Posts

PM Rowley: This country recognises the lasting legacy of Her Majesty Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

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

2 hrs ago

Queen Elizabeth II

NEWYou can now listen to Loop News articles!

Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley has joined several other regional leaders in expressing condolences to King Charles III on the passing of his mother, Queen Elizabeth II.

In a statement issued by the Ministry of Foreign and CARICOM Affairs, Rowley said that “after reigning for 70 years, Her Majesty has left a lasting legacy for the people of the UK and the world.”

The prime minister also recalled the promise that the queen had made at the age of 21, when she pledged her life to the service of her people.

“That promise,” the statement continued, “was refreshed on her coronation day when she asked for ‘God’s help to make that vow…”

Rowley also noted that the life Queen Elizabeth lived was marked by her strong sense of duty and dedication.

He recalled the queen’s previous visits to Trinidad and Tobago, the most recent of which was in 2009 when she attended the Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting.

According to Rowley, “although Trinidad and Tobago gained its Independence and later became a republic, this country recognises the lasting legacy of Her Majesty.”

He said she will be remembered for her selfless duty to the Commonwealth.

Related Articles

More From

Sport

Jamaica’s 4x100m women’s relay team that won the bronze medal at last month’s Commonwealth Games in Birmingham, England could have the medal upgraded to silver as Nzubechi Grace Nwokocha, who anchored

Sport

Jamaica’s sprinting sensation Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce bounced back from defeat in Brussels last weekend to win the Diamond League women’s 100m final in Zurich, Switzerland on Thursday.

Cheered on b

Sport

The 2022 Wanda Diamond League season ends on Thursday with the final day of the two-day meet in Zurich, Switzerland.

The world’s best athletes are competing for Diamond trophies, top $30,000 p

Sport

Shericka Jackson stormed to victory in the women’s 200m at the Diamond League final in Zurich, Switzerland on Thursday.

The Jamaican proved a cut above the field to win the season-ending event in 2

Sport

Jamaica’s Rasheed Broadbell narrowly missed out on winning the men’s 110m hurdles Diamond trophy and US$30,000 on the last day of the two-day Diamond League finals in Zurich, Switzerland on Thursday.

Jamaica News

Prime Minister Andrew Holness is assuring residents of Olympic Gardens that several strategies, including increased police presence and the installation of cameras, will be used to address gang

NewsAmericasNow.com

Joby Jay is here for the ‘Cool Breeze’ Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

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

1 hrs ago

Singer-songwriter Joby Jay takes us to the beach for some Cool Breeze. (Photo: Contributed)

NEWYou can now listen to Loop News articles!

‘Cool Breeze’ is the newly released track from the Big Girl Ting songbird, Joby Jay, which shows a different side to the artiste.

The neo-soul eccentric singer-songwriter says this song has a very relaxing feel, and the plan was to transcend listeners to the closest beach or their favourite nature haunt.

“A feel-good song that will leave you swaying”, is what a statement from the Joby Jay team described the track as.

Cool Breeze, produced by Koastal Kings, will be released tomorrow, so now’s as good a time as any to stream the track.

You can find it on all digital platforms here.

“A clear heart and a pure mind, good friends and good vibes … Cool Breeze.”

Related Articles

More From

Sport

Jamaica’s 4x100m women’s relay team that won the bronze medal at last month’s Commonwealth Games in Birmingham, England could have the medal upgraded to silver as Nzubechi Grace Nwokocha, who anchored

Sport

Jamaica’s sprinting sensation Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce bounced back from defeat in Brussels last weekend to win the Diamond League women’s 100m final in Zurich, Switzerland on Thursday.

Cheered on b

Sport

The 2022 Wanda Diamond League season ends on Thursday with the final day of the two-day meet in Zurich, Switzerland.

The world’s best athletes are competing for Diamond trophies, top $30,000 p

Sport

Shericka Jackson stormed to victory in the women’s 200m at the Diamond League final in Zurich, Switzerland on Thursday.

