Se llevan casi 14 mil dólares, iPads y ocasionan daños en Trampoline Park de Bayamón

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

Un escalamiento fue reportado por la Policía, a las 10:38 de la mañana del lunes, en las facilidades de Trampoline Park que ubica en el Bayamón Oeste Shopping en Bayamón.  

Según la Uniformada, alegó el querellante, que un desconocido obtuvo acceso por la puerta lateral y se apropió de una computadora portátil marca HP, cinco iPads, 13,919 dólares en efectivo, seis radios portátiles y un reloj marca Tecnomarine.

Además, ocasionaron daños a los ponchadores, dos bóvedas y las facilidades, al momento se desconoce el valor de los daños.

El agente Eduardo Otero adscrito al Precinto de Bayamón Norte, investigó preliminarmente y refirió a la División de Propiedad del Cuerpo de Investigaciones Criminales (CIC) de Bayamón, quienes continuaran con la investigación.

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Roban una “pick up”, motoras y “four tracks” de empresa de mudanzas en Toa Baja

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

La Policía informó el lunes sobre un escalamiento que fue reportado a las 7:49 de la mañana en las facilidades de una empresa de mudanzas que ubican en la PR-2 en Toa Baja.

Según la Uniformada, alegó el querellante, que un desconocido ocasionó daños a unos candados y portones, donde obtuvo acceso al interior y se apropiaron de una Toyota Tacoma color gris del 2001.

Además, según la Policía, los malhechores forzaron una puerta de metal del almacén y se apropiaron de una motora Suzuki RM-Z450 de color negra y gris del 2007, un “four track” color azul, un Yamaha Raptor 700 del 2014 color rojo y otro Yamaha ATV del 2014 color blanco y azul. Asimismo, se apropiaron de una tijera valorada en 100 dólares y un cargador de batería valorado en 600 dólares.

La agente Magaly Hernández adscrita al Distrito de Toa Baja, investigó preliminarmente y refirió a la División de Propiedad del Cuerpo de Investigaciones Criminales (CIC) de Bayamón, quienes continuaran con la investigación.

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Aidonia Launches Own Cannabis Strain “Banga Kush”

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Urban Islandz

Aidonia has formally entered into the legal cannabis business.

The dancehall deejay has long been associated with one of Jamaica’s favorite herbs. After all, in many of his videos, Aidonia can be seen smoking ‘spliffs’ and has never shied away from promoting the benefits of the plant. Now he’s been given the opportunity to bring his own flare to a strain of cannabis strain, which is called, very fittingly, Banga Kush.

The launch of the new strain was held earlier this week at Epican Medicinals at Marketplace on Constant Spring Road in St Andrew, for which he is a brand ambassador. The “U Know De Vibe” artist spoke with the Jamaica Observer and explained that he had a vested interest in introducing the new strain of cannabis.

He shared that it has always been a part of his life, and so once he was given the opportunity by the company, he pounced on it.

“Once the chance came about, we being a part of the Epican brand, that was just the focus to put something out there weh wi know say wi name attached to it and just the quality like what Epican produces. Having my own strain was always a goal and a dream,” he added.

He has been a brand ambassador for Epican for the last four years, and it seems like a match made in heaven for both parties. According to the popular deejay working with Epican has been easy because it feels like he is part of a family. He added that it has been a great partnership because they are able to exchange ideas and drive growth and education where marijuana is concerned.

The “Joker Smoker” singer also said that because of the partnership, people are starting to view him differently and see that he understands the balance between his career and the corporate world.

To that end, he praised Epican for the job that they are doing with the strains and said that his role was simply to showcase and show people the great work that the company is doing.

President of Epican Medicinals, Dwayne McKenzie, also had high praises for Aidonia and explained a little more about how they came up with the new strain.

“He worked for a number of years with the team to develop something perfect for himself. Banga Kush has become a hit at Epican with many persons already specially requesting it,” he added.

Aidonia has been out of the limelight in recent times when coming to his music, but fans will soon get a chance to hear some more of his work as he’s announced that he is hoping to drop two EPs later this year.

