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Guyana

Coordinates: 5°00′N 58°45′W / 5°N 58.75°W / 5; -58.75

Guyana (/ɡˈɑːnə/ (listen) or /ɡˈænə/ (listen)),[7][8], officially the Co‑operative Republic of Guyana,[9] is a country on the northern mainland of South America. Guyana is an indigenous word which means "Land of Many Waters". The capital city is Georgetown. Guyana is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean to the north, Brazil to the south and southwest, Venezuela to the west, and Suriname to the east. With 215,000 km2 (83,000 sq mi), Guyana is the third-smallest sovereign state by area in mainland South America after Uruguay and Suriname, and is the second-least populous sovereign state in South America after Suriname; it is also one of the least densely populated countries on Earth. It has a wide variety of natural habitats and very high biodiversity.

Co-operative Republic of Guyana
Motto: "One People, One Nation, One Destiny"
Anthem: "Dear Land of Guyana, of Rivers and Plains"
Location of Guyana (green)

in South America (grey)

Capital
and largest city
Georgetown
6°48′21″N 58°9′3″W / 6.80583°N 58.15083°W / 6.80583; -58.15083
Official languagesEnglish
Recognised regional languages
10 indigenous languages
Vernacular languageGuyanese Creole
Other languages
Ethnic groups
(2012)[1]
Religion
(2012)[1]
Demonym(s)Guyanese
GovernmentUnitary assembly-independent republic[2]
• President
Irfaan Ali
Mark Phillips
Bharrat Jagdeo
Manzoor Nadir
Roxane George-Wiltshire (acting)
LegislatureNational Assembly
Establishment
1667–1815
1831–1966
26 May 1966
• Republic
23 February 1970
• Joined CARICOM at the Treaty of Chaguaramas
1 August 1973
6 October 1980
Area
• Total
214,970 km2 (83,000 sq mi) (83rd)
• Water (%)
8.4
Population
• 2022 estimate
795,408[3] (166th)
• Density
3.502/km2 (9.1/sq mi) (232nd)
GDP (PPP)2022 estimate
• Total
$30.287 billion[4] (142nd)
• Per capita
$38,258[4] (49th)
GDP (nominal)2022 estimate
• Total
$13.543 billion[4] (142nd)
• Per capita
$17,108[4] (59th)
Gini (2007) 44.6[5]
medium
HDI (2021) 0.714[6]
high · 108th
CurrencyGuyanese dollar (GYD)
Time zoneUTC-4 (AST)
Date formatdd-mm-yyyy
Driving sideleft
Calling code+592
ISO 3166 codeGY
Internet TLD.gy

The region known as "the Guianas" consists of the large shield landmass north of the Amazon River and east of the Orinoco River known as the "land of many waters". Nine indigenous tribes reside in Guyana: the Wai Wai, Macushi, Patamona, Lokono, Kalina, Wapishana, Pemon, Akawaio and Warao. Historically dominated by the Lokono and Kalina tribes, Guyana was colonised by the Dutch before coming under British control in the late 18th century. It was governed as British Guiana, with a mostly plantation-style economy until the 1950s. It gained independence in 1966, and officially became a republic within the Commonwealth of Nations in 1970. The legacy of British rule is reflected in the country's political administration and diverse population, which includes Indian, African, Indigenous, Chinese, Portuguese, other European, and various multiracial groups. In 2017, 41% of the population of Guyana lived below the poverty line.[10]

Guyana is the only South American nation in which English is the official language. However, the majority of the population speak Guyanese Creole, an English-based creole language, as a first language. Guyana is part of the Anglophone Caribbean. It is part of the mainland Caribbean region maintaining strong cultural, historical, and political ties with other Caribbean countries as well as serving as the headquarters for the Caribbean Community (CARICOM). In 2008, the country joined the Union of South American Nations as a founding member.

Guyana's economy has been undergoing a transformation since the discovery of crude oil in 2015 and commercial drilling in 2019, being one of the only economies to grow in 2020 despite the pandemic at 49% GDP growth through the year. Due to Guyana's small population and as much as 11 billion barrels in oil reserves,[11] the country is on course to become one of the largest per capita oil producers in the world by 2030.[12] The discovery of over 11 billion barrels of oil reserves off the coast of Guyana in the last five years is the largest addition to global oil reserves in the last 50 years.[13]

Etymology

The name "Guyana" derives from Guiana, the original name for the region that included Guyana (British Guiana), Suriname (Dutch Guiana), French Guiana, and the Guayana Region in Venezuela (Spanish Guyana) and Amapá in Brazil (Portuguese Guiana). According to the Oxford English Dictionary, "Guyana" comes from an indigenous Amerindian language and means "land of many waters".[14][15] The Co‑operative Republic of Guyana in the official name referred to co-operative socialism.

History

 
A map of Dutch Guiana from 1667–1814

Before colonization

Nine indigenous tribes reside in Guyana: the Wai Wai; Macushi; Patamona; Lokono; Kalina; Wapishana; Pemon; Akawaio; and Warao.[16]

Historically, the Lokono and Kalina tribes dominated Guyana.

Colonial period

Although Christopher Columbus was the first European to sight Guyana during his third voyage (in 1498), and Sir Walter Raleigh wrote an account in 1596, the Dutch were the first Europeans to establish colonies: Pomeroon (1581), Essequibo (1616), Berbice (1627), and Demerara (1752). After the British assumed control in 1796,[17] the Dutch formally ceded the area in 1814.[citation needed]

In 1831, the united colonies of Demerara-Essequibo and separate colony of Berbice together became a single British colony known as British Guiana.[citation needed]

 
Map of British Guiana from 1896

Since its independence in 1824, Venezuela has claimed the area of land to the west of the Essequibo River. Simón Bolívar wrote to the British government warning against the Berbice and Demerara settlers settling on land which the Venezuelans, as assumed heirs of Spanish claims on the area dating to the 16th century, claimed was theirs. In 1899, an international tribunal ruled that the land belonged to Great Britain.[18] The British territorial claim stemmed from Dutch involvement and colonization of the area also dating to the 16th century, which was ceded to the British.[citation needed]

Independence

Guyana achieved independence from the United Kingdom as a dominion on 26 May 1966 and became a republic on 23 February 1970, remaining a member of the Commonwealth. Shortly after independence, Venezuela began to take diplomatic, economic and military action against Guyana in order to enforce its territorial claim to the Guayana Esequiba.[19] The US State Department and the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), along with the British government, also played a strong role in influencing political control in Guyana during this time.[20] The American government supported Forbes Burnham during the early years of independence because Cheddi Jagan was identified as a Marxist. They provided secret financial support and political campaign advice to Burnham's People's National Congress, to the detriment of the Jagan-led People's Progressive Party, which was mostly supported by Guyanese of Indian background.[citation needed]

Guyana was elected twice as member of the UN Security Council in 1975–76 and later 1982–83.

In 1978, a total of 918 people died at the Jonestown mass murder-suicide led by cult leader Jim Jones.[21]

In May 2008, President Bharrat Jagdeo was a signatory to the UNASUR Constitutive Treaty of the Union of South American Nations. The Guyanese government officially ratified the treaty in 2010.[22]

In March 2020, President David A. Granger narrowly lost the snap elections, following Granger's government loss of a vote of no confidence back in 2018. Granger refused to accept the results, but eventually five months later, Irfaan Ali of the People's Progressive Party/Civic was sworn in as the new president because of allegations of fraud and irregularities.[23]

Geography

 
Kaieteur Falls is the world's largest single-drop waterfall by volume.

The territory controlled by Guyana lies between latitudes and 9°N, and longitudes 56° and 62°W; it is one of the world's most sparsely populated countries.

The country can be divided into five natural regions: a narrow and fertile marshy plain along the Atlantic coast (low coastal plain) where most of the population lives; a white sand belt further inland (hilly sand and clay region), containing most of Guyana's mineral deposits; the dense rain forests (Forested Highland Region) in the southern part of the country; the drier savannah areas in the south-west; and the smallest interior lowlands (interior savannah) consisting mostly of mountains that gradually rise to the Brazilian border.

Some of Guyana's highest mountains are Mount Ayanganna (2,042 m or 6,699 ft), Monte Caburaí (1,465 m or 4,806 ft) and Mount Roraima (2,772 m or 9,094 ft – the highest mountain in Guyana) on the Brazil-Guyana-Venezuela tripoint border, part of the Pakaraima range. Mount Roraima and Guyana's table-top mountains (tepuis) are said to have been the inspiration for Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's 1912 novel The Lost World. There are also many volcanic escarpments and waterfalls, including Kaieteur Falls which is believed to be the largest single-drop waterfall in the world by volume.[24] North of the Rupununi River lies the Rupununi savannah, south of which lie the Kanuku Mountains.

The four longest rivers are the Essequibo at 1,010 km (628 mi) long, the Courentyne River at 724 km (450 mi), the Berbice at 595 km (370 mi), and the Demerara at 346 km (215 mi). The Courentyne river forms the border with Suriname. At the mouth of the Essequibo are several large islands, including the 145 km (90 mi) wide Shell Beach along the northwest coast, which is also a major breeding area for sea turtles (mainly leatherbacks) and other wildlife.

The climate is tropical and generally hot and humid, though moderated by northeast trade winds along the coast. There are two rainy seasons, the first from May to mid-August, the second from mid-November to mid-January.

Guyana has one of the largest unspoiled rainforests in South America, some parts of which are almost inaccessible by humans. The rich natural history of Guyana was described by early explorers Sir Walter Raleigh and Charles Waterton and later by naturalists Sir David Attenborough and Gerald Durrell. In 2008, the BBC broadcast a three-part programme called Lost Land of the Jaguar which highlighted the huge diversity of wildlife, including undiscovered species and rare species such as the giant otter and harpy eagle.

In 2012, Guyana received a $45 million reward from Norway for its rainforest protection efforts. This stems from a 2009 agreement between the nations for a total of $250 million for protecting and maintaining the natural habitat. Thus far, the country has received $115 million of the total grant.

Biodiversity and conservation

Guyana is home to more than 900 species of birds; 225 species of mammals; 880 species of reptiles and more than 6,500 different species of plants.[25] Among these wildlife categories the most notably famous are the Arapaima, which is the world's largest scaled freshwater fish; the giant anteater, the largest anteater; the giant otter, the world's largest and rarest river otter; and the cock-of-the-rock (Rupicola rupicola).[26]

 
Satellite image of Guyana from 2004
 
Anomaloglossus beebei (Kaieteur), specific to the Guianas
 
The hoatzin is the national bird of Guyana.

The following habitats have been categorised for Guyana: coastal, marine, littoral, estuarine palustrine, mangrove, riverine, lacustrine, swamp, savanna, white sand forest, brown sand forest, montane, cloud forest, moist lowland and dry evergreen scrub forests (NBAP, 1999). About 14 areas of biological interest have been identified as possible hotspots for a National Protected Area System. More than 80% of Guyana is still covered by forests, which also contain the world's rarest orchids, ranging from dry evergreen and seasonal forests to montane and lowland evergreen rain forests. These forests are home to more than a thousand species of trees. Guyana's tropical climate, unique geology, and relatively undisturbed ecosystems support extensive areas of species-rich rain forests and natural habitats with high levels of endemism. There are about 8000 species of plants in Guyana, half of which are found nowhere else.

Guyana has one of the highest levels of biodiversity in the world. With 1,168 vertebrate species and 814 bird species, it boasts one of the richest mammalian fauna assemblages of any comparably sized area in the world. Guyana is home to six ecoregions: Guayanan Highlands moist forests, Guianan moist forests, Orinoco Delta swamp forests, Tepuis, Guianan savanna, and Guianan mangroves.[27] The Guiana Shield region is little known and extremely rich biologically. Unlike other areas of South America, over 70% of the natural habitat remains pristine. Guyana ranks third in the world with a 2019 Forest Landscape Integrity Index mean score of 9.58/10.[28]

The rich natural history of British Guiana was described by early explorers Sir Walter Raleigh and Charles Waterton and later by naturalists Sir David Attenborough and Gerald Durrell.

