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FM
Former Member

Congrats from the PPP on 22 years since return of democracy

 

THE People’s Progressive Party (PPP) congratulates the Government and people of Guyana on the occasion of the 22nd anniversary since the return of democracy to Guyana, after twenty-eight years of dictatorial rule.

 

October 5, 1992, can justifiably be regarded as a defining moment in the political life of Guyana. For one thing, it marked a break from nearly three decades of authoritarian rule by a regime that was foisted on the backs of the Guyanese people by western imperialist powers which eventually morphed into one of the worst forms of quasi-military and dictatorial rule in the English- speaking Caribbean.


This month, the month of October, marks twenty-two years since the end of authoritarian rule in Guyana, following the election to office of the PPP/C administration after some twenty-eight years of minority rule. It is a well established fact that all elections, national and regional, were blatantly and massively rigged by the PNC regime in order to perpetuate its life in Government.


It would be useful to make mention of the fact that the democratic reforms which took place during the elections of October 5, did not come about as a result of the altruistic intentions of the then PNC regime, but due to intense pressures both from the democratic forces within the country, led by the PPP, and from the international donor community led by the Carter Centre. The cumulative effects of these two forces forced the PNC to grudgingly cave in to demands for democratic elections which resulted in the end of dictatorial rule and the dawn of a new day in the body-politic of the country.
The PPP became the main victim of the democratic rupture which took place in the elections of 1968, a mere one year after the PNC kicked out its junior coalition partner, the United Force, but only after it had taken total control of the electoral machinery of the state including that of the Elections Commission. It is pertinent to note also that in the elections of 1964, the PPP was engineered out of office by Anglo-American vested interests. Actually, the United States administration applied pressure on Britain not to grant political independence to the colony of British Guiana under the leftist PPP Government. Buckling under pressure, the British Government introduced a new electoral system of Proportional Representation which replaced the First-Past-the Post or Constituency, which saw the PPP winning a majority of the seats in the Legislative Assembly in the 1964 general elections, even though it failed to win a majority of the popular votes.


The plan hatched by Anglo-American vested interests in collaboration with local reactionary elements worked out well, thanks to a combination of racial tension and other acts of political destabilisation fomented by opposition, with support from the CIA and other reactionary overseas bodies.


It is indeed a sad narrative of failed governance that spawned the entire period of PNC misrule, which led not only to the impoverishment of the Guyanese people, but at a more fundamental level, to the degeneration of the nation-state to a point where the country was reduced to the poorest country in the western hemisphere, slightly ahead of Haiti in terms of per capita income. Guyana became a laughing stock among CARICOM nations and at one time was deemed ‘uncreditworthy” by the International Monetary Fund (IMF).


It was against the above background that the struggle for free and fair elections has to be situated. The country had reached a point where the regime had become a national liability and a brake on the country’s development. The PPP and other democratic forces formed a broad alliance, the Patriotic Coalition for Democracy (PCD) which comprised a number of political parties, civil society organisations and prominent individuals which, along with the Carter Centre and other international donor agencies, turned on the political heat on the PNC regime which forced Desmond Hoyte, then President, to agree to democratic reforms.


National and regional elections which were constitutionally due in 1990 were postponed by two years to allow for a new Voters List and other democratic changes to the elections process. The most significant of these changes were a new Elections Commission made up of an equal number of representatives from the Government and Opposition sides, a new voters’ list and the counting of votes at the place of polling. Hoyte refused to agree on the latter on the ground that it would be a “logistical nightmare” to count votes at the place of poll!


Elections held on October 5, 1992, as widely anticipated, led to the end of PNC dictatorial rule and the election to office of the PPP/C. Immediately prior to the 1992 elections, the PPP entered into an alliance with a group of individuals from civil society made up of intellectuals, businessmen and other members of civil society, some of whom were active in the PCD. Dr. Cheddi Jagan became Guyana’s first democratically elected Executive President and Mr. Samuel, from the Civic component, became Prime Minister.


