth,” Kissoon recounted. Persaud is suspected to have succumbed as a result of suffocation. BROKEN CONCRETE VENTS Asked how the burglars got into the store, Kissoon said: “The bandits moved a table from the rear of the building (situated at the western side). The table was used as an elevator for the men to climb up and break the concrete vents.” It was observed that the men had also used a stool for additional support. The men had ripped out a piece of mesh to access the concrete vents, which they smashed to gain entry into the building, landing on an indoor step which leads to the upper storey of the building. They also broke a door to enter the showroom of the store, from where they carted off an undisclosed amount of cash and a quantity of electrical appliances. This publication’s efforts to contact the manager of the burgled entity proved futile up to the time of going to press. The police have commenced active investigations into the matter.


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SUNDAY CHRONICLE January 26, 2014

Ukraine crisis: Yanukovych offers jobs to opposition

(BBC News) Ukraine’s President Viktor Yanukovych has offered the position of prime minister to an opposition leader, Arseniy Yatsenyuk. The offer came after talks on Saturday with opposition leaders in a new effort to end the worsening unrest that has spread across the country. Earlier, protesters in Kiev tried to occupy the energy ministry. The protests began in November after Ukraine decided not to sign an accord on more co-operation with the EU. Instead, the government opted to deepen ties with neighbouring Russia. Offer of debates The crisis escalated this week when two activists were killed, and another was found dead with torture marks in a forest near the capital. A 45-year-old protester is

said to have died in a Kiev hospital on Saturday, after sustaining injuries in earlier violence. Mr Yatsenyuk, parliamentary leader of the country’s second biggest party, Fatherland, has not commented on the president’s offer. He is an ally of the jailed ex-Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko. Mr Yanukovych has also offered the post of deputy prime minister for humanitarian issues to the former boxer, Vitali Klitschko, who is leader of the Udar (Punch) movement. Ukrainian media also report that Mr Yanukovych has said he is ready to amend the constitution to reduce the president’s powers. The opposition has previously demanded that Mr Yanukovych step down. In a statement published on the government’s website, Justice Minister Olena Lukash said that the president had offered public

debates with Vitali Klitschko “in order to ensure a wide public dialogue,” and that Mr Klitschko had agreed. ‘Extremist’ accusation Earlier, Ukraine’s interior minister said talks with protesters had failed. Vitaliy Zakharchenko - in charge of the police and one of the figures most despised by the protesters - blamed “radical groups” for the unrest, adding that protesters had arms. “We will consider those who remain on the Maidan [the square] and in captured buildings to be extremist groups,” he said “The events of recent days in the Ukrainian capital showed that our attempts to peacefully resolve the conflict without resorting to forceful opposition remain futile,” he added. Although the protest movement - the “EuroMaidan” - is largely peaceful, a hardcore of radicals have been fighting pitched battles with police away from the main protest on Independence Square.

Arseniy Yatsenyuk (L) and Vitali Klitschko have been offered the positions of PM and deputy PM

Egypt clashes kill 29 on third anniversary of revolution

(BBC News) At least 29 people have been killed in clashes in Egypt as the country marks the anniversary of the 2011 uprising which overthrew President Hosni Mubarak, the health ministry says.

took place in Cairo. But police broke up anti-government protests, and arrests were reported in Cairo and Alexandria. Hundreds have died since July when the army deposed President Mohammed Morsi.

Caption: Huge crowds turned out in Cairo’s Tahrir Square - the focal point of the 2011 uprising urged on by members of Egypt’s military-backed government Rival demonstrations of supporters and opponents of the military-backed government

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Extra security measures were in place for Saturday. The prisons are overflowing with anyone who opposes or challenges the government. So our arrest is not a mistake, and as a journalist this IS my battle” Peter Greste Al-Jazeera journalist detained in Egypt Egyptian Interior Minister Muhammad Ibrahim had urged

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Egyptians not to be afraid to go to events marking the anniversary of the uprising. Thousands of supporters of the military and the government gathered in high-profile locations including Tahrir Square - the focal point of the 18-day 2011 popular revolt. Participants waved Egyptian flags and banners showing army chief Gen Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, whom many urged to run for president. But police dealt harshly with anti-government protesters in Cairo, with 29 killed and 147 injured in street clashes, health ministry official Ahmed Kamal confirmed to the BBC. The majority died in Cairo, with two dead in the southern city of Minya and another - a woman - killed in Egypt’s second city of Alexandria. Meanwhile on Saturday, an army helicopter crashed in the restive Sinai peninsula, with an unconfirmed report that its crew of five soldiers was dead. A large car bomb exploded near a police building in Suez, at the southern entrance of the Suez canal, with reports that nine people were injured. At least 18 people died in violence on Friday.

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SUNDAY CHRONICLE January 26, 2014

Peru closes forced sterilisation probe and clears ex-President Alberto Fujimori

(BBC News) Peru has cleared the government of ex-President Alberto Fujimori of carrying out a campaign of forced sterilisations in the 1990s. Prosecutors say they found no evidence to support claims that hundreds of mostly poor and indigenous women and men were sterilised against their will. The Fujimori government has always maintained all operations were consensual. But human rights groups have reacted angrily, saying they will appeal. An independent congressional commission established in 2002 that the government of Alberto Fujimori had sterilised 346,219 women and 24,535 men during his terms in office between 1990 and 2000. It was part of a voluntary programme to reduce the country’s birth rate and, it was ar-

The government of Alberto Fujimori has always maintained all sterilisations were consensual gued, help parents lift their families out of poverty. The campaign had the backing of international donors including the United Nations Population Fund, Japan and the United States, as well as anti-abortion and feminist organisations alike.

Ja scared to free weed: Gov’t says legalising marijuana not on the cards at this time

Legalising marijuana not on the cards at this time Gary Spaulding, Senior Gleaner Writer (Sunday Gleaner) Although the Jamaican Government is being encouraged by foreign advocates and agitators to forge ahead with changing its laws to decriminalise marijuana for both recreational and medicinal use, Foreign Affairs Minister A.J. Nicholson is suggesting that the country still has to proceed with caution in one area. Nicholson told The Gleaner that the attitude of larger Western nations on decriminalisation remains foggy at best, even as a Canadian professional signalled that the country would purchase marijuana from Jamaica, and United States (US) agitators urged Jamaica to add the weed to its famed tourism brand. “There is no consideration at this time about changing the treaties, but there are still some concerns about how some Western countries would view our move towards decriminalise, de-penalise or anything like that,” asserted Nicholson. He stressed that legalising the use of marijuana was definitely out of the question at this time.

WATCH OUT

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Griffith: CCTV cameras monitoring citizens all over T&T By Curtis Rampersad Publications Editor (Sunday Express) This is what National Security Minister Gary Griffith hopes to achieve with a now-functioning network of CCTV cameras that has been in active use since last October to monitor roads, highways and the activity of Trinidadians across the country. The network of CCTV cameras is already so extensive that it monitors thousands of drivers around the country as well as travellers entering and leaving the country from Piarco International Airport. The CCTV communications platform was unveiled yesterday during a tour of the recently launched National Operations Centre (NOC) at its Knowsley Building headquarters in Port of Spain. It was previously located in Riverside Plaza, Port of Spain. The NOC has become the national focal point for public safety and joint security operations in the country. It combines the country’s law-enforcement and intelligence agencies, all operating under the same roof to

monitor activities around the country by camera, 24 hours a day, seven days a week. NOC operations involve the Police Service, Fire Service, Defence Force and the Office of Disaster Preparedness and Management (ODPM). It is currently using the national CCTV initiative controlled by the police, which feeds real-time video into the NOC. The NOC also monitors rapid-response police vehicles to ensure they are operating within the zones to which they are assigned. Security monitoring will also increase shortly with the inclusion of video from national security helicopters. Data from the Coast Guard’s coastal radar system is also being fed to the NOC, and a more direct link with video being channelled straight to the NOC is coming on stream to more effectively monitor the country’s coastline. It will shortly include Customs, Immigration, the prisons system and members of the country’s intelligence-gathering units.


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GUYANA

SUNDAY CHRONICLE January 26, 2014

Deaths did not occur at GPHC

EDITORIAL

GIMMICKS vs REALITIES

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HIS EDITORIAL was written while we awaited the latest news report from Linden where activists of the opposition, under the influence of the PNC’s point man in Linden, Sharma Solomon, had organised anti-government protests that could further negatively impact on the livelihood of more than the people of that bauxite mining town. For now this newspaper remains focused on the political gymnastics by the PNC/AFC alliance to further delay parliamentary approval of the vital ‘Anti-Money and Countering the Financing of Terrorism Bill”, as well as their fun politics over participation in consultation talks on the coming new Budget for 2014, as repeatedly requested by the Minister of Finance, Dr Ashni Singh. Having failed to show up last week for the work of the National Assembly’s Select Committee to which the “anti-money” laundering legislation was referred for consideration, Opposition Leader and chairman of APNU (PNC in new clothing), David Granger, was quoted in another section of the media as giving the assurance for co-operation to ensure passage of the bill by February 14. We have no doubts that, like the government, the private sector and all other stakeholders in Guyana, as well as the Caribbean Financial Action Task Force, of course, would eagerly await the honouring of this new assurance by Mr Granger. In the meanwhile, it is to be hoped that he would succeed in getting former Finance Minister, Carl Greenidge, the PNC “comrade” he had narrowly beaten (by 15 votes) for the party’s leadership prior to the 2012 general elections, to participate in invited talks on the 2014 budget. To say the least, Guyanese across the political divide cannot forget their painful experiences of Mr Greenidge’s budgets and initiatives at fiscal management of the national economy. After all, the initiatives he spearheaded couldn’t deliver this nation from the years of administrative incompetence and fiscal bunglings, not to mention the myopic, spiteful politics that had Guyana struggling to overcome the burden of being relegated among the world’s poorest and highly indebted countries. Now, rather than participate in consultations with the Finance Minister on the budget, prior to readiness for presentation in parliament, an evidently bitter Mr Greenidge has been resorting to typical divisive political posturings. Has he bothered to show his party’s leader the official letter of invitation sent to him by the Finance Minister for consultation? If so, why the lingering negative attitude? Whatever may be Mr Greenidge’s working relationship with Mr Granger, he needs to demonstrate the level of political maturity required of him to at least acknowledge the Minister’s invitation for pre-budget talks rather than encourage his party to indulge in political sophistry or, as Guyanese like to say, sheer ‘bad-mouth’ politics. We wait to see if either or both the PNC and AFC would accept the government’s invitation for pre-budget consultation talks. President Donald Ramotar said on Friday that the door remained open for such consultation.

GEORGETOWN Public Hospital Corporation (GPHC), the Nation’s provider of Health Services, has noted a front page article of the Guyana Chronicle (Jan, 25th inst) under the headline –‘Young mother and newborn baby die within hours of each other at GPHC – devastated relatives hoping PMEs provide answers’. GPHC hereby states categorically that these deaths did not occur at this Institution. Our staff members are severely upset over this embarrassing headline cum detailed story. We therefore seek a

retraction of this erroneous information.

Public Relations Officer Georgetown Public Hospital Corporation Editor’s note- We sincerely apologise to the management and staff of the GPHC for the error and wish to state that the reported deaths occurred at a private city hospital.

The Colwyn Harding affair

I NOTE with great amusement the speed with which the Guyana Bar Association was activated into action in condemning the Guyana Police Force in the Colwyn Harding affair.

The Bar Association must know or at least is presumed to know about concepts such as due process, presumption of innocence, the right to be heard and their absolute significance to the justice system, as well

as basic civilised notion of fairness. The Bar Association, however, obviously disregarded and ignores all these concepts in their haste to rally around Nigel Hughes, who appears to

be the main architect behind this whole saga. Indeed, from all indications, it appears there are going to be personally humiliated along with Hughes and AFC based on the information which is emanating from the police investigation and the medical probe. REAZ HOLLADAR

Lilliputians tie themselves actually believing they are imaginary giants WHEN the eyes become watery what can be its origins and significance? Unhappiness, tears of joy, an infected eye gland, someone cutting onions or fears of a crocodile also in tears poised to devour its victim? Measure the depth of empathetic sincerity, or rather underlying vengeance, for anyone to boldly advocate: “At this point of time (the beginning of 2014), I am now more than ever convinced that the crisis in the sugar industry has passed its tipping-point or point of no return. This means that all hopes for a rational, considered and ordered reform and reconstruction of the (sugar) industry are lost…. As presently configured the country’s sugar business can no longer go forward as a viable commercial endeavour”. Isn’t this a recipe for political armageddon in Guyana? Such advocacy in the SN of January 5, 2014 can be no more clearer for the WPA’s socialist Dr Clive Thomas’s future empowerment in APNU. Where is the wiggle room or attempt to close the gaps, even from the WPA which divides Guyanese unlike Dr Walter Rodney and Madiba’s legacies? If the sugar industry is not worthy of rescue according to a renowned textbook theoretician with absolutely no practical management or business experiences how much more is anyone qualified to decide or pronounce on it to “go forward as a viable commercial endeavour”? In fact, shouldn’t the undeniable reminder that Dr Thomas is factually naked without business experience or relevant acumen easily dismiss him totally without inclusivity to decide the fate of sugar? Even selling fried plantains at the street corner is enough proof positive of some business skills. Lack thereof does no dishonour for anyone to recuse himself especially when seeking to terminate an entire industry. But understanding why it prompted Guyana’s Afrocentric magnate Mr Eusi Kwayana to make Dr Thomas blessed, sanctifying his empowerment as relevant can only be instructionally revealing. “Did President Donald Ramotar sell sugar cakes for him to sit on Guysuco’s board of Directors” when it began its decline” was his shoot back; not bad by proxy but equally fair. No offence meant, none taken. Can King Solomon’s wisdom of deciding the true mother of a baby give more thrilling replication in muddy Guyana for those who want to keep hope alive? A skilled swordsman with his sword being sharpened gets swift support by one “mother”! However, neither Mr Ramotar’s association with the PPP’s trading arm Gimpex, his presence on the Guysuco board, nor any lacking skills thereof in unknown sugar cake sales, can be likewise exonerating for sure, especially after the electorate’s very decisive response in the 2011 elections. That “Change can only come from us” by Mr Craig Sylvester’s headlined letter in the SN letter of January 22, 2014 can only be a good slapping awakening after the 2011 elections. How much clearer can Mr Sylvester become when he himself says:” I imagine the difference between Dr Thomas and the rest of Guyana’s politicians is that while they all know that many things are wrong about how our country is run, only he knows the sure path (!) to economic prosperity.” That a future PNC/APNU

government will shut down the sugar industry is not imaginary, but a crystal clear certainty with Dr Thomas as their skillful swordsman in the pack. Mr Sylvester is both realistic and candidly concerned to acknowledge that “The supporters of the PPP will not forget the mess made of GuySuCo, and the economic chaos inflicted upon their families, dependent upon the existence of that corporation. One can hardly imagine the distress and suffering of the children of these families. GuySuCo could be wound up as a result of the PPP’s failure to grasp, among other things, the tide of change which would have resulted from the EU’s adjustments to its preferential arrangements, and this, if it happens would be among the most unremarkable events during its tenure in government. What will happen to these families still remains to be answered.” After the 2011 elections causing parliamentary gridlock compromises from all sides becomes necessary. Which party can fill the gap? It still does not make Dr Thomas’s academic evisceration of Guysuco more justifiably superior or conclusively acceptable. Even PNC founder leader Mr Forbes Burnham swiftly dismissed both Dr Thomas and Mr Kwayana. The latter’s desire to manage the bauxite industry after the PNC nationalised Demba was found laughable. Was the PNC Prime Minister originally wrong about Mr Kwayana to both expel him as PNC General Secretary, fire him as head of the Guyana Marketing Corporation and summarily avoid his control of an entire industry, which if it crumbled, would have drastically affected all Guyanese? Hoisting and saluting a shiny banner can only be designed to speed its ship to the port of government. Mr Sylvester’s endorses the PNC/WPA within APNU as the vanguard of private enterprise but it only adds to the confusion. Consider his claims that “The PNC promotes democratic values and is capitalist-oriented in economic policy, meaning that the private sector (business, not excessive government spending) is the engine of economic growth and prosperity”. AFC defector to APNU, Dr Tarron Khemraj must be very comfortable with his standby grooming to become the promised APNU’s Finance Minister dumping current Mr Carl Greenidge. So what is the complete truth? Is Mr Sylvester launching another trial weather balloon when he says: “I wish to acknowledge the, at times empathetic, distilled thoughts of Dr Clive Thomas, in particular, and also the contributions made by Mr David Granger, the Leader of the Opposition”? Who is to be taken seriously with so many engaged in Alice in Wonderland imagination? That APNU is capitalist oriented with Dr Thomas as their theoretician according to Mr Sylvester, impressed that “he knows the sure path to economic prosperity….” is no small irony. The changes which have resolved Guyana’s problems have always come from outside, as usual, when Lilliputians tie themselves actually believing they are imaginary giants. SULTAN MOHAMED


SUNDAY CHRONICLE January 26, 2014

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Success story surfaces at Banks DIH 58th Annual General Meeting --company’s 2013 pre-tax profit surpasses that of 2012 by $374M

By Ravin Singh BANKS DIH Limited has recorded a pre-tax profit of $5.340 billion for 2013, in the process recording a surplus of $374 million over the 2012 figure of $4.966 billion.

dressing the issue, he pinpointed the reason for not attaining the financial target in the second half of the year as due to contraction of the economy, which has had a devastating effect on companies. To combat this, though, he admonished shareholders to sharpen their focus and find

market. He mentioned that the new products launched over the past year include R1 white rum, ice cream and GT beer, quickly adding that a fellow associate of his has said that he has never seen a product hit the market and be in skyrocketing demand in such a short time. Reis said that as Banks DIH continues to achieve monumentally, its core principle that ‘charity begins at home’ continues to apply. Presently, the company is sponsoring six (6) national sports ambassadors for the country; has constructed four houses for its employees; and continues to

contribute significantly to religious, educational, and cultural movements across the Caribbean region. Hundreds of shareholders, special invitees and guests attended the 58th AGM of Banks DIH Ltd. They were each given opportunity to voice their concerns, ask questions, and make recommendations for betterment of the company. Each invited person was presented with a token of appreciation and a complimentary drink to end the evening in a “Brewery fresh” way. Banks DIH Limited originated from a rum business founded in the 1840s by Jose

Clifford Barrington Reis, C.C.H. Chairman/ Managing Director in his address to shareholders at the 58th AGM) This success story was detailed to shareholders yesterday at the beverage giant’s annual general meeting by company chairman and managing director, Mr Clifford Barrington Reis, who identified the many challenges the company had faced over the last year, due to what he described as a “sluggish global economic recovery and continuing tensions which continue to be manifested across the globe, especially in those areas which are prime petroleum producers”. Reis, nevertheless, added that implementation of the Brewery modernization programme will continue. Included in this programme to improve production capacity and availability are major capital works within the Brewhouse and Cellars’ operations, including Wort Kettle, CIP plants, Brewhouse Control Systems, BOTEC software upgrade and installation of the new Unitanks. In addition, installation of a palletiser, a de-palletiser, a pasteurizer with conveyor system and a labeler are currently in the process. Reis said the company’s after-tax profit for 2013 was $3.862 billion, compared to $3.700 for the year prior, which means that the company had recorded an increase of $162 million in profit over its 2012 operations. And while the year had seen the company facing many challenges, including not attaining its financial target set for the latter part of 2013, Reid noted that the journey was rewarding. Ad-

creative ideas to seek to minimize expenditure and increase revenue. The company’s objectives, Reis disclosed, are to create value for shareholders, to sustain meaningful relationships with employees and customers, and to provide quality products that can compete on the international

Hundreds in attendance at Banks DIH AGM

Gomes D’Aguiar. That business eventually expanded into a chain of liquor stores. The company experienced numerous challenges over the ensuing years of its existence, some of which placed the enterprise on the verge of bankruptcy. Peter Stanislaus D’Aguiar, the last of the four sons, took over at the helm of DIH from his father, and placed greater emphasis on the core business of manufacturing soft drinks and rum, although the company retained retail outlets, bars, and the hotel. The company’s financial position gradually improved; and

in 1942, the company obtained the first Pepsi-Cola franchise in South America; and during the 1950s, rum production also expanded. In 1955, Peter D’Aguiar promoted the publicly owned Banks Breweries Ltd. In 1966, D’Aguiar Bros. (D.I.H.) was floated as a public company, and it was merged with Banks Breweries in 1969 to form the present Banks DIH Ltd. The company today produces soft drinks, alcoholic beverages and food products; operates bars and restaurants; and, since 1998, has owned a controlling share in Citizens Bank Inc.


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AMNESTY’S SWIPE AT OBAMA ON EVE OF CELAC SUMMIT IN CUBA - focus on deepening ties

Analysis by Rickey Singh PRESIDENT BARACK Obama may have to cease speaking with a forked tongue on the continuing misuse of the Guantanamo Naval Base as a detention centre for political prisoners from other countries and also wake up and smell the ‘political coffee’ over the spreading and deepening relations with Cuba by hemispheric governments and international organisations. As the government in Havana was completing arrangements to host this week’s second summit of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC), Amnesty International issued a call last Wednesday for the Obama administration to “end its human rights hypocrisy” by the much unfulfilled promise to close the base as a detention centre for political prisoners without a court trial. Amnesty rebuked the US President for dishonouring his own

to Erika Guevara Rosas, Director of Amnesty International’s Americas Programme. After a dozen years in detention since the first of hundreds of political prisoners were brought to Guantanamo-- “strapped down in planes like cargo,” said Amnesty--more than 150 men are still there, most of them without charge or trial, with a few subjected to trial “under a military commission system that does not meet

SECRETARY GENERAL (OAS) JOSE MIGUEL INSULZA.

A guard tower outside the prison complex in Guatnanamo Bay, Cuba on Jan. 8, 2014. The prisons are surrounded by barbed wire fences and surveillance cameras. (Photo by Liz Goodwin/Yahoo News)Inside the Gitmo Media Tour expressed commitment of five years ago on January 22, 2009 to issue an ‘executive order’ for the closure of Guantanamo as a detention centre and arrange for court trials in the USA for prisoners, declaring in a media statement from London: “Five years later this promise of change has become a human rights failure that threatens to haunt President Obama’s legacy, Just as it has his predecessor’s (President George W Bush),” according

CARICOM SECRETARY GENERAL IRWIN LAROCQUE

international fair trial standards…” Last year Cuba, which has been protesting since its 1959 revolution, the US military presence at Guantanamo (which is part of Cuban territory), reminded a meeting of the UN Human Rights Council that the torture of political prisoners at the naval base has been internationally condemned. The continuing US military occupation of Guantanamo and its misuse as a detention centre for political prisoners without legitimate court trials is expected to surface among issues to be addressed during this week’s two-day summit meeting (January 28-29) in Havana of CELAC. CARICOM’s involvement Prior to the summit of Heads of State and Government a two-day Regional Forum comprising Foreign Ministers and national experts from various sectors are scheduled to participate in two-days of meeting, the first of which was scheduled to begin yesterday. CARICOM Secretary General Irwin LaRocque, who will be among participants, said in our brief telephone conversation that he, expects “a significant presence” from the 15-member Community for the CELAC summit. He pointed out that the Caribbean Region

SUNDAY CHRONICLE January 26, 2014

was actively involved from the inception in the creation of the hemispheric body. Among the distinguished special guests to be greeted by President Raoul Castro will be UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and the Secretary General of the Organisation of American States (OAS) Jose Miguel Insulza. Established in 2011 in Caracas as an initiative of the now late

PRESIDENT RAOUL CASTRO

PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA

President of Venezuela, Hugo Chavez, CELAC has defined itself as “a counterpart of the OAS”. It held its first formal summit in 2013 in Santiago Chile, the outgoing chair, now to be succeeded by Cuba. A distinguishing feature of CELAC from the OAS is that both the USA and Canada have not been considered for membership at the time of conception of its formation. The CELAC Summit in Havana will mark the first-ever official visit by an OAS Secretary General to Cuba which, under US pressures following the Fidel Castro-led revolution of 1959, had been excluded from membership—a position that the Caribbean island state has since showed no interest in regaining. Cuba’s deputy Foreign Minister, Abelardo Moreno, in briefing the media on the CELAC summit said he was optimistic that it would “yield very positive results for Latin America and the Caribbean” consistent with shared objectives in the strengthening of cooperation for deepening integration. **Meanwhile Trinidad and Tobago was designated as “Guest Country of Honour” for this year’s “Cubadisco Music Festival” which takes place in Havana from May 17-25. The announcement was made last week by Cuba’s new ambassador to T&T, Guillermo Vazquez Moreno, when he paid a courtesy call on Foreign Affairs Minister, Winston Dookeran.

President open to negotiations on public servants’ salary increases PRESIDENT Donald Ramotar at his press conference on Friday said that he is open to negotiations with unions, to come up with mutually accepted decisions in terms of annual salary increases. The President was at the time responding to questions

from media operatives specifically as it relates to the five percent retroactive increase offered in December last year which sparked a protest from some public servants. He explained that the country has come a far way, and that his government is willing to

give its workers as much as the country can afford. “My desire is to give everybody a bigger salary as possible, but this is not something that only has to go with desire it also has to do with your ability and capacity and the resources at your disposal,” the Head of

State explained. He is hoping that negotiations for increases in wages and salaries can begin early. The five percent that was awarded in 2013 is above the current inflation rate. When the People’s Progressive Party/Civic) PPP/C

assumed Office in 1992, the public servant’s minimum wage was $3,137 and by 2005 the figure rose to $23,204. In 2012, a five percent increase was granted to public servants, in 2011, eight percent, in 2010, five percent and in 2009, six percent. (GINA)

PRESIDENT DONALD RAMOTAR


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SUNDAY CHRONICLE January 26, 2014

Revisiting previously explored ideas (Part 2) By Keith Burrowes

I think the Speaker of the National Assembly, Raphael Trotman, Gail Teixeira and others deserve both acknowledgment and applause for the work they have been doing, particularly with regard to putting mechanisms in place for familiarising new parliamentarians with their duties. In terms of cooperation, I think what is sorely needed is a working environment designed to engender trust among our legislators. We can, for example, establish a protocol for ministers to engage their shadow colleagues in the opposition, thereby placing less pressure on the parliamentary sub-committees, yes, but also creating the sort of inclusivity that was promised by all parties, without exception, during the elections. Now, to deal with the actual subject at hand: Some time ago, I took the decision to write publicly about a particularly nasty clandestine E-mail smear campaign aimed at tarnishing my reputation, albeit via a secretive, cowardly modus operandi. Recently, in addition to the already strenuous pressures of illness, and a packed working schedule, I’ve discovered that the insanity has started again. While I refuse to give the people behind this the satisfaction of going into detail as to the content of their ‘campaign’, I will say that, as suspected before, it appears to be coming from persons who somehow feel threatened by my public service portfolios. As I’ve written previously, I can say without fear of contradiction that I have never once presented myself to be considered for any public post I currently hold, whether remunerated or unremunerated; I was asked by the former President, with whom I’ve had a professional relationship going back almost two decades, to serve in several capacities, and I agreed. If there is merit-worthy criticism to be made of my performance in those roles, then anyone is free to make them; and while I reserve the right to correct any misperception, whether privately or in the public domain, I have never seen myself as above constructive criticism. I can safely say that I have carried out every public service responsibility placed upon me to the best of my ability, and often – I am admittedly a little ashamed to admit – at the expense of my personal life. And while I’ve lent my professional expertise to whatever of those responsibilities I’ve had to shoulder, I also took away key lessons from those experiences, many of which I’ve used this column to explore. Specifically because my portfolio has stretched across multiple sectors, I’ve discovered that there is need for a more holistic and integrated approach to several areas of managing the operations of government. For example, I’ve touched upon the need for there to be a central database, with a multi-tiered access protocol, containing digitized copies of all consultants’ reports produced here as far back as possible, but most critically over the past 10 years. But this would ensure that information is shared among the various agencies. (I would guess that over the past 10 years Guyana through loans and grant would have invested significant sums in these organisations). I recently saw this newspaper cartoon with one man with a stack of documents being asked by another where he was going with them. The first man replies that he has been ordered to take them to the basement to be shredded, so that no trace of them can ever be found. The second man replies, “Well, in that case, just take them to be filed.” We’ve spent, according to my fairly well-informed estimate, somewhere in the vicinity of US $15 million on foreign consultants’ reports over the last decade, many of which end up being ‘filed’ away until they become obsolete, and/or are duplicated by yet another report; a central database would ensure that we get proper value for money when it comes to these reports. I’ve written at least one three-part series on public-private partnerships, a method of providing services that I believe affords the best option, in many cases, for the people for whom those services are intended, or, at the very least, where applicable, ensuring that taxpayers receive the best value for money. (This is one of the areas that would be focused on in modernization of Go-Invest).

