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4 additional covid19 deaths, 155 new cases

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Image courtesy CDC

Three elderly men and one elderly woman are the latest people to die from complications associated with the covid19 virus.

The Ministry of Health, in its daily update on Sunday, said all four patients had multiple comorbidities including diabetes, hypertension, heart disease, kidney disease, cerebrovascular disease and neurological disease. The total number of deaths since the start of the pandemic is 4,132.

The ministry also reported 115 new cases from samples taken between Friday and Saturday. There are now 6,327 active cases with 239 of them in hospital.

At the Couva Hospital and Multi-Training facility, there are 90 patients – six in the intensive care unit and four in the high dependency unit. At Caura Hospital there are 48 patients, 41 at Augustus Long in Point-a-Pierre, 22 at the Arima General Hospital, 14 at the Scarborough Regional Hospital (Fort) and one and the Scarborough General Hospital (Signal Hill).

Some 17 people have been discharged from public health facilities, and there have been 257 recovered community cases. These refer to people who were previously covid19 positive and in self isolation at home, and subsequently met the discharge criteria.

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Opinion: Why more Jamaicans aren’t visible in the top jobs in Cayman Loop Cayman Islands

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cayman Compass

Readers are asked to note that Op-eds do not necessarily reflect the opinions or beliefs of Loop Cayman.

by ‘Caymaican’

The Cayman Islands’ 2021 Census Report shows that Jamaica ranks second as the place of birth for Cayman residents. However, this does not translate into Jamaicans taking second place for the top jobs in Cayman. Instead, Jamaican born workers mostly work as housekeepers, cleaners, caretakers, gardeners, police and construction workers, where they earn the middle-to-lower end of the salary scale in Cayman. In contrast, workers representing smaller percentages of the population (the UK, USA and Canada) in terms of birth, appear to command Cayman’s highest salaries. I believe there are several reasons for these disparities, some of which I mention below.

Cayman’s economic needs

First, as Cayman developed rapidly (with more buildings, homes and businesses) Cayman was forced to find people from overseas to fill posts for construction and other areas where tradesmen were required. This happened because Cayman did not establish large enough of an institution to equip and train a sufficient number of Caymanians to take these jobs as they became available.

In addition, there was a period of time in Cayman that professions like tradesmen, electricians and others in the construction industry were not deemed to be “prestigious enough” for my fellow Caymanians to pursue as careers. Instead, my fellow Caymanians were attracted to jobs in banks and other places in the financial services industry. A matter of preference, as it were.

The result of these permutations and combinations is that a smaller number of Caymanian-born workers were represented in trades industries over the years when compared to Jamaican-born workers (the 2021 Census also confirms that construction is the largest employer of Non-Caymanians and is the fifth largest place of employment for Caymanians, confirming that the long-held trend of the number of Non-Caymanians versus Caymanians in the construction industry is continuing).

Proximity

Literally being located next door also influenced Cayman as a choice for Jamaicans.

Advantages of being include:

Ability to return home quickly in case of family emergenciesAllows parents working in Cayman to conveniently see their children in Cayman during the summer holidays when school is outShort flight

Hiring practices

These benefits also translated well for Cayman businesses too because they could obtain workers on short notice when sufficient labourers were not available in Cayman to complete new or ongoing projects.

My suspicion is that, over time, because of the convenience and proximity, human resources managers developed a “preference” for Jamaican workers, especially in construction and housekeeping.

At the same time, however, for the financial services industry to thrive, human resources managers in that sector recruited many of their managers, directors and partners from the UK, USA and Canada. The median salary for these positions, as shown below, is about 6k per month (note that partners can make millions of dollars per year at law firms and accounting firms, not just 6k per month).

Salary of managers according to 2021 Cayman Census

The median salary, however, for construction and trades (where many Jamaican-born workers are employed) is 3k or less per month, with housekeepers in the region of 1k per month (often, this situation does not change even when Jamaican-born workers obtain Caymanian citizenship). This is highlighted in the preceding table and the table below.

Salaries in construction based on the 2021 Cayman Census Report

Importance of differences

The significance of the differences between positions held by Jamaican-born workers (representing a large percentage of residents on the basis of birth) and the UK, USA and Canada (representing a smaller percentage of residents on the basis of birth) is that, given the salaries, Jamaican-born workers are likely to have a harder time surviving the high cost of living in Cayman and may also live near or at the poverty level.

Anomaly could have been avoided

This anomaly, in my view, may have been avoided over the years if human resource planners considered Jamaican scholars for positions in the financial services industry at the same time that they assessed Cayman’s needs in trades industries.

