Guyana Press Association

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Guyana Press Association The Guyana Press Association is the representative body of media workers in Guyana. GPA's origin dates back to 1945 and its membership is far and wide.

The Guyana Press Association is the oldest representative organisation of media workers in Guyana.

19/12/2025

NEWS Source: Award winning theatre and broadcasting icon, Ron Robinson, was cremated today after a funeral service at the St. George’s Cathedral, where family and friends gathered in his memory.

The National Cultural Centre’s stage was Ron Robinson’s stage for many decades. At a service under the National Cultural Centre’s foyer this midday, President Irfaan Ali paid tribute to Robinson, calling him a hero of local theatre that must never be forgotten.

READ MORE: https://newssourcegy.com/news/ron-robinson-eulogised-as-theatre-icon-and-brodacasting-legend/

GPA mourns the loss of veteran broadcaster Ron Robinson, A.ARon Robinson, A.A., was one of the longest-serving broadcast...
12/12/2025

GPA mourns the loss of veteran broadcaster Ron Robinson, A.A

Ron Robinson, A.A., was one of the longest-serving broadcasters in Guyana. He served the media with professionalism, effectiveness, and distinction. Ron brought elegant energy and remarkable repartee to his morning drive-time radio shows. He delivered the news with authority and conducted countless interviews that upheld the highest tenets of journalism.

Whether on radio, television, or online, Ron Robinson consistently set and maintained a high standard. He approached his work with thorough preparation and generously mentored many within the media fraternity.

Broadcasting in Guyana benefited immensely from his long, dedicated involvement. The numerous accolades he received over the years reflect the deep respect and admiration in which he was held.

Ron was 79 years old.

The Guyana Press Association joins the wider Guyanese community in extending sincere condolences to his children, Paul and Allison, and to his immediate family, the theatre and cultural community, and all the organizations he faithfully served.

05/12/2025
In 2023, the Guyana Press Association with support from Pan American Development Foundation and the International Organi...
25/11/2025

In 2023, the Guyana Press Association with support from Pan American Development Foundation and the International Organization for Migration (IOM Guyana) developed the "Media Workers' Guide for Reporting on Migration".

This guide contains information on key concepts around Migration reporting and seeks to provide recommendations on industry good practices as well as terminologies and contact information for government and non-governmental organisations.

We recommend that these guidelines be used by journalists covering issues related to migration and migrants, be adopted within news rooms and be used to guide our reporting on this sensitive but topical issue.

The booklet can be found here:

19/11/2025

NEWS Source: The European Union (EU) Elections Observer Mission (EOM), in its final report, said the media environment in Guyana during the course of the 2025 General and Regional Elections was “vibrant” but “highly polarized” with a high number of media outlets aligned with the ruling People’s Progressive Party (PPP/C), resulting in a disproportionate coverage in favor of the Government.

READ MORE: https://newssourcegy.com/news/eu-election-observers-highlight-guyanas-vibrant-but-highly-polarized-media-landscape-in-final-report/

09/11/2025
29/10/2025

News Room’s Senior Reporter, Sharda Bacchus, was honoured by the Guyana Prison Service for her outstanding work in promoting prisoners’ rehabilitation, reintegration, and staff development through public awareness.

The recognition was presented during the Prison Service’s 42nd Anniversary Collaborators Appreciation Luncheon.

29/10/2025
24/10/2025

𝗡𝗖𝗡’𝘀 𝗡𝗮𝗸𝗮𝘀𝗶𝗮 𝗟𝗼𝗴𝗮𝗻 𝗛𝗼𝗻𝗼𝘂𝗿𝗲𝗱 𝗮𝘁 𝗚𝗣𝗦 𝟰𝟮𝗻𝗱 𝗔𝗻𝗻𝗶𝘃𝗲𝗿𝘀𝗮𝗿𝘆!🥳

Long-serving NCN journalist Nakasia Logan was recognised at the Guyana Prison Service’s (GPS) 42nd Anniversary Collaborators Appreciation Luncheon, where she received an award from Deputy Director Kevin Pilgrim.

Held under the theme “Changing Culture and Mindset to Achieve Corrections,” the event celebrated over 70 partners supporting GPS’s mission to transform the correctional system. Nakasia’s award highlights her dedication to impactful storytelling, raising awareness on social issues, and amplifying community voices.

Congratulations, Nakasia!

There was no greater vantage point to see America burn than the Pennsylvania railroad. Working in the summer of 1919 as ...
16/10/2025

There was no greater vantage point to see America burn than the Pennsylvania railroad. Working in the summer of 1919 as a dining car waiter, Claude McKay was so fearful that he had resorted to travelling with a revolver secreted in his starched white jacket. During this volatile time, which became known as the US’s Red Summer, a wave of racial violence engulfed the country.

In a situation replicated across the western world, hundreds of thousands of first world war veterans had returned home and were now looking for work. Among them were Black troops who had fought for the allied powers and hoped that they would be awarded equal rights in return for their service. It was not to be.

Competition for labour and jobs would reveal ugly prejudices and trigger a prolonged spell of rioting and lynching across the US. Between April and November 1919, hundreds of people – most of them Black Americans – were killed and thousands injured. McKay, a 28-year-old Jamaican immigrant and aspiring poet, was shaken by the violence. “It was the first time I had ever come face to face with such manifest, implacable hate of my race, and my feelings were indescribable,” he later said. “I had heard of prejudice in America but never dreamed of it being so intensely bitter.”

The experience would prove formative to his writing. During the Red Summer riots, he wrote the impassioned sonnet If We Must Die. It was published in 1919 by the New York-based leftist publication the Liberator, which had been founded by Max Eastman and his sister, Crystal. The powerful verse, acknowledged by one contemporary as “the Marseillaise of the American Negro”, concluded with the lines, “Like men we’ll face the murderous, cowardly pack / Pressed to the wall, dying, but fighting back!” It established McKay, who was living in Harlem at the time, as a literary talent and after it was reprinted in the major US Black newspapers and magazines of the time, McKay was lauded as “a poet of his people”.

The long read: Economic insecurity, race riots, incendiary media … Claude McKay was one of the few Black journalists covering a turbulent period that sounds all too familiar to us today

16/10/2025

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The Guyana Press Association is the oldest representative organisation of media workers in Guyana.