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Govt building capacity to dismantle criminal enterprises

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana
Participants of the asset recovery workshop

The government is building its capacity to target the assets of persons involved in criminal activities as it aims to dismantle criminal enterprises.

Attorney General and Minister of Legal Affairs Mohabir Anil Nandlall, SC, said targeting the proceeds from criminal activities is a fundamental component in the administration of criminal justice.

He said that studies have shown that hitting criminals at their asset base is essential in the fight against organised crime, money laundering and countering the financing of terrorism.

“This is one component that admittedly has not been the subject of the type of focus that it should have been over the years, and the time has come for us to change that. Our government is committed to moving in this direction,” he stated.

The Attorney General was at the time delivering remarks at the opening of an asset recovery workshop. The two-day activity which commenced on July 19 is a collaborative effort with the United States Department of State, Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs and the National Center for State Courts.

Building the capacity of criminal justice agencies in the areas of financial crime and asset recovery is the focus of the workshop. This will ensure that Guyana has the institutional capacity to deal with crimes such as money laundering, tax evasion, accounting fraud and embezzlement corruption.

The Attorney General stressed that equal to the prosecution and investigation is aligned the consequential process of following the proceeds of the illicit activities with a view of forfeiture.

“No longer will we ignore that component of the enforcement of the law, for too long we have done that. Our government’s approach is holistic and as we are pursuing going after the proceeds of crime, we are also improving, developing and modernising crime fighting at every level,” the Attorney General noted.

Minister Nandlall disclosed that his ministry, in collaboration with the Ministry of Home Affairs, is in the process of recruiting qualified personnel that will enhance the forensic capabilities of the state’s investigative apparatus.

There is also continuous training for members of the Guyana Police Force in a number of areas, to deal with the evolution of criminal activities. This is coupled with the continued investment in improving the prosecutorial capabilities of the state. The asset recovery workshop will see the development of best practices for law enforcement, financial investigators, state prosecutors and state attorneys in the area of asset recovery.

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Acudirán al Tribunal Supremo Federal para luchar por retiro de los maestros

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

La presidenta del gremio EDUCAMOS, Migdalia Santiago, anunció en RADIO ISLA que tomaron la determinación de acudir al Tribunal Supremo de los Estados Unidos para continuar luchando a favor del retiro de los maestros de Puerto Rico.

“Vamos en alzada al Supremo de los Estados Unidos con nuestro caso para que revise la decisión de Boston (del Tribunal de Boston). Esa decisión la tomamos ayer en la tarde. Estamos en ese proceso. Debemos estar radicando (la demanda) antes del día 11 de agosto”, detalló Santiago.

Pendientes a RADIO ISLA para más información.   

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EN VIVO: Manifestantes marchan hacia la Fortaleza en contra de LUMA Energy

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

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Design by Radio Isla

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World Champs: Day 6 schedule for Jamaican athletes, Wednesday, July 20 Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

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

1 hrs ago

Rushell Clayton, of Jamaica, heads off the track after competing in a heat of the women’s 400m hurdles final at the World Athletics Championships on Tuesday, July 19, 2022, in Eugene, Ore. Clayton returns to action on Wednesday, July 20 for the semifinals. (PHOTO: Marlon Reid).

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Below is Wednesday’s schedule for Jamaican athletes at the World Athletics Championships in Eugene, Oregon.

The schedule is in Jamaica time.

Men’s 800m Heats7:36 pm – Navasky Anderson (Heat 3)

Women’s 400m Hurdles Semifinals8:15 pm – Janieve Russell (Heat 1)8:24 pm – Rushell Clayton (Heat 2)8:33 pm – Shiann Salmon (Heat 6)

Women’s 400m Semifinals8:45 pm – Candice McLeod (Heat 1)8:53 pm – Stephenie Ann McPherson (Heat 2)9:01 pm – Charokee Young (Heat 3)

Men’s 400m Semifinals9:15 pm – Christopher Taylor9:23 pm – Nathon Allen

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Jamaica’s Shaneika Ricketts on Monday night claimed the silver medal in the the women’s triple jump at the 2022 World Athletics Championships in Eugene, Oregon.

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Jamaica will be represented in the World Championships 200m final by all three women who swept the podium places in the 100m final.

