Man shot dead in San Fernando

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

File photo

Homicide Bureau of Investigations (Region III) police are investigating the shooting death of an unidentified man in San Fernando on Sunday night.

The police received a report at around 10 pm about a man lying face down and unresponsive on the road with gunshot wounds to his back.

Southern Division police found the body at Cross Crossing near Island Colour Printing.

The victim was of African descent, medium built, with a dark brown complexion.

People with information about his identity or the murder can call the Homicide Bureau Region III police at 652-0495 or the nearest police station.

People can also call the police at 555, 999 or Crime Stoppers at 800-TIPS (8477) or report it via the TTPS app.

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Latin American women get sewing training, equipment

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

– Grevic Alvarado

More than 300 Latin Anerican women in Trinidad and Tobago have been trained in the Textile Entrepreneurship Route programme sponsored by the International Organization for Migrants (IOM) through the NGO TTV Solidarity Network (TTVSolnet).

On Saturday 125 migrants received sewing machines after completing the basic online sewing course.

Heidi Diquez, founding member/managing director of TTVSolnet, said: “Textile Entrepreneurship Route is a project born from the need to support migrant women in TT who, due to their immigration status and stay in the country, do not have with the same opportunity to achieve their economic stability and the progress they all deserve.”

The programme began in 2019, thanks to the alliance of TTVSolnet with the Pan American Development Foundation (PADF), under a mandate from the Organization of American States (OAS) to especially support all those affected by the humanitarian and migration crisis in Venezuela.

The programme is financed by the Office of Population, Refugees and Migration.

The programme is only available to women in TT with irregular immigration status. Women from Venezuela, Cuba and Colombia participate in the courses, which are virtual, with a practical component lasting six weeks. Each student is given all the necessary material for the course.

Diquez said, “To date, the programme has trained more than 300 women, providing them with vocational training in the textile area from the basic sewing course, the manufacture of intimate apparel, repair and adjustment of garments and pattern-making, cutting and sewing.”

Diquez explained the project includes a special workshop on digital marketing in social networks that gave participants the tools to create virtual market spaces and help them promote their products and services.

“Another important part of the programme has been the alliance with IOM, who have supported it by providing sewing machines to all the graduates so they can produce from their homes.”

Diquez said at the end of the second cycle of training, “With great pride we congratulate all the women who participated in the workshops with commitment and effort to achieve their goals and delivery of projects.”

She also thanked all the facilitators of workshops for sharing their knowledge and encouraging each student to achieve perfection and quality in all their creations.

“We thank all our collaborators, and especially PADF and IOM, for their trust and commitment in helping our population of women entrepreneurs in TT.”

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World energy prices plummet days before budget: What will Colm bring today?

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Finance Minister Colm Imbert. File photo/Office of the Parliament –

FROM near-record highs in May, fuelled by the Russia/Ukraine war, world energy prices plunged sharply by five per cent overnight between Thursday and Friday, casting fresh doubt on any expected “goodies” a stressed out population can expect in Monday’s budget.

West Texas Intermediary (WTI) oil prices fell by almost a quarter from US$97 in late August, to US$78 on Friday. Natural gas fell from US$9.36 MMBtu to US$6.85 MMBtu.

Energy prices are where they were a year ago, before shooting up over supply-fears due to a European embargo on Russian oil and gas, since snapped up by China and India at cut-prices.

All this as the world faces a recession amid food shortages blamed on the protracted war in eastern Europe, plus post-pandemic public debts locally and globally.

Economist Vaalmiki Arjoon recently told Newsday of “a deepening cost of living crisis,” for the middle and lower income brackets, with the highest prices being seen by many in decades.

Food relief will be sought, after last budget’s VAT cut on biscuits, cooking oil, ketchup, bottled water, and pigtail.

Last month, thousands of workers protested in Port of Spain against stalled wage-negotiations as trade unions rejected the CPO’s four per cent offer for 2014-2019, with OWTU head Ancel Roget threatening to “shut this blasted place down.”

The Prime Minister has already said (in the Government’s Spotlight on the Economy event in September) that high energy prices would likely not last.

He had said TT must make best use of its finite resources to look after its people, but that does not include any entitlement to cheap fuel.

Economist Dr Marlene Attz recently told Newsday that TT was in “a very uncertain economic time” where bigger economies could intervene to flatten global energy prices. “It is unsustainable for us to assume a windfall in perpetuity. We don’t know when the windfall will end.”

