LAST CALL: PM issues strong warning in final hours of gun amnesty Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

With less than 24 hours to go until the gun amnesty comes to an end, Prime Minister, Andrew Holness has sent a strong warning for Jamaicans who are in possession of illegal guns to use the final hours to turn in the weapons.

The amnesty began on Saturday, November 5, and is slated to end at midnight on Saturday, November 19.

The PM warned that at the close of the time, members of the island security forces will be intensifying their efforts to rid the streets of illegal guns and go after those persons in possession of these weapons, and with the Firearms act in place perpetrators stand to spend from 15 years to life behind bars.

Holness warned that there will be no extension.

“I am making a solemn and urgent appeal to our young men, in particular, I am urging you even at this late stage turn in the guns,” said Holness.

He also warned that with the New Firearms act in place those caught with illegal guns face a minimum of 15 years to life behind bars.Minister of National Security, Horace Chang reported that more than 20 firearms have been handed over to the authorities under the gun amnesty.

Gun amnesty is the last opportunity for those who hold or are in possession of illegal firearms or ammunition to avoid significant sentences and forms an important milestone in Jamaica’s fight against illegal guns.

Breaches of the new Firearms (Prohibition, Restriction, and Regulation) Act, 2022, which is now in effect, will result in penalties ranging from 15 years to life imprisonment.

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CARIBBEAN DEBT CONSULTATIONS (ANTIGUA & BARBUDA)(Tuesday 22nd November 2022)(9:00 am – 1:00 pm)(In Person + Online via ZOOM)

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

JOIN US / REGISTRATION (FREE): www.volunteersunited.org

Date: Tuesday 22nd November 2022Time: 9:00 am – 1:00 pm

Location: Sir John E. St Luce Finance and Conference Center

Registration: FREE (in person or online via ZOOM)

Caribbean Small Island Developing States (SIDS) are currently gripped by a silent and growing debt crisis.

This high level of indebtedness manifests a myriad of negative impacts on the lives of the average citizen and more so hampers progress on climate action, as well as overall sustainable development in the region.

The Caribbean Policy Development Centre (CPDC), with support from the Funders Organized for Rights in the Global Economy (FORGE) and in partnership with Debt Justice UK (formally Jubilee UK), have implemented a project entitled: “Confronting the Caribbean Debt Challenge, Building Resilience for Sustainable Development”

This project is geared towards building awareness of the impact of increasing debt

in the Caribbean region by way of mobilizing Caribbean Civil Society Organizations (CSOs) and communities to have a more active role in collaborating on the debt campaign.

Volunteers United invites you to join stakeholders in person and virtually

online via ZOOM as we discuss debt policy and climate justice with:

– Ms. Nadia Spencer-Henry (Debt Manager with Ministry of Finance in Antigua and Barbuda)

– Mr. Auro Fraser (Regional Coordinator with OSF: Open Society Foundations)

– Mr. Jwala Rambarran (Policy Advisor with CPDC)

– Mr. Tim Jones (Head of Policy with Debt Justice UK)

If you have any feedback, please don’t hesitate to contact:

– Mr. Elijah James (Executive Coordinator with Vu: Volunteers United)

Phone or WhatsApp: (268) 775 5757

Email: [email protected]

Mr. Elijah JamesExecutive Coordinator

Volunteers United (Vu)

(M)268-775-5757

(E) [email protected]

CLICK HERE TO JOIN OUR WHATSAPP GROUP

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1 arrested after police find air gun at Grove, EBD

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana
The weapon found

While on patrol duties in the wee hours of today, police ranks from Regional Police Division 4B arrested a young man after he was observed disposing of an item which turned out to be an air gun.

The discovery was made at around 02:30 hrs in the vicinity of Bliss Sports Bar, which is located at ‘Second Bridge’ Golden Grove, East Bank Demerara.

According to the police, the ranks observed a group of men standing on the roadway.

On seeing the Police, the men walked off, one of whom was acting suspiciously. The Police observed this individual walking to a nearby garbage bin, taking out an object from the waist of his pants and throwing the object into the bin.

