Craig-Rousseau re-elected to FIH executive

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

Sports

Maureen Craig-Rousseau

FORMER TT Hockey Board (TTHB) president Maureen Craig-Rousseau was re-elected to the International Hockey Federation (FIH) executive board at the 48th FIH Congress, which was held virtually on November 4 and 5.

Amedia release from the TTHB said Craig-Rousseau was one of three female candidates battling for two executive positions (female) on the FIH executive. She received 88 out of the 126 eligible votes, ahead of her contenders Elizabeth King of Ghana (68 votes) and Marion Rodewald (64 votes) of Germany.

Craig-Rousseau was first elected to the FIH executive board in 2014, at the 44th FIH Congress, in Marrakesh, Morocco. Her new term of office will end in 2026.

Another TT hockey official, Willard Harris, was one of seven recipients of the FIH President Award for his long and meritorious service to the global hockey community as an educator and technical official, He is currently chair of the FIH Competitions Committee.

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Judge to rule on NIDCO’s challenge of $850m award to OAS

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Justice Frank Seepersad. –

A HIGH COURT judge has reserved his ruling on the challenge by the National Infrastructure Development Company (NIDCO) of the $857 million award of the international arbitration panel in favour of Brazilian firm Construtora OAS SA.

On Friday, Justice Frank Seepersad heard submissions by attorneys for NIDCO on why he would remit the award back to the arbitration tribunal for its reconsideration. He will give his decision on December 14.

NIDCO has argued that the High Court has the jurisdiction to send it back to the tribunal. It also made it clear its challenge was not an appeal of the award.

The company’s lead attorney, King’s Counsel Anneliese Day, argued that the court had the inherent jurisdiction to set aside the award and remit it because of errors in law made by the arbitrators.

Day went through the errors NIDCO is saying the arbitrators made in arriving at its decision in April. She also went through the evidence she said the panel failed to consider.

“There is a difference between what the court can look at, in law, and when considering the rationality of the conclusion.”

She said there were material aspects of the evidence which related to what was referred to the arbitrators for determination but were disregarded.

“…The tribunal came to an unreasonable decision so it was irrational.” She also submitted that the decision was one no reasonable arbitrator could have arrived at.

During Friday’s all-day hearing, NIDCO’s attorney went through the evidence it said the arbitrators did not consider, particularly as it related to its decision to terminate its contract with OAS, but this was rejected by OAS which has argued it would be unsafe and inappropriate for the court to pick out evidence at this stage.

“This is a very important public claim,” Day submitted.

Day also maintained NIDCO was not appealing the decision and gave reasons why it was asking the court to remit it back to the tribunal.

“This is not an appeal. I am asking you to say to them: ‘You didn’t deal with this and you should have. I am saying please send this back to the tribunal to deal with this (the evidence.)”

In resisting the challenge, OAS’s lead counsel, retired judge of the appeal court and the Caribbean Court of Justice Rolston Nelson, SC, said NIDCO was confused and conflated the common-law power to set aside an award.

He said there was no dispute that the parties had agreed to treat the award as final and pointed to the public interest aspect of going to arbitration to save the public from long-winded litigation.

“Parties come to the table and they want finality (of an issue)… The court should give deference to this in a commercial sense which is why they chose arbitration.”

It is also OAS’s position that the court’s jurisdiction was limited to errors on the face of the award and Nelson said that even if there was an argument that the court can look at the rationality of the decision, it has to be limited to what is on the face of the tribunal’s award.

This is not an appellate process, he contended.

“Whatever the final and binding clause says about the supervisory jurisdiction of the court, the court has to look at natural justice…The supervision of the court remains…But to say an award can be set aside, that is after the final award is given, and (where) the parties had agreed to accept it.”

Nelson said it was “nefarious” for the parties to agree that the arbitration findings would be final and binding but after the outcome, to now say it is not final and binding.

He countered that “anyone can say anything” but NIDCO failed to provide particulars of what it is contending in its case.

“What are the facts that support this? The tribunal has said, ‘I considered all the facts and I have come to the decision I came to.’”

He said there was a “gross misunderstanding” of the issues by NIDCO.

