Memorial Day parade returns

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Prime Minister Keith Rowley lays a wreath at the cenotaph in Memorial Park. – Photo by Roger Jacob

LIMITED to wreath-laying for the past two years owing to the covid19 pandemic, the 2022 Memorial Day event saw the return of the military parade.

Members of the public gathered around Memorial Park on Frederick Street in Port of Spain as those who served and fell in World Wars I and II were remembered and honoured.

The event kicked off with the military parade which featured members of the TT Regiment, Coast Guard, Air Guard, Defence Force, police service, fire service, prison service, cadet force and Red Cross.

Officers and the Memorial Day Parade 2022

They began marching from the Queen’s Park Savannah and ended at the park.

President Paula-Mae Weekes was the first to lay a ceremonial wreath at the cenotaph, followed by the Prime Minister, Chief Justice Ivor Archie and National Security Minister Fitzgerald Hinds.

Officials of the armed and unarmed forces also laid wreaths, along with mayors and diplomats.

Hinds greeted and took photos with members of the public after the ceremony.

National Security Minister Fitzgerald Hinds poses for photos with some children near Memorial Park on Sunday. – Photo by Roger Jacob

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Floodwaters sweep Claxton Bay man to his death

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

DROWNED: Driver’s Permit of Ramnath Minwah. –

THE screams of Ramnath Minwah’s wife and children shattered the quiet community of St John’s Trace in Claxton Bay around 6.30 pm on Saturday, when they saw him fall into a swollen river and get swept away by the strong currents.

Minwah’s family and neighbours rushed to rescue him, but it was not until almost an hour later, that the man who spent his life as a boat captain, was found unresponsive, his arms wrapped around a tree.

Fire services, police officers and ambulance attendants who arrived on the scene, later retrieved the body from the floodwaters.

Distraught relatives said Minwah was a strong swimmer, but age and illness as well as strong currents conspired to pull him under and to his death.

“If he was not old and sick, the waters would never have taken him. He was a top swimmer back in the day. He was a seaman, the captain of a boat. He worked all around the world,” said Dolly Minwah, his wife of over five decades.

She said that shortly after 6 pm, Minwah, 76, a father of six, grandfather of 16 and great-grandfather of four, left home to purchase cigarettes.

“He went by his nephew, one house away from ours and the nephew went and bought the cigarettes for him.”

On returning with the cigarettes, she said, Minwah’s nephew observed that the river on the opposite side of their home was swollen. He told his uncle to stay until the water receded.

“My husband said he wanted to come home before the waters got higher,” she said.

“As he left his nephew’s home, a car was parked in the middle of the road and my husband just stepped to his left to go around it and in so doing, slipped and fell into the river.

“My daughters and granddaughter saw him fall in and started bawling. Everybody came out immediately and started to search.”

Granddaughter Janelle Pirmal, 22, witnessed the moment her grandfather fell into river.

A screengrab taken from a video shows a flood-swollen river near the front gate of the Minwah family home in St John’s Trace, Claxton Bay where Ramnath Minwah was swept away to his death on Saturday evening. –

“We tried to save him, but it was pitch dark. There was nothing for him to hold on to and he was swept away. People used torches, head lights, car lights to search.”

Holding her head with one hand and wiping away tears with the other, Dolly said this could have been avoided if the help they had been clamouring for was heeded.

“When we came to live here this was a drain, there was no river. We bought this property, I ent no squatter. I have a deed for this property.” She said over the years, soil erosion narrowed the road and widened the drain until it became a river.

“It is not the first time someone fell into that river. For years I have been going to the councillor and the MP to complain about the erosion. Everytime it rains, the water took more and more of the road.

“I spoke to MP David Lee, chairman of the Couva/Tabaquite/Talparo Regional Corporation, Henry Awong and councillor Nadia. They all came, saw the situation but nothing was done. They said it would be too costly to repair.

“So, is the cost to stop the erosion and fix the problem worth more than the life of my husband,” she asked.

Dolly said that frustrated by the floods, only a day before the tragedy, she recalled telling her husband she felt like packing up and leaving the community.

This is the second tragic incident in which someone had been swept away and drowned due to flooding.

On Wednesday October 5, Lopinot farmer Theresa Lynch was swept away in the flood-swollen Surrey River, Lopinot as she and her brother were trying to make their way to their garden. Her body was found in the Caroni River near Trincity two days later.

