Se acaba periodo de moratoria a La Crudita

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El secretario del Departamento de Asuntos al Consumidor (DACO), Edán Rivera, confirmó en RADIO ISLA que la moratoria al impuesto de los derivados del crudo (La Crudita) culminó ayer, 21 de agosto.

La misma estuvo vigente por 45 días. Edán Rivera informó que se verá el aumento del precio del combustible en las estaciones de gasolina que se reabastezcan ahora.

“Lo cierto es que el efecto de La Crudita coincidió con una bajada considerable en los mercados internacionales”, afirmó Rivera. Rivera detalló que “los precios deben estar rondando los 97 centavos la mínima y $1.04 la máxima para gasolina regular”.

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R Kelly’s lawyer gets chance to question government witness Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

CHICAGO (AP) — R. Kelly’s legal team will get its chance to question the government’s star witness on Friday after she testified at his federal trial in Chicago that the R&B singer sexually abused her hundreds of times before she turned 18.

Jane, the pseudonym used for her during the trial, has been central to Kelly’s legal troubles for more than two decades. She testified for over four hours for the government Thursday, also telling jurors it was her and Kelly in a videotape that was at the heart of his 2008 child pornography trial, at which he was acquitted.

Jane, now 37, paused, tugged at a necklace and dabbed her eyes with a tissue as she said publicly for the first time that the girl in the video was her and that the man was Kelly.

When a prosecutor asked Jane how old she was at the time the video was shot, she said quietly: “14.” Kelly, 55, would have been around 30 years old at the time.

Kelly has denied any wrongdoing. He faces charges of child pornography and enticement of minors as well as conspiring to rig that 2008 trial by intimidating and paying off the girl to ensure she didn’t testify then.

Some jurors for the 2008 trial, which was on state charges, said that they had no choice but to acquit the R&B star because the girl — by then an adult — didn’t testify. On the stand Thursday, Jane conceded that she lied to a state grand jury in 2002 when she said that it was not her in the video.

“I was afraid something bad would happen to Robert,” she told jurors about why she didn’t tell the truth then, referring to Kelly by his full first name. “I was protecting him.”

She added there was another reason she lied about the identity of the person in the video. “I also did not want that person to be me,” she told jurors. “I was ashamed.”

Kelly’s attorney was scheduled to get her chance to cross-examine Jane starting Friday morning.

A prosecutor asked Jane toward the end of the day Thursday why she decided in recent years to begin speaking honestly about what happened with Kelly, who Jane said she continued to care for and sometimes live with into her 20s.

“I became exhausted living with his lies,” she answered. She added that federal prosecutors assured her she would not be charged with lying to authorities if she testified truthfully at this trial.

Earlier, Jane also became emotional when she was asked to explain why Kelly can be seen handing money to her in the video. She said it was a precaution against anyone accusing him of abusing a child if the video ever fell into the hands of authorities.

“If anyone saw the tape … he wanted it to appear as if I was a prostitute,” Jane said.

She described her parents confronting Kelly in the early 2000s about whether he was having sex with their daughter. Kelly dropped to his knees and begged her parents to forgive him, Jane testified. She said she later implored her parents not to do anything to get Kelly in trouble, telling them she loved him.

As Jane spoke, Kelly mostly stared down at the defense table and rarely looked up at her. She, too, rarely looked in his direction.

Earlier, she testified that Kelly sexually abused her “hundreds” of times before she turned 18 years old, starting when she was 15. She said they were having oral sex in the video and that she was 14 at the time.

Jane told jurors that in the late 1990s when she was 13, she asked the Grammy award-winning singer to be her godfather because she saw him as an inspiration and mentor.

She said within weeks, Kelly would call her and say sexual things. She told jurors she was 15 when they first had intercourse.

Asked by a prosecutor how she would know what to do sexually, Jane answered, “He would tell me what to do.” Asked how many times they had sex before she turned 18, she answered quietly: “Uncountable times. … Hundreds.”

A federal judge in New York sentenced Kelly to a 30-year prison sentence this year for his 2021 conviction for using his fame to sexually abuse fans.

Speaking softly and tentatively when she first took the stand Thursday, Jane described her upbringing in a musical family in a Chicago suburb, including that she was home-schooled because she was in a touring musical group that she joined when she was about 12.

Jane first met Kelly in the late 1990s when she was in junior high school. She had tagged along to Kelly’s Chicago recording studio with her aunt, a professional singer who worked with Kelly. Soon after that meeting, Jane told her parents that Kelly was going to be her godfather.

