Meshach Emmanuel McKoy completes Electrical Power Production training in the United States Airforce

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Amandala Newspaper

Meshach Emmanuel McKoy was born in Belize City in November of 2001 to Audrey Smith McKoy and Jamie McKoy of the Albert and Lake Independence divisions of Belize City, who had moved to Vista Del Mar, Ladyville, along with his brother, Uhuru Soweto McKoy in September of 2000. Meshach attended Ms. Ebanks Preschool, Grace Primary School and then the first year at Edward P. Yorke High School. The family migrated to Las Vegas, Nevada, USA to join his eldest brother, Elton Graham, in 2015, where Meshach later graduated from Canyon Springs High School in 2019 with a major in Military Leadership Studies. In 2017 Meshach enrolled in and completed a twelve-week program with the Southern Nevada Devil Pups, a military cadet program which afforded him a ten-day encampment experience at Camp Pendleton, United States Marine Corps base in San Diego, California.

Meshach worked as a life guard and flow rider (water board) instructor at Planet Hollywood Resorts of Las Vegas before returning to Belize in 2020, where he then took up a position as merchandiser at Bowen and Bowen Limited. Meshach returned to Las Vegas in late 2021, after which he enlisted into the United States Airforce in early 2022. After basic training in San Antonio, Texas, he was off to Wichita Falls, Texas, for further training in Electrical Power Production. Meshach graduated from this training at the end of August 2022, and was recognized for his achievements. After serving a few weeks in the recruiters office back in Las Vegas, Nevada, Meshach will be off to his first assignment in the state of Utah.

Meshach’s ambition is that through continued hard work and dedication, he can be a professional and advance in rank in his military career. His advice to the youths of Belize is that they must strive to take charge of their future, and live to have that future become their past. Meshach thanks everyone who played a role in his upbringing, which has enabled his successes and achievements so far, including during the Covid-19 pandemic crisis on his return home.

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Vague de r?actions apr?s le meurtre de deux journalistes ? Cit? Soleil

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Le Nouvelliste


L’UNESCO et le Haut-Commissariat des Nations Unies aux Droits de l’Homme (HCDH) en Ha?ti condamnent avec fermet? le meurtre des journalistes Tayson Latigue et Frantzsen Charles, le 11 septembre ? Cit? Soleil, par des bandits arm?s op?rant dans cette zone, pendant qu’ils ?taient en plein exercice de leur m?tier, peut-on lire dans un communiqu? conjoint, mercredi 14 septembre 2022.

Un cycle de violence est constat? ? l’encontre des journalistes en Haiti. Le 11 janvier 2022, deux journalistes John Wesley Amady et Wilguens Louis-Saint ont ?t? tu?s par des gangs arm?s. Le 23 f?vrier de la m?me ann?e le journaliste ha?tien Maximilien Lazard ?t? tu? par balles alors qu’il couvrait une manifestation. Plusieurs professionnels des m?dias continuent de subir des actes de violence, d’harc?lement, d’intimidation, de s?questration et d’agression de toutes sortes, a observ? le signataires de ce communiqu?.

<>, selon ce communiqu? qui se demande, << sans les journalistes, comment la population peut-elle avoir acc?s ? l’information ? <>, ont appel? ces organisations .

<>, peut-on lire dans ce communiqu?.

<>, soutenu ce communiqu?.

<>, selon ce communiqu? .

RSF choqu?e et pr?occup?e par la violence contre les journalistes

<< RSF est choqu?e et extr?mement pr?occup?e par l’intensification des violences contre la presse en Ha?ti, apr?s l’assassinat des journalistes Tayson Latigue et Frantzsen Charles ? Port-au-Prince. Quatre journalistes, a soulign? le communiqu? de RSF,ont d?j? ?t? assassin?s dans le pays en 2022.

“Le climat d’ins?curit? pour la presse ha?tienne est catastrophique. Les autorit?s nationales doivent renforcer leurs dispositifs de protection pour la profession, et notamment pour les journalistes ind?pendants et la presse en ligne dont le travail d’information est fondamental pour la population ha?tienne >>, a d?clar? Emmanuel Colombi?, directeur du bureau Am?rique latine de RSF, cit? dans ce communiqu?. << Les responsables de la l?che ex?cution de Tayson Latigue et de Frantzsen Charles doivent ?tre au plus vite identifi?s et traduits en justice. L’impunit? quasi-totale des assassinats et disparitions de journalistes en Ha?ti est ? l’origine de ce cercle vicieux de violences contre la presse. Le gouvernement d’Ariel Henry doit imp?rativement enrayer cette spirale infernale.” , selon RSF qui est revenu sur les circonstances de ces assassinats.