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Aantal oplichtingszaken girale overmaking toegenomen

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

PARAMARIBO — De afdeling Fraude van het Korps Politie Suriname heeft een stijging gemerkt van oplichtingszaken voor wat betreft girale

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Ebanks-Wilks to create space of music & arts for WB seniors on Nov 23 Loop Cayman Islands

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cayman Compass
Loop News

44 minutes ago

MP Katherine Ebanks-Wilks

(Photo credit: Radio Cayman, YouTube)

MP Katherine Ebanks-Wilks appeared on Radio Cayman’s ‘Talk Today’ show recently with host, Sterling Dwayne Ebanks, where she shared information about a seniors’ Thanksgiving lunch that she will be hosting on November 23 at the West Bay Heritage Park from 11am to 2pm.

As to what seniors and their families can expect at the event, MP Ebanks-Wilks shared that “During that time, we’ll be having live music and then, after lunch we’ll be having some games and then a time of art display… and crafts which will be for sale to the general public.”

And then later on in the evening, we’re gonna have a space [called] ‘arts in the park’ which will be focusing on live music. So, if you have musicians out there that just wanna have a jam session, there’s gonna be Jam night, karaoke, floetry.

She explained further.

Regarding the closing time for the evening portion of the event, MP Ebanks-Wilks said that they “will probably try to tie things up between 8 and 9pm since it is a week night.”

Clarifying whether the event was only limited to seniors, MP Ebanks-Wilks said:

We’re also inviting those who are in the community that may not fall in the category of being a senior, but you’re an artist of some sort, please come out, bring your art work, put it on display and maybe someone will appreciate your art and want to purchase it.

MP Ebanks-Wilks also emphasized the value of people simply coming out and showing their support at the event, summing up her thoughts that “Having a good turn out and having the support for our artists will be really beneficial to them and as to the community as a whole.”

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Biden-Xi summit: What Biden wants, what Xi wants Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — There won’t be concessions from the U.S. side. No real deliverables, which is government-speak for specific achievements. Don’t expect a cheery joint statement, either.

During President Joe Biden’s highly anticipated meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping on Monday, the leaders will be circling each other to game out how to manage a relationship that the U.S. has determined poses the biggest economic and military threat.

At the same time, U.S. officials have repeatedly stressed that they see the two countries’ interactions as one of competition — and that they want to avoid conflict.

Here’s a look at what each side is hoping to achieve out of the leaders’ first in-person encounter as presidents, to be held on the island of Bali in Indonesia:

Essentially, Biden and other U.S. officials are trying to understand where Xi really stands.

In a news conference shortly before leaving Washington, Biden said he wanted to “lay out … what each of our red lines are, understand what he believes to be in the critical national interests of China, what I know to be the critical interests of the United States.”

That mission has become all the more imperative since the conclusion of the Community Party congress in Beijing, during which Xi secured a norm-breaking third term as leader, empowering him even further.

It’s a goal that will be much more readily achieved in person, White House officials say, despite Biden and Xi’s five video or phone calls during the U.S. president’s term.

Biden told reporters on Sunday that he’s “always had straightforward discussions” with Xi, and that has prevented either of them from “miscalculations” of their intentions.

“I know him well, he knows me,” Biden said. “We’ve just got to figure out where the red lines are and what are the most important things to each of us, going into the next two years.”

The U.S. president will want to send a message to Xi on White House concerns about China’s economic practices. Taiwan is sure to come up, and Biden will want to emphasize to Xi that the U.S. will stand ready to defend the self-governing island should it come under attack by China. Biden also will seek to make clear his concerns about Beijing’s human rights practices, as he has in their previous interactions.

Biden will also use the meeting to press for a more aggressive posture from Xi on Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The Chinese leader has largely refrained from public criticism of Vladimir Putin’s actions while declining to actively aid Moscow by supplying arms.

“We believe that, of course, every country in the world should do more to prevail upon Russia, especially those who have relationships with Russia, to end this war and leave Ukraine,” said U.S. national security adviser Jake Sullivan.

Finally, U.S. officials say they’re eager to see where the two superpowers could actually collaborate. Though there are numerous areas in which Biden and Xi won’t see eye to eye, the White House has listed several issues where they conceivably could, including health, counternarcotics and climate change.

Xi has yet to give a wish list for talks with Biden, but Beijing wants U.S. action on trade and Taiwan.

