‘Main Road’ fares to go up by $1 on Princes Town-San Fernando route

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

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Shane Sookoo, member of the Main Road Taxi Association shows the existing tariff (fare) sheet. It is expected that the fares will increase by $1 as of October 17. – Photo by Marvin Hamilton

Fares along the Naparima/Mayaro route are set to increase by $1 from October 17.

Head of the Main Road Taxi Drivers’ Association Joseph “Joey” Badree told Newsday the increases apply to commuters travelling on the Naparima/Mayaro Road, commonly called Main Road. This road runs from Princes Town to San Fernando and through several villages like Iere, Mt Stewart and Cleghorn.

“From Princes Town to Mt Stewart Village and Palmyra, up to Seegobin Trace, for instance, costs $9, and it would be increased to $10. All off-route prices would be remaining the same,” Badree said on Tuesday afternoon.

“Passengers pay an extra $3 to go off route into the different streets. At certain points off-route, they pay $5.

“We will display the new tariff (fare) sheets in vehicles about a week before it comes into effect.”

Badree said the decision to increase the fare resulted from the latest fuel-price increase as announced in the September 26 budget.

“It was also caused by high vehicle maintenance caused by extremely bad roads. The last time the fuel prices increased, we, as taxi drivers, absorbed the cost. We cannot do that this time around.”

Association member Shane Sookoo said the drivers met on Monday and agreed to the increased fare.

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400 fewer covid cases this week, 17 deaths

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

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The Ministry of Health has reported 643 new cases and 17 covid19-related deaths between September 28 and October 4.

The seven-day average of new cases is 92 and the seven-day average of covid-related deaths is two.

Active cases now stand at 3,283, down 400 from 3,686 a week ago. There are 103 patients in hospital, down from 124.

The total number of covid19-related deaths stands at 4,224.

Since the national vaccination programme began over a year ago, 717,190 people have been fully vaccinated. Additionally, 168,809 people have had a booster shot.

The percentage of the population that is fully vaccinated remains at 51.2 per cent.

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Alfonsus Josef Maria Satropawiro

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The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

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Lucille Patricia Henar

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Cops, motorists several stand offs; Commissioner issues strong warning Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Police Commissioner, Major General Antony Anderson, is warning motorists to desist from obstructing and fighting the police, as lawmen will not yield or relent in their efforts to arrest them for any offence that they commit.

“… I think the message is, if you do that, you will be charged, and you are going to go to jail!” declared Anderson.

The commissioner’s stern warning comes after several videos have emerged on social media showing scuffles between motorists — some of who are public passenger vehicle (PPV) operators — and the police.

In one of the latest videos, a PPV operator was seen in a stand-off with the police as they sought to arrest him in a bar reportedly in the Corporate Area. The lawmen subsequently used their baton on the man. The incident has triggered mixed views on social media.

Speaking at the Jamaica Constabulary Force’s (JCF’s) monthly police press conference on Tuesday, Anderson said the Police High Command had taken note of the videos, in which their efforts to enforce public order were being disrupted.

“The most recent one (video) didn’t start there. It was a series of actions and a chase that ended up there and the person was arrested and charged,” said Anderson of one of the confrontations between motorists and the police.

He did not elaborate on that incident or provide specific details.

But he likened such videos to being “snapshots” that are circulated and only tell “a piece of a story”.

Added the commissioner: “We saw another video a little while ago with our police officers chasing somebody all through the city until they finally got them to stop.

“They reversed into the police car, and the person came out filming, suggesting, and saying on camera, that the police are acting improperly. Fortunately, in that case, the police were filming also,” he outlined.

In light of such incidents, the JCF has added additional body cameras to the clothing of some of its law enforcers.

“We have also added additional body cams; everybody doesn’t have them yet, but as part of our commitment…, we will have more and more of our officers in them,” Anderson assured, adding that “nothing really protects our officers, in terms of the story, better than them having these body cams.”

