Ramesh Lutchmedial: Each Tobago flight loses $40,800

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

A Caribbean Airlines plane

EACH CAL flight between Tobago and Trinidad loses at least $40,800 even if it is filled, Ramesh Lutchmedial, retired director general of Civil Aviation, claimed in a statement on Monday, urging a new model of flight operations.

Saying the Tobago Business Chamber blamed the airbridge for CAL’s losses, he said while the Tobago House of Assembly (THA) has called for more flights, CAL has consistently lost millions of dollars.

“CAL and its predecessor BWIA rarely achieved profitability throughout their existence. requiring taxpayers’ support to the tune of billions of dollars to remain airborne.

“More recently, the covid19 pandemic negatively impacted CAL’s ability to achieve the objectives of its recovery business.”

Lutchmedial said while stakeholders like the chamber, THA and hoteliers have a right to clamour for more flights, serious underlying issues must be tackled.

“The airline industry is extraordinarily complex and requires lots of cash to meet capital and operating expenses.

“For every route, airlines determine the cost to produce a seat on the flight and the realistic passenger loads at which the revenues generated meet the cost of operating the flight. This is known as the break-even load factor, and loads in excess of the break-even load factors realise operating profits.”

He said the airbridge does not afford passengers the luxury of showing up at the airport at any time to board a flight.

“Airline flight schedules are structured based on passenger demand, travel patterns and convenient travel times to achieve the optimum load factors. Besides, flight operations, flight-crew duty times, maintenance and air-traffic procedures are stringently regulated by law to ensure that the highest levels of operational safety are achieved.

“Further, on the domestic airbridge, demand is not always constant or balanced. Demand is directional on certain days, such as Fridays to Tobago and on Sundays to Trinidad.

“This means that on the return legs, the load factors can be low, with lots of empty seats. A critical point to note is that airline seats are uniquely ‘perishable’ products.”

Lutchmedial argued that the government has a public-service duty to provide air transport linkages to support social and economic activities in Tobago.

“Most passengers who are domiciled in Tobago and use the airbridge for essential travel may not be able to afford the full economic fare.

“Therefore, the solution may well lie in a two-tier fare system, a subsidised fare for Tobago residents and an economic fare for non-residents.”

He said in 2017 a CAL official told a parliamentary select committee the present airbridge airfare of $300 had been fixed for over ten years and did not cover $600-$700 operating costs, even with a $100 government subsidy.

Lutchmedial said today the cost of providing a return passenger seat on the airbridge using an ATR-72 aircraft is about $1,000.

“With a $400 revenue for a trip, this results in an operating deficit of $600 per return seat, and $40,800 per return flight using a 68-seater ATR72-600 aircraft. Even if airbridge flights are operated at 100 per cent load factors, the revenue earned by airfare and subsidy is well below the economic cost of providing the service.”

He said CAL must receive the cost of providing the airbridge service through an appropriate means such as a subsidy.

While subsidising flights to Tobago was not new and had even included the THA paying millions to subsidise foreign airlines, mainly from Europe, for airlift to support its tourism industry, he said Corporation Sole has mandated CAL to achieve self-sufficiency.

Lutchmedial said CAL was walking a tightrope between Corporation Sole’s mandate to become self-sufficient (due to dwindling government revenues/support) and stakeholders’ demand for increased capacity on the airbridge, whose losses were due to high operating costs and low revenues.

Saying all airlines, private and state, previously operating the airbridge could not do so profitably, as costs exceeded revenues, Lutchmedial said the existing airbridge model had never worked.

“The solution to the airbridge problems requires creativity, such as crafting a new airbridge model that is in keeping with modern airline marketing principles and practices and inclusive of aircraft type, capacity, frequency, airfare and subsidies.

“This new model can be jointly developed by all the stakeholders, including Corporation Sole, CAL, THA, Tobago Business Chamber and the hoteliers.

“However, key elements of a new airbridge model such as airfares and subsidies require the approval of government, in whose court the airbridge ball sits.”

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Judge: State must overhaul processes

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Justice Frank Seepersad. –

A HIGH COURT judge has advised the department which handles civil litigation for the State to reinvent its processes to ensure efficiency.

Justice Frank Seepersad gave the advice after he had to grant an extension to the State in a malicious prosecution claim brought by a Princes Town businesswoman who was arrested and charged with human trafficking in 2014.

Alana Lagan filed an application for default judgment last month after the State missed the deadline for filing its defence.

