WATCH: NEMO Facilitates First Responder Training On Mounting A Field Hospital – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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The National Emergency Management Organisation (NEMO) continues to strengthen Saint Lucia’s disaster response capacity.

Local first responders received timely, hands-on training on mounting a 40-bed Field Hospital, donated recently from the United States Southern Command Humanitarian Assistance Programme.

Field Hospitals can be erected on almost any terrain to provide medical support to areas made isolated as a result of natural or manmade hazards.

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SOURCE: Office of the Prime Minister

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What does ‘queenie’ take with tea? Jam sandwiches, every day Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

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

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Queen Elizabeth II has eaten jam sandwiches every day since she was a toddler, according to her former private chef. (Photo: Kirsty O’Connor/Pool Photo via AP, File)

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Queen Elizabeth II has eaten jam sandwiches every day since she was a toddler, according to her former private chef.

Darren McGrady claims on his YouTube channel that the monarch favours a strawberry preserve made from fruits picked in her Balmoral Castle grounds in Scotland.

“The queen was served jam pennies in the nursery as a little girl. She’s had them for afternoon tea ever since,” he says in a recently surfaced video published in July last year.

The sandwiches are made from bread with a little butter and a spread of jam, then cut out into circles the size of an old British penny.

As part of the genteel tradition of afternoon tea, McGrady, who says he was a chef to the queen for 11 years, also revealed the monarch’s solution to a familiar quandary for British scone lovers: jam first or cream?

“The queen was always jam first,” he said in a separate video.

“The jam went on followed by that delicious, clotted cream.”

As well to the preserve, the 96-year-old monarch has always been partial to fresh strawberries.

“The queen would eat strawberries three or four nights a week in Balmoral if they were in season,” he says.

But woe betides anyone who tried to give her out-of-season berries. A January batch at the supper table would mean “off with your head,” joked McGrady.

The Palace would not comment on the queen’s sandwich preferences.

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12.2% COVID-positivity rate; 128 new cases, no death recorded Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

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

49 minutes ago

NEWYou can now listen to Loop News articles!

Jamaica’s COVID-positivity rate decreased to 12.2 per cent amid 128 new COVID-19 cases recorded over a 24 hour period up to Sunday afternoon.

There was no coronavirus-related death recorded for the one-day reporting period.

The overall coronavirus death toll in Jamaica remains at 3,237.

There were 94 recoveries on the day, bringing that tally to 95,775.

The newly confirmed COVID-19 cases brought the total number on record for the island to 148,952.

Notably, the 12.2 per cent positivity rate was based on the samples tested on Sunday.

Of the newly confirmed cases, 78 are females and 50 are males, with ages ranging from four days to 97 years.

The case count was made up of St Catherine (25), Kingston and St Andrew (20), Clarendon (14), St Thomas (14), Portland (13), Manchester (11), Westmoreland (eight), St Elizabeth (six), St Ann (five), St Mary (four), Trelawny (four), St James (three), and Hanover (one).

There are 19 moderately ill patients, five severely ill patients and a critically ill patient among 1,352 active cases now under observation in Jamaica.

A total of 120 patients are now hospitalised locally.

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Two men killed in separate shootings

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Stock photo

TWO men were murdered on Monday morning in separate instances in Maloney and Caroni, taking the murder toll for the year to 375.

At this time last year, there were 236 murders.

In the most recent of the two, 33-year-old Keith Balramsingh of Jonathan Trace, Cunupia, died after he was shot when he went to move his vehicle.

Police said Balramsingh was at Kamachie’s Bar, along the South Trunk Road, Kelly Village, around 2 am, when he was asked to move his vehicle, a grey Kia Sportage, which was blocking another vehicle in the carpark.

Police said while in the driver’s seat, Balramsingh’s killers opened fire hitting him in the upper body. He was found slumped over on the front passenger seat and taken to the Eric Williams Medical Sciences Complex where he was pronounced dead at 2.20 am.

About an hour before Balramsingh was murdered, Maloney PH taxi driver Damien “Brainy” Danclair was gunned down while liming.

Police said at about 1.20am Danclair, 39, of Building Seven, Maloney Gardens, was in the carpark along with others, when he was shot. Residents reported hearing gunshots and later found Danclair on the ground bleeding.