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‘BPO is nu een grote industrie geworden in Suriname’

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

Niet praten maar groeien Waar vooral gepraat wordt over de potentie van Suriname als ‘investeringsland’ op tal van vlakken, is

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Assises: Double homicide, le premier par jalousie, le second par amitié

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guadeloupe FranceAntilles

Une captivante affaire débute ce lundi à la cour d’assises puisque si à l’origine le mobile, les protagonistes et même l’arme du crime étaient servis sur un plateau aux inspecteurs, au fil des auditions et des témoignages, l’affaire ne s’avère pas si limpide : liaisons dangereuses, règlement de compte entre amis, ou au contraire crime prémédité ? 

Shorn Pryce débarque dans le bar Wok TO GO, à Saint-Martin, au mitan de cette nuit du 2 octobre 2016, entouré de ses deux amis frères,  Junior Lake et Jérémie Quellery. C’est ce dernier qui aurait prévenu Shorn de la présence de sa compagne dans ce bar accompagnée de celui qu’il soupçonne être son amant. Dès son arrivée, Shorn provoque une bagarre avec son rival Roberto Valenzuela. Ce dernier sort une arme et le vise à la tête. La victime s’effondre. Junior Lake et Jérémie Quellerie se ruent…


France-Antilles Guadeloupe

944 mots – 12.09.2022

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For school lunch, why not a date insect or cucumber penguin? Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

When it comes to packing lunch for their kids, moms and dads have reliable favourites like PB&Js, bananas or maybe a bagel. Jenny Mollen has an unusual go-to — candy eyes.

The writer and actor has learned that a pair of edible eyeballs attached to anything she sends will do wonders, making her children snigger as they swallow goofy slices of bell peppers, kiwis or dates.

“Honestly, first of all, just buy yourself some candy googly eyes. They’re tried-and-true,” she said. “You lose something nutritionally having to give them the candy eyes, but you gain so much because they’re going to actually eat more because it’s entertaining.”

Mollen’s tricks — at the intersection of food and craft — are contained in her new cookbook, “Dictator Lunches,” from the HarperCollins imprint Harvest. She offers 40 recipes from breakfasts to dinner, with a special emphasis on what to pack for school lunch.

She uses the term “dictator” in loving respect to Sid and Lazlo, her sons with actor-husband Jason Biggs, who have been known to object to some foods on occasion. But cucumber penguins and Babybel Pok?mon delight even the pickiest eaters.

There is an edible insect made from a pitted date filled with sunflower seed butter and legs made from pretzels and, of course, candy eyes. There are also Rice Pandas, with cooked white rice from last night’s Chinese food delivery put in a mould and decorated with eyes, mouth, ears and paws cut out from sheets of dried seaweed.

“I also love piping yoghurt into fruit, whether it’s strawberries or raspberries,” she says. “If I pipe some yoghurt in, they suddenly look like parfaits. And if I sprinkle a little granola on top, it’s so easy for me — takes 2 seconds — but for them, they think they won the lottery.”

The adorable edible art isn’t as hard to pull off as it might seem. Mollen says you need a few tools — a vegetable peeler, various moulds and cookie cutters, a pumpkin carving knife, a repurposed syringe used to administer Benadryl — and then use leftovers in the fridge or items in your pantry.

“It’s really a way for me to sublimate my guilt because I’m a working mom and not the mom doing pick up and drop off. I’m not with them at the park after school every day. I’m usually working. So this feels like a way for me to instil them with a sense of constancy, even when I’m not there because it’s still so infused with my tone,” she says.

Sarah Pelz, her editor and also a working mom with two school-age picky eaters, says the book is a game-changer, making lunch planning less of a chore, especially the yoghurt-into-fruit trick.

“I used to dread packing their lunches, but now I actually enjoy it. I love that Jenny has this kind of philosophy that packing these lunches is an act of love, but it’s also an opportunity to encourage kids to try the food or different combinations of foods in a way that they might be resistant to at home,” she says.

Mollen’s humour is everywhere in the fun and sometimes profane book that doesn’t take itself too seriously. “I like my lunches how I like my Korean dictators: full-bodied, eccentric and just a little sneaky,” she writes.

A columnist for Parents magazine, Mollen has meals that include a fruit, a vegetable, a main dish, a snack and a bribe. And while they may be whimsical, she insists they also be nutritious. She recently lobbied to get rid of chocolate milk from her kids’ cafeteria.

“I don’t know if you notice with your kids, it’s like at every turn somebody is trying to give your kid sugar. So a lot of the recipes are low sugar, grain-free,” she said.

She hopes that by inspiring kids to eat their vegetables early, they’ll grow up to appreciate healthy foods later. Same thing for international flavours. And if they need to be tricked sometimes, so be it.

