18 persons of interest named by St Catherine South police Loop Jamaica

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The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News
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The St Catherine South Police Division has released a list of 18 individuals named as Persons of Interest in relation to the recent flare-up of crime and violence in sections of the division.

The police are appealing to these persons to turn themselves in to the Greater Portmore Police Station by 6:00 pm on Thursday, August 4:

Richard Hemley, otherwise called ‘Devils’Kirk Wint, otherwise called ‘Big Red’Christopher Barrett, otherwise called ‘Chicken Back’Elijah Carless, otherwise called ‘Papalou’Ricardo Carson, otherwise called ‘Trooper’Shane Williams, otherwise called ‘Tussain’Imoro McKenzie, otherwise called ‘Munga’Cedrick BarnettMiguel TraceySanjay TraceyA man known only as ‘Techa’A man known only as ‘Nigel’A man known only as ‘Dog Shot’A man known only as ‘Dappa’A man known only as ‘Cedrick’A man known only as ‘Bailey Boy’A man known only as ‘Tae Tae’,A man known only as ‘Steve’

Additionally, anyone with information about the whereabouts of these individuals is being asked to contact the Greater Portmore Police at 876-949-8403 or Crime Stop at 311.

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‘Elvis’ Movie Actor Alton Mason And Model Tanyka Renee Seen Enjoying Antigua’s Carnival 2022

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room
Elvis’ movie actor Alton Mason (center) and social media maven and model Tanyka Renee Henry (far right) were spotted partying with friends in Antigua during Antigua’s Carnival (Photo credits Watkins Multimedia)

After a two-year break, Antigua’s Carnival returned this summer with all its vibrancy and energy to the delight of carnival-lovers who immersed themselves in the carnival atmosphere of the Caribbean’s Greatest Summer Festival held from July 27 – August 2, 2022.

Amongst the masqueraders spotted on Carnival Monday dancing to soca and steelpan music under the summer sun were American male model and 2022 ‘Elvis’ biopic actor Alton Mason and social media maven, travel influencer and model Tanyka Renee Henry.

The duo was seen enjoying themselves with friends in the mas’ band Insane Carnival.

The group had such a great time on Carnival Monday that they returned on Carnival Tuesday for the costume parade.

Alton who portrays musical icon Little Richard in the 2022 ‘Elvis’ film wore a golden costume and was seen showing off his stealth dance moves as his feet sparkled in diamond studded boots.

In what could only be considered a masterpiece, Tanyka Renee stood out from the sea of masqueraders in a headliner costume from the Insane section ‘Milan’ drawing nods of approval from spectators.

Their entire group was seen having an amazing day as they glistened in sparkling gold and glamorous white feathered costumes and weaved their way through the bustling streets of St. John’s – a kaleidoscope of colour and energy with partying masqueraders and spectators.

The influencers were also spotted on social media enjoying themselves throughout Antigua. Instagram posts from Dr. Hakim Dubois @Iammisternewyork, allowed viewers to follow the group as they relaxed on a sunset cruise along Antigua’s scenic coastline.

The group enjoyed a zipline adventure through Antigua’s lush rainforest and learned how to make one of Antigua and Barbuda’s popular national dishes ducana, during a local cooking class hosted by friend @Iammisternewyork. Recent posts also show Alton and Tanyka at one of the island’s newest restaurants Rokuni.

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UPDATE: Williams adds double murder to rap sheet gets remanded Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

Update: 10 am, August 4, 2022

Shawayne Williams has been remanded to Her Majesty’s Prison Dodds.

He is set to reappear at District F Magistrate Court on Friday, August 12.

Original story: 5:30 pm, August 3, 2022

Shawayne Williams has now added more murder charges to his rap sheet, with police arresting and charging him in connection with the two murders committed in Horse Hill, St Joseph, near a popular restaurant and bar.

He appeared at the Holetown Magistrates Court today, Wednesday, August 3, 2022.

Today, the 27-year-old of Mahaica Gap, Green Hill, St Michael went before the magistrate for the following offences:

1. Murder of Tyrese Ceasar

2. Murder of Trae Harris

3. Endangering the Life of Andre Beckles

4. Wounding Seth Towler

5. Wounding Kemar Bradshaw

6. Possession of a Firearm

The police at the Criminal Investigation Department in the Northern Division considered the arrest and subsequent charges laid against Williams as a breakthrough into their investigations.

Williams was the subject of a Wanted Man bulletin on July 12, 2022. Alias ‘Steppy’, Williams was arrested on Thursday, July 21, 2022, after members of the Major Crime Unit, AntiGun Unit and the Criminal Investigations Unit North executed a Warrant at a residence at Bush Hall Yard Gap, St Michael.

In 2018, police arrested and formally charged Shawayne Dashawn Williams, 23 years of White Hall #1, St Michael, for the murder of Tavon Alleyne whilst at Eden Lodge, St Michael.