“There is no erroneous point of law in the tribunal’s treatment of the evidence,” he maintained, as he called on the judge to “accept the findings of fact set out by the tribunal.”

“There is nothing unreasonable or irrational (with the decision).”

On March 11, 2011, NIDCO contracted OAS, under the former People’s Partnership administration, to build 43.5 kilometres of dual highway from San Fernando to Point Fortin for $5.3 billion.

On July 6, 2016, the contract was terminated. NIDCO was able to recover $670 million in 2016 in letters of credit and bonds from a number of banks that had provided guarantees for OAS in previous litigation.

In April, the tribunal – comprising arbitrators Andrew White, KC, Adam Constable, KC, and John Fellas – ruled that NIDCO had to pay OAS a total of US$126 million ($857 million).

In its challenge, NIDCO contends it was not in default of any payment and it was OAS which faulted the contract by failing to remain mobilised on site.

Also representing NIDCO are attorneys Marcelle Ferdinand and Jason Mootoo while attorneys Gregory Pantin and Miguel Vasquez appear for OAS.

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YNW Melly Potentially Still Facing Death Penalty In Florida Double Murder Case

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Urban Islandz

A Florida Appeals Court has given the green light to an application by prosecutors for them to seek the death penalty should YNW Melly be convicted of murder.

The rapper is on trial for the murder of two of his associates, and the prosecution has secured a short victory ahead of his murder trial set to start soon. The Appeals Court decision overturned a lower court ruling that favored Melly and had prescribed that prosecutors couldn’t seek capital punishment on a possible conviction because they failed to properly notify him and his lawyers according to state law.

On Wednesday, the District Court of Appeal found that prosecutors did give notice that they might seek death if Melly is convicted.

Melly’s team had first filed for the lower court to make a determination that the prosecution failed to adhere to the rule that defendants facing first-degree murder charges must be told of the possibility of facing execution.

Florida laws require that notice is given 45 days after arraignment if the prosecution plans to seek capital punishment. Melly’s lawyer argues that prosecutors did file a notice of indictment in 2019 within the stipulated timeframe. However, a superseding indictment was later filed, but the prosecution did not again file another notice.

However, the Appeals court ruled that there was no material difference in Melly’s case as to whether the notice he received was effective when he was first indicted.

“We find that the state complied with its statutory obligations when it filed its notice of intent to seek the death penalty within 45 days of arraignment,” presiding Judge Spencer D. Levine said.

“The fact that the state filed a superseding indictment, requiring a second arraignment, does not vitiate the already filed and timely notice of intent. Notice is notice.”

It continued, “Clearly, in the present case, the defendant was noticed and apprised of the state seeking the death penalty in 2019. The defendant has had nearly three years to start the preparation of his defence to the state seeking the death penalty [and] the record contains no evidence that the defendant was prejudiced in any way.”

YNW Melly’s attorney Philip R. Horowitz reportedly said that his team and Melly were disappointed with the position of the appeals court.

YNW Melly is on trial for first-degree murder charges along with co-accused YNW Bortlen. They are accused of shooting and killing their friends Christopher “YNW Juvy” Thomas Jr. and Anthony “YNW Sakchaser” Williams in 2018 and setting up the crime scene as a drive-by shooting.

Melly’s trial has been delayed for months now, and the rapper had been implicated in what police said was a daring plan by him and his cellmate to escape from jail in recent weeks.

His trial has been pushed back twice from April to July and again with the application to the court seeking the death penalty.

In the meantime, Horowitz says that YNW Melly will appeal the decision at a higher court.

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Décès de l’artiste haïtien Hervé Télémaque à l’âge de 85 ans

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

L’artiste français d’origine haïtienne Hervé Télémaque, associé au courant de la figuration narrative, est décédé jeudi à l’âge de 85 ans en région parisienne où il était hospitalisé, a annoncé à l’AFP sa fille, Elodie-Anne Télémaque.

Atteint d’une grave maladie auto-immune qui l’avait contraint à se déplacer en fauteuil roulant et alors qu’il avait perdu l’usage du bras droit, il avait continué à peindre de la main gauche.