Keith Burrowes I can cite America’s NASA as an example of the evolution of a good private-public partnership. Decades ago, outer space was exclusively the territory of governments, particularly the competing ideological world powers at the time. Today, government input has been scaled back, and billionaire investors, such as Richard Branson, are working with the US government to create a competitive and increasingly commercially viable (granted for millionaires) aerospace industry. Another area I’ve been passionate about, and one related to the first, is engaging our Diaspora in our development, in as comprehensive a manner as possible, from structured programmes for involvement (whether repatriation or volunteering) to a Diaspora skills database. I’ve written, again largely because of my involvement in various public entities, about the need to establish a sophisticated multi-sectoral negotiation mechanism to engage with donors, allowing us to most strategically distribute donors across sectors. I’ve written about the need for a one-stop shop for government services for the elderly in our society. I’ve put forward this column in the same spirit that I’ve accepted the positions I’ve been offered without solicitation, because I believe that I have something to contribute to the development of my country. This would avoid our senior citizens having to go to several entities in order to conduct transactions e.g. Pension, NIS, etc. To those behind the periodic campaigns, who obviously feel that I am in competition with them for power or prestige, let me provide some solace: After discussion with my family, I’ve decided to scale back and eventually terminate completely my engagement in the public service in Guyana; this news might save you the effort of concocting and disseminating more slanderous Emails. The establishments of a mechanism that will provide information on persons who have outstanding payments for the government not benefitting from other government facilities until these amounts are liquidated. For Example if a person owes NIS it should be settled before you can obtain land concession. To the readers who’ve followed this column, I intend, in the upcoming weeks before I stop publishing it completely, to put forward a few more ideas into the public domain; for example, a mechanism to track the implementation of the government’s programme as set out in the ruling party’s manifesto. I also intend to revisit some of the topics I’ve explored in the past, and which I believe warrant a bit more consideration, particularly but not limited to those above, while I may very likely not be part of the team that implements these ideas, I believe offering them up is a critical step in the process. Until then, have a good week.

PSC heartened by Police Commissioner’s reception on Harding allegations

THE Private Sector Commission (PSC) in a release on Saturday said it met on Friday with the Commissioner of Police, Mr. Leroy Brumell, and his senior officers to express the very serious concerns of the commission about the public allegations of grievous assault and an act of sodomy on Colwyn Harding by the Guyana Police Force. The PSC told the commissioner that, in the view of the commission, there has not been a satisfactory public response to these very serious allegations. The commission further expressed its concern at the growing number of what appears to be legitimate complaints against the conduct of the Police Force in their resorting to the use of excessive force and violent behaviour towards citizens in the course of their investigations and during arrests. The PSC pointed out to the commissioner that the credibility and public confidence in the Force is being dangerously eroded which, if not promptly, openly and fully addressed, would undermine the ability and competence of the Force to carry out its law enforcement responsibilities. The PSC said it was heartened by the reception it received by

the commissioner and his officers and with the open and frank discussions held with them. The Commissioner of Police told the commission that he had directed his officers to carry out an immediate investigation on his receiving the report with regard to the allegations of assault on Mr. Harding and to take the necessary and appropriate action. He said that, as a consequence, the Office of Professional Responsibility is completing its investigation prior to transferring its report and recommendations to the Director of Public Prosecution. However, given the seriousness of the alleged offences, and the widely reported coverage which has been given to them, the PSC said it believes that an independent inquiry should be ordered into the matter. The PSC also raised the issue of deplorable state of most of the lock-ups at police stations and deemed the subjection of citizens to such conditions to be acts of violence against them. The commissioner acknowledged the complaint, noted his own concerns and undertook to have the matter urgently addressed. He, however, made the point that, at a number of locations, including Brickdam, where new facilities had been installed, they had been vandalised by

LEROY BRUMMEL RONALD WEBSTER persons held in the lock- ups. The commissioner advised the PSC that he welcomed and appreciated the meeting and the views shared by the commission and agreed to meet with the commission on a regular quarterly basis.


Ukraine Turns Violent

“THE protest mood in Ukraine is at a higher temperature than ever before,” said Vitali Klitschko, the de facto leader of the anti-government protests that have filled central Kiev for the past two months, in an interview with the Guardian on Tuesday. “We only need a small spark for the situation to develop in a way that will be completely out of control for the authorities.” It’s make-or-break time, because on Wednesday a raft of new laws came into effect that make almost everything the protesters have been doing illegal. The laws, which were rushed through the Ukrainian parliament last week on a show of hands, ban helmets, hard hats and masks at rallies, and impose fines and prison sentences for setting up unauthorised tents, stages or sound systems in public places. They prescribe jail terms for anybody blockading public buildings, and make it a crime to “slander” public officials (whatever that means). You can also go to jail for handing out

pamphlets, and you can get 15 years for being part of a “mass riot” (however the government chooses to define that).

Ukrainian capital. He hasn’t done so yet, but mobile phone users near the violent clashes early Tuesday morning got text

Protesters in Ukraine creating havoc If President Viktor Yanukovych’s government tries to enforce these laws on the tent city of protesters that has filled the “Maidan” (Independence Square) since late November, there will be something like civil war in the heart of the

messages saying: “Dear subscriber, you are registered as a participant in a mass riot.” Yanukovych is getting desperate, because the protests are no longer just against his abrupt decision not to sign a treaty creating closer trade and political

ties between Ukraine and the European Union, and to turn to Russia instead for loans ($15 billion) and discounted gas. The protests have expanded to take in the dire state of the economy, Yanukovych’s ruthless political tactics, and the sudden wealth of the “Family” of officials and businessmen who support him. So long as the conflict was about the EU-or-Russia issue, Yanukovych could count on the backing of the Russian-speaking half of the Ukrainian population, in the south and the heavily industrialised east of the country: many people there fear for their jobs if the Ukrainian economy integrates with the EU. But the poverty and the corruption hurt everybody, whether they speak Ukrainian or Russian. Everybody can get together and protest about that. Another worry for Yanukovych is the attitude of the oligarchs, the billionaire businessmen like Rinat Ahmetov, Viktor Pinchuk and Igor Kolomoisky who control a large share of the Ukrainian economy. They have not been politically neutered like the oligarchs in Vladimir Putin’s Russia, and it’s striking that the television stations they own have been covering the demonstrations quite objectively. The ultimate loyalty of the oligarchs is to their money, of course, but they seem to believe that in the long run their money is safer in EU countries, or at least in a Ukraine that con-

SUNDAY CHRONICLE January 26, 2014 forms to EU legal standards. So they are not ecstatic about Yaukovych’s decision to turn away from the EU, and they are quite capable of turning away from him. Indeed, that’s exactly what they did during the Orange Revolution of 2004, and they could do it again. So Yanukovych’s back is to the wall, and he has apparently decided that it’s worth gambling that he can clear the streets by force without triggering a confrontation that spreads far beyond the Maidan. And it will have to be done by force, because the protesters will not just fold their tents and creep off home. The sudden lurch into violence on the streets on Sunday and Monday nights occurred in this context. The several hundred young men who attacked the riot police with pipes, chains and fire-bombs were originally thought to be “provocateurs” hired by the government to give it a justification for using violence on the mass of peaceful protesters, but lots of them were not. The core group of fighters were members of a radical ultra-nationalist group called Right Sector that is both anti-Russian and anti-EU. It includes both Russian and Ukrainian speakers, and imagines it can use the current crisis to “destroy the skeleton state” and build a new state on the ruins. Things are indeed spinning out of control. When Vitali Klitschko arrived on the scene to beg them to remain non-violent, he was attacked with a fire extinguisher–and thousands of ordinary protesters showed up to cheer

BY GWYNNE DYER

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the young thugs as they attacked the police. There is a serious potential for mass violence here, and that could lead to even worse things. Viktor Yanukovych, for all his faults, is the legitimately elected President of Ukraine, and he has a majority in parliament. What if, facing overthrow in the streets, he called for “fraternal aid” from Russia to defend democracy in Ukraine? What if the Russians, who are already claiming that it’s a Western plot – “We have information that much of this is being stimulated from abroad,” said Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Monday – agree to send him police and military help? It sounds far-fetched and it would be extremely stupid, but everybody is busily painting themselves into corners and there is a small but real possibility that it could happen. In which case, welcome to the Second Cold War. (Gwynne Dyer is a London-based independent journalist and military historian.)


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GWI embarking on disconnection campaign on customers in arrears supermarkets etc. to interact with customers countrywide. This weekend they will be in Wakenaam, and they plan to visit all areas, including Ithaca and

By Michel Outridge G U YA N A WAT E R I N C . (GWI) on Thursday said that they would be embarking on a countrywide campaign to remove the water service of customers who are in arrears. Customer Services Manager Jeanette Thomas told this publication that GWI is focusing on collections of water services and urged customers to make such payments or face disconnection, which she noted is the last resort. Thomas suggested that those in arrears should visit GWI offices across the country to enter a ‘wallet-friendly’ payment plan which lasts for three months if the customer cannot afford to make the entire payment in the allotted time. He/ she can speak to a supervisor or a manager to have a waiver. She explained that one of the shortcomings is that bills are not getting to customers on time as a result of some hiccups with the postal service but they are making strides to have bills delivered otherwise to their customers. Thomas stated that they are in receipt of many complaints by customers, who claimed that their services were disconnected because they did not receive bills; as such, they could not make any payment. She, however, pointed out that customers whose services

Customer Services Manager, Jeanette Thomas and Billing, Revenue and Control Manager, Julie Ragnauth. have been repeatedly disconnected will have their service removed by GWI once they are in arrears, and urged such persons to make contact with the water company at the earliest on 227-8701 from 08:00hrs to 16:30 hrs on week days, or leave a message on weekends and a call will be returned. Thomas told this newspaper that water subletting is illegal and those culpable will be dealt with. She encouraged customers to desist from such practices. She noted that once the service line is removed by GWI, the customer must re-apply for service and will have to pay in excess of $30,000 to so do. She asked customers to make

payments to avoid the removal of their service. Thomas disclosed that more than 50% of customers are in arrears, and although they do not want to remove water service from them, they need to pay, since billing for 2013 is due and the payment options have been expanded to commercial banks, Bill Express, GPOC, GT&T Mobile Money, online banking etc. to facilitate payment by customers. GWI has also upped their efforts to reach out to customers by promoting a weekly outreach programme where revenue managers and customer service staffers have been visiting schools, NDC offices,

Corentyne, among other areas. The water company is also updating their data. An exercise is under way to verify such, in which customers’

accounts will be updated, and they are asking for the cooperation of consumers, said Billing, Revenue and Control Manager Julie Ragnauth.


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SUNDAY CHRONICLE January 26, 2014

World Leprosy Day…

Guyana moving towards eliminating leprosy at the sub-national level By Telesha Ramnarine GUYANA has eliminated leprosy at a national level and the fight is now on to have the disease eliminated at a sub-national level. The Leprosy Clinic based in Georgetown sees fewer than one hundred cases each year but its Director, Mrs. Heather Morris-Wilson, believes that should authorities become complacent the disease will continue to spread. Leprosy, also known as Hansen’s disease (HD), is a chronic infection caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium leprae and Mycobacterium lepromatosis. It takes its name from the Latin word Lepra, which means “scaly”, while the term “Hansen’s Disease” is named after the physician Gerhard Armauer Hansen. “It is a disease of poverty,” explains Dr Wilson. Hence, persons exposed to poor housing, bed bugs, overcrowding, poor sanitation and water are more susceptible to the disease. “It tends to spread in these conditions. So you find a lot of persons in the slums would get it.” “Right now for the country it is not a problem. But we cannot be complacent. We have to keep working and reaching those areas that are without clinics. Certain areas have families that keep transmitting the disease,” Dr Wilson reported. Importantly, she noted that Guyana sees ‘imported’ cases from time to time because neighbouring Brazil has the largest amount of cases per year. Dr Wilson, Director of the Ministry of Health’s Leprosy Programme, spoke with the Guyana Chronicle at her office located inside of the Palms Geriatric Home Compound, Brickdam. According to her, one of the first clinical signs that indicate leprosy is a noticeable rash on the skin where there is loss of feeling or sensation. The rash can develop on any part of the body depending on the type of leprosy. In addition to skin rashes, there can also be a tingling sensation in the hands and or feet, and a burning sensation of the skin because the disease affects the nerves. Furthermore, there is loss of feeling, no sweating and hair growth in the affected area. “We call it a numb spot disease,” Dr Wilson said. A cotton wool test for sensation would then be in order. It is referred to as the ‘pinch and touch’ test. On most occasions, when it is indeed leprosy that the person has, he will not be able to differentiate a pinch from a touch. Some persons who suffer with the disease also have to endure weakness, paralysis in the hands and feet, and affected muscles of the eyes. “Leprosy treated late can cause severe eye complications and lead to blindness because of weakness of the eyelids and the mus-

cles of the eye. So we would need to do a skin smear test where we just use a lymph fluid. We don’t need blood,” Dr Wilson explained. TODAY IS WORLD LEPROSY DAY Special activities are planned for the observance of World Leprosy Day today in an effort to increase awareness that leprosy is present and is a “neglected” disease. “Leprosy Day is to remember these persons and make them feel wanted. There still is a lot of stigma and discrimination against them,” Dr Wilson observed. She informed that on January 30, a fun day is planned for leprosy patients and they will be treated to gifts, food, games, Dr Heather Morris-Wilson.

diagnose leprosy. She works at this location on Wednesdays only as she also tends to other clinics across the country. She is in Region 10 (Upper Demerara/Upper Berbice) on every first Tuesday of the month; in Region 3 (Essequibo Islands/West Demerara) on every second Friday of the month (Best, Parika and Meten-Meer-Zorg Health Centre); in Regions 5 (Mahaica/Berbice) and 6 (East Berbice/Corentyne) on every third Monday and Tuesday. On the first Friday of the month she is at Lodge Health Centre while on every second Tuesday she is at Soesdyke. She goes to the health centre at Clonbrook on every fourth Tuesday and at Grove Health Centre on every third Friday. On every fourth Friday, she is at David Rose. Dr Wilson stressed that leprosy is curable and she encouraged anyone who suspects they are suffering from the disease to visit the centre on Brickdam. Here is where the drugs are stored and they are available free of charge. “We have nurses who can also educate them and make them more aware of the disease. We don’t just provide treatment but we have to follow up with them for no less than three years. We have to work at empowering them and reintegrating them into their families and the community,” she informed. LEPROSY – IS IT A CURSE FROM GOD?

etc. The day before (Jan 29), a team will be working in a health booth that will be set up in front of Scotia Bank on Carmichael Street. Meanwhile, Dr Wilson explained that the Leprosy Clinic would also entertain persons suffering with various skin infections. Observing these would be the only way of knowing whether or not to

Dr Wilson has had patients who confessed to her that they opted to consult a witch doctor for help because they believe leprosy is a curse from God. “Most of our patients sometimes go to witch doctors that give them remedies. I have actually have patients who confessed to me, and learned people too, not the layman. Learned persons have been fooled into thinking that,” she said. However, “everyone” is susceptible to leprosy. “You develop leprosy depending on your body’s immunity. So you have to try to build your immune system; exercise, eat your proper meals. Just be healthy. There is no way to really prevent it. You can obtain it in indirect ways,” said Dr Wilson. Transmission can occur by someone who has a lot of leprosy in their body and If treatment is not started, this individual can cause the bacteria to spread. “If it is discovered late, it can cause deformity because of the nerve damage.” It has been found that leprosy patients are often shunned, even by family members, because the disease comes with visible deformities. And hence, such individuals feel discriminated against. How vital to make these ones feel wanted and loved, Dr Wilson said.


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SUNDAY CHRONICLE January 26, 2014

President Ramotar to attend CELAC Summit in Cuba

PRESIDENT Donald Ramotar will be leaving for Cuba to attend the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) Heads of Government Summit to be held at PABEXPO building exhibition site of Havana´s Convention Centre on the 28 and 29 of this month. Speaking at a press conference on Friday the Head of State said that one of the main issues that will be addressed at that forum is poverty and inequality in the Region. He said that Guyana has a lot to offer at this conference; making reference to the recognition that the country received from the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) in 2012. Last year, Prime Minister Samuel Hinds received on Guyana’s behalf, an award at a ceremony in Rome, for being one of the 17 countries in the world to attain the targets set by both the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) Number One, and the goal set by the 1996 World Food Summit for halving the absolute number of hungry people by 2015. “Although Latin America

PABEXPO building, exhibition site of Havana´s Convention Centre

and the Caribbean have made tremendous progress over the last decade or so in fighting poverty and inequality, there is still a lot more to be done. So these are some of the main topics that will engage our attention when we go to Cuba,” the President said. He added that Guyana has a great input to make at this Summit in terms of sharing information and

experiences, since the social programmes that Guyana has been following over the past two decades have been tried, tested and proven to significantly reduce social poverty. According to the Cuba Standards, the CELAC summit is the biggest political event to be hosted by Havana in decades. Heads of State and foreign ministers of most member nations are expected to attend. (GINA)


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N/A magistrate advises that complaining defendants should inform station commanders of a total of $705,000., of allegations of police brutality Kang comprising $300,000 cash, an NEW Amsterdam Magistrate Sherdell Issacs-Marcus has advised that accused persons making allegations of being assaulted by the police to bring their complaints to the attention of the station commander prior to an investigation being launched.

Her remarks were made after robbery suspect, Eon Mickle alleged that he had been beaten in the face by a police rank whom he named. The police are alleging that this defendant, in company of others and being armed with a cutlass, robbed restaurateur Lim

Acer laptop, two cartons of cigarettes, and a quantity of Digecel and GT&T phone cards. The defendant has denied the charge, and has noted that after his mother had informed him that the police were searching for him, he, accompanied by his brother, went to the Central

SUNDAY CHRONICLE January 26, 2014 Police Station, where he met the investigating rank. After his brother had been told to go, Mickle alleged, his hands were handcuffed behind his back, and the police rank began slapping him in the face. “Then he told me to go to the back. He then took out his gun, put it to my head, and threatened to shoot me. An officer came in the room and asked the identified rank ‘why you playing with a gun to the boy’s head? Use a baton and a condom instead’. The defendant also informed the magistrate that an identification parade had not been held. Mickle was denied bail, but the matter is fixed for report on January 31.

Unlucky motorcyclist hit down by allegedly speeding car, allegedly run over by minibus By Michel Outridge AT ABOUT 02:00hrs yesterday, the unidentified driver of motor cycle CG 6446 was

very grievously injured when the allegedly drunken driver of motor car PGG 8790 struck him off his motor cycle at the corner of Regent and Albert Streets in Bourda, Georgetown. The out-of-control car came to a stop after it had shattered a utility pole, and the driver and a companion emerged, appearing very inebriated. Shortly afterwards, the unconscious motorcyclist was allegedly run over by a minibus, and his body was left lying on the roadway for in excess of half an hour, because efforts to contact an ambulance failed, and nobody wanted to transport him to a hospital. The female pillion rider who had been with the motorcyclist at the time of the accident has also been hospitalised. The driver of the motor car is being questioned by the police, but it is uncertain whether he had been arrested following the accident.


SUNDAY CHRONICLE January 26, 2014

Young cop shot by aggressive visitor to Meadow Brook home By Michel Outridge

POLICE report that at about 22:30 hrs on Friday, January 24, 2014, Special Constable 14127 Quincy Wright, called Dexter, of the Mounted Branch and of Zeskendren, Mahaicony, East Coast of Demerara, was involved in a heated argument with a man at the home of a female at Guyhoc Park, Georgetown, when he was shot to the left side of his chest. He was later pronounced dead on arrival at the GPHC. His assailant, who escaped, is also a suspect in a matter that occurred on January 23, 2014, at North Sophia, wherein a firearm was taken away from a security guard attached to a private security service. Investigations are in progress. “Gary” (only name given) of Lot 84 Guyhoc Park, Georgetown, said he was watching television in the upper flat of the building, at about 22:30 hrs, when he heard a loud explosion and he ran downstairs to see what was happening. He said he saw the mortally wounded cop lying in the yard, barely breathing because he was panting for breath. The grievously injured lawman had been shot; and after some time, Gary and others managed to get a taxi by which they rushed the lawman to the GPHC, where he was pronounced dead on arrival. Gary said he had seen the young lawman visiting his sister-inlaw when he went into the yard for a bath earlier that night. Gary told this publication that he feels very disturbed about the turn of events, and he regretted what had happened to the young cop; but he had not been aware there was anything going on in the yard until the incident. An eyewitness to the shooting, Ashanti Sankar, who was grazed by the bullet that killed Wright, said she barely managed to escape with her life; and she was in a state of shock yesterday when this newspaper visited the scene. She said that it all started when a young man (the gunman) came to the home to visit a female occupant (named) and he started to say things to the policeman, who was already in a conversation with another young female occupant of the house. Sankar explained that among the things the shooter said was: “Is problem you want with me?” after he was asked why he was peeping in Wright’s face. And despite attempts to pacify him, the gunman appeared to be very agitated by the question he had been asked. After some more exchange of words, he whipped out a gun from his waist and shot Wright. At that time, Sankar said, she was standing between the two men trying to make peace, and she barely shifted herself out of the way when she saw the gun, or she would also have been shot on

Ashanti Sankar, who witnessed the shooting and was grazed by the bullet

The house where the shooting took place

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- police hunting suspect

Friday night. She said the shooting happened when Wright went into his pocket to retrieve his phone, which was ringing at the time. She said she heard the gun go off before feeling a burning sensation on her arm; and she managed to hide by the fence and dial 911 for help. Sankar noted that the gunman was looking for her as he stood over the cop whom he had shot, but he did not see her in the darkness; so he left the scene of the shooting and she placed a call to her children’s father, who is a policeman. She said that after Wright had been taken to hospital, police came and took statements from her and another female. Up to press time, the gunman had not been apprehended by the police.

The bloodied spot where Wright’s body lay after he was shot


Roberto Thomas-miraculous old survivor of Lusignan m

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IAC holding commemoration of sixth anniversary of Lusignan Massacre THE Indian Arrival Committee (IAC) will today hold an Evening of Remembrance at Track ‘A’ Lusignan Pasture, East Coast Demerara to commemorate the sixth anniversary of the Lusignan Massacre of January 26th 2008. Activities begin at 17:00 hrs, and the Hon. Prime Minister Samuel Hinds and other Government officials will be in attendance. Residents of Lusignan are invited to the forum. Six years ago today, 11 persons were horrendously gunned down and three others were grievously wounded when marauding gunmen with high-powered assault rifles invaded the homes of five families at Track ‘A’ Lusignan, in the predawn hours of January 26, creating mayhem and unleashing unprovoked terror.

-six years after By Shirley Thomas

SIX years ago today doctors at the Intensive Care Unit of the Georgetown Public Hospital Corporation (GPHC) were battling to save the life of a five-year-old survivor of the horrendous Lusignan massacre, as the nation watched and prayed. Five-year old, Roberto Thomas, shot in the abdomen with high-powered assault rifles, by marauding gunmen who invaded five homes at Lusignan, East Coast of Demerara, in the pre-dawn hours

of January 26, 2008 kicked down doors and waged a wanton execution of family members, remained on life support and on the critical list. Roberto, who his mother hid under a bed, while she hid behind a curtain, clutched desperately to two suitcases during the ordeal, but still somehow the bullets, indiscriminately fired, managed to hit and seriously wound the hapless five-year old. The Thomas family was the first to come under attack by the gunmen. Three family members of that family were slain in the mayhem: Patriarch: Howard Clarence

Thomas, 49; his 12-yearold daughter, Vanessa and eleven-year old son, Ron. Clarence’s wife, Gowmattie Thomas, their 19-year-old son, Howard, and five-yearold Roberto survived the tragedy. However, Howard was seriously wounded in the upper left arm, by a high powered assault weapon, while the youngest, Roberto, shot in the abdomen, was immediately placed on life support on his admission to the GPH. It was an uphill task for doctors at the institution, who waged an unrelenting battle to save the life of the child and he remained hospitalised for three months, as did his brother Howard who was at one time in danger of losing his arm, but with doctors’ best efforts and divine intervention, both siblings recovered from their injuries. Today, even as bereaved relatives and others across the spectrum huddle together in sober reflection, Gomattie Thomas, the matriarch of the Thomas’ home, agreed, she has much to be thankful to God for sparing her life; the lives of her 5-year old shot in the abdomen who has miraculously recovered and her 19-year-old son Howard who did not lose his arm, as was feared by doctors. And whereas, six years ago Gowmattie lost an elevenyear-old son Ron in the mayhem, today she has by her side, Roberto who has turned eleven and is keeping her company, as together they seek to put the past behind them, pick up the pieces and move on with life. Also alive and well are Mark, now 26, who at the time of

SUNDAY CHRONICLE January 26, 2014

Gomattie Thomas

the massacre was at Bartica and Howard. They have both matured and now lead their separate lives. But incredibly, Roberto, now eleven, who attends the Valmiki Vidyalaya Primary School at Lusignan has since, recovered so favourably, he is participating in athletics sports and emerged champion runner for the school, for the years 2012 and 2013. Roberto, who is preparing to write the National Grade Six Assessment Examinations in March, says he would like to one day, become an engineer and is working towards that end. His now deceased sister, Vanessa was an aspiring air hostess, while Ron was training on the Lusignan golf course to become a golf caddie. Asked if he has any recollections of the ill-fated day, Roberto replied: “The only thing I recall is that I heard the shots, then I feel somebody hold me and slam me against a wall, saying: ‘You in the way’!”

