Meurtre du Maximus : « l’ennemi public numéro 1 » jugé à partir d’aujourd’hui

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Benoît de La Salle
b.delasalle@agmedias.fr

Les faits s’étaient déroulés le 26 juillet 2019 devant l’ancienne discothèque Le Maximus au Lamentin. • ARCHIVES FRANCE-ANTILLES

Cédric Chaillot, 37 ans, sera face aux jurés et juges de la Cour d’assises pour le meurtre de Daniel Duville, décédé le 26 juillet 2019 devant l’ex-discothèque le Maximus, au Lamentin. Il est également poursuivi pour violences, détention d’armes. À ses côtés, Dany-Claude L., 29 ans, est accusé de « soustraction d’un criminel à l’arrestation ou aux recherches ».

Les faits se sont déroulés le 26 juillet 2019
devant l’ancienne discothèque Le Maximus au Lamentin. Il est aux
alentours de 4h45 quand les policiers sont sollicités pour
intervenir après des coups de feu devant l’établissement situé au
quartier Californie. Sur place, ils trouvent deux personnes
blessées par balles. La première est Dany-Claude L. qui présente un
impact de balle au bras. L’autre victime n’est autre que Daniel
Duville, 23 ans, blessé par plusieurs projectiles. Le jeune homme
succombera à ses blessures durant son transfert vers le CHU de
Fort-de-France. Très vite, les témoins désignent le tireur comme
étant Cédric Chaillot. Ce dernier a quitté les lieux en scooter
après les tirs. Dany-Claude L. est désigné comme celui avec qui il
était arrivé. Il sera placé en garde à vue par la suite puis mis en
examen.

Selon les nombreux témoins, les faits seraient
survenus lors d’une altercation qui a commencé à l’intérieur de
l’établissement de nuit entre la victime et d

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Climat: les industriels émetteurs de gaz à effet de serre reçus à l’Elysée

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Ciment, aluminium, acier, engrais, sucre ou carburants: en pleine conférence mondiale sur le climat en Egypte, les dirigeants des cinquante sites industriels français les plus émetteurs de CO2 sont conviés mardi à l’Elysée pour voir combien coûterait de continuer…

Ciment, aluminium, acier, engrais, sucre ou carburants: en pleine conférence mondiale sur le climat en Egypte, les dirigeants des cinquante sites industriels français les plus émetteurs de CO2 sont conviés mardi à l’Elysée pour voir combien coûterait de continuer à produire en France sans réchauffer la planète.

Ce sont les sites sidérurgiques d’Arcelor Mittal à Dunkerque ou Fos sur Mer, les cimenteries de Vicat, Lafarge ou Calcia, des usines chimiques du Grand Est, de l’étang de Berre ou de Normandie, les fabricants d’engrais Yara ou Borealis, la verrerie d’Arcques, les raffineries d’ExxonMobil et TotalEnergies en Normandie, Air Liquide en région PACA, ou les sites de production de sucre de Tereos et Cristal Union dans le Nord de la France. Ils représentent 30.000 emplois.

Tout juste de retour de la COP27 à Charm el-Cheikh, Emmanuel Macron réunit leurs dirigeants à 15H00 avec l’intention d’accélérer la lutte contre le changement climatique, après un premier quinquennat jugé trop timoré en la matière par ses détracteurs.

Leur point commun est d’émettre des quantités considérables de C02 dans l’atmosphère, soit parce qu’ils brûlent du gaz pour chauffer leurs installations, soit parce qu’ils extraient certains éléments chimiques (l’hydrogène par exemple) du méthane et rejettent le CO2.

En France, l’industrie (hors transports et hors production d’énergie) représente “à peu près 20% de nos émissions de gaz à effet de serre”, indique-t-on à l’Elysée, qui a inscrit la décarbonation de l’industrie dans les objectifs de la planification écologique du second quinquennat d’Emmanuel Macron.

A eux seuls, les 50 sites dont les représentants sont attendus à l’Elysée représentent la moitié des émissions de l’industrie, soit 10% des émissions du pays.

“Le but c’est de baisser les émissions sans baisser la production”, précise-t-on au palais présidentiel. Et même “d’accélérer” la baisse des émissions (…) pour être neutre en carbone en 2050, a ajouté le ministre de l’Industrie Roland Lescure mardi sur France Inter.