Southern Guyana is host to some of the most pristine expanses of evergreen forests in the northern part of South America. Most of the forests found are tall, evergreen hill-land and lower montane forests, with large expanses of flooded forest along major rivers. Thanks to the very low human population density of the area, most of these forests are still intact. The Smithsonian Institution has identified nearly 2,700 species of plants from this region, representing 239 distinct families, and there are certainly additional species still to be recorded. The diversity of plants supports diverse animal life, recently documented by a biological survey organised by Conservation International. The reportedly clean, unpolluted waters of the Essequibo watershed support a remarkable diversity of fish and aquatic invertebrates, and are home to giant otters, capybaras, and several species of caimans.

On land, large mammals, such as jaguars, tapirs, bush dogs, giant anteaters, and saki monkeys are still common. Over 400 species of birds have been reported from the region, and the reptile and amphibian faunas are similarly rich.

In February 2004, the Government of Guyana issued a title to more than 4,000 km2 (1×10^6 acres) of land in the Konashen Indigenous District as the Kanashen Community-Owned Conservation Area, managed by the Wai Wai, and the world's largest community-owned conservation Area.[29] The Iwokrama International Centre for Rain Forest Conservation and Development was also created for the protection and sustainable use of the Iwokrama forest area.

Economy

 
A tractor in a rice field on Guyana's coastal plain
 
A proportional representation of Guyana exports, 2019

The main economic activities in Guyana are agriculture (rice and Demerara sugar), bauxite and gold mining, timber, shrimp fishing and minerals.

The discovery of major crude oil reserves off the Atlantic coast has since made a large impact on Guyana's GDP since drilling began in 2019. GDP grew sharply (43%) through the COVID-19 pandemic year of 2020, and is anticipated to continue at a high level in 2021 (estimated at 20%). The non-oil sectors contracted as public health measures were in place to control the virus spread; the growth of GDP rests on the oil sector for these two years.[30]

Preservation of Guyana's pristine forests has been a key component for receiving international aid through REDD programs.

Summary

  • GDP: US$4.121 billion ($5,252 per capita, 2019 est.)[4]
  • GDP growth rate: 86.7% (2020)[4][31]
  • Inflation: 12.3%
  • Unemployment: 21.5% (2017)[32]
  • Arable land: 2%
  • Labour force: 324,943 (2019)[33]
  • Agricultural produce: sugar, rice, vegetable oils, beef, pork, poultry, dairy products, fish, shrimp[32]
  • Industrial production: bauxite, sugar, rice milling, timber, textiles, gold mining[32]
  • Exports: US$1.439 billion; Canada 24.9%, US 16.5%, Panama 9.6%, UK 7.7%, Jamaica 5.1%, Trinidad and Tobago 5% (2017)[32]
  • Imports: US$1.626 billion; Trinidad and Tobago 27.5%, US 26.5%, China 8.9%, Suriname 6.1% (2017)[32]

History

The earliest residents of Guyana, the Amerindians of various tribes, employed a variety of agricultural practices for subsistence living but also had extensive networks of trade, dealing in items such as blow pipes, curare, cassava graters, and other essentials. These trade networks were important even at the time of the earliest European contact, and Dutch traders were inclined to gift the local peoples in order to maintain successful settlements.[34]

After the initial rush to find gold in the New World waned, the Dutch found the climate to be suitable for growing sugar cane, converting large tracts of the Guyanese coast into plantations and supplying with labour from the Atlantic slave trade. The country and economy were run by a small European planter elite[35] which continued on when the colonies of the territory were merged and the land was given over to the British Empire in 1814. Upon emancipation in 1838, almost all of the former slaves abandoned the plantations, and Indians were brought to the country under indenture contracts from 1838 until the end of the system in 1917.[36]

The production of balatá (natural latex) was once a big business in Guyana. Most of the balata bleeding in Guyana took place in the foothills of the Kanuku Mountains in the Rupununi savannah. Early exploitation also took place in the North West District, but most of the trees in the area were destroyed by illicit bleeding methods that involved cutting down the trees rather than making incisions in them. Uses of balatá included the making of cricket balls, temporary dental fillings, and the crafting of figurines and other decorative items (particularly by the Macushi people).

When the country gained independence from British rule, a policy of nationalization was enacted by Forbes Burnham to address the inequities that were established by plantation-based colonial rule. All large scale industries such as foreign-owned bauxite mining (Reynolds Metals and Rio Tinto's Alcan) and sugar (GuySuCo) operations were taken over by the government. However, the economy under nationalization was plagued by problems; political instability leading to an exodus of skilled labour, inexperienced management, aging infrastructure. Poor international market conditions also expanded the country's debt.[37]

The Guyanese economy rebounded slightly and exhibited moderate economic growth after 1999, due to expansion in the agricultural and mining sectors, a more favourable atmosphere for business initiatives, a more realistic exchange rate, fairly low inflation, and the continued support of international organisations. Guyana held huge amounts of debt which have been written off through various international agencies. In 2003 Guyana qualified for US$329 million of debt relief, in addition to the US$256 million from the original World Bank plan for assisting heavily indebted poor countries in 1999. The Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative in 2006/7 wrote off about US$611 million of Guyana's debt by the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and the Inter-American Development Bank. In 2006, Japan finalised its bilateral debt cancellation agreement, in 2007, US$15 million was written off by China and in 2008, Venezuela cancelled US$12.5 million.[38]

In 2008, the economy witnessed a 3% increase in growth amid the global economic crisis; it grew 5.4% in 2011 and 3.7% in 2012. IMF projected economic growth to be 53% in 2020 following the completion of the first off-shore oil project.[39] Actual growth in GDP in 2020 was 43%; reports in April 2021 anticipate 20% growth for 2021.[30]

Tax policy

The government initiated a major overhaul of the tax code in early 2007. A Value Added Tax (VAT) replaced six different taxes. Prior to the implementation of the VAT, it had been relatively easy to evade sales tax, and many businesses were in violation of tax code. Many businesses opposed VAT introduction because of the extra paperwork required; however, the Government has remained firm on the VAT. Replacing several taxes with one flat tax rate, it will also be easier for government auditors to spot embezzlement. This was prevalent under the former PPP/C government who authorised the VAT to be equal to 50% of the value of the good.[citation needed]

Organizations

Major private sector organisations include the Private Sector Commission (PSC)[40] and the Georgetown Chamber of Commerce & Industry (GCCI);[41]

 
Thatched roof houses in Guyana

Demographics

 
Guyana's population density in 2005 (people per km2)
 
A graph showing the population of Guyana from 1961 to 2003. The population decline in the 1980s can be clearly seen.

The chief majority (about 90%) of Guyana's 744,000 population lives along a narrow coastal strip which ranges from a width of 16 to 64 km (10 to 40 mi) inland and which makes up approximately only 10% of the nation's total land area.[42]

The present population of Guyana is racially and ethnically heterogeneous, with ethnic groups originating from India, Africa, Europe and China, as well as indigenous or aboriginal peoples. Despite their diverse ethnic backgrounds, these groups share two common languages: English and Guyanese English Creole.

The largest ethnic group is the Indo-Guyanese (also known as East Indians), the descendants of indentured labourers from India who make up 43.5% of the population, according to the 2002 census. They are followed by the Afro-Guyanese, the descendants of slaves imported from Africa, who constitute 30.2%. The Guyanese of mixed heritage make up 16.7%, while the indigenous peoples (known locally as Amerindians) make up 9.1%. The indigenous groups include the Arawaks, the Wai Wai, the Caribs, the Akawaio, the Arecuna, the Patamona, the Wapixana, the Macushi, and the Warao.[43] The two largest groups, the Indo-Guyanese and Afro-Guyanese, have experienced some racial tension.[44][45][46]

Most Indo-Guyanese are descended from indentured labourers who migrated from North India, especially the Bhojpur and Awadh regions of the Hindi Belt in the present day states of Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, and Jharkhand.[47] A significant minority of Indo-Guyanese are also descended from indentured migrants who came from the South Indian states of Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh; these South Indian descendants are the plurality ancestry in the East Berbice-Corentyne region.[48]

Largest cities

Languages

English is the official language of Guyana and is used for education, government, media, and services. The vast majority of the population speaks Guyanese Creole, an English-based creole with slight African, Indian, and Amerindian influences, as their native tongue.[51]

Indigenous Cariban languages (Akawaio, Wai-Wai, and Macushi) are spoken by a small minority of Amerindians.

Guyanese Hindustani is spoken by the older generation of the Indo-Guyanese community, but younger Guyanese use English or Guyanese Creole.[52]

Religion

Religious groups

Religion in Guyana (2012 census)[53]

  Christianity (62%)
  Hinduism (25%)
  Islam (7%)
  Other religious groups (3%)
  Irreligious (3%)

Religious sect groups

Religion in Guyana (2012 census)[53]

  Hinduism (25%)
  Pentecostalism (23%)
  Other forms of Christianity[a] (21%)
  Islam (7%)
  Anglicanism (5%)
  Methodism (1%)
  Other religious groups (3%)
  Irreligious (3%)

In 2012 the population was 63% Christian, 25% Hindu, 7% Muslim.

Religion is an important aspect of identity in Guyana and reflects the various external influences of colonialism and immigrant groups. Christianity was considered the prestigious religion, transmitting European culture and representing upward mobility in the colonial society. Missionaries and churches built schools, and until nationalization in the 1970s, nearly all schools were denominational. When Indians were brought to the country as indentured labour, Hinduism and Islam gained prominence, but for some decades neither were acknowledged for legal marriage.[54]

Some traditional African and Amerindian folk beliefs remain alongside the dominant religions.

Government

Politics

 
The State House, Guyana's presidential residence
 
The Supreme Court of Guyana
 
Guyana's parliament building since 1834

The politics of Guyana takes place in a framework of a Parliamentary representative democratic republic, in which the President of Guyana is both head of state and head of government, and of a multi-party system. Executive power is exercised by the President and the Government. Legislative power is vested in both the President and the National Assembly of Guyana.[55] Historically, politics are a source of tension in the country, and violent riots have often broken out during elections. During the 1970s and 1980s, the political landscape was dominated by the People's National Congress.[56]

In 1992, the first constitutional elections were overseen by former United States President Jimmy Carter, and the People's Progressive Party led the country until 2015. The two parties are principally organised along ethnic lines and as a result often clash on issues related to the allocation of resources. In the General Elections held on 28 November 2011, the People's Progressive Party (PPP) retained a majority, and their presidential candidate Donald Ramotar was elected as president.[57]

On 11 May 2015, early general elections were held. A coalition of the A Partnership for National Unity-Alliance for Change (APNU-AFC) parties won 33 of the 65 seats in the National Assembly. On 16 May 2015, retired army general David A. Granger became the eighth President of Guyana.[58] However, on 21 December 2018, a vote of confidence was called for, regarding terms under which the government granted a franchise for offshore oil exploration. Legislator Charrandass Persaud defected from the coalition and the vote failed, requiring new elections. The governing coalition litigated this result for the entire 90 days allowed for new elections. New elections were held on March 2, 2020, and results were declared on August 3, 2020, with the People's Progressive Party/Civic as the winner. Mohamed Irfaan Ali became the ninth President of Guyana.[59][60]

Public procurement

Public procurement in Guyana is overseen by the Public Procurement Commission, appointed under the Public Procurement Commission Act 2003. Due to lengthy delay in identifying and agreeing commission members, the commission was not appointed until 2016.[61]

Military

The Guyana Defence Force (GDF) is the military service of Guyana.

