Sandy “Mister Star Martinique 2022” s’envole pour la Belgique

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Sandy Jean-Baptiste-Simone s’apprête à participer au concours international Best Male Model of the Universe qui se déroulera en Belgique du 6 au 12 septembre.

Ce Spiritain de 21 ans va certainement vivre une expérience inoubliable. C’est le comité Mister Star Martinique qui a décidé de l’envoyer à ce concours. Il sera face à 12 autres candidats venus des quatre coins du globe : Aruba, Cap-Vert, Éthiopie, Haïti, Inde, Indonésie, Mexique, Maroc, Nigeria, Panama et Pakistan. Le gagnant et les finalistes bénéficieront  de prix allant de 250 à 2 500 euros avec la possibilité de décrocher un contrat dans une agence de mannequins.

Les membres du comité décrivent Sandy comme « un jeune homme solaire avec la joie de vivre ». Il est passionné de sport, de voiture. Il aime également le dessin et la danse. Il rêve de devenir le gérant de son propre bar à chicha.

Du charisme et des valeurs

Avec son titre de Mister, le jeune Spiritain souhaite défendre la cause des personnes en situation de handicap.

Sandy a suivi de nombreux ateliers pour être prêt pour le grand jour : atelier scénique, anglais, posing, chorégraphie ou encore sport. Pour rappel, le comité Mister Star Martinique a déjà remporté de nombreux prix à l’international et cela en moins de deux ans d’existence.

Sandy Jean-Baptiste-Simone

– DR

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Education CEO: Hair length doesn’t impede a student’s ability to learn

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Amandala Newspaper

by Khaila Gentle

BELIZE CITY, Thurs. Sept. 1, 2022

The Ministry of Education, Culture, Science & Technology (MoECST) says that students cannot and should not be denied admission to school because of any particular hairstyle being worn by those students, and the Ministry CEO, Dian Maheia, agrees.

On Wednesday, August 31, the Ministry of Education issued a press release expressing concern over school hair policies that cause students with certain hairstyles to be denied entry into their institutions. That release came following reports that students at Bishop Martin High School in Orange Walk had been barred from entering their classroom due to their hair being “too long” by administrative standards.

“We fully recognize and we support the schools in their right to have rules and to have policies. That’s absolutely clear. The one thing that we also want to make clear is the fact that enshrined in our Constitution is that schools cannot and should not remove students or deny students admission to a classroom based on the length of their hair,” said CEO Maheia in an interview this week.

The Orange Walk high school’s policy—which states that male students must keep their hair short—ultimately led to almost thirty students being sent home for not cutting their hair.

In its press release, the ministry highlights the fact that the preamble of the Constitution of Belize states, “equal protection should be given to children regardless of their social status, and that a just system should be ensured to provide for education and health on the basis of equality.

“It is true that school authorities do have the right to impose codes of conduct and general rules and guidelines for the proper administration of their schools. Students cannot, however, be removed from or denied admission to school because of the length of their hair,” says the release.

It also goes on to state that the Constitution affords all Belizeans the right to freedom of expression, conscience, and the right to be protected from discrimination.

In a similar case earlier this year, a Ladyville father claimed that his 5-year-old son had been denied admission to two primary schools because of his dreadlocked hair. The father, Kevin Pollard, also turned to existing legislation to defend his son’s right to an education regardless of his hairstyle.

On his personal social media account, Pollard posted a screenshot of Chapter 36 of Belize’s Education Act (Revised Edition 2003) which states that schools cannot refuse admission of any Belizean into a school based on ethnicity, race, perceived social and economic status, and, for government-aided schools, religion.

The news this week has sparked much debate among the public, with some persons expressing the view that school policies, such as those pertaining to hair length and style, are archaic—relics from the country’s colonial past—while others have maintained that “rules are rules” and the policies enforce discipline.

The CEO, however, says that the ministry is, in no way, encouraging undisciplined behavior that impedes students’ health and safety. What it is doing is asking schools to be mindful not only of the Constitution but of what is truly important. While enforcing uniforms and dress codes are one thing, a student’s ability to learn is not impeded by the length of their hair.

“These are rules that have been in existence for a very long time. Where we are today in 2022 is not where we were when the vast majority of our schools were opened—in some cases, decades ago,” she said.

The past two years have been challenging, to say the least, for students. And according to CEO Maheia, as they return to school for face-to-face learning, the focus should be on bringing them back to a positive environment rather than on hair length.

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20K sign petition saying “No to Waterloo!”