Ce qui signifie dans nombre de cas: changer de source d’énergie en abandonnant les énergies fossiles (pétrole ou gaz) pour se tourner vers l’électricité non émettrice de CO2, soit verte (éolienne ou solaire), soit nucléaire, soit encore de l’hydrogène décarboné, produit à partir d’électricité elle-même décarbonée. Et dans d’autres cas, de capturer et séquestrer le CO2 émis ou de le réutiliser dans le processus industriel.

Investissements massifs

Cela suppose des investissements massifs susceptibles de renchérir les coûts de production et de fragiliser la compétitivité des entreprises concernées face à des concurrents internationaux moins pressés de se décarboner.

Après des décennies de délocalisations d’usines et une amorce timide de réindustrialisation de la France depuis 2020, l’Elysée s’inquiète ainsi de voir les investisseurs se tourner vers d’autres continents et notamment vers les Etats-Unis où un plan d’investissement vert alléchant (Inflation reduction Act) a été lancé par l’administration Biden.

“Toute la clé, c’est de faire en sorte que la décarbonation ne se transforme pas en une délocalisation massive”, admet-on à l’Elysée.

“Ca va coûter beaucoup d’argent” a reconnu Roland Lescure. “Mais si on ne la fait pas en France”, la décarbonation des cinq haut fourneaux dont ArcelorMittal dispose en France, “se fera ailleurs” a-t-il prévenu.

ArcelorMittal à lui seul représente 25% des émissions des industriels présents à l’Elysée, et 4% des émissions françaises, selon M. Lescure. “Je veux que les haut fourneaux soient décarbonés en France plutôt qu’on aille chercher notre acier ailleurs” a-t-il ajouté.

“La clé sera le montant de l’aide publique qui sera consentie” pour aider les industriels, résume Vincent Charlet, économiste à la Fabrique de l’Industrie.

“Sans aide publique, des filières entières risquent de disparaître” en France et en Europe, ajoute-t-il en citant le secteur des métaux de base, le plus exposé, qui “ne dispose pas d’assez de marge bénéficiaire pour supporter le coût de sa décarbonation” mais aussi ceux de “la chimie, du papier-carton, du ciment ou du verre, ainsi que le transport aérien”.

“Le fait que l’Elysée organise une telle réunion alors que le sujet est travaillé depuis longtemps entre les filières et les administrations centrales est une très bonne nouvelle”, ajoute-t-il auprès de l’AFP, “et si un cofinancement public pouvait être annoncé à cette occasion, ce serait un très beau signal”.

im/ha/elm/mpm

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Miedema? Dutch government has never heard of him – StMaartenNews.com – News Views Reviews & Interviews

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: StMaartenNews

PHILIPSBURG — The Ministry of Home Affairs and Kingdom Relations does not know Jacob A. Miedema, the representative of a Dutch consortium that claims to be negotiating the refinancing of St. Maarten’s liquidity loans. “Nobody within the ministry has been in contact with Mr. Miedema about guarantees on loans or any other topic,” State Secretary Alexandra van Huffelen wrote to Minister of Finance Ardwell Irion.

Xavier Blackman, speaking on behalf of independent MP Grisha Heyliger-Marten, told StMaartenNews.com a couple of days ago that “Dutch technocrats know about the consortium’s offer to refinance their loans.”

Related article: Mysterious Dutch consortium interested in refinancing St. Maarten’s debt

But the State Secretary has now emphatically stated that nobody within her ministry has had contacts with the consortium or with its representative Jacob Miedema.

Minister Irion posed several questions to the State Secretary in a letter dated November 3. The letter refers to a coalition group chat meeting that took place on June 23, 2022, at the invitation of MP Heyliger-Marten. In this meeting, the minister wrote, Miedema “informed the group that he had engaged in informal conversations with technocrats within the Dutch government and the ministry of BZK.” This meeting focused on the preparedness of the Dutch government to guarantee the refinancing scheme. Miedema said during the meeting that “granting St. Maarten a guarantee was received favorably.”

But State Secretary Van Huffelen puts those statements to rest in her reaction to Irion’s letter. “It is unlikely that the Dutch state will issue a full guarantee on the refinancing of any loan St. Maarten has obtained from the Netherlands, because such a guarantee has no advantages for the Netherlands while there are risks attached to it.”

