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Former Member
No show in radio licence case …both applicant and lawyers absentPDFPrintE-mail
   
Friday, 10 May 2013 03:51

THE hearing into the court case brought by Enrico Woolford against the National Frequency Management Unit (NFMU) over its issuance of radio licences, which was scheduled for yesterday, saw Woolford and his battery of lawyers, Rex McKay, Keith Massiah, Abiola Wong, Fitz Peters, Bettina Glasford and Christopher Ram being absent.

Only the Attorney General Anil Nandlall who is representing the NFMU and that unit’s head, Valmikki Singh, appeared. Leave was granted to the AG to file an affidavit within 21 days.
The AG also made an application to the court that all the parties who are affected by the proceedings be served with copies of the proceedings, since they can be affected by its outcome, and therefore ought to be afforded the right to be heard.
The release of 11 radio licences to privately owned entities and organisations by former President Bharrat Jagdeo in late 2011 brought an end to a long held state monopoly on the radio airwaves, but was met with condescending reactions from those whose applications were shelved and opposition politicians looking for an opportunity to nitpick.
The government’s argument that the issuance of the licences was primarily to end the long held monopoly was not enough to convince them. Full page newspaper advertisements, picketing exercises outside of the Office of the President and the recent move to the court to reverse the decision, characterised their protest that called for the revocation of the licences.
The newly licenced radio operators are Matthews Ridge Community Council, Little Rock Television Station, Alfro Alphonso and Sons Enterprise, New Guyana Company Limited, National Television Network (NTN), Hits and Jams Entertainment, Wireless Connections, Rudy Grant, Telcor and Cultural Broadcasting Inc., Linden Wireless Communication Network, and Television Guyana (TVG) Channel 28 were the organisations granted licences.

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The release of 11 radio licences to privately owned entities and organisations by former President Bharrat Jagdeo in late 2011 brought an end to a long held state monopoly on the radio airwaves, but was met with condescending reactions from those whose applications were shelved and opposition politicians looking for an opportunity to nitpick.

FM
Originally Posted by Conscience:

The release of 11 radio licences to privately owned entities and organisations by former President Bharrat Jagdeo in late 2011 brought an end to a long held state monopoly on the radio airwaves, but was met with condescending reactions from those whose applications were shelved and opposition politicians looking for an opportunity to nitpick.

Councie...all aya got Crab Louse

Opposition cant nit-pick aya

Just watch how aya using Banana fuh scratch......

thius_pubis_-_crab_louse_516.jpg" title="A pubic louse">A pubic louse

http://www.wikihow.com/Treat-Crabs-(Pubic-Lice)

FM
Originally Posted by Conscience:

The release of 11 radio licences to privately owned entities and organisations by former President Bharrat Jagdeo in late 2011 brought an end to a long held state monopoly on the radio airwaves, but was met with condescending reactions from those whose applications were shelved and opposition politicians looking for an opportunity to nitpick.

Yes, nitpicking means complaining about the naked nepotism of awarding state assets to friends and family!

 

The PPP can try all they can to frame truth as they see fit but if it is encapsulated in a lie, only a few stupid people will buy it. They are digging a credibility hole. In time they will reach a point of diminishing returns. It will not matter what they say they will not be believed since they would have become so saturated with lies.

 

This is not a matter of breaking a monopoly. This is a matter of theft of the nations assets by converting it to private ownership of kith and kin.

FM

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