Over 50% of residents use the bush or hole in the ground as their toilet. This is indeed progress.
Tell me if any of your friends or family live in a house like that in Guyana?
They don't receive remittance money.
Plastic city is place on the West Coast that has some homeless people living. Don't you see homeless people in Toronto and New York?
Clearly you have no bloody idea what you are talking about, its best to remain silent so as not to expose your ignorance and uninformed self.
read and educate yourself man........
Life in Plastic City
Posted By Jeanna Pearson On February 3, 2014 @ 5:01 am In What the People Say | No Comments
Interviews and photos by Jeanna Pearson and Arian Browne
Stabroek News recently visited the Plastic City Squatting Area, West Demerara and residents were eager to speak about life in the swampy mangroves.
Ronald Alfred [miner]: `We were born here and we are comfortable. There is nothing to be afraid of hereâĶ even the snakes frighten us, we are not afraid of them. I lived 19 years here but the only problem is getting clean water. We are squatters but Jetty people still need water.â
Albert Link [Self Employed]: `I arrived in Plastic City when it only had four houses; that was fifteen years ago and itâs rough living without water and light for all those years. So it would be good if we could get some light and water.â
: `We are accustomed with Plastic City; fetching water and sleeping early, and no problem with people chopping people and killing. Itâs quiet here but we need water and lights.â
Eon De Britta [A farmer]: `We donât have electricity and the few that getting is about 15 houses and thatâs not fair. Nothing ainât good about this place but we living here because itâs all we got. We glad for house lots but the people at the ministry collected our numbers and years passed and they never called. When the high tide come it would flood out the Jetty area and the dirty water would mix up with the toilet water. Thatâs what we living in.â
Dillip Lambert [unemployed]: `Itâs very nice living here, the only problem we have is getting running water. If we donât have bicycles then we would have to fetch the water on our shoulders. Some people getting house lots but some of us waiting on the ministry to call us. They collected our numbers and said that they would call us.â
Mandoor Alli [Chairman of the Community Policing Group]: `We living comfortably here but itâs only the light and water that we need. Some have light but the rest of us have to get generators. All of us in this place apply for house lots but some of us never received a call. But me personally wouldnât want to move if they can give us this land I would be happy.â
Susan Ramdas [Housewife]: `We are not staying here for long anymore because we get a house lot from the ministry and we start building. So we donât have to put up with no light and clean water anymore.â
Shanta Ramdas [unemployed]: `I happy living here. We ainât get water and light but we accustom to it. Itâs a strain but we make out quite well. But I do hope that they would put in clean water for us because children have to fetch water from far to bathe to go to school.â
Maranda Thomas [Housewife]: `Iâm living here two months now and the place really quiet and it ainât get problem with thieves because everybody know everybody here and is only people from outside would come and hide in the Jetty.â
Nazetta Gill [Housewife]: `We are not happy here because the children donât have any place to play after school and we donât get water or light. That all we want. We ainât pleased with the situation we living in but we canât afford to rent a place or build a house.â
Plastic city is place on the West Coast that has some homeless people living. Don't you see homeless people in Toronto and New York?
Why don't you focus on why people are homeless. The lack of jobs and failure of the PPP to attract new industries and businesses. Look at Suriname all kinds of US companies are setting up operations and it is fast becoming a hub for their global business operations. Why not Guyana?
Clearly you have no bloody idea what you are talking about, its best to remain silent so as not to expose your ignorance and uninformed self.
read and educate yourself man........
Life in Plastic City
Posted By Jeanna Pearson On February 3, 2014 @ 5:01 am In What the People Say | No Comments
Interviews and photos by Jeanna Pearson and Arian Browne
Stabroek News recently visited the Plastic City Squatting Area, West Demerara and residents were eager to speak about life in the swampy mangroves.
Ronald Alfred [miner]: `We were born here and we are comfortable. There is nothing to be afraid of hereâĶ even the snakes frighten us, we are not afraid of them. I lived 19 years here but the only problem is getting clean water. We are squatters but Jetty people still need water.â
Albert Link [Self Employed]: `I arrived in Plastic City when it only had four houses; that was fifteen years ago and itâs rough living without water and light for all those years. So it would be good if we could get some light and water.â
: `We are accustomed with Plastic City; fetching water and sleeping early, and no problem with people chopping people and killing. Itâs quiet here but we need water and lights.â
Eon De Britta [A farmer]: `We donât have electricity and the few that getting is about 15 houses and thatâs not fair. Nothing ainât good about this place but we living here because itâs all we got. We glad for house lots but the people at the ministry collected our numbers and years passed and they never called. When the high tide come it would flood out the Jetty area and the dirty water would mix up with the toilet water. Thatâs what we living in.â
Dillip Lambert [unemployed]: `Itâs very nice living here, the only problem we have is getting running water. If we donât have bicycles then we would have to fetch the water on our shoulders. Some people getting house lots but some of us waiting on the ministry to call us. They collected our numbers and said that they would call us.â
Mandoor Alli [Chairman of the Community Policing Group]: `We living comfortably here but itâs only the light and water that we need. Some have light but the rest of us have to get generators. All of us in this place apply for house lots but some of us never received a call. But me personally wouldnât want to move if they can give us this land I would be happy.â
Susan Ramdas [Housewife]: `We are not staying here for long anymore because we get a house lot from the ministry and we start building. So we donât have to put up with no light and clean water anymore.â
Shanta Ramdas [unemployed]: `I happy living here. We ainât get water and light but we accustom to it. Itâs a strain but we make out quite well. But I do hope that they would put in clean water for us because children have to fetch water from far to bathe to go to school.â
Maranda Thomas [Housewife]: `Iâm living here two months now and the place really quiet and it ainât get problem with thieves because everybody know everybody here and is only people from outside would come and hide in the Jetty.â
Nazetta Gill [Housewife]: `We are not happy here because the children donât have any place to play after school and we donât get water or light. That all we want. We ainât pleased with the situation we living in but we canât afford to rent a place or build a house.â
Redux, Billy gone into hiding now. LOL Once his family is not one of them living there.
