All roads lead to National Stadium, traffic as J’cans head out Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

There is now bumper-to-bumper traffic in some sections of the Corporate Area as scores of Jamaicans are now making their way to the National Stadium to attend the Independence Day Grand Gala.

Approximately 30,000 spectators are expected to attend the event, which is part of Jamaica’s Diamond Jubilee celebrations.

The cultural showcase, which is slated to begin at 6:00 pm, will feature presentations in music, drama, song and dance, by costumed and uniformed groups alongside popular local artistes.

Addressing the House of Representatives on July 26, Minister of Culture, Gender, Entertainment and Sport, Olivia Grange, said members of the public who wish to attend the Grand Gala may get their tickets at Sangster’s Bookstore locations in Cross Roads, Spring Plaza, Portmore Pines, and Montego Bay; World Net Microfinancing branches and Jamaica Cultural Development Commission (JCDC) offices islandwide.

She added that tickets will also be distributed at the Jamaica 60 Independence Village inside the National Stadium and that other locations will be announced.

“Those who are not able to get tickets, it will be live on television, electronic boards across the island and we will be streaming right across the world,” Ms. Grange noted.

During the event, Sanchez and Derrick Morgan will be honoured with the Music Icon Award for their sterling contribution to the popularity of Jamaican music on the world stage.

She said that about 2,500 performers and crew drawn from communities across the Corporate Area and St. Catherine will perform at the Independence Grand Gala.

Some of the special guest performers include Beenie Man, Barrington Levy, Teejay, Toni-ann Singh, Glacia Robinson, and Tessanne Chin.

“It is going to be extremely grand and there will be a special high-profile guest from overseas who will be present,” she said.

Ms. Grange noted that in addition to the fireworks display, there will be a spectacular drone show. The drone show will also be a feature at the Western Gala on August 7.

“We will also have a flyover by a friendly country and we are going to have paratroopers from Guyana participating in the event as well,” she said.

Minister Grange pointed out that the celebrations on Independence Day will be held islandwide and include flag-raising ceremonies, sports festival, mini gala, gospel concerts, street dances, among others.

She informed that the Western Mini Gala will be held on August 7. “So, it is not competing with the gala in Kingston on the sixth, but they will have their own space and time on August 7,” she said.

The Western Gala will feature Jermaine Edwards, Govana, Tessanne Chin, Teejay, La-lee, among others.

“As we celebrate our Diamond Jubilee and we reignite our nation for greatness, we also want to reignite our nation for togetherness,” the Minister said.

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Fraser-Pryce to receive OJ, Jackson to be conferred with CD Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Sprinting legend Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce will be accorded the Order of Jamaica, the country’s fifth-highest honour, when the awards are handed out on National Heroes Day on Monday, October 17.

Fraser-Pryce who won an unprecedented fifth World Championships 100m title in Eugene, Oregon in July, and who won back-to-back Olympic 100m titles in 2008 and 2012, is among the 10 people who will be conferred with the OJ this year.

Fraser-Pryce is easily the most recognisable of the 143 Jamaicans who will be conferred with national honours by the Jamaican Government.

The awards were announced on Independence Day, Saturday, August 6.

At 35 years old and the mother of a son, Zyon, the enduring sprinter burst onto the international scene at the 2008 Beijing Olympics where she won gold in the 100m in a Jamaican podium sweep. She followed up that win with victory in London in 2012 and has won five World Championships at 100m since while adding a 200m title in 2013.

Fraser-Pryce also featured in Jamaican podium sweeps in the 100m at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics and the last month’s World Championships.

Another Olympian, Shericka Jackson, will be conferred with the Order of Distinction in the Rank of Commander (CD).

Jackson is the fastest woman alive over 200m and the second fastest ever over the distance. The MVP-conditioned athlete ran a jaw-dropping 21.45 seconds to win the 200m at last month’s World Championships in a national record. The previous Jamaican record of 21.53 seconds was held by Elaine Thompson-Herah.