Kelly, who rose from poverty on Chicago’s South Side to become a star singer, songwriter and producer, knew a conviction in 2008 would effectively end his life as he knew it, and so prosecutors say he conspired to fix that trial.

Kelly has been trailed for decades by complaints and allegations about his sexual behavior. The scrutiny intensified after the #MeToo era and the 2019 six-part documentary “Surviving R. Kelly.”

Kelly also faces four counts of enticement of minors for sex at the Chicago trial — one each for four other accusers. They, too, are expected to testify.

By MICHAEL TARM

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CBI Index 2022 offers a glimpse into the future of the citizenship by investment industry: CS Global Partners

Black Immigrant Daily News

News Americas, London, Aug. 22, 2022: The world’s most definitive guide on citizenship by investment, the CBI Index, was published today by PWM Magazine, a publication from the Financial Times in collaboration with CS Global Partners and offers readers a view of an industry in metamorphosis.

Released amid a year that has, again, been marked by heightened uncertainty, increased security risk, political instability and intensifying calls to act on the global warming threat, the CBI Index comes at a time when most individuals are reassessing the base they call home and are looking for more stable environments that not only offer security but business, health and education opportunities for generations to come.

Despite a tumultuous global environment and an investment industry harrowed by scrutiny from the EU and USA, this year’s CBI Index hints at opportunity amidst the chaos – opportunity for the CBI industry to evolve and perhaps be the answer to those who look to it to harness the world’s offerings.

Often thought of as a Plan B, the CBI Index infers that in a post-pandemic reset, there has been a shift in trust away from government as individuals obtain second, or multiple citizenships, and take control of their destinies. The new global citizen will look to invest in ‘Plan A’ and a more positive future for people and planet.

While the CBI Index is a rating system designed to measure the performance and appeal of global citizenship by investment (CBI) programmes across a diverse range of indicators, it is also a voice for the industry and a forward-looking manual that offers readers a glimpse of what the industry could be provided that industry players come together and shape its regulatory environment to benefit not only host countries, but citizens around the world who have realised that home need not be their place of birth, but where opportunities lie.

This Index is intended as a practical tool, both for those who wish to compare CBI programmes as a whole and for those who wish to compare specific aspects of each programme.

Its purpose is to provide a rigorous and systematic mechanism for appraising programmes, to facilitate the decision-making process for individuals considering them, and to bring value to the CBI industry.

The CBI Index assesses all countries with operational CBI programmes, which, in 2022, include Antigua and Barbuda, Austria, Cambodia, Dominica, Egypt, Grenada, Jordan, Malta, Montenegro, St Kitts and Nevis, St Lucia, Turkey and Vanuatu.

The CBI Index rates CBI programmes according to these nine pillars: Freedom of Movement, Standard of Living, Minimum Investment Outlay, Mandatory Travel or Residence, Citizenship Timeline, Ease of Processing, Due Diligence, Family and Certainty of Product.

Freedom of Movement measures the relative strength of each country’s citizenship based on three equally weighted factors: the number of destinations to which a country’s passport allows travel without restriction, the number of prime business hubs to which it provides access, and the degree to which a given citizenship provides settlement rights in other nations.

The Standard of Living pillar is a measure of the quality of life offered by the 13 CBI jurisdictions under assessment and this pillar is vital to those who yearn to relocate and secure a prosperous and fulfilling lifestyle. Similarly, it is key to those wanting to take advantage of local business opportunities or needing to transfer and safeguard their assets.

The Minimum Investment Outlay pillar measures one of the most practical and foremost considerations of CBI – how much capital is required for the investor to become an eligible applicant for the programme of their choosing. The cost of applying for CBI increases with the number of dependants — or qualifying family members — included in an application. In some jurisdictions this increase is proportional, while in others the cost only increases following the inclusion of multiple dependants.

Mandatory Travel or Residence examines the travel or residence conditions imposed on applicants both before and after the granting of citizenship.

The Citizenship Timeline pillar looks at the average time taken for citizenship to be secured by the applicant.

The Ease of Processing pillar measures the end-to-end complexity of the CBI application process. In some jurisdictions, the application process can be a labour-intensive and painstaking task that is time-consuming for the applicant; in others, it is streamlined, and the applicant receives clear directives on how to proceed. The overall effortlessness of the application process is a particularly important component, and the promise of a smooth, hassle-free process can generate readiness to engage with a programme.

The Due Diligence pillar focuses on each nation’s commitment to ensuring that their programme remains transparent and effective at evaluating potential candidates for citizenship. It is therefore a measure of each programme’s integrity.

