Loop Lens: An ‘Xodus’ from the ‘Bacch’! Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

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By the looks of it, this patron fully endorses the Bacchanal Jamaica x Xodus Carnival sugar rush. (Photos: Marlon Reid)

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‘Tis the first official band launch for the 2023 Carnival season, and patrons and stakeholders alike are rearing to get on bad.

Since Xodus Carnival and Bacchanal Jamaica dropped the plot twist for Carnival Road March 2023, fans have been teeming with anticipation in response to the merger and tonight’s reveal.

This was evident from tonight’s massive turnout at Mona Hockey Field in Kingston for the Xodus Sweet Treats Indulge in Pleasure and Bacchanal Jamaica Candy Land band launches.

Loop Lens takes you to the stage with these highlights!

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Trini referee makes the calls at World Cup in Qatar

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Caleb Wales makes a call during a football match. –

DAVID SCARLETT

THE illustrious FIFA World Cup is here again, bringing together casual fans, fanatics and bandwagonists for one month of thrilling, heart-breaking and exciting football.

Four years since the previous tournament was held in Russia, Qatar opens its doors to the world for the largest event on the sporting calendar.

It’s been 16 years since the Soca Warriors made TT proud with a maiden appearance at the World Cup. TT did not qualify for Qatar 2022 but there is still much to be proud of.

Twenty years since Michael Ragoonath, head of the TT Football Association (TTFA) Refereeing Department, graced the 2002 World Cup stage, the nation will, again, be proudly represented by one of TT’s most outstanding referees – Caleb Wales.

Refereeing is often seen as a villainous occupation. Whether referees make the right or wrong decision, some fans still believe they harbour sinister intentions against their favourite team.

But it is noteworthy to understand that referees are athletes and football lovers too, and only want the best for the game.

Refereeing in TT has been at a high level for some years now, particularly now under Ragoonath’s management.

Caleb Wales is a match official as an assistant referee at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar. – Photos courtesy Caleb Wales

Ragoonath was an assistant referee in South Korea and Japan and now uses his experience and expertise to develop both seasoned and budding referees across the nation.

Wales, 34, who has a background in information and communications technology (ICT), fell in love with officiating in his early adult years. It was then he decided to pursue refereeing as a career and later specialised as an assistant referee.

The Santa Cruz resident has been a TTFA referee since 2006 and was selected as an elite FIFA assistant referee in 2013. Since then, he has officiated in several Concacaf World Cup qualifiers, many Concacaf Champions League fixtures, the 2021 Gold Cup semifinal (Mexico vs Canada), and the 2021 Concacaf Nations League final (USA vs Mexico), in addition to matches and competitions in TT.

On May 19, Wales was selected by the FIFA Referee Committee to serve in Qatar.

He is now the fifth Trinidadian match official (fourth assistant referee) to fly the TT flag, as well as the checkered flag, at a World Cup.

His predecessors were Douglas James (assistant referee, USA 1994), Ramesh Ramdhan (referee, France 1998), Merere Gonzales (assistant referee, France 1998) and Ragoonath (assistant referee, Korea/Japan 2002).

Caleb Wales on duty during a match. –

In an interview with Sunday Newsday recently, Wales expressed his excitement to be on the world’s biggest stage in Qatar. “For me, it means a lot to be at the FIFA World Cup. It is the realisation of a lifelong goal to be a part of one of the biggest events in the world. It is also a big deal for my family, friends, colleagues, country, and wider region. I intend to do my best and make everyone proud,” he said.

Wales discussed the distinction between a referee and an assistant referee but stressed that the job is no easier.

“I prefer the more black-and-white decisions like offside (or not) and line decisions, such as ball in and out of play, or goal/no goal. Hence, it’s what I chose as we have more responsibility in such crucial decisions.

“I have stuck with it ever since. An assistant referee is also a match official so we must also be knowledgeable and prepared in all aspects of the laws of the game.”

Currently, Wales is accompanied by four other Trinidadians on FIFA’s elite panel. One is Ainsley Rochard, who is also an outstanding assistant referee with FIFA and Concacaf experience. They sport a FIFA badge on their chest alongside three women match officials – Crystal Sobers (referee), Cecile Hinds (referee) and Carissa Jacob (assistant referee).

Unfortunately, his local compatriots will not be joining him in Qatar.

But Wales believes that his breakthrough regarding World Cup selection can open the door for more local referees at the top level.

“I hope it does,” he said. “I am glad that I have proven that the door is still open for anyone looking to reach this point.

“I would like to see a full trio team (referee and two assistant referees) of Trini match officials at a World Cup one day, but it is a lot of hard work and commitment. We must be ready for it.”

He also highlighted that his preparations for the tournament have been “physical, mental and spiritual.” Most of his days leading up to the World Cup involved training, studying the game and praying that all goes well.

The competition’s referees arrived in Qatar on November 10 and Wales has been enjoying what he can in the Arab nation amidst his jam-packed schedule.

Despite the sweltering conditions – approximately 65 per cent humidity – that both players and referees will have to endure during the tournament, he was impressed by Qatar’s culture, infrastructure and love for their national team.

“It’s a very hot, dry country and their football is developing. I have seen the Qatari team at the Concacaf Gold Cup (2021), and they performed well.”

Qatar had an impressive campaign as an invited guest, topping Group D, which included Honduras and Panama, before defeating El Salvador 3-2 in the quarterfinals. They lost narrowly 1-0 to eventual champions USA in the semis.

An avid fan of Jamaican sprint legend Usain Bolt, Wales is relishing his World Cup experience so far, rubbing shoulders with the best of the best and keeping his eyes and ears open for knowledge.

