Pope urges Italians to have more children, welcome migrants Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

MATERA, Italy (AP) — Pope Francis travelled to southern Italy on Sunday to close out an Italian church congress that coincided with Italy’s national election, and delivered a message that hit on key domestic campaign issues including immigration.

Neither Francis nor his hosts referred to the vote during the open-air Mass, though Italy’s bishops conference had earlier urged Italians to cast ballots in the eagerly watched election that could bring Italy its first far-right government since World War II.

At the end of the outdoor Mass in Matera, Francis spoke off the cuff asking Italians to have more children. “I’d like to ask Italy: More births, more children,” Francis said.

Italy has one of the lowest birth rates in the world and Francis has frequently lamented its “demographic winter.”

Far-right leader Giorgia Meloni, who campaigned on a “God, family and homeland” mantra, has also called for Italy to reverse its demographic trends by proposing bigger financial incentives for couples to have children.

Francis also weighed in on a perennial issue in Italy, recalling that Sunday coincided with the Catholic Church’s World Day of Migrants and Refugees. Francis called for a future in which “God’s plan” is implemented, with migrants and victims of human trafficking living in peace and dignity, and for a more “inclusive and fraternal future.”

He added: “Immigrants are to be welcomed, accompanied, promoted and integrated.”

Meloni and her center-right alliance have vowed to resume a strict crackdown on migrants coming to Italy via Libyan-based smugglers. The centre-left Democratic Party has among other things called for an easier path to citizenship for children of newcomers.

The Mass was celebrated by a protege of Francis, Cardinal Matteo Zuppi, who is head of the Italian bishops’ conference and has a long affiliation with the Sant’Egidio Community, a Rome-based charity known for its outreach to migrants and the poor.

The 85-year-old Francis appeared tired during the visit, which was scheduled before Italy’s snap elections were called and came a day after he made a separate day trip to the Umbrian hilltop town of Assisi. Francis has been using a cane and wheelchair this year, due to strained knee ligaments that make walking and standing difficult.

His trip to Matera, the southern Basilicata city known for its cave dwellings, underwent a slight, last-minute change due to storms that belted much of the Italian peninsula overnight: Originally scheduled to fly by helicopter Sunday morning from the Vatican’s helipad, Francis instead flew to Matera by jet from Rome’s Ciampino airport.

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3 murders in 3 days –Tobago police chief: No need to panic

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

MURDERED: Emiro Baynes who was found shot to death in Tobago. –

HEAD of the Tobago Division, acting Senior Superintendent Junior Benjamin is calling on Tobagonians not to panic in the wake of three murders being committed within three days last week.

In confirming that a suspect is in custody for the last of those three murders, Benjamin in a police press release on Sunday, said he has deployed several “counter mechanisms” including “specialised units” to tackle the issue of violence and murders on the island.

Benjamin said, “The Tobago Division is confident in its ability to solve these unfortunate incidents as it maintains a 50 per cent detection rate which represents solvency of one out of every two murders and other serious crimes.”

He added that while the Homicide Bureau of Investigations, Tobago Division, has assured “promising results very soon,” in connection with the other two murders, officers from the Emergency Response Patrol, Task Force, Criminal Investigations Department, among others, have been mobilised and are targeting areas known for illicit activities which contribute to serious crimes on the island.

Jonathan Baptiste –

As the Division expects more mobility and traffic with the upcoming Carnival activities, he said, “There is no need for panic as police officers will be conducting operations to increase visibility, safety, and security in key areas.”

He urged those with information on the ongoing investigations into the three murders to contact the police at 555 or share the information via Crime Stoppers at 800-TIPS or via the TTPS’ App.

On Thursday, T&T Inter-Island Company worker Emero Baynes was gunned down while driving his car along Belmont Farm Road in Mason Hall. No arrest has been made in this case.

Later on Thursday night, 28-year-old Jonathan Baptiste was shot by a man at Lal’s carpark, Dutch Fort in Scarborough. Baptiste, who hailed from Gerald Graham Road in Union Village, died later at hospital.

Then on Saturday, Kenrick James, 65, was chopped to death at around 7.30 am during an argument with a man whom James knew. James lived in Store Bay Local Road. The suspect was held a short while later. James is Tobago’s seventh murder victim for this year.

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Guyana now one step closer in securing a CLE Law School

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana
Attorney General and Legal Affairs Minister Anil Nandlall, SC

See below for a statement issued today by Attorney General and Legal Affairs Minister Anil Nandlall on the establishment of a Law School in Guyana: 

The Council of Legal Education of the West Indies (CLE) is the lawful authority for theadministering of legal professional education in the Caribbean Region. The Councildoes so through its law schools, the Hugh Wooding Law School, St. Augustine inTrinidad and Tobago, Norman Manley Law School, Kingston, Jamaica, and EugeneDupuch Law School, Nassau, Bahamas.

