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Announcement of ABBA Division two commencement

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

With the ABBA Cool & Smooth Business Basketball League now complete, the Antigua and Barbuda Basketball Association is pleased to announce the start date for Division Two of the national league on December 4th, 2022.

This is a change from the regular timeframe in late January which usually coincides with the First and Third Divisions.

In August 2022, a meeting was held with the respective clubs and teams that comprise the Association, and further to this meeting, it was agreed that Division Two and Division Three will be amalgamated to form, Division Two, only.

As such, all teams that participated in the 2020 ABBA League, prior to the cancellation of the league due to the COVID-19 pandemic, will remain in Division Two; and all teams that participated in Division Three, now join those in Division Two.

Division Three will now be transitioned into a Youth Development category. That division will be held at a later date.

With the date fast approaching, the Executive seeks to remind all teams and clubs of the ongoing registration which is slated to end on November 25th 2022.

Please note that the team registration fee and individual registration fee per player (12) remains unchanged.

Teams/Club may contact the General Secretary Ms. Jennell Willette or email [email protected]

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No sign of decrease in global CO2 emissions

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

No sign of decrease in global CO2 emissions

Global carbon emissions in 2022 remain at record levels – with no sign of the decrease that is urgently needed to limit warming to 1.5°C, according to the Global Carbon Project science team.

If current emissions levels persist, there is now a 50% chance that global warming of 1.5°C will be exceeded in nine years.

The new report projects total global CO2 emissions of 40.6 billion tonnes (GtCO2) in 2022. This is fuelled by fossil CO2 emissions which are projected to rise 1.0% compared to 2021, reaching 36.6 GtCO2 – slightly above the 2019 pre-COVID-19 levels[*]. Emissions from land-use change (such as deforestation) are projected to be 3.9 GtCO2 in 2022.

Projected emissions from coal and oil are above their 2021 levels, with oil being the largest contributor to total emissions growth. The growth in oil emissions can be largely explained by the delayed rebound of international aviation following COVID-19 pandemic restrictions.

The 2022 picture among major emitters is mixed: emissions are projected to fall in China (0.9%) and the EU (0.8%), and increase in the USA (1.5%) and India (6%), with a 1.7% rise in the rest of the world combined.

The remaining carbon budget for a 50% likelihood to limit global warming to 1.5°C has reduced to 380 GtCO2 (exceeded after nine years if emissions remain at 2022 levels) and 1230 GtCO2 to limit to 2°C (30 years at 2022 emissions levels).

To reach zero CO2 emissions by 2050 would now require a decrease of about 1.4 GtCO2 each year, comparable to the observed fall in 2020 emissions resulting from COVID-19 lockdowns, highlighting the scale of the action required.

Land and ocean, which absorb and store carbon, continue to take up around half of the CO2 emissions. The ocean and land CO2 sinks are still increasing in response to the atmospheric CO2 increase, although climate change reduced this growth by an estimated 4% (ocean sink) and 17%  (land sink) over the 2012-2021 decade.

This year’s carbon budget shows that the long-term rate of increasing fossil emissions has slowed. The average rise peaked at +3% per year during the 2000s, while growth in the last decade has been about +0.5% per year.

The research team – including the University of Exeter, the University of East Anglia (UEA), CICERO and Ludwig-Maximilian-University Munich – welcomed this slow-down, but said it was “far from the emissions decrease we need”.

The findings come as world leaders meet at COP27 in Egypt to discuss the climate crisis.

“This year we see yet another rise in global fossil CO2 emissions, when we need a rapid decline,” said Professor Pierre Friedlingstein, of Exeter’s Global Systems Institute, who led the study.

“There are some positive signs, but leaders meeting at COP27 will have to take meaningful action if we are to have any chance of limiting global warming close to 1.5°C. The Global Carbon Budget numbers monitor the progress on climate action and right now we are not seeing the action required.”

Professor Corinne Le Quéré, Royal Society Research Professor at UEA’s School of Environmental Sciences, said: “Our findings reveal turbulence in emissions patterns this year resulting from the pandemic and global energy crises.

“If governments respond by turbo charging clean energy investments and planting, not cutting, trees, global emissions could rapidly start to fall.

“We are at a turning point and must not allow world events to distract us from the urgent and sustained need to cut our emissions to stabilise the global climate and reduce cascading risks.”

Land-use changes, especially deforestation, are a significant source of CO2 emissions (about a tenth of the amount from fossil emissions). Indonesia, Brazil and the Democratic Republic of the Congo contribute 58% of global land-use change emissions.