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Amandala Newspaper

The 20,132 signatures gathered so far in a petition to prevent the approval of the Waterloo cruise and cargo port development project were presented to the Minister of Sustainable Development by Thomas Greenwood, a supporter of the Feinstein group’s Port Coral cruise port development, which was approved several years ago and is nearing completion.

by Marco Lopez

BELIZE CITY, Thurs. Sept. 1, 2022

No to Waterloo—it is a position being taken by 20,132 Belizean citizens who have so far signed an ongoing petition to put a stop to the unrelenting efforts of Waterloo Investment Holdings to build a cruise terminal and expand the cargo facilities at the Port of Belize Limited compound in Belize City—despite a denial of the company’s request for project approval by the National Environmental Appraisal Committee (NEAC) in 2021 due to unanswered questions related to the project, and grave environmental and social concerns. The petition was submitted to the Minister of Sustainable Development, Climate Change and Disaster Risk Management, Hon. Orlando Habet, yesterday by Thomas Greenwood, president emeritus of the Federation of Cruise Tourism Associations of Belize (FECTAB).

Greenwood, after presenting the petition, stated, “From Punta Gorda to Corozal, from Cayo to the cayes, it was countrywide, and what really sent me into a state of pleasant shock was the reaction of people. There’ll be naysayers, there’ll be those who say, ‘I’m not really interested in that’. But no, once you mention the Barrier Reef, then right away, people’s hackles go up.” He later added, “This is all about the Barrier Reef—end of story, the Barrier Reef … one of the things I recognize by reading about cruise shipping in Caribbean and Central America is that unfettered, uncontrolled, can be dangerous. Dangerous to your environment, natural environment, business environment. It can be dangerous, and I studied more and more scenarios about it, and in some places, cruise operations were asked to leave.”

Today, public consultations with Waterloo’s consultants on a second Environmental and Social Impact Assessment (ESIA) that they recently submitted after the rejection of their previous EIA are scheduled to be held at the Belize Best Western Biltmore Plaza. Waterloo Investment Holdings Limited, whose chairman is British business tycoon Lord Michael Ashcroft, has been trying to get environmental clearance to begin the development of yet another cruise port in the Belize District—yet another since two others, Port Coral at Stake Bank and Port of Magical Belize, near the Sibun River, have been given clearance by the National Environmental Appraisal Committee (NEAC), with the construction of Port Coral having already reached an advanced stage.

Waterloo is thus making another attempt to get the approval of the NEAC, which rejected the project’s EIA last December after citing lack of critical information that was not submitted—information related to grave concerns about the environmental impact of the project, particularly the disposal of millions of cubic meters of dredged material that the company initially proposed to dump offshore. Over the past few weeks, however, activists could be seen across the streets of Belize City, and according to Greenwood, countrywide, getting Belizeans to sign onto a petition to the government to stop the project. This is the second collective effort to bring the cruise port-related efforts of Waterloo to a halt, since a group of conservation NGOs, including OCEANA, had also sent a letter to the government last week to request that it halt all Environmental Impact Assessments (EIA’s) until the country’s environmental laws are updated, in line with one of the commitments that the country made when it entered the Blue Bond loan agreement.This recent ESIA submitted in August 2022 by Nextera on behalf of Waterloo is seemingly the third such submission, and questions are now being raised as to whether a company should have been given so many opportunities to push through a project after rejection. When asked a similar question yesterday by local reporters, Hon. Orlando Habet, Minister of Sustainable Development, Climate Change and Disaster Risk Management, said that the government has been advised that there is no current section of the law that addresses this matter.

“In the interpretation of the law, we decided that based on consultation with the legal minds, that even when you take something to court that the court, either the judge or the magistrate, would lean on allowing something to be resolved outside of the court if there is a possibility. So, because that article 23 gives the opportunity, the option to resubmit, when they requested for a resubmission, we said ‘okay, go ahead and resubmit’, but of course, it can’t be the same submission that they had before,” Minister Habet outlined.

While the environmental community believes that since this most recent ESIA was submitted following the signing of the Blue Bond agreement, it should not be considered before the EIA process has been updated and improved, Habet attempted to suggest that the commitments made as part of the Blue Bond financial arrangement could only be applicable to processes that have not started. He thus implied that the most recent Waterloo ESIA submission must be reviewed by the NEAC to avoid any litigation by the company.

The notion of putting a pause on all EIAs—as outlined in the Blue Bond agreement and suggested by the environmental community, is one that Habet believes is out of the question, since he is of the view that it would halt development across the country. He instead suggested that GoB should look at projects on an individual basis, and he highlighted what he believes are significant legal risks that could accompany any such decision.