Reflecting on the good times he’s spent with his father and brother, he recalled when they’d do carving, making wooden aeroplanes, ships, coconut (pointer) brooms and the like. At that point, he suddenly broke down and sobbed: “But I didn’t get to see my father. I want my brother, I want my brother.” Based on conversations with Gowmattie (Roberto’s mother), there are indications that, deep within, the child is still hurting; he perceives that his father and siblings have been suddenly and rudely snatched away from him and that to date there is no explanation. For him, there has been no closure to a harrowing and horrendous episode, and these are haunting memories as far as he is concerned. Clearly, what is desperately needed is what was promised – counselling for the families of the diseased. Meanwhile, Roberto now has a new found brother – his best friend at school, Madhave

Ro

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ev G th C Sc co Lo Pr B


s five-year massacre SUNDAY CHRONICLE January 26, 2014

oberto Thomas

iwarie and they share good times ogether. He also finds solace in he company of the children in his mother’s Sunday School class she olds at home. For the last several years, and ven before the untimely disaster, Gowmattie, who is a member of he Lusignan Assembly of God hurch has been holding Sunday chool classes in her home and ontinues to win souls for the ord. She is also on the Women’s rayer Team and the Good News ible Club. Asked how she has been cop-

ing with the loss, Gowmattie modestly replied: “I remember, but try to put it away, but can’t erase the memory altogether.” She recalled the days when, torn with grief she could not even eat, and so became dehydrated and had to be rushed to hospital. Still affirming her faith in God and reiterating her thanks and gratitude for keeping her and her sons through the years, she affirmed: “It’s only God is keeping me. I talk to Him as a person, saying ‘God, I look to you for guidance, for all of my needs and you can’t let me down.’ I stand strong in Him and He has never let me down.” As an income generating project, she’s into the business of poultry rearing and also has a part-time job. On the morning of the Lusignan massacre, five homes were taken by storm, as marauding gunmen, while residents were yet asleep, kicked down doors and opened fire on the hapless residents, many of whom were children. Some were shot in their beds, one man was at his altar praying, while others still, took refuge under beds, but were dragged out and shot in cold blood. Those slain in the massacre were: Clarence Thomas, 49, a diver; his 12-year-old daughter, Vanessa Thomas and 11-yearold son, Ron Thomas, while two others from that household were wounded: Another son, Howard and the youngest sibling, Roberto 5, both with serious life-threatening injuries. They both remained in the Georgetown Public Hospital for three months. Roberto spent most of his time in the intensive Care Unit while How-

ard was warded at the High Dependency Unit. Next door to the Thomas’ family, killed were: Mohandai Gourdai, 32 and her two sons – Seegopaul Harilall 10, and Seegobind Harilall 4. The lone survivor was 11-year-old Arjune Bhim who was spending the night with his aunt. From the Mohammed’s home across the street, 22-year-old Shazam Mohamed was gunned down as he sought shelter in his kitchen. Nazir, the patriarch of the family was shot in both legs and remained warded at the GPHC for several weeks. Neighbours, Seecharraan Rooplal, 56; his wife Dhanrajie Ramsingh 52 and daughter Raywattie Ramsingh 11, were all shot dead. Meanwhile, another neighbour, Shaleem Baksh, 55, was shot in the head and killed. After several days of mourning, the dead were buried following mass funerals at the Lusignan car tarmac, attended by thousands. In the ensuing years, there have been calls for healing. At a commemorative ceremony staged by the Indian Arrival Committee on the last Saturday of January 2010, Minister of Housing, Irfaan Ali told the gathering: “All Guyana is standing hand in hand in strengthening a circle of solidarity with those who lost loved ones to such tragic circumstances, including members of Guyana’s security forces, who have, themselves, been under siege by the terrorists in the land.” “He stressed that the process of healing is important, but healing, adding that “We are One People; One Nation, with One Destiny. This is what reinforces the strength and spirit of the Guyanese people,” he said, but noted that as Guyanese, we sometimes take the essence of our motto very lightly.

17

Parika business people say bold police display of favouritism hampering business --but police refute claims of bias in discharge of their duties

By Alex Wayne

Consequently, rabid lawlessness and gross disorder obtains in the Hydronie/Parika community. Vendors operating in close proximity to the Parika Police Station also attested to these claims, confirming that they suffer the same treatment at the hands of the Parika police. The vendors claimed that while some police officers

to the police about being disturbed by their ‘loud music’, SEVERAL business persons and they would be summoned in the Hydronie/Parika area to the station to be charged and of the East Bank Essequibo placed before the courts, withare lamenting what they perout the police coming in person ceive as “naked favouritism” to verify the complaint made being displayed by officers against them. and ranks of the Parika Police They said that the police Station, whom they claim tarat Parika have, on several ocget some business people for casions, prevented them from hosting family-oriented entertainment ventures, simply because the said neighbour continues to pen horrid letters to the NDC painting an unpleasant picture of their activities, when the converse situation is what really obtains on their premises. Consequently, they lose a considerable volume of business, since they are not allowed to entertain customers with music, despite investing millions of dollars to create the sports bar. They showed this The A. Nazier & Son’s Sports Bar is void of activity allegedly because of its being a constant target of publication a small household-type stereo which they the police at Parika claim is what they use to continue to harass vendors for provide the sports bar with allegedly disturbing the peace, trading on the shoulders of music; and in a walk through while others are allowed to the road, those vendors who the area, this publication was blare music to forbidden deci- are prepared to be ‘friendly’ able to observe several roadbel levels and indulge in all with the police and give them side businesses blasting music forms of lawlessness. ‘donations’ are allowed to sell to forbidden decibel levels in On request yesterday, this in whatever manner suits their alarming proximity to the police publication visited the Hy- fancy. station. dronie/Parika area and met Operators of the elegant Parika/Hydronie business with several roadside business A. Nazier and Sons Sports persons are calling on police persons, who all opined that the Bar seemed to be sharing the officers to act fairly in their Parika police practise favourit- worst fate, since from all that dealings, and to be neutral in ism in dealing with matters of was reported they seemed to executing their duties. the public interest. be the constant target of the When the Parika Police Businessman Safraz Alli Parika police. This business Station was contacted yesterdisclosed that some police offi- family revealed that while they day, a male rank there refuted cers collude with several busi- would normally play music at a the allegations levelled and deness persons for favours grant- moderate level for the listening clared that the business people ed, and, consequently, cannot pleasure of their customers, were all just out to make trouintervene and represent the law someone they deemed a very ble for the police, but several when their business friends’ malicious and envious neigh- residents affirmed the claims operations get out of control. bour would regularly complain of the business persons.


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SUNDAY CHRONICLE January 26, 2014

Chronicle Weekend Round Up January 20 – 25, 2014

Monday 20th

Fire guts Fullworks Auto Spares building

***FIRE of unknown origin gutted Fullworks Auto Spares building on Regent Street, Bourda. The building situated east of Golyn & Sons, and two lots away from Safeway Security on Regent and Oronoque Streets, housed a Chinese clothing store. Fortunately, the caretaker of a wooden house behind the store, Rusdale Farley, 38, was rescued by firemen who broke down the door and whisked her away to safety, before it was badly scorched by the fire. Meanwhile, owner of the virtually destroyed building, Roshan Ali, told reporters he was not immediately certain what might have caused the blaze.

GDF promotes 88 officers, 260 other ranks

***EIGHTY-eight officers and 260 other ranks of the Guyana Defence Force (GDF) have been promoted effective January 1, 2014, according to an announcement from the Guyana Defence Force (GDF). The said declaration informs, also, that in accordance with the Defence Act, Chapter 15:01 of 1977, Chief-of-Staff Brigadier Mark Phillips has announced that the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces, President Donald Ramotar, has approved the 42 officers and 96 other ranks being confirmed in their positions, while 46 other officers and 164 other ranks have been elevated in rank.

Frustrated lawyer accuses authorities of protecting ASL boss

***Lawyer Gino Persaud charged on Friday that the authorities, including the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP), have been “protecting” ASL (Air Services Limited) boss Ahamad Mazahar Ally from the inception, of him, being charged with five offences. Ally, of Lot 64 New Haven, Bel Air, Georgetown, had pleaded not guilty to the five charges, namely: Insulting language, assault (two counts), threatening behaviour, and calling a person a name other than his own. Persaud told the court that the authorities, including the DPP, were written to on the matter, but he never received a response from anyone. This case has been adjourned to May 6.

Aircraft spotted 2.6 miles from takeoff point

***THE Guyana Civil Aviation Authority (GCAA) and the Guyana Defence Force (GDF) has been able to locate the exact area where a Trans Guyana Airways 700 Cessna Caravan 8r-GHS went down along with its pilot Blake Slater and cargo loader Dwayne Jacobs, on January 18 last. GDF Special Forces were moved into the general area and were cutting their way through to reach the location where the wreck is lying after being spotted from the air by the GDF 2 Chopper. However, despite sighting the craft it was difficult to get into the location so the Special Forces were transported to a proper point of discharge from where they began making their way on foot to the area.

Tuesday 21st

Passenger attempts to carry cocaine to US in Kerrygold milk powder packets

***JERMAINE Lowe, 24, a U.S-bound passenger, was busted with 15.308 kilogrammes of cocaine concealed in Kerrygold milk powder packets at the Cheddi Jagan International Airport. He appeared before Chief Magistrate Priya Sewnarine-Beharry and pleaded not guilty to the charge, but was remanded to prison until January 28, when he would answer to the charge at the Providence Magistrate’s Court.

President Ramotar commissions new $50M Ptolemy Reid Rehab Centre

***THE new $50M school building of the Ptolemy Reid Rehabilitation Centre at 131-132 Carmichael Street, Georgetown was commissioned by President Donald Ramotar with the authorities promising to continue looking after those who suffer with disabilities. The services of the centre currently include providing dormitory, day care, audiology, special education, vocational training, occupational speech, and physiotherapy, besides orthotic and prosthetic appliances.

Body of missing man found during trench excavation THE decomposed body of a man who was reported missing

since Old Year’s Day was discovered in a weed-infested trench at Anna Regina Saturday morning. According to reports, the body was found while an excavator operator was clearing weeds from a drainage trench. A sister of the missing man identified his body at the scene. She said that her 49-year-old brother, Jaglall, was the father of two children and lived at Bush Lot Village behind the Anna Regina Multilateral School.

Three-yr-old child killed after truck ran over him ***A three-year-old child, Josiah Persaud, was killed on a street

in the Charity Housing scheme after he was ran over by a truck. Reports said the child ran out from his parents’ yard onto the street and into the path of the moving truck. The child was immediately picked up by his father, Bobby, and rushed to the Charity hospital where he was pronounced dead on arrival.

Wednesday 22nd

Reunion moving to develop a plant in Trinidad ***REUNION Gold Corporation, the mineral exploration

company engaged in the exploration and development of the Matthews Ridge manganese project, announced that it is seeking to develop a silico-manganese plant in Trinidad and Tobago to process manganese ore produced at Matthews Ridge. Historical records have disclosed that in the 1960s ore produced by the African Manganese Company at Matthews Ridge was taken to Trinidad, stockpiled there and then the raw ore was taken by ocean-going vessels to processing destinations in North America and Europe. Reunion Gold Corporation said it has signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the National Energy Corporation of Trinidad and Tobago Ltd, setting out the terms under which the parties will collaborate to evaluate the potential development by Reunion of a silico-manganese plant in Trinidad and Tobago.

Three rescued as trawler sinks in the Atlantic

***A trawler travelling from Georgetown to the North West District, Region 1, sank in rough seas some miles off the Pomeroon River mouth in the Atlantic Ocean last Sunday. According to reports, three men on the trawler were rescued by fishermen of Better Success and Westbury after drifting on a truck tyre for several hours in the murky waters of the Atlantic Ocean. They were brought to shore and are thanking God for being alive and for being spared a watery grave. Reports said the trawler was transporting a cargo of oil, lubricants and children’s clothing when it sank in rough seas.

Guyana, Haiti to lead economic growth in LatAm, Caribbean in 2014 ***AS happened last year, the United Nations’ annual World

Economic Situation and Prospects (WESP) Report 2014, has projected that Guyana and Haiti will take the lead in economic growth for Latin America and the Caribbean. Both countries are projected to grow by 4.5 per cent this year. According to the report, Guyana’s economy grew by 4.6 per cent in 2013, while Haiti’s was pegged at 3.5 per cent. Guyana has experienced seven years of consecutive economic growth.

60 months imprisonment for causing death

***LERON Griffith, 25, of Lot 809 Festival City, North Ruimveldt, Georgetown, was sentenced to 60 months imprisonment for causing death by dangerous driving. The penalty was inflicted on him for having on Friday, May 31, 2013, at Mandela Avenue, also in the city, driven motorcar HC 2408 in a dangerous manner, causing the demise of Chinese national Feng Xue Fang.

with Telesha Ramnarine

Thursday 23rd

Former beauty queen remanded on same murder charge

***FORMER beauty queen Carol Ann Lynch, accused of killing her husband Farouk Razack on May 7, 2007, faced the charge, again, in court. Particulars of the capital offence said it was committed at Lot 106 Ireng Place, Bel Air Park, Georgetown, where then Swiss House Cambio managing director was found dead. Lynch had been previously charged for the same crime and the case was dismissed by then Magistrate Gordon Gilhuys on the basis of insufficient evidence.

Copa Airlines to fly Panama-Guyana route from July

***PANAMA-based Copa Airlines has announced the commencement of their service to Guyana starting in July this year. The Guyana route will begin operations with flights twice weekly, on Tuesdays and Fridays, to Panama City, Panama, and passengers would have the leisure of booking connecting flights to a number of other destinations such as Montreal, Canada, Fort Lauderdale, Florida and New York. Copa Airlines serve at present 68 destinations in some 30 countries with over 300 scheduled daily flights in North, South and Central America and the Caribbean. It is recognised for its leadership in international connectivity, punctuality, quality of service and for having one of the most modern fleets in the industry. Copa Airlines was founded in 1947 as the national airline of Panama and is a subsidiary of Copa Holdings, S.A. as well as a member of the Star Alliance.

Suddie Hospital now boasts spanking new ambulance ***THE Government, through the Ministry of Health and the

Region 2 Administration, handed over a brand new ambulance to the Suddie Hospital to help with the delivery of healthcare services to the region. At the handing over ceremony, which was held in the Regional Office compound at Suddie, Regional Chairman, Mr. Parmanand Persaud said the ambulance, which cost a whopping $11M, is testimony of the government’s massive investment in the healthcare sector, as well as its commitment to providing efficient and proper healthcare to the citizens of the Cinderella County.

Nothing new in Sheema Mangar murder probe: – Crime Chief

***NOTHING new has surfaced, to date, since the November 26, 2013 disclosure, by Crime Chief Seelall Persaud, that the Guyana Police Force (GPF) was in receipt of the results of a DNA sample, sent to Barbados for testing, earlier in that year, to aid in the murder probe of bank employee, Sheema Mangar. The Deputy Commissioner (Law Enforcement) said, following the negative match, they do not have any suspect but, once new information is received, the investigations will continue. For now though, the probe has been temporarily suspended but they are in talks with Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) Shalimar Ali-Hack on a way forward. After the killing of the former Demerara Bank staffer, on September 10, 2010, potential evidence was dispatched overseas to be tested. Mangar was at North Road and Camp Street, in Georgetown, awaiting transportation when her Blackberry cell phone was snatched from her. The 21-year-old woman gave chase after the snatcher who entered a motor car that drove off and she placed herself in front of the vehicle, in an effort to stop it but was run over and dragged several feet before it sped away.

Friday 24th

Ganga Persaud resigns as Local Gov’t Minister

***JUST over two years since his appointment as Minister of Local Government and Regional Development by President Donald Ramotar, on December 5, 2011, Mr Ganga Persaud has announced his resignation. In a press statement, Minister Persaud cited personal reasons as the motivation behind the unexpected move. “My resignation as Minister of Local Government and Regional Development is based on personal issues presently engaging my attention as well as some additional responsibilities to which I am committed,” he said.

See page 19


SUNDAY CHRONICLE January 26, 2014

Chronicle Weekend Round Up Friday 24th continued

11-yr-old student stabs classmate in eye ***ELEVEN-year-old Ishmael Pollard, a student of St. George’s

Secondary School on Church Street, Georgetown, was stabbed in the left eye with a pointed object by another male. The pointed object penetrated deeply into the eye, causing the wound to bleed considerably. “His eye was very, very red, and there was blood on his shirt. He was rushed to the St. Joseph’s Mercy Hospital, where his mother works as a nurse,” his father, Wilfred Pollard, told the Guyana Chronicle. The aggressor was taken home from school by his father, who informed the police that it was a case of self-defence. After initial treatment, Ishmael was discharged from hospital, but his parents have been advised to return him immediately in the event of an emergency.

Teenager refused bail on illegal gun, ammunition charges

***EIGHTEEN-YEAR-OLD Alex Mendonca, a vendor of Lot 135 Vlissengen Road, West Ruimveldt, Georgetown, was refused bail in court on charges of unlawful possession of firearm and ammunition. He pleaded not guilty to both allegations which said, on January 21, at West Ruimveldt, he had one .32 Taurus pistol and 26 live rounds of matching ammunition, without being the holder of a firearm licence. The cases will be called again on January 27.

Driver in recent ‘father-and-son’ accident remanded to prison

***ESSEQUIBO Magistrate, Mr. Sunil Scarce remanded Deyal Singh to prison when he appeared before him at the Anna Regina Court to answer to a charge of ‘Causing Death by Dangerous Driving’ on two counts. According to a Police report, on January 17, Singh, of Perserverance Village, on the Essequibo Coast, drove in a dangerous manner to the public, killing Mumtaz Baksh, 72, and his son, Rafmat Baksh, 44 on the Land of Plenty Public Road. Singh is due to return to Court on February 19.

Saturday 25th

Young mother and newborn baby die within hours of each other at GPHC

***A PERSEVERANCE, Essequibo Coast family is mourning the death of their 24-year-old daughter, Jaiwanti Chanderpaul and her newborn, a mere 12 hours apart. The baby was born on Wednesday morning and died on Wednesday night, while the mother died at approximately midday on Thursday, without ever knowing that her child had died, according to Jaiwanti’s bereaved relatives. Delivery was allegedly induced on the woman, who was 26 weeks pregnant, in order to save both her life and the life of her baby, since she was having gynaecological complications; and she allegedly gave birth by caesarian section. The surgery was successful, relatives recall,

19

with Telesha Ramnarine

adding that Jaiwanti had witnessed her baby in good health, and had communicated with her mother, Jenny Chanderpaul, who was at her bedside. Mysteriously, by Wednesday night, a few hours after delivery, the newborn had passed away; and within hours of that grave misfortune, Jaiwanti had also succumbed. Relatives are hoping that post-mortem examinations would reveal the cause(s) of their deaths.

PPP sees call for shut down of Linden as an attempt to wreak havoc

***The People’s Progressive Party took note of efforts by the Opposition to instigate a “shut down” of Linden through a protest yesterday. The PPP believes such a call by the Opposition, through its henchman Sharma Solomon, is nothing short of an attempt to wreak havoc, sow seeds of discord and promote an economic sabotage of the people of Linden, and should be condemned by Lindeners, and more so all Guyanese, forthwith.

10-year old charged with robbery under arms

***A TEN-YEAR-OLD boy, along with an adult, pleaded not guilty to a robbery under arms charge before Magistrate Sherdel Marcus- Issacs at the New Amsterdam Court. The minor, a Grade Five student, along with Hubert Elgin, known as ‘Squeeks’, a construction worker of 19 Vryman’s Erven , in New Amsterdam , is alleged to have been armed with a broken glass bottle when they allegedly robbed Coretta Lewis . The virtual complainant was walking along Main Street, in the New Amsterdam Township, when the duo allegedly snatched her handbag containing a blackberry cellular phone, a silver chain, and $98,000 cash on October 25, 2013. The minor was initially remanded to the Juvenile Centre, after the virtual complainant reported that she was receiving threats. But he was subsequently released in the custody of his mother, who was ordered to post $20,000 bail for him. Elgin was granted $100,000 bail. They are expected to return to Court on February 10.

Teenagers busted with grenades, rifle and ammunition remanded

***THE two teenagers found with grenades, a rifle and ammunition earlier this week, were remanded to prison. Kevin George, 18, of Lot 21 Costello Housing Scheme and Samuel Johnson, 17, of Lot 158 Curtis Street, Albouystown, also in Georgetown, both pleaded not guilty to three charges. One charge said, on Wednesday, January 22, at South Ruimveldt, without lawful authority or reasonable cause, they had one special concussion and one fragmentation grenade in their possession. Two other charges said they also had one M16 rifle and sixty-one .223 ammunition in their possession when they were not holders of firearm licences. The case was adjourned to February 11.

For Sunday, January 26, 2014 - 13:00hrs For Monday, January 27, 2014 - 14:00hrs For Tuesday, January 28, 2014 - 14:30hrs


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RENTAL / HIRE RENTAL HIRE

CAR RENTAL

Inn Apartments and Car Rental. Premio, Vitz. Eccles New Scheme. Tel. 6797139 , 639-4452

COUNSELLING

 you cursed, depressed, demon-possessed or need finance? Call Apostle Randolph Williams - (592) 2616050 20:00hrs to 23:00hrs.

EDUCATIONAL



 any language fast. Tel. 662-0001.  Classes Contact 622-7522, 690-4708.

  Academic Excellent (IAE) Register for Forms 1 - 5, CXC Repeaters, Lessons, morning and evening classes for adults, Mathematics, English A, Science and Business. Flexible time table. 683-5742, 223-0604 or visit us at 194 Camp Street (Behind Ultra Waters.).

LEARN TO DRIVE LEARN TO DRIVE   School 22 Nabaclis Public Road. Tel 650-4291, 652-6993.

 Driving School, 2 Croal Street: Enjoy 20% discount, you could also obtain an International Driver's Permit covering over 123 countries. Call 227-3835, 2273869, 227-7560, 622-8162.  Institute of Motoring Learn to drive at an affordable cost. Professional, Courteous and Patient Driving Instructor. For more details contact Annmarie/Vanessa at 172 Light and Charlotte Streets, Bourda. Te# 227-5072, 226-7541, 2 2 6 - 0 1 6 8 . www.rksinstituteofmotering.webs.com FITNESS

HEALTH/FITNESS

 para brasileiros English for Brazilian and foreigners, private tutoring. Tel. 667-3829.  a certificate in Cosmetology. Wig designs or Nails alone, beginning February, limited spaces available. Call 666-5241, 619-7603.  Royal School of Beauty: Be on the cutting edge of beauty care. Learn relaxing, cutting, skin care, nail technology and much more. Enrol today with Pamela Dillon 231-8148, 665-4565. Ask about our easy payment plan.  College Forms 1-5 CXC Adult classes, morning and evening CXC classes, $1500 a subject. All Science and Business subjects, Maths classes for slow learners, trained qualified teacher. Call 231-5678, 690-5008.    courses in sewing, cushions, curtains, decorative doll, floral arrangement, cake decoration, cake and pastry, Spanish, registration begin on the 27th January 2014. Call 226-5577 For more information.

SERVICES

repair AC units, refrigerators, washing machines, gas stoves, freezers, microwaves, etc. 683-1312, 627-3206 (Nick)..

 installation, cutting, polishing and profiling to all your granite counter tops also building of cupboards and closets. Contact Rawle 611-7031, 667-7963.

   R E PA I R S , D V D , m i c r o w a v e , a m p l i f i e r, s t e r e o , washing machine, etc. 693-2683.  Construction: We can construct, build, repair. Estimates are free. Contact 592-6541997, 665-7946.   .: We construct, whatever you desire, your dream homes. Estimates are free. Contact Mark 592-689-6033.

 or gain weight, fat reduction power, protein powder. Call 660-2686, 625-7073.

PAWNSHOP



 Jewellery and Pawn Shop, Lot 1 Durban Street Werk-en-Rust between Camp and George Streets. Tel: 223-6331, 227-2307.

 Construction Co.: We build for you, repair, construct anything. Estimates are free. Contact Dexter 602-8657.  your home or business spiritually clean to enhance good luck and prosperity. Tel. 6875653.

SERVICES

  

 professional Visa and Passpor,t applications, K&P Project Management Co. Tel. 231-5876.  out of U.S. Visa applications, $2 000 per application. Call 689-9222.

-made computer systems, parts, accessories, repairs, installation of operating systems. Contact Basil 6663873.

NOTICE

 your payroll, NIS reports and PAYE reports. Call 673-7572 for more information.  Construction and Rental Service excav a t o r, b o b c a t , t r u c k , t o o l s . Te l . 6015024, 227-4536.

FOR all your computer repairs and needs upgrades, PC games, etc. Unlocking disabled Iphones, Ipods. Tel. 685-5633, 622-1659.  Chowkai Construction: Building of homes, building, renovations, carpentry, masonry, tiling, plumbing, lacquering, painting. Call 682-4533

 reading, other works done. For fast results - reuniting lovers, removing evil and all blockages, etc. Call 696-8873, 673-1166.  work done in Suriname. Love, marriage, sickness, pregnancy, removes evil, prosperity, business. Readings. Call 674-8603, 597-851-9876. works done to bring peace, finance, success, enhance prosperity, remove evil, blockage, reunite families, lovers, etc. 610-7234, 644-0058.  spiritual help in removing evil spirit, bad luck, evil sickness, spells, reuniting lovers, bringing prosperity to business, etc. Tel: 612-6417, 220-0708, .687-5653.

and Services: We fix all desktops, laptops and tablets. We sell laptop screen as cheap as $16 000. Set up office and business networks and internet café. Quality, reliable and affordable service, trained technician, The PC doctor 696-2602, Get 20% off for December.

to work on truck, lorry and van drivers. 226-5473.

PEN PAL

 in the vicinity of Hadfield and Smyth Streets, one brown mixed Tibetan dog. Answers to the name SIMBA. Please contact 225-0198, 225-7552, 6247686. A reward is offered.

SPIRITUALITY



 guard at Sunset View Hotel, David St , Kitty. Tel. 223-6416.

  Barbecue, creole foods, at night from 17:00hrs to 03:00hrs. Call to order. Reasonable prices at Creen House - 2274792, 656-9894.

 spouse, polygraph testing, background checks, locating missing persons, bodyguard service , p r i vate + criminal investig a tion, any other (Worldwide). Contact St r a t e gic Advisory Services. Tel. 592-6513508, 592-668-9532 Email: sasmi5@hotmail.com M e m b e r of National Association of Investigative Speciali s t s ( U S A ) (All assignments treated as top secret

                                                      

     Save your life or prevent injury!, Save your vehicle from being hijacked!, Save your valuables from being robbed!, Know where your vehicle is 24/7!, Kill the engine by the owner or controller!, Get/send panic button sms messages if held up!, Know if vehicle is out of route sms messages sent, Personal Tracker available!, Personal Tracker can transfer from vehicle to vehicle by self. Personal Tracker can transfer person to person, Both Systems full mapping, Record kept for months of all movements, etc, etc. Comprehensive Insurance Discounts. RK's: 172 Light and Charlotte Streets, Bourda. Tel: 22-67521; 22-60168 (Ask for Dr. Net).

 services: Computers, TV, stereo, stoves, washing machine, and fridges. 699-6307.

LOST

 is hereby given that MIN GHUI SU of 14 Bel Air Promenade, Prashad Nagar, is applying to the Minister of Naturalisation and that any person who knows any reason why Naturalisation should not be granted should send a written and signed statement of the facts to the Permanent Secretary Ministry of Home Affairs, Georgetown, Guyana.

 do TAXES, VAT/Income/ company/property/personal, payroll NIS/PAYE. Financial Statements, bank proposals (for loans, etc), HR Consultation. Contact us at Tel. 613-5334, Email ac_solution2011@yahoo.com

  Assoc i a t e s Financial Services Chartered Accountants Services: Taxation, Consultancy, Accounting, Income tax, Vehicle and Building Compliances. Office located at 190 Church Street, South Cummingsburg, Georgetown. Tel. 223-2105, 662-7467, or Email at joeastman2001@yahoo.com

 Call and make an appointment, office No. 231-3327, 660-1611, 687-3147, 696-9289 Miss Fala Khan Nazir, 48 Sheriff & Duncan Streets - spots, pimples, poor circulation, control diabetes, loss, gain or maintain weight, bad memory, arthritis. LOST

 Pressure washing: you won't believe the difference Call Kevin Blyden 592-696-5424 We clean homes, driveways, decks, gutters, parking lots, businesses, equipment, machinery, cars and anything else with dirt and grime.

 Visa Service. Professional Visa applications to the US and Canada. Fees USA VISA $3000, Canada $4000, Plaza Computer Service, 245 Sheriff Street, C/ville.   . Open Monday to Sunday 09:00hrs 21:00hrs

 canter services, available on a contractual or occasional basis. Contact 6238852, 668-2750.  an event? Call Travellers Sound C o m pany, thirty years in the business. Indian wedding, religious function, barbecue, conference, concerts (all levels). We do stage lighting , d i s c o l i g h t i n g , p a r t i e s , g e n e r a t o r s f rom 5 KVA to 400 KVA, PA s y s t e m , a l l t y p e s . Te l . 2 2 6 - 6 5 2 7 , 6 0 0 7242, 600-3122, 6237242, 623-3122, Leonard or Steven, based at Club Mon a c o.

PRIVATE INVESTIGATION PI

 station to rent. Must have clients $6 000 per week. Call 645-9266.

 and Sons Driving School. Learn to drive the right way. First Federation Building. 622-2872, 644-5166, 689-599, 615-0964.