In asking for an extension, it was explained some internal administrative imbroglio caused by inconsistent record-keeping caused a miscalculation of the date the defence was due.

The court was told the non-compliance was inadvertent and not intentional.

When the matter came up on Monday, Seepersad granted the extension but warned he would not grant another. The State has until October 18 to get its case together or the matter will proceed on that day as an undefended trial.

The judge said the time for change had come as the “alarmingly frequent” requests by the State for extensions were now “unacceptable.”

He advised those in authority to revisit the status quo and effect a review of its processes.

“It has been a runaway train for 60 years…There must be a reinvention of the processes to ensure we emerge an efficient society.

“Ultimately inadvertence or administrative hiccups are not a good reason to delay the progress of matters before the court. Perhaps when the State starts having to find the money to pay out judgments it will realise the time for serious constitutional and process review is now.”

He was also taken aback by an assertion that the department was a “toothless bulldog” when it came to getting police officers to give instructions when lawsuits are filed.

“That is cause for concern. If that is the level of institutional dysfunction we face, then we need to assess where we are.

“We need to have cohesion in all the arms of the State.”

The State was represented by attorneys from the Chief State Solicitor’s department, Nairob Smart and Mary Davis.

In her claim, Lagan contends the police acted with malice. She is seeking compensation for false imprisonment, malicious prosecution as well as special damages of $53,084 for legal fees and loss of reputation. She is represented by attorneys Jagdeo Singh and Richard Jaggasar.

The lawsuit said police constantly harassed her husband after he refused to pay to have charges of possession of guns and ammunition against him dropped.

Eventually, the charges were dropped and Lagan’s husband reported the matter to the police’s Professional Standards Bureau before he was killed in St Joseph Village on May 23, 2015.

In June 2015, Lagan said, while the family was having a religious service for her husband, police arrested her for “exploiting” friends who had stayed at her home a year earlier. One of the friends claimed she was having an affair with Lagan’s husband after she was suspected of stealing money.

Lagan was charged with trafficking in persons, but after 24 court appearances, the charges were eventually dropped on July 31, 2019.

The claim said despite repeated attempts to get information on the police’s file on the human trafficking charges, none was forthcoming, leading her to question whether any existed.

Her burger-cart businesses also suffered, the lawsuit said.

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“The list is not the problem” – Pres Ali on Norton’s “no elections” threat

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana
President Dr Irfaan Ali and Opposition Leader Aubrey Norton

…says Opposition only has problem with electoral list when they lose elections

President Dr Irfaan Ali has poured cold water on Opposition Leader Aubrey Norton’s threat that there would be “no elections” if the list of electors is not clean, pointing out that the People’s National Congress Reform (PNCR) only has a problem with the list when it does not win the elections.

During an interview on the sidelines of a recent event in Buxton, the President pointed out the trend. He noted that there was no outcry from the Opposition A Partnership for National Unity/Alliance For Change (APNU/AFC), of which the PNCR is a major part, about a dirty list when it won the elections in 2015.

“First of all, I don’t know what he is referring to as a dirty list. This is the list that went to the elections in 2015, the list that brought him to Government. That’s the list that went to the 2011 elections that saw a minority Government. That’s the list that went to the 2020 election that saw a majority Government.”

“So, apparently this list is only a problem when you don’t win the elections. The list is not the problem… his inability to recognise democracy and… his inability to respect the will of the people is the problem. And he needs to fix that,” President Ali said.

President Dr Irfaan Ali

During a recent rally with his supporters, Norton had said that the party would not participate in an election where the list was not clean. He had also repeated a call he has previously made for the removal of Guyana Elections Commission (GECOM) Chair, Retired Justice Claudette Singh.

“We have to have a clean election list… every observer team that came here said we need a new list. We need a clean voters’ list… as part of this clean list campaign, we have to make it clear that Claudette Singh must go,” Norton told the crowd.

According to Norton, if his party does not get its way with a “clean” voters’ list, then it will do all in its power to prevent elections with a dirty list.

GECOM has already conducted a Continuous Registration Exercise in order to update the List of Electors and pave the way for the hosting of Local Government Elections (LGE). GECOM has said that this registration exercise is of crucial importance for first-time applicants – those persons who were 14 to 18 years old when they were registered during the 2019 House-to-House exercise.

Opposition Leader Aubrey Norton

It is also understood that GECOM is looking to have an updated voters’ list in place by October, in order for the Local Government Elections (LGE) to be held. The last time GECOM conducted Continuous Registration was in 2019, in preparation for the March 2020 General and Regional Elections.

