Governor photograph

Governor

Use attributes for filter !
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID992006
Send edit request

About Governor


A governor is, in most cases, a public official with the power to govern the executive branch of a non-sovereign or sub-national level of government, ranking under the head of state. In federations, governor may be the title of a politician who governs a constituent state and may be either appointed or elected.

King Charles supports study into royal family slavery links

King Charles supports study into royal family slavery links
Apr 6,2023 6:20 am

... " A Palace statement, which has published a previously unseen document showing the 1689 transfer of shares in the slave-trading Royal African Company from Edward Colston - the slave trader and the company s deputy Governor - to King William III...

Donald Trump and US midterms: How bad was his night?

Donald Trump and US midterms: How bad was his night?
Nov 9,2022 1:25 pm

... Perhaps more concerning for the former president was the resounding success of Florida Governor - and potential 2024 rival - Ron DeSantis, who celebrated a " win for the ages" in his re-election bid as his tensions with Mr Trump spilled out into the open...

Politburo Standing Committee: Who are the men that rule China now?

Politburo Standing Committee: Who are the men that rule China now?
Oct 23,2022 2:11 am

... After entering the Qinghai provincial government, he swiftly rose up the ladder and became Governor at the age of 42 - the youngest person to become a provincial Governor...

Jair Bolsonaro: Why the world is watching Brazil's election

Jair Bolsonaro: Why the world is watching Brazil's election
Oct 21,2022 12:51 pm

... In front of the Governor s palace stands a monument dedicated to the prospectors of the past...

Queen's funeral: Full guide to the gun carriage and the main procession

Queen's funeral: Full guide to the gun carriage and the main procession
Sep 19,2022 1:40 am

