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FM
Former Member

‘Guyana can become a developed country in my lifetime’ – President Ramotar

 

PRESIDENT Donald Ramotar yesterday at Unicomer New Distribution Centre asserted that with investments such as this one, “The whole idea is to make Guyana a modern and developed country.”Speaking at the official opening of the Unicomer Distribution Centre located in Eccles, President of Guyana, Donald Ramotar stressed: “As I have said before, although I am no spring chicken any longer I still believe I have enough in me left to witness Guyana moving from a middle- income developing country as it is so described to being in the not-too-distant future as a developed country.”
He noted that for the country to achieve such a status it has to be a joint effort: “This project itself is a grand partnership among the Government, private sector and other stakeholders to work together to make us a modern society.” Noting too that the development of people is essential, since achieving this is heavily dependent on people’s development. “This is what we have been doing, we have invested heavily over the years in our people, since we wanted to provide investors with a work force that is highly educated.”
He urged persons to peruse the Government’s budget and see for themselves that “most of our budget is placed in the social sector; we place emphasis on this sector and education takes the biggest bite. With this investment done over the years, we are able to see that this is having a positive impact on our economy as a whole. Over the last 20 years only 30% of our children were able to attend secondary school and obtain an education, today we are almost, after achieving universal primary education, on the verge of achieving universal secondary education,” the President boasted.
Noting that there needs to be greater improvement in the education sector, especially in our interior locations, since this can become one of the major areas of development, he said. The President related that the Government is currently working with the University of Guyana to put some of the courses online, so as to remove some of the impediments of remoteness that the interiors locations face.
The Head of State explained that “We have also been spending a lot of money on technical education too; we now have institutes in many parts of the country that we never had before and this is what we have been planning for, so that we can give our people more skills in the anticipation that we were close to having cheap energy.”
President Ramotar explained that it is very well known that this is one of the most important factors that have not allowed Guyana to go forward as fast as it could have and “the fact is that we don’t have cheap energy in our society.” He added that despite the recent setback with the Amaila Falls Hydro Project, “we are still determined that we will have that project built here in Guyana so that we can provide cheap energy for the development of a strong industrial manufacturing sector and a strong processing sector.” Noting, however, that with this achievement we can have our agricultural sector soar. “We have a progressing agricultural sector and we can easily develop an agro- industrial complex,” he said.
“We need to connect the north and south of our country with all-weather roads, we need to have a paved highway from Linden to Lethem so that we can take advantage of the huge South American market that is just close to us, but we need more than that and infrastructure is expensive,” the President posited. He also stressed that we have seen it manifested that Guyana has really become a bridge between the Caribbean and South America.
The Head of State also emphasised that the country is in need of a deep-water harbour, noting that with this in place our country can then export our products in bulk and also take advantage of other avenues that will open up to Guyana. “We also need another very expensive infrastructure that we have to invest in and that is the deep-water harbour; with the expansion of the Panama Canal this will revolutionise maritime trade and we therefore have to be prepared to take advantage of it,” he stated.
Tourism, he noted, itself has such huge possibilities: “This product we have here is second to none and if we develop this product it can be a major contributor to this country’s economy. This is a thriving sector and if given the chance to achieve its full potential, will become the future of this country’s development.
“Let us all work together to achieve in the shortest possible time a status of a developed country,” the Head of State emphasised, as he concluded his remarks. (Rebecca Ganesh-Ally)

 

source: The Guyana Chronicle

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Originally Posted by Nehru:

YES IF THE DESTRUCTIVE AND THE NO TO EVERYTHING OPPOSITION BECOMES A MINORITY.

Let the people decide...instead of a dictatorship

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

YES IF THE DESTRUCTIVE AND THE NO TO EVERYTHING OPPOSITION BECOMES A MINORITY.

Let the people decide...instead of a dictatorship

That is EXACTLY what will happen in about 3 months.  THE WILL OF THE PEOPLE IS PARAMOUNT IN TODAY'S GUYANA DEMOCRACY.  NO MORE RIGGING AND FRIGGING!!!

