Cops launch search for more persons who were intimidating passengers Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News
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The police say they hav stepped up their search for more individuals who were part of a group intimidating passengers in and around the Corporate area as taxi and bus operators staged a protest on Monday.

The operation to locate the perpetrators following the arrest and charge of one man who was captured in video carrying out a similar act in downtown Kingston on Monday.

The man who has been identified as Ramone Silvera gave his profession as a professional clown.

He has since been charged with assault, disorderly conduct and indecent language.

On Monday scores of taxi and bus operators staged a protest and withdrew their service, this resulted in hundreds of commuters in and around downtown Kingston being left stranded.

The operators on Sunday afternoon voted to support an islandwide strike for three days, starting Monday, after the Government failed to grant a traffic ticket amnesty as requested.

But during the strike there were some taxi operators who opted to continue working, several of these taxi operators were attacked and beaten by men posing as ‘loader men’.

Passengers traveling in their vehicles were also removed by loader men.

Police said they were able to apprehend a number of person and so far one of the men seen intimidating the passengers was arrested and charged.

Police say they are now searching for other individuals who are believed to be apart of this group that was carrying out the illegal activities.

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World population hits 8 billion, creating many challenges Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

The world’s population is projected to hit an estimated eight billion people on Tuesday, according to a United Nations projection, with much of the growth coming from developing nations in Africa.

Among them is Nigeria, where resources are already stretched to the limit. More than 15 million people in Lagos compete for everything from electricity to light their homes to spots on crowded buses, often for two-hour commutes each way in this sprawling megacity. Some Nigerian children set off for school as early as 5 am.

And over the next three decades, the West African nation’s population is expected to soar even more: from 216 million this year to 375 million, the UN says. That will make Nigeria the fourth-most populous country in the world after India, China and the United States.

“We are already overstretching what we have — the housing, roads, the hospitals, schools. Everything is overstretched,” said Gyang Dalyop, an urban planning and development consultant in Nigeria.

The UN’s Day of 8 Billion milestone Tuesday is more symbolic than precise, officials are careful to note in a wide-ranging report released over the summer that makes some staggering projections.

The upward trend threatens to leave even more people in developing countries further behind, as governments struggle to provide enough classrooms and jobs for a rapidly growing number of youth, and food insecurity becomes an even more urgent problem.

Nigeria is among eight countries the UN says will account for more than half the world’s population growth between now and 2050 — along with fellow African nations Congo, Ethiopia and Tanzania.

“The population in many countries in sub-Saharan Africa is projected to double between 2022 and 2050, putting additional pressure on already strained resources and challenging policies aimed to reduce poverty and inequalities,” the UN report said.

It projected the world’s population will reach around 8.5 billion in 2030, 9.7 billion in 2050 and 10.4 billion in 2100.

Other countries rounding out the list with the fastest growing populations are Egypt, Pakistan, the Philippines and India, which is set to overtake China as the world’s most populous nation next year.

In Congo’s capital, Kinshasa, where more than 12 million people live, many families struggle to find affordable housing and pay school fees. While elementary pupils attend for free, older children’s chances depend on their parents’ incomes.

“My children took turns” going to school, said Luc Kyungu, a Kinshasa truck driver who has six children. “Two studied while others waited because of money. If I didn’t have so many children, they would have finished their studies on time.”

Rapid population growth also means more people vying for scarce water resources and leaves more families facing hunger as climate change increasingly impacts crop production in many parts of the world.

“There is also a greater pressure on the environment, increasing the challenges to food security that is also compounded by climate change,” said Dr Srinath Reddy, president of the Public Health Foundation of India. “Reducing inequality while focusing on adapting and mitigating climate change should be where our policy makers’ focus should be.”

Still, experts say the bigger threat to the environment is consumption, which is highest in developed countries not undergoing big population increases.

“Global evidence shows that a small portion of the world’s people use most of the Earth’s resources and produce most of its greenhouse gas emissions,” said Poonam Muttreja, executive director of the Population Foundation of India. “Over the past 25 years, the richest 10 per cent of the global population has been responsible for more than half of all carbon emissions.”

According to the UN, the population in sub-Saharan Africa is growing at 2.5 per cent per year — more than three times the global average. Some of that can be attributed to people living longer, but family size remains the driving factor. Women in sub-Saharan Africa on average have 4.6 births, twice the current global average of 2.3.

Families become larger when women start having children early, and 4 out of 10 girls in Africa marry before they turn 18, according to UN figures. The rate of teen pregnancy on the continent is the highest in the world — about half of the children born last year to mothers under 20 worldwide were in sub-Saharan Africa.

Still, any effort to reduce family size now would come too late to significantly slow the 2050 growth projections, the UN said. About two-thirds of it “will be driven by the momentum of past growth.”

“Such growth would occur even if childbearing in today’s high-fertility countries were to fall immediately to around two births per woman,” the report found.

There are also important cultural reasons for large families. In sub-Saharan Africa, children are seen as a blessing and as a source of support for their elders — the more sons and daughters, the greater comfort in retirement.

Still, some large families “may not have what it takes to actually feed them,” says Eunice Azimi, an insurance broker in Lagos and mother of three.