One of the ranks approached the suspicious man (name withheld), who said he was a 23-year-old construction worker. A search was conducted in the garbage bin in his presence and the Police found one black metal object suspected to be a Firearm (air gun).

The Police told him of the allegation, and he remained silent. He was arrested, escorted to the Golden Grove police station, and placed into custody.

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ST. LUCIA-ECONOMY-IMF says St. Lucia ‘severely affected’ by COVID-19 pandemic, war in Ukraine

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cana News Business

Post Content

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Un Oscar d’honneur pour Euzhan Palcy

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

La cinéaste martiniquaise connue pour son film multi-récompensé Rue Cases Nègres, va recevoir ce samedi soir aux États-Unis, un Oscar d’honneur.

” Euzhan Palcy est une pionnière dont l’importance considérable dans le cinéma international est ancrée dans l’histoire du 7e art “, a salué le président de l’Académie des Oscars, David Rubin, dans un communiqué.

” En m’honorant ainsi avec cet Oscar d’honneur, @TheAcademy honore toute la diaspora, les femmes cinéastes, la diversité ! J’en suis très fière “, a réagi la cinéaste en juin dernier, lors de l’annonce, sur Twitter.

L’Oscar d’honneur rend hommage ” aux contributions exceptionnelles au monde du cinéma ou pour des services rendus à l’Académie ” qui décerne les Oscars, a indiqué celle-ci. La cinéaste Agnès Varda en avait reçu un en 2017.

Avec “Rue Cases-Nègres”, qui se déroule dans la Martinique des années 30, Euzhan Palcy avait remporté le César du premier film en 1984. Elle avait également été récompensée à la Mostra de Venise pour ce film.

Elle a ensuite fait tourner Marlon Brando dans Une saison blanche et sèche (1989) sur l’apartheid, devenant alors ” la première femme noire à réaliser un film pour un grand studio hollywoodien (la Metro Goldwyn Mayer)”, souligne l’Académie.

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US bans entry of “corrupt” John Saldivar

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Amandala Newspaper

Photo: John Saldivar

The public designation of former UDP Cabinet minister, John Saldivar as a former government official guilty of significant corruption was initially announced by US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken

BELIZE CITY, Thurs. Nov. 17, 2022

The US State Department has released a written statement that notifies the public that former UDP Belmopan area representative, John Saldivar, who served during the previous Barrow administration as the country’s Minister of National Security, has been designated by the US government as a former government official who was involved in “significant corruption”, and as a result he and his immediate family are now barred from entering the United States.

In the statement, the US State Department indicates that Saldivar “accepted bribes in exchange for improperly facilitating the acquisition of Belizean immigration documents” and that he “interfered in public processes for personal gain.” US Secretary of State, Antony Blinken made an announcement of the designation prior to the release of the written statement, which was released on Tuesday and which points to section 7031 (c ) of the USSD Foreign Operation and Related Programs Appropriations Act of 2022. That section of the US legislation “provides that officials of foreign governments and their immediate family members about whom the Secretary of State has credible information of direct or indirect involvement in significant corruption or a gross violation of human rights are ineligible for entry into the United States.”

The announcement by what is still arguably the world’s most powerful nation could deal a death blow to the political career of Saldivar, who was attempting to regain footing after a huge loss at the polls in the 2020 general elections and who is once more seeking to be the UDP standard bearer in Belmopan. It could also further weaken and splinter the United Democratic Party, following a recent attempt by certain members of the party to recall its current leader, Hon. Moses “Shyne” Barrow. The party recently began holding conventions for the selection of some standard bearers and the endorsement of some — and Saldivar was seemingly on the cusp of securing the Belmopan standard bearer position at an upcoming convention after the apparent sidelining of the other contender, Khalid Belisle (former Belmopan mayor), when the announcement landed like a comet. The UDP now must decide whether it will disqualify Saldivar or whether it will risk being a political party associated with a person publicly designated as significantly corrupt by the US.