“It’s like a dream come true. I, too, intend to be remembered as being one of the best, so I will learn as much as I can from the team.”

Although Wales has achieved one objective, he insists that he will not stop at this point. His next goal is to earn selection for the next World Cup, especially as it will be hosted in Concacaf territory (the United States, Mexico and Canada).

In addition to the quintet of the regular refereeing team (referee, two assistant referees, fourth official and reserve referee), as well as the video assistant referee (VAR) and the assistant video assistant referee, there will be three new roles at this year’s tournament – offside video assistant referee, support video assistant referee and stand-by assistant video assistant referee.

Therefore, there will be ten match officials appointed to every game in the competition.

However, Wales said that he will only be serving on the pitch as he is not yet trained to be in the Video Operation Room for VAR duty.

Also, for the first time in World Cup history, there will be women officiating at the tournament. Stephanie Frappart, who was the first woman to referee a professional men’s European match and a UEFA Champions League match, will lead the female contingent in Qatar.

Frappart will be accompanied by two other referees – Yamashita Yoshimi and Salima Mukansanga – as well as three assistant referees – Neuza Back, Karen Diaz Medina and Kathryn Nesbitt – as part of the 129 match officials at the tournament.

Wales was pleased to see his female colleagues joining him in Qatar. “It’s nothing new for me as I have been working with top women officials for men’s games on both the local and regional stage for many years.

“FIFA is setting the standard in that, if the referee is of high enough quality, then it doesn’t matter the gender of the official and I am always happy to be working with top quality match officials.”

Wales’ first World Cup appearance is yet to be determined as referees are appointed two to three days before a fixture.

He is grateful for the support he has been getting from his family, friends, FIFA colleagues, the TTFA Refereeing Department and the entire nation.

The Italian trio of Daneile Orsato (referee), Ciro Carbone (assistant referee) and Alessandro Giallatini (assistant referee) will take charge of the opening game between hosts Qatar and Ecuador on Sunday. Let the games begin – within the rules, of course.

NewsAmericasNow.com

Warner’s foul on Qatar’s World Cup bid

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Former FIFA vice president Jack Warner, right, hands the MVP trophy to France’s Florent Sinama-Pongolle, centre, at the 2001 FIFA U-17 World Championship in Trinidad. At left is ex-FIFA president Sepp Blatter. –

At noon Sunday, the first ball will be kicked off at the FIFA World Cup 2022 in Qatar.

While there is no national team in the competition, recent events in TT dredges up the controversy as to how the smallest nation ever became host to one of the biggest sporting events.

Late last week when TT’s apex court, the Privy Council, in London, ruled that former FIFA vice president Jack Warner could face extradition to the United States for a barrage of racketeering and bribery charges.

The decision to chose Qatar made in 2010 as host nation for the 2022 games has been questioned and linked to allegations of bribery and corruption by those FIFA officials who voted for the Gulf nation.

Ex-FIFA head Sepp Blatter recently admitted choosing Qatar was a bad choice.

International media reports have linked Warner, who was barred by FIFA for life in 2015 after his grand jury indictment in the US, as being instrumental in the bid which allowed Qatar to get the nod to host this year’s tournament.

In 2020, documents released by the US Department of Justice’s in the indictment filed in the US District Court of New York’s Brooklyn Office set out the allegations in relation to the 2018 and 2022 voting bid for Russia and Qatar.

Jack Warner at a press conference ahead of the FIFA U20 World Cup, in Cairo, Egypt in September 2009.-

It said, “On or about December 2, 2010, in Zurich, Switzerland, the FIFA executive committee selected the host sites for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups, in separate rounds of voting for each edition of the tournament, with each executive committee member casting an equally weighted vote. “Under the voting rules, if no bid received a majority of the votes cast, the bid receiving the fewest votes was eliminated and another vote was held.

“The process was repeated until one bid received an outright majority of the votes. Russia received a majority of votes in the second round of voting for the 2018 World Cup. Qatar received a majority of votes in the fourth round of voting for the 2022 World Cup.

The indictment went on to add, “Several executive committee members were offered or received bribes in connection with their votes. For example, the defendant Ricardo Teixeira (the former leader of football in Brazil), Nicolas Leoz (former president of the South American Football Federation) and co-conspirator# 1 were offered and received bribe payments in exchange for their votes in favour of Qatar to host the 2022 World Cup.”

Warner’s name was mentioned next, “In addition, the defendant Jack Warner was promised and received bribe payments totalling US$5 million and Rafael Salguero was promised a US$1 million bribe in exchange for their votes in favour of Russia to host the 2018 World Cup.”

The US Department of Justice documents explained the 2018 and 2022 World Cup vote schemes.

“In or about and between 2009 and 2010, bid committees working on behalf of various nations prepared presentations in support of bids to host either the 2018 or 2022 World Cup.

In this 2015 file photo, forme FIFA vice president Jack Warner leaves the Port of Spain magistrate court after his appearance on an extradition request by the United States. – ANGELO MARCELLE

Ultimately, bid committees representing Russia, England, a joint bid by Spain and Portugal and a joint bid by the Netherlands and Belgium submitted bids to host the 2018 World Cup, and bid committees representing the United States, Qatar, Japan, South Korea and Australia submitted bids to host the 2022 World Cup.”

Warner recently told Trinidad online news outlet AZP News he thought it was Russia’s time to host the World Cup.

“Where I failed I should have told England very early of what my intention was. I did not do that and therefore they were led along to believe I was supporting them. I failed, I erred and I apologise profusely for that but I thought it was Russia’s time to host a World Cup and I have no regret.”

