Advertencia de inundaciones para varios pueblos de la zona metropolitana

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El Servicio Nacional de Meteorología (SNM) emitió una advertencia de inundaciones urbanas para varios pueblos de la zona metropolitana de San Juan.

La advertencia es hasta las 4:15 de la tarde e incluye los pueblos de Bayamón, Guaynabo, Toa Alta y Toa Baja.

El rada Doppler detectó fuertes lluvias y tronadas aisladas. Inundaciones menores son posibles que ocurran en los mencionados municipios.

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Gert Kivistik, team Crédit Mutuel Garage Premier, vainqueur du contre- la-montre

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

IL A DIT…

« C’est merveilleux »

« C’était très difficile et surtout très technique, le parcours avait beaucoup de virages. C’est bien pour moi d’avoir gagné une étape surtout à Fort-de-France, c’est merveilleux. J’ai eu un peu mal ce matin mais c’est après-midi cela allait mieux. » 


France-Antilles Martinique

42 mots – 11.07.2022

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Naparima MP to PM: Do like UK, Sri Lanka prime ministers and step down

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Naparima MP Rodney Charles. –

Just as two prime ministers —Boris Johnson of the UK and Ranil Wickremesinghe of Sri Lanka— resigned amid scandals, economic decline and unrest, Naparima MP Rodney Charles is calling on the prime minister to do the same.

Charles said this during Sunday’s weekly media briefing at the Opposition Leader’s office at Charles Street, Port of Spain.

“He must step down before it is too late,” Charles said.

“Dr Rowley, the buck stops with you. Do like Boris Johnson and take the right action. Do like Wickremesinghe and go.”

The United National Congress (UNC) MP said this country is in a crisis. He repeatedly criticised Rowley and his Cabinet and accused them of failing the country.

With the crime rate increasing and social ills plaguing people, Charles said it might be best if the country’s name was changed from “T&T to TT (Tombstone Territory).”

He referred to Rowley as a “non-performer,” saying his policies do not make any sense.

The policies are “Pontius Pilate-like,” designed merely to distract from the disaster of crime in the country.

“You are now minded to blame parents for poor parenting. How can you blame parents and not accept responsibility for not providing our breadwinners in our families with decent, well-paying jobs?”

Charles responded to Rowley who recently said he is considering crime and violence be treated as a public health emergency.

The opposition MP questioned whether the comment was “a scheme” to hand over the National Security portfolio to the Health Minister.

“Do not wait for riots against your failed policies to become the norm in TT Dr Rowley. Do not wait for the murder rate to reach 1,000 annually.

“Do not wait for gangs to take over and control large parts of our urban areas. Do not wait for all of TT to become stink and dutty under your watch.”

Charles charged that under a UNC-led government, changes would be implemented for the betterment of all.

One such change would be increasing qualifications for entering the police service to at least an associate degree or equivalent.

The opposition pledged to have mandatory continuous training programmes, requiring all police officers to get gun training at specified periods, or compulsory training in de-escalation approaches in crowd-control management.

Couva North MP Ravi Ratiram was also at the conference.

Like Charles, Ratiram made several allegations against the Government.

Once again, Ratiram referred to a recent attack at sea and called on National Security Minister Fitzgerald Hinds to adequately resource the Coast Guard officers to “effectively do their job.”

He also called on the Government to do more for the agriculture sector.

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Aranguez boy, 16, killed by falling gate

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Kameel Ali. –

Rishad Ali, 38, sat at his Jagessar Street, Aranguez home on Sunday afternoon in tears, saying a silent prayer for his son Kameel Ali who died that morning.

The 16-year-old form four student, of Vishnu Boys’ Hindu College in Caroni, died when the 12-foot-tall gate at the front of the family’s home fell and crushed him.

“I always wanted him to have a better life than I did,” Ali said.

“I didn’t want him to go through the struggles I did. We tried. I really tried. I worked hard just for him. I always say everything happens for a reason. I believe God has a plan for all of us, but I wasn’t expecting to have to say goodbye to my son so soon.”

Rishad Ali mourns the death of his son Kameel at their home in Aranguez. – Angelo Marcelle

Ali, a gardener, told Newsday he and his son left early on Sunday morning for Kameel to join a cricket team in Chaguanas, but could not sign up because of the heavy rain. They then went in the Bamboo to get boots to plant cucumbers on their five-acre plot of land and went back to their home.

Ali said they got back at about 9.45 am and Kameel got out of the Hyundai H100 van to close the gate behind his father who was parking in the driveway. As the boy was closing the gate, it rode up on a stone, jumping the tracks. The gate fell on Kameel, pinning his head between the gate and a standing I-beam, meant to hold the gate up from falling.

