Business owner complains that her bar was broken into and liquor and pool-table coins were stolen

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

REAL NEWS- The bar of a Hispanic woman was broken into and money and alcoholic beverages removed, and the Police are now probing the incident.

Reports say the Villa woman reported to the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) that her business, Matha Bar, located on Bay Street, Villa, had been broken into.

The woman reportedly secured the establishment and returned the following day to discover that someone had used a breaking implement to remove the hinges from a western double door to gain access to the building.

Reportedly the intruder stole a bottle of Cavalier Rum valued at $25 and a bottle of Black Label Rum valued at $155 from the bar counter.

Additionally, the thief then used a tool to open a coin container on the pool table and removed a quantity of coins.

This offence reportedly occurred between 11:45 p.m. on Monday, October 31 and 6:30 a.m. on Tuesday, November 1.

CLICK HERE TO JOIN OUR WHATSAPP GROUP

NewsAmericasNow.com

Moodie, Sammy, Tancoo want action on Oropouche flooding

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Woodland residents were led by the South Oropouche Riverine Action Group leader Edward Moodie and the Woodland flood action group. Photo by Lincoln Holder

SOUTH Oropouche Riverine Flood Action Group president Edward Moodie, Penal/Debe Regional Corporation chairman Dr Allen Sammy and Oropouche West MP Davendranath Tancoo have called on Works and Transport Minister Rohan Sinanan to urgently address the flooding concerns of residents of South Oropouche and environs.

They did so when they took part in a protest outside of the offices of the ministry’s drainage division in Penal on Wednesday.

Moodie said flooding has been bad in the area in recent times because rivers have not been dredged and riverbanks have not been cleared.

“We are asking for the ministry to come in and do justice.”

He said some of the ministry’s equipment on some riverbanks is damaging those banks.

“We need (river)banks to be properly built.”

Referring to two water pumps in Tulsa Trace and another in Woodland, Moodie said there are problems keeping one of the pumps at Tulsa Trace active on a regular basis.

“If you have a pump, make sure that you have the manpower and the diesel and the electricity so that pump will work.”

Moodie described the pump as a derelict piece of metal and said it has not worked for the last three years. He called for a properly working pump to be installed in Woodland.

“Without that pump, Woodland would be in a (flooding) demise for years to come.”

Moodie recalled that under previous PNM and UNC governments, there were always water pumps in Woodland.

The protest was staged outside the Penal office of the Ministry of Works and Transport on Wednesday to highlight the ongoing flooding in the area. Photo by Lincoln Holder

“We are asking for maintenance of the rivers. We are asking for that pump in Woodland (to be operational). We are asking for justice for our people because we have had enough.”

Sammy said, “We have suffered for too long. The resources of the state, clearly are being mismanaged.”

He added that the authorities appear clueless about how to manage flooding in the area.

Sammy said in 2018, he submitted a plan to address flooding in the Penal/Debe area and on a national level to Sinanan.

“Yet they have ignored every single proposal that we have made.”

Sammy said the relevant authorities must work with communities in different parts of the country to tackle flooding.

“Why are we neglecting our communities? Why are we neglecting our people?”

Asked if Sinanan should take a hands-on approach to tackling flooding in the area, Moodie replied, “Taking a hands-on approach, but with consultation.”

He said his group has a better idea of causes of flooding on the ground and can provide the ministry with that information.

Oropouche West MP Dave Tancoo stands with Woodland residents. Photo by Lincoln Holder

Reiterating his view that people in South Oropouche and environs have been been disrespected over their concerns about flooding, Moodie said, “Let us meet. Let us shake hands. Let us work together to resolve the issue of flooding.”

Sammy said the corporation stands ready to co-operate with any group to tackle flooding in the area.

Tancoo agreed with Moodie and Sammy’s views.

“The Minister of Works is very familiar with what the problems are and what the solutions are.”

Tancoo also said at Mosquito Creek, some of the old infrastructure from a 36-inch water transmission line which collapsed into the nearby Godineau River on October 18 is still in the river. The line and its supporting infrastructure were repaired on October 21.

He said, “What we noticed today is that there are a lot of waterlilies that are backed up behind that structure, right in the mouth of the river.”

