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Total number of local active Covid-19 cases stands at 15

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: NBC SVG

The Ministry of Health Wellness and the Environment says the number of active cases of Covid 19 remains at 15, as there were no new cases recorded here on Wednesday September 14th

In its latest update, the Ministry of Health Wellness and the Environment says no one is currently hospitalized with Covid 19, and no recoveries were noted on Wednesday.

9,446 cases of COVID-19 and 9,315 recoveries have been reported in St. Vincent and the Grenadines to date.   116 people have died from the virus.

And, 72,682 COVID-19 vaccines have so far been administered locally.  37,218 persons have received their first dose;  31,317 have received their second dose and 4,147 persons have received boosters.

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Two Books of Condolences opened for Vincentians to express their condolences to the family of last weekend’s vehicular accident

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: NBC SVG

Two Books of Condolences are being opened here for Vincentians to express their condolences to residents of Clare Valley who lost their loved ones in the tragic vehicle accident on the weekend.

Word of this came from Prime Minister Dr. Ralph Gonsalves, during NBC’s Face to Face programme yesterday.

https://www.nbcsvg.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/PM-CONDOLENCE-BOOKS.mp3

The five men who died in the traffic accident were passengers on a mini-van that went over an embankment on the Old Sandy Bay Public Road, while on their way to a funeral in Owia.

Prime Minister Gonsalves said the entire Government has been mobilized to provide the necessary support to the bereaved families.

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Fatal Mandela accident: Truck driver claims he had the greenlight

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana
Dead: Nigel Cush

A truck driver has been arrested following the death of a 45-year-old man in an accident at around 01:30h today along Mandela Avenue, Georgetown.

Dead is Nigel Cush of Roxanne Burnham Gardens, Georgetown, who was driving motorcar PVV 7062.

Reports are that the motorcar was crossing Mandela Avenue onto Vlissengen Road when the motor lorry, which was travelling east along Mandela Avenue, collided with the vehicle.

The truck driver told police that as he approached the stoplight at Vlissengen Road and Mandela Avenue, it was showing green, and as such, he continued driving when he saw the motorcar proceeding south toward Vlissengen Road.

“According to the driver of the lorry as he approached the stop light at Vlissengen Road and Nelson Mandela Avenue which was showing green, he continued driving when he saw motorcar PVV 7062 proceeding south along Vlissengen Road. According to the lorry driver, the motorcar then slowed down on the approach of Mandela Avenue, and continued further south, into the lorry’s path,” police said in a statement to the media.

The truck driver further told investigators that he then applied brakes and swerved in a south-eastern direction but the left side front portion of the lorry collided with the right-side front portion of the motorcar.

However, CCTV footage shows that it was the motorcar that had the greenlight.

As a result of the collision, the car slammed into a lamp pole situated in the center of the median.

The car driver received injuries about his body, and was taken out of the vehicle in an unconscious state. He was placed into an ambulance and taken to the Georgetown Public Hospital where he was pronounced dead on arrival.

A breathalyzer test was conducted on the 44-year-old truck driver of Supply, Mahaica, East Coast Demerara (ECD) but no trace of alcohol was detected.

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Wasim spins Tallawahs to win

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana
GROS ISLET, SAINT LUCIA – SEPTEMBER 11: Oshane Thomas (R) of Barbados Royals express disappointment as Rovman Powell (L) of Jamaica Tallawahs run during the Men’s 2022 Hero Caribbean Premier League match 14 between Jamaica Tallawahs and Barbados Royals at Daren Sammy National Cricket Stadium on September 11, 2022 in Gros Islet, Saint Lucia. (Photo by Randy Brooks – CPL T20/CPL T20 via Getty Images)

The Jamaica Tallawahs consolidated second place in the league table with a six run (DLS) victory over Barbados Royals, inflicting their first loss of the 2022 Hero Caribbean Premier League (CPL) season.

The Jamaica Tallawahs won the toss and chose to field first, Imad Wasim getting them off to a spectacular start by bowling two maiden overs and taking three wickets in the powerplay to leave the Royals reeling at 17-3 after six overs. It was South African internationals Quinton De Kock and David Miller who rebuilt the innings for the Royals with an 83 run partnership that took them to 146/6 at the end of their innings.