Dimanche 11 septembre, en plein apr?s-midi, les journalistes Tayson Latigue et Frantzsen Charles ont ?t? assassin?s ? Port-au-Prince, capitale du pays. En compagnie de cinq autres journalistes, ils s’?taient rendus ? Cit? Soleil, un quartier violent et d?favoris? de la capitale, pour r?aliser un reportage sur l’ins?curit? qui s?vit dans la r?gion, suite notamment ? l’assassinat d’une adolescente de 17 ans, Christelle Delva, le 10 septembre 2022. C’est en rentrant d’une interview avec les parents de Christelle Delva que le groupe de journalistes a ?t? attaqu? par un gang arm?. Cinq d’entre eux ont pu s’?chapper in extremis de l’embuscade. Tayson Latigue et Frantzsen Charles ont eux pay? de leur vie leur travail d’information. Les corps des deux journalistes n’ont pour l’instant pas ?t? retrouv?s. Selon plusieurs sources locales, ils auraient ?t? br?l?s sur place apr?s l’ex?cution.

Tayson Latigue travaillait pour le m?dia en ligne Ti Jenn jounalis dont il ?tait le fondateur. Frantzsen Charles ?tait journaliste et reporter pour le journal en ligne FS News Ha?ti. Ils couvraient tous les deux les actualit?s locales et notamment la violence des gangs arm?s qui s?vit depuis des ann?es dans la capitale, peut-on lire dans ce communiqu?.

Selon une source locale consult?e par RSF, “Il y a une sorte de discrimination contre les journalistes des m?dias en ligne dans le pays. On ne les consid?re pas vraiment comme des journalistes et on leur reproche de s’exposer ? des risques insens?s par manque de professionnalisme (…) On soup?onne aussi certains journalistes ind?pendants d’?tre des alli?s des bandits.”

Le 12 septembre sur Twitter, le Premier ministre d’Ha?ti Ariel Henry s’est dit profond?ment choqu? par ce double assassinat et a condamn? un “acte barbare”.

Contact? par RSF, Jacques Lafontant, commissaire du gouvernement de Port-au-Prince, (soit l’?quivalent du procureur), a signal? qu””? date”, aucune poursuite n’?tait pour l’instant engag?e.

Tayson Latigue et Frantzsen Charles sont les 3e et 4e journalistes tu?s en Ha?ti en 2022, apr?s Wilguens Louissaint et John Wesley Amady, le 6 janvier dernier ? Port-au-Prince.

En 2019, les journalistes P?tion Rospide (Radio sans Fin) et N?h?mie Joseph (radios Panic FM et M?ga) ont eux aussi ?t? assassin?s en lien avec leur travail journalistique, selon RSF. Par ailleurs, depuis le 14 mars 2018, le photojournaliste Vladjimir Legagneur est port? disparu.

Aucune avanc?e significative n’a ?t? communiqu?e par les enqu?teurs dans ces cinq cas, a rappel? RSF. RA

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Luis Abinader :

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Le Nouvelliste


Le pr?sident de la R?publique dominicaine, Luis Abiner, lors d’un discours ? l’OEA, a largement ?voqu? Ha?ti et a appel? l’OEA et l’ensemble de la communaut? internationale ? y exercer un mandat fort, jeudi 15 septembre 2022.

<>, a dit le pr?sident Abiner, soulignant, qu’au cours de son entretien avec la vice-pr?sidente des Etats-Unis, Kamala Harris, celle-ci a indiqu? <>. ‘

Le pr?sident Abinader souscrit ? l’id?e d’un mandat fort de la communaut? internationale qui permettra aux autorit?s ha?tiennes d’avoir l’assistance et la coop?ration dont elles ont besoin pour surmonter la violence de mani?re urgente, renforcer la capacit? de leur ?tat. <>.

<>, a dit Abinader, estimant que c’est <> <>.

<>, a soulign? le pr?sident de la r?publique dominicaine.

<>, a indiqu? Luis Abinader.

Pour Luis Abinader, <>.

Luis Abinader a estim? que deux ans n’ont pas suffi aux membres non permanents du Conseil de s?curit? des Nations unies <>.

Abinader s’aligne sur le diagnostic du secr?taire g?n?ral de l’OEA sur Ha?ti

Le chef d’Etat dominicain, s’adressant au secr?taire g?n?ral de l’OEA, Luis Almagro, a indiqu? que ses paroles sur Ha?ti sont porteuses de v?rit?s. <>, a dit Abinader. <>.