He further reiterated that the filming of these incidents by the offenders will not, in any way, deter the police’s effort to detain them.

“So, although you see a video, don’t believe for a minute that the JCF is going to roll over and our officers are going to accept that when they are arresting somebody (and) if you create enough disturbance, that we are going to stop what we are doing. That is not the case!” Anderson asserted.

Continuing, he said: People need to take note that we will continue to act, we will use the force required to affect the arrest…

“… And I suggest strongly that persons who are in that process, (if) you know you have breached, you know you have done the wrong thing, and when the police are doing their jobs, comply, go to the courts and get your ticket or your summons, and end up in the court, get your lawyer and deal with it that way, as opposed to this idea where you going to fight off the police at each juncture,” he advised.

Meanwhile, the former army boss had a strong warning for those persons at scenes who join the “chorus” of trying to assist the person who is being arrested by the police.

“In those cases, we have identified them through… those same videos and have arrested them subsequently, so this narrative that you going to get away with it and fight the police if you chose to, don’t do it!” he urged.

In the meantime, Anderson stated that persons caught on camera breaching the directives from the State will also be found and prosecuted.

He alluded to the case of bus operator Garth Brown and Glenroy Denton, who were captured in a video breaching the padlock of a floodgate in the Bog Walk Gorge in St Catherine last week.

“We see it (breaking of rules) not just in confrontations with the police, but we saw that with the guys who were — when we had the rains — breaking the lock to go into the gorge.

“Well those people are arrested and charged,” stated the commissioner.

It is reported that the National Works Agency (NWA) ordered the closure of the floodgate in the vicinity of Dam Head on Monday, September 26.

The agency said the gorge was flooded and was not safe to access at the time.

However, CCTV footage showed Denton and Brown trying to access the gate by allegedly breaking the padlock.

Following a statement by Prime Minister Andrew Holness that the men should be charged, they were arrested and subsequently booked for the relative offences.

Denton was charged last Thursday with malicious destruction of government property, while Brown was charged with malicious destruction of government property and unauthorised entry to a restricted area.

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Noel Maitland to know court’s ruling on bail application Oct 13 Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Noel Maitland, the policeman accused of killing his girlfriend, social media influencer Donna-Lee Donaldson, will know on October 13 if he is to be offered bail.

The bail application was made before the Home Circuit Court in Kingston on Tuesday. In addition to the murder charged, Maitland was charged with preventing the burial of a corpse.

Donaldson was last seen with Maitland on July 11 and was reported missing on July 13. The police believe she was killed on July 12.

During the bail hearing, the prosecution outlined the details of the case they would be pursuing in court. The prosecution did admit that the case is circumstantial as there is no eyewitness to the murder of Donaldson, nor have the police found her body.

However, due to evidence collected, including a blood sample at the police constable’s apartment, the prosecution asserted that the 24-year-old social media influencer is dead.

Based on the prosecution’s assertions, Donaldson’s death may have escalated from an argument between the two over a photograph of Maitland’s babymother that was on display in his apartment.

The prosecution, in outlining the allegation, said that Maitland admitted to being in an argument with Donaldson over the photograph.

The prosecution is opposing bail out of concern that Maitland may tamper with the prosecution’s case.It is alleged that Maitland has already tried to get a security guard that works at the apartment where he lives to lie to the police and destroyed evidence, namely “the bloody couch” that was at his apartment.

The prosecution is also alleging that Maitland’s accomplices are still at large and that he pressured a neighbour to delete CCTV footage.

Donna-Lee Donaldson’s mom, Sophia Lugg (seated, centre), is surrounded by supporters outside the Home Circuit Court on Tuesday after the man accused of killing her daughter appeared in court in downtown Kingston.

His attorney, Christopher Townsend, said that his client is not a flight risk as he had surrendered to the police when contacted. The attorney said, too, that his client cooperated with the investigative authorities.