Van Huffelen announces in her letter that the Netherlands is prepared to offer St. Maarten a soft deal on the refinancing of its liquidity loans. The current refinancing agreement expires in October 2023. “The Netherlands intends to make multi-annual refinancing-agreements that take the carrying capacity of the country into account. This has been discussed in the Kingdom Council of Ministers.”

Minister Irion said in a reaction to StMaartenNews.com that Miedema had started to beg his staff to have him sign a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) for the refinancing deal. “That set off all kinds of red flags with me.”

Those actions came after the minister demanded a term sheet before having any more discussions about the topic.

In June, MP Heyliger-Marten let the minister know that “based on informal talks there are indications that the ministry sees the benefits of this option from short-term liquidity and long-term strategic perspective, and is willing to discuss a (joint) proposal from the island and the consortium.”

Irion: “Now the State Secretary declares in writing that no such talks with civil servants within the Dutch government have taken place.”

Ahead of the June 23-meeting MP Heyliger Marten provided the minister with the possible terms for the refinancing-deal: a ten-year loan, to be repaid on the tenth anniversary of the contract, against 4 percent annual interest, to be paid in two installments every year. “The loan will be provided based on an irrevocable guarantee from the Dutch state.”

Heyliger-Marten furthermore informed the minister ahead of the June-meeting that “the lender is a Dutch legal entity that obtains the funds from Dutch and non-Dutch institutions.”

Rosette Generlette, the secretary of MP Heyliger-Marten who at the time was President of Parliament, sent log-in information to Miedema and Irion for the meeting of June 23. The information is addressed to miedema@anfire-tax.com. But an online search for this company hits a brick wall and leads to the website of Trans IP, the largest cloud provider in the Netherlands, and the message: “Anfire-tax.com is reserved for a client of Trans IP.”

###

Related article: Mysterious Dutch consortium interested in refinancing St. Maarten’s debt

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New Bordelais Director Takes Up Duty – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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The Department of Home Affairs confirms that Mr. Verne Garde has assumedthe post of Director of Correction at the Bordelais Correctional Facility, BCF, effectiveOctober 4, 2022 to October 3, 2024.

Mr. Guard has held the post of Director previously, from February 2015 to May 2018;with this current appointment marking his second tenure at the helm of the BordelaisCorrectional Facility.

The newly reappointed BCF Chief is also a retired police officer of 20 years’ servicewho attained the rank of Inspector and headed the Special Branch Unit of the RoyalSaint Lucia Police Force.

More recently, Mr. Guard served in the capacity of Superintendent of Her Majesty’s Prison in Balsam Ghut, Tortola, British Virgin Islands from July 2, 2018 to July 3, 2021.

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He also served as the National Security Advisor on Prison Matters.

The Minister for Home Affairs Honourable Dr. Virginia Albert-Poyotte and the Department of Home Affairs and Gender Affairs, vouch to work closely with the new director, throughout the two-year duration of his contract.

Meanwhile, the Department of Home Affairs wishes to acknowledge the support and leadership provided by Deputy Director Mr. Leonard Terrence, for the approximately six weeks.

SOURCE: Department of Home Affairs

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Scrap iron dealers plead again for industry to reopen

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Scrap Iron Dealers Association president Allan Ferguson, centre, speaks at a news conference at Yzees Event Hall, Caroni Savannah Road, Kelly Village, Caroni on Monday. –

SCRAP Iron Dealers Association president Allan Ferguson has said some people may turn to a life of crime in search of income as the ban on scrap-iron exports continues. He again called on the Prime Minister to reopen the industry.

He was speaking at a news conference in Kelly Village, Caroni on Monday morning.

The six-month ban was announced on August 15, although, under the Customs Act, it came into effect on August 12.

An emotional Ferguson said members of the association have been calling him saying they cannot afford to take care of their families, among other things, and are “willing to do anything” to earn a dollar.

“It (the ban) costing us plenty,” Ferguson said.

In addition to those who buy scrap iron, he said it has also affected the shipping industry.

“A lot of them would have bought a lot of trucks and trailers to be able to move our material to the port and back…they and all feeling it.”

Prior to the ban, there were several reports of people in the scrap-iron industry stealing.

For instance, a bell was stolen from the St John’s Anglican Church, Petit Bourg, San Juan in July.

