Crise: les ?tats-Unis condamnent les violences et appellent au calme

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Le Nouvelliste

L’ambassade des ?tats-Unis en Ha?ti a publi?, dimanche 18 septembre 2022, un communiqu? sur les r?centes manifestations ? Port-au-Prince et dans plusieurs villes de province. Reconnaissant le droit de la population ? manifester, l’ambassade am?ricaine <> toutefois les violences enregistr?es lors des protestations. <>, peut-on lire dans le communiqu? publi? sur le site web de l’ambassade am?ricaine.

<>, poursuit le communiqu?.

Les ?tats-Unis, via ce communiqu?, disent continuer ? <>. << Les Ha?tiens ? travers tout le pays et de tous les horizons sociaux doivent cr?er les conditions qui permettront ? un gouvernement d?mocratiquement ?lu d’entrer en fonction d?s que possible.

Les ?tats-Unis demeurent un partenaire fid?le d’Ha?ti et nous restons d?termin?s ? soutenir le peuple ha?tien en cette p?riode difficile >>, soutient l’ambassade am?ricaine dans son communiqu?.

R?agir ? cet article

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Appeals process for firearm license applications being revamped Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

The Minister of National Security will no longer be involved in the appeals process for gun license applications under the new Firearms (Prohibition, Restriction and Regulation) Act, when it is passed into law.

Portfolio Minister, Dr Horace Chang, made the disclosure as he opened the debate on the Bill in the House of Representatives recently.

“We have established in this new-look Bill, a Review Panel that will take all appeals out of the hands of a single individual,” he said, while indicating that this will render the appeal process more transparent.

Procedures for appeals are outlined in the Bill, which makes provisions for the establishment of an Appeals Review Panel, which replaces the Review Board in the principal Act.

Minister Chang also noted that under subsection 86(1) of the Bill, an applicant challenging a decision by the Firearm Licensing Authority’s Board, may make an appeal to the Review Panel within the prescribed time and manner.

The Bill also makes provisions for the Review Panel to either accept the decision of the Board being appealed or refer the matter back for a new ruling.

The Firearms (Prohibition, Restriction and Regulation) Act, 2022, or the Firearms Act, was tabled in the House of Representatives on February 10.

The legislation introduces harsher penalties for offences connected to the illicit trade, manufacture, stockpiling, possession, and use of illegal guns.

It aims to address the challenges being experienced in Jamaica with respect to the proliferation of illegal firearms and increase the applicable penalties for breaches of provisions relating to prohibited weapons.

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Antigua, region must have a fund to support women’s and LGBTQI+ rights

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

Despite a thriving presence and rich history of feminist activism and social change, the Caribbean has long been one of the only regions in the world without a dedicated philanthropic fund focused on women’s and LGBTQI+ rights.

A new study finds resounding support to change that, pointing to the power and promise of women’s and LGBTQI+ movements working across the region, and the opportunity for donors to support their work with sustained and flexible funding.

If not now, when? A Feasibility Study for a Caribbean Fund for Women’s and LGBTQI+ Rights draws on engagement with activists, civil society leaders, and philanthropic donors— including a survey, three stakeholder sessions, and a public forum—as well as a review of literature and reports about women’s rights and LGBTQI+ movements in the Caribbean, donor and philanthropic attitudes, and trends. Its examination includes potential sources of funding; structure, management, and governance; mandate and location; financial requirements; and a risk analysis.

“Over the past several decades, Caribbean feminist movements have been significantly underfunded. Many of the leading organizations working towards gender justice are operating on shoestring budgets with volunteers and unpaid staff. We are all united in the belief that our region deserves much better, “ said Amina Doherty. “The time is now for a Caribbean fund that resources the activism that is addressing the most pressing issues of our time, from climate change and gender-based violence to economic security.”

