ILT20: Rovman Powell and Fabian Allen sign up for Dubai Capitals Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Jamaica and West Indies players Rovman Powell and Fabian Allen are among 14 overseas players signed by Dubai Capitals for the inaugural edition of the International League T20 (ILT20) in the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

Dubai Capitals is the sister franchise of 2020 IPL runners-up Delhi Capitals.

Among the current signees, Powell is the only one who is part of Delhi Capitals, the franchise partly owned by the GMR Group.

The 29-year-old Powell represented Delhi Capitals in IPL 2022 earlier this year. In 14 matches for the franchise, he made 250 runs as a lower-order batter, at an average of 25 and strike rate of 149.70 in his very first time in the IPL.

Gulf Giants, MI Emirates and Abu Dhabi Knight Riders with Jamaica and West Indies player Andre Russell are the other teams who have announced their overseas roster for the six-team league.

Each team in the ILT20 will consist of 18 players, including four local UAE players and two other players from ICC Associate countries.

The ILT20 will be played in a 34-match format across Dubai, Abu Dhabi and Sharjah, and will take place between January 6 and February 12.

Dubai Capitals squad so far: Rovman Powell, Dushmantha Chameera, Hazratullah Zazai, Fabian Allen, Mujeeb Ur Rahman, Sikandar Raza, Niroshan Dickwella, Dasun Shanaka, Bhanuka Rajapaksa, Dan Lawrence, Blessing Muzarabani, Isuru Udana, George Munsey, Fred Klaassen

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Knife wielding robber shot dead by cops on Waltham Park Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

The Independent Commission of Investigations (INDECOM) commenced investigations into a police fatal shooting of an unidentified man along Waltham Park Road. The incident took place on Thursday, August 18 at about 2:00 am.

The police have stated that two officers were traveling along Waltham Park Road when they were alerted by a female who alleged she was being robbed by a man with a knife.

The officers report that during their intervention they were attacked by the man with a knife. In response, both officers fired their weapons in the direction of the man. The injured man was transported to the hospital where he was pronounced dead.

The Commission seeks the assistance of the public with identifying the deceased, who is of dark complexion and has plaited hair and a birthmark on his left thigh.

Persons with information regarding the deceased and/or this incident are encouraged to contact the Commission’s Head Office or send any information, photos or videos to INDECOM’s official WhatsApp at (876)553-5555.

The concerned officers provided initial accounts of the incident to the Investigative team and were each served a Section 21 Notice to provide a statement and attend the office of the Commission to be interviewed.

The incident scene was processed by INDECOM and included the collection of forensic exhibits, namely the recovered weapon, a knife, and the service firearms of the concerned officers.

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Retired prison officer dies on fishing trip

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Macqueripe Bay, Chaguaramas. File photo/Jeff K Mayers

A retired prison officer died on Wednesday afternoon after he hit his head on a rock at Macqueripe beach.

Police said retired ASP Noel Phillip was on a fishing trip when the accident occurred.

In a media release on Thursday the Prison Service said Phillip enlisted in 1990 and was well known as a drill instructor at the Prisons Training College. He was promoted to assistant superintendent of prisons last year and was last assigned to the Prisons Training College as an acting superintendent of prisons before he went on pre-retirement leave.

Executive member of the Prison Officers Association Gerard Gordon praised Phillip in a Facebook post and recalled him making his entire batch do push-ups because someone dropped a baton.

Retired Port of Spain Prison Supt Noel Phillip

“Baton Drills in 1998. Instructor Mr. Noel Phillip. He sees someone drop their baton. The penalty for the entire squad is push-ups. Later on after training I asked ‘Why you made us do all those push-ups?’ He laughed and said his target was 200 per session. Even under his guidance he was always a gentleman and an exemplar. Feeling the same way now, as I felt when Mr Gaston Dick passed away. The good ones always leave us.”

The Prison Service extended condolences to Phillip’s family in its release, saying it hoped they are comforted at this time. It added that Phillip served with pride and was a shining example and a mentor to many.