While the UDP has not released a public statement on the matter as yet, the Leader of the Opposition, Hon. Moses “Shyne” Barrow, in a social media post, referred to the designation as an “allegation” by the US State Department, and he went on to say, “Notwithstanding our zero tolerance of corruption by public officials, we must be guided by the fundamental principles of due process and in the Belize judicial system all are innocent until proven guilty.”

Barrow went on to say that the Opposition will take steps to gather facts from the State Department and Saldivar to “determine the way forward to implement our anti-corruption policy in a fair and just manner.”

But other members of the UDP are calling for Saldivar’s removal from the party, and are classifying Barrow’s statement as indicative of the symbiotic relationship between himself and Saldivar. 

Notably, it was Saldivar (who had once himself briefly secured the spot as UDP leader in 2020 before his association with a convicted US fraudster became known via Utah court documents) who was believed to be the mastermind of the UDP “Caucus for Change”’s effort to remove former UDP leader Patrick Faber from the helm of the UDP in 2021 — which arguably paved the way for Barrow’s swift ascent to the top spot in the party.

Known UDP stalwart Denton Belisle (the father of Khalid Belisle, former Belmopan mayor who also aspires to be Belmopan area rep) thus stated this morning, “The attempt therein to obfuscate the issues at hand and to downplay the gravity of the move by the U.S. Government against Saldivar leaves me to conclude that all efforts will be made by the UDP leadership to cover up Saldivar’s transgressions and to protect and preserve his status within the UDP, cost it what it may.”

It remains to be seen what type of cover-up can he done, or what type of investigation would be necessary to understand the basis of the corruption claims made by the US government. The accusations are many. They can be found in the past headlines of most local newspapers, and in the archives of the country’s television stations and news websites.

The role he allegedly played in the improper “acquisition of Belizean immigration documents” is documented in the coverage of a Senate Select Committee inquiry (2016-2017) that was held following the release of a report by then Auditor General Dorothy Bradley that uncovered unethical conduct within the Immigration Department during the period 2011-2013. Saldivar was listed during the committee’s questioning of key Immigration officials as a government minister who would frequently visit the Immigration Department to deliver applications on behalf of his “constituents”. It has been alleged that during that period Cabinet ministers were signing visa recommendations for a range of individuals, particularly Asian nationals.

When questioned by Jules Vasquez in 2013 about the role he played in facilitating visa acquisition for some persons, Saldivar had said, “I have never issued any letter. I have simply called at times to try to see the process through, but that’s about it. I have never written any letter — that has never occurred with me.”

Interestingly, when it was announced that a Belizean government official had been receiving payments of $25,000 US monthly from US fraudster Lev Dermen, who reportedly defrauded the US government of $511 million in a bio-fuel scam, a January 2020 AMANDALA article had noted that Lev Asan Dermen used the name Levon Termendzhyan when “he was granted Belizean nationality in September, 2013.”

The article further noted that Dermen was a Los-Angeles-based businessman who “was granted Belizean nationality under questionable circumstances” and that he was “indicted in the state of Utah along with four members of a polygamous family with the surname ‘Kingston’ who owned a bio-fuel plant, Washakie Renewable Energy, which was used in the massive forgery for which four members of the family made a plea deal with prosecutors..”

(Transcripts from the Utah District Court proceeding indicate that Lev Dermen and his affiliates were introduced to Saldivar while he was Minister of National Security in order to facilitate the opening of a casino in Belize. Other Belizean government officials were also at that meeting. In 2013, Saldivar admitted to having met Dermen during the 2013 Gold Cup Football Tournament.)

Prime Minister at the time, Hon. Dean Barrow, had indicated that all members of his Cabinet, including Saldivar, had denied receiving any money from Dermen. Not long after, Saldivar was named in alleged court documents that indicated that he communicated via text with Dermen’s business associate, Jacob Kingston, to arrange the transfer of the US $25,000 monthly.

And it appears that the US government had been tracking and documenting all these developments.