He was taken to the Arima District Hospital, where he was declared dead on arrival.

On Newsday’s Facebook page on Monday, a friend of Danclair wrote that his murder was heart-breaking.

“This is so heartbreaking. Brainy you were loved and will always be in our hearts. Such a selfless soul, with the most contagious smile and laugh. The heavens weep.”

Police said Danclair was not known to be involved in any criminal activities and like Balramsingh, they had no immediate motive for his killing.

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Paria enquiry holds first procedural hearing September 7,8

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Paria Fuel Trading Co Ltd jetty in Pointe-a-Pierre, off the Gulf of Paria.

THE first procedural hearing of the Commission of Enquiry into the Paria diving tragedy takes place in Port of Spain on September 7 and 8, at Tower D of the Port of Spain International Waterfront Centre.

The hearing, which is open to members of the public and the media, will start at 10.30 am on both days.

The information was provided in a release issued by the CoE’s secretariat on August 19.

It was first announced at a news conference at the Southern Academy for the Performing Arts (SAPA) in San Fernando on July 7 that the commission will hold its procedural hearing on September 7 in Port of Spain.

The date for the start of the public hearings will be announced later.

At that conference, CoE chairman Queen’s Counsel Jerome Lynch said no stone will be left unturned in the quest to find out how Kazim Jeremiah Ali, Yusuf Henry, Fyzal Kurban and Rishi Nagassar died on February 25.

Ali, Henry, Kurban and Nagassar were working on a 30-inch-diameter subsea pipeline, belonging to the Paria Trading Company, at Pointe-a-Pierre, when they were sucked into the line.

The commission was appointed on April 22, with Dennis Morrison, QC, as its chairman/commissioner and local subsea specialist Gregory Wilson as a commissioner. Morrison resigned last month for personal reasons. He was replaced by Lynch, who was sworn in by President Paula-Mae Weekes on July 6.

Lynch is a senior litigator at Trott and Duncan in Bermuda, and a QC at Cloisters Chambers in London.

He said the commission has a six-month timeframe from the date of its first public hearing to complete its report.

At the end of the enquiry, the commission will submit its report to the President.

Ramesh Lawrence Maharaj, SC, lead counsel to the commission, said the commission did not lapse when Morrison resigned, and has been diligently working since April 22.

Under the Commission of Enquiry Act, the Paria commission has the power to summon witnesses to give evidence under oath. These witnesses can also be cross-examined by attorneys for other parties appearing before the commission.

Maharaj said enquiry witnesses must obey the commission’s summonses, which are like subpoenas to witnesses issued by the High Court. Section 12 of the act says anyone who fails to heed a summons from a CoE are liable to a fine of $2,000.

“We do not believe there would be occasions for witnesses who are subpoenaed not to comply with their subpoenas.”

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Shadow teachers to continue receiving benefits – Education Ministry Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Acting Chief Education Officer, Dr Kasan Troupe, has assured that shadow teachers contracted by the Education Ministry for 10 months will continue to be compensated as they offer one-on-one support to select students.

Troupe was responding to concerns that this category of teachers was in high demand due to the novel coronavirus pandemic and other issues relative to their payments and benefits.

Speaking at an Education Ministry press conference on Monday, Troupe provided clarity on the definition of a shadow teacher.

“Just to clarify, shadow teachers are what we call educational paraprofessionals, and so, these are individuals who are high school graduates, may have been exposed to some post-secondary education, (or) have a natural proclivity to working with children, and so they indicate to us that interest,” she explained.

These individuals are then trained and deployed to work with students who have been referred to the Education Ministry after being assessed by a psycho-educational clinician.

“They (the clinicians) send us a report to say this student, for example, will need support for going to the bathroom, he needs support to eat, or will need support to do tasks in the classroom,” Troupe informed.

Shadow teachers, she said, can also be persons referred to the Education Ministry by parents.

These individuals are caregivers who are working with children at home, and then are trained after being referred to the ministry.

“They (shadow teachers) are compensated under a contractual arrangement for 10 months throughout the system from September to June, and we compensate them according to that facility that we have provided for our children,” Troupe outlined.

“… And so the benefits under that contract will be accorded to those persons as they come into this paraprofessional experience, to support our students who need individualised support,” she stated.

