Un Golden Lion à réaction

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

FOOTBALL. 24e TROPHéE YVON-LUTBERT

Mené par le CO Trénelle, le Golden Lion a su trouver les ressources nécessaires pour inverser la tendance et finalement l’emporter grâce à des réalisations de Boriel et Cracien (2-1).

Le CO Trénelle a pris, depuis ces derniers mois, de bonnes habitudes, celle de se hisser en finale des compétitions auxquelles il participe. Rien que cette année les hommes de Jean-François Go en ont déjà joué trois. Ils triomphent de l’US Robert en coupe de Martinique (5-1), avant de s’incliner au Tournoi de la ville de Fort-de-France contre le Club Colonial (1-0) et vendredi contre le Golden Lion (2-1).

Surpris mais pas battu

Les deux équipes ont proposé deux stratégies…


France-Antilles Martinique

700 mots – 22.08.2022

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Vers la fin du casse-tête pour la succession de biens

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Vendredi dernier, a eu lieu, à la Villa Chanteclerc, à Fort-de-France, la signature de la convention constitutive du groupement d’intérêt public « Sortie de l’Indivision et Titrement Martinique ». Objectif : renforcer l’application de la « loi Letchimy », accompagner les familles à la sortie de l’indivision successorale et constituer ou reconstituer des titres de propriété dont l’absence provoque de grandes difficultés patrimoniales.

La Martinique est confrontée à des difficultés particulières dans le domaine de la gestion foncière. La propriété des biens s’y trouve difficile à établir en raison d’une multiplication des indivisions : 40 à 50% des biens privés ont donné lieu à une indivision bloquée. Ce phénomène constitue un frein à leur entretien et au développement d’une offre satisfaisante de logements. La loi du 27 décembre 2018, dite « loi Letchimy », simplifie la procédure de sortie de…


France-Antilles Martinique

1191 mots – 22.08.2022

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La CTM a reçu, à son tour, les yoleurs

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Yole ronde. Tour de martinique 2022

Vendredi, Serge Letchimy, le président de l’Assemblée territoriale a reçu dans les jardins de l’institution les équipages engagées sur le Tour ainsi que le Comité d’administration de la Fédération des yoles. 

Après un Tour sur l’eau réussi, c’est celui des réceptions que les yoleurs doivent désormais honorer. Dans le sillage de celle de la Fyrm, et en attendant celles des partenaires et sponsors, c’était au tour de la CTM d’inviter les équipages. Tout en remerciant ceux qui ont organisé et participé au Tour, dont c’était le retour après deux années d’absence, Serge Letchimy a parlé « d’une identité forte » véhiculée par la yole. Tout en poursuivant avec « la résilience,…


France-Antilles Martinique

305 mots – 22.08.2022

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Les joueuses de l’Arsenal plébiscitées

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

OMNISPORTS. NUIT DES ETOILES ROBERTINES

Il y a un peu plus d’une semaine Alfred Monthieux et son conseil municipal recevaient, à L’Appaloosa, les sportifs de leur commune, à travers la Nuit des étoiles robertines. L’occasion de féliciter tout un chacun, tant individuellement que collectivement.

La plupart des municipalités choisissent la fin de l’année civile, et d’autres, plus rares comme le Robert, la fin de saison pour mettre à l’honneur ses sportifs. Une mise à l’honneur qui revient après deux années d’arrêt, compte tenu de la pandémie. Alfred Monthieux a salué les champions de sa commune qui sont nombreux, tant au niveau individuel que collectif.

Parmi les plus populaires la yole UFR/Chanflor, les clubs cycilstes JC 231 et Féwôs, le football et l’athlétisme avec…


France-Antilles Martinique

384 mots – 22.08.2022

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Trois livres, 130 euros : le coût de la rentrée pour les étudiants guadeloupéens

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guadeloupe FranceAntilles

Après deux ans de crise sanitaire, la plupart des étudiants vont pouvoir retrouver les bancs de l’université ou des grandes écoles pour pouvoir suivre les cours en présentiel. Mais comme pour tout élève, cette rentrée a eu un coût, parfois plus élevé que l’on ne pense.

