Takeoff fans gather for Atlanta celebration of slain rapper Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Fans gathered Friday to remember slain rapper Takeoff, a member of the hip-hop trio Migos, in a rainy downtown Atlanta near where the 28-year-old grew up.

State Farm Arena, home of the Atlanta Hawks, was hosting a memorial service to celebrate the rapper’s life and music, and a massive sign outside the arena was lit up with the rapper’s image.

Takeoff, born Kirsnick Khari Ball, was shot and killed earlier this month outside a Houston bowling alley. A woman and another man were also wounded in the shooting. No arrests have been made.

Jenifer Loving, 22, stood in line with her infant son, Mateo, for more than an hour before doors opened to fans. She said Takeoff’s death was heartbreaking because he was so young.

Migos’ music represented the creativity and culture of the Black community, she said, and she worried the group would be too saddened to make new music — at least for a while.

“It’s just something that you can play anywhere, and everybody will just come out and come around and dance,” she said. “It’s how it brings people together. It’s how it makes the whole room just fill up with positivity.”

Eric Hood, an Atlanta firefighter, said he was shocked when he heard about Takeoff’s death because of the three members of Migos, he was considered the most laid back.

Migos’ music was an “escape” for many people, he said, and he was hopeful the event would leave his family and the rest of the group with lasting memories of him.

“I pray for them,” he said. “I hope they continue to be uplifting, positive, influential members in the society and keep pushing forward.”

Free tickets to the memorial service were available to Georgia residents, but State Farm Arena said well before Friday that the event had reached capacity and fans without tickets should not come downtown.

The venue did not release a program for the event.

The Grammy Award-nominated trio Migos also included Takeoff’s uncle Quavo and cousin Offset. All three were largely raised by Takeoff’s mother in an Atlanta suburb.

Migos broke out nearly a decade ago with the 2013 hit “Versace,” which hit even greater heights in popularity through a Drake remix.

Houston Police Chief Troy Finner said the day after the shooting that Takeoff was “well respected,” and there was “no reason to believe he was involved in anything criminal at the time.”

Migos’ record label, Quality Control, mourned Takeoff’s death in a statement posted on Instagram that attributed it to “senseless violence and a stray bullet.” Police have said nothing about the gunshot being stray.

Instead of flowers or gifts, his family has asked that people make donations to The Rocket Foundation, which was established in Takeoff’s honour and aims to prevent gun violence, according to its website.

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By SUDHIN THANAWALA Associated Press

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T&T looking to adopt Jamaica’s social housing programme Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Government representatives from Trinidad and Tobago are currently in the island to observe Jamaica’s New Social Housing Programme (NSHP) with a view to adopting the initiative.

Prime Minister Andrew Holness made the disclosure during a ceremony for the handover of a house in Kellits, Clarendon, on Thursday.

Secretary for Settlements, Public Utilities and Rural Development in the Tobago House of Assembly, Ian Pollard and Social Intervention Officer, Jimmy Sylvester, who have been in the island since November 4, attended the ceremony.

“That you’re here to observe what Jamaica is doing, says quite a bit about the programme,” Holness said.

Noting the role of Members of Parliament (MPs) in the selection of NSHP recipients in Jamaica, he told the Trinidadian officials that they may consider including a similar element in their programme.

He explained that the programme assists the MPs to fulfil their roles as advocates, pointing out that the final selection is made by the oversight committee in the Ministry of Economic Growth and Job Creation.

Prime Minister Andrew Holness points to a display showing the transformation of the living conditions of a recipient under the New Social Housing Programme during the handover of the unit in Kellits, Clarendon, on November 10. (Photo: JIS)

The prime minister said that community members have been “widely receptive” of the programme and the selected beneficiaries.

“I have not gone to any community where the houses are built and detected any dissatisfaction with the beneficiaries. The people in the area are all very happy for the beneficiary, and they all agree that the [person] is deserving,” he noted.

