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The Stabroek News is a privately owned newspaper published in Guyana.It takes its name from Stabroek / ˈ s t æ b r uː k /, the former name of Georgetown, Guyana.. It was first published in November 1986, first as a weekly but it later changed to a daily print newspaper. [1]
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] Georgetown: Official country Gazette [8] officialgazette.gov.gy: Stabroek News: Georgetown: 1986 [9] Private daily. (Absorbed ...
Kaieteur News; O. The Official Gazette of Guyana; S. Stabroek News; Sunday Chronicle (Guyana) This page was last edited on 14 December 2023, at 00:46 ...
Kaieteur News is a privately owned daily newspaper published in Guyana. Kaieteur News columnists include Freddie Kissoon , Stella Ramsaroop, Adam Harris , and an anonymous columnist who goes by the nom de plume "Peeping Tom".
The old name of the city is still reflected in Georgetown's main market, Stabroek Market, which has existed on or near its present location since the 18th century, [7] and the newspaper Stabroek News, established in 1986. [8] The Parliament Building is located in Stabroek on the same spot where the Court of Policy used to be. [6]
David de Caires (31 December 1937 – 1 November 2008) was a Guyanese solicitor.He was also the founder and editor-in-chief of Stabroek News. [1]De Caires' father Francis was a director of the family company, De Caires Bros Ltd, and a Test cricketer for the West Indies in the 1930s.
The legality of VCT led to debates on the subject, over times, writers to Stabroek News' letter column described it as a "pirate" station. Until the appearance of WRHM, it was the only television station in Guyana; WRHM when it opened was entirely free-to-air and did not rely on subscriptions. [1]
The other newspapers were the Guyana Chronicle, a government controlled newspaper, and The Mirror, a newspaper of the then opposition party, the People's Progressive Party led by Cheddi Jagan. In the 1990s, Kissoon began writing for a new independent newspaper, the Stabroek News.