Entre 18 et 25 ans, beaucoup de jeunes sont encore dans un cursus à l’université ou dans une grande école. Licence, master, doctorat pour les plus téméraires, les études supérieures sont aussi synonyme de dépenses.

À l’heure où les étudiants dénoncent l’augmentation du coût de la vie, ils doivent faire face à une rentrée universitaire plus chère. 

Addition salée

Pour ses fournitures scolaires, Maêva, étudiante en deuxième année de classe préparatoire scientifique au…


France-Antilles Guadeloupe

1293 mots – 22.08.2022

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Imam reflects on death of Palo Seco girl, 7: Mckenzie in Creator’s hands

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Mckenzie Hope Rechier –

The Claxton Bay imam who alerted the police about the strangling death of seven-year-old Mckenzie Hope Rechier in Palo Seco on Friday night believes the “creator has his hands over the situation.”

Newsday spoke to Yasin in Pranz Gardens near the area where the 25-year-old detained suspect had spoken to him about the death. The unemployed woman, a close relative of the girl, was still in custody on Sunday evening.

The imam did not give his full name nor did he want to provide details on the incident.

He said the police had interviewed him earlier and he had given them “all the information” he had.

“I did my part,” he said.

He said it was not the first time she came for help as many people visit the masjid for help with different things.

“Anyone can come here for help. We help people once it is within our means and once it is nothing illegal. As you can see, we are not rich people, but we still help. We could not help in this case. The child was already dead. So we passed on the information to the police,” Yasin said.

He added that the masjid have been helping people for over 20 years. The masjid is a complete structure on a hill overlooking a forested area in Pranz Gardens.

From what relatives were told, the suspect had a hefty meal before meeting Yasin on Friday night.

The friend, 40, from La Brea, who took her to meet him, had bought her a KFC meal, soup, and ice cream, as she requested.

“She had all of that before heading to meet the imam,” a close relative said.

Cpl Aguillera and WPC Monsegue of the Santa Flora station found the girl’s body on Saturday around 12.05 pm at home, an incomplete wooden shack, at 7 Road Extension in Palo Seco.

The body was wrapped with a curtain on a mattress. The structure does not have electricity or pipe-borne water and is in a forested area accessed by a muddy track.

The police said the suspect reported that she left the girl alone at about 4 pm on Friday. She went to a supermarket with the friend and he bought her a few items. He also bought a KFC meal for her.

Police said she asked the friend to take her to visit her imam.

He complied, and they met Yasin at around 10.20 pm.

Yasin accompanied the woman and the friend to the shack, where they saw the child’s body in a foetal position. The body had marks on the right side of the neck and the child’s face was swollen.

Mckenzie’s grandmother Brenda Persad, 47, said the suspect battled depression after her (suspect’s) two-month-old son died from bronchitis and lung infection in 2016.

The Palo Seco home in which Mckenzie Hope Rechier, 7, was found unresponsive on Friday night. – ANGELO MARCELLE

In 2017, the now-detained woman spent 14 days in the psychiatric ward of the San Fernando General Hospital.

Persad said the baby boy’s father was living in the Claxton Bay area.

Asked about Mckenzie’s father, Persad had some harsh words about the man believed to be from Point Fortin.

“He was absent and was never a part of the girl’s life,” Persad said.

She accused him of giving Mckenzie’s mother “a belly and never came back and looked for her.”

The grandmother said she took the slack and helped care for her grandchild.

One of the suspect’s neighbours, Michelle Alexander, said: “One of the things that shocked us is that she never ill-treated the child as far as we know. She gave the child the best of the best. Only a few weeks ago, she stopped taking care of herself. Mckenzie often came to my house and played with my children.”

About three weeks ago, Alexander said, the suspect said, “We would not be here soon.”

Consulted for comment, and expert in children’s care with a bachelor’s degree in psychology and a master’s degree in social work shared their views on the situation with Newsday.