Nehru
Originally Posted by Conscience:

‘Guyana can become a developed country in my lifetime’ – President Ramotar

 

PRESIDENT Donald Ramotar yesterday at Unicomer New Distribution Centre asserted that with investments such as this one, “The whole idea is to make Guyana a modern and developed country.”Speaking at the official opening of the Unicomer Distribution Centre located in Eccles, President of Guyana, Donald Ramotar stressed: “As I have said before, although I am no spring chicken any longer I still believe I have enough in me left to witness Guyana moving from a middle- income developing country as it is so described to being in the not-too-distant future as a developed country.”
He noted that for the country to achieve such a status it has to be a joint effort: “This project itself is a grand partnership among the Government, private sector and other stakeholders to work together to make us a modern society.” Noting too that the development of people is essential, since achieving this is heavily dependent on people’s development. “This is what we have been doing, we have invested heavily over the years in our people, since we wanted to provide investors with a work force that is highly educated.”
He urged persons to peruse the Government’s budget and see for themselves that “most of our budget is placed in the social sector; we place emphasis on this sector and education takes the biggest bite. With this investment done over the years, we are able to see that this is having a positive impact on our economy as a whole. Over the last 20 years only 30% of our children were able to attend secondary school and obtain an education, today we are almost, after achieving universal primary education, on the verge of achieving universal secondary education,” the President boasted.
Noting that there needs to be greater improvement in the education sector, especially in our interior locations, since this can become one of the major areas of development, he said. The President related that the Government is currently working with the University of Guyana to put some of the courses online, so as to remove some of the impediments of remoteness that the interiors locations face.
The Head of State explained that “We have also been spending a lot of money on technical education too; we now have institutes in many parts of the country that we never had before and this is what we have been planning for, so that we can give our people more skills in the anticipation that we were close to having cheap energy.”
President Ramotar explained that it is very well known that this is one of the most important factors that have not allowed Guyana to go forward as fast as it could have and “the fact is that we don’t have cheap energy in our society.” He added that despite the recent setback with the Amaila Falls Hydro Project, “we are still determined that we will have that project built here in Guyana so that we can provide cheap energy for the development of a strong industrial manufacturing sector and a strong processing sector.” Noting, however, that with this achievement we can have our agricultural sector soar. “We have a progressing agricultural sector and we can easily develop an agro- industrial complex,” he said.
“We need to connect the north and south of our country with all-weather roads, we need to have a paved highway from Linden to Lethem so that we can take advantage of the huge South American market that is just close to us, but we need more than that and infrastructure is expensive,” the President posited. He also stressed that we have seen it manifested that Guyana has really become a bridge between the Caribbean and South America.
The Head of State also emphasised that the country is in need of a deep-water harbour, noting that with this in place our country can then export our products in bulk and also take advantage of other avenues that will open up to Guyana. “We also need another very expensive infrastructure that we have to invest in and that is the deep-water harbour; with the expansion of the Panama Canal this will revolutionise maritime trade and we therefore have to be prepared to take advantage of it,” he stated.
Tourism, he noted, itself has such huge possibilities: “This product we have here is second to none and if we develop this product it can be a major contributor to this country’s economy. This is a thriving sector and if given the chance to achieve its full potential, will become the future of this country’s development.
“Let us all work together to achieve in the shortest possible time a status of a developed country,” the Head of State emphasised, as he concluded his remarks. (Rebecca Ganesh-Ally)

 

source: The Guyana Chronicle

http://img.auctiva.com/imgdata/0/5/0/8/1/6/webimg/603006616_o.jpg

FM
Originally Posted by Nehru:
Originally Posted by RiffRaff:
Originally Posted by Nehru:

YES IF THE DESTRUCTIVE AND THE NO TO EVERYTHING OPPOSITION BECOMES A MINORITY.

Let the people decide...instead of a dictatorship

That is EXACTLY what will happen in about 3 months.  THE WILL OF THE PEOPLE IS PARAMOUNT IN TODAY'S GUYANA DEMOCRACY.  NO MORE RIGGING AND FRIGGING!!!