The release said acting Commissioner of Prisons Deopersad Ramoutar was shocked by the news of Phillip’s death, noted Phillip’s love of life and the outdoors and the passion he displayed in his role as a prisons officer.

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Morvant boy shot in head improving, says mum

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Eight-year-old Javan Prince.

THINGS are looking up for eight-year-old Javan Price who was shot in the head on Tuesday night when gunmen chased after a 38-year-old Morvant man.

In a telephone interview with Newsday on Thursday, Price’s mother Marcia Burke said Javan underwent surgery on Thursday and doctors gave her encouraging news.

“The doctor said the bullet passed through his head. He went back to the intensive care unit. The neurosurgeon explained everything to me. We have to keep on praying for Javan. His skull is fractured.”

At about 7 pm on Tuesday, gunmen got out of a grey Nissan AD wagon at Mon Repos, Morvant and opened fire hitting 49-year-old Eusibio Roberts killing him instantly, police said.

The killers then chased after the 38-year-old man who ran through the basketball court where the children were training for a football competition in the area.

While running, they kept shooting. Price was shot to the left side of his head, and another child, an 11-year-old boy, twice in the leg. The children were taken to the Eric Williams Medical Sciences Complex.

The other child, Burke’s neighbour, had one bullet pass through his leg and the other is lodged near a bone. Burke said her eldest son spoke with the child and he told them he was doing well. He remains in hospital as the bullet has to be removed.

Tuesday’s shooting is the second recent in which a child was wounded. On August 1, a ten-year-old girl was among eight people shot during a shootout at Sixth Avenue, Malick. The bullet hit her left leg breaking a bone. She has since been discharged from hospital.

Her mother Carla Mc Intosh offered words of comfort to Burke telling her to have faith.

“There are no words that can express that feeling. God is the only miracle worker. They have to have faith, despite whatever.”

Burke said she accepted the words of encouragement and will be heeding the encouragement to have faith.

Residents told Newsday the shooting sounded like grenades exploding in their yards. One man said his mother fell to the ground and began crying when the shooting started.

Another neighbour said her relative was one of the children who had to run to escape being shot. She said her relative, who has a dislocated knee, managed to run without an issue to escape the gunmen.

When Newsday visited on Wednesday, the area was void of children playing outside – an unusual sight for the July/August vacation.

Residents said, since the shooting children are afraid to play outside.

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Haiti sinking deeper into catastrophe: Who will save it?

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

By Sir Ronald Sanders 

(The writer is Antigua and Barbuda’s Ambassador to the United States of America and the Organization of American States.   He is also a Senior Fellow at the Institute of Commonwealth Studies, University of London and Massey College in the University of Toronto) 

Haiti has never been far from wide-scale human suffering, grave political instability, and grim economic underdevelopment.  But its circumstances today are worse than they have been before.

The country has become a battle ground for rival criminal gangs, whose weapons are superior to those of the Police, both in quantity and fire power.  These gangs have established fiefdoms in which they rule supreme, terrorizing communities, kidnapping people, demanding huge ransoms, committing vile murders and even burning their victims – alive or dead. Even more disturbing, some gangs appear to have established links with politicians.

Beyond the loss of control of law and order, the country is being governed, in name, by unelected officials with no independent judiciary or functioning national assembly.  An accord among civil society groups and political players, fashioned in September 2021, has collapsed.  This makes fulfilment of the desire for a “Haitian-led” solution to the country’s problems most unlikely, and not credible.

What makes this situation worse is that Haiti has no strong institutions to support governance and to address the deep-seated problems of the country.

Some nations – among them countries whose governments have contributed to the underdevelopment and weakness of Haiti – now conveniently hide behind the Haitian call for a “Haitian-led” solution, to do little or nothing.   The United Nations (UN) withdrew its Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH) in October 2017 after 13 years.

Despite the dire situation which now exists, the UN Security Council opted to extend the mandate of its Integrated Office in Haiti (BINUH) until 15 July 2023, but not to expand it to tackle the spiral of violence, lawlessness, and the terror of armed gangs.