Perhaps most importantly, the Group of 20 gathering in Bali and the meeting with Biden give China’s most powerful leader in decades a stage to promote his country’s image as a global player and himself as a history-making figure who is restoring its rightful role as an economic and political force.

China pursues “increasingly assertive foreign and security policies aimed at changing the international status quo,” Kevin Rudd, a former Australian prime minister who is president of the Asia Society, wrote in Foreign Affairs. That has strained relations with Washington, Europe and China’s Asian neighbors, but Xi is unfazed and looks set to be more ambitious abroad.

The meeting is “an important event of China’s head-of-state diplomacy toward the Asia Pacific,” said a foreign ministry spokesman, Zhao Lijian. He said Xi will “deliver an important speech” on economic growth.

Zhao called on the Biden administration to “stop politicizing” trade and embrace Beijing’s claim to sovereignty over Taiwan, the self-ruled island democracy that split with the mainland in 1949 and never has been part of the People’s Republic of China.

Beijing wants Washington to lift tariffs imposed by former President Donald Trump in 2019 and to pull back on increasing restrictions on Chinese access to processor chips and other U.S. technology. Biden has left most of those in place and added curbs on access to technology that American officials say can be used in weapons development.

“The United States needs to stop politicizing, weaponizing and ideologizing trade issues,” Zhao said.

Xi’s government has stepped up efforts to intimidate the elected government of Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen by flying fighter planes near the island and firing missiles into the sea.

Beijing broke off talks with Washington on security, climate cooperation and other issues after U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi visited Taiwan in August in a show of support for its government.

“The United States needs to stop obscuring, hollowing out and distorting the ‘one-China principle,’” said Zhao, referring to Beijing’s stance that Taiwan is obligated to join the mainland under Communist Party leadership.

Another goal for Xi: Don’t get COVID-19.

The G-20 will be only Xi’s second foreign trip in 2 1/2 years while his government enforces a severe “Zero COVID” strategy that shut down cities and kept most visitors out of China.

Xi broke that moratorium by attending a September summit with Putin and Central Asian leaders. But he skipped a dinner and photo session where Putin and others wore no masks.

By SEUNG MIN KIM and JOE MCDONALD, Associated Press

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MP Tancoo: TT likethe Wild, Wild West

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Oropouche West MP Davendranath Tancoo. FILE PHOTO –

SAYING nowhere, not even in one’s own home, is safe anymore from criminals and gunmen, Oropouche West MP Davendranath Tancoo has likened TT to the Wild, Wild West of yesteryear, where the only power lay in the barrel of a gun.

With at least five murders recorded on the weekend, including that of a policeman in Tobago, and the murder toll reaching 530, Tancoo also wondered what it would take the Government to finally come out of its slumber and take meaningful action on crime and violence.

“Yesterday (Saturday), on the doorstep of Starbucks in Sun Plaza, Monroe Road, a man was murdered in full view of families who went to buy coffee, or who went to buy bread in the Quikshoppe or chicken and chips in Royal Castle or to fill gas on the same compound.

“Yesterday at Movie Towne, families had to run in fear as violence broke out and a man was shot. We have become the wild, wild west,” Tancoo said at the UNC’s weekly Sunday press briefing. He was joined by Senator Wade Mark.

“Everyday we see videos in real time of criminals assaulting, robbing and murdering citizens.”

Painting a picture of the trauma citizens of all ages are enduring because of the crime wave, Tancoo called on people.

“Imagine your infant son or daughter going to school and when they are supposed to be learning to count, read and write and draw, the first thing they have to learn to do is how to duck and hide from bullets.”

He said it was a sad indictment on the country when everywhere one goes, one is at risk of being murdered.

“You are not safe in school, in the grocery or in the parlour, in the mall, in the Chinese restaurant, by the doubles man or coconut vendor. You are not safe even in your own home,” he said.

Tancoo said today’s criminals do not care about race or gender or age.

“Nobody is safe anywhere in this country. Embassies are warning their citizens about travelling to this country because crime is so bad.” Last week the US State Dept in its latest country advisory on TT, asked all Americans to reconsider visiting TT.

He also criticised Speaker Bridgid Annisette-George for blanking Barataria/San Juan MP Saddam Hosein’s call for the House of Representatives to debate crime as a matter of urgent public importance.