: Dressmaking classes done on East Coast Demerara. Call 226-9798.

SERVICES

 equipped kitchen at Julian's Restaurant and bar $ 3 5 0 0 0 w e e k l y. 6 3 8 - 4 5 0 5 , 225-4709.

CAR RENTAL



MASSAGE

MASSAGE

SUNDAY CHRONICLE GUYANA CHRONICLE, SUNDAY , JANUARY January 26, 2014 26, 2014

 male looking for a female from Guyana, Jamaica or USA. Tel. 668-5901.  you match: find lifelong partners, friends; confidential rules apply Tel. 592-223-8237, 592-648-6098 8:30 am - 5 pm daily; both phones same hours.  of worldwide pen friends. Information? Send stamped self-addressed envelope: EFI, PO Box 12154, Georgetown.  a Friend! Get educated! Get Married! Migrate!..through the CFI. Telephone Friendship Link. Call 592-261-5079, 6543670, 688-8293,2 6 1 - 6 8 3 3 twenty-four hours

VACANCY



 to work in store, between 18 and 25 years old. Send application to Riaz Computer Centre, 105 Regent Road, Bourda.

 Clerk: Must have 2 years experience and knowledge in PAYE, NIS and Payroll Preparation. 656-2350. , Kitchen Assistant. Must come in with a written application to Oasis Café, 125 Carmichael Street.  the following positions: Cashier, Waiter, Waitress, Bill Clerk and Kitchen Assistant. Send application to Kam Boat Restaurant, 51 Sheriff Street, Campbellville. Georgetown.  following Western Union CSR, Office Assistant, Cleaners, Cashiers. Survival Shopping Complex, 173 Sheriff Street, Georgetown. Tel. 227-5286-9. Cashier: Minimum 5 subjects including Maths and English. Apply within, with passport size photo, 79 Albert and Laluni Streets Georgetown, Nimbus Water Department  experienced female sales clerk to work at poultry outlet in Georgetown. Must know to write bills and read a kg scale. Age 25 and over. Contact 2260772, 225-9304.  General Store, 116 Regent Road Bourda. Tel. 226-3748, 223-5659 Sales Clerks experienced in hardware, plumbing and electrical, handyman to work in Eccles to care for dogs and plants. exists for the following positions at : Managers, waiters, waitresses, supervisors, cashiers, bartenders, cleaners, hostesses, security personnel. Send applications to P.O. Box:101848


SUNDAY CHRONICLE January 26, 2014

GUYANA CHRONICLE, SUNDAY , JANUARY 26, 2014 VACANCY

VACANCY

           cooks, kitchen assistants and attractive waitresses, between the ages of 17 and 27 to work in the Kitty area. Interested Personnel, please contact 227-5857,6108269 as soon as possible.

 exists for the following:- (1) One (1) Senior Internal Auditor: Ambitious female to work in Finance D e p a r t m e n t . Requirements: Certified Account Technician (CAT) level 2 or AAT - level 2. Four CXC subjects or equivalent including Mathematics, English and Principles of Accounts. Must be pleasant, disciplined and of stable personality. Experience would be an asset (30 to 50yrs preferably) (2) One Junior Accounts Clerk to work in the Finance Department. Apply in Person t o : - M r. L a t c h m i n K h a n / R a j d a i R a g h u b e e r ( Va s h t i ) RK's Security Services 172 Light & Charlotte Streets, B o u r da

 and    for Regent and Mon Repos locations. Requirements - 2 passport size photos, written application, 2 recommendations, CXC Maths and English. Age 20-30 years. Apply to  , 120 Regent St, Bourda. Tel. 645-4900, 226-3950, 698-0000.  Managers. Apply in person at Friendly's Bar and Lounge Viewing Gallery, Cheddi Jagan International Airport Timehri. Tel. 623-5011.  Operator for interior location. Must be experienced in grading with Backblade. Beginners need not apply. Call 618-2020.  exist for Apprentice Safe & Vault Technician. Email CV to vacancy@giotechco.com or deliver to 'Giotech' at 64C Middle Street, Georgetown.  Attendant. Apply with written application to German's Restaurant, Lot 8 New Market Street, North Cummingsburg, Georgetown. Starting salary $12 000. Tel. 227-0079.  Counter Clerk must be 18 and over must have a secondary education and must be able to work shift. Apply in person to Bish and Son's Trading Co. ltd, 159 Barr St., Kitty. Walk with application and CV. Tel. 226-0996. Clerk, 5 subjects CXC including Maths and English. Must be computer literate, Working knowledge of "Dac Easy', Experience would be an asset. 136 Sheriff Street, Tel. 227-2486.  exist at Survival Shopping Complex 173 Sheriff Street for drivers, evening cashiers, porters, bond attendants. Persons must send in an application along with a passportsize photograph. For more information, contact 592-227-5288/89.  exists at Survival Shopping Complex 173 Sheriff Street for one IT Technician qualified in SQL Server Maintenance. Persons must send in an application, CV and passport-size photograph. For more information, contact 592-2275288/89. ,/Computer Operat o r. M u s t h a v e E n g l i s h a n d Maths (CSEC) and proficiency in Microsoft packages (Word, Excel, Publisher and Power Point) and demonstrate basic competency in Corel Graphics, age 2035 years. Apply FCE Systems, 1010 Hadfield Street Georgetown. Tel. 227-3989, 227-8615 Email fce_sys@hotmail.com  16-24 years to work in retail store. Small and friendly work environment, located in Georgetown, great hours, paid time-off, NIS and $40 000 monthly. Should have at least a sound secondary education. Mail CV to P.O. Box 101491.  you enjoy taking things apart and putting them back together? Then join our friendly team. No experience required. Great hours, paid time-off, NIS and $40 000 monthly. Should have at least a sound secondary education. Mail CV to P.O. Box 101491. Inspectors. To inspect Security Officers on locations and respond. Persons with scooters, motor cycles and bicycles are welcome to apply. Persons with motor cycle's license can also apply to use RK's Moto Cycles and Three Wheelers. Excellent Salary, travelling allowances and benefits. Send Application to RK's Security Services, 172 Light and Charlotte Street, Bourda. Telephone # 227-5072/ 226-7541

LAND FOR SALE

LAND FOR SALE

Y with 45 cows, horse, house and generator. 

 RD- WORTHMAN-VILLE- triple lot suitable for business, bond, etc. Price reduce to $35 million. Contact Royal Real Estate 225-7276, 6657400, 685-7887, 643-6353.

Street by Monument, overlooking the DUban Park, 40x80, with 30 ft reserve at the back $18M. Da Silva Street 135x31 $17.5M. Mr Boodram 6923831, Mr Darindra 615-0069, 2252626, 226-1064, 227-6863, 2312064, 225-3068.

 lot in Dennis St, with driveway 20 feet $17M, Sec. 'M', 80 x 60, plus reserve for bond $19M, Da S i l v a S t 8 0 x 5 0 $13M, Kitty Railway Embankment 8 000 sq. f t $ 2 0 M , land has 20 ft driveways. V i c e Preside n t D r a n d i a 6 1 5 - 0 0 6 9 , V i c e P r e sident Alysious Pereira - 623-2591, Vice President Ramsayae 6180000, Vice President 225-2626, 2 2 6 - 1 0 6 4 , 667-7812.  Park double lot $19M, LBI large lot $14M, Happy Acres $14M, Republic Park $9M, and double $15M, Duncan Street 140 x 33 for 5-storey $34M neg, South Road between Camp And Wellington Streets 80x36 $38M, f o r 4 - s t o r e y, B r i c k d a m l a n d 70x40 $60M, Charlotte Street east of Citizens Bank $46M, Section 'M' Campbellville 45x80 plus reserve $15M, Houston land $12M, Da Silva Street Kitty 140x33 $20M, Alberttown 120x30 $30M, Queenstown 8 000 sq. ft $50M, Mandela Avenue by Chinese Embassy 8000 sq. ft $58M, by Gymnasium 50x100 and reserve also with strong concrete structure $90M, D\Urban Street 120 x 100 $70M, Smyth Street 120 x 60 $75M, 1 ¼ acres Turkeyen for bond school or any other business $60M, East Ruimveldt land $7.5M, Bel Air Gardens 100x140 US$600 000, one house lot, Bank executive compound US$395 000. Phone Mr Pereira 227-6949, Mrs. Hercules 661-1952, MR. Darindra 615-0069, Mr Ramsahoye 225-2709, 2312064, 225-2626, 225-5198, 2253068, Mr Budram 692-3831, 226-1064, 227-6949, 669-3350.

  GATED COMPOUND: Versailles (behind Aracari), Republic Gardens Eccles, Diamond and Herstelling.     Coast Demerara Vryheid's Lust, one flat concrete, three bedrooms, overhead tank, fenced, etc in good condition $15M neg. Tel. 618-3635.

 ST NEWTOWN- Land for commercial building, bond, apartments, etc. Size 32x135. Price $34 million neg. Contact Royal Real Estate 225-7276, 665- 7400, 685-7887, 643-6353.

 $40M neg, Republic Park $40M, business concern $60M. Land in LBI $15M, 155.5 acres highway land $30M. Call 645-5938.

 STREET, FREEBURG - INVESTMENT corner lot . Size 11,000 sq ft. Price $77 million neg. Contact Royal Real Estate on 225-7276, 6657400, 685-7887, 643-6353.

TOURS

 land, Bartica, 6 acres. Call 231-8417, 687-8168. Street business $65M. Call Carol - 612-9785.  Acres (50 x 100) $15M, Houston (80x157) $18M. Call Carol - 612-9785.  Kara, Linden $32M neg. Contact 680-3771, 6947210.  in Linden $6.5M neg. Contact 680-3771, 6947210.  at Providence EBD behind National Stadium 55'x100'. Tel. 649-0707.  house lot at Mon Repos 5 minutes from the road Martyrsville. Price $2.8M neg. Tel. 629-5300.  with 2-storey column structure located at 3rd Bridge Grove Housing Scheme $5M neg. Tel. 600-2032.  income land located in Phase 3 La Parfaite Harmonie $2.5M neg, Size 53x100. Tel. 697-5378.   cultivated citrus, house, fish pond, storage, 2 acres cultivated, ACRE cultivated Parika. Contact 226-7968.  lot in St. John Street New Amsterdam, Berbice $20M neg. 333-3803, 698-2499. 100 x 50 only $14M, Call 231-2064, 225-2626, 227-6863, 615-0069, 627-0288, 226-1064. , Public Road WCD for mall, gas station or any franchise, etc. Call 223-9580, 6776363, 658-5730.  of land for sale located at Ocean View Drive, Ruimzeight Gardens WCD. Call 267-2348, 694-3896.  Street: Three-storey solid concrete building (business) US$800 000. Call Carol - 6129785.  corner lot at Garnett and Republic Streets Newtown, Georgetown. Dimension 50 ft x 30 ft. Tel. 601-6000.

 land is going to solve your business need, in Smyth close to Brickdam 120 x 60 the only land available for $55M neg All lands that would give you the same re t u r n o n y o u r i n vestment $95M, talking of 5storey complex. Phone Lady Boston 684-2244, Lady Racel Jones 688-3434 , Master Darindra 615-0069, 618-0000, 623-2591, 225-2626, 225-3068, 226-106 4 , E m a i l : tonyreidsrealty@hotmail.co m  Amsterdam riverside 112x114 (12 768 sq. ft) 98x48ft (4 704 sq. ft), factory building on 75x62 $60M neg, Soesdyke riverside, 160x300ft $35M neg, Mahaica Creek 100 acres arable land $35M, St. Eustacious Llama, Timehri 18.4 acres $30M, Diamond 50x100 $6M, land suitable for resort, retirement homes, 30 mins, outside city $8M per acre. Wills Realty 227-2612, 2231877, 627-8314, 655-0755 stanleywwills@gmail.com Like us on face book.

TOURS

LAND FOR SALE

21

LAND FOR SALE

 exist for Sales Clerk, B o n d C l e r k , A c counts Clerk, Pharmacist and cleaners at Roy's Pharmacy. Interested persons can send in applications along with Curriculum Vitae and one passport-size photograph to Roy's Pharmacy Stall #32-33 and 64-65 Bourda Market. Tel. 2260693, one cleaner call Samantha 223-6072.

Land For Sale

21

LAND FOR SALE

exists for an Office Assistant. Must have a valid Motor Cycle License. Age 20 and 30 years.Sound Primary Education. Apply in person with application and reference between the hours 10hrs. and 1600 hrs. Cell Phone Shack, 176 Middle Street.

 Masharamni Weekend Tour, shopping, sight-seeing etc Friday February 21 to February Monday 24, Call 644-0185, 6392663, 665-5171, 227-8290.

 area, incomplete concrete building $5.5M neg, Soesdyke area lands for sale $1.7M neg, $8M neg, Tel. 6183635.  in Queenstown 165 x 60 over $100M. Phone Vi c e P r e s i d e n t Alysious Pereira 623-2591, Vice President Darandia 615-0069, 6 1 8 - 0 0 0 0 , 2 2 5 - 2 6 26  plot of land on the East Bank of Demerara, suitable for housing development or agricultural purposes. Contact 6945998.  GARDENS/ REPUBLIC PARK E.B.D (Gated community) - Size 5000 sq ft. Price $13.5 million neg. Contact Royal Real Estate on 2257276, 665-7400, 685-7887, 643-6353.  $18M Kitty, 30x50 $ 1 3 M = K i t t y, 5 0 x 11 0 R o b b St r e e t $ 9 0 M . C o n t a c t M r. Pereira on 669-0943, 2312064, 623-2591, 227-6949 louiepereira14@yahoo.com    double lot Turkeyen just off Public Road perfect for mansion $65M neg. Contact Mr. Pereira on 669-0943, 231-2064, 623-2591, 227-6949 louiepereira14@yahoo.com  STREET- double lot prime business spot (Size 12,500 sq ft) Price USD$ 1.3 million neg. Contact Royal Real Estate on 225-7276, 665 -7400, 6857887, 643-6353.  GARDENS/ REPUBLIC PARK E.B.D (Gated community) - (Size 10,000 sq ft) Price $23 million neg. Contact Royal Real Estate on 225-7276, 6657400, 685-7887, 643-6353.  STREET NEWTOWN - Double lot. Price $21 million neg. Contact Royal Real Estate 225-7276, 6657400, 685-7887, 643-6353.  GARDENS E.C.D - Triple lot. Price $58 million neg. Contact Royal Real Estate 225-7276, 665-7400, 6857887, 643-6353.  two-storey concrete 5bedroom property, parking for 3 vehicles, in Georgetown $48M neg. Contact Mr Alexander Pereira 669-0943, 231-2064 or Mr Louie Pereira 623-2591.

  ST NEWTOWN Land with concrete fence. Size 31 X 135. Price 21.5 million neg. Contact Royal Real Estate on 2257276, 665-7400, 685-7887, 6436353.  STREET, NEWTOWN - corner lot suitable for apartment complex, store, bond, restaurant, etc. Price 35 million. Contact Royal Real Estate on 225-7276, 665-7400, 6857887, 643-6353.   Price 36 million. Contact Royal Real Estate on 2257276, 665-7400, 685-7887, 643-6353.  at 14 Kersaint Park, LBI, house lot 50x90 - $15M. Tel. 699-9201.  NEW SCHEME E.B.D - Price $7 million. Contact Royal Real Estate on 225-7276, 665-7400, 685-7887, 643-6353.  Kitty $25M neg, D\Urban Street, Wortmanville $15M neg., Parika $30M, 4 lots land at lake Contact 665-7946.  for bond, hotel, apartment complex, Blygezight 120 x 60 - $36M, neg, Austin St. 134 x 56 - $36M, Kitty 8 000 sq ft $22M, Phone Vice President 2252626, 618-0000, 225-2626, 6232591, 226-1064, 227-6863, 615-0069  land in Duncan St. for 4storey office complex, bond, school, apartment $35M. Phone 627-0288, Mr. Ramsayoe 618-0000, Mr Alysious Pereira 623-2591, Mr. Darindra 615-0069.   to Brickdam, $75M suitable for 5storey complex, hotel Mr Ramsohoye 618-0000, Mr Pereira 226-1064, Mr. Darindra 615-0069, 225-2626, 227-6863, 225-5198\  LOTS IN NEW HOUSING SCHEME, ELAINE VILLE 1,500 ACRES OF LAND IN BERBICE PLEASE CHECK WEBSITE FOR PHOTOS & PRICES CONTACT :223-8479, 647-3768. www.spaceseek.gy     land in Bel Air Village for hotel, bond, 5s t o r e y, s t u d e n ts ' d o r m $42M. Phone Vice President Patrick Pereira 669-3350, Vice President Ramsohoye 618-0000, 623-2591, 227-6863, 225-2626, 667-7812.

 wish to advertise all land was made by the creator for different purposes. Go as high as you can to enjoy economy of height. Earl's Court LBI double lot 120 x 90 - $17M, Happy Acres parallel to the Main Road 100 x 50 - $16M, for business or 4-storey apartment land for bonds on the East Coast $28M, Kitty 8 000 sq. ft $20M, Da Silva St 70 x 35 - $14M, 9 000 sq. ft on Main Road 500 yards south of Chinese Embassy, Turkeyen 1.4 acres $38M, Campbellville 80 x 60 with lots of reserve $16M, Republic Park $16M, C o n t i n e n t a l P a r k d o u b l e l ot $35M, Croal Street 75 x 50 - $32M, 3 lots at 'AA' Eccles with massive unfinished structure $98M, plus reserve. Friendship $3.5M, Pearl 5 acres for gated community $45M neg. Phone , 225-3068, 226-1064, 227-6863, 227-6964, 2252626.  businesses must think out of the box. They must adopt a new strategy. The Chinese are moving in so m e l o c a t i o n s t h a t l a n d for bond/factory is cheap, 20 000 sq ft land close to the Chinese embassy for bond. $58M, 8 000 s q . f t o n the main road close t o t h e C h i nese Embassy $54M for 4-storey fast food/supermarket 200car parking. 1½ acres of land in Turkeyen for hostel, school, university, bond, Buy now, be decisive. Present, you have a boss, now decide. Phone Mr. Danhandri 615-0065, Mr. Patrick Pereira 669-3350, Mr. Alysious Pereira 623-2591, 225-2709, 225-2626, 225-3068, 226-1064, 227-6863, 225-5198 Seven days of h o t m ail: tonyreidsrealty.com.  with 20ft driveway Dennis Street $17M, Sec. 'M' 90 x 50 plus reserve $17M, Kitty 8 000 sq. ft - $19M, one house in McDoom close to main road $9M. Phone Mr Darindra 615-0069, 618-0000 V i ce President Alysious Pereira 623-2591, 2276863, 226-1064, 225-2626.  to Country Real Estate, 264-0146, 264-0140, 2250854, 225-0843, 672-7390, 6020011: Tuschen 45 x 90 - $18M, $1.5M, $2.5M, Diamond $3.5M, $4.8M, $6.5M, $7.5M, Diamond Grove between 1st Bridge $3M, $4.5M, $5M, $5.5M, La Parfaite Harmonie $1M, $1.2M, $1.5M, $1.7M, $1.8M, Atlantic Ville $13M, neg, Mon Repos triple lot $17M neg, Enmore $25M, Eccles 50x100 - $19M, Highway land $3.5M, $6M, $12M, $2.5M, $35M, La Parfaite Harmonie $1.5M, $1.8M, $1.9M, $1.3M, Versailles $25M, $32M, $10M, $8.5M, Pouderoyen $4.5M, $5M, Tuschen flat house $9.5M, $27M, $28M, $24M neg. Parika.

 Values Realty! Property, Land and Rental Listings Land Friendship riverside (114x166) $6.8M, Diamond/ Grove New Scheme 2nd Bridge $80M, Grove 1st Bridge $6M, Essequibo Supenaam 25 acres $17M, Linden Highway 20 acres farming land $45M. Robb and King Street US$1.7M, Republic Gardens (50x100) $16M, Sherriff Street double lot US$1.5M, Quamina Street $45M, Bagotstown (Road to River) $35M, Soesdyke (50x400) $40M, La Parfaite Harmonie $3 - 5M, Shamrock Gardens main road ECD $50M, Coverden (Road to River 62x600) $40M, Diamond Land with foundation and columns $4.5M, Republic Garden 7 lots together $80M, Essequibo Supenaam land $25M, North Road and King Street US$1.6M, Diamond Main Road opposite Bank, commercial land US$1.4M, 13,300 sq. ft Tel: 2258101,/225-8103,/658-3928,/6863153.. to let

TO LET

 and apartments 621-5282.  for decent working person. Tel. 227-0485. -bedroom top flat in Kitty. Tel. 686-3072, 610-8627.  houses and apartments. Call 692-3831.  rooms, single person only. Tel. 229-6149. Gardens: 3-bedrooms apartment exclusive. 6139033.  4-bedroom upper flat in Albert Street. Contact 6149560, 226-6036.  for single, responsible, working female. Contact 618-3815. -bedroom unfurnished house in Bel Air Gardens. Call 644-2099.  room in (shared) apartment, preferably a working male. Serious enquiries only. 6910693.  2-bedroom apartment in Agriculture Road. Tel. 2207937, 625-5257.


22 22 TO LET  house in Enmore up and down $35 000 each monthly. Call 677-1495. -bedroom apartment at 88 Middle Road, La Penitence, $30 000. Tel. 615-6090. bedroom apartment at 27 Hugh Ghanie Park. Tel. 6742639. for couple or single persons in Georgetown. Tel. 226-5336, 692-6595.  and apartments from $75 000 up. Tel. 638-7232, 222-7986 Sandy.  place price $60 000, one fully secured ground floor. Tel. 642-0636.  space $50 000, internet café $50 000, boutique $60 000. Tel. 642-0636.  3-bedroom house at Fort Ordnance Canje, Berbice $25 000. 624-6170, 333-3866.  3-bedroom flat concrete house with concrete fence at La Parfaite Harmonie. Tel 231-0a821, 643-4740.  unfurnished executive apartment with parking. Contact Krishnadat Raghubir. Tel. 642-0636.  to buy in La Parfaite Harmonie. We pay cash. We pay all legal fees. We clean your land 675-7292, 218-5591. : Furnished twobedroom bottom flat US$40 daily. Long-term rates neg. Call 226-9798.   top flat apartment for short term rental with all amenities. Tel. 6095810.  3-bedroom apartment in Plaisance. Tel 6977014, 222-4071. Garfield. -BEDROOM unfurnished apartments in Eccles. Call 6899222.  bond with utilities, fully secured, located at Ketley Street. 643-3675 Desree.  building, fully furnished in Prashad Nagar US$900 per apartment. Tel. 6286069, 604-6520.  flat 3-bedroom with parking Shell Road and Lamaha Street, Kitty. $75 000 monthly. 677-2732  two bedroom apartment (top flat) indoor toilet and bath, situated at Craig East Bank Demerara. For info call 220-7505. ECCLES 3-bedroom semifurnished flat property $85 000.   227-1988, 623-6431, 647-0560, 270-4470.  property in Alberttown on the corner of Fourth and Light Streets. Interested persons, please call 617-8255.  place, suitable for spare parts, office or business purpose at Parika Public Road. Call 691-7122, ask for Christine. -bedroom apartment, inside toilet and bath at Campbellville. Decent working couple or female. Tel. 225-7611.  concrete bond 87'x32, lots of yard space suitable for CarMart, etc. Public Road McDoom 233-0570 (No agents.).  floor and second floor space on Duncan Street. 6218198.   2-bedroom unfurnished apartment at Cummings Street, Alberttown $60 000, $80 000. Call 6505354, 621-3094.  3-bedroom upper flat in Eccles, parking available, Price $100 000 monthly. Contact 639-2728.  Garden flat/ long, let preferred, centrally located, fully furnished, all amenities US$550 monthly. Call 6414664, 225-7211.

TO LET

TO LET

 3-bedroom fully furnished middle flat at 115 Thomas Street, Kitty long term or short term. Tel. 225-0071, 674-7420.

 fully furn i s h e d a p a r t m e n t , B e l A i r. Cable, internet, security gate. Contact 682-3733.

 bottom flat apartment at 541 Tenth Street Cummings Lodge Housing Scheme. Tel. 610-0987, 222-0444.

 flat new 3 bedroom concrete building, tank, parking, in Good Hope, Phase 3, $50M negotiable. Tel. 669-9103, 256-3921.

 to store goods at Newtown, Kitty. Can hold 3 - 40foot containers and 1 - 20-foot container. Tel. 222-3014, 673-6161.

 executive apartment with internet access, generator and parking. Contact Krishnadat Raghubir. Tel. 6420636.

  spaces at 26 Garnett Street and Delph Avenue. Tel. 687-0431, 658-7724, 225-7712.  concrete lower flat, fully grilled also one parking, in Kitty. Call between 10:00hrs and 16:30hrs. 6411852, 664-7945.  2-storey concrete, by itself, $140 000, executive house US$2500, office building 4-storey or independent flat. Contact 223-1440, 687-6647.  'CC'- 3 bedrooms unfurnished property - $100,000. Available 1st Feb : 227-1988/ 6236431/ 647-0560.

  (top flat) concrete house, very convenient, Anna Catherina, WCD, $35 000 per month. Call 678-3474, 698-4813. $65 000 - $120 000, East Coast $40 000, Campbellville $100 000, Robb Street US$1000, Bel Air US$1800, Atlantic Gardens US$900, Greenfield Park US$1250. Diana Tel. 227-2256, 626-9382. -BEDROOM bottom flat at 158 Da Silva Street, can be used living quarters, bond or business place. Contact Geeta 661-2082.  two-bedroom bottom flat, 319 East Street Georgetown. 225-0568, 611-7029, 225-5684 Richi or Ruth.

 2-bedroom apartment, 2 baths, parking, AC, secured, long term overseas visitors preferred. UG Road. Call 623-3404,

 residential property in Waterloo Street, near Lamaha Street, semi-furnished. US$850 per month. Phone 645-0133 during office hours.

 out Green House Apartments: Fully furnished, AC, TV, fridge etc. Daily/Monthly/ Hourly. Call 227-4792, 6569894.

