Home Affairs Minister Pays Official Visit To Police Marine Unit – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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Home Affairs Minister Dr. Virginia Albert-Poyotte in her continued quest to ensure she assesses first – hand the conditions of work of law enforcement officers paid an official visit to the Marine Unit compound at Vigie, Castries on Thursday, August 11, 2022.

The entourage that accompanied the Minister comprised of the Commissioner of Police Mr. Milton Desir and the Permanent Secretary of Home Affairs Dr. Elizabeth Bailey among other officials.

The touring party was led by Commander of the Marine Unit Mr. Kentry Frederick.

Whilst visiting the compound, Minister Albert – Poyotte was briefed on areas whichrequired immediate attention, long term challenges and recommendations as well asfuture plans for the expansion of the Marine Unit.

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The Home Affairs Minister thanked the seamen for their reliable and excellent service to the nation despite some obvious challenges.

The Minister advised that the most immediate of their needs ought to be urgently addressed through the relevant channels of the Royal Saint Lucia Police Force.

She also indicated however that more cash intensive endeavors would be escalated to the Minister for National Security who is also the Minister for Finance, Prime Minister Honourable Philip J. Pierre for further deliberations on the way forward.

Minister Albert-Poyotte however, provided reassurances that the prime minister remainsunwavering in his personal commitment to bring meaningful relief to national security agencies such as the Royal Saint Lucia Police Force despite the constraints of resources at this time.

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‘Heel erg moeilijk als Hindostaans meisje stempel te drukken in hiphopscene’

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

door Sharon Singh PARAMARIBO — Ze valt op door haar verschijning: lang krullend haar, mooi figuur en een knap gezicht.

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Albert Emérancienne a définitivement pris le large

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Vauclin

Vendredi après-midi, au temple adventiste, ont eu lieu les funérailles de Frédéric Albert Emérancienne, marin-pêcheur ayant longtemps œuvré dans le milieu de la yole.

Nombreux étaient celles et ceux qui ont voulu saluer une dernière fois la mémoire d’Albert Emérancienne, décédé le 8 août dernier, emporté par la maladie, à l’âge de 78 ans. Passionné par la mer, il a décidé à l’âge de 14 ans d’en vivre et donc d’embrasser la profession de marin-pêcheur. Très croyant, il avait nommé sa première embarcation « Dios me da gracias » (Dieu m’accorde sa grâce). En parallèle, il s’est donné corps et âme à l’activité yole en…


France-Antilles Martinique

424 mots – 16.08.2022

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Les Clubistes maîtres à Foyal

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

FOOTBALL. TOURNOI DE LA VILLE DE FORT-DE-FRANCE

La compétition a tenu en haleine les footeux foyalais pendant toute la semaine. Comme pour la première édition en 2019, c’est le Club Colonial qui rafle la mise en disposant du CO Trénelle en finale (1-0).

Vainqueurs de la première édition, les Clubistes ont récidivé. Ils ont pris le meilleur sur le CO Trénelle grâce au penalty obtenu par Bourguignon et transformé par Marny (1-0, 41e). Les Trénelliens ont eu la possession de balle et se sont procuré de nombreuses occasions de marquer. Mais comme dit l’adage : « Dominer n’est pas gagner » et cela s’est vérifié sur ce match.

Les joueurs de Jean-François Go aurait pu marquer, quand Henriol, seul face à Vermignon, échoue (16e).

La…


France-Antilles Martinique

509 mots – 16.08.2022

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L’aquaculteur Alex Racine perd toute sa production de loups

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Vauclin

En fin de semaine dernière, Alex Racine, aquaculteur depuis 25 ans au Vauclin, a perdu brutalement toute sa production de loups des Caraïbes. Une dizaine de tonnes de poissons qui, selon lui, auraient été asphyxiés suite à un échouement massif de sargasses.

«Avec ce genre de situation qui se reproduit, on se pose des questions. Est-ce que ça vaut le coup de continuer ? », lâche, désemparé, Alex Racine. Vendredi dernier, cet aquaculteur a eu la malheureuse surprise, en allant nourrir ses poissons aux alentours de 6h30, de découvrir que la totalité de son cheptel était mort asphyxié. Une dizaine de tonnes de loups des Caraïbes, dont des juvéniles, qu’il élève dans une baie tranquille du Vauclin. 