The Energy Chamber urged boosted gas production by incentivising firms to explore, by quicker bid rounds, more tax-breaks (VAT, royalties), help for small and mature field development, and help to cut the carbon intensity of operations (e.g. in methane emissions and flaring).

Divert gas from domestic electricity generation by way of energy efficiency and renewables, it added.

The chamber advocated more cross-border supplies, saying flared gas in the North Monagas oilfields in eastern Venezuela exceeded TT’s shortfall.

The Government will also likely promote non-energy diversification: manufacturing, agriculture, tourism, and the creative sector. TT Manufacturers Association (TTMA) head Tricia Coosal on Friday in a text message, told Newsday, “The TTMA looks forward to the reading of the 2022/23 fiscal package with great anticipation.

“As the TTMA pursues its goal of doubling local non-energy exports by 2025, it is our hope the Government continues to support this thrust towards diversification as has been done in previous budgets.”

Another revenue source, recently mooted by Arjoon, was better tax collection.

Imbert told the spotlight event of $7 billion being owed in taxes, citing the proposed TT Revenue Authority (TTRA) which last year’s budget proposed to staff with 100 university graduates.

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FAO: Government must rethink school feeding policies

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Farmers tend to their crops in Aranguez. File photo/Roger Jacob

THE local office of the UN’s Food Agriculture Organisation (FAO) wants an increase in the input of local farmers in the national school feeding programme.

It wants more local produce provided by small-scale farmers to be purchased and incorporated into the menus offered in the programme.

But with the price of local produce being extremely volatile, especially with increasing price of inputs in farming, the school feeding programme is being boxed-in, especially as it has a fixed allocation to supply meals to thousands of school children.

The FAO is now calling on Government to rethink its policies on food acquisition to get farmers to have a consistent price for produce.

During an interview at the FAO’s offices on Serpentine Road, Port of Spain on Thursday, officials spoke about the Resilient School Feeding Programs Project which started in 2021 and will continue until 2023.

The programme, FAO officials said, is the local component of a regional initiative which involves six Caribbean countries.

The main objective of the project is to strengthen the capacity of institutions and stakeholders to implement sustainable National School Feeding Programs that incorporate the purchase of products from small farmers.

At the end of the programme the FAO hopes that there would be a consolidation of the school feeding programme as an important safety net to facilitate access to nutritional food for schoolchildren and an income for small farmers.

They also want a platform for inter-sectoral and inter-institutional co-ordination to achieve food and nutrition security and serve as a viable market for farmers.

Last Monday, the Central Statistical Office said the index of retail prices indicated a 1.5 per cent increase of all items up to June 2022, including food and non-alcoholic beverages, which increased by 2.9 per cent when compared to the same period in 2021.

The increase in prices were as a result of increases in flour, ketchup and white bread but also increases in the price of several locally-grown produce including tomatoes, ochroes, melongene, green pepper, chive and celery.

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Sand Hill murder: Family in fear as suspects remain at large

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana
Dead: Ray Wame Narine

The family of Ray Wame Narine, a miner of Spring Garden, Essequibo Coast, Region Two (Pomeroon-Supenaam), who was shot dead during an attack by two men on Thursday last, remains fearful for their lives as the suspects are still on the run.

In the same incident, which occurred in Region Seven (Cuyuni-Mazaruni), Narine’s twin brother and Rakesh Chunilall, also a miner of Banana Land, Berbice, were also injured.

In an interview with this publication, the family of the brothers stated that they have also received threats from the suspects, which now have them very much on the alert.

“It is sad to know that we lost our twin, he was an identical twin. He lost his life and the other one managed to escape, but we guess the killers are still hunting for him…”, they said.

Police had reported that the suspects are a father and his son from Pearl Village, East Bank Demerara (EBD).

According to reports, the motionless body of Ray Narine was found covered with several tree branches in the northern corner of the main access road, in Region Seven, which runs East to West.

Upon examination, two gunshot wounds were seen to the chest area along with one-inch lacerations to the abdomen and shoulder. A two-inch laceration was also seen on his right arm.

One suspected exit wound was observed on the right side of his back, and a warhead was also recovered in close proximity to the victim which appears to be .32 (calibre) ammunition.

Investigations so far revealed that the brothers operate a dredge in the Sand Hill Backdam.

The surviving brother told the Police that he and his brother left their 4-inch mining operation on Thursday and went to Sand Hill Landing, Cuyuni River, and while sitting on the front step of the Shanaz Allicock shop, a Honda XR motorcycle approached from a western direction with the suspects.

