Legal Aid Council assists 1,524 clients Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

The Legal Aid Council assisted 1,524 clients through duty counsel services and legal representation in 2021.

Additionally, representation was provided for 59 persons with mental illness who were held on remand and deemed unfit to plead or held in adult correctional facilities at the Governor-General’s or the Court’s pleasure.

As reported in the Economic and Social Survey Jamaica 2021, a total of 748 beneficiaries were assisted through the services of the Mobile Justice Unit, which employed a blended approach of face-to-face and virtual consultations.

“Visits were made to 30 communities in which legal services were provided to 289 beneficiaries, while 471 virtual consultations were conducted,” the document outlined.

Meanwhile, the Criminal, Civil and Family Law Unit processed 1,130 expungement applications (847 male applicants).

From this total, 769 applications (549 male applicants) were approved by the Criminal Records (Rehabilitation of Offenders) Board.

“This represented a 95.7 per cent increase in approvals, compared with 2020.

The increase in approvals is due to the Unit, again, operating at pre-pandemic levels, as approvals had declined by 62.4 per cent in 2020,” the Survey stated.

The Unit also processed 6,752 applications for Minister’s Marriage Licences, of which 4,097 were from walk-in clients, while 2,655 were submitted by hotels. This was an increase of 2.9 per cent compared with 2020.

Additionally, there was a 16.2 per cent reduction in the number of walk-in applications, while hotel applications increased by 58.7 per cent, which might be attributed to the gradual lifting of measures implemented to manage the COVID-19 pandemic.

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44 new COVID cases, 2 deaths, 16.5% positivity rate recorded Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

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

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Jamaica recorded 44 new COVID-19 cases over a 24-hour period up to Monday afternoon.

Two COVID-19 deaths that occurred in September 2021 were also recorded on Monday, bringing the overall coronavirus death toll in Jamaica to 3,239.

A 62-year-old man and a 78-year-old woman, both from St Mary, the latest recorded COVID fatalities nationally.

There were 108 recoveries on the day, bringing that tally to 95,883.

The newly confirmed COVID-19 cases brought the total number on record for the island to 148,996.

Notably, the island recorded a 16.5 per cent positivity rate based on the samples that were tested on Monday.

Of the newly confirmed cases, 27 are females and 17 are males, with ages ranging from one to 92 years.

The case count was made up of St James (17), Kingston and St Andrew (14), Westmoreland (four), Trelawny (four), Clarendon (two), St Catherine (two), and Manchester (one).

There are 21 moderately ill patients, six severely ill patients and a critically ill patient among 1,364 active cases now under observation in Jamaica.

A total of 118 COVID-19 patients are now hospitalised locally.

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Post Office appears to be popular channel for importing cannabis, as latest find nets more than $140k worth of drugs

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

For another consecutive week, law-enforcement officers have made a successful drug bust during an interdiction operation.

The General Post Office, which now seems to be a popular medium for persons shipping illegal drugs, was the location of this most recent exercise, conducted at about 9:45 a.m. on Monday, August 22.

Reports are that the police dogs hit upon three brown cardboard boxes that were subsequently searched, and a total of 24 vacuum-sealed packages with cannabis were found.

Further reports say the substance weighs 24 pounds and has an estimated street value of $144,000.

As is customary, the boxes and their contents were transported to Police Headquarters pending further investigations.

Officers from the Narcotics Department, the K9 Unit and the Customs Enforcement Unit took part in the joint operation at the Lower High Street premises. – REAL NEWS

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SPECIAL REPORT: Insiders claim hospital and clinics are near collapse as the lack of basic equipment and drugs has become untenable

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room
SLB-MSJMC

Special investigative report by Real News.

One week after Prime Minister Gaston Browne said the Sir Lester Bird Medical Centre (SLBMC) is offering world-class care, hospital employees are saying the health-care system is on the verge of collapse.

Inside sources tell REAL News that everything needed to deliver timely treatment and effective care is either in short supply or out of stock altogether.

Of greatest concern, says one nurse, is that only emergency surgeries can be undertaken at this time, because there are not enough supplies – including anesthesia – to stock the Operation Rooms (OR).

Accordingly, she says, persons whose elective surgeries were delayed for the past two-three years because of the COVID-19 pandemic are still unable to have their operations done.

The sources allege that “basic equipment to perform special surgeries is not available,” which has forced staff to improvise, even with pieces brought over from the old Holberton Hospital.

In terms of customer service, many residents have accused the Medical Centre of being callous when it comes to wait times. But the staff say they, too, are perturbed by this shortcoming.

