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Mother, daughter die after house collapses at Bonasika

The collapsed house [Police photo)
The collapsed house (Police photo)

A mother and her daughter died tragically yesterday at Bonasika Creek when their house collapsed as they were feeding their puppies.

The police today named the victims as 35-year-old farmer, Seematie Chandra and her 6-year-old daughter Christine Sookdeo.

Reports are that the mother and daughter were under the house feeding puppies when the house collapsed around 4 pm, the police say.

The deceased and her daughter  resided  at the Lower Bonasika Creek, Essequibo River address with two other children and her 45-year-old husband, Tulsieram Sookdeo, who is also a farmer.

According to the grieving husband, he left home yesterday at about 3.50 pm to burn bushes on another plot of land two lots away.

At the time, his wife and children were at home.  Shortly after he received information from a neighbour  that his house had collapsed and that his wife and daughter, who were under the house feeding the puppies, had been pinned under the house beams.

As a result, he hurried home, where he found his wife and daughter  beneath the collapsed house.

With assistance from villagers, the bodies were removed and transported via boat to Parika Hubu Stelling.

The bodies were further transported to the Leonora Cottage Hospital, where they were pronounced dead on arrival by a doctor on duty. On completion, the bodies were then escorted to Ezekiel funeral home, where they await Post Mortem Examinations.

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The mother was 35 years old. That means she experienced 30 years under the PPP who built Pradoville for themselves and homes with swimming pools and better houses for their dogs.

How do these politicians sleep at nights? There are more than 60% of the population living below the poverty line.

Condolences to rest of the family.

Mitwah

Guyana’s bauxite is the best in the world

―High-grade, low impurity bauxite being mined at First Bauxite LLC’s Bonasika Bauxite Project.

DPI, Guyana, Friday, February 21, 2020

Guyana’s bauxite is being hailed as being of the highest quality in the world.

The assertion came from President and CEO Bill Rice whose company, First Bauxite LLC, on Thursday launched its Bonasika Bauxite Project.

Rice explained that the mining company produces high grade, non-metallurgical (low impurity) bauxite with raw ore alumina contents at 63 percent, and when sintered, over 93 percent alumina.

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Sample of Guyana’s Bauxite at the Bonasika Bauxite Project.

Sintered bauxite is produced when the rock is crushed to a powdered form and then fused into round beads at a very high temperature.

“In essence what this means is that Guyana’s bauxite fills a particular niche in the alumina range, between 87-88 percent typical bauxites, which makes it a more expensive grade on the market,” Rice said.

He added that First Bauxite LLC through its local subsidiary, Guyana Industrial Mineral Incorporated, is already supplying the market with the product in a bid to develop its supply chain.

“A pilot-scale production of bauxite began in late 2018 and throughout 2019; however, full production began on January 1st 2020,” Rice stated.

So far, he noted that 20,000 tonnes of bauxite had been shipped overseas since last month and the company was looking to do much more.

“We are aiming for 200,000 tonnes to be exported by the ending of 2020. The total capacity for the company is about 320,000 tonnes a year,” Rice stated.

Minister of Natural Resources, the Hon. Raphael Trotman, who was present at Thursday’s launch, also praised the quality of Guyana’s bauxite.

“As it turns out, the bauxite being mined here, is the best quality, not only in all Guyana but all the world,” he said while congratulating the company.

“You have stayed the course, and today, as bauxite is one of the minerals that will feature in ‘green technology’, you are poised to be at the forefront of a booming economy,” the minister added.

Alumina, derived from bauxite, is widely used in a variety of industrial abrasive materials, owing to its superior hardness and strength.

Mitwah

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