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The area in question, the densely forested Essequibo region, amounts to about two-thirds of Guyana’s national territory and is roughly the size of Florida. The recent discovery of vast offshore oil fields in the region has heightened the stakes of the dispute. Venezuelans in Caracas take part in a rally during the closing of the campaign for the Essequibo referendum, on December 1. It owns the congress of Guyana,” Maduro told supporters last week. Matias Delacroix/APOn Wednesday, Brazil announced that it was increasing its military presence with “defensive actions” along its northern border with Venezuela and Guyana.
Persons: Nicolas Maduro, Miguel Gutierrez, Shutterstock, Robert Persaud, Venezuela doesn’t, Matias Delacroix, ” Maduro, Maria Corina Machado, Maduro, , Phil Gunson, Irfaan Ali, Paul J, Angelo, Wazim Mowla, Adrienne Arsht, Vladmir Putin’s, Bharrat Jagdeo, , ” Jagdeo, ” Gunson Organizations: CNN, Quarterly, Court of Justice, UN, International Court of Justice, ExxonMobil, AP, International Crisis, Venezuelan, Foreign Relations, Caribbean Initiative, Atlantic, America, Crisis Locations: Guyana, Essequibo, Florida, Venezuela, British, Venezuelan, Caracas, Ukraine, Guyanese, The Hague, Guyana's, Paris, Guiana, Georgetown, AP Venezuela, , Demerara, Brazil, Crimea, that’s
Alternatively called rum cake, fruit cake or great cake, this dessert most likely came to the Caribbean in the 18th century with English and Irish colonizers, who substituted local rum for whiskey in their traditional Christmas fruitcake. At some point, burnt sugar syrup was added, turning the cake almost black. It has been a West Indian holiday staple, as well as the go-to wedding cake, for centuries. The recipe for black cake is so storied it has even inspired a best-selling novel that has been adapted into a series on Hulu. Black cake baking is a cottage industry in the West Indies that continues among Caribbean immigrants worldwide.
Persons: , citron, prunes, , Deborah Charles, Organizations: Hulu Locations: Caribbean, West Indian, West Indies
A video showing a man appearing to assault a priest in a church is from an incident in Georgetown, Guyana in 2020, not in France as has been claimed online. The footage was posted on Twitter with the caption: “France: black ‘refugee’ interrupts Mass, assaults priest, and steals the Holy Bible #BlackLivesMatter” (archive.is/1M5AS)Iterations of the claim were also seen on Facebook: (here) and (here). Reuters Fact Check has previously debunked claims circulating in Portuguese that the same video shows an incident in France (here ). Reuters has previously debunked claims that migrants were engaged in a brawl on the streets of Wicklow, Ireland (here)VERDICTMiscaptioned. The video is an old clip dating to 2020 in Guyana, not France, as claimed online.
"From 2020 onwards, we've achieved extremely strong real economic growth overall," Singh said at Guyana's Energy Conference and Expo in Georgetown. Guyana's economy registered a real growth of 62% last year and it has been forecasted to expand by another 25% this year. "Real economic growth of 25% over a sustained period is an achievement that is rare in the historic economic context." By the end of 2026, the fund is expected to have increased its balance to $5.4 billion. Reporting by Neil Marks in Georgetown and Marianna Parraga in Houston Editing by Marguerita ChoyOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
[1/2] Vessels carrying supplies for an offshore oil platform operated by Exxon Mobil are seen at the Guyana Shore Base Inc wharf on the Demerara River, south of Georgetown, Guyana January 23, 2020. REUTERS/Luc CohenGEORGETOWN, Jan 17 (Reuters) - Guyana expects to soon receive a proposal from India for long-term purchases of the South American country's oil, President Irfaan Ali said on Tuesday, a new attempt to reach a government-to-government deal potentially leading to better sale terms for Guyana. Guyana's government is entitled to a share of crude produced off the nation's coast by a consortium led by Exxon Mobil Corp (XOM.N). In 2022, Ali's government received a total of 13 cargoes of crude, and it expects to receive and export 17 cargoes this year, the finance minister said earlier this week. Guyana and India in 2021 failed to reach an agreement for direct sales of Guyana's sweet crude to Indian state refiners.
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