The Jamaican proved a cut above the field to win the season-ending event in 2

Sport

Jamaica’s Rasheed Broadbell narrowly missed out on winning the men’s 110m hurdles Diamond trophy and US$30,000 on the last day of the two-day Diamond League finals in Zurich, Switzerland on Thursday.

Jamaica News

Prime Minister Andrew Holness is assuring residents of Olympic Gardens that several strategies, including increased police presence and the installation of cameras, will be used to address gang

NewsAmericasNow.com

Ministry Of Health Urges Vigilance As Saint Lucia Monitors Dengue Fever Cases – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

– Advertisement –

The Ministry of Health, Wellness and Elderly Affairs has urged vigilance as Saint Lucia monitors dengue fever.

The Island recorded three cases of the disease in August and a total of thirteen so far for this year.

Environmental Health Officer, Vector Control – Charletta Charles-Leon provided an update on the dengue fever situation in a statement on Thursday.

The complete statement appears below:

– Advertisement –

– Advertisement –

TRENDING

NewsAmericasNow.com

Young scientists benefit from Dr Joy Spence’s passion for charity Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Dr Joy Spence, the master blender at J Wray & Nephew Limited is going back to her roots and her first love, of sorts, with benevolence.

Spence recently donated over JM$4m to the chemistry departments of seven institutions across the island.

Students from Mona High, Dinthill Technical, Denbigh High, Edwin Allen High Schools, College of Agriculture, Science & Education (CASE), Montego Bay Community College and University of the West Indies, Mona, will start the new school year with brand new chemistry equipment.

J Wray & Nephew Master Blender Dr Joy Spence (4th L) presents a symbolic cheque worth JM$1.5m to the Chemistry Department at UWI, Mona. They are (l-r) Dr Donna Minott Kates, head of the Chemistry Department, UWI, Mona; with colleagues Dr Marvadebe Singh Wilmot, lecturer and academic dean for student experience; Dr Robin Rattray; Dr Novelette Sadley McKnight; Professor Emeritus Robert Lancashire and Dr Winklet Gallimore. (Photos: Contributed)

Dr Spence who began her career as a Chemistry teacher has always supported the sciences through her mentorship of young scientists and her donations to the J Wray & Nephew Foundation which goes directly to students studying chemistry.

In recognising the challenges faced by teachers and students in the delivery of the science curriculum, she decided to donate to non-traditional high schools that have managed to rise above these challenges and deliver excellence.

On Monday, August 22, Dr Spence handed over poster-style periodic tables branded with the words “Chemistry is Life”, words that have guided her life and career to students “As a chemistry graduate, I especially wanted to assist chemistry students at the non-traditional schools as well as the tertiary level to develop their talents in that discipline so they can take their places in the field internationally”, Dr Spence noted.

The donations to the schools will include hundreds of burettes, volumetric pipettes, beakers, Bunsen Burners, safety boggles, measuring cylinders, test tubes and test tube holders.

Dr Joy Spence signs a symbolic cheque before presenting it to members of the academic staff of the Department of Chemistry at UWI, Mona. (Photos: Contributed)

Mona High School will benefit from a JM$1.1m facelift which will include a repainted science lab, new stools, and cabinets to secure chemicals, and a new counter and a train board for the lab technician’s room.

Dinthill Technical, Denbigh High and Edwin Allen High schools, as well as the CASE and the Montego Bay Community College, will receive donations of chemistry lab kits valued at JM$220k each.

The Chemistry lab at UWI will receive JM$1.5m towards the purchase of an electronic analytical Balance, a much-needed tool for chemical experiments.

“As a student, the Chemistry Department of the UWI played a major role in my decision to become a chemist.

40 years later, I am the Master Blender for a global brand, Appleton Estate and celebrating my wonderful career at J Wray & Nephew which has allowed me to give back to the next generation” said Dr Spence.

40 Years of Joy was launched in December 2021 to celebrate Dr Joy Spence’s forty years with JWN.

Spence was gifted J$20M to donate to forty (40) charities of her choice.