Ron Keme Narine said he recognised the pillion rider, as only a few days prior he had an altercation with him, and he relieved him of a firearm and ammunition, which was later handed over to the Police.

He said the suspects dismounted the motorcycle, hurriedly walked in their direction with handguns, and started to discharge several rounds in their direction.

After the shooting, they escaped in a western direction and while running, the suspects were still discharging rounds in their direction.

Ron Narine added that while running, he saw his brother collapse on the roadway, and he continued to run and sought refuge in some bushes where he remained for about two hours before returning to the landing.

Upon arrival, he found his brother lying motionlessly on the road with what appeared to be blood on him. He later learned that the suspects had made good their escape.

The body of Ray Narine was escorted to the Bartica Regional Hospital where it was pronounced dead, and taken to the hospital’s mortuary pending a post-mortem examination.

Meanwhile, the family said that Ray Wame Narine is a father of two children, and one is on the way. The said man would have celebrated his 22nd birthday in a matter of days, and he was deprived of that opportunity.

They said that based on what they were told, sometime last week Ray and the duo [the suspects] had a misunderstanding which led to a fight.

“Ray, who was very passionate at the time, cuffed down the man that shot him. However, the man was very offended after he was hit and as such took revenge where the man and his son teamed up and attacked Ray and his other half, Ron,” they claimed.

“This is very hard for us… his life was snapped out before his birthday and I really can’t go on anymore because I don’t [want] to break down,” they said.

The family is hoping that the suspects are apprehended and justice is served soon.

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UN Deputy Chief Says World’s ‘To-Do List’ Is Long And Time Is Short – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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Every problem we face is a problem that we created – so it’s a problem we can solve together, declared UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed on Saturday, rallying the crowd gathered in New York’s Central Park for the 2022 Global Citizen Festival to keep holding their leaders accountable: with hope and action, a world free of hunger and poverty is not impossible.

“Let’s tell it like it is: Our world is in big trouble. And we are facing crisis after crisis: People are hurting – and our planet is burning. Hunger is rising – and we are getting much more unequal. War is raging – and human rights are under attack,” the Deputy Secretary-General told the crowd gathered for the tenth year in New York’s iconic Central Park.

There is hope!

“But let me also tell you this: We are not hopeless… Are we?” she asked and rallied the festival attendees by noting some of the transformative objectives than can be achieved with united action: “A world of peace is not impossible. A world free of extreme hunger is not impossible. And deepening inequalities are not impossible.”

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Global Citizen Festival is an annual music event where fans take actions toward ending extreme poverty in order to earn free tickets. It brings together artists, activists, world leaders, philanthropists, corporate leaders, and more. This year’s gathering was held in dual locations – New York City, and for the first time, the Ghanaian capital, Accra.

The festival is timed to coincide with the annual high-level opening of the UN General Assembly to leverage opportunities to get policy and financial commitments from government, corporate, and philanthropic leaders to defeat poverty, demand equity, and defend the planet.

‘Will you be the change we are waiting for?’

On Saturday night, Ms. Mohammed told the enthusiastic crowd that a truly peaceful world free of poverty and hunger “is the world we promised ourselves, through the 2030 Agenda of the United Nations and the Global Goals,” referring to the 17-point action plan to end poverty, protect the planet and improve the lives and prospects of everyone, everywhere.

But she warned that time is running out – fast. “Just look at Pakistan and the tragedy of an extreme climate event. And there will be another on tomorrow,” and declared: “We have a serious ‘To-Do list’ – it’s the 17 Global Goals – and we need all your hands on deck.

Telling the Global Citizens gathered in New York that they must hold world leaders to account and demand equitable climate action, gender equality, and social justice now.

“Your voices matter. Your actions do count. Turn your frustrations into positive change,” said Ms. Mohammed, and added: “We’re betting on you. I’m betting on you. And you can bet on the United Nations. My question to you is: Will you be the change that we are waiting for? Will you be the change we are waiting for? “

SOURCE: UN News

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Menos del 10 por ciento de Ponce está energizado, reclama alcalde

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El alcalde de Ponce, Luis Irizarry Pabón, denunció que su municipio continúa con solo un 10 por ciento de zonas energizadas a ocho días del azote del huracán Fiona.

“La situación en Ponce sigue sumamente seria. La falta de energía, pues, ha complicado la situación de la ciudad […] Ha sido un trabajo intenso. Y lo más que ha requerido este alcalde, y ayer estuve con el gobernador y se lo dije, es la falta de información y la falta de comunicación en este evento de parte de LUMA”, expresó el primer ejecutivo al describir la situación como “crítica” en el municipio que recibió la mayor cantidad de lluvia (32.4 pulgadas) tras el paso del evento atmosférico.

