Editorial

Prison reform

A recent, eye-opening New York Times Op-Ed considers the enormous costs of mass incarceration in America.

Patricio Aylwin and reconstruction of the truth

The death, aged 97, of Patricio Aylwin, the first Chilean president to be democratically elected after almost 17 years of dictatorship under General Augusto Pinochet, may resonate with some Guyanese because of a few traits Mr Aylwin shared with the late Dr Cheddi Jagan.

No justice for Kimani

On Tuesday, a jury found Mr Kevin Rankin not guilty of sodomising and murdering his two-year-old niece nearly three years ago at Haslington, East Coast Demerara.

America’s presidential politics

Undoubtedly, citizens of countries all over the world with access to television must be increasingly fascinated by the ongoing process of selecting candidates from within the Democratic and Republican parties now seeking to be chosen as representatives of those parties for the presidency of the country in the election in November this year.

A return to collective bargaining?

It appears that after several years there has been some meaningful movement in the matter of the much wished-for negotiations in the matter of wages and salaries increases for Public Servants.

Interference with GRA

It is hard to imagine that one official of an 11-month-old government could have gotten himself into so much trouble on so many fronts.

Advisors and the China visit

As more emerges about Minister of State Joseph Harmon, his trip to China and his appointment of Mr Brian Tiwarie as an “Honorary Ministerial Advisor” the murkier everything becomes.

Watching Burundi unravel

In 1994 the Rwandan genocide set in motion a chain of events that culminated in a decade-long regional war that cost five million lives.

Housing deficit

There is a housing crisis in Guyana. This is obvious even from a cursory look around, which would reveal families squatting in one-room shacks on government reserves in areas like Plastic City.

United States presidential elections

With American presidential elections due in November this year, the preliminary stages of candidates facing what are described as primary elections within their own parties, are beginning to come to a climax, as the various pretenders to the throne are winnowed out, or voluntarily leave the race.

Honeymoon well and truly over

It would have been naïve, to say the least, to expect that with the very best of intentions the APNU+AFC administration would not have – sooner or later – begun to encounter its very own political banana skins and that those would not have given rise to the need for the coalition to confront those attendant challenges.

Damage to government

It has taken just 11 months for the APNU+AFC administration to stumble badly on accountability and good governance and, importantly, in relation to two of its senior officials: the Minister of State, Joseph Harmon and the Minister of Social Protection, Volda Lawrence.

Ministry of the Presidency

It was former Head of the Presidential Secretariat and Cabinet Secretary, Dr Roger Luncheon who transformed his post into one of considerable power.

Panama in Iceland

After almost a year of poring over the 11.5 million documents which constitute the Panama Papers — the largest leak of sensitive data in history — news outlets around the world are confirming many of our worst fears about the global network of offshore tax havens.

Brazil’s chaotic situation

Reports from neighbouring Brazil indicate that the congressional opposition is gaining momentum in its bid to garner 342 votes in the Chamber of Deputies to approve the formal initiation of the impeachment process against President Dilma Rousseff on April 17.

One in 12

One in every 12 people in the Americas, 62 million and counting, are currently living with diabetes.

Cricket, politics, regionalism

It must, by now, be quite obvious to listeners last Sunday, that Darren Sammy, the West Indies T20 Cricket captain could not, with such a large population hearing him, and at a high point of personal and team success, contain himself from forthright public criticism of the West Indies Cricket Board.

A reminder that our cricket matters

Sunday was one of those rare days in Caribbean cricket that will go down as truly unforgettable; the West Indies captured the two ICC World T20 men and women’s titles, (to go along with the T20 Under-19 title won just a few weeks ago).

Business advisor fiasco

No matter what explanations are provided by the Minister of State Joseph Harmon over his farcical appointment of Mr Brian Tiwari as a Business Advisor to the government, the damage has already been done.

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