A chronology of key events in Guyana’s History

A chronology of key events:

1498 – Christopher Columbus sights Guyana.

1580 – Dutch establish trading posts upriver.

1620 – Dutch West India Company establishes a foothold in Guyana, including armed bases, and imports slaves from Africa to work on the sugar plantations.

1780-1813 – Guyana changes hands several times between the Dutch, French and British.

1814 – Britain occupies Guyana during the Napoleonic Wars.

1831 – Guyana officially declared a British colony.

1834 – Slavery abolished; many slaves leave plantations to set up their own freeholdings and are replaced by indentured workers mainly from India.

1879 – Gold is discovered in Guyana and is followed by an economic boom.

1889 – Venezuela lays claim to a large portion of Guyana west of the Essequibo river.

1899 – International arbitration tribunal rules in favour of Guyana (then called British Guiana) in the territorial dispute with Venezuela.

1953 – Britain suspends Guyana’s constitution, sends in troops and installs an interim administration after democratic elections for parliament produces a result not to its liking – a victory for the left-wing Indo-Guyanese Progressive People’s Party (PPP). Read More….

1957 – Britain restores Guyanese constitution; PPP splits along racial lines, with Cheddi Jagan leading a mostly Indian party and Forbes Burnham leading a party of African descendants, the People’s National Congress (PNC).

1961 – Guyana granted full autonomy, with Britain retaining control over internal and defence matters; Jagan of the PPP becomes prime minister.

1962 – Venezuela revives its territorial claims on Guyana; Jagan introduces austerity programme, sparking off violent riots and a general strike; British troops sent in to restore order.

1963 – Racial violence between people of African origins and Indian supporters of Jagan.

1966 – May 26, Guyana gains independence from Britain with Forbes Burnham as Prime Minister.

1966 – December 16, Sir David Rose Becomes Governor General of Guyana

1970 – Guyana becomes a republic within the British Commonwealth with Raymond Arthur Chung as titular president.

1976 – 11 Guyanese were among 73 persons murdered by a terrorist bomb on board a Cubana flight off the Barbados coastline. Read More….

1978 – November 18, nine hundred members of a religious sect commit mass suicide at Jonestown, a community established by sect leader Jim Jones.

1980 – Guyana gets a new constitution and Burnham becomes the country’s first executive president.

1985 – Desmond Hoyte (PNC) becomes president following the death of Burnham.

1992 – PPP wins general elections; Cheddi Jagan becomes President.

1997 – March 06, Cheddie Jagan dies and is replaced by Prime Minister Mr. Sam Hinds.

1997 – December 19, Sam Hinds steps down as President and Janet Jagan is sworn in as President. Sam Hinds is appointed Prime Minister.

1998 – Government declares state of emergency in Georgetown in response to violent riots amid allegations of discrimination by PPP against Afro-Guyanese.

1999 – Janet Jagan temporarily replaced Sam Hinds with Bharrat Jagdeo as Prime Minister and resigned for health reasons. Bharrat Jagdeo becomes president and Sam Hinds is appointed Prime Minister.

2000 – Long-running dispute with Suriname over the offshore border comes to a head when Surinam gunboats evict an oil exploration rig from the area. Guyana had approved the exploration.

2002 July – TV presenter Mark Benschop charged with treason. Court says he encouraged protest in which presidential complex was stormed by demonstrators, who were complaining of discrimination against Afro-Guyanese.

2003 April – US embassy employee is kidnapped and released after a ransom is paid. The abduction is part of a wave of violent crime; the murder rate in 2002 quadrupled to more than 160.

2004 May – Home Affairs Minister Ronald Gajraj steps down to allow an inquiry into allegations that he is linked to a death squad accused of executing hundreds of suspected criminals.

2004 June – UN sets up tribunal to try to resolve long-running maritime border dispute between Guyana and neighbouring Suriname.

2004 December – Jury at trial of TV presenter Mark Benschop, charged with treason in 2002, fails to deliver unanimous verdict, necessitating re-trial.

2005 January – Government declares the capital a disaster zone as severe flooding follows days of continuous rain. More than 30 people are killed. UN estimates loss to the economy to be $500m.

2005 April – Ronald Gajraj reappointed as interior minister after inquiry clears him of direct involvement in killings of known and suspected criminals. He resigns in May.

2006 April – Agriculture Minister Satyadeow Sawh is shot dead. The murder is part of a string of gun crimes. The ruling party (PPP) says the killing is intended to incite pre-election violence.

2006 August – President Bharrat Jagdeo wins another five-year term in general elections.

2007 June – Former Guyanese MP Abdul Kadir is arrested in Trinidad on suspicion of involvement in a plot of blow up New York’s JFK airport.

2007 September – A UN tribunal rules in the Guyana-Suriname dispute over maritime territory, giving both a share of a potentially oil-rich offshore basin.

2008 July – President Jagdeo accuses the EU of using its economic might to ‘bully’ developing nations into accepting its terms in negotiations with 16 Caribbean countries over a trade agreement.

2008 October – President Jagdeo signs trade agreement with EU.