Irizarry Pabón explicó que tampoco han recibido un informe de estatus de las labores, lo cual les permitiría continuar tareas que apoyen la reparación de la red, “abrir caminos”, tal como mencionó en entrevista para Dígame la verdad.

“Ponce es el pueblo con menos energía. Yo entiendo que menos de un 10 por ciento. Gracias a Dios, pudimos energizar los hospitales desde ayer, pero necesitamos información para nosotros llevarla a nuestra gente. El gobernador llamó a uno de los ejecutivos de LUMA, delante de mí, y lo que le dijeron era que, en dos o tres días, la mayor parte de Ponce iba a estar energizado, pero no tenemos información exacta”, expresó el alcalde al plantear que no comprende por qué si no hay dificultad de tendido, cables o transformadores en el casco urbano y la ciudad, aún no tienen más abonados conectados al servicio.

Otra de las preocupaciones que acapara a Irizarry Pabón es la escasez del diésel y cómo se afectan los servicios básicos en edificios clave, por lo que reclamó que, una vez llegado el producto, se priorice al municipio.

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Vigilante ante posibles casos de leptospirosis por agua contaminada

Ante la amenaza de un problema de salud pública (simultáneo con la pandemia por el coronavirus) por el uso de agua no potable y el resurgimiento de contagios por leptospirosis, el alcalde apuntó estar alerta al respecto.

“Definitivamente, como médico, ante la situación de las inundaciones y ciertas áreas donde se colapsaron ciertas alcantarillas y aguas usadas, estamos bien pendientes. De hecho, ayer enviamos una brigada al sector de Puerto Viejo, en la playa de Ponce, donde tuvimos esa situación. Las brigadas actuaron prontamente. Se está limpiando el área”, indicó al resaltar que en las comunidades de la montaña también carecen de agua potable.

El alcalde finalizó informando que ha atendido a la mayoría de las comunidades. No obstante, reconoció que se le han quedado algunas, pero que hoy continuará con las visitas y repartición de suministros.

Si tiene alguna emergencia particular como residente en el municipio, puede llamar al 787-840-5353 o al 787-840-5315, indicó el alcalde.

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Gobernador pide intervención del Departamento de Seguridad Nacional para entrada de barcaza con diésel

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El gobernador de Puerto Rico, Pedro Pierluisi Urrutia, informó en su cuenta de Twitter que solicitó la intervención del secretario del Departamento de Seguridad Nacional de Estados Unidos, Alejandro Mayorkas, para permitir la entrada de una embarcación con diésel en el sur de la isla en momentos en que casi la mitad de los abonados aún no cuentan con el servicio de energía eléctrica, y las instituciones que ofrecen servicios básicos no cuentan con abastos del combustible para operar.

“He solicitado la intervención personal del Secretario del Departamento de Seguridad Nacional para que un barco contratado por un suplidor privado, cargado con diésel y que se encuentra cerca de Puerto Rico pueda descargar el combustible en beneficio de nuestro pueblo. Asimismo, mi administración sigue trabajando para asegurar la agilización de embarques de diésel y gasolina a la isla”, expresó el primer ejecutivo en la red social.

Desde hace días, el pueblo ha estado a la espera por el producto en las gasolineras, y ha reinado la preocupación debido a que se ha visto amenazada la operación en hospitales, supermercados y empresas manufactureras, aparte de los miles de hogares de la ciudadanía que no tienen el servicio desde hace ocho días, luego del paso del huracán Fiona.

Pendientes para ampliación.

Nota relacionada: LUMA Energy llegará a acuerdo con municipios para que asistan en la reparación del sistema eléctrico

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Former DLP MP Dr Denis Lowe to receive an Official funeral Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

Former Member of Parliament and Minister of Government, Dr Denis Stephenson Lowe will be accorded an Official Funeral.

He will be cremated.

The service and cremation are scheduled for Saturday, October 8, at the Coral Ridge Memorial Gardens and Crematorium, The Ridge, Christ Church. It will begin at 10am.

The signing of the condolence book and viewing of the body will take place on Friday, October 7, at the Democratic Labour Party headquarters, George Street, Belleville, St Michael, from 3pm to 6pm.

Dr Lowe passed away on Friday, September 16, 2022, at the age of 64.

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GRENADA-FINANCE-NIS records increase in contributions for 2021 fiscal year

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cana News Business

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