Tancoo said this means there is less run-off at the mouth of the river and the water could back up inland.

“It may be one of the reasons why we still have flooding for four and five days in Woodland and surrounding areas.”

NewsAmericasNow.com

CAL flew 14,890 domestic passengers in carnival week

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

A Caribbean Airlines aircraft

Caribbean Airlines (CAL) said it transported 7,365 passengers from Trinidad to Tobago, from October 24-31, during the week of the inaugural Tobago carnival. The carnival was officially celebrated from October 28-30, but Trinis began flocking to the island earlier, to enjoy parties, boat rides and TOMAC’s Burna Boy concert on October 27.

In a press release on Wednesday, CAL said 10,020 seats were provided on 139 flights from Trinidad to Tobago.

It said there were 140 flights from Tobago to Trinidad during the same period, with 7,525 passengers taking advantage of the 10,180 seats available.

CAL said the airline operated five international non-stop flights from Barbados, Miami and New York with a capacity of 616 seats to Tobago.

NewsAmericasNow.com

Hinkson wants Tobago home for art

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Donald “Jackie” Hinkson’s mural on a wall outside the Bon Accord Government Primary School in Bon Accord, Tobago. Photo by David Reid

It is the dream of 80-year-old Donald “Jackie” Hinkson that Tobago will soon establish a home for artwork to be displayed.

In an interview with Newsday on Wednesday, Hinkson, an award-winning creative painter with a gift for capturing the light and life of the Caribbean, said there is a vacuum that needs to be filled.

Hinkson’s art was on display for revellers during the inaugural Tobago carnival from October 28-30.

He had two large murals outside the TT Electricity Commission (TTEC) on Wilson Road, Scarborough and along the wall of the Bon Accord Government Primary School. They are expected to be removed on Thursday.

Although grateful for the opportunity to display his work, Hinkson said the environment was not conducive to the longevity of the paintings.

“They are works on canvas with paint. The sun is going to damage them, rain is going to damage them, so they should not be here. Because I have these things stacked up in my garage, and because a very important thing for me is for people to see the work, then I take the chance of seizing the opportunity to put out whenever I can, knowing fully well I should not.”

He added, “I hope that someday they would find a permanent home, but it’s not up to me.”

He said he has had conversations about putting his painting at the Shaw Park Cultural Complex, but there has been no favourable response to date.

“This one in Bon Accord was done 15 years ago; the one in Scarborough was done over the last three years, and is ongoing.”

He said both works of art were inspired by his perception of what was happening in society and in the world.

Donald “Jackie” Hinkson

“The one in Bon Accord begins with almost a historical depiction of early Carnival. Within that are allusions to social situations: it begins with an image of Columbus’s ships’ sails but the people are wearing robber hats, so right away there is a suggestion that there was an element of robbery in that era.

“Then I go on to depict some of the architecture of the time of early Carnival – the 1940s, when I was a child, and the movement from tamboo bamboo to steelband, with humble architecture in the background.”

He said thereafter the celebratory depiction of Carnival changed, so he alluded to certain current situations. That story, he said, ended there but led him to start the mural at Scarborough.

“In my mind I felt totally besieged by fights, conflicts, arguments, political situations, debates, anger, crime – every day you feel assaulted by all these issues and opinions around them and commentaries. I said, ‘This feels to me as some kind of mas, some kind of Carnival.’ So I picked up from the first mural and started that second one, where I would capture my mainly emotional reactions to all of that frenzy that is happening around me, but depict it through the symbolism of Carnival imagery.”

Asked how he became involved in the creative sector, he said “I have no idea.

“In school everybody doing little drawing and so on – everybody except you stopped doing it.

“For me to explain why I continued, I have no idea. Is it genetics, is it a combination of genes and social environments, is it what people vaguely call a gift?

“I have no idea, but that is how it started.”

Born in Port of Spain, Hinkson trained at the Academie Julien in Paris (1963-1964) and the University of Alberta, Canada (1965-1970).

He added: “We all in our lives have experiences – privately, publicly, domestically, socially, in our work environment. We all in our lives see things happening around us locally in our local environment, internationally, and we all respond emotionally to a large degree and intellectually to all those events and how they affect us.”