Human rights

Homosexual acts, as well as anal and oral sex, are illegal in Guyana.[62] It is currently the only country in South America that prohibits such acts. Engaging in such acts can warrant life imprisonment, though the prohibition is not enforced. These laws can be difficult to alter, as Guyana's Constitution protects laws inherited from the British Empire from constitutional review.[63] However, cross-dressing has been legal since 2018, when a ban was struck down by Guyana's court of last resort, the Caribbean Court of Justice.[64] President David A. Granger (2015–2020) expressed support for these efforts.[65]

Administrative divisions

Regions and Neighbourhood Councils

  
Regions of Guyana by number and name

Guyana is divided into 10 regions:[66][67]

No Region Area km2 Pop.
(2012 Census)
Pop. Density
per km2
1 Barima-Waini 20,339 26,941 1.32
2 Pomeroon-Supenaam 6,195 46,810 7.56
3 Essequibo Islands-West Demerara 3,755 107,416 28.61
4 Demerara-Mahaica 2,232 313,429 140.43
5 Mahaica-Berbice 4,190 49,723 11.87
6 East Berbice-Corentyne 36,234 109,431 3.02
7 Cuyuni-Mazaruni 47,213 20,280 0.43
8 Potaro-Siparuni 20,051 10,190 0.51
9 Upper Takutu-Upper Essequibo 57,750 24,212 0.42
10 Upper Demerara-Berbice 17,040 39,452 2.32
Total 214,999 747,884 3.48

The regions are divided into 27 neighbourhood councils.[68]

International and regional relations

Boundary disputes

 
Map of Guyana, showing the Essequibo River and (shaded dark) the river's drainage basin. Venezuela claims territory up to the western bank of the river. The historical claim by the UK included the river basin well into current-day Venezuela.

Guyana is in border disputes with both Suriname, which claims the area east of the left bank of the Corentyne River and the New River in southwestern Suriname, and Venezuela which claims the land west of the Essequibo River, once the Dutch colony of Essequibo as part of Venezuela's Guayana Essequiba.[69][70][71][72] The maritime[73][74] component of the territorial dispute with Suriname was arbitrated by the United Nations Convention on Law of the Sea, and a ruling was announced on 21 September 2007. The ruling concerning the Caribbean Sea north of both nations found both parties violated treaty obligations and declined to order any compensation to either party.[75]

When the British surveyed British Guiana in 1840, they included the entire Cuyuni River basin within the colony. Venezuela did not agree with this as it claimed all lands west of the Essequibo River. In 1898, at Venezuela's request, an international arbitration tribunal was convened, and in 1899 the tribunal issued an award giving about 94% of the disputed territory to British Guiana. The arbitration was concluded, settled and accepted into International law by both Venezuela and the UK. Venezuela brought up again the settled claim, during the 1960s cold war period, and during Guyana's Independence period. This issue is now governed by the Treaty of Geneva of 1966, which was signed by the Governments of Guyana, Great Britain and Venezuela, and Venezuela continues to claim Guayana Esequiba.[76] Venezuela calls this region "Zona en Reclamación" (Reclamation Zone) and Venezuelan maps of the national territory routinely include it, drawing it in with dashed lines.[77]

Specific small disputed areas involving Guyana are Ankoko Island with Venezuela; Corentyne River[78] with Suriname; and Tigri Area or New River Triangle[79] with Suriname. In 1967 a Surinamese survey team was found in the New River Triangle and was forcibly removed. In August 1969 a patrol of the Guyana Defence Force found a survey camp and a partially completed airstrip inside the triangle, and documented evidence of the Surinamese intention to occupy the entire disputed area. After an exchange of gunfire, the Surinamese were driven from the triangle.

The Organisation of American States (OAS)

Guyana entered the Organisation of American States in 1991.[80]

Indigenous Leaders Summits of America (ILSA)

With Guyana having many groups of indigenous persons and given the geographical location of the country, the contributions of the Guyanese to the OAS respecting indigenous people may be significant.[81]

The position of the OAS respecting indigenous persons developed over the years. "The "OAS has supported and participated in the organisation of Indigenous Leaders Summits of Americas (ILSA)"[82]

The Draft American Declaration of the Rights of the Indigenous Persons appears to be a working document[83]

Agreements which affect financial relationships

The Double Taxation Relief (CARICOM) Treaty 1994

At a CARICOM Meeting, representatives of Trinidad and Tobago and Guyana respectively signed The Double Taxation Relief (CARICOM) Treaty 1994 on 19 August 1994.[84]

This treaty covered taxes, residence, tax jurisdictions, capital gains, business profits, interest, dividends, royalties and other areas.

FATCA

On 30 June 2014, Guyana signed a Model 1 agreement with the United States of America in relation to the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA).[85] This Model 1 agreement includes a reference to the Tax Information Exchange Agreement (Clause 3) which was signed on 22 July 1992 in Georgetown, Guyana intending to exchange Tax information on an automatic basis.

Infrastructure and telecommunications

Transport

 
Cross-border bridge from Guyana to Brazil near Lethem

There are a total of 187 km (116 mi) of railway, all dedicated to ore transport. There are 7,969 km (4,952 mi) of highway, of which 591 km (367 mi) are paved. Navigable waterways extend 1,077 km (669 mi), including the Berbice, Demerara, and Essequibo rivers. There are ports at Georgetown, Port Kaituma, and New Amsterdam. There are two international airports (Cheddi Jagan International Airport, Timehri and Eugene F. Correira International Airport (formerly Ogle Airport); along with about 90 airstrips, nine of which have paved runways. Guyana, Suriname and the Falkland Islands are the only three regions in South America that drive on the left.

Electricity

The electricity sector in Guyana is dominated by Guyana Power and Light (GPL), the state-owned vertically integrated utility. Although the country has a large potential for hydroelectric and bagasse-fuelled power generation, most of its 226 MW of installed capacity correspond to diesel-engine driven generators.[86]

Several initiatives are in place to improve energy access in the hinterland.

Health

Life expectancy at birth is estimated to be 69.5 years as of 2020.[87]

The PAHO/ WHO Global Health Report 2014 (using statistics of 2012) ranked the country as having the highest suicide rate in the world, with a mortality rate of 44.2 per 100,000 inhabitants.[88][89] According to 2011 estimates from the WHO, HIV prevalence is 1.2% of the teen/adult population (ages 15–49).[90]

Education

Education in Guyana was primarily introduced and operated by missionizing Christian denominations. The wealthy planter elite often sent their children for education abroad in England, but as schools improved in Guyana, they also modelled after the former British education system. Primary education became compulsory in 1876, although the need for children to assist in agricultural labour kept many children from schooling. In the 1960s, the government took over control of all schools in the country. Fees were removed, new schools were opened in rural areas, and the University of Guyana was established so students no longer were required to go abroad for tertiary education.[91]

 

Guyana's literacy was one of the highest in the Caribbean, by estimated literacy rate of 96 per cent in 1990.[91] In a 2014 UNESCO estimate, literacy is 96.7 in the 15–24 year old age group.[92] However, the functional literacy may be only as high as 70%.[93]

Students are expected to take the NGSA (National Grade Six Assessment) for entrance into high school in grade 7. They take the CXC at the end of high school. Schools have introduced the CAPE exams which all other Caribbean countries have introduced. The A-level system, inherited from the British era, is offered only in a few schools.

Infrastructure challenges impact access to education, especially students in the hinterland. A World Bank assessment showed roughly 50% of teachers were "untrained, operated with inadequate teaching materials, and served children of parents with low levels of adult literacy".[94]

Culture

Holidays
1 January New Year's Day
Spring Youman Nabi (Mawlid)
23 February Republic Day / Mashramani
March Phagwah (Holi)
March / April Good Friday
March / April Easter Sunday
March / April Easter Monday
1 May Labour Day
5 May Indian Arrival Day
26 May Independence Day
First Monday in July CARICOM Day
1 August Emancipation Day
October / November Diwali
25 December Christmas
26 or 27 December Boxing Day
Varies Eid al-Fitr
Varies Eid al-Adha

Guyana's culture is very similar to that of the English-speaking Caribbean, and has historically been tied to the English-speaking Caribbean as part of the British Empire when it became a possession in the nineteenth century.

Guyanese culture developed as forced and voluntary immigrants adapted and converged with the dominant British culture. Slavery eradicated much of the distinction between differing African cultures, encouraging the adoption of Christianity and the values of British colonists, which laid the foundations of today's Afro-Guyanese culture. Arriving later and under somewhat more favourable circumstances, Indian immigrants were subjected to less assimilation, and preserved more aspects of Indian culture, such as religion, cuisine, music, festivals, and clothing.[95]

Guyana's geographical location, its sparsely populated rain-forest regions, and its substantial Amerindian population differentiate it from English-speaking Caribbean countries. Its blend of the two dominant Indo-Guyanese and Afro-Guyanese cultures gives it similarities to Trinidad and Tobago and Suriname, and distinguishes it from other parts of the Americas. Guyana shares similar interests with the islands in the West Indies, such as food, festive events, music, sports, etc.

Events include Mashramani (Mash), Phagwah (Holi), and Deepavali (Diwali).

Landmarks

  • St George's Anglican Cathedral: A historic Anglican Cathedral made of wood.[96]
  • Demerara Harbour Bridge: The world's fourth-longest floating bridge.[97]
  • Berbice Bridge: The world's sixth-longest floating bridge.
  • Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Building: Houses the headquarters of the largest and most powerful economic union in the Caribbean.
  • Providence Stadium: Situated on Providence on the east bank of the Demerara River and built in time for the ICC World Cup 2007, it is the largest sports stadium in the country. It is also near the Providence Mall, forming a major spot for leisure in Guyana.
  • Arthur Chung Conference Centre:[98] Presented as a gift from the People's Republic of China to the Government of Guyana. It is the only one of its kind in the country.
  • Stabroek Market: A large cast-iron colonial structure that looked like a statue was located next to the Demerara River.[96]
  • Georgetown City Hall: A beautiful wooden structure also from the colonial era.[96]
  • Takutu River Bridge: A bridge across the Takutu River, connecting Lethem in Guyana to Bonfim in Brazil.[99]
  • Umana Yana: An Amerindian benab, that is a national monument built in 1972, for a meeting of the Foreign Ministers of the Non-Aligned nations (It was rebuilt in 2016).[100]
  • Shell Beach: Approximately 140 km long beach. In some parts beach consists of pure shells, very high biological diversity. Important nesting site for 8 species of sea turtles.[96]

Sports

 
Providence Stadium as seen from the East Bank Highway

The major sports in Guyana are cricket (Guyana is part of the West Indies cricket team for international cricket purposes[101]), basketball, football and volleyball.[102] Minor sports include softball cricket (beach cricket), field hockey, netball, rounders, lawn tennis, table tennis, boxing, squash, rugby, horse racing and a few others.

Guyana played host to international cricket matches as part of the 2007 Cricket World Cup (CWC 2007). The new 15,000-seat Providence Stadium, also referred to as Guyana National Stadium, was built in time for the World Cup and was ready for the beginning of play on 28 March. At the first international game of CWC 2007 at the stadium, Lasith Malinga of the Sri Lankan team took four wickets in four consecutive deliveries.[103]

Guyana's national basketball team has traditionally been one of the top contenders at the CaribeBasket, the top international basketball tournament for countries in the Caribbean.

For international football purposes, Guyana is part of CONCACAF. The highest league in their club system is the GFF Elite League. Guyana's national football team has never qualified for the FIFA World Cup, however they qualified for the Caribbean Cup in 1991, finishing fourth, and 2007. In 2019, they qualified for the CONCACAF Gold Cup for the first time, after finishing seventh in the qualifiers. They finished third in Group D, having lost two matches and drawn one.