For example, looking at Rhodes Scholarships alone, these have been awarded to Jamaicans from the 1950s to date, for literary and scholastic attainments, according to data published by the University of The West Indies. Jamaica also boasts good university education standards, with some Caymanians even obtaining their education in Jamaica in the past. Jamaica could have therefore been seen as a reliable source of educated candidates for top jobs, not just construction and housekeeping.

Opportunity to change things

Ignoring what could have been, the Cayman government and businesses have an opportunity now to correct the existing mismatch. The will to do this, however, may depend on the attitude towards more diversity at the top.

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Two women injured in crash

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

TWO WOMEN INJURED IN CRASH ON SIR GEORGE WALTER HIGHWAY

Police are now on the scene of a two-vehicle crash on Sir George Walter Highway which has left two women injured.

It happened shortly after 9 on Sunday night outside Dee’s Service Station.

It involved a white Delta truck and a white Nissan car.

The driver of the truck was reportedly traveling from north to south when he slammed into the car which was turning onto Pigotts Road at the stoplight.

The woman who was driving the car and a woman who was a passenger in the truck were seriously injured and rushed to hospital.

Firefighters used jaws of life equipment to free one of the women.

The driver of the truck, who was not seriously injured, has provided information to the police at the scene as investigations continue.

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OWTU protest outside PM’s residence for health, pension benefits for ex-Petrotrin workers

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

A Petrotrin retiree at the protest. – AYANNA KINSALE

Members of the Oilfield Workers Trade Union (OWTU) protested outside the official residence of the Prime Minister on Sunday afternoon, calling for the reinstatement of their pension and medical plans.

The protest comes months after the union hand delivered a letter to the Office of the Prime Minister at Whitehall in Port of Spain, detailing the plight of retirees after Petrotrin was shut down in 2018.

At the protest, OWTU president general Ancel Roget called on the Prime Minister to hear the cries of the ex-workers.

OTWU president general Ancel Roget (right) and OWTU education officer Ozzie Warwick during a protest outside the PM’s official residence at La Fantasie Road, St Ann’s on Sunday. – AYANNA KINSALE

“You would have taken away from the retirees a provision that they were entitled to through their terms and conditions of employment. The net effect of taking that away is that retirees continue to suffer and die without the provision of the required medical check ups and so on.”

Roget said the Augustus Long, Pointe-a-Pierre hospital should be reopened to care for the retirees who, he said, contributed billions of dollars to the country through their work prior to the closing of the refinery and are now suffering with ailments such as cancer and joint pains.

A police officer keeps watch over the protest on Sunday. – AYANNA KINSALE

The protesters brought with them an effigy of Rowley which has become part of their protests. They marched in a circle to the entrance of the St Ann’s residence chanting, “We will keep on struggling until Rowley goes away” to the melody of Battle Hymn of the Republic.

Roget added: “Our retirees have not only run out of patience, they’ve run out of medical care entirely, and the union would have written to the PM by letter dated March 25. It took some four weeks to get a response. And when that response came, it did not even come from the Prime Minister himself. He did not even have the respect to those who would have produced for the country to respond himself.”

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Three years later, parents still seeking justice for Carenage schoolgirl Naomi Nelson, 14

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

SHOT DEAD: Schoolgirl Naomi Nelson. –

IT has been more than three years since 14-year-old Naomi Nelson was shot dead in a confrontation between police and alleged gunmen at Big Yard, Carenage on May 3, 2019.

However, her parents say they are nowhere close to getting justice for their daughter’s death.

Naomi was on her way to purchase food when the incident happened. Two men – Kareem “Baldwin” Roberts, 27, and Keron “Frosty” Eve, 30, were also shot dead. Police claimed responsibility for Roberts and Eve.

But they said Nelson was killed by bullets fired by either the two men or from those affiliated with them.

Nelson’s parents suspect otherwise, but all they do now is wait, pray, cry and hope for justice as they remember the child they lost.

Her father David Nelson said, since the incident he has been placed on anti-depressants and takes other medication for insomnia. With three other children to care for, including an autistic son, he is now dependent on a monthly social welfare grant of $1500 to survive.

Both police and the Police Complaints Authority are investigating Naomi’s death.

Newsday sought an update on the police’s investigation last week but was not given one up to press time.

SEEKING CLOSURE: Natasha Nelson, mother of Naomi Nelson, at her Mt Lambert home on Sunday. – AYANNA KINSALE

Asked if he believes he will ever get justice, or at the very least some answers as to who killed his first-born, David said he was hoping for the best, but doubtful.

“Right now I under medication – serious, serious medication from that day. I can’t work, and money is not what I am accustomed to, but I am still thankful.