“Seeing signs of depression in this young woman does not mean that they could have prevented or predicted that she would do what she did.

“It seems that she was crying out for help and had also been grieving,” Newsday’s source with over ten years experience in social work involving children said.

“She would have had this child at 18 and may have been overwhelmed and out of her depth since then. She is young, living in poverty, and under great pressure.

“But if she had not behaved drastically before, predicting such drastic behavior is almost impossible outside of hindsight.”

The source added that people in the suspect’s life are not to blame for her actions or choices.

In terms of getting help, ther source said there were few options for people who cannot afford it outside the public health system.

They said signs of depression included: no appetite or overeating, not sleeping or refusing to leave the bed, poor personal hygiene, and a lack of desire to do anything.

Newsday asked, given the level of poverty that the suspect and the child were living in, would those be circumstances that would normally trigger an intervention by the Children’s Authority or the Child Protection Unit of the police? Do friends/family have a duty to report those types of circumstances to authorities?

In response, the source said, “Poverty is not normally a reason to remove children unless there is neglect. The Child Protection Unit is for criminal offenses against a child.

“If there was neglect and neighbors witnessed then they should have reported, but neglect is not poverty.

“Signs of neglect would be leaving the child alone in the house with no supervision or the child begging in the community for food. Those things would have been a reason to call the Children’s Authority.”

Homicide Bureau Region III police are leading investigations.

Anyone who needs help can call Lifeline (24-hour hotline) at 800-5588, 231-2824 or 220-3636

In case of an emergency (attempted suicide), people can call 990, 811, or 999.

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Covid19: Five more dead, 187 new infections

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Image courtesy CDC

Five more people have died from covid19-related illness, raising the total death toll to 4,100 since the first infection in March 2020, according to the latest covid19 update issued by the Ministry of Health.

A total of 187 new cases were also recorded from samples taken between August 19 and 20.

Among the dead were three elderly males and two elderly females. The deceased had a range of pre-existing conditions, including hypertension, heart disease, cerebrovascular disease, neurological disease, kidney disease, endocrine disease and immunological disease.

The update said there were also 215 people hospitalised because of the virus with seven in the Intensive Care Unit and 13 in the High Dependency Unit at the Couva Hospital and Multi-Training Facility. There are also 27 people in step-down facilities and 6,755 people in home self-isolation.

The number of vaccinations remains at 51.2 per cent with 716,147 people fully vaccinated and 683,853 people not fully vaccinated. A total of 167,980 people have received a booster shot.

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LGBT+ community celebrates five years of Pride

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Participants in Sunday’s Pride Parade in Port of Spain. – Sureash Cholai

Pride TT and other supporting groups took to the streets on Sunday as members of the LGBT+ community and allies celebrated five years of its pride parade.

Although the community has celebrated pride (an event replicated globally) for more than 30 years, it was only 2018 that the first pride parade was held.

Scores of people gathered at Rust Street, St Clair and danced along Gray Street, then to St Clair Avenue at the British High Commission, then to Nelson Mandela Park and ended at Rust Street. Some of the participants wore Carnival costumes and danced to soca.

Participants in Sunday’s Pride Parade in Port of Spain. – Sureash Cholai

Co-chair of Pride TT Rudy Hanamji said only a few months ago the community lost Brandy Rodriguez, the head of the Trans Coalition of Trinidad and Tobago.

“This is a person who educated herself. She came from the streets. She empowered herself and she still could not access her inalienable rights. She could not access health care equitably. She could not access financing, equitably or housing. In 2021, Rodriguez was recognised by Queen Elizabeth II for her exceptional service supporting the trans community and LGBT+ rights.

“So in 2022, when you have vulnerable people in the queer community who do not have all of the privileges some of us have and the legislation still does not protect us fully then we have to have pride.”

British High Commissioner to TT, Harriet Cross, sixth from left, and members of her staff show their support for the LGBT+ community during its Pride Parade in Port of Spain on Sunday. – Sureash Cholai

Hanamji said pride was a protest at the end of the day even whilst the community celebrated all of the things queer people contributed to the country.