NewsAmericasNow.com

Ameen: Tackle flooding in memory of Theresa Lynch

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

St Augustine MP Khadijah Ameen.

FLOODING which left 40-odd families from Valsayn marooned in their homes for days, was not caused by an act of God, but by an act of incompetence on the part of Works and Transport Minister Rohan Sinanan, says St Augustine MP Khadija Ameen.

She said this could have been prevented if a simple engineering plan, with a flood dam and a pump were made available.

Ameen said the plan was submitted to the Ministry some time ago.

At the United National Congress (UNC) virtual platform on Monday night, she wondered whether Sinanan was refusing to service these areas because they are in UNC-held constituencies.

“I will not stand for the constituency of St Augustine being victimised because of who they voted for.

“I don’t care if you want to come in your PNM jersey and campaign, just come and fix the problem because they are citizens of TT.”

She accused Sinanan of continuing to trivialise the severity of flooding, blaming citizens, the gradient of the land, ignoring the fact that throughout TT flooding is occurring.

Noting that citizens have lost their lives owing to flooding, Ameen called on Sinanan to use some of the US$5.84 million disaster recovery fund from the Caribbean Catastrophe Risk Insurance facility to deal with this problem.

Remembering Theresa Lynch who was recently swept away by flood water in La Pastora, Lopinot, she asked that works be done urgently in her memory to prevent another life being lost because of flooding.

Ameen said flooding in areas such as Cocorite, Maraval, Arima, Sangre Grande – where flood waters measured four feet high, Cunupia, Chaguanas, Penal, Oropouche, Valsayn South – which saw water rising to as high as five feet to the top of street signs, Woodland, St Helena and Caroni, were preventable.

“Having spent millions of taxpayers’ money, Sinanan has presided over the worst state of neglect of infrastructure and drainage. Citizens have lost their lives, and residents of Valsayn South are marooned in their homes as I speak.

“They are unable to come out of their homes, to access health care, go to school, go to work – and all it requires is a flood gate”

The water began receding on Tuesday.

Ameen noted that one of the roles of the government is to provide either on its own, or in partnership with other entities and other organisations, public infrastructure such as transportation, communication networks, road, bridges, waterways.

“Disaster response is important in governance and running a country. In many countries, including TT, the organ for responding to that disaster falls under the Ministry of National Security.

“While the murder rate is going up, the rest of the MNS is also collapsing. We have disaster management falling apart and we have the man responsible for the prevention of massive flooding, major landslips and preventable disaster – Rohan Sinanan saying it is normal.

“He is saying those areas have a low gradient, that floods are happening all over the world.

“There is an attempt by the MOWT to get citizens to accept massive flooding we are seeing as something acceptable and a normal occurrence, in his desperate attempt to cover up his incompetence and failure as a minister.”

Recalling one of his earlier promises to make flooding a thing of the past, Ameen observed that annually, money allocated to the ministry goes back as unspent balances.

“So, it is not a matter of a lack of funding. Over the last seven years, government has starved local government of resources to undertake maintenance and drainage works which is part of the reason why everywhere in this country flooding now.”

She also attributed the lack of maintenance of water courses, which was previously undertaken by former Caroni (1975) Ltd and Petrotrin, as contributing factors.

She asked for an update on the national drainage plan promised by the PNM during its election campaign, which was to be funded by the Development Bank of Latin America.

NewsAmericasNow.com

CXC® grants conditional approval for CVQ implementation in secondary schools in Guyana

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana
CXC Headquarters

Recently, the Caribbean Examinations Council granted conditional approval for the implementation of the Caribbean Vocational Qualification (CVQ) in secondary schools across Guyana.

This approval follows a pre-readiness audit conducted last August in which Guyana obtained an overall compliance rating of 75 per cent. While this indicates a strong level of compliance with most of the requirements, it is five per cent below the minimum compliance level rate of 80 per cent for full approval to be granted.

Assistant Chief Education Officer -Technical, Ms Marcia Paddy has assured that the required corrective actions are being done to achieve full compliance.

