Gymnastique : les féminines ont fait leur rentrée

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

GRS

Le hall des sports de Trinité a été, il y a une dizaine de jours, le théâtre de la reprise des compétitions chez les féminines qui lancent la saison.

Le premier week-end du mois a été propice pour la reprise des compétitions, dont la première a eu lieu au hall des sports de Trinité, avec 53 athlètes, issues de 5 clubs en provenance de Schœlcher, Bellefontaine Fort-de-France, Sainte-Luce et du Gros-Morne. Quatre engins étaient au programme de la journée, à savoir le ballon, la corde, les massues et le cerceau.  

Les gymnastes ont concouru dans les catégories fédérale, nationale et régionale, selon leur âge. Mieux notées en individuel, les…


France-Antilles Martinique

323 mots – 13.10.2022

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Ceiling falls at St George’s College, back to online learning

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Fallen ceiling at the St George’s College, San Juan hallway near the staff room. –

Minister of Education Dr Nyan Gadsby-Dolly on Wednesday confirmed reports that a fallen ceiling has forced the closure of St George’s College, Barataria.

A student at the college told Newsday that the ceiling fell in the hallway at the front of the staff room last Wednesday..

Gadsby-Dolly said, “The school has ceiling damage from the heavy rain last week and that is being addressed.”

The student said classes immediately reverted to online, but no word has been given on the resumption of physical classes.

There were no injuries reported from the incident.

Heavy rainfall last Wednesday caused massive flooding in various parts of Trinidad and Tobago.

Some schools in Trinidad were dismissed early last Wednesday owing to the bad weather. Schools throughout the country were closed on Thursday as heavy rain and flooding persisted in low-lying areas. Schools in Tobago remained closed last Friday but students in Trinidad were back in class on that day.

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Dying man told wife: ‘Take care of yourself and the children’

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

SHOOTING: Three images, taken from screen grabs of a video posted to social media, shows Jamie Walker (dressed in blue) scuffling with an off-duty SRP officer in the carpark of a businessplace in San Fernando last Friday. The image in the middle and at right, show the officer drawing his firearm. –

As her husband lay on the ground outside a supermarket bleeding from a gunshot to his chest, with his dying breath he told her, “I think I am going. I love you. Take care of yourself and the children.”

That memory will haunt Heather Sedeno-Walker for the rest of her life.

Her husband, Jamie Walker, 39, an ex-soldier, was shot to death outside We Supermarket, Cocoyea Village, San Fernando.

The shooting followed an argument over where the family’s car, in which Walker was the front-seat passenger, was parked.

Three of their four children witnessed their father being killed.

Sedeno-Walker heard the shots which ended his life and rushed to his side, only to see him take his last breath.

Since the shooting, their traumatised children have been at home, unable to go to school.

“We are not hearing anything about the shooter. We were promised counselling by the TTPS (but) nobody ever contacted us. The Children’s Authority visited and a social worker visited my daughter’s school and is putting things in place to counsel her. But apart from that, nothing.”

Sedeno-Walker, a candidate for the People’s National Movement (PNM) in the Oropouche West 2010 general election, said she understands an autopsy on her husband’s body was scheduled for October 12.

“But no one told me. So we have no family witnessing the autopsy.”

A shaken Sedeno-Walker said she was driving the family’s car on the evening her husband was killed. Their children, 13, eight and four, were in the back seat. They also have a two-year-old.

She said she had just picked up Walker from work, parked in front of the supermarket, and got out to cross the road to buy barbecue for the family, then return to the supermarket for bread.

“I normally park there, buy the chicken and bread, and then head home. The key was still in the car.”

While ordering their meal, she heard her children screaming and rushed out to see her husband scuffling with another man. She said she told them to move away from the car in which the screaming children were sitting.

She tried to grab her husband and pull him away, she said, but someone watching the scuffle told her the man fighting with her husband had a gun.

As she saw him draw it, “I dived into the pharmacy, and then I heard three shots. I rushed back outside and saw him go down to the ground.

“I asked him if he was all right and he said, ‘Yes, I good.’”

Seeing blood on his coverall, she called for an ambulance and was told not to give her husband water, as he requested, but to put a cloth on the wound.

