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PM Mottley was not involved in a plane accident Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

The Prime Minister’s Office is assuring Barbadians that Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley was not involved in any accident during her recent overseas trip.

“It is fake news!” the Prime Minister said tonight.

Over the past two days, a number of local and regional media outlets reported that a plane carrying Prime Minister Mottley and Guyana President Irfan Ali skidded off the taxiway after landing, prompting a response from emergency personnel.

The Prime Minister has explained that it is normal procedure for emergency appliances, including fire crews, and official vehicles that transport the president and his guests, to meet the plane on the tarmac.

What occurred at the Eugene F. Correa International Airport when she was there earlier this week was no different from what occurred on previous visits, Prime Minister Mottley said.

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126 new COVID cases recorded amid 22.1% positivity rate Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

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

44 minutes ago

NEWYou can now listen to Loop News articles!

Jamaica recorded 126 new COVID-19 cases over a 24-hour period up to Wednesday afternoon.

There was no coronavirus-related death recorded for the one-day reporting period.

The overall coronavirus death toll in Jamaica remains at 3,239.

There were 122 recoveries on the day, bringing that tally to 96,098.

The newly confirmed COVID-19 cases brought the total number on record for the island to 149,215.

Notably, the island recorded a 22.1 per cent positivity rate based on the samples that were tested on Wednesday.

Of the newly confirmed cases, 65 are females and 61 are males, with ages ranging from three months to 96 years.

The case count was made up of St Catherine (37), Kingston and St Andrew (29), St James (15), St Ann (10), St Elizabeth (nine), St Thomas (six), Manchester (six), Westmoreland (five), Clarendon (four), St Mary (two), Trelawny (two), and Hanover (one).

There are 20 moderately ill patients, four severely ill patients and three critically patients among 1,221 active cases now under observation in Jamaica.

A total of 105 COVID-19 patients are now hospitalised locally.

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Morant Bay High School, located in the cool hills of Highbury, St Thomas, will welcome many new faces when the 2022/23 academic year begins this September, and one of those will be 12-year-old Alex Ta

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Western Union has deepened its relationship with Visa allowing customers in the US to send money directly to the accounts of Visa debit card holders in six countries, including Jamaica.

The expande

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Nick Cannon continues to add to his brood.

The entertainer revealed via Instagram that he is expecting his 10th child with Brittany Bell.

It will be his third child with Bell, who gave birth to

Business

High school teacher, Asheka Headley, was invited to a function and wanted to find the perfect purse to complement the shoes she planned to wear.

Frustrated with going from store to store and findin

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With world titles won and continental crowns claimed, many of the sport’s stars will clash again at the Athletissima meeting in Lausanne on Friday as the Wanda Diamond League continues towards its cre

Jamaica News

The Government of Jamaica is providing $2.03 billion in back-to-school grants to beneficiary students under the Programme of Advancement Through Health and Education (PATH) and the Poor Relief Program

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WATCH: Heavy flooding in Lucea, Hanover Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

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

38 minutes ago

Flooding In Lucea, Hanover

NEWYou can now listen to Loop News articles!

A section of the roadway in the Hanover capital, Lucea, has been flooded as a result of a heavy downpour which lashed a section of the western parish on Thursday afternoon.

The high-rising waters along a section of the roadway caused a long back-up of traffic from Waterloo Road leading to the hub of the town.

Only heavy-duty vehicles could manoeuvre through the flooded roadway.

Some pedestrians had to be ferried across the water in dinghy boats operated by residents for a fee.

Businesses along the stretch of road were also curtailed as a result of the flooding.

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Jamaica News

Morant Bay High School, located in the cool hills of Highbury, St Thomas, will welcome many new faces when the 2022/23 academic year begins this September, and one of those will be 12-year-old Alex Ta

Business

Western Union has deepened its relationship with Visa allowing customers in the US to send money directly to the accounts of Visa debit card holders in six countries, including Jamaica.

