Grand Sud : Le s?isme un moindre mal devant la mauvaise gouvernance de la reconstruction

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Le Nouvelliste

Tous les responsables d’institutions dans le Sud, la Grand Anse et les Nippes qui sont interrog?s sont cat?goriques : les promesses n’ont pas ?t? tenues une ann?e apr?s le s?isme du 14 ao?t 2021.

Le bilan des actions gouvernementales pr?sent? en conf?rence de presse mardi par trois ministres, les plus actifs dans les r?gions les plus touch?es, ne dit pas autre chose. On a travaill?, mais cela est insuffisant. L’agriculture, l’?ducation et la planification n’ont pas pu faire de miracle. Les montants engag?s sont faibles. Les r?alisations lilliputiennes compar?es aux besoins.

Et personne n’a pr?sent? de r?sultats sur la reconstruction des maisons d?truites par le s?isme. Personne n’a parl? d’aide pour relancer les entreprises priv?es affect?es par le tremblement de terre. Mis ? part le nouveau pont de J?r?mie, il n’y a pas eu d’inauguration majeure une ann?e apr?s.

Comme en 2010, apr?s la catastrophe du 12 janvier, une conf?rence des bailleurs a ?t? tenue et la communaut? internationale a d?gain? des promesses. Pour le moment, nous sommes loin des sommes promises.

Ce mercredi, la coordinatrice humanitaire des Nations unies, la plus haute responsable humanitaire de l’organisation dans le pays, Ulrika Richardson, a d?clar? dans un communiqu? que <>.

Les gens du Grand Sud ont corrig? le titre pour dire <>.

Non seulement le minimum n’a pas ?t? atteint, mais le basique manque aussi ? l’appel. Plus de 250 000 enfants sont priv?s d’acc?s ? des ?coles ad?quates, un an apr?s le s?isme, alerte l’UNICEF.

<>, indique l’agence onusienne.

Le 14 ao?t, le jour anniversaire avait vu fleurir un ensemble de communiqu?s pour vendre les mensonges des aides promises. L’ONU et l’UNICEF disent la v?rit? comme elle est sur le terrain pendant que le gouvernement ha?tien se cache derri?re tous les pr?textes pour masquer les rendez-vous manqu?s.

Jusqu’? ce 17 ao?t, il n’existe pas une coordination efficace de la reconstruction du Grand Sud…

Trois d?partements g?ographiques du pays sont en train d’?tre r?duits ? leur plus simple expression apr?s une catastrophe naturelle doubl?e d’une h?catombe manag?riale.

Le s?isme du 14 ao?t 2021 n’?tait rien devant la mauvaise gouvernance de la reconstruction.

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Agreement signed with China for 150 turnkey units at Booby Alley

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

On Thursday, 18th August 2022, Prime Minister Gaston Browne , on behalf of the Government of Antigua and Barbuda, signed the official Booby Alley Social Housing Project agreement with the People’s Republic of China.

Through the housing project agreement, the Government of Antigua and Barbuda and the Chinese Government agree to construct 150 turnkey modality units.

According to Prime Minister Browne, “Today is a very historic day and a very important one as we sign the exchange of notes between the Government of Antigua and Barbuda and The People’s Republic of China to signify an agreement between both countries for the development of 150, two-bedroom properties at the Booby Alley area in Point. It is the first phase of a housing project which will span to other areas.”

PM Browne noted that this project is taking the ongoing housing revolution to the Next Level.

Joining Prime Minister Browne at today’s signing ceremony were Attorney General Hon. Steadroy Benjamin, Her Excellency Zhang Yanling, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the People’s Republic of China to Antigua and Barbuda, and Ambassador Clarence Pilgrim, Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Works.

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Video leaves fans of top dancehall artiste asking questions Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

He is regarded as one of the top entertainers in dancehall music today but did you know that before entering into a life of music this artiste had other intentions.

Can you guess the artiste?

A one-minute video posted on social media showing a young student on a junior school challenge quiz programme speaking about his plans to take a totally different career path has left some fans surprised.

Other social media users were left asking questions as they would, later on, come to witness the entertainer growing up to lay down a new set of rules in the music industry.

“Who would have thought,” said one social media user after watching the video.

Another user said even though the artiste took a different path, certainly, his ability to deliver thought-provoking lyrics must have come from the curricular activities that he was involved in as a student. Also, there were hints, the artiste, a student at the time, did point out in the video that one of his hobbies was in fact singing. One of the career paths that he said he was aiming for was medicine.

Watch the video below as the artiste, a student at the time, introduce himself and give his full name.

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Body of second Jamaican who jumped from US bridge found Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News
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The Bulgin brothers

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A body matching the description of one of the two brothers from Jamaica who went missing last weekend after jumping from a Martha’s Vineyard bridge featured in the movie “Jaws” has been found, state police said Thursday.

The body was discovered by a shell fisherman on the edge of a pond on the Massachusetts resort island at about 11:30am, agency spokesperson David Procopio wrote in a statement.

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“The body matches the description of Tavaughn Bulgin, 21, who has been the subject of a week-long ongoing search since he went missing Sunday night,” the statement said.