“The officer told me not to touch him. I went over him and he said he was feeling like he could not breathe. Then he said, ‘Girl, I feel like I going. I gone. I love you. Take care of yourself and the children.’

“Then he just lie back. I raised up his jersey and saw a bullet hole to the centre of his heart.”

Sedeno-Walker said no one lifted a finger to help her before an ambulance arrived a long time afterwards.

She said her children, who have been crying constantly for their father, told her the other man was arguing with her husband to move the car.

“I don’t know if he was coming out to move the car, because the key was still in the ignition, but the children told me the (other man) poked him in the face, and that was when he retaliated.”

Responding to accusations that he was smoking weed, Sedeno-Walker replied, “It does not matter if he was smoking weed or cocaine – the (other man) had no right to shoot my husband.

Having lost her husband, and the children their father, she said, “It is so unfair. They are lying. I just had enough. I was there. I know the truth. That was uncalled for. If the authority don’t want to see that, the public saw it. I have had enough. I am just leaving it in God’s hands.”

Joint owner of the We Supermarket Naigum Joseph, councillor for Springvale/Paradise in the San Fernando City Corporation , told Newsday on Wednesday he could not say anything about the incident. “because there is an ongoing investigation. I am co-operating with the police.”

He said video footage of the incident has been handed over to the police. The shooter has reportedly given them a statement.

Funeral arrangements for Walker have been tentatively set for Sunday at Guide’s Funeral Home, Coffee Street, San Fernando.

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PM: Nelson case not part of Cabinet business

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley, second from right, greets supporters on Wednesday at a meeting at the Diego Martin South Community Centre, Four Roads, Diego Martin. – Sureash Cholai

THE Prime Minister has made it clear that his office holds no role in the criminal prosecution of any person in Trinidad and Tobago.

However, he said the Government will continue to oppose white-collar crime.

He was speaking on Wednesday night at the Diego Martin South Community Centre, Four Roads, Diego Martin, at his Diego Martin West constituency conference.

His remarks came against the backdrop of DPP Roger Gaspard on Monday dropping corruption charges against former attorney general Anand Ramlogan and ex-UNC senator Gerald Ramdeen. This was after King’s Counsel and main witness Vincent Nelson declined to testify against them until the hearing of his civil lawsuit against the State for an alleged breach of indemnity.

Responding to repeated queries by the Opposition Leader about whether he was aware of the indemnity deal with Nelson, Dr Rowley said, “The PM of TT has no involvement and no role in the prosecution of any person in this country.”So stop asking for me. And as for the Cabinet, we are not running a parlour but a Cabinet.” He said the Cabinet should not mull the details of whether a person had turned state witness.

He then complained, “When Mrs Persad-Bissessar starts her stupidness, her echo chamber is the media.”It’s time we get serious on serious business.”He alleged Persad-Bissessar had misrepresented facts regarding San Fernando West MP Faris Al-Rawi in the Ramlogan/Ramdeen case, but he vowed that nothing she could do would shake the PNM’s resolve regarding those who had committed white-collar crimes.He alleged she had tried to muddy the waters on Tuesday so as to normalise certain behaviour by people who have serious questions to answer. He said Ramlogan and Ramdeen were not exonerated as Persad-Bissessar was claiming.

Rowley complained that the ethic standard in TT was on the decline as he recalled visiting a foreign parliament with some MPs on criminal charges. However, he said TT was simply too small to endure that.

He said that was why the PNM had objected in the past to UNC and PDP members on criminal charges being election candidates.

He warned, “We are normalising a kind of behaviour in this country that’s not going to do us well.”Rowley urged the public to ask about leaders who accept such conduct. He said the opposition chief whip (David Lee) was recently defended to the hilt by Persad-Bissessar.

Lee was charged alongside businessman Hugh Leong Poi with conspiracy to defraud, over the purchase of a $2.3 million Mercedes Benz AMG G 63. As an MP, Lee received $1.4 million in tax exemptions.

The PM said in Tobago a leader who was under a charge had got elected three times to ultimately head Tobago (seemingly referring to PDP head Watson Duke who was charged with rape).

Rowley rejected such a state of affairs as “a dagger at the heart of TT.”