The US Embassy’s Belize 2020 Human Rights Report stated, “In February, Minister of National Security and newly elected leader of the United Democratic Party John Saldivar was forced to resign when court documents revealed that he received large sums of money from a U.S. citizen accused of defrauding the U.S. government of tax in return for political favors in Belize. Saldivar remained area representative for Belmopan and an active legislator. The Commissioner of Police stated the BPD would initiate an investigation into the matter and press charges, but as of October no charges had been filed. The Senate Select Committee presented its report and recommendations on an investigation, initiated in 2017, of the Immigration and Nationality Department conducted by the Office of the Auditor General. The report confirmed the department had a pattern of improper and illegal issuances of Belizean visas, passports, and citizenship. The committee conducted public hearings in 2017 that revealed several instances where high-ranking government officials, including ministers of government, approved the issuance of visas, citizenship, and passports to unqualified individuals. As of October no charges had been filed against anyone as a result of the report.”

Prior to these allegations, however, Saldivar had received public criticism before — for his association/business partnership with convicted murderer Danny Mason, who was involved in the murder and beheading of Pastor Llewelyn Lucas, and for misuse of Coast Guard vessels donated by the US government while he headed the Ministry that oversaw that arm of law enforcement.

In an October 16 article entitled, “Leaked documents confirm business relationship between John Saldivar and Danny Mason,” the San Pedro Sun had reported, “Despite much denial from several government officials, a leaked document released on October 17th revealed the business relationship between Minister of Defense John Saldivar and Mason, the accused murderer. In a press release issued on Tuesday, October 18th, the Barrow Administration announced that Saldivar was placed on a one-week leave of absence… Saldivar previously reported that he had accepted $50,000 from Mason as a contribution to his Belmopan Bandits football team. He stated that was the extent of their business relationship and claimed that he has disassociated himself with Mason since September 2015 after learning of Mason’s ‘unsavory’ past. However, the document with signatures of both men indicate how both Saldivar and Mason were shareholders of the company: Bandits Sporting Club Limited, the holding company for the Belmopan Bandits Football Club. According to the document dated August 18, 2015, shares were split with 70% belonging to Saldivar, and 30% to Mason.”

The other accusation, that Saldivar used Coast Guard boats to entertain some of his questionable associates — specifically Lev Dermen— has also been documented. And there were media reports that he used such vessels to transport his football team, Belmopan Bandits, to San Pedro when the team played on the island. In regard to the first of the two accusations, 7News has aired an audio clip in which a man purported to be Saldivar can be heard saying, “Now I understand why when Lev mi come da Belize, when I take Lev on the Coast Guard boat, I take Lev and all of these Mormons pan wa fishing trip out deh eena the Coast Guard boat and so… that is how he was, according to Jacob, asserting that, hey, yuh listen to me or else you could get F*** because I have friends all over the world, my network of F* powerful people… That’s how my name come to be mentioned. Da soh I di get the 25 thousand dollars every month. That’s how my name come into it. Me get lotta F* money from Lev.”

Nonetheless, in the face of all these accusations, Saldivar is defending his reputation and refuting what has been reported about him. He has said that the funds he received from Dermen were campaign contributions (and had in fact stated at a press conference last year that then Prime Minister Barrow knew about it.) According to Saldivar, who refuted the US Department’s claims in a Facebook post, he recalls being told that a person known as a car dealer who claimed to be a part of his inner circle made some untrue statements about him while trying to secure a visa from the US Embassy. The person allegedly said that Saldivar received bags of money weekly and claimed that he was involved in corruption in the Immigration Department.

Saldivar went on to refer to the US State Department’s claims that immigration documents were improperly acquired through bribes accepted by Saldivar as “unfounded, and malicious” — noting that no evidence or specific case was cited in the statement.

He further commented in a release on his Facebook page on Wednesday morning that he had no clue where the allegations were coming from until he remembered a conversation he had with former Prime Minister Dean Barrow while they were in office.

“I never knew that this big lie would come back to haunt me, and I did not consider anything until now that it has come back to my memory while searching for answers,” he remarked in his post.

Saldivar is claiming that the US State Department will never be able to produce any evidence against him and has hinted that there is some ulterior motive behind this designation, which, he said, has blindsided him just weeks before his endorsement convention.

