Miner dies after being pinned by falling tree

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana

A 24-year-old miner of Lethem, Region Nine (Upper Takutu-Essequibo) is now dead after he was pinned by a falling tree on Saturday.

Troy Prudencio met his demise at around 13:22h whilst working at Gold Finger Landing, Cuyuni River.

Reports are that Prudencio and two other workers, age 31 and 25, were in a camp cooking. At that time, there were several gusts of heavy winds and subsequently they heard the sound of a tree falling.

Prudencio and the other two workers scampered to get out of the camp to safety but the young man did not make it out in time and was pinned by a falling tree.

The other two workers immediately removed the tree that pinned their co-worker, who was motionless at that time. They then took him to the Aurora Gold Mine where he was pronounced dead on arrival.

Investigations are in progress.

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Essequibo River mishap: Boat was uncertified, not permitted to operate – Edghill

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana
Minister of Public Works Bishop Juan Edghill

Statement issued by Minister of Public Works Juan Edghill:

As Minister of Public Works with responsibility for transportation, I extend my deepest sympathy to the family, friends and loved ones of the two persons who lost their lives in the Essequibo River.

At approximately 19:00 hours on Saturday 17th September 2022, officers from the Maritime Administration Department (MARAD) received reports about a boat mishap in the Essequibo River.

We are informed, by our investigation that the small open boat “CARLOS”, under the command of one Jermain Blackman ran into the Rattlesnake Rock in the Essequibo River.  In addition to the captain there were eleven (11) other persons on board, including the bowman.  Most of the persons on board were reportedly not wearing lifejackets, even though it is reported that there were several on board.

According to our investigation thus far, after the Carlos hit the rock, it suffered extensive damage and was sinking, some of the occupants were thrown into the water while others exited the ill-fated boat and tried swimming to the shore.

Most of the occupants were rescued by other boats, but two persons were unaccounted for. Two bodies were reportedly recovered earlier today, 19th September.

Rattlesnake Rock is approximately 2.7 kilometres from the Bartica Stelling and 300 metres east of Calf Island.

While Mr. Blackman is in possession of a valid license to operate such a boat, the boat was uncertified and not permitted to operate on the Parika – Bartica passenger service. Further, boats on this service are not allowed to operate during the hours of darkness.

MARAD’s record reflects that the last authorized departure was by the “LADY ZENIELL” – a boat licensed to operate within the system, at 17:10 hrs. The sunset at Bartica was approximately 18:00 hours.

MARAD has designated 17:00 hours as the latest departure time for boats to depart Parika or Bartica on this service, so as to arrive before dark. The CARLOS reportedly departed from the Parika Stelling at approximately 17:30 hours after MARAD’s monitors would have concluded work for the day.

The issue of unlicensed “outside” boats transporting passengers on our waterways is actively engaging the attention of the Administration. We continue to urge the traveling public not to board water taxis/speedboats operating outside of the regulated system and hours of operation.

MARAD, as the regulatory authority, also wishes to reiterate that all persons using boats/ water taxis must properly and securely wear lifejackets.

Captain Romain Seurattan, River Navigation Officer, is spearheading the investigation and is working along with the Guyana Police Force – Division Seven (7).

Safety on our roads, waterways, and in our airspace must be adhered to.

Service providers must follow the rules and be in full compliance at all times.

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Police Probe Shooting In Castries, Stabbing In Vieux Fort – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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Police have launched investigations into a shooting incident in Castries on Friday and a stabbing in Bruceville, Vieux Fort on Saturday night.

Regarding the stabbing, reports indicate that one young woman sustained wounds during an altercation with another female.

According to the reports, a private vehicle rushed the injured woman to St. Jude Hospital.

The previous day, emergency personnel transported a man who appeared to have sustained gunshot wounds to the OKEU Hospital after treating his injuries on the scene.

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Saint Lucia Fire Service (SLFS) Communications Officer Stacy Joseph said the man appeared to be in his late twenties.

The SLFS spokeswoman’s statement appears below:

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Mujer muere en refugio de Mayagüez

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

Una persona muerta fue reportada a eso de las 10:49 de la mañana de hoy, en un refugio ubicado en la escuela Eugenio María de Hostos  de Mayaguez.  