More than $750 million has been set aside in Budget 2022 for the preparations to be undertaken by GECOM for the hosting of LGE this year. This money is part of an overall $4.1 billion allocation to GECOM’s in Budget 2022, and was examined and approved by the National Assembly during its consideration of the 2022 Budget Estimates.

Included in the $783 million for LGE is a more-than-$300 million increase in “other goods and services purchased”, which jumped from $250.8 million in 2021 to $575.9 million in the 2022 budget.

LGE are constitutionally due every two years in Guyana and were last held in 2018. However, given the fiasco that played out following the 2020 General and Regional Elections, the Local Government polls were deferred to 2021.

At the last LGE in November 2018, the then People’s Progressive Party/Civic (PPP/C) Opposition had secured 52 of the 80 Local Authority Areas (LAAs). This followed the holding of the LGE in 2016, during which the PPP/C also claimed the majority of the LAAs.

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New trafficking routes, secret airstrips among challenges – CANU

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana

…says corruption within agencies hindering anti-narcotic efforts

As it continues to strengthen its efforts to clamp down on narcotics trafficking in Guyana, the Customs Anti-Narcotics Unit (CANU) will be focusing on tackling challenges such as new trafficking routes and secret airstrips with the hopes of minimising trafficking activities and reducing the amount of illicit drugs on the market.

In its 2022 Second Quarter Report, the Unit highlighted a series of new and existing challenges that confront it and ways in which it is working to have these addressed.

With regards to new and emerging routes of trafficking narcotics to evade law enforcement, CANU said it is collaborating with other agencies in response.

“The Unit has discovered new trends in the routes used by illicit drug traffickers through extensive observation and analysis of the points of seizures. Though some of the routes are speculative, CANU intends to collaborate with sister law enforcement agencies to intercept drugs trafficked along these routes, as well as deter narcotics trafficking and cultivation within specific areas.”

Additionally, the anti-narcotics agency also highlighted that clandestine airports, especially in the hinterland regions, are another area of concern.

a plane found hidden along a secret airstrip

In fact, it was noted that throughout 2021 and in the first quarter of this year, there were numerous reports of abandoned aircraft being discovered at such locations.

“The Unit plans to create tools to pinpoint the locations of any potential sites for clandestine airstrips, which are thought to be one of the means by which the drug trade is facilitated. The Unit is dedicated to increasing its ability to meet this challenge.”

CANU also pointed to corruption within agencies as a deterrent to anti-narcotic efforts. It outlined that like many other countries, Guyana is no exception to corruption and illegal drug trafficking.

“There have been numerous reports of drug traffickers using their financial clout to influence officials working within the system in order to allow the free flow of their illicit activities. In the face of this dangerous and illegal practice, the Unit continues to strive unyieldingly to expose and root out this ill within agencies, identifying officials who facilitate these illegal activities.”

Meanwhile, the rapid advancement of new technologies also jeopardises the effectiveness of law enforcement efforts, the Unit said in the report.

According to CANU, the internet’s global reach as a platform for communication and coordination among traffickers has an impact on the movement of illicit drugs as well as the facilitation of money-laundering activities.

“Drug traffickers can use new technologies to commit traditional crimes in novel ways, such as concealing information about the shipment of illicit drug consignments via encrypted messages or laundering drug-related funds via electronic transfer. Drug traffickers now use platforms such as the dark web, WhatsApp, and Telegram to conduct illegal business.”

Head of CANU James Singh

In addition, the anti-narcotic agency went on to state that with the detection of increased presence of drugs in schools, it is working with the Education Ministry to come up with a framework to address drug use and drug possession in schools. In fact, it was noted that the Unit has begun the process of developing a proactive framework, which is currently in its early stages.

“CANU in collaboration with the Ministry of Education has begun conducting awareness campaign exercises in schools, which would not only focus on students, but also assist teachers in identifying the various types of drugs and determining if a student is using illicit drugs. These exercises will also help the Unit understand the current situation and determine the source of supply so that proper strategies can be implemented to address and reduce this phenomenon.”

Further, the report detailed that in the months of May and June, CANU placed significant emphasis on tackling micro trafficking, recognising that the domestic trade is a major problem with a growing presence in schools.

Nevertheless, despite the challenges, the Unit will continue to pursue its mandate in the hopes of minimising such activities and reducing the amount of illicit drugs on the market.

In its Second Quarter Report, CANU reported that it seized some 161.21 kilograms of cannabis, 40.37kg of cocaine and 0.150 grams of ecstasy between April and June. These narcotics amounted to approximately $206 million worth of illicit drugs taken off the streets.

