L’Aiglon ira à Amiens

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

FOOTBALL. RéGIONAL 1 – COUPES DE FRANCE et DE MARTINIQUE

C.T., M.Z., M.M.

Au cours de ce week-end qui servait de point d’orgue à la coupe de France, avec la finale locale entre le Golden Lion et l’Aiglon, des mises à jour ont été effectuées en championnat de Régional 1 et en coupe de Martinique.

RÉGIONAL 1

Dans cette mise à jour de la première journée, le
Club Colonial a dû attendre la 83e minute pour ouvrir le score et
arracher la victoire. La frappe de Charles est repoussée par
Bertrand. Le ballon arrive jusqu’à De Perçin, qui enchaine avec une
frappe victorieuse (1-0). 

Cette courte mais précieuse victoire, la quatrième
en championnat, évite aux pensionnaires de Desclieux de nourrir des
regrets, tant les hommes de Jean-Marc Civault ont eu des occasions
de concrétiser plus tôt. Mais en vain.

Le match US Rober

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Makenzy Orcel ou la r?invention heureuse

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Le Nouvelliste

Troisi?me et derni?re s?lection du Goncourt avant l’attribution du prix. <> poursuit son chemin. Quels sont vos sentiments ? quelques jours de la proclamation ?

Il y a quelques semaines, avant la proclamation de la premi?re liste du Goncourt, je me demandais encore si je n’?tais pas pass? ? c?t? de ce projet litt?raire que j’ai port?, jour et nuit, pendant trois ans. M?me apr?s son arriv?e sur les tables des librairies, je n’arr?tais pas de me relire, ? la recherche de la faille, submerg? par l’id?e qu’il manquait quelque chose. Avant de me r?soudre ? accepter le livre tel qu’il est, et passer ? autre chose, les s?lections du Goncourt sont tomb?es. Tout s’est pass? tr?s vite dans une ?trange tension. J’ai l’impression d’?tre ? la fois le concern? et le spectateur qui se demande si tout ?a est vrai, a un sens. Mais mon livre a ?t? d?couvert par des milliers de personnes, j’en suis tr?s content.

Le livre est une vraie somme de plus de 600 pages dans une ?criture dense, avec de longues phrases. Pouvez-vous nous le pr?senter ?

Il existe dans une ?toile toutes les combinaisons chimiques qui existent dans un ?tre humain. A la naissance de l’astre, un champ gravitationnel avale tout ce qui lui est n?cessaire dans son environnement pour se former, se compl?ter, finir par s’accomplir, et briller. Il se passe la m?me chose pour l’?tre humain, pour sa construction, tout au long de son existence (?ducation, rencontres, lectures, voyages, etc.). L’?toile qui meurt s’effondre sur elle-m?me en devenant un trou noir (on ignore ce qui se passe dans un trou, comme dans la mort). Que racontent les trous noirs de l’humanit?, de la mort de la vie ?

J’ai travaill? sur cette figure f?minine avec cette id?e qu’elle est une ?toile (un cadavre stellaire) incapable de s’adapter au monde, ?cras?e en pleine gravitation par cette impossibilit? de s’accrocher ? quelque chose, au possible, au r?el. Elle finit par claquer la porte, pour rena?tre et se rendre compte que tout s’?claircit ? partir de la mort…

Elle est n?e, a grandi dans un village perdu du sud de la France, dans une famille pour le moins dysfonctionnelle. Pour fuir sa condition d’enfant, de fille, de jeune adulte d?laiss?e, abus?e par l’oncle, elle rejoint Paris, et d?bute une longue errance faite de rencontres, de r?ves avort?s, de d?sillusions, jusqu’? cet instant crucial o? elle d?cide de mettre un terme ? sa vie. Mais elle continue encore de parler en nous, comme la seule preuve de son passage dans cette vie, et la certitude contagieuse, ? l’entendre, que le langage est plus fort que la mort.

<> se raconte dans la jonction entre des extr?mes de l’existence humaine. Entre la mort et la vie. Le village (lieu coup? du monde) et la grande ville. L’existant et l’invent?. Une parole libre, int?rieure, cyclique, sans commencement ni fin, pleine, comme le mouvement de la vie et du temps, r?sonnant depuis l’au-del? du temps trifide : pass?, pr?sent, futur. Na?tre, vivre, p?rir…

Par son sujet, <>, sort de l’univers habituel de la litt?rature ha?tienne. Constitue-t-elle une transition, une mutation, une rupture dans l’imaginaire de l’?crivain que vous ?tes ?

Ha?ti, ancienne colonie fran?aise, anciennement occup?e par les Etats-Unis. Le triangle est l?, vivant, complexe, in?puisable. L’id?e de le tracer symboliquement, historiquement (L’Ombre animale) en passant par la France (Une Somme humaine) jusqu’Aux Etats-Unis (le dernier volet ? venir) en questionnant ma propre histoire et celle de ma famille, une m?moire enfouie… Mes personnages sont dans une constante remise en question de leur histoire individuelle et de l’Histoire, des profondes cicatrices laiss?es par le croisement des deux. L’imaginaire est constamment en mouvement. En ce sens, l’?crivain ha?tien, comme aucun autre d’ailleurs, n’est pas enferm? dans son pays d’origine, il est t?moin des grands mouvements, des soubresauts du monde, et il s’interroge.