Il fait partie des 24 artistes étrangers exposés actuellement au musée de l’Histoire de l’immigration du Palais de la Porte-Dorée dans le cadre de l’exposition “Paris et nulle part ailleurs”, qui retrace les années d’effervescence artistique d’après-guerre, de 1945 à 1972, et l’attrait de la capitale française pour les artistes du monde entier.

Né en 1937 à Port-au-Prince, en Haïti, Hervé Télémaque avait quitté son pays en 1957 pour New York avant de s’installer en France en 1961, où il travaillait à Villejuif.

Histoire et culture

Déçu par l’ambiance “ségrégationniste” des Etats-Unis où il ne retournera qu’en 1973, il fréquente en France les Surréalistes, sans adhérer formellement au groupe et trouve sa voie bien particulière dans les préceptes du Pop art tout en défendant la création européenne, qu’il juge plus critique envers la société.

Depuis la fin des années 1950, il avait créé un vaste corpus d’œuvres au vocabulaire visuel ludique, caractérisé par des gestes abstraits, une imagerie de type cartoon et des compositions mixtes, une oeuvre multiple et complexe marquée par ses origines haïtiennes et la négritude.

Par le biais de peintures, de dessins, de collages, d’objets et d’assemblages, il associait des références historiques et littéraires à celles de la culture populaire et de la consommation.

Incorporant des images et des expériences de sa vie quotidienne, ses oeuvres, colorées, tissent des liens entre les domaines de la conscience intérieure, de l’expérience sociale et des relations complexes entre l’image et le langage.

Une rétrospective à Pompidou

Exposé dans plusieurs grands musées internationaux, une rétrospective lui a notamment été consacrée en France par le Centre Pompidou en 2015, reprise au musée Cantini à Marseille, puis en 2016 à la Fondation Clément au François en Martinique, avec une sélection d’une cinquantaine de toiles en rapport direct avec les Antilles et l’Afrique.

En 2010, il avait parrainé une vente aux enchères “Haïti Action Artistes“, dont l’objectif était de restituer aux artistes haïtiens les moyens de retravailler et de créer des structures pérennes, à la suite du tremblement de terre du 12 janvier.

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COLUMN: ‘Politiek’

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

REFLECTIE / Iwan Brave De Surinaamse Politiebond, bij monde van voorzitter Mielando Atompai, stelt dat het ontslag van de hoofdinspecteurs

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Décès de l’artiste haïtien Hervé Télémaque à l’âge de 85 ans

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guadeloupe FranceAntilles

L’artiste français d’origine haïtienne Hervé Télémaque, associé au courant de la figuration narrative, est décédé jeudi à l’âge de 85 ans en région parisienne où il était hospitalisé, a annoncé à l’AFP sa fille, Elodie-Anne Télémaque.

Atteint d’une grave maladie auto-immune qui l’avait contraint à se déplacer en fauteuil roulant et alors qu’il avait perdu l’usage du bras droit, il avait continué à peindre de la main gauche.

Il fait partie des 24 artistes étrangers exposés actuellement au musée de l’Histoire de l’immigration du Palais de la Porte-Dorée dans le cadre de l’exposition “Paris et nulle part ailleurs”, qui retrace les années d’effervescence artistique d’après-guerre, de 1945 à 1972, et l’attrait de la capitale française pour les artistes du monde entier.

Né en 1937 à Port-au-Prince, en Haïti, Hervé Télémaque avait quitté son pays en 1957 pour New York avant de s’installer en France en 1961, où il travaillait à Villejuif.

Histoire et culture

Déçu par l’ambiance “ségrégationniste” des Etats-Unis où il ne retournera qu’en 1973, il fréquente en France les Surréalistes, sans adhérer formellement au groupe et trouve sa voie bien particulière dans les préceptes du Pop art tout en défendant la création européenne, qu’il juge plus critique envers la société.

Depuis la fin des années 1950, il avait créé un vaste corpus d’œuvres au vocabulaire visuel ludique, caractérisé par des gestes abstraits, une imagerie de type cartoon et des compositions mixtes, une oeuvre multiple et complexe marquée par ses origines haïtiennes et la négritude.

Par le biais de peintures, de dessins, de collages, d’objets et d’assemblages, il associait des références historiques et littéraires à celles de la culture populaire et de la consommation.