The expande

Entertainment

Nick Cannon continues to add to his brood.

The entertainer revealed via Instagram that he is expecting his 10th child with Brittany Bell.

It will be his third child with Bell, who gave birth to

Business

High school teacher, Asheka Headley, was invited to a function and wanted to find the perfect purse to complement the shoes she planned to wear.

Frustrated with going from store to store and findin

Sport

With world titles won and continental crowns claimed, many of the sport’s stars will clash again at the Athletissima meeting in Lausanne on Friday as the Wanda Diamond League continues towards its cre

Jamaica News

The Government of Jamaica is providing $2.03 billion in back-to-school grants to beneficiary students under the Programme of Advancement Through Health and Education (PATH) and the Poor Relief Program

NewsAmericasNow.com

Broadcasting icon Dave Elcock dies, media applaud his life and work

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

David Elcock

Former TT radio and television broadcasting icon David Elcock has died, his son Jason Elcock confirmed yesterday.

He was 78 and would have been 79 next month.

In a brief phone interview with Newsday, Elcock said his father died at about 1.30 pm on Thursday in Brooklyn, New York.

Although he could not give thecause of death, he said, his father had been ailing for some time.

David Elcock was one of the country’s pioneering broadcasters.

A bio on Radiokyso.com said Elcock’s career spanned more than 30 years in radio and television.

He was known for the now defunct National Broadcasting Service’s (NBS) Radio 610’s Elcock in the Morning programme, which ran from the early 70s to the 90s. It was a favourite of both local and regional audiences.

On the night-time TV show TT Tonight, Elcock would interview local leading artistes, government officials, sport personalities and visiting entertainers.

He also sang popular songs with his ex-wife Mavis John such as You Are What Love Is.

Veteran journalist Dominic Kalipersad said Elcock was a legend, passionate, intense, amusing and knowledgeable.

He said it was an honour to work with him.

“I could not imagine that the person whom I had been hearing on the radio during my youth, I ended up being his programme director when I worked, after TTT, at Trinidad Broadcasting Company Ltd.

“He was one of the primary voices on Radio Tempo 105.1 FM, which was the first all-local music radio station in the country launched by the veteran Neil Giuseppi.”

Kalipersad said Elcock would continue to be recognised as one of TT’s legendary broadcasters.

Giuseppi also paid tribute to him, sharing an article he wrote about Elcock’s life and work to his Facebook page.

He said Elcock was born on September 20, 1943 on Duncan Street, Port of Spain.

He joined 610 Radio (then Radio Guardian) in 1962 as a trainee announcer, and launched The David Elcock Show which ran until 1972.

Elcock also worked in advertising at the firm Christiansen and Belgrave.

In 1976, he launched Elcock in the Morning, “which would top all the annual radio surveys for almost 15 years,” Giuseppi said.

Elcock was also one of the most in-demand MCs of his time, he added.

Giuseppi said Elcock introduced iconic international acts such as Stevie Wonder, Barry White, and Dionne Warwick.

He met Elcock professionally in the 90s when, as managing director of Trinidad Broadcasting Company, he persuaded him to leave 610 Radio and join the Radio Tempo (105.1 FM) team. Elcock also worked as the host of the New Scouting for Talent before migrating to the US.

Though semi-retired, Elcock worked with Radio Kyso.com in the US.

In 1990, he received the Humming Bird Medal (Silver) for public service.

He leaves to mourn his children Marc, Amanda and Jason and wife Juliet.

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Website gelanceerd op sterfdag componiste Majoie Hajary

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

Maak kennis met de flamboyante, eigenzinnige componiste en pianiste www.majoiehajary.org INGEZONDEN ‘Bestaat er zoiets als een eigen klassieke Surinaamse muziek?’,

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L’éthéphon utilisé sur des bananes plantains

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Rédaction web
Jeudi 25 Août 2022 – 18h37

Suspicion de fraude dans l’utilisation de l’éthéphon sur les bananes plantains commercialisées en Martinique. – Shutterstock – Copyright (c) 2016 Mark Green/Shutterstock. No use without permission.