Vous faites parler une femme, une Fran?aise, une morte, c’est un v?ritable tour de force ou f?t-ce facile d’entrer dans le personnage ?

Je mets la m?me ?nergie dans tous mes personnages. Facile, non, ?a ne l’a pas ?t?. Ce n’est jamais facile. Mais pour ce livre, dont la France est aussi un des personnages cl?s, ? c?t? du Mali, du Qu?bec, etc., c’?tait diff?rent. Le temps pass? sur chaque phrase, chaque chapitre, chaque histoire, ?tait particuli?rement long. Retracer l’autobiographie de quelqu’un, se projeter compl?tement dans l’autre, c’est tout simplement lui donner toute la place. Et qui ? Une femme que j’ai invent? de toutes pi?ces, de son enfance ? sa mort. ?a exige une proximit?, une ouverture totale ? sa vision du monde, sa psychologie, ses sentiments les plus profonds… Bref, Il faut que ?a soit vrai, cr?dible.

Makenzy Orcel entre-il dans une autre cat?gorie avec cet ouvrage qui regarde la France et qui est remarqu? par le jury Goncourt ?

Je ne sais pas, je ne le pense pas. La litt?rature est un long voyage. Je dois continuer ma route, ou continuer ? la tracer. C’est-?-dire m?langer le ciel et la terre. Le visible et l’invisible. Donner ? vivre les beaut?s et les laideurs du monde. Me baigner dans les soubassements des ?tres et des choses. Les ?lectriser par la force gravitationnelle de la langue…

Le livre s’inscrit dans la trilogie <> parlez-nous de ce projet ? L’irr?sistible errance va continuer ?

Oui, ?a va continuer. Le cadre du dernier volet sera l’Am?rique dans toute sa splendeur, ses d?mons, ses fant?mes et ses contractions ? travers, le tout ? travers la voix d’une adolescente. Toujours dans une langue qui fonce, emporte tout son passage. Je vais tenter de pousser la d?marche encore plus loin tant sur le plan linguistique que romanesque.

Le succ?s des deux premiers romans <> et <> est ind?niable. Cela met-il d?j? de la pression sur la production du dernier tome ?

Pour l’instant j’assure la promotion d’Une Somme humaine. Je profite ? fond. Mais ?a va peut-?tre continuer encore longtemps, parce que le livre a ?t? s?lectionn? dans le choix du Goncourt de plusieurs pays. D’autres tourn?es se pr?parent en cons?quence…

Avec ou sans le Prix Goncourt, quels sont les projets imm?diats de Makenzy Orcel ?

J’essaie de mettre en route un roman pour revenir ? la forme courte. Quelque chose dans la veine de Les Immortelles ou L’Empereur. Je le fais doucement, entre deux trains, deux avions, pour accompagner la sortie de Ma?tre-Minuit en poche dans un an ou deux. Sinon je co-dirige avec Jean-Marie Th?odat un livre encyclop?dique sur Ha?ti (plus d’un million de signes) qui sortira dans la prestigieuse collection Bouquins ? Paris dirig? par Jean-Luc barr?. Beaucoup de projets.

En 2017, Le Nouvelliste vous pr?sentait comme un jeune ?crivain ha?tien plus connu ? l’?tranger que chez lui. Pensez-vous que 5 ans plus tard cette impression a chang? ? Y travaillez-vous en d?pit des circonstances ?

Raymond Radiguet avait 17 ans lorsque son premier roman <> est paru. Rimbaud aurait ?crit ses <> ? 16 ans. Coriolan Ardouin est mort ? 23 ans, il nous laiss? un tr?s beau recueil, son unique d’ailleurs, <>… J’ai publi? mon premier livre en 2007. J’?tais jeune et pas s?r que j’allais pouvoir continuer, vu les circonstances (tr?s difficiles) dans lesquelles je l’avais ?crit. Il ?tait clair que je ne pouvais pas gagner ma vie en publiant des livres, mais finalement c’est qui s’est pass?, je vis uniquement de mon ?criture depuis quelques ann?es (une petite vie mais libre comme le vent), parce que justement mon objectif n’?tait pas de toucher uniquement des lecteurs ha?tiens, mais ceux du monde entier. Je suis connu en Ha?ti, mais je dirais que je suis plus lu et invit? ? l’?tranger. Exemple : dans le cadre du Goncourt de l’Orient <> a ?t? lu et appr?ci? par 35 jurys dans 33 universit?s de 11 pays du Moyen-Orient. C’est ?norme. J’ai rencontr? quelques-uns des repr?sentants de ces jurys ? Beyrouth.

Vos derniers ouvrages sont difficiles ? trouver en Ha?ti. Et votre derni?re vente-signature au pays remonte ? un certain temps d?j?. Votre public ha?tien se sent n?glig?. Un mot pour vos lecteurs ?

