Grand’Anse: lancement d’un projet d’appui ? la production agricole et au PNCS

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Le Nouvelliste

Relancer la production agricole, assurer la disponibilit? des aliments nutritifs produits localement, am?liorer la scolarisation des enfants dans des ?coles b?n?ficiant de cantine scolaire, tels sont les principaux objectifs de ce projet dont l’ex?cution sera assur?e par l’Organisation des Nations unies pour l’alimentation et l’agriculture (FAO).

Financ? ? hauteur de 11 millions de dollars par l’Union europ?enne, ce projet dont la dur?e d’ex?cution est de 42 mois, vise non seulement ? soutenir 4 200 m?nages dans les communes de Corail, de Pestel, de Beaumont et des Abricots, mais ?galement ? garantir la disponibilit? des denr?es agricoles produites localement dans les assiettes des enfants dans le cadre du Programme national de cantine scolaire (PNCS).

Le Premier ministre Ariel Henry affirme entrevoir deux piliers majeurs dans la mise en oeuvre de ce projet. <>, pr?cise le chef de la Primature.

Ainsi, il s’agit d’un pas important dans le processus de rel?vement de cette partie du pays ayant ?t? touch?e par des catastrophes ? r?p?tition. La Grand’Anse, indique le chef du gouvernement, a un potentiel agricole consid?rable qu’il s’agit de remettre en valeur et de renforcer. <> cela signifie ? mes yeux que les cantines scolaires devront servir aux ?l?ves de plats pr?par?s ? partir des denr?es produites dans la r?gion et non des produits import?s. Les fonds disponibles pour l’alimentation scolaire doivent en priorit? ?tre d?pens?s dans la r?gion. Ce qui assurera un d?bouch? certain pour les agriculteurs et des prix convenables >>, se r?jouit-il.

En garantissant une alimentation ?quilibr?e et une di?te bien balanc?e aux enfants, poursuit-il on fera d’une pierre deux coups en m?me temps on supportera l’?conomie locale, et il va sans dire que la Grand’Anse peut aussi produire pour le reste du pays beaucoup de denr?es agricoles. Ce qui aura une incidence positive sur les conditions de vie des producteurs agricoles de cette r?gion.

Le ministre de l’Agriculture, Bredy Charlot dit y entrevoir ?galement un m?canisme combien important pour le secteur agricole. <>, esp?re-t-il.

Selon lui, ce projet arrive ? point nomm?, dans la mesure o? la s?curit? alimentaire d’une frange importante de la population n’est pas assur?e. Selon les chiffres fournis par le repr?sentant de la FAO en Ha?ti, Jos? Luis Fernandez, 52% de la population grand’anselaise est dans l’ins?curit? alimentaire, soit 39% ? la phase III et 13% ? la phase IV.

Le but d’un tel projet est de changer la donne. Si l’on en croit le repr?sentant de l’Union europ?enne, Lunciano Colucci, le projet Agriculture r?siliente et alimentation scolaire durable dans le d?partement de la Grand’Anse ambitionne l’?radication de la faim, la bonne sant? et le bien-?tre des habitants de la Grand’Anse. <>

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Saint Lucia Records 82 New COVID-19 Cases – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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Today Thursday August 18, 2022 the Ministry of Health, Wellness and Elderly Affairs reports a total of 82 new cases of COVID-19 from samples processed on Monday August 15, 2022 and Tuesday August 16, 2022.

This is from a total of 392 samples, of which 368 samples are from the Ezra Long Laboratory and 24 samples from the Laboratory Services and Consultations Limited.

These samples were collected from August 12, 2022 to August 16, 2022. This number of positive cases makes up 20.9% of all the samples processed on these dates.

These new cases bring the total number of cases diagnosed in country to date to 28, 461.

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Confirmation was also received of the recovery of 21 individuals diagnosed with COVID-19. This brings the number of active cases in country to date to 139. Currently, there are eleven positive cases of COVID-19 admitted at the Respiratory Hospital, of which one is critically ill.

To date, a total of 54, 739 individuals have been fully vaccinated. Another 5, 166 are partially vaccinated and 7, 765 have received their booster shot.

Vaccination will take place at various Wellness Centres as per the published COVID-19 vaccination schedule. Vaccination will be available from 9am to 4pm.

SOURCE: Ministry of Health, Wellness and Elderly Affairs

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Staatsolie doneert voor schoonmaak ondergelopen woningen Brokopondo

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

Tekst en beeld Samuel Wens BROKOPONDO — “Begin deze week is Staatsolie gestart met het doneren van meer dan SRD

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Afghanistan: 21 morts dans un attentat à l’explosif dans une mosquée à Kaboul, Au moins 21 personnes ont été tuées et 33 blessées dans un attentat à l’explosif dans une mosquée de Kaboul, mercredi à l’heure de la prière du soir, selon un…, Afghanistan: 21 morts dans un attentat à…

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guadeloupe FranceAntilles

Au moins 21 personnes ont été tuées et 33 blessées dans un attentat à l’explosif dans une mosquée de Kaboul, mercredi à l’heure de la prière du soir, selon un bilan de la police donné jeudi.