Carbon removal via reforestation or new forests counterbalances half of the deforestation emissions, and the researchers say that stopping deforestation and increasing efforts to restore and expand forests constitutes a large opportunity to reduce emissions and increase removals in forests.

The Global Carbon Budget report projects that atmospheric CO2 concentrations will reach an average of 417.2 parts per million in 2022, more than 50% above pre-industrial levels.

The projection of 40.6 GtCO2 total emissions in 2022 is close to the 40.9 GtCO2 in 2019, which is the highest annual total ever.

The Global Carbon Budget report, produced by an international team of more than 100 scientists, examines both carbon sources and sinks. It provides an annual, peer-reviewed update, building on established methodologies in a fully transparent manner. Once published, the 2022 edition (the 17th annual report) will be online here: https://doi.org/10.5194/essd-14-4811-2022

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AFC bows out of Local Government Elections

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana
AFC Leader Khemraj Ramjattan and party Chairperson Cathy Hughes

See below statement from the Alliance For Change (AFC) on not contesting the March 2023 Local Government Elections (LGE):

The National Executive Committee (NEC) of the Alliance For Change (AFC), after muchdebate, has arrived at a consensus that the party will not contest the upcoming localgovernment elections (LGE) without changes to the list of electors.

The AFC has concluded that no election should be held on the existing list of electorsbecause it is bloated, illegitimate and a source of electoral fraud, as demonstratedduring the publicized national recount. On the face of it, the current list contains thenames of the deceased, migrated and duplicates.

It is manifest that our electoral system is far from perfect, but we must not wilfullyperpetuate a deception on the people of Guyana. During the national election in 2020,there were multiple instances where dead people, the migrated, and a host of othershenanigans interfered with the electoral process. We should not go there again!

The NEC believes that participating in these elections with a list proven deficient andcontaining widespread discrepancies would perpetrate a fraud on the Guyanese peopleand undermine our democratic system.

The AFC has already called on the Guyana Election Commission (GECOM) to producea credible voters’ list by conducting a certifiable house-to-house verification andregistration process. Accordingly, we would go as far as supporting the postponementof the LGE as was done in 1992 to present a “clean” voters’ list to the electorate.

We have also indicated our acceptance of using biometrics and the necessaryelectronic equipment to enhance our voting experience and reduce the propensity forimpersonation. However, as warned, we will not participate in the upcoming LocalGovernment Elections if these changes are not made to bring legitimacy to our electoralsystem.

The people of Guyana have a right to feel confident in its electoral system, like thevoting public in the United Kingdom or elsewhere, without unnecessary workarounds.

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New Batavia youth group plans to effect social change

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana
Members of the newly formed Batavia Mountain Movers Youth Group alongside Blossom Inc’s mentorship trainers Joses Solomon and Arlyne Ramdatt (kneeling)

For years, hinterland communities have seen recurring incidents of social issues, such as teenage pregnancy and alcohol abuse. Youths of Batavia, in Region Seven (Cuyuni-Mazaruni), plan to effect change to this situation to see social ills affecting the community being addressed frontally.

On October 28, 2022, the Batavia Mountain Movers Youth Group was presented to its home village. With training provided by Blossom Inc’s Spotlight Initiative, these youths, some of whom are serving as Community Support Officers, have been trained in various skills, and are equipped to address the issues of gender-based violence and child sexual abuse. They have also been trained in various life skills before the official launch of the group.

The training sessions were capacity-building initiatives to provide the youths of the community with skills and knowledge, so they can appropriately advocate for other persons within the community.

“The name Mountain Movers came about because of the main purpose of the group, and that is to make a positive impact on the lives of the youths of Batavia,” Crystal Williams, one of the leaders of the group, noted at its launching. She said the main pillars of the group are love, trust, and community service.

“This group believes that teamwork is what makes the dream work. And our dream as youths is to see our village forge ahead in terms of youth empowerment, hence our motto is, ‘Individuals go far, teams go further’,” she told the villagers.

Williams said the group would work together, with its motto being to provide the youths of the community a better and more level playing field when it comes to sports, jobs, and training opportunities. She said the group also wants to provide the youths in the area with “more solid building blocks to education and equal opportunities, so that they can make a more positive contribution to their family as well as village development.”

At the launch of the group, its members prepared several artistic pieces, such as skits, dramatic poems, songs, and an acrostic inspired by their training. Batavia Toshao Orin Williams, Deputy Toshao Donna Boyal, Regional Child Protection Officer Shenella Edwards, and representatives from Blossom Inc. Child Advocacy Centers graced the event.