Nehru Bhai

 

Don't worry about the opposition losers. The PPP is headed for a 54 percent majority. 

 

With big bonuses for Sugar Workers and Because We Care, the PPP might end up with more than 54 percent.

 

Look at the "massive" AFC protest of 8 protesters. Dem is now de Donkey Cart Party. These guys cannot even organize a protest and they have to hang on to Granger for Oxygen. 

 

The AFC has no support left. Even Gerhard ran away from the AFC.

1478917_765624010151595_7035481971346816702_n

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FM
Last edited by Former Member
Originally Posted by yuji22:
Originally Posted by Nehru:
Originally Posted by RiffRaff:
Originally Posted by Nehru:

YES IF THE DESTRUCTIVE AND THE NO TO EVERYTHING OPPOSITION BECOMES A MINORITY.

Let the people decide...instead of a dictatorship

That is EXACTLY what will happen in about 3 months.  THE WILL OF THE PEOPLE IS PARAMOUNT IN TODAY'S GUYANA DEMOCRACY.  NO MORE RIGGING AND FRIGGING!!!

Nehru Bhai

 

Don't worry about the opposition losers. The PPP is headed for a 54 percent majority. 

 

With big bonuses for Sugar Workers and Because We Care, the PPP might end up with more than 54 percent.

 

Look at the "massive" AFC protest of 8 protesters. Dem is now de Donkey Cart Party. These guys cannot even organize a protest and they have to hang on to Granger for Oxygen. 

 

The AFC has no support left. Even Gerhard ran away from the AFC.

1478917_765624010151595_7035481971346816702_n

WEll dat is what i call MASSIVE support.

Nehru

All public schools in Regions 2, 3 and 4 closed today

-deep flooding in city after heavy rain

Heavy rain overnight and this morning has left deep flooding along the East Bank and East Coast Demerara and public schools in the city and regions two and three are closed today as a result.
A notice this morning from the Ministry of Education said:
“We are now learning  of other areas severely affected by flooding. The ministry I seeking your help to make the following announcement:
Due to severe weather conditions all public schools in Regions 2, 3 4(East Bank and East Coast) and Georgetown will be closed today.
We are advising parents and guardians of children in those regions to keep their children at home as schools will be closed. “
The rain has been heavy and unrelenting and like on previous occasions where severe weather systems have struck there was no warning from the hydrometeorological department of the Ministry of Agriculture.
Despite government’s massive clean-up of city drains and other infrastructure in the last two months, there is deep flooding in the city and garbage can be seen floating in many places.
Astronomer/consultant Alfred Bhulai in a comment said “My weather station recorded 130 mm of rain up to for the morning up to 6 a.m. That’s over 5 inches of rain. 4″ is considered a disaster here. It was 155 mm (= over 6&Prime by 8.30 a.m. The colour of the water was ominously looking like conservancy water.”
APNU today issued the following press release on the flooding:

“The flooding of wide swaths of coastal communities in Guyana is a clear indication that the Peoples Progressive Party Civic administration has failed to address infrastructure, environmental and agricultural development in a comprehensive manner. This is also a clear manifestation of the failure of the local government system.

A Partnership for National Unity-APNU sees this as an environmental catastrophe.

sfloodAPNU calls on President Donald Ramotar, The Minister of Local Government, Mr. Norman Whitaker, the Minister of Public Infrastructure, Mr. Roberson Benn, and the Minister Responsible for the Environment, Mr. Robert Persaud to immediately take action to alleviate this catastrophe.

APNU affirms that this flooding is a failure of governance.”

Meanwhile, the hydrometeorological department of the Ministry of Agriculture issued the following notice at around 10.30 am

 

This is a problem that need attention.

Django
Originally Posted by Conscience:

Stop fighting the truth....

I think he is defining development in terms of how fast there can be a transfer of every and all lucrative state assets to the PPP  friends and family network!

FM
Originally Posted by Stormborn:
I think he is defining development in terms of how fast there can be a transfer of every and all lucrative state assets to the PPP  friends and family network!

Another imaginative thought.

FM

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