Mercredi “une explosion s’est produite dans une mosquée (…) pendant la prière du soir”, a déclaré dans un communiqué Khalid Zadran, porte-parole de la police de Kaboul, en donnant un bilan de 21 morts et 33 blessés.

“La déflagration a été causée par des explosifs placés dans la mosquée” sunnite Sediqia, située dans le nord-ouest de la capitale afghane, a-t-il précisé à l’AFP.

Le nombre d’attentats a diminué en Afghanistan depuis que les talibans ont pris le pouvoir il y a un an, mais ils n’ont pas cessé pour autant.

La mosquée visée se trouve dans le quartier sunnite Khair Khana et dispose aussi d’une école coranique.

Le dôme bleu d’une mosquée au lendemain d’un attentat à l’explosif dans une mosquée de Kaboul, le 18 août 2022 en Afghanistan – Wakil KOHSAR (AFP)

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L’ONG italienne Emergency, qui opère dans un hôpital de Kaboul, a indiqué jeudi avoir reçu un total de 35 personnes après l’explosion, dont trois sont décédées.

“La plupart des blessures ont été causées par des éclats de bombe et des brûlures (…) Il y avait neuf enfants parmi les personnes que nous avons reçues”, a précisé dans un communiqué le directeur pays de l’ONG, Stefano Sozza.

Les hôpitaux locaux contactés par l’AFP ont déclaré ne pas être autorisés à fournir de détails sur les victimes.

Constatant sur tweeter que “la sécurité se détériore” en Afghanistan, la mission de l’ONU dans le pays (Minua) a “déploré” l’attentat de mercredi, “le dernier d’une série inquiétante d’attentats à la bombe qui ont tué et blessé plus de 250 personnes ces dernières semaines, le plus grand nombre mensuel de victimes civiles depuis un an”.

Jeudi matin, la mosquée, dont les vitres étaient brisées, était sécurisée par de nombreux talibans armés, présents aussi dans les rues alentours et en interdisant l’accès aux journalistes, a constaté l’AFP.

Les responsables talibans assurent régulièrement qu’ils maîtrisent la sécurité dans la pays, et ils nient ou minimisent souvent des incidents rapportés sur les réseaux sociaux.

Depuis peu, ils empêchent – parfois violemment – les médias locaux et étrangers de s’approcher de lieux frappés par des attentats.

Des combattants talibans armés célèbrent le premier anniversaire de leur retour au pouvoir, le 15 août 2022 à Kaboul, en Afghanistan – Wakil KOHSAR (AFP/Archives)

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WATCH: Cops dig five feet deep to retrieve illegal gun Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

A major joint police-military operation, which has so far resulted in the seizure of one firearm, is now underway in the St Andrew South Police Division.

The gun, a 9 mm pistol along with nine live rounds and two magazines, was seized at a residence on St Paul’s Lane off Olympic Way in the Waterhouse community.

Acting on information received, the security forces swarmed the area and have been combing the yard with members of the Canine Division as they believe more guns are buried there. The cops disclosed that the gun recovered had been buried “five feet in the ground”.

“We are going to find the weapons hidden, wherever they are in the St Andrew South division,” Deputy Superintendent Coleridge Minto, operations officer for the St Andrew South Police Division, told Loop News.

“I want to highlight the challenges faced as law enforcement, the criminals in these places, the men are hiding weapons in some ingenious ways. We are going after them, we are utilising technology, utilising the Canine and we have members of the Search Centre that assist us from time to time,” he added.

No arrests have so far been made.

Earlier this week, the police did a series of night-time snap raids across three police divisions.

In one raid, the police recovered a Smith & Wesson firearm with 17 rounds on Mannings Hill Road in St Andrew, and one man was arrested in connection with this find.

In other raids, a submachine gun was seized in the McVickers Lane area of Spanish Town, St Catherine, and a shotgun was seized in the Swamp Lane area of Bog Walk, also in St Catherine.

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Caribbean In Line To Benefit From United Kingdom Labour Shortage – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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The Caribbean can benefit twofold from an extreme labour shortage plaguing the United Kingdom, says the CEO of a regional online recruitment service.

“We’ve already seen a noticeable uptick in foreign employers, especially from the UK, recruiting local Caribbean talent,” says Joseph Boll, Caribbean Employment Services Inc. CEO, “but there are opportunities from the other way around as well.

