Diany Rémy dans les locaux de France-Antilles : « Ça n’a pas été facile mais on a gagné »

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles
« Ah, ça fait bizarre de vous voir comme ça, en vrai ! », s’étonne Valérie,une journaliste du Magde France-Antilles. En Bermuda, avec son maillot rouge France-Antilles / Didier 113 sur les épaules, Diany Rémy, apparaît étonné.

« Ben oui, c’est différent de vous voir à la télé ! On dirait un jeune homme là ! ». Rires du patron de yole. « Mais je suis jeune, j’ai 33 ans ! », sourit l’intéressé.

Ce mardi matin, le Marinois s’est déplacé à France-Antilles, au 10ème étage de la Tour Lumina, à Fort-de-France

Après une rapide présentation des équipes et des services, le double vainqueur du Tour de Martinique des Yoles rondes s’est prêté à une nouvelle interview, après celle déjà publiée dans notre édition de ce mardi 9 août.

Cette fois, il est revenu plus longuement sur sa performance, sur son ressenti, la tactique adoptée, son lien avec la yole.

Un moment tout en simplicité pour un enfant de la voile traditionnelle déjà devenu grand. Et sur qui il faut désormais compter pour porter la discipline au plus haut.

Interview complète à retrouver ce mercredi 10 août dans France-Antilles. Voici la UNE à retrouver dans vos points de vente habituels.

Une du mercredi 10 août. –

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Et de 3 pour Rapiteau, Brunel en jaune

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

CYCLISME. 71E TOUR DE GUADELOUPE. 5e étape

Déjà vainqueur de deux étapes, dont celle de mardi, le sociétaire du Laval Cycling 53 a franchi la ligne d’arrivée en tête à Palmiste, dans la commune de Gourbeyre au terme d’une étape de 148 km, qui voit Brunel s’accaparer du jaune.

S’il est loin d’être un spécialiste de la montage, Florian Rapiteau toujours assoiffé de victoires et surtout décidé à tenir son pari des cinq succès sur ce Tour, s’est imposé dans l’indigeste montée de Palmiste (Gourbeyre). Dans ce qui sera la dernière offensive de cette cinquième étape, il a réussi à se mettre dans la roue de Kylian Senicourt (Première Tech U23) dans la montée de Dolé. Les deux hommes, membres d’un groupe de douze échappés, ont faussé compagnie à…


France-Antilles Martinique

519 mots – 11.08.2022

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15 jours pour danser sur les rythmes de la Caraïbe

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Fort-de-France

Depuis lundi et jusqu’au 20 août se tient, à la salle de Tanbou Bô Kannal, la 10ème édition du Stage Intensif de Danse. L’occasion pour les amateurs de tous niveaux de s’essayer aux différentes techniques de danse de la Grande Caraïbe.

Danses traditionnelles haïtiennes, renforcement musculaire, bèlè Sentmari, biguine, mazurka, tanbou Baspwent, afro-jazz, danse indienne, hip-hop, et bien d’autres encore, sont au programme de la 10e édition du stage intensif de danse et atelier bèlè, organisé en ce moment à Bô Kannal. ” En août 2013, nous avons initié ce projet à la Maison Rouge. Il y avait alors une semaine de stage avec très peu de cours dans la journée”, explique Robert Régina, professeur de danse diplômé…


France-Antilles Martinique

903 mots – 11.08.2022

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« Entre 5 et 10 % de la forêt n’a jamais été touchée en Martinique »

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Guillaume Viscardi, directeur du conservatoire botanique national de Martinique

Le directeur du conservatoire botanique national de Martinique nous révèle les zones inexploitées par l’homme au sein des volcans et forêts de la montagne Pelée et des pitons du Nord dans le cadre de la candidature française au patrimoine mondial de l’Unesco. 

Quelles sont les zones inexploitées par l’homme dans le bien ?