“A lot of it is just trying to cram as many vegetables in them as possible and hope for the best because, at some point, I’m going to have zero control, right? This ends with a giant insurrection. So that’s how I have to fight the good fight and hope something lands.”

Other recipes include a Green Breakfast Muffin, made from bananas, cinnamon, spinach, almond milk, eggs, oats and maple syrup, and one for Roasted Shiitake Chips, which are cooked to avoid their slimy texture. She likes using sunflower seed butter as glue for her creations.

It may come as no surprise that Mollen grew up loving glue guns and decorated her own headbands. She also made art with varnish: “I was an out-of-work actress for many years, so I’ve done a lot of crafting,” she says, laughing. She says she’s a classic Gemini. “I’m all over the place.”

She started tinkering with school lunches as a way to keep herself entertained. One early stab was using a gingerbread man cookie cutter on toasted waffles to form a waffle family that almost looked composed of chain-link fencing, her subtle protest at the Trump administration’s border policy.

“It’s really just like, ‘What is lying around?’ ‘What do I want to say today?’ And ‘What’s the season?’ And then just build the story from there,” she said.

“I wanted people to understand that you can sort of going that extra mile without really having the skill set. You just have to have the willingness to show up and just take a stab at it.”

By Mark Kennedy

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ICWI Pink Run to raise JM$5m toward the fight against breast cancer Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

On Sunday, October 30, 2022, Jamaicans have a chance to actively join the fight against breast cancer by participating in the ICWI/Jamaica Reach to Recovery Pink Run.

The title sponsor, the Insurance Company of the West Indies (ICWI) made the announcement during the official launch event held on September 7 at Toyota Jamaica in Kingston.

The annual charity race event is back on the radar after suffering an unexpected two-year hiatus due to the pandemic.

In her address, Samantha Samuda, vice-president of Marketing, Distribution and Human Resources, at ICWI, announced that this year’s Pink Run is projected to raise five million for Jamaica Reach to Recovery (JR2R) – the sole beneficiary of the run.

(L-R) Acting Executive Director of the Jamaica Cancer Society Michael Leslie; ICWI’s VP of Marketing, HR and Distribution, Samantha Samuda; Jamaica Reach to Recovery’s (JR2R) Chair Carolind Graham, Vice-Chair Eugenie French, Director Sandra Samuels and Race Director for the 2022 ICWI Pink Run Phillip Clarke gathered for a photo op and to show off a symbolic cheque for JM$1m from the ICWI to JR2R following the launch of this year’s staging of the fundraising venture.

The JR2R is the arm of the Jamaica Cancer Society that provides emotional, psychological and financial support to breast cancer survivors.

The non-profit organisation which is staffed by volunteers who are themselves breast cancer survivors relies heavily on the monies raised from the annual charity event to provide adequate support to its members.

Samuda explains that ICWI’s support is indicative of the work of the company to support families by doing what they can to save the lives of breast cancer patients, which are largely women.

“In 2019, the race raised JM$7 million, a significant contribution which went a far way but there is now a tremendous gap in the organisation’s coffers because of the cancellation of the 2020 and 2021 stagings.”

“With the pandemic still causing some restrictions, we believe we’ve set a realistic goal to raise JM$5m for the JR2R this year. We are attempting to again strengthen the work of the JR2R so that breast cancer patients have the support services they need to win the fight,” Samuda noted.

The highly anticipated 5K run/walk takes place each year in October. Globally, October is recognized as Breast Cancer Awareness Month and corporate Jamaica has paid homage to survivors over the years through various initiatives each year.

The ICWI is leading the charge by encouraging other corporate entities to register their teams for the ‘fun run’ for the benefit of Jamaicans at large.

Carolind Graham, Executive Director, JR2R, is grateful for the support from the ICWI while expressing the need for support from other corporates.

“We thank the sponsors that have joined us in this initiative so far and want to appeal to other corporate entities to also join us in this effort. We want to make up for the shortfall that we have been dealing with since the pandemic. Our team has been working hard with the small resources to help our breast cancer survivors; so, we want to not just meet the goal but surpass it with the support of the participants. Each registrant is allowing one woman a chance to access life-saving tests and treatments needed on her journey to recovery,” Graham shared.

Participants are expected to show up in their interpretation of the pink run, be it with tutus and knee-high socks or other versions that have been represented over the years.