He said there were still members of the community who were locked out of homes and threatened with violence, and when they went before the courts, they were not protected by the Equal Opportunity Act as the law did not include sexual orientation.

The Equal Opportunity Act does state in its definition of sex that sexual preference or orientation is not included.

Hanamji said he was hopeful in TT despite global movements questioning some rights.

PRIDE: Members and supporters of the LGBT+ community took to the streets of Port of Spain on Sunday for their Pride Parade, starting at Rust street, St Clair. this follows a month of Pride TT celebrations and their fifth annivesary as an organisation. PHOTOS BY SUREASH CHOLAI –

TT’s culture is different from North America’s and TT has a very integrated people, he said.

“In a small island, everyone knows a queer person. It could be a teacher, your doctor, your aunty, your nephew etc. For the most part, since we have started public pride five years ago, we have not seen that push back.”

Similarly, Sharon Mottley head of the Women’s Caucus, a lesbian and bi organisation, said it was important to continue to protest and raise visibility of the LGBT+ community.

She said the pride parade was a manifestation of all of the work by those who went before, and it was important to continue mobilising and demanding the rights of all people in TT for equal access and protection under the law.

Participants in Sunday’s Pride Parade in Port of Spain. – Sureash Cholai

Asked if she was concerned of the removal of certain rights in TT given the overturning of Roe versus Wade by the US Supreme Court, Mottley said some stride was made in TT with women’s reproductive rights.

The Roe versus Wade decision of the US Supreme Court ruled, in 1973, that the 14th Ammendment of the US Constitution gave women the right to have an abortion. That decision was overturned by the same court on June 24 of this year.

Mottley said TT needed to continue to make those strides despite what happens in the US.

Participants in Sunday’s Pride Parade in Port of Spain. – Sureash Cholai

She said there was a threat of the removal of women’s rights globally and that happens when people get too comfortable and forget all the work that went in to making these things possible.

“I think it is a wake-up call for women globally and for LGBTQIA people, even though we’ve have got stride, how easy it is for the tide to turn if we become complacent.”

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Stabilisation road works to resume in Chatham Monday

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

A landslip is currently threatening a portion of the Southern Main Road in Chatham Village.

Point Fortin MP Kennedy Richards Jr has assured his constituents that stabilisation works on a massive landslip along the Southern Main Road in Chatham Village is set to resume on Monday.

If there is no rain.

Several residents have been complaining that landslips on both sides of the road are worsening. It is unsafe, they say, for any car to pass on the narrow remaining strip of the road. They fear that “at any time now,” they cut be cut off from the rest of Trinidad and Tobago.

Richards said, “It could happen, but no one knows if or when that could happen. The work is getting done. I know that they are frightened, and I am frightened too. Trying to upgrade the road, we must not lose a soul. While I am scared, I must trust the engineers to do their jobs. Kennedy is the remedy but that does not mean things would be easy.

“The Government is spending upwards of $10 million on this site. This is to ensure that the south western peninsula does not get cut off from the rest of the country. The work must be done properly. People are anxious, and I am just as anxious.”

The MP recalled that a contractor had recently started stabilisation work on one side of the road then stopped. That was because soil testing results showed that the other side of the road also needed work. That caused a change in the original scope of the project.

He said the change in design to fix both sides, and the bad weather caused a delay in the restart of the work.

Richards said he was being kept abreast of the project and was working to have the problems fixed.

The contractor and the Works and Transport Ministry have been working with WASA regarding the updated design.

A landslip is currently threatening a portion of the Southern Main Road in Chatham Village. –

Richards said, “After this landslip is fixed, there are more 19 remaining from there straight to Icacos. I checked them myself. I spoke to (Works and Transport Minister Rohan) Sinanan, who is willing to help. But he is dealing with 450 landslips throughout the country. Every time he fixes one, he gets two more. That is the challenge we have in the country.