Pour lui, la cause de cette…


France-Antilles Martinique

846 mots – 16.08.2022

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Un centre aéré pour participer à l’épanouissement de jeunes autistes

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Après avoir proposé pendant plus d’un mois des activités en tous genres à une quinzaine de jeunes autistes, le centre d’accueil de jour et de répit de l’Adapei leur a organisé une dernière journée conviviale et festive le 11 août dernier, dans ses locaux au Lamentin. L’occasion pour les jeunes, comme pour les encadrants, de s’amuser mais aussi de tirer le bilan de ces dernières semaines. 

Des rires et des cris de joie résonnent lorsqu’on approche, en ce jeudi matin d’août, du centre d’accueil de jour et de répit (CAJR) de l’Adapei. Dans le jardin clôturé de la maison située quartier Petit- Morne au Lamentin, une poignée de jeunes se sont lancés dans une course en sac, sous les encouragements et applaudissements de leurs encadrants et des autres enfants. D’autres regardent plus tranquillement les photos qui défilent sur la télévision installée sous la terrasse….


France-Antilles Martinique

1400 mots – 16.08.2022

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Colleagues remember Suzanne Mills as beautiful, brilliant, gifted

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Suzanne Mills. –

SUZANNE Mills was a beautiful, intelligent, brilliant and gifted writer, in the view of people who knew her. She was fair-minded, compassionate and cared deeply for those who worked with and for her.

But Mills, 59, was a troubled soul, bedevilled with bipolar illness, which she wrote about openly in her newspaper column in her last years.

It may have been that illness that led to her death. Mills’s body was found at her home at Aquamarine Drive, Diamond Vale home, on Sunday night, six days after anyone had last seen her.

A former editor in chief at the Newsday (2002-2009), Mills spent over 21 years in different positions at the paper, where her late mother Therese Mills was the founding editor in chief.

Friends and colleagues responded with shock to the news of her solitary death. Her body was found after neighbours called the police.

Newsday’s board of directors said its members were deeply saddened by the news of her untimely passing. They said the Mills family was intimately connected with Newsday and always would be.

Daily editor Ken Chee Hing was one of those at Newsday who worked with Mills when she was daily editor and later editor in chief.

He remembered her as “a vibrant journalist, a great writer and also an editor who demanded only the best from her reporters. As an editor, she supported her reporters and was willing to impart advice and suggestions.

“Suzanne was committed to two things – her mother and her job.”

For all her seriousness, Chee Hing recalled the humorous side of Mills.

“I remember Suzanne Mills the person, who loved a good joke or old talk. Her laughter was loud as was her voice. She let you know what was on her mind whether you wanted to know it or not.”

He referred to her many personal issues, which worsened with the passing of her mother, but being fiercely private and an independent woman, he said, she bore her challenges alone.

“May she rest in peace. My condolences to her family and friends,” Chee Hing said.

Another former colleague, Sunday editor Camille Moreno, said, “Suzanne was fiercely committed to a free press, defending Newsday against its critics. Her political reporting stands out, especially her commentaries where she spared no punches against both sides. I’m grateful I got to work with her and her mother.”

Head of Newsday’s San Fernando office Lincoln Holder was also torn by Mills’s tragic end.

“I knew she had her troubles, but to go down that road alone, that’s hard.

“She was a good boss. She was fair. Like her mother, she was big on education and always encouraged the younger employees to study.

“She brought a freshness to the Newsday and often butted heads with the older staff because of her novel style. We followed her vision, which was really to bring that youthfulness to the paper.”

Holder, a photographer, recalled before she rose to manage the newsroom, Mills was a political reporter, whom he often accompanied to Parliament. He said she always guided him and gave him tips in terms of what photographic images to capture.

“She impacted my career a lot. She was very knowledgeable. Like her mother, she was always there for us: we could speak to her about anything. She was compassionate, she was jovial, always kept the place lively.

“I am sorry to hear of her tragic passing. Condolences to her family.”

Though from a competing media house, political reporter Richard Lord thanked Mills for her service to journalism. He said she raised the bar on political reporting so high, it motivated him to become a better writer.

“With Suzanne from the Newsday on one side, (and) Ria Taitt from the Express on the other, I, as the Guardian reporter, was inspired to write a thorough a story as they did.

“May her soul rest in eternal peace.”

Suzanne Sheppard, a former editor at Newsday, said she was shocked and heartbroken by the circumstances of Mills’s passing.

“I have known Suzanne for many years and it is sad that she died alone.”

Sheppard said her relationship with Mills dated back to the time when Mills’s mother was editor in chief of the Guardian and Mills dreamed of following in her footsteps.