Blossom’s Spotlight Initiative began in November 2020 in collaboration with the Spotlight Initiative, a project funded by the United Nations Children’s Fund, the United Nations, and the European Union. Its goal is to eliminate violence against women and girls in Guyana.Blossom Inc’s Education and Outreach Officers Arlyne Ramdatt and Joses Solomon have been making several impactful trips into several communities to do just that.

The officers have been able to establish and support communities such as Matthews Ridge in Region 1 and Waramadong in Region 7 to launch youth groups similar to the one formed in Batavia.

According to Blossom Inc., the youth groups are not only peer-support bodies that offer safe spaces for young people in the community, but youths who form the group have received from Education and Outreach Officers training and mentorship that has provided them with the skills to plan and conduct various awareness-raising activities and campaigns to advocate against the social ills in their communities while supporting other youth in the community.

Following the launch of the Batavia Mountain Movers Youth Group, Blossom Inc expressed appreciation to the EU for being a major donor of funds to the UN to embark on the wider Spotlight Initiative.

That global initiative would see Guyana benefitting from the three-year, EU-funded program aimed at eliminating all forms of violence against women and girls.

“Much more is still to be done in order to see us, as a nation, achieve sustainable gender equality and the benefits of women empowerment by 2030,” Blossom Inc has said.It has been noted that the Spotlight team would forever be grateful for all the support given and pledges made to the project. For safe spaces to make reports of gender-based violence, members of the public can contact Blossom Inc. at 233-6701, the Counselling Hotline at 914, and/or the Child Protection hotline at 227-0979.

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Taiwan Pledges US$100,000 Flood Relief Donation To Saint Lucia – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

Taiwan Pledges US$100,000 Flood Relief Donation To Saint Lucia – St. Lucia Times News

– Advertisement –

Taiwan has pledged a US$100,000 donation to Saint Lucia to assist in its recovery from recent devastating floods, which wreaked havoc in the North of the Island.

Taiwan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced the donation on Friday.

The country’s Central News Agency (CNA) quoted a Foreign Ministry statement saying the money would help Saint Lucia’s reconstruction efforts.

CNA  also reported that Taiwan would give more help if needed.

– Advertisement –

Saint Lucia’s National Emergency Management Organisation (NEMO) has said that the disaster level after the recent floods has risen to two on a scale of four due to the extent of the damage in the North.

The National Emergency Operation Centre (NEOC) was coordinating the distribution of relief supplies to households and communities affected by the November 6 trough system.

Damage Analysis and Needs Assessment (DANA) teams have been deployed to affected communities to identify the needs of households and communities that require assistance.

Assessments will continue into the coming weeks.

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Driekwart ambtenaren Nickerie al geregistreerd

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

PARAMARIBO — Ruim driekwart van de ambtenaren van Nickerie hebben zich al geregistreerd. Het ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken (BiZa) is

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L’Iran annonce une première condamnation à mort liée aux “émeutes”

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Un tribunal de Téhéran a condamné à mort dimanche, pour la première fois, une personne accusée d’avoir participé “aux émeutes” qui secouent l’Iran, a annoncé l’agence…

Un tribunal de Téhéran a condamné à mort dimanche, pour la première fois, une personne accusée d’avoir participé “aux émeutes” qui secouent l’Iran, a annoncé l’agence de l’autorité judiciaire Mizan online.

Aucune information n’a été donnée sur son identité ni sur son âge.

Selon le verdict, cette personne est jugée coupable “d’avoir incendié un bâtiment gouvernemental, de trouble à l’ordre public, de rassemblement et conspiration en vue de commettre un crime contre la sécurité nationale, d’être un ennemi de Dieu et de corruption sur terre”, a précisé l’agence.

Un autre tribunal de la capitale a condamné cinq personnes à des peines de cinq à 10 ans de prison pour “rassemblement et conspiration en vue de commettre des crimes contre la sécurité nationale et trouble à l’ordre public”.

Il s’agit de tribunaux de première instance et les condamnés peuvent donc faire appel, précise Mizan.

L’Iran est secoué par une vague de manifestations depuis la mort le 16 septembre de Mahsa Amini, une Kurde iranienne de 22 ans, arrêtée trois jours plus tôt par la police des mœurs pour avoir enfreint le strict code vestimentaire de la République islamique.

La justice iranienne a par ailleurs inculpé près de 800 personnes pour leur participation à des “récentes émeutes” dans les provinces d’Hormozgan, d’Ispahan et Markazi.