With embarrassment, they acknowledge that, “most times, admissions are untimely due to lack of beds” and this sometimes results in persons having to be sent back home.

While this is happening, both staff and the public are aware that the Ministry of Health appropriated the Nugent Avenue technical-school building over a year ago to create a satellite hospital.

But although the ribbon-cutting and naming ceremony took place since 2021, the facility has never been commissioned, and reports say its refurbishment remains incomplete.

Another challenge – that is affecting the community clinics, as well – is the reported severe shortage of staple vaccines.  Sources tell REAL News that the Ministry of Health recently “borrowed” some of these drugs from St. Kitts, with the understanding that they would be replaced.

However, Antigua and Barbuda has not received any vaccines from its distributors, to date, the sources say.  Reportedly, this is because the suppliers are owed by the Government and are refusing to ship more drugs until they have been paid.

About two weeks ago, news broke that the local Pharmacy Council was unable to issue licenses to the companies importing prescription drugs and other pharmaceuticals.

Reports said that a request for a mere $2,000 for printing supplies had not been honoured, and that members of the Council were also owed for their services since 2019.

“It’s bad, bad, bad. Shameful. The hospital needs help – from the Emergency Room to the OR to the ICU,” a nurse says.  “Doctors and nurses are getting frustrated and are leaving.  Right now, another 10 nurses are planning to resign,” another one claims.

Ironically, PM Browne told the public, last week, that he and his wife, MP Maria Bird Browne, had just undergone their annual medical checks in the United States.

One source is not surprised by their decision, since he alleges that the Sir Lester Bird Medical Centre is not up to the standard required by the US-based Joint Commission, which undertakes international accreditation.

In its defence, however, an official tells REAL News that SLBMC is not “immune to the challenges being faced by other hospitals – or by other organisations, generally, for that matter.”

“Some of the challenges we’re experiencing have more to do with delays in manufacturing, shipping, and shortages on the market and less to do with ability to purchase,” the hospital official asserts.

Countering this, the inside sources say they are aware that the Browne Administration withdrew funds from the Medical Benefits Scheme – said to be $37 million – shortly after assuming office.  And they believe this massive withdrawal is partly responsible for the state in which the public healthcare system now finds itself.

When questioned on this matter recently in Parliament, PM Browne, the Minister of Finance, claimed the monies will not be replaced, since these trust funds were “a grant” to the Government.

… In other system-wide woes, yesterday, August 22, REAL News reported that the lack of pipe-borne water at the Pathology Department had caused the suspension of autopsies – even as some families allegedly have been waiting for weeks on end to bury their dead.

On Monday, too, the Ministry of Health was forced to close the Glanvilles Polyclinic “due to unforeseen circumstances” – which persons claim, again, was the lack of running water.

The insiders report that the All Saints Clinic was also closed that day on account of a leaking roof, while the Villa facility allegedly had a shut-down one day last week.

Meanwhile, the Rural East Branch of the United Progressive Party is currently engaged in a supplies-drive for the Clare Hall Clinic.  The list of items solicited includes things as basic as scissors, folders, toilet paper, and garbage bags.

Despite the seriousness of the public-health situation, the sources say that Minister of Health Sir Molwyn Joseph has been remarkably silent and is absent from duty.

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Elderly woman’s home still damaged, THA ‘awaiting funds’

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

THA secretaries Ian Pollard, left, and Terance Baynes, right, reassure Bethany resident Marjorie Taylor after her house was damaged during the passage of a tropical wave in June. FILE PHOTO/DAVID REID –

Almost two months after her small wooden house in Bethany, Tobago, collapsed during bad weather, Marjorie Taylor is still waiting on assistance for the structure to be repaired.

Taylor, 79, of Bethany Avenue, was resting in her house around 4am on June 29 when a part of the structure came crashing down.

Powerful winds, triggered by a potential cyclone, dislodged at least three of the wooden posts that had supported the house.

As a result, appliances, wall plaques, clothes and other items were strewn all over the floor, rendering the doorway to the living room impassable.

Taylor, who lived in the house for the past 20 years, had told Newsday she hoped the Tobago House of Assembly (THA) would help to rebuild the structure.

The elderly woman, who walks with a cane, took temporary shelter at her sister’s home in Bethel.

THA Secretary of Settlements, Public Utilities and Rural Development Ian Pollard, Secretary of Community Development, Youth Development and Sport Terance Baynes and officials from the Tobago Emergency Management Agency had visited Taylor to assess the damage to the house.

