Foreigner arrested after ammunition found at MoBay airport Loop Jamaica

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Lawmen in St James arrested and charged an American citizen in relation to ammunition that was found in his possession on Wednesday, August 10 at the Sangster International Airport in the parish.

Charged with illegal possession of ammunition is 29-year-old Javius Mitchell, a Lab Technician of Emily, St Bainbridge, Georgia in the USA.

Reports are that at about 1:45 pm, Mitchell was in the process of boarding a flight, during which his luggage were searched and two Sig Sauer magazines, one of which contained eight 9mm rounds of ammunition.

He is scheduled to appear in the St. James Parish Court on Thursday, August 11.

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‘A black eye for the PNP’ Loop Jamaica

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The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

“It’s a black eye for the PNP (People’s National Party), and they’re going to feel the political fallout from it.”

That is the reaction of Professor of Culture, Gender and Society at The University of the West Indies (UWI), Donna Hope, to the shock announcement by Member of Parliament for St Ann South Eastern Lisa Hanna that she is walking away from representational politics.

The four-term MP and former Minister of Youth and Culture told PNP President and Opposition Leader Mark Golding in a lengthy letter on Tuesday that she will not be contesting the next general election that is constitutionally due in 2025.

Among other things, Hanna, who turns 47 later this month and who first won the safe St Ann seat in 2007, said she is making way for future generations.

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However, Hope is not buying that argument.

“There are people on social media I see who are actually trying to run with that, but we have geriatrics in the Parliament who are in their 70s and 80s,” said the professor.

She said that, as a woman, she’s not surprised by Hanna’s decision to quit.

“When you’re working in Jamaica as a woman, a professional or otherwise, there’s a point where you get to where that patriarchal glass ceiling becomes unbearable, and I understand where Lisa is probably making some decisions in that regard,” she said.

Continuing, Hope said: “The truth is that her future in leadership in the PNP is slim to none. There are a lot of men there jostling for the positions of primacy, and that’s just what it is. So while the people of Jamaica, and people like myself, see her as one of the potential leaders and one of the better fit-for-leadership type, especially in the current era, the PNP apparently does not see it that way.”

“And, I don’t think they see her the way they saw a Portia Simpson Miller’s ‘winnability’ for the party and, therefore, allowed Portia the opportunity to go ahead because they wanted Portia to provide them with the win,” Hope added about the former PNP President and Prime Minister.

She congratulated Hanna for waiting until a lot of the discomfort and discord had died down around the party’s massive defeat in the 2020 General Election and in-fighting around leadership challenges before making her announcement.

“She waited very carefully as a good communicator and as a person who understands marketing. She waited until things calmed down and had settled, and then she decided to move on from politics.

“If it was done during the carryings on and the chaos, it would have looked bad on Lisa. But now that she has waited until everything has calmed down, the leadership races, the general election and the ‘cas cas’, everything is very calm, right after Independence and everybody feel happy, and she sneaks her move… she will come out smelling like roses…the PNP is suffering another black eye for this,” said Hope.

Lisa Hanna, Member of Parliament for St Ann South Eastern

Hope argued that the PNP is losing one of its trump cards.

“She is well recognised internationally. She has a lot of favours among the Jamaican people. She’s a beautiful woman. She’s graceful and very savvy politically, with a lot of time ahead of her to make a mark in any area that she chooses because she’s at the peak of her career, and she’s now going to continue to move forward. The PNP has lost a trump card.”

Yet, Hope noted that with Hanna winning her seat by a mere 31 votes in the last general election, it “means that her political career in South East St Ann is very weak”.

Additionally, Hope said the PNP has not made great strides as a political Opposition to set itself up for a general election that is at most three years away.

“It’s not a lot of time for a general election, and we’ll soon start to see winds of it, and I believe she’s assessing all of that and decided to make her move. Whatever that move is, we don’t know, but this thing about making way for another generation, Lisa is 47 this year, she’s not yet 50 and there are people in Parliament who are like nearly twice her age and who haven’t given any indication that they’re going to allow a younger generation to get an opportunity to sit in those seats.

“So, Lisa using that line. I think it is a part of her, perhaps, understanding that it would ring a bell in the minds of people because ‘it’s young people time now’ has been a part of the rallying cry for a couple of the general elections that have gone on”.

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Meanwhile, Public and Social Commentator, Dennis Chung, said the people speculating about why Hanna has decided to walk should be reminded that it is difficult to be in politics and public life, generally.