He said that the prosecution focused on the blood that was found at the apartment, on a couch, and a CCTV camera at a neighbour’s house.

Townsend said several forensic teams went to the apartment at different times to collect evidence. On one of the occasions when Maitland was not present for the search, blood was found, the defence said.

The attorney suggested that questions surrounding the quantity of the blood and the circumstances surrounding the find render the prosecution’s case weak.

He denied that any blood was seen or found in any settee. He also questioned “the bloody couch”, saying that the witness could have seen red dye being washed out of the couch.

Townsend also questioned the prosecution’s reliance on footage of a video camera that showed Donaldson entering the apartment but the camera was not positioned to show anyone leaving the apartment complex.

He said that there is a major hole in the prosecution’s case as large as a gateway.

The prosecution said that Maitland and Donaldson shared an on-and-off relationship for over three years. Between the night of July 11 and the early morning of July 12, Maitland picked up Donaldson in his grey BMW.

The prosecution said Donaldson spoke to several of her family members – including her mother Sophia Lugg – up to 4:46 on the afternoon of July 12, who were able to place her at Maitland’s New Kingston apartment building.

The prosecution said an analysis from cellphone sites put Donaldson’s phone in the New Kingston area during the time of the calls.

The prosecution pointed out that Lugg was concerned when she didn’t see her daughter return home, nor was able to get her on the telephone.

It’s alleged that Maitland called Lugg inquiring about Donaldson’s location. He allegedly told her that they had an argument, and she left.

The prosecution alleged that Maitland went to a hardware store on Constant Spring Road in St Andrew where he hired a truck driver to take a couch from his apartment to a car wash on Lyndhurst Road in St Andrew.

Further allegations are that Maitland and another man went into his apartment and took out the couch, which was carried to the car wash.

The prosecution also alleged that what appeared to be blood was seen coming from the couch while it was being washed.

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WATCH: Agreement Signed For New RSLPF Divisional Headquarters – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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Police operations in the island’s north are on course for a significant infrastructure upgrade.

On September 30, Prime Minister Hon. Philip J. Pierre signed a XCD $35 million dollar Built Own Lease Transfer (BOLT) agreement with the National Insurance Property Development & Management Company LTD (NIPRO) to commence construction of a new Divisional Headquarters in Gros Islet.

The Pierre Administration’s BOLT agreement with NIPRO is the largest investment project for the Royal Saint Lucia Police Force in recent years.

More from Rehani Isidore:

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SOURCE: Office of the Prime Minister

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14 years of marriage: Tia Mowry announces split from Cory Hardict Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

Tia Mowry is calling it quits and walking away from her marriage.

We will maintain a friendship as we co-parent our beautiful children

The 44-year-old shared the news on her Instagram hours ago:

“I have always been honest with my fans, and today is no different. I wanted to share that Cory and I have decided to go our separate ways. These decisions are never easy, and not without sadness.

“We will maintain a friendship as we co-parent our beautiful children. I am grateful for all the happy times we had together and want to thank my friends, family and fans for your love and support as we start this new chapter moving forward in our lives.”

Posted three hours ago (as of 6pm EST), the most popular response is “love you!” with four heart emoticons from her twin sister Tamera. Some 10,319 people have liked her comment in two hours.

In Tia’s Instagram story today, October 4, she also shared a horoscope that stated – You’re going to be celebrating something major soon. Your heart and mind will be at peace. You’ll see it all miraculously work out. Be grateful for it all right now. You are highly blessed already.”

And she posted as well – ‘Letting go can be painful. But it won’t hurt as much as holding on to an illusion,’ by Vex King.

Hardict who is 42 years old and Tia have two children together – Cairo Tiahna Hardrict and Cree Hardrict.

According to internet research, the two met on the set of their film, Hollywood Horror, and dated for six years before getting engaged on Christmas Day 2006. They were married in California on April 20, 2008.

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