She is also one of few women who have excelled on the global stage at the 100, 200, and 400m, winning global medals at all three distances.

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Saint Lucia’s Men’s 4x100m Relay Team Qualifies For Commonwealth Games Finals – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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Saint Lucia’s track dreams at this year’s Commonwealth Games remain alive as the Men’s 4x100m Relay Team qualified on Saturday at the Alexander Stadium in Birmingham, United Kingdom.

The quartet of Delan Edward, Lenyn Leonce, Michael Joseph and Stephan Charles ran a record-breaking 39.96s in the Men’s 4x100m Relay – Round 1 Heat 2, finishing fourth.

Nigeria took first place with 38.85s, with Kenya and The Gambia copping second and third places with 38.92s and 39.77s respectively.

Team Saint Lucia’s performance on Saturday smashed the previous National Record, which stood at 40.96s.

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“Basically, we were well prepared for the 4x100m Relay,” said Henry Bailey, Athletics Team Coach, following the race. “I mean, the boys worked extremely hard, and, of course, one of our major objectives was achieved, in that we were able to set a new National Record.”

He added: “It’s our first Men’s 4x100m Relay Team at the Commonwealth Games. Previously, we had a 4x100m Relay Team at the Panam Games.”

Sunday’s Finals will feature Nigeria, Kenya, The Gambia, Saint Lucia, England, Trinidad and Tobago, Guyana, and Singapore.

Bailey said the team is now focused on resetting its goals to see whether they can better both their time and place in the Men’s 4x100m Relay Finals on Sunday.

Team Captain, Lenyn Leonce, said the win was a relief for the team, having made a few errors in the race.

“We had a shaky performance at first. Our exchanges weren’t as good as they should have been. But it’s something that we’re working on and we’re just glad that we got the new National Record and we’re in the Finals,” Leonce explained.

As for expectations for Sunday’s Finals, he said: “Anything can happen in the Finals. We’re just going to go out there and do our best. Whatever the result is, we’ll be fine with it. Hopefully, we’ll get a new National Record again on the one we just established.

Source: Commonwealth Games (Saint Lucia). Headline photo: Saint Lucia’s Men’s 4x100m Relay Team following their record-breaking feat at the Alexander Stadium in Birmingham, United Kingdom.

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Prison Officers distance themselves from smuggling allegations

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room
Items recovered at HMP during operation

Prison Officers are speaking out after being accused by an official of the prison of facilitating trafficking of prohibited items

I am addressing you on behalf the officers of H.M.P aka 1735. As you know a search was carried out on Thursday of this week. Many many prohibited items were ceased.

It is now being said that prison officers traffic these items into the prison.

But if this is so why did the  powers that be block the commission of inquiry into the corruption in the lone penal institution.

Also an investigation was carried out by former Superintendent Albert M P Wade in June/ July 2014. The findings were very damaging. ( INVESTIGATION WAS CARRIED OUT BY insp. BROWNE #409) ( it would be a very interesting read for you sir). Yet this too was covered up.

Now your administration ( MP, PS,SOP, and prison administration) all acting as if this is BRAND NEW INFORMATION. YOU’LL HAVE PAINT ALL OFFICERS WITH THE SAME BRUSH WHEN THIS IS NOT THE CASE.  Administration KNOW WHO THE CORRUPTION OF THE PRISON POINTS TOO.

YOU NEED TO ASK THE MINISTER OF SAFETY TO  GIVE TO YOU THE COMMISSION OF INQUIRY OF JUNE 2019/2020.. IF NOT I CAN SUPPLY YOU WITH THE MAMES COMMISSION MEMBERS.

WE ARE TIRED OF BEING MADE SCAPE GOATS FOR Inept  BEHAVIOR OF OUR ADMINISTRATION. . AS FROM THE  MINISTER TO THE PS TO THE SOP KNOWS VERY WELL THE  TRUTH. IF  IT WERE NOT FOR THE VIDEO OF THE INMATE PULL CONTRABAND OVER THE WALL . IT WOULD HAVE BEEN BUSINESS AS USUAL.