Against this background, Luis Almagro, the Secretary-General of the Organization of American States (OAS), issued a rousing public indictment of the “international community” and the self-interested political elite in Haiti.  Almagro minced no words when he declared: “The institutional crisis that Haiti is experiencing right now is a direct result of the actions taken by the country’s endogenous forces and by the international community”.  He stated unequivocally that, “The last 20 years of the international community’s presence in Haiti has amounted to one of the worst and clearest failures implemented and executed within the framework of international cooperation”.  To be clear, “the international community” in Haiti amounted to “a core group”, compromising the European Union, the UN, the OAS, Brazil, Canada, France, Germany, and Spain.

I publicly agreed with his assessment.  It was the most honest and compelling statement by a high official of any regional or international institution ever issued, concerning Haiti.  In agreeing with his statement, I interpreted his definition of the “international community” as including every country, every international financial and development institution, the United Nations and its organs, and the OAS itself.   But I also recognized then, what I later said in the Permanent Council of the OAS on August 17, when the Foreign Minister of Haiti, Jean Victor Généus, clearly prompted by Almagro’s statement, asked for a meeting.

What I said, in brief, was that “many countries in the international community are perfectly innocent of what happens in Haiti or has happened there. There are others – both countries and institutions – that have damaged Haiti irreparably over many years. Now, it is up to those countries to do something to correct the situation.  Financial support is the obligation of those members of the international community with the resources to do so. And many of them, incidentally, bear responsibility for the situation in Haiti today”.

Almagro is clearly right in saying, “…resources have to be provided to Haiti through an institutionalized process by the international community with a strong monitoring component and capacity to combat corruption and prevent the resources from being diverted and misused”.

As I observed at the OAS meeting, Haiti cannot expect an international response to its needs “without some assurance that, within Haiti, there will be a collective, solidified position, both in terms of the requests they make, the cooperation they will give, and the openness with which they will deal with the international community”.

For his part, Foreign Minister Généus said that the Government has tried to promote dialogue, suggesting that its efforts have not been successful, but that “the Prime Minister will continue tirelessly in this quest for dialogue and consensus”.

Of course, such a dialogue will not happen, nor will any agreement be sustained, unless there is good offices mediation to facilitate it and oversee the implementation of its agreements.  Mediation cannot happen without an invitation from the Ariel Henry provisional government and the agreement of the other Haitian groups.

Neighbouring countries are already struggling with the failure of the Haitian State.  The Bahamas, with a population of 400,000, has an estimated 150,000 Haitian refugees in its territory. This year alone, the Bahamas Government has spent millions of dollars repatriating Haitian refugees.  In the words of the Ambassador of the Dominican Republic to the OAS, Josue Fiallo, the situation in Haiti “constitutes an unusual and extraordinary threat to my country’s national security, foreign policy and economy”. And the US has deported or expelled thousands of Haitians, fleeing from their desperate conditions.

In his statement of August 8, Almagro identified what amounts to a programme of action to try to save Haiti.  It includes: bringing violence under control and disarming the gangs; providing technical and financial resources to address the current security situation; creating a central mechanism to deploy assistance without overlapping and wasteful efforts; a strong monitoring component to combat corruption; drafting a new Constitution that fixes deficiencies in the existing constitution, including by establishing an autonomous Central Bank, an independent justice system, a functioning and effective education system; and investment to create employment and alleviate poverty.

Few would disagree with this agenda.  The questions it raises are: who would provide the financing and which agency would be trusted to implement it?

These are questions, which must be addressed before Haiti sinks even deeper into an even bigger catastrophic humanitarian crisis than it has suffered so far.  Haiti must become a priority on the agenda of all international and regional bodies…  now.

Responses and previous commentaries: www.sirronaldsanders.com 

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PAHO seeks to strengthen preparedness and response to future respiratory virus pandemics in the Caribbean

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

With the aim of supporting countries in Latin America and the Caribbean to develop or update their  operational plans to face future pandemics, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) is holding a regional workshop on preparedness and response to events with pandemic and epidemic potential in Buenos Aires this week. This workshop will build on the lessons learned from COVID-19.

