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President Ali meets President UN General Assembly

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana

President Irfaan Ali earlier today met with the President of the 76th Session of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) H.E Abdulla Shahid and his delegation at State House.

The Head of State used the opportunity to congratulate Shahid on his leadership and accomplishments, particularly with his involvement of youths in the work of the General Assembly.

The President also updated the visiting official on the recent establishment of the Youth Advisory Council in Guyana. This move, he explained is to allow for the involvement of youths in Guyana’s national development and to foster their involvement as “agents of change”.

He noted too the efforts towards the inclusion of women and youth empowerment.

President Ali also spoke of Guyana’s national and regional food security drive, the Government’s integrated approach to development, and its focus on building out traditional and non-traditional sectors.

In his remarks, the UNGA official lauded President Ali’s work in food security and his progressive vision for the country and its people.

Following the brief discussion, President Ali presented the 76th Session of the UNGA President with a painting by talented Guyanese artist, Dillon Craig.

The Minister of Parliamentary Affairs and Governance, Gail Teixeira; Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, Hugh Todd, United Nations Resident Coordinator, Yeşim Oruç and the Director of Projects at the Office of the President, Mrs Marcia Nadir-Sharma were also at the meeting. (Office of the President)

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Performance in Math, English at NGSA dropped

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana
Education Minister, Priya Manickchand with the three students who tied for first spot

With 518 marks, Neuel Bancroft of Annandale Primary; Angelica Subryan of Cumberland Primary and Jonathon Gomes of Josel Educational Institute tied for the top spot at this year’s NGSA.

The results were officially announced today at the Arthur Chung Conference Centre. In addition three students shared the second spot with 517 marks while five share the third spot with 516 marks.

Education Minister, Priya Manickchand with the three students who tied for the first spot at this year’s NGSA

All the top performers were awarded places at Queen’s College.

However, during the announcement, it was announced that Social Studies recorded an increase in performance at 58.9 per cent but also an increase in students scoring zero.

English saw a slight reduction in overall performance at 64.8 per cent while there was a slight reduction in the performance in Mathematics when compare to the 2021.

As it relates to Science, the overall performance moved from 40.12 per cent to 45.45 per cent.

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UWP Observes 13th Anniversary Of St Jude Hospital Fire – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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The United Workers Party observes that today marks the 13th anniversary of the fireat St Jude’s Hospital on September 9, 2009.

Having worked diligently towards building a world class and state-of-the-art hospitalduring its recent term of office, the UWP administration was determined to provide to the people of the south, and by extension the people of Saint Lucia, an effective solution to healthcare.

Unfortunately, the ravages of Covid seriously hampered the progress of the construction works at the hospital site in the south.

The decision by the current administration to return to the old St. Jude Hospital which began serving the general population since 1965 is not a move in the best interest of the people of Saint Lucia.

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The ageing number of buildings are not the most efficient and convenient layout for a modern hospital.

The old St. Jude Hospital which was originally constructed in 1942 can hardly beconsidered as relevant or up to the times.

With all the development, investment, and economic activity planned for the south, it only makes sense to give the people of the south, a modern and resilient structure which is in keeping with expectations for a hospital in these modern times.

The United Workers Party calls on the Philip J. Pierre administration to consider all the benefits of the modern facility started by the United Workers Party and to complete the new St. Jude Hospital facility.

The United Workers Party calls on the current administration to look to the futurerather regressing into the past with our healthcare.

SOURCE: United Workers Party. Headline photo: Stock image

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Alcalde de Bayamón rechaza intervención en los procesos de subastas del municipio

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

A raíz de la cancelación del contrato con la empresa Bou Maintenance Service -cuyo dueño hizo acuerdo de culpabilidad en el caso de exalcalde de Cataño, Félix Delgado Montalvo-, el alcalde de Bayamón, Ramón Luis Rivera Cruz, rechazó el viernes que de alguna manera participe de las subastas que realiza el municipio.

“Nunca he participado en ningún proceso de subasta desde que soy alcalde de la Ciudad de Bayamón. Eso es una regla fundamental, nunca. Como también, es bueno establecer que si desafortunadamente, en algunos otros lugares algún otro funcionario público aceptó una regalía fuera de la ley, pues mire, eso es un asunto personal. Eso es un principio ético de cada ser humano”, dijo el alcalde en conferencia de prensa.

“Nunca, nunca, nunca he recibido ningún regalo de ningún suplidor del municipio de Bayamón” añadió.

Cuestionado si José Bou Santiago hizo donativos a sus campañas, Rivera Cruz contestó que “me imagino que si, ysi hace aportaciones dentro de los reglamentos y las leyes, de eso no debe haber ningún problema”.