At that time, Taylor’s fallen home was among 11 reports to the TEMA after heavy rain and strong winds associated with the tropical wave, affected several villages on the island.

On Tuesday, Taylor’s brother, Aldwyn, said help has not been forthcoming.

“Is the same way everything is. Nobody eh come back to say nothing and enlighten we. It just remain the same,” he told Newsday.

Aldwyn said Taylor is still staying with her sister.

“Marjorie is by a sister in Bethel but she just want to come back in she place. She just fussing, fussing all the time, saying she want to go home.”

He said he does not feel good about the situation.

“Is meh sister and I want to see her come back home.”

Aldwyn said the house should have already been repaired.

“But nothing eh do. They say within a two to three months things supposed to happen and they would bring men to undertake the responsibility. Up to now time just running, month after month and nothing eh happening. We just remain the same way.”

He said he does not know who to talk to.

“Right now, I am in limbo. I do not have numbers for any of the secretaries because I had left it up to them when they came. So I didn’t bother about asking for any number.

Contacted for a response by Newsday, Pollard said, via WhatsApp, the division is “awaiting funding from budgets.”

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Murdered Curepe woman to be buried on Wednesday

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Rianna Mohammed.

The 26-year-old woman who was killed last Wednesday night will be buried on Wednesday afternoon.

Rianna Mohammed will be buried after Islamic final rites at Shyam Islamic Funeral Services, Southern Main Road, Warrenville.

Mohammed was killed while liming with friends in Arima on August 17.

Police said that at about 10 pm Mohammed, who was originally from Freeport and was renting an apartment in Mc Inroy Street, Curepe, was at Bolo Trace, Hoyte Avenue, Arima with a 37-year-old able-bodied seaman and his relatives, when they were shot at.

The man with whom Mohammed went there was grazed in the neck.

Police initially said they had no motive for the killing, but are now saying Mohammed’s killers were aiming for a relative of the man she was with when the shooting happened. Police said Mohammed was at the wrong place at the wrong time.

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Guyana Confirms First Monkeypox Case – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

GUYANA has recorded its first confirmed case of the Monkeypox virus with the first infected person already placed in institutional isolation.

This first case was confirmed on Monday by Minister of Health, Dr. Frank Anthony in a recorded statement.

He noted that over the last weekend, there was a suspected case of monkeypox as the individual presented with all the clinical signs of the disease.

The case was confirmed as health officials were able to collect samples and do the required testing here.

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The index case was identified as a male from Region Four (Demerara-Mahaica) who is currently in his 50s.

It was revealed that this patient does not have a recent travel history. He started developing signs of the Monkeypox and showed up at the hospital.

“We have since isolated the patient. So, that patient is now in an isolated area at the Ocean View Hospital, and that patient is stable and is doing very well,” Minister Anthony said.

He mentioned that some amount of contact tracing was done as persons who were in contact with the infected man were already contacted and are currently in quarantine.

Meanwhile, President, Dr. Irfaan Ali on the sidelines of an event on Monday, mentioned that Guyana has had systems in place since the announcement of the Monkeypox outbreak by the World Health Organisation (WHO) as a public health emergency of international concern in July.

“We had the systems in place, so I’m very confident the Ministry of Health will be dealing with this. As a matter of fact, we have already ordered, some time ago, the vaccines although they are in very limited supply,” the President said.

President Ali went on to say that the system at the Ocean View facility has already been activated and with the confirmation of this first case, there will be greater monitoring.

He went on to add that at this time there will be no restrictions put in place as he mentioned that there is no need for those, calling instead for persons to be responsible.

President Ali also confirmed that the family of the man who is Guyana’s first case was already tested, and will be isolated even as contact tracing will take place.

According to the Health Minister, a lot of surveillance personnel at various borders and healthcare facilities in the country have already been trained to detect the virus.

To this end, he mentioned that the ministry has been working along with the Pan-American Health Organisation (PAHO), and through this collaboration, many persons were sent abroad for training and have returned and shared their knowledge to healthcare staff here.

The Health Minister said, “We have prepared for it. Our team is on the ball. They have been able to detect this, and we’re now working to treat the patient. The patient is stable, and we will continue working with that patient to make sure that everything is fine.”

He added that the ministry has already placed an order for some monkeypox vaccines which is currently in high demand across the world. The ministry he said has been working with the Pan American Health Organisation (PAHO) to source same.

Dr. Anthony went on to say that the hope is to have that first set of vaccines here within another month.

Monkeypox, according to the WHO, is a virus which is transmitted to humans with symptoms similar to those seen in smallpox patients.