“So while he (Sinanan) is working to remedy the situation, others parts are getting damaged. The Government has been supporting wherever it could. If we had more money, we would have had more done.”

Richards said he was also trying to identify alternative routes like an old Ministry of Works road that connects Buenos Ayers, Erin, to Chatham Road South. But that road also has a landslip.

A statement from the PURE Unit of the Ministry said construction works on the southern landslip were set to restart on August 2. But there were further land movements owing to the bad weather over the past few weeks.

The statement added that work on the site was set to restart on Monday and is expected to finish by the end of November.

One resident, Rikki Undheim, said the road is the only access route to other parts of Cedros.

“Villagers are waiting for the whole southwest to be isolated from the country. This is the worst I have ever seen this landslip. It was already bad, but after the contractor cleared down the bamboo trees holding up the road, it got worse,” Undheim said.

“God forbid someone is on the road when the road gives in. We are frustrated. There are numerous bad roads in Cedros and other parts of TT. But ours are unsafe, and lives are at risk.”

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20 new lawyers for DPP says Attorney General

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Reginald Armour –

Attorney General (AG) Reginald Armour announced that 20 new lawyers were appointed to the office of the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP), in a bid to address concerns of staffing and space.

He made the announcement in a one-on-one interview on the Delving Deeper show on TTT, on Sunday.

Armour said when he was appointed AG, one of his first priorities was to engage the DPP and speak with him on the challenges that his office were facing. Armour said some of the key issues and challenges that he was aware of were staffing and space.

“The current situation is that the DPP has been understaffed,” he said. “There are other challenges that I know the DPP has which involves dealing with the Judiciary, because they have been building out a very aggressive judicial trial process that requires the DPP’s lawyers to be in two places at the same time.

“One morning you are dealing with case management and in the very same day you are dealing with trials and there weren’t sufficient lawyers in the DPP’s department to have two different lawyers deal with two different things at the same time. So I know that is a challenge. It was brought to my attention by the DPP and it is something that I have spoken to the Chief Justice about.”

“That was improved by the 20 attorneys. Now, with the additional lawyers, I expect that it is going to build out into solutions.”

He described the new attorneys as “young, enthusiastic and hard-working.”

The new attorneys, he said came out of Hugh Wooding Law School.

Armour said that space issues are also being addressed through the opening of new offices on Park Street, Port of Spain. In 2020 the National Infrastructure Development Company (NIDCO) handed over to the DPP the ceremonial keys to the $24 million, six storey office. The building has dedicated floors for the DPP’s executive secretariat, administrative and support units, processing units and units for indictment and vault usage.

New anti-terror legislation to bring ISIS refugees home

Armour also said that the AG’s office was working on draft legislation that would provide a gateway for the wives and children who were taken to Syria by Trinidadians who left to join extremist group ISIS but have since died, so that they would be able to return home and be safely reintegrated in to TT’s society.

“One of the things that we are looking to do in the recent amendment that we are discussing at this point and we are in active consultation with the law reform commission, is to provide legislation that would try and find a gateway to bring those people back.

“But to bring them back in a way that may be sensitive to the fact that they will need help, and sensitive to the fact that they will need to be properly assessed both in terms of whether they would represent a security risk or health wise and housed in an environment which will allow them to transition back into TT,” Armour said.

Between 2013 and 2016 at least 130 people from TT, including women and children left for Syria, as the men in the families went to join the caliphate as mercenary fighters loyal to IS. They are now believed to be dead.

Since 2017, families in TT of the women and children have been appealing to government to find a way to bring them back home. A repatriation, rehabilitation and reintegration project was started to show government that it could be done in safe manner.

In 2018 then minister of national security Stuart Young constituted a multidisciplinary and multi-agency team to deal with possible repatriation of those in Syria and Iraq.

The team included members of the Financial Intelligence Unit, Terrorists Interdiction Unit of the TTPS, the Child Protection Unit and the Anti-Terrorism Desk of the Ministry of the Attorney General and Legal Affairs.

ISIS fell in 2019.

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