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Hurricane Bonnie forecasted to weaken as it moves westward | Loop Cayman Islands

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cayman Compass
Loop News

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Hurricane Bonnie forecast

(Source: 10 Tampa Bay)

The National Hurricane Center reported this morning, July 6, 2022, that is continuing to move west near 14 mph (22 km/h), but maximum sustained winds have decreased to near 100 mph.

A westward to west-northwestward motion is forecast through the week with gradual weakening forecasted to begin Thursday night and should continue through Friday.

In the meantime, hurricane-force winds extend outward up to 25 miles from the center and tropical-storm-force winds extend outward up to 90 miles.

Impacts

According to the National Hurricane Center, swells generated by Bonnie will continue to affect portions of the coast of southwestern Mexico during the next day or so. These swells are likely to cause life-threatening surf and rip current conditions.

Portions of Hawaii may also be affected by remnants of Bonnie by way of flash flooding or mudslides over the next couple of days if Bonnie continues its forecasted track (according to “spaghetti” computer models).

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Gov’t announces $2.7b in additional support for vulnerable citizens | Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News | Loop News

The Government is providing $2.7 billion in additional social intervention expenditure, which includes $750 million towards a campaign to clean up parish capitals and major townships ahead of Independence celebrations in August.

Of the amount, $550 million will be allocated to the National Solid Waste Management Authority, and $189 million to Members of Parliament via the Constituency Development Fund (CDF).

The announcement was made on Tuesday by the Minister of Finance and the Public Service, Dr Nigel Clarke, during a ministerial statement in the House of Representatives.

He said amounts allocated via the CDF can be used for beautification, bushing, drain-cleaning activities, and any other activity a Member of Parliament deems fit.

Clarke also announced that $150 million will go towards the trucking of water under the Ministry of Local Government and Community Development to areas experiencing water challenges “due to the erratic nature of rainfall islandwide and especially in the parishes of St Elizabeth, Clarendon and Portland but not limited to these parishes”.

There will also be $550 million in General Welfare Support for beneficiaries who are not on the Programme of Advancement Through Health and Education (PATH) in the following amounts: $189 million through the Ministry of Labour and Social Security; $189 million through the CDF for welfare and economic enablement activities; $70 million through municipal corporations for welfare and economic support; $52 million for poor relief through Ministry of Local Government and Community Development; and $50 million through the MLSS’s Public Assistance Department.

And, Clarke said $550 million has been allocated to pensioners at the bottom of the income ladder; $450 million for 45,000 NIS pensioners who receive pensions less than $15,000 per month, and $100 million for 10,000 social pensioners who are not PATH beneficiaries.

The finance minister also disclosed that $1.789 billion in back-to-school one-off grants, which will be implemented through the MLSS and directed towards 160,000 PATH school-aged children, has also been earmarked.

This is in addition to $189 million in back-to-school education grants and assistance to non-PATH vulnerable students through the CDF.

“You will note a total of $9 million per constituency in additional support to the Constituency Development Fund for the above-mentioned activities. I am advised by the CDF that each Member of Parliament should consult with the Director, CDF to be guided on the administration of these additional allocations,” Clarke told the House.

He explained that the additional $2.7 billion brings to $3.8 billion, the amount in social intervention expenditure provided by the Government. He said $1.1 billion is already accounted for in the budget, while the incremental $2.7 billion expenditure will initially be funded by advances from existing budgeted resources.

“These advances will be cleared following regularisation of the expenditure in the First Supplementary Estimates 2022/23,” Clarke said.

In giving reasons for the additional expenditure, Clarke highlighted that “the world is facing challenging times”.

“After enduring two years of the COVID-19 pandemic, the worst pandemic in 100 years, and the historic economic contraction it induced around the world, the world now faces the highest levels of global inflation in 40 years. Supply chain pressures related to the dynamics of COVID-19 had a negative impact on prices towards the latter half of 2021,” he said.