Plus de 2.000 personnes ont été inculpées, dont la moitié à Téhéran, depuis le début des manifestations, il y a deux mois, selon les chiffres fournis par la justice iranienne. 

Des organisations des droits de l’Homme à l’étranger font état de 15.000 arrestations, chiffre que démentent les autorités iraniennes.

Loi du talion

Récemment, une grande majorité des 290 députés iraniens avaient réclamé à la justice d’appliquer la loi du talion contre les “ennemis de Dieu”, en référence aux auteurs des “émeutes” qui secouent le pays.

Les députés demandaient à tous les responsables du pays, y compris le pouvoir judiciaire, d’appliquer dès que possible contre les moharebs (ennemis de Dieu) la loi du talion.

“Comme le groupe Etat islamique, ils ont porté atteinte à la vie et aux biens des gens avec des armes blanches et des armes à feu”, affirmaient les parlementaires.

L’Iran a par ailleurs fustigé dimanche la rencontre à Paris entre le président français et des opposantes, qualifiant de “regrettables et honteuses” ses déclarations à l’issue de cette réunion.

Emmanuel Macron avait reçu vendredi à Paris, en marge du Forum de la paix, quatre militantes iraniennes, dont il avait salué la “révolution qu’elles sont en train de conduire” dans leur pays.

“Il s’agit d’une violation flagrante des responsabilités internationales de la France dans la lutte contre le terrorisme et la violence et nous considérons qu’elle favorise ces sinistres phénomènes”, a déclaré le porte-parole du ministère des Affaires étrangères, Nasser Kanani.

L’Iran a en outre vivement réagi dimanche aux propos la veille du chancelier allemand Olaf Scholz sur son podcast vidéo hebdomadaire.

“Quel genre de gouvernement êtes-vous qui tire sur ses propres citoyens? Quiconque agit de cette manière doit s’attendre à notre opposition”, avait dit le chancelier.

“La destruction des relations historiques entre l’Iran et l’Allemagne aura des conséquences à long terme et l’Iran possède une longue liste de revendications vis-à-vis de l’Allemagne en matière des droits de l’Homme”, a déclaré le porte-parole des Affaires étrangères iraniennes, dénonçant la position “interventionniste” et “provocatrice” de l’Allemagne. 

Pour tenter d’apaiser la situation au Sistan-Baloutchistan après les incidents qui y ont fait des dizaines de morts depuis le 30 septembre, une délégation dépêchée par le guide suprême Ali Khamenei s’est rendue ce week-end dans cette province du sud-est de l’Iran.

Arrivé samedi soir à Zahedan, la capitale de cette province défavorisée, peuplée d’une importante minorité sunnite, son représentant Mohammad-Javad Haj Ali Akbari a déclaré dimanche: “Nous sommes venus pour vous faire part du chagrin et de la tristesse qu’éprouve le guide suprême concernant les incidents qui se sont produits” au Sistan-Baloutchistan.

kam/sk/sg

Le guide suprême iranien, l’ayatollah Ali Khamenei, le 12 octobre 2022 à Téhéran
• –

Un tribunal de Téhéran a condamné à mort dimanche, pour la première fois, une personne accusée d’avoir participé “aux émeutes” qui secouent l’Iran
• ATTA KENARE

L’entrée du Forum de Paris sur la paix au Palais Brongniart, le 11 novembre 2022 à Paris
• STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN

NewsAmericasNow.com

L’Iran annonce une première condamnation à mort liée aux “émeutes”

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guadeloupe FranceAntilles

Un tribunal de Téhéran a condamné à mort dimanche, pour la première fois, une personne accusée d’avoir participé “aux émeutes” qui secouent l’Iran, a annoncé l’agence…

Un tribunal de Téhéran a condamné à mort dimanche, pour la première fois, une personne accusée d’avoir participé “aux émeutes” qui secouent l’Iran, a annoncé l’agence de l’autorité judiciaire Mizan online.

Aucune information n’a été donnée sur son identité ni sur son âge.

Selon le verdict, cette personne est jugée coupable “d’avoir incendié un bâtiment gouvernemental, de trouble à l’ordre public, de rassemblement et conspiration en vue de commettre un crime contre la sécurité nationale, d’être un ennemi de Dieu et de corruption sur terre”, a précisé l’agence.

Un autre tribunal de la capitale a condamné cinq personnes à des peines de cinq à 10 ans de prison pour “rassemblement et conspiration en vue de commettre des crimes contre la sécurité nationale et trouble à l’ordre public”.