“I think that what we have to do is look at the EIA process, what is legal, what is illegal, what will put us in trouble with the law, and frankly, when we get sued and we go to court and we have to pay, it’s not the government that is in power that paying, its all of us Belizeans that have to pay, so we have to make certain that we do things right on all sides so that at the end of the day we can proceed with national development that is sustainable for all of us, beneficial for all of us, but not one that will burden our children and grandchildren for many, many years,” he said.

Concerns about litigation by Waterloo are real—especially in light of the recent leaking of a letter written by Waterloo chairman, Lord Ashcroft, to the Prime Minister earlier this year after the rejection of a previous EIA submitted by the company. In that letter Ashcroft threatened to take legal action against the government of Belize. According to last Friday’s issue of the AMANDALA, Ashcroft stated in the letter that he and the UK shareholders of Waterloo are entitled to compensation under the Promotion and Protection of Investments 1982 agreement between Belize and the UK, since they have already invested upward of 5 million dollars in the project.

The letter was leaked last week, after GoB agreed to pay $76.5 million in compensation following a lawsuit brought by another Waterloo-affiliated enterprise, BISL, following the nationalization of the country’s ships registry in 2013. The timing of the leak suggested to some members of the public that attempts were.being made to intimidate the government in an effort to ensure approval of Waterloo’s most recent submission.

Waterloo’s previous submission, which had been rejected, had initially proposed that 7.5 million cubic meters of dredged material be dumped offshore—a suggestion that caused alarm among environmental groups and members of the public, and that even prompted the Belize Water Services Ltd. to issue a statement in which it expressed concern. The company then adjusted that section of its proposal and instead outlined nearshore and onshore dumping options. However, all the information requested by the NEAC was not made available. Minister Habet had even stated at the time that only a portion of the dredged material was accounted for in the document. The lack of information thus led to the rejection of the EIA in December 2021.

Minister Habet explained this week, “There were some missing points. If you recall, part of the criticism, even questions from the media, was why the letter was written saying it is not approved at this time. It was because they were required to submit certain information. We didn’t receive it on time.”

The vice president of OCEANA, Janelle Chanona, however, has dismissed the notion that the nearshore dumping now being proposed by the company would be less harmful to the Barrier Reef. Last week, she told 7News, “We confirm still to the position that ocean dumping does not and should never make sense for Belize. It is (I’m trying to be kind) a point of fact that offshore dumping and nearshore dumping are both dumping dredge spoils in the Caribbean Sea. You cannot tell me because the water is in front of Belize City versus in front of Turneffe that that is not the Caribbean Sea. You are talking about dumping millions of cubic meters of dredge spoils in the Caribbean Sea and all the science, all the data has shown, all the modeling has shown, that wherever you dump that material, it will end up on some part of the Belize Barrier Reef System.”

The representative for the petitioners, Thomas Greenwood, has expressed a similar view—that the alterations contained in the most recent ESIA will not reduce the potential environmental harm to be caused by the project. He stated plainly “once something is bad, out with it.”

“This is why when I see a government vacillating and hum-haw and all that—nuh man, we mustn’t have no humm- haw. We mustn’t have no hum-haw, and that kind of thing. Once something is bad, out with it! Sorry, we are not doing that kind of thing,” Greenwood stated.

Greenwood, a lifelong tour guide and activist in Belize, is also the president emeritus of FECTAB, an organization that has gone on the record to support the development of the Port Coral cruise destination development. Despite that project receiving its own pushback from the environmental community over a planned causeway linking the island to North Drowned Caye and then Belize City, FECTAB has indicated its approval of the Stake Bank Enterprises Ltd. (Feinstein Group) development.

His handing over of a petition to the government to block a cruise port that would compete with Stake Bank’s Port Coral—a project of a Belizean millionaire developer—might appear to be a conflict of interest. When questioned about this, he responded, “This country suffers from a deadly illness, a very extremely deadly illness. The moment anything, you know, kinda big and looking good start up, once it is run by native Belizean, native Belizeans and their cohorts from outside will hammer it as hard as they can. I’ve seen in my lifetime projects after projects fail, so I reach the stage where I say, guess what, maybe I should be supporting projects, maybe I should be making noise,” Greenwood said, adding that he’s known the Feinstein family (the investors in Port Coral) for most of his life.

He also noted that many international cruise enterprises had their eyes on Stake Bank.

“I know that there are other entities that had their eyes on Stake Bank—entities that I nuh wanh see inna this country at all, cah that Stake bank was just waiting to be developed,” Greenwood said.

