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Charles III: Antigua & Barbuda Plans Vote On King’s Role As Head Of State – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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Antigua and Barbuda will vote on whether to become a republic following the death of Queen Elizabeth II, the country’s prime minister has said.

Gaston Browne said a referendum could take place within three years – but emphasised that the move was “not an act of hostility”.

He made the comments after confirming Charles III as King and head of state of the Caribbean nation.

Mr Browne said he intended to introduce the referendum if re-elected next year.

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While he expects to win that election – his party holds 15 of the 17 seats in the House of Representatives – he accepted that there hadn’t been any major demand to hold a vote among citizens.

“I think most people haven’t even bothered to think about it,” Mr Browne told ITV News.

Earlier, Australia ruled out a similar vote within the next four years.

The Queen’s death has reignited Australia’s monarchy debate, and Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, who was elected in May, is a republican.

But he ruled out a poll in his first term and told Sky News that “the bigger questions about our constitution are not ones for this current period”.

“This is a period in which we are sharing the grief that so many Australians are feeling at the moment, showing our deep respect and admiration for the contribution of the Queen to Australia,” Mr Albanese said.

In addition to the UK, King Charles serves as head of state in 14 countries – Antigua and Barbuda, Australia, The Bahamas, Belize, Canada, Grenada, Jamaica, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Solomon Islands, and Tuvalu.

But many countries are reconsidering the role of monarchy, with Mr Browne saying becoming a republic would mark the “final step to complete the circle of independence to become a truly sovereign nation”.

Last year, Barbados swore in its first president after the Queen was removed as head of state by the country’s parliament.

Dame Sandra Mason, 72, the island’s governor-general since 2018, was named as president-elect of the nation following a vote in parliament.

And in Jamaica, the ruling Labour Party says its goal is to hold a referendum on becoming a republic.

SOURCE: BBC News. Headline photo Gaston Browne (Stock image)

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Hombre es arrollado por ‘party bus’ en Aguadilla

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

Un hombre fue arrollado por un ‘party bus’, a eso de las 10:06 de la noche del sábado, en la carretera PR- 107, en Aguadilla.

Según el reporte de la Policía, el hombre de 70 años pretendía bajarse del vehículo frente a su residencia, pero tropezó en el último escalón y cayó al pavimento.

El conductor del vehículo, de 46 años, residente de Aguadilla, no se percató del peatón e inició la marcha y lo arrolló con la goma posterior.

El perjudicado fue llevado a un hospital de la región donde el médico de turno, indicó herida abierta en el brazo izquierdo. Fue referido a un hospital de la zona metropolitana de San Juan.

Al conductor se le practicó la prueba de aliento, con resultado de 0.077 por ciento de alcohol en su organismo. La Policía entiende que, por el tipo de vehículo, el resultado de la prueba es positivo.

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¿Adicto a internet? La terapia conductual podría funcionar

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

Muchas personas pasan horas en internet cada semana, pero algunas personas no pueden alejarse.

Para las personas con adicción a Internet, hay un tipo de terapia a corto plazo que puede ser un tratamiento eficaz, según un pequeño estudio publicado el miércoles en la revista médica JAMA Psychiatry.

Los investigadores hallaron que el 69.4% de los hombres con adicción a internet ingresaron a remisión si recibieron terapia cognitiva conductual a corto plazo, en comparación con el 23.9% de los hombres que ingresaron a remisión cuando estaban en una lista de espera para recibir la terapia.

Las personas en remisión tenían 10 veces más probabilidades de ser parte del grupo de terapia conductual cognitiva a corto plazo que el grupo de control de lista de espera.

«Esto indica un fuerte efecto de tratamiento para los sujetos que sufren adicción a Internet o trastorno de juego«, dijo Klaus Wölfling, autor principal del estudio, en un podcast para JAMA Psychiatry.

Wölfling es investigador en el Departamento de Medicina Psicosomática y Psicoterapia del Centro Médico Universitario de Johannes Gutenberg-University Mainz en Alemania.

La adicción a Internet, según los investigadores, es el uso excesivo de Internet que afecta negativamente a la familia, el trabajo, los aspectos sociales y otros aspectos de la vida.