Ha?ti est avec moi partout. J’ai ?crit tous mes livres depuis mon enfance ? Martissant, pour raconter des histoires au petit gar?on que j’ai ?t?, avec les r?ves de ma m?re pour lui. Je viendrai d?s que je pourrai. H?te.

Propos recueillis par Frantz Duval et Daphney Valsaint Malandre

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3-y-o son of Nigerian singer Davido has died — police Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

The three-year-old son of Nigerian music star Davido has died at his home in an apparent drowning, police said Tuesday.

The singer, whose real name is David Adeleke, was not at the home at the time of Ifeanyi’s death Monday night. The child’s mother, Chioma Rowland, was also away, according to Lagos police spokesman Ben Hundeyin.

Authorities are interviewing eight of the pop star’s employees who were at the Lagos residence, he added.

Neither parent has spoken publicly about their son’s death, just two weeks after Ifeanyi’s third birthday.

The global award-winning musician got engaged to Rowland, a popular chef, in 2019. The couple had said recently that they plan to wed next year.

Lagos Gov, Babajide Sanwo-Olu mourned Ifeanyi’s death, tweeting that “death leaves a heartache no words can heal.”

Peter Obi, one of the leading contenders in Nigeria’s presidential election next year said he cannot “begin to imagine the pains” both parents are going through.

“No parents deserve what they are going through right now,” Nigerian pop star Peter Okoye said of Davido and Rowland in an Instagram post.

By CHINEDU ASADU

Associated Press

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FIFA doctor sees World Cup as showcase of concussion policy Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

FIFA’s top doctor highlighted brain injuries in soccer as his top priority Tuesday ahead of a World Cup where teams can use an extra substitute if a player has a suspected concussion.

“I joined FIFA to try and make a little bit of a difference and brain injuries is top of my list. That is the one we can focus on,” said Andrew Massey, who joined the world governing body as its medical director in 2020 after being team doctor at Liverpool. “What we do at the World Cup will be evidenced at grass-roots football.”

The tournament in Qatar will be the first World Cup where teams can make an additional permanent substitution in a game for a suspected concussion, on top of the five that can be used in the regulation 90 minutes.

In the final of the 2014 World Cup, Germany midfielder Christoph Kramer stayed on the field for 14 first-half minutes after taking a heavy blow to the face when colliding with an Argentina opponent. He was replaced only after slumping to the ground.

Soccer’s often inconsistent attitude to head injuries was shown Saturday in the English Premier League.

Aston Villa’s Argentina goalkeeper Emiliano Martinez continued playing for several minutes against Newcastle despite looking groggy after colliding with a teammate.

FIFAs law-making panel, known as IFAB, has specially allowed concussion subs at the World Cup as it continues trials that run through August next year with about 140 competitions globally.

Massey said FIFA’s strategy was to “suspect and protect”, aiming to avoid having injured players staying on the field until the severity of a head injury becomes clearer.

“We don’t want to leave a team numerically disadvantaged or tactically disadvantaged,” he told FIFA’s in-house “Living Football” show.

In Qatar, teams’ medical staff will have tablets to see video replays quickly and get input from concussion spotters in the stands.

“Everything FIFA does is to support the team doctors” who make the final decision if a player can continue playing or must be replaced, Massey said.___By GRAHAM DUNBAR

AP Sports Writer

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Bus driver that caused 8 vehicle crash had 120 outstanding ticket Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

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

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NEWYou can now listen to Loop News articles!

The driver, who was operating the coaster bus that triggered the eight-vehicle accident on Constant Spring Road, was driving with over 100 outstanding tickets.

The police high command made the disclosure during a press conference that was held at the Police Commissioner’s Office in St Andrew on Tuesday.

A one-minute video circulating on social media, showed the coaster bus slamming into the back of a van, and the impact from that collision led to other collisions.

Reports are that several people were taken to the hospital for medical treatment.

Police say they will be stepping up the pressure on those motorists who continue to break the law.

“The police will continue to write tickets and arrest on warrants for traffic offences”, Commissioner of Police Antony Anderson said during the JCF Press briefing.

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Speech by Prime Minister Gaston Browne On the occasion of the 41st Anniversary of the Independence of Antigua and Barbuda

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

 

Speech by Prime Minister

the Honourable Gaston Browne MP

On the occasion of the 41st Anniversary of the Independence of Antigua and Barbuda

November 1st, 2022 –
 

“Our nation has been tested, and proved strong and resilient”

 

Fellow Citizens and Residents of our beloved Antigua and Barbuda.

Today, we have completed 41 years of political independence and we commemorate our nation’s struggle for freedom and its advancement, under the theme: Moving forward with Unity, Strength and Stability. 

Whereas we are in an election cycle which is characterised by partisan sentiments, we must all remain respectful of our nation’s independence by dignifying the struggles of our ancestors and giving thanks to the Most High for our 41 years of achievements. 

For more than four decades, we have successfully advanced and improved the welfare of our people, creating a much higher standard of living than we inherited.

We have:

Created better quality and higher paying jobs.

