Roger Federer’s goodbye will be in doubles, maybe with Nadal Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Roger Federer is known for his elegant style of play, for his longevity, for his 20 Grand Slam titles — and for occasional tears in his most emotional post-match moments, whether after victory or defeat.

There was none of that sort of sadness Wednesday, just smiles and some chuckles at his own jokes, as Federer appeared at a news conference to discuss his retirement from professional tennis at age 41 after a series of knee operations. He will close his career with a doubles match at the Laver Cup on Friday — perhaps alongside longtime rival Rafael Nadal.

Federer said he is now at peace with the decision to walk away, which comes a few weeks after Serena Williams played what is expected to be her last match at the U.S. Open, and he wants this farewell to be a celebration.

“I really don’t want it to be a funeral,” Federer said. “I want it to be really happy and powerful and party mode.”

Wearing a blue blazer with the sleeves rolled up to his elbows and a white polo shirt, Federer took questions for about a half-hour at the arena that will host the team competition founded by his management company.

“I’m nervous going in, because I haven’t played in so long,” he said. “I hope I can be somewhat competitive.”

Federer, who announced last week via social media that he would be retiring after the Laver Cup, said it took him a bit to get used to the idea of stepping away from competition.

But it was something he understood he needed to do after running into setbacks in July during his rehabilitation from what was his third surgery on his right knee in about 1 1/2 years.

“You try to go to the next level in training, and I could feel it was getting difficult. … Then, I guess, I was also getting more tired, because you have to put more effort into it to be able to sort of believe that it was going to turn around. You start getting too pessimistic. Then I also got a scan back, which wasn’t what I wanted it to be,” Federer explained. “At some point, you sit down and go, ‘OK, we are at an intersection here, at a crossroad, and you have to take a turn. Which way is it?’ I was not willing to go into the direction of: ‘Let’s risk it all.’ I’m not ready for that. I always said that was never my goal.”

And the hardest part came when he knew he needed to stop.

“You’re sad,” Federer said, “in the very moment when you realize, ‘OK, this is the end.’”

The last procedure on his knee came shortly after a quarterfinal loss to Hubert Hurkacz at Wimbledon in July 2021, which will go into the books as the last singles match of a superlative career that began in the 1990s and included 103 tournament titles, a Davis Cup championship for Switzerland, Olympic medals and hundreds of weeks at No. 1 in the ATP rankings.

In his online farewell message last week, Federer referred to retirement as a “bittersweet decision.”

He was asked Wednesday what aspect was most bitter and what was most sweet.

“The bitterness: You always want to play forever,” he said. “I love being out on court. I love playing against the guys. I love traveling. … It was all perfect. I love my career from every angle.”

And then he added: “The sweet part was that I know everybody has to do it at one point; everybody has to leave the game. It’s been a great, great journey. For that, I’m really grateful.”

He will play doubles for Team Europe against Team World on Day 1 of the event, then will give way to 2021 Wimbledon runner-up Matteo Berrettini for singles over the weekend. That plan was run by the ATP and both team captains, John McEnroe and Bjorn Borg, Federer said.

As for his doubles partner for the last hurrah? Federer would not say definitively — he said that’s up to Borg — but the not-so-hidden secret is that it is expected to be Nadal, who holds the men’s record of 22 major championships.

Back in February, when word emerged that Federer would be in London this week, he said Nadal messaged him last year suggesting they play doubles together again. They teamed up to win a doubles match during the first Laver Cup in 2017.

“If we’re able to possibly share the court one more time as a doubles pairing,” Nadal said in February, “then this would be a truly special experience for us both at this stage in our careers.”

While other contemporaries of Federer and stars of the sport are on Team Europe, such as 21-time Slam champ Novak Djokovic and three-time major winner Andy Murray, the Federer vs. Nadal matchup will go down in history as among the greatest rivalries in tennis or any other sport.

They played each other 40 times in all (Nadal won 26), with 14 Grand Slam matchups (Nadal won 10). Nadal came out on top in their classic 2008 Wimbledon final, considered by some the greatest match in history; Federer won their last showdown, in the 2019 semifinals at the All England Club.

“It could be quite, I don’t know, a unique situation, if it were to happen,” Federer said about the doubles pairing. “For us, as well, to go through a career that we both have had and to come out on the other side and being able to have a nice relationship, I think, is maybe a great message, as well, to not just tennis but sports and maybe even beyond.”