The study is based on the premise that “the lack of a fund in the Caribbean is not solely due to its feasibility, but is also related to the negotiation of power and what, whom, and what places are prioritized in philanthropic spaces.” The fact that the Caribbean is one of the only regions in the world without such a fund, the study notes, “has direct correlation to how little funding goes to movements in the region.” It finds that “funding in the region is still relatively small compared to similarly sized regions in the world”— while the funding that does exist is often “insecure, short term, and project-based”, with a patchwork of “funding agendas…set by external actors.”

A Caribbean-led fund could go a long way in addressing these challenges, improving both the quantity and quality of funding for movement leaders. Establishing a regional fund could play a critical role in supporting the sustainability and growth of women’s rights and LGBTQI+ organizations at grassroots, local, and national levels, while also putting in place strategies to optimize resource mobilization, grantmaking, and capacity-building as conduits for supporting activism, the study finds.

“A Caribbean-led fund would unleash a ripple effect of change on two levels. It’s an exciting opportunity to increase resources for the region through direct grantmaking. And it would serve as a powerful base for philanthropic advocacy to leverage far greater resources from across the entire field for many years to come,“ said Tamara Huggins.

Along with opportunities, the study notes challenges that should be addressed and researched more deeply, such as the logistics of operating a fund across such a culturally and linguistically diverse region with varied colonial legacies. Yet as the experience of other funds in regions with similar challenges clearly demonstrates, the challenges are surmountable.

Women’s and feminist funds have long played a crticial role in supporting locally-led activism across the globe. According to Gendernet: “Supporting women’s funds is one of the most effective ways for donors to get resources to southern women’s rights organisations and movements […]. They are uniquely well-connected with women’s rights organisations at the grassroots level and can reach small and emerging groups that are less able to access larger sources of funding.” A feminist fund in the Caribbean could stabilize support for local changemakers, helping to unleash their full potential to drive lasting change in the region.

The study was initiated by Women’s Voice and Leadership – Caribbean, a partnership of the Equality Fund and the Astraea Foundation for Justice to to resource women’s rights and LGBTQI+ organizations in the Caribbean region. A five-year (2019-2024), $4.8 million CAD initiative, WVL-Caribbean is demonstrating what becomes possible when movement leaders have sustained support to lead change on their own terms, according to their own agendas for the region. The initiative is funded by the Government of Canada.

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SLFS Puts Out Fire In Vieux Fort Residence – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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Emergency personnel from the Saint Lucia Fire Service (SLFS) had to pry open a door on the top floor of a two-storey dwelling at Augier, Vieux Fort on Saturday to put out a fire in a bedroom.

No one was at home at the time of the blaze.

The Vieux Fort fire station responded with two fire trucks and an ambulance after receiving a distress call at 9:15 pm.

The fire destroyed two beds and personal effects in the bedroom to which it was confined.

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According to reports, the owner of the building is overseas and tenants occupied both floors of the building.

Headline photo: Stock image

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Familia pierde su techo a causa del huracán Fiona en Loíza

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

La alcaldesa de Loíza, Julia Nazario, informó en RADIO ISLA que solo una familia de la comunidad Viequito en su municipio perdió el techo de su vivienda a causa del paso del huracán Fiona por Puerto Rico.  

Julia Nazario agregó que cayeron muchos árboles, pero que, afortunadamente, ninguno cayó sobre residencias. Además, agregó que lograron movilizar a las comunidades que se hubiesen afectado tras la apertura de las compuertas de la represa Carraízo.

Nazario afirmó que no hubo pérdidas de vidas humanas, pero que aún queda por determinar cuánto fueron las pérdidas materiales. “Hay muchas residencias con filtraciones de techos y pues las estaremos ya recogiendo hoy”, expuso Nazario.

Noticia relacionada: Catalogan al huracán Fiona como “histórico y catastrófico” para sectores del Sur de Puerto Rico

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Están todas las comunidades de su municipio desconectadas del casco urbano, dice alcalde de Cayey

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El alcalde de Cayey, Rolando Ortiz, compartió el lunes en RADIO ISLA que todas las comunidades de sus municipios están fuera de conexión con el centro urbano.