The PPP/C, despite predictions by Hoyte that the new Government could not survive one year in office, is celebrating this month twenty-two years in office, having won successive elections, all certified free and fair . During this period, the Presidency changed hands following the death of Dr. Jagan, to his wife Janet Jagan, and following her passing, to Mr. Samuel Hinds, Dr. Bharrat Jagdeo and Mr. Donald Ramotar who is the current President.


One common denominator of all the Presidents that served at the helm of the PPP/C administration was their ability to take the country along the development continuum as the country soars to higher and higher levels of achievement and recognition, and as a proud member of the international community. Despite obstruction tactics employed by the combined political Opposition, the country continues to make substantial progress in every facet of national life.


The PPP is proud of the role it has played and continues to play in the restoration and consolidation of democratic rule in Guyana.


Congratulations are in order for His Excellency President, Donald Ramotar, all former presidents of the PPP/C Government, Cabinet Members, both present and past, the leadership and entire membership of the ruling PPP, and all those who have contributed in one way or the other to the growth and development of this beautiful and great country of ours.

People’s Progressive Party


October 5, 2014

 

Source - http://guyanachronicle.com/con...return-of-democracy/

Replies sorted oldest to newest

To the victor goes the spoils as the saying goes. The WPA and its massive assault on the dictatorship is not even mentioned as contribution to the struggle for change. 


This is simply another massaging of the notions of democracy as it conveniently fits the PPP campaign theme. That we have had no local elections, the boney structure of democracy, that we had no reforms away from a totalitarian constitution and that they have not actively sought to facilitate true republicanism via direct vote for parliamentarians hence local people holding local representatives accountable is all a consequence of the PPP's neglect to foster democracy. They can pat themselves on the back all they want but their tenure in office is marked with sustained autocratic governing and pillage of state assets.

FM
Originally Posted by Nehru:

HIP HIP HOORAY. GREAT JOB.  LET PROGRESS AND PROSPERITY CONTINUES.  CONGRATS TO THE GOVT AND PEOPLE OF THE NEW AND IMPROVED GUYANA.

222 more years of the PPP. Never again Guyanese should be lining-up for soap and butter.

FM

yeah democracy......

 

GRA, a tool for revenge by the state-says Stockbroker

OCTOBER 7, 2014 | BY  | FILED UNDER NEWS 

Backed by the supremacy of the laws and armed with the authority to enforce, some agencies of the state wield extraordinary powers. They can reveal the dictatorial tendency of government.

Commissioner General of the GRA, Khurshid Sattaur

Commissioner General of  GRA, Khurshid Sattaur

This is according to columnist, Rawle Lucas, who runs the weekly Lucas Stock index.
“Such gargantuan powers are more ominous and politically threatening when the immunity of an intolerant or obdurate President is inserted into the process of tax law.”
According to Lucas, one agency with such powers in Guyana is the Guyana Revenue Authority (GRA) whose most potent weapon is its powers of compulsion.
He added that the GRA has responsibility for tax laws of Guyana with the goal of collecting taxes for use by government.
Lucas in his analysis said that Commissioner General of the GRA, Khurshid Sattaur, cannot do his job of assessing tax or determining tax liability without the requisite information and the law “gives him the authority to demand that information from tax payers if it is not provided voluntarily.
According to Lucas, the law puts the power of Commissioner General on full display, including the ability to “make taxpayers do things that might even turn out to be unnecessary.”
He said that one example of “this frightening reality” is seen in the law which states, “The Commissioner-General may by notice in writing require any person to furnish him within a specified time any particulars in writing he requires for any purpose relating to the administration or enforcement of this Act, whether or not the person has been previously assessed or additionally assessed, with respect to the income, assets and liabilities of such person or of his wife.”
According to Lucas, it would appear, therefore, that it does not matter how often the GRA has assessed a taxpayer, it can keep coming after that taxpayer.
“Even if such behaviour amounts to harassment, it looks as if it could continue for as long as the GRA wishes it to.”
He noted, too, that the grim reality is that things could become rougher if the taxpayer appears to be resisting the request of the Commissioner-General.
He drew reference to Article 64 which states, “The Commissioner General or any officer duly authorized in writing in that behalf by him may enter any premises used for industrial, business or trade purposes at all reasonable times for the purpose of obtaining any information required for the application of this Act.”

