Deaths of four children at GPHC
In the textbook “Principles of Biomedical Ethics,” authors Beauchamp and Childress address in detail four principles which for many have become the standard for the examination of ethical issues in the medical system.
In the textbook “Principles of Biomedical Ethics,” authors Beauchamp and Childress address in detail four principles which for many have become the standard for the examination of ethical issues in the medical system.
City Hall announced last week that it was about to “recommence an aggressive campaign which aims at the removal of all derelict vehicles and other encumbrances from roadsides, sidewalks, parapets and reserves belonging to the city”, adding that the owners would be fined for the removal and storage of such encumbrances.
Last Friday, the owners of the thirty-two teams in the National Football League (NFL) took the very significant decision to settle a nearly two year collusion lawsuit with the former San Francisco 49ers’ quarterback Colin Kaepernick.
Ever since the Russian aluminum giant RUSAL ‘set up shop’ in Guyana in 2004 the company has made clear its discomfort with the industrial relations laws of Guyana, specifically those that afford employees of the Bauxite Company of Guyana Inc.
On July 19, 2017, following a landmark ruling by Chief Justice (ag) Roxane George on the classes of persons eligible to be appointed as Chairman of GECOM, President Granger struck a defiant note.
The week before last, the UK Economist published a piece on ExxonMobil and Guyana.
A lawless act. A gross abuse of power. A desperate attempt to distract from a broken political promise.
The management of the City of Georgetown has been palpably unflattering in many ways and for many years now.
A report from Shulinab, South Rupununi in Region 9 released by the government’s Department of Public Information (DPI) on Saturday last was cause for cautious optimism, while being an example of how Guyana is still not getting it right with regard to the agricultural and small business industries.
On Monday, the Third Day of the Third Test, the West Indies, still basking in the glow of winning the first two matches and regaining the Wisden Trophy, received some hard lessons on how harsh and taxing the game can be at this level.
Just around the same time last week when the Department of Energy was preparing to break the news of ExxonMobil’s eleventh and twelfth oil discoveries offshore Guyana, prosecutors in Geneva were winding down a two-year-old money laundering inquiry involving the eldest son of Equatorial Guinea’s President Teodoro Obiang Nugema Mbasogo, Africa’s longest serving ruler.
Friday’s press conference called by the Guyana Elections Commission (GECOM) was further evidence that this high constitutional body has allowed itself to be subverted by the government with the express intention of delaying general elections and further thrusting the country towards a constitutional crisis.
After all the expectations generated by the promises of the 2015 campaign, and the hope that some tinkering, at least, would be done on the Constitution to make our political world a little less stressful, here we are again, back to square one.
Earlier this week, while promoting his new movie, the Irish actor Liam Neeson shared a personal anecdote about revenge.
There is a well-known African proverb which says, “It takes a village to raise a child.”
In November 2009, oil-rich, and apparently cash-flush Venezuela, under the then-president Hugo Chavez’s Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas, gave Guyana a grant of US$2 million for the construction of a shelter for the homeless.
Last Saturday a rare celebration occurred at the Sir Vivian Richards Stadium in North Sound, Antigua as the West Indies won the Second Test match versus England inside of three days to take an unassailable 2 – 0 lead and regain the Wisden Trophy for the first time in ten years.
It is not uncommon in instances of political crisis, whether domestic or international, for the tide of events to roll along sedately for a period then suddenly, without warning, accelerate alarmingly, sometimes leaving analysts scrambling to keep pace with events.
Thursday’s trifecta of decisions by Chief Justice (ag) Roxane George has further exposed the exiguity of the government’s defiance of the motion of no confidence which was passed against it on December 21, effectively ending its tenure and mandating that general elections be held in 90 days.
It is clear from all the exposés about what goes on in the current White House, that as far as President Donald Trump is concerned, loyalty trumps everything.
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