Constructed roads where they did not exist and we have built highways that were previously beyond imagination.

We have built more homes and given more people ownership in 41 years than existed in the previous three centuries.

And, have educated more Antiguans and Barbudans to secondary and University levels in four decades than in 300 years of previous generations.

These were extraordinary accomplishments, in an extraordinarily short space of time.

There is much of which, as a nation, we have cause to be proud.

The evidence of our progress is there for all to see.

Two Modern sea ports and the most modern international airport in the Caribbean;
Sir Lester Bird Hospital which provides the best facilities for a range of ailments that our country has ever enjoyed;
More and better schools for all children, guaranteeing everyone the right to education and learning;
In a country, perennially plagued by drought, over seven million gallons of potable water is being produced daily, using reversed osmosis technologies and delivered to most parts of the country in a continuing and progressive programme;
Electricity now reaches all sections of our nation, whereas 41 years ago, electricity was a scarce commodity, street lighting was sparse and electricity in homes was a luxury for the better-off;
More housing and more homeownership for all income groups than at any other time in our nation’s history;
Instant interconnectivity to the world via high-speed internet for information, education, learning, entertainment, and social contact;
We enjoy one of the highest wage levels in the Caribbean;
Our people’s savings in the banks and credit unions are among the highest per capita in the Caribbean.
Barbuda now enjoys the highest level of investment in its history, with full employment; considerably improved infrastructure in education, health and port facilities; better and more resilient housing; more reliable public utilities including, a renewable energy plant and telecommunications. 
Barbudans who were previously left behind, now enjoy the opportunity for greater empowerment.

Forty-one years of independence brought us these successes, having been left with a neglected, backwater of colonialism where inequities and inequalities prevailed.

It is the vision, the commitment, drive and leadership competence that resulted in our accomplishments and fuelled our people’s burning ambition for advancement. 

And, we should all recall that, for 31 of those 41 years of improvement and progress, it was the Antigua and Barbuda Labour Party that successfully managed the affairs of our nation for the benefit of all our people.

Leadership mattered over the last 41 years, as leadership matters now.

Our progress should have reached higher heights; more should have been achieved for our nation and for every person within it.

But we experienced 10 lost years; a lost decade under the former administration

I need not recall the rapid decline of our economy between 2004 and 2014.

Many of you suffered through it, particularly between 2009 and 2014, when the nation’s financial affairs were mistakenly entrusted into the hands of a well known financial novice, Harold Lovell, culminating in the worst performance of any finance minister in the history of our country and possibly in the history of the world.

You will all recall the high unemployment – the large number of people who lost their homes and their cars because they could not pay their loans and mortgages.

You will all recall the stagnation of our economy, resulting in no growth and financial hardship, causing businesses to close and contracting the economy.

You will all recall the high debt that was incurred and the descent into the harsh conditions of an IMF programme, causing workers to be pushed into severance or early retirement.

You will recall parents having to make a choice between paying to run their cars or paying their children’s school fees.

You will also remember, that even in these harsh conditions, taxes – including taxes on income, astronomical airport taxes and taxes on services  – were imposed upon you, causing the depletion and exhaustion of your savings.

Those awful 10 years, between 2004 and 2014, significantly reversed the decades of growth and development achieved over the previous 23 years.

Our progress was retarded.

Our growth prospects were ruined, by the four years of economic contraction between 2009-2014.

Our people’s betterment was derailed.

The inept UPP government pauperized our country and bankrupted our economy.

Had our nation not suffered those ten years of economic mismanagement, financial maladministration, and just plain incompetence, on this 41st Anniversary of our independence, our finances would have been much stronger, our economy more resilient and our social welfare system more robust.

That is why, one of our pledges at this 41st Anniversary of our National Independence is not to make that mistake again.

We paid dearly.

We suffered much.

Never again should we be lured by empty and recycled promises.

Never again should we be fooled by unsupported pledges to reduce taxes, without any compensatory revenue.

Never again should we fall prey to the trap of downright lies and deceptions, of these desperados.

Never again.

My friends, it took a new direction, a new leadership  and a clear vision with strong management to recover our nation from that decade of catastrophe, and to restore it to a path of economic advancement, higher employment, and social improvement.

The outstanding record of reconstructing our finances, restoring jobs and rebuilding our economy, between 2014 and the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, was plain for all to see.

Our nation’s economy experienced 5 years of unprecedented, high sustainable growth.

Employment increased.

Poverty reduced.

Both foreign and local investment multiplied fuelling robust growth and development.

Tourism figures reached an all-time high.

New housing schemes and schools were built and equipped.

A record number of scholarships were awarded to hundreds of nationals to secure a University education.

We established the first-ever University of the West Indies Campus in our country.

We empowered more individual Antiguans and Barbudans with ownership of homes, cars, and shares in public companies than at any other comparable period in history.

Fully aware that we cannot have a sound economy with a dysfunctional financial system, in 2014 we immediately instituted measures to fix the disastrous banking crisis that was enabled by the UPP.