FM

yeah democracy....

 

Could NBS suffer CLICO fate?

shaun michael samaroo

April 3, 2012

 

by Shaun Michael Samaroo

In fairness to the government of the day, this country plunged into serious corruption during the economic crisis of the 1980's. Under Forbes Burnham's rule, with flour and essential food banned, a thriving international smuggling trade developed.

This escalated in leaps and bounds under Desmond Hoyte's liberal economic policies, which freed up, for example, the movement of money. Money started flowing freely on Wall Street, and then through the cambio system.

This writer's first encounter with the rotten core of corruption in this country was as an Investigative Journalist at Stabroek News in the early 1990's. This was the time when the power barge fiasco led to President Hoyte calling a Commission of Enquiry that blamed Robert Corbin for the barge fiasco.

This period saw other stories in this newspaper. The story of this country's gold being mismanaged for the gain of a few was another indication of corruption eating at the heart and soul of the country.

The execution of cambio dealer Herman Sanichar in the early 1990's exposed a bizarre underground criminal network. The US's FBI was by then taking a strong interest already in money movements from Guyana to New York and other international destinations.

Sanichar had got caught up in international money laundering, involving a New York based Pakistani hashish dealer, and a Kitty drugstore owner who was convicted in the US and deported just before Sanichar's execution. Sanichar's was the first such execution in this country. Many more, so far unsolved, followed.

This underground criminal network, from all indications, has become entrenched, powerful and untouchable. Government now seems helpless.

The government may have become a victim of this underground power-base. The lords of this shadow land even fund political parties, reports indicate. Politicians become beholden to those who fund them. Alas, this “money as king-maker” law is the single most deadly flaw in the democratic electoral system, as we see in the US with Political Action Committees.

Today, Guyana's most urgent problem may not be the narcotic trade, although that is urgent enough. Rather it is the entrenched system of money corruption that runs rampart across all aspects of the society, not only government, as is reflected in the Auditor General's Report, but also across the Private Sector, and among the disciplined services. In fact, the average citizen now sees corruption as a way of life, bribing relevant authority figures with ease whenever necessary.

This criminal-laced culture has fuelled this society's most pressing problem – money laundering.

Money laundering may be the most crucial challenge facing not only government but also international organizations that work to keep a sane global economic order.

Several local stories lurk in the shadows, hiding dark secrets.

This country's economic health is so frail and fragile that gathering capital for any major, serious development work is a huge challenge. Former President Bharrat Jagdeo bulldozed his projects through, and from reliable reports, frequently became impatient that he could not get things done.

But his pet projects, the Berbice Bridge, the Providence Hotel and Stadium, and the Amalia Hydro project have all come in for severe flak. Even the One Laptop Per Family project, a laudable initiative, the Skeldon sugar factory, another promising project, and the four-lane East Bank Demerara roadway all stink of extreme financial irregularity.

The story of the Berbice Bridge will be a stain forever on the history pages of this country. Some of these major projects got funding from CLICO, which has since collapsed, and whose CEO had to flee Guyana for her life after she was ambushed and shot. CLICO collapsed, wiping out billions of dollars in savings.

The National Insurance Scheme (NIS) has also funded some of these projects, and announced that it won't be profitable anymore within two years.

But also collared for capital was the New Building Society (NBS).

And the story concerning the NBS, once this country's most secured bank with four billion dollars in reserve, reads like a Sherlock Holmes master mystery. With assets in 2006 of $32 billion, NBS was a cash cow.

The issue for which NBS' CEO and other high officials were fired and charged, now dismissed by the courts, indicates something deeply rotten at the core of this country's economic soul.

It involves senior officials of a major international organization operating in this country. This organization allegedly has links to nefarious countries and terrorist sympathizers around the world.

The affair at NBS, for which the CEO and senior staff were dismissed, stinks. It smells of something really rotten. It involves a woman living in Canada, in a most depressed part of Toronto, a poor section, who mysteriously held an account for $69M in a savings account at NBS.