Relatives rushed to get him out from under the gate and took him to Eric Williams Medical Sciences Complex, but he was declared dead.

Newsday was told Kameel was very small in stature, standing at only four feet tall, and was very thin. They said the gate takes several men to lift it if it jumps off the tracks.

Ali described his son as a respectful person. He said his son would go to school then return straight home to their one-bedroom home, where he would go on the top of a double-decker bed and read.

“He played drums for the Om Shakti temple on Coronation Street, San Juan. He was really involved in cricket. He was a very likeable person. He was always quiet and to himself,” Ali said.

Relatives and friends gather outside the Jagessar Street, Aranguez home of Kadeem Ali who was crushed to death by a falling gate. – Angelo Marcelle

“When my father passed away, he left us with nothing. I am only just now getting to catch myself and see a future for myself and my son. But garden work is real hard. Every week the prices are going up. Some days, just to make ends meet, my wife and I would eat one doubles for the day. I kept telling my wife if we worked the land for a couple years and we worked hard, we could give him everything he needs. Now I feel as though I wasn’t successful as a father.”

In February, five-year-old girl Krystal Laloo died after a gate fell on her at her Sangre Chiquito home. The girl’s cousin was also injured during the incident.

In April, a student of the Carapichaima East Secondary school got injuries to her head, back, hands, shoulders and knees when a staff member tried to open a three-part metal folding gate and it fell on the child.

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Journalist, educator Joel Nanton dies after illness

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Joel Nanton. – Courtesy the Ken Gordon School of Journalism

Joel Nanton, chair at the Department of Journalism and Media at Costatt’s Ken Gordon School of Journalism and Communication Studies, lost a four-year struggle with cancer on Sunday. He was 48 years old.

News of his death cut deep among the fraternity of journalists who, for many, had been taught in one way or another by the educator and ex-reporter at the TT Guardian and Express. He was the brother of lead editor – content at the Guardian Sampson Nanton.

The faculty at Costatt, where he worked for the past 15 years, described him as a passionate, determined and humble person.

“Joel’s faith was unflinching, and he treated the best possible outcome as a given,” Costatt said.

“Even as we grieve him, we all feel deeply grateful that he touched our lives.”

Costatt described him as a pioneer lecturer in the school who used his experience as a journalist to develop its curriculum.

“As an educator, he remained a journalist. It was in his blood. Like the best editors, he shared tales of his time at the Guardian and the Express to enlighten, to inspire, and sometimes to simply amuse his students. Those stories became a hallmark of his classes.”

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Trade unions’ motorcade against PM, govt rolls on despite rain

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Members of the TT Postal Workers Union were part of the motorcade. – Angelo Marcelle

Despite heavy rain throughout the country, dozens of people turned out on Sunday for a motorcade by trade unions, which began in Sangre Grande and ended in Port of Spain.

Joint Trade Union Movement (JTUM) president Ancel Roget, at the meeting point at North Eastern College in Sangre Grande, said the motorcade was organised to gather support for and draw attention to the symbolic no-confidence motion passed by the trade union movement against the Prime Minister and his government on Labour Day.

“We did not come to that decision lightly. It is after all the problems and issues experienced and, of course, the most ridiculous offer by the government for the settlement of negotiations which are nine and, in some cases, 12 years outstanding.

“This was rejected by the union movement as being ridiculous. It (the motion) was also passed on the basis of the treatment and the attack on workers, the retrenchment of many thousands of workers, the decimation of many state enterprises, the privatisation, wanting to send home public officers without these negotiations settled, all of which point to an attack on workers with paying jobs and working people in the country.”

Roget said Sunday’s motorcade, as well as one the previous week from Palmiste to PoS, was part of a mobilisation towards a bigger initiative which he could not yet disclose.

PSA president Leroy Baptiste said the macro-economic policies of the government were causing the middle class to be decimated.

Trade union members drive along Foster Road in Sangre Grande on Sunday to demonstrate their disgust with the government. – Angelo Marcelle

“This country is going down a direction where the gap between the haves and have nots is widening, and this must come to a halt. Workers have a right to be able to take care of themselves and their families, to put a roof over their heads, to proper healthcare, and the reality is that they can’t, based on the macroeconomic policies being driven in this country.

Baptiste asked who could afford to buy a house on the open market, given that many people were getting low wages and were on contract for many years.

“By making us temporary contract workers, they’re not giving us security of tenure. Who could accept a situation where the government is attacking organised labour and the trade union movement? The only vehicle to ensure workers could achieve a good-paying job is under attack.”

Retrenchment is becoming the norm, he said.