... The procession in fullMounted Metropolitan Police • Royal Canadian Mounted Police • Bands of The Rifles and Brigade of Gurkhas • Representatives of the George Cross from Malta, the Royal Ulster Constabulary and the UK National Health Service Representative detachments of Commonwealth forces: Territorial Air Force of New Zealand • Royal New Zealand Infantry Regiment • The Corps of Royal New Zealand Engineers • Royal New Zealand Armoured Corps • Royal Regiment of New Zealand Artillery • Royal New Zealand Navy • Royal Australian Air Force Reserve • Royal Australian Army Nursing Corps • Royal Australian Army Ordnance Corps • Royal Australian Infantry Corps • Royal Australian Engineers • Royal Regiment of Australian Artillery • Royal Australian Navy • The Canadian Armed Forces Legal Branch • The Royal Canadian Air Force (Reserve) • The Calgary Highlanders • The Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders of Canada • The 48th Highlanders of Canada • The North Shore (New Brunswick) Regiment • The Royal New Brunswick Regiment • Le Regiment de Ia Chaudière • The Stormont, Dundas and Glengarry Highlanders (Princess Louise s) • The Canadian Grenadier Guards • Governor General s Foot Guards • Royal 22e Regiment • The King s Own Calgary Regiment (RCAC) The Governor General s Horse Guards • The Royal Canadian Engineers • The Canadian Armed Forces Military Engineering Branch • The Royal Regiment of Canadian ArtilleryRepresentatives of the Royal Air Force: 603 (City of Edinburgh) Squadron Royal Auxiliary Air Force • Royal Auxiliary Air Force • Royal Air Force Marham • The Combined Bands of the Royal Air Force • Royal Air Force College, Cranwell • Royal Air Force RegimentRepresentatives of the Army: The Honourable Artillery Company • Adjutant General s Corps • British Army Bands Sandhurst and Colchester • The Queen s Gurkha Engineers • The Royal Welsh • The Duke of Lancaster s Regiment • The Royal Regiment of Scotland • Welsh Guards • Irish Guards • Scots Guards • Coldstream Guards • Grenadier Guards • Bands of the Irish Guards and Welsh Guards • Corps of Royal Engineers • Royal Regiment of Artillery • Royal Tank Regiment • The Royal Lancers • The Royal Scots Dragoon Guards (Carabiniers and Greys)Representatives of the Royal Navy: Royal Navy • Royal Marines • The Combined Bands of the Royal MarinesDefence advisers and staff of Her Majesty s realms: Jamaica • New Zealand • Australia • CanadaRepresentative colonels of Commonwealth forces of which Her Majesty was Colonel-in-ChiefChaplains of the armed forces: Principal Church of Scotland & Free Church Chaplain Royal Air Force • Principal Roman Catholic Chaplain Royal Air Force • Chaplain-in-Chief Royal Air Force • Deputy Chaplain General (Army) • Principal Roman Catholic Chaplain (Army) • Chaplain General (Army) • Principal Church of Scotland and Free Churches Chaplain (Royal Navy) • Principal Roman Catholic Chaplain (Royal Navy) • Chaplain of the FleetRepresentatives of forces of which the Queen was air commodore-in-chief • Representative Colonels Commandant, Colonels and Honorary Colonels of Her Majesty s Regiments and Corps • Commandant General, Royal Marines • Representatives of Her Majesty s ships • Commander Strategic Command • Vice Chief of the Defence Staff • Chief of the Air Staff • Chief of the General Staff • Chief of the Naval Staff • Chief of the Defence Staff • Drum Horse and State Trumpeter • 1st Division of the Sovereign s Escort • ADC to the Major General Commanding the Household Division • Brigade Major Household Division • Major General Commanding the Household Division • Combined Bands of the Scots Guards and Coldstream Guards Pursuivants and Heralds of Arms of Scotland: March • Linlithgow • Ormond • Rothesay • Falkland • Unicorn • Carrick • Marchmont Pursuivants and Heralds of Arms of England: Portcullis • Rouge Dragon • Norfolk • Windsor • York • Bluemantle • Wales • Maltravers • Chester • RichmondKings of Arms: Norroy and Ulster King of Arms • Lord Lyon King of Arms • Clarenceux King of Arms • Lady Usher of the Black Rod • Garter King of ArmsThe Earl Marshal • Bands of the Scots Guards and Coldstream Guards • Captain, the King s Body Guard of the Yeoman of the Guard • Captain general, the King s Body Guard for Scotland (Royal Company of Archers) (Gold Stick for Scotland) • Captain, His Majesty s Body Guard of the Honourable Corps of Gentlemen at Arms Royal Household; Vice Chamberlain of the Household • Comptroller of the Household • Treasurer of the Household • Queen s Gurkha Orderly Officer (x2) • Royal Waterman (x2) • Director of the Royal Collection • Comptroller Lord Chamberlain s Office • Master of the Household • Keeper of the Privy Purse • Private secretary to the Queen • Master of the Horse • Lord Steward • Her Majesty s Page (x2) • Her Majesty s Palace StewardBehind the gun carriage: Escort Party of the Household CavalryRoyal Family: The Earl of Wessex and Forfar • The Duke of York • The Princess Royal • The King • Peter Phillips • The Duke of Sussex • The Prince of Wales • Vice Admiral Sir Tim Laurence • The Duke of Gloucester • The Earl of SnowdonRoyal Car 1: The Queen Consort • The Princess of WalesRoyal Car 2: The Duchess of Sussex • The Countess of Wessex and ForfarField officer in Brigade Waiting • Silver Stick in Waiting • Colonel Coldstream Guards • Gold Stick in Waiting • Adjutant in Brigade Waiting • Silver Stick Adjutant • Crown EquerryHousehold of the King: Master of the Household • Equerry • Principal Private Secretary • TreasurerSecond division of the Sovereign s escortRepresentatives of Civilian Services: Merchant Navy • Royal Fleet Auxiliary • The Maritime Coastguard Agency • Police Services • Fire and Rescue Services • His Majesty s Prison Services • Ambulance Service • British Red Cross • St John Ambulance • Royal Voluntary Service • Cadet forcesRear: Mounted Metropolitan PoliceOnce the procession reaches Wellington Arch at Hyde Park Corner, at about 13:00 BST, the coffin will be transferred to the new State Hearse for its final journey to Windsor Castle...

Queen Elizabeth II: Gun salutes and floral tributes as UK mourns

Queen Elizabeth II: Gun salutes and floral tributes as UK mourns
Sep 9,2022 5:20 am

... The Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby - spiritual leader to the Church of England of which the monarch is supreme Governor - expressed his " profound sadness"...

Will Smith banned from Oscars for 10 years over slap

Will Smith banned from Oscars for 10 years over slap
Apr 8,2022 10:10 pm

... Late last month, actor Whoopi Goldberg - a member of the academy s board of Governor - predicted Smith would face " big consequences" but said " we re not going to take that Oscar away from him...