Warner’s name was linked to Qatari football administrator and ex-head of the Asian Football Confederation Mohammed Bin Hamman in 2014. Warner was then head of the Confederation of North, Central American and Caribbean Association Football (Concacaf). A FIFA ethics judge named both men as having contravened rules regarding payments.

At the time, a FIFA statement said: “The subject of the criminal complaint is the possible misconduct of individual persons in connection with the awarding of the hosting rights of the 2018 and 2022 World Cups investigated by Michael Garcia (chairman of the FIFA Ethics Committee investigatory chamber).

“In particular there seem to be grounds for suspicion that, in isolated cases, international transfers of assets with connections to Switzerland took place, which merit examination by the criminal prosecution authorities.”

Both men were suspended and vociferously maintained their innocence.

The Qatar 2022 organising committee has repeatedly denied any involvement in corruption during the chaotic and ill-defined World Cup bidding race, and sought to distance itself from Bin Hammam, the UK Guardian newspaper wrote.

Warner, who resigned from football for life in June 2012, again maintained his innocence on Thursday.

Hours after the Privy Council’s decision went public, he said in a statement, it was “unfathomable” for a US district attorney to commence a prosecution against him “based solely on the fact that monies payable to me passed through the American banking system.”

Warner said he has no bank account or property in the US, nor has he done any business there.

“Furthermore, it is incredulous that allegations of misconduct arising out of a FIFA meeting held in Trinidad could be prosecuted in the United States whereas, in Trinidad itself it does not constitute criminal activity.”’

A defiant Warner also said, “I have lived in this country for nearly eighty years, and I am confident that I will continue to receive the love, affection, and respect that people from all walks of life have always extended to me. I am certain I will prevail in the end.”

Although extradition proceedings in the magistrates’ court can now resume, Warner said he has advised his attorneys to continue to press the remaining stages of the extradition proceedings.

Warner challenged the process by which the extradition proceedings against him were being carried out and sought to quash the authority to proceed (ATP) signed by the Attorney General in September 2015.

This was after the US made its request to have the former football jefe extradited to face some 29 charges of fraud, corruption and money laundering. The US’s request was made on July 24, 2015.

After the 2015 general election, then-attorney general Faris Al-Rawi offered to allow Warner to make representations, but only on the condition the deadline for receipt of the ATP would be extended with his consent.

Warner refused to agree to the condition. His attorneys said he was not given sufficient time to make representations nor was he provided with disclosures of any evidence the US intended to use to secure his extradition.

The ATP gave the magistrate the green light to begin committal proceedings.

Warner surrendered to fraud squad officers on May 27, 2015, after learning of a provisional warrant for his arrest.

After the ATP was signed giving the go-ahead for extradition proceedings to start, Warner was banned from all football activities for life by FIFA.

He and 13 other FIFA officials were indicted in the US.

According to the US charge sheet against him, Warner is accused of racketeering, wire fraud, money laundering, and bribery; and allegedly, from the early 1990s, “began to leverage his influence and exploit his official positions for personal gain.”

He also allegedly accepted a million-dollar bribe from South African officials in return for voting to award them the 2010 World Cup and allegedly bribed officials with envelopes each containing cash.

He was one of 14 charged in connection with a 24-year scheme to allegedly “enrich themselves through the corruption of international soccer.”

On Thursday, Warner said FIFA was an independent association not affiliated to any government or country.

“At all times it sought, in the interest of football, to offer opportunities to the widest cross section of the international community to host the World Cup.

“Particular attention was paid to developing countries who have been denied economic opportunity partly because for long periods they were under colonial domination.”

He said FIFA gave preference to South Africa, Russia and Qatar to host World Cup finals.

Warner said, “Naturally, the United States of America and the United Kingdom who had previously hosted the World Cup were not selected despite sustained lobbying.

“They were therefore not pleased and thereafter began a campaign against FIFA which resulted in the arrest and prosecution of several executive committee members of FIFA who had assembled for a meeting in Zurich.”

Warner said several European countries, including France and Switzerland; several Latin American countries, including Brazil, and several African and Middle Eastern countries have refused to extradite their citizens.

“Trinidad and Tobago is therefore an outlier,” he said on Thursday.

Warner is a former UNC minister. He was described as a politician, businessman and former FIFA vice president who was charged by the prosecuting authorities in the United States with crimes spanning more than three decades.

Attorney General Reginald Armour, SC, found this description to be significant and specifically referred to it in a press release on the Privy Council’s ruling.

Armour also said the law must now be allowed to take its course and that “the rule of law and due process are alive and well in TT.”

And while Warner’s name has been vilified, football stakeholders locally said he contributed significantly to the growth of the sport here and in the Caribbean.

NewsAmericasNow.com

Point Fortin man critical after shot in neck

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

File photo –

Gunmen pretending to be police shot and wounded a man in his home at Point Fortin early Saturday.

The victim Rishi “Nemo” Ramlal, 30, of Fanny Village, Point Fortin, was listed in a critical condition at the San Fernando General Hospital, police said.

A bullet entered the front of his neck and exited on the right side, upper back, police said..

A police report said at around 3 am, Ramlal and his girlfriend, 22, were asleep but were awoken by banging on the front door.

She reported that she heard a male voice saying, “Police, Police.”

However, they did not open the door and, shortly after, they heard several explosions.

She then saw Ramlal bleeding from a wound to his neck and called a relative by phone for help.

Ramlal was taken to the Point Fortin Hospital.