She noted that the implementation of CVQ in secondary schools is in keeping with the Ministry of Education’s commitment to ensuring that all students are offered a secondary-level education that will make them academically and economically viable.

Ms Paddy said that having completed a pilot of CVQ, it has become evident that the expansion of the programme is the next step.

Meanwhile, the Council for Technical Vocational Education and Training extended congratulations to the unit for its achievement and pledged to collaborate on the areas to be addressed.

The assessment focused on evaluating the readiness of the institutions to deliver the regional occupational standards and to implement the CXC quality assurance criteria in training candidates pursuing programs for CVQ certification.

In 2021, when the CVQ certification was originally introduced in eight secondary schools in Guyana, approximately 119 students registered in four areas: commercial food preparation, furniture making, fabric decoration and crop production.

The Ministry then expanded it to 34 more schools with the aim to eventually have CVQ programs offered in every secondary school across Guyana. This will enable each child to exit secondary school with both a CXC certificate and a CVQ certificate.

NewsAmericasNow.com

Father Of Homicide Victim Says Saint Lucia Becoming ‘ Like A Cemetery’

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

– Advertisement –

Concerned about the frequency of deadly gun violence which claimed the life of his son Joshua Jn Baptiste on Tuesday night, a Ciceron Castries father has lamented that Saint Lucia is becoming like a cemetery.

“I seeing like Saint Lucia turn to like a cemetery. I seeing the children not taking example. They moving careless and don’t care – they following friends,” Mc Lean Cherubin told St Lucia Times.

Cherubin said someone called him on Tuesday night saying that his son had been shot in Castries.

Mc Lean Cherubin – Father of deceased

“When I reached, they were just moving out with the body,” the father recalled, adding that the death of his son had plunged the family into mourning.

– Advertisement –

Cherubin said he had repeatedly cautioned his deceased son regarding his associates, some of whom the young man had only recently met.

“Moving around with friends – sometimes fellas you just get to know you tag up with them. I always tell him that’s not the right way. I tell him: ‘I don’t like that’. He is a big man. I can’t beat him. All I could do was talk to him,” he said.

Cherubin said Joshua Jn Baptiste was twenty-six years old.

According to the police, Jn Baptiste was walking along St Louis Street, Castries, when an unidentified individual shot him multiple times in the back at about 6:30 pm.

An ambulance transported the victim to the OKEU Hospital, where a medical practitioner pronounced him dead.

Saint Lucia has recorded 58 homicides, including three fatal police shootings.

Headline photo: Joshua Jn Baptiste – deceased

– Advertisement –

NewsAmericasNow.com

Police Recover Items Stolen During Anse La Raye Guest House Robbery – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

– Advertisement –

About 10:10 p.m. on October 26, 2022, officers responded to a report of a Robbery at a guest house in Anse La Raye, involving several foreign nationals.

During the Robbery, a male security officer was assaulted by the assailants, and was seriously injured. He was able to apprehend one assailant, who was also wounded in the process. Both received care at local medical facilities.

The other assailants made away with personal items, money, cellular phones, belonging to guests of the property.

On Friday, October 29, 2022, officers attached to the Anse La Raye and Marigot Police Station conducted an operation in Anse Gallet, where they recovered all the stolen property, inclusive of some of the foreign currency taken.

– Advertisement –

The wounded assailant remains admitted at a local medical institution for care.

SOURCE: Royal Saint Lucia Police Force

– Advertisement –

NewsAmericasNow.com

Programma’s nodig om tienermoeders (weer) in schoolbanken te houden

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

door Valerie Fris PARAMARIBO — Met 28,4 procent tienerzwangerschappen spant het Lager Beroepsonderwijs de kroon. Dit blijkt uit het afstudeeronderzoek

NewsAmericasNow.com

Les taux continuent de grimper aux Etats-Unis, la Fed garde l’inflation en ligne de mire

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

La banque centrale américaine a relevé mercredi ses taux à leur plus haut niveau depuis près de 15 ans, et pense continuer à les augmenter, cherchant à tout prix à juguler la forte inflation, une tâche…

La banque centrale américaine a relevé mercredi ses taux à leur plus haut niveau depuis près de 15 ans, et pense continuer à les augmenter, cherchant à tout prix à juguler la forte inflation, une tâche compliqué cependant par la menace d’une récession.