Rivera Cruz estuvo en la conferencia de prensa acompañado por los integrantes de la Junta de Subastas del municipio. Los contratos -que desde el 2008 tuvo Bou Santiago con el municipio-, fueron a subasta pública.

Todas los contratos de mantenimiento de áreas verdes y equipo pesado se adjudican por subasta pública.

Los últimos contratos de Bou Maintenance Service, fueron para limpieza, desganche, mantenimiento, control de plagas y recogido de escombros para las quebradas. Posteriormente, como consecuencia del incumplimiento que tuvo otra compañía, se le adjudicaron los contratos para limpieza y mantenimiento del Parque Lineal y el Parque de las Ciencias.

El otro contrato cancelado fue para el alquiler de vehículos pesados.

Rivera Cruz informó además que a raíz de la cancelación de los contratos, se hara orden de emergencia para hacer un contrato temporal para cubrir servicios en lo que culmina el proceso de una nueva subasta que tarda 45 días.

Además, le solicitaron a la Oficina de la Contralora- que actualmente está auditando al municipio-, que incluya los contratos cancelados a Bou Maintenance Service,
José Bou Santiago hizo acuerdo de culpabilidad en el Tribunal Federal, por regalarle al exalcalde de Cataño un Rolex Pepsi, a cambio de recibir contratos.

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Policía ocupa millonario cargamento de cocaína en costas de Loíza

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El comisionado del Negociado de la Policía de Puerto Rico, Antonio López Figueroa, informó el viernes, que agentes adscritos a la Unidad de la División de Vigilancia Marítima de Piñones y Fajardo, en unión al personal de Inteligencia del Negociado de FURA y la agencia federal Air Marine Branch, ocuparon en la mañana, un cargamento de 47 bloques de cocaína en 5 fardos los cuales fueron valorados en 4.8 millones de dólares. 

También se ocupó 5 pistolas Glock, 3 rifles, 16 cargadores, 1,700 municiones y aproximadamente un millón de dólares en efectivo.

Estos hechos ocurrieron a media milla del norte de la costa del sector Tocones en Loíza, donde se intervino con una embarcación tipo yola color blanca y gris, de fabricación casera, de 26 pies de eslora y con un motor de 75 caballos de fuerza.

La evidencia ocupada arrojó positivo a cocaína según la prueba de campo realizada. Al momento no se han efectuado arrestos.

Se informó que la Agencia federal DEA asumió jurisdicción del mismo y continúan la investigación.

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NBC’s Covid-19 Update – Friday September 9th 2022

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: NBC SVG

The Ministry of Health, Wellness and the Environment is appealing to the organizers of any event where people tend to congregate to ensure that the COVID19 Safety Protocols are followed during their programs.

The appeal has come from Chief Health Promotion Officer in the Ministry of Health, Wellness and the Environment, Shanika John.

Donnie Collins has more in today’s COVID-19 Update.

https://www.nbcsvg.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/COVID-19-UPDATE-607-Recording.mp3

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A total of 19 active Covid-19 cases recorded here in SVG

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: NBC SVG

There are now 19 active cases of COVID 19 recorded in St. Vincent and the Grenadines, according to the latest update from the Ministry of Health Wellness and the Environment

The Ministry says there were no new cases recorded on Thursday September 8th, and two recoveries were noted.

One unvaccinated person is currently hospitalized with COVID-19.

9,446 cases of COVID-19 and 9,311 recoveries have been reported in St. Vincent and the Grenadines to date.   115 people have died from the virus.

And, 72,591 COVID-19 vaccines have so far been administered locally.  37,174persons have received their first dose;  31, 283 have received their second dose and 4,134 persons have received boosters.

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Leaders plan for upcoming COP27

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: The BVI Beacon

Caribbean countries are working to learn the best ways to finance measures for mitigating and adapting to the effects of climate change, Premier Dr. Natalio “Sowande” Wheatley said in a press conference on Aug. 26.

Dr. Wheatley recently conferred with Caribbean Community heads of government, environment ministers and foreign ministers at the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change hosted in the Bahamas.

“As we all know, the Caribbean in particular is vulnerable to stronger hurricanes, as well a sea-level rises and droughts,” he said.

Caricom associate members including the VI, Anguilla, Bermuda, the Cayman Islands, and Turks and Caicos also held a Caribbean overseas territories caucus.

“We agreed that greater engagement with the United Nations on alternative forms of climate finance for overseas territories was critical as well as further discussions with the United Kingdom government on financial support and technical assistance to the overseas territories to adapt to climate change,” the premier said.