THEREFORE WE THE PRISON OFFICERS ARE BEGGING TO HAVE AN AUDIENCE WITH YOU SIR.

THEY HAVE BROKEN OUR MORALS.THERE WAS NO COMPENSATION FOR THE PRISON OFFICERS WHO WORKED THROUGH THE COVID EITHER. WE WERE TOLD THAT THE PS SAID WE WERE WORKING ILLEGALLY. . AFTER WORK 12 HOURS A DAY FOR 16 MONTHS STRAIGHT.  THIS IS WICKEDNESS IN HIGH PLACES. WE ASK THAT THE PS BE MOVED FOR VALID REASONS AND THE MOVE WAS BLOCKED.

PLEASE MEET WITH US TO SHED LIGHT ON THIS MATTER. OR WILL THIS TO DIE OF NATURAL CAUSES?

ALSO READ:

An early morning search at Her Majesty’s Prison on Thursday led to the discovery of several items of contraband.

Acting Prison Superintendent, Jermaine Anthony says the joint operation included staffers at the Prison as well as members of the Police and Defence Forces.

Anthony said it lasted for about 5 and a half hours and is a part of ensuring improved security at the penal institution.

The search also came on the heels of a recent ANR News story showing cellphone video of what appeared to be an act of smuggling onto the prison compound.

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43 new Covid-19 cases recorded; 1 in ICU

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana
People in Georgetown

Another 43 persons have tested positive for COVID-19 in the last 24 hours.

This now takes actives cases in Guyana to 496 including one patient in the Covid-19 ICU and the remaining persons in either home (481) or institutional isolation (14).

Seven other persons are also in institutional quarantine.

The Covid-19 death toll in the country remains at 1271, while some 68,359 person have recovered from the life-threatening virus to date.

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WATCH: Saint Lucia Observes Breastfeeding Week – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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Saint Lucia is celebrating Breastfeeding Week from August 1st to August 7th.

During the period the Ministry of Health, Wellness and Elderly Affairs is focussing on promoting and supporting breastfeeding.

This report from Fernelle Neptune:

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Source: Ministry of Health, Wellness & Elderly Affairs

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Social Army ervaart knelpunten bij aanvraag percelen jongeren

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

PARAMARIBO — President Chandrikapersad Santokhi heeft toegezegd de stichting Social Army te ondersteunen bij het uitvoeren van sociale projecten. De

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Florian Rapiteau : ” Ma plus belle victoire “

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guadeloupe FranceAntilles

71e Tour cycliste de Guadeloupe

Après une course acharnée de 156 km reliant Pointe-à-Pitre à Petit Canal, c’est le Nantais Florian Rapiteau du Laval cycling 53 et âgé de 23 ans qui l’emporte. Propos recueillis par Joanne Blanc

France-Antilles : Vous êtes un habitué des courses en solitaires, que représente cette victoire dans votre carrière cycliste ?

Florian Rapiteau : C’est une grande joie de remporter cette étape aujourd’hui. C’est à ce jour ma plus belle victoire. Je ne mesure pas encore la chance que j’ai et l’ampleur de l’effort que j’ai fourni. Être en Guadeloupe est une première et c’est un peu bizarre pour moi de changer du tout au tout. Les conditions ne sont absolument pas les mêmes, il…


franceantilles.fr

449 mots – 06.08.2022

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Emancipation Service held on August Monday

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: The BVI Beacon

Within the first two lines of the territorial song — “out of the huts of history’s pain, our ancestors bled and died” — lie a commemoration, one that was celebrated on Monday during the annual emancipation service led by Reverend Dr. Melvin A. Turnbull.

“As we celebrate our emancipation on this 31st day of July 2022, I suggest we might be doing so with mixed emotions,” he said. “On one hand we are glad to be alive, on the other hand, we mourn for our fallen brothers and sisters.”

At least two dozen people gathered at the Sunday morning well where the service was held on Monday at 4 p.m. following a solemn march from the Old Government House.