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Bendals man fined for cannabis cultivation, disorderly conduct and profane language – or prison sentences in default

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

REAL NEWS- A Bendals man has been convicted and fined in the St. John’s Magistrates Court for a slew of offences.

Kelsey Joseph recently appeared before Magistrate Conliffe Clarke on a number of charges, including the cultivation of cannabis, possession of cannabis, disorderly conduct and making use of indecent language.

He pleaded guilty to all charges and the court imposed fines.

On the cultivation charge, he was fined $600 to be paid by September 9 or, in default, he will spend three months in prison.

For having the Class B drug in his possession, Joseph was given a reprimand and discharged.

The court imposed a $300 fine for the charge of disorderly conduct or, in default, one month in prison, while for making use of indecent language he was fined $75 or one month at Her Majesty’s Prison.

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Flooding, landslides, fallen trees in Tobago

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

Tobago

TEMA director Allan Stewart. File photo/David Reid

Heavy rains over the weekend resulted in several areas across Tobago experiencing street flooding, landslides and fallen trees.

While he was unable to give a number, Tobago Emergency Management Agency (TEMA) director Allan Stewart on Monday told Newsday his team had responded to several incident reports.

“We had a couple reports between Saturday and today – a fallen tree in Union Village and Les Coteaux, a landslide blocking the Mt Dillon Hill, also report in Golden Lane, Mt Thomas, Mary’s Hill. We also had some potential flooding in the Golden Lane area.”

No injuries were reported.

Since Friday the TT Met Office has been forecasting showers and the medium chance of thundershowers. This was updated on Monday to; partly cloudy and hazy with showers occurring in few areas. It assessed that there was also a 40-60 per cent chance of isolated heavy showers and thunderstorms.

Stewart said it was natural that as a result of the downpour that slopes were very unstable.

“We have the potential of these slippages taking place – fallen trees, collapsed houses is possible during this period because of the amounts of water in the soil.”

He is advising people to keep a “grab and go bag” or emergency kit ready, and improve their family emergency plans.

“Also the various sectors – public-sector emergency plans, schools, business places – so that they have the necessary contingency plans in place.”

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Persons who were in contact with monkeypox patient quarantined – Health Minister

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana

A 57-year-old man from Region Four (Demerara-Mahaica) is the country’s first monkeypox patient who is currently at the Infectious Diseases Hospital at Liliendaal, Greater Georgetown.

The individual, whose identity was not revealed, is said to be a public transportation provider.

Health Minister Dr Frank Anthony is urging the population not to panic.

“We have since isolated the patient,” he said. “That patient is stable and doing very well.”

The Health Minister also disclosed that persons who were recently in contact with the patient have been quarantined for monitoring.

“We have diagnostic capabilities…we have a lot of people who’ve been trained…so I don’t want people to panic because monkeypox is not something that is readily transmissible. You have to be in very, very close contact with that person…before you can actually get sick,” he explained.

“Once we follow the guidelines, I think people are gonna be okay,” the Health Minister added.

According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), monkeypox is a viral zoonosis (a virus transmitted to humans from animals) with symptoms similar to those seen in the past in smallpox patients, although it is clinically less severe.

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Pierre On Gun Trafficking: ‘We Have To Work With The US’ – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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Prime Minister Philip J. Pierre, describing gun trafficking as a ‘massive problem’, has stressed the need to work with the United States to address it.

“We don’t manufacture guns and most of these guns it is said come from the US. It’s a transnational situation. We have got to work with the US to deal with it,” Pierre told reporters.

The Prime Minister, responsible for National Security is just back from Agri-Investment Forum and Expo II  which ended on Sunday in Trinidad and Tobago.

He observed that the twin Island republic had recorded 371 murders and disclosed that the country’s Police Commissioner had appeared on television speaking about the connection with guns coming from the United States.

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On the other hand, Saint Lucia has recorded 43 homicides this year, many of them gun-related.

Last week the United States announced a crackdown on illegal gun trafficking to Haiti and the Caribbean.

Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) Miami reported a substantial spike in the number of weapons, along with a big increase in the caliber and type of firearms, being illegally trafficked.

Some weapons included .50 caliber sniper rifles, 308 rifles, and a belt-fed machine gun.

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