The petition has now been submitted to the government. Minister Habet said that the petitioners had wanted to pass the signatures directly to PM Briceño, but he has been out of the country on “duty leave” and Deputy Prime Minister Cordel Hyde, who is the acting PM, was unable to attend the meeting.

Tonight, the public consultation on the Waterloo Cruise and Cargo Expansion of the Port of Belize will be held at the Belize Best Western Biltmore Plaza in Belize City and will likely be streamed online. 

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FIFA president visits, praises Belize

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Amandala Newspaper

Gianni Infantino, President of FIFA (Fédération Internationale de Football Association), makes his first visit to Belize

by Charles Gladden

BELIZE CITY, Wed. Aug. 31, 2022

After arriving in Belize on Tuesday for an official visit, the president of FIFA (Fédération Internationale de Football Association), Gianni Infantino, made his way to Belmopan, and following courtesy visits on the Governor General of Belize Dame Froyla Tzalam and Acting Prime Minister Hon. Cordel Hyde, he made his way to the Football Federation of Belize (FFB) headquarters.

Upon arriving at the Football Federation of Belize (FFB) headquarters along with his delegation of FIFA executives, including Chief Development Officer Arsene Wenger and Pierluigi Collina, Chairman of FIFA’s Referee Committee, Infantino received a warm welcome from children of various ages who are participants in the FFB’s programs, and who demonstrated what they were being taught by FFB coaches on the football pitch.

Infantino, who became FIFA’s 9th president in 2016 and is officially visiting Belize for the first time, told local reporters that his administration is focusing on how to improve the sport of football for the next generation of athletes who would like to pursue a profession in the sport.

“Football is overdeveloped in some parts of the world, and in other parts, there is still a way to go, but when you have the talent and when you have basic structures, you know, you don’t need to have the training center of the top professional teams in Europe to be able to train boys and girls. You need basic structures; you need expertise; you need goodwill, and you need to implement it. And that’s all these ingredients, we found them here, with Sergio, with his team, and that’s what we are putting in place,” he said.

In 2020, the FFB began its construction of a stadium in Belmopan through a two-million-dollar investment from the FIFA Forward program, and Infantino commended the progress made in upgrading the stadium, which he referred to as “state-of-the-art”. “I’ve been visiting, in the last few years, over 160 countries around the world and I can tell you that this infrastructure here is already much, much better than many others in many parts of the world. So really, congratulations, and we keep on working on that at that pace, and we will invest even more,” he said. Nonetheless, FFB president Sergio Chuc pointed to work that still must be done.

“We are three-quarter way complete, but you see we need the parking, we need the shed, we need the VIP, and we still need another training pitch to the back. In Central America, all the national teams play on a grass pitch. We can’t have the national team playing strictly on a synthetic pitch and then go to play on a grass pitch in Salvador. So, we need to fix [the] pitches we have here. So we have a little more work to complete the center fully and then we look at other projects in other areas around the country, where the investment will go the longest way, maybe Belize City, where the most populated area is. We’ll look at those aspects, but certainly, we’ll move out of Belmopan soon as we complete the investment here,” he said.

There was some speculation in some quarters that Infantino’s official visit to Belize might be an attempt to lobby Belize’s support for his re-election at the FIFA Elections in 2023 and for his idea of a biennial World Cup, which will be voted on at the 72nd FIFA Congress this year. (He’ll need more than 50 percent of the votes from the 211 member countries for his brainchild idea of a World Cup every two years to become a reality.) The FFB president, Sergio Chuc, told local media, however, that he had already publicly declared his support for Infantino’s re-election—even prior to the visit.

“Let me say, he doesn’t have to worry about Belize, because when I took over at the first summit we had in Hong Kong, the panel was there discussing who the funds would be best suited for the developing countries. Initially, FIFA proposed that the operational funds be half a million dollars and the project funds [are] three quarter million dollars. We sat down in the group and discussed it and said the operation is more important. So we lobbied for a higher operation fund. The committee looked at it, [and] took our recommendation from Belize. Next thing, they reversed it and the operating funds became higher than the project funds. So, he is about listening to us and developing the countries that need it more. So, I have absolutely no reservations about pledging again my support for Gianni Infantino. I already nominated him, because I believe in what he is doing and he has been more than good to us. And, I am happy that he is pleased with the way how we are using the funds,” he said.