Through a series of intrigue involving documents allegedly coming out of the Consulate Office in Toronto, Ontario, and involving a local lawyer here, this $69M was withdrawn, but the account holders eventually said they did not withdraw the money.

The Central Islamic Organization of Guyana (CIOG) crops up in documents pertaining to the matter, which this writer has seen.

Officials of the CIOG were meeting to discuss issues relating to the matter. Why? What role does the CIOG have in matters pertaining to NBS?

The story involves a doctor, who is the woman's husband, now migrated.

The story is laced with intrigue, secrets and behind-the-scenes meetings.

This writer saw a letter dated July 20, 2005, from a senior Board authority to a Director and executive manager, that alleges “movements of funds in order to facilitate the issuance of visas to account holders”, which are “reprehensible and could cause great damage to the society”.

The story behind the firing of the CEO of NBS makes for sobering reading. What role the CEO, Maurice Arjune, and those dismissed with him, played in this saga, may never be fully known.

Arjune has denied every allegation against him in court documents, and has sued NBS for wrongful dismissal, claiming lost benefits and wages.

One source said that these rotten foundations could lead to the eventual collapse of the NBS, and also a drastic transformation of the NIS – another cash cow for capital.

The government's role in all this? In its grab for capital for development projects, it may have become a victim of nefarious, powerful people with deeply ulterior motives.

One day, the full story may be told.

FM

We must all condemn the vengeful and desperate pursuit of Kaieteur News and Glenn Lall

October 7, 2014 | By | Filed Under Letters 

DEAR EDITOR, It is really frightening that in this 22nd year since the so-called restoration of democracy to Guyana, a major Guyanese newspaper and its owner have been targeted for persecution and prosecution simply for reporting the news. Though I am convinced that any eventual prosecution will end in failure, I am concerned that Kaieteur News and Glenn Lall will have to expend valuable time and hard-earned money to clear their names against the vengeful frivolities of people who believe that their election or appointment to office has made them immune to scrutiny. I believe that these demonstrably frivolous actions have no place in even a so-called democratic society such as ours, and must therefore be condemned. So I join right-thinking Guyanese in condemning the various skullduggeries that have been unleashed against Kaieteur News and Glenn Lall by Khurshid Sattaur and his handlers. In their vengeful and desperate pursuit of Mr. Lall and Kaieteur News, Mr. Sattaur and his handlers have disregarded civility, ignored the rule of law, and stomped on our constitution. I urge Guyanese everywhere to join me in defending Mr. Lall and Kaieteur News so that they can continue to provide us with the information we so desperately need to help hold our politicians and appointed officials responsible to their oaths of office. As this matter unfolds, it is worth observing that Khurshid Sattaur probably didn’t voluntarily pick up the fire-rage of Bharrat Jagdeo and others in their ill-advised battle against Kaieteur News and Glenn Lall. It’s just that he finds himself as head of the Guyana Revenue Authority (GRA) at a time when those who appointed him are hell-bent on using the GRA or any other means to destroy Kaieteur News or any other entity that exposes their disgusting disservice to our nation. So having picked up the fire-rage, Khurshid now finds himself trapped and belittled in a firestorm of public criticisms and self-delusions, hoping against all hope that the police will rescue him. I hope that the police will act professionally and refuse to allow themselves to be used as anybody’s attack dog. The police must respect their oath of office, respect the independence they preach, and refuse to be used in any effort to deprive Guyanese of a news outlet that is essential in a so-called democracy. Lionel Lowe

Mitwah
Originally Posted by skeldon_man:
Originally Posted by Nehru:

HIP HIP HOORAY. GREAT JOB.  LET PROGRESS AND PROSPERITY CONTINUES.  CONGRATS TO THE GOVT AND PEOPLE OF THE NEW AND IMPROVED GUYANA.

222 more years of the PPP. Never again Guyanese should be lining-up for soap and butter.

While all political parties have items to address and resolve, nonetheless, the PPP/C is much more responsive to the grass-roots issues of Guyanese.

 

Overall, the PPP/C is considered as the political to be in government for quite a while based on free and fair elections.