Dr Spence, who joined JWN as the chief chemist in 1981, rose through the ranks to become the industry’s first female master blender in 1997 and was recently named one of Jamaica’s Tourism Brand Ambassadors by Minister of Tourism Edmund Bartlett.

NewsAmericasNow.com

JMMB’s marketing head prioritises downtime to help boost efficiency Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Habits for Success

Shamille Scott

35 minutes ago

Kerry-Ann Stimpson – Habits for Success

NEWYou can now listen to Loop News articles!

Kerry-Ann Stimpson, chief marketing officer for JMMB Group, employs several activities/rituals to help fuel her productivity.

Among them is an emphasis on downtime.

Though her core function at JMMB is to promote the regional financial conglomerate, Stimpson says she gets a lot of energy from being locked away and consuming social content.

Listen as Stimpson outlines how this and other activities help her to function as a leader.

Source

Related Articles

More From

Sport

Jamaica’s 4x100m women’s relay team that won the bronze medal at last month’s Commonwealth Games in Birmingham, England could have the medal upgraded to silver as Nzubechi Grace Nwokocha, who anchored

Sport

The 2022 Wanda Diamond League season ends on Thursday with the final day of the two-day meet in Zurich, Switzerland.

The world’s best athletes are competing for Diamond trophies, top $30,000 p

Sport

Jamaica’s sprinting sensation Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce bounced back from defeat in Brussels last weekend to win the Diamond League women’s 100m final in Zurich, Switzerland on Thursday.

Cheered on b

Sport

Shericka Jackson stormed to victory in the women’s 200m at the Diamond League final in Zurich, Switzerland on Thursday.

The Jamaican proved a cut above the field to win the season-ending event in 2

Sport

Jamaica’s Rasheed Broadbell narrowly missed out on winning the men’s 110m hurdles Diamond trophy and US$30,000 on the last day of the two-day Diamond League finals in Zurich, Switzerland on Thursday.

Jamaica News

Prime Minister Andrew Holness is assuring residents of Olympic Gardens that several strategies, including increased police presence and the installation of cameras, will be used to address gang

NewsAmericasNow.com

154 new covid19 cases show decline

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Image courtesy CDC

THE MINISTRY of Health has issued encouraging news on the covid19 pandemic on Thursday, announcing no new deaths and 154 active cases, a considerable dip compared to the previous day.

There are 210 patients hospitalised among the 5,294 active cases. The death toll attributed to the virus remains at 4,166.

Thursday’s announcement of 154 new cases reflects results taken between Tuesday and Wednesday, and not the 24 hours preceding the latest update.

The figures indicate a sharp drop from 239 new cases reported the day before, and the 302 reported on Tuesday.

The latest local figures also complement Wednesday’s announcement by the World Health Organization of a 12 per cent decrease in cases worldwide.

NewsAmericasNow.com

Protest at condemned Claxton Bay school

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

The Claxton Bay Junior Anglican School on Cedar Hill Road Claxton Bay where parents protested on Thursday. Photo by Ayanna Kinsale

A small group of parents staged a protest on Thursday outside the closed Claxton Bay Anglican Primary School.

They chanted, “We need we school right now.”

The school has been closed since October 2019

Then education minister Anthony Garcia said arrangements were being made to house the school’s 170 affected students, a week after the building was condemned and ordered demolished by the Occupational Safety and Health Agency (OSHA).

Garcia stressed the school building is over 100 years old and was originally built to accommodate a population of 150.

In collaboration with the Anglican School Board, which owns the school, he said the ministry was working to resolve the issue.

In 2019, then minister in the Education Ministry Dr Lovell Francis hoped students would return to classes in January 2020. He was hoping then that the old school building would be demolished and eplaced by prefabricated buildings.

On Thursday a parent, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the protest was held because the school has not been rebuilt to date.

“We are fed up. Nothing is happening.”

The parent also said a maxi-taxi system to transport students who live in Marabella to the school stopped last year because drivers claimed they were not being paid.