Brandon King and Amir Jangoo got off to a flying start in the chase, scoring 50 runs by the fifth over to put the Tallawahs in a commanding position. Jason Holder would take three wickets as the Royals fought back, but it was not enough as the Royals reached 126/5 and won by five wickets (DLS), six runs ahead of the par score.

Jamaica Tallawahs shocked the Royals early on in the innings with Wasim striking three times within the powerplay, removing Rahkeem Cornwall, Kyle Mayers and Corbin Bosch with his bamboozling deliveries. But it was de Kock, once again batting lower down the order at four, who led the way with a sublime 74 off just 43 balls, with support from David Miller as the Royals ended up finishing on 146/6.

Tallawahs had a dream start to their chase with King and Jangoo finding the boundary consistently in the PowerPlay. However, Obed McCoy would strike with two wickets, before Holder set up a tense finish by taking three wickets. In the end, a six from Rovman Powell just before rain fell would prove critical, as it meant the Tallwahs finished ahead by six runs on DLS and picked up the five wicket win.

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WHO: The End Of The COVID-19 Pandemic Is In Sight – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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As the number of weekly reported deaths from COVID-19 plunged to its lowest since March 2020, the head of the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Wednesday that the end of the pandemic is now in sight.

“We have never been in a better position to end the pandemic”, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told journalists during his regular weekly press conference.

The UN health agency’s Director-General explained however, that the world is “not there yet”.

Finish line in sight

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“A marathon runner does not stop when the finish line comes into view. She runs harder, with all the energy she has left. So must we. We can see the finish line. We’re in a winning position. But now is the worst time to stop running”, he underscored.

He also warned that if the world does not take the opportunity now, there is still a risk of more variants, deaths, disruption, and uncertainty.

“So, let’s seize this opportunity”, he urged, announcing that WHO is releasing six short policy briefs that outline the key actions that all governments must take now to “finish the race”.

Urgent call

The policy briefs are a summary, based on the evidence and experience of the last 32 months, outlining what works best to save lives, protect health systems, and avoid social and economic disruption.

“[They] are an urgent call for governments to take a hard look at their policies and strengthen them for COVID-19 and future pathogens with pandemic potential”, Tedros explained.

The documents, which are available online, include recommendations regarding vaccination of most at-risk groups, continued testing and sequencing of the SARS-CoV-2 virus, and integrating effective treatment for COVID-19 into primary healthcare systems.

They also urge authorities to have plans for future surges, including the securing of supplies, equipment, and extra health workers.

The briefs also contain communications advice, including training health workers to identify and address misinformation, as well as creating high-quality informative materials.

Committed to the future

Tedros underscored that WHO has been working since New Year’s Eve 2019 to fight against the spread of COVID and will continue to do so until the pandemic is “truly over”.

“We can end this pandemic together, but only if all countries, manufacturers, communities and individuals step up and seize this opportunity”, he said.

Possible scenarios

Dr. Maria Van Kerkhove, WHO’s technical lead on COVID-19, highlighted that the virus is still “ intensely circulating” around the world and that the agency believes that case numbers being reported are an underestimate.

“We expect that there are going to be future waves of infection, potentially at different time points throughout the world caused by different subvariants of Omicron or even different variants of concern”, she said, reiterating her previous warning that the more the virus circulates, the more opportunities it has to mutate.

However, she said, these future waves do not need to translate into “waves or death” because there are now effective tools such as vaccines and antivirals specifically for COVID-19.

SOURCE: UN News/ SLT

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Emiten vigilancia de inundaciones para Puerto Rico

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El Servicio Nacional de Meteorología (SNM) en San Juan emitió el jueves, una vigilancia de inundaciones para Puerto Rico asociadas con el paso de Fiona.

La escorrentía excesiva puede resultar en inundaciones de ríos, arroyos  y otros lugares bajos y propensos a inundaciones, como así como deslizamientos de tierra y desprendimientos de rocas en áreas de terreno escarpado.