However, it was disclosed that CANU recorded a reduction in narcotics seized during this period in comparison to last year.

Meanwhile, during this three-month period, a total of seven persons were convicted and 23 new cases were filed. At the end of the second quarter, 83 cases were pending in the courts, while there were 15 convictions thus far this year which stemmed from matters occurring in 2021 and 2022.

CANU further stated that it has accomplished more convictions, arrests, and charges during this year’s second quarter when compared to the same period in 2021. The Unit credited this “successful quarter” to its dedicated officers in various departments working in a coordinating manner to execute operations as well as cooperation with other agencies.

On the other hand, the Unit continues to engage in a number of operations with other agencies including the Guyana Revenue Authority (GRA), Guyana Police Force as well as regional and international agencies. It was noted that through these joint operations, the law enforcement agencies combine their resources to support the goals of breaking down drug trafficking organisations, reducing crime, saving lives, and advancing the National Drug Control Strategy.

Additionally, the Unit continues to place emphasis on developing its officers’ capacities in a variety of areas through trainings and exchange programmes that are beneficial to the Unit’s operations and professional competence.

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Ángel Matos dice “es un soberano disparate” la demanda de hijos de Roberto Clemente

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El portavoz de la mayoría en la Cámara de Representantes, Ángel Matos, manifestó en RADIO ISLA que “es un soberano disparate” la demanda que presentaron los hijos del pelotero puertorriqueño, Roberto Clemente.

Los descendientes del galardonado deportista entablaron una demanda a nivel federal en contra del gobierno de Puerto Rico con relación al marbete conmemorativo de Clemente. Estos alegan en la misma que se violaron los derechos propietarios sobre la marca “Roberto Clemente” y reclama que se detenga el uso de la misma, $45 millones daños y $3,150,000 por el uso temporero del nombre de su padre.

Ángel Matos afirmó que la familia Clemente no obtendrá “ni un vellón” de la demanda y que ellos han radicado peticiones similares, pero las han perdido.  

El pasado mes de enero, el abogado José Alfredo Hernández, quien es experto en derechos de autor, aseguró en este medio que el gobierno de Puerto Rico no tiene que pagarle a la familia del pelotero puertorriqueño, Roberto Clemente, por el uso de su imagen en el marbete. Esto, debido a que la Ley de Protección de Imagen solo aplica durante la vida de la persona y por los 25 años posteriores a su muerte. 

Noticia relacionada: Aseguran gobierno no tiene que pagarle a la familia Clemente por uso de imagen en marbete

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Pourquoi le recours contre l’élection de Jean-Victor Castor a été rejeté par le Conseil constitutionnel Guyaweb, site d’information et d’investigation en Guyane

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guyaweb

Saisi en juin par une électrice de Guyane, le Conseil constitutionnel a rejeté vendredi 5 août le recours déposé à l’encontre de l’élection de Jean-Victor Castor lors des législatives de juin. Le député de la 1ère circonscription est confirmé dans ses fonctions.  Épilogue des élections législatives de juin dernier, le Conseil constitutionnel a rejeté, dans une décision rendue publique ce vendredi 5 août, l’unique recours concernant la Guyane. À la suite des deux tours des 11 et 18 juin, le Conseil constitutionnel avait été saisi le 29 juin d’une requête, dans le délai légal des 10 jours suivant la proclamation des…

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Olivier Dubois en captivité depuis 16 mois : une banderole déployée au François

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Alexandre Labat-Mars
Lundi 8 Août 2022 – 11h22

Olivier Dubois

Cela fait 16 mois, ce lundi 8 août que le journaliste martiniquais Olivier Dubois est retenu en otage au Mali. Une banderole est installée au François en soutien du journaliste.

Franciscain d’origine, le journaliste Olivier Dubois reste le seul français retenu en otage en ce 8 août 2022. Cela fait maintenant 16 mois jour pour jour que le Martiniquais correspondant de « Libération », « Le Point » et « Jeune Afrique » est retenu en captivité au Mali par le Groupe de soutien à l’islam et aux musulmans lié à Al-Qaïda au Maghreb islamique.

La dernière fois qu’il a donné des nouvelles remonte à mars 2022, par la publication d’une vidéo non datée dans laquelle il demandait au gouvernement de ” continuer à faire son possible pour œuvrer à (sa) libération “.

Pour rappel, il a été enlevé le 8 avril 2021 à à Gao, dans le nord du Mali.