“So I can’t really try to keep up because I already know is failure. They should hurry up and get this thing over with because I real uncomfortable right now,” David said as he struggled to keep himself from crying.

He, like Naomi’s mother Natasha Nelson, said police could have identified themselves to avoid unnecessary confrontation.

Police said they went to the area in an unmarked car, were fired upon and had to return fire resulting in the deaths of the two men and injuries to others, some of whom are charged with shooting at the police. One officer was grazed in the shooting.

Last Tuesday, a similar incident happened at Beetham Gardens where a man was killed after police entered the community in an unmarked vehicle and claimed they were shot at and returned fire. In that incident Richard “Snake” Marcelle was killed. His relatives are claiming there was no shootout. They only knew it was police after his body was picked up and taken to hospital.

At a media conference last Thursday, acting DCP Wendell Williams said police officers on certain operations will be chaperoned by officers in the traditional blue and grey uniforms. Officers were also ordered to stop wearing balaclavas (a face covering resembling a ski mask), especially when wearing tactical uniforms.

The order came as there were increasing reports of men dressed in clothing resembling the police’s operational wear, committing several offences including kidnapping and robberies.

WHY SO LONG?: David Nelson speaks with Newsday on Sunday about the shooting death of his14-year-old daughter Naomi Nelson more than three three years ago in Carenage. – AYANNA KINSALE

Williams said then that there were no immediate instructions to curb the use of unmarked police vehicles especially in areas with heightened gang activity.

Natasha believes that in the case of her daughter, had police been properly identified, she would not be grieving her death.

“Them (police) know what to do. I can’t tell them, but they should identify themselves because they are going in like criminals. They probably should put something better in place.”

She added that unmarked police vehicles should be accompanied by marked vehicles to avoid jumpy gangsters shooting at them, ending in the deaths of innocent people like her daughter.

Natasha, who spoke with Newsday at her Mt Dor home, said since the death there has not been a day that passes that she does not think about her child, be it her smile, or her voice. She said the pain of losing a child is hard, but she lives one day at a time.

Nelson, who spoke with Newsday outside MovieTowne, said he found the investigation was taking unnecessarily long.

“How much years now, not three and something years now? And nobody come up with nothing? Yuh ain’t hearing nothing, yuh ain’t knowing nothing, yuh just not knowing what going on. Something is wrong somewhere.”

Nelson questioned how police were able to determine in less than a year that it was a police bullet which killed an officer in Diego Martin earlier this year, but they are still waiting to determine who killed his child.

Earlier this month PC Kristian Genty, 28, of Diego Martin was charged with murdering his colleague PC Clarence Gilkes.

Gilkes, 44, of La Resource Road, D’Abadie, was killed when he and members of the Western Division Task Force responded to a report of men armed with rifles at Upper Rich Plain Road, Diego Martin on April 22.

Police initially claimed they were fired upon by a group of men and returned fire. They claimed Gilkes was killed by the assailants, and launched a manhunt for a suspect, Jehlano Romney. A post-mortem report later revealed Gilkes was shot in the neck from behind, and a ballistics report said the bullet was fired from a police-issued gun.

“How they could find out that and they can’t find out who killed Naomi?,” David asked.

“This is the part I can’t understand. This is what really baffling me and have me confused. How they can’t find out that? Why it taking so long to get this thing over with? Everybody done know what went on already.”

After taking a moment to catch himself after he began crying, David questioned how Gilkes’ ballistics report could be completed in months, and after three years and almost four months he is still awaiting answers.

In 2019, then police commissioner Gary Griffith said the ballistics report on Nelson may take up to six years to be completed.

“It (slow ballistics results) is just one of the concerns that ties to this. It is out of the control of the police service, which I think is rather unacceptable,” Griffith said then.

He added: “Because when you have a situation like this, which can go on for so long, by the time they pinpoint the perpetrator he could be dead, or witnesses may no longer be willing to come forward. Which is why we have to ensure swift justice.”

At the end of the day, Natasha, like David, had one simple message for those in authority: “I just want justice for my child.”

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Two more killed, murder toll now 387

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Image courtesy CDC

TWO men are dead after they were shot in separate incidents in Arima and Diego Martin, taking the murder toll to 387 for the year.

In the most recent of the two, police reported that at about 9 am on Sunday they received a report from residents of Blue Basin Hill about a stench coming from the area. Officers responded and found the partially-burnt and partially-decomposing remains of a man, yet to be identified, in a burnt patch off the roadway. Anyone with information which may be able to identify the man is asked to contact the nearest police station or 555 or 800-TIPS.