The police recovered several 5.56 mm spent shells at the scene.

Insp Ali, Sgt Gosine and other the South Western Division police visited the scene and gathered information.

The shooters remained at large, up to Saturday afternoon.

PC Ferdinand is leading investigations.

NewsAmericasNow.com

La COP27 adopte un texte sur les dégâts climatiques aux plus pauvres

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Après des négociations longues et difficiles qui ont largement débordé le calendrier prévu, la COP27 a ouvert en pleine nuit de samedi à dimanche sa séance de clôture en adoptant un texte très disputé sur l’aide…

Après des négociations longues et difficiles qui ont largement débordé le calendrier prévu, la COP27 a ouvert en pleine nuit de samedi à dimanche sa séance de clôture en adoptant un texte très disputé sur l’aide aux pays pauvres impactés par le changement climatique.

Le président de la conférence, le ministre égyptien des Affaires étrangères Sameh Choukri, a “imploré” les délégués de près de 200 pays réunis depuis deux semaines dans la station balnéaire de Charm el-Cheikh d’adopter les résolutions qui doivent leur être présentées.

M. Choukri a assuré qu’elles reflétaient des “équilibres délicats” et “la plus haute ambition qui puisse être atteinte à ce moment”, illustration des difficultés qu’a rencontrées cette COP, sous une présidence égyptienne très critiquée.

Il a immédiatement soumis aux délégués, qui se prononcent par consensus, la résolution la plus emblématique de cette édition, qualifiée d’historique par ses promoteurs, sur la compensation des dégâts causés par le changement climatique déjà subis par les pays les plus pauvres.

Mais il a dû ensuite accepter une suspension de séance de 30 minutes, réclamée par la délégation suisse qui a souligné que les délégués n’avaient reçu un autre texte très important, la déclaration finale globale, que “quelques minutes” avant le début de la séance et ne pouvaient donc pas se prononcer dessus.

Le dossier des “pertes et dommages” climatiques des pays pauvres avait failli faire dérailler la conférence, avant de faire l’objet d’un texte de compromis de dernière minute qui laisse de nombreuses questions en suspens, mais acte le principe de la création d’un fonds financier spécifique.

Recul critiqué

Le texte sur les réductions d’émissions a été également très disputé, de nombreux pays dénonçant ce qu’ils considéraient comme un recul sur les ambitions définies lors de précédentes conférences.

Notamment sur l’objectif le plus ambitieux de l’accord de Paris, contenir le réchauffement à 1,5°C par rapport à l’ère pré-industrielle.

Car les engagements actuels des pays signataires de l’accord ne permettent pas de tenir cet objectif, ni même celui de contenir l’élévation de la température à 2°C par rapport à l’ère pré-industrielle, quand les humains ont commencé à utiliser en masse les énergies fossiles responsables du réchauffement climatique.

Ces engagements, en admettant qu’ils soient intégralement tenus, mettraient au mieux le monde sur la trajectoire de +2,4°C à la fin du siècle et, au rythme actuel des émissions, sur celle d’un catastrophique +2,8°C.

Or, à près de 1,2°C de réchauffement actuellement, les impacts dramatiques du changement climatique se multiplient déjà.

L’année 2022 en a été l’illustration, avec son cortège de sécheresses, méga-feux et inondations dévastatrices, impactant récoltes et infrastructures.

Les coûts de ces événements extrêmes s’envolent également: la Banque mondiale a ainsi estimé à 30 milliards de dollars le coût des inondations qui ont laissé un tiers du territoire pakistanais sous l’eau pendant des semaines et fait des millions de sinistrés.

Les pays pauvres, souvent parmi les plus exposés mais qui sont généralement très peu responsables du réchauffement, réclamaient depuis des années un financement des “pertes et dommages” qu’ils subissent.

“Suspects habituels”

La bataille ne s’achèvera pas avec l’adoption de la résolution de Charm el-Cheikh puisque celle-ci reste volontairement vague sur certains points controversés.

Les détails opérationnels doivent être définis pour adoption à la prochaine COP, fin 2023 aux Emirats arabes unis, promettant de nouveaux affrontements. Notamment sur la question des contributeurs, les pays développés insistant pour que la Chine en fasse partie.

Autre sujet qui a secoué la COP: les ambitions de réductions d’émissions.

De nombreux pays ont estimé que les textes proposés par la présidence égyptienne constituaient un retour en arrière sur les engagements d’en relever régulièrement le niveau pris en 2021 à la COP de Glasgow.

Sans compter la question de la réduction de l’usage des énergies fossiles, à l’origine du réchauffement mais à peine mentionnées dans la plupart des textes sur le climat.

Le charbon avait été mentionné en 2021 après de rudes échanges mais à Charm el-Cheikh les “suspects habituels”, selon l’expression d’un délégué, s’y sont une nouvelle fois opposés pour le pétrole et le gaz. Arabie saoudite, Iran ou Russie sont les noms de pays les plus souvent avancés.

so-jmi/uh/elm

Les marais asséchés de Chibayich en Irak, le 24 juillet 2022
• Asaad NIAZI

Les scénarios du réchauffement climatique
• Simon MALFATTO

NewsAmericasNow.com

La COP27 adopte un texte sur les dégâts climatiques aux plus pauvres

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guadeloupe FranceAntilles

Après des négociations longues et difficiles qui ont largement débordé le calendrier prévu, la COP27 a ouvert en pleine nuit de samedi à dimanche sa séance de clôture en adoptant un texte très disputé sur l’aide…

Après des négociations longues et difficiles qui ont largement débordé le calendrier prévu, la COP27 a ouvert en pleine nuit de samedi à dimanche sa séance de clôture en adoptant un texte très disputé sur l’aide aux pays pauvres impactés par le changement climatique.

