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News - Country profile: Guyana

May 19th, 2008


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rested country with spectacular waterfalls, distinctively large plants and trees and a tropical rainforest teeming with brilliantly-coloured birds, insects and a wide variety of mammals, Guyana is an ideal destination for eco-tourists.


But political troubles, ethnic tension and economic online dating astrology service
have left it among the region’s poorest countries.

OVERVIEW


OVERVIEW FACTS LEADERS MEDIA

The former British colony - the only English-speaking country in South America - became independent in 1966.

ROOTS IN SLAVERY

The international community must recognise that there was an African holocaust
Guyanese President Bharrat Jagdeo
Guyana calls for reparations

A third of its population is descended from African slaves, imported by the Dutch to work on sugar plantations. Around half are the descendants of indentured Indian agricultural workers brought in by the British after slavery was abolished.

Persistent tension between these two groups has fuelled political instability and is reflected in hostility between the two main parties, which are ethnically-based.

Until the 1990s more than 80% of Guyana’s industries were state-owned. Mismanagement, falling commodity prices and high fuel costs created serious economic problems and led to a fall in an already-low living standard.

Since the late 1990s the government has divested itself of many industries, but it now faces problems which include environmental threats to the coastal strip and rainforest, poverty and violent crime - the latter fuelled by the drugs trade.

The sugar industry - a key source of foreign exchange and Guyana’s main employer - has been hit by the loss of preferential access to EU markets and a cut in European sugar subsidies.

Many Guyanese seek their fortunes outside the country; the exodus of skilled migrants is among the highest in the region.

Guyana has a long-running dispute with its neighbour, Surinam, over the ownership of a potentially oil-rich offshore area.

A UN tribunal aims to settle the issue, which came to a head in 2000 when Surinamese patrol boats evicted a Canadian-owned rig from a concession awarded by Guyana.

The demarcation of the Guyana-Venezuela border is also disputed, with both countries claiming the mineral and timber-rich Essequibo region.

OVERVIEW FACTS LEADERS MEDIA


  • Full name: Co-operative Republic of Guyana
  • Population: 751,000 (via UN, 2006)
  • Capital: Georgetown
  • Area: 214,969 sq km (83,000 sq miles)
  • Major languages: English, indigenous languages, Creole, Hindi, Urdu
  • Major religions: Christianity, Hinduism, Islam
  • Life expectancy: 60 years (men), 66 years (women) (UN)
  • Monetary unit:
    1 Guyanese dollar (G$) = 100 cents

  • Main exports:
    Bauxite and alumina, sugar, gold, rice, shrimp, molasses, rum, timber

  • GNI per capita:
    US$1,010 (World Bank, 2006)

  • Internet domain: .gy
  • International dialling code: +592

LEADERS


OVERVIEW FACTS LEADERS MEDIA

President: Bharrat Jagdeo

Incumbent President Bharrat Jagdeo, from the ruling Indo-Guyanese Progressive People’s Party, won a five-year term in the August 2006 general elections, gaining more than 54% of the vote.

President of Guyana

Bharrat Jagdeo aims to cut the crime rate

The president promised to fight crime - and gang violence in particular - and to improve government services.

He has said Guyana must reduce its dependence on fossil fuel imports and boost access to information technology.

Mr Jagdeo is a Russian-trained economist and a former finance minister. He worked for local and international financial bodies, including the National Bank of Industry and Commerce and the International Monetary Fund.

He first took office in August 1999 after his predecessor Janet Jagan resigned because of poor health.

  • Prime minister: Sam Hinds

  • Foreign minister: Samuel Insanally
  • Finance minister: Ashni Singh

    MEDIA


    OVERVIEW FACTS LEADERS MEDIA

    Guyanese newspapers are free to criticise the government, although journalists are apt to exercise self-censorship.

    The government operates radio services and a TV channel. Private TV stations freely criticise the government.

    The press

  • Guyana Chronicle - government-owned daily
  • Sunday Chronicle - weekly, published by Guyana Chronicle
  • Stabroek News - private daily
  • The Catholic Standard - church weekly
  • Kaieteur News - private, weekly
  • Mirror - private, published twice a week

    Television

  • National Communications Network (NCN) TV (Channel 11) - state-owned

    Radio

  • National Communications Network (NCN) - state-owned, operates Voice of Guyana, Radio Roraima and Hot FM

    News agency

  • Guyana Information Service

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