“Esto no tiene comparables. Sobrepasan ya las 20 pulgadas. Todas las comunidades están incomunicadas con el casco urbano. Sin equipo pesado no vamos a poder entrar a las comunidades. Ya pedimos asistencia a la Guardia Nacional”, explica Ortiz.

El Centro Nacional de Huracanes mantiene un aviso de tormenta tropical para Puerto Rico, mientras el huracán Fiona se mueve a la República Dominicana. 

Fiona se encuentra en la latitud 18.5 grados Norte, longitud 68.6 grados Oeste, a unas 15 millas de Punta Cana, República Dominicana. Los vientos máximos sostenidos son de 90 millas y mantiene su movimiento a 8 millas.

Se esperan de 4 a 6 pulgadas adicionales para el sureste de Puerto Rico y unas 4 a 6 pulgadas adicionales para el Norte. Fiona ha dejado en algunos sectores hasta 30 pulgadas de lluvia.

Esas lluvias producirán inundaciones catastróficas y deslizamientos en Puerto Rico, según el Centro Nacional de Huracanes.

Escucha los detalles aquí

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LUMA Energy asegura restauración del servicio eléctrico tomará entre días y semanas

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El director de seguridad de LUMA Energy, Abner Gómez, aseguró en RADIO ISLA que la restauración del servicio eléctrico en Puerto Rico tomará entre días y semanas tras el paso del huracán Fiona.

Esto, a diferencia del huracán María en el 2017, cuando el mismo tardó meses en recuperarse para varios sectores.  

“Eso va a depender de los daños. Nosotros vamos a comenzar a energizar todo lo que podamos, pero deben haber lugares en Puerto Rico que por la topografía, por el tipo de daños, la secuencia de los daños, va a tomar un poquito más de tiempo. Aquí no va a haber este ‘blackout’ que hubo en María”, expresó Gómez.       

Más temprano hoy, los portavoces del consorcio indicaron que alrededor de 100 mil clientes tienen restablecido el servicio eléctrico.

Noticia relacionada: Aproximadamente 100,000 abonados ya tienen servicio eléctrico

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“Esto es otra cosa. Totalmente catastrófico”, dice Nino Correa

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El comisionado del Negociado para el Manejo de Emergencias y Administración de Desastres (NMEAD), Nino Correa Filomeno, indicó el lunes en RADIO ISLA que Puerto Rico está en estado crítico. 

“Esto es otra cosa. Totalmente catastrófico”, explica Correa. según indicó, es imposible comparar este evento atmosférico de sus efectos con cualquier otro.

El funcionario reiteró que el estado de emergencia no ha terminado y exhortó a la ciudadanía a quedarse en los refugios si están albergados allí, o a quedarse en sus casas con tal de no correr peligro. 

Manténgase pendiente a este medio para más información

Escucha los detalles aquí

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Fiona nears Dominican Republic after pounding Puerto Rico Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

Hurricane Fiona bore down on the Dominican Republic Monday after knocking out the power grid and unleashing floods and landslides in Puerto Rico, where the governor said the damage was “catastrophic.”

No deaths have been reported, but authorities in the US territory said it was too early to estimate the damage from a storm that was still forecast to unleash torrential rain across Puerto Rico on Monday.

Up to 30 inches (76 centimeters) were forecast for Puerto Rico’s southern region.

“It’s important people understand that this is not over,” said Ernesto Morales, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in San Juan.

He said flooding reached “historic levels,” with authorities evacuating or rescuing hundreds of people across the island.

“The damages that we are seeing are catastrophic,” said Governor Pedro Pierluisi.

Before dawn on Monday, authorities in a boat traveled through the flooded streets of the north coastal town of Catano and used a megaphone to alert people that the pumps had collapsed and urged them to evacuate as soon as possible.

Brown water rushed through streets, into homes and even consumed a runway airport in southern Puerto Rico.

Fiona also ripped up asphalt from roads and washed away a bridge in the central mountain town of Utuado that police say was installed by the National Guard after Hurricane Maria hit in 2017 as a Category 4 storm.