NewsAmericasNow.com

PM, Young talk ALNG, new projects with BP in UK

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

File photo: Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley.

THE Prime Minister and Energy Minister Stuart Young held discussions with British Petroleum (BP) executives in London on Thursday on several issues of mutual interest

A statement issued by the Office of the Prime Minister (OPM) said Dr Rowley and Young met with a BP team, led by its CEO Bernard Looney, at BP’s headquarters at St James Square, London.

BP gave Rowley and Young an update on its plans for future gas production, including the sanctioning of new projects.

The OPM said, “The discussions also touched on the progress of the Atlantic LNG (ALNG) restructuring negotiations which is expected to be finalised soon.”

On January 25, Government and ALNG’s shareholders reached a heads of agreement (HoA) that will guide the company’s restructuring.

In a statement on that day, the Energy Ministry said the HoA is being executed by Government, BP, Shell TT Ltd and the National Gas Company (NGC). BP and Shell also welcomed the HoA in separate statements.

At that time, sources told Newsday the objective of the HoA is to restructure ALNG so its shareholders would own certain percentages in the new entity, as opposed to having ownership in its four trains. In the current arrangement, Government, through NGC, only has shares in trains One and Four.

While the HoA may not immediately address issues concerning Train One, which is currently shut down, sources said a restructured ALNG could allow Government, through the NGC, to access a portion of the revenues from trains in which it currently has no shares.

Train One has been shut down since November 2020.

The OPM added, “Both parties reiterated their commitment to working together to ensure the future of TT’s energy sector.”

During the meeting, Rowley suggested to BP executives that “future fabrication of platforms and other infrastructure should be done in TT.”

Looney reiterated that TT remains an important asset in BP’s global operations.

He said the the BP team would continue working assiduously with the Government on delivering a number of initiatives that would benefit both Triidad and Tobago and BP.

Rowley and Young will meet with executives of Shell at The Hague, Netherlands on Friday.

They left TT on September 2 for meetings in Switzerland, the UK and the Netherlands for meetings with Proman, BP and Shell respectively.

Finance Minister Colm Imbert is acting as prime minister until Rowley returns.

NewsAmericasNow.com

Azruddin Mohamed rewards 2nd & 3rd top CSEC performers

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana

Hours after meeting and congratulating Ramoll Baboolall of the Anna Regina Multilateral School, businessman Azruddin Mohamed also met with his schoolmates, Daniel Dowding and Uotam Heeralall both of whom performed exceptionally well at this year’s CSEC.

A. Mohamed with Dowding and his family (Mike Gonsalves photo)

In fact, Heeralall who secured 24 Grade Ones and one Grade Two tied with Baboolall for the most ones at one sitting while Dowding copped 21 Grade Ones and three Grade Twos.

Dowding aspires to become a Marine Biologist or Veterinarian while Heeralall wants to be a surgeon and a politician. The businessman wishes both young men who hail from the Essequibo Coast the best in their future endeavours.

Uotam Heeralall is being greeting by the businessman (Mike Gonsalves photo)

He reiterated that their successes are testimonies that despite someone’s circumstances, with hard work and determination, you can be destined for great things.

In addition, the philanthropist also thanked their parents for supporting them in their academic pursuits and more so, the teachers and all those who played a role in their success.

Mohamed also rewarded the two young men with tokens as incentives for their performance which made their parents, teachers, school, and communities proud.

NewsAmericasNow.com

After a lifetime of preparation, Charles takes the throne Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

Prince Charles has been preparing for the crown his entire life. Now, at age 73, that moment has arrived.

Charles, the oldest person to ever assume the British throne, became King Charles III today, Thursday, September 8, following the death of his mother, Queen Elizabeth II. No date has been set for his coronation.

After an apprenticeship that began as a child, Charles embodies the modernisation of the British monarchy. He was the first heir not educated at home, the first to earn a university degree and the first to grow up in the ever-intensifying glare of the media as deference to royalty faded.