In regard to the progress that has been made in Belize, Infantino remarked, “I really want to congratulate the President, Sergio Chuc, for what he did, because it’s exactly true what you say. It was—Belize Football Federation was in a very poor state due to several circumstances. I mean, I can speak out of experience because FIFA was more or less in the same situation when I came to FIFA. And then when you know, when you are serious about it, when you are committed about it – we were discussing many times in the last few years, you know, where do we have to focus our investment, on the senior national team, or on the youths? No, we have to focus on the youths because that’s the future. And, even if it takes a few years to build up, you need to have this vision, and you need to invest the money, and you have to do it in an open and transparent way. FIFA, compared to before I arrived, is now investing in every country seven times more. So we thought it was like $300,000 a year, 250,000, and now it’s over 2 million every year – U.S. dollars – that we are investing. But we are not only investing. We are also making sure and controlling that the money is invested in the right places. But in Belize, since Sergio came, you know, this has changed completely. Everything is transparent. Every dollar that comes in is accounted for. Every dollar that goes out is accounted for.”

Minister of Sports, Hon. Rodwell Ferguson, when he later met with local reporters, remarked, “I just met Mr. Infantino this morning, right here at the FFB compound, and I’m happy that he chose to visit our small country. We never expected in my lifetime that a president of FIFA would have visited Belize. But I have seen their input, over the last maybe five or ten years, where there has been a serious transformation in football in this country because of FIFA inputs. And so, I guess he decided to come to Belize, and it’s not for votes, because according to the president, they had already told him that he already had their full support. But, just for their Football for Schools, Belize has been rated as number 14 [which] got the assistance out of 211 countries. So, there is something that we’re doing significantly to attract the FIFA organization.”

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DFC workers protest redundancy terminations

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Amandala Newspaper

The unionized workers at the Development Finance Corporation (DFC) in Belmopan expressed their discontent with a redundancy exercise undertaken by the administration which saw the termination of three of their co-workers by staging a walkout today. A meeting between the Labor Department and Christian Workers Union is scheduled for tomorrow

BELMOPAN, Thurs. Sept. 1, 2022

Every hour today, for 30 seconds, the unionized workers at the Belmopan branch of the Development Finance Corporation (DFC) have been thumping on their desks as a show of protest against the termination of the employment of three of their colleagues which was finalized yesterday. This morning, as an added show of dissatisfaction with the handling of the redundancy exercise which resulted in the termination of the workers, the unionized workers at the DFC staged a walkout – lining up outside the office on the side of the road and singing the union songs.

Tomorrow, a meeting is scheduled between the Christian Workers Union (CWU) and the Labor Department, and representatives from the DFC will likely also be in attendance to attempt to address the issues raised—chief of which, says CWU rep for the DFC Belmopan branch, Pablo Cawich, is the DFC’s lack of adherence to the protocol laid out in the Labor Act in the way they carried out the terminations.

“We informed them that in our view they were not implementing the exercise in accordance to the Labor Act, and yesterday three of our members were issued their redundancy letters, officially terminating them as of yesterday. We at the CWU had informed them that due to their lack of adherence to the Act, we were not accepting the notices, and hence the employees had not been terminated,” Cawich said.

But those employees were reportedly escorted from the DFC office in Belmopan, and according to the redundancy letters issued to them, are without a job at this time. Cawich said that in this case the employees were not treated fairly.

“We have to stand beside our brothers and sisters to ensure that fairness and process is always adhered to,” he emphasized. He went on to describe what he called the union members’ “dissatisfaction exercise”. “Every hour for 30 seconds, we bang our tables, not to damage them but just to express our dissatisfaction with the circumstances that we are in,” Cawich explained.

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Observation: Misrepresentation At International Conferences Is Insulting

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

OBSERVATION

Misrepresentation At International Conferences Is Insulting

Why on earth send the Minister of Education to the AfriCaribbean Conference in Barbados instead of the Antigua Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Trade.

Our Prime Minister himself should have availed himself to attend this most important first of its kind AfriCaribbean Trade and Investment Forum, which seeks to bring Africa and the Caribbean closer together, and convened by the African Export Import Bank.

The AU Commission, Africa Business Council, African Continental Free Trade Area Secretariat, CDB, Caricom and the Caribbean Export Development Agency comprised the heavy weights attending in Barbados.

Did someone in the Prime Minister’s Ministry fail to brief P.M Browne on the importance of the event, and benefits to be gained from the august gathering of African and Caribbean movers and shakers, seeking to build economic and financial bridges cross the pond.

Was the PM so busy engaging his Northern, Middle & Far Eastern investors, that he just could not bother with those black people bonding in South-South investment and trade.

Even if PM was not interested, or busy, he could at least have sent a representative who could contribute to discourse on international trade and finance.