Bernie Sanders: Who are the democratic White house candidates?

Bernie Sanders: Who are the democratic White house candidates?
Feb 16,2020 10:23 am

... He lost the race, along with a couple of campaigns to be Governor...

Jair Bolsonaro: Why the world is watching Brazil's election

Feb 16,2020 9:06 am

By Katy WatsonBBC South America correspondent, Amazon

As Brazilians prepare to pick Jair Bolsonaro or Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva as their new president, the future of the largest rainforest in the world hangs in the balance.

There is no such thing as silence in the Amazon. The rustle of the trees, the birdsong, the drips of water on leaves after a heavy downpour - the forest is always talking.

But then every so often, it is rudely interrupted; nature's conversation drowned out by the hum of planes or helicopters overhead.

Most of the aircraft belong to illegal gold miners, heading to sites to deliver supplies. The people of Maloca Paapiu hardly bat an eyelid now. And they feel that the authorities are doing the same.

The remoteness of the Yanomami territory is the reason for its beauty - as well as its strife. Close to 30,000 people live a hunter-gatherer lifestyle on a reserve the size of Portugal.

The land is highly coveted - rich in gold and minerals, it has long been in the sights of illegal miners, but in 1992, a presidential decree recognised the Yanomami people's rights to the land.

While mining activity decreased after their land was protected, in the past four years under President Jair Bolsonaro, it's hit new highs. The region is experiencing an illegal gold rush.

The small indigenous villages, close to the gold deposits, are the hardest hit.

The health centre in Paapiu has become a sort of front line field hospital. It is a simple wooden hut with intermittent electricity and just a radio to contact the outside world. There's a steady line of people wanting to be seen. Mothers sit on the floor with their babies, bellies distended and their hair discoloured - a clear sign of malnutrition among children.

One woman who appears to be in her 20s comes in looking very weak. She is hooked up to a drip and laid on the only bed in the centre. The health worker explains she too is malnourished and dehydrated.

Outside, there is a makeshift ward for more patients - a simple wooden frame with leaves for a roof and hammocks for beds. Everyone in this shelter has malaria - yet another disease brought in by outsiders and making the Yanomami sick.

" The illegal miners are working near our village, they keep getting closer, " Malirina Yanomami tells me. " There's lots of smoke from the machines and that's making kids ill. It causes tummy ache, malnutrition, the kids get skinny. Before, we didn't have so much illness, there were far less serious diseases and we got better quickly. "

Malirina's two-month-old grandson has pneumonia. He doesn't have a name - Yanomami parents wait for a few years to name them, out of fear they may die. It's a very real anxiety.

Five minutes walk from the health centre is a creek where three small boys are playing in the water. They have been told not to but like any kids, they ignore their parents. The mercury used to extract the gold from the mine upstream has poisoned these once-crystal clear waters so fishing and drinking here is now impossible.

There are estimated to be around 20,000 illegal miners working in the region, spurred on by the current president. Jair Bolsonaro maintains that the Amazon is rich in resources and local people need to be able to benefit from that. So he has proposed a law that would legalise mining on indigenous areas.

At the same time, locals complain that surveillance of practices detrimental to the Amazon has fallen.

" Most organised crime associated with deforestation - forest degradation, illegal mining - is easy [to identify] because the satellites pick up the first day of deforestation, " says renowned scientist Carlos Nobre.

He is referring to a system introduced in Brazil in 2004 - DETER - which helps government agencies combat crime in the forest, giving daily data on deforestation.

" Unfortunately, the political discourse of the current president of Brazil has always been, 'go ahead, deforest, do some gold mining, do whatever you want. The forests have no value. "

The gold mines are actually easy to spot. In a sea of unbroken green, the forest suddenly opens up. The land scarred by excavators and pools of water, sifted by miners searching for treasure.

Miners are often armed - in this criminal world, it's hard to know who to trust.

" It's like any city, there are good and bad people, " says 24-year-old Danilo - not his real name - who has worked in illegal mining for a few years now. " When it comes to gold, you have to protect yourself. "

Danilo prefers to trade everyday goods. A 2 litre bottle of Coca-cola sells for 8 reais in the city ($1. 50). In a gold mine, it sells for closer to $50.