“As we meet today, we continue to deal with the current COVID-19 pandemic and, at the same time, we are facing an outbreak of Monkeypox in several countries,” said PAHO Director Carissa F. Etienne. COVID-19, she said, “has been a formidable challenge” and “a stark reminder of the responsibility we all have to invest in prevention, preparedness and response to communicable pathogen events”.

Dr. Etienne highlighted that, as of last Wednesday, there were 170 million cases and nearly 3 million deaths due to COVID-19 in the Americas. She noted that other respiratory pathogens are re-emerging, and that seasonal influenza causes between 290,000 and 650,000 deaths each year in the region. “We must never forget that it is not a question of whether a pandemic will occur due to a new influenza virus, but when it will occur,” she warned.

“Our capacity to respond to health emergencies depends on what we have done before they occur and what we have learned during previous emergencies” such as COVID-19, said the PAHO Director during the opening of the workshop, which brings together technical experts in epidemiology, laboratory, immunization and risk communication from the ministries of Health of Argentina, Bolivia, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Nicaragua, Paraguay and Suriname.

A preparedness and response plan for events with epidemic and pandemic potential is one of the core capacities required by the International Health Regulations (IHR), a legally binding international convention adopted by Member States of the World Health Organization (WHO) to prevent and respond to public health threats that can cross borders and affect populations around the world.

“Functioning health systems are the foundation of health security,” asserted Dr. Etienne and it is essential to “secure supply chains of vaccines, medicines, laboratory reagents, personal protective equipment and other strategic public health goods” before the next emergency occurs, and  “strengthen the resilience of health systems with human resources and planning.”

The PAHO Director recalled that two centers in Argentina and Brazil were designated by WHO for the future development and production of vaccines using mRNA technology, something that is expected to improve timely and equitable access to vaccines in the region and contribute to health self-sufficiency. “All of this is key for us to be prepared to respond and succeed during emergencies that threaten our region,” she stressed.

The Minister of Health of Argentina, Carla Vizzotti, considered that the COVID-19 pandemic showed that health “must be a priority for everyone” because “without health one cannot study, work or produce”. After indicating that the government had to reformulate its response to the pandemic, Vizzotti said that the region must tackle the challenges around  access to medical supplies -something learned during the COVID-19 pandemic, and “think about how we can produce and expand access to vaccines.”

Reflecting on the countries’ response to the emergency, Vizzotti stated that “we were able to do many things in a very short time. We have to look back to see what we learned, but also forward in order to make improvements and take action that will better position us for the next pandemic”.

“The COVID-19 pandemic is not over yet,” said the PAHO Representative in Argentina, Eva Jané Llopis, and added that since the declaration of the public health emergency of international concern on January 30, 2020, “the response had to be adjusted, to seek funding and involve other sectors” due to its great scope and duration. “Reflecting on what we did, taking it to the level of strategies, and thinking about other epidemiological challenges is crucial to continue moving forward,” she said.

PAHO expects to hold similar workshops with other countries in the region during 2022. The outputs of this and other workshops will integrate the vision of the Americas region into global pandemic preparedness and response documents and guidelines.

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New PAHO Report on Progress in the Fight Against Smoking in the region

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

Some 900 million people, or 96% of the population of the 35 countries of the Americas are currently protected by at least one of the six tobacco control measures recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO), up 50% from 2007. However, progress has not been uniform.

According to the Report on Tobacco Control for the Region of the Americas 2022, presented today by the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), 26 of the Region’s 35 countries have achieved the highest level of application of at least one measure; but other measures such as increased tobacco taxes have made slow progress and nine countries have not yet taken any action.

“Tobacco causes nearly a million deaths in the region every year and it is the only legal consumer product that kills up to half of those who use it,” said Dr. Anselm Hennis, Director of PAHO’s Department of Noncommunicable Diseases and Mental Health. “The response to this enormous threat must be equally aggressive. Control measures work and we must move more quickly to implement all of them.”