Dr. Wheatley also commended the Bahamian government for arranging for heads of government to fly to Trinidad and attend the Agri-Investment Forum and Expo II.

“The expo was inspirational to say the least and provided a real vision for agriculture in the Caribbean as we strive to become more self-sufficient in food production,” he said. “As a region, we must reduce our food import bill to give us a greater sense of food security, especially during these uncertain times where inflation is running rampant.”

The premier added that his government is moving quickly to establish a new Agriculture and Fisheries Authority as prescribed by the Food Security and Sustainability Act, 2022, which recently received Governor John Rankin’s assent.

COP27 conference

Caricom members also began planning for the UN Climate Change Conference to be held in Egypt in November.

At the event, Dr. Wheatley said, nations from around the world will focus on how to slow global warming.

“We are aligned in our view that the countries who are releasing the large majority of CO-2 gas emissions into the atmosphere should deliver on their pledges of financial support promised to small island developing states and other groups of vulnerable countries,” Dr. Wheatley said. “We are also of the view that we must hasten our transition to renewable energy to mitigate the economic and environmental risks associated with fossil fuels, such as the sharp spike in the price of oil and gas.”

At the COP26 meeting last November in Glasgow, former Natural Resources, Labour and Immigration Minister Vincent Wheatley lobbied for climate change mitigation funding from the UK.

He also pledged commitment to a newly created alliance of Caribbean and Latin American leaders; touted the Anegada solar project as a sign of the territory’s commitment to a renewable energy transition; and said passing legislation such as revamped building codes will be crucial for climate-change adaptation.

Representatives in Glasgow eventually signed an agreement to reconvene in a year with ambitious plans to rein in emissions, though many small island nations remained unimpressed with a lack of recognition for the imminent danger facing them.

Window for action

Such concerns were echoed on Aug. 26 by Natural Resources and Labour Minister Mitch Turnbull, who joined the premier at the press conference.

Mr. Turnbull warned that the window for action to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels — a commitment outlined in the 2015 Paris Agreement — is narrowing.

“This target has been identified as critical for small islands to survive and avoid the worst impacts of climate change,” he said.

Also during the press conference, the premier thanked former members of the VI Climate Change Trust Fund for being willing to resume their duties after their membership was revoked by the Virgin Islands Party government shortly after it took power in February 2019. Mr. Turnbull apologised to former members on Aug. 18 and invited them to return.

On Aug. 26, Dr. Wheatley added, “They can be assured that Government of National Unity supports the critical and independent work that they will be doing in helping to mobilise and deploy resources to help build the climate resilience of this territory.”

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VI has come a ‘long’ way with recovery, but some still struggling

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: The BVI Beacon

“I would say we have a lot to be proud of,” Premier Dr. Natalio “Sowande” Wheatley said during a recent press conference when asked about the upcoming fifth anniversary of Hurricane Irma. “We don’t want to be in a perpetual state of recovery. We want to move on from recovery and move forward with our development.”

But in the five years since the storm, recovery has proved elusive for some residents.

“I would say that we are at about 85 percent,” said BVI Red Cross Director Stacy Lloyd. “When I look around in the community, I still see homes without roofs or with different damages. Some properties have been abandoned. Some businesses — most businesses, I would say, have rebounded. We still have to take into consideration Covid, which slowed down the progress of recovery. But I do feel individually and on a business level, we have come a very, very long way.”

Ms. Lloyd added that repairing remaining damage to homes — particularly those with missing roofs, which are vulnerable even to mild storms — is an essential part of the ongoing push for recovery and preparedness.

Mental health

Repairing physical damages, however, is only part of the recovery process. The 2017 storms, she said, also had a lasting effect on the mental health of community members — an issue compounded by the pandemic.

“I do know of people who still suffer from [post-traumatic stress disorder] when it comes to hurricane season,” Ms. Stoutt said. “When a hard rain comes, they get very anxious. And I’ve seen it come out in different ways with Covid. That’s why we had to open our psychosocial hotline.”

Ms. Lloyd said progress has been made in this respect as well.

“I think people are more aware of mental wellness, and they are more inclined to look for help,” she added.

Sarah Smith, founder of Elevated Dance Company, poses amid the damage dealt to the BVI Dance Studio after the 2017 hurricanes. In the years after, businesses including the studio have been working on rebuilding. (Photo: KEMUEL GUMBS)

Long-term recovery

In the months after the storms, the Red Cross and other VI aid organisations focused largely on providing immediate assistance, but now they are increasingly turning their attention to long-term development efforts designed to boost their capacity to provide services.

The Family Support Network — which provided food and other aid to community members after the 2017 storms and during the pandemic — has seen many families make great strides, said FSN board member David Penn.