“This is the mighty United States of America, accountable to no one. We are all supposed to just accept that they are right, even when they have been wrong so many times before. We are to assume there is no secret motive to interfere in our politics, even though evidence of such interference abounds across the world,” Saldivar commented.

He added, “This designation of mine is timed a few weeks before my convention to once again become the candidate for the UDP. Up until yesterday, this was a sure thing. If I mount a legal challenge, it will not conclude before the convention, so there is no way I can clear my name before then. But of course, they know that.”

He called the move a “bully tactic” and suggested that it was no coincidence that the Prime Minister, John Briceno, met with Antony Blinken recently.

“For those of you who are interested in our democracy and ensuring that there is no political interference from outside forces, especially when using manufactured evidence, picture this: John Briceno visited US Secretary of State Blinken last week and this week Secretary Blinken who hardly even knows where Belize is, signs a declaration against a key political opponent of John Briceno,” Saldivar said.

He even made mention, when responding to comments on the post, of recent visits by Patrick Faber, former UDP leader and Collet area representative, to Briceno’s residence. Prime Minister Briceno has subsequently referred to that insinuation by Saldivar as “ridiculously preposterous”, adding that he “wishes this on no one.” 

The Prime Minister further told reporters, “I do not rejoice what is happening to Mr. Saldivar and especially to his family that quite likely they were not involved in the allegations that were made against him, but it is something certainly for my Cabinet for us to be able to look at that and to see what the consequences can be if we do not do what is right.”

In regard to Saldivar’s insistence that the claims being made by the US State Department are untrue, Briceno commented, “Well, he has been saying this for a number of years whenever anything is brought up to him that he is innocent and every time things come out to show that there is not much credibility to what he is saying. But I guess, like everybody, he has to put some kind of defense; he has to say something. But time will tell.”

Saldivar says that he is consulting an attorney in Belize and may retain a US attorney if he decides to pursue a legal challenge against the US government, since he claims that no due process was observed or evidence presented to him prior to the US State Department’s announcement.

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ASR/BSI and BSCFA can’t agree on mediator

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Amandala Newspaper

Photo: Mac Mclachlan – Vice President of International Affairs, ASR/BSI

by Khaila Gentle

BELIZE CITY, Thurs. Nov. 17, 2022

The Belize Sugar Cane Farmers Association (BSCFA) says that BSI/ASR has yet to produce a list of potential candidates who they feel are suitable to act as a mediator between the two parties as they attempt to establish the terms of a new commercial agreement. During a press conference held at the BSCFA offices in Orange Walk Town on Tuesday, the CEO of the association, Oscar Alonzo, told reporters that recent assertions by representatives from BSI/ASR regarding the mediation process were incorrect.

According to Alonzo, both parties had agreed that they would produce a list of potential mediators, but since coming to that agreement, the BSCFA has received no further correspondence from BSI/ASR.

“BSI has mentioned something about attitude. And I think this further displays the attitude that BSI has been showing, not only in regard to this mediation process but since the old process of negotiations began. And where we have clear steps and processes defined, it seems that these steps and processes are only convenient when it suits BSI for them to follow,” Alonzo said.

Last Thursday, BSI/ASR held their own press conference in response to allegations made by the BSCFA. During that conference, the company’s Vice President of International Relations, Mac McLachlan, told the press that someone had already been recommended to fill the role of mediator and that the milling company, after accepting that recommendation, was awaiting a response from the association.

McLachlan also spoke on the proposal made by the BSCFA to split gross revenues from the sale of milled sugar cane 60/40. He said that such a split was unreasonable, and that agreeing to it, without having farmers contributing to production costs, would amount to a $20 million yearly subsidization of the cañeros by the company, which, he said, would condemn BSI/ASR to bankruptcy—a claim that the milling company has made before and one that the BSCFA has vehemently refuted.

The BSCFA also responded to those assertions this week, with Finance Committee Chairman Javier Keme stating that they had already shown the company the financial rationale behind their proposal.

“What [BSI/ASR] calls a financial rationale for their position is their millions of dollars of investments. That’s the only rationale that they have been putting forward. The last statement that they made in that regard is that they invested sixty million dollars as operation costs every year,” he stated.