Ferguson sought to apologise for those in the industry who participated in illegal activity.

“I believe in God…and who want to hide, they can hide from me, but they cannot hide from God.

“I humbly apologise to TT.”

He said it “gives him no joy” to say that he believes the shutdown of the industry is contributing to the increasing crime rate.

“We worked with them, we bring them out of crime, all they know their whole life was about crime and we talk to them, we show them a way to make an honest dollar without doing crime.”

He added that international companies which place containers in areas specifically for stolen items to be stored there must also cease.

“I don’t care who vex, I don’t care who don’t like it.”

He said he wants to have a meeting with acting Commissioner of Police Mc Donald Jacob to crack down on wrongdoers in the industry.

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Maxi crushes Black Rock man in freak accident

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Theodore James, centre, was killed in a freak accident on Monday. –

A Black Rock maxi-taxi driver was crushed to death on Monday in a freak accident.

Theodore James, 71, of Fort Bennett, was fixing his blue-band maxi at a nearby garage when it fell on him.

He was pronounced dead at the scene.

James’s niece Liz James-Mander told Newsday she heard about the incident shortly after 10am.

“Girl, I faint away. Is something we didn’t expect. I saw him up to this morning – normal, talk, everything,” she said.

James-Mander said the maxi had been in the garage for over a year.

“He was trying to fix the maxi for the longest while.

“Apparently the maxi was probably in a gear and he was trying to fix it, so as he went under and they started it. They didn’t know that would have happened. The maxi rolled. I don’t even know what caused it to roll.

“Is years he trying to fix it and nothing, it just never moved, so he is accustomed going below it to try and fix it.”

She said for the last couple years his maxi has not been working.

“Since the covid19 hit, the maxi has not been on the road, since then he has been trying to fix it.”

She said another man in the garage witnessed the incident and had to be taken away as he was traumatised.

Family and friends of Theodore James console each other at Fort Bennett Street, Black Rock where James was crushed by a maxi he was fixing on Monday morning. – David Reid

“He devastated right now, he’s out of it – totally out of it. He came to help him. And is not he alone, a next fella went to come back to help him. They were just at least trying to get the maxi to start.”

She said James wanted to fix the maxi as there were some complaints from people in the area about the unavailability of maxis to transport children.

She described the father of five as a very serious man.

“He was a man who was always on time – that is one thing. If he comes and he gives you a time or you give him a time and you’re not ready, he was going to go away. He was always particular about time – he used to leave people. He never use to play with time. He was very serious, but nice.”

James-Mander’s stepfather, Herbert Graham, said he was in total shock.

“Where you seeing that hose running, is wash I trying to wash down the blood.

“I don’t even know how to feel at this time. This just wasn’t expected – not to say that he sick and lie down, he was up and moving and now, ­bram, he dead. I see him just a few minutes before this happened.”

He added, “The maxi cannot tell the last time it moved from the spot. That is the whole fact of the matter: the maxi wasn’t working, so he use to work on it every day to try to get it to work. He accustomed going under it.”

The scene was visited by THA representative for Plymouth/ Black Rock Nial George and assistant secretary in the office of the chief secretary Certica Williams-Orr.

Police investigations are continuing.

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TTUTA warns teachers: Don’t intervene in school fights

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

TTUTA president Martin Lum Kin – Photo by Marvin Hamilton

PRESIDENT of the Trinidad and Tobago Unified Teachers Association (TTUTA) Martin Lum Kin is advising teachers against intervening to stop fights among students.

His advice comes after a video of a fight involving Tranquillity Secondary School, Port of Spain students was widely shared on social media platforms.

The 23-second video, allegedly taken by a student on November 4, showed two separate fights among female students in the school’s car park with scores of students looking on.

The camera panned to the left, and captured the female principal and a male teacher trying to break up one of the fights. But even as the principal got among the fighting girls, they continued to fight over her.

The camera shifted away for a few seconds, and when it moved back the principal was seen falling to the ground. She landed on her back, but the fight continued. It is unclear if she was shoved or if she stumbled.

A male staff member and at least one student attempted to help her to her feet.

No one was injured.

Police have since launched an investigation and taken reports from several of the students who were allegedly involved.

Speaking with Newsday on Monday night, Lum Kin said TTUTA has launched its own investigation.

But he warned his members they can risk being seriously injured intervening in these types of altercations.

