Editorial

Police shortcomings

The police have come under a great deal of criticism recently, more particularly over their handling of the Middle Street shootings the week before last.

News from nowhere

Fifty years on, an entire generation still remembers where it was when they first heard news of the Kennedy assassination.

The rot in West Indies cricket

The West Indies team were the most accommodating of guests in the two Test series in India to mark the retirement of Sachin Tendulkar, by allowing their hosts to dominate them as never before, losing twice by an innings and within three days.

Fishy business

Globally, the fisheries industry, inclusive of aquaculture, had a total value of US$217.5 billion in 2010.

The Commonwealth meets

Amid dissatisfaction on the part of the host government, Sri Lanka, in the face of criticisms of its human rights record, the Commonwealth met last week at another of its biennial meetings, the last of which was held in Austraila.

Human rights and the Commonwealth

Despite all of the pre-summit brouhaha over the Sri Lankan Government’s dubious human rights record the final communiqué issued at the end of the gathering in Colombo uttered not a word about the issue that had dominated the international headlines.

Solid waste recycling MoU

Considering the depth and age of the debate for best procurement practices and good governance, it is appalling that the government has embarked on a Memorandum of Understanding for what could be a US$30M waste recycling plant in such a flawed manner.

Shoot-out

The Ministry of Home Affairs can bluster as much as it pleases; nothing demonstrated the shortcomings of the police more clearly than the events in Middle Street on Tuesday. 

A pale blue dot

Earlier this week NASA released a photograph taken from the Cassini probe as it completed an orbit around Saturn.

Salute to Shiv

Shivnarine Chanderpaul is this weekend playing in his 150th Test match, the only West Indian to do so.

Berserk

Tuesday afternoon’s shooting to death of four people by an unhinged man who subsequently also died by way of a bullet was not something that one ever imagined would have been associated with Guyana.

Jamaica’s party politics

During the last few weeks, the attention of the Jamaican population has been riveted on a contest for the leadership of the Jamaica Labour Party, brought on by the decision of Deputy Leader and former Minister of Finance, Audley Shaw, to challenge the incumbent Political Leader and Leader of the Opposition, Andrew Holness.

Drone strikes and US foreign policy

A decade or so of the use of drones as a tool in the targeted killing of persons deemed to be terrorists has provided considerable enlightenment on US pursuit of its interests in the post-Cold War era.

Outmoded vision

Like some other countries on this continent Guyana is a partial democracy, but without the populism which characterizes their forms of government.

A tale of two cities

Every West Indian who visits Toronto should make the time to observe the marvel of self-imposed order that emerges each afternoon among the GO train commuters at Union Station.

A democratic opening in the Colombian peace process

Just over a year ago, our interest was piqued by  the peace process initiated by Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos with his country’s revolutionary Marxist-Leninist guerrillas, the FARC, in which Cuba and Norway were playing key mediating roles (October 26, 2012, Colombia and the FARC).

Being superwoman has its downside

The pattern of a preponderance of girls among the hi-flyers at the National Grade Six Assessment along with the Caribbean Examination Council’s Caribbean Secondary Education Certificate (CSEC) and Caribbean Advanced Proficiency Examination (CAPE) as well as the 3,000-odd annual graduates of the University of Guyana is a possible indication of the balance of the sexes in Guyana.

The US and Middle East developments

For many years, with the exception of its relations with revolutionary clerical Iran, the United States has had a diplomatic dominance in relation to developments in the Middle East that for years has almost made that area seem a privileged preserve.

Bo Xilai’s fall from political grace

China continues to attract international attention mostly for the right reasons, not least, the phenomenal growth of the country’s economy which has seen Beijing’s aggressive excursion into ambitious global economic diplomacy initiatives that has witnessed a combination of billions of dollars in development projects and investments – primarily in forestry, minerals, oil and gas – in regions as far apart as Africa and the Caribbean.

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