Guyana also has five courses for horse racing.[104]

Guyana featured a beach volleyball team at the 2019 South American Beach Games.[105]

See also

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ Mostly made up of other Protestants, but also Eastern Orthodox, Mormons, Jehovah's Witnesses and other Christians.[citation needed]

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Further reading

  • Brock, Stanley E. (1999). All the Cowboys Were Indians (Commemorative, illustrated (reprint of Jungle Cowboy) ed.). Lenoir City, TN: Synergy South, Inc. ISBN 978-1-892329-00-4. OCLC 51089880. from the original on 29 August 2020. Retrieved 7 January 2010.
  • Brock, Stanley E. (1972). Jungle Cowboy (illustrated ed.). London: Robert Hale Ltd. ISBN 978-0-7091-2972-1. OCLC 650259. from the original on 25 August 2020. Retrieved 7 January 2010.
  • Donald Haack, Bush Pilot in Diamond Country
  • Hamish MacInnes, Climb to the Lost World (1974)
  • Andrew Salkey, Georgetown Journal (1970)
  • Marion Morrison, Guyana (Enchantment of the World Series)
  • Bob Temple, Guyana
  • Noel C. Bacchus, Guyana Farewell: A Recollection of Childhood in a Faraway Place
  • Marcus Colchester, Guyana: Fragile Frontier
  • Matthew French Young, Guyana: My Fifty Years in the Guyanese Wilds
  • Margaret Bacon, Journey to Guyana
  • Father Andrew Morrison SJ, Justice: The Struggle For Democracy in Guyana 1952–1992
  • Daly, Vere T. (1974). The Making of Guyana. Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-333-14482-4. OCLC 1257829. from the original on 11 May 2011. Retrieved 7 January 2010.
  • D. Graham Burnett, Masters of All They Surveyed: Exploration, Geography and a British El Dorado
  • Ovid Abrams, Metegee: The History and Culture of Guyana
  • Waugh, Evelyn (1934). Ninety-two days: The account of a tropical journey through British Guiana and part of Brazil. New York: Farrar & Rinehart. OCLC 3000330. from the original on 11 May 2011. Retrieved 7 January 2010.
  • Gerald Durrell, Three Singles To Adventure
  • Cheddi Jagan. The West on Trial: My Fight for Guyana's Freedom
  • Cheddi Jagan. My Fight For Guyana's Freedom: With Reflections on My Father by Nadira Jagan-Brancier.
  • Colin Henfrey, Through Indian Eyes: A Journey Among the Indian Tribes of Guiana.
  • Stephen G. Rabe, US Intervention in British Guiana: A Cold War Story.
  • Charles Waterton, Wanderings in South America.
  • David Attenborough, Zoo Quest to Guiana (Lutterworth Press, London: 1956).
  • John Gimlette, Wild Coast: Travels on South America's Untamed Edge, 2011.
  • Clementi, Cecil (1915). The Chinese in British Guiana (PDF). Georgetown, British Guiana: The Argosy Company Limited. (PDF) from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 27 October 2015.