The body of Tavaris Bulgin, 26, Tavaughn’s brother, was recovered on Monday morning.

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The Bulgin brothers were seasonal workers at a restaurant on the island where much of the 1975 movie was filmed. They and two friends jumped from the bridge late Sunday night. The other two made it out of the water.

Commonly called the Jaws Bridge, it links the towns of Oak Bluffs and Edgartown. Also known as the Big Bridge, it is officially the American Legion Memorial Bridge, and spans an inlet that connects Nantucket Sound with Sengekontacket Pond.

Despite signs prohibiting the activity, thrill seekers are frequently seen jumping from the span.

Authorities have said no foul play is suspected.

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‘Knife wielding robber’ fatally shot by cops on Waltham Park Road Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

The Independent Commission of Investigations (INDECOM) commenced investigations into a police fatal shooting of an unidentified man along Waltham Park Road. The incident took place on Thursday, August 18 at about 2:00 am.

The police have stated that two officers were traveling along Waltham Park Road when they were alerted by a female who alleged she was being robbed by a man with a knife.

The officers report that during their intervention they were attacked by the man with a knife. In response, both officers fired their weapons in the direction of the man. The injured man was transported to the hospital where he was pronounced dead.

The Commission seeks the assistance of the public with identifying the deceased, who is of dark complexion and has plaited hair and a birthmark on his left thigh.

Persons with information regarding the deceased and/or this incident are encouraged to contact the Commission’s Head Office or send any information, photos or videos to INDECOM’s official WhatsApp at (876)553-5555.

The concerned officers provided initial accounts of the incident to the Investigative team and were each served a Section 21 Notice to provide a statement and attend the office of the Commission to be interviewed.

The incident scene was processed by INDECOM and included the collection of forensic exhibits, namely the recovered weapon, a knife, and the service firearms of the concerned officers.

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Jamaica ranks second on human flight and brain drain index Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Jamaica has been ranked at second place out of 177 countries on the 2022 edition of the human flight and brain drain index.

The ranking, which is compiled by business and economics website the GlobalEcomomy.com, assesses “the economic impact of human displacement (for economic or political reasons) and the consequences this may have on a country’s development”.

The higher the index, the greater the human displacement, Global Economy’s website said.

Jamaica has a human flight and brain drain index score of 9.1, with Samoa topping the list with a perfect score of 10.

Of note, Global Economy said it arrived at its index indicator for each country by examining available data between 2007 and 2022 from a wide range of sources, including national authorities, the World Bank, United Nations (UN), and the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

“For that indicator, we provide data for Jamaica from 2007 to 2022. The average value for Jamaica during that period was 7.66 index points with a minimum of 6.3 index points in 2009 and a maximum of 9.1 index points in 2022,” the website said.

“The latest value from 2022 is 9.1 index points. For comparison, the world average in 2022 based on 177 countries is 5.21 index points,” it added.

Elsewhere on the index, Palestine placed third with a score of 8.8, while Micronesia and Somalia rounded out the top five with a similar score of 8.7 index points.

Haiti and Guyana were the only other Caribbean nations in the top 10, being ranked in ninth and tenth place, respectively. Haiti had a score of 8.2 index points, while Guyana received 8.1.

Human flight and brain drain index country rankings

Australia was the least country in the world affected by brain drain, receiving the lowest score of 0.4.

The Global Economy’s human flight and brain drain indicator also ranked Sweden (0.6), Norway (0.7), and Canada (0.8) as some of the other countries least impacted by migration or human displacement caused by economic and/or political reasons.

Locally, Prime Minister Andrew Holness had recently weighed in on the issue of migration by suggesting that it has impacted the country negatively, with numerous members of the middle class migrating.

Additionally, he said young people are increasingly frustrated by the lack of opportunities and proper housing in Jamaica and are eyeing migration to developed countries.

Teachers, for example, are said to be leaving the island due to the very reasons the prime minister has mentioned, according to several stakeholders in the education sector.

“Somehow they [young persons] look at other countries, they see what is happening in other countries, and they say, ‘Why can’t it happen here? Why do we have all the problems that we have?’

“It is infuriating to many of them, and when we talk to them, particularly the millennials, they just want to leave. They want to just go overseas and enjoy the benefits that are existing in other developed countries,” Holness said earlier this month.

He noted, as well, that Jamaica has suffered from migration since post-Independence, especially since the 1970s.

“Since the 1970s, there has been a migration of Jamaica’s middle class… No country can progress without building its middle class. The middle class isn’t a bourgeoisie concept. The middle class is the segment of your society, where skills and entrepreneurism and innovation exist,” he explained.

“Unfortunately, we have been losing them, and one of the reasons we have been losing them is security… job opportunities, maybe another, but we are slowly conquering that.”

Another issue driving middle-class persons away from the country is the quality of infrastructure, including housing, Holness then claimed.

“In our 60th year, we have to confront this, and make a commitment to improve our infrastructure, so that people can feel that they are living in a modern society,” he stated.

“So we are appealing to the young people in our country to consider that ‘Project Jamaica’ is not complete, and you have a role, not just to be critical of the incompleteness and failures of ‘Project Jamaica’, but you have a role in making ‘Project Jamaica’ a success,” urged Holness.