Alleyne, who was 21 years old, resided at Lakes Close, Eden Lodge, St Michael.

According to police, on Tuesday, Boxing Day, December 26, 2017, around 7:00 pm, Alleyne was walking through a track in the area of his house when he was approached by a man who shot him multiple times before fleeing the scene. Alleyne was rushed for medical attention by a private vehicle, where he later succumbed to his injuries.

Williams was subsequently arrested and formally charged for the murder of Alleyne. According to police reports, he appeared before Magistrate Douglas Fredericks in the District ‘A’ Magistrates Court on Wednesday, January 3, 2018, and was remanded to prison to reappear in Court on January 31, 2018.

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Tour de la Guadeloupe 2022 sur FranceAntilles.fr

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guadeloupe FranceAntilles

Cédric Cornet arrêté à…

Rédaction web Mercredi 27 Juillet 2022

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La compagnie aérienne Jet Blue va reprendre les vols entre la Guadeloupe et New-York

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guadeloupe FranceAntilles

Rédaction web
Jeudi 4 Août 2022 – 17h04

Aéroport Pôle Caraïbes – Aéroport Pôle Caraïbes

La compagnie aérienne Jet Blue va reprendre ses rotations entre la Guadeloupe et New-York à partir du 5 novembre.

Après avoir pris le relais de Norwegian qui était la pionnière dans les rotations vers New-York en Février 2020, puis suspendue pendant la crise sanitaire, la liaison aérienne New-York/Pointe-à-Pitre fera son grand retour à partir du mois de novembre.

Le détail des rotations

Jet Blue a prévu d’effectuer trois vols par semaine entre New-York et  Pointe-à-Pitre.

Les vols seront programmés, les lundis, mercredis et samedis.

L’objectif est de faire découvrir aux touristes américains, friands des îles anglophones de la zone, une destination francophone. 

La Guadeloupe est la seule destination caribéenne française proposée par la compagnie. 

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Terre-de-Bas a désormais sa déchetterie

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guadeloupe FranceAntilles

Dimanche dernier, le conseil régional a procédé à l’inauguration de la déchetterie de Terre-de-Bas. 

De nombreuses personnalités ont dimanche pris la direction de Terre-de-Bas pour participer à l’inauguration de la déchetterie nouvellement implantée sur l’îlet. Un investissement de la Région qui entre dans le cadre de son plan zéro déchet en 2035. « Vu la situation financière très dégradée de Grand sud Caraïbes (CAGSC), elle n’aurait pas été en capacité de porter ce programme, nous remercions la Région. Ce sont ces équipements-là qui permettront de mieux gérer et optimiser la collecte et le traitement des déchets sur notre territoire. C’est une excellente chose pour Terre-de-Bas qui connait une double insularité. J’espère que la population va l’utiliser  à bon escient, de manière à ce que le territoire puisse bénéficier d’un environnement satisfaisant. La prochaine étape devrait être Baillif » explique Thierry Abélli, président de la CAGSC. Au total, ce sont six déchetteries qui sont prévus sur le territoire de la CAGSC. Pour tous, la Région en sera le maître d’ouvrage.  

Une déchetterie bien spécifique

Chaque déchetterie a sa spécificité. Celle de Terre-de-Bas est située sur un site à plat, contrairement aux structures classiques qui ont un quai haut et un quai bas ; ici il y a des basculeurs pour les déchets les plus volumineux (gravats, tout-venant et ferraille, notamment). Prochaine étape, l’inauguration de la déchetterie de Baillif et son quai de transfert, puis celle de Terre-de-Haut. « En 2023, devraient arriver celles de Petit-Bourg, Goyave, Trois-Rivières.  Celle de Capesterre Belle-Eau sera rénovée. Plus de 15 millions d’euros ont déjà investis. Les fonds viennent de l’Europe, de l’Etat par biais de l’Ademe (Agence de l’environnement et de la maîtrise de l’énergie) qui est un partenaire extrêmement précieux et de la Région. Ces déchetteries sont un service que l’agglomération va mettre à proximité des habitants, qui se doivent de se l’approprier, en y amenant leurs déchets. Car ces déchets seront recyclés ; ce sont donc des déchets que l’on ne va pas retrouver dans l’environnement »,  confie avec satisfaction  Sylvie Gustave-dit-Duflo, vice-présidente de la Région Guadeloupe.

Les saintois avaient fait le déplacement pour l’occasion

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Has CARICOM reached its limits of regional integration?  Part 2

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

By Sir Ronald Sanders

(The writer is Antigua and Barbuda’s Ambassador to the United States of America and the Organization of American States.   He is also a Senior Fellow at the Institute of Commonwealth Studies, University of London, and Massey College in the University of Toronto) 

In the first part of this commentary, the conclusion was reached that the great ideals, set out in the 1973 Treaty of Chaguaramas (the CARICOM Treaty) and its revision in 2001, remain unfulfilled.  But does this reality mean that, as the CARICOM project reaches its 50th anniversary next July, it has reached the limits of regional integration?