External links

guyana, confused, with, french, guiana, other, uses, disambiguation, coordinates, ɑː, listen, listen, officially, operative, republic, country, northern, mainland, south, america, indigenous, word, which, means, land, many, waters, capital, city, georgetown, b. Not to be confused with French Guiana For other uses see Guyana disambiguation Coordinates 5 00 N 58 45 W 5 N 58 75 W 5 58 75 Guyana ɡ aɪ ˈ ɑː n e listen or ɡ aɪ ˈ ae n e listen 7 8 officially the Co operative Republic of Guyana 9 is a country on the northern mainland of South America Guyana is an indigenous word which means Land of Many Waters The capital city is Georgetown Guyana is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean to the north Brazil to the south and southwest Venezuela to the west and Suriname to the east With 215 000 km2 83 000 sq mi Guyana is the third smallest sovereign state by area in mainland South America after Uruguay and Suriname and is the second least populous sovereign state in South America after Suriname it is also one of the least densely populated countries on Earth It has a wide variety of natural habitats and very high biodiversity Co operative Republic of GuyanaFlag Coat of armsMotto One People One Nation One Destiny Anthem Dear Land of Guyana of Rivers and Plains source source track track Location of Guyana green in South America grey Capitaland largest cityGeorgetown6 48 21 N 58 9 3 W 6 80583 N 58 15083 W 6 80583 58 15083Official languagesEnglishRecognised regional languages10 indigenous languages AkawaioMacushiWaiwaiArawak Lokono PatamonaWarrauCaribWapishanaPemon Arekuna MawayanaVernacular languageGuyanese CreoleOther languages6 languages Guyanese HindustaniPortugueseDutchSpanishChineseFrenchEthnic groups 2012 1 39 8 Indian29 3 African19 9 Multiracial10 5 Indigenous0 3 European0 2 ChineseReligion 2012 1 62 7 Christianity24 8 Hinduism6 8 Islam3 1 No religion2 6 OthersDemonym s GuyaneseGovernmentUnitary assembly independent republic 2 PresidentIrfaan Ali Prime Minister amp First Vice PresidentMark Phillips Vice PresidentBharrat Jagdeo National Assembly SpeakerManzoor Nadir Chief JusticeRoxane George Wiltshire acting LegislatureNational AssemblyEstablishment Dutch control1667 1815 British Guiana1831 1966 Independence from the United Kingdom as Guyana26 May 1966 Republic23 February 1970 Joined CARICOM at the Treaty of Chaguaramas1 August 1973 Current constitution6 October 1980Area Total214 970 km2 83 000 sq mi 83rd Water 8 4Population 2022 estimate795 408 3 166th Density3 502 km2 9 1 sq mi 232nd GDP PPP 2022 estimate Total 30 287 billion 4 142nd Per capita 38 258 4 49th GDP nominal 2022 estimate Total 13 543 billion 4 142nd Per capita 17 108 4 59th Gini 2007 44 6 5 mediumHDI 2021 0 714 6 high 108thCurrencyGuyanese dollar GYD Time zoneUTC 4 AST Date formatdd mm yyyyDriving sideleftCalling code 592ISO 3166 codeGYInternet TLD gyThe region known as the Guianas consists of the large shield landmass north of the Amazon River and east of the Orinoco River known as the land of many waters Nine indigenous tribes reside in Guyana the Wai Wai Macushi Patamona Lokono Kalina Wapishana Pemon Akawaio and Warao Historically dominated by the Lokono and Kalina tribes Guyana was colonised by the Dutch before coming under British control in the late 18th century It was governed as British Guiana with a mostly plantation style economy until the 1950s It gained independence in 1966 and officially became a republic within the Commonwealth of Nations in 1970 The legacy of British rule is reflected in the country s political administration and diverse population which includes Indian African Indigenous Chinese Portuguese other European and various multiracial groups In 2017 41 of the population of Guyana lived below the poverty line 10 Guyana is the only South American nation in which English is the official language However the majority of the population speak Guyanese Creole an English based creole language as a first language Guyana is part of the Anglophone Caribbean It is part of the mainland Caribbean region maintaining strong cultural historical and political ties with other Caribbean countries as well as serving as the headquarters for the Caribbean Community CARICOM In 2008 the country joined the Union of South American Nations as a founding member Guyana s economy has been undergoing a transformation since the discovery of crude oil in 2015 and commercial drilling in 2019 being one of the only economies to grow in 2020 despite the pandemic at 49 GDP growth through the year Due to Guyana s small population and as much as 11 billion barrels in oil reserves 11 the country is on course to become one of the largest per capita oil producers in the world by 2030 12 The discovery of over 11 billion barrels of oil reserves off the coast of Guyana in the last five years is the largest addition to global oil reserves in the last 50 years 13 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Before colonization 2 2 Colonial period 2 3 Independence 3 Geography 3 1 Biodiversity and conservation 4 Economy 4 1 Summary 4 2 History 4 3 Tax policy 4 4 Organizations 5 Demographics 5 1 Largest cities 5 2 Languages 5 3 Religion 5 3 1 Religious groups 5 3 2 Religious sect groups 6 Government 6 1 Politics 6 2 Public procurement 6 3 Military 6 4 Human rights 7 Administrative divisions 7 1 Regions and Neighbourhood Councils 8 International and regional relations 8 1 Boundary disputes 8 2 The Organisation of American States OAS 8 3 Indigenous Leaders Summits of America ILSA 8 4 Agreements which affect financial relationships 8 4 1 The Double Taxation Relief CARICOM Treaty 1994 8 4 2 FATCA 9 Infrastructure and telecommunications 9 1 Transport 9 2 Electricity 10 Health 11 Education 12 Culture 12 1 Landmarks 13 Sports 14 See also 15 Explanatory notes 16 References 17 Further reading 18 External linksEtymology EditThe name Guyana derives from Guiana the original name for the region that included Guyana British Guiana Suriname Dutch Guiana French Guiana and the Guayana Region in Venezuela Spanish Guyana and Amapa in Brazil Portuguese Guiana According to the Oxford English Dictionary Guyana comes from an indigenous Amerindian language and means land of many waters 14 15 The Co operative Republic of Guyana in the official name referred to co operative socialism History EditMain article History of Guyana A map of Dutch Guiana from 1667 1814 Before colonization Edit Nine indigenous tribes reside in Guyana the Wai Wai Macushi Patamona Lokono Kalina Wapishana Pemon Akawaio and Warao 16 Historically the Lokono and Kalina tribes dominated Guyana Colonial period Edit Although Christopher Columbus was the first European to sight Guyana during his third voyage in 1498 and Sir Walter Raleigh wrote an account in 1596 the Dutch were the first Europeans to establish colonies Pomeroon 1581 Essequibo 1616 Berbice 1627 and Demerara 1752 After the British assumed control in 1796 17 the Dutch formally ceded the area in 1814 citation needed In 1831 the united colonies of Demerara Essequibo and separate colony of Berbice together became a single British colony known as British Guiana citation needed Map of British Guiana from 1896 Since its independence in 1824 Venezuela has claimed the area of land to the west of the Essequibo River Simon Bolivar wrote to the British government warning against the Berbice and Demerara settlers settling on land which the Venezuelans as assumed heirs of Spanish claims on the area dating to the 16th century claimed was theirs In 1899 an international tribunal ruled that the land belonged to Great Britain 18 The British territorial claim stemmed from Dutch involvement and colonization of the area also dating to the 16th century which was ceded to the British citation needed Independence Edit Guyana achieved independence from the United Kingdom as a dominion on 26 May 1966 and became a republic on 23 February 1970 remaining a member of the Commonwealth Shortly after independence Venezuela began to take diplomatic economic and military action against Guyana in order to enforce its territorial claim to the Guayana Esequiba 19 The US State Department and the US Central Intelligence Agency CIA along with the British government also played a strong role in influencing political control in Guyana during this time 20 The American government supported Forbes Burnham during the early years of independence because Cheddi Jagan was identified as a Marxist They provided secret financial support and political campaign advice to Burnham s People s National Congress to the detriment of the Jagan led People s Progressive Party which was mostly supported by Guyanese of Indian background citation needed Guyana was elected twice as member of the UN Security Council in 1975 76 and later 1982 83 In 1978 a total of 918 people died at the Jonestown mass murder suicide led by cult leader Jim Jones 21 In May 2008 President Bharrat Jagdeo was a signatory to the UNASUR Constitutive Treaty of the Union of South American Nations The Guyanese government officially ratified the treaty in 2010 22 In March 2020 President David A Granger narrowly lost the snap elections following Granger s government loss of a vote of no confidence back in 2018 Granger refused to accept the results but eventually five months later Irfaan Ali of the People s Progressive Party Civic was sworn in as the new president because of allegations of fraud and irregularities 23 Geography EditMain article Geography of Guyana Kaieteur Falls is the world s largest single drop waterfall by volume Rupununi Savannah The territory controlled by Guyana lies between latitudes 1 and 9 N and longitudes 56 and 62 W it is one of the world s most sparsely populated countries The country can be divided into five natural regions a narrow and fertile marshy plain along the Atlantic coast low coastal plain where most of the population lives a white sand belt further inland hilly sand and clay region containing most of Guyana s mineral deposits the dense rain forests Forested Highland Region in the southern part of the country the drier savannah areas in the south west and the smallest interior lowlands interior savannah consisting mostly of mountains that gradually rise to the Brazilian border Some of Guyana s highest mountains are Mount Ayanganna 2 042 m or 6 699 ft Monte Caburai 1 465 m or 4 806 ft and Mount Roraima 2 772 m or 9 094 ft the highest mountain in Guyana on the Brazil Guyana Venezuela tripoint border part of the Pakaraima range Mount Roraima and Guyana s table top mountains tepuis are said to have been the inspiration for Sir Arthur Conan Doyle s 1912 novel The Lost World There are also many volcanic escarpments and waterfalls including Kaieteur Falls which is believed to be the largest single drop waterfall in the world by volume 24 North of the Rupununi River lies the Rupununi savannah south of which lie the Kanuku Mountains The four longest rivers are the Essequibo at 1 010 km 628 mi long the Courentyne River at 724 km 450 mi the Berbice at 595 km 370 mi and the Demerara at 346 km 215 mi The Courentyne river forms the border with Suriname At the mouth of the Essequibo are several large islands including the 145 km 90 mi wide Shell Beach along the northwest coast which is also a major breeding area for sea turtles mainly leatherbacks and other wildlife The climate is tropical and generally hot and humid though moderated by northeast trade winds along the coast There are two rainy seasons the first from May to mid August the second from mid November to mid January Guyana has one of the largest unspoiled rainforests in South America some parts of which are almost inaccessible by humans The rich natural history of Guyana was described by early explorers Sir Walter Raleigh and Charles Waterton and later by naturalists Sir David Attenborough and Gerald Durrell In 2008 the BBC broadcast a three part programme called Lost Land of the Jaguar which highlighted the huge diversity of wildlife including undiscovered species and rare species such as the giant otter and harpy eagle In 2012 Guyana received a 45 million reward from Norway for its rainforest protection efforts This stems from a 2009 agreement between the nations for a total of 250 million for protecting and maintaining the natural habitat Thus far the country has received 115 million of the total grant Biodiversity and conservation Edit See also Category Flora of Guyana Category Fauna of Guyana and Category Orchids of GuyanaGuyana is home to more than 900 species of birds 225 species of mammals 880 species of reptiles and more than 6 500 different species of plants 25 Among these wildlife categories the most notably famous are the Arapaima which is the world s largest scaled freshwater fish the giant anteater the largest anteater the giant otter the world s largest and rarest river otter and the cock of the rock Rupicola rupicola 26 Satellite image of Guyana from 2004 Anomaloglossus beebei Kaieteur specific to the Guianas The hoatzin is the national bird of Guyana The following habitats have been categorised for Guyana coastal marine littoral estuarine palustrine mangrove riverine lacustrine swamp savanna white sand forest brown sand forest montane cloud forest moist lowland and dry evergreen scrub forests NBAP 1999 About 14 areas of biological interest have been identified as possible hotspots for a National Protected Area System More than 80 of Guyana is still covered by forests which also contain the world s rarest orchids ranging from dry evergreen and seasonal forests to montane and lowland evergreen rain forests These forests are home to more than a thousand species of trees Guyana s tropical climate unique geology and relatively undisturbed ecosystems support extensive areas of species rich rain forests and natural habitats with high levels of endemism There are about 8000 species of plants in Guyana half of which are found nowhere else Guyana has one of the highest levels of biodiversity in the world With 1 168 vertebrate species and 814 bird species it boasts one of the richest mammalian fauna assemblages of any comparably sized area in the world Guyana is home to six ecoregions Guayanan Highlands moist forests Guianan moist forests Orinoco Delta swamp forests Tepuis Guianan savanna and Guianan mangroves 27 The Guiana Shield region is little known and extremely rich biologically Unlike other areas of South America over 70 of the natural habitat remains pristine Guyana ranks third in the world with a 2019 Forest Landscape Integrity Index mean score of 9 58 10 28 The rich natural history of British Guiana was described by early explorers Sir Walter Raleigh and Charles Waterton and later by naturalists Sir David Attenborough and Gerald Durrell Southern Guyana is host to some of the most pristine expanses of evergreen forests in the northern part of South America Most of the forests found are tall evergreen hill land and lower montane forests with large expanses of flooded forest along major rivers Thanks to the very low human population density of the area most of these forests are still intact The Smithsonian Institution has identified nearly 2 700 species of plants from this region representing 239 distinct families and there are certainly additional species still to be recorded The diversity of plants supports diverse animal life recently documented by a biological survey organised by Conservation International The reportedly clean unpolluted waters of the Essequibo watershed support a remarkable diversity of