El año pasado, la Organización Mundial de la Salud reconoció el trastorno de los juegos de Internet como una condición de salud mental.

Los criterios para el trastorno del juego en la Clasificación Internacional de Enfermedades de la OMS incluyen al menos 12 meses de patrones recurrentes de juego, pérdida de control y comportamiento continuo incluso después de causar consecuencias negativas y angustia en otros aspectos de la vida.

Para este estudio, los investigadores utilizaron una definición más amplia de la adicción a Internet, para incluir a los pacientes que eran adictos a los juegos, las redes sociales, la pornografía, la navegación en línea o el uso general de Internet. La prevalencia de la adicción a internet se estima en un 6% en todo el mundo.

15 semanas de terapia

El estudio examinó a 143 hombres entre las edades de 17 y 55 años en cuatro clínicas ambulatorias en Alemania y Austria, que cumplieron con los criterios para la adicción a Internet según los puntajes de la Evaluación de la adicción a juegos de computadora e Internet, una encuesta estandarizada utilizada en este campo.

Se basa en 14 criterios que incluyen la frecuencia de la actividad de Internet, los síntomas de abstinencia, la preocupación por Internet y la pérdida de interés en otras actividades de la vida.

La adicción a Internet se definió como una puntuación superior a 13, mientras que la remisión se definió como una puntuación inferior a 7.

La terapia cognitiva conductual a corto plazo consistió en 15 semanas de sesiones grupales e individuales.

El programa se dividió en tres fases: educación sobre la adicción, intervención psicoterapéutica (como mostrar un uso saludable de Internet) y «enfoque en las técnicas de prevención de recaídas y transición a la vida cotidiana«, según Wölfling.

Las personas que estaban en el grupo de control de la lista de espera finalmente recibieron la terapia cognitiva conductual, pero después de un retraso de 15 semanas para permitir que se completara el estudio.

El estudio evaluó solo a los hombres porque son los pacientes predominantes de la adicción a Internet en las clínicas, según Wölfling.

Para la adicción al comportamiento en general, los hombres «representan el 90% de los pacientes tratados o diagnosticados en clínicas ambulatorias», escribieron los investigadores.

Los pacientes fueron evaluados al inicio del tratamiento, a mitad del tratamiento y después del tratamiento a los cuatro meses.

Aquellos en el grupo de terapia cognitiva a corto plazo también tuvieron una evaluación de seguimiento después de seis meses. Los investigadores analizaron los autoinformes de los comportamientos y síntomas de la adicción a Internet.

Al final del tratamiento, los pacientes en el grupo de terapia mostraron menores síntomas de adicción autoinformados, como abstinencia, preocupación y tiempo en línea, y mejor funcionamiento social, laboral y cotidiano.

Los pacientes mostraron tasas más bajas de depresión en general, sin diferencias significativas entre los dos grupos. Una pequeña cantidad de personas se deprimió más y tuvieron que ser trasladadas a un centro para pacientes hospitalizados, anotaron los investigadores.

Este fue el primer ensayo clínico aleatorizado en múltiples clínicas que analizó el tratamiento de la adicción a Internet, pero el estudio tenía varias limitaciones.

El pequeño tamaño de la muestra podría haber «sobreestimado» el efecto de la terapia a corto plazo, escribieron los investigadores.

Además, el estudio se limitó a los hombres y se basó en la información que los pacientes informaron sobre su propia condición. Algunos pacientes abandonaron, con 100 pacientes que completaron el estudio según lo programado.

De acuerdo con Wölfling, los ensayos controlados aleatorios futuros deberían tener una mejor retención de pacientes, incluir mujeres y tener una duración más larga.

«Los pacientes podrían beneficiarse aún más si la fase de tratamiento se prolongara«, dijo en el podcast de Psiquiatría de JAMA.

«La comprensión de la persona y la historia y el desarrollo del comportamiento o trastorno patológico pueden ser más importantes para que el paciente aprenda acerca de su propia historia y de su propia vida”.