The virus can be spread through animal to human transmission, and through direct contact with blood and other bodily fluids.

Human-to-human transmission can result from close contact with respiratory secretions or lesions of an infected person.

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Guardia Costera rescata a seis pescadores a 18 millas náuticas al oeste de Cabo Rojo

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

La tripulación del patrullero Heriberto Hernández de la Guardia Costera rescató a seis hombres de un barco pesquero que se estaba adentrando el domingo, aproximadamente a 18 millas náuticas al oeste de Cabo Rojo.

“Afortunadamente, pudimos brindar asistencia dentro de los 30 minutos posteriores a que el barco se hiciera a la mar, si hubiera pasado más tiempo, el barco pesquero probablemente se habría hundido. Inmediatamente lanzamos nuestro barco de corte y dos de nuestros miembros se subieron y comenzaron a vaciar el barco con una bomba P6. Estoy extremadamente orgulloso de las acciones rápidas y el profesionalismo de la tripulación, casos como este son muy gratificantes y hacen que servir en la Guardia Costera sea gratificante”, dijo el teniente Robert Renfrow, oficial al mando del cúter Heriberto Hernández en declaraciones escritas.

Los hombres, todos con chalecos salvavidas, habían salido en un viaje de pesca recreativa cuando el barco pesquero Makaira Seeker de 27 pies comenzó a llenarse de agua y las bombas de achique del barco dejaron de funcionar.

Vigilantes de la Guardia Costera en el Sector San Juan recibieron una comunicación VHF-Canal 16 a la 1:28 p.m. el domingo desde la embarcación Makaira Seeker informando sobre el peligro y que los pescadores intentaban vaciar la embarcación a mano. Los sobrevivientes también informaron que el GPS de la embarcación no funcionaba y estimaron que su posición estaba aproximadamente a cinco millas náuticas de la boya número seis. Los vigilantes desviaron de inmediato al cúter Heriberto Hernández para encontrar la embarcación en peligro y transmitieron una transmisión de información marina urgente para alertar al tráfico de embarcaciones cercanas para que estén atentos.

En treinta minutos, el cúter Heriberto Hernández llegó a la escena y usó el bote pequeño del cúter para desplegar a dos tripulantes a bordo del Makaira Seeker junto con dos bombas de drenaje P6. La tripulación del bote pequeño también embarcó a cuatro de los pescadores, mientras que otros dos permanecieron a bordo del barco para continuar con los trabajos de extracción de agua.

Una vez que la embarcación estuvo estable, la tripulación de la lancha cúter escoltó al Makaira Seeker hasta la marina de Puerto Real en Cabo Rojo.

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Emiten advertencia de inundaciones para San Juan

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El Servicio Nacional de Meteorología (SNM) en San Juan emitió el martes, una advertencia de inundaciones repentinas para el municipio de San Juan hasta las 2:00 de la tarde.

Inundaciones menores en áreas bajas y de drenaje deficiente. Flujos peligrosos sobre cruces de aguas bajas. Agua sobre calzadas. Desbordamiento de zonas de mal drenaje. Algunos cruces con aguas bajas pueden volverse intransitable.

A las 10:58 de la mañana, el radar Doppler detectó lluvia intensa. El desarrollo de tormentas eléctricas puede producir fuertes lluvias adicionales. Esto provocará inundaciones urbanas y de pequeños arroyos. hasta 1 pulgada de lluvia ha caído.

Se esperan cantidades adicionales de lluvia de hasta 2 pulgadas durante la zona. Esta lluvia adicional resultará en inundaciones menores.

El SNM exhortó a mantener precaución.

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Travel Tuesday: Barbados ranks 5 in top destinations for scenic drives Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

Discovercars.com asked over 140,000 people their opinions

Loop Lifestyle

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Trevor’s Way, Bridgetown (FILE)

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Barbados has rounded out the Top 5 destinations in the world for scenic rides in 2022 according to one travel site.

Just about 140,065 DiscoverCars.com customers rated destinations they visited and drove in to determine the best destinations for scenic drives around the world in 2022.

Here’s the list of the Top 5 destinations:

Ivalo, FinlandInverness, UKVictoria, SeychellesRovaniemi, FinlandBridgetown, Barbados

Back in 2019, Gran Canaria (Canary Islands, Spain) took the number 1 spot.

According to Discovercars.com, road trips can provide excitement and adventure in a whole host of ways. Whether it’s a cross-country drive or taking in a city or town for the first time, it can feel liberating to explore a new area with friends or family. More than 140,000 tourists from across the world rated the best scenic routes for driving, based on their own experiences.

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