“I remember when she left to study abroad. She lived in Spain for some time. She was bilingual and worked for some multinational companies. Her mother and I often spoke about her. We later worked together at the management level of the newsroom at Newsday. She was a very intelligent young woman.

“I just want to extend my condolences to her family and colleagues.”

Another former colleague, Irene Medina, also lauded Mills’s brilliance.

“We worked well together. I found her to be very energetic and tremendously bright. She was a very good journalist, a great writer, a brave writer, very creative and innovative.

“I remember one election time when she created a whole ‘election campaign’ in the office and had people voting and wearing campaign T-shirts. I did not participate, but I admired how her mind and her brain worked. She always found a way to do things a little bit outside the box.”

Recalling her health issues, Medina said, “I knew she had her challenges, but I did not expect the news that I heard today.”

The Media Association (MATT) said it joined the journalism community in mourning the loss of Mills, daughter of “the legendary Therese Mills.”

It noted that as a “well regarded political reporter and commentator, she took up the job of Newsday editor, but had a relatively short career there, buffeted by mental health issues.

“Ms Mills wrote a column for several months in 2019-2020 for the Trinidad Express and openly discussed her experiences with bipolar disorder,” it recalled, commenting that her death was “a powerful reminder of the toll that journalism can take on its practitioners and the importance of self-care and supportive conversations” in doing their jobs.

MATT said it was “committed to increasing opportunities to address these issues facing journalists” and sent its condolences to Mills’s family.

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Mother of murdered man: I was expecting it years ago

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Jenelle Dominique, mother of Carlon Sooknanan, speaks with Newday at the Forensic Science Centre on Monday. – Angelo Marcelle

THE mother of Carlon Sooknanan, the man who was murdered in Valencia while having sex, said he failed to heed her warnings and she was expecting him to be murdered years ago.

Speaking with reporters at the Forensic Science Centre, St James on Monday, Jenelle Dominique said her first-born child, who is originally from Sea Wall Trace, Guayaguayare, was “hardened.”

“This young boy, he (was) just miserable. I am not the kind of mother who will put my head on a block and say he don’t know about this or that. He been in all kind of nonsense.

“I accept it because I was expecting it. I was expecting it a long time, a couple years now. It kind of hard, but I will get over it.”

Police reported that at about 10.20 pm on Saturday, 28-year-old Sooknanan was at Emon Lane, Valencia, with his 30-year-old girlfriend when three men shouted “Police! Police!”

Carlon Sooknanan –

Sooknanan, police said, was on a mattress on the floor when his killers forced themselves inside and shot him before running off. His girlfriend, who was unharmed, ran to his relatives and called for help.

Dominique said she lost another son, who was also involved in criminality – mainly the drug trade between Trinidad and Venezuela – four years ago and since then she spoke to Sooknanan to change his ways.

In 2019 her 19-year-old son Anthony George was abducted at sea and has not been seen since. He and two others were snatched by Venezuelan pirates, only one man survived after he and another man jumped overboard and swam to safety. The survivor, Keyon Alexander, said he swam to an oil rig off the coast of Erin and got a ride on a passing fishing boat.

“I used to tell him ‘I have no money to bury yuh. Somebody will bullet you down. Behave yuhself.’ I been telling him that for the longest while. He listen now though!”

She described Sooknanan as a quiet child who was very sly. Dominique said her son had land in the area and was planning to construct a home there. The house in which he was killed was an abandoned house which once belonged to a friend.

“My message to mothers is don’t let your children rule you. Make sure and talk to them, and if they don’t listen it have a place for them at the end of the day. Don’t lie for your children.”

Her concern was Sooknanan’s lifestyle coming home to affect his remaining siblings.

The mother of nine, five boys and four girls, said she did not want criminals shooting up her home looking for her son, and an innocent sibling gets killed. She said she advised him not to stay with them because of the life he lived.

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Srta. Rita Otilia Laclè

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Diario

“Señor ta mi wardador, mi’n tin falta di nada

Den cunucu di yerba berde e ta ponemi sosega.

E ta hibami na awa trankil,

Pa mi bolbe haña forsa”.