“I know it must be difficult for her because I just sit as the chairman at NSWMA (National Solid Waste Management Authority) and some of the things that you hear people say about us being at the trough and all of that, they don’t realise that it’s a personal sacrifice because it actually cost you more to be there, but these things are (in) service (to country),” he said.

Nevertheless, Chung argued that in looking at the letter Hanna wrote to Golding stating her decision to quit, “it’s obvious there was some discontent”.

“I don’t know if the discontent alone would’ve been enough to walk away from politics if she still had a passion for it, so it could suggest that, based on what’s happening, she’s really just tired and wants to leave it or it could also mean that there’s some disagreement, which doesn’t necessarily have to mean that she has a problem with Golding as people are saying but rather a problem with the direction of the policies and how the party is moving, which is a separate thing,” Chung reasoned.

He said he would not want to cast a shadow on Golding because of that.

“The best thing to do is really understand, from her point of view, but it certainly requires more understanding in terms of what happened,” he said.

According to Chung, “When you look at the current political landscape, the general feeling out there is that the Opposition is still trailing in the polls.

“And when I think about what Hanna says that we have to think about new ways of doing things…and the call (by Golding) for $40 billion more to be spent on social welfare, it betrays our knowledge or memory of what happened in terms of the fiscal irresponsibility years when we were constantly putting on new taxes and borrowing money and the country almost dropped off a cliff,” he said.

Chung said: “I don’t want to cast any aspersions on what she has said or her intent, but certainly there is more to look at. In terms of what drove her there, it must have been some personal reason because you just don’t walk away from something that you love like that if you still feel the fire burning and you feel you can still do something about it.”

For his part, Public Commentator, Kevin O’Brien Chang said: “Lisa Hanna is a mixed bag. She has her good side and her bad side.”

On the good side, O’Brien Chang noted that many women in Hanna’s privileged position would not bother to show the level of commitment to country that she has shown.

“She could easily be travelling the world, but she has, instead, devoted a lot of time and energy to her country and being in politics is not an easy thing. You have to give her credit for sticking with it for 15 years. She has tried to give back to her country though she could be living a Kim Kardashian lifestyle,” O’Brien Chang stated.

He noted further that not many even think about serving or giving back to the country.

“They’re not interested; they just want to live life. It’s a small pool who are willing to go through the hassle, go into the system, and try and help to run the affairs of the country,” he said.

The commentator added: “Every time we lose somebody prominent and intelligent enough, it’s a setback for the country. Every time we lose somebody who’s prominent and has the respect of the people, and the attention and the qualifications, the pool shrinks a bit.

“It’s a bit worrying that the pool may shrink one day to nothing, or the PNP might shrink to nothing,” he said.

On the negative side, O’Brien Chang said it is obvious that Hanna is not the best people person in the world, based on the numerous public spats she has had with her councillors over the years.

He also highlighted that she has taken the seat, which she first won in 2007 with a majority of more than 2,700 votes, shrinking the margin to just a 31-vote majority in the last election.

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In the context of the PNP, he said the prospects for party leadership look bleak.

“If Golding loses the next election and the people say, ‘Let us get fresh blood’, where’s that going to come from?” O’Brien Chang questioned.

He also said the PNP seem to have a problem with women.

“It’s not a good thing for the country; the talent pool is shrinking, the PNP is shrinking. Hopefully, maybe she can reconsider and come back and use her obvious appeal to contribute more to nation building,” said O’Brien Chang.

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Antigua and Barbuda gets yet another fire truck

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

ANOTHER FIRE TENDER ARRIVES TO BOOST BRIGADE’S FLEET

The fleet of the fire brigade has been bolstered with another fire tender which arrived in the country this week.

The unit is the second of two purchased by the Government from the United States.

The first purchased from the US had arrived in May.

This latest unit comes less than two weeks after the donation of a fire tender to the brigade from the principals of the Peace Love and Happiness or PLH project in Barbuda.

Meanwhile, two of the three fire tenders the Government has purchased from the United Kingdom are expected to arrive in the country on Friday.

The third, which is a new unit, is scheduled to arrive next month.

The authorities say the beefing up of the brigade’s fleet is an indication of their commitment to the safety of residents.

There had been a firestorm of concern in some quarters of the public earlier this year regarding the number of working units for the brigade.

