Vie chère, sécurité : les maires d’Outre-mer au bord de la crise de nerfs

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guadeloupe FranceAntilles

POLITIQUE

Mary Bildy

Réunis à Paris, les maires de Guadeloupe et de tout l’Outre-mer sont venus plaider leur cause et demander le soutien de l’État face à la double crise de l’inflation et de l’insécurité.

Vie chère, immigration, insécurité : les thèmes qui font les
gros titres de l’actualité dans l’Hexagone ces jours-ci sont connus
des maires ultramarins depuis de longues années déjà. « Dans
l’Outre-mer, les crises sont graves depuis bien longtemps : la
pauvreté y atteint des taux 5 à 15 fois supérieurs à ce qu’ils sont
dans l’Hexagone
», rappelait le président du Sénat,
Gérard Larcher,
lors de son discours d’accueil envers les
maires ultramarins.

Réunis à Paris à l’occasion du Congrès annuel des maires, les
élus sont venus de Guyane, des Antilles mais aussi de Polynésie
française ou encore de Mayotte et de l’océan Indien pour participer
à des ateliers, rencontrer leurs collègues hexagonaux, mais aussi
et surtout interpeller les au

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Usain Bolt, Chris Gayle, Usher and more in Abu Dhabi for F1 Grand Prix Loop Cayman Islands

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cayman Compass
Loop Lifestyle

4 hrs ago

(L-R) Cricketer Chris Gayle; Talent Manager Nugent ‘NJ’ Walker; and Olympian Usain Bolt share a selfie frame.

One thing about Jamaican sporting legend Usain Bolt is that wherever he works, he’ll also find time to play.

The ‘fastest man alive’ was the VIP guest at the Puma Family event in Abu Dhabi on Sunday, November 20.

Naturally, he was invited to make a presentation and relied on flashback clips of Puma ads to ‘energise’ his delivery.

Later that day, Bolt and company shared some downtime with a few popular folks at the Yas Marina Circuit, the venue for the F1 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix.

In a caption that read: “Great time @f1”, Bolt shared several images with fans, friends, and the CEO of the Formula1 Group Stefano Domenicali.

The Universe Boss Chris Gayle, R&B megastar Usher, Bollywood superstar Ranveer Singh, fellow Olympian Marcell Jacobs, French footballer Patrice Evra, comedian Martin Lawrence, rapper will.i.am and countless fans and ell-wishers were among those in attendance, that also joined Bolt for photo ops.

See some images shared via Instagram/@usainbolt below

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Raheem Sterling helps England rout Iran 6-2 at World Cup Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

When Bukayo Saka and Marcus Rashford last walked off the field at a major international soccer tournament, they were bombarded with racist abuse.

Three goals for England in the team’s opening match at this year’s World Cup was their immediate riposte.

Saka scored two before giving way to Rashford, who added another in the second half of England’s 6-2 rout of Iran on Monday.

The jubilant scene at the Khalifa International Stadium was in contrast to the tears shed following England’s penalty shootout loss to Italy in last year’s European Championship final. Saka and Rashford both failed to convert from the spot and were targeted on social media.

“It is a moment that has been with me and will be with me forever,” said Saka, who was only 19 during Euro 2020. “But I am so blessed and so grateful to have the coaching staff, not only here with the team at England, but also at Arsenal.

“My friends and my family put their arm around me along with my teammates and the nation supported me to help me get back to a good place. I feel that love from everyone around me.”

England’s Bukayo Saka (right) celebrates with teammates after scoring his side’s fourth goal against Iran during the World Cup group B soccer match between England and Iran at the Khalifa International Stadium, in Doha, Qatar, Monday, Nov 21, 2022. (AP Photo/Martin Meissner)

The win also provides encouragement for coach Gareth Southgate, who has faced the most troubled period of his England tenure over the last year. In a difficult buildup to the tournament in Qatar, he was booed after a 4-0 loss to Hungary in June and was humiliated by his own fans when they chanted, “You don’t know what you’re doing.”

Hundreds of fans missed the start of Monday’s match because of an issue with digital tickets. When they eventually made their way to their seats, they witnessed an utterly dominant display from England.

Jude Bellingham’s first international goal opened the scoring in the 35th minute.