“Personally, I think we have come a very, very long way,” he said. “I think that terrible time showed us all the great resilience of BVIslanders and the residents of this country. To have come through that to where we are today, I think it’s a real testament to that.”

He noted, though, that assisting victims of domestic abuse — one of the organisation’s essential services — became particularly challenging after the hurricanes.

“We seek to address certain ills and problems in our community that otherwise would go unattended, and that is to care for and provide protection to those who suffer abuse at home,” he said.

Many of the spaces that provided shelter to abuse victims prior to the 2017 hurricanes were damaged in the storms, he said.

Now that the organisation is focusing more on long-term development, it hopes to build its own facility to provide secure housing for people seeking shelter, according to Mr. Penn.

Impact on youth

The storms’ long-term effects also continue to impact young people.

Sylvanna Charles, an English and theatre teacher at Elmore Stoutt High School, said she is proud to see a class of “Irma babies” she taught as seventh graders now entering the 12th grade.

“I have to be proud of them in the sense that they made it even with all the challenges of a shift system after the storm and Covid and working online,” she said. “They’ve gone through it. So you have to be proud of them in that aspect. But then in a sense, you’re kind of a bit disappointed because it’s a time in their lives that they won’t get back. They’ve not been able to experience a regular high school. Those kind of moments and situations build and mould you into the adult that you’ll be, and I feel like a lot of them, in a sense, are lost. … It’s bittersweet, but they made it.”

ESHS saw major damage from the hurricanes, and new buildings were scheduled to open at the start of the school year. However, Education, Culture, Youth Affairs and Sports Minister Sharie DeCastro said Friday that the project was delayed and students would attend classes on a hybrid system at least until October.

Ms. Charles said students have demonstrated tremendous resilience in being able to adapt to the circumstances after Irma.

She added that seeing junior ESHS students move back to the L-shaped building in Road Town was a step in the right direction, but she hopes to soon be able to teach out of a proper classroom rather than operating out of a space at the Clarence Thomas Limited building as she has in the years since Irma.

“Something like having your own classroom may seem so basic for many, but for us it would make such a difference,” she said.

Still, Ms. Charles said she is grateful for the work that has been done to help the wider community rebound.

“Time has gone by so quickly, and so many things have changed,” she said. “I still remember stepping out and seeing the destruction. I’m surprised that we’ve rebuilt so quickly. I would say, for the majority, things are back to what they were before the storm.”

Building future athletes

The lasting storm damage continues to affect not only students’ academic pursuits, but also their extracurricular ambitions.

“Over 90 percent of our recreational infrastructure was destroyed,” Dr. Wheatley said during an Aug. 8 press conference. “We did quite a bit to restore our recreational grounds, even though we have a few outstanding ones left.”

The premier acknowledged challenges facing those facilities but claimed the territory has some of the best in the Eastern Caribbean, particularly with the Multi-purpose Sports Complex.

“I share concerns about progress in building on the strong foundation established in past years, but every government in the world has to be able to balance all their obligations, and we are seeking to move forward in a positive way,” he said. “I acknowledged not just with this government, in repairing a lot of facilities after the hurricanes, but past governments: They’ve all contributed towards the development of sports.”

Sportswriter Dean “The Sportsman” Greenaway, who has documented the derelict state of sports facilities in the territory, said many more investments in infrastructure and maintenance are still needed if the government plans to fully support the territory’s athletes — particularly with the construction of a swimming pool adequate for Olympic training.

But more important is the need for a comprehensive plan to develop sports, he added.

“Prior to the hurricane, for example, since 2004 we have had the multi-sports complex as a facility,” he said. “But we do not have basketball programmes.”

While leagues can serve a purpose, he said providing men’s and women’s programmes is a necessary step for growing athletes to be able to develop their skills and pursue future opportunities.

Businesses rebounding

Many businesses devastated by the storm have also been tasked with figuring out how to rebuild, even amid the economic challenges of the pandemic.

Sandy Lyons, director of the BVI Dance School, said the storms decimated her dance studio and tore the roof off the home her mother had built 45 years earlier. After going to the United States for three months to recover from an injury she sustained during the storm, she returned to the territory.

“I’d lost everything. When we went by the studio, I could see that the roof was gone on that too,” she said. “Driving through, what it looked like was just war. It was indescribable.”

Sandy Lyons, director of the BVI Dance School, said the storms decimated her dance studio and tore the roof off the home her mother had built 45 years earlier. (Photo: DANA KAMPA)

She said it took some time to figure out how to move forward.

“It took me five months [after the storm] before I could even walk into the studio, because I knew it was going to be pretty emotional,” she said.