He added that: “This has been seriously compounded by the war in Ukraine, which began earlier this year. So even as we celebrate 8.2 per cent GDP growth for the 2021/22 fiscal year released by STATIN yesterday (Monday), which represents a strong start to our recovery, and as unemployment at 6.2 per cent is at a historic low, we need to ensure that we continue to provide protection for the most vulnerable and those impacted by global conditions who are least able to absorb these shocks.”

Clarke pointed to his closing budget presentation in March when he announced $3.5 billion of measures to alleviate the impact of these conditions.

The amounts included: $800 million to assist public transport operators as a means of protecting the substantial number of Jamaicans who depend on public transportation; $750 million for a food assistance programme targeting 75,000 Jamaicans; $152 million for an increase in the allocation toward transportation assistance to students on PATH; and approximately $2 billion to the GOJ Energy Co-Pay where theGovernment of Jamaica contributes 20 per cent of the JPS bill for all post-paid households that consume 200kWh of electricity or less, per month, over the four months of April 2022 to July 2022 as well as $3,000 per month over the same period for pre-paid residential customers.

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Pierre Pushes ‘People First’ Agenda At CARICOM Summit – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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Prime Minister Hon. Philip J. Pierre delivered his inaugural address to The CARICOM at the 43rd Regular Meeting of Heads of Government in Paramaribo, Suriname on July 3, 2022.

Hon. Pierre reaffirmed Saint Lucia’s allegiance to the regional bloc and also advocated for solutions that will bring about meaningful and tangible improvements to the framework of The CARICOM.

I want to assure you that I come to the Prime Ministership of Saint Lucia in the firm and abiding belief in CARICOM.  Mr. Chairman, my regional philosophy has been shaped by the small population and territorial size of the country that I lead, but I stand here to affirm that Saint Lucia will always be less than it can be without CARICOM.

 Whenever we are faced by external challenges, not of our own making, I am always guided by the words of the late Prime Minister of Barbados Owen Arthur that “we should face it and fix it.” I am also always guided by the warning of our respected colleague, the distinguished Prime Minister of St. Vincent and the Grenadines, that we should avoid the reflexive learned helplessness which arguably stems from an inherited colonial consciousness.  So, colleagues, I intend to use the responsibility that the people of Saint Lucia have placed on my shoulders to engage constructively with you and the CARICOM secretariat and to draw on your collective experience to advance the cause of CARICOM.  In this regard, I pledge to engage energetically within CARICOM.”

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In the face of external uncertainties affecting the Member States, the Prime Minister addressed the more pressing challenges impeding CARICOM’s long-envisioned pathway to holistic regional integration. Hon. Pierre espoused optimism for CARICOM’s potential and underscored the region’s collective intellectual wherewithal capable of devising and implementing workable strategies and models to make the regional bloc more agile, flexible, and responsive to the social and economic needs of its citizens.

In closing, Hon. Pierre implored his colleague Heads of Government to prioritise the well-being of the people who elected them to serve and to demonstrate the change CARICOM and its inhabitants need to forge a unified front.

My dream is for a CARICOM that never forgets that the only reason why we have committed ourselves to public life, is to serve the people and so we must put the people first in all that we do…

 My friends, let’s be honest and acknowledge that CARICOM’s image throughout our region needs to improve. That must change, and change now. Too much time has already been lost. We must begin that vital change by being the change the people have for a very long time been crying for.

 We must not only talk unity. We must demonstrate to our people that we are together confronted by similar problems that can be resolved only by a United CARICOM.

Source: Office of the Prime Minister. Headline photo: Philip J. Pierre stock image.

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Entre hoy y mañana pudieran radicar cargos contra Anthony Salvá por el asesinato de Jennifer Maldonado

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El teniente coronel Roberto Rivera compartió el miércoles en RADIO ISLA que entre hoy y mañana pudieran radicar cargos contra Anthony Salvá por el asesinato de Jennifer Maldonado. 

Según Rivera compartido a la prensa, el acusado tiene antecedentes criminales previos. Rivera informó este martes que Anthony Salvá Rivera, de 26 años, confesó a las autoridades haber asesinado a Jennifer Michelle Maldonado Padua, de 33, a quien él mismo reportó como desaparecida.

