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Global Journalist: Tiny Guyana Threatened by 'Oil Curse'

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Most people probably know little about the tiny South American nation of Guyana. In the U.S., it made headlines back in the late 1970s after an American cult leader named Jim Jones took his followers there – and more than 900 died in a murder-suicide after drinking poisoned Kool-Aid.

But recently Guyana has been in the news for more positive reasons. That’s because ExxonMobil has made one of the most promising offshore oil discoveries there in decades.

Yet the sudden discovery of all this cash under its seabed holds a lot of risk for Guyana. In some oil-rich countries like Angola and Nigeria, most of the population has gotten no real benefit from their country’s petroleum wealth. 

On this edition of Global Journalist, a look at Guyana’s big find - and whether it can avoid the so-called “resource curse.” 

Joining the program:

      • Samuel Sukhnandan, senior journalist for the Guyana Times and Television Guyana.
      • Raul Gallegos, associate director for consulting firm Control Risks.
      • Anthony Bryan, professor at the Institute of International Relations at the University of the West Indies.
      • Nick Butler, former BP plc oil executive and visiting professor at King's College London.

Assistant producers: Teodora Agarici, Rosemary Belson

Supervising producer: Edom Kassaye

Visual editor: Jiwon Choi

Jason left Global Journalist in 2019
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