Clearly you have no bloody idea what you are talking about, its best to remain silent so as not to expose your ignorance and uninformed self.
read and educate yourself man........
Life in Plastic City
Posted By Jeanna Pearson On February 3, 2014 @ 5:01 am In What the People Say | No Comments
Interviews and photos by Jeanna Pearson and Arian Browne
Stabroek News recently visited the Plastic City Squatting Area, West Demerara and residents were eager to speak about life in the swampy mangroves.
Ronald Alfred [miner]: `We were born here and we are comfortable. There is nothing to be afraid of hereâĶ even the snakes frighten us, we are not afraid of them. I lived 19 years here but the only problem is getting clean water. We are squatters but Jetty people still need water.â
Albert Link [Self Employed]: `I arrived in Plastic City when it only had four houses; that was fifteen years ago and itâs rough living without water and light for all those years. So it would be good if we could get some light and water.â
: `We are accustomed with Plastic City; fetching water and sleeping early, and no problem with people chopping people and killing. Itâs quiet here but we need water and lights.â
Eon De Britta [A farmer]: `We donât have electricity and the few that getting is about 15 houses and thatâs not fair. Nothing ainât good about this place but we living here because itâs all we got. We glad for house lots but the people at the ministry collected our numbers and years passed and they never called. When the high tide come it would flood out the Jetty area and the dirty water would mix up with the toilet water. Thatâs what we living in.â
Dillip Lambert [unemployed]: `Itâs very nice living here, the only problem we have is getting running water. If we donât have bicycles then we would have to fetch the water on our shoulders. Some people getting house lots but some of us waiting on the ministry to call us. They collected our numbers and said that they would call us.â
Mandoor Alli [Chairman of the Community Policing Group]: `We living comfortably here but itâs only the light and water that we need. Some have light but the rest of us have to get generators. All of us in this place apply for house lots but some of us never received a call. But me personally wouldnât want to move if they can give us this land I would be happy.â
Susan Ramdas [Housewife]: `We are not staying here for long anymore because we get a house lot from the ministry and we start building. So we donât have to put up with no light and clean water anymore.â
Shanta Ramdas [unemployed]: `I happy living here. We ainât get water and light but we accustom to it. Itâs a strain but we make out quite well. But I do hope that they would put in clean water for us because children have to fetch water from far to bathe to go to school.â
Maranda Thomas [Housewife]: `Iâm living here two months now and the place really quiet and it ainât get problem with thieves because everybody know everybody here and is only people from outside would come and hide in the Jetty.â
Nazetta Gill [Housewife]: `We are not happy here because the children donât have any place to play after school and we donât get water or light. That all we want. We ainât pleased with the situation we living in but we canât afford to rent a place or build a house.â
Paid PNC sympathizers.
Everyone is a paid PNC sympathizer, the pictures doan lie.....
The chemicals were suspected to have been sold to private cane farmers
I heard about this whan I was in Guyana. It was just rumors then. Jail the corrupted bastards. In Skeldon some of the cane farmers also went out of business.
a lot of them went out of business because the PPP promised them loads of money they would get from supplying cane to the skeldon factory. They are paid based on how much sugar is produced from the cane and since the factory cannot efficiently produce sugar from the cane the farmers are being screwed royally.
Many of them have lost land, houses and equipment because they cannot repay the bank. Robert persaud and Jagdeo made a ton of promises to them.
When you listen to the farmers its heartbreaking, of course we doan know what the people in Guyana want per the PPP mouth pieces.
It is sad when a people are so beaten down that the accept horrible living conditions as "normal". Rather than spending so many millions of dollars to bootstrap another chinese company at the Marriott ( and we did not even get a token Panda), these approx `120 families could have been relocated easily to higher ground in proper homes. I cannot bear to think the amount of parasites that are living inside these poor children.
The PPP cannot find truck drivers in Guyana they are allowing and issuing permits for the chinese to import truck drivers.
Soon they will import chinese guard dogs and water...
The PPP cannot find truck drivers in Guyana they are allowing and issuing permits for the chinese to import truck drivers.
Soon they will import chinese guard dogs and water...
Sorry HM. Chinese do not have guard dogs. They kill em and eat em..those bastards.