fish and aquatic invertebrates and are home to giant otters capybaras and several species of caimans On land large mammals such as jaguars tapirs bush dogs giant anteaters and saki monkeys are still common Over 400 species of birds have been reported from the region and the reptile and amphibian faunas are similarly rich In February 2004 the Government of Guyana issued a title to more than 4 000 km2 1 10 6 acres of land in the Konashen Indigenous District as the Kanashen Community Owned Conservation Area managed by the Wai Wai and the world s largest community owned conservation Area 29 The Iwokrama International Centre for Rain Forest Conservation and Development was also created for the protection and sustainable use of the Iwokrama forest area Economy EditMain articles Economy of Guyana and Agriculture in Guyana See also List of companies of Guyana A tractor in a rice field on Guyana s coastal plain A proportional representation of Guyana exports 2019 The main economic activities in Guyana are agriculture rice and Demerara sugar bauxite and gold mining timber shrimp fishing and minerals The discovery of major crude oil reserves off the Atlantic coast has since made a large impact on Guyana s GDP since drilling began in 2019 GDP grew sharply 43 through the COVID 19 pandemic year of 2020 and is anticipated to continue at a high level in 2021 estimated at 20 The non oil sectors contracted as public health measures were in place to control the virus spread the growth of GDP rests on the oil sector for these two years 30 Preservation of Guyana s pristine forests has been a key component for receiving international aid through REDD programs Summary Edit GDP US 4 121 billion 5 252 per capita 2019 est 4 GDP growth rate 86 7 2020 4 31 Inflation 12 3 Unemployment 21 5 2017 32 Arable land 2 Labour force 324 943 2019 33 Agricultural produce sugar rice vegetable oils beef pork poultry dairy products fish shrimp 32 Industrial production bauxite sugar rice milling timber textiles gold mining 32 Exports US 1 439 billion Canada 24 9 US 16 5 Panama 9 6 UK 7 7 Jamaica 5 1 Trinidad and Tobago 5 2017 32 Imports US 1 626 billion Trinidad and Tobago 27 5 US 26 5 China 8 9 Suriname 6 1 2017 32 History Edit The earliest residents of Guyana the Amerindians of various tribes employed a variety of agricultural practices for subsistence living but also had extensive networks of trade dealing in items such as blow pipes curare cassava graters and other essentials These trade networks were important even at the time of the earliest European contact and Dutch traders were inclined to gift the local peoples in order to maintain successful settlements 34 After the initial rush to find gold in the New World waned the Dutch found the climate to be suitable for growing sugar cane converting large tracts of the Guyanese coast into plantations and supplying with labour from the Atlantic slave trade The country and economy were run by a small European planter elite 35 which continued on when the colonies of the territory were merged and the land was given over to the British Empire in 1814 Upon emancipation in 1838 almost all of the former slaves abandoned the plantations and Indians were brought to the country under indenture contracts from 1838 until the end of the system in 1917 36 The production of balata natural latex was once a big business in Guyana Most of the balata bleeding in Guyana took place in the foothills of the Kanuku Mountains in the Rupununi savannah Early exploitation also took place in the North West District but most of the trees in the area were destroyed by illicit bleeding methods that involved cutting down the trees rather than making incisions in them Uses of balata included the making of cricket balls temporary dental fillings and the crafting of figurines and other decorative items particularly by the Macushi people When the country gained independence from British rule a policy of nationalization was enacted by Forbes Burnham to address the inequities that were established by plantation based colonial rule All large scale industries such as foreign owned bauxite mining Reynolds Metals and Rio Tinto s Alcan and sugar GuySuCo operations were taken over by the government However the economy under nationalization was plagued by problems political instability leading to an exodus of skilled labour inexperienced management aging infrastructure Poor international market conditions also expanded the country s debt 37 The Guyanese economy rebounded slightly and exhibited moderate economic growth after 1999 due to expansion in the agricultural and mining sectors a more favourable atmosphere for business initiatives a more realistic exchange rate fairly low inflation and the continued support of international organisations Guyana held huge amounts of debt which have been written off through various international agencies In 2003 Guyana qualified for US 329 million of debt relief in addition to the US 256 million from the original World Bank plan for assisting heavily indebted poor countries in 1999 The Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative in 2006 7 wrote off about US 611 million of Guyana s debt by the International Monetary Fund the World Bank and the Inter American Development Bank In 2006 Japan finalised its bilateral debt cancellation agreement in 2007 US 15 million was written off by China and in 2008 Venezuela cancelled US 12 5 million 38 In 2008 the economy witnessed a 3 increase in growth amid the global economic crisis it grew 5 4 in 2011 and 3 7 in 2012 IMF projected economic growth to be 53 in 2020 following the completion of the first off shore oil project 39 Actual growth in GDP in 2020 was 43 reports in April 2021 anticipate 20 growth for 2021 30 Tax policy Edit The government initiated a major overhaul of the tax code in early 2007 A Value Added Tax VAT replaced six different taxes Prior to the implementation of the VAT it had been relatively easy to evade sales tax and many businesses were in violation of tax code Many businesses opposed VAT introduction because of the extra paperwork required however the Government has remained firm on the VAT Replacing several taxes with one flat tax rate it will also be easier for government auditors to spot embezzlement This was prevalent under the former PPP C government who authorised the VAT to be equal to 50 of the value of the good citation needed Organizations EditMajor private sector organisations include the Private Sector Commission PSC 40 and the Georgetown Chamber of Commerce amp Industry GCCI 41 Thatched roof houses in GuyanaDemographics EditMain articles Demographics of Guyana and Guyanese people Guyana s population density in 2005 people per km2 A graph showing the population of Guyana from 1961 to 2003 The population decline in the 1980s can be clearly seen The chief majority about 90 of Guyana s 744 000 population lives along a narrow coastal strip which ranges from a width of 16 to 64 km 10 to 40 mi inland and which makes up approximately only 10 of the nation s total land area 42 The present population of Guyana is racially and ethnically heterogeneous with ethnic groups originating from India Africa Europe and China as well as indigenous or aboriginal peoples Despite their diverse ethnic backgrounds these groups share two common languages English and Guyanese English Creole The largest ethnic group is the Indo Guyanese also known as East Indians the descendants of indentured labourers from India who make up 43 5 of the population according to the 2002 census They are followed by the Afro Guyanese the descendants of slaves imported from Africa who constitute 30 2 The Guyanese of mixed heritage make up 16 7 while the indigenous peoples known locally as Amerindians make up 9 1 The indigenous groups include the Arawaks the Wai Wai the Caribs the Akawaio the Arecuna the Patamona the Wapixana the Macushi and the Warao 43 The two largest groups the Indo Guyanese and Afro Guyanese have experienced some racial tension 44 45 46 Most Indo Guyanese are descended from indentured labourers who migrated from North India especially the Bhojpur and Awadh regions of the Hindi Belt in the present day states of Uttar Pradesh Bihar and Jharkhand 47 A significant minority of Indo Guyanese are also descended from indentured migrants who came from the South Indian states of Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh these South Indian descendants are the plurality ancestry in the East Berbice Corentyne region 48 Largest cities Edit Largest cities and towns of Guyana Rank Name Region Population1 Georgetown Demerara Mahaica 118 363 49 2 Linden Upper Demerara Berbice 27 277 49 3 New Amsterdam East Berbice Corentyne 17 329 49 4 Corriverton East Berbice Corentyne 11 386 49 5 Bartica Cuyuni Mazaruni 8 004 50 6 Mahaica Demerara Mahaica 4 867 50 7 Rose Hall East Berbice Corentyne 4 413 50 8 Parika Essequibo Islands West Demerara 4 385 50 9 Triumph Demerara Mahaica 3 788 50 10 Uitvlugt Essequibo Islands West Demerara 2 980 50 Languages Edit Main article Languages of Guyana English is the official language of Guyana and is used for education government media and services The vast majority of the population speaks Guyanese Creole an English based creole with slight African Indian and Amerindian influences as their native tongue 51 Indigenous Cariban languages Akawaio Wai Wai and Macushi are spoken by a small minority of Amerindians Guyanese Hindustani is spoken by the older generation of the Indo Guyanese community but younger Guyanese use English or Guyanese Creole 52 Religion Edit Main article Religion in Guyana Religious groups Edit Religion in Guyana 2012 census 53 Christianity 62 Hinduism 25 Islam 7 Other religious groups 3 Irreligious 3 Religious sect groups Edit Religion in Guyana 2012 census 53 Hinduism 25 Pentecostalism 23 Other forms of Christianity a 21 Roman Catholicism 7 Islam 7 Anglicanism 5 Seventh day Adventism 5 Methodism 1 Other religious groups 3 Irreligious 3 In 2012 the population was 63 Christian 25 Hindu 7 Muslim Religion is an important aspect of identity in Guyana and reflects the various external influences of colonialism and immigrant groups Christianity was considered the prestigious religion transmitting European culture and representing upward mobility in the colonial society Missionaries and churches built schools and until nationalization in the 1970s nearly all schools were denominational When Indians were brought to the country as indentured labour Hinduism and Islam gained prominence but for some decades neither were acknowledged for legal marriage 54 Some traditional African and Amerindian folk beliefs remain alongside the dominant religions Government EditPolitics Edit Main article Politics of Guyana The State House Guyana s presidential residence The Supreme Court of Guyana Guyana s parliament building since 1834 The politics of Guyana takes place in a framework of a Parliamentary representative democratic republic in which the President of Guyana is both head of state and head of government and of a multi party system Executive power is exercised by the President and the Government Legislative power is vested in both the President and the National Assembly of Guyana 55 Historically politics are a source of tension in the country and violent riots have often broken out during elections During the 1970s and 1980s the political landscape was dominated by the People s National Congress 56 In 1992 the first constitutional elections were overseen by former United States President Jimmy Carter and the People s Progressive Party led the country until 2015 The two parties are principally organised along ethnic lines and as a result often clash on issues related to the allocation of resources In the General Elections held on 28 November 2011 the People s Progressive Party PPP retained a majority and their presidential candidate Donald Ramotar was elected as president 57 On 11 May 2015 early general elections were held A coalition of the A Partnership for National Unity Alliance for Change APNU AFC parties won 33 of the 65 seats in the National Assembly On 16 May 2015 retired army general David A Granger became the eighth President of Guyana 58 However on 21 December 2018 a vote of confidence was called for regarding terms under which the government granted a franchise for offshore oil exploration Legislator Charrandass Persaud defected from the coalition and the vote failed requiring new elections The governing coalition litigated this result for the entire 90 days allowed for new elections New elections were held on March 2 2020 and results were declared on August 3 2020 with the People s Progressive Party Civic as the winner Mohamed Irfaan Ali became the ninth President of Guyana 59 60 Public procurement Edit Public procurement in Guyana is overseen by the Public Procurement Commission appointed under the Public Procurement Commission Act 2003 Due to lengthy delay in identifying and agreeing commission members the commission was not appointed until 2016 61 Military Edit Main article Guyana Defence Force The Guyana Defence Force GDF is the military service of Guyana Human rights Edit See also LGBT rights in Guyana Homosexual acts as well as anal and oral sex are illegal in Guyana 62 It is currently the only country in South America that prohibits such acts Engaging in such acts can warrant life imprisonment though the prohibition is not enforced These laws can be difficult to alter as Guyana s Constitution protects laws inherited from the British Empire from constitutional review 63 However cross dressing has been legal since 2018 when a ban was struck down by Guyana s court of last resort the Caribbean Court of Justice 64 President David A Granger 2015 2020 expressed support for these efforts 65 Administrative divisions EditRegions and Neighbourhood Councils Edit Main articles Regions of Guyana and Neighbourhood Councils of Guyana Regions of Guyana by number and nameGuyana is divided into 10 regions 66 67 No Region Area km2 Pop 2012 Census Pop Density per km21 Barima Waini 20 339 26 941 1 322 Pomeroon Supenaam 6 195 46 810 7 563 Essequibo Islands West Demerara 3 755 107 416 28 614 Demerara Mahaica 2 232 313 429 140 435 Mahaica Berbice 4 190 49 723 11 876 East Berbice Corentyne 36 234 109 431 3 027 Cuyuni Mazaruni 47 213 20 280 0 438 Potaro Siparuni 20 051 10 190 0 519 Upper Takutu Upper Essequibo 57 750 24 212 0 4210 Upper Demerara Berbice 17 040 39 452 2 32Total 214 999 747 884 3 48The regions are divided into 27 neighbourhood councils 68 International and regional relations EditBoundary disputes Edit Map of Guyana showing the Essequibo River and shaded dark the river s drainage basin Venezuela claims territory up to the western bank of the river The historical claim by the UK included the river basin well into current day Venezuela See also Schomburgk Line and Borders of Suriname Guyana is in border disputes with both Suriname which claims the area east of the left bank of the Corentyne River and the New River in southwestern Suriname and Venezuela which claims the land west of the Essequibo River once the Dutch colony of Essequibo as part of Venezuela s Guayana Essequiba 69 70 71 72 The maritime 73 74 component of the territorial dispute with Suriname was arbitrated by the United Nations Convention on Law of the Sea and a ruling was announced on 21 September 2007 The ruling concerning the Caribbean Sea north of both nations found both parties violated treaty obligations and declined to order any compensation