Misrepresentation of our country at such a important and cultural event can only send the wrong message to the gathering, bordering on insult and disinterest in the mission of the conference. Not to berate the intelligence of the attendee, but years of involvement in trade, commerce and finance allows for greater participation, and even in understanding the discourse as the language is often specific, expecting delegates who work in the various fields to understand intricate theories with the applicable abbreviations. Misrepresentation can also be embarrassing for the delegate whose limitations re subject matter could retard interactive contribution.

Where is the Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Trade? If he was incapable of attending the AfriCaribbean Conference, clearly a more directly involved representative should have replaced him, even the Junior Minister of Finance who is accustomed to International Fora, having worked at the World Bank, or the Ambassador in the Office of the Prime Minister who also has an international profile and whose work has taken him to Africa.

Antigua must have been a very lame spectator, signing the Agreement and coming home empty handed.

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Residents urged to closely monitor Tropical Storm Earl

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

Tropical Storm Earl Alert StatementAntigua And Barbuda Meteorological Services05:20 Am Ect Sat, Sep 3, 2022

…Earl Continues West-Northwestward And Should Pass North Of The Leeward Islands Today…

A Tropical Cyclone Alert Remains In Effect For The Leeward Islands And The British Virgin Islands. A Tropical Cyclone Alert Means That, In This Case, A Tropical Storm Is In Our Monitored Area Of Concern But A Watch Or Warning Is Not Required, At This Time.

There Remains Some Level Of Uncertainty To The  Eventual Strength, Track And Size Of Tropical Storm Earl. Notwithstanding, The Storm Is In The Vicinity And Is Forecast To Pass Just North Of The Islands. The Storm-Force Winds, Which Are Mainly Located To The North And East Of The Centre Of The System Are Also Forecast To Pass North Of The Islands. The Cyclone Poses An Elevated/Minor Threat With The Potential To Cause Limited Impacts From Storm-Force Winds And High Seas Nevertheless, You Should Be Prepared To Implement Your Hurricane Disaster Plan At Very Short Notice Should The Need Arise.

At 5 Am Ect Or 0900 Utc Tropical Storm Earl Was Located Approximately 113 Miles East-Northeast Of Antigua In The Leeward Islands Or 211 Miles East Of Tortola In The British Virgin Islands. Earl Is Moving Toward The West-Northwest Near 13 Mph And This Motion With A Decrease In Forward Speed Is Expected Through Early Sunday After Which A Turn Toward The Northwest With An Additional Decrease In Forward Speed Is Expected Sunday Through Monday. On The Forecast Track, The Centre Of Earl Is Expected To Pass Near Or North Of The Northern Leeward Islands On Saturday, And North Of The Virgin Islands Saturday Night Into Sunday.

Maximum Sustained Winds Are Near 40 Mph (65 Km/H) With Higher Gusts With Some Slight Strengthening Possible During The Next Few Days. Presently, Tropical-Storm-Force Winds Extend Outward Up To 175 Miles Mainly To The North And East Of The Centre.

The Threat Level At This Time Is Elevated Particularly For Anguilla; However, Storm Force Winds Are Not Expected To Impact The Area. Notwithstanding, Any Southward Shift Of Earl’s Centre Would Increase The Threat Of Tropical-Storm-Force Winds Reaching, At Least, Some Of The Islands.

Earl Is Expected To Produce Total Rainfall Amounts Of 1 To 4 Inches, With Isolated Totals Of 6 Inches, Across Parts Of The Leeward And British Virgin Islands Through This Weekend.  Minor Flash Flooding Is Expected.  Strong Gusty Winds, Especially In Squalls, Are Also Possible Across Portions Of The The Leeward Islands And The Virgin Islands. Additionally, Swells From This System Could Produce Hazardous Marine Conditions For Beach-Goers During The Weekend.

Residents Are Urged To Monitor Tropical Storm Earl Closely And Be Prepared To Take Quick Action To Implement Their Hurricane Plans, If Called Upon To Do So. The Threat Is Minor, At This Time, But It Could Increase.

The Next Advisory Will Be At Around 11 Am Ect, Or 1300 Utc.

ForecasterLetitia Humphreys

ALSO READ:

At 500 AM AST (0900 UTC), the center of Tropical Storm Earl was located near latitude 18.7 North, longitude 61.4 West.

Earl is moving toward the west-northwest near 13 mph (20 km/h), and this motion with a decrease in forward speed is expected through early Sunday.

A turn toward the northwest with an additional decrease in forward speed is expected Sunday through Monday.  On the forecast track, the center of Earl is expected to pass near or north of the northern Leeward Islands today, and north of the Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico tonight and Sunday.

Maximum sustained winds are near 40 mph (65 km/h) with higher gusts.

