the life of the rare Guyanese inhabiting the forest and mangroves of Essequibo

by time news

2024-01-28 17:56:34

By Adrien Jaulmes

Published 2 hours ago, Updated 2 hours ago

Guyanese travel by boat across the Wenamu River, which separates Guyana from Venezuela, to Mango Landing, a mining town in the Essequibo. ROBERTO CISNEROS/AFP

REPORT – A country long classified among the poorest, little Guyana has discovered oil, arousing the desire of its neighbor, Venezuela, an ally of Russia, which, despite international arbitration, continues to claim the province of Essequibo.

Special Envoy to Mabaruma, Essequibo Region, Guyana

The track reduces to a narrow path of planks thrown on the soggy ground to the edge of a small river. Canoes are pulled onto the bank. Under plank shelters, residents take a nap in hammocks. A woman crosses the river with her baby on her hip. “Venezuela is over theresays a young man without looking up from his cell phone. Just before the border, there is the Guyanese military post, with a few soldiers supplied by canoe.”

The White Creek River, which wends its way through the trees, is one of the few lines of communication between Guyana and neighboring Venezuela. The northern Essequibo region is a vast expanse of flooded forests and mangroves. No roads connect the region’s few small towns, Mabaruma or Port Kaituma, to Georgetown, Guyana’s capital. No bridge crosses the Essequibo River and its immense delta. The connections are made by small…

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#life #rare #Guyanese #inhabiting #forest #mangroves #Essequibo

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