Le président de la conférence, le ministre égyptien des Affaires étrangères Sameh Choukri, a “imploré” les délégués de près de 200 pays réunis depuis deux semaines dans la station balnéaire de Charm el-Cheikh d’adopter les résolutions qui doivent leur être présentées.

M. Choukri a assuré qu’elles reflétaient des “équilibres délicats” et “la plus haute ambition qui puisse être atteinte à ce moment”, illustration des difficultés qu’a rencontrées cette COP, sous une présidence égyptienne très critiquée.

Il a immédiatement soumis aux délégués, qui se prononcent par consensus, la résolution la plus emblématique de cette édition, qualifiée d’historique par ses promoteurs, sur la compensation des dégâts causés par le changement climatique déjà subis par les pays les plus pauvres.

Mais il a dû ensuite accepter une suspension de séance de 30 minutes, réclamée par la délégation suisse qui a souligné que les délégués n’avaient reçu un autre texte très important, la déclaration finale globale, que “quelques minutes” avant le début de la séance et ne pouvaient donc pas se prononcer dessus.

Le dossier des “pertes et dommages” climatiques des pays pauvres avait failli faire dérailler la conférence, avant de faire l’objet d’un texte de compromis de dernière minute qui laisse de nombreuses questions en suspens, mais acte le principe de la création d’un fonds financier spécifique.

Recul critiqué

Le texte sur les réductions d’émissions a été également très disputé, de nombreux pays dénonçant ce qu’ils considéraient comme un recul sur les ambitions définies lors de précédentes conférences.

Notamment sur l’objectif le plus ambitieux de l’accord de Paris, contenir le réchauffement à 1,5°C par rapport à l’ère pré-industrielle.

Car les engagements actuels des pays signataires de l’accord ne permettent pas de tenir cet objectif, ni même celui de contenir l’élévation de la température à 2°C par rapport à l’ère pré-industrielle, quand les humains ont commencé à utiliser en masse les énergies fossiles responsables du réchauffement climatique.

Ces engagements, en admettant qu’ils soient intégralement tenus, mettraient au mieux le monde sur la trajectoire de +2,4°C à la fin du siècle et, au rythme actuel des émissions, sur celle d’un catastrophique +2,8°C.

Or, à près de 1,2°C de réchauffement actuellement, les impacts dramatiques du changement climatique se multiplient déjà.

L’année 2022 en a été l’illustration, avec son cortège de sécheresses, méga-feux et inondations dévastatrices, impactant récoltes et infrastructures.

Les coûts de ces événements extrêmes s’envolent également: la Banque mondiale a ainsi estimé à 30 milliards de dollars le coût des inondations qui ont laissé un tiers du territoire pakistanais sous l’eau pendant des semaines et fait des millions de sinistrés.

Les pays pauvres, souvent parmi les plus exposés mais qui sont généralement très peu responsables du réchauffement, réclamaient depuis des années un financement des “pertes et dommages” qu’ils subissent.

“Suspects habituels”

La bataille ne s’achèvera pas avec l’adoption de la résolution de Charm el-Cheikh puisque celle-ci reste volontairement vague sur certains points controversés.

Les détails opérationnels doivent être définis pour adoption à la prochaine COP, fin 2023 aux Emirats arabes unis, promettant de nouveaux affrontements. Notamment sur la question des contributeurs, les pays développés insistant pour que la Chine en fasse partie.

Autre sujet qui a secoué la COP: les ambitions de réductions d’émissions.

De nombreux pays ont estimé que les textes proposés par la présidence égyptienne constituaient un retour en arrière sur les engagements d’en relever régulièrement le niveau pris en 2021 à la COP de Glasgow.

Sans compter la question de la réduction de l’usage des énergies fossiles, à l’origine du réchauffement mais à peine mentionnées dans la plupart des textes sur le climat.

Le charbon avait été mentionné en 2021 après de rudes échanges mais à Charm el-Cheikh les “suspects habituels”, selon l’expression d’un délégué, s’y sont une nouvelle fois opposés pour le pétrole et le gaz. Arabie saoudite, Iran ou Russie sont les noms de pays les plus souvent avancés.

so-jmi/uh/elm

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• Asaad NIAZI

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NewsAmericasNow.com

Musk restores Trump’s Twitter Account after Online Poll

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

Elon Musk reinstated Donald Trump’s account on Twitter on Saturday, reversing a ban that has kept the former president off the social media site since a pro-Trump mob attacked the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, as Congress was poised to certify Joe Biden’s election victory.

Musk made the announcement in the evening after holding a poll that asked Twitter users to click “yes” or “no” on whether Trump’s account should be restored.

The “yes” vote won, with 51.2 per cent.

“The people have spoken. Trump will be reinstated. Vox Populi, Vox Dei,” Musk tweeted,

using a Latin phrase meaning “the voice of the people, the voice of God.”

Shortly afterward Trump’s account, which had earlier appeared as suspended, reappeared on the platform complete with his former tweets, more than 59,000 of them.

However his followers were gone,at least initially.

It is not clear whether Trump would actually return to Twitter.

An irrepressible tweeter before he was banned, Trump has said in the past that he would not rejoin even if his account was reinstated.

He has been relying on his own, much smaller social media site, TruthSocial, which he launched after being blocked from Twitter.

And on Saturday, during a video speech to a Republican Jewish group meeting in Las Vegas,

Trump said that he was aware of Musk’s poll but that he saw “a lot of problems at Twitter,” according t Bloomberg.