Had we not acted swiftly, not only would the lifesavings of thousands of persons and their families been completely lost, but the collapse of ABIB would have plunged the entire banking system into danger.

We implemented a financial rescue plan that stabilised the banking structure and bolstered the financial system.

Solid and sound financial and economic management, combined with a deep commitment to social welfare improvement, recovered our country and rebuilt it from the ashes of destruction inflicted by the UPP.

The fact is that in 2014, this nation was on the brink of complete collapse.

Unemployment was higher than it had been since the 1940’s.

Productivity was at an all-time low.

Unauthorised Debts incurred by the UPP were high and unpaid.

These unauthorised debts, which had no agreed credit terms, included debt for the supply of water provided by Sembcorp, which was threatening to cut-off supply to the entire country, and debt to APC for electricity. 

West Indies Oil Company, which had already given notice that it would cease supply of all petroleum products to the nation as a whole, was owed 81M at the time, with a further $8M in cheques, that were returned unpaid for insufficient funds.

It is the UPP government that put people out of work and set a shameful record of economic and financial decline.

Had the ABLP Government not acted swiftly to remedy all this, the scale of the catastrophe and hardship that would have befallen this nation is almost unimaginable.

Everything would have ground to a devastating halt with no water, no electricity, no functioning shops, businesses, banks, schools or offices.

Our nation was within a fraction of that reality.

To forget it would be folly.

Remembering it would be wise and not repeating this mistake will be most wise.

Never again, should we suffer from such incompetent management of our affairs.

My friends, today, despite the ravages of the COVID-19 pandemic on our economy, and the turmoil caused by the consequences of the Russian war against Ukraine, your money in the bank is safe; businesses are no longer in deep distress; the banking system is stable; average national income has returned to a high level; and our Government has established successful mechanisms to give relief to the vulnerable.

Yes, the world economy is in a crisis of high prices and high inflation, and, undeniably, those circumstances have affected our country just as they have impacted all others.

The impact of COVID-19 has lingered globally, adversely affecting logistics and the supply chain.

This has resulted in shortages and high prices, which, as part of the global community, we import.

This situation has been worsened by the Russian war in Ukraine that created more shortages of food and ingredients for food production, as well as higher prices for oil, gas, and production of electricity and water.

These were all circumstances not created in our country.

No policy or action of the Government led to these conditions.

All of them were due to external factors that we could not escape or avoid.

But, your government did not wring its hands in despair, nor was it paralyzed in fear.

Instead we expanded our social safety-net programs and, continue to subsidise the cost of petroleum products, thereby keeping the rate of inflation below those of other countries including developed countries.  

Although fear did grip the entire world in the face of the galloping spread of the Coronavirus which, to date, has killed almost 7 million persons worldwide, and infected more than 630 million people; we courageously and successfully adopted and implemented a pragmatic policy of working and living with COVID. 

Throughout the period of more than 2 years since March 2020 to now, we have limited the number of COVID-19 deaths in our society to 146 – that is 0.15 per cent of our population.

Very few countries in the world have matched that achievement.

Our people were kept secured; their lives were saved; and their future was assured by the competent, efficient, and caring policies that the ABLP government immediately implemented.

Even in the face of significantly reduced revenues, resulting from the worldwide lockdown, the ABLP government invested in safeguarding the welfare of our people.

For instance, for more than a year the government instituted the Dollar Barrell Initiative to allow families to import food, clothing, toiletries and personal hygiene products for a nominal fee of $10 per barrel in taxes.

We also stopped disconnections of electricity and water supply to aid families whose income had been adversely affected by the pandemic.

Further, we discounted 25% on domestic electricity accounts for households.

Our investment in health facilities was significant.

We expanded hospital facilities, constructing new accommodation and increasing the number of beds per patient.

We built the first infectious diseases clinic in our country to contain the disease and to save lives.

And, we invested heavily in life saving equipment, such as ventilators, and in drugs, medical personnel and specialized treatment, including stem cells therapy.

We scoured the World for vaccines to inoculate our people against the virus and to save their lives.

No effort was spared, and not a cent was withheld in our drive to protect our people from the reaping scythe of the deadly pandemic.

Our nation emerged stronger, and better able to open up our economy before any other Caribbean country. 

We led the way in the reopening of Caribbean economies. 

We were able to revive tourism and tourism facilities, returning people to work, facilitating their earnings, therby promoting economic growth.

None of this happened by accident.

It required planning, foresight, strategic allocation of scarce resources and careful oversight in implementation. 

Safeguarding our peoples’ lives from the most frightening disease the modern world has confronted, together with managing economic survival and growth, are the most awesome combination of tests any Government has ever faced.

The proof of the ABLP government’s successful stewardship, in the interest of every person and the entire nation, has been lived by all in our country. 

It was not a task for the incompetent, the incapable or the inadequate.

Similarly, neither is the task of navigating our ship of state through the current turbulent global economic sea.

The prevailing global challenges demand competent, strong and stable leadership to ensure the continued advancement of our country and its transformation into an economic powerhouse.

It is evident, that on this the 41st Anniversary of our nation’s independence, the UPP has no plan to safeguard and strengthen our growth and development.