FM

Yeah democracy

 

Maria van Beek survives execution

APRIL 17, 2009 | BY  | FILED UNDER NEWS 

…bullet missed her heart by close to 5 inches

Anxious relatives at the Woodlands Hospital yesterday morning.

Anxious relatives at the Woodlands Hospital yesterday morning.

Commissioner of Insurance Maria van Beek narrowly survived a brazen attempt on her life at around 08:15 hrs yesterday, after she was shot by a gunman while driving her car along Lombard Street in Georgetown.
Van Beek, who is also the Judicial Manager for CLICO, was shot in the chest as she drove in heavy traffic during a downpour.

Eyewitnesses said that the gunman struck in the vicinity of Lombard and Leopold Streets, standing in front on van Beek’s car before firing a bullet into her right front window.
An eyewitness told Kaieteur News that the gunman then walked calmly into Leopold Street, where he and an accomplice escaped on a Honda CG motorcycle.
The injured woman managed to drive to Mohamed’s Enterprises on Lombard Street, where she sought assistance from staff who drove her to the Woodlands Hospital in Carmichael Street, where she underwent emergency surgery.
A physician at the hospital said that the bullet missed van Beek’s heart by about five inches, but listed her condition as stable.
From all reports, the gunman and his accomplice made no attempt to relieve van Beek of any of her valuables.

A police statement also indicated that no attempt was made to rob van Beek, and said that patrols were dispatched to the scene after the shooting.
Roadblocks were also laid out and several searches carried out as the police continue their efforts to locate the two suspects.
Van Beek’s car was taken to the Privatisation Unit in Kingston after detectives had checked it for prints and other forensic evidence.
Ameer Mohamed, manager of Mohamed’s Enterprises, told Kaieteur News that he was at his premises when he heard a loud gunshot.

FM

Yeah man democracy......

 

More than a conflict of interest, did Brassington breach his legal and fiduciary duties as a NICIL director?

JUNE 5, 2012 | BY  | FILED UNDER LETTERS 

 

DEAR EDITOR,
The transaction Winston Brassington conducted for his brother, Jonathan Brassington, has prompted me to consult a few legal luminaries in the region, including a few who have appeared before the Caribbean Court of Justice. Brassington’s case may be more than a conflict of interest. The issue is whether Winston Brassington also breached his legal and fiduciary duties as a director under the law.
Brassington’s legal and fiduciary duties as a director under the law in Guyana require him to (1) act honestly (2) act in good faith (3) act in the best interest of the company and (4) exercise reasonable care, diligence and skill. These duties as a NICIL director trump obligations to anyone else, including his brother.
NICIL has to come first as long as Winston Brassington served as director of NICIL. Any frank analysis of the facts strongly suggests NICIL and the people of Guyana came last in this transaction.
Winston Brassington was in a conflict of interest and his legal and fiduciary duties were on thin ice the moment he purchased those 50,000 shares for NICIL and then also bought 2.25 million shares for his brother, Jonathan Brassington. A director’s decision-making process must always be in the best interest of the company, in good faith, and to the benefit the company.
Winston Brassington buying 50,000 shares for NICIL and Guyana, while buying 2.25 million shares for Jonathan Brassington, was not a transaction in the best interest of NICIL and Guyana. Winston Brassington was obviously motivated by the reasonable belief and expectation of some profit, gain, benefit or advantage to NICIL by virtue of acquiring those 50,000 shares, which is why he bought them. Once there was the belief, potential or the possibility of profit, gain, advantage or benefit to NICIL in this transaction, Winston Brassington legally and fiduciarially could not act for Jonathan Brassington.
Winston Brassington’s actions benefited Jonathan Brassington at the expense of NICIL and the Guyanese taxpayers. Once Winston Brassington was aware of the shares on offer and had first option to buy those shares on NICIL’s behalf, Winston Brassington had no choice but to buy those shares for NICIL and no one else. To buy those 2.25 million shares for anyone else while buying only 50,000 for NICIL meant that the profit, gain, advantage and benefit Brassington saw in buying those same shares for NICIL went to another individual while NICIL loses that profit, advantage, gain or benefit.
When NICIL loses the people of Guyana lose. Winston Brassington cannot act in a manner that undermines NICIL. He was bound by law to act in NICIL’s interest. Acting honestly and in good faith required Winston Brassington tell Jonathan Brassington that he cannot act for him. Acting in good faith required Winston Brassington to buy those 2.25 million shares for NICIL so that NICIL and the Guyanese people get the benefit, profit, advantage and gain of those shares.