<>, s’est demand? le pr?sident Luis Abinader. Une base pour un ?change fluide et constructif avec le gouvernement ha?tien, l’ONU et tous ceux qui ont le d?sir et la volont? de coop?rer et de nous aider, a-t-il estim?, sans jamais faire l’?conomie de rappeler que la situation en Ha?ti est une menace pour la s?curit? de la R?publique dominicaine.

La crise Ha?tienne, une menace pour la s?curit? nationale de la R?publique dominicaine

<>, a affirm? Luis Abinader.

<>, a-t-il dit.

<>, a expliqu? Luis Abinader, soulignant que son gouvernement <>. <>.

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Tempête Fiona : la Martinique reste en vigilance Orange ce samedi

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Dans son bulletin de ce samedi matin, Météo France maintient le niveau de vigilance Orange pour fortes pluies et orages.

La tempête tropicale Fiona se situe en Caraïbe à plus de 200 km à l’ouest de la Guadeloupe, et se déplace vers l’ouest à 22 km/h. La Martinique reste encore concernée par des pluies localement orageuses à l’arrière du phénomène. Le vent de sud modéré, va générer une mer agitée à la côte Caraïbe. 

Prévisions 

Fiona génère encore à l’arrière de fortes précipitations et des orages jusqu’à dimanche matin. Ces précipitations localement orageuses devrait encore se produire dans la journée, puis devenir plus rares en soirée. De plus, de fortes rafales de vents de l’ordre 60 à 80 km/h, sont à craindre à proximité de ces averses orageuses. Les conditions de mer vont rester dégradées du côté caraïbe avec le vent de sud à sud-est. 

Pluies 

De fortes averses localement orageuses se produisent encore en matinée, puis seront progressivement moins nombreuses cet après midi. Des cumuls de 30 à 50mm et ponctuellement à 80 mm sont attendus en 3 heures. 

Sur l’ensemble de l’épisode, des cumuls de 120 à 150 mm, pourront être observés. 

Mer 

Côte Caraïbe : 

Par ailleurs, le vent s’oriente au secteur sud, dans le sillage du phénomène Fiona, et provoque une agitation inhabituelle à la côte Caraïbe. Des creux moyens de 0m60 à 1m20 sont attendus dans la journée. La mer s’amortit progressivement à partir de dimanche. 

Retour au vert sur la côte Atlantique : les creux moyens sont en nette amélioration, les vagues ne dépasseront plus les 1m60. 

En chiffres 

Cumuls de Pluie :(en 1 heure)

-41.9mm au Diamant – en 3 heures 

-52.8 mm au St Esprit -en 6 heures: 

-63.8mm à Ducos

-68.1mm à Saint-Joseph

-91.4 mm au Diamant

-104.4mm au François, 78.2 mm au St Esprit. 

Données du Houlographe de Basse-Pointe :

-creux moyens de 3m10 avec des périodes de 10 à 13 secondes. 

Vent:

-Caravelle: sud-ouest, 53 km/h en moyen, rafales 85km/h. 

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La tempête Fiona a traversé la Guadeloupe, premières inondations

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guadeloupe FranceAntilles

De fortes rafales et d’importantes inondations: les premiers effets de la tempête Fiona se sont fait sentir dans la nuit de vendredi à samedi en Guadeloupe, placée en vigilance rouge pour fortes pluies et orages.

Les habitants d’Anse-Bertrand l’ont vue de très près puisque son centre, se déplaçant d’est en ouest, est venu percuter la pointe nord de l’archipel.

Sixième système tropical de la saison sur le bassin atlantique, la tempête Fiona, qui s’est formée jeudi au centre de l’océan, “a traversé l’archipel guadeloupéen en soirée, elle est à présent en mer des Caraïbes et se dirige vers Montserrat”, une île britannique située à 50 km au nord de la Guadeloupe, a précisé Météo-France dans son bulletin de 00H00 heure locale (06H00 à Paris).

Si Fiona “continue de s’évacuer lentement” vers l’ouest et la mer des Caraïbes ce samedi, les Guadeloupéens n’en ont pas fini avec elle, prévient Météo-France: les fortes précipitations “devraient perdurer dans tout le nord des Petites Antilles au cours des prochaines 18 heures”.

Un mois de pluie

Le dernier relevé de Météo-France indiquait jusqu’à 181 mm de pluie en 24 heures en Basse-Terre, soit l’équivalent de plus d’un mois de pluie.

Dans la soirée, certaines routes étaient déjà gorgées d’eau, notamment en Basse-Terre dont certaines communes ont d’ores et déjà subi d’importantes inondations, selon les images publiées par les habitants sur les réseaux sociaux.