“Just as UK employers want to hire Caribbean workers, thousands of British workers are looking to leave home to live and work abroad. This is where remote work programmes in the Caribbean can come to the forefront and use that desire to their advantage.”

Boll notes the already-high pent-up demand for travel as COVID-related restrictions have eased around the world.

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“The Caribbean is already a highly desirable destination for visitors,” says the CEO, “but why stop there? There is a growing digital nomad market, where remote workers travel the world to live in different locations while still working for their employers back home. The Caribbean can benefit by making this easy and welcoming them.”

One such example is the Work From Bermuda programme, which that nation’s government said contributed some $28 million to the local economy.

Since its launch in August 2020, the Work From Bermuda programme garnered 1,315 applicants, of which 1,127 were approved and 234 remain in the country as of August 2022.

The Bermudian government says it intends to continue the widely successful initiative, hailing the programme as “a win-win for both visitors and Bermuda”.

Last year, Bermuda Tourism Authority CEO Charles Jeffers II told Remote Worker UK, an affiliate of Caribbean Employment Services Inc., of the programme’s tremendous success. He highlighted the economic boost to tourism as well as local businesses and the local rental accommodation market.

Up to now, those benefits show no sign of slowing down as the government of Bermuda says it “continues to be encouraged by the number of new applications submitted weekly and the number of individuals who are choosing to renew their stay for an additional year”.

Boll notes that several other Caribbean nations had launched similar remote work programmes, though their levels of success are not widely known.

“Other countries should take note of the UK’s labour climate and Bermuda’s success and put the two together,” says Boll, a staunch advocate for remote work.

“There are benefits to be gained from Caribbean residents working remotely; from them taking advantage of work abroad opportunities in the UK; and from Caribbean nations letting foreigners live and work in their locales for short periods of time. The conditions are right; we just have to reach out and seize that opportunity.”

SOURCE: Caribbean Employment Services Inc./ SLT. Headline photo: Internet stock image.

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Nieuw hoofkantoor Surinaamse Brouwerij brengt medewerkers weer onder één dak

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

door Arjen Stikvoort PARAMARIBO — Het duurde bijna twee jaren. Maar het nieuwe hoofdkantoor van de Surinaamse Brouwerij is sinds

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House of Assembly tackles water woes with new bill

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: The BVI Beacon

The House of Assembly is currently debating a bill that would create a new statutory body for water and sewerage, and most legislators expressed overwhelming support for the plan before going into a closed-door committee session on Tuesday afternoon.

The Water and Sewerage Department is currently spending about $22 million a year to subsidise water operations, with residents only paying about $5 million of the overall $27 million cost.

Government hopes to help remedy the situation by creating a new statutory body, but details of that move still need to be hashed out, leaders said Tuesday. The Water and Sewerage Authority Act, 2021, which was introduced by Deputy Premier Kye Rymer, came for a seconand third reading during Tues- day’s HOA sitting.

Mr. Rymer, who is also the minister of communications and works, said the proposed legislation is “transformative” and would be the “impetus for some major changes that will dramatically improve the management for the delivery of potable water to residents.”

The minister described the plan to make the Water and Sewerage Department into a statutory board as a move that residents “need and deserve.”

Questions

But Opposition Leader Julian Fraser warned that the proposed legislation would result in increased water prices for consumers, and Health and Social Development Minister Marlon Penn said the authority would cost the territory $40 million per year or more. Both members found issues with a lack of a “plan” in the bill itself and urged their colleagues to consider the importance of a clear policy position.

“I don’t want to see this board formed and everyone expects a miracle from this board,” Mr. Fraser (R-D3) said. “I don’t want to see the board formed and they walk into the Water and Sewerage Department and get buried in the culture.”

He argued that the bill does- n’t provide a “map” for how the board will proceed with its tasks, and added that more details are needed.

“I am convinced that with proper leadership and using the existing model that we have, there is hope that an authority for water and sewerage can turn things around,” he said. “All we need is a minister who is committed and understands what the problems are.”

Mr. Penn, however, said that it’s important to “fix the problems that we face” by trying something different.

“We need to give this shift an opportunity,” he added.

The minister also noted that many concerns surrounding the water system in the territory already had been voiced in the House.

“We have to ensure that there’s a clear policy position on the way forward for this authority, and I think the committee stages of this bill are going to be critical for us,” he said. “There are some very specific and deliberate things that we need to do as a House to ensure this authority functions the way it’s supposed to function.”

High costs

Mr. Penn (R-D8) added that the territory has a distribution problem and needs to commit to infrastructural in- vestments. He also stressed the importance of accountability, transparency and value for money in establishing the board, and called for a strategic plan with a phased approach to fixing distribution issues.

“If we’re going to move, let’s move properly,” he said. “There’s too much money at stake. And not just the money: [Water] is a human right.”

