St. Kitts and Nevis’ Attorney General Promises to Swiftly Operationalize Integrity in Public Life Act, Freedom of Information Act and to Draft New Anti-corruption Legislation

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: ZIZ Broadcasting Corporation

Basseterre, St. Kitts, September 24, 2022 (SKNIS): Attorney General and Minister of Justice and Legal Affairs, Honourable Garth Lucien Wilkin, said that he highly believes that public office must be influenced by good ethical behaviour.

“I believe in Integrity in Public Life unashamedly. We must do better and be better. Too many people in the system abuse the system,” said Attorney General Wilkin.

He said that the Administration of Hon. Dr. Terrance M. Drew takes the matter of integrity in public life seriously.

“Our Prime Minister, who shares my passion, has therefore instructed me to swiftly implement the Integrity in Public Life Act, the Freedom of Information Act and a brand new Anti-Corruption Act. Those laws will be fully operational in 2022,” the Honourable Attorney General said.

He said that he had begun to hold talks in relation to the Nevis Island Administration (NIA) status issue and to set goals with respect to Constitutional reform.

“On another note, I ventured to Charlestown yesterday with the Solicitor General, Simone Bullen-Thompson, to meet with the Legal Advisor to the NIA, Hélène Lewis, and Senior NIA Legal Officer, Rhonda Nisbett-Browne, to hold the first formal meeting of the Joint Constitutional Reform Committee (JCRC),” he said.

Commenting on the meeting he said “It was a respectful, heartwarming and fruitful meeting. We are on the same page. We agreed on some interim measures to resolve the NIA status issue and set short-term goals to advance Fulsome Constitutional Reform and resolve all outstanding issues between our Islands.”

Attorney General Wilkin also said that his Chambers has already begun formulating plans for St. Kitts and Nevis to become a Republic, thereby remove the British monarch as Head of State.

“On that note, our Prime Minister, Hon. Dr Terrance Drew has announced in his Independence Day message that it is time our Federation becomes fully and truly Independent. On his instructions, the Chambers has begun formulating that plan,” he said.

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Operations of Dieppe Bay Police Station Temporarily Relocated

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: ZIZ Broadcasting Corporation

The Royal St. Christopher and Nevis Police Force is informing the public of the temporary closure of the Dieppe Bay Police Station for urgent repairs. As of September 24, 2022, the operations of that station will take place at the Tabernacle Police Station. The Tabernacle Police Station can be reached by dialling 465-7227.

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Farmer of Hanover and St James addresses named as person of interest Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

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

33 minutes ago

NEWYou can now listen to Loop News articles!

The Hanover police have named 47-year-old Andrew Jones as a person of interest.

Jones, who is said to be a farmer and a mason, is last known to have resided in Golden Grove district in Hanover as well as Barrett Town in St James. Detectives have, however, been unable to find him at these addresses.

Jones is therefore being urged to make contact with detectives at the Sandy Bay Police Station immediately.

In addition, anyone who can assist the police to locate him is asked to contact the Sandy Bay police at 876-953-5312 or the Lucea police at 876-956-2333. Persons may also call the police 119 number.

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Bam! NASA spacecraft crashes into asteroid in defence test Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

A NASA spacecraft rammed an asteroid at blistering speed Monday in an unprecedented dress rehearsal for the day a killer rock menaces Earth.

The galactic slam occurred at a harmless asteroid 7 million miles (11.3 million kilometres) away, with the spacecraft named Dart plowing into the space rock at 14,000 mph (22,500 kph). Scientists expected the impact to carve out a crater, hurl streams of rocks and dirt into space and, most importantly, alter the asteroid’s orbit.

“We have impact!” Mission Control’s Elena Adams announced, jumping up and down and thrusting her arms skyward.

Telescopes around the world and in space aimed at the same point in the sky to capture the spectacle.

Though the impact was immediately obvious — Dart’s radio signal abruptly ceased — it will take as long as a couple of months to determine how much the asteroid’s path was changed.

The US$325-million mission was the first attempt to shift the position of an asteroid or any other natural object in space.

“As far as we can tell, our first planetary defence test was a success,” Adams later told a news conference, the room filling with applause. “I think Earthlings should sleep better. Definitely, I will.”