A Lamentin (Basse-Terre), une journaliste de l’AFP a pu constater des pluies torrentielles sans discontinuer depuis 22H00, des orages très forts qui persistaient encore à 05H00 (11H00 à Paris) dans une intensité moindre.

En Sud Basse-Terre, des habitations inondées ont été évacuées en cours de nuit dans les communes de Basse-Terre, Baillif et Vieux Habitant, a-t-on appris de source préfectorale.

Sur Grande-Terre, l’autre île majeure, la zone de Pointe-à-Pitre est aussi concernée par d’importants cumuls, avec jusqu’à 122 mm de pluie mesurés en 24 heures.

Plusieurs abris ont été ouverts un peu partout dans l’archipel.

Certains chefs d’entreprise ont expliqué sur Facebook avoir vu leurs locaux inondés et certains habitants ont raconté avoir vu de l’eau entrer dans leur maison.

Marie M., une habitante du Gosier (Grande-Terre) âgée d’une trentaine d’années, a indiqué à l’AFP avoir été “réveillée vers 3H00 par le tonnerre et les éclairs” et avoir “très peur pour sa maison, actuellement en rénovation”.

Certains habitants ont témoigné de coupures de courant ou de réseau Internet.

La Guadeloupe est toujours en vigilance rouge pour fortes pluies et orages et en vigilance orange pour vague submersion et vent violent.

L’archipel à l’arrêt

Vendredi soir, le préfet Alexandre Rochette avait demandé aux Guadeloupéens d’éviter “l’ensemble des déplacements” et que chacun reste chez soi “pour éviter que des risques soient pris”. Des routes ont été fermées à la circulation depuis 19H00 pour éviter des accidents.

Des vents en rafales étaient prévus “jusqu’à 100/120 km/h” en Guadeloupe au cours de la nuit et de nombreuses averses fortes et orageuses étaient prévues jusqu’à la mi-journée.

Suspendu depuis 19 heures vendredi soir jusqu’à samedi midi, le trafic aérien ne reprendra qu’en fonction des conditions météorologiques, ont prévenu les autorités

Toutes les écoles de Guadeloupe avaient fermé dès vendredi à midi. Toutes les activités du week-end – telles les compétitions sportives ou les journées du Patrimoine – ont été annulées ou reportées en raison de l’arrivée de la tempête.

Le 16 septembre est la date anniversaire du cyclone Hugo, ouragan de catégorie 5 qui avait dévasté l’île en 1989.

Après la Guadeloupe, ce sont les Grandes Antilles qui voient la menace Fiona se préciser: le centre américain de surveillance des ouragans (NHC), situé à Miami, a indiqué envisager la requalification de la tempête en cyclone “au fil de son déplacement vers Porto Rico ce (samedi) soir tard et dimanche”, puis vers Haïti en début de semaine prochaine.

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La Guadeloupe reste en vigilance rouge

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guadeloupe FranceAntilles

La tempête Fiona est désormais en Mer des Antilles mais la masse nuageuse qui l’accompagne continue à arroser copieusement la Guadeloupe. Depuis vendredi après-midi la pluie n’a cessé de tomber sur toute l’archipel et particulièrement en Basse-Terre. D’après les premiers constats de nombreuses routes restent impraticables.  Cette nuit, les pompiers ont enregistré des centaines d’appels. Les cours d’eau et les rivières débordent.  Nous sommes encore en vigilance rouge et les autorités demandent aux habitants de rester chez eux. Ce samedi matin le dernier bulletin météo tire le bilan suivant : ” De fortes pluies concernent encore la Basse-Terre en ce début de matinée, en particulier le sud et la Côte-sous-le-vent. La pluie plus modérée qui s’est installée sur la Grande-Terre, Marie-Galante et La Désirade, va progressivement s’étendre à la Basse-Terre dans le courant de la matinée. Une amélioration plus nette est attendue dans l’après-midi. Les cumuls de pluie, déjà très importants, vont donc continuer de grossir ce matin, en particulier sur la Basse-Terre. Des cumuls de pluie de l’ordre de 150 mm ou plus de 3 heures sont encore possibles en Basse-Terre et aux Saintes. Sur toute la durée de l’épisode, les cumuls pourront atteindre 300 à 400 mm ou plus localement. “

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Bevans to get $770,000 for “wrongful termination”

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Amandala Newspaper

The Belize Tourism Board will have to pay close to 1 million dollars in damages following the Supreme Court’s ruling in favor of Karen Bevans’ wrongful termination lawsuit; counter and ancillary claims filed by the BTB were dismissed. 

by Marco Lopez

BELIZE CITY, Wed. Sept. 14, 2022

The former Director of Tourism, Karen Bevans, will be collecting close to eight hundred thousand dollars from the Belize Tourism Board (BTB) after the issuance this week of a Supreme Court ruling in favor of her wrongful termination claim, which she brought against the board following her dismissal from the BTB in March 2021, just a few months after the current PUP administration entered office. Justice Geneviéve Chabot, who handed down the judgment, awarded Bevans $769,869.00 dollars – what was to be her remaining salary under her second contract of employment, which was signed 1 year and 8 months before the new administration came into power in November 2020. 