Slow strengthening is possible during the next few of days.

Tropical-storm-force winds extend outward up to 175 miles (280 km)

mainly to the north and east of the center.

The estimated minimum central pressure is 1005 mb (29.68 inches).

HAZARDS AFFECTING LAND

———————-

RAINFALL:  Earl is expected to produce total rainfall amounts of 2 to 4 inches, with isolated totals of 6 inches, across the Leeward Islands, U.S. and British Virgin Islands, and Puerto Rico this

weekend.

Limited flash, urban, and small stream flooding impacts will be possible.  Rapid rises on rivers are possible in Puerto

Rico.

WIND:  Gusty winds, especially in squalls, are possible across the northern Leeward Islands, the Virgin Islands, and Puerto Rico through the weekend.

NEXT ADVISORY

————-

Next complete advisory at 1100 AM AST.

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A efectua apertura di Expo ‘E Lens di mi Wowonan’ cu homenahe na Rudolph Haseth y Jason Inesia

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Diario

ORANJESTAD (AAN):  E di 15 edicion di e Expo famoso ‘E lens di mi wowonan’

a wordo realisa un biaha mas y e biaha aki a wordo dedica na e fotografonan Jason Inesia y colega di DIARIO Rudolph Haseth.

            E apertura di e evento a tuma lugar na Biblioteca Nacional den presencia di Minister Xiomara Maduro, Parlamentarionan, Director di RBC Royal Bank Aruba, Sr. Pierre Rafini, Directora di Biblioteca Astrid Britten, invitadonan y homenaheadonan

             Organisador di e expo pa 15 aña, Leo Vrolijk hunto cu Sr. Rafini tabata esnan encarga di entrega e plakkat pa honra Jason Inesia y Rudolph Haseth. Banda di esaki, e biaha aki a otorga e Djispie Award na Andrew Vrolijk for di man di Sra. Suzy Franken.

            Tabata sigur un bunita ceremonia unda a corta e cinta  pa duna apertura na e expo sigui pa un brindis chikito.





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Fin di campaña 3C – Colecta, Conoce y Conserva di Archivo Nacional

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Diario

Minister di Cultura Xiomara Maduro:

ORANJESTAD (AAN): E siman aki Minister di Cultura tabata na Archivo Nacional enconexion cu Campaña 3-C a yega na su final despues di varios siman di campaña. Cu e campaña aki Archivo Nacional por a Colecta, Conoce y Conserva historia di nos Pais Aruba. Mester trece dilanti cu e portanan di Archivo Nacional ta keda habri pa tur esnan cu ta desea di trece informacion y material cu ta contribui na e memoria colectivo di nos Pais.

   Durante e atardi aki na Archivo Nacional, Minister Xiomara Maduro tabata tin e placer di por ricibi for di Sr. Michael Arends, un coleccion di fotografia y tambe for di Sr. Harold Frigerio a ricibi historia di 45 famia aki na Aruba.

Esakinan ta tesoronan grandi cu lo keda bon cuida na Archivo Nacional Aruba, pero mas importante cu esakinan lo wordo prepara pa wordo exponi pa nan ta accesibel pa un grupo mas grandi. Esaki tabata e idea tras di Campaña 3C, pa trece informacion na archivo pa nan por wordo cuida, prepara y wordo exponi pa tur esnan interesa.

Minister di Cultura a gradici un y tur cu participa na e Campaña 3C, como tambe un danki na e staf y personal di Archivo Nacional Aruba pa un campaña exitoso. E campaña a inicia cu 3C, di Colecta, Conoce y Conserva y ta termina cu un C mas, e di 4 C ta di Concientiza.

Cu e campaña hiba, Aruba ta mas conciente di e responsabilidad di cada uno pa conserva y traha pa trece hunto na Archivo Nacional pa asina Aruba por tin e memoria colectivo di un Pais intacto pa e generacion cu ta sigui nos. Asina nos sa ken nos ta y pa nos sa tambe unda nos ta bay como Pais.

galleryColecta, Conoce y Conserva di Archivo Nacional/gallery

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Cuanto placa Aruba a gasta cu casonan politico den Corte?

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Diario

Pakico den empresa priva corupcion y mal maneho ta menos facil?

*Cuanto hende cu hamber por a come cu placa pa investigacion?

*Corupcion ta exigi gastonan enorme den un mundo di problema 

ORANJESTAD(AAN)—Un ola di problema a ataca mundo y asina tambe Aruba, cu ya tabata den problema serio pa e maneho di abuso cu a wordo hiba for di 2009 pa 2017 ora wowo di Pueblo tabata tan cera, cu no por a mira e bofon di e palabranan cu “orguyosamente lo paga e debe nacional”.