After observing the handover of a two-bedroom house to Jordeen Mason and her mother, Joan Douglas, Pollard told JIS News that “this is heart[warming]. It’s nice to see what the prime minister is doing… . I applaud the Government [of Jamaica] for their efforts”.

Sylvester, for her part, said: “It’s a really good initiative when you’re looking at indigent housing and persons being given a home. I mean, if your basic need of shelter is being met, that’s a very good thing.”

She said that the Government of Trinidad and Tobago also has “a lot of persons living in subsidised homes” and explained that what drew the team to Jamaica and the NSHP, was, to an extent, the cost of the units.

She noted that the approximately $6-million cost to build a home “is a pretty low and decent sum”.

The Trinidadians will meet with the principals of the NSHP and representatives from the National Housing Trust before concluding their one-week visit.

A total of six units were handed over on Thursday by the prime minister, including a second dwelling in Kellits and four others in Cotton Piece, Forte Street, Gordon Pen, and Brunswick Avenue in St Catherine.

The NSHP was established in 2018 by Prime Minister Holness. It is the housing component of the Housing, Opportunity, Production and Employment programme, and is being implemented through the Ministry of Economic Growth and Job Creation.

The initiative aims to improve the housing condition of the country’s most needy citizens.

JIS News

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Women make history in new books

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

from left, Professor Brinsley Samaroo, Ms. Paula Greene NALIS Executive Director, Dr. Karen Eccles, Professor Bridget Brereton, Professor Rose Marie Belle-Antoine, Ms. Judy Raymond and Gerard Besson,
The book launch of ‘History Matters’ author by Professor Bridget Brereton and ‘Islands at War – Trinidad and Tobago During World War II’ authored by Professor Bridget Brereton and Dr. Karen Eccles, held at the Audio Visual Conference Room and Auditorium at NALIS-National Library and Information System Authority(NALIS)
Thursday 10th November 2022. – Photo by Roger Jacob

WOMEN’s role in history, including the World War II period (1939-1945) in Trinidad and Tobago, was highlighted in two books published by historians Professor Emerita Bridget Brereton and Dr Karen Eccles at the National Library, Port of Spain on Thursday – the day before Armistice Day (November 11) marking the end of World War I (1914-1918.)

The books were Brereton’s History Matters: Selected Newspaper Columns 2011-2021 and Islands at War: TT during World War II by Brereton and Eccles.

The book launch of ‘History Matters’ author by Professor Bridget Brereton and ‘Islands at War – Trinidad and Tobago During World War II’ authored by Professor Bridget Brereton and Dr. Karen Eccles, held at the Audio Visual Conference Room and Auditorium at NALIS-National Library and Information System Authority(NALIS)Thursday 10th November 2022. – Photo by Roger Jacob

The launch was chaired by Dr Glenroy Taitt of the Alma Jordan Library, UWI, St Augustine, with a welcome by Nalis executive director Paula Greene.

UWI, St Augustine principal Prof Rose-Marie Belle Antoine, in her remarks, praised Brereton for her “calm, unbiased advice” and “very rational, empathetic approach.”

Historian Prof Brinsley Samaroo, reviewing Islands at War, said history should provide guidelines for the future. He said the war years were a complicated slice of TT’s history, with US occupation, TT becoming the Commonwealth’s biggest oil producer and a takeover target for German ambitions, while seeing an upswing in local agricultural production displacing the influence of a colonial cartel, temporarily. Samaroo’s favourite chapter was Forgotten Women of World War II, a detailed probe into the lives of ordinary women – nurses, teachers, telegraph operators and social activists.

“These women operated in a world dominated by men who dictated that upon marriage a woman had to resign from government employment.” Bigger jobs went to British women.

