Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Official Gazette of Guyana is the government gazette of Guyana. The Gazette is believed to have been introduced to Guyana by Dutch colonists in the seventeenth century and until 2012 had no statutory footing in Guyanese law, despite many matters being required to be published in it by law.
News site. demerarawaves.com: Guyana Graphic: Georgetown: Not related to Guyana Graphic (1944-1975) guyanagraphic.com: Guyana Press: Georgetown: guyanapress.com: Guyana Times [5] Georgetown: 6 June 2008 News site. guyanatimesgy.com: Kaieteur News [6] Georgetown: Private daily. kaieteurnewsonline.com: The Official Gazette of Guyana [7 ...
The Official Gazette of Guyana: officialgazette.gov.gy: Holy See ... Official Newspaper "Government Gazette" of the State of Mexico: legislacion.edomex.gob.mx:
Pages in category "Government of Guyana" The following 15 pages are in this category, out of 15 total. ... The Official Gazette of Guyana; Q. Queen of Guyana; V.
The National Archives of Guyana were founded in 1958. They were originally located in a building on Main Street. [4]In 1982, the Government of Guyana passed the National Archives of Guyana Act, which made the National Archives a department of the Ministry of Culture, Youth and Sport, and the archivist an officer-in-charge with duty to report to the ministry.
A constitutional referendum was held in Guyana on 10 July 1978. The proposed change to Article 73 of the constitution would abolish the need for referendums to change the entrenched provisions of the constitution (including presidential powers, the dissolution of Parliament and the electoral system) and instead allow them to be changed by a two-thirds majority in parliament (which the ruling ...
Guyana’s people believe Essequibo is theirs and see no legal issue in the matter, said Cummings, who has written about the dispute and grew up in Guyana, four miles from the border with Venezuela.
The Argosy was a newspaper published in Georgetown, Demerara, in British Guiana (later Guyana) from 2 October 1880 to 30 March 1907. It became the Weekly Argosy with effect from the issue of 6 April 1907 and ceased publication with the issue of 24 October 1908. It was founded by James Thompson. [1]