BSI/ASR went as far as to allow the media a first-hand glance at those million-dollar investments via a tour of their factories this week. There, they showed local journalists the giant, stainless steel machinery, used for manufacturing and processing, all of which has been continuously improved and maintained since 2019. According to the company, the new machinery has allowed for the sale of direct consumption sugar at a higher price, which has benefitted both the millers and the farmers.

“…We’re selling in international markets: in the US, Canada, the Caribbean, and Europe, and the standards are very high. One mistake can really tarnish your reputation. And that’s why it’s very important that what we do here is done to a very high standard that meets international customer requirements. And that is a big part of the investment that occurred… that included the expansion of the boiling house… I’m sure the public will recall many years ago, you’re stirring your sugar, and you’d sometimes get little fibrous materials. All those things had to be addressed. You put in the syrup clarifiers and DSM screens so that the sugar, the juice that you’re producing to produce direct consumption sugars, is of high quality and of a high standard… Then, you go to the next part, which is conditioning. So, the sugar, by the time it gets to the customer, has to be in a free-flowing state… So you would have an opportunity to see the investment in the conditioning building, so all the driers, the silos….Then, you had the packaging facilities that had to be expanded and upgraded.. The value-added investments have been around sixty-four million Belize dollars… and then you had the environmental projects: the water cooler.. and also the air emissions. Those two projects combined are around twenty-two million. So, in the last four years alone, we’re talking about a hundred and ten million Belize dollars in investments, expanding to produce more value-added sugar,” stated Shawn Chavarria, Director of Finance of ASR/BSI.

But the farmers, Keme said, have also made investments in the millions.

“An average of $27 on every raw tonne of cane that is delivered is an investment of the farmer in the production sector. On an average of $27. You add to that the $30 average of harvesting and delivery, it arises to close to $57 that the farmer invests every year. You put that in a volume of a million tonnes in production—that’s $57 million on average that the farmers put every year. So, hand in hand, they can’t come and say that the farmers are not investing,” he explained.

And while it seems that there is no end in sight to the months-long impasse between BSI/ASR and the BSCFA, both parties, as well as the Government of Belize, have expressed a desire to resolve the matter before the start of the upcoming crop season on December 19.

The BSCFA CEO has said that the association is intent on having a commercial agreement signed before the start of the crop, noting “that has been our objective and our commitment since we started the negotiation process and we have not deviated from that.”

BSI/ASR’s Mac McLachlan shared a similar sentiment on Thursday, stating that he hopes the mill and BSCFA can find some middle ground and move forward with a productive business arrangement for the benefit of the sugar industry—particularly since world prices for sugar cane are currently high.

“We have just over the last crop put forty million dollars into the economy of the north through the improvement of these cane prices. That’s very important, not just for cane farmers. It’s important for the entire economy of the north. If we didn’t have a sugar industry here, well, it would be a lot more difficult for people, I think,” he added.

In an interview on Wednesday morning, Prime Minister John Briceño said the same. But while he expressed his hopes that the start of the crop will be on time, he also added that he believes, in some instances, that both sides have “pinned themselves in a corner.”

“It’s just endless games that both sides are playing, and it’s, unfortunately, a lot of innocent people are going to get hurt, a lot of cane farmers are going to get hurt because they would not be able to deliver their cane, and the truth is that this is probably some of the highest prices we’ve had in a long time,” the Prime Minister stated.

He also responded to questions about the possible willingness of the three other sugarcane growers associations to proceed with the sugar crop even if an agreement is not reached with BSCFA, which produces almost half of the sugar cane delivered to the mill. Briceño replied by stating, “ … The important thing is that we need to get the crop going. I mean we have not only BSCFA, but other associations that have already signed contracts with BSI, and who knows? What if we decide we’re not going to open until BSCFA gets an agreement? And then what if the other associations then decide to sue the government to say, well now you are preventing me from earning a living? So, we have to find the best balance to be able to get this going.”