“I hear we’re getting a big vote to also go back on Twitter. I don’t see it because I don’t see any reason for it,” Trump was quoted as saying by Bloomberg.

“It may make it, it may not make it,” he added, apparently referring to Twitter’s recent internal upheavals.

The prospect of restoring Trump’s presence to the platform follows Musk’s purchase last month of Twitter — an acquisition that has fanned widespread concern that the billionaire owner will allow purveyors of lies and misinformation to flourish on the site.

Musk has frequently expressed his belief that Twitter had become too restrictive of freewheeling speech.

His efforts to reshape the site have been both swift and chaotic.

Musk has fired many of the company’s 7,500 full-time workers and an untold number of contractors who are responsible for content moderation and other crucial responsibilities.

His demand that remaining employees pledge to “extremely hardcore” work triggered a wave of resignations, including hundreds of software engineers.

Users have reported seeing increased spam and scams on their feeds and in their direct messages, among other glitches, in the aftermath of the mass layoffs and worker exodus.

Some programmers who were fired or resigned this week warned that Twitter may soon fray so badly it could actually crash.

Musk’s online survey, which ran for 24 hours before ending Saturday evening, concluded with 51.2% of more than 15 million votes favoring the restoration of Trump’s Twitter’ account.

It comes four days after Trump announced his candidacy for the presidency in 2024.

Trump lost his access to Twitter two days after his supporters stormed the Capitol, soon after the former president had exhorted them to “fight like hell.”

Twitter dropped his account after Trump wrote a pair of tweets that the company said cast further doubts on the legitimacy of the presidential election and raised risks for the Biden presidential inauguration.

After the Jan. 6 attack, Trump was also kicked off Facebook and Instagram, which are owned by Meta Platforms, and Snapchat.

His ability to post videos to his YouTube channel was also suspended.

Facebook is set to reconsider Trump’s account suspension in January.

Throughout his tenure as president, Trump’s use of social media posed a significant challenge to major social media platforms that sought to balance the public’s interest in hearing from public officials with worries about misinformation, bigotry, harassment and incitement of violence.

But in a speech at an auto conference in May, Musk asserted that Twitter’s ban of Trump was a “morally bad decision” and “foolish in the extreme.”

Earlier this month, Musk, who completed the $44 billion takeover of Twitter in late October, declared that the company wouldn’t let anyone who had been kicked off the site return until Twitter had established procedures on how to do so, including forming a “content moderation council.”

On Friday, Musk tweeted that the suspended Twitter accounts for the comedian Kathy Griffin, the Canadian psychologist Jordan Peterson and the conservative Christian news satire website Babylon Bee had been reinstated.

He added that a decision on Trump had not yet been made. He also responded “no” when someone on Twitter asked him to reinstate the conspiracy theorist Alex Jones’ account.

In a tweet Friday, the Tesla CEO described the company’s new content policy as “freedom of speech, but not freedom of reach.”

He explained that a tweet deemed to be “negative” or to include “hate” would be allowed on the site but would be visible only to users who specifically searched for it.

Such tweets also would be “demonetized, so no ads or other revenue to Twitter,” Musk said.

SOURCE: The Associated Press

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EU delegation notes Trinidad and Tobago’s progress on ‘fair taxation’

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

MITTCO employee Jaijah Codrington shows how a steel pan is made to COLAC chair Tomas Ortegas Reyes, centre, and EU Ambassador Peter Cavendish in Diego Martin on Saturday. – SUREASH CHOLAI

The Working Party on Latin America and the Caribbean of the Council of the EU (COLAC) discussed Trinidad and Tobago being removed from the EU’s list of non-cooperative jurisdictions for tax purposes during it visit to TT, but no decision has been made.

Speaking to members of the media after a tour of the steelpan manufacturing facility, The Musical Instruments of TT Company Limited (MITTCO), in Diego Martin, on Saturday COLAC Chair, Tomas Ortegas Reyes said the country had made progress.

“We have listened to our partners here. We have explained why this is important. Fair taxation is extremely important, not only in TT or the Caribbean but in the world at large. This is an aim we certainly share. In particular, in this area, TT has made important progress that we have taken note of.”

TT is one of 12 on a list of tax havens including American Samoa, Anguilla, The Bahamas, Fiji, Panama, and the US Virgin Islands.

European Union (EU) Ambassador to TT, Peter Cavendish, also praised TT for speaking out on behalf of the rules-based international order, denouncing Russia’s “unjustified aggression” against Ukraine, and its “deep and strong” democratic values.

“It’s not at all afraid to use it’s voice in the international arena. And I say well-done TT for using your democratic right on the international scene to condemn wrongdoing.”

Twelve COLAC delegates from eight of the 27 member states – Czech Republic, Germany, Finland, France, Ireland, Luxembourg, Slovenia and Spain – were on a working visit to the Caribbean, specifically St Lucia, Barbados and TT.

They met with government officials, business leaders, civil society, and experienced what TT had to offer in terms of its food, nature and beaches.

Reyes said the visit made the delegates recognise there was a “closeness” in the way the EU and the Caribbean had concerns about food and energy security, saw the world and the rules-based international order.

The rules-based international system, created by leading democratic allies at the end of World War II, is a system based on principles relevant to governance, global security, and the economy. The rules encourages peaceful and cooperative behaviour consistent with liberal values and principles.

“We also share preoccupations for very important things for the planet, such as the climate, such as the importance of having sustainable recovery after the covid… And important issues such as the digital alliance that could be so important for the development of the region and Trinidad,” said Reyes.