-bedroom (apartment), fully tiled and furnished with AC, hot and cold internet, US$20 daily (No private calls). 231-6061, 621-1524.

 apartments (Vlissengen/D\Urban) unfurnished $40 000 - $60 000 monthly, furnished studio US$500 monthly full bathrooms, verandahs, parking, close to facilities and transportation. 6989086. -BEDROOM unfurnished bottom flat apartment at 94 Shell Road, Kitty, inside toilet & bath, no parking, fully grilled. Preferred working coupleTe l . 643-6552  two-storey building, 3 bedrooms, with all modern conveniences, furnished/unfurnished, Meadow Brook Gardens. Mr Narine. 696-8230.  apartment in Bent Street, Wortmanville, US$30 per day. Contact 2263309, 218-1033, 678-4267.  place" Furnished, suitable for restaurant in Albert St. Tel. 621-5282.  room and apartment $3 000, $4 000, $5 000, $6 000 daily. Call Julian - 638-4505, 225-4709.  8000 sq. ft modern warehouse facility in prime location, US$5000 per month. Interested person contact GIMPEX@GMAIL.COM  apartment fully furnished, hot and cold, AC, parking, located in Lamaha Springs. Tel. 692-2016.  to rent close to UG, shared accommodation call: 625- 8585 also to rent, one five bedroom house . -furnished 3-bedroom house in Atlantic Gardens, garage, fully secured, AC< hot and cold, etc. 657-1414, 697-9899. -BEDROOM fully furnished apartment fully secured, parking, AC, hot and cold, etc. in South Ruimveldt Park. 689-5877.  3-bedroom, 2-bathroom, semi-furnished house, located at Sec. 'K' Diamond. Price neg. Tel. 681-6066.  furnished self-contained apartment, fridge, bed, stove, etc - reasonable rate. Tel. 227-4422.  Main Road, 2 bedroom low apartment $65 000.  2271988, 23-6431, 647-0560.

 furnished 1- and 2-bedroom apartment with AC, internet, for long- and short-term, Utilities included. Contact 645-0787.  Street Alberttown bottom flat office US$500, First Street Alberttown 2-flat residence and office US$1500 neg. 647-5914, 699-7239.  WILLS STREET, Republic Park, fully AC, fully grilled, electronic security system, prepaid to July 2014, water filtration system, etc US$1200. Call 688-4321, 2162782.  prime three-storey commercial building with car park, located on North Road, between Oronoque and Albert Streets. Contact 626-6909, 642-7963, 669-0855. ,: Fully furnished 1- and 3-bedroom apartments, hot and cold, AC, parking, internet, etc. Suitable for overseas visitors, short term. 226-5137, 227-1843. - Bottom flat suitable for storage bond size (1160 sq ft). Price $100,000 neg. Contact Royal Real Estate 225-7276, 665-7400, 685-7887, 643-6353.  Nagar: Two-bedroom fully furnished apartment, with air conditioning and generator US$1000. Call Carol 612-9785.  STREET, KITTY space available on ground floor suitable for office, bond, internet café etc. Size 24 X 36. Price $120,000.00. Contact Royal Real Estate 225-7276, 665-7400, 6857887, 643-6353.  Gardens E.C.D semi furnished 4 bedroom house. Price USD $1400 neg. Contact Royal Real Estate 225-7276, 6657400, 685-7887, 643-6353.  office space. Threestorey building in excellent location in the city, each floor 2 000 sq. ft, adequate parking, lots of land. Price US$7500 neg. Call Carol Waltor - 612-9785.   apartments located in Campbellville, 2 modern apartments located at Campbellville, hot and cold water, etc, house located at Lamaha Gardens, hot and cold water etc. Call 219-4535.  3-bedroom furnished US$700, 2-bedroom furnished US$120, Prashad Nagar brand new, furnished US$800, 2-bedroom Campbellville $60 000. Tel. 611-7004, 680-2596.

GUYANA CHRONICLE, SUNDAY , JANUARY SUNDAY CHRONICLE January26, 26,2014 2014 TO LET

TO LET

  class, fully furnished four-bedroom apartment, complete with AC, DSL, hot and cold shower, etc. proximity to Georgetown. US1200 neg, Contact 226-1769, 629-4961, 6000282.

 STREET, ALBERTOWN - 3 storey concrete building. Suitable for school, embassy, office complex, call centre, medical complex etc. Price USD $6,000 neg. Contact Royal Real Estate 225-7276, 665-7400, 685-7887, 643-6353.

 GARDENS Fully furnished Executive 3 bedroom house. Price USD $1800. Contact Royal Real Estate 2257276, 665-7400, 685-7887, 6436353.

 STREET - brand new executive offices. Size per unit 1650 sq ft. Price USD $2200 neg. Contact Royal Real Estate 225-7276, 665-7400, 685-7887, 643-6353.

 new office buildings, prime locations in the city: 4storey US$6000, serious enquiries only. Contact Mr Pereira on 6690943, 231-2064, 623-2591 louiepereira14@yahoo.com

 AIR GARDENS - unfurnished 4 bedroom house can be used as office or residence. Price USD $1500 neg. Contact Royal Real Estate 225-7276, 665-7400, 685-7887, 643-6353.

- Unfurnished 3 bedroom top flat can be used as office as well. Price USD $1100. Contact Royal Real Estate 225-7276, 665-7400, 685-7887, 643-6353.

         GEORGETOWN - office space available suitable for consultants, accounting firm, lawyers etc. Price USD $900 neg. Contact Royal Real Estate 225-7276, 6657400, 685-7887, 643-6353.

 E.B.D - brand new executive 5 bedroom semi furnished house. Price $2900 USD neg. Contact Royal Real Estate 225-7276, 665-7400, 685-7887, 643-6353.  STREET SECTION K C/VILLE- unfurnished 3 bedroom house can be rented as office. Price $1700 USD neg. Contact Royal Real Estate on 225-7276, 665 7400, 685-7887, 643-6353.  new office building 5 storeys which include living quarters. Fantastic locations on Regent Street US$15000. Serious enquiries only. Contact Mr Pereira on 669-0943, 231-2064, 6 2 3 2 5 9 1 louiepereira14@yahoo.com  Bridge New Mall, business spots available US$150 - US$1000, Alberttown 6 office spaces $80 000, commercial building for rent US$2500 and above, executive homes for rent US$1500 and above. Tel. 2258101, 225-8103, 658-3928, 6863153.  close proximity to Sheriff Street - brand new 3 storey concrete building. Suitable for business, school, residence etc. Price USD $12,000. Contact Royal Real Estate 225-7276, 6657400, 685-7887, 643-6353. - 3 storey concrete building suitable for school. Building size 10,250 sq ft. price USD $4500 neg. Contact Royal Real Estate 2257276, 665-7400, 685-7887, 6436353.  - Semifurnished 3 bedroom house with office space on ground floor. Price USD $1600. Contact Royal Real Estate 225-7276, 665-7400, 6857887, 643-6353.  - furnished 2 bedroom executive top flat. Price USD $1250. Contact Royal Real Estate 225-7276, 665-7400, 685-7887, 6436353.  - bottom flat suitable for office/residence. Price USD $1200. Contact Royal Real Estate 225-7276, 665-7400, 6857887, 643-6353.  double-bedroom apartments in Subryanville, fully furnished, two ACs, mosquito meshed, fully grilled, parking, back up generator. Require overseas guests. Tel. 226-5369 Dudley.  3-bedroom house by itself $60 000, Kitty 3-bedroom upstairs $75 000, Section 'K' Campbellville 3-bedroom unfurnished US$600 neg, Kingston 3bedroom semi-furnished US$750. Call Raul 655-8361, 699-6811, Fabulous Homes Realty.  ST CHARLESTOWN - 3 storey concrete building for general store/ storage bond. Size 15225 Sq Ft. Price USD $10,000. Contact Royal Real Estate 225-7276, 6657400, 685-7887, 643-6353.

 AIR PARK - 5 bedroom executive house. Price USD $4500. Contact Royal Real Estate 225-7276, 665-7400, 6857887, 643-6353.  E.B.D - 4 bedroom semi furnished house. Price USD $1200. Contact Royal Real Estate 225-7276, 665-7400, 6857887, 643-6353.    -                   all self-contained house, fully furnished residential US$2500, 3-bedroom top flat (1 master room) furnished or unfurnished US$1500, US$1000, 2-bedroom furnished apartment residential US$1200, other residences for diplomats. Call 664-5105. /executive rental: Wonderful 7-bedroom property for office & residence at Atlantic Ville, East Coast Demerara. Price US$2000. Call Mr Darin 6150069, 225-2626, 225-5198, 2253069, 225-2709, 231-2064. OFFICES&COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS EXECUTIVE APARTMENTS & HOUSES IN ; KITTY, SUBRYANVILLE,SHAMROCK GARDENS,OGLE,BELAIR,ETCPLEASE CHECK WEBSITE FOR PHOTOS & PRICES. CONTACT: 223-8479, 647-3768. www.spaceseek.gy    2-bedroom apartment in Eping Avenue, corner property, newly remodeled, furnished or unfurnished short- or long-term, hot and cold water, split AC in both rooms, parking and much more. 67 1 - 8 8 8 3 , 6 6 9 - 111 3 , 6 9 6 9529.  Street, Kitty: 3-bedroom front house, 1 self-contained room, tub, washroom, hot and cold, 2 washrooms, 2 AC, ceiling fans in all rooms, breezy verandah and all rooms beautifuly lacquered fully grilled, private driveway for 3 vehicles. Suitable for foreigners. Call 2253262, 676-6948.    : 3-bedroom unfurnished top apartment $100 000, 2-bedroom unfurnished bottom apartment $80 000, or whole house. Republic Gardens well appointed furnished house, Ogle 2bedroom unfurnished AC, $120 000, Campbellville 2-bedroom furnished apartment.      Plaza Bridge New Mall, Business spots available US$150 - $1000 Albertown 6 Office spaces $80 000, Commercial Building for rent US$2500 and above, Executives Homes for rent US$1500 and above. Apartment Buildings. & office space Bent Street $500 000, Tel:2258101/225-8103/658-3928/6863153

TO LET  Real Estate & Property Management Serv i c e s 204 Charlotte Street, Bourda Tel. 225-8241, 2274950, 226-7829, Fax: 227-1537. Ogle 5-bedroom furnished, swimming pool US$5000, Bel Air Gardens (unfurnished) US$2000, Republic Park (unfurnished) $75 000. New one and two-storey apartments in Georgetown US$1200 and US$1500 monthly. All prices are negotiable.  Pristine residential cul-de-sac location in Bel Air Gardens, comprises one master bedroom with study and verandah, en suite three additional bedrooms with powder room and adjacent bathroom, built-in closet space, open plan living/dining room and kitchen, ground floor lounge with powder room, bar area and patio doors terrace, utility room and multiple parking facility. Suits Corporate Clients, Serious enquiry ONLY. Phone 667-9367. PROSPEROUS New Year to you, my valued customers! We appreciate your business with us We are slashing some prices for this new year: Bel Air Park home US$2000 to US$1700, Bel Air Gardens US$4000 to US$3500, Subryanivlle US$1200 to US$2800, Le Resouvenir US$5000 to US$3900, Republic Park US$4000 to US$2300, AA Eccles US$4000 to US$2300, Queen's app. US$2500 to US$220-0 and much more. We also have short term rental Contact us 644-9883, info_meir@yahoo.com World #1 Realtor Mister Terry Redford Reid 667-7812, 2256858, 225-7164, 226-1064, 225-2626, 231-2068, 619-7945. Have the executive rental reduced by 35%, Prashad Nagar US$1000, Jacaranda Ave. Bel Air Park US$2000, Barima Ave Bel Air Park US$1800, Bel Air Sp r i n g s US$1000, large bond for rental office small form US$375, 10 000 sq ft office space for technologybusiness, Lamaha G a r d ens US$1500, Lama Ave, Bel Air Park US$1800, Bel Air Pa r k o n t he round about US$1000, Prashad Nagar US$1500, land from $11 million, riverside land hotels with US$35 0 0 0 m o n t h rental a nd office space US$40 000 month properties from $14 million. 225-2626, 2255198, 226-1064, 623-2591, 6693350  have rental from US$800 in         b e a u t i f u l 2-storey concrete property, 4 self-contained rooms, large den, large living room, family room, t e l e vision room, beautiful kitchen, fully air conditioned, hot and cold facilities, land space. Price US$ 2 5 0 0 , u n f u r nished.    2 - s t o r e y c o n c r e t e property, master room, 2 bedrooms, kitchen, family ro o m , d e n , verandah, hot and cold facilities, semi-furnished, sec u r i t y c a m e r a s, land spac e US $ 1 5 0 0 .        2 - s t o r e y c o n c r ete property, fully air conditioned 3 be d r o o m s , u n f u r n i s h e d US$2000, (neg).   2-storey concrete property large living area, 4 s elf-contained rooms hot and cold facilities, generator, unfurnished US$1500 neg.   middle floor suitable for bu sine s s $ 1 7 5 0 0 0 . : Beautiful 2-storey concret e p r o p e r t y in perfect condition, 4 bedrooms, hot and cold f a c i l i ties, master room, fam ily room, den, air-condit i o n e d , p a r k i ng space for vehicle US$2500. D o c a l l u s o n Te l . 2 2 5 - 6858, 225-7164, 688-1885 Call Te r r e n c e 6 6 7 - 7 8 1 2 . W e a r e s i t u ated at 247 'D' Forshaw &Oronoque Sts. Queenstown


GUYANA CHRONICLE, JANUARY SUNDAY CHRONICLE SUNDAY January,26, 2014 26, 2014 TO LET

PROPERTYFORSALE

PROPERTYFORSALE

PROPERTYFORSALE

-bedroom fully furnished executive property in gated community US$4000, property with four self-contained bedrooms in gat e d c o m m u n i t y US$4000, fully furnished with all modern facilities, security system in residential area US$3000 neg, four-bedroom fully furnished house US$1500 neg, four-bedroom house, with two utility rooms US$3000, four bedrooms AC, hot and cold, fully furnished in residential area US$3000, three-storey building for residence or off i c e i n c e n t r a l Georgetown US$3000 neg, two-bedroom fully furnished flat, Queenstown US$1500, three bedroom with master room top flat in Georgetown $120 000, one-bedroom apartment fully furnished US$600, office space top flat for office with two offices an open space, fully secured US$1200, business space 30x30 Regent St US$1600, 30x30 business space in Georgetown. Wills Realty 227-2612, 223-1877, 627-8314, 6 5 5 - 0755 stanleywwills@gmail.com Like us on face book

 business and gift shop at 33 D'Urban Street, Werk-en-Rust, Georgetown. Tel. 347-400-7851, 227-2452.

concrete 2 flat house at 47 Happy Acres ECD, fully furnished 3 bedrooms top flat, hot and cold bath, big yard space. Call 225-2902, 673-1095.

 Street 3 flat investment property between Alexander and Bourda Market, permit for 4th flat US$2.2M, land 60x52. MR. Paul 626-1150, 10 Am - 12 noon.

  BSc h a s more than 20,000 hrs in Real Estate Investment and Economic Transformation of People Economic Growth. We have rental from US$1500, in Bel Air Park, ambassador's residence in University Gardens Le Resouvenir, Lama Ave with pool, Jacaranda Ave. with large lawns US$2000, Prashad Nagar US$1000, apt. from U S $ 7 0 0 , b o n d 8 0 0 0 sq ft, small an d large office space up to 15000 sq foot; state of the art hotel and off i c e c o m p l e x w i t h i nc o m e o f U S $ 4 0 0 00 mo n t h l y ; 2 acres of land in the city for hotel, and any complex Main Street 2 ½ acres US$5M, Water Stre e t 4 a cres for hotel, hotel on 5 acres of land overlooking the sea US$5M; another overl o o k i n g the sea US$1.5M, income US$15000; riverside land residential land at LBI $10M; Republi c Park $8M, Dia mond $ 7 M , S e c . ' K ' $ 2 0 M , B e l Air P a r k $25M, G a r nett double lot $42M, Phone 225-2626, 231-2064, 225-2709, 2261064, 227-6949, 227-6863, 6677812. 619-7945.

PROPERTYFORSALE PROPERTY FOR SALE  storey $19M, East Street. Tel. 615-8683, 225-7593.  corner property, prime location. 681-7792.  Back with driveway 2-storey building $50M. Call Carol - 612-9785. house and land at De Kendren $6.5M negotiable. 679-7691, 337-5592. 3-BEDROOM Meten-MeerZorg WCD. 223-9580, 677-6363, 658-5736.        Ville $52M, neg. Contact 680-3771, 6947210.  Gardens, corner lot $10M. Contact 680-3771, 694-7210.  Nagar: 3-bedroom concrete house with lots of yard space $80M. Call Carol 612-9785.  property at Atlantic Gardens. Tel. 679-4096, 6012938, 225-6608.  2-bedroom flat concrete house in Mon Repos. Tel. 220-7937, 625-5257.  property at 25 Public Road, Mon Repos, opposite market, 220-1882, 220-9889  and land at Parcel 105 Vrymen's Erven, New Amsterdam, Tel. 618-1915.  upstairs, concrete house located in Diamond Housing Scheme. Tel. 667-0057.

 Front land with a small wooden house in East Coast Demerara. Contact 657-8086.

 concrete building bordered by 3 Main Streets in central Georgetown. Ideal for offices, school, bond, etc., 4 flats 130ft x 35 ft each, land 250ft x 50 ft. 227-0190, 693-5610.

-bedroom flat concrete house in Coghlan Dam, West Bank Demerara. Phone 654-6902.  3-bedroom flat concrete house with concrete fence at La Parfaite Harmonie. Tel 231-0a821, 6434740.

Ideal for two families. property in Bent St - $16.5M, Phone Mr. Darindra 615-0069, 226-1064, 618-0000, Mr Pereira 623-2591, 225-2626. 225-5198, 231-2064, 226-1064.

property for sale on Sheriff Street Campbellville. Call 6827733.

 (land) $8.5M, 28 acres at $400 000 per acre East Coast $12M, Eccles $25M, Quamina Street $72M, Alberttown $31M, Section 'K' $55M. Diana 227-2256, 626-9382.

 one executive concrete flat building with yard space price negotiable. Tel. 6420636. Gardens near UG, new 3-bedroom 2-storey house $55M, new 4-bedroom 2-storey house $78M. Call Carol - 6129785.  fully furnished two-bedroom house with lots of yard space. Owner migrating 270-5196, 6040183, 651-8979.  constructed threebedroom, two-storey house at Providence (Behind the stadium). Tel. 668-5571.  property on the corner of Fourth and Light Streets, Alberttown, perfect for business. Interested persons, please call 617-8255.          Real Estate: Enterprise lot with house $6M, La Parfaite Harmonie $3.5M. 6281567, 628-5738.

  Adelaide and Evans Streets Charlestown, Georgetown, Georgetown, Lot No. 41 Section 'A', NO. 53 Village, Corentyne, Berbice. Contact 233-6811, 679-3448.

-storey concrete, onefamily, situated at Continental Park for only $35M. Contact Pete's Real Estate, Lot 2 George Street, 223-6218, 226-5546, 623-7805.

 20% on all executive properties $60M, 30% discount on $24M, and below, 15% discount on land $18M. Phone 6677812, 225 - 6 8 5 8 , 225-2626 Terrence Reid.

-STOREY concrete house furnished, 6 bedrooms, 2 master bedrooms at Tuschen Housing Scheme, East Bank Essequibo. Contact 626-6968. Price $28M.

 incomplete 2-storey concrete building at Liliendaal. Contact Sanjay on 662-3842.  concrete and wooden building at       $50M. Tel. 641-1800, 223-5324.  for sale 178 Waterloo Street, Georgetown, $50M neg. Call 627-3994.  : Three bedroom concrete building 28M; Diamond - concrete and wooden twostorey building - 16M; Guyhoc Park - two-storey concrete and wooden building- 11M. Tel # 2253737, 225-4398, 651-7078.

 3-storey building at Lot 61 Station Street, Kitty $32M neg. Contact 6803771, 694-7210.  5 Pigeon Island, Chateau Margot ECD, in excellent condition. Price $18M neg. Tel. 220-4776.  new 3-bedroom property, low land, East Coast Demerara $16M neg. Contact 6803771, 694-7210.  and land Subryanville, 3rd Avenue corner spot, just off Embassy turn, beautiful location. Call 617-3642.  and Bar Cody's Place 344 & 345 East and Middle Streets, North Cummingsburg, For sale by owner only. Tel. 656-9835, 908-456-6683.  Street $34.5M, Campbellville (2 buildings) $23M, Anna Catherina $6.5M, Diana 2272256, 626-9382.  Street US$1M, Alberttown $64M and $34M, Golden Grove $12M, South $20M and $18M, Eccles $31M, Queenstown $13M, Troy 6262243.  Ruimveldt Gardens, Vreed-en-Hoop and Craig. Prices range from $17M neg - $38M neg. Call 644-2099. and land for sale, Lot 9 Crane Old Road 750ft x 38ft. One land for sale Independence Street, La Grange., Phone 6013322.  Peter Rose Street large executive concrete and wooden building. Vacant possession. K.S. Raghubir Agency. 225-0545.

, Georgetown: Six-bedroom, twofamily. Land size 60x133 $60M neg. Tel. 639-2835, 223-5460.

  and Lamaha Streets, Kitty, two Lister engines, 2 generators 75 KVA and 30 KVA, with heavy duty trailer. Tel. 2257732, 610-3043, 688-4771, 2270173, 622-7402. EBD $6M, Diamond 6th Street - $24M, McDoom EBD $6M, Continental Park EBD $65M, Lusignan ECD $13M, Good Hope ECD $10M, $16M, $27M, Block 'CC' Mon Repos ECD $20M, Paradise ECD and 100 x 50 $1.5M. Contact 223-1440 or 687-6647.  six-bedroom house with studio apartment in Nandy Park $70M, one-family three-bedroom in Republic Park $35M, solid two-storey concrete building in Station Street $55M. Call Pete's Real Estate 2236218, 226-5546, 227-2487, 623-7805.

-storey building in Thomas Street, Cummingsburg, $92M, land size 40x120. Call Pete's Real Estate 226-9951, 2236218, 227-2487, 623-7805.  deals for 2014 begins now: Diamond Third Avenue $30M neg, $43M, $45M neg, Eccles $45M, $16M, Prashad Nagar $30M, Plaisance $15M, Ogle $65M,. 644-9883, info_meir@yahoo.com Street US$3M neg, Sheriff Street US$1M, Duncan Street $180M neg, South Road $120M, Croal Street $120M. Serious enquiries only. Call 6899222.

23 23 PROPERTYFOR FORSALE VEHICLES SALE  close proximity to Sheriff Street - brand new 3 storey concrete building. Suitable for business, school, residence etc. Price USD $1.4 Contact Royal Real Estate 225-7276, 665-7400, 685-7887, 643-6353.  BABB STREET KITTY - 2 storey wooden and concrete Income Property. Price $64 million neg. Contact Royal Real Estate 225-7276, 665-7400, 685-7887, 643-6353.  - 3 storey Investment Property. Currently renting as apartments and offices. Price $100,000,000 million neg. Contact Royal Real Estate 2257276, 665-7400, 685-7887, 6436353..  PARK E.B.D - 2 family wooden and concrete Income Property. Price $35 million neg. Contact Royal Real Estate 225-7276, 665-7400, 685-7887, 643-6353.  ROAD - brand new 3 storey concrete building with roof garden. Currently renting as hotel and bar. Price $115,000,000 million neg. Contact Royal Real Estate 225-7276, 665-7400, 685-7887, 643-6353.  ST, KITTY - Investment property on corner. Suitable for any business. Price $60 million neg. Contact Royal Real Estate on 225-7276, 665-7400, 685-7887, 643-6353.  HOPE E.B.D (Gated Community) - Executive modern four bedroom concrete houses with swimming pool. On single lot $39 million, with double lot $45 million. Contact Royal Real Estate 225-7276, 665-7400, 6857887, 643-6353.

 Road Eccles properties on land size 50x187 - $40M, Somerset Court, flat three-bedroom $16.5M, two-storey wooden concrete building at Providence $16M, Call Pete's Real Estate 226-9951, 223-6218, 227-2487, 623-7805.

 OLD ROAD E.B.D - 2 family house upper flat 3 bedroom, lower flat 2 two bedroom apartments repairs needed. Price $29 million . Contact Royal Real Estate 2257276, 665-7400, 685-7887, 643-6353.

 Street over Albert, size 32x110 $60M, North Road size 32x110 - $60M, Main Street threestorey building US$1M. Call Pete's Real Estate 227-2487, 2269951, 223-6218, 226-25546, 6237805.

 E.B.D - 2 family wooden and concrete house upper flat 4 bedroom, lower flat 2 bedroom apartment repairs needed. Price $16 million neg. Contact Royal Real Estate 225-7276, 6657400, 685-7887, 643-6353.

 building on land at Sandy Babb Street Kitty, size 50x150 - $28M, Da Silva Street corner land size 100x100 - $25M. Call Pete's Real Estate 226-5546, 223-6218, 227-2487, 623-7805.

 property, prime location (land 200' x 50') store front 72' x 24', bond 87' x 32', extra space for 15 cars Public Road, McDoom. Tel. 233-0570 (No agent).

 COMMERICAL PROPERTY, ALBERTOWN, 3 LOTS WITH BUSINESS, (NUT CENTRE) best offer. TEL 6214000, 2273939

 2-storey building wooden and concrete in Norton Street, five buildings from Camp Street, second house in yard, $20M neg. Call 6280972.

 flat three-bedroom concrete house at Eccles $19M, two-storey concrete, 3 bedrooms upstairs, and 2 bedrooms downstairs $25M. Call Pete's Real Estate 226-5546, 227-2487, 2269951, 623-7805.

 Street $40M, East Coast $11M, East Bank $13M, South (land) $8.5M, Alberttown $25M - $32M, Campbellville $35M, Section 'K' $40M - $50M, Highway (land), $400 000 per acre. Diana 2272256, 626-9382.

 two-storey building, 3 bedrooms with all modern conveniences, Meadow Brook Gardens, Mr. Narine. 6968230.

business location, 14 T Pit Street New Amsterdam, Berbice, 10000 sq ft 2-storey concrete building. Ideal for bank, insurance company, fast food, franchise, supermarket, general store. 333-3803, 698-2499.

 and Howes Streets, Charlestown corner spot for business $25M neg, Charlotte Street 35x100 $55M, Camp Street for big investment 240 ft x 76 US$1.5M. Naresh Persaud 2259882, 681-2499.

 building on land 45 feet by 150 feet on Bagotstown Public Road, suitable for business, priced at $35M. Contact Pete's Real Estate, Lot 2 George Street, W/Rust. 227-2487, 226-5546, 2236218, 623-7805.

 building on land 54 feet by 90 feet, situated at Nandy Park EBD for only $16M. Contact Pete's Real Estate, Lot 2 George Street 2272487, 226-9951, 623-7805.

 $50M, Da Silva Street $22M (land), North Ruimveldt $11M, Providence $5M, Lamaha Street $65M, Charlestown $40M. Tel. 611-7004, 680-2596.

PROPERTYFORSALE

 LAND ON CHARLOTTE STREET - $ 400.000 USD. EXECUTIVE HOUSES ON EAST COAST DEM, EAST BANK DEM & GEORGETOWN. INVESTMENT PROPERTIES IN GEORGETOWN. HOTEL IN GEORGETOWN, CONTACT: 2238479, 647-3768 www.spaceseek.gy

 central area on Regent Street, Acme building. For more information, come in to Pete's Real Estate 226-9951, 2236218, 227-2487, 623-7805.

 Street double lot $140M neg. Princes Street $15M neg. 611-0315, 690-8625.

 E.C.D 2 family concrete house upper flat 3 bedroom lower flat 2 bedroom. Price $56 million. Contact Royal Real Estate on 225-7276, 665-7400, 6857887, 643-6353.  2-storey wooden and concrete house, 3 bedrooms upstairs and downstairs, inside toilet and bath, at Good Hope, ECD, with transfer. Can go through bank. Price $16.9M neg. Tel. 220-2366, 617-7929.  STREET, CHARLESTOWN - 2 family wooden and concrete house, 3 bedrooms upper and 2 bedrooms lower. Price $11.5 neg. Contact Royal Real Estate 225-7276, 665-7400, 6857887, 643-6353.

 E.B.D - brand new Executive concrete house, upper flat 4 bedroom and lower flat 2 apartments Price $53 million neg. Contact Royal Real Estate on 225-7276, 6657400, 685-7887 , 6 4 3 - 6 3 5 3 .        BACKLANDS - 3 bedroom flat house on corner lot, repairs needed Price $14 million neg. Contact Royal Real Estate on 225-7276, 6657400, 6857887, 643-6353.           W. B . D brand new 5 bedroom executive house with extra house lot. Price $70 million neg. Contact Royal Real Estate on 2257276, 6657400, 685-7887, 643-6353.       R O A D K I T T Y: two family concrete property suitable for business Price $45 million. Contact Royal Real Estate on 225-7276, 6657400, 685-7887, 643-6353. REPOS E.C.D- Modern 4 bedroom concrete property inclusive of 1 master room. Price $35 million neg. Contact Royal Real Estate on 225-7276, 6657400, 685-7887, 643-6353.  E.B.D - Modern 2 family concrete house. Price $35 million. Contact Royal Real Estate on 2257276, 665-7400, 685-7887, 643-6353.=  OF CANAAN- 4 bedroom concrete house just off the public road. Price $17.5 million neg. Contact Royal Real Estate on 225-7276, 665-7400, 6857887, 643-6353.