to either party 75 When the British surveyed British Guiana in 1840 they included the entire Cuyuni River basin within the colony Venezuela did not agree with this as it claimed all lands west of the Essequibo River In 1898 at Venezuela s request an international arbitration tribunal was convened and in 1899 the tribunal issued an award giving about 94 of the disputed territory to British Guiana The arbitration was concluded settled and accepted into International law by both Venezuela and the UK Venezuela brought up again the settled claim during the 1960s cold war period and during Guyana s Independence period This issue is now governed by the Treaty of Geneva of 1966 which was signed by the Governments of Guyana Great Britain and Venezuela and Venezuela continues to claim Guayana Esequiba 76 Venezuela calls this region Zona en Reclamacion Reclamation Zone and Venezuelan maps of the national territory routinely include it drawing it in with dashed lines 77 Specific small disputed areas involving Guyana are Ankoko Island with Venezuela Corentyne River 78 with Suriname and Tigri Area or New River Triangle 79 with Suriname In 1967 a Surinamese survey team was found in the New River Triangle and was forcibly removed In August 1969 a patrol of the Guyana Defence Force found a survey camp and a partially completed airstrip inside the triangle and documented evidence of the Surinamese intention to occupy the entire disputed area After an exchange of gunfire the Surinamese were driven from the triangle The Organisation of American States OAS Edit Guyana entered the Organisation of American States in 1991 80 Indigenous Leaders Summits of America ILSA Edit With Guyana having many groups of indigenous persons and given the geographical location of the country the contributions of the Guyanese to the OAS respecting indigenous people may be significant 81 The position of the OAS respecting indigenous persons developed over the years The OAS has supported and participated in the organisation of Indigenous Leaders Summits of Americas ILSA 82 The Draft American Declaration of the Rights of the Indigenous Persons appears to be a working document 83 Agreements which affect financial relationships Edit The Double Taxation Relief CARICOM Treaty 1994 Edit At a CARICOM Meeting representatives of Trinidad and Tobago and Guyana respectively signed The Double Taxation Relief CARICOM Treaty 1994 on 19 August 1994 84 This treaty covered taxes residence tax jurisdictions capital gains business profits interest dividends royalties and other areas FATCA Edit On 30 June 2014 Guyana signed a Model 1 agreement with the United States of America in relation to the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act FATCA 85 This Model 1 agreement includes a reference to the Tax Information Exchange Agreement Clause 3 which was signed on 22 July 1992 in Georgetown Guyana intending to exchange Tax information on an automatic basis Infrastructure and telecommunications EditTransport Edit Main article Transport in Guyana Cross border bridge from Guyana to Brazil near Lethem There are a total of 187 km 116 mi of railway all dedicated to ore transport There are 7 969 km 4 952 mi of highway of which 591 km 367 mi are paved Navigable waterways extend 1 077 km 669 mi including the Berbice Demerara and Essequibo rivers There are ports at Georgetown Port Kaituma and New Amsterdam There are two international airports Cheddi Jagan International Airport Timehri and Eugene F Correira International Airport formerly Ogle Airport along with about 90 airstrips nine of which have paved runways Guyana Suriname and the Falkland Islands are the only three regions in South America that drive on the left Electricity Edit Main article Electricity sector in Guyana The electricity sector in Guyana is dominated by Guyana Power and Light GPL the state owned vertically integrated utility Although the country has a large potential for hydroelectric and bagasse fuelled power generation most of its 226 MW of installed capacity correspond to diesel engine driven generators 86 Several initiatives are in place to improve energy access in the hinterland Health EditMain article Health in Guyana Life expectancy at birth is estimated to be 69 5 years as of 2020 87 The PAHO WHO Global Health Report 2014 using statistics of 2012 ranked the country as having the highest suicide rate in the world with a mortality rate of 44 2 per 100 000 inhabitants 88 89 According to 2011 estimates from the WHO HIV prevalence is 1 2 of the teen adult population ages 15 49 90 Education EditMain article Education in GuyanaEducation in Guyana was primarily introduced and operated by missionizing Christian denominations The wealthy planter elite often sent their children for education abroad in England but as schools improved in Guyana they also modelled after the former British education system Primary education became compulsory in 1876 although the need for children to assist in agricultural labour kept many children from schooling In the 1960s the government took over control of all schools in the country Fees were removed new schools were opened in rural areas and the University of Guyana was established so students no longer were required to go abroad for tertiary education 91 Guyana s literacy was one of the highest in the Caribbean by estimated literacy rate of 96 per cent in 1990 91 In a 2014 UNESCO estimate literacy is 96 7 in the 15 24 year old age group 92 However the functional literacy may be only as high as 70 93 Students are expected to take the NGSA National Grade Six Assessment for entrance into high school in grade 7 They take the CXC at the end of high school Schools have introduced the CAPE exams which all other Caribbean countries have introduced The A level system inherited from the British era is offered only in a few schools Infrastructure challenges impact access to education especially students in the hinterland A World Bank assessment showed roughly 50 of teachers were untrained operated with inadequate teaching materials and served children of parents with low levels of adult literacy 94 Culture EditMain article Culture of Guyana See also Literature of Guyana and Music of Guyana Holidays 1 January New Year s DaySpring Youman Nabi Mawlid 23 February Republic Day MashramaniMarch Phagwah Holi March April Good FridayMarch April Easter SundayMarch April Easter Monday1 May Labour Day5 May Indian Arrival Day26 May Independence DayFirst Monday in July CARICOM Day1 August Emancipation DayOctober November Diwali25 December Christmas26 or 27 December Boxing DayVaries Eid al FitrVaries Eid al AdhaGuyana s culture is very similar to that of the English speaking Caribbean and has historically been tied to the English speaking Caribbean as part of the British Empire when it became a possession in the nineteenth century Guyanese culture developed as forced and voluntary immigrants adapted and converged with the dominant British culture Slavery eradicated much of the distinction between differing African cultures encouraging the adoption of Christianity and the values of British colonists which laid the foundations of today s Afro Guyanese culture Arriving later and under somewhat more favourable circumstances Indian immigrants were subjected to less assimilation and preserved more aspects of Indian culture such as religion cuisine music festivals and clothing 95 Guyana s geographical location its sparsely populated rain forest regions and its substantial Amerindian population differentiate it from English speaking Caribbean countries Its blend of the two dominant Indo Guyanese and Afro Guyanese cultures gives it similarities to Trinidad and Tobago and Suriname and distinguishes it from other parts of the Americas Guyana shares similar interests with the islands in the West Indies such as food festive events music sports etc Events include Mashramani Mash Phagwah Holi and Deepavali Diwali Landmarks Edit St George s Cathedral Georgetown St George s Anglican Cathedral A historic Anglican Cathedral made of wood 96 Demerara Harbour Bridge The world s fourth longest floating bridge 97 Berbice Bridge The world s sixth longest floating bridge Caribbean Community CARICOM Building Houses the headquarters of the largest and most powerful economic union in the Caribbean Providence Stadium Situated on Providence on the east bank of the Demerara River and built in time for the ICC World Cup 2007 it is the largest sports stadium in the country It is also near the Providence Mall forming a major spot for leisure in Guyana Arthur Chung Conference Centre 98 Presented as a gift from the People s Republic of China to the Government of Guyana It is the only one of its kind in the country Stabroek Market A large cast iron colonial structure that looked like a statue was located next to the Demerara River 96 Georgetown City Hall A beautiful wooden structure also from the colonial era 96 Takutu River Bridge A bridge across the Takutu River connecting Lethem in Guyana to Bonfim in Brazil 99 Umana Yana An Amerindian benab that is a national monument built in 1972 for a meeting of the Foreign Ministers of the Non Aligned nations It was rebuilt in 2016 100 Shell Beach Approximately 140 km long beach In some parts beach consists of pure shells very high biological diversity Important nesting site for 8 species of sea turtles 96 Sports EditSee also Cricket in the West Indies Providence Stadium as seen from the East Bank Highway The major sports in Guyana are cricket Guyana is part of the West Indies cricket team for international cricket purposes 101 basketball football and volleyball 102 Minor sports include softball cricket beach cricket field hockey netball rounders lawn tennis table tennis boxing squash rugby horse racing and a few others Guyana played host to international cricket matches as part of the 2007 Cricket World Cup CWC 2007 The new 15 000 seat Providence Stadium also referred to as Guyana National Stadium was built in time for the World Cup and was ready for the beginning of play on 28 March At the first international game of CWC 2007 at the stadium Lasith Malinga of the Sri Lankan team took four wickets in four consecutive deliveries 103 Guyana s national basketball team has traditionally been one of the top contenders at the CaribeBasket the top international basketball tournament for countries in the Caribbean For international football purposes Guyana is part of CONCACAF The highest league in their club system is the GFF Elite League Guyana s national football team has never qualified for the FIFA World Cup however they qualified for the Caribbean Cup in 1991 finishing fourth and 2007 In 2019 they qualified for the CONCACAF Gold Cup for the first time after finishing seventh in the qualifiers They finished third in Group D having lost two matches and drawn one Guyana also has five courses for horse racing 104 Guyana featured a beach volleyball team at the 2019 South American Beach Games 105 See also Edit Guyana portal Caribbean portalIndex of Guyana related articles Outline of Guyana Petroleum industry in GuyanaExplanatory notes Edit Mostly made up of other Protestants but also Eastern Orthodox Mormons Jehovah s Witnesses and other Christians citation needed References Edit a b Compedium 2 Population Composition Bureau of Statistics Guyana July 2016 Archived from the original on 9 July 2018 Retrieved 25 August 2018 Article Preamble Section Preamble of the Constitution of the Cooperative Republic of Guyana 20 February 1980 Guyana Population 2022 Worldometer www worldometers info a b c d e f World Economic Outlook Database April 2021 IMF org International Monetary Fund Archived from the original on 11 August 2021 Retrieved 11 August 2020 Gini Index coefficient CIA World Factbook Archived from the original on 17 July 2021 Retrieved 4 August 2021 Human Development Report 2021 2022 PDF United Nations Development Programme 8 September 2022 Retrieved 8 September 2022 Wells John C 1990 Longman pronunciation dictionary Harlow England Longman ISBN 978 0 582 05383 0 entry Guyana Guyana Dictionary definition and pronunciation Yahoo Education Education yahoo com Archived from the original on 29 October 2013 Retrieved 30 March 2014 Independent States in the World state gov Archived from the original on 9 June 2010 Retrieved 24 June 2017 Guyana no recuerda a Walter Rodney Le Monde diplomatique en espanol mondiplo com Archived from the original on 25 September 2020 Retrieved 10 October 2020 Valle Sabrina 26 April 2022 Exxon makes three new oil discoveries in Guyana and boosts reserves Reuters via www reuters com Bajpai Prableen 16 October 2020 The Five Fastest Growing Economies In The World NASDAQ Retrieved 30 December 2022 Blackmon David Why The Oil Bonanza Offshore Guyana Has Global Implications Forbes Guyana Oxford Dictionaries Archived from the original on 7 July 2015 Retrieved 9 May 2015 Guyana Oxford Dictionaries Archived from the original on 7 July 2015 Retrieved 9 May 2015 Ministry of Amerindian Affairs Georgetown Guyana Amerindian gov gy Archived from the original on 2 June 2013 Retrieved 30 March 2014 South America 1744 1817 by Sanderson Beck Archived from the original on 1 January 2017 Retrieved 24 October 2016 Award regarding the Boundary between the Colony of British Guiana and the United States of Venezuela decision of 3 October 1899 PDF Archived PDF from the original on 30 July 2020 Retrieved 2 February 2020 Ince Basil A 1970 The Venezuela Guyana Boundary Dispute in the United Nations Caribbean Studies 9 4 5 26 US Declassified Documents 1964 1968 guyana org Archived 12 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine Inside the Jonestown massacre CNN com edition cnn com Retrieved 27 September 2022 UNASUR indifference to Guyana Guyana Chronicle Archived from the original on 17 April 2021 Retrieved 2 April 2021 Guyana swears in Irfaan Ali as president after long stand off BBC News 3 August 2020 Rowe Mark 14 November 2004 South America Do the continental The best of what s new spectacular waterfalls forgotten cities pre Inca trails The Independent p Features page 3 Tavani Claudia 14 August 2018 The Most Amazing Wildlife in Guyana My Adventures Across the World Archived from the original on 3 September 2019 Retrieved 3 September 2019 Attenborough S 1998 BBC The Life of Birds p 211 ISBN 0563 38792 0 Dinerstein Eric Olson David Joshi Anup Vynne Carly Burgess Neil D Wikramanayake Eric Hahn Nathan Palminteri Suzanne Hedao Prashant Noss Reed Hansen Matt Locke Harvey Ellis Erle C Jones Benjamin Barber Charles Victor Hayes Randy Kormos Cyril Martin Vance Crist Eileen Sechrest Wes Price Lori Baillie Jonathan E M Weeden Don Suckling Kieran Davis Crystal Sizer Nigel Moore Rebecca Thau David Birch Tanya Potapov Peter Turubanova Svetlana Tyukavina Alexandra de Souza Nadia Pintea Lilian Brito Jose C Llewellyn Othman A Miller Anthony G Patzelt Annette Ghazanfar Shahina A Timberlake Jonathan Kloser Heinz Shennan Farpon Yara Kindt Roeland Lilleso Jens Peter Barnekow van Breugel Paulo Graudal Lars Voge Maianna Al Shammari Khalaf F Saleem Muhammad 2017 An Ecoregion Based Approach to Protecting Half the Terrestrial Realm BioScience 67 6 534 545 doi 10 1093 biosci bix014 ISSN 0006 3568 PMC 5451287 PMID 28608869 Grantham H S Duncan A Evans T D Jones K R Beyer H L Schuster R Walston J Ray J C Robinson J G Callow M Clements T Costa H M DeGemmis A Elsen P R Ervin J Franco P Goldman E Goetz S Hansen A Hofsvang E Jantz P Jupiter S Kang A Langhammer P Laurance W F Lieberman S Linkie M Malhi Y Maxwell