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CEOs Breakfast culminates Business Month 2017

commerce

The Department of Commerce, International Trade, Investment, Enterprise Development and Consumer Affairs will officially culminate Business Month 2017 with the hosting of a CEOs Breakfast—the primary focus of which will be “SME Access to Finance.”
The event will be hosted by the Department of Commerce in collaboration with the Organization of American States (OAS) on Nov. 30, from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Finance Administrative Centre, Pointe Seraphine, Castries. The objectives of the CEOs Breakfast include: identifying critical gaps between financial institutions and business support organizations; devising solutions to overcome these gaps at the national level; using the outcome of the event to enhance synergies in the context of the Small Business Development Centre (SBDC) program.
Business Month was observed under the theme “Promoting an Entrepreneurial Culture – Innovation and Creativity,” with a series of activities held during the month of November.
For information contact Jonathan Allain at 758.468.4241/758.285.3761 or Egbert Stevens at 758.468.4221/758.285.4573.

Govt. to make contract with ExxonMobil public before year end

ExxonMobil
Stena Carron drillship

The contract signed between the Government of Guyana and oil company, ExxonMobil will be made public in December on a date to be announced later.
State Minister, Joseph Harmon made the pronouncement today at a post-Cabinet press conference following a question from the media. Minister Harmon noted that the decision was taken at the cabinet level following consideration of all the ramifications, legal and otherwise.
“We recognise that there is a need expressed by our population for greater inclusiveness, for more information to be provided and we take those into consideration as well… We listen to the people and we are not deaf to the concerns that have been expressed,” the State Minister said.
Minister of Natural Resources, Raphael Trotman, had previously indicated that full disclosure was not within the national interest at that time, following calls by individuals and organisations for the Government to fully release the 1999 contract signed between itself and Exxon.
Aspects of the production sharing agreement between Exxon and Government have been released over time. Guyana will receive a royalty of two percent on gross earnings and benefit from 50 percent of the profits from the sale of petroleum once production commences in 2020.

Athletes optimistic about $520M allocated to sports

$520M allocated to sports

Local sportsmen and women are anticipating the implementation of much-needed development in the sporting sector with the allocation of $520 million.

The budget provision caters for the continued development of sporting facilities and programmes; the provision of youth access to amenities and structured approaches to nurturing their athletic abilities.
The Department of Public Information (DPI) spoke to a few sportsmen and women to garner their opinions of the government’s provision.
Tennis player, Joshua Kalekyezi said, “I think that it is very good that the government took some time to allocate that amount to money to sports and if they actually go through with their plans, I think it will be very beneficial to the whole sports fraternity.”
According to Junior Hercules, a basketball coach “sports and culture are two things in my opinion, that are responsible for youngsters’ interest. We talk about unemployment, once you get youngsters engaged, that is the first step and facility is important. We need to not treat sports like a pastime. Look at what the developed countries are doing, look at what our fellow Caribbean countries are doing, sport is a vehicle.”
Basketballer, Ronaldo Teixeira wants to see the money invested in “more facilities in schools and communities in poor areas around Guyana. I would like my sport, basketball, to be taken to the interior, so, they could use the money for that.”
The government, throughout this year, has worked to improve sports infrastructure across the country, including the enhancement of community grounds as well as outfitting them with lights and fencing; the upgrading of facilities such as the Cliff Anderson Sports Hall and the National Gymnasium. Several athletes were also afforded the opportunity to participate in regional and international events along with receiving scholarships to study locally or abroad.
Sporting activities attract many from across the country and it is anticipated with the allocation of more than $500 million, both athletes and fans will benefit.

United States Embassy in Belize donates to Immigration Department

United States Embassy - Brazil
PHOTO: (L-R) CEO in the Ministry of Immigration Mr. Edmund Zuniga, Assistant Director of Immigration and Nationality Services Mrs. Debra Baptist Estrada, Director of Immigration and Nationality Services Ms. Diana Locke, and Mr. Steven Davis

Immigration Department Receives Donation from the United States Embassy in Belize.

The Ministry with responsibility for Immigration and Refugees received six MIDAS mobile readers from the United States Embassy in Belize on Wednesday, November 29, 2017.

The donation was presented by Mr. Steven Davis of the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs Specialist at the Embassy of the United States of America in Belize. The readers are valued at approximately BZ$72,000. Receiving on behalf of the Government of Belize was Hon. Beverly Williams, Minister of State in the Ministry of Immigration, CEO in the Ministry of Immigration Mr. Edmund Zuniga, Director of Immigration and Nationality Services Ms. Diana Locke, and Assistant Director of Immigration and Nationality Services Mrs. Debra Baptist Estrada.