Professor Brinsley Samaroo, delivers remarks on the book ‘Islands at War’The book launch of ‘History Matters’ author by Professor Bridget Brereton and ‘Islands at War – Trinidad and Tobago During World War II’ authored by Professor Bridget Brereton and Dr. Karen Eccles, held at the Audio Visual Conference Room and Auditorium at NALIS-National Library and Information System Authority(NALIS)Thursday 10th November 2022. – Photo by Roger Jacob

Local women, however, pitched in to help to bail Britain out of the war, a record of their lives surely now inspiring to modern women.

“Chapter two revisits the story of Jean and Dinah through the sexploitation of local women by the Americans.”

He said calypsonian Slinger “Mighty Sparrow” Francisco had little sympathy for such women abandoned by the Americans.

Samaroo said the war stimulated Carnival, calypso and steelbands, as the Americans craved local entertainment. He said writers such as VS Naipaul, Ralph de Boissiere and Sam Selvon had recreated wartime scenarios in their books, the period nourishing the creative impulse.

Lamenting a dearth of post-colonial writing especially on women’s role in creating a Caribbean space, he welcomed the book as a labour of love.

Commenting on History Matters, Judy Raymond, writer and editor in chief of Newsday, considered the place of history in modern TT, Brereton’s collection of opinion columns and Brereton’s wider professional life.

“As many writers and no doubt any historian will tell you, the past is never dead; it’s not even past,” she said. “There are still people who are under the impression that we don’t have much history, recorded or otherwise, though whether you know it or not, it’s actually always with us, like the river that still runs below this building.”

She said the book was a reminder that newspapers were not only about the latest murders, insults traded in Parliament or who had just beaten the West Indies, but also about opinions on issues such as current affairs, books, art or history.

Raymond said the collection of news columns showed TT’s wealth of history.

“These columns are perfectly designed and targeted: they’re short, they’re easily digested, and they offer enlightenment on subjects you didn’t know anything about, and deeper or fresh insight into things about which you knew a little. They’re readable, but they don’t exaggerate or, worse yet, take liberties with the facts for effect.”

She quoted Brereton as saying truth in history was notoriously tricky. Raymond said while some had viewed Governor Sir Thomas Picton as a hero who died nobly at the Battle of Waterloo (1815), this year his statue had been relegated to a back room in Wales’s National Museum. Brereton, she said, had mentioned Picton, but was more interested in Luisa Calderon, the local girl he was tried for torturing, plus Picton’s companion Rosette Smith, a mixed-race woman who had nevertheless done a roaring trade in buying and hiring out her enslaved compatriots.

Raymond was pleased the book includes the voices of women, otherwise silenced or stolen.

She hailed Brereton for conveying complex ideas to the general reader via a newspaper column, getting many details into a very small space without looking crammed.

“Not only is she a professor emerita of our university, who has influenced generations of students through her teaching; she’s also been a public intellectual, through sitting on various government committees, and panels of judges of awards, or taking part in the Bocas Lit Fest.”

Professor Bridget Brereton delivers the vote of thanks remarks.The book launch of ‘History Matters’ author by Professor Bridget Brereton and ‘Islands at War – Trinidad and Tobago During World War II’ authored by Professor Bridget Brereton and Dr. Karen Eccles, held at the Audio Visual Conference Room and Auditorium at NALIS-National Library and Information System Authority(NALIS)Thursday 10th November 2022. – Photo by Roger Jacobs

Brereton has written, edited and contributed to many publications, Raymond related.

“She has been unfailingly generous with her time, knowledge and encouragement to countless researchers and writers, whether fellow academics, journalists or random people who impudently sally into her territory now and again.

“And now she’s done the same for the fortunate people who will buy or be given a copy of this book, dip into it, and find themselves re-emerging into the 21st century hours later, surprised, entertained, and more knowledgeable than they were when first they opened it.”

