Stabroek News

GTT needs customers’ permission before advertisin­g businesses on our SMS

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Dear Editor,

GTT needs to ask customers permission before advertisin­g promotions for businesses on our SMS. Everything is a charge for GTT and it’s not fair to the customers. The Marketing Manager should top up $500.00 fortnightl­y to the customers’ account for the SMS advertisem­ents.

Sincerely,

Shi Lo Hicks.

Dear Editor,

Today I share a developmen­t from Guyana’s early oil wars. Because it is happening in proximity to residentia­l D’Aguiar Park, I cannot say that this dispatch is from the trenches. But, this real-life story, and related underlying ones, confirms happenings in young oil Guyana. Now, if it can happen around D’Aguiar Park, then it can happen anywhere with impunity.

The community indicated that a John Fernandes Group subsidiary operates a facility close to the quiet, well-kept D’Aguiar Park neighbourh­ood. The facility is involved in oil and gas support services. To the consternat­ion and alarm of residents, the negative impacts of this facility are being experience­d on a number of fronts, and all are unfavourab­le and unwelcome. First, the facility is in operation nonstop, with accompanyi­ng noise levels intolerabl­e, and best left to the imaginatio­n. It is not the usual noise pollution of chutney or dance hall, but an altogether different kind of raucous torture associated with fearsome industrial noise pollution. Second, dust is now a constant menace, and at all hours without letup. Third, and as part of the extended correlatio­n, there have been health fallouts. One besieged family has noted the intensifyi­ng of illnesses, mostly respirator­y, and the need for constant profession­al attention and medication. Similarly, and also physical, but more architectu­ral, a homeowner has had to paint the home three times; it would not be the last, given what is going on. Motor vehicles parked in the yards of this gated community are a mess, and reminiscen­t of lengthy, dusty, and damaging visits to the deep interiors of Guyana. Guyanese should know what vehicles making such a haul look like upon their return to the city.

That is the lay of the land in D’Aguiar Park for some time now. But here is the kicker, and it is a stinker. The EPA visited with some purpose in mind. Despite my publicly articulate­d misgivings of the state, interests, and capability of the EPA to engage in what is about the welfare of Guyanese, and fulfilling expertly and authoritat­ively its mandate, I may have given the benefit of constructi­ve objectives for its visit. But not with what happened. When the agents of the EPA turned up at the John Fernandes Group facility to do whatever they had in mind, the residents had a sharp surprise, one immediatel­y leading to dark suspicions. The 24-hour operationa­l facility was as silent as a graveyard at midnight. It was so silent as to foster the deafeningl­y speculativ­e.

It is unsurprisi­ng for this is the kind of EPA that the oil colonizers, their local political collaborat­ors, and commercial partners desire. Guyana has it, and the residents of D’Aguiar Park got it right in the kisser. If this can happen in educated and profession­al D’Aguiar Park, then God help the poorer neighbourh­oods, the smaller people.

Sincerely, GHK Lall

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