“In Nigeria, we believe that it is God that gives children,” she said. “They see it as the more children you have, the more benefits. And you are actually overtaking your peers who cannot have as many children. It looks like a competition in villages.”

Politics also have played a role in Tanzania, where former President John Magufuli, who ruled the East African country from 2015 until his death in 2021, discouraged birth control, saying that a large population was good for the economy.

He opposed family planning programs promoted by outside groups, and in a 2019 speech urged women not to “block ovaries.” He even described users of contraceptives as “lazy” in a country he said was awash with cheap food. Under Magufuli, pregnant schoolgirls were even banned from returning to classrooms.

But his successor, Samia Suluhu Hassan, appeared to reverse government policy in comments last month when she said birth control was necessary in order not to overwhelm the country’s public infrastructure.

Even as populations soar in some countries, the UN says rates are expected to drop by 1 per cent or more in 61 nations.

The US population is now around 333 million, according to US Census Bureau data. The population growth rate in 2021 was just 0.1 per cent, the lowest since the country was founded.

“Going forward, we’re going to have slower growth — the question is, how slow?” said William Frey, a demographer at the Brookings Institution. “The real wild card for the US and many other developed countries is immigration.”

Charles Kenny, a senior fellow at the Centre for Global Development in Washington, says environmental concerns surrounding the 8 billion mark should focus on consumption, particularly in developed countries.

“Population is not the problem, the way we consume is the problem — let’s change our consumption patterns,” he said.

___

By DAN IKPOYI and CHINEDU ASADU

Associated Press

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St. Phillip’s North is Next on the UPP ‘Small Business Pull-Up’ Tour

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

The next installment of the UPP’s ‘Small Business Pull-Up’ tour will be staged on Saturday November 19th, when a team of UPP supporters will traverse St. Phillip’s North to support small businesses in the community.

The UPP’s caravan will leave St. Stephen’s Anglican Church at 1:30 pm and will patronize a diverse array of small enterprises in Seatons, Glanvilles, Wilikies and Newfield.

The team will share the UPP’s Small Business Agenda for Development and Growth with vendors and patrons.

Alex Browne, UPP Candidate for St. Phillip’s North, believes that small businesses offer a special touch by catering to the unique needs of those in the community.

“Expect to be greeted with the warm hospitality that is synonymous with our small business owners in the East. It is these positive experiences that create a win-win for everyone in the community that keep customers coming back,” said Browne.

Since late August, the UPP ‘Small Biz Pull-Up’ has been highlighting and empowering small businesses throughout the pandemic-recovery.

Many vendors have expressed gratitude for the additional sales and exposure that this initiative has generated in support of their business.

For more information about the ‘Small Business Pull-Up’ in St. Phillip’s North Tel: 464-4352.

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Stop Arresting Rastafari For Possession Of Cannabis

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room
A tour guide shows marijuana growing openly in a flower garden

Letter to EditorFrom Concerned Rastafari

Stop Arresting Rastafari For Possession Of Cannabis

Unless this is the way the Government wants their policy to operate, Rastafari are the only persons in the Cannabis trade who continue to be picked up police, their belongings ransacked, and whatever holy herb, weed, cannabis or ganga found in their possession, Rastafari are taken to the police station where in some situations, depending on who turns up at the station, bail may be given, and if not they are held until the next Court date.

Since the laws pertaining to farming and trade in Cannabis was preceded by a law designed to comfort Rastafari, where four trees and 14 oz of cannabis became law, it would be expected that transporting the harvest from one place to another would form part of the law.

However, whereas there are now several licensed cannabis farmers operating on the island, and two or more crops have been harvested, none of them have ever been picked up by police, even by mistake.

Only Rastafari!Discussion with the police at the St. John’s Police Station, who have been quite civil, explored why persons who hold Cannabis growing licenses and are promoted by the Cannabis Authority, are still being picked up by police on their way home with product for medicines or oil making.

It was discovered that the government has not taken the criminality off the cannabis laws, and so the police are doing their work, and the magistrate as well! The only thing that was expected to change but continued, was the persecution of the Rastafari community by police looking for cannabis.

The Cannabis Authority is failing the community by the absence of management of the Business of Cannabis, resulting in the continued police persecution of Rastafari.

Whatever is planned to erase this part of the training of Antigua & Barbuda Police Force, it must be put in place immediately.

Besides, if people are allowed to come into the island and partake of the fruits of Rastafari labour, life and suffering for the past fifty years, it is only fair that Rastafari must benefit first!

If only occasionally the police would grab some youth from some other community, like Hodges Bay and Crosbies, where high grade cannabis is grown behind walls, where police dare not go!

This never happens, and all the middle class youth, the cannabis growers from abroad, and the politicians who have invested in the cannabis trade, all of them operate without interference from the police and the Magistrate Court.

Nobody in that social grouping is arrested and dragged to the police station, where they may be forced to stay.

This continues to be the unfair roll out of Antigua’s Cannabis Industry, where Rastafari who have kept cannabis alive, and suffered for it, are still being made to suffer, so that those who have, can have more!

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The Pan American Health Organization is on a quest to strengthen Grenada’s Immunization System.

 

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President Chandrikapersad Santokhi heeft de afgelopen week in Sharm-el-Sheikh in Egypte, waar hij de klimaatconferentie van de Verenigde Naties (COP27)

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