What they offer is a tissue of promises without the means to fulfil them; pledges for big spending without showing how the money is to be earned and character assassination of their political opponents.

Their threats to privatise, to their cronies, the peoples’ assets in productive enterprises such as WIOC, APUA, State Insurance, Caribbean Union Bank and other state owned entities by collapsing the National Assets Management Company which holds the shares in these entities, should be of serious concern to the workers of these entities. 

And what they do not say is, just as they did during their disastrous period in government, they will increase taxes, impose income taxes, and hustle to the IMF to again indebt the country and tie it to commitments to dismiss civil servants, reduce wages and salaries and cut social welfare services.

After engaging previously in a failed IMF program, they are now champions of a new IMF program; we therefore do not have to speculate on the focus of their development plan.

We know it from experience.

Prior to 2004, they swore not to introduce any taxes.

Yet they reintroduced income tax that the ABLP had abolished; they imposed ABST on services, even though they pledged not to do so; they raised property taxes; they raised airport taxes to astronomical levels, they dismissed public servants by forcing them into severance.

Who can trust such charlatans?

Today, their declared policies threaten the ultimate disaster – a catastrophic economic hurricane that would ruin the livelihood of thousands of families.

Our forefathers, and we of this generation, did not work so hard to maintain our nation’s independence to see it mortgaged and destroyed by the UPP yet again.

What our country requires now is sound financial knowledge, successful management experience, and the capacity to achieve increased income and economic growth with more investment in education, health, and social welfare services.

That is how we will maintain and strengthen our independence.

It is how we will command a place of respect and regard in the global community.

And that is what this ABLP government has delivered and will elevate to the next higher level of accomplishment.

We shall do it by ensuring that men and women who invest their savings in their own business, or in a public company, can earn a reasonable return, such as they do now with WIOC, and with their own enterprises.

We shall encourage the production of wealth by spreading a share in its growth among those who have helped to create it.

My fellow citizens,

I lay out now some of the further means that the ABLP Government has already started to alleviate the cost of living and to further empower our people.

By the end of this year, we will increase the salaries and wages of public servants, pending the results of the current negotiations .

This undertaking reflects the seriousness and commitment of the ABLP government to alleviate the present impact of global circumstances on the well-being of our people.

Effective from November 2nd, we will waive payments on electricity and water bills that were due up to December 31st, 2021, provided that bills for 2022 are paid-up.

We will also reduce internet costs for less fortunate students. 

The Dollar Barrell Program will resume on Nov 2, 2022. 

Understanding that our migrant community, especially from our sister Caribbean countries, who are working and contributing to our nation’s development, are also facing hardship from the impact of global conditions, we will reduce all immigration extension fees to $150, effective November 1st, 2022.

We will waive all outstanding property taxes on residential properties, due and payable up to Dec 31, 2021. Additionally, we will grant a 10 per cent discount to all those who pay their property taxes for 2023 early. 

And to continue the empowerment of our people, especially our young people who want to start-up businesses of various kinds, we are adding a Venture Capital Component to our existing Entrepreneurial Development Program (EDP).

The sum of $1 million has been placed in this new mechanism. 

Its purpose is to provide capital, as a Government stake in viable business projects submitted by individuals. 

The injection of this capital will give the business the chance to start-up, expand and take off successfully.

If it turns out to be profitable, the individuals can buy-back the government’s stake.

We are launching this new initiative because we recognise that traditional lenders and investors are risk-averse, hence potentially profitable, new enterprises may go underfunded. 

We want to give our people, particularly our young people, the chance to prove their entrepreneurship and gain the success they want.

In other words, my friends, on this 41st Anniversary of our independence, the ABLP Government is implementing additional measures to safeguard and advance the interests of people, in the firm belief that, together, we can meet any crisis, and prevail.

This is the resilience of the Antiguan & Barbudan people which is second to none. 

The compact that we, as a governing party made with the people of our one nation, is that we will honour and respect the confidence that you placed in us to manage your affairs successfully.

We are doing so, as the evidence shows.

More remains to be done.

Water supply has come a long way and full satisfaction is within sight.  The last Reverse Osmosis Plant whose components have begun to arrive will be installed in the first quarter of 2023, and will provide a further 3M gallons of water daily.  The piping, re-piping and water conservation program will also be done con-currently, thereby ensuring water sustainability.  

Electricity delivery has also significantly improved, and we know that there is still more to be accomplished.  To this end, a 40 megawatts LNG electricity plant is being installed at Crabbs and will be operational by their quarter 2023.

We are fixing our country’s problems steadily and progressively.

And, we are doing so, despite all the odds of high costs, reduced revenues and increased expenditure on housing, education, health, roads and social empowerment and improvement.

All that we ask, as part of that bargain, is that each of you join hands with us in the task of keeping our country as a paradise in which all are entitled to grow and to live in the pursuit of happiness.

We are now an inflection point, a turning point in our history.

There are two paths to choose.