Le 3 août, le parquet de Fort-de-France a été saisi par l’administration car l’éthéphon, un régulateur de croissance végétale, aurait été utilisé pour jaunir des bananes plantains (“créoles”) et pour les rendre plus facilement commercialisables. Or, ce produit ne peut pas être utilisé sur les bananes, parce qu’il est dans cette culture potentiellement dangereux. En Martinique, l’éthéphon est autorisé exclusivement en culture d’ananas pour accélérer la floraison. “On a donc ouvert le 18 août une enquête”, explique Clarisse Taron, procureur de la République de Fort-de-France. “Elle a été confiée à différents services spécialisés sous la direction de l’office central de lutte contre les atteintes à l’environnement et à la santé publique de Guyane, pour déterminer si des infractions ont été commises”.

Un sujet sensible

Il s’agit bien évidemment d’un sujet sensible, notamment quand on pense au scandale du chlordécone. “Nous sommes tout à fait conscients du caractère important de la qualité des enquêtes que l’on devra mener et l’on va s’y attacher”, souligne le procureur. Les prélèvements, acheminés et analysés en laboratoire spécialisé, ont confirmé l’utilisation de l’éthéphon sur 25 lots de bananes plantains (sur une quarantaine de lots inspectés). “Ce n’est pas un nombre majeur par rapport aux points de vente ou à la manière de vendre la banane plantain en Martinique mais il est vrai quand même que cette proportion est suffisamment inquiétante pour que l’on soit alerté et pour que l’on se dépêche de commencer cette enquête”, poursuit Clarisse Taron. “Elle aura plusieurs aspects, techniques, sanitaires, d’où la conjonction de plusieurs services”.

  La Martinique maintenue en vigilance …

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Public Health Dept confirms one case of DENGUE in Cayman Loop Cayman Islands

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cayman Compass

The Cayman Islands Public Health Department has confirmed one (1) case of dengue in the Cayman Islands.

Dengue, which is prevalent throughout certain countries in the region, is not considered to be endemic to the Cayman Islands as historically there has been no sustained transmission of the disease. Epidemiological data for the territory shows an average of 1-4 imported cases per year, however in 2020 and 2021 there were no reported cases of dengue in the Cayman Islands.

“The Public Health Department works very closely with the Mosquito Research and Control Unit (MRCU) to take vector control measures every time a suspected case is reported,” explained Dr. Samuel Williams-Rodriguez, Medical Officer of Health.

Dr. Alan Wheeler, Director of the MRCU, confirmed that the Unit “has begun preventative control measures across the Cayman Islands and will continue to monitor and adjust its activities based on surveillance findings and guidance from the Public Health department.” This guidance is greatly impacted by the Health Services Authority’s (HSA) capacity to test for vector born diseases, such as dengue, locally.

The Public Health Department is urging residents to be aware of the symptoms of dengue as a precaution following increased activity in the region. With the frequency of travel between the Cayman Islands and other regional destinations, the likelihood of an increase imported cases is a strong possibility.

Dengue is a mosquito-borne viral disease transmitted by the female mosquitoes Aedes aegypti. Symptoms of the disease include the acute onset of high fever and at least two of the following:

Severe frontal headacheJoint painPain behind the eyesMuscle and or bone painA rash (sometimes) may be visible two to five days after the onset of fever.Nausea or vomiting (sometimes)Signs of bleeding (such as pinpoint red or purple spots on the skin, nosebleed,bleeding gums, blood in urine or stool, or vaginal bleeding) are seen in a severe form of dengue fever known as dengue hemorrhagic fever, severe dengue, or dengue shock syndrome.