He also alienated many with his messy divorce from the much-loved Princess Diana, and by straining the rules that prohibit royals from intervening in public affairs, wading into debates on issues such as environmental protection and architectural preservation,

“He now finds himself in, if you like, the autumn of his life, having to think carefully about how he projects his image as a public figure,” said historian Ed Owens. “He’s nowhere near as popular as his mother.”

Charles must figure out how to generate the “public support, a sense of endearment” that characterised the relationship Elizabeth had with the British public, Owens said.

In other words, will Charles be as loved by his subjects? It’s a question that has overshadowed his entire life.

A shy boy with a domineering father, Charles grew into a sometimes awkward, understated man who is nevertheless confident in his own opinions. Unlike his mother, who refused to publicly discuss her views, Charles has delivered speeches and written articles on issues close to his heart, such as climate change, green energy and alternative medicine.

His accession to the throne is likely to fuel debate about the future of Britain’s largely ceremonial monarchy, seen by some as a symbol of national unity and others as an obsolete vestige of feudal history.

“We know the monarch and certainly the monarch’s family – they’re not meant to have political voices. They’re not meant to have political opinions. And the fact that he’s been flexing, if you like, his political muscle is something that he will have to be really careful with … lest he be seen as unconstitutional,” said Owens, who wrote “The Family Firm: Monarchy, Mass Media and the British Public, 1932-53.”

FILE – In this July 27, 1958 file photo, Britain’s Prince Charles walks wearing his uniform. Prince Charles has been preparing for the crown his entire life. Now, that moment has finally arrived. Charles, the oldest person to ever assume the British throne, became king on Thursday September 8, 2022, following the death of his mother, Queen Elizabeth II. (AP Photo, File)

Charles, who will be the head of state for the UK and 14 other countries, including Australia, Canada, New Zealand and Papua New Guinea, has defended his actions.

“I always wonder what meddling is, I always thought it was motivating,” he said in “Prince, Son and Heir: Charles at 70,” a 2018 documentary. “I’ve always been intrigued if it’s meddling to worry about the inner cities, as I did 40 years ago and what was happening or not happening there, the conditions in which people were living. If that’s meddling, I’m very proud of it.”

In the same interview, however, Charles acknowledged that as king, he wouldn’t be able to speak out or interfere in politics because the role of the sovereign is different from being the Prince of Wales.

Charles has said he intends to reduce the number of working royals, cut expenses and better represent modern Britain.

But tradition matters, too, for a man whose office previously described the monarchy as “the focal point for national pride, unity and allegiance.”

That has meant a life of palaces and polo, attracting criticism that Charles was out of touch with everyday life, being lampooned for having a valet who purportedly squeezed toothpaste onto his brush.

But it was the disintegration of his marriage to Diana that made many question his fitness for the throne. Then, as he aged, his handsome young sons stole the limelight from a man who had a reputation for being as gray as his Saville Row suits.

Biographer Sally Bedell Smith, author of “Prince Charles: the Passions and Paradoxes of an Improbable Life,” described him as being constantly overshadowed by others in the family, despite his destiny.

“I think the frustrations are not so much that he’s had to wait for the throne,” Smith told PBS. “I think his main frustration is that he has done so much and that … he has been sort of massively misunderstood. He’s sort of been caught between two worlds: the world of his mother, revered, now beloved; and Diana, the ghost of whom still shadows him; and then his incredibly glamorous sons.”

FILE – In this March 25, 1968 file photo, Prince Charles looks on, durig a procession, in London. Prince Charles has been preparing for the crown his entire life. Now, that moment has finally arrived. Charles, the oldest person to ever assume the British throne, became king on Thursday, September 8, 2022, following the death of his mother, Queen Elizabeth II. (AP Photo/Peter Kemp, File)

It took years for many in Britain to forgive Charles for his admitted infidelity to Diana before “the people’s princess” died in a Paris car crash in 1997. But the public mood softened after he married Camilla Parker Bowles in 2005 and she became the Duchess of Cornwall.

Although Camilla played a significant role in the breakup of Charles and Diana, her self-deprecating style and salt-of-the-earth sense of humor eventually won over many Britons.