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Independent senator: Budget doesn’t inspire hope

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Senator Anthony Vieira –

Independent Senator Anthony Vieira said the budget did not go far enough to reassure a population left anxious, and in need of hope and guidance. He spoke in the budget debate in the Senate on Wednesday. While saying number-crunchers could say if the budget was good for the middle-class and poor, Vieira said it had much good in it yet was in some ways out of step. “My concerns have been directed towards the need for diversification, tackling technological disruption, red-tape reform and a new paradigm for development.

“The budget fails to appreciate that people have come out of this lockdown feeling anxious and pessimistic. Some were ill, some lost loved ones, some lost jobs, some lost businesses. Almost everyone has suffered a loss of income.He said after the stress of the pandemic, people were now concerned about price increases across the board, about disaffected youth and escalating crime, and whether the country is heading in the right or wrong direction.”Becoming poor can happen quickly. One retrenchment, or death, can plunge a family into poverty. People want to see buffers against this in place. They want to see policies that will leave them feeling uplifted. People are more worried than hopeful.”In a time of prevailing uncertainty when an anxious population is looking for reassurance, hope, guidance, this conventional budget, this solid budget, does not go far enough.”It lacks imagination, it doesn’t resonate with people, it fails to offer a clear vision of hope with a clear path towards a future we can believe in.”I’d like to believe that we can do better.”

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‘De keuzes die we maken zullen bepalend zijn’

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

PARAMARIBO — Het Caribisch Gebied moet een belangrijke keus maken: kiezen voor de normale gang van zaken of voor het

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Deux motards grièvement blessés dans un accident à Ducos

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Rédaction web
Mercredi 12 Octobre 2022 – 23h28

Véhicule de pompiers. – DR

Deux hommes à moto et sans protection ont été grièvement blessés dans un accident à Ducos au niveau de Carrère ce mercredi vers 22 heures 30.

C’est vers 22 heures 30 ce mercredi 12 octobre que le Service Territorial d’Incendie et de Secours est appelé pour intervenir sur un accident impliquant deux motos au niveau de Carrère sur la route nationale 5 à Ducos. Les deux hommes, circulant sans protection au guidon de leur deux-roues, sont entrés en collision avant de chuter entrainant de graves blessures, notamment au visage, faute de port de casque. La route a été sécurisée le temps de l’intervention puis deblayée.

Les deux hommes âgés de 20 et de 21 ans ont été transportés conscients vers le CHU Pierre Zobda Quitman. L’occasion de rappeler l’importance du port du casque et des autres protections nécessaires à la conduite à moto.

Sur le même sujet

  Le rapport accablant de la Chambre …

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‘Een grote zoon van kaseko verloren’

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

door Steven Seedo PARAMARIBO — “We hebben een grote zoon van kaseko verloren”, reageert Michael Deira van Aptijt op het

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Man die oudere broer neerstak voortvluchtig

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

PARAMARIBO — De politie zegt te werken aan de aanhouding van de voortvluchtige Sergio C. De man nam de benen

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Excelsior beat Clan Carthy while Campion College whip Cumberland 4-0 Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Excelsior High booked their spot in the second round of the Digicel/ISSA Manning Cup competition with a 2-0 win over Clan Carthy High in one of only three Zone F games Wednesday.

In the other games: Campion College whipped Cumberland High 4-0 and moved closer to the second round, while Jose Marti lost ground following their 0-1 defeat at the hands of Kingston Technical.

The Xavier Gilbert-coached Excelsior won their sixth match from eight games and moved to 20 points. They are four points clear of second-placed Campion College but, more importantly, they are nine points ahead of the third-placed team Jose Marti which, with only two games remaining, cannot surpass them.

The unbeaten Excelsior are, therefore, safely into the second round.

Excelsior High and Clan Carthy High in their ISSA/Digicel Manning Cup encounter on Wednesday. (Photo: Marlon Reid)

Campion College moved a step closer to the second round, sitting in second on 16 points. Their closest challengers are both Jose Marti and Kingston Technical on 11 points with two games remaining.

The competition continues Thursday with three games in Zone D. Norman Manley High will face Dunoon Park Technical, STATHS will take on Spanish Town High, and and Tarrant will host Jonathan Grant High.

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