Salvá Rivera fue arrestado en la tarde. Inicialmente, alegó a los agentes que la mujer había desaparecido luego de montarse en un vehículo, minutos antes de iniciar su jornada de trabajo en la Planta Central Hidroeléctrica en el lago Dos Bocas, de Arecibo.

Rivera reveló que Salvá Rivera enfrentó cargos en el 2019 por escalamiento, violación y sodomía contra una menor de 16 años. Sin embargo, se encontró culpable solo por el escalamiento.

Escucha los detalles aquí

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Sujeto que provocó millonaria búsqueda en Arecibo es arrestado por violar orden de protección

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

Agentes del Negociado de la Policía de Puerto Rico detuvieron en la noche del martes a Harold Carrión Butter por violación a una orden de protección, emitida por un juez a favor de su ex pareja.

Carrión Butter, de 23 años, fue quien provocó una movilización de recursos estimada en 1.2 millones de dólares por parte del Estado, tras reportarse como desaparecido la semana pasada en el área conocida como la Poza del Obispo en Arecibo.

El caso será consultado con los fiscales para la radicación de cargos.

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Uitvoerend orgaan Nationale Anti-Drugs Raad wacht al twee jaar op beëdiging

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

door Valerie Fris PARAMARIBO — De zittingstermijn voor de leden van het uitvoerend bureau van de Nationale Anti-drugs Raad (NAR)

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Assises : victime de violences, elle l’a piqué pour s’en débarrasser

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guadeloupe FranceAntilles

Il est assez rare que l’accusée soit une femme. C’est le cas cette fois-ci dans ce nouveau procès devant la cour criminelle, qui débute ce mercredi 6 juillet. Elle-même victime de la violence de son conjoint, excédée par ses harcèlements en tout genre, elle va sans réfléchir, lui planter un couteau dans le ventre.

Sonia est née en 1966 à Perpignan. Le soir du 17 décembre 2020, elle appelle la gendarmerie de Sainte-Anne pour informer les militaires qu’elle vient de poignarder un homme et ignore s’il est mort. Elle a peur de sortir de son domicile où elle se trouve avec ses deux enfants mineurs. A leur arrivée, les gendarmes retrouvent l’homme allongé au sol au niveau de l’entrée de  l’immeuble. Les traces de sang sur les marches entre l’appartement de la mise en cause au 2ème étage et le corps…


France-Antilles Guadeloupe

715 mots – 06.07.2022

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Court finds anti-buggery laws in Antigua unconstitutional | Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News | Loop News

A Caribbean court ruled Tuesday that a law in Antigua and Barbuda that criminalises gay sex is unconstitutional.

The Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court found that “the selection of an intimate partner is a private and a personal choice.”

The ruling also said the twin-island nation’s 1995 Sexual Offences Act “offends the right to liberty, protection of the law, freedom of expression, protection of personal privacy and protection from discrimination on the basis of sex.”

The ruling comes after a gay man who works at Antigua’s Ministry of Health and a local group called Women Against Rape Inc asked that the law be found unconstitutional.

The rarely used law states, in part, that two consenting adults found guilty of having anal sex would face 15 years in prison. If found guilty of serious indecency, they would face five years in prison.

The gay man testified that he has been persecuted and assaulted, a common complaint across the largely conservative Caribbean region, where many homosexuals fear for their lives. The man also said that patients have refused treatment from him because of his sexual orientation, according to the ruling.

Meanwhile, the anti-rape group said that concern over breaches of confidentiality has prevented those in the LGBTQ community from seeking AIDS testing or treatment and that they receive hostile treatment by health care providers.

Such laws used to be common in former British colonies across the Caribbean but have been challenged in recent years. Courts in Belize and Trinidad & Tobago have found such laws unconstitutional, while other cases in the region are pending.

The Eastern Caribbean Alliance for Diversity and Equality welcomed Tuesday’s outcome, which came in litigation that began in 2020 to challenge what it called “invasive and unconstitutional remnants of colonial law”.