NASA Administrator Bill Nelson reminded people earlier in the day via Twitter that, “No, this is not a movie plot.” He added in a prerecorded video: “We’ve all seen it on movies like ‘Armageddon,’ but the real-life stakes are high.”

Monday’s target: a 525-foot (160-metre) asteroid named Dimorphos. It’s a moonlet of Didymos, Greek for twin, a fast-spinning asteroid five times bigger that flung off the material that formed the junior partner.

The pair have been orbiting the sun for eons without threatening Earth, making them ideal save-the-world test candidates.

Launched last November, the vending machine-size Dart — short for Double Asteroid Redirection Test — navigated to its target using new technology developed by Johns Hopkins University’s Applied Physics Laboratory, the spacecraft builder and mission manager.

Dart’s on-board camera, a key part of this smart navigation system, caught sight of Dimorphos barely an hour before impact. “Woo hoo!” exclaimed Adams, a mission systems engineer at Johns Hopkins.

With an image beaming back to Earth every second, Adams and other ground controllers in Laurel, Maryland, watched with growing excitement as Dimorphos loomed larger and larger in the field of view alongside its bigger companion. Within minutes, Dimorphos was alone in the pictures; it looked like a giant gray lemon, but with boulders and rubble on the surface. The last image froze on the screen as the radio transmission ended.

Flight controllers cheered, hugged one another and exchanged high fives. Their mission complete, the Dart team went straight into celebration mode. There was little sorrow over the spacecraft’s demise.

“Normally, losing signal from a spacecraft is a very bad thing. But in this case, it was the ideal outcome,” said NASA programme scientist Tom Statler.

Johns Hopkins scientist Carolyn Ernst said the spacecraft was definitely “kaput”, with remnants possibly in the fresh crater or cascading into space with the asteroid’s ejected material.

Scientists insisted Dart would not shatter Dimorphos. The spacecraft packed a scant 1,260 pounds (570 kilograms), compared with the asteroid’s 11 billion pounds (5 billion kilograms). But that should be plenty to shrink its 11-hour, 55-minute orbit around Didymos.The impact should pare 10 minutes off that. The anticipated orbital shift of one per cent might not sound like much, scientists noted. But they stressed it would amount to a significant change over years.

“Now is when the science starts,” said NASA’s Lori Glaze, planetary science division director. “Now we’re going to see for real how effective we were.”

Planetary defence experts prefer nudging a threatening asteroid or comet out of the way, given enough lead time, rather than blowing it up and creating multiple pieces that could rain down on Earth. Multiple impactors might be needed for big space rocks or a combination of impactors and so-called gravity tractors, not-yet-invented devices that would use their own gravity to pull an asteroid into a safer orbit.

“The dinosaurs didn’t have a space programme to help them know what was coming, but we do,” NASA’s senior climate adviser Katherine Calvin said, referring to the mass extinction 66 million years ago believed to have been caused by a major asteroid impact, volcanic eruptions or both.

The non-profit B612 Foundation, dedicated to protecting Earth from asteroid strikes, has been pushing for impact tests like Dart since its founding by astronauts and physicists 20 years ago. Monday’s feat aside, the world must do a better job of identifying the countless space rocks lurking out there, warned the foundation’s executive director, Ed Lu, a former astronaut.

Significantly less than half of the estimated 25,000 near-Earth objects in the deadly 460-foot (140-metre) range have been discovered, according to NASA. And fewer than on per cent of the millions of smaller asteroids, capable of widespread injuries, are known.

The Vera Rubin Observatory, nearing completion in Chile by the National Science Foundation and US Energy Department, promises to revolutionise the field of asteroid discovery, Lu noted.

Finding and tracking asteroids, “That’s still the name of the game here. That’s the thing that has to happen in order to protect the Earth,” he said.

By MARCIA DUNN

AP Aerospace Writer

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Reports of Land Slippage At The Barre De L’Isle ‘Untrue’ – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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The Department of Infrastructure, Ports, and Transport has denied reports of a land slippage at the Barre de L’ Isle.

The denial came in a statement on Tuesday morning from Communications Officer Miguel Fevrier.