As for his future?

The father of two sets of twins — girls 13, boys 8 — wouldn’t say exactly what he has planned, other than a vacation, but he did say he would remain connected to tennis in some capacity.

Recalling the way Borg stayed away from the sport for years after retiring, Federer sought to reassure his own fans by saying: “I won’t be a ghost.”

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Scotland Yard assessing allegations regarding abduction and torture of Mehul Choksi

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

NATIONAL HERALD: The War Crimes Team of London’s Metropolitan Police, popularly known as Scotland Yard, is examining a complaint made by a British human rights lawyer Michael Polak. This accuses four people, said to be United Kingdom residents, of abducting and torturing Indian-born Antiguan diamond merchant Mehul Choksi.

In a characteristically conservative manner, Scotland Yard revealed: “We can confirm that the Met’s War Crimes Unit, part of the Counter Terrorism Command, received a referral on 7 June 2021 which relates to allegations of torture. The referral is being assessed by officers, in accordance with the CPS/SO15 referral guidelines for war crimes and crimes against humanity.”

The four seem to be 31-year-old Hungarian Barbara Jarabik, 45-year-old Gurdip Bath of St Kitts and Nevis, 50-year-old British national Gurjit Singh Bhandal and 63-year-old Gurmit Singh, an Indian.

The complaint is that on 23 May, Choksi, 62, was kidnapped in Antigua, bound, beaten and blindfolded and forcibly taken to Dominica by sea. There he was charged with illegal entry by Dominican authorities and detained. The Indian government wants him to be directly deported to India to face trial for allegedly defrauding Punjab National Bank of thousands of crores of rupees – without being returned to Antigua, the country of his current citizenship.

Even though the crime is said to have been committed in the Caribbean, British authorities are empowered to investigate, arrest and prosecute persons involved by virtue of a Universal Jurisdiction Act. The purpose of this legislation was to hold “those who commit the most serious crimes accountable for their actions” and “not provide a safe haven for war criminals or those who commit other serious violations of international law”.

Narendra Modi narrowly escaped being detained when he visited the UK as chief minister of Gujarat in 2003. The application to take him into custody for his suspected role in the 2002 riots in the state failed in court on a technicality. In fact, the security around him was upgraded by British police in anticipation of a citizen’s arrest, which would have adversely impacted Indo-British relations.

Distinguished diplomat Satyabrata Pal, then the Indian deputy high commissioner in London, later noted: “Two days into the visit, the (British) Foreign Office called the (Indian) High Commission in a panic to report that they had learnt that, following a precedent set during a recent visit by Robert Mugabe (then president of Zimbabwe), an attempt would be made to put Narendra Modi under citizen’s arrest, permitted by British law, while some lawyers were approaching a magistrate for a more conventional arrest warrant.”

“Luckily, the application for the warrant failed in court, and the British threw an invisible cordon around Modi to prevent the feared citizen’s arrest; so he strutted and fretted on his London stage a few days more, and left on schedule, his departure warmly welcomed by both governments,” Pal added.

A Whitehall notification states: “Crimes of universal jurisdiction can be reported to the police in the same way as any other offence.”

It continues: “The war crimes team of the Metropolitan Police Counter Terrorism command is responsible for the investigation of all allegations of war crimes, crimes against humanity, genocide and torture.”

Significantly, since torture is included in the list of offences for which prosecution under the Universal Jurisdiction law can take place, Polak highlighted in his complaint that Choksi was tortured. “He was severely mistreated by the use of electric shocks, being threatened with a knife, and beaten during this forced rendition to Dominica.”

The complaint pieces together the accused travelling on same flights and boats in an attempt to establish that they were working in harness. In April, all four took the same British Airway flight from Antigua to London. Bath and Jarabik arrived and departed between Antigua and Dominica the same month. On 25 May, Bhandal and Singh are recorded as entering Dominica on the same boat; and on 28 May the two, with Jarabik, leave this island on the same flight.

Interestingly, it looks like Bhandal and Singh were in April denied immigration by Dominica. An email submitted as evidence by Polak to Scotland Yard (headed “suspected human smuggling ring”) from Rhoan Barker, operations supervisor at the Joint Regional Communication Centre in Barbados, in an intelligence alert to several island states in the region, wrote: “Please note that the undermentioned subjects were intercepted in Dominica on April 12, 2021, having arrived into the country on a yacht (Lady Anne) manned by two Saint Lucian nationals. Subjects appeared to be involved in a smuggling ring. Singh and Bhandal were attempting to disembark the vessel to board a flight to the UK. They were both denied landing and subsequently left for Antigua on the said yacht.”