Government backbencher Mark Vanterpool (R-D4) said the bill may not be “perfect” but with “more experience” the government will be able to make amendments in the future.

Junior Minister for Trade and Economic Development Shereen Flax-Charles said she supports the bill, noting that the system needs improvements.

During the sitting, she shared messages that she’s received from residents who are “sick and tired” of the problems that have plagued the territory for decades.

“We have to fix this problem,” Ms. Flax-Charles said. “We have to try something different. We can’t continue to say that we’re one of the top destinations for tourism in the Caribbean and the locals, the residents, can’t get water and the tourists can’t get water.”

‘A significant step’

Government backbencher Vincent Wheatley (R-D9) also expressed his support for the bill, stating that water problems should have been fixed a “long time ago” and that making WSD a statutory body is a “significant step toward addressing” the issue.

Similarly, opposition member Carvin Malone (R-at large) said he supports the “brilliant initiative” by Mr. Rymer, who has also worked on efforts like adjusting the traffic flow in Road Town.

“This is a minister that gets things done,” Mr. Malone said of Mr. Rymer.

Premier Dr. Natalio “Sowande” Wheatley agreed with Mr. Malone’s statement and said that establishing the authority is “another opportunity for [Mr. Rymer] to drive progress forward.”

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Solar crosswalk signals installed

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: The BVI Beacon

New solar-powered crosswalk signals being erected in Road Town will help make the capital greener and more pedestrian-friendly, according to Deputy Premier Kye Rymer.

“Five sets of the solar-powered crosswalks are to be installed,” Mr. Rymer told the House of Assembly last month, adding, “The solar-powered crosswalks are signage that flashes to get the attention of the oncoming traffic, therefore bringing awareness to drivers that a pedestrian is intending to cross the street.”

Mr. Rymer, who is the minister of communications and works, said the systems are being installed in some of the more highly trafficked areas in the capital, including at the Sir Olva Georges Plaza, on Waterfront Drive in front of Clover’s, and on De Castro Street near Bobby’s Supermarket and Republic Bank.

“The ‘BVI Going Green Initiative’ announced in August 2021 is still in effect and ends in August 2023,” Mr. Rymer said. “The initiative came from an amendment in the Customs Management and Duties Act, and makes provision for residents of the Virgin Islands to achieve significant savings by going green.”

Last August, the House of Assembly passed a resolution to add certain energy-based goods to the list of zero-tax items coming through customs. The resolution covers items categorised in “renewable energy (wind, solar and other systems); energy storage; and energy-efficient equipment and transportation.”

The special rate is to last for two years before being reassessed.

Public Works Department Director Jeremy Hodge said the solar crosswalk signals also have other benefits.

“Safety is paramount in this effort, as well as the government’s green initiative,” he said. “The electronic crosswalk signs flash brightly to get the attention of vehicular traffic, all the while verbally cautioning pedestrians before they cross.”

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Festival report promised in weeks

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: The BVI Beacon

Following August Emancipation Festival events held for the first time in three years, Virgin Islands Festivals and Fairs Committee Chairman Dirk Walters said that the organisation is already drafting a financial report that will be ready “within the next couple of weeks.”

“Once we receive the various reports from all the different subcommittees and we put all the financials together, then that will be made public, of course,” Mr. Walters said during an interview with JTV.

The last festival report — covering 2019 events — was laid on the table of the House of Assembly in June 2020 by then- Education, Culture, Youth Affairs, Fisheries and Agriculture Minister Dr. Natalio “Sowande” Wheatley.

Prior to that, government had failed to provide legally mandated annual reports on festival spending for three years.

Still, the 72-page document presented by Dr. Wheatley didn’t detail who received money or how they were chosen.

According to the 2005 VI Festivals and Fairs Committee Act, the committee is required to record its financial transactions and to submit a report to the leading minister within three months of the end of each financial year.

The minister is then required to lay the report before the legislature, thereby making the report public.

$500k from gov’t

During his interview on Saturday with JTV, Mr. Walters affirmed that the committee received $500,000 from the government to execute events for this year, as well as donations, contributions, and sponsorships from “stakeholders” and “other companies,” including the BVI Tourist Board.

“A lot of things are done without money. Relationships are the biggest currency on earth,” he said. “We were able to get a lot of things done based on relationships, even without speaking money. Everyone for the most part, understood or understands where we are.”

Fundraising committee

An official fundraising committee is being formed to help offset costs that fell onto the shoulders of the public, including entry fees that were up to $40 per person for village events, he said. This year is Mr. Walters’s first chairing the committee. Prior to that, Carnel Clyne resigned from the position in 2019, and Co-Chair Khalid Frett served as acting chair.

But events in 2020 and 2021 were dramatically scaled back because of the Covid-19 pandemic.

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