One is a path I’ve warned about today, the path that would serve only narrow interests and ambitions, ending in social chaos and economic hardships, as it did the last time, except now, it will be catastrophic.

It is a path that leads to incompetence, corruption, decline and disaster.

It is a certain route to failure.

My fellow citizens and residents,

Everyone’s experience, particularly in the travails of the last 2 years, shows how we can survive the greatest threats, with tried and tested hands.

That is the path to security, progress and prosperity.

Further, the lessons of our heritage – the path of common purpose, of shared aspirations, of joint achievement – summon us to good sense and informed judgment.

We all know the strength of our people, their resilience and inexhaustible capacity to thrive.

That has been the lesson and experience of our history.

It is what empowered previous generations to overcome exploitation and to claim independence.

It was what inspired the present generation to build on that inheritance and to reach with pride and with dignity, this 41st Anniversary of Independence.

In the days to come, let us renew the strength of our joint effort to maintain the freedom of our nation.

Let us advance the progress of all in our country to the next higher level of development on whose ladder our feet are firmly set.

Let us commit ourselves together to a rebirth of the spirit of unity of our one nation, recalling with determination that when each endeavour with supporting works, all can achieve.

With our common faith we cannot – and will not – fail.

Happy Independence anniversary.

May God continue to bless you, and to bless our beloved Antigua and Barbuda.

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Missing tourist identified as NYPD cop

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana
Police Officer Gladstone Haynes [NY Daily News photo]

[NYPOST] A Brooklyn cop vacationing in Guyana went missing Sunday while swimming in Orinduik Falls, and the NYPD is assisting in the search for the 17-year department veteran.

Officer Gladstone Haynes, who works in the 70th Precinct, vanished while at the popular tourist site the Orinduik and Kaieteur waterfalls on the border of Guyana and Brazil as part of a tour group, said Demerara Waves Online.

Haynes had reportedly boarded a domestic flight from Guyana’s main airport near the capital of Georgetown to the Cuyuni-Mazaruni region to explore the local attractions.

According to the Guyana Times, Haynes went missing while swimming in the falls.

When he failed to resurface at the end of the excursion, an alarm was raised, and local authorities were contacted.

The Guyanese army’s special forces were assisting police with the search-and-rescue operation aimed at finding the missing cop, the Times said.

The NYPD confirmed to The Post on Tuesday that the department is helping Guyanese authorities in the search for Haynes.

According to publicly available records, Haynes has been on the force since 2005 — and at the 70th Precinct since 2017 — and earned $105,000 last year.

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Dennery Captures 2022 Blackheart Football Title – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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Dennery’s Javel Faucher scored the sole goal in the 51st minute of this year’s Blackheart Knockout Football Final to help his team defeat rivals Anse La Raye last Saturday evening at the Daren Sammy Cricket Ground.

Team Dennery also picked up two special awards. The award for Best Goal-keeper went to Anton Richard while the Most Valuable Award went to Sherman St. Rose.

From the moment the two teams took to the field, the energy seemed equally high as expectations, especially for the thousands of supportive fans. Both teams exhibited the skillful play for which they have become synonymous all season long. Going into the Final, it seemed both teams had what it took to win the championship.

Both Dennery and Anse La Raye had something to boast about, really.

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Firstly, it was Dennery who defeated the 2016-2019 Blackheart Football Champions, Vieux Fort South, by 2-0 and in fine form in this year’s Big 8 Final at Dennery Playing Field on Sunday, September 4. In the process, Dennery walked away with the $5,000.00 winner-takes-all prize.

Conversely, it was Anse La Raye who booted Vieux Fort South from the tournament via penalty shootout at the Soufriere Stadium on Wednesday, October 19. At the end of regulation time, both teams were one goal apiece. Anse La Raye eventually won by 8-7 via a nail-biting penalty shootout.

PHOTO: Dennery’s goalkeeper, Anton Richard, receives his trophy for Best Goalkeeper of the tournament.

Last Saturday’s win was Dennery’s fourth time lifting the championship trophy. Team coach, Sabbatus Hunte, said the team’s victory did not happen by chance, but through sheer determination and hard work.

“I think we did not have the preparation we wanted for this tournament,” Hunte said. “Our preparation was hindered by various extenuating circumstances, so we tried to work around them. The technical team was really a team behind the team.”

He added: “A lot of work has been done behind the scenes and we really were looking for more as it pertains to preparation. It was not ideal in the end, but what we always felt was that the players had the desire to do well, especially coming on the heels of the victory in the Big 8 Tournament. The momentum they built from there, and the interest from the community, which also came like a poisoned chalice, because the community really demanded that we win the tournament. The players stepped up to the challenge and put their best foot forward.”

PHOTO: Dennery’s goalkeeper, Anton Richard, receives his trophy for Best Goalkeeper of the tournament.

According to Hunte, it’s been ten years since Dennery last won the Blackheart Knockout Football Tournament, adding that playing against Anse La Raye was no easy feat. He said Dennery will continue to nurture young talent to sustain its rich football programme and continue its winning trend.