“There should have been no objection, because everybody is affected by this crime tsunami burying this country in blood.” Tancoo said he was certain even the Speaker knew someone directly affected by the crime scourge.

Commenting on the Prime Minister posting Facebook photos of himself with retired WI cricket legend Viv Richards on the golf course, Tancoo said he does not begrudge Dr Rowley having fun.

“But when you put yourself up to be elected to office, to represent and serve people, for God’s sake serve the people nah man. If you have been elected to be Prime Minister, for God’s sake be the Prime Minister. Grow up! There is a crisis, lead or get out of the way.

“Corruption is now endemic under this PNM Government, like it was under every previous PNM government. Crime is worse than ever before. Then there is flooding, infrastructural neglect, poverty, unemployment…this government is failing at every turn,” he declared.

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Teenager dies after giving birth to stillborn twin

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana

A young woman died today shortly after giving birth to her first twin at the Georgetown Public Hospital Corporation (GPHC).

According to a brief statement from the GPHC, the babies were stillborn.

The now-dead 19-year-old female was from the East Bank of Demerara, Region Four (Demerara-Mahaica).

This is the second maternal death reported by the City Hospital today.

This morning, the GPHC reported that a 40-year-old pregnant woman from Region Six (East Berbice-Corentyne) also died today at the Ocean View Hospital, which houses the COVID-19 Intensive Care Unit (ICU).

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CARICOM Secretary-General Issues Call To Action As She Heads To COP27 – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

– Advertisement –

Citing the devastating effect of adverse weather on the Region, the Secretary-General of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) on Friday issued a call to action as she headed to the COP27 climate change conference in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt.

“Stating the obvious has never been any simpler. We must act now to secure our future,” Dr. Carla Barnett declared.

“Ambitious and credible action in adaptation, finance and loss and damage are paramount,” she stated.

The CARICOM Secretary-General said she would join the Region in advocating for better and more at the climate change conference.

– Advertisement –

“The situation is dire. We deserve no less,” the CARICOM Secretary-General explained.

Barnett recalled that six CARICOM member states had been devastated by extreme weather events in the past two weeks, including two hurricanes.

And she explained in a video recording that preliminary estimates indicate damage in tens of millions.

According to Barnett, the extreme weather destroyed homes, shuttered businesses, damaged infrastructure, and kept children away from school.

“It has become a cycle we know too well and one that we cannot long bear,” the CARICOM Secretary-General asserted.

In this regard, she said, as the world gathers in Sharm el-Sheikh for COP 27, the Region is resolute in its position and singular in its demand for climate justice for the vulnerable.

COP27, which opened on November 6, runs until November 18.

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Mondial: trophée, supporteurs et équipes arrivent en ordre dispersé au Qatar

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

A une semaine du coup d’envoi du Mondial-2022, le trophée de la Coupe du monde est de retour au Qatar, les équipes et les supporteurs commencent à affluer, avant l’un des tournois…

A une semaine du coup d’envoi du Mondial-2022, le trophée de la Coupe du monde est de retour au Qatar, les équipes et les supporteurs commencent à affluer, avant l’un des tournois de football les plus controversés de l’histoire.

Après une tournée de six mois à travers 51 pays, la coupe qui sera brandie par le vainqueur le 18 décembre prochain est revenue dans l’émirat dimanche matin, à sept jours du match d’ouverture Qatar-Equateur le 20 novembre.

Les appels de la Fifa à “se concentrer” sur le foot butent toutefois toujours sur les critiques européennes concernant le traitement des travailleurs migrants et de la communauté LGBT+, et le dirigeant de Qatar Airways, Akbar Al Baker, a rejeté “toute la publicité négative orchestrée dans la presse” contre son pays. 

“La désinformation a échoué et, à la fin du tournoi, tous les Qataris se sentiront grandis d’un mètre”, a-t-il clamé lors du baptême d’un immense bateau de croisière qui accueillera des milliers de fans parmi le million attendu pendant un mois de compétition.

“J’ai l’impression que c’est tout ce que nous lisons ces dernières semaines”, a pour sa part commenté Ringo Gonzalez, un Équatorien basé en Allemagne, rencontré par l’AFP au pied de l’horloge marquant le compte à rebours avant la Coupe du monde. 

“Ce sera bien de voir enfin les équipes. Je veux que l’Équateur réussisse et voir (l’Argentin) Lionel Messi et les autres grands noms en action.”