After the pair apparently returned to Antigua, Randy Baltimore, principal inspector of customs, in a hand-written note on the email said “both passengers arrived on the 15.4.21… and departed same day on o/b (on board) BA2156 (which is a British Airways flight from Antigua to London Gatwick).”

Bath and Jarabik reportedly live in London. Bhandal and Singh are supposed to be Birmingham-based. If Scotland Yard agrees with Polak’s contention, all four can be interviewed to explain themselves. Bath may, however, enjoy diplomatic immunity. He met Narendra Modi in September 2019 at an India-CARICOM (Caribbean Community) summit in New York and posted photos of them in conversation on Twitter. The prime minister of Antigua and Barbuda, Gaston Browne, has been following him on Twitter.

In March 2018, Princess Latifa, daughter of the ruler of Dubai Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, escaped from the UAE to seek asylum in India. The yacht on which she sailed was intercepted by Indian forces in the Arabian Sea and she was returned to her father against her will.

In December 2019, a high court judge in London concluded: “The description of the way in which Latifa was treated by the Indian security services… does not give any indication that this was a ‘rescue’ (her father’s story) rather a ‘capture’.”

The United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention (WGAD) in its verdict echoed: “The detainee (Latifa) was extradited by the Indian forces, which had intercepted her yacht in international waters off the coast of Goa in March 2018, after the Prime Minister of India had made a personal telephone call to the Prime Minister of the United Arab Emirates and the ruler of the Emirate of Dubai.”

In the same verdict, WGAD noted about the claimed extradition of British aviation consultant Christian Michel from Dubai to Delhi: “On 4 December 2018, Mr Michel was reportedly handcuffed, blindfolded and transported by private jet to India, in a hurried and unlawful manner that prevented him from challenging any decision.”

The Indian government has been silent on the Latifa affair; but has taken umbrage about WGAD’s views on the Michel matter.

From all accounts, a private jet was again deployed to bring back Choksi to India from Dominica. A lawful pursuit of him is certainly justifiable. But commando-style operations, circumventing due process, do not generally impress the democratic world.

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Focus on soldier – police search army base in Pennywise robbery probe

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Constable Arvin Boodram shows Acting Police Commissioner McDonald Jacob one of the AR15 assault rifles used by the bandits in Tuesday’s failed Pennywise robbery. The weapons were displayed on Wednesday
at the La Romaine Police Post. – ROGER JACOB

The man who claimed bandits robbed him at gunpoint in La Romaine and used his Nissan X-Trail van to try to escape the police after Monday’s deadly heist is now in custody as a “person of interest.”

The suspect is a TT Regiment member based at Camp Serrette (Second Infantry Battalion) at the M2 Ring Road in La Romaine. He is a private in his 20s who lives in the Fyzabad area.

The police also detained two other suspects, from Arouca, in connection with the robbery and subsequent “carjacking” outside La Romaine Plaza that left two security dead, one hospitalised, one discharged, and a child with injuries.

The police said the “young soldier” reported that he was looking for “a place to tint his van” and made a wrong turn. The wrong turn was into a new housing settlement across the road from his workplace. He reported that gunmen in a white car blocked the road and ordered him out of his white van.

The gunmen abandoned and burnt the car at the roadside along the M2 Ring Road, then left in his van.

Newsday learned that the police also searched the soldier’s locker at the camp.

Senior police confirmed that apart from the three detained men, no one else was in custody up to Tuesday evening, contrary to social media reports.

A senior policeman told Newsday, “We cannot say where these stories are coming from. We do not have information about him training anyone. We do not have a female in custody. People are saying all sorts of things.”

About an hour before the “carjacking,” five men ambushed and shot at an unarmored van with three security officers employed with Allied Security Ltd, hitting them. Jeffery Peters, 51, and Jerry “Bat” Stuart, 49, died, while their colleague Peola Baptiste, 57, is critical in hospital. They were transporting money.

The police said Allister Harris, 47, who works with Phoenix Protective Services at the plaza, was also hit. He received minor injuries and was treated and discharged on Monday.