Incorporant des images et des expériences de sa vie quotidienne, ses oeuvres, colorées, tissent des liens entre les domaines de la conscience intérieure, de l’expérience sociale et des relations complexes entre l’image et le langage.

Une rétrospective à Pompidou

Exposé dans plusieurs grands musées internationaux, une rétrospective lui a notamment été consacrée en France par le Centre Pompidou en 2015, reprise au musée Cantini à Marseille, puis en 2016 à la Fondation Clément au François en Martinique, avec une sélection d’une cinquantaine de toiles en rapport direct avec les Antilles et l’Afrique.

En 2010, il avait parrainé une vente aux enchères “Haïti Action Artistes“, dont l’objectif était de restituer aux artistes haïtiens les moyens de retravailler et de créer des structures pérennes, à la suite du tremblement de terre du 12 janvier.

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Minute Car Rentals boost fleet through new affiliates Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Minute Car Rentals wants to add 60 cars to its fleet by December under its newest venture, Minute RentCars, which it hopes will see individuals signing up to allow the company to use their vehicles for hire.

The expansion push comes on the heels of a franchise acquisition that has “opened up our reservation board tremendously,” CEO and Founder, Ferone Bryan told Loop News.

The company, which began operating in 2018, currently has a fleet of 40 cars split between itself and 30 long-term affiliates.

“We started this mission as the very first company to offer hourly rental in addition to our daily rental. As we continue to evolve, we are always looking at how best we can add value to the market that we serve, expand our target audience and scale our company beyond its current operational capacity,” Bryan said in a media release.’

The company hopes to attract new affiliates under its Minute RentCars Programme, thereby expanding its reach islandwide.

As for how the programme works: “You would sign up. We invite you for an inspection. Once your car is ok, we assign you an affiliate number and with that, you will be open to our reservation board which is monitored through WhatsApp,” Bryan said.

The company has found favour with individuals who were operating as informal car rental entities as well as private car owners who want to make money on the side, Bryan said.

“Before we had an affiliates programme, we catered to a lot of individuals who were overseas who didn’t have use for their cars…but that was on a longer-term relationship. With the launch of this initiative, we have moved into the part-time arrangements where people can now drive their cars and [still] rent it with us,” he said.

“We also have a lot of individuals who drive their cars to work and then may want it to earn some money to pay their car note, so it’s a mix of both,” he said

Minute Car Rentals started as an hourly car rental company with two small Suzuki Altos. But “we are giving people the option now to rent their cars for six hours or more,” Bryan said.

The company provides insurance coverage, to an extent, to ensure the safety of drivers, customers and assets.

“The moment I get access to your car, anything that happens goes on my insurance coverage, not yours. We also have internal liability coverage that covers you up to $150,000 for bumps and scratches,” he said.

There is also the option of paying a daily sum for insurance coverage for the rental period.

“Say, for example, you have accepted a 10-day booking, we generate a cover note for those 10 days and the insurance is paid per day by the affiliate.

All vehicles are also tracked and monitored.

Minute Car Rentals is also set to open its second location in Montego Bay shortly and has plans to be the first car rental company to list on the Jamaica Stock Exchange.

“…We want to achieve this within the next three years. As a fast-rising MSME, our company’s vision has always been centred on a multi-dimensional outlook that seeks to enhance economic growth, provide income and create the highest value and convenience for our customers,” Bryan said.

Minute RentCars kicked off on November 1.

By Tameka Gordon

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Fifth Berth Opening Ceremony Expected To Take Place Next Month

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

POINTE XPRESS: Work on the fifth berth is close to completion as Cabinet has announced a prospective timeline for its opening ceremony.

This ceremony is expected to coincide with the country’s hosting of the OECS Ministers of Tourism meeting from 1st to 3rd December.

The latest Cabinet notes suggested that the fifth berth would be launched at this time to celebrate “the enormous effort to ensure that Antigua can accommodate the Oasis Class Ships”.

The berth itself was completed last February, but the official opening has been delayed several times due to the dredging at the harbour which will allow the country to accommodate Oasis Class ships.

On Thursday, however, Information Minister Melford Nicholas said while the dredging completed is still insufficient to accommodate Oasis Class ships, the harbour can now welcome much larger vessels than the country has before.