Según se informó, falleció María Ithier de 88 años y residente de Mayaguez, debido a un paro cardiorrespiratorio, certificó el Dr. Campos.  

El agente Augusto Lugo adscrito al distrito de Mayaguez en unión al fiscal  Andy Rodrَguez investigaron los hechos.

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‘Gros Saamaka leeft in armoede ondanks dappere strijd voorouders’

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

PARAMARIBO — De politieke partij Broederschap en Eenheid in de Politiek (BEP) roept de Saramaccaners (Saamaka) op om “moed te

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Tufton headed for the US to sign MOUs to recruit nurses for Jamaica Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Health and Wellness Minister, Dr Christopher Tufton, has disclosed that he will be heading to the United States next week, where several Memorandum of Understandings (MOU) are to be signed for local hospitals.

But, amid criticisms over the move by the Government to import nurses from the diaspora, Tufton has defended the decision, declaring that it will bring relief to patients waiting for extended periods for surgeries.

“I know there is a little backlash about whether or not we should be bringing in nurses into country, as opposed to fixing operating theatres, (and) whether we should be giving private sector work, as opposed to fixing and paying public sector nurses more, or doctors, where the cases may be,” he said.

“My view is that we have to find the optimal arrangement, given our objective of bringing relief to

Tufton was speaking at a ceremony where the Health and Wellness Ministry signed contracts with private hospitals at the Western Regional Health Authority’s office in St James, to facilitate elective surgeries in the public health system.

The surgeries will cost the Government some $70 million this year. The project is in the pilot phase, and persons selected will be among those waiting the longest for surgeries in the western health region. Based on the programme’s success, other health regions could benefit.

The minister outlined the other plans to further bring down the backlog of elective surgeries locally.

“Next week, I am off to the US, where we will be signing a few MOUs with a few hospitals, health systems, starting in Florida, then to New York (in the) Hartford area, which will see the other phase of the strategy materialising, where we will see some operating theatre nurses coming in to the public space,” said Tufton.

“One of the conversations we may need to have is whether or not they could come into private space also, but that’s another conversation that may have to take place,” he added.

Tufton reiterated that the healthcare professionals are experienced, and will work for short periods in the public health system locally.

“They are experienced, trained people, where they will be allowed some time to come in for a four or five days to work on a particular set of cases, and then go back to their substantive positions,” he indicated.

The recruitment of the healthcare professionals from overseas is being facilitated under the ministry’s CODE CARE programme, which is a project to improve the wait times for elective surgeries such as cataracts, oral and sinus cancers.

The announcement of the CODE CARE programme was first made by Tufton as he made his contribution to the 2022-2023 Sectoral Debate in the House of Representatives in May.

“Our special intervention this year, CODE CARE, will seek to do an additional 1,000 surgeries over the next 10 months to clear up most, if not all, backlogs,” the minister stated then.

The COVID-19 pandemic has created a major backlog of elective surgeries locally.

Also part of the strategy will be the provision of approximately $300 million to repair and, where necessary, maintain the island’s operating theatres “to operate more efficiently and longer hours to drive”.

This is in addition to partnering with private sector health facilities to provide surgery and recovery spaces to augment the existing public facilities.

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New disturbance of interest to the Caribbbean

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

A tropical wave located several hundred miles east of the Windward  Islands is producing an area of disorganized showers and  thunderstorms.

Some gradual development of this system is possible  during the next several days while the system approaches the Windward Islands toward the end of the week and moves over the  eastern Caribbean sea over the weekend.

* Formation chance through 48 hours…low…near 0 percent.

* Formation chance through 5 days…low…20 percent.

Forecaster Roberts

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Statement From The Caribbean Community (Caricom) On Developments In Haiti

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

STATEMENT FROM THE CARIBBEAN COMMUNITY (CARICOM) ON DEVELOPMENTS IN HAITI

The Caribbean Community (CARICOM) is gravely concerned by the continuing deterioration of the security situation and the social circumstances in the Republic of Haiti.

The continued breakdown in law and order, and its distressing effect on the people of Haiti, is intensifying. The fraught situation is exacerbated by the inability of the Haitian security forces to address the ongoing violence.

The unrest is having a negative impact on the already weak economy leading to even more mass demonstrations. Especially the worsening social conditions and the limited availability of food require urgent and immediate attention from the international community.