Saka then got his first of the match in the 43rd and Jamaican Raheem Sterling added another in first-half stoppage time. Saka scored his second shortly after the hour, but Mehdi Taremi pulled one back for Iran in the 65th minute.

Rashford struck six minutes later to extend England’s lead to 5-1, and Jack Grealish also stepped off the bench to score a sixth in the 90th. Taremi added another for Iran from the penalty spot deep in stoppage time after John Stones was penalized for holding Morteza Pouraliganji’s shirt in the box.

The game was delayed for several minutes in the first half when Iran goalkeeper Ali Beiranvand clashed heads with a teammate. He was eventually taken off the field on a stretcher with the score still 0-0.

Iran’s goalkeeper Alireza Beiranvand collides with Iran’s Majid Hosseini (right) during the World Cup group B soccer match between England and Iran at the Khalifa International Stadium in Doha, Qatar, Monday, Nov 21, 2022. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino)

His replacement, Hossein Hosseini, was left with the unenviable task of facing England’s potent attack.

The match had a total of 29 minutes of stoppage time, 15 minutes in the first half and 14 in the second.

After the match, Iran coach Carlos Queiroz pleaded with fans to support the team following apparent boos during the national anthem amid protests in the nation for women’s rights.

“All the Iranians in the stadium are welcome, and feel free to criticise,” he said. “Those who come to disturb the team with issues that are not only about football opinions are not welcome. They are just simple football boys. They have one dream, to play football. It is not their fault that the World Cup happens at the moment.

The moral is: Let the kids play the game. They want to represent the country, represent the people.”

Brilliant BellinghamBellingham had not even made his senior debut by the time of the last World Cup in 2018. Now the Borussia Dortmund midfielder is one of the most coveted players in Europe and is expected to spark a major transfer battle at the end of the season. Monday’s performance is likely to see his reputation grow even more.

Kane’s okaySouthgate said Harry Kane was not injured despite concerns when he went down under a challenge in the second half and was later substituted.”I think Harry is fine,” the coach said. “It looked a bad tackle, but he carried on and we took him off because we thought it was a moment when we could do that.”

Up nextEngland faces the United States on Friday and Iran takes on Wales.___By JAMES ROBSON

AP Soccer Writer

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Commonwealth Parliamentary Association: Members becoming republics not a threat

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Commonwealth Parliamentary Association Secretary Stephen Twigg, speaks at the 11th Commonwealth Youth Parliament, Red House, Port of Spain on Monday November 21. – Photo by Angelo Marcelle

SECRETARY-GENERAL of the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association Stephen Twigg said member countries seeking to become republics is not a threat to the Commonwealth. He urged open discussions on the Commonwealth’s “problematic history.”

He was speaking at the opening ceremony of the 11th Commonwealth Youth Parliament at the Red House on Monday morning.

Twigg said just before the opening, there was a meet-and-greetevent with the 56 participants at which he was asked about the future and role of the Commonwealth going forward.

He said the question was “very correctly located in the context of some of the controversy of the history of the Commonwealth…

“The colonial legacy, the impact of slavery. “An opportunity to have an open, honest debate about the problematic history of the Commonwealth only serves to strengthen our organisation going forward.”

He acknowledged the presence of representatives from Barbados, noting that the country recently became a republic.

Republics can remain members of the Commonwealth, and Barbados opted for this, as did TT in 1976.

That decision, Twigg said, “prompted a lot of discussion around the future of the Commonwealth.

“(But) actually, the majority of members of the Commonwealth are republics. It is no threat to the Commonwealth.”

He said with the passing of Queen Elizabeth II and King Charles III taking over, there is an opportunity for young people to discuss what the Commonwealth means to them.

“(Discuss) what the Commonwealth means – yes, in terms of its history and its legacy – but the Commonwealth today and perhaps most importantly, the Commonwealth of the future.”

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Fondes Amandes NGO leads bush, forest fire policy talks

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Merikin tradition: Akilah Jaramogi remembers hill rice was just one of many crops her grandmother planted as part of a Merikin tradition of agricultural self-sufficiency. Photo by Shereen Ali

THE ST ANN’s community-based Fondes Amandes Community Reforestation Project (FACRP) has engaged private- and public-sector stakeholders for its second series of consultations to develop a comprehensive draft national bush and forest fire policy (DNBFF).