He said the discussions proved the Caribbean was a real partner with whom they could work.

On the topic of MITTCO, Cavendish described the steelpan as an exceptional instrument and a work of genius.

“We consider that this instrument celebrates, promotes and justifies the creative talent, the creative genius, the creative pool that exists in this country. We’re extremely pleased to see this facility and we really wish it the strongest and greatest success for the future. It’s a world-class product and we hope it gets world-class appreciation.”

Reyes added that the delegates had an intense experience full of sunshine and energy to carry back to Brussels, the administrative centre of the EU, and that he would love to hear pan players perform the European anthem.

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Road deaths climb to 79: survivor recounts trauma of crash

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Sgt Brent Batson addresses the media after assessing the Macoya and Priority Bus Route intersection, the site of several collisions, on May 1 – JEFF K MAYERS/FILE PHOTO

THE world marks World Day of Remembrance for Road Traffic Victims on Sunday, and for many people, that has a personal, painful meaning.

One survivor is pleading with drivers to consider the trauma families are left to endure after road fatalities.

Each time Shurnelle Sobra, 35, sees a road-traffic accident, she’s nauseated.

This paranoia started 14 years ago on October 7, when Sobra got into a maxi designated to take her to school at Vessigny Secondary School, La Brea.

She said the maxi tried to overtake a bus when at the same time a vehicle was coming from the other direction. The maxi unsuccessfully tried to pull back into its lane, but collided with the bus.

“I just remember being on the side of the road covered in mud. I couldn’t move any part of my body. People were trying to wash mud from my eyes.

“My family believed I had died, because they didn’t see me on the scene.

“All this time I was in and out of consciousness while being taken to the hospital.”

She spent five days in the ICU unit with a broken leg, a fractured collarbone, bruised lungs and cuts to her head from the impact. Then she was moved to another ward and her leg was put in traction to help it heal.

“My parents asked that they put a cast on it, but they said I needed to learn to walk with crutches.”

After a full month of physiotherapy, her leg broke again when she tried to walk for the first time.

“I stayed in the hospital for another month, and this time with the cast my mother had asked for in the first place.”

Doctors eventually discharged her two days before Christmas, in a wheelchair and still unable to walk. She told Sunday Newsday her road to recovery had started, but a nightmare she thought was over returned to haunt her family in 2009 and 2013.

Her aunt and uncle were involved in a fatal car accident on Christmas morning. Her uncle died of his injuries and her aunt slipped into a coma and died months later.

Then in 2013, her sister, two cousins and another friend were involved in an accident. The friend died in the crash.

Sobra struggled even more in her recovery journey. She returned to school in January the year after the accident, and started walking in July.

“Every time I tell my story, I have a different experience.

“I won’t say I get sad over it any more. It’s more like a level of gratitude and some reflection at every stage of how far I’ve come.”

She urges drivers not to drink and drive, and to be patient on the roads.

“The accidents with me and my aunt involved alcohol. While you might survive the accident, the other people involved might not survive. Think about what their family would have to go through.

“To this day I still have anxiety. The only thing that helped me was God.”

As Sobra continues her long recovery, another woman is just starting hers after a car killed her father in a hit-and-run accident in July.

Anthony Harris, 60, who was a freelance sports photographer with Guardian Media Ltd, was hit by a car while cycling around the Queen’s Park Savannah, Port of Spain, on July 10. He died at the Port of Spain General Hospital the following day.

His daughter Charisse Harris felt it was important to let the public know of her trauma in an interview with Sunday Newsday on Thursday.

“No one speaks about it. It is real. People need to know seeking help is not a bad thing.”

Normally, the World Day of Remembrance for Road Traffic Victims would be an ordinary day for Harris, but this year it is a grim reminder of her father’s death.

Harris, the eldest of three daughters, said the family is “fair to fine – with lots of scattered showers,” when asked how they have been coping.

She explained, “We are okay as we can possibly be. It is very hard on all of us, as my dad was the glue of the entire family. So a very important part of the family is missing.”

She urged families who are struggling to deal with the loss of a relative in a road-traffic accident to stick together.

“Tragedy and death does a lot to people, and if you see you are spiralling down a very slippery slope, do not be afraid to seek help and seek therapy. Nothing is wrong with you for seeking help therapy.

Today, she said, “means to me one of the recognised days to remember and appreciate victims of the road. Bike lives matter, regardless if it’s a motorcyclist (or) somebody riding a bicycle on the road just trying to get to point A to B. Their lives matter. Drivers need to pay a lot more attention of cyclist.”

Harris stayed away from the Savannah completely for almost three months after the accident.

She became emotional as she explained, “Everything gives me flashbacks. This entire ordeal has been horrific. It is my absolute worst nightmare. I wish I could turn back time to make sure it didn’t happen.”

“I took me months to drive around the Savannah. It’s now four months and counting since my dad passed, and it took me almost three months before I could drive in the vicinity of the incident.”

When she finally built up the courage to visit the area, she struggled to look at the spot where her father lay after he was thrown off his bicycle.

“The right lane should be made for cyclists alone. That’s how I feel at this point. Drivers need to read signs and pay attention and stick to the speed limit, especially around the Savannah.

The speed limit around the Queen’s Park Savannah is 65 km. In 2015, the Ministry of Works and Transport decided cyclists will have access to the right lane between 4 am and 6 am and between 8 pm and 9.30 pm during the week. During the weekends and on public holidays cyclists have access to the right lane between 6 am and 9 am.

