|

Guyana achieved independence
from the UK in 1966 and became a republic in 1970.
In 1989 Guyana launched an Economic Recovery Program, which marked a
dramatic reversal from a state-controlled, socialist economy towards a
more open, free market system. Results through the first decade have
proven encouraging.
Guyana, a country of
exceptional natural beauty, is a splendid combination of the
Caribbean and South America. Perched on the north-east corner of the South
American continent, Guyana stretches 450 miles from its long Atlantic
coastline into dense equatorial forest and the broad savannah of the
Rupununi.
The
country has an area of 215,084 square kilometres, but only about 2.5
percent (or 537,710 hectacres) is cultivated. About 90 percent of the
population lives on the narrow coastal plain, either in
Georgetown, the capital, or in villages
along the main road running from Charity in the west to the Suriname
border. Most of the plain is below sea level. Large wooden houses stand on
stilts above ground level. A sea wall keeps out the Atlantic and the
fertile clay soil is drained by a system of dykes; sluice gates, kokers
are opened to let out water at low tide. Separate irrigation channels are
used to bring water back to the fields in dry weather. Most of the western
third of the coastal plain is undrained and uninhabited.
Until
the 1920s there was little natural increase in population, but the
eradication of malaria and other diseases has since led to a rapid growth
in population, particularly among the East Indians (Asian), who, according
to most estimates comprise about 50 percent of the population. The 1992
census showed the following ethnic distribution: East Indian 48.3 percent;
black 32.7 percent; mixed 12.2 percent; Amerindian 6.3 percent; white 0.3
percent; Chinese 0.2 percent; other 0.02 percent. Descendants of the
original Amerindian inhabitants are divided into nine ethnic groups,
including the Akawaio, Makuxi and Pemon. Some have lost their isolation
and moved to the urban areas, others keenly maintain aspects of their
traditional culture and identity.
Four major rivers cross the coastal plain
(from west to east) the Essequibo, the Demerara, the Berbice, and the
Corentyne (which forms the frontier with Suriname). Only the Demerara is
crossed by bridges. Elsewhere ferries must be used. At the mouth of the
Essequibo River, 34 kilometres wide, are islands the size of Barbados. The
lower reaches of these rivers are navigable (120 kilometres up the
Demerara to Linden and 72 kilometres up the Essequibo to the mouth of the
Cuyuni River); but waterfalls and rapids prevent them being used by large
boats to reach the interior.
Inland from the
coastal plain most of the country is covered by thick rain forest,
although in the east there is a large area of grassland. Towards the
Venezuelan border the rain forest rises in a series of steep escarpments,
with spectacular waterfalls, the highest and best known of which are the
Kaieteur Falls on the Potaro River. In the southwest of the
country is the Rupununi Savanna, an area of open grassland more easily
reached from Brazil than from Georgetown.
The area west of the
Essequibo River, about 70 percent of the national territory, is claimed by
Venezuela. In the southeast, the border with Suriname is in dispute, the
contentious issue being whether high or low water is the boundary (in the
area of the Koeroeni and New rivers).
|
|