The mobile readers will be used to capture immigration information at established and informal border entry/exit points.

New SOP’s for Police Fleet

Guyana Police Force
Assistant Commissioner Clifton Hicken and Chinese Technical training officer Hou Jian flanked by representatives of the various Police Administrative Divisions.

The Guyana Police Force has established New Standard Operating (SOPs) procedures to effectively manage its fleet of vehicles, inclusive of the vehicles recently donated by the People’s Republic of China.
Assistant Commissioner of Police, Clifton Hicken explained. “Coming out of our security sector reform we have realised the Strategic Planning Unit and they are looking at TORS (Terms Of Reference). And within that TOR they have developed a maintenance plan so what we are doing now is that we have decentralised logistics officers that span the seven administrative divisions and the departments. That is to be done so that across the board we will have standardisation in terms of maintaining the vehicles at the required standard as expected so that we can have the shelf life of the vehicles.”
In addition, the Assistant Commissioner says the new operating procedures will ensure that there is strict accountability with regards to the force’s fleet.
“It is expected that with the structures we have in place there is no room for neglect for the want of a better term because it will be managed from the force at the policy level and decentralised to the commanders. They have a responsibility to ensure what is decided at the policy level is enforced by them. It is expected, too that coming out of the decentralisation we will have databases in all the sub divisions that speaks to accountability for the vehicles and accoutrements in the divisions,” the Assistant Commissioner added.
According to Hicken, built into the database is a warning system that reminds when the vehicles are due for servicing and that will be controlled from a decentralised level but information will be sent to Georgetown for there to be a central database.
One of the technocrats has arrived in the country and is moving ahead to ensure that the force is adequately equipped with the necessary knowledge for the maintenance of these vehicles.
In keeping with the bilateral agreement between the Government of Guyana and the People’s Republic of China, technical training officer, Hou Jian, is currently here to conduct training in the use and maintenance of the donated vehicles.
“This training will be for a two-day duration and its expected that within the two days the ranks will be equipped adequately. We expect to have a roll out immediately after the training would have been completed,” Commissioner Hicken said.

Guyana Police Force
Assistant Commissioner of Police, Clifton Hicken and Chinese Technical training officer Hou Jian.

He further said that with their allocation to the various police divisions the vehicles will add to their efficiency in responding to reports and carrying out anti-crime patrols.
“With the decentralisation of the 911 system which covers 52 stations. It is expected that the vehicles will be strategically placed in proximity so that we can reduce our response time and build back the community relations and trust with members of the public. We expect also that the populace will be adequately policed given the resources we have, 56 in numbers. We are going to allocate adequately to the divisions so that they can look at the housing, busy areas shopping malls and crime-prone areas,” Commissioner Hicken assured.
The creation of Standard Operating Procedures for management of the force’s convoy of vehicles is a first for the Guyana Police Force and is a direct result of the formation of the Special Projects Unit within the Force according to the Assistant Commissioner.
The fleet of vehicles valued in excess of US$2 million was given as a gift to the Guyana Police Force by the Government of the Peoples’ Republic of China to aid in effective policing locally.

Barbados Independence Message

Address by Prime Minister, The Rt. Hon Freundel J. Stuart, Q.C., M.P. on the occasion of the 51st anniversary of Barbados’ Independence.