Earlier this month the FACRP, led by co-founder and executive director Akilah Jaramogi, hosted a workshop for a number of crucial stakeholders from the police and fire services, the Environmental Management Authority, the Ministry of Agriculture’s Forestry Division and the Institute of Marine Affairs, among others.

It was staged in partnership with UWI’s Institute of Gender and Development Studies (IGDS).

Technical director and environmentalist Kemba Jaramogi told Newsday the second of three workshops was designed “to (measure) how we’re doing with this policy; where we’re going; what can be done differently; what more needs to be added; and what type of work they (public stakeholders) are doing to complement the work we’re suggesting or promoting in the policy.

“The original idea is that we wanted to set up a national fire management plan, and then, because the pandemic started, we had to switch gears and we thought, ‘What better way to have that concrete, long-term impact?’”

Among the main goals of the draft policy are: to reduce the frequency, intensity and prevalence of bush and forest fires (BFF) in TT; improve co-ordination of BFF management resources, knowledge and skills among stakeholders; updating the legislative framework governing BFF; develop an integrated technology-enabled system for BFF monitoring and data-sharing; and increasing participation of the public in BFF management.

Although the FACRP wants to complete the draft policy by next July or August, Jaramogi is wary, knowing policies can and do sometimes take decades to be implemented.

And, apart from adopting a policy, Jaramogi said, there is the important matter of policing and enforcement, which has proven the biggest hurdles in preventing and combating forest and bush fires.

“In terms of looking at policing and holding people accountable, long-time you could’ve said, ‘That’s a man from the community,’ and you hold him and carry him to the police station…

“Now (you have) a situation where there is so much disaggregation in communities; you don’t have the gelling in communities like you used to. You have people moving out and moving in.

“In terms of policing, we really need the State to play an active role just because people are more careful for (their safety).”

Policy consultant Taresa Best explained the relationship between the FACRP and UWI’s IGDS in developing the policy.

“One of our greatest challenges when it comes to all policies is the inability for us to conceptualise the different ways in which any issue affects men equally, differently and in (different) contexts.

“So what you found is that in the last ten years, the UN has made a point of implementing and promoting the implementation of policies from a gender-mainstreaming perspective.

“It’s not about looking at women,” she said, but about looking at the different ways policy affects different genders.

“When it comes to BFF, we understand a couple things. We know that men are particularly involved in fighting of fires.

“What we also know is that when it comes to the tending of land, women play a particular role.”

Best said the FACRP, for example, was led by an “influential patriarch,” but later dominated by a group of mostly women when he passed on.

“There’s another way of looking at it: when a house floods, how does that affect a family? The cleaning up, taking care of the children, who’s setting the fires (leading to floods), what’s the reason for setting the fires?

“It takes a gendered lens with a view to understanding the role that men and women may play differently so that we can also effect change with that in mind.”

The FACRP celebrates its 40th anniversary as a formal organisation this year. Although founded in 1982 by husband and wife team Tacuma and Akilah Jaramogi, the organisation’s unofficial roots date back to the 1970s.

Since the early 1990s, the community project has been transformed from an informal group to an award-winning organisation, trusted with private and public grants to undertake ecological restoration works and many other initiatives.

The FACRP has been subject to a number of case studies, including one funded by the EU and published in 2010.

One of its findings was that: “The annual occurrence of fires set during the dry season for farming, hunting, garbage-burning, bush-clearing, for mischief or by accident, began to further transform the landscape, establishing areas of fire climax grassland punctuated by bamboo, cocorite palm and other fire-tolerant species.

“By the 1980s, Fondes Amandes was identified as a fire ‘hot spot,’ the frequent origin of fires that would then sweep up and pass over adjacent ridges.”

The prevalence of bush and forest fires is exacerbated, many stakeholders agree, by climate change.

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Pres Ali announces double payment for artistes who performed during One Guyana Cricket Carnival shows

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana
President Dr Irfaan Ali with artistes and other stakeholders at State House this morning

President Dr Irfaan Ali this morning announced that the PPP/C Government will double the payments for all the local artistes who performed at the various ‘One Guyana’ shows during the inaugural Cricket Carnival.

The Head of State made this revelation at State House where he engaged the artistes and other stakeholders who participated in the Cricket Carnival events.

According to Ali, he is proud of the talent displayed by Guyanese during the two weeks.