Avec l’appui de son comité de soutien #FreeOlivierDubois, Reporters Sans Frontières et la famille d’Olivier Dubois, la ville du François déploie ce lundi matin une banderole de soutien de 15m2 sur la façade de l’Hôtel de Ville.

Sur le même sujet

  Bellefontaine, commune la plus …

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Déjà 28 décès en 2022 sur les routes de Guadeloupe

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guadeloupe FranceAntilles

Rédaction web
Lundi 8 Août 2022 – 12h43

Les pompiers sont encore intervenus ce week-end pour un accident mortel. – Laurianne Nomel

Vendredi dernier, une jeune conductrice de 21 ans a trouvé la mort dans un accident de la circulation à Saint-François. Il s’agit du 28ème décès, le 12ème en véhicule, sur nos routes depuis le début de l’année. 

Un nouveau drame de la route a endeuillé une famille guadeloupéenne ce week-end. Vendredi soir (5 août), un peu après 23h, une jeune femme de 21 ans aurait perdu le contrôle de sa voiture, route de la Coulée, à Saint-François.

Les circonstances ne sont pas encore précisément connues mais elle serait seule en cause dans cet accident. À l’arrivée des pompiers, la conductrice était incarcérée dans son véhicule, qui se trouvait sur le toit.

59% des tués sont des usagers vulnérables

Elle est décédée sur place. Les secours n’ont rien pu faire pour la sauver. 

Ce nouveau décès porte à 28 le nombre de morts sur nos routes en 2022 : 12 en véhicule (dont 5 passagers), 12 en moto, 1 en cyclo et 3 piétons. « Les usagers vulnérables représentent 59 % des tués ».

Pour rappel, en 2021, au 31 juillet, 31 personnes avaient déjà perdu la vie sur les routes de Guadeloupe. En 2020, à la même date, les autorités dénombraient 28 décès.

Sur le même sujet

  En Martinique, un accident mortel …

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CRABS IN A BARREL

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: The Anguillian Newspaper

Anguillians share a unique version of the crabs in a barrel syndrome. They raise up their leaders only to drag them down.Dr Ellis Lorenzo Webster is Anguilla’s current Premier. He won his seat in 2020 at his second attempt in national politics. One of Dr Webster’s characteristics is his humility. The man appears to have no vanity about him. He seems strangely lacking in any feelings of inadequacy. He has no chip on his shoulder. He does not need to prove his superiority, like some of his ethically and morally challenged opponents feel compelled to do every day. When he greets you, his smile is genuine. He puts his hands together, and gently bows no matter how apparently lowly the status of the person. He greets everyone the same way, high or low. Unlike his denigrators, he suffers from no inferiority complex.

Dr Webster was an island scholar, winning a government scholarship to study dentistry in the States. Later, he attended Yale University in the US, where he obtained a Master’s degree, graduating in 1991 as a medical doctor. While maintaining a busy and successful practice, he provided ear, nose and throat care for indigent patients in Florida where he had settled down. In the States he was well known for participating in mentoring programs for elementary and high school students. He led the society for minority physicians in Palm Beach County. He chaired surgical sections at different hospitals. He became involved in local, state, and national political campaigns in the USA. It was hardly surprising that after some 20 years away his eyes turned to the political situation in his home island of Anguilla.

Before Dr Webster returned to Anguilla to take up the mantle of leadership, the island was run by a series of political groups entirely lacking in integrity. Nepotism, cronyism, conflicts of interest, all ran rife decade after decade. The voters shuffled from party to party, desperately hoping for an improvement every five years. It never came.Seven years ago, Dr Webster was unsuccessful in his political campaign to represent his village constituency of Island Harbour. But he had proven his integrity and committment. When he ran again two years ago, he was returned to the House of Assembly by a landslide. Since then, as leader of the political party with the most seats in the Assembly, he has taken up the mantle of Premier of the Island.

These past two years have seen him exhaust all of his political capital. He is now daily criticized on the private radio stations by loud mouths who are all his intellectual and moral inferiors. It is painful to listen. I won’t repeat any of the egregious and undeserved insults that are showered on him on a daily basis. I only note that he has not once deigned to respond in kind. Amazingly, he continues to be the same gentle, courteous, almost diffident, person. One never hears an unkind or insulting word from him.

Members of the political opposition are mainly silent. It is not the opposition party that does most of the attacking on his character, integrity, and intelligence. The most virulent attacks come from disappointed, previous members of his party. They each claim to have been turned down on some interest or the other of theirs that they unsuccessfully promoted. Hurt an Anguillian in his financial interests, and you have an enemy for life.