Nota original de BocaLista

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The 18-year anniversary of Hurricane Ivan; recalling the impacts Loop Cayman Islands

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cayman Compass

Hurricane Ivan has become known as one of the worst hurricanes to hit the Caribbean region. Eighteen years ago, on Sunday September 12 2004, the eye of the storm passed within eight to 15 miles of Grand Cayman, striking the island with sustained winds of 160 miles per hour, gusts of up to 217 mph, and a storm surge of seawater of 8 to 10 feet, with wave heights of 20-30 feet, submerging most of the Island.

As a Category 5 Atlantic hurricane, Ivan ultimately registered wind speeds in excess of 165 mph on the Saffir-Simpson scale, killing 124 people and resulting in US$23.3 billion in damages across all of the affected areas.

Loop Cayman presents 15 facts behind the most memorable weather system in the history of the Cayman Islands.

1. At the time, Ivan was sixth most intense Atlantic hurricane on record.

2. In the Cayman Islands, two deaths were recorded as a result of Hurricane Ivan; one was caused by flying debris and the other by drowning.

3. 402 people were treated for lacerations, wounds, removal of foreign bodies, fractures and burns as a result of the disaster. (Reliefweb)

4. Hurricane Ivan caused a reported US$2.86 billion in damages in the Cayman Islands (183% of GDP at the time).

5. Ivan’s winds and storm surge caused widespread property damage. A quarter or more of the buildings in the Cayman Islands were rendered uninhabitable, with 95 per cent having some degree of damage. The total financial effect on the housing sector was estimated at CI$1.4 billion (Reliefweb).

6. Two days after the hurricane, the islands were still submerged by water.

7. The three most affected districts were George Town, Bodden Town and East End, which accounted for 75 per cent of the total population on Grand Cayman.

8. The island took months to achieve basic recovery. It took months for island-wide reinstatement of power, water, and sewer services and after five months, less than half the pre-Ivan hotel rooms were usable.

9. The financial effect on Cayman’s finance (commerce) and tourism sectors were estimated at around CI$460 million each (Reliefweb)

10. ECLAC estimated that the amount of per capita damage and losses to the Cayman Islands was US$75,700 per person– the highest ever encountered by ECLAC.

11. Ivan occurred during the decade with the most Category 5 hurricanes (2000-2009) on record. The eight category 5 hurricanes included Isabel (2003), Ivan (2004), Emily (2005), Katrina (2005), Rita (2005), Wilma (2005), Dean (2007), and Felix (2007).

12. Ivan was one of nine Atlantic hurricanes to ever reach Category 5 intensity on more than one occasion; that is, after reaching Category 5 intensity, then weakening to a lower category, and then becoming a Category 5 hurricane again.

13. Hurricane Ivan had a duration of 60-hours, hitting Cayman with wind speeds of more than 100 mph for 7-hours. This was the fourth longest of any of the 35 category 5 hurricanes in recorded history. The longest category 5 hurricane in recorded history occurred in 1932 (before hurricanes were given names) and lasted 78 hours, also having a significant impact on the Cayman Islands.

14. Hurricane Ivan was a record breaker. It set 18 new records for intensity at low latitudes. At the time, it held the world record of 33 (with 32 consecutive) six-hour periods of intensity at or above Category 4 strength. The tornado outbreak associated with Ivan spawned 127 tornadoes, which was more than any other tropical cyclone worldwide.

15. In the Cayman Islands, Hurricane Ivan destroyed 8,500 cars, resulted in a loss of 25-40 school days, and caused 6,500 people to be relocated to shelters.

The Cayman Islands continues to be highly vulnerable to hurricanes. According to hurricanecity.com, the Cayman Islands is the area most affected by hurricanes in the Caribbean sea and the fifth most affected area in the world.

Since 2004, the Cayman Islands has significantly enhanced its disaster management strategy and established Hazard Management Cayman Islands (HMCI) which is the focal point of disaster risk management (2007), responsible for the management of the National Emergency Management Center (NEOC). There have been a substantial number of measures implemented to ensure that the island is well-prepared now and in the future.

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US marks 21st anniversary of 9/11 terror attacks Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Americans remembered 9/11 on Sunday with readings of victims’ names, volunteer work and other tributes 21 years after the deadliest terror attack on US soil.