Fevrier noted that reports started circulating on social media and instant messaging platforms regarding land slippage at the Barre de L’Isle due to rains Saint Lucia has been experiencing.

But he disclosed that a technical team went to the area and confirmed that “nothing has happened.”

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Reportan accidente de carácter grave cerca de la zona industrial de Caguas

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

Las autoridades se encuentran investigando un accidente de carácter grave ocurrido en horas de la mañana de hoy en la carretera 189, intersección con la avenida Muñoz Marin, en Caguas en la que un peatón resultó herido.

Según informó la periodista y colaboradora de RADIO ISLA, Aixa Vázquez, los hechos ocurrieron cerca de la zona industrial de Caguas. 

Además, se supo que el conductor del vehículo se detuvo en la escena y será sometido a una prueba de aliento para determinar si conducía bajo los efectos de alcohol. 

Pendientes a RADIO ISLA para la ampliación de esta noticia en desarrollo.

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Trahadornan di Post Aruba NV a drenta den accion pa 8 ora largo

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Diario

Nan ta exigi haya nan placa bek

ORANJESTAD (AAN): Malcontento ta sigui entre e trahadornan di Post Aruba NV.  Esaki ta debi cu diripiente gerencia no kier sigui cumpli cu e CAO existente, y ta pushando pa bin cu un Contrato Colectivo nobo.

   Debi na esaki, hopi trahador a bay atras cu 105 Florin, y esey ta e fuente di tur e disgusto cu tin na Servicio Postal.

   Tempo cu esnan di Post Aruba NV mester a entrega durante e Pandemia, nan a haci esaki sin problema.  Pero awor cu nan tin di haya nan parti tambe bek, diripiente Post Aruba NV ta bin bisa cu ‘no tin placa’.  Siendo cu nan a tene e placa di tur trahador aden!

   Pues tur cos ta draai rond cu trahadornan ta exigiendo pa nan haya e 105 Florin aki bek.  Como cu anteriormente gerencia a bisa cu nan tin e “placa wanta”, y awor ta saliendo na cla cu esey no ta e caso.

   Como cu Post Aruba NV no a cumpli 2 aña cune, e suma di 105 Florin aki awor a redobla y a bira 210 Florin.

   Trahadornan ta convenci cu esey ta e motibo cu e compania ta buscando cueste loke cueste pa cambia e contract di CAO cu tin.

   Considerando e hecho cu e trahadornan no ta hayando ningun contesta di gerencia, nan a dicidi siman pasa Diahuebs 22 di September, pa tene un walkout di 2 ora largo pa asina spera di por haya contesta.  Pero e contesta nunca a bin, y trahadornan a bay labora bek.

   E ora a dicidi cu Diabierna ta bay tene un walkout atrobe, pero e biaha aki di 4 ora largo pa mira si asina kizas gerencia lo spierta di soño.  Pero atrobe riba 23 di September esey no a socede.

   E shopsteward di Sindicato SEPPA, esta Eusebio Kelly cu ta representa e trahadornan a indica cu pa tal motibo riba Dialuna, nan a dicidi na tene un walkout di 8 ora largo pa e asunto ey.  Pesey mes henter dia Post Aruba NV tabata plat.

    Sindicato SEPPA ta para 100 porciento tras di e lucha di trahadornan, y nan a mustra cu tanten cu gerencia no duna un contesta, nan lo no drenta bek y bay traha.

   Post Aruba NV pa colmo falta trahador pa e servicio di Bestel Dienst.  Y gerencia ta keha tambe cu a perde 30% di cobranzanan cu tabata wordo manda antes pa Setar NV.  Pero aki ta unda cu e trahadornan ta spera cu gerencia lo bin cu inovacion y busca forma pa crea entrada nobo.  Den diez aña, nan no ta mira nada di esey ta socede.

   E trahadornan ta mira cu hopi hefe y miembro di gerencia ta atende Conferencianan Mundial, pero na final no ta mira ningun inovacion, cambio, y progreso.  Cada biaha ta menciona cu tin plan riba mesa, pero trahadornan mes no sa nada di esey.

   Mediador di Gobierno a drenta den e asunto, y e trahadornan ta spera cu gerencia awor si lo por yama nan y ta cla pa duna contesta.

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