FM
Originally Posted by HM_Redux:

Yeah democracy

 

Maria van Beek survives execution

APRIL 17, 2009 | BY  | FILED UNDER NEWS 

…bullet missed her heart by close to 5 inches

Anxious relatives at the Woodlands Hospital yesterday morning.

Anxious relatives at the Woodlands Hospital yesterday morning.

Commissioner of Insurance Maria van Beek narrowly survived a brazen attempt on her life at around 08:15 hrs yesterday, after she was shot by a gunman while driving her car along Lombard Street in Georgetown.
Van Beek, who is also the Judicial Manager for CLICO, was shot in the chest as she drove in heavy traffic during a downpour.

Eyewitnesses said that the gunman struck in the vicinity of Lombard and Leopold Streets, standing in front on van Beek’s car before firing a bullet into her right front window.
An eyewitness told Kaieteur News that the gunman then walked calmly into Leopold Street, where he and an accomplice escaped on a Honda CG motorcycle.
The injured woman managed to drive to Mohamed’s Enterprises on Lombard Street, where she sought assistance from staff who drove her to the Woodlands Hospital in Carmichael Street, where she underwent emergency surgery.
A physician at the hospital said that the bullet missed van Beek’s heart by about five inches, but listed her condition as stable.
From all reports, the gunman and his accomplice made no attempt to relieve van Beek of any of her valuables.

A police statement also indicated that no attempt was made to rob van Beek, and said that patrols were dispatched to the scene after the shooting.
Roadblocks were also laid out and several searches carried out as the police continue their efforts to locate the two suspects.
Van Beek’s car was taken to the Privatisation Unit in Kingston after detectives had checked it for prints and other forensic evidence.
Ameer Mohamed, manager of Mohamed’s Enterprises, told Kaieteur News that he was at his premises when he heard a loud gunshot.

2009??  Is this an episode of Back to the Future or Twilight Zone???

Nehru
Originally Posted by Nehru:
Originally Posted by HM_Redux:

Yeah democracy

 

Maria van Beek survives execution

APRIL 17, 2009 | BY  | FILED UNDER NEWS 

…bullet missed her heart by close to 5 inches

Anxious relatives at the Woodlands Hospital yesterday morning.

Anxious relatives at the Woodlands Hospital yesterday morning.

Commissioner of Insurance Maria van Beek narrowly survived a brazen attempt on her life at around 08:15 hrs yesterday, after she was shot by a gunman while driving her car along Lombard Street in Georgetown.
Van Beek, who is also the Judicial Manager for CLICO, was shot in the chest as she drove in heavy traffic during a downpour.

Eyewitnesses said that the gunman struck in the vicinity of Lombard and Leopold Streets, standing in front on van Beek’s car before firing a bullet into her right front window.
An eyewitness told Kaieteur News that the gunman then walked calmly into Leopold Street, where he and an accomplice escaped on a Honda CG motorcycle.
The injured woman managed to drive to Mohamed’s Enterprises on Lombard Street, where she sought assistance from staff who drove her to the Woodlands Hospital in Carmichael Street, where she underwent emergency surgery.
A physician at the hospital said that the bullet missed van Beek’s heart by about five inches, but listed her condition as stable.
From all reports, the gunman and his accomplice made no attempt to relieve van Beek of any of her valuables.

A police statement also indicated that no attempt was made to rob van Beek, and said that patrols were dispatched to the scene after the shooting.
Roadblocks were also laid out and several searches carried out as the police continue their efforts to locate the two suspects.
Van Beek’s car was taken to the Privatisation Unit in Kingston after detectives had checked it for prints and other forensic evidence.
Ameer Mohamed, manager of Mohamed’s Enterprises, told Kaieteur News that he was at his premises when he heard a loud gunshot.