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24.9% COVID-positivity rate; 137 new cases, 4 deaths recorded Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Amid Jamaica recording 137 new COVID-19 cases over 24 hours up to Wednesday afternoon, the Ministry of Health and Wellness has reported a positivity rate for the one-day period of 24.9 per cent.

Four COVID-19 deaths that occurred from September 2021 to August 2022 were also recorded on Wednesday, bringing the overall coronavirus death toll in Jamaica to 3,216.

A 73-year-old man from St Thomas is among the latest recorded COVID fatalities nationally.

The separate deaths of two COVID-19 patients are under investigation by health officials, while the death of another patient has been classified as being coincidental.

There were 92 recoveries on the day, bringing that tally to 94,817.

The newly confirmed COVID-19 cases brought the total number on record for the island to 147,567.

Notably, the 24.9 per cent positivity rate was based on the samples tested on Wednesday.

Of the newly confirmed cases, 85 are females and 52 are males, with ages ranging from five months to 95 years.

The case count was made up of Kingston and St Andrew (48), St Catherine (31), St James (11), Westmoreland (nine), Manchester (nine), St Ann (eight), Clarendon (seven), Trelawny (five), St Mary (four), St Elizabeth (two), Portland (two), and St Thomas (one).

There are 24 moderately ill patients, three severely ill patients and five critically ill patients among 1,235 active cases now under observation in Jamaica.

A total of 116 patients are now hospitalised locally.

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Cop battling for his life after attack by gunmen in Westmoreland Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop Jamaica

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A policeman is now in the hospital battling for his life after he was attacked and shot by gunmen in Westmoreland.

Reports are that the policeman was home when he was attacked by men who drove up to his premises on a motorcycle.

Reports are that the men then fled the area after the incident.

The policeman was rushed to the hospital where he has since been admitted.

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First Rock’s Shaun Myers stocks up on sleep to ensure efficiency Loop Jamaica

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The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop Jamaica

Habits for Success

Shamille Scott

42 minutes ago – Updated

Habits for Success: Shaun Myers

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Shaun Myers, Vice President of Finance and Planning at First Rock, knows when to call it a night.

He lists adequate sleep among the top habits he practises to ensure he effectively functions as a leader.

Listen as Myers details his Habits for Success.

Source

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Kieron Pollard, Dwayne Bravo, Nicholas Pooran join UAE’s ILT20 Loop Jamaica

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(From left) Kierron Pollard, Dwayne Bravo and Nicholas Pooran.

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Ex-West Indies all-rounders Kieron Pollard and Dwayne Bravo along with their Trinidad and Tobago compatriot Nicholas Pooran are among the latest stars to sign up for the UAE’s International League T20 (IL T20).

The trio from Trinidad and Tobago have joined Jamaicans Andre Russell, Fabian Allen, Rovman Powell, Sheldon Cottrell, and Kennar Lewis who are among the first list of players announced for the competition.

Some of the other signees from the Caribbean are Sunil Narine, Evin Lewis, Shimron Hetmyer, Ravi Rampaul, and Raymon Reifer

The ILT20 is set to begin in January next year in the UAE and is competing with South Africa’s T20 League for players.

Each squad of 18 will have two players from Associate countries and four players from the UAE.

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INTERNATIONAL YOUTH DAY 2022 Intergenerational Solidarity: Creating a World for All Ages

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

The Caribbean Observatory Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights in collaboration with the Caribbean Family Planning Affiliation (CFPA), salute all Youth in the Caribbean and join the rest of the world in celebrating International Youth Day 2022.

This year’s theme: Intergenerational Solidarity: Creating a World for All Ages highlights the importance of recognizing our need for unity across generations and diversity – race, gender, ethnicity, religion and geographical location that prevent us from learning from and leaning on each other to overcome barriers that prevent us from learning from and leaning on each other as we strive to build a better Caribbean for all.

Caribbean adolescents face major barriers to access sexual and reproductive health (SRH) services and comprehensive sexuality education (CSE). This has contributed to the early sexual debut and one of the highest adolescent fertility rates in the world: 60.2 births per 1,000 girls aged 15-19 (2010-2015 period). According to a PANCAP 2018 report, “Young people as a whole, and specifically young people from key populations, are disproportionally at risk for HIV infection, STIs and other sexual and reproductive health problems.