The BTB argued in court that this contract was invalid, since, according to them, it was signed without the resolution of the board of directors and the authorization of the Minister of Tourism – being executed instead under the former Chairman and Vice Chairman of the BTB. (Bevans’ attorney, Senior Counsel Dean Barrow, in fact told a local television station, “What the BTB was arguing was that this contract was not properly given … the Prime Minister had said the same thing, that Mrs. Bevans gave herself this contract, the board did not act properly as it were sanctioning the contract, the contract was therefore illegal …”). The BTB also contended that clause 7.1.1 in the agreement, which stipulated that Bevans would have been entitled to payment if she was subjected to a wrongful termination, was an unenforceable penalty, and it brought ancillary claims against former Tourism Minister, Manuel Heredia; the former chairman of the Board of the BTB, Einer Gomez; and former BTB vice-chairman, Glenford Eiley.  

The claim which was brought against those persons was dismissed by Justice Chabot. At the time of Bevans’ dismissal, the BTB had opted to give her an ex-gratia payment of one year’s salary as a settlement to end any and all future claims for loss of wages under the agreement. This proposal was not accepted by Bevans, who through her attorney, Senior Counsel Dean Barrow, sent a written rejection of the offer to the board, but Barrow noted that the money, about $180,000, was still sent to the claimant’s account.

“The BTB, in fact, filed a counterclaim against her; that arose because when they wrote her to tell her that she was being terminated, they said ‘we will pay you a year’,” Barrow explained. “They said this is in full pay and final settlement, you are being terminated, we will give you a year’s salary, and that’s it. She came to me; I wrote back to say, ‘we do not accept that’; when they sent her the letter talking about the year’s salary that they will give, it said we do this by way of ex-gratia payment,” Barrow said.

That payment, however, was conditional—requiring, specifically, that she agree to not pursue legal action to recover the remainder of the salary to which she would have been entitled if she had served the full term of the contract.

“We wrote back to say that’s nonsense. They still deposited that year’s salary in her account,” Barrow explained. The counterclaim to recover that one year of salary was thus dismissed.

The court, in addition to ruling in favor of Bevans and awarding damages and legal costs, which, according to her attorney amount to about $81,000, also dismissed the ancillary claim brought by the BTB against the former Tourism Minister, Manual Heredia; former Chairman of the Board of the BTB, Einer Gomez; and former BTB Vice-Chair, Glenford Eiley.   

The BTB had claimed that Minister Heredia breached his statutory duty by failing to approve the contract for Bevans’ second term as Director of the BTB. The court found, however, that the agreement had been approved by Heredia by phone. The judgment noted, “It is Mr. Heredia’s understanding that there was no requirement for his approval to be in writing. He instructed the Chairman of the Board to execute the Agreement, and once those instructions were issued, the Board had to follow those instructions, which it did.”

The court also rejected the BTB’s claim that clause 7.1.1 of the contract agreement was unenforceable, that it was “irrationally generous”, and that “no reasonable and rational contracting authority would have considered it”. “The Court rejects the notion that Clause 7.1.1 was either unjustified, disproportionate, not in the best interest of the BTB, excessively generous to the Claimant, or… unreasonable based on the fact that Clause 7.1.1 is a standard clause in BTB’s employment contracts, that the Agreement was negotiated at arm’s length, and that there is evidence that Clause 7.1.1 is justified on a commercial basis,” stated Chabot’s ruling.

When interviewed after the issuance of the ruling. Senior Counsel Dean Barrow, who was prime minister of the country when Bevans served as BTB Director, said that both current and past directors of the BTB have benefited from the inclusion in their employment contracts of such a clause guaranteeing payment in cases of wrongful termination. Barrow even made reference to a specific instance of this: “As you know at the time when the UDP was in office, Mr. Mahler [Hon. Anthony Mahler—current Tourism Minister who was the BTB’s Director of Finance at the time] was terminated early and he sued and the then BTB settled, because they accepted that the contract said what it did.”

