Colapsa edificio de concreto de tres pisos en Ponce

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

Las autoridades atienden el colapso de un edificio deshabitado en la calle Torres, esquina con la calle Roosevelt, en Ponce.

De acuerdo con la información suministrada, un edificio de concreto de tres pisos, el cual se encontraba en mal estado y aislado mediante perímetro de seguridad, se derrumbó.

Al momento, se desconoce el monto de los daños y no se han reportado personas heridas o afectadas.

Agentes del Negociado de la Policía de Puerto Rico, Bomberos del área de Ponce, junto a personal de la Oficina de Manejo de Emergencias, se hicieron cargo de la situación.

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Meteorología emite advertencia de calor para todo el Norte y sectores del Oeste de Puerto Rico

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El Servicio Nacional de Meteorología en San Juan (SNM) emitió una advertencia de calor para todo el Norte y sectores del Oeste de Puerto Rico, informó Liam Inglés, meteoróloga del SNM, en RADIO ISLA. 

Los índices de calor estarán de hasta 111 grados, según el SNM. Liam Inglés le recomendó a las personas a tomar periodos de descanso en sombra “para evitar cualquier tipo de situación de salud debido a las condiciones que se esperan hoy en cuanto a las temperaturas a través de la isla”. 

Las condiciones marítimas están picadas debido a los vientos del Sureste de 15 a 20 nudos sobre las aguas mar afuera del Atlántico y los operadores de embarcaciones pequeñas deben ejercer precaución.

En otros lugares, el oleaje oscilará entre 1 y 4 pies con vientos de hasta 15 nudos. Existe un riesgo bajo de corrientes marinas hoy, pero esta noche habrá un riesgo moderado de corrientes marinas a lo largo de gran parte de las costas Oeste, Norte y Este de la isla que no incluyen Culebra y Vieques. El riesgo moderado de corrientes marinas continuará para la costa Norte el jueves.

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BARBADOS-ECONOMY-Political economist has warning for MSME as Barbados seeks another IMF loan

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cana News Business

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CARIBBEAN-FINANCE-IDB president critical of “unprecedented investigation” into financial institution

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cana News Business

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Open brief aan een ondergedoken SEH-coassistent

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

“Ik zweer/beloof dat ik de geneeskunst zo goed als ik kan zal uitoefenen ten dienste van mijn medemens. Ik zal

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Alzheimer : prendre la maladie à contrepied

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

La Journée mondiale Alzheimer a lieu comme chaque année le 21 septembre. L’occasion d’informer et de sensibiliser le public sur cette maladie qui touche de plus en plus de nos aînés, mais aussi des personnes de plus en plus jeunes.

Pour cette édition 2022, c’est la ville du François qui accueille toute la journée, ce mercredi, sur la place de l’église, une grande manifestation autour de la maladie d’Alzheimer. Le but est de sensibiliser le grand public à cette affection souvent connue de nom mais méconnue dans ses effets et conséquences. Au programme, de 9 heures à 18h30, différentes animations. Jocelyne Béroard fera une prestation après la signature de la charte. Ensuite la public pourra découvrir des…


France-Antilles Martinique

1078 mots – 21.09.2022

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Three generations of family living off salvaged waste from dump Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Tameka is a 38-year-old mother of four. She has lived in the tough inner-city community of Riverton City off Spanish Town Road in St Andrew all her life.

Her four children — ages 21, 16, nine, and one — were born in Riverton City, the site of the largest dump in the country.

Tameka, who declined to give her full name, and others like her living in Riverton City have had to endure the stigma which goes with “living on the dump”. But, she is undeterred.

Her singular aim is to provide for her children and the dump is where she hustles. In fact, she said the dump has made her into an independent woman.

The polyethylene terephthalate (PET) bottle, referred to as the “trouble” bottle by those who eke out a living on the dump, is what she collects each day to send her children to school. She also collects plastic buckets and scrap metal.

PET bottles and other items collected by Angella ‘Dimples’ Christie and her daughter Tameka are stacked just off the road in their community of Riverton City in St Andrew.

“Mi nuh work, a dis mi do fi a living,” Tameka told Loop News on a recent visit to the dump site.

“Yuh just go pon di landfill and collect dem and bag dem up and sell dem a week time or whenever you want. Is it we live off,” Tameka added while pointing to several large bags filled with PET bottles that she and family members had collected from the landfill.

The single mother said she gets no support from any of her children’s fathers.

“Is me and God and my pickney dem and the dump,” she declared.

Tameka said her one-year-old son started Riverton Meadows Early Childhood Institution at the beginning of the new school year. Her other school-age children attend Denham Town High and Seaview Gardens Primary schools.

She said her 21-year-old son is into sales.

“Him doing him own thing,” Tameka said.

Like other residents, Tameka is on edge since the announcement on August 5 by Prime Minister Andrew Holness that the Riverton City dump and others will be closed. No details were given, but the prime minister said he will be meeting in September with the Member of Parliament for the area, Anthony Hylton.