A nine-year-old child from the Siparia was also grazed, the police reported. His injuries are not life-threatening.

In full view of drivers and customers at the plaza, the gunmen left with bags containing undisclosed cash.

It was while fleeing that they met the soldier and changed vehicles.

But the police, hot on their heels, caught up with them in a street off Pond Street. The gunmen abandoned the van, ran through a track, and jumped over a wall into a property of a retired probation officer, Ann-Marie Elbourne-County.

The certified mediation practitioner and her family, including two children, locked themselves inside. Moments later, the police responded.

The gunmen began shooting at the police, who returned fire, hitting four.

From left, Police Commissioner McDonald Jacob, La Romain resident Ann-Marie Elbourne-County, and police victims support unit officers Bernadette Sealey and Ayanna Phillip at Elbourne-County’s home on Tuesday. – ROGER JACOB

The injured men were taken to the San Fernando General Hospital, where a DMO declared them dead on arrival at 6.05 pm.

The police identified them as Kyle and his brother Keyon “Bush” Ramdhan of Delhi Road, Greg Dodough, and Deaundre “Monty” Montrose, all of Fyzabad.

The police recovered two loaded pistols at the scene.

The police also searched a nearby overgrown area and found two A-R 15 rifles, two bulletproof vests, a pair of boots, and an empty magazine. The police confirmed that some money was recovered but did not give an amount.

On Tuesday, the acting Police Commissioner McDonald Jacob, together with acting Snr Supt Smith, Insp Phillip, and other police from the Southern Division, showed the media weapons and other items the bandits used.

Jacob assured the public that the police have different methods and strategies to deal with incidents like the heist in a commercial space.

The compound houses several other businesses like Rattans and a baby store apart from Pennywise Super Centre.

He said the police are working hand in hand with the business community.

He said many people in leadership positions, who have access to all media, make negative comments about the police and their ability to handle situations.

Jacob said, “Be responsible. It is creating negativity on the ground and they think the police are weak. There are innocent people who are being injured and killed because of these activities.”

Jacob told reporters that he spoke to representatives from the Estate Police Association about suggestions for security companies to upgrade the type of vehicles they are using to transport money.

“Several security companies are properly equipped to carry out these activities. This will put an unnecessary burden on the police service,” Jacob said.

“If one security company has required security vehicles and others do not, they can work out a contract and assist each other. Our patrols will pay attention if they are transporting and taking money to the bank.”

Jacob later visited Elbourne-County’s home and she recounted what happened. She said the family was deeply traumatised.

“I take adversities, and I grin on them,” she said, standing next to Jacob.

She said she felt comfortable when police responded to her home on Monday evening. She complimented them, saying they were strategic and professional.

“I take this opportunity to thank all police who were here and my community because we are close-knit. I felt ultimately safe when I saw the police. That is when I knew I was not so good before their arrival. Last night I could not sleep,” she said.

Police from the police’s social victim and support unit also visited the family to offer counselling.

“I feel for young people. I do not excuse their behaviour. But I often think about what I can do to reach my young people. I have children and grandchildren to leave in this society,” she said.

Pennywise Plaza was closed to the public and when Newsday visited on Tuesday, workers were seen cleaning the compound.

Investigations are ongoing.

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NPA Issues Statement On SMC Hair Grooming Controversy – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

– Advertisement –

The National Principals’ Association (NPA) has commented on the hair grooming controversy at St. Mary’s College (SMC), lamenting that it has gone to litigation.

In a statement Wednesday, the NPA said it was ‘distinctly aware’ of the ramifications of the case on the wider education system.

The complete NPA statement appears below:

Statement By The National Principals’ Association On Impasse Between St. Mary’s College and Parent

– Advertisement –

As a professional organisation, the NPA has taken a keen interest in developments related to the impasse at caption.

While we lament that the matter has gone to litigation, we are distinctly aware of the ramifications of such a case on the wider education system.

All schools have rules tailored to the specific contexts of their individual environments. However, we believe that this situation presents a unique opportunity for stakeholders to unite in a collective effort to, as much as possible, standardise school rules within the parameters of the Education Act.

To this end, the NPA stands ready to engage the respective stakeholders in an effort to begin this consultation process.

Headline photo courtesy Salah Regouane (Unsplash.com)

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LUMA anticipa podría haber sectores sin luz hasta octubre tras el paso del huracán Fiona

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El director de seguridad de LUMA Energy, Abner Gómez, anticipó hoy en RADIO ISLA que para el mes de octubre podrían haber sectores de Puerto Rico sin el servicio de energía eléctrica tras el paso del huracán Fiona.