A tolling bell and a moment of silence began the commemoration at ground zero in New York, where the World Trade Center’s twin towers were destroyed by the hijacked-plane attacks of September 11, 2001. Victims’ relatives and dignitaries also convened at the two other attack sites, the Pentagon and a field in Pennsylvania.

Other communities around the country are marking the day with candlelight vigils, interfaith services and other commemorations. Some Americans are joining in volunteer projects on a day that is federally recognised as both Patriot Day and a National Day of Service and Remembrance.

The observances follow a fraught milestone anniversary last year. It came weeks after the chaotic and humbling end of the Afghanistan war that the US launched in response to the attacks.

But if this September 11 may be less of an inflection point, it remains a point for reflection on the attack that killed nearly 3,000 people, spurred a US “war on terror” worldwide and reconfigured national security policy.

FILE – Members of the public arrive at the south pool after the conclusion of ceremonies to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the September 11 terrorist attacks, September 11, 2021, at the National September 11 Memorial & Museum, in New York. On Sunday, September 11, 2022, Vice President Kamala Harris and her husband are due at the ground zero observance, but by tradition, no political figures speak there. Instead, victims’ relatives take turns in an hours-long reading of the names of the dead. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File)

It also stirred — for a time — a sense of national pride and unity for many, while subjecting Muslim Americans to years of suspicion and bigotry and engendering debate over the balance between safety and civil liberties. In ways both subtle and plain, the aftermath of 9/11 ripples through American politics and public life to this day.

And the attacks have cast a long shadow into the personal lives of thousands of people who survived, responded or lost loved ones, friends and colleagues.

More than 70 of Sekou Siby’s co-workers perished at Windows on the World, the restaurant atop the trade centre’s north tower. Siby had been scheduled to work that morning until another cook asked him to switch shifts.

Siby never took a restaurant job again; it would have brought back too many memories. The Ivorian immigrant wrestled with how to comprehend such horror in a country where he’d come looking for a better life.

He found it difficult to form the type of close, family-like friendships he and his Windows on the World co-workers had shared. It was too painful, he had learned, to become attached to people when “you have no control over what’s going to happen to them next.”

“Every 9/11 is a reminder of what I lost that I can never recover,” says Siby, who is now president and CEO of ROC United. The restaurant workers’ advocacy group evolved from a relief centre for Windows on the World workers who lost their jobs when the twin towers fell.

On Sunday, President Joe Biden plans to speak and lay a wreath at the Pentagon while first lady Jill Biden is scheduled to speak in Shanksville, Pennsylvania, where one of the hijacked planes went down after passengers and crew members tried to storm the cockpit as the hijackers headed for Washington. Al-Qaida conspirators had seized control of the jets to use them as passenger-filled missiles.

Vice President Kamala Harris and husband Doug Emhoff joined the observance at the National September 11 Memorial in New York, but by tradition, no political figures speak at the ground zero ceremony. It centres instead on victims’ relatives reading aloud the names of the dead.

Readers often add personal remarks that form an alloy of American sentiments about September 11 — grief, anger, toughness, appreciation for first responders and the military, appeals to patriotism, hopes for peace, occasional political barbs, and a poignant accounting of the graduations, weddings, births and daily lives that victims have missed.

Some relatives also lament that a nation which came together — to some extent — after the attacks have since splintered apart. So much so that federal law enforcement and intelligence agencies, which were reshaped to focus on international terrorism after 9/11, now see the threat of domestic violent extremism as equally urgent.

By JENNIFER PELTZ and KAREN MATTHEWS, Associated Press

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‘I cannot mourn’: Former colonies conflicted over the queen Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Upon taking the throne in 1952, Queen Elizabeth II inherited millions of subjects around the world, many of them unwilling. Today, in the British Empire’s former colonies, her death brings complicated feelings, including anger.

Beyond official condolences praising the queen’s longevity and service, there is some bitterness about the past in Africa, Asia, the Caribbean and elsewhere. Talk has turned to the legacies of colonialism, from slavery to corporal punishment in African schools to looted artefacts held in British institutions. For many, the queen came to represent all of that during her seven decades on the throne.