Age-specific consent laws restrict adolescents’ access sexual and reproductive health (SRH) services, including access to essential information and guidance required to make informed decisions. Integrating age-appropriate CSE in the Health and Family Life Education (HFLE) curriculum is a positive step in equipping adolescents and youth with the knowledge, skills and confidence to make wise decisions and prevent early sexual debut, teenage pregnancy, STIs, GBV, suicide, and to protect vulnerable youth.

Ageism in the Caribbean and the culture of silencing youth, dismissing their voices and experiences and the right of decision-making regarding their lives and wellbeing has devastating consequences for them and the whole society. This is a major barrier to intergenerational solidarity in the face of challenges that threaten our collective future. The COVID-19 pandemic has taught us the importance of our interdependence, human solidarity and community. We are also reminded of the urgency to come together to find solutions in the face of our mutual vulnerability.

Youth are a vital priority for the CFPA and the Caribbean Observatory on Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights. At the heart of our vision and mandate is our commitment to ensure that no one is left behind. In observance of #IYD2022, we will be hosting a Community Dialogue on August 12, 2022, at 11:30 AM (AST) to discuss how we can strive towards advancing the health and wellbeing of youth in the region. We call on governments, civil society, community and faith-based organisations to recognize and

commit to advancing the Rights of Youth, build intergenerational solidarity and to support them in making informed and wise decisions regarding their bodies and lives.

Happy International Youth Day!!

See Zoom link here to register

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ABTA Announces New U.S. Market Travel Advisory Board

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

The Antigua and Barbuda Tourism Authority (ABTA) has chosen a “dynamic” and “remarkable” group of travel trade professionals within the United States for a new ABTA (USA) Travel Advisory Board from September 2022.

The board consists of travel business owners within the Midwest, Southeast, East Coast and West Coast of the United States.

They have been chosen because of their strong relationship with the Antigua and Barbuda Tourism Authority’s U.S. Office, the passion they have for the destination, and the important role they play in the travel industry.

They will offer their assistance and guidance to the ABTA until September 2023.

Charles Fernandez, minister of tourism, Antigua and Barbuda, addressed the new members at a dinner held at Sandals Grande Antigua resort and said, “I feel privileged and honored to be in your company this evening because I know of your commitment—and your mission—to help our tourism product grow.” The minister thanked the group for their support, particularly within the recent years and for their partnership. “We benefit from your knowledge and expertise, so I would also like to congratulate those of you who have had careers spanning more than 30 years in the travel industry and who are proud owners and managers in your respective field,” he added.

Dean Fenton, U.S. director of tourism, said: “The last few days have been very productive. The group has been engaged in strategic think tank sessions, producing big ideas that will help Antigua and Barbuda stand-out and drive more business to the destination from the U.S.”

The trade partners spent five days in Antigua, familiarizing themselves with the newest destination updates and brainstorming.

The 2022-23 Board members include: Brenda O’NealeWith This Ring Destination Weddings and HoneymoonsDebra BrownSmartBird World TravelSusan BermanBerman TravelTerry StraussDedham TravelNiki RakowitzCare TravelEdouard JeanMassive TravelsTom VargheseTravel Tom; and Donna BorrelliHamden Travel.

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Has CARICOM reached its limits of regional integration?  Part 3

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) 

So far in this attempt to answer the question, “Has CARICOM reached its limits of regional integration”, it has been established that, after almost 50 years, the regional project has failed to deliver the commitments expected from the 1973 Treaty of Chaguaramas and its Revision in 2001.

In summary, while the 2001 revision of the CARICOM Treaty laid the framework for a single economic space (the Caribbean Single Market and Economy (CSME), the attempts at regional integration have made very little progress. Not even a Custom Union, let alone a Common Market has been established.

The ‘Sovereignty’ of individual states continues to be the dominant characteristic of decision making, resulting in inadequate or no implementation of regional decisions.  The Secretariat, having started off brilliantly under William Demas and Alister McIntyre (two widely respected Caribbean figures), and with enthusiastic support from the then member governments, has drifted into paralysis and bureaucratic management, in addition to being poorly funded.

Additionally, CARICOM expanded prematurely instead of focussing on deepening its integration.  The admission of Haiti in 2002 has caused problems for trade and economic integration – one that is unlikely to be solved in the foreseeable future.  Further, successive governments of Haiti have breached the 1997 CARICOM Charter of Civil Society in relation to free and fair elections, good governance, and civil and political rights.  The Bahamas is not a member of the common market aspects of CARICOM. While it has participated beneficially in some aspects of “functional cooperation”, its governments have been inconsistent in the coordination foreign policy with other CARICOM states.