The political opposition do not have to be loud in their condemnation. They are politically astute enough to know they need only keep quiet and let the governing party tear themselves apart. Previous members of the party will do their work for them. Their strategy is in three years’ time to swoop in and snatch up the prize of political power. Their hope is that if they are successful, Dr Webster will then retreat to his medical practice in Palm Beach, leaving Anguilla to the scavengers.

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Central Superette’s Neville Richardson Concerned About Reckless Driving in The Valley

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: The Anguillian Newspaper

Central Superette on Coronation Avenue

The curve located near the Koal Keel Restaurant on Coronation Avenue

For responsible drivers, the majority of Anguilla’s roads allow for reasonable driving conditions, but as far as road safety is concerned, there are a few that leave much to be desired. One of these roads is that stretch in the vicinity of Neville’s Central Superette in the heart of The Valley.

Mr. Richardson is duly concerned about the speed at which some uncaring drivers traverse this section of road, and he fears that someday, in the future, the unnecessary speeding will end in a senseless fatality. “Somebody is going to get kill on this street,” he contemplatively told The Anguillian. “It is just a matter of time, if nothing is done to address the situation,” he added.This section of road poses hazards in both directions. For drivers heading west, there is a blind curve adjacent to the old Koal Keel Restaurant on the left. And on the right, there is an age-old historic stone wall. In the section along the curve, the road narrows. Any indiscriminate, speeding driver can lose control within that narrow curve, and in no time the consequences can be fatal.

Speeding drivers heading east in the residential area pose an even greater hazard, because they often come down the slope at astronomical speed on the side of the Superette, a few feet away from its door. Shoppers stepping out of the superette are placed at great risk, and if they happen to walk onto the road without being mindful of the traffic, the results can be a disaster, which, Neville says he was often at the brink of witnessing. He spoke extensively to The Anguillian on the matter:

“This part of The Valley is a residential area,” he said, “and with the houses so close to the road, the reality is that speeding traffic here poses a detrimental risk. Just up the road, there in the area of the Koal Keel Restaurant, that rock wall and the concrete wall in front the restaurant itself also pose great danger, especially to pedestrians – children in particular.

“There are big concrete trucks, and trucks that carry heavy equipment, which come around that curve and down this slope at considerable speeds. They even pick up more speed, down the slope, once they pass the curve. It is frightening to see the velocity at which they pass right in front my shop door – where customers come in and go out. And it is not only the heavy trucks, but they are some reckless young drivers that seem to use this stretch like a racetrack.”He continued: “I have seen so many instances around here – instances with speeding car tires screeching on this busy, narrow road, just to avoid a collision, or to avert hitting a pedestrian.” “Let’s look at it this way,” he said. “If someone would rush out from this shop, not realising the potential harm, that person can be easily hit by a speeding vehicle coming down the slope.

“This road is one of the fastest, most used roads in Anguilla. I have spoken to several Ministers of Infrastructure about doing something to reduce the speed, such as installing speed bumps or ditches. I have gone to Public Works several times and complain about the hazard, but no one has lifted a finger to do anything about preventing a disaster that is waiting to happen here. It is only when an incident does occur, then they will come down asking all sort of ‘crazy’ questions.”

“In fact,” he said, “a couple months ago a collision did take place here, where a promising young lady was actually thrown out of her car. She did not die, of course, but she was badly injured and had to be hospitalised for some time. And, she still has to be going to clinic for therapy.”“Look! My concern is this,” Mr. Richardson emphasised. “Let us not wait until somebody gets killed on this road. I am appealing to the Traffic Department, to the Public Works Department – and I am appealing to the Ministers who are elected to help look out for the wellbeing of our people: ‘Please do whatever is necessary to slow down the traffic on this road. Let us save life on this road. Let us prevent a catastrophe.’

“I have decided to take this matter to the press because, after all, I would have done all that I can do to bring the public’s awareness to a potential disaster. As a dutiful citizen of this country, I would not be able to sleep comfortably, or live at ease with myself, if something tragic happens here – and I did not speak or warn about it. So please, let us act now before it is too late. Thank you!”Even while we were interviewing Neville, The Anguillian bore first-hand witness of indiscriminate drivers who were driving at senseless speeds in this residential zone. Obviously, Government authorities need to pay attention to the possibility of disasters waiting to happen and take measures to prevent the loss of life.

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