Fellow Barbadians, I feel honoured to be able to address you once again on this the 51stAnniversary of the Independence of Barbados.
When I addressed you last year, Barbados had just completed one full year of the celebration of its Golden Jubilee as an independent nation.  It was also a year of deep reflection.
The Barbados at Fifty study, which was commissioned by the 50th Anniversary Secretariat and carried out by the Sir Arthur Lewis Institute of Social and Economic Studies, has sought to answer the three questions which I posed to the nation at the launch of the 50th Anniversary celebrations.  That study has revealed the deep and abiding love which Barbadians have for their country.
It has revealed also that, despite the many changes which have taken place in the environment in which we operate, our people continue to attach great importance to those core values that have made us strong throughout our history.
Ours is a small country which belongs to the family of Small Island Developing States. We have never allowed our small size, however, to shape our view of what it is possible for us to attempt or to achieve.  Therein is the secret of the impact we have been able to make on the world beyond Barbados.
Whether in sport, in the arts, in literature, in entertainment, in the world of ideas, or in areas such as health, education, and the environment and whether in the region, in the hemisphere or in the world beyond, Barbados has shown always an enviable capacity to lead.  That has been the story of the last fifty-one years.
That story cannot be properly understood, however, if we do not remind ourselves of those values that have made our successes possible.  Our national anthem traces our achievements through times of plenty and times of need.  Barbados has known both of these states, and the character of our nation has been shaped by the capacity of our men, our women and our children to manage both plenty and need.
Ernst Schumacher, who delivered the first Sir Winston Scott Memorial Lecture on the 10thAnniversary of our Independence in 1976, issued the timely reminder that economic development is something much wider and deeper than economics or econometrics.
The roots of economic development, he says, lie outside the economic sphere in education, in organization, in discipline, and beyond that, in political independence and a national consciousness of self-reliance.
Let us resist, therefore, the tendency to treat present challenges of debt and deficit as the measure of our country.  The measurement of our progress as a people has never been purely in terms of money or material gains. Our image in the world has primarily been associated with our character and it is that character that has sustained us as a nation, both in times of plenty and in times of need.
People remain at the centre of our concept of development.  So as we work through present challenges, and seek to recapture the essence of what it is to be a Barbadian, let us ensure that the strength of this nation’s true character continues to shine for all the world to see.
The world in which Barbados celebrates its 51st Anniversary as a nation continues to be haunted by dizzying change and the uncertainty which change, even in the best of times, always engenders.  A constant feature of the history of our country has been that much of what we have been able to do here has depended on what was happening outside of Barbados in the economies of our main trading partners – the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada and the CARICOM region.  That reality is not going to change anytime soon.
We cannot determine how the owners of the world’s material wealth allocate or otherwise dispose of that wealth.  As a people, Barbadians can, however, mobilize and fully exploit those vast reserves of inner wealth which we have always been known to possess.  I speak of self-confidence, a robust determination to succeed, a belief in hard work, pride as a people, an abiding trust in God, and the desire of Barbadians for the achievement of excellence in all that we do.
It is these reserves of inner wealth that have made the difference whenever we have had to confront and manage challenges.  It is these reserves that have ensured that we triumphed over difficulties whenever they have arisen.  It is these reserves that have kept alive our capacity to hope and to have an unshakeable faith in the future.
That Barbados has done well as an independent nation, no one will deny.  What we have been able to achieve, represents battles fought and won. But we cannot live our lives in the past.  “Life goes not backward, nor tarries with yesterday.”  We have now to ensure that we protect past achievements, in a spirit of thanksgiving, while we concentrate on building a sunlit future.
We can enhance our chances of creating that future if together as Barbadians we continue to pursue the creation of an inclusive society that is peaceful, productive and stable; if together as Barbadians we continue to promote commitment to democratic values, so that as many people as possible can have a say in the moulding of their destiny; if together as Barbadians we continue to preserve our belief in fundamental human rights at the core of which is respect for our many individual differences.
I am confident that, God going before us, these goals are well within our capacity to achieve and that, buoyed up by the words of our national anthem, we can continue to proudly “write our names on history’s page with expectations great, strict guardians of our heritage, firm craftsmen of our fate”.  Every Barbadian has an important role to play in the building of our nation!
I take this opportunity to wish a Blessed and Happy Independence to all Barbadians and those who reside with us!

Ministry of Health welcomes medical interns

medical interns
Dr. Sharon Belmar-George, Medical Officer of Health

The Ministry of Health, on Nov. 24, held an orientation program for medical interns from Taiwan, Cuba, the University of the West Indies and Spartan Health Services.

The program served to introduce the interns to Saint Lucia’s health system.
“This year, between the period of September and November, we have accepted 24 medical interns from various medical schools. This year, we’ve probably had the biggest number of interns than any other year. We met with them formally to introduce them to the structure and the function of the health system in Saint Lucia, educate them on the different services we provide, inform them about pharmaceuticals and how medications are procured, and explain what is expected of them,” Medical Officer Dr. Sharon Belmar George said. “We also presented the staff orders and let them know their role as medical officers with the health system.”
Thus far, 16 interns have commenced services at the Victoria Hospital, and 8 at the St. Jude Hospital. The internship period is approximately one year before the officers can become fully registered physicians.
During the year long period, officers will alternate, in order to be exposed to the different services offered on island.
“They get to rotate into the main services such as obstetrics and gynecology, pediatric surgery and internal medicine,” Dr George said.
Ministry officials congratulated the interns on their achievements thus far, and encouraged them to continue performing their duties efficiently and effectively.