In the second incident, police reported that at about 9 pm on Saturday, Devaughn Pamponette, 36, of River Road in Arima, was shot while liming with a friend at a house along Bellamy Street, Arima.

Both Pamponette and his friend were wounded and taken to the Arima Hospital where Pamponette died while being treated. His friend was transferred to another facility where he remains warded in a stable condition.

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La Reine Rive queens show off their talent

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Ashti Seenath of the Bollywod Dance Company. – Ayanna Kinsale

The self expression and talent competition categories for the 2022 Miss La Reine Rive Queen pageant was held on Saturday at the National Academy for the Performing Arts in Port of Spain. Contestants are seeking to make it into the finals, titled Le Gran Z’Affaire, scheduled for Saturday (September 3) at the Southern Academy for the Performing Arts, San Fernando at 6 pm.

Newsday’s photographer Ayanna Kinsale was on hand to capture some of the highlights.

Elisabeth St John, of the Diego Martin Footprints Folk Performers, pays tribute to Daisy Voisin. – Ayanna Kinsale

Vance River Village Council’s Tineka Francois appears to be suspended in mid air during her monologue on domestic violence. – Ayanna Kinsale

Sobo Village Council’s Jada Victor pays tribute to late calypsonian Sandra “Singing Sandra” Des Vignes-Millington. – Ayanna Kinsale

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Levens heeft oor voor roep sporters, maar heeft andere prioriteiten

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

door Euritha Tjan A Way PARAMARIBO — De roep van het sportveld om de schoolvakanties aan te passen aan wat

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Police investigate fatal collision at Parkers Raceway, August 28 Loop Cayman Islands

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cayman Compass

The Royal Cayman Islands Police Service (RCIPS) reported that, just after 2pm today, Sunday August 28, police and other emergency services were dispatched by the 9-1-1 Communications Centre to a report of a vehicle collision involving a motorcycle.

It was reported that the rider of the motorcycle was participating in vehicular sporting activities at the Parkers Raceway in Bodden Town when he lost control of his black Suzuki motorcycle and fell from the vehicle.

The Cayman Islands Fire Service attended the location to assist with the wreckage and ensure the scene was safe for other emergency personnel. The man was transported to the hospital by ambulance where he was pronounced dead by the attending doctor.

The incident is being investigated by the police and investigators are encouraging witnesses to the incident to call the Traffic and Roads Policing Unit at 649-6254 or the George Town Police Station at 949-4222.

Alternatively, members of the public may submit tip through the RCIPS Confidential Tip Line at 949-7777 or via the RCIPS website at https://www.rcips.ky/submit-a-tip

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Amcham, ADIH, CCIO et ATH appuient les appels du

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Le Nouvelliste

Quatre associations patronales, la Chambre am?ricaine de commerce en Ha?ti (AMCHAM), l’Association des Industries d’Ha?ti (ADIH), la Chambre de Commerce et d’Industrie de l’Ouest (CCIO) et l’Association touristique d’Ha?ti (ATH) << saluent haut et fort la Note de Presse courageuse du “Regroupement Patronal Ha?tien” en date du 23 ao?t 2022 qui, de mani?re succincte, pose le probl?me national ? sa plus simple expression, en exprimant la n?cessit? d’un <> de secteurs-clefs au profit du bien-?tre collectif de la soci?t? >>, peut-on lire dans une note de presse communiqu?e ? Le Nouvelliste, dimanche 28 ao?t 2022.

<< Nous appuyons cet appel patriotique aux femmes et hommes d’affaire, ? assumer leurs responsabilit?s fiscales comme point de d?part vers une soci?t? moderne et ?quitable ou l’?tat est en mesure de subvenir aux besoins et aspirations l?gitimes de la population.

Nous appuyons ?galement cet appel patriotique aux gouvernants, appel?s eux aussi ? un d?passement de soi in?dit, ceci au profit d’une gestion saine, efficace et transparente de l’?tat ? l’?coute des besoins de Tous. Nous appuyons enfin cet appel patriotique aux protagonistes politiques, leur demandant une prise de conscience et les encourageant eux aussi ? adopter un comportement allant dans le sens de la majorit? de nos compatriotes plut?t que ces interminables querelles st?riles qui n’ont pas donn? de r?sultats >>, selon cette note sign?e par Jean Philippe Boisson, pr?sident de Amcham, Wilhelme Lemke, pr?sident de ADIH, de Jean Philippe Baussan, vice-pr?sident de la CCI et de Lionel Pressoir, secr?taire de l’ATH.

Ces quatre associations, selon la note de presse, <>. <>, a conclu cette note.

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