While those plans were being made to rebuild, Ms. Lyons began looking for temporary headquarters from which to teach. Even though many students from the dance school and other studios had to leave the territory with their families after the storm, she said she wanted to provide some normalcy for the ones who remained.

Ms. Lyons added that she was compelled to rebuild the studio for the same reason she returned before even having a place to live: It was her home, and her students needed her.

They didn’t even miss their annual dance fest, coming back to the stage in June 2018. Then in January 2019, the studio made its grand reopening.

“It was coming home,” she said of walking into the studio for the first time. She added that she is amazed with how the business community has recovered in the past five years.

“Every little victory is a victory for everyone,” she said.

Preparedness

Ms. Lloyd, the Red Cross director, said the community has learned a lot from its struggles over the past five years.

“I do feel and I do see where our community is more resilient,” she said. “We do have the education and the resources and the partnerships with governments and other international organisations that can provide the support that we need in the event of a major storm.”

Her agency, she said, has been working to promote such work, hosting its second annual Emergency Preparedness Expo in April and recently launching its preparedness programme for businesses.

“We continue to push our educational efforts in terms of recovery, resilience, and preparedness,” she said. “We try to find creative ways in how to engage the community and to get the information out there.”

Ms. Lloyd noted the importance of collaborating with the Department of Disaster Management and other organisations to help the community continue to recover and prepare for any potential future disasters, whether they come in the form of hurricanes or other emergencies.

Those educational efforts should extend to young people too, so they understand what to expect during an emergency, she said. Heads of households should also make sure they plan ahead to ensure the safety of young children, seniors, other vulnerable residents, and pets, according to the director.

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Premier League games off as ‘mark of respect’ to queen Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

The Premier League postponed its upcoming round of matches as a mark of respect following the death of Queen Elizabeth II, adding to the cancellation of high-profile golf, cricket and horse racing events across a mourning Britain on Friday.

England’s top-flight football clubs held a meeting on Friday and said they wanted to “pay tribute to Her Majesty’s long and unwavering service to our country.”

“This is a tremendously sad time for not just the nation but also for the millions of people around the world who admired her,” Premier League chief executive Richard Masters said, “and we join together with all those in mourning her passing.”

The English Football League — the three divisions below the Premier League — also called off their games scheduled for the weekend. The Women’s Super League was due to start its season this weekend but has canceled its games, too.

The British government said it was at the discretion of individual sporting organizations whether fixtures went ahead following the death of the queen on Thursday at the age of 96.

British sport essentially shut down on Friday, but many events were planning to be up and running again on Saturday.

The BMW PGA Championship, the flagship event on the European tour, was paused near the end of the first round Thursday following the announcement of the queen’s death — there were still 30 players out on the course — and there was no play Friday.

Play will resume Saturday, the tour said, for what will become a 54-hole event “with the intention to finish on Sunday as scheduled.”

“It is not possible to play the full 72 holes and finish on Monday as we cannot guarantee the staff, facilities or security of the venue on Monday due to the ongoing plans for the state funeral,” the tour said in a statement, adding that there will be a two-minute silence at 9.50 am local time Saturday.

The third and deciding test between England and South Africa will resume at the Oval in London on Saturday after the England and Wales Cricket Board decided there would be no play on Friday.

It will essentially be a three-day test — Day 1 on Thursday was washed out — and all players and coaches will wear black armbands, observing a minute’s silence followed by the national anthem — “God Save the King.”

It wasn’t possible to add an extra day to the test match because the touring South Africans are flying home on Tuesday before heading to India and Australia.

Other events called off included cycling’s Tour of Britain, which also canceled the final two stages of the race scheduled for the weekend, and the third day of horse racing’s St. Leger festival in Doncaster. The St. Leger, one of British racing’s classics, will now take place on Sunday, organizers said Friday.

Horse racing was the queen’s favourite sport.

While Friday’s matches in England’s top rugby division were cancelled, those scheduled for Saturday and Sunday will go ahead as planned.

Football matches in the English Football League and in the Scottish lower league scheduled for Friday had already been postponed while matches scheduled to be played in Northern Ireland over the weekend were also canceled.

The Premier League said further updates regarding its fixtures during the period of mourning, which has begun in Britain, will be provided “in due course.”

Organizations are having to weigh up factors such as whether holding matches would use up police resources, the desire of broadcasters and the mood of the public.

There is little room in the schedule of this World Cup-affected season to fit in postponed fixtures.

The government said sporting organizations “might wish to consider canceling or postponing events or closing venues on the day of the State Funeral.”

That date of the funeral has not been set.

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