The storm also ripped off the roofs of several homes, including that of Nelson Cirino in the northern coastal town of Loiza.

“I was sleeping and saw when the corrugated metal flew off,” he said as he observed how the rain drenched his belongings and the wind whipped his colorful curtains into the air.

People clean debris from a road after a mudslide caused by Hurricane Fiona in Cayey, Puerto Rico, Sunday, Sept. 18, 2022. (AP Photo/Stephanie Rojas)

Ada Vivian Rom?n, a 21-year-old photography student, said the storm knocked down trees and fences in her hometown of Toa Alta.

“I’m actually very anxious because it’s a really slow-moving hurricane,” she said.

She said she is also worried about whether the public transportation she relies on to get to her job at a public relations agency will be operating by the time she has to go back to the office.

“But I know that I’m privileged compared with other families who are practically losing their homes because they are underwater,” she said.

Fiona was centered 15 miles (25 kilometers) west-southwest of Punta Cana, Dominican Republic, with maximum sustained winds of 90 mph (150 kph) on Sunday night, according to the US National Hurricane Center. It was moving to the northwest at eight mph (13 kph).

It hit on the anniversary of Hurricane Hugo, which slammed into the island in 1989 as a Category 3 storm.

As authorities continue to assess the damage from Fiona, many wondered when power would be restored.

“That’s probably the worst damage there is,” said Tom?s Rivera, who co-owns a hotel in the southwest coastal town of El Combate.

A man walks on a road flooded by Hurricane Fiona in Cayey, Puerto Rico, Sunday, Sept. 18, 2022. (AP Photo/Stephanie Rojas)

On Monday, authorities announced that power had been restored to 100,000 customers on an island of 3.2 million people.

US President Joe Biden declared a state of emergency in the US territory as the eye of the storm approached the island’s southwest corner.

The blackout that Hurricane Maria caused was blamed for the deaths of nearly 3,000 people in the storm’s sweltering aftermath, with power in some neighborhoods not restored until a year later. Maria was a devastating Category 4 storm that struck on September 20, 2017.

Luma, the company that operates power transmission and distribution, said bad weather, including winds of 80 mph, had disrupted transmission lines on Sunday, leading to “a blackout on all the island.”

Health centers were running on generators — and some of those had failed. Health Secretary Carlos Mellado said crews rushed to repair generators at the Comprehensive Cancer Center, where several patients had to be evacuated.

More than 3,000 homes still have only a blue tarp as a roof, and infrastructure remains weak, including the power grid. Outages remain common, and reconstruction started only recently.

“I think all of us Puerto Ricans who lived through Maria have that post-traumatic stress of, ‘What is going to happen, how long is it going to last and what needs might we face?’” said Danny Hern?ndez, who works in the capital of San Juan but planned to weather the storm with his parents and family in the western town of Mayaguez.

A home is submerged in floodwaters caused by Hurricane Fiona in Cayey, Puerto Rico, Sunday, Sept. 18, 2022. According to authorities three people were inside the home and were reported to have been rescued. (AP Photo/Stephanie Rojas)

The storm pummeled cities and towns along Puerto Rico’s southern coast that have not yet fully recovered from a string of strong earthquakes starting in late 2019.

More than 1,000 people with some 80 pets had sought shelter across the island by Sunday night, the majority of them on the southern coast.

Fiona was forecast to swipe the Dominican Republic early Monday and then northern Haiti and the Turks and Caicos Islands with the threat of heavy rain. It could threaten the far southern end of the Bahamas on Tuesday.

Hurricane warnings were posted for the Dominican Republic’s eastern coast from Cabo Caucedo to Cabo Frances Viejo, and for the Turks and Caicos.

Fiona previously battered the eastern Caribbean, killing one man in the French territory of Guadeloupe when floods washed his home away, officials said.

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DOMINICA-ENERGY-Rubis warns of job losses

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cana News Business

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