Guyana

REPUBLIC OF GUYANA

Guyana | Amnesty International
23 May 2007

Region      

Guyana: Urgent action needed on witness protection
25 June 2004

There is no abstract for this document.

Press Release       AMR 35/004/2004

Guyana: Commission of Inquiry into death squad
19 May 2004

There is no abstract for this document.

Press Release       AMR 35/003/2004

Guyana: Open letter for ICC campaign
17 July 2003

This letter urges the Prime Minister of Guyana to ratify the International Criminal Court (Rome Statute).

Report       AMR 35/007/2003

Guyana: Amnesty International's forensic expert to undertake ...
7 March 2003

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL. PRESS RELEASE. AI Index: AMR 35/005/2003 (Public). News Service No: 052. 7 March 2003. Guyana: Amnesty International's ...

Press Release       AMR 35/005/2003

Guyana: Human rights and crime control: Not mutually exclusive
13 January 2003

This report details Amnesty International's concerns about the recent Criminal Law Offences (Amendment) Act which was passed in September 2002. These concerns inlcude ...

Report       AMR 35/003/2003

Guyana: Draconian security legislation threatens fundamental ...
13 January 2003

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL. PRESS RELEASE. AI Index: AMR 35/001/2003 (Public). News Service No: 238. Embargo Date: 13 January 2003 01:00GMT. ...

Press Release       AMR 35/001/2003

Guyana: Legitimate debate around human rights issues must not be ...
19 April 2002

Public Statement. 19 April 2002. AI Index AMR 35/001/2002 - News Service Nr. 70. Guyana: Legitimate debate around human rights issues must not be stifled. ...

Press Release       AMR 35/001/2002

Guyana: The murderers of Mohammed Shafeek must be brought to ...
29 November 2001

29 November 2001. AI Index AMR 35/001/2001 - News Service Nr. 211. Guyana: The murderers of Mohammed Shafeek must be brought to justice. ...

Press Release       AMR 35/001/2001

Guyana: a call for transparency in the Bourne case
19 April 2000

News Service: 073/00. AI INDEX: AMR 35/15/00. 19 April 2000. Guyana: a call for transparency in the Bourne case. The findings of the ...

Press Release       AMR 35/015/2000

Taken from the Amnesty International Report 2007

Head of state: Bharrat Jagdeo
Head of government: Samuel Hinds
Death penalty: retentionist
International Criminal Court: ratified

There were attacks on freedom of expression. Marginalized communities had difficulty in accessing treatment for HIV/AIDS. Twenty-three people were on death row. Death sentences continued to be passed. No executions were reported.

Background

The People’s Progressive Party (PPP) was returned to office for a fourth consecutive term following peaceful general elections in August. The murder in April of Satyadeow Sawh, the PPP Agriculture Minister, had created fears of a recurrence of political violence between supporters of the mainly Indo-Guyanese PPP and the opposition People’s National Congress (PNC), which is principally Afro-Guyanese.

Freedom of expression

Five newspaper employees and an opposition journalist were killed.

Five employees of the newspaper Kaieteur News were shot execution-style on 8 August at the newspaper’s printing plant. The motive for the killings was unclear, although the owner of the newspaper had allegedly received threats over the coverage of a series of rapes in the capital, Georgetown. Three men were charged with the killings.

Ronald Waddell, a journalist, radio talk show host and former candidate for the PNC, was shot outside his home in a Georgetown suburb on 30 January. According to eyewitness reports, two men shot him repeatedly as he was getting into his car. He died later in hospital. No one had been charged with the murder by the end of 2006.

People living with HIV/AIDS

Despite positive steps to ensure the right to health, stigma and discrimination towards HIV/AIDS remained a barrier to the successful implementation of treatment. The Indigenous Amerindian population had particularly limited access to HIV/AIDS-related health care and information. Men who have sexual relations with other men were criminalized and discriminated against, which restricted their access to HIV/AIDS prevention, treatment and care. There were reports of people being dismissed from their jobs on the basis of their HIV status. Violations of the rights to privacy and confidentiality contributed to the spread of the disease by discouraging people from seeking an HIV test or treatment.

AI country reports/visits

Report

•  “I am not ashamed!”: HIV/AIDS and human rights in the Dominican Republic and Guyana(AI Index: AMR 01/002/2006)

Visit

AI delegates visited Guyana in January.