This thirst for gold means the way of life for the Yanomami hangs in the balance. And the current government seems unwilling to stop the miners.

" If Bolsonaro wins again, he'll kill us all, " says shaman and leader Davi Kopenawa Yanomami. " We are surrounded by big politicians who don't want to know us or respect us. "

With large amounts of money being earned on Yanomami land, some of the indigenous community have become part of the industry - whether through being paid to grant access to the miners or mining themselves.

" A minority of young Yanomami are involved, " admits Davi. " They think illegal mining helps - but it doesn't, it just kills people. "

As you fly over the vast pristine forest - the only viable way to get to many of the villages - golden rivers break up the canopy, weaving through the trees. Up close, some are vast - and fast-flowing. It's on these waterways that the miners travel on motorised canoes.

A 53-year-old mother of six, Maria is building a new house in the state capital, Boa Vista. She's replacing a wooden shack with a brick structure together with glass windows and tiled floors. All this paid for by her work as a cook at the mines.

She started working when she was 22. Employed as a domestic worker by a pilot at the illegal mines, he offered her her first job.

" I worked there for three-and-a-half months, and came back and was able to buy my first wooden house, " says Maria, which is not her real name.

In the corner of her bedroom are a couple of plastic jerrycans. Inside, she's packed clothes, a piece of rope for a hammock and some bug spray to ward off the malaria-infested mosquitos.

She's ready for the phone call that's bound to come soon, one of the mine owners she knows asking her to travel back to the forest. It doesn't mean she's not terrified. A few months ago, her canoe capsized and she only managed to stay afloat thanks to the jerrycan.

" I'd prefer us to go without than have my children do this too, " she says. " Because it's illegal, you run the risk of being arrested. But my son doesn't have work and he has a family. "

With debts to pay, Maria doesn't believe they have an alternative. Maria, though, is rare in the mining community in the fact that she doesn't want Bolsonaro to win a second term.

" He campaigned in 2018 saying he would legalise mining - and when he does that, he's incentivising everyone to do it, " she says. " As president I think he has to make the Brazilian economy better so people have more job opportunities away from illegal mining. "

The police station's car park in Boa Vista is testament to the booming mining industry. Dozens of planes and helicopters confiscated from suspected illegal miners - some of them even prominent local businessmen.

Mining is most definitely in this region's blood. In front of the governor's palace stands a monument dedicated to the prospectors of the past. The current governor - an ally of Bolsonaro's - wants that tradition to continue.

" We have the right to exploit our natural wealth, benefitting indigenous communities, " Antonio Denarium explains.

" The way it is today, all the mining that takes place in Roraima leaves the state illegally, not paying any taxes, no fees that will compensate the environmental damage caused by the mining. In the Brazilian Amazon there are 23 million people and those people need to work. "

When I ask miner Danilo about the future of the rainforest, it's of little consequence.

" I just want to live for today, " he admits. " Life is short. " But he does agree he's causing damage.

" When the excavators start to work, they create a massive hole. And you can't fill it in, " he says.

As for the impact on the indigenous communities, he has little sympathy.

" They're more shameless than the miners, " he says. " Every journey to the mines, you pass through an indigenous area. If you don't pay them off, they won't let you through. I used to have this vision of mining being bad for the indigenous, deforestation being damaging. But I saw they were part of the problem. "

The Amazon matters to the world, absorbing huge amounts of greenhouse gases but for those living in the rainforest, getting by is what they care most about.

What will resolve the problem of poverty in the Amazon is creating new alternatives for the economy, says Marina Silva, Lula's former environment minister. " But we can't continue to destroy the forest because otherwise it will go past the point of no return. "

She left Lula's government in 2008 after disagreements over his infrastructure projects in the Amazon. Does she really see him as the Amazon's saviour?

" I think Lula today has a wider understanding of what's at play in relation to climate change and the role the Amazon has. "

" It's not the job of one person, this idea of a saviour doesn't apply to the reality of the world we are living in, with all its complexities. But I do believe he can contribute greatly. "

How will the Yanomami community - and the Amazon - look in a few decades from now?

There's no doubt, competing forces in the Amazon are changing how they live their lives.

In this vast rainforest though, there's little hope that politicians can keep them safe.

Photos by Katy Watson

.



Source of news: bbc.com

Related Persons

Next Profile ❯