Salmo: 23 

Cu inmenso dolor y tristesa na nos curason pero conforme

cu boluntad di Dios nos ta anuncia fayecimento di: 

Srta. Rita Otilia Laclè

Mihor conoci cu como Rita of Rika

01 Oct 1939 – 11 Aug 2022 

Na nomber di su:

Tata y Mama:

†Jose Chebito y Anita Laclé-Yarzagaray

Rumanan:

†Thelma Laclé

†Clyve Laclé y Famia

Ismael y Esposa Alegonda Laclé de Rijk

†Olga Viera-Alves Laclé y Famia

†Dr. Edgar Laclé y Famia

Mena y Esposo Gerard Marsman-Laclé

 Sobrino manera su Yui:

Bubu y Debbie Laclé-Thijzen y Famia

 Sobrino y Sobrinanan cu e la stima hopi:

Marcel Sommer y Famia, Max Laclé y famia, Monique Laclé y Famia, Robby Laclé y famia,

Angelique Laclé, Chaim Alves y Famia

Eugene Laclé y Famia, Marcel Laclé y Famia, Mirella Laclé y Famia

Gladys Moldovan-Viera Alves y Famia, +Franklin Viera-Alves y Famia, +Anthony Viera-Alves y Famia

Junior, Thelma, Raquel y Celeste Laclé

Patricia Papaikonomou-Marsman y Famia, Chantal de Jong-Marsman y Famia

Denise y Joshua Laclé

 Demas famianan:

Laclé, Yarzagaray, de Mey, Lampe, Luidens, Erasmus, Sommer, de Rijk, Alves-Viera,

Marsman, Tromp, Thijzen, Franca, el Hage, Haines, Alves, Papaikonomou, de Jong, van Hooft.

 Un danki di curason na personal di Stichting Thuis Zorg Jaburubari 

Nos ta pidi nos disculpa den nos tristesa si nos por a lubida algun famia. 

Acto di Entiero lo tuma lugar diaranson 17 augustus 2022, di 9:00am – 11:00am na Aurora Funeral Home. 

Nos la lamenta cu despues di entiero nos no ta ricibi bishita di condolencia na cas.

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Cudjoe: Our voices in Cabinet have helped Tobago

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Tobago West MP Shamfa Cudjoe has defended her representation as well as that of Tobago East MP Ayanna Webster-Roy, after criticism from THA Chief Secretary Farley Augustine.

At Emancipation Day celebrations, Augustine said the Prime Minister and the Tobago MPs should be pushing for longer opening hours at the ANR Robinson International Airport so that Caribbean Airlines Ltd (CAL) could increase its flights to the island.

The THA, hoteliers and other stakeholders have long been clamouring for CAL to increase the number of domestic flights, particularly during peak travel periods, such as Easter, the July-August vacation and the upcoming October Carnival.

Addressing the issue on the Tobago Updates morning show on Monday, Cudjoe took umbrage at Augustine’s statement and argued that the island has benefited from their influence in the PNM-led government.

Cudjoe is the Miister of Sport and Community Development and Webster-Roy is a Minister in the Office of the Prime Minister.

Cudjoe said: “It is because of our representation and our voices at the Cabinet that Tobago has seen this development that it has seen over the past seven years.”

On the issue of CAL and the airbridge, Cudjoe said it’s a matter of resources.

“Of course we would like a flight to go back and forth every 30 minutes, but the government is already subsidising CAL to the tune of $800 million per year, and the interisland airbridge at $100 million per year.

“CAL has been in the red for as long as we know. In addition to that, CAL, like other airline companies, (is) coming out of this whole covid19 situation.”

She said currently the government continues to subsidise seats on the airbridge, as “every time you sit down in a seat, you pay your $300 return, the government is paying an additional $400 on that ticket – every single time.”

She said in the last two weeks of July, CAL had moved at least 6,000 people back and forth on the airbridge.

Cudjoe said financial resources will affect interisland transportation, noting that the country already benefits from free education and healthcare as well as subsidised electricity and fuel.

Saying there are currently seven ATRs available to TT, three to four of which are being used between the islands, CAL, she said, is not a national airline, but more of a regional airline.

“Yes, we lease some of the jets. People would say, ‘Well, put on a jet.’

“We don’t own the jets, we lease the jets, and then it’s not good for the jets to fly that short distance – we know that damages the jets and we have to pay extra monies and so on to the people we’re leasing the jet from.

“So yes, of course we would like to have hundreds of ATRs going back and forth, but based on our financial situation, it’s not possible at this point in time, alongside all the other expenses.”

She added: “We continue to make the investment in the domestic airbridge, utilise the two ferries and improve our airport. Make that investment so that we can attract more airlines.

“You can’t not want the airport and development and want more flights and more tourism development at the same time. It is a sacrifice that we have to make right now, and we as government, we continue to invest in Tobago’s development.”

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