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Ansa McAl profits decline despite 14% revenue increase

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Ansa McAl chairman A Norman Sabga during the release of the group’s half-year results in June. The group’s profits declined over the nine-period ending September 30. – Photo by Sureash Cholai

CONGLOMERATE Ansa McAl recorded an increase in revenue of 14 per cent, or $581 million, to $5.7 billion for the first nine months, this year. The nine-month revenue was $4.9 billion in 2021. However, its after-tax profit plummeted to $13.7 million from $335.1 million in the comparative periods.

The increase was reflected in the group’s unaudited results for the nine-month period ending September 30, 2022 published on Friday.

The top-earning sector was construction, manufacturing, packaging and brewing which earned $2.1 billion, compared to $1.6 billion in 2021.

In its media, retail and parent-company segment, the group earned $236,423,000 compared to $224,792,000.

Banking and insurance earned $747,658,000 – a decrease of some $40 million – compared to $784,907,000. Automotive, trading and distribution in 2021 recorded revenue of $1.4 billion which increased to $1.5 billion this year.

The group’s total asset rose to $17.570 billion from $17.043 billion.

Ansa McAl, which operates in manufacturing, automotive, media, insurance and other businesses, saw increases in revenue all sectors except banking and insurance.

In his statement, chairman A Norman Sabga said the non-cash market losses reduced the group’s before-tax profit from $461.8 million to $139.1 million. After-tax profit was $13,733,000 compared to $335,151,000.

He added that while there is a challenge in predicting, with certainty, the turnaround on investments in the banking and insurance portfolios, the two sectors continue to do well. To demonstrate this he highlighted Tatil’s acquisition of Colfire, which will be finalised in 2023.

“We have set an aggressive target of doubling the group’s profitability by 2027. Underpinning this target are robust strategies to achieve organic and inorganic growth in both new and existing regional and international markets.”

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CJ orders Ramps Logistics be issued with Local Content Certificate by Monday

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana

Chief Justice (ag) Roxane George, SC has ordered the Director of Local Content Martin Pertab to issue Ramps Logistics (Guyana) with a Local Content Certificate by noon on Monday, November 14, failing to do so will see him being liable for contempt of court and being fined.

In September, the company initiated judicial review proceedings against Natural Resources Minister Vickram Bharrat, the Local Content Secretariat, Secretariat Director Martin Pertab, and Attorney General Anil Nandlall, SC over the government’s decision to deny it the certificate.

Ruling in the matter on Friday, Justice George held that the Local Content Secretariat considered irrelevant factors in making its decision. The irrelevant factors she alluded to are the criminal charges against the company for making false declarations to the Guyana Revenue Authority (GRA). Based on the evidence before the court, Justice George noted that the company has satisfied all the requirements to be registered in the Local Content Register.

Ramps Logisitcs’ Logistics Director, Samantha Cole had deposed that if the company is not added to the Local Content register, it will lose multi-million US dollar contracts from companies in the oil industry and be forced to reduce its operations and dismiss a majority of its employees.

At a press conference, Ramps Logistics Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Shaun Rampersad had related that the company divested 51 per cent ownership of its Guyana operations to Trinidad-based investor Deepak Lall, who has Guyanese parentage, to bring its operations in compliance with the Local Content Law.

Guyana’s Local Content Act defines a local company as one incorporated under the Companies Act and is beneficially owned by Guyanese nationals. Beneficial ownership is defined as owning 51 per cent of the company. Additionally, a local company is expected to have Guyanese in at least 75 per cent of executive and senior management positions, and at least 90 per cent in non-managerial and other positions.

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BCF Reports Unprecedented Seizure Of Inmate Contraband – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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The Bordelais Correctional Facility (BCF) reported an unprecedented seizure of inmate contraband, including mobile telephones, ‘cell-made’ weapons, and cannabis on Thursday.

Correctional Officers seized 45 phones, 43 batteries, 22 chargers, 31 weapons, 60 portions of cannabis, six scissors, one hacksaw, an SD card, an MP3 player, and two lighters – among other items.

‘Cell-made’ weapons seized during search

BCF Communications Officer Kerwin Albert described the seizure in the institution’s remand block as ‘unusual’.