“As for the Final, I think Anse La Raye put up a very spirited performance,” Hunte said. “As we said before, no team gets to the Final by chance. They get to the Final because they deserved to be there, and I think Anse La Raye really showed that on the day. But I think we matched them in terms of desire and enthusiasm and things went our way.”

Earlier in the evening, semifinalists La Clery and Gros Islet squared off for third place. A week prior, both teams went down to the season’s eventual finalists, but they both seemed to lift the spirits of their supporters by playing a better game last Saturday.

Gros Islet opened the scoring with a goal from Jahlil Evans in the 67th minute. But La Clery bounced back strongly, scoring two goals, both via Malik St. Prix (79th and 90th minutes respectively). Final score: La Clery 2, Gros Islet 1.

The management and team members of Blackheart Productions thank everyone who made this year’s tournament a successful one, including our sponsors, supporters, host communities, players, technical teams, security personnel, vendors, ball boys and girls, fans, Saint Lucia Football Association (SLFA), and Hon. Kenson Casimir, Minister for Youth Development and Sports.

SOURCE: Blackheart Productions. Headline photo: Great play from Dennery this season has led to the east coast squad winning their fourth Blackheart Football title.

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Brésil : transition et réconciliation, les défis de Lula Guyaweb, site d’information et d’investigation en Guyane

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guyaweb

Alors que Jair Bolsonaro n’a toujours pas reconnu sa défaite près de 48h après l’annonce officielle des résultats du scrutin présidentiel, donnant vainqueur dimanche Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, la transition du pouvoir s’annonce compliquée. Le mandat du leader de la gauche brésilienne aussi, lui qui devra réconcilier une société fracturée au-delà des urnes.   À la joie expressive de Lula s’oppose le silence assourdissant de Jair Bolsonaro. Le futur ex-président du Brésil, battu d’une courte tête dimanche (50,9% contre 49,1%) lors du second tour de l’élection présidentielle, n’a toujours pas reconnu officiellement sa défaite près de 48h après l’annonce…

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Kamla: NSC meeting ‘pappyshow’ in midst of crime pandemic

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Kamla Persad-Bissessar – Lincoln Holder

Trinidad and Tobago is facing a crime pandemic, and after weeks of silence, Monday’s National Security Council meeting has not yielded anything of substance to solve the scourge, Opposition Leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar has charged.

From the United National Congress (UNC) virtual platform on Monday night, Persad-Bissessar described the meeting of the NSC, headed by the Prime Minister, and which includes National Security Minister Fitzgerald Hinds and acting CoP Mc Donald Jacob, as nothing but a “pappyshow” and a “photo op.”

She said she was tired of calling for Hinds’s resignation, and agreed with the call of another platform speaker, Chaguanas West MP Dinesh Rambally: “Dissolve the damn Parliament and call the elections now.”

“We are in turmoil. Those charged with protecting and securing citizens have fled. They have gone into hiding in the last couple of weeks. The Prime Minister went totally silent. He went MIA – missing in action – for weeks and then we see today (Monday), posting of photographs on social media to say last week he instructed the meeting to be held.”

She asked, “Why you had to post that last week he instructed the meeting to be held? You know why? It is a total photo op, a pappyshow to make you feel they were working when there was no response over all these weeks – trying to fool us.”

While crime is spiralling out of control and thousands live in fear, she said, government could wait two weeks to speak about security problems, because its members are well secured,

What is sad, she said, is that after the meeting, “nothing of substance” came out. Instead, she said, Hinds’s answer was a heightened police presence.

“Heightened police presence? That obviously has not worked for the past seven years.

“Our country is under siege. There are 508 murders (for the year) and counting as we speak. Heaven help us. This is not a cricket score at the Oval. These are murders – 508 – under Rowley. This is not something to celebrate, like a cricket score. This is something we are all in mourning about.

“Over the past days we have been rocked by an alarming surge in homicide – 30 murders in just one week – and not one word from these people. They are totally clueless.”

While more boots on the ground can help, she said boots alone cannot work and suggested a more holistic approach likethe one her government took between 2010 to 2015, when they created opportunities for education and jobs to bring down the high level of crime.

“We created jobs. That is one of the answers. I am not saying because you don’t have a job that gives you a right to be a criminal,” she clarified. “Criminals are more emboldened than ever before. They know the PNM don’t have a clue. They know they won’t be caught and can continue to do their crime. “

She said 2015 manifesto promises to solve crime have not been kept.

“They have no idea how to stop crime. They do not have the political will to stop crime, because they are part of the problem. “

Rambally spoke about the lack of empathy for victims of crime, especially the several children who have been killed in crossfire over the past weeks.

He referred to Hinds’s comments about children being in the wrong place at the wrong time and his denial that there was evidence gangs were marking children for death.

“It is the PNM being in government in the wrong place at the wrong time. Do you know what Fitzgerald Hinds said recently? He said murders are increasing because criminals are changing their tactics.

“Well, tonight I want to tell Rowley, the people of this country are also changing their tactics, and they are saying you and your band of failures need to demit office now. The people of this country are saying they want to live in a country with safety and security. They want a government that takes crime seriously.”

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