In Kenya, where decades ago a young Elizabeth learned of her father’s death and her enormous new role as queen, a lawyer named Alice Mugo shared online a photograph of a fading document from 1956. It was issued four years into the queen’s reign, and well into Britain’s harsh response to the Mau Mau rebellion against colonial rule.

“Movement permit,” the document says. While over 100,000 Kenyans were rounded up in camps under grim conditions, others, like Mugo’s grandmother, were forced to request British permission to go from place to place.

“Most of our grandparents were oppressed,” Mugo tweeted in the hours after the queen’s death Thursday. “I cannot mourn.”

Two lorry loads transporting Kikuyu people arrive at a reception camp outside Nairobi, Kenya, on April 28, 1954, after 5,000 British troops and 1,000 armed police rounded up some 30,000 to 40,000 men for screening. The sweep followed the breakdown of the surrender invitation launched by the authorities after the capture of Mau Mau’s “General China.” At the reception camp many men were released after screening. Others were sent to detention camps by the sea. (AP Photo, File)

But Kenya’s outgoing president, Uhuru Kenyatta, whose father, Jomo Kenyatta, was imprisoned during the queen’s rule before becoming the country’s first president in 1964, overlooked past troubles, as did other African heads of state. “The most iconic figure of the 20th and 21st centuries,” Uhuru Kenyatta called her.

Anger came from ordinary people. Some called for apologies for past abuses like slavery, others for something more tangible.

“This commonwealth of nations, that wealth belongs to England. That wealth is something never shared in,” said Bert Samuels, a member of the National Council on Reparations in Jamaica.

Elizabeth’s reign saw the hard-won independence of African countries from Ghana to Zimbabwe, along with a string of Caribbean islands and nations along the edge of the Arabian Peninsula.

Some historians see her as a monarch who helped oversee the mostly peaceful transition from empire to the Commonwealth, a voluntary association of 56 nations with historic and linguistic ties. But she was also the symbol of a nation that often rode roughshod over people it subjugated.

There were few signs of public grief or even interest in her death across the Middle East, where many still hold Britain responsible for colonial actions that drew much of the region’s borders and laid the groundwork for many of its modern conflicts. On Saturday, Gaza’s Hamas rulers called on King Charles III to “correct” British mandate decisions that they said oppressed Palestinians.

In ethnically divided Cyprus, many Greek Cypriots remembered the four-year guerrilla campaign waged in the late 1950s against colonial rule and the queen’s perceived indifference over the plight of nine people whom British authorities executed by hanging.

Yiannis Spanos, president of the Association of National Organization of Cypriot Fighters, said the queen was “held by many as bearing responsibility” for the island’s tragedies.

Now, with her passing, there are new efforts to address the colonial past, or hide it.

India is renewing its efforts under Prime Minister Narendra Modi to remove colonial names and symbols. The country has long moved on, even overtaking the British economy in size.

“I do not think we have any place for kings and queens in today’s world, because we are the world’s largest democratic country,” said Dhiren Singh, a 57-year-old entrepreneur in New Delhi.

There was some sympathy for Elizabeth and the circumstances she was born under and then thrust into.

In Kenya’s capital, Nairobi, resident Max Kahindi remembered the Mau Mau rebellion “with a lot of bitterness” and recalled how some elders were detained or killed. But he said the queen was “a very young lady” then, and he believes someone else likely was running British affairs.

“We cannot blame the queen for all the sufferings that we had at that particular time,” Kahindi said.

Timothy Kalyegira, a political analyst in Uganda, said there is a lingering “spiritual connection” in some African countries, from the colonial experience to the Commonwealth. “It is a moment of pain, a moment of nostalgia,” he said.

The queen’s dignified persona and age, and the centrality of the English language in global affairs, are powerful enough to temper some criticisms, Kalyegira added: “She’s seen more as the mother of the world.”

Mixed views were also found in the Caribbean, where some countries are removing the British monarch as their head of state.

“You have contradictory consciousness,” said Maziki Thame, a senior lecturer in development studies at the University of the West Indies in Jamaica, whose prime minister announced during this year’s visit of Prince William, who is now heir to the throne, and Kate that the island intended to become fully independent.