Abner Gómez indicó que esto podría ocurrir en las áreas donde se concentran los daños. El portavoz de la empresa que administra los sistemas de transmisión y distribución del país expuso que las inundaciones han causado la mayor cantidad de daños al sistema eléctrico. Este explicó que hay subestaciones de servicio, líneas y torres de transmisión cuyas bases quedaron bajo agua. 

Además, Gómez no prometió que para el fin de semana LUMA pueda devolverle el servicio al 75 por ciento de la población. “No sería responsable de mi parte que decirte que eso representa un 75 por ciento, pero sí, vamos a hacer todo el trabajo que nos permita el tiempo y las adversidades para que eso lo podamos lograr”, expresó Gómez. 

Gómez detalló que están trabajando en conjunto con la Autoridad de Energía Eléctrica (AEE) para poder energizar la central Aguirre y poder brindarle el servicio a más clientes. “La esperanza es que durante el día de hoy algo de eso pueda pasar para aumentar nuestros números”, indicó Gómez. 

Noticia relacionada: Portavoces de LUMA dicen expectativa del gobernador no necesariamente se va a cumplir

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LUMA anticipa podría haber sectores sin luz hasta octubre tras paso del huracán Fiona

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El director de seguridad de LUMA Energy, Abner Gómez, anticipó hoy en RADIO ISLA que para el mes de octubre podrían haber sectores de Puerto Rico sin el servicio de energía eléctrica tras el paso del huracán Fiona.

Abner Gómez indicó que esto podría ocurrir en las áreas donde se concentran los daños. El portavoz de la empresa que administra los sistemas de transmisión y distribución del país expuso que las inundaciones han causado la mayor cantidad de daños al sistema eléctrico. Este explicó que hay subestaciones de servicio, líneas y torres de transmisión cuyas bases quedaron bajo agua. 

Además, Gómez no prometió que para el fin de semana LUMA pueda devolverle el servicio al 75 por ciento de la población. “No sería responsable de mi parte que decirte que eso representa un 75 por ciento, pero sí, vamos a hacer todo el trabajo que nos permita el tiempo y las adversidades para que eso lo podamos lograr”, expresó Gómez. 

Gómez detalló que están trabajando en conjunto con la Autoridad de Energía Eléctrica (AEE) para poder energizar la central Aguirre y poder brindarle el servicio a más clientes. “La esperanza es que durante el día de hoy algo de eso pueda pasar para aumentar nuestros números”, indicó Gómez. 

Noticia relacionada: Portavoces de LUMA dicen expectativa del gobernador no necesariamente se va a cumplir

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Solo un 15% de las pequeñas y medianas empresas en pie tras el paso de Fiona

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

La presidenta del Centro Unido de Detallistas, Lourdes M. Aponte Rodríguez, resaltó cuán afectado se encuentra el sector comercial a raíz del paso del huracán Fiona, y solicitó al Gobierno agilizar sus movidas para asistir a los dueños de pequeñas y medianas empresas (PYMES), del cual aún no se tiene un número certero de cuántas reiniciaron sus operaciones.

“Este fenómeno trajo consigo tanta y tanta lluvia que, pues, lamentablemente, aunque muchos se hayan preparado, pues, obviamente, hay unas situaciones que no están en el control de nadie. Y todo lo que conlleva las inundaciones, pues, pérdida de inventario, de contenido, definitivamente, pues, hizo grandes estragos al comercio”, expresó la líder.

Según los datos de su matrícula, gran parte aún no cuenta con energía eléctrica, lo que dificulta una reapertura. No obstante, aclaró que tan solo un 15 al 20 por ciento están brindando sus servicios, aunque sea a medias, y que los ubicados en la zona metropolitana han sido los menos impactados.

Respecto a la pérdida económica, Aponte Rodríguez reiteró que es muy temprano para indicar un número, mas aclaró que “las pérdidas han sido bien significativas. Estamos hablando, prácticamente, de lo que es inventario. Es una operación diaria. Al no abrir, pues, no se está produciendo y eso nos coloca en una posición más vulnerable de la que ya estábamos. Pero ya, proximamente […] entrada ya la próxima semana, ya debemos tener un número mucho más claro”, señaló.

