FIND THE LATEST NEWS UPDATED EVERY DAY AT CARIBBEANLIFENEWS.COM 
 Vol. 31, Issue 9  BROOKLYN EDITION Feb. 28-Mar. 5, 2020 
 GUYANESE  
 HEAD TO  
 THE POLLS 
 Bloated voters list could  
 present some problems 
 By Bert Wilkinson 
 Guyanese go to the polls on  
 Monday in the first of five general  
 elections in the Caribbean  
 trade bloc for 2020, but fears  
 that a compromised voters list  
 could present some problems  
 and threaten to mar what is  
 widely  regarded  as  the  most  
 important general elections in  
 the country’s history. 
 Considered as the ‘mother’ of  
 all elections since independence  
 from Britain in 1966, the polls  
 are being held amid hopes that  
 recently found offshore commercial  
 oil and gas deposits will  
 soon make Guyana one of the  
 richest countries in the hemisphere. 
 Therefore, the 2020 elections  
 are coming down to a straight  
 fight for control of oil revenues  
 going forward. And both of the  
 main parties — the governing  
 multiracial-multiparty coalition  
 led by retired Army General, 
  David Granger and the  
 main  Indo-led  opposition  People’s  
 Progressive Party (PPP) of  
 former Minister of Housing and  
 Water, Irfaan Ali — both agree  
 that  whichever  outfit  wins  this  
 one could control the region’s  
 most resource-rich country for  
 decades. The stakes therefore  
 are extremely high. 
 As  campaigning  heightens  
 with  less  than  a  week  to  go,  
 attention is turning to a voters  
 list that most in the country of  
 about 780,000 think is simply  
 bloated, unreal and problematic. 
  The elections commission’s  
 final  voters  scroll  contains  an  
 astonishing 661,000 eligible voters, 
  a number even the commissioners  
 consider and an impossibility  
 and an improbability  
 given the fact that the national  
 schools population of students  
 under the voting age of 18 is  
 260,000. 
 Yet the country is going to  
 the polls with this list because of  
 court rulings barring the commission  
 from removing migrated  
 people and other categories  
 from the list so the two main  
 parties and seven or so other  
 small outfits which qualified to  
 run for seats in the 65-member  
 house, all say they would need  
 to ensure that excess ballots are  
 not stuffed into ballot boxes as  
 had happened in the past. In  
 the 2015 elections that pushed  
 out the PPP after 23 consecutive  
 years, the final voters list  
 was 585,727 with 416,000 people  
 actually casting votes. 
 As parties prepare for final  
 rallies at the weekend, many  
 of  the  political  advertisements  
 on radio and television as well  
 Rep. Yvette Clarke, D-N.Y.  Tom Williams / CQ Roll Call (CQ Roll Call via Associated Press 
 New laws for green card holders 
 By Nelson A. King 
 The  Donald  J.  Trump  
 administration in the United  
 States has implemented new  
 laws for Caribbean nationals  
 and  others  who  are  permanent  
 residents or green card  
 holders.  
 According  to  the  United  
 States Citizenship and Immigration  
 Services  (USCIS),  
 Caribbean and other nationals  
 who  failed  to  admit  that  
 they  are  immigrants,  when  
 filing  their  income  tax  
 returns,  or  who  failed  to  
 report some of their income,  
 could result in deportation.  
 Caribbean  men,  between  
 18 and 25, who also failed to  
 register  with  the  US  Selective  
 Service,  could  also  be  
 deported, USCIS said.  
 Caribbean and other immigrants  
 could  also  lose  their  
 green cards for being on “an  
 extended  overseas  vacation,”  
 NBC-2 TV also reported.  
 It said this “could be considered  
 ‘abandonment’ of the  
 green card.”  
 On  Monday,  USCIS  began  
 implementing  the  Inadmissibility  
 on  Public  Charge  
 Grounds  final  rule,  denying  
 green  cards  to  Caribbean  
 and  other  immigrants  who  
 may  need  US  government  
 assistance. 
 “In light of the US Supreme  
 Court’s  Feb.  21,  2020  decision  
 to  stay  the  statewide  
 injunction preventing implementation  
 of  the  Final  Rule  
 Continued on Page 12 Continued on Page 12 
 
				
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