“We are very concerned about it, and when the incidents where our members, whether the teachers or administrators, get injured during these scuffles and fights, we are also very concerned.

“The principal (in the latest incident) was thrown to the ground, and we still have to find out what caused that.

“We see in other videos where teachers getting involved would have had some level of injury during that scuffle.”

He reminded members of the possible legal implications if students sustain bodily harm or are touched inappropriately.

“We have school safety officers in secondary schools who should be intervening; we have school security as well. Education Minister Dr Nyan Gadsby-Dolly said the education system will not be held to ransom by students who, despite the best efforts of Student Support Services Division (SSSD) officers, continue to disrupt schools.

She said the students directly involved in the fracas have been suspended and will receive attention from the SSSD.

“However, depending on their disciplinary history, their parents will receive expulsion warning letters on their return to school, or the students may face expulsion at this time.”

She added, “The principal’s report with full details is expected tomorrow, and that will determine the exact nature of the discipline to be meted out to each student identified as being directly involved in this incident.”

Gadsby-Dolly said the ministry and the safety of teachers, administrators and students is being compromised by a minority of students, “Who continue, by their actions, to disrupt some schools and bring the education system into disrepute.

“The law allows for such students to be removed from the system to restore an atmosphere of safety and security to the learning environment, and this option has been, and will continue to be, exercised.

National Parent/Teachers Association president Kevin David said stakeholders must do more to bring indiscipline under control.

“This shows the level of indiscipline within our school system. It also, again, shows the level of parental involvement that is needed to assist in bringing a reduction in these incidents in schools. It’s a reflection of our society.”

Newsday unsuccessfully attempted the speak to the principal who was still on the compound on Monday after school hours.

Secondary Schools Principal Association head Sheera Carrington-James could not be reached for comment.

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Wage talks rejected, court sets tribunal dates for unions over four per cent rejection

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

PSA president Leroy Baptiste outside the Industrial Court in Port of Spain on Monday. – ROGER JACOB

LEADERS of five top trade unions in the public sector voiced their upset to reporters at the Industrial Court, Port of Spain, on Monday, as the Chief Personnel Officer (CPO) rejected a bid for them to return to the bargaining table for wage negotiations.

Instead, the issue will be heard by the court’s special tribunal next year.

Industrial Court president Deborah Thomas-Felix presided over a three-hour case-management conference with the representatives of the unions and the CPO to agree on a series of dates for tribunal hearings, negotiated separately for each of the five unions.

While the unions had argued that fruitful wage talks were underway, the CPO’s attorney Seenath Jairam did not agree to the unions’ attempts at conciliation.

The unions have continuously rejected the government’s offer of a four per cent wage increase for 2014-2019. The proposal represents zero, zero, two, zero, zero, two for each year successively.

The offer was accepted by the Amalgamated Workers Union and the defence force.

A dejected-looking Ceron Richards, president of the Prisons Officers Association, leaves the Industrial Court in Port of Spain on Monday. – ROGER JACOB

In his winding up of the budget debate in the House on October 4, Finance Minister Colm Imbert said the CPO negotiates with workers in the civil service, the prison service, the fire service, the police service, the defence force and the teaching service. “When negotiations break down, the negotiations or the disputes are referred to a special tribunal, which is comprised of senior members of the Industrial Court.”

He said there are approximately 20,000 daily-rated workers within the mainstream public service.

“I want to report that four unions have been referred to the special tribunal.

Fire, prisons, police, TTUTA and the NUGFW have gone through the process, because they are not referred to the special tribunal, of sending the matter to the Industrial Court.” But, he said there is always the option, along the way, of the trade unions asking for conciliation outside of the tribunal.

On Monday, Thomas-Felix said conciliation was a voluntary process, implying both sides must consent.

In court were PSA head Leroy Baptiste, Fire Service Association (FSA) head Leo Ramkissoon, and Police Social and Welfare Division head Gideon Dickson – all who addressed the court on behalf of their unions – plus TTUTA head Martin Lum Kin and Prison Officers Association (POA) head Ceron Richards.

Accusing the Government of not acting in good faith towards them, the labour leaders argued for wage talks by saying they were not in a dispute.

Jairam responded, “We have no instructions that there should be conciliation.”