There were some 89 local artistes on the ‘One Guyana’ stage and according to the President, the government stood the cost of production while corporate sponsors were brought in to buy the tickets.

He added that all of the monies earned – $6.9 million in total – went to those 89 artistes, whose payments ranged from $100,000 to $300,000.

“But as your president and having committed that I always want better for you and I want more for you, after reviewing the entire CC and looking at ways at which we can further help you… I want to double what you get and the government is putting a further $6.9 million.”

This will see the artistes getting a minimum of $200,000 or a maximum of $600,000.

President Ali explained that the Cricket Carnival initiative was built to not only put Guyana on show and attract tourists but also showcase local talents.

As such, the Guyanese Leader bashed all those who have criticised the event and urge artistes to be bold in standing up for their talents.

“We are here to support you. We will defend you, we will stand up for you, we will promote you… This is what we are doing. We are also investing in the infrastructure but you have to help us… We have to all now become bold enough to tell those who continuously want to keep Guyana back that we are all for One Guyana now… All of us [must] stand up against the narrow-minded message or narrow-minded behaviour of [critics]…”

“I am not telling you to be political or embrace a common political party, I am asking everyone to embrace a common vision – united in purpose, vision, in strategy and in people,” he stated.

President Ali recalled that many were not confident that Guyana could pull off the Cricket Carnival but after the two-week success, which also includes hosting the Caribbean Premier League (CPL) semi-finals and final for the first time, there are many persons now – in the diaspora especially – asking for next year’s dates.

“We have been able to build a product that brings economic prosperity with it, artistic development, cultural development and one that I am sure will help us to improve and to be better.”

“We continue to be your partner in your own development and in the development of your culture, development of your talent in proportion of a One Guyana as a destination that is not only diverse by people and culture but is rich in talent and ready to explore on the international stage,” the president posited.

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COLUMN: Hoogie vs WK

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

ROZENGEUR / Gerold Rozenblad De aftrap is inmiddels gedaan, maar van een WK-koorts schijnt geen sprake te zijn. Hooguit een

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Vie chère, sécurité : les maires d’Outre-mer au bord de la crise de nerfs

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

POLITIQUE

Mary Bildy

Réunis à Paris, les maires de Guyane et de tout l’Outre-mer sont venus plaider leur cause et demander le soutien de l’État face à la double crise de l’inflation et de l’insécurité.

Vie chère, immigration, insécurité : les thèmes qui font les
gros titres de l’actualité dans l’Hexagone ces jours-ci sont connus
des maires ultramarins depuis de longues années déjà. « Dans
l’Outre-mer, les crises sont graves depuis bien longtemps : la
pauvreté y atteint des taux 5 à 15 fois supérieurs à ce qu’ils sont
dans l’Hexagone
», rappelait le président du Sénat,
Gérard Larcher,
lors de son discours d’accueil envers les
maires ultramarins.

Réunis à Paris à l’occasion du Congrès annuel des maires, les
élus sont venus de Guyane, des Antilles mais aussi de Polynésie
française ou encore de Mayotte et de l’océan Indien pour participer
à des ateliers, rencontrer leurs collègues hexagonaux, mais aussi
et surtout interpeller les au

NewsAmericasNow.com

Sandals treat residents out west for International Men’s Day Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News
Loop News

41 minutes ago – Updated

Soup vendor in Green Island, Hanover, Elsworth Foster matched Beaches Negril Junior Sales Executive, Asheika McNab’s energy; handing her a cup of soup as a sign of appreciation for his International Men’s Day treat.

NEWYou can now listen to Loop News articles!

In observance of International Men’s Day, team members from Sandals and Beaches Negril ventured into communities in Hanover and Westmoreland to show their appreciation to male residents under the theme: “Helping Men and Boys.”

The rehydration initiative impacted over 70 men hailing from several communities.

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DNA says Dalso did party a favour by resigning

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room
Massiah during launch of political campaign of DNA

We wish to thank former Col. Kelton Dalso for doing the Party a favour by formally submitting his resignation given his general open hostility, aggression and uncooperativeness towards colleagues since his appearance on the Dave Lester Payne’s show on February 22, 2022 along with Bruce Goodwin and Malaka Parker in which they called for a merger of the DNA with the UPP or, that the DNA be subsumed within the UPP.

We wish him well.

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