Tameka told Loop News that her only wish is that the authorities provide her with some assistance before the dump is closed.

“A hope dem ago find sumn fi wi do. Dem just cyaa lef wi high and dry so wid nutten. Dem haffi do sumn fi wi,” she said.

Asked whether residents have yet been told anything by those in authority, Tameka said: “The only thing wi hear is that it (the land they live on) ago sell and by the next three years we haffi move from down here because the entire land sell.”

Tameka and other residents are of the view that having endured the shame of living on the dump for decades, they should be given first preference if/when the land in the area is sold.

“It was pure swamp. A we dump it up; a we build and develop roun here so,” she stated.

Since the announcement in the Parliament by the prime minister, Tameka claimed she is yet to hear from Hylton.

“We nuh hear nutten from anybody,” she said as she was joined by her mother Angella Christie, called ‘Dimples’, who has lived on the dump for more than 50 years.

Christie’s five children, including Tameka, were all born in Riverton City.

“From me know me self is the dump me live pon,” said Christie.

The grandmother said she was able to school her children off her earnings from the dump, adding that the schools they attended included Tredegar Park Primary, Penwood High, and Haile Selassie High.

Family matriarch Angella ‘Dimples’ Christie examines plastic buckets she collected from the Riverton City dump for sale in Corporate Area markets.

Apart from PET bottles, she showed the news team some five-gallon buckets that previously contained paint that she had collected at the dump and was getting ready to sell.

She explained that anything of value that can be sold is collected at the waste disposal site.

Christie said some individuals journey to Riverton to make purchases. However, for the most part, she travels to Coronation Market in downtown Kingston as well as to the Spanish Town and Linstead markets in St Catherine and as far away as May Pen, Clarendon to sell the buckets and other items of value she picks from the landfill.

“A it mi live off a,” she declared.

As to what she would want if she has to leave the site she has called home all her life, Christie said she would be grateful for some help in purchasing a piece of land in Red Hills, St Andrew.

“If dem even come fi di land we just need a likkle help to start back life somewhere else. Just a likkle help,” said Christie.

Meanwhile, 52-year-old George Ford has been living in Riverton City for 30 years.

He collects scrap metal and buckets from the dump, which he then sells to supplement his income from his job as a cutter (he uses a welding torch to cut metal).

George Ford examines some of the plastic buckets he retrieved from the dump.

Ford lives with his girlfriend and their daughter.

“If me see hustling [on the dump], mi wi collect stuff and sell but mi nuh really tek it fi habit,” he told Loop News.

Ford noted that when the dump closes the livelihood of many people will be impacted. Yet, he has no confidence that any help will be forthcoming from the authorities.

“We would appreciate any help, but I don’t see any coming. We just haffi go mek it on we own,” he said.

“Mi see 50 years and nuh see nutten from dem, so mi nuh expect fi see it again,” Ford added.

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How a mom helped her sons develop a love for reading Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Among the champions in the 2021 National Reading Competition is a duo from the Clarendon Parish Library Network, who share more than just a love for reading.

Fellow contestants may have noticed that the 9-11 National Champion, Kyle Bennett, calls the 21 and over National Champion, Marjorie Howitt Bennett, “Mom”.

An educator, Bennett said she became a member of the library from a very young age as she held a love for books. This was later shown in her children.

“The librarians there [at the Clarendon Parish Library] were used to seeing me twice on weekdays as I went to exchange the books I had read. Years later, I would sit with my sons in that same library from when they were just a few months old, reading to them, allowing them to touch the books, and as I hoped, they too began to read and appreciate the written word really early,” the mother of two explained.

Her younger son, Kyle, got the opportunity to become a member of the library early as he would always complain that he did not want to use his mother’s ticket, but wanted his own.

Bennett pointed out, however, that the future champion did not like to read for himself during those younger years.

“The books that I bought him would just sit on his shelf unless someone read to him, and so I decided to let him enter the National Reading Competition as soon as he turned six. As I expected, he was very distraught when he did not win because he had not read all the books,” she said.

This turn of events motivated young Kyle to develop a love for reading, as “he likes to excel at anything he does”.

He entered the competition again in 2018 and 2020 but was unsuccessful in claiming the national title.

In 2021, he made another entry, but this time with his mother.

“He and my older son signed me up for the competition, as well, and I was rather surprised when I got a call reminding me to pick up the material to read. I was reluctant at first because of time constraints, but my sons and a few of the librarians persuaded me,” Bennett said.

No stranger to the contest, Bennett had entered in 2006, and she was crowned the National Runner-Up for that year.

Fifteen years later and now with her son, the duo endured rounds of competition at the parish level and then the national level. Finally, the 2021 winners were announced.

“It was an amazing feeling hearing my son’s name and then mine being announced as the national champions,” she recalled.

The two, as well as other national champions and runners-up, received prizes from various sponsors in a presentation ceremony at The Jamaica Pegasus hotel on August 26.

Kyle, now 10, moved on to second form at Glenmuir High School in Clarendon, at the start of the new school year in September.