The previous commentary showed that CARICOM expanded by adding new members (Suriname and Haiti), but it failed to deepen its integration arrangements, such that while it has been aspiring to become a Single Market and Economy (SME) since 2001, it still has not established a Customs Union let alone a Common Market.

The prevailing characteristic of CARICOM, apart from the agonizingly slow pace of institutionalizing the machinery for integration, has been the jealous retention of “sovereignty” by governments of the region. In other words, as the late, former Prime Minister of Barbados, Owen Arthur, put it disapprovingly: “[CARICOM] conceives of (itself) mainly as a community of sovereign states in which sovereignty is pooled but never ceded; with the nation-state being the locus of decision-making in respect of the implementation of regional commitments”.

However, it should not be believed that political leaders are the only persons who cling to sovereignty (in other words, keeping all decision making at the national level).  Over the years, keen to maintain control over what they consider to be their own turf, bureaucrats have also caused decisions to be delayed, deferred or made impossible to implement.  The pull of local control remains greater than the push toward regional authority.

The worst example of failure to operationalize fully a regional institution that CARICOM governments, themselves, established is the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ).  Upon its establishment, the CCJ was to become the final appellate Court for all civil and criminal matters, replacing the British (and colonial) Privy Council.  Epitomizing the inexplicable dissonance that surrounds the attitude to the CCJ is that its headquarters is located in Trinidad and Tobago, a country that has been independent since 1962, and that has long severed the Queen as its Head of State in favour of becoming a Republic with a native President. Yet Trinidad and Tobago’s final appellate Court remains the British Privy Council because of internal politics.

Only four CARICOM countries – Barbados, Belize, Dominica and Guyana – recognize the CCJ as their final Court of Appeal.  Despite the celebration of independence and sovereignty, Caribbean politicians (on all sides) by their failure to explain the merits of the CCJ to their people – or by their deliberate misleading of them – sustain a contradiction.

In part, this situation continues because the “nation state” in CARICOM has not collapsed, supported, as it is, by official development assistance from members of the international community; by international lenders who profit from loans to needy governments; and by investors whose business models are based on over generous tax concessions by the state, motivated by competition between CARICOM states, especially in the tourism industry.

Additionally, no CARICOM country has had to bear the full burden of national security that would come from the establishment of the military apparatus necessary to protect its borders and its sovereignty.   There has been little or no need for an air force, battle ships, armies or considerable armaments.   Up until Russia invaded Ukraine, the borders, territorial integrity and sovereignty of individual CARICOM countries, was protected by an international order and a UN Security Council that seemed to insure protection against military aggression.   Despite Russia’s action, CARICOM countries have not discussed their collective defence. Instead, they have repeated their desire for the Caribbean to be a “zone of peace”, expecting external actors to respect it, knowing fully well that the cost of defending themselves militarily is far beyond each of their means.

Even at times of natural disasters, causing massive damage and economic reversals, individual CARICOM countries have looked to the international donor community for help; borrowed money, thus increasing their national debt burden; and entered into financial adjustment programmes with the International Monetary Fund (IMF).   In the latter case, they have been forced to cede aspects of the “sovereignty” to which they cling within the CARICOM grouping.   However, apart from the worthwhile, but under resourced, work of the Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency, CARICOM is not able to respond in the way in which, for instance, the single federal governments of the US or Canada are able to tackle disasters in states or provinces.

To be sure, in the 60 years since Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago became independent states, leading to a procession of Caribbean countries doing the same, independence has allowed national governments to accelerate infrastructural development and economic progress in many countries.  Within the CARICOM group, Haiti, with its history of foreign occupation, exploitation, and succession of dictatorial and repressive governments, is the main exception.

So, sovereignty has not been without its benefits.  But the question remains: how much further along the road to economic and social progress would CARICOM countries have been, had they not only pooled their sovereignty but also ceded aspects of it to a regional centre as occurred with the European Union?

According to the latest IMF research, further liberalizing trade and labour mobility in the region can generate significant economic benefits—potentially over 7 percent of the region’s GDP in 2018.

The February 2020 research finds that “a 25-percent reduction in non-tariff barriers and trade costs within CARICOM and vis-à-vis non-CARICOM trade partners can boost trade and improve welfare gain for all members—at about $6 billion, or 7.6 percent of the region’s GDP in 2018. It can also help restructure economies from contracting to expanding sectors, resulting in a net employment gain across the region”.

The IMF report entitled, “Is the Whole Greater than the Sum of its Parts? Strengthening Caribbean Regional Integration”, lays out solid research to establish that while the small size and supply constraints of these countries may potentially limit benefits from economic integration, acting as a group can enhance the scale, bringing widespread benefits and helping the region further tap into global value chains.

Part 3 next week will conclude this discussion.

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