Lluvias y tormentas eléctricas asociadas a la tormenta tropical Fiona, ahora ubicada a 495 millas al este de las islas Leeward y se espera que llegue el sábado, se prevé que llegue a Puerto Rico y las Islas Vírgenes de Estados Unidos el viernes por la noche. Estas duchas y las tormentas seguirán afectando a las islas locales al menos hasta el lunes, lo que aumenta el riesgo de inundaciones en la mayor parte del área de pronóstico. Los suelos ya están saturados a través de áreas de terreno más alto y, como resultado, deslizamientos de tierra y desprendimientos de rocas también son posibles.

El período de mayor actividad de precipitaciones es el sábado al domingo, mientras que las áreas con mayor probabilidad de recibir la mayor acumulación de lluvia son porciones del este de Puerto Rico, donde existe la posibilidad de que los totales de lluvia alcancen de 6 a 8 pulgadas con cantidades localmente más altas alrededor de 10 pulgadas. A través de el sur de Puerto Rico y las Islas Vírgenes de Estados Unidos, el potencial existe para los totales de lluvia para llegar a 4 a 6 pulgadas. En otra parte, espere que los totales de lluvia oscilen entre 2 y 4 pulgadas.

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$40 millones en 5 años se han aprobado para atender el sistema eléctrico de PR, según funcionaria de FEMA

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

Durante las vistas públicas del Comité de Transportación e Infraestructura de la Cámara de Representantes federal, la comisionada residente, Jenniffer González Colón le dijo el jueves a la administradora asociada de la Agencia federal de Administración de Desastres (FEMA), Anne Bink, que el proceso de reconstrucción ha sido muy lento y todavía no se ven los resultados.

“Mis constituyentes están frustrados con la falta de progreso y el portaestandarte de esa frustración está en la continua inestabilidad del sistema eléctrico. Ellos oyen que se han aprobado sobre 4 mil millones para arreglar los daños, sobre 10 mil millones obligados para reconstruir, pero ellos siguen experimentando frecuentes interrupciones, subestaciones explotando, líneas de transmisión que salen de servicio o que fallan. Ahora, con una tormenta tropical que se acerca, los sentimientos se ansiedad aumentan de que otra vez estaremos meses sin luz y esa es la realidad que viven los puertorriqueños”, dijo González Colón en su turno.

A preguntas de cuanto de los 9,400 millones obligados para atender el sistema eléctrico se han utilizado, Bink contestó que hasta el momento se han utilizado 40 millones de dólares en 5 años.

“A pesar de que el arranque pudo haber sido más rápido, ahora estamos acelerando el trabajo para desarrollar un sistema resiliente en la isla. Esta es una oportunidad única y aunque toma tiempo llegar ahí, sabemos que ha valido la pena el tiempo invertido, porque la isla será más resiliente y más independiente en términos de su sistema eléctrico en el futuro.

González Colón levantó bandera de que el atraso en los proyectos puede enfrentar un nuevo reto que es el de la inflación. Eso puede provocar que los costos de reconstrucción aumenten, a medida que pasa el tiempo.

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The 2022 CSEC results has officially been released

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: NBC SVG

Following the settlement of some discrepancies, the Ministry of Education and National Reconciliation has released the preliminary results of the 2022 May/June Caribbean Secondary Education Certificate (CSEC) Exam

The Ministry says this year, 2006 candidates were registered.  Of these, 513 were private candidates and 1493 were school candidates. There were 1364 school candidates from 26 secondary schools sitting papers I and II with 9,649 subject entries in 31 subject areas. Approximately 66.55% of the subject entries were awarded Grades I – III. The corresponding figure in 2019 (the last year papers I and II were done by Vincentian students) was 74.33%.

Year
% Pass
2019
74.33%
2020
81.86%
2021
83.48%
2022
66.55%

This year, 16.96% of the passes were at Grade I level, 35.40% at Grade II and 47.64% at Grade III. The figures in 2019 were 15.62% at Grade I, 38.53% at Grade II and 45.85% at Grade III.

Additionally, English A recorded a pass rate of 64.12% and Mathematics a pass rate of 26.01% compared to 2019 where the pass rates were 76.08% and 33.10% respectively.