Messi, Neymar et Mbappé sur le terrain

L’équipe américaine a pris ses quartiers sur l’île artificielle de The Pearl (La Perle) et la délégation australienne devait atterrir dans la soirée.

Conséquence du décalage du tournoi à l’automne pour bénéficier de températures plus clémentes que durant l’été, les grands championnats européens jouaient encore ce week-end et de nombreuses vedettes étaient sur les terrains.  

Messi, le Brésilien Neymar et le Français Kylian Mbappé faisaient partie du onze de départ du Paris Saint-Germain contre Auxerre en Ligue 1 et se sont plutôt amusés (5-0).

Conformément aux lois du pays musulman conservateur, c’est une bouteille d’eau de rose qui a été brisée sur la coque du MSC Europa, plutôt que du champagne, et le casino du bateau restera fermé tant qu’il sera dans le port de Doha.

Le navire de croisière et deux autres similaires, complets pendant les deux premières semaines du tournoi, logeront quelque 10.000 personnes, pour éviter l’engorgement dans les hôtels du plus petit pays à organiser un Mondial (11.571 km², la taille de l’Ile-de-France).

Les vols de la compagnie nationale Qatar Airways sont également pleins en novembre et décembre en raison du Mondial, a indiqué Al Baker.

Guerre des mots

Selon les organisateurs, 2,9 millions de billets sur 3,1 millions au total ont été vendus et les fans qui visitent le principal point de vente dans le quartier de West Bay en sortent souvent les mains vides, comme Matthew Coleman, un Australien résidant à Doha, et son ami néerlandais Gijs Beenker, qui n’ont pas trouvé de match “intéressant”.

Non loin de là, dans une boutique officielle de souvenirs, les clients sont surtout européens et intéressés par le ballon du tournoi et sa mascotte La’eeb, raconte le staff. 

Des travailleurs migrants d’Asie du Sud ont eux acheté par milliers des maillots du Brésil et de l’Argentine, alors que leur sort est au centre de discussions souvent acrimonieuses depuis que le Qatar a obtenu fin 2010 l’organisation de la Coupe du monde.

Les médias européens et qataris poursuivent d’ailleurs leur guerre des mots sur la légitimité du riche émirat gazier à accueillir l’évènement.

Un journal britannique rapporte que de nombreux fans pensent que des Indiens du Qatar ont été “payés” pour participer à des rassemblements de supporteurs vendredi. 

Le journal arabophone Al-Sharq rétorque qu’une telle campagne anti-Qatar “confirme l’arrogance de certains pays occidentaux qui pensent qu’organiser la Coupe du monde doit rester leur monopole”. 

Pour le quotidien Al Raya, “l’atmosphère enthousiaste et festive de ces foules de fans de foot de différentes nationalités (…) démontre l’échec des campagnes de diffamation menées par certains médias et politiciens occidentaux”.

bur-tw/ep/smr/hpa 

Une affiche présentant le Français Kylian Mbappe (à gauche) et l’Argentin Lionel Messi dans les rues de Doha, le 8 novembre 2022
• GABRIEL BOUYS

Le navire de croisière MSC Europa le 13 novembre 2022 à Doha
• Andrej ISAKOVIC

Vue générale le 10 novembre 2022 du stade Al-Bayt à al-Khor, au Qatar, où se jouera le match d’ouverture de la compétition, le 20 novembre, entre le pays hôte à l’Équateur
• Kirill KUDRYAVTSEV

NewsAmericasNow.com

Mondial: trophée, supporteurs et équipes arrivent en ordre dispersé au Qatar

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guadeloupe FranceAntilles

A une semaine du coup d’envoi du Mondial-2022, le trophée de la Coupe du monde est de retour au Qatar, les équipes et les supporteurs commencent à affluer, avant l’un des tournois…

A une semaine du coup d’envoi du Mondial-2022, le trophée de la Coupe du monde est de retour au Qatar, les équipes et les supporteurs commencent à affluer, avant l’un des tournois de football les plus controversés de l’histoire.

Après une tournée de six mois à travers 51 pays, la coupe qui sera brandie par le vainqueur le 18 décembre prochain est revenue dans l’émirat dimanche matin, à sept jours du match d’ouverture Qatar-Equateur le 20 novembre.

