Dear Editor,
I am requesting some space in your paper as I wish to make a special appeal to President Donald Ramotar, the Minister of Education and all those who have authority over the school system, the Leader of the Opposition in Parliament, sociologists and social workers and parents.
Dear Editor,
As a University of Guyana graduate (LLB programme), I join in celebrating the 50th anniversary of the university and acknowledge the contributions of those who have contributed to the growth and development from its modest beginnings to the stage where its existence in the Guyanese society is being lauded as an educational institution of repute.
Dear Editor,
The iconic Sachin Tendulkar, playing in his final domestic first class cricket match, did extremely well leading his Mumbai side to victory against Haryana state with an unbeaten 79.
In response to our editorial last Sunday on our country’s latest confrontation with Venezuela, one blogger opined that “diplomacy is nothing without the backing of a credible military option.”
Dear Editor,
In the Guyana Chronicle of the 26th October, 2013, at page 9, the Honourable Attorney General with the pretended reverence of being the “protector of the public’s legal interest and the defender of the Constitution of Guyana,” concluded that the Honourable Justice Roxanne George “fell into error by issuing the said gag order.
Dear Editor,
I would like to take a few minutes to comment on a startling letter in yesterday’s Stabroek News `The dog should have been released to continue its life’ by Learie Barclay.
Dear Editor,
Reference is made to actions by APNU during its press conference held on Friday, October 25, 2013 to deflect attention from their failure to support the Government’s calls for sustainable development and advancement of a Green Economy.
Dear Editor,
I am responding to Mr. Ronald Bulkan’s letter (`T&T PM said that the UNC would not negotiate with criminals’ SN Oct 27) in which he accuses me of “suffering from a full-blown panic attack” (of what – he did not say) and for “commencing the beating of well-known tribal drums”.
Over the last few weeks Trinidad & Tobago has been at fever pitch, with campaigning for local government elections, now over, and a parliamentary bye-election due on November 4th in the constituency of Barataria.