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Teachers Co-operative Credit Union Star Girls are the 2022 Netball Champions

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: NBC SVG

 Teachers Co-operative Credit Union Star Girls are the new Division 1 Champions of the Kingstown Co-operative Credit Union/Vita Malt/National Lotteries Authority Richland Park Netball Championship.

They defeated Defending Champions, High Park United 51-35 yesterday afternoon in front of a large and colourful crowd at the Hard Court of the Richland Park Government School.

JLC Warriors won the Division 2 Title by beating 3 Js Valley Strikers 34-20.

Last Saturday, Caesar’s Real Estate Dynamic Girls clinched 3rd Place in Division 2 with a 45-15 win over the Royal St Vincent and the Grenadines Police Force Gems, and Vultures beat J and G Scorchers 69-20 in the Division 1 3rd Play Play-off.

Former National goal shooter, Skiddy Francis with 251 goals was the top goal-scorer in Division1, and Aneka Dallaway of JLS Warriors scored the most goals in Division 2 finishing with 218.

The Division 1 Most Valuable Player (MVP) was Kishorn Lowman of Teachers Co-operative Credit Union Star Girls, and Aneka Dallaway of JLC Warriors was the Most Valuable (MVP) in Division 2.

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Singapore to decriminalize gay sex, but will limit change Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

Singapore announced Sunday it will decriminalize sex between men by repealing a colonial-era law while protecting the city-state’s traditional norms and its definition of marriage.

During his speech at the annual National Day Rally, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said he believed it is the “right thing to do now” as most Singaporeans will now accept it.

“Private sexual behaviour between consenting adults does not raise any law and order issue. There is no justification to prosecute people for it nor to make it a crime,” Lee said. “This will bring the law into line with current social mores and I hope provide some relief to gay Singaporeans.”

Lee vowed the repeal will be limited and not shake Singapore’s traditional family and societal norms including how marriage is defined, what children are taught in schools, what is shown on television and general public conduct.

He said the government will amend the constitution to ensure that there can be no constitutional challenge to allow same-sex marriage.

“Even as we repeal Section 377A, we will uphold and safeguard the institution of marriage,” Lee said. “We have to amend the Constitution to protect it. And we will do so. This will help us repeal Section 377A in a controlled and careful way.”

Section 377A of the Penal Code was introduced under British colonial rule in the 1930s. British rule over the island ended in 1963 when Singapore became a state of Malaysia. It became independent two years later but retained the Penal Code, which made sex between men punishable by up to two years in jail.

Since 2007 when Parliament last debated whether to repeal Section 377A, its position was to keep the law but not enforce it.

But gay men say the law hangs over their heads and discriminates against them. Thousands of activists annually stage a rally in the city-state known as the “Pink Dot” in support of the LGBTQ community.

Lee said he hopes the government’s move will help reconcile and accommodate both the concerns of conservative religious groups and the desires of gay Singaporeans to be respected and accepted.

“All groups should exercise restraint, because that is the only way we can move forward as a nation together,” he said. “I hope the new balance will enable Singapore to remain a tolerant and inclusive society for many years to come.”

One of Lee’s nephews, Li Huanwu, is gay. The son of Lee’s estranged younger brother Lee Hsien Yang married his partner in South Africa in 2019. Li Huanwu has attended Pink Dot events with his partner and parents.

Other former British colonies still retain similar laws that criminalize sex between men, including neighbouring Malaysia where a former deputy premier was jailed twice for sodomy. He was sentenced in 2000 and again in 2014, in cases that critics say were politically motivated.

In 2018, India decriminalized gay sex after its Supreme Court in a historic ruling struck down Section 377 that punished gay sex by up to 10 years in prison. Some Asian countries have also moved to legalize gay marriage, with Taiwan as the first in 2019. Thailand also recently approved plans allowing same-sex unions.

By EILEEN NG

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Hoe marrons en inheemsen elkaar vonden

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

door Tascha Aveloo PARAMARIBO — “We doen ek jaar rond Dag van de Marrons een theaterstuk. Dit jaar dachten wij

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Denise Jannah speelt hoofdrol in ‘Swart Wyn’

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

door Steven Seedo PARAMARIBO — “Dit is een heel interessant project. Voor mij is deze voorstelling een geschenk”, reageert Denise

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PM calls depositor “greedy” after he sues Global Bank for $10 million of his deposits

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

Prime Minister Gaston Browne is defending CEO of the Global Bank of Commerce Brian Stuart-Young.

Stuart young is being sued by a customer of the bank for failure to pay over US$10,000,000 in deposits.

Browne says the customer is “greedy” and that the lawsuit is meant to destroy the bank.