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SUNDAY CHRONICLE January 26, 2014

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PROPERTYFORSALE  NAGAR - Investment property. 3 bedroom upper flat and 2 bedroom lower flat. Price $ 56.5 million for quick sale . Contact Royal Real Estate on 225-7276, 6657400, 685-7887, 643-6353   and Second Streets Alberttown, Georgetown corner property. Contact Gary 225-0336, 6633633 or for more information on Facebook under Gary Nauth $40M neg. Two-storey 3-bedroom, toilet and bath upstairs and downstairs.  - Investment property on corner. Suitable for business, apartment complex, hotel or dream house etc. Land size 6500 Sq Ft.Price $85 million neg. Contact Royal Real Estate on 225-7276, 665-7400, 685-7887, 643-6353.  STREET, ALBERTOWN - 3 storey concrete investment property. Suitable for school, embassy, office complex etc. Price $160 million neg. Contact Royal Real Estate on 2257276, 665-7400, 685-7887, 6436353.  and Land for Sale Two Storyed Wooden and Concrete House, Sixth Street Alberttown Georgetown. $35 Million Dollars Negotiable. Contact: Mr. George Teekah Tel: 231-6278 Or Dr: Thasana Teekah Tel: 6260993  Home Int'l: Coldingen fully furnished $14.5M neg, 7-bedroom Eccles front $29M neg, Seaforth Street $25M neg, Alberttown $34M neg, Canal $17M neg, Good Hope $30M neg, Land Herstelling $3M, Mon Repos $8M neg, Enmore $7M neg, Ocean View $15M, Grove front $7M neg. Contact Theresa 6486033.  executive 3-self-contained Lamaha Gardens property on 7 200 sq. ft land with all international facilities $68M. Mr Boodram 692-3831, Mr Darindra 615-0069, Mr. Pereira 623-2591, Mr Harold Anthony Reid 6270288, 225-5198, 225-2626, 2253068, 226-1064. close to main road 7-bedroom $29M neg, South Ruimveldt Gardens 5-bedroom $29M, East Ruimveldt 5-bedroom $14M, Enmore $7M neg, Non Pareil 3-bedroom, fully furnished $14.5M, Call Raul 6558361, 699-6811, Fabulous Homes Realty.  PAREIL $14.5M neg, fully furnished, Eccles sevenbedroom $29M neg, Enmore $7M neg, East Ruimveldt $13M, South Ruimveldt $20M neg, Shell Road $15M neg, Station Street $30M neg, Meadow Brook Gardens $26M. Alicia 6161442.  Strathspey ECD: Flat three-bedroom concrete building $6M, Eccles two corner spots, concrete buildings $25M, Canal No. 2 two-storey 4-bedroom concrete building on 9 acres of land $25M, Tel. 225 - 3 7 3 7 , 2 2 5 - 4 3 9 8 , 6 5 1 7078. : Campbellville two-storey concrete building $50M, Atlantic Ville furnished two-storey building w i t h g e n e r a t o r, o v e r l o o k ing Atlantic Ocean $55M. Tel. 2253737, 225-4398, 651-7078.  property in Independence Boulevard La P e n i t e n c e - $ 7 M g i v e a w a y, own leaving before Christmas. Phone 226-1064/692-3831/ 623-2591/615-0069/225262 6.  constructed commercial/residential building on Water Street/Strand New Amsterdam. Potential wharf facility, 2 acres land zone commercial .Tel. 626-0017, 627-1885, E m a i l clondon219@hotmail.com

GUYANA CHRONICLE, SUNDAY , JANUARY 26, 2014

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 Road US$3M neg, 29 lots, Duncan Street $180 000M neg, South Road $180M neg, D\Urban Street $25M neg, Charlestown $15M neg, Campbellville $60M neg. George Street $60M neg, Regent Street US$2M neg, Sheriff Street US$1.2M neg. Serious enquiries only Contact 592-665-7946.

 HUGE 3-STOREY BUILDING WITH GOING BUSINESS AND LOTS OF LAND SPACE. MUST SEE. WI T H G R E AT P O T E N T I A L S FOR STORE, FACTORY, BOND, SUPERMARKET, SCHOOL, DAY CARE, OR GOING BUSINESS A N D L O T S O F L A N D S PA C E MUST SEE WITH GREAT POTENTIALS FOR STORE, FACTORY, APARTMENT, BOND, SUPERMARKET, SCHOOL, DAY CARE, OR APARTMENT. SERIOUS ENQUIRIES ONLY. 684-3718.

 Marketing and Realty. Good Hope PUBLIC Road East Coast (land 675 x 92) $150M, Agriculture Rd, Triumph (land 600 x 45 ft) $ 1 4 M , Chimney Road, Chateau Margot - (4 bedroom self cont) $29M, Atlantic Ville 5 bedroom self contained $53M, Diamond 2nd Ave5 Bedroom $40M,Robb & Ornoque Sts $46M, Oleander Gdns $40M, Alberttown 6th St $52M, Republic Park $40M, L/Gardens $55M, Atlantic Gardens $ 45M , D u n c a n S t $ 30 M , A l e x a n d e r S t $ 50M , R o b b St $60M,Barr St $65M , E a r l ' s Court $35M, Meadow Brook Gardens $50M, Queenstown $70M, Republic Gdns -Land (100x100) $24M, Alexander st. & South Road $900,000US. Tel. 219-4399, 610-8332.

us at Raphael's Real 204 Charlotte St. Bourda Tel. # 225-8241, 227-4950, after hours 226-7829 Fax 227-1537 Executive Ogle $115M, Diamond $20M, $13M, Queenstown, Versailles $25M, Good Hope $27M, Subryanville 7 bedrooms w i t h swimming pool US$2.5M, Continental Park (exquisitely furnished) $70M, Wismar Burnham Drive $8M, Breda St, Werk-en-Rust $20M, Plaisance (2-storey concrete) $23M, Dazzell Scheme $27M, Atlantic Ville $19M, John Street, Campbellville $55M, North Ruimveldt $12M, La Parfaite Harmonie $16.5M. LAND La Grange $3M, 157 acres river to Linden Highway $30M.

built two flat concrete building at Diamond New Scheme. The upstairs consists of two self-contained bedr o o m s with bu i l t - i n c l o s e t s , a s p a c i o u s k i t c hen, dining and living rooms along with a large verandah at the back. The lower flat has a twobedroom apartment and a lar g e a r e a that c o u l d b e u s e d a s a bond or for any business. The yard has a conc r e t e f e n c e w i t h s p i k e s a n d r a z o r wire above it. T h ere is also a laundry and a generator room downstairs along with a fully tiled carport. A complete water supply is available including six tanks and pump. Asking price: $42M. Interested persons can contact owner at 693 2531.

  on all properties for this summer only. Sale! Sale! Sale! Business property im m e d i ately: East of Orange Walk in Charlotte Street $28M, 3-storey business property in Croal Street requires repairs $32M, Bent Street almost new 2-storey business p roperty $!6M, South Ruimveldt Gardens residence $16M, Ogle fully concrete new $49M, Tucville new $26M, Prashad Nagar executive $55M, Bel Air Park $55M, Kitty b u s i ness or residence requires repairs, on 8 000 sq. ft - $19M, Forshaw old house $21M, 3-storey business close to Main Street $55M, Meadow Brook $45M, fully concrete D'Urban B acklands $30M, New S e c tion 'K' $42M, Lamaha Gardens e x e c u t i v e $ 6 8 M , o ne ranch-style Section 'M' 3-bedroom suites for elderly $50M, fully concrete with excellent interior work, Bel Air Gardens $130M 2 3 1 - 2 0 6 4 , 2 2 5 - 3 0 6 8 , 2 2 76863, 226-1064, 227-6949,

are) JANUARY bargains: Sec. 'K' $23 million, Meadow Brook $28M, and $35M , K i t t y $23, Al b e r t t o w n c o n c r e t e massive for hotel $45M, Bel Air Park in great condition $52M, Happy Acres executive $58M, Alb e r t t o w n $30M, Sec. ' M' C a m p b e l l v i l l e $ 3 4 M n o w, Phone 225-2626, 225-5198, 227-6863, 227-6449, 225-2709, 231-2064, 226-1064, 667-7812 tonyreidsrealty@hotmail.com.  Non Pareil ECD, two-storey concrete building $14M, Campbellville two-storey concrete building $50M, Diamond two-storey concrete buildings $32M $35M, $40M, Covent Gardens EBD on public road $38M. Tel. 225-3737, 225-4893, 651-7078. WBD: almost brand new 5 bedroom house for sale, master room and all rooms self-contained with AC and fans, open concept kitchen/dining/living room, large walk-in pantry, office/ library room and a powder room. Beautiful landscape and wrap around patio. Priced to sell- $75 Million. Tel. 59 2 6 2 4 - 8 7 04, 592-684-9203.                   Norton Street, C a r m i c h a e l S t r e e t , North Ruimveldt, South Ruimveldt, Craig, Republic Park, Diamond, Alberttown Section 'K', Melanie Damishana, Campbellville, Thomas Street business spot, Robb Street business spot, D\urban Street business spot. LAND: Friendship land size 115 x 450 (wharf side) $65M, Meadow Brook Gardens $8.5M, Non Pareil.  to Country Real Estate, 264-0146, 264-0140, 2250854, 225-0843, 672-7390, 6020011: MEADOW Brook $11.5M, $12M, $13.5M, Mon Repos $14M neg, Sheriff Street US$1M, neg, Regent Street USS1M neg, Bel Air $45M, $55M, La Parfaite Harmonie $5.5M. Shell Road $18M neg, David Street Kitty $65M Public Road Kitty $46M. prime property on Main Street US$4.8M, La Parfaite Harmonie $18.7M, 2 storeys, 3 apartments, Mandela Avenue $17.2M, Prashad Nagar $40M neg, $65M neg, $126M neg, La Parfaite Harmonie $17.5M, $8M, $10.5M, 2640146, 672-7390, 602-0011,          location  Street, Kingston opposite the American Emb a s s y. O n e ( 1 ) h u g e f o u r s t orey concrete and steel building, 2 bedrooms on each flat, AC< hot water, refrigerator and stove one ach floor and fully furnished, generator. Can be used for embassy, office, apartments or residence. Price $180M. Property being sold with all equipment and furnishings inclusive. Serious enquiries 223-8634, 646-3251, 227-0464'  $19M neg, Providence $26M, East Ruimveldt $10.5M, Middle Road La Penitence $27M, Diamond $10.5M, $22M, $40M, $65M,. Grove $13M, Chateau Margot $32M, Lamaha Gardens $120M, Wuamina Street $160M, Prashad Nagar $45M, $58M, Subryanville US$2M, Guysuco Gardens $80M. Call Rosanna 671-5008, 619-8000. Email rosannarealty_gt@yahoo.com www. Facebook.com/ rosannarealty PIN 236A219D

 modern Pike North Ruimveldt ranch with master room $17M, Meadow Brook Gardens $35M, Tucville concrete new $27M, Providence $25M, new ranch $13M, Bel Air Park $45M, Prashad Nagar $37M, Duncan St. $23M, Sec. 'M' Campbellville requires repairs $14M, D'Urban St. $15M, Bent St. business residence. Phone Lord Johnny Ramsohoye 2252709, 618-0000, 227-6949, 225-2626,226-1064, 227-6949, 225-5198.  property at 59 Public Road, Kitty Georgetown with small white wooden cottage $18M, 59 Light Street, Alberttown, 3-storey concrete building with all modern facilities. Suitable for business and residence $165M. Corner lot at 82 Robb and Light Streets Georgetown with two-storey concrete and wooden building suitable for business and residence $95M. Modern two-storey building at 6 Albion Public Road, Chesney, Berbice $58M. Contact Trudy 225-4712, 6962435. Serious enquiries only. No Agents.  Sam's Real Estate and Property Management has the best priced properties for 2014. Grove $8M (land) Diamond $4.5M, (land) Leonora $40M neg, Brickdam $65M neg, D'Urban Backlands $30M neg, Campbellville $45M, David Street $14M, Subryanville $65M, Section 'K' $38M, Hadfield Street $36M, Light Street $21M, South Road $38M, Duncan Street (land) $32M, Rentals Subryanville US$800 - US$1500, Kitty US$600, Bel Air US$750, Grove 12M, Da Silva St. $17M, Diamond $22M. Tel. 697-7842, 231-7052, 671-6653.  on all properties for this summer only. UG Gardens $140M, Republic Park $30M, Nandy Park 4 apartments $32M, Middle Road La Penitence land size 140 x 60 $17M, second Street Alberttown business and residence $45M, 5th St. Alberttown massive concrete $48M, Eccles $14M, Kitty Sandy Babb St. two properties on double lot $38M, Lamaha St Queenstown apartment complex $58M. Phone Vice President 231-2064, 225-3068, 227-6863, 226-1064, 2276949, 225-2626.  Marketing and Realty. KITTY- $17M, $32M & $35M, Guysuco Gardens $78M, Good Hope $15.5M, Garnett St $31M, SEC K C/ ville 4 bedroom self-contained $44M, AA Eccles $68M, Carmichael Street 2 storey back house $22.5M, Montrose $16M, Mon Repos Block CC $10.5M & $11.5M, Ganges St. P/Nagar - 5 Bedroom $58M, Granville Park $31M, Lusignan business property $13M, Durban St $21M, Ogle A/Strip Road $55M, Better Hope Pub Rd $37M, Cummings St $37M, New Market St $55M, East St $60M, Happy Acres $30M, North Road $70M, Bel/A/Park $60M, P/Nagar $28M, L/Gardens $75M,Regent St. $1.2MUS. Diamond - 2nd Ave, 5 Bedroom $38M. Tel. 219-4399, 610-8332  Marketing and Realty. Middleton St C/VILLE 5 bedroom self-contained back house 15ft driveway $28M, Kitty business property $44M, Pike St. C/Ville $45M, LBI Embankment $24M, Good Hope P/Rd (land - 280x140) $ 90M , Da Silva St (land) $21M. Charlotte St. (land) $55M, Sheriff & Enachu Sts. $75M, Vlissengen Rd. (land) $75M, Sherrif St, $5 0 M , S o u t h R u i m v e l d t $ 1 6 M , D i a m ond $9M, $12M, $22M, East R/veldt $10.5M, E c c l e s $ 30M , $ 3 4 M , A / t o w n $36M,Triumph $14M, Agriculture Road, Triumph $20M, Sheriff St. $150M, Subryanville $58M, Brickdam $100M, Ogle brand new 2-storey, 5 bedroom house $80M, Lamaha St, Queenstown, 3-storey, corner proprty $85M. Tel. 219-4399, 6108332

 bargains Norton St r eet - $14M, Bent Street business and residence - $16M, executive Prashad Nagar mansion double lot - $85M, 8 apt. apartment complex was - $120M, now - $85M, Sec. 'K' Campbellville - $23M, Alberttown concrete 5 bedrooms - $46M, other for - $19M, and $30M, South Ruimveldt Gardens $19M, Festival City - $14M Charlotte Street business and residence by Bourda Market - $26M, Cummings Street - $34M, Me a d o w B r o ok - $28M, D ' U rban Street for double l o t for 5-storey - $25M, Phone Lord Alysious Pereira - 6232591, 227-6949, 225-2709, 231-2064, 2276863, 226-1064, 227-6 8 6 3 , 2 2 5 5198, 6 6 7 -7812 tonyreidsrealty@hotmail.com Bargains in Guyana: Full concrete D'Urban Street business $19M, business and residence Bent Street 16M, Gordon Street business & residence $23M. Waterloo Street business and residence (new) $35M. South Road Land $36M, Charlotte Street 2 buildi n g s 2 h o u ses by Light $32M. Land 140 x 60 by Russia n E m bassy $30M. Land at Turkeyen 1 4 0 x 6 0 $ 32M. L0 Ressovenure Land 126x60 $20M. Camp b e l l v i l l e flat house needs r e p a i r s $ 13M. Section K $19M needs rep a i r s , 3-storey Quam ina Street for hotel US$599 000, Bel Air Park $49M Lamaha Gardens va l u e d $85M now $ 7 0 M . R e ntal o f a p a r t m e n t s f r o m US$7 0 0 , R e s i dence US$1 200 upwards. Phone Lord Patrick Pereira 227-6863, 225-2709, 227-6949, 226-1064, 669-3350. 7 days a week tonyrei d s r e a l t y @ h o t m a i l . c o m   26% 26% 26% discount: Two-family concrete business and residence in the front of Happy Acres $32M, Dowding Street, Kitty with driveway $16M, BB Eccles $16M, South Ruimveldt Gardens $!6M, Light Street $21M, Second building with 12 ft drive way $!4M, David Street Subryanville with 14ft driveway $16M, West Ruimveldt concrete flat house $4.9M, Dazell Housing Scheme $11M, La Penitence bu s i n e s s a n d r e s i d e n c e with reserve for 20 cars $11M, Meadow Brook old house $ 1 2 M , L o d g e $ 1 4 M , Middle Road La Penitence with 20ft driveway 4 apartments $15M, second ranch concrete $38M, Garnett St. business and residence $32M. Phone Mr. Budram 692-3831, Mr Darindra 615-0069, Mr. A. Pereira 623-2591, Mrs Hercules 661-1952, 225-2626, 2252709, 225-5198.

 concrete Section 'K' $44M, 7-apartment William St. concrete building reduced from $60M to $50M, Kitty house requires. repair on 8 000 sq. ft $19M, Mi d d l e Road La Penitence $1 6.5M, almost Regent and Oronoque St. $36M, Charlotte Street East of Orange Walk $28M, South Ruimveldt Gardens $66M, Meadow Brook concrete $45M, executive Republic Park $48M, Lamaha Gardens 3 self-contained $70M, Prashad Nagar 6-bedroom $58M, business 3-storey Quamina Street $85M, Bel Air Gardens on double lot $140M, Subryanville $58M, Alberttown concrete business $40M, New Haven 4 self-contained $80M, 3-bedroom new concrete Ogle $48M, Bel Air Park $52M, Croal St. 3-storey require repairs $30M, 4 lots in AA Eccles with incompl e t e c a t h e d r a l - s t y l e s t r u c t u r e r e q u i r e s $20M to complete, plus reserve and place for lake $90M neg. , Mr. Darendra 615-0069, Vice Presiednt Alysious Pereira 623 2591, Vice President Jhonny Ramsahoye 225-2709, Vice President Darindra 615-0069, 2252626, 225-3068, 227-6863, 2261064, 667-7812, facebook Tony Reid Realty 7 days a week 24 hours a day all holidays and all prices are negotiable.  3-storey concre t e building, Price $ 1 00 M .    property in good condition. Price $18M.   beautiful 2storey concrete property 3 self-contained, 1 master, lib r a r y, television room, living room, upstairs back verandah, d o w n s t a i r s den, fully marble stone tile, family room patio, garage parking space, for 3 cars, needs cosmetics, land space P r i c e $ 9 0 M,O g l e b e a u t i f u l p r o p e r t y $90M,  $36M neg,   $120M beautiful home excellent condition in      $ 5 5 M n eg, Queenstown property $100M. Do call us at Joy Reid's Realty. We are located at 247(D) Forshaw and Oronoque Streets, Queenstown. Tel. 2 2 5 - 6 8 5 8 , 2 2 5 - 7 1 6 4 , 6 6 7 - 7 8 12, email: joyreid.realty7@yahoo.com

PROPERTYFORSALE  two-storey concrete building suitable for school, bond, church $26M, six fully furnished suites in apartment complex complete with office, reception area, generator, water pump, $600M neg, 4-storey, 7room, 5 self-contained, $180M neg, 6 bedrooms with master room in residential area $45M neg, 3-storey building suitable for supermarket or shopping complex, security facilities, parking, open space, storage & 7 self-contained rooms, US$1M, 3 self-contained rooms and master suite, AC, parking, fully furnished $65M, three-bedroom two-flat concrete house, parking, fully furnished $30M, fully furnished, twostorey building $30M, residential area two-flat 2-family, furnished concrete building $55M, 2 twostorey corner lot properties in Georgetown $35M neg, 3-storey concrete building appro.x 4800 sq. ft in Georgetown, $80M neg. Wills Realty 227-2612, 2231877,627-8314, 655-0755 stanleywwills@gmail.com Like us on face book  your year for 28% discount on all properties. Happy Acres 2-storey concrete $24M, Providence Stadium new $16M, concrete Republic Park $36M, Eccles concrete $34M, South Ruimveldt Gardens $12M needs repairs, Middle Road La Penitence 4-apartment $14M, La Penitence two-storey $11M, D\Urban Backlands concrete $28M, Meadow Brook $12M, D\Urban Street concrete residence and business $28M, Lamaha Gardens executive $68M, Prashad Nagar 8000 sq ft land $60M, Lama Avenue, Bel Air Park $83M, Bel Air Park $45M Dowding Street Kitty $29M, and $19M , David Street Subryanville from $19M, back with 12ft driveway $14M, Section 'K' Campbellville $40M, Garnett Street ranch concrete $38M, Owen Street Kitty concrete 2-storey $39M, Camp Street business and residence. Phone Mr Darindra 615-0069, Mr Carlos Budram 692-3831, Mr. Alex Pereira 231-2064, Mr. Ramsahoye 225-2709, 2252626, 225-3068, 2 2 7 - 6 9 4 9 , 2 2 5 - 5 1 9 8 , 6 2 7 - 7 8 1 2 , 22610 64.  DIAMOND 4-bedroom furnished with pool $78M, Behind Plaza 4 apts double lot $30M, Lot 5 Best Road 3-bedroom flat WCD $17M, Diamond 2-bedroom flat $9.5M, Mon Repos 3-bedroom flat $12M, Ogle Airport 5 bedrooms $65M, Charlestown 3-storey building $33M, Republic Park 2-storey $37M, Robb and Albert $95M, Plaza bridge 3-bedroom house double lot $20M, Pike Street house top flat, 2 self-contained bedrooms $45M, hot/cold shower, lower flat 1- & 2-bedroom apartments North Road before Camp Street (100x35) $160M, Robb Street 3-storey building $160M, Agricola 2nd Street $7 & 8M, Enmore ECD house 4 bedrooms $17M, Queenstown Business property $95M, South Ruimveldt Park 5 bedrooms, 2 baths $35M, 4-car parking garage, study etc. Section K 4 bedroom, parking, yard space, $50M, and 3 bathrooms DAguiar Park 4-bedroom house US$1.5M, South Kaikan Street 3 bedrooms 2 baths $20M, Johnny P Supermarket Aubrey Barker & Kaikan Street $45M, Penny Lane 2-storey concrete house $35M, Ogle 2-storey concrete 55x110, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths $45M, Diamond AA 2storey concrete 3 bedrooms, 2 baths $16M, Princes Street $15M, D'Urban Street between Hardina and Louisa $30M, Upper D\Urban Street two properties together $30M, Bel Air Park 4 bedrooms, 3 baths $55M, Providence (behind stadium) $18M, Mon Repos Martyrsville $13M, New Amsterdam $10M, South Sophia $12M, Meadow Brook Gardens $45M, Tel:225-8101/225-8103/ 658-3928/686-3153


SUNDAY CHRONICLE January 26, 2014

GUYANA CHRONICLE, SUNDAY , JANUARY 26, 2014

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PROPERTYFORSALE

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

 Homes International Realty: Coldingen $14M neg, Rasville $14M neg, Enmore $8M neg, Campbellville $15M neg, Diamond 2 for 1 deal $15M neg, Cove and John 2 homes 5 bedrooms $12M, 4-bedroom $10M, McDoom Solid concrete $20M, North Ruimveldt 7-bedroom fixer upper, Nismes $6.5M, La Parfaite Harmonie $8.5M, 6-bedroom apartment (4 2-br, 2 1-br) only $21M neg), corner lot 89x80 Albouystown. Ready to go now! And many more, call Ahaziah 613-3018

 FT FISHING boat with 12 000lb seine and 10 000lb ice box. Any reasonable offer accepted. Tel. 641-9597.

 refurbished Yamaha outboard motor from N.Y. Sold with one-month warranty. Contact Patrick 601-8826.

250-gallon plastic totes, ideal to transport fuel to the interior also oil paint and concrete paint, 5 gallons and 1 gallon,, marine paint also. Phone 220-1014.

 Turnkey Business, 6 Goed Fortuin Public Road. Phone 600-3927.

 generator with John Deere engine with turbo 175 KVA, very low hours, Call for more information. Tel. 639-3100, 667-1116,6195400.

 with John Deere engine, with turbo 63 KVA, on wheels, very low hours, in excellent condition. Call for more information.. 639-3100, 667-1116, 619-5400.

2E ENGINE transmission 5x15 tyres for pick-up, Weber racing carburetor, 1- and 3-phase entrance switch, 1- and 3-Hp electric motors, counter top fridge, air tools - chisel, mini-angle die grinder/sander, cut off drilling and grinding tool, air sander, 6" dual action air sander, 120v AC finishing sander, DeWalt mitre saw, cordless drill/driver, ½" Impact cordless driver, cordless jig saw, 12v trickle charger. Tel. 2224158, 641-7526.

 6" water dredge complete 1 - 25 Hp Yamaha outboard, 4 cylinder E Perkins on Bed with radiator 6" g pump complete key start, 4 cylinder Kobota diesel engine on bed with radiator key start, 1 chain saw, 1 freezer, 1 complete gas welding set with bottles, 7 brand new diving suit with hood, 23 - 20 lbs & 2 - 100 lbs Tex bottle, 2 new steel pontoons 24L x 4 W x 3 ½ H, 17-9' zinc sheet, 6 and 8" orange flex 6" black pipe, Tel. 652-6601, 222-6678.

AGRI. EQUIP. MISC.  & Ranjah Import and Export. For all genuine truck parts and accessories new and used for Leyland, DAF, ERF Bedford Model M and TM etc from the UK, also foreign used Cummins and Perkins engine from the UK We currently have transfer boxes (power box) for 6x6 TM. Tel. 592660-9152, 592-610-2873.

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

 selling water. 6237212.        .  F150 spare parts and accessories. Call 685-2584.  Daschund mixed with puddle. Tel. 609-5810.  generator $100 000, Hi Earns DG 6500se - 616-0312.  Generator, $100,000, Hiearns DG6500se. Tel: 616-0312.   tables 8'x4'x3', suitable for workshop etc. 2330570 . PIGS and piglets, 14 Kersaint Park, LBI. 699-9201.  and pitbull mixed. 625-0345.  Drums, left in weather for 8 months $2 500 each. 6933885.  earth delivery to spot, ECD and WBD. Call 627-9977, 698-0182.  165 KVA generator with very low hours. 656-2350. Te l :

    & plucked chicken. 650-4421, 220-9203.

 electric horse walker, walks four horses at a time, Call 689-5858.  new Xbox one + PS4 system (w/accessories) Kinect for 360 with game. 668-1906.  12-week-old German Shepherds. 629-5289, 254-0608 after 18:00hrs.  RCA Plasma 32-inch TV. Price $100 000 neg. Tel. 6553545 (anytime).  steel buildings made to order, send all information for pricing to gimpex@gmail.com  PROPERTIES IN GEORGETOWN  CRASHED 150cc dirt bike for parts. 662-0001.  2-door MABE refrigerator, working and in good condition $25 000 Call 613-3992, 225-7136.

ONE fishing boat, seine and engine. Tel. 220-7648, 626-2066.

580c HYMAC, sale by tender, Wakenaam NDC. Closing date February 25. Tel. 774-5060.   nickel mag rims (16) 6 logs minibus bmm $1.3M. Tel. 220-2472, 653-2868.  PS2 $20 000, Nintendo 64 $15 000, with games and control. 670-2732, 264-2732.

 flip car deck, 7", serious enquiries only $65 000, brand new, memory card, USB, Aux. Tel. 648-0088.  pure breed Rottweiler pups, five months old, fully vaccinated. Asking price $80 000 each. Contact Kevin 601-3533.  SNACKETTE WITH ALL EQUIPMENT IN Bourda Green. Phone 226-5503 after 7 pm. -bred Rottweiler pups and pure-bred German Shepherd pups. Tel. 686-3072, 610-8627, 618-2903. Hymac, gearbox, tracks, rims, foreign-used Toyota 5VZ engine 3400cc, twin steer radiator. 621-4862.  generator, key start, excellent condition. Asking price $450 000 neg. Tel. 602-2033, 684-8164.