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Popular deejay Leonard ‘Merciless’ Bartley is dead.

Reports are that the body of the veteran dancehall artiste was found in a motel on Beechwood Avenue in St Andrew.

Reports reaching Loop N

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The police high command has confirmed that two policemen are now in custody and a search launched for another, who has reportedly left the island, as investigators intensify their probe into

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Jamaican weakens by 16 cents on Tuesday Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

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

40 minutes ago – Updated

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The US dollar closed trading at J$152.94, according to the Bank of Jamaica’s trading summary on Tuesday.

The Jamaican dollar weakened by 16 cents on Tuesday from $152.78 on Monday. On Tuesday, the Canadian dollar closed trading at $118.50 and the British Pound closed trading at $183.68.

Total sales across the foreign exchange market totalled US$58.3 million and US$63.2 million worth of purchases.

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January 4, 2022 10:23 AM

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EUGENE, Oregon: After finishing third in the women’s 100m final at the World Athletics Championships on Sunday night, Elaine Thompson-Herah revealed that she has been facing a plethora of struggles le

Jamaica News

Ministry of Education issues bulletin for administrators

World Champs

Jamaica’s Shaneika Ricketts on Monday night claimed the silver medal in the the women’s triple jump at the 2022 World Athletics Championships in Eugene, Oregon.

This adds to the silver she won

World Champs

Jamaica will be represented in the World Championships 200m final by all three women who swept the podium places in the 100m final.

Shericka Jackson, the pre-race favourite based on her outstanding

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Popular deejay Leonard ‘Merciless’ Bartley is dead.

Reports are that the body of the veteran dancehall artiste was found in a motel on Beechwood Avenue in St Andrew.

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The police high command has confirmed that two policemen are now in custody and a search launched for another, who has reportedly left the island, as investigators intensify their probe into

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VIDEO: Woman holding up multimillion dollar project says she is not opposed to moving but demands proof

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

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We burned down the inter-island air travel barn. Time we rebuild it.

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

Anyone who is remotely acquainted with or involved in the state of reasonable air transport would concede that it has been an abject mess ever since but Barbados’ withdrawal from LIAT leading to the repossession of planes and the shrinking of a mainstay carrier into a one-plane operation out of Antigua. CLICK HERE TO JOIN OUR WHATSAPP GROUP FOR NEWS UPDATES.

Airline schedules, from Guyana in the south to the Leeward Islands in the north, have been wrecked, and the arrival of three airlines into the regional airspace has done nothing to improve this sorry state of affairs.

For a recent regional workshop, no one from Grenada could attend because the only flights available would route them through Miami. No one from St. Vincent and the Grenadines could make it – their flights would see them being routed through London. Participants from a neighbouring island roughly 50 miles or half-an-hour’s flying time away had to arrive via British Airways. Planning to get into and out of each island has become a complex, military-style, logistical operation merely because airlines have inconvenient days of arrival and departure, their seats are invariably sold out weeks in advance, and relative comfort and convenience have been sacrificed on the altar of profit.

The notion that inter-Island air transport must be the sole preserve of profit-making entities is as bizarrely unproductive for the region as the same assumption for public transport in each island. In developing countries, transport cannot be considered as purely private goods

Just as lengthy commute times are a trademark of reduced productivity, sluggish output and lax revenue in any local economy, so too does the regional economy suffer when one-day trips must become four-day excursions and a flight from one island to another becomes a game of hopscotch involving three.

There is more than enough blame to share among regional governments for the shambolic schedules: the intransigence of one government unwilling to trim its labour force to suit the airline’s operations is matched by another island’s bull-headed notion that it should not be involved in civil aviation at all.

We repeat: Caribbean transport cannot work entirely as a private sector playground. Contrary to rosy expectations spawned by LIAT’s wrecking of increased competition, greater choice and lower fares, we have airlines charging double and triple what they used to for a trip from one island to another.

For Caribbean people to enjoy the community to which they belong, they must spend more money than it would take  to travel three or four hours to North America. To this reality, an economist  previously posited that given our small size,  we ought not to expect low airfares. In a region-wide telecast on the subject of airfares, this economist’s dose of economic realism came up against the bullish desire of the then Secretary General of the Caribbean Tourism Organization and his own economic pragmatism: if you lower fares you will get more bums on seats.