“Enough is enough, workers will fight back for their families, to put a roof over the heads of their families, for their children, and their children’s children. That is our right.”

Among the unions present were the Public Services’ Association, the Postal Workers’ Union, the Industrial, General and Sanitation Workers’ Union, the Banking, Insurance and General Workers’ Union, the Transport Industrial Workers’ Union, the Fire Services Association, the Aviation, Communication and Allied Workers’ Union, the National Union of General and Federated Workers, the TT Unified Teachers’ Association, and the Seamen and Waterfront Workers Trade Union.

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230 ‘wanted’ illegal firearms linked to 662 cases locally – DCP Bailey | Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News | Loop News

As the police continue to carry out ballistic tests on firearms seized so far to link them to specific crimes, there are approximately 230 ‘wanted’ firearms associated with more than 660 shooting incidents.

In fact, several of the weapons – both those seized and wanted, appear to have been repeatedly used by criminals to commit a raft of serious offences.

The disclosures were made by two of the island’s top police commanders at the Jamaica Constabulary Force’s (JCF) press conference last week.

Earlier at the press briefing, it was released by Police Commissioner, Major General Antony Anderson, that 392 firearms have been seized in the first half of 2022.

But, according to Deputy Commissioner of Police (DCP), Fitz Bailey, who is in charge of the crime portfolio, a number of firearms remain on the nation’s streets in the hands of criminals.

“Since the beginning of the year, we have had 595 hits from crime scenes by firearms,” he said.

“We have systems whereby we categorise firearms as wanted firearms. We have actually linked 57 recovered firearms to 163 cases, and there are 230 wanted firearms that are linked to 662 cases.

That’s where we are at now,” the DCP continued.

“Last year, at this time, it was 538 hits that we made. Currently, we have made more hits since the beginning of this year than last year,” he added.

In responding to the statistics revealed by his counterpart, Anderson said: “So what you find from that data is that clearly weapons are being used and used again by criminals…

“… And it (the data) forms part of our whole investigative strategy that we use in determining that when we actually seize them (the illegal fireams),” he informed.

The commissioner said for the weapons seized so far, their ballistics will be taken and compared.

The JCF, he said, will then utilise its “software that can tie firearms and their uses to particular cases and so on.”

Aside from that procedure, Anderson said the constabulary also works with its “overseas partners to look at the source of these firearms and who may have sent them to Jamaica.”

He elaborated that, “It’s an end-to-end process, and we have had convictions recently in the US from joint investigations that are done between us (the JCF) and the police forces in the US.

“We work with the ATF (Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms) in the US and their databases, to also track these weapons,” Anderson indicated.

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Notch klimt naar vierde plek

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

Tekst en beeld Ricky Wirjosentono  PARAMARIBO — Het doelpunt van de Braziliaanse verdediger Irailton Nascimento was voldoende om Notch de

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Claudius Straal: ‘Amerikaanse Maagdeneilanden heeft verdiend gewonnen’

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

door John Zaalman  PARAMARIBO — De nationale U21-meisjes-volleybalselectie van de Amerikaanse Maagdeneilanden (USVI) is ongeslagen kampioen geworden van de Cazova

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Portland cop freed of assaulting 15-y-o girl, but… | Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News | Loop News

A police constable who remains in custody after he allegedly handcuffed, attacked and sexually assaulted his girlfriend last year, was freed of a separate charge relative to touching a 15-year-old female student on her leg.

Ryan Anderson from the Portland Police Division was found not guilty of indecent assault last week.

The parish judge who presided at the trial determined that the complainant’s testimony was not credible, as several inconsistencies were found in her evidence.

The girl claimed that in August of 2021, the cop inappropriately touched her on her leg while she was a passenger in his car.

The matter was reported to the police, and following a probe, Anderson was charged.

The cop, however, denied the allegations at his trial, which ended in him being acquitted.

In relation to the matter surrounding his girlfriend, Anderson is to appear in court later this week.

The constable is charged with rape, grievous sexual assault, three counts of assault occasioning bodily harm, unlawful wounding and malicious destruction of property.

Allegations are that between November 13 and November 29, 2021, Anderson and the woman got into a dispute after he accused her of being unfaithful to him.

During the course of the dispute, the cop allegedly handcuffed his lover and beat her severely on several occasions.

It is further alleged that he also sexually assaulted the woman during the reported ordeal.

Further reports are that the lawman burnt some of his girlfriend’s clothing during their disagreement.

The woman eventually made a report to the police and an investigation was launched.

A file was subsequently submitted to the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions (ODPP), which ruled that Anderson should be charged.

He was subsequently arrested and booked for the offences stemming from the alleged altercation.

The cop has remained in police custody since that time.

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