Two held for stolen Works Ministry steel

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

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Recovered Materials which were Reported Stolen from MOWT Compound –

TWO men were arrested on Tuesday after police found stolen steel belonging to the Ministry of Works and Transport at a scrapyard in Cunupia.

In a media release, police said the men, a 36-year-old, of Sangre Grande and the owner of the scrapyard, a 33-year-old Chaguanas man, were arrested after the stolen steel was found at the compound at the corner of Ramlal Trace Extension and the Uriah Butler Highway.

Police said an employee at the ministry discovered the steel was missing on Tuesday afternoon. He told police he last saw the items – nine iron beams, 60 electrical steel pipes, two excavator buckets, an 18-inch one-way valve pipe and six pieces of overhanging beams – at the ministry’s Caroni compound at about 3 pm last Friday.

The theft was reported to the Caroni Police Station and based on information, police went to the scrapyard where they found the stolen materials.

On Wednesday, Transport Commissioner Clive Clarke said the steel, which had been fabricated to construct an inspection bay at Wrightson Road, in Port of Spain, was stolen on Saturday. It was stored at the mechanical service building at the ministry’s Caroni compound.

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Marabella family praises Guapo man for saving girl, 11

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

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Merlene Rock, grandmother of Tahira Checkley who was saved from drowning at Clifton Hill beach, Point Fortin hails Otis Morrison as an angel. – Photo by Lincoln Holder

A guardian angel sent from heaven. That was how 59-year-old Marabella resident Merlene Rock described Otis Morrison, 36, who gave his life to prevent her granddaughter from drowning at Guapo Beach on Monday.

“He was truly an angel. He was a guardian angel that came from heaven. Without a doubt, he died a hero. That man would forever be in my prayers,” Rock said.

“It is because of him that my grandchild (Tahira Checkley) is alive today.

“God alone knows why this happened. We cannot question God.”

The father of two girls, 11 and eight, Morrison lived at Salick Street, at Gonzales Village, Point Fortin,

Several people, including Morrison’s relatives and Point Fortin MP Kennedy Richards Jr, have hailed him as a hero for saving the girl, whom he did not know.

The child’s mother, who asked not to be named, said she spoke to Morrison’s family on Thursday by phone and offered her condolences. Her family plans to meet the Morrisons in person to help in whatever way they can.

The mother said she took her children and two nieces to the beach, and tragedy struck within an hour.

Her daughter later told her “something” had been pulling her into the water, and she could not feel her feet. She began to cry for help.

Morrison, who was swimming nearby, heard and rushed to help.

Without saying anything, he put her on his back to carry her to safety. Other people were alerted, and someone on a jet ski took the child ashore.

The mother was looking at them from onshore nearby.

“Everything happened very fast. They were not far in the water. I saw when the man on the jet ski took her. At the time, I did not see the other guy (Morrison),” she said.

“Then I see people brought him to the shore. They were doing CPR on him. I was crying and praying over him, telling him to stay alive.”

One of the gathered men began saying Morrison had “just saved the little girl.”

The mother said she then began to piece together what had happened. In hindsight, she realised she could not see Morrison because he was underwater with her daughter on his back, preventing her from drowning.

“My daughter did not see his face. All she knew is that he put her on his back and saved her. I keep seeing his face over and over in my mind, because I saw people were doing CPR on him,” she said.

“We couldn’t sleep when we got home.”

Morrison was taken to the Point Fortin Hospital, where he died.

While at the hospital, she got a phone number for Morrison’s relatives. But the first one she was given was a wrong number.

Morrison is believed to have drowned, but an autopsy is yet to be done.

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Las Cuevas couple shot a total of seven times, autopsy finds

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Hollis Valdez and his wife Shereen Bailey-Valdez –

THE Las Cuevas couple murdered at their home on July 29 died from multiple gunshot wounds as the wife was shot three times and the husband four.

The autopsy report revealed 41-year-old Shereen Bailey-Valdez was shot once in the head, abdomen and vagina, while Hollis Valdez was shot four times in the upper body including the head. The couple were found on the floor of their bedroom at Rincon Road at about 7.45 am last Friday.

Three days later, the decomposing body of Franklin Abel Clement, the man suspected of killing them, was found in the Rincon Forest. His body is yet to be taken to the Forensic Science Centre.

The couple worked together as lifeguards at the Las Cuevas beach and had recently rekindled their relationship when they were killed.

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2-year-wait for release of bodies of 3 Guapo murder victims

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

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TORTUROUS WAIT: Siblings Michael and Cindy Farrell speak outside the Forensic Science Centre in St James on Thursday, about the long wait to retrieve the bodies of their mother, brother and neighbour who were chopped to death and their Guapo house set ablaze in February 2020. –
Photo by Angelo Marcelle

RELATIVES of a mother and son murdered over two years ago, along with a neighbour whom they took in, want to bury their loved ones, but their bodies have not been released from the Forensic Science Centre.

Speaking with the media at the centre at Barbados Road, Port of Spain, brother and sister Michael and Cindy Farrell say after almost two and a half years, they just want closure.

Fighting back tears, Cindy said: “There is no closure. We need closure. Not only for me, but also for the rest of the whole family.

“We can’t move on with our lives. There is nothing we can do. We can’t bury them. We need closure and we need justice also.

“This is a horrible way for somebody who is innocent to die, and it is wearing on us that we not even getting the bodies. Two and a half years! Somebody needs to give us answers on what is really taking place.”

On February 28, 2020, police and fire officers went to a burning house at Petrotrin Quarters in Guapo. After outing the blaze, they found the bodies of 69-year-old Ceslyn “Linda” Farrell, her son Patrick, 48, and friend Seycelles Hannah, 41, burnt beyond recognition.