“The dredging of the harbour is nearing completion. There are a couple of events that will take place. The christening of the new berth, as it were, we will be able to have that event but early in the new year in January.

“There will be a larger than previously received craft that will come here and it would not have been able to travel here if not the channel been open but it is still not at the stage were we will be able to accommodate the Oasis Class ships.

“I think that the work is nearly 90 percent complete and the good news is Blue Ocean which is the dredging company has indicated that they are encountering softer material so hopefully it translates into an accelerated timeline at which the work can be done…and we anticipate that very early on in the new year the work will be completed and at some point, in time, the maiden voyage of the Oasis Class ships will be able to accommodate it here in Antigua,” Nicholas clarified.

This is welcome news for those within the cruise tourism sector in Antigua and Barbuda as Oasis Class ships will significantly boost the recovering economy.

The Royal Caribbean-owned ships are the largest in the world and can carry more than 6000 passengers and crew.

This staggering figure is exceedingly attractive to countries like Antigua and Barbuda which depend on tourism.

The new pier is part of a US$80 million agreement signed in 2019 between Global Ports Holding (GPH) and the government to redevelop the cruise complex.

The completed port project will also see new shopping and restaurant facilities as well as 50,000 square feet of additional commercial space which will be available for lease.

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Regional ministers of Education share insights at CXC’s 2nd Annual Ministerial Summit

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

The Caribbean Examinations Council (CXC®) will host its second annual Ministerial Summit on Friday 11 November 2022 from 9:30 AM AST in St. George’s, Grenada. The event will also be live streamed via CXC® TV, www.cxc.org/cxctv.

The event will be held under the theme Flexible Learning, Credentialing and Assessment and will engage education policymakers, from across the region, in high-level dialogue. The second Ministerial Summit will consider flexible learning and assessment in a new paradigm of educational credentialling within the region’s education system. Key emphasis of the Summit is the exploration of CXC’s new qualifications management framework and flexible learning and assessment strategies at the secondary and post-secondary education level.

The agenda includes keynote addresses and two fora on discussions surrounding topical credentialing and curriculum policy issues, and educational transformation. The Honourable Dickon A.T. Mitchell, Prime Minister of Grenada will deliver the Keynote Address. Remarks will be delivered by Senator the Honourable David Andrew, Minister of Education, Sports and Culture, Grenada. Professor Sir Hilary Beckles, Chairman of CXC® and Dr Wayne Wesley, Registrar and CEO, CXC® will both address the Summit on behalf of CXC®, while Mr Elvis Morain, Permanent Secretary with Responsibility for Education, Ministry of Education, Sports and Culture, Grenada will serve as Master of Ceremonies for the Opening Ceremony.

The event will receive pre-recorded remarks from The Rt Hon Patricia Scotland KC, Secretary General of The Commonwealth Secretariat. She will be followed by Dr Sanjaya Mishra, Director: Education, of The Commonwealth of Learning, who will share insights on the topic Flexible Credentialling in a Digital Age. In the first of two Plenary sessions, Dr Eduardo Ali, Pro-Registrar and Deputy Chief Executive Officer, CXC® and Dr Margaret Niles, Manager, Educational Research and Innovation, CXC® will explore CXC’s approach to the Learning Crisis Post-Pandemic. Secondly, Dr Nicole Manning, Director of Operations, CXC® will speak to Digital Transformation through Partnership for Quality Education.

Regional Ministers of Education and Ministry officials will provide key inputs during the second session focused on Educational Transformation: Policy, Financial Sustainability and Practice. In the first forum, Dr the Honourable Fayval Williams, Minister of Education and Youth, Jamaica; Dr the Honourable Nyan Gadsby-Dolly, Minister of Education, Trinidad and Tobago and The Honourable Kay McConney, Minister of Education, Technological and Vocational Training, Barbados will share key presentations related to policies for educational transformation.