This year, the walk and the run event has a new home, at Hope Gardens. Registration is now open and persons may visit the Pink Run website as an individual or team; donations are also accepted.

For further information, persons may contact the Pink Run organisers at 876-936-7980-2 or 876-978-0375 or 876-517-0312 or via email.

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Young dancer stabbed outside club in need of blood Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

The relatives of a 19-year-old dancer, who was stabbed, allegedly by another dancer, have issued a desperate plea for blood donations as she is expected to undergo major surgery soon.

The injured dancer, Jeneva ‘Spirit’ Sawyers, hails from Greenwich Farm in Kingston. She is a member of the dance group Royalty Divas.

Sawyers was reportedly stabbed a few minutes after an event at a popular restaurant, bar and lounge on Hagley Park Road in St Andrew ended on Monday morning.

The incident has been reported to the police.

“She has lost a lot of blood. I am making an appeal for people to give blood at the Blood Bank for Jeneva, because she has to do major surgery,” Claudine Grant, mother-in-law of the young dancer, told Loop News on Monday.

“Dem just run mi outta the room [at KPH]… They opened up her chest so air could get in her lungs…” Grant said.

“She vomited, and a blood clot came out the hole where she was stabbed and the doctors said it was a good thing it came out,” she added.

Grant alleges that the attack was unprovoked.

“She was in the car when the girl stabbed her in the back with a ratchet knife and punctured her lungs. Oh God,” the dancer’s mother-in-law claimed.

A police officer reportedly visited the hospital to take the report and spoke to alleged eyewitnesses of the attack.

Dancehall artiste RT Boss, who employs the Royalty Divas, appealed for peace to reign in dancehall.

“Right now, Jen is in critical condition and will need major surgery. We are asking for prayers at this time because she was stabbed under her arm, puncturing her lungs and one of her arteries. She’s critical right now, and for what, some petty matter. We need peace to reign in the dancehall, cut out the violence,” dancehall artiste RT Boss told Loop News.

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UPDATE: Upset taxi, bus operators could protest all week Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Why St Andrew transport operators have withdrawn their services

Loop News

23 minutes ago

Whatsapp Video 2022-09-12 At 11.36.21 Am

NEWYou can now listen to Loop News articles!

“Some of the police just issuing out the [traffic] tickets as if a pick we pick up the money off the ground fi pay them,” was the claim of one transport operator who was among bus and taxi operators who withdrew their services in sections of the Corporate Area on Monday.

The protesting transport operators ply the Lawrence Tavern and Stony Hill routes in St Andrew to Half-Way-Tree and downtown Kingston.

The bus and taxi operators gathered in Half-Way-Tree on Monday, calling for a traffic ticket amnesty and threatening to continue their protest all week, which will impact commuters’ ability to move around.

Watch the video to hear why the aggrieved transport operators are taking a stand.

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Scarborough Secondary forms 2, 3 rotate classes

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Students at Scaborough Secondary School sanitise and sign a register before entering the school compound. FILE PHOTO –

CLASSES have resumed at the Scarborough Secondary School, but students in forms two and three will alternate days.

The school reopened its doors on Monday, having failed to open on September 5, the first day of the new school year.

A press release from the THA Division of Education, Research and Technology on Monday said form three students will go to school on Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Form two students will attend on Tuesday and Thursday. This is because of continued repairs next to a block at the southern end of the school compound.

A statement from the principal on Sunday said that this arrangement will last for two weeks. The principal warned that the form three classrooms and the auditorium will be out of bounds. Students are advised to follow the safety signs.

The division said updates to this temporary schedule will be communicated to parents and students through the principal.

It added that infrastructural repairs will only take place at the end of the school day and on weekends, to ensure the safety of students.

Last Monday, late school repairs saw two of Tobago’s 57 schools remain closed. The other was Speyside Secondary, which opened on September 6.

Education secretary Zorisha Hackett said repairs were classified as high, medium and low priority, and only high-priority repairs would affect the reopening of schools.

The Scarborough Secondary School has been in disrepair for some time. In 2019, students protested over the conditions and called for a new school to be built.

In an interview that year, the Prime Minister said the school needed to be relocated further inland because coastal erosion was threatening its foundations.

Then Education Secretary Kelvin Charles had previously said there were plans to build a new school and land had been identified. He did not say where, or whether the school would be renamed if or when it was relocated.

Hackett recently said the assembly is eyeing another site, as the previous one has some drainage challenges.

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