Even though there are two signs to remind drivers of this, Harris said that area isn’t safe for anyone. “Before this, the Savannah was a safe place for me…Now it is not safe for me any more. I cannot walk around the Savannah. I cannot go to anything in the Savannah. It’s the last thing on my mind. I just do not feel safe, and that is horrible.”

She is in therapy, trying to come to terms with her loss and to battle the fear of driving, walking and attending events in and around the Savannah.

“Therapy has helped tremendously, because I was a lot worse than I am right now. Seeking help is important, and as I said before, I recommend for people like me to seek help if they need it.

“After my dad’s death I slipped into a deep depression. Getting out of bed was not something I wanted to do. Waking up on a daily basis was not something I wanted to do. I kept asking, why him? Why anybody?”

She will remember her father’s passion for cycling at Arrive Alive’s cycle, walk or run event on Sunday to commemorate World Day of Remembrance for Road Traffic Victims at the National Cycling Velodrome in Balmain, Couva.

So far for 2022, 79 people have been killed in road-traffic collisions compared with 67 for the same period in 2021.

Brent Batson, police road and safety officer, said this represents an 18 per cent increase in road deaths.

Among the 79, there were 30 drivers, 14 passengers, 30 pedestrians, three motorcyclists and two cyclists.

Data from the past five years shows between 2017 and 2021, 525 people died in road accidents.

Batson told Sunday Newsday police continue to have challenges with enforcing the bicycle policy. He said cyclists fear using the right lane around the Savannah even during the allotted times because drivers refuse to give them the room and continue to overtake dangerously.

Batson said, “As one key stakeholder agency which is mandated with responsibility of public safety, we know first-hand how unsafe, reckless and illegal driving and irresponsible road use can quickly lead to serious or fatal collisions on the nation’s roads.

“The tragedy of almost all road-traffic collisions lies in the fact that they are preventable in nature. If only someone didn’t drink alcohol and drive, or if they had obeyed the speed limit, or utilised a walkover instead of running across a six-lane highway, they may have been around to celebrate Christmas with their family and friends.

“Sadly, people are still gambling with their lives and the lives of others when it comes to road safety in TT.

“Imagine, for 2022, traffic-law enforcement officers issued 21,313 tickets to drivers for seatbelt violations – knowing that wearing a seatbelt is one of the most crucial devices to help save your life in a crash.

“Every life lost on the road is one too many and we will continue our enforcement and education efforts while partnering with our road-safety stakeholders such as the Licensing Division and Arrive Alive to help save lives and keep families together.”

Put in box

Year*Number of Deaths

2017*116

2018*118

2019*121

2020*96

2021* 75

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Farley: THA set to open department of safety and security

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Chief Secretary Farley Augustine at Friday’s press conference at Shaw Park in Tobago. – Photo courtesy THA

CHIEF Secretary Farley Augustine says the Tobago House of Assembly (THA) will soon open its department of safety and security in an attempt to better address the island’s worsening crime situation.

Augustine had first mentioned the initiative in the THA’s budget presentation in June.

Last week Saturday, Tobago recorded its tenth murder for the year with the shooting death of special reserve policeman Kyle Lashley during a robbery.

The policeman, who was last assigned to the Crown Point Police Station, was gunned down around 7.10pm while talking to friends at Providence Road, Les Coteaux. He was pronounced dead on arrival at the Scarborough General Hospital. The shooter snatched his gold chain.

At a news conference on Friday at the Shaw Park Cultural Complex, Augustine said he is expected to visit Les Coteaux and its environs this week.

“I will be making some time to get to that community along with the area rep (Zorisha Hackett) because I think she is planning for us to have some engagements there along with the national security apparatus,” he said

Augustine said the THA executive was disheartened by the increasing number of murders on the island.

But he noted the assembly was constrained legally in addressing certain aspects of crime.

“One of the challenges that Tobago will face is that it has no legal remit over national security. So the THA can’t order the police to do X, Y or Z. The THA can’t order that there be joint patrols. That is just the plain and simple truth of the laws as it is,” he said.

Augustine said, however, there are some measures the THA can implement to tackle the scourge.

On such measure, he said, is the department of safety and security.

“On the Tobago side, we are very close to opening our department of safety and security and we have been engaging with security experts who have been guiding us in terms structure and how that ought to work.

“Not only are we looking at safety and security in terms of murders and robberies. We are also looking at a wide picture, everything from terrorism to natural disasters and everything in between.”

Augustine said the department of safety and security will advise the THA on security measures. He added it will also marry those initiatives with social programmes “to help those who have a penchant for criminal activity.”

Beyond that, Augustine said, the THA is also looking at the legalities of creating its own localised security service, similar to what exists in Trinidad with the municipal police.

“We are working on a similar framework for the THA so that we can have a strength on the island that augments what the police is already doing.”

Augustine said they are also examining the possibility of bringing back the community comfort patrols.

“That was a national initiative and when you talk to the communities, they will tell you that they felt very safe seeing those vehicles, just patrolling the area and they were very useful in assisting communities, especially when it comes to small criminal matters.”

He said details on whether the comfort patrol officers should be armed with guns are still being worked out.

Augustine said he has also been discussing the island’s crime situation with Minority Leader Kelvon Morris. They are expected to meet again toward the end of this month.

Outside of crime initiatives, Augustine said the THA was also looking at establishing mass skills training and re-education programmes within communities.

“We campaigned on the fact that there must be parallel systems of education and yes there is a need to for the traditional academics. But we need to put some resources behind technical/ vocational education as well, skills training and make all of our offerings available to the community because at the end of the day learning should be lifelong.”

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