2009??  Is this an episode of Back to the Future or Twilight Zone???

The man has a dhall gutney business.

FM
Originally Posted by skeldon_man:
Originally Posted by Nehru:
Originally Posted by HM_Redux:

Yeah democracy

 

Maria van Beek survives execution

APRIL 17, 2009 | BY  | FILED UNDER NEWS 

…bullet missed her heart by close to 5 inches

Anxious relatives at the Woodlands Hospital yesterday morning.

Anxious relatives at the Woodlands Hospital yesterday morning.

Commissioner of Insurance Maria van Beek narrowly survived a brazen attempt on her life at around 08:15 hrs yesterday, after she was shot by a gunman while driving her car along Lombard Street in Georgetown.
Van Beek, who is also the Judicial Manager for CLICO, was shot in the chest as she drove in heavy traffic during a downpour.

Eyewitnesses said that the gunman struck in the vicinity of Lombard and Leopold Streets, standing in front on van Beek’s car before firing a bullet into her right front window.
An eyewitness told Kaieteur News that the gunman then walked calmly into Leopold Street, where he and an accomplice escaped on a Honda CG motorcycle.
The injured woman managed to drive to Mohamed’s Enterprises on Lombard Street, where she sought assistance from staff who drove her to the Woodlands Hospital in Carmichael Street, where she underwent emergency surgery.
A physician at the hospital said that the bullet missed van Beek’s heart by about five inches, but listed her condition as stable.
From all reports, the gunman and his accomplice made no attempt to relieve van Beek of any of her valuables.

A police statement also indicated that no attempt was made to rob van Beek, and said that patrols were dispatched to the scene after the shooting.
Roadblocks were also laid out and several searches carried out as the police continue their efforts to locate the two suspects.
Van Beek’s car was taken to the Privatisation Unit in Kingston after detectives had checked it for prints and other forensic evidence.
Ameer Mohamed, manager of Mohamed’s Enterprises, told Kaieteur News that he was at his premises when he heard a loud gunshot.

2009??  Is this an episode of Back to the Future or Twilight Zone???

The man has a dhall gutney business.

HEHEHEHE No wonder.

Nehru

Cheddi Jagan’s philosophy still relevant to today’s challenges.

Happy 22nd anniversary to the PPP. Long live the PPP. Long live Jagdeo and Ramotar & the Queen of England. 

FM
Last edited by Former Member
Originally Posted by skeldon_man:
Originally Posted by Nehru:

HIP HIP HOORAY. GREAT JOB.  LET PROGRESS AND PROSPERITY CONTINUES.  CONGRATS TO THE GOVT AND PEOPLE OF THE NEW AND IMPROVED GUYANA.

222 more years of the PPP. Never again Guyanese should be lining-up for soap and butter.

Nowadays I hear dem ppp/C guys doan line up they does bend down for the soap while using the butter in each others butts. I doan think they'll last too long, they'll wind up with cop cop ants in thier backsides.

cain
Last edited by cain
Originally Posted by Cobra:

Cheddi Jagan’s philosophy still relevant to today’s challenges.

Happy 22nd anniversary to the PPP. Long live the PPP. Long live Jagdeo and Ramotar & the Queen of England. 

The Queen of England can haul she Baxside suh!!!!

Nehru
Originally Posted by Nehru:
Originally Posted by Cobra:

Cheddi Jagan’s philosophy still relevant to today’s challenges.

Happy 22nd anniversary to the PPP. Long live the PPP. Long live Jagdeo and Ramotar & the Queen of England. 

The Queen of England can haul she Baxside suh!!!!

Ah so bad you treating grandma of England? 

FM
Originally Posted by Nehru:
Originally Posted by Cobra:

Cheddi Jagan’s philosophy still relevant to today’s challenges.

Happy 22nd anniversary to the PPP. Long live the PPP. Long live Jagdeo and Ramotar & the Queen of England. 

The Queen of England can haul she Baxside suh!!!!

The other two scumbags should help the planet and just die.

cain

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