The Family pillar measures the extent to which investors can obtain citizenship for their immediate and extended family. The CBI Index recognises that the rise of increasingly complex family relationships is driving investors to seek programmes that allow for a more diverse range of family members to be included under a primary application.

Lastly, Certainty of Product encompasses a range of factors that measure a programme’s certainty across five different dimensions: longevity, popularity and renown, stability, reputation and adaptability. Additionally, it assesses a programme’s responsiveness to major global events, such as the Covid-19 pandemic and the war in Ukraine that have had a significant impact on global mobility and due diligence requirements.

As the CBI industry undergoes its own challenges and metamorphosis, the CBI Index gives worldly investors a reliable analysis of reputable programmes that will enable them to choose second citizenship in destinations that will fulfil their needs.

Download the full report here to see which of the thirteen countries took top spot and gain further insight into the CBI industry.

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Mayers ton in vain as New Zealand beat West Indies to clinch series Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

West Indies posted 301 for eight but it wasn’t enough as New Zealand overhauled the total to win the third One-Day International (ODI) on Sunday night by five wickets and clinch the series 2-1.

Four batsmen posted half centuries as New Zealand replied with 307 for five to win the match by 17 runs at Kensington Oval in Barbados.

Tom Latham scored 69 and put on 120 for the fourth wicket with Daryl Mitchell (63) in a stand which paced the run chase and carried New Zealand in sight of victory.

New Zealand’s captain Tom Latham plays a shot. (AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa).

Martin Guptill (57) and Devon Conway (56) had earlier combined to add 82 runs for the second wicket to give New Zealand a platform for a demanding chase.

Mitchell was out with the total 248 in the 42nd over and Latham at 259 in the 44th, still with New Zealand requiring 43 runs. Jimmy Neesham settled the issue with a decisive innings of 34 from 11 deliveries, taking 18 runs from the 45th over bowled by Yannic Cariah.

Neesham hit a six from the bowling of West Indies captain Nicholas Pooran to end the chase in the 47th over.

“It was obviously nice to make a contribution,” Latham said. “I think the partnership that Daryl and I were able to make put them under pressure. We set a target of getting to that 40-over mark where we needed a run a ball.”

Latham appeared to have erred when he chose to bowl first and as the West Indies flourished in good batting conditions.

West Indies’ openers Shai Hope and Kyle Mayers. (AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa).

Kyle Mayers made 105 in a 173-run opening partnership with Shai Hope, and Pooran smashed nine sixes in a rapid 91 for the West Indies.

The pitch proved much better for batting than those on which the West Indies won the first match by five wickets and New Zealand won the second by 50 runs. The highest previous total in the series was New Zealand’s 212 in the second match.

Mayers and Hope stayed together for almost 35 overs to shape the West Indies innings.

Their partnership ended when Hope was out for 51 and, as often happens with large partnerships, partner Mayers was out two balls later and without addition to the total. Brandon King fell soon afterwards with the total 181 for three in a sudden reversal for the West Indies.

But Pooran picked up the pace again, posting a half-century from 33 balls. He had hit nine sixes and and four fours from 55 balls when he was out in the 49th over.

Mayers and Hope made a cautious start to the innings as they found the pace of the new pitch, crawling to 24 after 10 overs, negotiating a short rain break in the seventh over.

“I took my time in the powerplay and it gave me the chance to get in. The last two games I got out in the powerplay,” Mayers said in a television interview. “It’s not every day you bat the powerplay for 20 runs but it worked out well in the end.”

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Jamaica weather: Brace for more showers over next few days Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

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

44 minutes ago

(Photo: iStock)

NEWYou can now listen to Loop News articles!

Jamaicans are being urged to expect an increase in showers and thunderstorm activities across the island over the next few days.

According to the latest weather forecast from the Meteorological Service of Jamaica, released on Monday at 5am, there is a trough across the central Caribbean.

The trough is expected to remain in the vicinity of the island while slowly drifting westward over the next few days.

“Expect an increase in shower and thunderstorm activity across Jamaica today through to Thursday as a result, especially during the afternoons,” the Met Sevice said.

24-hour forecast:

Monday morning:… Showers and thunderstorms mainly across sections of eastern parishes, becoming cloudy elsewhere.

Monday afternoon/evening:… Cloudy with periods of showers and thunderstorms across sections of the island.

Monday night:…Cloudy. Expect periods of showers and thunderstorms across sections of eastern and south-central parishes.

Maximum temperature expected for Kingston Monday:..32 degrees CelsiusMaximum temperature expected for Montego Bay Monday:..33 degrees Celsius

3-day forecast (starting Tuesday):

Tuesday/Wednesday/Thursday: Cloudy with periods of showers and thunderstorms across the island, especially during the afternoons.