The report shows that, in 2021, of 35 countries in the Americas:

24 are implementing measures to protect against exposure to second-hand smoke

22 require large graphic warnings about the dangers of smoking on tobacco product packages

10 have surveillance systems with recent, periodic, and representative data on tobacco use by adults and young people

6 offer a comprehensive system to help people quit smoking

9 establish total bans on tobacco advertising, promotion, and sponsorship

3 apply indirect taxes to cigarettes that account for 75% or more of the retail price.

Progress in the application of the six measures known as MPOWER, established by WHO in 2008, has helped reduce the prevalence of tobacco use from 28% of the region’s population in 2000 to 16.3% in 2020, the second lowest in the world. In 2020, South America became the first smoke-free subregion of the Americas, where smoking is absolutely prohibited in enclosed public places, in workplaces, and on public transport.

Tobacco use is the leading risk factor for six of the eight leading causes of death in the world, and for the four most preventable and prevalent noncommunicable diseases: cardiovascular disease, diabetes, cancer, and chronic respiratory disease. All forms of tobacco are harmful and there is no safe level of exposure.

Addressing the threat of new products

The PAHO report warns that new and emerging nicotine and tobacco products such as e-cigarettes are becoming increasingly available and accessible, posing a threat to tobacco control. It also warns that the tobacco industry makes misleading claims to increase consumers and enter new markets.

PAHO/WHO recommends that governments put regulations in place to help prevent non-smokers from starting to use these products, to prevent tobacco use from becoming socially acceptable again, and to protect future generations.

Currently, the sale of electronic nicotine delivery systems is banned in seven countries in the Americas. Five of these countries and 13 others have taken partial measures to prohibit the use of these systems, limit their advertising, promotion, and sponsorship, and require warnings on their packaging. Fifteen countries do not impose any regulatory framework.

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Antigua and Barbuda’s US Television Campaign with CBS TV

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

The Antigua and Barbuda Tourism Authority’s latest advertising campaign out of the US Market has been creating a stir as ‘Antigua and Barbuda’s Reggae Ambassador’ Gregory ‘Causion’ Bailey croons across US television screens and issues an invitation to CBS TV audiences to “bathe in the sun” in Antigua and Barbuda, known for having an astonishing 365 beaches.

The television advertising campaign which begun on August 9 features fifteen second and thirty second clips of Causion’s summer hit music video ‘Antigua Me Come From’ played on CBS TV programmes.  A call-to-action encourages viewers of the advert to contact their travel advisor to book an Antigua and Barbuda vacation.

The campaign will run through to the Labor Day weekend (up to September 5) for a total of four weeks, creating over 100 airings and delivering over 10 million New York DMA (designated marketing area) ad impressions.

Programming will include daily CBS morning and evening (11pm) newscasts, CBS Sunday Morning, and Face the Nation (9-11am), Late Night with Stephen Colbert, Entertainment Tonight and CBS Primetime!

A ten second A&B snipe (logo with picture, no audio) will also appear in the bottom right corner during Entertainment Tonight (ET), the leading source of all things entertainment and pop culture.

Causion’s ‘Antigua Me Come From’ video, launched in May 2022 to inspire summer travel, features some of Antigua and Barbuda’s scenic locations, popular resorts, and hospitable people.

ABTA US Director of Tourism Dean Fenton said, “The song really resonated well with our target audience during the early summer months and was the perfect anthem for our brand. Summer is still going strong in Antigua and Barbuda and we are excited to see what this television opportunity does for the destination as far as increasing brand awareness, driving last-minute summer bookings, and getting persons thinking about upcoming winter breaks.”

The CBS audience is considered a strong target for the destination. Viewers plan to take an all-inclusive resort, spa, and beach vacation in the next 12 months, have spent $10,000 or more on vacations during the past 12 months and have an annual household income exceeding $250,000.