This arrangement is governed by a Treaty which is incorporated by legislation in allmember States. Under this arrangement, holders of a recognized Bachelor of Lawsdegree are admitted to these law schools and upon the satisfactory completion of acourse of study, are issued with a Legal Education Certificate (LEC) which qualifiesthem to practise before the Courts of Law in member States.

For nearly three decades Guyana has been trying to establish a law school within itsjurisdiction.

Last week at a meeting of the Council of Legal Education held in Bridgetown, Barbadoson September 16 and 17, 2022, the Hon. Mohabir Anil Nandlall, SC, MP, AttorneyGeneral and Minister of Legal Affairs presented a case for the establishment of aCouncil’s law school in Guyana. In his presentation, the Attorney General informed theCouncil that unlike a proposal made by his predecessor, Basil Williams, SC, in which theCouncil rejected, the Government of Guyana is proposing that the law school be aCouncil’s institution to be managed and administered by the CLE but that theGovernment will provide the land and buildings based upon criteria and specificationsset by the Council.

This request was favourably considered, and the Council made a decision to write theGovernment of Guyana shortly, informing of this decision and setting out the criteria andother requirements which the Government will have to satisfy.

The Hon. Yonnette Cummings-Edwards, OR, Chancellor of the Judiciary (ag.)representing the Judiciary and Attorneys-at-Law, Mr. Teni Housty and KamalRamkarran, representing the Guyana Bar Association, who were also present at themeeting, ably supported the Attorney General in presenting Guyana’s case.

This initiative merges into the Government of Guyana’s commitment to promote Guyanaas an attractive offshore education destination. The proposed Law School is expectedto attract students from across the Region and further afield and will ease theoverloading which currently obtains, in particular, at Hugh Wooding and Normal ManleyLaw Schools.

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17-Y-O motorcyclist struck down on Linden-Soesdyke Highway

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana
Dead Stanton Garraway

A teenager is now dead after he was struck down by a motorcar while on his motorcycle on the Linden-Soesdyke Highway.

The dead youth has been identified as 17-year-old Stanton Garraway of Lot Kairuni Village, Linden-Soesdyke Highway.

INews understands that the accident occurred on the Silver Hill Public Road, Linden-Soesdyke Highway just after 14:00h on Saturday.

Reports reaching this publication revealed that Garraway was on his motorcycle, driving along the highway when a motorcar drove out of a trail and into his path. This resulted in a collision between the bike and the car.

Upon impact, the teenager was flung off of the motorcycle and fell onto the roadway, where he was fatally injured.

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UN Chief Says World Falling Short On Pledge To Protect Minority Rights – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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The world is falling “far short” of commitments made three decades ago to protect minority communities, UN Secretary-General António Guterres said on Wednesday, appealing for concrete action to counter this neglect.

The UN chief was speaking in New York at an event to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the adoption of the Declaration on the Rights of Persons Belonging to National or Ethnic, Religious and Linguistic Minorities.

Countries are meeting on the sidelines of the General Assembly to critically assess progress of the landmark document.

‘Outright inaction and negligence’

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Mr. Guterres was blunt in his evaluation of their efforts.

“The hard truth is that – 30 years on – the world is falling short. Far short,” he said.

“We are not dealing with gaps – we are dealing with outright inaction and negligence in the protection of minority rights.”

Women most affected

He reported that minorities have faced forced assimilation, persecution, prejudice, discrimination, stereotyping, hatred, and violence.

They also have been stripped of their political and citizenship rights, and seen their cultures stifled, their languages suppressed, and their religious practices curtailed.

Additionally, more than three-quarters of the world’s stateless people belong to minorities, while the COVID-19 pandemic has revealed deep-rooted patterns of exclusion and discrimination disproportionally affecting their communities.

“Women from minority groups have often been the worst off – facing an escalation in gender-based violence, losing jobs in greater numbers, and benefiting the least from any fiscal stimulus,” he added.

It is past time the international community lives up to its commitments, the Secretary-General told the gathering.

Call to action

“We need political leadership and resolute action. I call on every Member State to take concrete steps to protect minorities and their identity,” he said.

The UN chief pointed to his Call to Action for Human Rights, issued in February 2020, as a “blueprint” for all governments to address long standing issues of discrimination.

Meanwhile, his Our Common Agenda report, published last September, calls for a renewed social contract anchored in a comprehensive approach to human rights.

Mr. Guterres stressed that minorities must be active and equal participants in every action and decision, adding that this participation is not just for their benefit.