Bennett hailed the contest for being “a good example for my sons, my students and all the youngsters whose lives I touch”.

“I hope that more adults will get up and lead the younger generation, not just by preaching to them, but by doing it with them,” she added.

The National Reading Competition is an initiative of the Jamaica Library Service and has been held consecutively for the past 35 years. It is the flagship event of the organisation, which is aimed at fostering a love for reading, literature and literacy in general.

— JIS News

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Alfred Athill in India for major conference

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

The country’s Director of Pharmaceutical Service, Mr. Alfred Athill is presently in Dehli, India attending a Global Regulators Conclave and the 8th edition of the International Exhibition for the Pharmaceutical Industry and Healthcare (IPHEX) schedule to take place September 21-23, 2022.

The Conclave will bring together Drug Regulatory Agencies of top one hundred (100) export destinations of Indian Pharmaceutical products on a common platform to exchange information, best practices and collaborative approaches related to regulation of medical products and strategies to address drug shortages especially during the current challenging times of the COVID-19 pandemic. Some of the objectives of the Global Regulators Conclave include:

Possible cooperation on Harmonization of Regulatory Standards within and between regions.
Exploring the possibilities of Mutual Collaboration between National Drug Council (NDC) and Central Drugs Standard Control Organization (CDSCO) – the National Drug Regulatory Authority of India by signing a MOU/Regulatory Cooperation Agreement to facilitate accessibility of medicines.
Ensuring Supply Chain Resiliency of Medical products.

Mr. Athill is scheduled to deliver a presentation at the Conclave on the topic “Migrating from Routine to Risk Based Inspections – Optimizing the Human Resources in Post Pandemic” on Thursday afternoon.

The Regulators Conclave and the International Exhibition are sponsored by the Pharmaceuticals Export Promotion Council of India (Pharmexcil) an entity established by the Ministry of Commerce and Industry, Government of India.

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CARICOM, WFP Survey Points To Rising Caribbean Food Insecurity – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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The number of people estimated to be facing moderate to severe levels of food insecurity in the English-speaking Caribbean has risen by an alarming 46 percent over the last six months.

Nearly 4.1 million people or 57 percent of the population now face food insecurity, according to a recent survey conducted by the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) and the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP).

While severe food insecurity in the region remained largely unchanged, when compared to February 2022, there has been a significant increase in households that have fallen into moderate levels of food insecurity.

Overall, the number of food insecure people has increased by 1.3 million over the past six months. The deterioration has been attributed to rising costs for food and other commodities, as the ripple effect of the Ukraine conflict and a slow recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic is felt throughout Latin America and the Caribbean.

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Nearly six percent of people in the English-speaking Caribbean reported going an entire day without eating in the week leading up to the survey, which is a one percent increase since February 2022.

Another 36 percent of respondents skipped meals or ate less than usual, and 32 percent ate less preferred foods in the week leading up to the survey.

In February these figures were at 30 and 25 percent, respectively.

“We are seeing worrying trends in the region with people selling off their assets and using their savings to meet basic needs. This was unheard of in the region previously”, said Regis Chapman, Representative and Country Director WFP Caribbean Multi-Country Office.

“These negative coping strategies are unsustainable, and we fear that these short-term measures will lead to a further increase in the number of people who are unable to meet their daily food requirements”

The Caribbean region continues to be impacted by external factors which threaten livelihoods and the ability of people to meet their basic needs.

On average, food inflation in the English and Dutch-speaking Caribbean has risen by 10.2 percent across 20 countries as of March 2022. High energy prices are exacerbating the food price crisis.

Ninety-seven percent of people surveyed reported seeing higher prices for food items compared to 59 percent in April 2020.

“For the first time in over two years, people’s inability to meet food and essential needs were top concerns, followed by unemployment,” said Joseph Cox, Assistant Secretary-General, Economic Integration, Innovation and Development, CARICOM Secretariat.

“CARICOM recognizes that further support is necessary to reduce the level of need in the region and establish systems which facilitate access to nutritious food for all. Leaders in the region are actively engaging with decision makers across all relevant sectors to identify solutions for increasing food production and reducing import dependency within the region in order to reduce the cost of food.”

The most recent survey results and an interactive dashboard are available to carry out a full comparison of data across all five rounds of the survey and the different countries that are covered.

The dashboard now has additional information specifically on the impact of economic conditions on the farming and fishing sectors along with livelihoods, markets, and food security.

CARICOM, WFP and other partners continue to work together to increase people’s resilience to shocks through stronger disaster management, social protection and food systems that are more effective, sustainable and responsive in meeting the needs of those most affected by crises.

Social protection programmes and other government support has been scaled up throughout the Caribbean, helping offset the impacts of the crisis. Investments in agriculture are aimed at reducing the reliance on imports.

The survey has been made possible with the support of the European Union and the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), Bureau of Humanitarian Assistance.

SOURCE: CARICOM Today/SLT. Headline photo: Castries vendors stock image

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