Prime Minister Hon. John Briceño and RSV Ltd. were both earlier sued successfully in a defamation claim that was brought by Bevans in response to the Prime Minister’s description of her employment agreement as a “crony contract” during comments he made on Love FM and other national media in December 2020. Hon. Briceño had claimed that there was a plethora of compiled evidence that never made it to the courtroom. When he first learned of a possible lawsuit against him, Prime Minister Briceño had stated, “I don’t think she wants to go to court, because when we set up all the evidence of what has happened during her time, it’s not going to be a pretty picture.” Notably, neither Hon. Briceño nor RSV Limited had apologized as was requested by Bevans in a letter sent by her lawyer—which was noted by Justice Westmin James, who, in an August 2021 ruling, awarded Bevans $30,000 in aggravated damages and $60,000 in compensatory damages.  

“The Claimant contends that she is not a political appointee,” stated the judgment handed down today. Bevans’ contract was renewed in April 2019 and was to run until April 2024, before she was terminated in March 2021. In February of that year, while Bevans was still at the helm of the BTB, an investigation was launched to determine if pension funds were misappropriated. Minister Mahler had stated at the time that he believed that trustees used those funds to pay themselves at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. 

Notably, the BTB, also while Bevans was BTB Director, parted ways with 50% percent of its staff during the first few months of the pandemic.

There has been no indication that the BTB will appeal the ruling, but the board’s attorney, Andrew Marshalleck, told local media this week that they are still considering what options are available to them and that he would be reviewing the court’s judgment before making a determination.

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KHMH celebrates 27 years

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Amandala Newspaper

“Today, we have a lot to boast about, and with the dedication of our staff, and their awesome ability to rise to the occasion despite the greatest of challenges, and the support of the board and the Ministry of Health and Wellness, we will have a lot more achievements. Our people need us, and we must answer the call,” CEO of the KHMH, Chandra Cansino said.

BELIZE CITY, Thurs. Sept. 15, 2022

The Karl Heusner Memorial Hospital (KHMH) celebrated its 27th anniversary of service to the country today. The hospital has been providing medical care to the Belizean population since 1995 when its doors were first opened. Since then, it has become the national referral hospital, and the apex tertiary care institution countrywide. The hospital’s administration hosted a ceremony of appreciation today to thank the staff for their invaluable work over the years at the hospital.

Minister of Health and Wellness, Hon. Kevin Bernard, and Prime Minister Hon. John Briceño were both in attendance.

“I still remember vividly when this institution was inaugurated—Karl Heusner Memorial Hospital. I was two years in politics at that time. I think it’s the late Reuben Campos was the Minister of Health, and I was in such awe to be here in this brand new hospital at that time, state of the art, and feeling that somehow this institution is going to play a very important role in the development of our country,” PM Briceño remarked.

With around 700 KHMH employees catering to the population of 400,000, and in light of the increased demand for services that has stretched thin the hospital’s resources and staff, the PM agrees that supporting the institution is more important than ever.

“The KHMH continues to be our flagship hospital in this country, and after 27 years we can see that the wear and tear that this hospital has been going through, and the equipment, and even with the staff that has been working so hard, and if we don’t give back the love, if we don’t give back the necessary resources for you to be able to continue to operate – just like us human beings, if we don’t take care of ourselves, we are going to fall apart,” PM Briceño said.

One aspect of the institution that has been steadily deteriorating is the hospital’s physical structure, and the PM, during his remarks, made a commitment to addressing the situation.

“I want to tell you that as a government we understand that, and we have been working, and we will continue to work with the Minister, with the Chairman and his board and the CEO to see how we can uplift this hospital, how we can make this environment better for you all so that you can feel proud that you are working here at the Karl Heusner Memorial Hospital, that you believe that your work is being recognized by not only the government but even by our people,” the PM remarked.

The Prime Minister also acknowledged the frontline workers at the national referral hospital who were the first responders to the COVID-19 pandemic, many sacrificing weeks without seeing their own family at the height of the pandemic.

“We salute the staff of this institution for all they have given, and continue to give of themselves and even of their families. We can never thank you all enough,” he said.

CEO of the hospital, Chandra Cansino, noted during her presentation that it seems we are nearing the end of the COVID-19 tunnel.

“While the tunnel may be long and dark, we are many, and we will walk together, we’ll support those who need a little help and we will persuade those who may need a little push, but as our village little upon itself, we will always be here for each other. None of us can do it alone, but together we can move mountains. Each and every member of the KHMH staff is important, and each person is a link in the chain of change that this institution needs to transform into a center of excellence,” CEO Cansino expressed.