Les appels de la Fifa à “se concentrer” sur le foot butent toutefois toujours sur les critiques européennes concernant le traitement des travailleurs migrants et de la communauté LGBT+, et le dirigeant de Qatar Airways, Akbar Al Baker, a rejeté “toute la publicité négative orchestrée dans la presse” contre son pays. 

“La désinformation a échoué et, à la fin du tournoi, tous les Qataris se sentiront grandis d’un mètre”, a-t-il clamé lors du baptême d’un immense bateau de croisière qui accueillera des milliers de fans parmi le million attendu pendant un mois de compétition.

“J’ai l’impression que c’est tout ce que nous lisons ces dernières semaines”, a pour sa part commenté Ringo Gonzalez, un Équatorien basé en Allemagne, rencontré par l’AFP au pied de l’horloge marquant le compte à rebours avant la Coupe du monde. 

“Ce sera bien de voir enfin les équipes. Je veux que l’Équateur réussisse et voir (l’Argentin) Lionel Messi et les autres grands noms en action.”

Messi, Neymar et Mbappé sur le terrain

L’équipe américaine a pris ses quartiers sur l’île artificielle de The Pearl (La Perle) et la délégation australienne devait atterrir dans la soirée.

Conséquence du décalage du tournoi à l’automne pour bénéficier de températures plus clémentes que durant l’été, les grands championnats européens jouaient encore ce week-end et de nombreuses vedettes étaient sur les terrains.  

Messi, le Brésilien Neymar et le Français Kylian Mbappé faisaient partie du onze de départ du Paris Saint-Germain contre Auxerre en Ligue 1 et se sont plutôt amusés (5-0).

Conformément aux lois du pays musulman conservateur, c’est une bouteille d’eau de rose qui a été brisée sur la coque du MSC Europa, plutôt que du champagne, et le casino du bateau restera fermé tant qu’il sera dans le port de Doha.

Le navire de croisière et deux autres similaires, complets pendant les deux premières semaines du tournoi, logeront quelque 10.000 personnes, pour éviter l’engorgement dans les hôtels du plus petit pays à organiser un Mondial (11.571 km², la taille de l’Ile-de-France).

Les vols de la compagnie nationale Qatar Airways sont également pleins en novembre et décembre en raison du Mondial, a indiqué Al Baker.

Guerre des mots

Selon les organisateurs, 2,9 millions de billets sur 3,1 millions au total ont été vendus et les fans qui visitent le principal point de vente dans le quartier de West Bay en sortent souvent les mains vides, comme Matthew Coleman, un Australien résidant à Doha, et son ami néerlandais Gijs Beenker, qui n’ont pas trouvé de match “intéressant”.

Non loin de là, dans une boutique officielle de souvenirs, les clients sont surtout européens et intéressés par le ballon du tournoi et sa mascotte La’eeb, raconte le staff. 

Des travailleurs migrants d’Asie du Sud ont eux acheté par milliers des maillots du Brésil et de l’Argentine, alors que leur sort est au centre de discussions souvent acrimonieuses depuis que le Qatar a obtenu fin 2010 l’organisation de la Coupe du monde.

Les médias européens et qataris poursuivent d’ailleurs leur guerre des mots sur la légitimité du riche émirat gazier à accueillir l’évènement.

Un journal britannique rapporte que de nombreux fans pensent que des Indiens du Qatar ont été “payés” pour participer à des rassemblements de supporteurs vendredi. 

Le journal arabophone Al-Sharq rétorque qu’une telle campagne anti-Qatar “confirme l’arrogance de certains pays occidentaux qui pensent qu’organiser la Coupe du monde doit rester leur monopole”. 

Pour le quotidien Al Raya, “l’atmosphère enthousiaste et festive de ces foules de fans de foot de différentes nationalités (…) démontre l’échec des campagnes de diffamation menées par certains médias et politiciens occidentaux”.

bur-tw/ep/smr/hpa 

Une affiche présentant le Français Kylian Mbappe (à gauche) et l’Argentin Lionel Messi dans les rues de Doha, le 8 novembre 2022
• GABRIEL BOUYS

Le navire de croisière MSC Europa le 13 novembre 2022 à Doha
• Andrej ISAKOVIC

Vue générale le 10 novembre 2022 du stade Al-Bayt à al-Khor, au Qatar, où se jouera le match d’ouverture de la compétition, le 20 novembre, entre le pays hôte à l’Équateur
• Kirill KUDRYAVTSEV

NewsAmericasNow.com