Guyana boasts a remarkably rich ecology, but also has one of South America's poorest economies.
Tropical rainforests - filled with distinctive plants and trees, teeming with exotic birds, insects and mammals - are a big draw for eco-tourists.
Guyana boasts a remarkably rich ecology, but also has one of South America's poorest economies.
Tropical rainforests - filled with distinctive plants and trees, teeming with exotic birds, insects and mammals - are a big draw for eco-tourists.
The only English-speaking country in South America, Guyana became independent in 1966.
ROOTS IN SLAVERY
Until the 1990s more than 80% of Guyana's industries were state-owned. Mismanagement, falling commodity prices and high fuel costs created serious economic problems and led to a fall in an already-low living standard.
Since the late 1990s the government has divested itself of many industries, but it now faces problems which include environmental threats to the coastal strip and rainforest, poverty and violent crime - the latter fuelled by the drugs trade.
The sugar industry - a key source of foreign exchange and Guyana's main employer - has been hit by the loss of preferential access to EU markets and a cut in European sugar subsidies.
Many Guyanese seek their fortunes outside the country; the exodus of skilled migrants is among the highest in the region.
A long-running dispute with neighbouring Suriname over the ownership of a potentially oil-rich offshore area was settled in 2007 by a UN tribunal that redrew the maritime boundary and gave both countries a share of the basin. The ruling could bring a surge of exploration by major oil companies.
The issue came to a head in 2000 when Surinamese patrol boats evicted a Canadian-owned rig from a concession awarded by Guyana.
The demarcation of the Guyana-Venezuela border is also disputed, with both countries claiming the mineral and timber-rich Essequibo region.
President: Bharrat Jagdeo
Incumbent President Bharrat Jagdeo, from the ruling Indo-Guyanese Progressive People's Party, won a five-year term in the August 2006 general elections, gaining more than 54% of the vote.
The president promised to fight crime - and gang violence in particular - and to improve government services.
He has said Guyana must reduce its dependence on fossil fuel imports and boost access to information technology.
He has also called for the developed world and the developing world to cooperate more effectively in the battle against climate change.
In 2008, Mr Jagdeo accused the EU of 'bullying' Caribbean nations into accepting a trade agreement on what he said was less than favourable terms for the region.
After months of negotiations, he eventually signed the Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) between the EU and over a dozen Caribbean countries.
Mr Jagdeo is a Russian-trained economist and a former finance minister. He worked for local and international financial bodies, including the National Bank of Industry and Commerce and the International Monetary Fund.
He first took office in August 1999 after his predecessor Janet Jagan resigned because of poor health.
Guyanese newspapers are free to criticise the government, although journalists are apt to exercise self-censorship.
The government operates radio services and a TV channel. Private TV stations freely criticise the government.
The press
Television
Radio
News agency
^ Back to top | BBC Sport Home | BBC Homepage | Contact us | Help | ©