That economist clearly missed the boat. Should exponentially higher airfares  be the price for doing business, getting education, visiting friends and family, engaging in commerce, deepening participation in our cultures and spreading the glue that keeps these desperate islands together as a single economic space and polity?

Caribbean governments have long shown great disdain for their own people travelling to the region, giving lie to their rhetoric. For example, these governments routinely pay subsidies to North American carriers to bring sun-seeking tourists to sun-drenched shores but steadfastly refuse to invest in regional air linkages that would expose even more of those same tourists to a wider choice of destinations or multiple destinations in one trip.

Antigua and Barbuda, the sole designated survivor as the remaining shareholder of LIAT last week became the latest to adopt a for-profit stance to keep LIAT going, by calling on Caribbean governments to do for it what it has long done for others.

What St. John’s is urging fellow CARICOM nations to do is act in the spirit and letter of the treaty they signed nearly 40 years ago. After all, they all agreed never to offer terms and conditions of service to third party countries that are superior to those offered to fellow member states. It is now time to stop violating the Treaty of Chaguaramas, thwarting the dreams and hopes of Caribbean people and stunting their own development and growth. They must abandon ages-old mistrust and suspicion of each other by setting a new course for Caribbean aviation, in which agreements are honoured, not breached.

Caribbean aviation has been reduced through the management of decline and our own government must acknowledge its role in bringing about the current state of affairs. But it will require collective action to return to what now appears to have been a golden age of inter-island aviation.

We never knew we had it so good until we lit the match and burned down our own barn. Rather than poke about the embers, it is time to rebuild that structure, not depend on others to do it for us, and throw off the shackles of economic orthodoxy that have left a regional industry in shambles. — Barbados TODAY Editorial

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Saint Lucia Pierre To Take Over Chairmanship of ECCB Monetary Council – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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Chairmanship of the Monetary Council of the Eastern Caribbean Central Bank (ECCB) will be transferred to the Honourable Philip J Pierre, Council Member for Saint Lucia, during the official Handing Over Ceremony on 22 July at the Golden Grove Ball Room, Harbour Club Hotel, Gros Islet, Saint Lucia.

Prime Minister Pierre will succeed the Outgoing Chairman, the Honourable Joseph Easton Farrell, Council Member for Montserrat.

The Monetary Council is the highest decision making authority of the ECCB and comprises the eight Ministers for Finance of the ECCB member governments.

Chairmanship of the Council is rotated alphabetically each year among the eight ECCB member countries: Anguilla, Antigua and Barbuda, The Commonwealth of Dominica, Grenada, Montserrat, Saint Christopher (St Kitts) and Nevis, Saint Lucia and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines.

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Following the Handing Over Ceremony, the Council will convene for its 102nd Meeting where it will receive the ECCB Governor’s Report on Money, Credit and Financial Conditions in the Eastern Caribbean Currency Union.

Following the meeting, the new Chairman will host a media conference where he will present the Communiqué, and along with other members of the Council, field questions from the media in Saint Lucia.

The Ceremony will be streamed live on the ECCB Facebook page and YouTube Channel – ECCB Connects.

Source: Eastern Caribbean Central Bank

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Cierran terminal de lanchas de Cataño debido a manifestación contra LUMA en San Juan

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El presidente de la Unión de Trabajadores de la Industria Eléctrica y Riego (UTIER), Ángel Figueroa Jaramillo, informó en RADIO ISLA que el terminal de lanchas de Cataño fue cerrado en medio de la marcha contra la empresa LUMA Energy.  

Ángel Figueroa Jaramillo expuso que, a pesar de ello, la manifestación sigue en pie y afirmó que siguen llegando las personas. Este sostuvo que la ruta de la marcha saldrá del Capitolio hacia la alcaldía de San Juan, pasará por el frente del Departamento de Estado y culminará frente a la Fortaleza. 

Según Figueroa Jaramillo la marcha está pautada para iniciar a eso de las 10:30 de la mañana. Los manifestantes fueron citados al Capitolio a las 9 AM.

Escucha aquí los detalles

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Michael Sallons protesteert ook tegen werkwijze vakbeweging

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

Tekst en beeld Valerie Fris PARAMARIBO — Vakbondsleider Michael Sallons is niet te spreken over het feit dat de regering

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