Those gathered for the service began the day with the song “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” followed by an invocation by lay preacher Rosemary Flax and opening remarks by Dr. Turnbull.

Dr. Turnbull encouraged the congregation to not get lost in the African diaspora and to remember that they share a common legacy and a “common enemy.”

“Your enemy is not people. They are just the conduits, the tools, the puppet, in which the enemy acts,” he said. “I plead with us as a people of the Virgin Islands to stop fighting with each other. Let us come together.”

History

Premier Dr. Natalio “Sowande” Wheatley spoke after, sharing a history of the emancipation march and service.

“August 1 marks 188 years since we have been a free people,” said Dr. Wheatley. “Since then, as a tradition and in remembrance of our legacy, we have been keeping and observing this time as one where we give all praise and thanks to God for his favour in granting our foreparents the desires of their heart, our freedom.”

He said that their sacrifice for emancipation shouldn’t be forgotten.

“We must reflect on the Trans-Atlantic slave trade as formally recognized to have taken place from 1526 to 1867 during which time over 12 million men, women and children were stolen from their homes,” he said.

He added that there have been enslaved people from Africa in the Virgin Islands as early as the 1600s, stating that it was a very “dark period” in the history of the territory.

“We observe emancipation because history must not forget what our foreparents went through and neither must we,” Dr. Wheatley said. “They struggled, determined to be free so that we, their progeny, can be free.”

Throughout the region, other countries and territories share similar histories, Dr. Wheatley said. Most of the islands had enslaved ancestors whose families were “broken up” by plantation owners, and when the economic model of slavery collapsed in these lands, the enslaved people found ways to survive by working with each other through trading and bartering, he said.

“We have examples we can relate to with our family in St. Thomas, St. John, St. Croix, the Turks and Caicos and so forth,” he said. “But I want us to recognise that this family circle is wider, much wider than we often perceive, and we have a lot in common with our brothers and sisters not just in our immediate vicinity, but further afield.”

Festivities

Education, Culture, Youth Affairs and Sports Minister Sharie DeCastro said that the Virgin Islander identity was created by ancestors who were determined to secure their freedom.

“I am reminded that our annual emancipation festivities began with picnics, dances, horseracing and boat racing organised by members of the community,” she said. “Later on, the churches alternated the spearheading of the fete on the field, a family-oriented and faith-based event.”

The service closed off with a sermon by Reverend Dr. Bartholomew Orr of the Brown Missionary Baptist Church of Memphis, Tennessee, and the singing of the song “We Shall Overcome.”

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Commonwealth Games: Thompson-Herah sets Games record to take 200m gold Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

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

24 minutes ago

Elaine Thompson-Herah of Jamaica poses after winning the gold medal in the women’s 200 meters setting a new Games record during the athletics competition in the Alexander Stadium at the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham, England, Saturday, Aug. 6, 2022. (AP Photo/Manish Swarup).

NEWYou can now listen to Loop News articles!

Jamaican sprinter Elaine Thompson-Herah won the women’s 200m gold medal on Saturday to secure the sprint double at the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham, England.

Thompson-Herah won in a Games record of 22.02 seconds to finish streets ahead of the rest of the field.

Favour Ofili of Nigeria (22.51) and Christine Mboma (22.80) of Namibia took silver and bronze, respectively.

Thompson-Herah’s compatriot Natalliah Whyte finished fourth in 23.06 seconds.

The 200m gold came three days after the Jamaican sprint queen held off Julien Alfred of St Lucia and Daryll Neita of England, to claim the 100m gold in 10.95 seconds.

She is the only one of Jamaica’s star trio in Birmingham as world 200m champion Shericka Jackson and 100m champion Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce skipped the Games following last month’s World Championships in Eugene.

Thompson-Herah finished a disappointing seventh in the 200m in Eugene in 22.39 as 28-year-old Jackson set a new championships record and the second-fastest time in history, winning in a sensational 21.45. Fraser-Pryce took silver with a new season’s best time of 21.81.

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