She helped Charles smile more in public by tempering his reserve and making him made him appear approachable, if not happier, as he cut ribbons, visited houses of worship, unveiled plaques and waited for the crown.

Her service was rewarded in February 2022, when Queen Elizabeth II said publicly that it was her “sincere wish” that Camilla should be known as “Queen Consort” after her son succeeded her, answering questions once and for all about her status in the Royal Family.

Prince Charles Philip Arthur George was born November 14, 1948, in Buckingham Palace. When his mother acceded to the throne in 1952, the 3-year-old prince became the Duke of Cornwall. He became Prince of Wales at 20.

His school years were unhappy, with the future king being bullied by classmates at Gordonstoun, a Scottish boarding school that prides itself on building character through vigorous outdoor activities and educating his father, Philip.

Charles studied history at Cambridge University’s Trinity College, where in 1970 he became the first British royal to earn a university degree.

He then spent seven years in uniform, training as a Royal Air Force pilot before joining the Royal Navy, where he learned to fly helicopters. He ended his military career as commander of the HMS Bronington, a minesweeper, in 1976.

FILE – In this April 17, 2021 file photo, Prince Charles with other family members follow the coffin during a procession arriving at St George’s Chapel for the funeral of Britain’s Prince Philip inside Windsor Castle in Windsor, England. Prince Charles has been preparing for the crown his entire life. (Paul Edwards/Pool via AP, File)

Charles’ relationship with Camilla began before he went to sea, but the romance foundered and she married a cavalry officer.

He met Lady Diana Spencer in 1977 when she was 16 and he was dating her older sister. Diana apparently didn’t see him again until 1980, and rumours of their engagement swirled after she was invited to spend time with Charles and the royal family.

They announced their engagement in February 1981. Some awkwardness in their relationship was immediately apparent when, during a televised interview about their betrothal, a reporter asked if they were in love. “Of course,” Diana answered immediately, while Charles said, “Whatever ‘in love’ means.”

Although Diana giggled at the response, she later said that Charles’ remark “threw me completely.”

“God, it absolutely traumatised me,” she said in a recording made by her voice coach in 1992-93 that was featured in the 2017 documentary “Diana, In Her Own Words.”

The couple married on July 29, 1981, at St. Paul’s Cathedral in a globally televised ceremony. Prince William, now heir to the throne, was born less than a year later, followed by his brother, Prince Harry, in 1984.

The public fairy tale soon crumbled. Charles admitted to adultery to a TV interviewer in 1994. In an interview of her own, Diana drew attention to her husband’s relationship with Camilla, saying: “There were three of us in this marriage.”

The revelations tarnished Charles’ reputation among many who celebrated Diana for her style as well as her charity work with AIDS patients and landmine victims.

William and Harry were caught in the middle. While the princes revered their late mother, they said Charles was a good father and praised him as an early advocate for issues like the environment.

Tensions persist inside the royal family, underscored by the decision of Harry and his wife, Meghan, to step away from their royal duties and move to California in 2020. In a televised interview, they later said a member of the royal family had raised “concerns and conversations” about the colour of their baby’s skin before he was born. The explosive revelation forced William to publicly declare the family wasn’t racist.

Charles soldiered on, increasingly standing in for the queen in her twilight years. In 2018, he was named the queen’s designated successor as head of the Commonwealth, an association of 54 nations with links to the British Empire. The process accelerated after the death of her husband, Prince Philip, on April 9, 2021.

As Elizabeth declined, he sometimes stepped in at the last moment.

On the eve of the state opening of Parliament on May 10, 2022, the queen asked Charles to preside, delegating one of her most important constitutional duties to him — evidence that a transition was underway.

Camilla said in a 2018 documentary that Charles was comfortable with the prospect of being king.

“I think his destiny will come,” she said. “He’s always known it’s going to come, and I don’t think it does weigh heavily on his shoulders at all.”

By DANICA KIRKA

NewsAmericasNow.com