 Pathfinder parts (1990 - 97 parts. Contact 687-4135, 687-3896.  Shore with 1x3 tee straps, 9 feet plus, giveaway prices. 669-1113, 696-9529.  fuel plastic drums, 55 gallons. Contact 697-9610 or 6466000.

 truck tyres 1000-20 $20 000 each, 11R 22.5 $20 000 each, 11R 24.5 $25 000 each. Call 6274148. -used Massey tractor, 2 - 60Hp tractors $1.6M00 each, 75Hp tractor $2.4M. Call 627-4148

 new, light blue fibreglass bath tub US-made $40 000, 2 hot and cold water sinks with fittings UK-made $10 000 each. Owner migrating 616-5340.  and mirrors foreign-used, screw on antenna, Japanese-made for all types of vehicles also rear view mirrors original, 192, 212 Honda and many more. $6 000 per pair and antenna $5 000. Tel. 616-5340.

 805 Jack hammer, cord and cordless drills, jig saw, mitre saw, impact wrench, nail gun, sanding monitor, saw zall, angle grinder, 2- gallon, 25-gallon air compressor, tile saw, expansion tools, sm water pump, 1300 watts Hyundai generator, socket set, STIHL TS 410 saw. Call 2615142, 601-1094.

    12" Robinson Moulder need motor, priced for quick sale $1M. - 652-5601.  pups, both parents imported with full pedigree from champion blood lines. Call 685-2584.  Desktop computer set, with webcam, speaker, etc. Recently serviced. Tel. 6654658, 662-0809.

 Power ware UPS needs batteries, 1 - snow cone machine electric, 2 flat screen monitors, 5 - 750 APC need batteries, 3 wind turbines. Tel. 6211549.

 garden earth and builders waste, also bobcat rental, excavating, clearing and leveling down. Call 616-0617 or 663-3285.

  boat 600 lb, 5-inch nylon seine, 15 Hp new model Yamaha engine. Price $1.8M nege. Contact 621-2875.

 boat 43' Cabin Cruiser with 48 Yamaha, 450 lb banga seine, 5 000 lb ice box. All in excellent condition, $2M neg. Tel. 256-0382, 602-2946.

 caterpillar engine 3406 Di $1M. 2 set 17" mags with tyre (6 logs), 4 wheel 2 wheel drive. 654-6166.

 treadmill, Kenwood fridge, two small power wash, 1 church mixer with two speakers, 2 Bose speakers, (901 series) $650 000. Tel. 692-2016.

3 INDUSTRIAL air-condition units, crashed Mercedes Benz, 1 - 15 KVA generator, AE 100 Toyota, 5 printers Call 223-1589, 227-4406 (8:00 - 16:00).

 Hatchery (Robbins), 28,000 eggs capacity fully ready, $ 5.5 million or CREDIT available TEL: 227-3939 621-4000  Generator, 3 cylinder Lister pitter (England) key start, 15,000 watts $550,000 cash 2273939, 621-4000

 birds, Lot 1 L'Orataire Canal No. 1, WBD. Tel. 655-1284.

  Yamaha outboard engine. Tel. 218-2039, 688-7017, 628-2692.

   Hp Yamaha salt water engine, 1 excavator slush bucket. Contact 622-7522, 652-3217.

 cell phone, 9650 model, Blackberry Bold excellent condition (like new) no camera - $12,000. 624-6464, 665-6061, 686-0900.. Keith.

 Generator 15,000 watts, portable, $ 4 5 0 , 0 0 0 c a s h Te l 2 2 7 3939, 621-4000   forklifts 3 pcs 2000, 3000, 4000 Lb, lifting capacity $300,000 AND UP TEL: 227-3939, 621-4000

 jack hammer to break very strong concrete and rock, can work on 320 and 324 CAT and also Kobelco and Doosan excavators. 656-2350.

 Generator silent 28,000 watts SDMO John Deere engine, missing Fuel Pump, Panel, Avr $800,000 cash 2273939, 621-4000

 Games Games: Xbox 360, PS2, PSP, games and mod, starting at $500. Contact 684-3025.

Antenna (Mass) for Radio, TV, Cellular, with cables, brackets, sky light $375,000 2273939, 621-4000

 Honda Rebel motorcycle 250cc clean, black $400 000 neg, CG 9345, Samsung Galaxy Tablet 2, $70 000 new,. Both bikes in GT, owner leaving country. 673-7734. ! 1 inverter +2 deep cycle batteries, 6-8 hours backup electricity, automatic switchover and recharge, can use solar panels, 1 year warranty, affordable $134 000. 226-2646.  water pump, 10" gold mine, 2 - 125 Yamaha outboards, 2 cool storage print, 1 Cummings engine, 6-cylinder, 1 CAT engine 6-cylinder. Tel. 627-0819, 6834015.  juice-mobile canteen equipped with generator, cupboards, running water, commercial Vitamix etc.Going cheap. Owner leaving country. 638-9116, 603-0976.  arrivals: 16 gallons wet and dry Ridgid vacuums, 32 gallons rough neck black bins with cover, Glacier Bay toilet set, compressor 20 gallons, 33 gallons, 30 gallons and 60 gallons, generators Stanley 8000 watts and all power 10 000 watts. Contact Donna on tel. 609-1179, 6110402.

     l a r g e ta b l e lamps antique with shade 110v $15 000, toaster oven with glass door 110v$4 000, coffee percolator with glass mug 110v $4 000, antique half round small table and antique stool $15 000, Milkshake machine 3-speed, 3-pint cup stainless steel good for home or business 110v (Hamilton Beach) made $20 000, new 4-speed Premium blender with large mug 110v $5 000. Owner leaving 6758008. -by-side large refrigerator and freezer h a r d l y u s e d 11 0 v g o o d condition $180 000, 32i n c h S o n y T V, c o l o u r e d curved screen 110v with remote $50 000, Inverter 140watt power invertors DC 12 volt to 110 volts with fuse system $20 000, Detecto scale large for measuring height and weight of patient, good for doctor\s clinic or any medical organisation, UKmade $45 000. Owner migrating 675-8008.

 AC, 12.6 and 1 8 0 0 0 B T U , 2 2 0 v o l t s . Te l . 623-3280, 689-4372.

 Annandale Market Road, Toyota Dyna 14B, self-loading Ransom five-sack cement. 676-5727.

 backhoe 3 CX, caterpillar backhoe, 10-ton toad roller, portable welder on wheels. Call 623-3404.

 brand new, complete vulcanising equipment (coats), tyre changer, (60 gals) compressor 4 jackstan and lots of plugs, patches, and valve stems, also hose and air tools. Everything $1.2M. Tel. 267-2329, cell 691-5588. -PIECE dining set (wholesale/ retail) $35 000/$45 000, 30, 32, 34, 36 purpleheart panel doors, $28 000 each, 30, 32, 34, 36 Kabakali panel doors $20 000 each. Tel. 688-9712, 651-0717, 669-1448.

metal decking, over 100 pics 39" wide. Priced for quick sale. 669-1113, 696-9529.

 new treadmill, BMW car, Toyota Rush SUV. Tel. 2251540, 622-8308

 290 Massey Ferguson Tractor, one irrigation pump. Tel. 658-4910.

 imported! David's beautiful bridal outfit and accessories, re jewellery and purse, etc. All going at reasonable prices. Call now 225-9450, 649-4435.

NEW Samsung Galaxy Tablet. No reasonable offer refused. Tel. 685-9321.

     from Jerusalem. We have various variety of amazing and unique gift items coming straight from Jerusalem which you can choose from - key rings, pens, wall magnets, souvenirs, etc. Conta c t M s . R e s h m a Te l . 6 1 3 9589, 614-1439, 233-3422. Mr Homes 678-0998.  Perkins generator 12500 watts $550 000, Perkins 1000 series 4-cylinder engine on bed with radiator $875 000 like new Welder engine driven $450 000 large American-made wood shaper $250 000, wood morticer $180 000. Tel. 6196863, 226-3883, 601-8276.  box, Dell desktops, Apple Laptop 17"/13" CD duplicator, Canon/Nikon SLR camera, video projector, Gibson/Yamaha Guitars/ keyboards Apple Ipods 4G, Pioneers/Denon jugglers, drive racks BBE crossovers, mixers, 15"/18" RCF/JBL/Celestion speakers. 2266432, 623-2477.  sale, stove, bed, carpet, wicker, chairs (4 pcs) kitchen items, living room set, pots and pans, dishes, saucers, dresser closet, sofa, breakfast table (4 chairs) office printers, projector, coffee tables, dish washer. Hot dog cart comes with 3-wheel bike, large cooler, picture frames much more. Call 2271028, 231-5788.

 new catridges and Hp ink in box, cheap. Owners leaving 2 Xerox ink cartridges 113R 634 $30 000 each, 5 Xerox ink cartridges 113R 321 $30 000 each, 8 Hp Laser Jet ink cartridges 98X 92298S, 3 Hp Laser Jet ink cartridges 13X $6 000 each, 4 Hp Laser Jet ink coloured cartridges 4193A $5 000 each, 3 Canon cartridges NPG H toner $4 000 each. All prices are neg. Owner migrating 616-5340.   machines: 1- large Canadian Band Saw 240v, one large De Walt Rip Saw or Cross Cut Saw with large arm and table, move in any direction- 240v. 1 Edge sander with 12 inch disc 240v, to sand wood edge, 1 Wadkin adjustable up and downcross cut saw on table - 240v, 1Wadkin 12 inch plane with blades- 240v. All machines are in good working order. Owner leaving 664-3368.  radiators for 6- or 4-cylinder (1) red engine 2 x 2-1/2 ft in good condition $50 000 excellent. Large commercial vacuum cleaner 120v, 60 Hz, 10 A, stainless steel, on trolley for car wash or industrial purposes, Hp 4.2 shop vac, wet/dry $60 000, 4 new 650-16 tyres Goodyear nylon 10-ply rating $21,000 each, 5 used mag rims for Toyota Land Cruiser 5hole, 17 tyre $120 000. Owner leaving 616-5340.  for office: Paper cutter guillotine hand type 18x30 US-made $10 000, 1 set office wall divider UK-made to set up two to three offices with glass door $40 000, office paper shredder 110v fully automatic to destroy documents $10 000, Whirlpool dehumidifier on wheels 110v, for office, home or patio, filters clean air $15 0 0 0 , l a r g e n e w A P C smart uninterruptable power supply 120 vac, along with all fittings and new laptop and manuals, CD instructions $90 000, 10 large flat screen computer monitors 60 Hz 110v $15 000 each 14'x16', 10 surge protector and battery back ups ES 750, 120v, 60Hz, $10 000 each, Owner leaving. Tel. 616-5340.


26 26 FOR SALE  equipment: 1 used Xerox work centre photocopy machine with scanning kit, all cards, manual CD available with machine, excellent condition, hardly used, also spare ink available $325 000. 4 Printers Laser Jet Hp 4200N, 4300 series $30 000, 2420 - $10 000, Hp Laser Jet $20 000 and Lexmark 253 $6 000. All 110v and in good condition. Owner leaving 616-5340.  dish for communication or TV station or anything that you want to set up. 50 pieces of 10 feet dish width at $100 000 complete each, 10 pieces central air conditioner units large 240v complete with motor $50 000 each, large fuel tank metal on stand with gauge 2000 gallon $60 000, large Kholer generator housing to keep noise low while generator working $50 000, 10 sturdy metal cages with door to secure air conditioner units, water pumps, etc.Could place a lock on door for security purposes $15 000 each, 2 large 2400 BTU air conditioner evaporator complete wall unit 240v $50 000 each with all brackets complete. Owner leaving. 675-8008.  heavy duty Kolbe German made band saw 4340 MM to 450 MM model B 63, 240, 208 and 440 volts 50/60 Hz could also tilt the table. Large De Walt industrial cross and rip saw on large metal table, could move in any direction with 4 foot original, 208, 240 and 440v, 50/60 Hz, 2825 to 3425 RPM 3Hp motor, sliding on arm adjustable to tilt or turn to any direction, 12-inch disc sander for sanding edge of any furniture 110240, electric Mac tool brand parts washer 110v with 25-gal drum that holds wash fluid at the bottom and square metal bin 2ft by 3 ½ ft at the top with cover to wash engine parts, etc All machines are working. Make an offer for 1 or the lot. Owner leaving 614-9432.   Heavy-duty wall and stand fans, soup pot, cake mixers, deep fryers, double sliding glass chicken display showcase, slush/juice machine, double door oven, stainless steel table, grills, 2-compartment ice cream machine with mixer, mince meat grinder, hotdog machine, mustard, ketchup and relish dispenser, ice machine, power converter 2400-3000w, true upright stainless steel freezer 15 cu. ft, cocktail glasses. Serious enquiries only. Call 226-6458, 223-6487, 680-4008.  items: Large flat screen TV's, ice cream maker in box, floral arrangements, universal six-hole custom chrome wheels, brand new 305 x 40 x22 fits all 4x4, wares, guard grille for 4x4 engines, Sony computer, body building creatine powders, steel grilles for windows and doors, large complete standing units with glass shelves (food warmers) with 8/9" stainless steel pans, with burners and all fittings, suitable for snackette, restaurant, canteen, brand new polarised Oakley sunglasses, brand name colognes, inflatable new sturdy big chair bed, inflatable mattress, writing desks, living room chairs, dining room table set, cocktail centre tables, karaoke player in box, wardrobes, large stainless steel fridge (Frigidaire) with ice m a k e r, computer desks, Panasonic stereo complete with subwoofer speakers, large carpets, industrial standing fans (110 volts), new designer clothing, accessories Lasko fans with remote, comforter set, standing clothes rack, new hammock designer curtains for windows much more all items in excellent condition, DVD players camcorder with LCD screen. 223-1885, 642-3722.

VEHICLES FOR SALE VEHICLES FOR SALE

         

SUNDAY CHRONICLE January26, 26,2014 2014 GUYANA CHRONICLE, SUNDAY , JANUARY

VEHICLES FOR SALE

VEHICLES FOR SALE

VEHICLES FOR SALE

VEHICLES FOR SALE

VEHICLES FOR SALE

 minibus. Price neg. Contact 660-0972.

 RX8 18-inch allow rims, fully leather interior, spoiler, $1.8M. 220-0170.

 model Raum with mags, spoiler, AC, CD music. In excellent condition. Price $1.8M neg. Tel. 626-7436.

 Hilux pickup 4x4, long base, manual, single cab, just imported. Excellent condition. Tel. 665-2880.

 Touring Hiace Regius van, reg. GRR. Contact 618-2576, 678-0109. Owner leaving country. Anthony.

 Premio PNN series, in excellent condition (ladydriven), 17" chrome rims, alarm, automatic start, ac, CD player etc. $2.3M neg. Tel. 649-2541.

  Grey Toyota Vigo double cab fully loaded in excellent condition, with roof rack, crash bar, CD player, price to go. Contact 600-5550.

 Carina $500 000. 697-5378.  DIESEL bus, BLL 9038, 4WD. 674-2639. Corolla NZE, HC 129. 660-6027.  AT 212 in immaculate condition. Tel. 649-9143.  Premio, PNN 8268, $2.3M. NEGOTIABLE. Tel. 6040866.  Toyota Hilux Pickup 2WD, excellent condition. Call 658-0199.  Lancer car, PHH series, fully loaded. Tel. 611-5426. 2005 model and NZE Corolla, excellent condition. Call 617-8500.  Toyota BB, mid PLL series, 1 owner, $1.6M neg. Tel. 610-4291.  Black Toyota Lexus IS200, Year 2003 / 2004. 1800cc. Price $3.4 Contact: 699-8189.     RR 600 motorcycle, like brand new. Contact 682-0384.

  TOYOTA Carina motor car, good condition. For more information, call 643-4096.   Carina executive-driven in excellent condition, $1M cash. Tel. 691-0756.  model AT 212, never registered, excellent condition $1.9M. Tel. 629-4494, 678-4513.  150 in working condition $200 000. Naresh Persaud. 2259882, 681-2499.   Honda Civic fully loaded in excellent condition $1.2M. Contact 600-5550.  Raum PLL series, AC, mags, excellent condition. Call 610-0514. series, 212 Corona, good condition. Contact 218-1800, 6299438.  new model AT 212, alarm system, CD player. Tel. 625-7416, 227-8659.  L-Touring Wagon, mags, music, alarm, $950 000 neg. Tel. 618-8040.  USED trucks for sale. Contact Bakewell 220-1304, 220-1353.  10-seater bus, BMM 1832 in perfect condition. Tel. 6569835. 3922 RZ minbus, in working condition. Call Robert on 2341888, 609-9972.

 Vitara, immaculate condition, fully powered, AC, mags, CD, 4WD. Serious enquiry only. Tel. 6292371.  DAF Hauler trucks also 1 CF Daf for parts. 656-2350.  212 old model in excellent condition. Tel. 671-2220.   S C R A P 3 1 2 B C AT excavator - 656-2350.  Raum $1.165M neg, rims, AC. Contact Vishal Tel. 270-4674, 621-9080.   Ta c o m a 4 x 4 2006, $4.2M, RX8 Mazda 2004, $2.2M. Tel. 615-8683, 225-7593.          1) Toyota 212 PLL series, driven by lady, price $1.1M negotiable. Tel. 698-1733 (June).    PMM series, lady-driven, 2 Raum, PRR series. Owner migrating. 070-5196, 604-0183, 651-8979.

CRV PMM series, HID lights, reverse camera, dark interior, alloy wheels, 6-disc changer, Call 693-7722.  RZ long base 15seater minibus, BLL series, good condition. Price $1.15M. Call 216-0367, 676-6948.  Raum model 2005, PMM 3298, TV, CD, AC, mag rim, $1.6M neg. Tel. 625-9873.

  tractor, foreign-used, in excellent condition. Price neg. Contact 670-9393.  RZ BGG series, automatic in good condition $750 000 neg. Must go. Tel 621-6215.

Corolla AE 81 automatic. 683-8013.

Corona Wagon, working condition. Contact 613-3377.

   -Trike Can- Am style Motorcycle, 200cc new, unregistered $275,000 neg or credit, Wholesale TEL: 227-3939, 6214000

 Benz S 300 bullet proof, leather seats, automatic, 19" rims 2.3 million cash Tel: 6214000,

 3Y Super Custom GGG series, in excellent working condition, $450 000 neg. Tel. 625-3265, 618-2317.

 RZ bus, owner leaving country. Price $450 000 neg. Call 601-1094, 629-5946.

  limousine, Lincoln Town car, and fully powered $6 million or credit available Tel 227-3939, 621-4000

 FERGUSON TRACTORS. 165 AND 135 WITH SPARES. Price $1.5M and $600 000.    

 Nissan Pick-up, engine KA20, AC, music, good working condition, first owner, GNN series. Call 259-3158, 673-1935.

85 Daf truck, GRR series. Contact 610-8954.

 Maxima, fully powered, needs repairs, sold as is $275,000 cash 227-3939, 6214000

 Rav 4 (MANUAL, 4WD) in EXCELLEENT condition $1.6M negotiable. Contact: 622-4746

 Mitsubishi Dingo, lady-driven, PPP series. Price $1.7M neg. Contact 610-3777.

 BMW 316I, mag rims, music, AC, etc. Price $2.1M neg. Tel. 649-7005.

 SURF 4 DOORS, minor parts needed, sold as is $650,000 cash TEL: 227-3939, 621-4000

 3000GT sports car, 18" rims, leather seats, excellent condition $1.8 million. Tel: 621-4000, 227-3939

3287 bus, $1.3M neg Tel 686-0900

 Allion, clean, 2 Toyota Voxy, and one Toyota Noah PPP. Call 688-1657.

 TRIDENT car- 250CC, 4 doors, power window, keyless entry $395,000 cash or credit. TEL: 227-3939, 621-4000

 Nissan Tiida Latio PPP series, in excellent condition. Owner migrating. MILGAE 58,000, LADYDRIVEN Tel. 617-3834.

 AT 192, automatic, good condition. Call 225-8915 (Office).

 F150 V6 in working condition $700 000. Tel. 256-3749, 681-5422, 692-0526.

 X-Trail, 56,000 km, original, excellent condition, no accidents, one owner, $3.6M. Mr. Paul 626-1150, 10 Am - 12 noon.

 Noah bus, BMW 320, 4x4 Pickup, Mitsubishi canter, 1 - 20 ft boat trailer. 693-5610, 616-9727, 623-5845, 227-0190.

   Spa c i o , m u s i c , rims, excellent condition. Tel. 689-3881.

 212 PNN series, AC, CD, mags, very good condition. Call 617-9507.

 Solid Def Hilux Pinckup $2.4M, 2-ton Isuzu Dump truck $2.3M, New model Raum, $2.2M. Tel. 641-1800, 223-5324.

 TL Bedford truck 8 and 10 tons. Excellent condition. Tel. 612-6426, 667-7010.

 Toyota Town Ace minibus, BMM series. Price $1.2M. 664-5593.

 SV-40 Toyota Camry in e x c e l l e n t c o n d i t i o n . Te l . 6 4 4 5931.

 Cruiser Prado, excellent condition, fully powered, automatic diesel, AC, DVD, rims, music system, $4.8M. Call 220-6380, 618-1395.

 Pickup, excellent condition, 5-speed transmission. Asking $2.2M neg. Contact 683-0658, 693-7635 Hilux Surf Extra Cab 5L diesel pickup -excellent condition. 656-2350.   100 Toyota Sprinter as is, where is. Asking price $300 000 neg. Call 672-3586.   Toyota Fielder, silver in colour. Price $1.9M neg. Tel. 628-8183.   new model car, fully powered with AC, CD music. Price $1.3M neg. Tel. 626-7436.  Ceres PGG series, immaculate condition, lady-driven. Call 664-7525, 225-7131.  Hilux extra cab pickup, diesel engine. Excellent condition $3M. Tel. 649-0707, 264-2682.

 2004 Toyota Allion, fully equipped with TV, reverse camera, DVD, CD. Car like new. 638-9116, 603-0976.  Altezza, with ful body kit, viperalarm, TV, PS, PW, AC, fog lamp, 17" rims, 35 engine, 6-disc changer, air bags. Call Anto 624-8183.  long base EFI, BJJ series, 2 AT 212 motor cars. All in excellent condition. Phone 268-3953, 638-5301.  model NZE Corolla AC, TV, DVD, mags, excellent condition. Priced to go - $1.8M neg. Tel. 6820274, 625-8775. owner, Suzuki Escudo, Vitara, low mileage, late PMM series, Contact 623-8172, 629-2404. No reasonable offer refused.  AE 100 Toyota L-Touring Wagon, PMM series, excellent condition, CD, mags, tint and alarm. Price neg. Tel. 642-7813, 266-2696.  IST 2004 model, PRR series, TV, reverse, camera, AT 192 hire car (yellow). Contact 688-9159, 654-1080.   Titan, hardly driven $3.5M neg. Toyota 212 (woman driver), perfect condition $1.5M. 648-4627, 639-3042.

   unregistered Toyota Premio (new shape) 2007 year model, press start, reverse camera, TV, etc. $3.850. Tel. 644-0530.  Toyota Rav4, one Mitsubishi Lancer, one Toyota Corolla NZE, vehicles in good condition, selling as a package $3M negotiable. Tel. 609-5810.  Liner with caterpillar 3406B (425) manual engine non electronic aluminum rim, dual exhaust, mint condition, price $6.2M. 603-5500.  minibuses BMM and BNN, CRV new model, AT 192, 212, NZE, AT 170, Toyota Hilux Surf, 06 Tacoma, Family van (7 seater) canters, Tacoma, Nissan Cefirowagon and cheap cars - 6803154.

 Benz CLK200 Kompressor 2005 PRR series, pearl white, 67 000 miles. Flawless, features too numerous to mention. 623-5492.  Auto blowout sale! Unregistered Mazda Axela $2 295 000 Pioneer CD, crystal lights, remote start, alarm. 643-6565, 226-9931.  Auto blowout sale! Unregistered Toyota IST $2 195 000 body kit, TV, camera, spoiler, fogs, HID, alarm. 643-6565, 226-9931.  TOYOTA Premio, deck, AC, rims, PMM series, HID lights, etc in excellent condition. Reasonably priced. Tel. 691-3388.  new model 212 Carina motor car, one AT 176 Toyota Carina wagon both in excellent condition. Price neg. Contact 337-4544, cell 626-1525.  Premio PNN series, in excellent condition (lady-driven), 17" chrome rims, alarm, automatic start, ac, CD player etc. $2.3M neg. Tel. 649-2541.  unregistered Toyota Spacio, wine colour fully loaded with rails, TV, reverse camera, mag rims, etc. Price $2.3M neg. Tel. 642-6030.  Tundra AC, CD player, $1.2M neg, GJJ series, Suzuki, Vitara PFF series $600 000. Both vehicles are in good condition. Contact 625-4273.  Mazda Miata convertible with hard top as an extra, one Bedford 330 model TK dump truck, ready for paddy. Call 689-5858.  2003 Honda CRV in immaculate condition, AC, leather interior, rims, new tires, chrome kits, door, lights, etc, music. Serious enquiries only. 6262237, 602-3294.  Nissan Vanette small minibuses, privately used - PEE series, driving condition, stick shift gear, disc brakes, mag wheels, $325 000; PDD series not driving, needs minor work to drive $225 000. Double sliding door, disc brakes, stick gear good. Owner leaving - 616-5340.

 buy and sell and trade invehicles for cash and we also do trading-in of vehicles: 30seater buses low as $900 000, Spacio, Allion, Super Custom bus. - 680-3154   Hiace BRR1, RZ Super Custom Hiace, PKK. both excellent condition, never worked hire. Tel. 612-1718, home 325-3057. Civic, CD player, AC, mag rims, alarm system, $780 000 neg. Ford Ranger 2003 $2.2M neg. Tel. 658-5400.  D2200 double cab pick-up, single drive, 3Y engine and gear box. Working condition. Contact 618-1773, 216-4199 after 17:00hrs.  - TOYOTA Tacoma, year 2002 - 2006, One Nissan Vanette, one Toyota IST. 657-1930, 6601943. -DOOR automatic Toyota Starlet, 4-door, 5-speed Dihatsu charade. Tel. 222-4158, 6417526. Journey bus 47-seater series, BSS 115. Price $5.2M neg. Contact Bro. Keith 614-5036. Carina, AC, alarm, private, AE 110 Sprinter, excellent condition, cheap price $950 000 each. Tel. 655-7839, 690-7344.

 Toyota IST ladydriv e n , P P P s e r i e s , A C , CD, very clean $1.65M neg. One Toyota 212 new model, PRR series, $ 1 . 4 7 5 M n e g . Te l . 2 3 3 6337 or 601-2532.  , excellent working condition, below 75 000 miles, BJJ series, mag rims. Asking $1.2M. Call 2162791, 626-0819.


SUNDAY CHRONICLE January 26, 2014

27

Mayor’s 79th birthday football final fixed for Den Amstel tomorrow

ONCE AGAIN, the stage is set for another ‘East meets West’ encounter, when the curtains come down in the action of this year’s Mayor’s 79 th birthday seven aside football tournament on the West side from 17:00hrs this afternoon. Den Amstel will be representing the West Side in the final where they face-off with City line-up North East La Penitence who will be coming from the East to create an upset over their West Demerara counterparts on their home ground, with the winner taking home $100,000 and a trophy, while the losers will pocket $50,000. Admission to the ground is $500 and the Den Amstel team is expected to come from Delon Lanferman, Jeffery Pereira, Travis Hilliman, Ryan Hunte, Colin Benn, Rondel Hutson, Kester Jacobs and Gilian Payne. North East LaPenitence will look to Orville Milton (Captain), Hubert Pedro, Solomon Austin, Andrew Murray, Randolph Wagner, Rensford Coleridge, Devon Millington and Calvin Moore, to see them to victory. Meanwhile, a Mayor’s All Star team will be taking on a Young Achievers lineup in an exhibition encounter from 15:00hrs, prior to the playing of the final. The Mayor’s All Star team will field: Devon Charles, Ashley Harding, William Europe, Joshua Browne, Joshua Kamal, Malcolm Wilson, Nikel Frazer, Dwayne Wilson, Jamaal Har-

vey, Keron Solomon, Orville Stewart, Trevor Lewis, Trevor Jones, Lloyd Matthews, Clive Matthews, Amos Ramsay and Domini Garnett. Young Achievers will include Deon Terrence, Dexroy Adams, Roy Chilcott, Jason Critchlow, Winston Johnson, Marvin Josiah and Lloyd Prince.