The younger generation of royals seem to have greater sensitivity to colonialism’s implications, Thame said — during the visit, William expressed his “profound sorrow” for slavery.

Nadeen Spence, an activist, said appreciation for Elizabeth among older Jamaicans, isn’t surprising since she was presented by the British as “this benevolent queen who has always looked out for us,” but young people aren’t awed by the royal family.

“The only thing I noted about the queen’s passing is that she died and never apologised for slavery,” Spence said. “She should’ve apologised.”

___

By CARA ANNA, DANICA COTO and RODNEY MUHUMUZA, Associated Press

Associated Press journalists around the world contributed to this report.

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Raad van toezicht SPWE heeft slechts drie maanden

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

PARAMARIBO — Hoewel de raad van toezicht van de Stichting Productieve Werkeenheden (SPWE) slechts drie maanden zal aanzitten, gelooft voorzitter

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Deux jeunes femmes décèdent de mort violente

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guadeloupe FranceAntilles

Lésion par arme à feu sur la voie publique

Une femme d’environ 30 ans a été retrouvée gravement blessée, en arrêt cardiorespiratoire par les secours, à 2 heures du matin ce dimanche rue Raspail, à Pointe-à-Pitre. Elle était allongée sur le ventre et présentait plusieurs impacts de balles. La victime serait originaire de la République Dominicaine.

3 sapeurs-pompiers à bord d’un véhicule de secours et d’assistance aux victimes (VSAV) ont été dépêchés sur les lieux. La police nationale et une structure mobile d’urgence et de réanimation (SMUR) se sont également rendues sur place. Malheureusement le médecin SMUR a constaté son décès. Les circonstances du drame restent encore à définir, une enquête de Police en cours. 

Accident deux-roues 

Ce dimanche matin aux alentours de 3 heures, un accident de deux-roues est survenu rue François Fresneau, à Jarry, Baie-Mahault. 

La victime,  une jeune femme de 23 ans est seule impliquée. A l’arrivée des secours, elle était en arrêt cardio-respiratoire. 4 sapeurs-pompiers, dont 1 officier, ainsi que la gendarmerie et une structure mobile d’urgence et de réanimation inter-hospitalière ont été mobilisés. Un attroupement de personnes sur place les ont contraints à se déplacer avec elle, les gestes de premiers secours étant impossible à prodiguer. 

Suite à des tentatives de réanimation cardiopulmonaire et de médicalisation restées sans succès, le décès de la victime a été déclaré par le médecin SMUR.

Perdu en forêt

Ce samedi 10 septembre, à 16 h 08, les sapeurs-pompiers se sont engagés dans la recherche d’une personne perdue en forêt au sommet du Nez Cassé, à Saint-Claude.

La victime, un homme de 29 ans marchait depuis 10 heures le matin. Le temps incertain et la densité de la végétation seraient à l’origine de son égarement.

Après l’interruption des recherches par l’hélicoptère Dragon971 hier au soir, le jeune homme a été retrouvé et ramené par la Gendarmerie à la Clinique les eaux vives à SAINT CLAUDE. Après le bilan SAMU, il a été laissé sur place à la charge de ses proches.

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Teen fined $10,000 for ‘illegally’ interacting with prisoner at lockup Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News
Loop News

41 minutes ago

File photo

NEWYou can now listen to Loop News articles!

A 19-year-old man was fined $10,000 after he admitted to breaching security and speaking with a prisoner at the Morant Bay Police Station lockup in St Thomas.

Oneil Kelly, otherwise called ‘Cow Boss’, of Danvers Pen in the parish, appeared in the St Thomas Parish Court last week.

He was charged with communicating with a prisoner, to which he pleaded guilty.

Reports are that late last month, Kelly was observed by the police in a restricted area on the police station compound where civilians are not allowed.

Further observations revealed that the teenager was in the vicinity of the lockup communicating with a prisoner.

Kelly fled after he was spotted by the police, but he was later apprehended.

He was subsequently charged with the offence.

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Antigua May Ask King Charles to Apologize for Slavery

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

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