S Mendez M Mittermeier R Murray N J Possingham H Radachowsky J Saatchi S Samper C Silverman J Shapiro A Strassburg B Stevens T Stokes E Taylor R Tear T Tizard R Venter O Visconti P Wang S Watson J E M 2020 Anthropogenic modification of forests means only 40 of remaining forests have high ecosystem integrity Supplementary Material Nature Communications 11 1 5978 Bibcode 2020NatCo 11 5978G doi 10 1038 s41467 020 19493 3 ISSN 2041 1723 PMC 7723057 PMID 33293507 Biodiversity in the Konashen Community Owned Conservation Area Guyana PDF Archived from the original PDF on 6 December 2010 Retrieved 2 May 2010 a b Ragobeer Vishani 7 April 2021 Economy to grow 16 4 per cent Guyana Chronicle Archived from the original on 4 November 2021 Retrieved 4 November 2021 While presenting the 2021 National Budget in February Senior Minister in the Office of the President with responsibility for Finance Dr Ashni Singh noted that Guyana s growth in 2020 was actually 43 5 per cent The IMF s revised growth rate for 2020 43 4 per cent is now closely aligned with the figures provided by the senior minister Meanwhile in February also the Dr Singh projected that Guyana s economy is expected to grow by 20 9 per cent in 2021 Based on the World Bank s latest estimates the country is set to record economic growth of 20 9 per cent at the end of 2021 26 0 per cent in 2022 and 23 0 per cent in 2023 Global Economic Prospects January 2020 Slow Growth Policy Challenges PDF openknowledge worldbank org World Bank p 101 Archived PDF from the original on 12 December 2020 Retrieved 14 January 2020 a b c d e Guyana The World Factbook Archived from the original on 7 January 2021 Retrieved 6 March 2021 Labor force total Guyana data worldbank org World Bank Archived from the original on 14 January 2020 Retrieved 14 January 2020 Whitaker James Andrew December 2017 Guns and Sorcery Raiding Trading and Kanaima among the Makushi ResearchGate Retrieved 4 March 2021 Beaumont Joseph 1871 The New Slavery An Account of the Indian and Chinese Immigrants in British Guiana W Ridgway pp 8 9 Archived from the original on 31 May 2021 Retrieved 1 May 2021 Guyana HISTORY OF THE ECONOMY countrystudies us Archived from the original on 6 July 2009 Retrieved 4 March 2021 Guyana HISTORY OF THE ECONOMY Postindependence countrystudies us Archived from the original on 16 May 2021 Retrieved 4 March 2021 International Development Association Country Assistance Strategy for Guyana for the Period FY 2009 2012 PDF 15 April 2009 p 7 Archived PDF from the original on 17 April 2021 Retrieved 28 February 2021 Bristow Matthew 14 April 2020 World Economy May Be Crashing But Guyana Still Seen Growing 53 Bloomberg com Archived from the original on 4 May 2020 Retrieved 2 May 2020 RedSpider Romona Khan Private Sector Commission Psc org gy Archived from the original on 28 June 2010 Retrieved 2 May 2010 Georgetown Chamber of Commerce amp Industry GCCI Georgetownchamberofcommerce org Archived from the original on 17 December 2010 Retrieved 2 May 2010 Guyana General Information Geographia com Archived from the original on 11 April 2010 Retrieved 2 May 2010 The World Factbook Guyana CIA Archived from the original on 7 January 2021 Retrieved 6 January 2014 Guyana turns attention to racism Archived 2 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine BBC News 20 September 2005 Conflict between Guyanese Indians and Blacks in Trinidad and Guyana Socially Economically and Politically Archived 2 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine Gabrielle Hookumchand Professor Moses Seenarine 18 May 2000 International Business Times Guyana A Study in Polarized Racial Politics Archived 15 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine 12 December 2011 Myers Helen 1999 Music of Hindu Trinidad University of Chicago Press p 30 ISBN 9780226554532 Indian Diaspora PDF Indiandiaspora nic in Archived from the original PDF on 30 April 2011 Retrieved 3 October 2017 a b c d Guyana Population and Housing Census 2012 Preliminary Report PDF Report Bureau of Statistics Guyana June 2014 p 23 Archived PDF from the original on 10 October 2020 Retrieved 10 March 2021 a b c d e f 2012 Population by Village Statistics Guyana Retrieved 16 August 2020 Damoiseau Robert 2003 Elements de grammaire comparee francais creole guyanais Ibis rouge Guyana ISBN 2 84450 192 3 Gambhir Surendra Kumar 1981 The East Indian Speech Community in Guyana A Sociolinguistic Study With Special Reference to Koine Formation PhD dissertation University of Pennsylvania pp 1 367 ProQuest 303192456 Archived from the original on 30 April 2021 Retrieved 7 March 2021 a b Data PDF state gov Archived from the original PDF on 6 December 2017 Retrieved 11 December 2017 Williams Brackette F 12 April 1991 Stains on My Name War in My Veins Guyana and the Politics of Cultural Struggle Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 1119 5 Archived from the original on 31 May 2021 Retrieved 1 May 2021 Guyana GOVERNMENT INSTITUTIONS countrystudies us Archived from the original on 7 April 2016 Retrieved 4 March 2021 Guyana Political Parties countrystudies us Archived from the original on 7 April 2016 Retrieved 4 March 2021 Guyana governing party s Donald Ramotar wins presidency BBC News 2 December 2011 Archived from the original on 17 April 2021 Retrieved 2 April 2021 Ex general David Granger wins Guyana election BBC News 15 May 2015 Archived from the original on 17 April 2021 Retrieved 2 April 2021 Guyana swears in Irfaan Ali as president after long stand off BBC News 3 August 2020 Archived from the original on 3 August 2020 Retrieved 2 April 2021 Marshall Svetlana 21 March 2019 Ruling on confidence vote appeal Friday Guyana Chronicle Archived from the original on 22 March 2019 Retrieved 22 March 2019 After 14 years Guyana establishes procurement commission Archived 21 October 2016 at the Wayback Machine Supply Management 12 August 2016 accessed 1 October 2016 LGBT relationships are illegal in 74 countries research finds The Independent 17 May 2016 Archived from the original on 27 August 2017 Retrieved 29 August 2017 Burham Margaret A Saving Constitutional Rights from Judicial Scrutiny The Savings Clause in the Law of the Commonwealth Caribbean miami edu miami edu Archived from the original on 28 June 2018 Retrieved 26 June 2020 CCJ Declares Guyana s Cross Dressing Law Unconstitutional The Caribbean Court of Justice 13 November 2018 Archived from the original on 20 February 2019 Retrieved 4 August 2020 President to respect LGBT rights Guyana Chronicle 6 January 2016 Archived from the original on 24 November 2020 Retrieved 4 August 2020 Bureau of Statistics Guyana Archived 17 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine CHAPTER III POPULATION REDISTRIBUTION AND INTERNAL MIGRATION Table 3 4 Population Density Guyana 1980 2002 Guyana Government Information Agency National Profile gina gov gy Archived 14 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine Government of Guyana Statistics PDF Archived from the original PDF on 13 November 2009 Retrieved 2 May 2010 Guyana ponders judicial action in border dispute with Venezuela FoxNews Latino 23 December 2014 Archived from the original on 22 February 2015 Retrieved 22 February 2015 Tribunal decision tentatively set for August Archived from the original on 6 April 2009 Retrieved 9 July 2007 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link guyanachronicle com Archives for 17 June 2007 Guyana to experience massive oil exploration this year Landofsixpeoples com 5 February 2007 Archived from the original on 24 August 2010 Retrieved 2 May 2010 News in the Caribbean Caribbean360 com 27 April 2007 Archived from the original on 29 September 2007 Retrieved 2 May 2010 Foreign affairs minister reiterates Guyana s territorial sovereignty Archived 12 November 2014 at the Wayback Machine CaribbeanNetNews com 17 February 2010 POINT OF CLARIFICATION Guyana clears air on Suriname border talk Caribbean News Agency 17 February 2010 official site of the Permanent Court of Arbitration Pca cpa org Archived from the original on 8 February 2013 Retrieved 2 May 2010 Ishmael Odeen 1998 rev 2006 The Trail Of Diplomacy A Documentary History of the Guyana Venezuela Border Issue Archived 28 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine Dr Ishmael was Ambassador of Guyana to Venezuela when this was written Mapa Politico de Venezuela A venezuela com Archived from the original on 20 February 2010 Retrieved 2 May 2010 Ramjeet Oscar 28 October 2008 Guyana and Suriname border dispute continues despite UN findings Caribbean Net News Archived from the original on 28 February 2014 Retrieved 15 December 2008 Rodrigues Birkett Carolyn 24 October 2008 There is no agreement recognizing Suriname s sovereignty over the Corentyne River Stabroek Newspaper Archived from the original on 3 February 2013 Retrieved 15 December 2008 OAS 1 August 2009 OAS Organization of American States Democracy for peace security and development oas org Archived from the original on 14 October 2016 Retrieved 3 January 2017 OAS 1 August 2009 OAS Organization of American States Democracy for peace security and development oas org Archived from the original on 22 December 2016 Retrieved 3 January 2017 Indigenous Peoples summit americas org Archived from the original on 13 April 2012 Retrieved 3 January 2017 Events OAS Indigenous Special Events oas org Archived from the original on 4 January 2017 Retrieved 3 January 2017 IRD Trinidad and Tobago CARICOM Treaties PDF ird gov tt Archived PDF from the original on 7 May 2016 Retrieved 27 December 2016 Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act FATCA treasury gov Archived from the original on 13 January 2017 Retrieved 16 January 2017 Guyana Investment Climate Assessment Vol II PDF World Bank 2007 pp 71 73 Archived PDF from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 18 July 2020 South America Guyana The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency www cia gov Archived from the original on 7 January 2021 Retrieved 10 December 2020 WHO Report 2014 Preventing suicide A global imperative PDF Archived PDF from the original on 16 June 2015 Retrieved 4 August 2015 Desperate measures The Economist 13 September 2014 Archived from the original on 10 June 2017 Retrieved 29 August 2017 WHO Health Related Millennium Development Goals Report 2011 Archived 17 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine Part1 a b Guyana EDUCATION countrystudies us Archived from the original on 14 August 2021 Retrieved 6 March 2021 Guyana uis unesco org 27 November 2016 Archived from the original on 2 March 2021 Retrieved 6 March 2021 Jennings Zellyne 1 May 2000 Functional literacy of Young Guyanese Adults International Review of Education 46 1 93 116 Bibcode 2000IREdu 46 93J doi 10 1023 A 1003926406978 ISSN 1573 0638 S2CID 142861368 Improving Literacy and Numeracy Outcomes for Guyana s Early Learners World Bank Archived from the original on 17 April 2021 Retrieved 6 March 2021 Guyana Society countrystudies us Archived from the original on 17 April 2021 Retrieved 4 March 2021 a b c d Wonders of Guyana National Trust of Guyana Archived from the original on 17 December 2021 Retrieved 17 December 2021 Region 3 Essequibo Islands West Demerara National Trust of Guyana Archived from the original on 26 November 2021 Retrieved 17 December 2021 Arthur Chung Conference Centre Ministry of Public Telecommunications Republic of Guyana 6 March 2017 Archived from the original on 23 September 2020 Retrieved 10 December 2019 Takutu Bridge to open Friday Kaieteur News 29 July 2009 Archived from the original on 26 November 2020 Retrieved 18 July 2020 National Monuments National Trust of Guyana Archived from the original on 17 December 2021 Retrieved 17 December 2021 Composition and countries W I Cricket team West Indies Cricket Board Archived from the original on 3 January 2014 Retrieved 27 November 2013 SPORTS LITERATURE Guyana News and Information Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 30 November 2015 Providence stadium Records and statistics Cricket World 4U Archived from the original on 2 December 2013 Retrieved 27 November 2013 Service K News 11 July 2013 Guyana Horse Racing Authority continues its drive to regularize the sport Kaiteur News Archived from the original on 3 December 2013 Retrieved 27 November 2013 Alkins Royston 16 March 2019 Guyana drops first two matches at SA Beach Volleyball Championships Stabroek News Retrieved 30 April 2021 Further reading EditBrock Stanley E 1999 All the Cowboys Were Indians Commemorative illustrated reprint of Jungle Cowboy ed Lenoir City TN Synergy South Inc ISBN 978 1 892329 00 4 OCLC 51089880 Archived from the original on 29 August 2020 Retrieved 7 January 2010 Brock Stanley E 1972 Jungle Cowboy illustrated ed London Robert Hale Ltd ISBN 978 0 7091 2972 1 OCLC 650259 Archived from the original on 25 August 2020 Retrieved 7 January 2010 Donald Haack Bush Pilot in Diamond Country Hamish MacInnes Climb to the Lost World 1974 Andrew Salkey Georgetown Journal 1970 Marion Morrison Guyana Enchantment of the World Series Bob Temple Guyana Noel C Bacchus Guyana Farewell A Recollection of Childhood in a Faraway Place Marcus Colchester Guyana Fragile Frontier Matthew French Young Guyana My Fifty Years in the Guyanese Wilds Margaret Bacon Journey to Guyana Father Andrew Morrison SJ Justice The Struggle For Democracy in Guyana 1952 1992 Daly Vere T 1974 The Making of Guyana Macmillan ISBN 978 0 333 14482 4 OCLC 1257829 Archived from the original on 11 May 2011 Retrieved 7 January 2010 D Graham Burnett Masters of All They Surveyed Exploration Geography and a British El Dorado Ovid Abrams Metegee The History and Culture of Guyana Waugh Evelyn 1934 Ninety two days The account of a tropical journey through British Guiana and part of Brazil New York Farrar amp Rinehart OCLC 3000330 Archived from the original on 11 May 2011 Retrieved 7 January 2010 Gerald Durrell Three Singles To Adventure Cheddi Jagan The West on Trial My Fight for Guyana s Freedom Cheddi Jagan My Fight For Guyana s Freedom With Reflections on My Father by Nadira Jagan Brancier Colin Henfrey Through Indian Eyes A Journey Among the Indian Tribes of Guiana Stephen G Rabe US Intervention in British Guiana A Cold War Story Charles Waterton Wanderings in South America David Attenborough Zoo Quest to Guiana Lutterworth Press London 1956 John Gimlette Wild Coast Travels on South America s Untamed Edge 2011 Clementi Cecil 1915 The Chinese in British Guiana PDF Georgetown British Guiana The Argosy Company Limited Archived PDF from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 27 October 2015 External links EditGuyana at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Travel information from Wikivoyage Resources from Wikiversity Office of the President Republic of Guyana official website Parliament of the Cooperative Republic of Guyana official website Wikimedia Atlas of Guyana Geographic data related to Guyana at OpenStreetMap Guyana The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency Country Profile from the BBC News Guyana from the Encyclopaedia Britannica Guyana at UCB Libraries GovPubs Guyana at Curlie The State of the World s Midwifery Guyana Country Profile Archived 15 August 2021 at the Wayback Machine Key Development Forecasts for Guyana from International Futures Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Guyana amp oldid 1132093902, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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