The POA’s chief negotiator Burton Hill said his association had been on a firm path towards arriving at common ground with the CPO. He said the association made headway on the issue of someone acting in a post before retirement, declaring,”The CPO responded.” Likewise, on the matter of qualification allowance, he said, “The CPO said he will look at it.”

However Hill then admitted, “We don’t have a memorandum of agreed items.” Saying the association has letters with agreements on a number of things, he complained, “We were blind sided by the Minister of Finance saying the matters were referred to a special tribunal.”

Hill said correspondence dated September 26 showed agreement on several allowances, as he said the association was now taken aback by news it was heading to the tribunal.

Thomas-Felix said, “There is a view that different things had been agreed to.”

Jairam replied that the relevant law allows the Finance Minister to refer matters to a special tribunal.

Thomas-Felix asked, “So the door has closed for discussion?”

TTUTA president Martin Lum Kin, centre, with executive members. – ROGER JACOB

Seenath said yes.

Hill argued,”We have documents that we were engaged in agreeable discussions up to September 26.”

Thomas-Felix said,”Present those things to the special tribunal.”

Speaking for the PSA, Baptiste said, “It takes two hands to clap. But it appears not to be the case.”

He said he had only learnt the union was supposedly in a dispute when he got a letter to go to court, which he viewed as a subtle threat.

“It was shocking to me.”

Arguing for conciliation, Baptiste added,”The court witnessed today three associations all unaware they had a dispute with the CPO.”

Initially, the PSA, FSA and POA agreed for their future court hearings to be consolidated in the interest of time, but later adopted the positions of TTUTA and the PSWA for separate hearings.

The PSA is expected to have hearings on January 19, 20 and 30, and half-day hearings on March 14, 16 and 17.

The FSA will have hearings on April 12, 13 and 14.

The PSWA have hearings on February 15 and 24, and March 13, the POA on May 2, 4 and 5, and TTUTA on May 12 and 19, and June 9.

Union leaders complained to reporters about ongoing financial hardships faced by their members awaiting their salary updates amid rising prices of food and gasoline.

TTUTA past second vice-president Kyrla Robertson-Thomas said, “Collective agreements for TTUTA have been outside since 2014-2017. This is the first one we have on the table. Our first hearing date is in May, so I will tell you we are not happy people today.”

Ramkissoon said the State’s rejection of conciliation was “very, very disheartening and demotivating” to his officers.

“While the minister said clearly during his delivery in Parliament that opportunity would be given, if we so desire, to further discuss around the table and have conciliation in the interest of hammering out a fair settlement, we find that under the cloak or under the protection of the court, they are holding a different position.”

Dickson said his association was not taken aback by the State’s decision but had planned for it.

“We are disheartened to know the State would have shown their hands at this time, to not operate in what we would want to consider to be good faith. That’s of serious concern to police officers. “We will be engaging our members in the next two weeks.”

Baptiste alleged “a complete undermining” of TT’s industrial relations fabric, with the court used as a whip to oppress workers, with the government’s attorney refusing to engage in conciliation.

“Notwithstanding the posturing of the State, we will continue to engage in the process of trying to bring about a resolution of the terms and conditions of our members even before the hearing on January 19.”

Richards was taken aback by the day’s events.

“We always thought the option for conciliation would always been on the table based on the utterances of the minister in Parliament. We are very disappointed there is no option for conciliation.”

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Carlsen Field farmer jailed for housebreaking, larceny

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

A farmer has been sentenced to 30 months’ jail with hard labour for housebreaking and larceny.

Jevon Gibbs, 26, of Pig Farm Road in Carlsen Field, pleaded guilty before a Chaguanas magistrate on Monday.

The victim, a 35-year-old farmer, reported to the police that on September 6 he returned tohis home at Connector Road, also in Carlsen Field, after leaving the day before, and discovered several items were missing. They included a brushcutter, chainsaw, mattress, TV, water pump, clothing and fridge.

The court heard that “diligent efforts and meticulous investigations,” headed by Sgt Seelal led and including police from Freeport CID, led to Gibbs’ arrest.

PC Mootiram laid the charge.

The police also recovered some of the stolen items, including the TV and the chainsaw.

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Verlies voor Leter in openingswedstrijd

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

door Terence Oosterwolde PARAMARIBO — Dancell Leter en het basketbalteam van Utah Tech University hebben geen succes gehad in hun

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