En el día de ayer, el gobernador Pedro Pierluisi y el secretario del Departamento de Desarrollo Económico y Comercio (DDEC), Manuel Cidre, anunciaron incentivos de hasta $50,000 para las PYMES, mediante la creación del Programa de Recuperación Económica. Aponte Rodríguez informó que han colaborado con el DDEC para dichos fines. Sin embargo, buscan que se agilicen las tareas.

“Nosotros lo que necesitamos es la agilidad […] Definitivamente, el DDEC ha identificado una cantidad de lo que es el incentivo de emergencia para las PYMES, para las personas que están afectadas [y] pueden solicitar hasta $50,000. Y, obviamente, pues, el portal está ya arriba.  Cualquier cosa, todas las entidades que estamos, [que] están Hecho en Puerto Rico, Cámara de Comercio, Centro Unido de Detallistas, ASORE… Nos hemos unido en esta alianza porque, ante esta emergencia, todos tenemos que poner de nuestra parte y ser facilitadores”, finalizó la líder del CUD al detallar que la aportación que reciban las micro y pequeñas empresas, que a su entender debería ser más debido a los daños, contenido e inventario, es para las que no excedan los $1,500,000 en ingresos durante los pasados años. Además, informó que gestionan más ayuda mediante el Small Business Administration del gobierno federal.

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El huracán Fiona se intensifica a categoría 4 a medida que se acerca a las Bermudas

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El huracán Fiona se ha fortalecido en las últimas horas hasta alcanzar la categoría 4 (de 5 en la escala Saffir-Simpson) a medida que se aleja de las Islas Turcas y Caicos, en el borde atlántico del Caribe, informó en la madrugada de este miércoles el Centro Nacional de Huracanes de EE.UU.

Fiona se mueve hacia el noroeste a 13 km/h, con vientos máximos sostenidos de hasta 210 km/h y ráfagas de hasta 250 km/h. Se prevé un incremento en su velocidad mientras continúa acercándose a las islas Bermudas, frente a la costa este de EE.UU., así como algunas fluctuaciones de intensidad en la noche de hoy y el jueves.

Es probable que las ráfagas de viento continúen en partes del sureste de las Bahamas y las islas Turcas y Caicos este miércoles. Fiona podría llegar a las Bermudas —donde se mantiene una alerta de tormenta tropical— en las primeras horas del viernes, con precipitaciones, oleaje y marejadas que seguirán extendiéndose hacia el noroeste de Bahamas y la costa este estadounidense durante uno o dos días.

El huracán ya causó algunas muertes y dejó muchos heridos en la República Dominicana y Puerto Rico, donde la mayoría de la población se quedó sin electricidad ni agua corriente. Los rescatistas siguen trabajando para llevar a los damnificados a lugares seguros.

Noticia original de RT en Español.

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Tropical Storm Gaston forms in the North Atlantic Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

The seventh Atlantic named storm of the 2022 Atlantic Hurricane Season has formed – Tropical Storm Gaston.

The US National Hurricane Centre (US NHC) in its latest update said Tropical Storm Gaston was located about 990 miles West of the Azores.

NHC says there are no coastal watches or warnings in effect however interests in the Azores should monitor the progress of the system.

Source: NHC

At 9 pm GMT (2100 UTC), the centre of Tropical Storm Gaston was located near latitude 34.7 North, longitude 44.4 West. Gaston is moving toward the north-northeast near 17 mph (28 km/h). A turn to the northeast is expected on Wednesday, followed by a motion to the east.

Maximum sustained winds have increased to near 40 mph (65 km/h) with higher gusts. Additional strengthening is forecast during the next day or two. Tropical-storm-force winds extend outward up to 70 miles (110 km) from the centre.

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Third day with no covid19 deaths for September

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

File photo

THERE were no reported covid19 deaths on Tuesday, the Health Ministry’s daily covid19 update reported, the third day without covid19-related deaths this month.

The last time the country went without a covid19 death was on September 8. The covid19 death toll is 4,194.

The ministry said there were 174 new reported cases, taking the number of active cases to 4,259.

A total of 159 people are in health facilities with five in the intensive care unit and nine in the high dependency unit. Twelve were discharged on Tuesday.

There are 4,100 people in home isolation after 243 released from home isolation.

The total number of people vaccinated are 716,868 with 168,595 receiving their boosters.

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