Awe cu hunto cu henter mundo Aruba ta den problema social serio despues di Pandemia y ainda den Guera di Ukraine den un mundo insigur, Aruba mester haci su mes e pregunta, cuanto placa e ta gasta na casonan contra politiconan acusa di corupcion.

Con por abusa di Pueblo, kibra ley pa hunga cu sentimento di Pueblo ora ta spart placa, ta bini dilanti den e Rapport Bo Aruba cu aparentemente no por wordo persigui.

Loke si ta pendiente ta e rapport di Refineria di Aruba pa no papia mes di investigacionnan cu ya ta un realidad of a resulta den caso den Corte pa un Pueblo paga.

Cuanto hende por a come cu e placa cu Aruba mester gasta pa asina por a tene e huicio di “Avestruz’? Cuanto tempo Polis mester a traha cuanto hora, pa por a entrega tur prueba cu den un caso asina ta determina si Husticia por wordo haci of no?

Cuanto Recherche, cuanto hende cu mester brinda asistencia na e trabou investigativo di Ministerio Publico, mester wordo paga for di e fondonan cu Aruba tin na su disposicion y cu cual mester duna asistencia na un comunidad cu tanto problema social?

Ora leza rapportnan internacional cu ta adverti pa e situacion mundial, por cera conoci cu e haltura di gastonan di gobernacion den e tempo cu ta conduci na recesion na 2023, cu cada dia ta bini cu mas siguransa.

E situacion financiero cu cual Aruba a wordo confronta na 2017, ta un abuso contra e Pueblo di Aruba pero mas grandi ta e abuso di casonan cu Aruba mester paga pa asina investiga corupcion politico y percura pa tur hende paga pa loke nan a haci contra e Pais y contra e Pueblo di Aruba, cu ta victima directo di mentenan corupto.

Mientras Aruba ta den negociacion cu Hulanda, cu tin Aruba bou supervision despues cu Gobierno Mike Eman a zink Aruba financieramente, Aruba mester paga e gastonan di e Caso den cual Benny Sevinger mester splica kico a pasa cu terenonan di Aruba, cu segun Husticia ta fuentenan di lodo.

Aparentemente no ta parada di Carnaval pero parada politico tin pa sala di Corte di Husticia, cu mester percura pa tanto gasto.

Pa trata un caso politico, mester busca Huez for di otro pais. Ta costa placa pa entre otro estadia y permanencia mescos cu buelo pa Aruba.

Un batayon di hende mester traha overtime pa por atende cu casonan nunca visto na Aruba.

Nomber di Aruba cu ta asina importante den un tempo di recuperacion, ta wordo tira den lodo cada bez cu atrobe tin un caso di politico cu placa di Aruba.

Pakico den sector priva ta menos facil pa abusa di un pais? Simpel. Pasobra e caminda pa tira hende cu horta, cu comete acto di corupcion na empresa priva, ta mucho mas facil cu den e mundo di gobernacion.

Politica demasiado bez ta un inspiracion pa hende cu no kier traha y gana nan placa mescos cu tur otro hende.

Cuanto politico di Aruba cu e cantidad di habitante cu Aruba tin, durante Siglo 21 ya a haya nan mes den problema cu husticia? Ta normal?

Ta normal cu den un situacion cu Pueblo no sa con pone cuminda tur dia riba mesa, Benny Sevinger mester atende cu Husticia pa placa bruto cu lo a circula na forma ilegal?

Ta normal cu Benny Sevinger, ta den Parlamento ta gana cantidad di placa y ta exigi tur informacion cu e kier, mientras Corte di Husticia ta atende cu su persona den un caso tan costoso pa Aruba?

Alan Howell mester aparece den corte di Husticia y awor Marisol mester fungi como testigo. Tin algo di Marisol tambe na caminda segun rumor cu ta circula?

Caso Otmar Oduber ta sigui den actualidad.

Awor kico e Arubiano cu ta traha dia y anochi pa por mantene su mes y su famia mester haci? Kico ta pasa cu su placa?

E mester sigui paga pa un batayon den Ministerio Publico? Of Aruba mester bira un republica di banana caminda tur politico cu ta capaz pa manipula hende, por crece y biba dushi mientras Pueblo ta hoga den problema?

Tur partido, cu ta e vehiculo pa Aruba haya gobernacion, tin e deber pa cera porta pa corupcion y practica control di nan miembronan, cu nan ta entrega puestonan di poder segun e sistema politico di Aruba.

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