Persons can tune into these key CBS Programmes to catch the Antigua and Barbuda advert this Thursday evening and Friday:

Thursday, Aug 18 

7:28pm – Entertainment Tonight
8:45pm – CBS Primetime’s “Ghosts”
11:21pm – CBS 11pm News

Friday, Aug 19 

5:28am – CBS Morning News
8:48am – CBS Morning News
1:29pm – Young and the Restless
7:28pm – Entertainment Tonight
9:45pm: CBS Primetime’s “Blue Bloods”

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PSA stands with scrap-iron dealers against export ban

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Scrap iron worker, Devon Hayde, in an interview on Thursday speaks with media. Like other workers, he too distanced himself from the Trinidad & Tobago Scrap Iron Dealers Association and blasts the government on the decision to implement a 6-month ban on export to the industry. Photo by Marvin Hamilton

THE Public Services Association has said it stands in solidarity with members of the Scrap Iron Dealers Association against government’s decision to impose a six-month ban on the export of old and scrap metal.

During a press conference on Thursday morning the association’s president, Leroy Baptiste, called on the government to reconsider this approach.

He said the government had disregarded the livelihood of scrap-iron workers, without offering incentives to the families affected by this move.

While he agrees there must be action to deal with the increase in theft and vandalism of state and private assets, he believes such a drastic move was unwarranted.

The ban came into effect on August 12, but was announced on August 15 at a joint press conference held by National Security Minister Fitzgerald Hinds and Attorney General Reginald Armour.

In three months, Armour will approach Cabinet with a review of the industry and proposed legislation aimed at monitoring and reducing the illegal trade in scrap iron and metal. Once Cabinet is convinced, the ban will end.

File photo: PSA president Leroy Baptiste. File photo/Sureash Cholai

But Baptiste said, “It’s unusual as a strategy to shut an industry for the purpose of drafting regulatory legislation…We are concerned about the business owners in the industry. They will have their financial commitments. How are they to meet those commitments? Don’t cut off the nose to spite the face.

“It’s not a surprise, but it’s concerning that government would take a decision that impacts workers’ lives and livelihood. It’s almost trivialised, it’s not even in any way giving any regard to how those workers will survive in those six months.”

He said if the government decided to halt the industry, there must be a safety net for the workers affected during that period, “so they can continue to cover important expenses… It’s callous and inconsiderate to simply not give any regard for the workers and businesses involved.”

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Covid puts funeral of Catholic ex-lay minister on hold

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

File photo: Police officers at the home of Sylda Mudie, 82, who was killed by a male relative at their Edward Trace Moruga, home on Wednesday. File photo/Lincoln Holder

FORMER lay minister with the RC church Sylda Mudie, 82, is being remembered as a pillar of strength in the church.

“She was a true pillar of the Catholic Church in Moruga,” said Fr David Khan of Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church, San Fernando, of the woman who was murdered by her husband, Carltus “Sankar” Mudie, 80.

In her earlier years, Sylda served as a Lay Minister at the St Anthony’s Chapel, Basse Terre, teaching first communion and confirmation classes.

Mudie shot and chopped Sylda and their son, Derek, 55, at their Basse Terre Village, home on August 10. The mother of two and grandmother of one died on the spot, but Derek who lives in the US, survived.

Police shot at Mudie to disarm him, as he refused to put down the murder weapons. He died some days later from gunshot wounds.

A joint funeral had been planned for the couple at the St Vincent Ferrer RC church, Grand Chemin.

Butrelease from the family on Thursday said owing to unforeseen circumstances, the funeral has been postponed and will be rescheduled.

Sylda’s niece Marissa Granger told the Newsday Derek and other members of the family have covid19. She said arrangements will be made after their quarantine period has expired.

Granger said Derek who was discharged from the hospital the day after he was attacked and his mother killed, “is doing well, given the circumstances.”

In an article in the Catholic News August 21 issue, Khan spoke of Sylda Mudie’s life as a living testimony of devotion to the Lord.

He said she embodied humility, faith and strength, and was faithful to the teaching of the First Communion and confirmation in the parish. Under her charge, many came to know the Catholic faith, he said.

“She lived with humility and simplicity, just as our Lord Jesus Christ.”

In the same article, Josephine Alpheus, one of Sylda’s relatives, said she was a generous person and a mentor to young people who readily accepted the values she instilled in her teachings of God and his goodness.

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