Notably, a Cabinet brief released today notified the public that the Cabinet had approved the removal of restrictions on overtime pay for healthcare workers – one of the commitments made by the Ministry of Health and Wellness to nurses following the nationwide walkout at the end of August. PM Briceño in his presentation commended that initiative by the nurses.

“I must commend you that you were able to stand up but quickly sit down and discuss and negotiate and find common ground with the government. I say this to tell you that I know we still have a number of outstanding issues,” PM Briceño said, referring to a letter he has received from the KHMHAU regarding those workers’ pension scheme.

He said that he has asked the Minister of Health and Wellness, Hon. Kevin Bernard, to begin the conversation on that matter.

CEO Cansino remarked, “As you may know, the KHMH was established 27 years ago on September 15, 2022, 1995, and was named in the honor of Dr. Karl Huesner, who gave over 6 decades of his life to the service of Belize; and I know I’m not the only person here who remembers that transition … Five years later, the KHMH became the Karl Heusner Memorial Hospital Authority under chapter 38 of the Laws of Belize. Back in ’95, we served a population of approximately 210,000 people, which today has almost doubled to approximately 400,000. Gradually, over the years the demand for care and services increased, forcing us to expand and deliver. Today, we have a lot to boast about, and with the dedication of our staff, and their awesome ability to rise to the occasion despite the greatest of challenges, and the support of the board and the Ministry of Health and Wellness, we will have a lot more achievements. Our people need us, and we must answer the call.”

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Bird Flu confirmed in Blue Creek

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Amandala Newspaper

Officials have stressed that poultry and eggs are still safe for human consumption. To tackle the outbreak, BAHA has been controlling the movement of poultry and poultry products from affected farms.

by Khaila Gentle

BELIZE CITY, Thurs. Sept. 15, 2022

For the first time in almost seven years, an outbreak of Avian Influenza has been identified in the country—this time in the poultry population of a farm in the Blue Creek community. According to Dr. Miguel Depaz, Director of the Animal Health Department at the Belize Agricultural Health Authority (BAHA), that farm has been placed under quarantine, and further testing is being done at other farms in northwest Belize, with results expected to return anytime this week. There are already preliminary indications that the virus had been detected on one other farm—in Shipyard. When asked by 7News’ Jules Vasquez about the sense of urgency in ensuring containment of the virus at one farm, Depaz said, “It’s actually two farms. We have detected another farm. We sample another farm that was having some problems in Shipyard and that farm came out positive also.”

Depaz said on Wednesday that samples had been taken from the Blue Creek farm after it was observed that a number of chickens were dying. The samples were then sent to the University of Georgia in the United States, after which BAHA enacted its emergency response plan.

“As you know, Avian Influenza is the most serious poultry disease. And despite having said ‘poultry’, there is a potential for zoonosis, meaning that it also has the potential to be transmitted to humans,” he stated.

BAHA received confirmation that the samples had tested positive for Bird Flu on September 9. The strain of the disease identified was subtype H5.

Avian Influenza viruses can be categorized into two groups—highly pathogenic and low pathogenic. According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), most H5 viruses are low pathogenic viruses. Occasionally, however, some highly pathogenic H5 viruses—which have the potential to severely impact poultry industries—have been detected.

“All H5 and all H7 are of concern [to BAHA] and more so to the poultry industry because it is known that it is those subtypes that really affect poultry,” said DePaz.

At the moment, the pathogenicity of the strain identified in Blue Creek has not yet been confirmed by BAHA. Further pending studies will reveal the virus’s exact genetic makeup. Depaz did note, however, that so far 1,000 birds have died. “From 25,500 birds they are down to about 24,000, so [they] have lost over one thousand birds. The pathogenicity we don’t know what it is, despite the mortality only being 4% maybe. That is already alarming, regardless of what anybody says. You don’t want to lose a thousand birds.”

The source of the outbreak is believed to be a batch of imported hatching eggs, from which farms in both Blue Creek and Shipyard received stock. This, however, will also be confirmed with further testing. “Now we can suspect that the origin might be the US, but when we do the genetic sequence of the virus we will know,” Depaz said.

BAHA has already begun to implement its mitigation strategies. A Cabinet brief released on Thursday noted that the government had approved the measures recommended by the organization for controlling and eradicating the disease. Those measures include the depopulation of birds from affected farms, checkpoints to control the movement of poultry and poultry products from affected farms, and increased surveillance in communities where there is a presence of the disease.

Depopulation at the Blue Creek farm—which houses just under 25,000 birds—is expected to take place this week, if it is found that the outbreak is severe, and, according to DePaz, it will be done humanely.