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Baby found in cardboard box at San Fernando General Hospital

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

The area where the baby was found at the San Fernando General Hospital on Monday morning. Photo by Laurel V Williams

A newborn baby was found in a cardboard box at the San Fernando General Hospital on Monday morning.

A man was heading to the hospital when he saw the box on the ground at around 8.30 am

The child was awake and appeared to be in good health. The baby girl was wrapped in a brown blanket with only her face visible.

Two workers were passing by and the man and another passerby called out to them.

They took the baby inside to be medically examined.

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Tres policías de EE.UU. golpean violentamente a un hombre durante su arresto y chocan su cabeza contra la acera varias veces

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

Un video difundido recientemente en las redes sociales captó el momento en el que tres policías del Estado de Arkansas (EE.UU.) golpearon brutalmente a un sospechoso bajo arresto este domingo por la mañana.

El detenido, que yace en el suelo sujetado por los agentes, recibe puñetazos y rodillazos en la cara y varias partes del cuerpo. En cierto momento, uno de los uniformados le agarra la cabeza y se la hace chocar contra el suelo en más de una ocasión.

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#BREAKING: Arkansas State Police launch investigation into this incident, captured on camera, outside a convenience store in Crawford County. ASP says two county deputies and a Mulberry police officer were involved. #ARNews

**WARNING: GRAPHIC VIDEO / No audio** pic.twitter.com/dYE0htfAsf

— Mitchell McCoy (@MitchellMcCoy) August 21, 2022

De acuerdo a un informe policial, el arresto se produjo después de que el sujeto, identificado como Randal Ray Worcester, de 27 años, escupiera en la cara de un empleado de una tienda y profiriera amenazas terroristas, recogen los medios locales. Asimismo, cuando los agentes procedieron a arrestar a Worcester, ese supuestamente empujó a un oficial al suelo y le dio un puñetazo en la parte posterior de la cabeza, informa AP. 

Tras la confrontación, el detenido fue trasladado a un hospital con “heridas leves” en la cabeza. Actualmente, enfrenta cargos de amenaza terrorista, resistencia al arresto y agresión, entre otros. 

Mientras tanto, el alguacil de Crawford, Jimmy Damante, emitió un comunicado en el que indicó que dos agentes de ese condado fueron suspendidos mientras dure la investigación sobre los hechos, que llevará a cabo la Policía estatal de Arkansas. “Responsabilizo a todos mis empleados por sus acciones y tomaré las medidas apropiadas en este asunto”, prometió.

Por su parte, el jefe de Policía de Mulberry, Shannon Gregory, agregó que el tercer oficial involucrado en la detención “está en licencia administrativa a la espera del resultado de la investigación”. “La ciudad de Mulberry y el Departamento de Policía de Mulberry se toman muy en serio estas investigaciones”, aseguró Gregory.

Noticia original de RT en Español

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Police file terrorism charges against Pakistan’s Imran Khan Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

Pakistani police have filed terrorism charges against former Prime Minister Imran Khan, authorities said Monday, escalating political tensions in the country as the ousted premier holds mass rallies seeking to return to the office.

The charges followed a speech Khan gave in Islamabad on Saturday in which he vowed to sue police officers and a female judge and alleged that a close aide had been tortured after his arrest.

Khan himself has not publicly spoken about the latest charges against him. However, a court in Islamabad issued a so-called “protective bail” for Khan for the next three days, preventing police from arresting him over the charges, said Shah Mahmood Qureshi, a senior leader in his Tehreek-e-Insaf opposition party.

Hundreds of Tehreek-e-Insaf members stood outside Khan’s home on Monday in a show of support as the former premier held meetings inside. The party has warned that it will hold nationwide rallies if Khan is arrested while working to try to squash the charges in court.

“We will take over Islamabad and my message to police is … don’t be part of this political war anymore,” warned Ali Amin Khan Gandapur, a former minister under Khan.

Under Pakistan’s legal system, police file what is known as a first information report about charges against an accused person to a magistrate judge, who allows the investigation to move forward. Typically, police then arrest and question the accused.

The report against Khan includes testimony from Magistrate Judge Ali Javed, who described being at the Islamabad rally on Saturday and hearing Khan criticize the inspector-general of Pakistan’s police and another judge. Khan went on to reportedly say: “You also get ready for it, we will also take action against you. All of you must be ashamed.”

Khan could face several years in prison for the new charges, which accuse him of threatening police officers and the judge under Pakistan’s 1997 anti-terrorism law, which granted police wider powers amid sectarian violence in the country. However, 25 years later, critics say the law helps security forces skirt constitutional protections for defendants while governments also used it for political purposes.

Khan has not been detained on other lesser charges levied against him in his recent campaigning against the government.

The Pakistani judiciary also has a history of politicization and taking sides in power struggles between the military, the civilian government and opposition politicians, according to the Washington-based advocacy group Freedom House. Current Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif likely will discuss the charges against Khan at a Cabinet meeting scheduled for Tuesday.