Local businesses to compete with international companies

Local Businesses

Government strengthening local businesses to compete with international companies.

The administration is working on building the capacity of local businesses so that they meet the international standards that will allow them to be awarded more contracts.
Minister of State, Joseph Harmon today explained that there is not a preference for overseas contractors, but there are some criteria that must be met.
“We are working on capacity building in the companies… only recently the [Ministry of Public Infrastructure] had an extensive meeting with local contractors where they actually pointed out things they need to do,” Minister Harmon said.
In this vein, the Minister pointed to the awarding of a $117.4 million contract for the establishment of a Business Incubator at Belvedere Industrial Estate in Region Six (East Berbice-Corentyne) to assist local businesses to become more competitive.
Minister Harmon said, “This is to give the small businesses an opportunity to promulgate, to push themselves further so that they can not just get small contracts, but medium-sized and larger contracts”.
The main objective of the government, the State Minister disclosed, is to create a framework within which businesses can easily operate. He said it must be recognised that Guyana is operating in a global market and is open to investments, which will enable a conducive environment for economic development.
Therefore, businesses must ensure they operate at a standard that will increase their competitiveness.
Minister Harmon said Government has created a level playing field to ensure both local and international contractors benefit.

Official close of hurricane season 2017

Hurricane Season

Media briefing to mark official close of hurricane season 2017.

Belmopan. November 30, 2017. A media briefing marking the close of the 2017 Hurricane Season was held this morning at the NEMO Headquarters in Belmopan. Speakers included Minister of National Emergency Management Hon. Edmond Castro; CEO in the Ministry, Ruth Meighan; NEMO National Emergency Coordinator, Colonel (ret.) Shelton DeFour; and Chief Meteorologist at the National Meteorology Service, Catherine Cumberbatch.
In her remarks, Chief Meteorologist Catherine Cumberbatch noted that Hurricane Season 2017 lived up to expectations as a very active one. She said it was forecasted to be above average and it was, with a total of 17 named storms, of which 10 became hurricanes and six reached major hurricane status (category three or higher). The major factors that supported the above average season, she explained, were a decrease in vertical wind-shear, the presence of above-normal sea surface temperatures in the Tropical Atlantic Ocean, and the transition from a neutral El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) pattern at the start of the hurricane season to a weak La Niña by the end of the season.
Thankfully, Ms. Cumberbatch recounted, “Belize was blessed to have NOT been directly affected by any. However, two systems were tracked just north of our border. Those were Tropical Storms Franklin and Harvey.” She said, “The staff at the National Meteorological Service will continue to do its utmost best to disseminate reliable analytic information in a timely and user-friendly manner to the Belizean public in the case of any weather-related emergency event.”
Hon. Edmond Castro expressed thanks to the Almighty for sparing Belize this past hurricane season, and to NEMO staff and volunteers countrywide and the wider community for staying alert and prepared. National Emergency Coordinator Shelton DeFour spoke of the lessons learnt and areas identified for improvement in Disaster Preparedness and Emergency Management. CEO Ruth Meighan thanked the staff of NEMO and the National Meteorology Service and commented on the continued work to improve coordination within the Ministry, the Public Service and the community for greater efficiency and effectiveness.
The event was attended by NEMO Coordinators from around the country and support staff from NEMO and the Ministry of National Emergency Management.

Govt. to pilot legal aid programme in 2018

Legal Aid

Minors before the courts will be able to benefit from legal aid provided by the government in 2018.

Allocations have been made in the 2018 National Budget for the piloting of a legal aid programme to provide defence to minor, non-violent offenders, who are in pre-trial detention.
By the end of 2018, the programme will commence work on the over 500 cases assessing the sustainability of the pilot programme. It will also provide capacity building to non-governmental organisations that share a similar objective.
“Our work on the new legal aid programme is part of a broader vision, which seeks to reduce the burden on our prisons, allowing for a more people-focused, efficient justice system,” Minister of Finance Winston Jordan pointed out during his budget speech on Monday.
Meanwhile, the Law Reform Commission is expected to be established in 2018 and will work on amending and modernising Guyana’s legislation to cater for non-custodial sanctions for various types of offence.
Reform and modernisation of the justice system remain a top priority for the government. These and existing measures are aimed at reducing backlog and delays while increasing efficiency an ensuring justice is available to every Guyanese.

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