In Thursday’s brief, Cabinet also noted that the Minister of Agriculture, Hon. Jose Abelardo Mai, had reassured them that there is no shortage of poultry products in Belize at this time. Hon. Mai, however, did state on Wednesday that there will be no movement of live birds and eggs until adequate testing of farms has been completed.

“We cannot slaughter animals for human consumption if they are not tested,” he said.

While depopulation will have an impact on the poultry industry, it may be the most effective measure for mitigating the spread of the disease. And, according to Armando Cowo, the President of the Belize Poultry Association, there would be no immediate impact on consumers.

Cowo and DePaz have stressed that poultry meat is still safe for consumption. Under BAHA’s emergency response plan, all birds entering the slaughterhouse must test negative and layer birds must test negative before their eggs can be commercialized. As a result, processed poultry is still being allowed to move out of the country. The movement of live birds out of farms, however, is being controlled.

Cowo, while commending BAHA for its immediate response to the suspected virus, has said that he believes the health authority may be acting too quickly in wanting to begin depopulation. He added that, following scientific protocol, BAHA should wait until it receives the final confirmation from its reference labs in the US. The Poultry Association, however, remains cognizant of the fact that Avian Influenza demands quick action.

BAHA is hoping to avoid a complete lockdown of the communities that produce the majority of the country’s poultry, as that would prove devastating.

“You need to allow activities but without compromising the situation—in other words, if I will allow birds to move out of Blue Creek, I need to test them. I need to ensure that they are negative. So, that is what we need to do. A total lockdown would kill the industry up north,” DePaz said.

In December 2015, an outbreak of Avian Influenza originating in Spanish Lookout village led to the culling of some 60,000 birds and approximately $6 million in losses for the poultry industry after a total of seven months.

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September Celebrations Abound!

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Amandala Newspaper

St. Martin’s Community Fest, a tribute to calypso legend Lord Rhaburn, and the return of the fire engine parade are among the highlights for this year’s September Celebration events so far.

by Khaila Gentle

BELIZE CITY, Tues. Sept. 13, 2022

The month of September is halfway over, and the festivities are in full swing. The past two weeks of events make up only a fraction of the National Celebrations Commission’s extensive September Celebrations Calendar, but all can be said to be true embodiments of the chosen theme for this year.

Giving Our Heroes Their Flowers

The Living Legend Concert held on September 9th saw Belize’s King of Calypso, Lord Rhaburn, honored for his invaluable contribution to Belizean culture and heritage. The National Celebrations Commission, along with the Belize City Council, inaugurated the Lord Rhaburn Plaza beside the Memorial Park in honor of the beloved musician.

Gerald “Lord” Rhaburn, 86 years old, is a pioneer in calypso, brukdown, and soca in Belize, with many of his hit songs having solidified themselves as a staple in the country’s September celebrations. The tribute to him is one of the many ways in which the Ministry of Culture has been making an effort to honor local legends—or “give them their flowers”—while they are alive.

A Martin’s Fest to Remember

The Saint Martin’s Community Fest has quickly become a much-anticipated annual event for persons living in Belize City, and this year, the festival’s post-pandemic return saw its largest turnout yet.

The festival, held on Sunday, was a day of clean fun for all ages and featured performances from a wide range of Belizean artists, many of whom have roots in the Saint Martin de Porres area. Entertainers included Supa G, Ernestine Carballo, King Rome, TR Shine, Britney Starr, and Cocono Bwai.

According to KREM Radio DJ and host of the event, Brick City, Martin’s Fest was previously set to occur in June, but after being postponed due to circumstances out of his control, the event ended up taking place in September.

“It originated in June. And then we pushed it back and we were going to do it in July as well when there was a state of emergency—which felt bad for me, because, as the organizer, and the brain behind it, I didn’t see why that should have affected us in any way … but again we have to follow all protocols, so we did that and we’re back again,” he said.

Now, the DJ is hoping that the festival can find a permanent home on the September calendar, alongside all the other celebrations.

“It’s good. They say good things come to those who wait, because I wish and I pray now that they put it eena the September calendar fi the celebrations,” he added.

Concerts Galore

September 20th, 2022 will see the long-awaited return of the Belize Soca and Culture Festival, with famed musicians Kes the Band, Nadia Batson, and Baby Cham headlining the Independence Day Eve event. The days leading up to Belize’s Independence Day, however, have also seen their fair share of concerts, including on September 9th when local artist Lova Boy graced the stage along with Jamaican singers Tanya Stephens and Christopher Martin.

This past Saturday, the Belize City Council hosted its 10th of September Bram 2022, which featured an array of local entertainers and musicians, including singer Brithney Starr, steel pannist Alexander Evans, and the Cumbia Boys Band.

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