Other Current Regional Weather Features:A Tropical Wave across the western Caribbean.

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One dead, others injured in Clarendon crash Loop Jamaica

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The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News
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One man is dead and several other persons injured following a two-vehicle crash between a truck and a coaster bus on Bustamante High Way near Four Paths in Clarendon.

The incident took place at around 6:00 am on the busy thoroughfare.

Reports of what caused the crash are still unclear but reports are that both vehicles ran off the roadway.

More details later.

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Maloney taxi driver killed

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Damien Danclair

A Maloney PH taxi driver was killed early on Monday morning.

Police said at about 1.20am Damien Danclair, 39, of Building Seven, Maloney Gardens, was liming in the carpark with others when he was shot.

Nearby residents heard the gunshots and later found Danclair on the ground bleeding. He was taken to the Arima District Hospital, where he was declared dead on arrival.

Police said Danclair was not known to them to be involved in any criminal activities.So far, they have no motive for his killing.

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Shooting victim Javan, 8, off ventilator

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Javan Price

EIGHT-YEAR-OLD Javan Price, who was shot in the head last Tuesday night, is now breathing on his own, his mother told Newsday.

Price was shot in Morvant while gunmen chasing a 38-year-old man from the area kept shooting as he ran through a crowd of children, who tried to avoid being hit. Eusibio Roberts, 49, was killed. Price and another child, an 11-year-old boy, were shot, along with the man the gunmen were chasing.

In a phone interview with Newsday last Thursday, Price’s mother Marcia Burke said Javan had surgery that day and doctors had given her encouraging news.

Since being shot he has been warded in the intensive care unit of the Eric Williams Medical Sciences Complex. He was removed from the ventilator on Sunday.

Javan suffered a fractured skull as a result of the shooting when the bullet passed through his head.

The other child was shot twice in the leg. One bullet went right through his leg and the other lodged near a bone.

About the shooting

Police reported that at about 7 pm on August 16, gunmen got out of a grey Nissan AD wagon at Mon Repos, Morvant and started shooting at two men, killing Roberts instantly.

The killers then chased the Morvant man, who ran through a basketball court where Javan and other children were training for a football competition.

The killers kept shooting, hitting Javan in the left side of his head. He collapsed near a track leading to his home.

Police believe the 38-year-old man was the intended target.

That shooting was the second incident this month in which children were casualties. On August 1, a ten-year-old girl was among eight people victims of a shootout at Sixth Avenue, Malick. The bullet hit her left leg, breaking a bone. She has since been discharged from hospital.

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Rivera Schatz afirma gobernador debe poner más presión al fiscalizar contrato de LUMA Energy

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El portavoz del Partido Nuevo Progresista (PNP) en el Senado, Thomás Rivera Schatz, afirmó en RADIO ISLA que el gobernador de Puerto Rico, Pedro Pierluisi, debe poner “la mayor presión” al fiscalizar el contrato de LUMA Energy.

“La fiscalización le corresponde, después de todo, al gobierno de Puerto Rico. El gobernador es la persona quien le responde al pueblo por el servicio básico y esencial que es la energía. Me parece a mi que, respectivamente de las posiciones, quien tiene que hacer su trabajo, sin lugar a dudas, quien tiene que poner la mayor presión, es el gobernador de Puerto Rico”, manifestó Rivera Schatz.     

Pendientes a RADIO ISLA para más información.

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Servicio Nacional de Meteorología anticipa índices de calor estarán cerca de 100 grados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

Las condiciones del tiempo en tempranas horas de la mañana se mantendrán en calma con una mezcla de nubosidad y sol. En horas de la tarde, la combinación de una vaguada en los niveles altos, con el calor diurno y la brisa marina resultarán en aguaceros y tronadas.

Esta actividad podría resultar en inundaciones urbanas y de pequeños riachuelos, especialmente a lo largo de la Cordillera Central, incluyendo el área Metropolitana de San Juan. Los índices de calor estarán cerca de los 100s grados Fahrenheit en horas avanzadas de la mañana a la tarde. El viento continuará del Este al Este-Sureste entre 10 a 15 mph.

Las condiciones marítimas se esperan que continúen tranquilas con oleaje por debajo de los 5 pies y vientos entre 10 a 15 nudos. Sin embargo, la actividad de tronadas en horas de la tarde podría resultar en condiciones marítimas peligrosas a través de las aguas locales. Por lo tanto, los operadores de pequeñas embarcaciones deben ejercer precaución.

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