Khan came to power in 2018, promising to break the pattern of family rule in Pakistan. His opponents contend he was elected with help from the powerful military, which has ruled the country for half of its 75-year history.

In seeking Khan’s ouster earlier this year, the opposition had accused him of economic mismanagement as inflation soars and the Pakistani rupee plummets in value. The parliament’s no-confidence vote in April that ousted Khan capped months of political turmoil and a constitutional crisis that required the Supreme Court to step in. Meanwhile, it appeared the military similarly had cooled to Khan.

Khan alleged without providing evidence that the Pakistani military took part in a US plot to oust him. Washington, the Pakistani military and Sharif’s government have all denied the allegation. Meanwhile, Khan has been carrying out a series of mass rallies trying to pressure the government.

In his latest speech Sunday night at a rally in the city of Rawalpindi outside of Islamabad, Khan said so-called “neutrals” were behind the recent crackdown against his party. He has in the past used the phrase “neutrals” for the military.

“A plan has been made to place our party against the wall. I assure you, that the Sri Lankan situation is going to happen here,” Khan threatened, referencing the recent economic protests that toppled that island nation’s government.

“Now we are following law and constitution. But when a political party strays from that path, the situation inside Pakistan, who will stop the public? There are 220 million people.”

Khan’s party has been holding mass protests, but Pakistan’s government and security forces fear the former cricket star’s popularity still could draw millions out to the street. That could further pressure the nuclear-armed nation as it struggles to secure a $7 billion bailout from the International Monetary Fund amid an economic crisis, exacerbated by rising global food prices due in part to Russia’s war on Ukraine.

On Sunday, the internet-access advocacy group NetBlocks said internet services in the country blocked access to YouTube after Khan broadcast the speech on the platform despite a ban issued by the Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority.

Police arrested Khan’s political aide, Shahbaz Gill, earlier this month after he appeared on the private television channel ARY TV and urged soldiers and officers to refuse to obey “illegal orders” from the military leadership. Gill was charged with treason, which carries the death penalty under Pakistan’s sedition act which stems from British colonial-era law. ARY also remains off-air in Pakistan following that broadcast.

Khan has alleged that police abused Gill while in custody. Police say Gill suffers from asthma and has not been abused while detained.

Gill was discharged from a hospital to attend a court hearing Monday. He appeared healthy in television footage as he left for the court amid tight security. The court then ordered that he be returned to police custody for two days of interrogations, Information Minister Maryam Aurangzeb said. He likely will appear again in court on Thursday.

Khan’s speech Saturday in Islamabad focused primarily on Gill’s arrest.

Meanwhile, police separately arrested journalist Jameel Farooqi in Karachi over his allegations that Gill had been tortured by police. Farooqi is a vocal supporter of Khan.

___

By MUNIR AHMED

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Former local cricketer, Irvin Warrican passes away

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: NBC SVG

The cricket fraternity of St Vincent and the Grenadines and the Windward Islands was thrown into mourning yesterday when news broke that the former Radcliffe, St Vincent and the Grenadines and Windward Islands cricketer, Irvin Warrican died in the early hours of yesterday morning at his home in Colonarie on the North-Eastern coast of main-Island, St Vincent. He was 56 and had taken ill a few weeks ago.

Warrican, an off-spinner and batsman, was captain of Radcliffe Cricket Club in the National Cricket Championship, and also led St Vincent and the Grenadines in the Windward Islands Cricket Championship. He also served for several years as the Cricket Development Officer of the Windward Islands Cricket Board.

He was a teacher by profession and was attached to the Georgetown Secondary School where he was also the cricket coach.

Dead at the age of 56 is former, Radcliffe, St Vincent and the Grenadines and Windward Islands off-spinner and batsman, Irvin Warrican.

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La Guadeloupe vue du ciel

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guadeloupe FranceAntilles

Un tour en ULM ça vous tente ? Prendre de la hauteur et apprécier le papillon autrement, voilà la promesse de ce survol touristique de la Pointe des Châteaux en autogire avec Bénédicte. Un vrai régal pour les yeux avec à la clé des sensations inédites.

Voler comme un oiseau reste le rêve ultime pour les humains. Notre corps est capable de marcher, de sauter et même de nager, mais voler nous est anatomiquement impossible. Si des hommes repoussent les limites pour se rapprocher du vol naturel, aile à réaction, base jump, delta plane ou vol illusoire, les oiseaux restent les maîtres du ciel.

Et si, pendant 20mn on vous offre la possibilité d’être un oiseau ? L’autogire, aéronef léger faisant partie de la famille des ULM (ultra léger motorisé)…


France-Antilles Guadeloupe

633 mots – 22.08.2022

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