La Fed a, comme attendu, relevé de 0,75 point de pourcentage son taux directeur, désormais situé entre 3,75 et 4,00%. Il s’agit de son plus haut niveau depuis janvier 2008.

Et les responsables de l’institution, par ailleurs, disent anticiper “que de nouvelles hausses des taux seront appropriées”, selon un communiqué de presse publié à l’issue de deux jours de réunion.

Ils indiquent cependant que les effets sur l’économie des relèvements déjà effectués depuis le mois de mars devront être pris en compte pour établir le rythme des hausses qui seront décidées lors des prochaines réunions. Cela pourrait signaler des hausses moins rapides dans les mois à venir.

Il faut en effet des mois pour que ces décisions de la Fed aient un effet sur l’économie.

L’inflation, ainsi, était encore en septembre de 6,2% sur un an, proche de ses plus hauts niveaux depuis plus de 40 ans, selon l’indice PCE privilégié par la Fed, dont l’objectif est de la ramener à 2%.

Une autre mesure, l’indice CPI, qui fait référence notamment pour l’indexation des retraites, a montré une hausse des prix de 8,2% sur un an en septembre.

La hausse du taux directeur décidée mercredi est la sixième d’affilée depuis le mois de mars, lorsqu’il se trouvait entre 0,00 et 0,25%, au plus bas afin de stimuler la consommation économique pendant la crise du Covid-19. La Fed avait commencé par la hausse habituelle de 0,25 point, avant d’accélérer à 0,50, et enfin, à quatre reprises désormais, de 0,75 point.

A moins d’une semaine des élections de mi-mandat, lors desquelles le président Joe Biden risque de perdre sa faible majorité démocrate au Congrès, l’inflation est désormais la principale préoccupation des foyers américains.

Mais un autre danger menace, puisque ce ralentissement volontaire de l’activité risque de faire plonger l’économie américaine dans la récession en 2023.

“Premiers signes” de ralentissement

Jerome Powell avait averti, à l’issue de la dernière réunion, en septembre, qu’il n’existait pas de “moyen indolore” de combattre durablement l’inflation.

En attendant, les Etats-Unis ont enregistré un trimestre de croissance entre juillet et septembre, avec +2,6% de croissance du PIB en rythme annualisé.

Quant au marché de l’emploi, il affiche toujours une santé de fer. Les chiffres officiels d’octobre seront dévoilés vendredi, mais on sait d’ores et déjà que les employeurs privés ont créé en octobre 239.000 emplois, bien plus qu’en septembre, et bien plus qu’attendu, selon des chiffres publiés mercredi.

“Alors que nous voyons les premiers signes d’un ralentissement de la demande (de main d’oeuvre) induite par la Fed, cela n’affecte que certains secteurs du marché du travail”, a commenté Nela Richardson, cheffe économiste d’ADP, citée dans le communiqué.

Les démocrates, qui avaient concentré leur campagne sur le droit à l’avortement, quand les républicains jouaient la carte de la lutte contre l’inflation, tentent désormais de mettre en avant leur programme économique en faveur des classes moyennes.

Le sénateur démocrate Sherrod Brown, président de la commission bancaire du Sénat, a ainsi envoyé fin octobre un courrier à Jerome Powell, soulignant que “la lutte de la Fed contre l’inflation ne doit pas faire souffrir les travailleurs”.

La crédibilité de la puissante institution est en jeu car, après avoir assuré pendant des mois que la forte inflation ne serait que temporaire, elle a jusqu’à présent échoué à la faire ralentir.

Or, plus les ménages anticipent une hausse des prix durable, plus ils agissent en conséquence, et plus celle-ci s’ancre. Ce qui nécessite alors des mesures encore plus douloureuses, comme au début des années 1980, après des années d’inflation frôlant parfois les 15%.

jul/cm

Le président de la Fed, Jerome Powell, le 2 novembre 2022 à Washington
• Mandel NGAN

Evolution du taux directeur de la Réserve fédérale américaine
• Patricio ARANA

NewsAmericasNow.com