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Belize applies for ICJ to resolve Honduras’ Sapodilla Cayes claim

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Amandala Newspaper

by Khaila Gentle

BELIZE CITY, Thurs. Nov. 17, 2022

A press release issued by the Government late this evening announced that Belize has submitted an application for the International Court of Justice (ICJ) to issue a judgment on Honduras’ claim (embedded in Article 10 of its Constitution) that the Sapodilla Cayes are part of its territory. The release notes that the application was submitted to the Registrar of the ICJ, located in The Hague, Netherlands, and that by means of the application, Belize is seeking a “final and binding resolution” to the matter.

The Government claims that it has taken this measure to “protect the vital interests of Belize” by ensuring that all territorial disputes are fully settled. The press release also states that the application to the ICJ has been done in full support and furtherance of its friendly relations with Honduras.

The application and all its associated documents can be found on the ICJ’s website under “cases”. It is listed as pending and was filed on Wednesday, November 16. Included in the eleven-page document is a section stating that Belize officially acceded to the Pact of Bogotá on October 24, 2022 by submitting an instrument of accession to the Organization of American States (OAS) and that the General Secretariat of the OAS issued a certificate of receipt of that instrument dated October 27.

In its application to the ICJ, Belize notes that the Sapodilla Cayes, located 75 miles east of Punta Gorda, have been a part of Belize’s territory since the early nineteenth century, initially as part of the settlement of Belize and later the colony of British Honduras, and since 1981 as part of the independent State of Belize.

It also states that sovereignty over the Cayes has been peacefully, publicly, and continuously manifested through a number of acts, including the exercising of jurisdiction by magistrates over the Cayes (such as in relation to criminal matters, salvage claims and the suppression of piracy); the construction of lighthouses; the granting of licenses and concessions in relation to natural resources; the regulation of land ownership, fishing, and entry to the Sapodilla Cayes; and the conducting of military activities in and around the Cayes.

By contrast, it further notes, Honduras has never had nor purported to exercise any sovereignty over the Cayes, and, prior to 1981, it repeatedly acknowledged British sovereignty.

In one such instance, the Government of Honduras, concerned that the Cayes were being used as a base by revolutionary movements plotting against it, requested British authorities in Belize to take action in respect to those movements.

The Government has appointed Ambassador Assad Shoman as Agent and Ambassador Alexis Rosado as Co-Agent for Belize in the proceedings.

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Cabinet maker fatally stabbed during workshop argument in Trelawny Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

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

1 hrs ago

NEWYou can now listen to Loop News articles!

A Trelawny cabinetmaker has been taken into custody in connection with the deadly stabbing of his colleague with whom he had a dispute at work in the parish Thursday morning.

The deceased has been identified as 40-year-old Odean Green of Deeside, Trelawny.

Reports are that at about 11:30 am the two carpenters were working at a furniture shop in Deeside, Trelawny, when a dispute developed between them. A chisel, which was brought into play, was used to inflict a stab wound on Green’s neck.

Green was taken to the hospital where he was pronounced dead.

His co-worker was subsequently taken into the custody of the Wakefield police.

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West Indies draw warmup match to open 2-test Australian tour Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

CANBERRA, Australia (AP) — Several West Indian batters had lackluster results as the visitors played to a draw in a three-day tour match Saturday against a combined New South Wales and Australian Capital Territory XI.

The Caribbean side was 114 for four in its second innings at Manuka Oval when play was called off, the home side declaring earlier in the day on 426 for four.

Opener Tagenarine Chanderpaul, the son of West Indies great Shivnarine Chanderpaul, made just four after not batting in West Indies’ first-innings effort of 424 for nine declared. And 48-test veteran Jermaine Blackwood, who retired on 42 in the first innings, made just one.

West Indies were 77 for four before Roston Chase (31 not out) and Joshua Da Silva (12 not out) ensured no further damage was done.

Blake MacDonald finished unbeaten on 177 after No. 3 Oliver Davies had scored 115 off just 106 balls on Friday off the West Indian bowlers.

The visitors will play a four-day twilight fixture against a strong Prime Minister’s XI beginning next Wednesday before tests against Australia in Perth beginning Nov. 30 and a day-night test in Adelaide from Dec. 8.

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