“We all benefit,” he said. “States that protect the rights of minorities are more peaceful. Economies that promote the full participation of minorities are more prosperous. Societies that embrace diversity and inclusion are more vibrant. And a world in which the rights of all are respected is more stable and more just.”

The commemoration should serve as “a catalyst for action”, he said, urging countries to work together to make the Declaration a reality for minorities everywhere.

SOURCE: UN News/ SLT

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9th in the World! Barbadian female archer wins big in Santo Domingo Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

Charlene Goddard will represent Barbados in the 2023 Central American and Caribbean Games [CAC] following her recent performance at the Copa Merengue CAC qualifier world ranking event.

The competition, which was hosted at Pabell?n de Arquer?a, Parque del Este in Santo Domingo, took place from September 6 to September 11, 2022.

Speaking to Loop Sports, 28-year-old Goddard said that she was feeling conflicted about her performance.

“I have mixed emotions about my performance,” she explained. “I struggled a bit to settle down in the qualification round and it resulted in me not shooting a score I would have liked, but I picked myself back up in eliminations and felt better about my performance during then.”

The Medical Laboratory Technologist who works at Bayview Laboratory in Belleville, St Michael revealed that she not only placed second in the CAC qualifier, but also ninth in a world ranking event against over 100 competitors.

“I competed in two competitions while I was there. One being the CAC qualifier which I placed second overall and opened a Senior Compound female slot for Barbados. The second was a world ranking event in which I placed ninth overall.”

Goddard, who is an experienced archer having been shooting for over 15 years, disclosed that this was not her first time competing abroad, however, the weather conditions in the Dominican Republic were something she had never experienced before.

“I have been competing overseas for quite some time. My last competition would have been a world ranking shoot in Medellin Colombia last year May, which I would have finished fourth overall. There hasn’t been much difference with competing at different competitions. The only thing I can think about is the weather. Some countries I have competed in have been freezing while others, for example Dominican Republic, was extremely hot, I have never experienced heat like that in my life.”

Currently, Goddard is focusing on training for the CAC games with her eyes set on the 2023 Pan American Qualifier as well.

“I would like to attend the Pan American Qualifier next year. I am unsure of dates but for now, I am mainly focusing on my training for the CAC games.”

Looking ahead with determination, she took a moment to thank her family and friends who play an important role in her archery career. “My coach, family, husband and friends, each one of them play an important role in my archery career.” She added, “They are always proud of me no matter the outcome.”

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Some communities in western, southern parishes out of power – JPS Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

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

1 hrs ago

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NEWYou can now listen to Loop News articles!

As the outer bands of Tropical Storm Ian continue to impact southern and western parishes, Jamaica Public Service Company (JPS) is reporting that a few small pockets in these parishes have had their power service interrupted.

In a release on Sunday morning, the company said it expects to return these areas to normality on Sunday.

The affected areas include sections of Liguanea in St Andrew; Red Ground and Flanker in St James; and Blackwind Deeside in Trelawny.

The power company said waterlogged soil resulting from the rainy conditions, along with lightning, remain the biggest threats to the restoration and stability of the power supply.

The company it will continue to closely monitor the situation to address customers’ needs as they may arise.

JPS said it remains dedicated to serve with the highest levels of safety in mind.

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Winter’s approach sets clock ticking for Ukraine, Russia Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — The onset of autumnal weather, with rains making fields too muddy for tanks, is beginning to cloud Ukraine’s efforts to take back more Russian-held territory before winter freezes the battlefields, a Washington-based think tank said Sunday.

Russia, meanwhile, pressed on with its call-up of hundreds of thousands of men to throw into the seven-month war, seeking to reverse its recent losses. Without control of the skies over Ukraine, Russia is also making increasing use of suicide drones, with more strikes reported Sunday in the Black Sea port city of Odesa.

The Russian mobilization — its first such call-up since World War II — is sparking protests in Russia, with fresh demonstrations Sunday. In Dagestan, one of Russia’s poorer regions in the North Caucasus, police fired warning shots to try to disperse more than 100 people who blocked a highway while protesting the call-up, Russian media reported.

It is also opening splits in Europe about whether fighting-age Russian men fleeing in droves should be welcomed or turned away.

For Ukrainian and Russian military planners, the clock is ticking, with the approach of winter expected to make fighting more complicated. Already, rainy weather is bringing muddy conditions that are starting to limit the mobility of tanks and other heavy weaponry, according to the Institute for the Study of War.

But the think tank said Ukrainian forces are still gaining ground in their counteroffensive, launched in late August, that has spectacularly rolled back the Russian occupation across large areas of the northeast and which also prompted Russian President Vladimir Putin’s new drive for reinforcements.

The partial mobilization has triggered an exodus of men seeking to avoid the draft — and sharp differences of opinion in Europe in recent days about how to deal with them.