Jamaica has continuously questioned the benefits of its own participation in CARICOM, focusing issues on its trade with Trinidad and Tobago only and ignoring the fact that it enjoys a large trade surplus with all other CARICOM states, especially those that are also members of the Organization of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS).  Also depending on which political party holds office, Jamaican governments have chosen to do very little coordination of its foreign policy positions.

The 2017 Jamaica Commission, headed by former Prime Minister, Bruce Golding, which reviewed Jamaica’s relations with CARICOM, recommended that, if fundamental changes were not made to CARICOM’s processes, Jamaica should “withdraw from the CSME” but retain membership “similar to that of The Bahamas”.  The latter event would put Jamaica in the same semi-detached position as The Bahamas, weaking the Organization even more.   Note should be taken, however, that there were many valid observations and remarks in the Golding Report, regarding reform of CARICOM, especially regarding implementation of its decisions.

In 2003, fourteen years before the Golding report,  another Jamaican Prime Minister, P.J. Patterson, a committed regionalist, proposed to a CARICOM Heads of Government meeting, a mechanism to facilitate the deepening of the regional integration.  Seemingly convinced, the leaders adopted “The Rose Hall Declaration”.  However, even then, there were signs of reticence and reluctance with one Prime Minister insisting on accepting the Rose Hall Declaration “in principle”, not in practice.   The Declaration was never executed.

This caused  Sir Shridath Ramphal, the elder Caribbean Statesman who chaired the 1992 West Indian Commission, to observe, in 2014, that nothing came of the Declaration because it offered “a regionalism which, for all its checks and balances against supra-nationality, was still too much for the cloistered immaturity of a political culture fixated by the obsessive compulsions of local control”.  Sir Shridath also remarked with poignant resonance today, that had regional leaders implemented the mechanism proposed by P.J. Patterson, “many of our countries would not be experiencing the extent of the terrible economic misfortune and uncertainty they now endure”.

Realistically, the challenged faced by CARICOM countries, including Trinidad and Tobago, Guyana and Suriname with their present-day riches of oil and gas, is that none of them, individually, enjoys sustainable economic independence.  Each of them is dependent on aid for social and economic development and security in all its dimensions.  Consequently, this dependence deprives each of them of genuine political independence.  As the late Prime Minister of Antigua and Barbuda, Lester Bird, put it in 1992, “No small state, severely limited in its natural, human and financial resources, can operate as if it were a large country [-] It is an unrealistic approach to problem-solving and decision-making in a world which has embraced economic alliances, merges and the creation of single regional markets as ways to survive”.

Given all this, CARICOM has not reached its limits of regional integration; indeed, CARICOM has barely scratched the surface of the economic and political benefits of integration.

The region’s current leaders must navigate their countries through the maelstrom of high debt, continuing poor terms of trade, inadequate access to concessional financing for development, imported high costs for food and energy, inadequate technological infrastructure and the impact of Climate Change.  While some of them, with oil and gas especially, may weather this storm for now, the underlying weaknesses of individual small economies will persist.   A committed approach to the deepening of regional integration with effective machinery for implementation is the only answer.

The adherence to a “Caribbean Community of Sovereign States” is unlikely to change.  But its leaders should, at least recognize that “sovereignty” is only beneficial if it has force in dealing with an international community. Many of the member states of the international community are fed-up with the constant demands on their taxpayers’ money from individual small and powerless states.  They have themselves pursued integration as their salvation as for instance, in the European Union, the federation of the United States of America, the federation of Canada, the federation of Mexico and the federation of Brazil.

While Federation is a contemplation now too imbued with fear, at least deeper integration must be high on the priorities and commitment of leaders as the 60th anniversary of CARICOM approaches.  Leaders might usefully consider adapting one of the Golding Commission’s recommendations, “to appoint an oversight body of three to five eminent CARICOM nationals to review CARICOM’s performance and, in particular, the compliance of member states…”. The review could be considered in July 2023 and delivered to the public.  There is no shortage of solid, authoritative work that would aid the review.

As Dr Eric Williams, a renowned Caribbean historian, who led his country, Trinidad and Tobago, to independence in the wake of the break-up of the West Indies Federation, advised with compelling prescience in 1962: “Separation and fragmentation were the policy of colonialism and rival colonialisms.  Association and integration must be the policy of independence”.

Responses and previous commentaries: www.sirronaldsanders.com 

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