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Trinidad and Tobago, Guyana collaborate to make trade easier

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

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Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley looks on as Guyana’s President Dr Mohamed Irfaan Ali signs the visitors’ book at the Diplomatic Centre, St Ann’s on Thursday. Photo by Sureash Cholai

Trinidad and Tobago’s Prime Minister and Guyana’s President Dr Mohamed Irfaan Ali have committed to working together to make trade easier among Caricom member states.

One of the ways they plan to do so is by reducing the many non-tariff barriers which stand in the way of production.

Dr Rowley and Ali said a task force has been developed to treat with the non-tariff barriers, and standardise and define policies for trade.

At a news conference at the Diplomatic Center in Port of Spain, after bi-lateral talks on trade, transport, energy and agriculture, Rowley explained that the non-tariff barriers – restrictions on trade outside of tariff systems – will undermine Caricom’s goals of creating an efficient single market and economy (SME) if not controlled.

He said in many cases policies to protect countries are used to limit or reject goods which could be traded.

“When I was agriculture minister, we wanted to sell pork to Jamaica,” he said.

“TT had a good pork-producing infrastructure here. But we couldn’t because, while there was no tariff against the meat from TT, a Jamaican interest group – mainly technical people – used animal health to say, ‘You TT had swine fever 25 years ago, therefore we cannot buy any pork from you because you might introduce swine fever into Jamaica.’ As a result of that, the pork business in TT, which was heavily supported by the TT government and the private sector, shrunk.”

He used Chile’s cattle production as another example, saying there was a time when its beef was extremely cheap because it could not be traded out of fear that meat from Chile’s cattle production could spread hand, foot and mouth disease.

“Today the same meat that is selling for $2 a cup in Chile is now being sold at the same price of New Zealand meat, because hand foot and mouth disease has been overcome in a way that you can produce it and sell it safely.

“If those systems are available to us in Caricom, then South American meat should be available to Caricom nations. But someone in TT with a degree in something says if the meat is coming from South America, it has hand foot and mouth disease and it cannot come here.”

“Sometimes a customs officer by him or herself, using the customs law of the country, would say this or that cannot come in. And a lot of that is happening in Caricom,” Rowley said.

Ali added, policies are widely open to interpretation by public servants monitoring what enters through the ports, and this serves as a barrier to trade. The task force will deal with this issue, he said.

“You can ask ten public servants to interpret a statute and they might give you ten different interpretations. What we want to do in this task force is to have the interpretation done for them by the policymakers so no individual will try to interpret a statute outside of what is given,” Ali said.

“When you craft legislation and law you will see in front you will have each term and the definitions. We will have to, in this task force, define a lot of these things so that its subjectivity will be removed.”

Rowley added that in terms of average trade, decisions are made at individual ports, but the barriers which exist in each Caricom state differs.

“You would find that the non-tariff barrier in St Vincent is different to the one in Grenada or Trinidad, and that is what we are trying to get out of,” Rowley said.

“If we say that we have a single market and economy, that should mean something. A perfect working SME means that you have no impediment to goods, people or financing, going to any part of the market.”

Ali said work has already started for the task force, as many of the barriers have been identified and listed. He said both governments would keep the public informed on its progress.

Asked what would be the effect of the removal of these non-tariff barriers, Rowley said the effect would be “significant.”

The meeting and subsequent news conference was part of Ali’s three-day state visit to TT, where he was expected to tour industrial sites and participate in TT’s Agri-Investment Forum and Expo, being held from Friday to Sunday.

In May a memorandum of understanding was signed between Rowley and Ali to identify and eliminate non-tariff barriers between TT and Guyana.

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NEMO Conducts Field Hospital Refresher Training – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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On Thursday, the National Emergency Management Organisation (NEMO) conducted refresher training on setting up a field hospital donated by the U.S Southern Command (SOUTHCOM).

The Ministry of Health and the Royal Saint Lucia Police Force (RSLPF) assisted.

“We are trying to get the team who originally set up the field hospital in Vieux Fort about six months ago. We are trying to get them back so they can brush up on their skills to be able to set up the field hospital or components of it in record time,” explained NEMO Acting Director Maria Medard.

Medard disclosed that the exercise would assist the locals if there was a need to urgently set up the field hospital because of a disaster or another pandemic.

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She noted that there are options for different field hospital patterns.

“They are going to use a different pattern to what was set up in Vieux Fort so today they’re looking at putting up a 20-bed field hospital just for the day,” the Acting NEMO Director told reporters.

She said the exercise was important.

“We have the field hospital. It can serve as shelter. It can also serve when we deploy the police. So it’s important that they know how to set it up so it can be used,” the NEMO official stated.

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GRENADA-LABOUR-Union alleges public service workers being transferred or fired on the sister isle

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cana News Business

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Tres Navy viert succes ‘OMG’ met videoclip

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

door Shanavon Arsomedjo PARAMARIBO — ‘OMG’, het nummer van het duo Tres Navy, is al een jaar oud. Echter, het

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