The group’s executive director, Kenita Placide, said such laws “legitimise hate speech, discrimination and violence and tears at the fabric of our society”.

The group said same-sex consensual intimacy is still criminalised in seven Caribbean countries, adding that while sentences are rarely imposed, penalties range from 10 years to life imprisonment.

It said constitutional challenges are pending in Barbados, St Lucia, and St Kitts and Nevis.

In her ruling, High Court Judge Marissa Robertson said that “the Constitution is often described as a living instrument, which gives significant room for the realisation and enjoyment of individuals’ human rights. The very rights that the document espouses and protects are capable of evolution since concepts, attitudes and the understanding of human rights and dignity evolve over time.”

It wasn’t immediately clear if the attorney general for Antigua and Barbuda planned to appeal the decision. Government officials couldn’t be immediately reached for comment.

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No request from Jamaica’s Gov’t for Popcaan to be ‘detained’ in UK | Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News | Loop News

The Government of Jamaica has not requested that dancehall artiste Popcaan be “detained” in the United Kingdom.

The disclosure came from Minister of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Affairs Senator Kamina Johnson Smith in a tweeted response to a query from Shelly-Ann Curran, CEO of Shelly Curran Bookings, which was made after the Popcaan was “detained” on his arrival to the UK on Tuesday.

The ‘Party Shot’ shared his plight with his almost three million followers on Instagram via a video in his Stories on Tuesday, calling on Prime Minister Andrew Holness for answers as to why there are red flags against his name that causes him to be detained each time he enters the United Kingdom.

It was not the first time Popcaan was making a public appeal to the Jamaican Government about the matter, having also been held in UK immigration in January.

Curran, in a tweet to Johnson Smith on Tuesday, highlighted Popcaan’s situation in the UK, stating that “he is detained and asked to do so by the Ja Govt”, and questioning why.

Johnson Smith responded to Curran, denying that Jamaica’s Government has made such a request.
“Dear @ShellyCurran the Govt of JA has not requested that @popcaanmusic be detained, but there are many reasons why a traveller may be detained.

“I have asked the High Commission to enquiry into the matter as early as they are able, so that they may advise,” the Government Minister tweeted.

In his post to Instagram on Tuesday, Popcaan displayed a paper for viewers, stating that every time he is in the UK he is given the paper and “detained” “because of information that was sent by my country that I should be stopped every time I am in the UK”.

“I wanna know why,” was the simple request from the ‘Family’ recording artiste.

With Johnson Smith stating that she has asked the High Commission to make checks, Popcaan could soon have an answer to that question.

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Saudi Arabian investors to visit Jamaica this week | Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News | Loop News

A group of 80 Saudi Arabian business interests will arrive in Jamaica on Friday (July 8) for discussions with government officials on local investment prospects.

Tourism Minister Edmund Bartlett, who made the announcement, said it will be the largest and strongest group of investors from the Middle East to be hosted locally.

They will arrive after participating in the inaugural two-day Caribbean-Saudi Arabia Summit which gets underway in the Dominican Republic on Wednesday (July 6).

Bartlett, who was slated to depart Jamaica on Tuesday for the Summit, made the announcement during a media briefing at Gordon House in downtown Kingston Tuesday (July 4), where he provided an update on tourism developments.

He indicated that members of the delegation will be exploring potential investment options in several areas.

These include logistics, agriculture, infrastructure and real estate, and tourism and hospitality.

“We are excited about the prospects of being able to show them the different investment options in the Corporate Area, in Montego Bay, and elsewhere, and that out of it will come foreign direct investment… straight investment in the economy of Jamaica,” the Minister stated.

Bartlett said the visit to Jamaica was facilitated by his ministry working in tandem with the Ministry of Industry, Investment and Commerce, and Portfolio Minister, Senator Aubyn Hill.

“This, I think, is an exciting moment and I’m very pleased that Minister Aubyn Hill and myself have teamed together so well to create this opportunity for investment in Jamaica,” Bartlett stated.

The Caribbean-Saudi Arabia Summit is being held to facilitate stakeholder discussions that forge and strengthen business relations between both regions.

— JIS

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