The Public Health Department has a year-round surveillance system that involves weekly monitoring of potential mosquito-borne illnesses reported by public and private physicians that have proven very sensitive when detecting dengue cases.

Recommended prevention measures include wearing long sleeves, long pants, and mosquito bite repellent containing at least 50% DEET. Persons should also eliminate potential Aedes aegypti breeding grounds by turning over sources of standing water around their homes and other buildings.

In addition, the Mosquito Research and Control Unit will continue its surveillance efforts and ongoing work to identify and eliminate Aedes aegypti breeding grounds around the Islands.

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Two men from George Town arrested by Anti-Corruption Commission Loop Cayman Islands

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cayman Compass

Charges include fraud on the government, false accounting and transferring criminal property

Loop News

28 minutes ago

On Tuesday, August 23, 2022 Investigators from the Cayman Islands Anti-Corruption Commission made the following arrests:

1. Male, aged 44 of Prospect,

2. Male, aged 44 of George Town.

Both men were arrested upon suspicion of committing the following offences:

1. Breach of trust, contrary to Section 13 of the Anti-Corruption Act (2019 Revision);

2. Fraud on the Government contrary to section 11 of the Anti-Corruption Act (2019 Revision);

3. False accounting contrary to section 255 of the Penal Code (2022 Revision); and

4. Transferring criminal property (Money Laundering) contrary to section 133 of the Proceeds of Crime Act 2019.

Both men were released on bail pending further enquiries. The Commission will not provide any further comment on the matter.

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The Ministry of Tourism and Transport announced that it has regrettably accepted the resignation of Mr. Jude Scott as Chairman of the Board of Cayman Airways, Ltd.

According to the Ministry, on Mon

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In a decision released 23 August 2022, the Grand Court of the Cayman Islands confirmed that the National Conservation Act (2013) provides the National Conservation Council (NCC) with the ability to

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The National Hurricane Center is now reporting two weather disturbances approaching the Caribbean. These are described below.

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

by ‘Happy’

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The National Hurricane Center is reporting a tropical wave located a few hundred miles west of the Cabo Verde Islands.

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UPDATE: Missing teen found Loop Cayman Islands

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cayman Compass
Loop News

26 minutes ago

Brianna Ebanks

The Royal Cayman Islands Police Service (RCIPS) confirmed today that Brianna Ebanks, age 14, who was reported missing on Friday, August 19, has been located and returned to her place of residence, and appears to be in good health.

The RCIPS thanks the public for their help in Brianna’s safe return.

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Cayman News

The Ministry of Tourism and Transport announced that it has regrettably accepted the resignation of Mr. Jude Scott as Chairman of the Board of Cayman Airways, Ltd.

According to the Ministry, on Mon

Cayman News

In a decision released 23 August 2022, the Grand Court of the Cayman Islands confirmed that the National Conservation Act (2013) provides the National Conservation Council (NCC) with the ability to

Cayman News

The National Hurricane Center is now reporting two weather disturbances approaching the Caribbean. These are described below.

Windward Islands

The first weather system is located several h

Lifestyle

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

by ‘Happy’

Stuffing my face with food was fun for a while. It stopped being excit

Cayman News

The National Hurricane Center is reporting a tropical wave located a few hundred miles west of the Cabo Verde Islands.

According to the NHC, the tropical wave continues to produce disorganized show

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A prayer a day keeps Lifespan boss Nayana Williams productive Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Habits for Success

Shamille Scott

8 minutes ago – Updated

Nayana Williams

NEWYou can now listen to Loop News articles!

“Habits are like atoms. Each one is a fundamental unit that contributes to your overall improvement.”

For Lifespan Company CEO Nayana Williams, assuming an attitude of gratitude is essential to her productivity.

The Portland-based businesswoman also often utilises the natural resources around her to keep a cool head for decision-making.

Listen as Williams shares the importance of incorporating daily prayers and meditation, among other habits.

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August 11, 2022 07:45 PM

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