Man’s body found inside barrel with throat slashed Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News
Loop News

3 hrs ago

The barrel found with a body of a man inside on Thursday afternoon in St Catherine.

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The shirtless body of a man was found inside a barrel at a section of Hellshire main road in St catherine on Thursday afternoon.

The body, with the throat slashed, was reportedly discovered by a passerby about 3:50pm.

The deceased individual had still not been identified up to late Thursday.

“A passing cyclist saw the barrel and alerted a police team which was conducting operations in the area,” head of the St Catherine South Police, Senior Superintendent of Police Christopher Phillips, said.

He added: “The throat was slashed, the body was shirtless, and the lower body was clad in a pair of jeans.”

The area was cordoned, and following investigations, the body removed.

The St Catherine South police are investigating.

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A plea for blood donations for former Senator Delano Franklyn Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News
Loop News

2 hrs ago

Delano Franklyn

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A plea has gone out for Jamaicans to donate blood for former People’s National Party (PNP) Senator, Delano Franklyn, who is hospitalised at The University Hospital of the West Indies (UHWI), reportedly in critical condition.

Franklyn’s illness has not been disclosed, but he needs up to 10 units of blood per day, according to a WhatsApp status post from Dr Dayton Campbell, the general secretary of the PNP.

“Comrade Franklyn is in need of blood,” said Campbell, a medical doctor, in a terse message.

Campbell is asking individuals who can donate to do so at the Blood Bank or the UHWI. The receipt should be given to the head nurse at the Annex UHWI.

A long-standing member of the PNP, Franklyn is 62 years old. He previously served as minister of state in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

In 2016, he shared publicly that he was hospitalised with Guillain-Barre Syndrome (GBS) after he was infected with the mosquito-borne Zika virus. He detailed his struggles with the life-threatening disease, which results in muscle weakness when the immune system causes damage to the peripheral nervous system.

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Cop charged in relation to the assault of man in Denham Town Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Policeman taken before court on summons

Loop News

28 minutes ago

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An investigation by the Independent Commission of Investigations (INDECOM) has led to a policeman, being charged in relation to the assault of a man in Denham Town, two years ago.

The policeman Constable Rajeeck O’Connor was brought before the Kingston and St Andrew Parish Court by way of summons on Thursday.

During the appearance, a trial date was set for February 6-7, 2023 when the lawman, will answer to the charge of assault occasioning actual bodily harm contrary to common law.

These charges were a result of an investigation by the Independent Commission of Investigations (INDECOM) and a ruling by the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions (ODPP).

A release from INDECOM said that on February 21, 2020, Constable O’Connor intervened in a verbal altercation, between the complainant and his neighbor, which resulted in the complainant sustaining actual bodily harm (abrasions and bruises).

A trial date was set for February 6-7, 2023 by the presiding judge, and disclosure was made to Defense Counsel. All concerned parties were bound over.

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Economists: Years of government assistance leave Trinis too spoilt

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

SPOILT ON SUBSIDIES: Economists Dr Darren Conrad, left, and Dave Seerattan, centre, who said on Thursday that decades of governnment grants and subsidies have left TT citizens spoilt. In this photo, both are seen with another economist Roger Hosein. FILE PHOTO –

THREE senior economists said on Thursday that decades of subsidies, transfers and other forms of government assistance – to the tune of tens of billions of dollars – have made citizens spoilt.

This view comes three days after the Minister of Finance Colm Imbert announced in the budget, a further cut on subsidies in the price of fuel and consequent increase in the price of premium and super gasoline, each by a dollar per litre, and 50 cents per litre for diesel.

Economists Dr Dave Seerattan, Dr Darren Conrad and Dr Marlene Attzs, spoke during a post budget virtual forum hosted the Department of Economics, Faculty of Social Science, University of the West Indies, St Augustine campus.

All agreed that after years of support from successive governments, citizens are now facing, if only in part, the actual real cost of many commodities.

“In some countries, with less resources available, there is a different mindset altogether,” said Conrad. “They are able to make tough decisions and implement some of these measures. But it doesn’t fly here because we have become, for want of a better word, spoilt over the years.

DEPENDENCY SYNDROME

Attzs agreed saying, “What has happened for us for 60 years is that successive governments have created a dependency syndrome.”

“I think our country and its citizens need to understand what constitutes TT’s wealth. It is incumbent on us as a department to help with that conversation in terms of educating the population so when budget day happens people have a better platform in which they would be able to receive the information and have some kind of understanding of what is happening in the country.”

Seerattan said that in years past, TT has experienced “supernormal” profits from energy sales and revenues, but times have changed and revenue and production are not what they used to be.

“Those times may come again but right now we are not in that position,” he said.

“The problem with the fuels subsidy is that it is not sustainable in the long term. If you didn’t have the subsidies, you would have been able to do what Barbados is doing and offer assistance to people to meet their fuel and food bills – but we have subsidies in place already.”

Economist Marlene Attzs who also believes citizens have grown spoilt on government grants and subsidies. FILE PHOTO –

Their views of society being spoilt by decades of government assistance, grants and subsidies, comes amid major condemnation on social media, of a call by Sport Minister Shamfa Cudjoe for greater sacrifices to be made by people.

With the thinking that the fuel subsidy would sooner or later become unsustainable, Seerattan said there was an overall logic to what Imbert did in reducing government subsidies on the price of fuel.