On pense qu’il y a entre 5 et 10% de la forêt qui n’a jamais été touchée en Martinique. Une partie du nord-ouest de la Montagne Pelée, le piton Mont Conil, le Morne Sibérie, le piton Marcel, le Pain de Sucre font partie de ces zones inexploitées, préservées et qui présentent des paysages quasiment intactes. Tout comme le Morne Jacob et le Morne Platine, où on a des forêts gigantesques avec des arbres immenses. Les…


France-Antilles Martinique

780 mots – 11.08.2022

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Une adjointe « en colère » après avoir été destituée de ses fonctions

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Saint-Pierre

Le 27 juillet, Karyne Alexandre-Sabin, cinquième adjointe au maire de Sainte-Pierre en charge de la petite enfance, apprend le retrait de sa délégation. Une décision incompréhensible avance celle qui siège désormais au conseil municipal en tant que simple conseillère, mais justifiée par « un comportement incompatible » avec ses fonctions, comme l’indique la lettre qui lui a été envoyée par le premier magistrat. 

«Je ne pensais pas qu’on en arriverait là », lâche, à l’autre bout du fil, Karyne Alexandre-Sabin. Cette dernière était jusqu’à récemment la cinquième adjointe au maire de Saint-Pierre, en charge de la Petite enfance. Mais le 27 juillet dernier, la quinquagénaire reçoit un mail, puis un courrier recommandé lui notifiant le retrait de sa délégation. Le mardi 2 août, les membres du conseil municipal de la ville d’art et d’histoire sont convoqués afin de délibérer sur la…


France-Antilles Martinique

711 mots – 11.08.2022

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Barrackpore retiree fears she might lose her property to landslip

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Homeowner Phenola Bachan shows a crack straight down the middle of her home, caused a landlsip on Papourie Road, Upper Barrackpore. – Lincoln Holder

A massive landslip at Papourie Road in Upper Barrackpore is threatening the property of a retired schoolteacher who wants the authorities to stabilise the land and save her from further destruction.

Phenola Bachan said she spent about $300,000 from January to now trying to save the property.

“I give up. I do not know what to do again. My house keeps cracking as the land moves. Maybe if they can fix the road and the underground problem, my property could still be saved,”

Single lane traffic along Papourie Road, Upper Barrackpore, after a major landslip damaged the road. – Lincoln Holder

She said she retired from the teaching service eight years ago, has spent all her gratuity money and does not have any more to secure the property.

She said she has lived on the property all her life and had expected to be relaxing after retirement. A representative visited, but no work was done underground to deal with the root of the problem.

Her nightmare began in January when the land started moving rapidly. A retaining wall at the front of her home keeps sinking due to excessive water underground.

Unsure what was causing this, she went to the Water and Sewerage Authority (WASA) for help. However, workers are yet to fix the underground issue. While she believes the authority might be culpable, no one know for sure if a line broke or the root cause of the leak.

A sign directs single-lane traffic on Papourie Road, Upper Barrackpore, on Wednesday. – Lincoln Holder

There were workers from the Works and Transport Ministry on the site doing remedial work to allow cars to pass. The road has single-lane traffic.

“This is the third time for the year these workers are here. The materials help the road surface in that it helps make the road passable for now,” Bachan said.

She said she intends to write to the Works and Transport Minister Rohan Sinanan to get some relief.

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Digicel moves office to Pegasus corporate center

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana

Please see below full press release:

Digicel is pleased to inform all of our customers that in order to provide you with improved access to our corporate services, both our Sales office and store have been relocated from their previous location at Fort & Barrack Streets to a new, larger and more convenient location in the New Pegasus Corporate Office, located on Seawall Road, Kingston, Georgetown.

This new state-of-the-art facility brings our customer more ease of access to our services, with ample parking and improved facilities.  Corporate customers, as always, can pay their bills, acquire new services, seek support and access all standard services at this location, and we look forward to welcoming our business customers to our new offices.

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Chief Secretary: $25k for THA budget editing ‘normal’

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Chief Secretary Farley Augustine during his budget presentation at the Assembly Legislature, Scarborough in June. FILE PHOTO/THA –

THA Chief Secretary Farley Augustine has confirmed the payment of $25,000 to political commentator Dr Winford James for editing the fiscal 2022/2023 THA budget statement.