This persistently distressing situation is untenable, and CARICOM calls for all stakeholders to engage meaningfully with the aim to find a way forward and to put country first and address the situation urgently.

CARICOM, following discussions in the past weeks, remains available to assist and work with international partners to mobilize financial and technical resources to facilitate a process towards normalization and ultimately the holding of free, fair and credible general elections.

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QRC student semifinalist in international Breakthrough Junior Challenge

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Armani Adams –

Armani Adams’ passion for science has secured him a spot in the annual Breakthrough Junior Challenge competition.

The Queen’s Royal College student, 17, from D’Abadie, is one of 30 semifinalists from thousands of applicants worldwide in the US-based contest for students between 13 and 18.

The form six student represents the TT/ South American region.

The NGO Breakthrough Prize Foundation, founded by technology investor and science philanthropist Yuri Milner, organised the event in keeping with its pledge to support science and the communication of scientific ideas.

Along with Milner, other board members include Mark Zuckerberg, Anne Wojcicki, and chairman Huda Yahya Zoghbi.

Adams recalled that a friend told him about the competition. He submitted an original video centred on the concept of light, identifying the different types and sharing their importance.

He told Newsday, “It’s an opportunity to be creative and share new and meaningful ideas. I believe that science is meaningful. We must engage in science education given how the world is advancing.”

Each student/applicant submitted a video explaining a challenging and important concept or theory in mathematics, life sciences, or physics.

Adams’s video focuses on photons and the electromagnetic spectrum, which is used in everyday activities like texting and heating food (microwaves).

Armani Adams –

He said there are different types of light waves, such as radio, infrared, visible, ultraviolet, x-ray and gamma-ray.

Most people do not know what light is, he said.

Adams encourages viewers to look at atoms as a ladder. He said under the right condition, an electron can absorb kinetic energy making it jump to a higher energy level.

He added that when an electron releases energy, it falls to a lower energy level.

“The tiny bits of kinetic energy that electrons absorb or release of what is called a photon,” he explains in the video.

“They aren’t made of any matter, and with zero mass, they travel through space as electric fields and magnetic fields, creating an electromagnetic wave that moves so fast that no object in the universe can beat its speed record.”

The more energy the photons have, the shorter the length of their waves, creating a whole family of different light waves called the electromagnetic spectrum.

Adams said it ranges from radio waves being the size of buildings or even planets to gamma rays being smaller than atoms.

The Breakthrough Junior Challenge was founded in 2015 to “inspire creative thinking about science.”

The winner receives a college scholarship worth US$250,000.

The winner’s teacher, as nominated by the student, gets US$50,000, and the school receives a state-of-the-art science lab worth US$100,000.

Adams’s video, uploaded on YouTube and Facebook, has made it to the Popular Vote challenge.

He encourages the public to like it now to make it go straight to the final round before the September 20 deadline.

The video can be found on the links https://fb.watch/fDl2wAx3DV/ and https://youtu.be/u66d-DVg8jQ.

Besides science, Adams said he is passionate about filmmaking and graphic design.

Ra’Nasia Sangster, associate account executive of the PR firm Rubenstein, said Adams is the first from TT to be a semifinalist in the competition. Sangster is working with the organisers to promote the competition.

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Morvant men shot dead on way to pick zabocas

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

File photo: Port of Spain General Hospital.

Two Morvant men were gunned down while on their way to pick avocadoes near their home on Monday morning.

Police said Keston Baldwin, 35 and Rahim Greaves, were walking on Valley Road, Romain Lands, Morvant, at around 10.30 am when a silver Toyota Axio drove up.

Four men dressed in Muslim women’s clothes got out of the car and shot Baldwin and Greaves.

The gunmen got back in the car and drove off.

Nearby residents heard the gunshots and found both men bleeding. One man took Greaves to the Port of Spain General Hospital, where he was declared dead.

Morvant police visited the area with a district medical officer who declared Baldwin dead at the scene.

Newsday visited and tried to speak with a relative of the men but was unsuccessful.

Investigators said Baldwin had also been shot in June.

Police suspect the murders may be related to a gang war between criminals in Romain Lands and St Francois Valley Road.

The Homicide Bureau Region II is investigating.

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