“If you had been looking at what the minister has been doing over a period of time, he has consistently scaled back the fuel subsidy. I believe any minister of finance finding himself in the position that he (Imbert) did, prior to 2022, would have done the same thing.”

The price of fuel has been increased six times over the past seven years.

Conrad claimed that TT households receive subsidies to the tune of $5,000 a year, while another speaker at the forum, Dr Regan Deonanan, highlighted the fact that over the past ten years, transfers and subsidies averaged $28.2 billion per year. Wages paid by government averaged $9.1 billion per year.

In comparison, the gross fixed capital formation – the measure of the level of investment overall in the economy – is about $24.9 billion.

Some of these subsidies are in the form of education, electricity, fuel, healthcare, water and others.

“Some of the agencies or enterprises arguing for an increase in wages, I don’t know if they take into consideration some of the subsidies that they get.

“So let’s say the government plays devil’s advocate and says ‘OK, we’ll give you 19 per cent but we will take away all the subsidies,’ where does that leave the household? So we need to consider what we are asking for and what is sustainable,” Conrad said.

“We are borrowing money after all to pay public servants’ salaries,” Seerattan reminded. “We have to wean ourselves off of these subsidies while protecting the most vulnerable.”

BALANCE NEEDED

While the economists agreed that excess subsidies were not sustainable, they also agreed that a reasonable balance between walking back on these subsidies, and protection of the more vulnerable, are needed, and that balance may not have been met in this budget.

Attzs highlighted in her presentation a breakdown of the average monthly salary of a person working for minimum wage, which amounted to $2,677.80. By comparison, basic living expenses amounted to an average of $7,500.

“We as economists understand there were certain measures that had to take place for us to try to get the economy back on some stabilised footing, but I think insufficient attention was paid to the vulnerable in society.

“If we want to move forward we have to ensure that as few TT citizens as possible are left behind,” she said.

Conrad suggested government take the approach of being more targeted when applying subsidies, since currently, they are given regardless of income bracket.

Seerattan said the system of aggregate wage negotiations also needs to change so that the lion’s share of allocated money could be given to lower income workers.

Ultimately, the economists agreed that there needs to be a focus on the vulnerable. “Those people in the lowest rungs of society are the people most at risk,” Seerattan said.

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Más de 80 mujeres han desaparecido en Puerto Rico en los últimos 9 años

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

La portavoz del Observatorio Equidad de Género, Irma Lugo, informó en RADIO ISLA que unas 83 mujeres han desaparecido en Puerto Rico desde el año 2013.

“Quiero traer el punto que la compañera, Carmen Castelló, que ella desarrolló este trabajo desde el año 2013, aproximadamente, ella ha identificado que en Puerto Rico hay 83 mujeres que siguen desaparecidas y, de esas 83, 34 son menores de edad entre los 13 y 18 años”, detalló Lugo. 

Irma Lugo comunicó que 17 de ellas han desaparecido en los últimos tres años, cantidad de tiempo que lleva operando el Observatorio. Lugo indicó que “lo que hemos visto en el Observatorio en estos últimos tres años es que casi siempre, ese número de las menores de edad, no cambia mucho”.  

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Muere otro confinado en institución correccional de Puerto Rico

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

La Policía investiga el hallazgo de un confinado muerto a eso de las 11:55 de la noche del jueves, por oficiales de custodia de la cárcel Guerrero de Aguadilla.

Según el reporte de las autoridades, el confinado, identificado como Javier Vélez Cubero, de 49 años, natural de Isabela, fue atendido por el médico de la institución quien certificó la ausencia de signos vitales y su cuerpo no presentaba signos de violencia.

El agente Juan Pérez Hernández, supervisado por el sargento Ariel Irizarry Cortés, director auxiliar de esa división especializada, y el fiscal Héctor Crespo Correa, ordenó el levantamiento del cadáver y su envío al Negociado de Ciencias Forenses para fines periciales, quienes determinarán las causas del deceso.

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GRENADA-FINANCE-Government says revenue collection surpasses projection during first six months of the year

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Regering communiceert niet via media met Guyana over visserijkwestie

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door Ivan Cairo PARAMARIBO — De regering zal niet via de media communiceren met Guyana over zaken in de wederzijdse

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Fortes pluies et orages : La Martinique reste en vigilance jaune

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Rédaction web
Vendredi 30 Septembre 2022 – 07h01

Vigilance jaune forte pluies – DR

L’île reste en vigilance jaune pour fortes pluies et orages selon le dernier bulletin de Météo France paru ce vendredi 30 septembre à 5 heures 39.

La masse d’air humide et instable engendre encore un risque important de précipitations localement orageuses sur notre île.

L’accalmie de cette nuit perdure un peu ce matin mais rapidement l’activité pluvieuse devient à nouveau plus marquée avec des averses localement de forte intensité et orageuses. Certaines pourraient encore engendrer des cumuls de pluie de l’ordre 50 à 80 mm en 1 à 3 heures avec un risque plus important sur le nord et l’est de l’île mais qui n’est pas exclu sur le reste du territoire. La fin de cet épisode est prévu en cours de nuit prochaine.

Les averses des dernières heures se sont surtout produites en début de nuit. Elles ont engendré les plus forts cumuls dans le secteur du Gros Morne et celui du Robert au Vauclin.

Sur les 12 dernières heures, on a relevé: 68 mm au Gros-Morne, 31 mm au Vauclin, 32 mm à François-Chopot, 27 mm à la station de François-Simon.Le prochain bulletin est prévu pour 17 heures ce vendredi.

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