“Even when we searched the entire facility we never got so many phones at one time,” Albert told St Lucia Times.

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And he disclosed that the seizures are currently the subject of an investigation.

Albert explained that mobile telephones in prison represent a security risk, including providing inmates with the means to interfere with witnesses.

He said the inmates gave no trouble during the search of the remand block, which lasted for about two and a half hours.

There are currently 337 inmates housed in the block, including 17 females.

Officers found the contraband in possession of some inmates, while other items had been concealed in the cells.

“A search like that, which confiscated so many cell phones, assures you that something is happening in the right direction. Also you feel safer that the particular area is now sterile,” the BCF Communications Officer told St Lucia Times.

The latest contraband seizure came days after the Department of Home Affairs officially announced that Verne Garde, a former Director of Corrections, had been reappointed to the post.

In his first media interview, Garde disclosed a 27-point ‘Correctional Restoration’ plan to address issues at the BCF.

BCF Communications Officer Kerwin Albert explained that Garde’s plan, which includes removing contraband from the institution, was being implemented.

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Cultural Ambassador calls for steel pan to be made the principal instrument in schools

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: NBC SVG

A call has been made for the Government of St. Vincent and the Grenadines to make the Steel Pan the principal instrument in the nations’ schools.

Cultural Ambassador and President of the Youlou Pan Movement Rodney Small made the call during a recent interview with NBC News.

He says the steel pan plays a very important role in preserving Caribbean identity.

https://www.nbcsvg.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/RODNEY-STEEL-PAN-CALL.mp3

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Director of Forestry urges Vincentians to be cautious of Lahars

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: NBC SVG

The Forestry Service in the Ministry of Agriculture is appealing to Vincentians to continue exercising caution as there can be possible Lahars as the rainy season continues.

This appeal was made by Director of Forestry, Fitzgerald Providence during an interview with NBC News.

Mr. Providence said following last year’s explosive eruption of La Soufriere Volcano there is still significant Ash buildup in some areas and when heavy rainfall occurs these materials are washed off the volcano slopes and come down as Lahars.

https://www.nbcsvg.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/IMPROVEMENT1.mp3

Mr. Providence said the Forestry Service is also implementing a number of projects which can assist in the management of Lahars when they occur. He is however cautioning members of the public to stay alert with the weather bulletins and guidelines form the authorities.

https://www.nbcsvg.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/IMPROVEMENT2.mp3

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Minister Curtis King emphasizes the importance of Technical and Vocational Education and Training to the development

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: NBC SVG

Minister of Education, Curtis King has emphasized the importance of Technical and Vocational Education and Training to the development of St., Vincent and the Grenadines

Speaking on Radio this week, the Minister said the Ministry is continuing to address the gaps in the education system so it can be in close alignment with the national development needs.

https://www.nbcsvg.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/TVET-MONTH.mp3

Minister King said the Ministry will continue to provide the necessary training, given the increased demand for skilled professionals.

https://www.nbcsvg.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/TVET-TRAINING.mp3

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The Making Cities Resilient 2030 Workshop culminates today

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: NBC SVG

The Making Cities Resilient 2030 Workshop culminates today at the Beachcombers Hotel Conference Facility, after three days of deliberations.

The National Emergency Management Organization has partnered with the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction to host the workshop.

Its objective is to expose key stakeholders to the Resilience Roadmap which is a pathway for the Making Cities Resilient 2030 initiative.

Permanent Secretary, Ministry of National Security, Hudson Nedd said during the opening ceremony that stakeholders must work to achieve the outcomes of the initiative.

https://www.nbcsvg.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/INITIATIVE-OUTCOME.mp3

Meanwhile, Disaster Risk Reduction Advisor, United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction, Jaire Tores stressed the importance of the workshop.

https://www.nbcsvg.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/JAIRE-OUTCOMES.mp3

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