Lithuania, a European Union member-country that borders Kaliningrad, a Russian Baltic Sea exclave, said it won’t grant them asylum. “Russians should stay and fight. Against Putin,” Foreign Minister Gabrielius Landsbergis tweeted.

His counterpart in Latvia, also an EU member and bordering Russia, said the exodus poses “considerable security risks” for the 27-nation bloc and that those fleeing can’t be considered conscientious objectors against the invasion.

Many “were fine with killing Ukrainians, they did not protest then,” the Latvian foreign minister, Edgars Rinkevics, tweeted. He added that they have “plenty of countries outside EU to go.”

Finland also said it intends to “significantly restrict” entry to Russians entering the EU through its border with Russia. A Finnish opposition leader, Petteri Orpo, also said fleeing Russian military reservists are an “obvious” security risk and “we must put our national security first.”

Officials in other EU nations, however, say Europe has a duty to help, and fear that turning away Russians could play into Putin’s hands, feeding his narrative that the West has always hated Russians and that the war is being waged to safeguard their country against Western hostility.

“Closing our frontiers would fit neither with our values nor our interests,” a 40-strong group of senators in France said in a statement. They urged the EU to grant refugee status to Russians fleeing mobilization and said turning them away would be “a mistake by Europe in the war of communication and influence that is playing out.”

The mobilization is also running hand-in-hand with Kremlin-orchestrated votes in four occupied regions of Ukraine that could pave the way for their imminent annexation by Russia.

Ukraine and its Western allies say the referendums in Kherson and Zaporizhzhia in the south and the eastern Luhansk and Donetsk regions have no legal force. The votes are set to wrap up Tuesday but are being dismissed in Ukraine and the West as a sham, with footage showing armed Russian troops going door to door to pressure Ukrainians into voting.

Ukraine’s Reintegration Ministry said Russia has brought people from Belarus, Brazil, Egypt, South Africa, Syria, Togo, Uruguay and Venezuela to act as supposed outside observers. The ministry warned that they “will be punished,” without specifying how.

In cities across Russia, police have arrested hundreds of protesters against the mobilization order. Women opposed to the call-up protested Sunday in the Siberian city of Yakutsk. Videos shared by local media showed a crowd of a few hundred people, mostly women, holding hands and marching in a circle around a group of police. Police later dragged some away or forced them into police vans. News website SakhaDay said the women chanted pacifist slogans and songs.

At least 2,000 people have been arrested in recent days for similar demonstrations around the country. Many of those taken away immediately received call-up summons.

Other Russians are reporting for duty. Putin and Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu have said the order applies to reservists who recently served or have special skills, but almost every man is considered a reservist until age 65 and Putin’s decree kept the door open for a broader call-up.

The Kremlin said its initial aim is to add about 300,000 troops to its forces in Ukraine, struggling with equipment losses, mounting casualties and weakening morale. The mobilization marks a sharp shift from Putin’s previous efforts to portray the war as a limited military operation that wouldn’t interfere with most Russians’ lives.

By JON GAMBRELL, Associated Press

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Roban generador eléctrico de residencia en Dorado

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

Un escalamiento fue reportado a las 4:56 de la tarde del sábado en una residencia localizada en el Barrio Los Puertos de Dorado.

De acuerdo a la información preliminar, alega la querellante del área de la marquesina se robaron de un generador eléctrico A-iPower 12000 valorada en cinco mil dólares.

La querella fue investigada preliminarmente por el agente José Allende del distrito de Dorado y referida al Cuerpo de Investigaciones Criminales de Vega Baja para la investigación correspondiente.

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Seguridad

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El dólar cobra fuerza e incrementa su diferencial ante el euro en los pagos internacionales

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El uso del euro como medio de pago internacional en agosto logró su mínimo de 2 años, mientras que el dólar alcanzó su máximo en el mismo periodo, se desprende del informe del sistema interbancario SWIFT publicado este miércoles, recoge Bloomberg.

Según las estadísticas, para el 31 de agosto el porcentaje de la moneda europea en el comercio internacional se redujo hasta un 34,5%, mientras el del dólar subió un 42,6%. Los extremos previos fueron alcanzados en el marzo del 2020, cuando la tasa de la moneda norteamericana en intercambios globales fue de un 44,1%, y la del euro un 30,8%.

El diferencial entre dólar y euro, siendo de solo un punto porcentual en febrero, superó los 8 puntos para agosto. Según Bloomberg, tal descenso en el uso del euro en los pagos internacionales pudo deberse a la inflación récord, la crisis energética y depreciación del 12% de la moneda europea respecto al dólar. No obstante, pese a todas las dificultades, el euro preserva el segundo lugar en la lista de divisas utilizadas en el comercio mundial.

Noticia original de RT en Español

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dolar euro

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