On Tuesday, the invoice began circulating on social media, with many questioning whether the editing of the annual statement is a normal practice, along with the attached fee.

Speaking on Tobago Channel Five’s Rise and Shine programme on Wednesday, Augustine confirmed the invoice in circulation.

“Yes, let me say there is truth to that. It is a very normal practice, very normal practice, but yet we have the creation of mischief around it,”

He stressed, “There is nothing absolutely controversial or strange about that.”

James is an English lecturer at UWI, St Augustine. He has taught at Roxborough Composite and Signal Hill Senior Comprehensive. His Linkedin profile lists him as fluent in English, English Creole, French and Spanish.

UWI’s website lists James under associate full-time staff in the Department of Modern Languages and Linguistics.

James, a newspaper columnist, has also shown support for Augustine’s Progressive Democratic Patriots (PDP) political party in the recent past, appearing at a PDP political meeting in the lead-up to last year’s THA election on January 25, 2021. That election ended in a six-six tie between the PDP and the PNM.

In April, James’s appointment as deputy chairman of the new Studley Park Enterprises Ltd (SPEL) board came under review by the THA after public criticism. James is the brother of Secretary of Infrastructure, Quarries and Urban Renewal Trevor James, whose division is responsible for the Studley Park quarry. The appointment was later revoked.

Defending the use of James’s services on Wednesday, Augustine said that the division under the previous administration would have paid upwards of $36,000 for editing. He promised to provide evidence to support his claims on Thursday, along with receipts to show the budget preparations would have taken place in the past.

He said what people need to understand is the process of producing the budget.

“For the budget, we spend in excess of a month organising the budget. So we have all the technocrats – people like (division’s senior economist) Dr Carlos Hazel, (division’s technical adviser) Anselm Richards – several people in the space meeting and we put all the information from the different divisions. We pull information from the economists in the space, and we sit and we write.”

He said usually the writing is done after working hours, and the team that works on the budget does not work during regular working hours, to avoid distractions.

“So they would come to work at 5pm and they would leave work sometimes at 2 o’clock in the morning, 3 o’clock in the morning. I’ve been there with then up until 5am in the morning. And so we write by pulling the content together.

“Dr James’ role is to check for grammar, language, construction. Essentially what we are writing is like a thesis like a doctoral thesis that requires an editor, the skills of which we do not have resident in the division and that has always been the case.”

He said the fact that those on the opposite side are making an issue of this showed not just pettiness, but unreasonableness.

“Beyond that, it shows a sort of deliberate attempt to create noise where there is no need for noise, because this practice has been ongoing.

“I can tell you, beyond editing, this might have been the cheapest budget preparation, because beyond editing we would have had payments for consultants, we had payments in tens of thousands of US dollars to foreign entities to help in budget preparations – none of that happened this time.”

Contacted on Wednesday, former THA chief secretary and PNM Tobago Council political leader Ancil Dennis said: “The nepotism and clientelism continues blatantly and brazenly.”

In a Facebook post mere minutes later, Dennis said the people of Tobago rejected the PNM 14-1 in the THA elections last December.

“Notwithstanding the many reasons for the PNM’s defeat advanced by many, I have accepted and concluded that Tobagonians wanted change; not exchange.

“Therefore, I find it insulting and annoying when PDP apologists including the Chief Secretary and his secretaries attempt to justify their missteps, mistakes, misfires, misfortunes, miscalculations, mismanagement, misfits, and misery with public statements such as ‘PNM did it too.’”

He said it is embarrassing that their “leh we fix dis” slogan has turned to “leh we do dis too.”

He added, “Tobago must now endure this clueless and classless bunch for several more months. It is my hope that they get it together quickly for the sake of us all. Meanwhile, I am happy to lead the process to rebrand and reintroduce a PNM that will neither repeat the mistakes of the past, nor be brave and boldfaced enough to justify foolishness with ‘them was doing it too.’”