In the second forum, Dr Eduardo Ali and Mrs Sheree Deslandes, Director of Corporate Services will set the stage for a discussion around the topic: Financing Sustainable Educational Transformation in the CXC® context especially in the area of technical cooperation with development partners. The Honourable Daryll Matthew, Minister of Education, Sports and Creative Industries, Antigua andBarbuda and Dr Laurette Bristol, Programme Manager for Human Resource Development, CARICOM Secretariat will join Senior Economists of the World Bank, Dr Diego Angel-Urdinola (Human Capital Development) and Dr Victoria Levin (Global Education Practice) and Dr Martin Baptiste, Division Chief, Social Sector Division, Caribbean Development Bank in sharing perspectives on the theme Financing Sustainable Educational Transformation.

These robust discussions from regional stakeholders and policy experts should provide greater insights into the requirements of a digitally transformed Post-Pandemic Caribbean education framework.

For further information, kindly contact us at +1 (246) 227-1700 or email [email protected] (Barbados), or for queries in Jamaica at + 1 (876) 630-5200 or email: [email protected]

About CXC®:

The Caribbean Examinations Council® (CXC®) was established in 1972 under Agreement by the Participating Governments in the Caribbean Community (CARICOM). CXC® assures the global human resource competitiveness of the Caribbean through the provision of syllabuses of the highest quality; valid and reliable examinations and certificates of international repute for students of all ages, abilities and interests; services to educational institutions in the development of syllabuses, examinations and examinations’ administration, in the most cost-effective way.

CXC® comprises 16 Participating Countries: Anguilla, Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Belize, British Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands, Dominica, Grenada, Guyana, Jamaica, Montserrat, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Trinidad and Tobago and Turks and Caicos Islands.

The first examinations for the Caribbean Secondary Education Certificate® (CSEC®) were offered in 1979 in five subjects. Subsequent to CSEC®, CXC® has introduced a comprehensive suite of qualifications to meet the needs of the region: Caribbean Primary Exit Assessment (CPEA), Caribbean Certificate of Secondary Level Competence® (CCSLC®), *Caribbean Vocational Qualification (CVQ), Caribbean Advanced Proficiency Examination® (CAPE®) and the CXC® Associate Degree (CXC®-AD). The organisation also collaborates with countries in the Dutch Caribbean – Curaçao, Saba, St Eustatius and St. Maarten, as well as Suriname.

Additional information about the Caribbean Examinations Council® can be found at www.cxc.org

*Caribbean Vocational Qualification (CVQ) is the trademark of the Caribbean Association of National Training Authorities. CXC® is one of the National Training Agencies in the Caribbean which awards CVQs.

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PM Phillips officially bowls off PMT20 Cup 6

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana

The action in the Prime Ministers T20 Cup officially commenced in and around the beautiful capital city of Georgetown. The opening ceremony was a spectacle as Prime Minister Brigadier (ret’d) Mark Phillips himself bowled off the first ball of the tournament at the MYO Ground, while urging the players to enjoy themselves as three days of riveting action begin.

In his feature address to all the teams present, the Prime Minister said, “We have female teams this year, so we have grown from just a tournament with male teams to having female teams, so I consider this a complete tournament now. Internationally in the world cricket is not an all-male sport, we have female teams participating in all levels of sport. So, it’s just natural that the Prime Minister T20 cup as it grows it will have female teams, so congratulation to the organizers. We also have more sponsors in the 6th edition as compared to the previous editions, so congratulations to the sponsors and thank you for believe in this tournament and participating in the growth of the tournament through your tremendous support over the years.”

Phillips further related that while this year the weather is challenging, it should be noted that it is also the year without COVID-19. He went on to explain that for the last two editions the pandemic affected the tournament as restrictions had to be followed, however, with those restrictions lifted he is optimistic that there will be a larger fanbase coming out to support the teams in the grand finale at the stadium.

“This year is the biggest tournament and the best team, like in any cricket tournament will emerge and win. Let’s, have a good tournament, we don’t want any controversy and as I would always say, the umpire’s decision is final. Congratulations to all of you here who are participating, I know there are teams here from overseas, welcome home and let’s have a good tournament and may the best team win,” Phillips shared.

There will be three male categories, and these are the Legends (Over-50), Masters (Over-40) and Open (All ages). Over two million dollars are up for grabs. The winning team in each category is set to collect $600,000 while the champion lady’s side would cart off $200,000.

 Photos and Story by: Timothy Jaikarran

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