Guyana in South America still has most of its forests and, with the areas of adjacent Venezuela (seen here) and northern Brazil constituting one of the largest remaining blocks of tropical forest. Photo by Stuart L. Pimm

Reporting by Neil Marks; Editing by John O’Callaghan
GEORGETOWN
Sat Mar 27, 2010 2:56pm EDT (Reuters) – Muslims across Guyana prayed for rain on Saturday to end a drought that has battered the tiny South American nation’s rice and sugar exports and caused food shortages in indigenous communities.   The government of the former British colony of about 750,000 people is struggling to irrigate farmland, with water at storage points reaching dangerously low levels. The Central Islamic Organization of Guyana (CIOG), which represents Muslims in 145 mosques across the multiethnic nation, organized a day of prayers for rain. “This activity is consistent with the Sunnah of the Prophet Mohammad beseeching the Creator to cause the rain to descend and alleviate sufferings,” said one CIOG leader, Shaykh Moeenul. Muslims make up about 7 percent of Guyana’s population, with Hindus at 28 percent and Christians making up most of the rest across various denominations. Guyana is one of several countries in the region, including neighboring Venezuela, that have been parched by drought since the end of last year. “The Amerindian communities are really badly hit,” President Bharrat Jagdeo said on Friday of the indigenous people who make up nearly a 10th of Guyana’s population. “We have been supplying food to some communities but I need to increase that significantly.” …

Muslims pray for rain in drought-hit Guyana