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UNC councillor: My family is now being threatened

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Samuel Sankar –

UNC councillor for Kelly Village/Warrenville Samuel Sankar said while he has received threats of hate crimes and attacks on his family via social media following his attendance at a local government meeting on Tuesday, he maintained he had done the right thing by attending.

On Wednesday evening, he said he had not yet communicated with the party’s leadership, although the party’s chairman had reached out to him.

“Outside of that, there are comments coming in, there are comments on social media, some disrespectful, some encouraging, some people expressing themselves and different views.

“It’s a democracy. It’s a democratic process in terms of what we do. The party is a democratic party and you have a right to your opinion.

“I think when it comes to hate crimes and disrespecting people’s families, I have a problem with that, and those are the challenges we have.

Calling it disrespectful, Sankar wondered why people would want to resort to threatening his family.

“Talking about treason, do they understand what they’re saying? I’m disappointed in the people who are inciting those things.

“I’m disappointed in certain MPs who spread that narrative in certain quarters against me – the narrative coming out of social media. There’s a programme that comes out there and people just lambasting, totally disrespectful, and they don’t even understand why and who it is, like sheep, misled.”

Sankar said he had received many positive responses, both locally and internationally, as Newsday’s headline which said ‘My People Come First’ had made waves.

“I’ve had good responses from my electoral district coming out of that meeting on Tuesday. It is positive.

“I’m getting messages from all over, Michigan, throughout the US, Canada, Europe, Australia, sending messages. My people come first and I stand with that. I’m here to serve people. I was selected, and this is not meant to discredit anyone.

“I’m not disrespecting and cursing people and defying people. Right is right and wrong is wrong. Do the right thing because it’s the right thing to do.”

Sankar said if he did not get the desired response from the meeting, he would be attending the Prime Minister’s conversations to ensure he was able to speak to him directly.

“I went to meet the Prime Minister at this meeting and I didn’t get to talk to him. If the burgesses do not benefit coming out of that meeting, I’m looking to attend the conversations and I will ask direct questions, respectful questions.

“‘Prime Minister this is my challenge, how can you help me? How can you help the burgesses of Kelly Village/Warrenville?’

“I’m standing by that. I’m going all out so that my burgesses and the people who I serve get the goods and services from the government that they take taxes for.”

He said going to the top was the only way to get help.

“Burning tires isn’t helping me, and giving out hampers when people whole fridge and washing machine gone and hoping the State could fund it.

“No, that’s wrong. Fix it now, don’t try to give me social services after. If you clean the drains and plant things, the place could be nice. We could welcome visitors here, we could increase and make a contribution to the national economy.”

Sankar said he thought his burgesses would benefit following his attendance at the meeting, with meaningful contribution and work being done in the district.

“I want to follow up on those issues and drill down in a particular way. I need help, as I said. I did ask the Local Government Minister those questions and I said I need help in my electoral district – roads, infrastructure, drainage, parks and recreation, sanitation.

“We have challenges through all the districts in terms of services to distribute to our burgesses.”

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UPDATE: Colombian on drug charges remanded Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

[Update: 2pm, August 10, 2022]

Oswaldo Aroca was not required to plead and has been remanded to HMP Dodds.

[Original story: 7:36am, August 10, 2022]

The man caught at a “stash house” with over BBD $21million worth of marijuana has been formally charged.

Police of the Narcotics Division have arrested and formally charged Colombian NationalOswaldo Rafael Acosta Aroca.

The 58-year-old of #20 De Octubre, Santa Marta, Columbia, was caught when police executed a warrant on August 2, 2022, on intelligence garnered through working with the Trinidad and Tobago Police Service. Aroca is charged for the following offences:1. Unlawful Possession of Cannabis 2. Trafficking Cannabis 3. Possession with Intent to Supply Cannabis 4. Disembarking without the consent of an Immigration Officer 5. Entering Barbados other than a port of Entry

He is scheduled to appear at the District ‘B’ Magistrates’ Court today, Wednesday August 10, 2022.

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