Ceslyn Linda Farrell, 69 –

Their autopsy reports said they had been chopped and stabbed to death and their house set afire.

Michael said just after the murders the pandemic hit, and he understood and accepted that there would be some delays – but 29 months was not what he expected.

“I find they take too long for us to retrieve the remains of my brother and my mother. I find this system is dragging this thing too long. The process is too long and overbearing.

“The latest information I have is that I have to register a late death and that will take two weeks.”

He said he began his quest at the San Fernando branch of Legal Affairs and was referred to the Point Fortin branch. At Point Fortin, the registrar fell ill and he had to wait for her health to improve. After she died he was referred back to San Fernando.

There the process had to restart with his making an appointment.

“After I had given a sample of my DNA, they said they sent it abroad to process. That was taking too long and eventually we reached out to the media.

“After about a month they called me back and told me that I have to do over the DNA (sampling). And that is where we got a little advancement.”

DNA samples needed to be taken to confirm the identity of the victims because they were burnt beyond recognition.

He called on those in authority to assist in expediting the final paperwork, which he said is supposed to take two weeks. He recalled that less than a month after the killing, he gave a sample of DNA along with a relative of Hannah’s.

“This year, in February, I came and do over the DNA (sampling). They said, going on their words, there were no results from the first time. I don’t know what happened to the first set of results, so I had to do it over.

“After I found they were taking too long I came to Forensic and they said they had to wait until I got the DNA results.”

He said the bodies have already been identified and all he is waiting for now is the death certificates to take back to the centre so the bodies can be released for burial.

Cindy said her mother took in Hannah, who was kicked out of her home, and less than a month later, her family members and Hannah were murdered.

“She lost her life, and my brother, trying to help somebody.

“For me, I am hoping for justice. I am hoping for justice.”

Seycelles Hannah, 41 –

She said the domestic dispute that led to the triple killing could have been dealt with differently, instead of ending in chopping deaths and the destruction of the home her mother worked hard to build.

Addressing violence against women, Michael said men should learn to control their emotions.

“If they don’t have God in their heart, you’ll find anything possible will happen. People talk about the Bible, but it is a foundation of the beginning of things.

“Men need to put their emotions aside and deal with the problem, and the problem is (lack of) communication. Communicate with the individual you have the situation with, regardless if it is your woman, your mother, your friend.

“This thing going on far too long where men just killing women, sometimes people grew up together and you just killing them senselessly without remorse.”

He said he is bearing with the process at this time, while his sister reiterated that the family just wants closure and justice.

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Eerste Surinaamse vrouwelijk arbiter op WK

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

door Marinio Balsemhof  PARAMARIBO — Ik voel me heel goed. Het feit alleen dat ik hier mag zijn, zegt al

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Pour sauver son père, il retombe dans le trafic de drogue

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Le tribunal judiciaire de Fort-de-France a condamné un jeune Guyanais de 30 ans qui a fait la mule dans un trafic de cocaïne. Un choix murement réfléchi pour le prévenu qui voulait aider son père malade.

Auguste S., un Guyanais de 30 ans, est de retour devant le tribunal judiciaire de Fort-de-France pour être jugé dans une affaire de « transport, détention et acquisition de stupéfiants ». Lors de la première audience, en mai dernier, le prévenu avait demandé un délai afin de préparer sa défense. Pour rappel, le trentenaire est interpellé le 20 mai de cette année à l’aéroport Aimé-Césaire du Lamentin avec près de 700 grammes de cocaïne.

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Un an après les émeutes à Sainte-Thérèse, “la vie a repris son cours”

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Dans la nuit du 31 juillet au 1er août 2021, des violences urbaines avaient éclaté à Fort-de-France, plus particulièrement dans le quartier de Sainte-Thérèse. Un an après, “la vie a repris son cours” selon la présidente du conseil citoyen, même si certains habitants se disent toujours “traumatisés” par ces exactions.  

Des voitures incendiées à l’avenue Maurice-Bishop, des poubelles brûlées et renversées obstruant les voies de circulation, le centre de vaccination de la ville de Fort-de-France détruit, le mobil-home d’une pharmacie où était effectués des tests Covid ravagé par les flammes… Les habitants du quartier de Sainte-Thérèse avaient assisté à un véritable spectacle de désolation en se réveillant le matin du dimanche 1er août 2021.

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Nicolas Rhinan (CTDM / EDF) : « Nous avons remis les pendules à l’heure »

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Aide patron de la yole CTDM / EDF

Dans le top 5 au classement général, CTDM / EDF réalise de bonnes performances durant ce Tour. Nicolas Rhinan, aide patron sur l’embarcation, revient sur le parcours de la yole lamentinoise.

Comment s’est déroulée pour vous l’étape de jeudi ?

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Ambre Bozza, ambassadrice de beauté et yoleuse

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

à bord de la yole

Ambre Bozza, Miss Martinique 2019, est présente sur ce Tour. Elle a pris goût à la yole ronde au sein de l’équipage de SMEM/Solar Inox/Limitless, dans laquelle figurent de nombreuses femmes (entre 12 et 14 au sein de l’association).

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Lors de sa préparation à Miss Martinique, Ambre Bozza a été initiée à la yole. Une gentille balade pour la jeune femme qui développera par la suite cette pratique grâce à sa rencontre avec les responsables de la yole.

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Kennisoverdracht essentieel voor kennen van elkaar tradities

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

Tekst en beeld Tascha Aveloo PARAMARIBO —  Het is een aan en aflopen in de hal op het directoraat Cultuur.

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