There were five (5) schools which recorded percentage pass rates of 80% or more.  These schools are:

School                                                                                                              % Pass

GIRLS’ HIGH SCHOOL
96.88%
ST. VINCENT GRAMMAR SCHOOL
91.00%
ST. JOSEPH’S CONVENT KINGSTOWN
82.24%
BEQUIA SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST SCHOOL
81.20%
ST. MARTIN SECONDARY SCHOOL
80.95%

Five (5) schools obtained creditable pass rates between 60 % and 80%.  These are:

School                                                                                                                 % Pass

ST. JOSEPH’S CONVENT MARRIAQUA
76.38%
THOMAS SAUNDERS SECONDARY SCHOOL
76.04%
MOUNTAIN VIEW  ADVENTIST ACADEMY
68.60%
BISHOP’S COLLEGE KINGSTOWN
63.79%
BUCCAMENT BAY SECONDARY SCHOOL
60.91%

The Petit Bordel Secondary School (PBSS) and the St. Vincent Grammar School (SVGS) show a slight improvement in their performance at the 2022 CSEC examinations.  In 2021, the PBSS recorded a pass rate of 47.84% and the SVGS recorded a pass rate of 89.54%.  In 2022, PBSS pass rate increased to 51.79% and the SVGS pass rate rose to 91.00%. These figures represent an increase of 3.94% and 1.46% respectively.

The top female performer is Chenise Harper of the Girls’ High School who sat 15 subjects and obtained 15 grade ones. The top male performer is Keanu Child of the St. Vincent Grammar School who sat 12 subjects and obtained 12 grade ones. Honourable mention is also given to the following students:

 

Kerese Cozier (Girls’ High School)sat 14 subjects; obtained 14 grade ones.
Halei Douglas (Girls’ High School) – sat 14 subjects; obtained 14 grade ones.
Ashlyn Francis (Girls’ High School) – sat 14 subjects; obtained 13 grade ones and 1 grade two.
Aneilia Cato (Girls’ High School) – sat 14 subjects; obtained 5 grade ones, 8 grade twos and 1 grade three.

The Ministry of Education of National Reconciliation congratulates all students and extends gratitude to the principals, teachers, and staff at all schools for the support provided to the students.

We are cognizant of the fact that outcomes in education are measured, not only in quantitative terms, but also in qualitative terms; therefore, the value added to the lives of all students, the top performers as well as those whose performance can be improved, is greatly appreciated. We urge all principals to continue to work diligently, in conjunction with the Ministry, in the best interest of school effectiveness and the students’ success.

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Decisions taken to address crime in St. Vincent and the Grenadines

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: NBC SVG

A number of decisions have been taken here, to address the issue of crime in St. Vincent and the Grenadines.

Word of this came from Prime Minister and Minister of National Security, Dr. Ralph Gonsalves, during NBC’s Face to Face programme on Wednesday.

The Prime Minister said the decisions were taken, following a meeting with the Police Commissioner and other Police personnel.

https://www.nbcsvg.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/PM-CRIME.mp3

The Prime Minister noted that gun-related crime usually creates a cycle of violence.

https://www.nbcsvg.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/PM-CRIME-1.mp3

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Tropical storm Fiona expected to pass North of SVG this weekend

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: NBC SVG

The SVG Meteorological Service says Tropical Depression seven has become tropical storm Fiona and is forecast to pass north of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines.

The Met office says this storm will have no direct impact on SVG, but its presence and associated instability will influence the weather pattern across the islands during the next 3 days.

Model guidance indicates the highest chance of showers to be around Saturday, with a little over an inch is shown by Saturday night.

Today, skies will be partly cloudy, with light winds resulting in humid conditions and a chance of some localised showers as well as showers and thunderstorms in isolated places.

And by tomorrow, moisture would have increased over the islands and cloudy conditions are likely with a high chance of some scattered showers.

On Saturday, Met officials says scattered moderate showers and chance of isolated thunderstorms are forecast as a light southerly wind flow moves over the island chain.

Winds are forecast to blow from the east northeast at 10-20km/h, becoming southerly ,and could possibly become calm at times from around Friday.

Seas are forecast to be slight to moderate in open waters, with swells peaking at 1.0m on the western coast and 2.0m on the eastern coast. In addition, there will be no significant haze intrusion within this forecast period.

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