Police Sports Club ...

From back page he observed her running at a developmental meet earlier last year. Wishing his athlete well, coach of the Police Athletics Club, Lyndon Wilson says he sees Moore achieving quite a lot through this opportunity. Wilson has been Moore’s coach for the past three years since she began her training in athletics. “She’s an athlete that always wants to achieve to the highest and she’s very disciplined, so I know she will be a great achiever.” Wilson said, as he coached Moore through her final training session in Guyana. The young 19 year old who is yet to make her debut at an international event says that qualifying for the 2016 Olympics will be at the top of training priorities as she begins her training when she arrives in the US.(Tamica Garnett).

Racing Tips English Sedgefield 09:10 hrs Oscar Tanner 09:40 hrs Swatow Typhoon 10:10 hrs Welsh Bard 10:45 hrs Tahiti Pearl 11:50 hrs Cloudy Dawn 12:20 hrs Silver Gent South Africa Racing Tips Clairwood 08:55 hrs Philanthropic 09:30 hrs Darwin Cup 10:05 hrs Kingston Boy 10:40 hrs Pimpernel 11:15 hrs Dazzling Gem Irish Racing Tips Leopardstown 09:00 hrs Stuccodor 09:30 hrs Defy Logic 10:00 hrs The Way We Were 10:35 hrs Hurricane Fly 11:10 hrs Sure Reef 11:40 hrs Wrong Turn 12:10 hrs Silver Gent


28

Mata joins Manchester United for record transfer fee

Li takes the extra step to win Australian Open

By Nick Mulvenney

MELBOURNE-(Reuters) China’s Li Na banished the ghosts of two Australian Open final defeats by overpowering Dominika Cibulkova yesterday to win her second major title and give the grand slam of the Asia-Pacific its first Asian singles champion. The 31-year-old needed a tiebreak to clinch an error-strewn first set but romped away with the second for a 7-6(3) 6-0 victory to become the oldest woman to lift the Daphne Akhurst Memorial Cup. Li was the first Asian player to win a grand slam singles title at the French Open in 2011 and ended her 31-month membership of the “one-slam wonder” club when her Slovakian opponent sent a forehand long after 97 minutes. Losing the final to Kim Clijsters in 2011 and Victoria Azarenka last year, both times after winning the first set, had only added to Li’s reputation as a formidable player with a major flaw in her temperament. “At last I made it. Not like the last two times, always feeling one more step. But this

time I did it, so I’m really so proud of myself,” the fourth seed rejoiced. “In the French I was feeling I would just go for it. I didn’t think about winning or losing. But this one, I was really wishing I could do well. And also maybe you guys didn’t know how hard I was working mentally to make this one.” Cibulkova, one of the shortest women in the game at just 5ft-3in (1.6 metres) tall, had beaten four top 20 players, including third seed Maria Sharapova, on her fairytale run to her first grand slam final. The 24-year-old dynamo was still smiling at the end of the final and described the tournament as the “most fantastic two weeks of my life”. “It was my first grand slam final and I’m just proud with the way I handled it,” she said. “It wasn’t easy against her because she was playing extremely well. So I’m quite happy.” CHILLY BREEZE The heatwave of the first week of the tournament was a distant memory when the players took to the court on

Saturday evening with a chilly breeze blowing across Melbourne Park. If 20th seed Cibulkova was hoping to ride the momentum of her ruthless semi-final demolition of Agnieszka Radwanska, she got a quick reality check when Li broke her first service game on a double fault. Even at that early stage, it looked like Li only had to tighten up her first serve and cut out the errors in her forehand, as her power, when her range was accurate, was overwhelming Cibulkova. The Slovakian’s run to the final was built not only on her aggression and energy, but also on mental strength, however, and she broke back for 3-3 when Li double-faulted on two successive points. Li upped her level to break again for 6-5, and had a set point on her own serve, only for Cibulkova to send the match to a tiebreak when Li netted a backhand. The Chinese charged to a 5-1 lead in the tiebreak and, with 25 unforced errors to her name, took a one set lead after 70 minutes, when Cibulkova also netted a backhand. Cheered on by the tradi-

SUNDAY CHRONICLE January 26, 2014

Dominika Cibulkova tional Mandarin rallying cry of “jia you” - literally “add oil” - Li rode her own momentum to grab an early break in the second set. Li had a similar lead over Clijsters three years ago, though, before another of the meltdowns that have afflicted her over her career kicked in and she lost to the Belgian. Argentine coach Carlos Rodriguez has toughened her up over the last year or so, however, as was evident when she saved match point before beating Lucie Safarova in the third round. Cilbulkova’s celebratory fist pumps were now becoming fewer and fewer - she hit just 11 winners in the match and four in the second set - as Li got better and better. “After she won first two games, she just relaxed,” Cibulkova said. “She was more relaxed and she was going for her shots.”

MANCHESTER, England-(Reuters) - Spain playmaker Juan Mata has joined Manchester United for a club record transfer fee of 37.1 million pounds ($61.22 million) from Premier League rivals Chelsea. “I am thrilled to be joining United,” the 25-year-old told the club’s website (www.manutd.com) yesterday.

Juan Mata “I have enjoyed some very happy years at Chelsea, but the time has come for a new challenge. United is the perfect place for me, and I am excited at the chance I have to be part of the next phase in the club’s history.” Mata claimed the Player of the Year award in his first two seasons at Chelsea, helping the Londoners win the 2012 Champions League and 2013 Europa League, but has been out of favour this season under manager Jose Mourinho. “Juan is one of the finest playmakers in the game today, and it’s a real pleasure to have secured his signature,” United manager David Moyes said. “He’s been instrumental in Chelsea’s recent success with a notable 28 assists and 32 goals in his last two Premier League seasons.” The fee breaks the previous record of 30.75 million pounds United paid Tottenham Hotspur for Bulgaria striker Dimitar Berbatov in 2008.


SUNDAY CHRONICLE January 26, 2014

Jadeja’s late heroics keep ODI series alive

INDIA kept the one-day series against New Zealand alive with a nerve-wracking tie in the third match at Eden Park in Auckland yesterday. Needing 19 off the final over for the win, and with just one wicket in hand, India came agonisingly close to beating New Zealand’s 314 all out off 50 overs. Ravindra Jadeja belted 15 off the last over, with three wides from Corey Anderson adding to the final tally and leaving the scores level. The Black Caps looked to have done enough to wrap up the five-match series after picking up the key wickets of Virat Kohli for six and captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni (50) but Ravichandran Ashwin (65) and Jadeja resurrected India’s hopes in putting on 85 for the seventh wicket, with Jadeja’s unbeaten 66 off 45 balls proving everything but a match-winner. Anderson couldn’t deliver with the bat, managing only eight, but he proved lethal with the ball and finished with figures of 5-63, including the key scalps of openers Rohit Sharma and Shikha Dhawan. Hamish Bennett, making a long-awaited return to international cricket from injury, provided superb back-up with 2-41 off his 10 overs. Earlier, New Zealand got off to a flying start after losing the

toss for the third successive game. Martin Guptill provided the backbone of the innings with 111 - his fifth ODI century - and the opener’s 153-run partnership with Kane Williamson (65) set a new record for the second wicket against India. But a flurry of dismissals slowed the New Zealand run-rate after they initially looked on track to comfortably score 330. The home side were 1-189 in the 33rd over but then lost four wickets in 36 balls for 41 runs, with Williamson bowled by Mohammed Shami for 65 and Guptill caught in the deep by Ajinkya Rahane off Jadeja. Five more wickets fell in the last 7.2 overs, Luke Ronchi’s 20-ball 38 the highlight in tandem with a breezy 27 off 23 balls from Tim Southee at the tail-end of the innings. New Zealand won the first two ODIs, with the fourth scheduled for Seddon Park in Hamilton on Tuesday and the fifth in Wellington on Friday. Australia can regain the No. 1 ODI ranking under the following scenarios: If Australia beat England at the Adelaide Oval today, New Zealand need to defeat India in one of the remaining matches. If Australia lose, New Zealand need to defeat India in both of the remaining matches.(CA)

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SUNDAY CHRONICLE January 26, 2014

Super 50 team claims final practice fixture under lights -Chattergoon and Deonarine hit 50s

By Calvin Roberts HAVING lost the first day/night and fourth practice fixture to the Rest XI last Tuesday night, the Christopher Barnwell led National XI returned to the Guyana National Stadium, Providence last Friday night to take the final practice encounter by 5 runs, under the Duckworth/Lewis Method. This time around, they were indebted to some incisive fast bowling from Ronsford Beaton who took 3 for 30 and Barnwell’s 2 for 29, to reduce the Rest XI to 194 for 8 from their 50 overs. Skipper Sewnarine Chattergoon led the way with a knock of 74 off (110balls, 9x4, 1x6), while Assad Fudadin made 46. When the rain which came for the second time-the first being at the interval- and stopped play at 22:40hrs, the National XI were 154 for 5 from 42.1 overs, with Narsingh Deonarine unbeaten on 56 and Royston Crandon, who bowled a tidy spell with his off breaks in tandem with Deonarine, on 22 against Raun Johnson’s 3 for 30. Fudadin, who was asked to play on the Rest XI for this encounter, as was evident with members of the National XI in all the practice matches, started things with Chattergoon and they added 117 for the first wicket, with Chattergoon hitting boundaries off Beaton’s first and third delivery of the ninth over. This was after he scored boundaries off the first delivery of the third and eighth over that was bowled by Beaton and Paul Wintz (0-30) respectively, following a sedate start, in which Fudadin looked to assert himself for a big innings. Chattergoon posted his half century from 79 balls, counting six fours and an uppercut six over third man off Beaton in the ninth over, even as Fudadin got into his stride with a sweetly timed drive through extra cover off Crandon. Chattergoon was the first to go, caught by Robin Bacchus

DCC congratulates Barnwell

THE PRESIDENT, executive and members of the Demerara Cricket Club (DCC) wish to congratulate Christopher Barnwell on his appointment as Captain of the Guyana Team for the 2014 West Indies Cricket Board (WICB)/NAGICO Super50 tournament. His selection came as no surprise, since he captained the Guyana team in the same tournament in 2013, when the then skipper Veerasammy Permaul was unavailable due to West Indies commitments and his appointment this year is a testimony to his ever improving and consistent performances over the past few years. The explosive batting all-rounder and West Indies T20 player is currently the most feared batsman in Guyana in the limited over format of the game Christopher Barnwell as evidenced by his domination of local competitions, while he is one of three players from the DCC who was selected for the Guyana team. The others are the aggressive opening batsman Trevon Griffith and medium pacer Paul Wintz. President of DCC, Alfred Mentore, noted that the selection of these players attests to their dedication and commitment and also that of their coach, and alluding to the team’s vast talent and experience, added that Guyana is capable of winning the tournament. He said DCC can proudly boast of it’s proven track record of producing Clive Lloyd, arguably the most successful West Indies captain coupled with other Guyana and West Indian legends Lance Gibbs, Roy Fredericks, the Christiani and Harper brothers and Travis Dowlin, whose talents and skills were nurtured and honed on the playing fields of DCC. The president also informed that the day and night matches will be featured on ESPN and the Club is cordially inviting the executive, members and members of other sister clubs together with the general public, to view these matches free of charge, at the Club’s pavilion on a big screen which will be installed for this purpose. He also stated that refreshments will be on sale, along with giveaways compliments of one of the popular beverage giants, and anticipates an exciting atmosphere of expectation and enjoyment within the ambience of the Club’s welcoming environment – the fervent hope being that the trophy will return to Guyana.

at backward squareleg off Deonarine (1 for 13) at 117 for 1, which was soon 141 for 4 as the Rest XI lost Fudadin caught at the wicket by Anthony Bramble off Barnwell, along with Rajiv Ivan (01) and Jonathan Foo (01) who were sent back by Beaton and Devendra Bishoo (1 for 34). Vishal Singh 26 (29balls 3x4)and Rajendra Chandrika 29 (54balls) added 42 for the fifth wicket, after Fudadin, who had 60 scoreless deliveries recorded amongst his 88 balls faced, was caught at the wicket by Bramble off Barnwell, for his 46 which was decorated with five fours. The demise of both batsmen, Chandrika to Beaton and Singh to Barnwell, saw the Rest XI catapult to their final total , as both Zaheer Mohammed and Shaquille Williams failed to trouble the scorers, even as Amir Khan tried to repeat his heroics from the last game with a run a ball 7 (1x4). Keon Joseph (1 for 26) give the Rest XI a sound start when he sent back Bacchus via the lbw route for 8 at 24 for 1 in the fifth over, enabling a pugnacious looking Trevon Griffith (28) and Ramnaresh Sarwan (16) to add 41 for the second wicket. They both got boundaries off Andre Stoll, before Griffith was caught by Ivan at mid on, off the lively Raun Johnson, who also ruffled up Sarwan with his in swingers, hitting the former Guyana and West Indies skipper in the mid section with one such delivery before he nicked one through to Jason Sinclair. From 65 for 1, the National XI slipped to 80 for 5, losing Griffith, Sarwan, Leon Johnson (01) and Barnwell (07), who was unfortunate to be given out lbw to one that was sliding down the leg side, before Deonarine and Crandon repaired the damage. The Rest XI had the opportunity to dismiss Deonarine early in his innings, but Chattergoon grassed the opportunity that was offered off Khan at mid-wicket, when the left hander

was on 5 at 85 for 5 in the 24th over. Deonarine said thanks for the chance by sweeping Khan for 4, the first boundary since Griffith got his back to back boundaries off Raun Johnson in the 8th over, a short ball from the lanky Johnson was dispatched with disdain and authority by Deonarine for his fourth four, realising his 50 as well from 78balls. However, the heavens opened up at 22:40hrs and brought a halt to the proceedings following which the National XI, who were ahead by five runs at that stage, won the contest via the Duckworth/Lewis Method. The cricketers broke camp yesterday, and will depart Guyana on Tuesday morning for Trinidad and Tobago to do battle in the WICB/NAGICO Super50 tournament out of Group A alongside defending champions Windward Islands, Jamaica and Ireland.

PLAY in the Georgetown Cricket Association Hadi’s World Incorporated sponsored first division and Noble House Seafoods sponsored second division two day competitions is scheduled to resume this Saturday. With that in mind, participating clubs are asked to prepare their venues and teams for the resumption and be reminded that the Transfer Window for Players wishing to change club, ends on Friday, January 31, 2014. In the Hadi’s World Inc competition, Georgetown Cricket Club will host Everest at Bourda, Demerara Cricket Club face Police at

Queenstown, Transport Sports Club battles Gandhi Youth Organisation at Eve Leary and GNIC tackle Malteenoes Sports Club at Everest, with all matches starting at 09:30 hrs. In the Noble House Sea Foods tournament, Muslim Youth Organisation will travel to GNIC, Malteenoes Sports Club host DCC at Malteenoes, Everest will entertain Transport SC at MYO, Sophia will match skills with Georgetown Cricket Club at GYO, University of Guyana will look to resist arrest from Police at Turkeyen and GDF confronts GYO at Camp Ayanganna, with the action getting underway from 10:30 hrs.

Narsingh Deonarine

GCA competitions to resume next Saturday

Bernard takes over as captain of Jamaica’s Super 50 squad

KINGSTON, Jamaica, (CMC) – Jamaica’s top-order batsman Kenar Lewis will replace the injured left-handed opener Chris Gayle for the NAGICO Super50 Regional cricket tournament, according to the Jamaica Cricket Association (JCA). The JCA has confirmed that Gayle, who injured his hamstring on the tour of India last October, has failed a fitness test. Jamaica Observer quotDavid Bernard Jnr ed the JCA’s chief executive officer Courtney Francis as saying that the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) chief medical officer Dr Akshai Mansingh deemed Gayle unfit to play. “I don’t think an error was made. Chris Gayle was in Australia and he came back. We mandated him to see Dr Mansingh to ascertain his level of fitness. Upon result of testing Chris came out to be unfit medically,” said Francis. The selectors have now named David Bernard Jnr as the

..Kenar Lewis in for injured Chris Gayle captain with Nikita Miller as the vice captain. The NAGICO Super50 tournament is set for January 30 to February 15 in Trinidad. Squad — David Bernard (captain), Nikita Miller (vice-captain), Kenar Lewis, John Campbell, Nkrumah Bonner, Jermaine Blackwood, Horace Miller, Andre McCarthy, Tamar Lambert, Andre Russell, Carlton Baugh, Andrew Richardson, Sheldon Cottrell, Jerome Taylor.

CRICKETQUIZ CORNER (Sunday January 26, 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 Friday’s quiz: Clyde Butts and Tony Howard 131 Today’s Quiz: Where and when did Sir Frank Worrell make his highest Test score? Which two played less than 100 ODIs apiece? Roger Harper; Joel Garner; Michael Holding; Ricardo Powell; Clive Lloyd Answers in tomorrow’s issue


SUNDAY CHRONICLE January 26, 2014

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‘Fishy’ pedals away with first National Park feature cycle race ---At Ricks and Sari 21st Annual event

MARLON `Fishy’ Williams returned one hour 17 minutes 09.65 seconds in winning the feature 35-lap event of the 21st Annual Ricks and Sari Agro Industries sponsored National Park cycle programme yesterday. The win for Williams is his first for the year and he vows to continue his winning ways next weekend when national cycle coach Hassan Mohamed stages the National Sports Commission’s annual 11-race Mashramani programme in the National Park on Saturday and the 40-mile road race the following day (Sunday) in the West Demerara area. The time Williams took yesterday is one minute slower that last year’s winner Raynauth Jeffrey who had clocked one hour, 16 minutes 56 seconds in winning the event. Orville Hinds who won the cycling season’s opening event in Berbice last Sunday placed second to Williams yesterday, while Michael Anthony finished third. The fourth, fifth and sixth place finishers were Jeffrey, Robin Persaud and Junior Niles respectively. Jeffrey, however, won three of the eight prime prizes that were up for grabs while Williams, A. Abdool, Anthony, Hinds and Grant Stuart won one each. Anthony had earlier won the juveniles 10-lap race ahead of Akeem Arthur and Stephine Husbands, respectively. In the open five-lap race for mountain bikers, Clyde Jacobs came out on top ahead of Ozia McAully and Richard Charles respectively. The three-lap race for boys 12-14 years old was won by Romalo Crawford. Second was Raphael Leung and third was Nigel de Quiso. Niles won the veterans under-50 years five-lap event ahead of Tuashan Harris and Shameer Baksh, respectively. The veterans’ over- 50 years of age five-lap race was won by Linden Blackmam. Second was Maurice Fagundes and third was Anthony Farriah.

Prize winners of the various categories of the Ricks and Sari Agro Group of Companies sponsored 21st Annual 11-race cycle programme strike a pose for photographer Sunil Nelson yesterday. Sherwin Sampson won the BMX boys and girls six-nine years old two-lap race ahead of Shaq Sue Hing and Alexander Leung respectively. The BMX boys nine to `12 years old three-lap event was won by Sherwin Sampson. Second was Tarin Garbarran and third was

Cross Country Race set for Berbice

PRESIDENT of the Athletics Association of Guyana (AAG), Aubrey Hutson, says he expects a good turn out this afternoon at the Cross Country race in Berbice, which will mark the beginning of the Association’s 2014 packed calendar of events. Hutson said everything is set to start off the event which is expected to run off at 15:30hrs this afternoon, beginning and ending at the Esplanade Ground, Berbice. According to Hutson, after beginning at the ground the race will run through Tucberg Housing Scheme, the backlands of Stanleytown, then to Water Street before ending back at the Ground. The event will feature races in three categories, namely, the junior, youth and senior categories, with the seniors running a 8km race, while the junior and youth category will both run 6km races. The youth category is for athletes under the age of 16 years, while athletes between 16 – 20 years old will fall into the junior category. Trophy prizes will be offered to athletes placing first, second and third in each category. According to Hutson, the hosting of the event in Berbice is no coincidence, as taking the event to Berbice is the first of the Assocaition’s initiative of the year to see athletic events carried to all parts of Guyana. “It is the first time, that I can remember, that we are having a cross country in Berbice. It is part of our effort, as we promised at counsel, to decentralise out events from Georgetown and send it to outlying areas, so we wanted to start off with that,” Hutson said yesterday. Several athletes from Georgetown are expected to be travelling up for the event, with transportation set to leave Georgetown at 12:00hrs. According to Hutson , several athletes from along the East Coast are also expected to participate in the event. (Tamica Garnett)

SPR Enterprise threeway dominoes on today

…Fierce encounter expected in final leg

Aubrey Hutson

BCB to host tribute to retired Cricketers programme today THE BERBICE Cricket Board will today be hosting their 4th annual Tribute to Retired Cricketers Programme at the head office of the St. Francis Community Developers from 13:00hrs, thanks to the kind sponsorship of New GPC Inc. Those to be honoured include George Paddy, Desmond Frazer, Jude Ramkissoon, Jaikarran Balchand and Mahadeo Latchman. Meanwhile, the BCB and the Rose Hall Town Youth and

Alexander Leung. Rawle Small was a comfortable winner of the BMX boys 12-14 years three-lap race. Second was Doraj Garbarran and third was Taleal Jackson.

Sports Club would also be making numerous donations to several cricket clubs in the Ancient County in it’s ongoing drive to develop Berbice cricket. Representatives of the following clubs are asked to be at the St. Francis Club office for 13:00hrs*- Bush Lot, Blairmont, West Berbice, Police, Bermine, Edinburg, Rose Hall Canje, Young Warriors, Chesney, Albion, Port Mourant, Whim, Skeldon and Upper Corentyne.

A FIERCE encounter is anticipated when the final leg of the SPR Enterprise sponsored three-way aggregate dominoes tournament climaxes at Zeelugt today. At the end of the second round, played at Ernest Shop, Canal Number One, West Bank Demerara last Sunday, International Six were leading with 150 games with Canal Six trailing on 145 and Zeelugt 143. The lead represented a significant comeback by International Six after they trailed Canal Six by nine games following the end of the first leg, played last Friday at the Everest Cricket Club pavilion. Led by the maximum 18 games from Ramroop Sukhai in the first leg, Canal Six romped to a commanding 83 games with International Six on 74 and Zeelugt 69. Sukhai received admirable support from Chibar Seopaul with 14 games and Scotty Ramroop who made 29 out of a possible 36, playing through. For International Six, Edmund Sammy (15 games), Hilbert “Bumpy” Ali (14) and Ron Callender (13) were the top markers. Skipper Boodnarine Persaud and Balram Sammy topped for Zeelugt with 13 games each. The lone lovebird was Navin Samaroo of International Six. In the second leg, International Six bounced back to score 76 games with Zeelugt just behind on 76 and Canal lagging on a mere 62 games. Intikab “Corbie” Ali led the way for the winners with the maximum 18 games while Callender supported with 13. Zeelugt’s top markers were Daniel Juman with 16 games and Robin Persaud 13. P. Ramdial and Scotty Ramroop made 15 and 14 game respectively, for Canal. Four players went down lover’s lane – skipper Manniram Shew and Hilbert Ali of International Six and Canal’s Ramroop Sukhai and Kedar Seopaul. The teams are competing for a winning and first runner-up trophy, three trophies for the top three players in the winning team, the best two players in the second team and the best in the third team.


Sport CHRONICLE

The Chronicle is at http://www.guyanachronicle.com

ICC Board to meet in Dubai on 28 and 29 January

FIVE days of ICC meetings in Dubai commenced yesterday and will conclude with the ICC Board meeting on 28 and 29 January. The week began with the Chief Executives’ Committee meeting today and will include Working Groups on DRS and Anti-Corruption. The Finance and Commercial Affairs Committee and Governance Review Committee will both meet on Monday January 27. All of the meetings will take place at the ICC Headquarters in Dubai Sports City.

Joseph slams WICB over silence on ICC Draft Proposal

S

T JOHN’S, Antigua, (CMC) – Former West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) vice- president Clarvis Joseph has labelled the WICB’s “no comment” approach to the draft presented by the International Cricket Council’s (ICC) Finance & Commercial Affairs committee as cowardly. Joseph was quoted in the Antigua Observer as saying that there are wide implications for the development of cricket in the region and the WICB’s silence on the issue has done it no favour. “We have lost the leadership role that we used to play in ICC by adopting the cowardly attitude of not making it public. There are very wide implications for the development of cricket and that is all I would say at this time because I really don’t want to get involved for obvious reasons that you would appreciate,” Joseph said. “But I find it disgusting that we are not prepared to stand up and declare out of hand and talk

Former WICB vicepresident Clarvis Joseph

about it when we should have gone to the meeting and that is nonsense. “There is too much investment by government and the people in the Caribbean in the development of cricket. We have been let down in terms of the standard of the players but that is no excuse to adopt a cowardly attitude,” he added. The proposal, if adopted, gives control of Test cricket to England, India and Australia and also includes the formation of a two-tier structure of Test cricket, with those three nations immune

from relegation. Joseph, who said he has seen the draft in its entirety, warns that the motive of the proposal hinges largely on finances. “My knowledge suggests that the members of the West Indies Cricket Board have not been presented with the full report but have been presented with a power point presentation of the report and if you read the full report, there is nothing to do with cricket,” the former VP said. “It has everything to do with money and distribution of revenue and if you look at it from a purely cricket perspective, the proposal has no merit. “It is not today that England has sought to dominate the decision-making in ICC and if you go back as far as when Alan Weir was president, the ECC requested a veto on ICC matters as far as that,” he added. WICB has reserved comment on the draft proposal until they have made a presentation to the ICC at its Board meeting scheduled for Dubai, United Arab Emirates, next Tuesday and Wednesday.

Li powers to Australian Open title

MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA - Li Na of China holds the Daphne Akhurst Memorial Cup after winning the women’s final match against Dominika Cibulkova of Slovakia during day 13 of the 2014 Australian Open at Melbourne Park yesterday in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Michael Dodge/Getty Image). See story on Page 28.

Police Sports Club athlete Alita Moore off to Higher Heights

SPRINT ace and scholarship awardee Alita Moore was expected to leave Guyana in the early hours this morning for the United States of America ahead of beginning her studies with the ASA College in New York.. Moore was scheduled to be on a 1:30 am Fly Jamaica flight this morning, and the Inter-Guiana Games gold medalist says she’s not too anxious ahead of her new journey, her only apprehension ahead of her new life is how she will cope with the weather. When she arrives in the US, Moore will join compatriots Chavez Ageday, Stephan James, and Jevina Straker all whom were awarded scholarships similar to Moore’s. Moore is the last one to travel to the US, with Ageday,

James and Straker having travelled to the US, since last year, to begin training ahead of the commencement of their studies at the College. It was last year that the four athletes received the two year scholarships to train and study at the college. The quartet is expected to begin school from February 2. Moore, a Lance Corporal with the Guyana Police Force (GPF), will be studying Criminal Justice, which she says she chose because she feels it would be most beneficial to her when she returns to Guyana after her two year stint. Moore first caught the eye of overseas- based Guyanese Winslow Hendricks, when See page 27

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Flashback! Alita Moore winning the 100m at the 2013 Inter-Guiana Games in Suriname

Mayor’s 79th birthday football final fixed for Den Amstel tomorrow See story on page 27

SUNDAY, JANUARY 26, 2014


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