Il s’agit de tribunaux de première instance et les condamnés peuvent donc faire appel, précise Mizan.

L’Iran est secoué par une vague de manifestations depuis la mort le 16 septembre de Mahsa Amini, une Kurde iranienne de 22 ans, arrêtée trois jours plus tôt par la police des mœurs pour avoir enfreint le strict code vestimentaire de la République islamique.

La justice iranienne a par ailleurs inculpé près de 800 personnes pour leur participation à des “récentes émeutes” dans les provinces d’Hormozgan, d’Ispahan et Markazi.

Plus de 2.000 personnes ont été inculpées, dont la moitié à Téhéran, depuis le début des manifestations, il y a deux mois, selon les chiffres fournis par la justice iranienne. 

Des organisations des droits de l’Homme à l’étranger font état de 15.000 arrestations, chiffre que démentent les autorités iraniennes.

Loi du talion

Récemment, une grande majorité des 290 députés iraniens avaient réclamé à la justice d’appliquer la loi du talion contre les “ennemis de Dieu”, en référence aux auteurs des “émeutes” qui secouent le pays.

Les députés demandaient à tous les responsables du pays, y compris le pouvoir judiciaire, d’appliquer dès que possible contre les moharebs (ennemis de Dieu) la loi du talion.

“Comme le groupe Etat islamique, ils ont porté atteinte à la vie et aux biens des gens avec des armes blanches et des armes à feu”, affirmaient les parlementaires.

L’Iran a par ailleurs fustigé dimanche la rencontre à Paris entre le président français et des opposantes, qualifiant de “regrettables et honteuses” ses déclarations à l’issue de cette réunion.

Emmanuel Macron avait reçu vendredi à Paris, en marge du Forum de la paix, quatre militantes iraniennes, dont il avait salué la “révolution qu’elles sont en train de conduire” dans leur pays.

“Il s’agit d’une violation flagrante des responsabilités internationales de la France dans la lutte contre le terrorisme et la violence et nous considérons qu’elle favorise ces sinistres phénomènes”, a déclaré le porte-parole du ministère des Affaires étrangères, Nasser Kanani.

L’Iran a en outre vivement réagi dimanche aux propos la veille du chancelier allemand Olaf Scholz sur son podcast vidéo hebdomadaire.

“Quel genre de gouvernement êtes-vous qui tire sur ses propres citoyens? Quiconque agit de cette manière doit s’attendre à notre opposition”, avait dit le chancelier.

“La destruction des relations historiques entre l’Iran et l’Allemagne aura des conséquences à long terme et l’Iran possède une longue liste de revendications vis-à-vis de l’Allemagne en matière des droits de l’Homme”, a déclaré le porte-parole des Affaires étrangères iraniennes, dénonçant la position “interventionniste” et “provocatrice” de l’Allemagne. 

Pour tenter d’apaiser la situation au Sistan-Baloutchistan après les incidents qui y ont fait des dizaines de morts depuis le 30 septembre, une délégation dépêchée par le guide suprême Ali Khamenei s’est rendue ce week-end dans cette province du sud-est de l’Iran.

Arrivé samedi soir à Zahedan, la capitale de cette province défavorisée, peuplée d’une importante minorité sunnite, son représentant Mohammad-Javad Haj Ali Akbari a déclaré dimanche: “Nous sommes venus pour vous faire part du chagrin et de la tristesse qu’éprouve le guide suprême concernant les incidents qui se sont produits” au Sistan-Baloutchistan.

kam/sk/sg

Le guide suprême iranien, l’ayatollah Ali Khamenei, le 12 octobre 2022 à Téhéran
• –

Un tribunal de Téhéran a condamné à mort dimanche, pour la première fois, une personne accusée d’avoir participé “aux émeutes” qui secouent l’Iran
• ATTA KENARE

L’entrée du Forum de Paris sur la paix au Palais Brongniart, le 11 novembre 2022 à Paris
• STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN

NewsAmericasNow.com

22 migrants arrive in Cayman Brac over the past couple of days Loop Cayman Islands

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cayman Compass

22 migrants arrive in Cayman Brac over the past couple of days Loop Cayman Islands

Loop News

44 minutes ago

According to the Cayman Islands Customs and Border Control Service (CBC), a total of 22 migrants arrived in Cayman Brac over the past couple of days.

The number includes 3 male migrants who arrived in the Spot Bay area of Cayman Brac today (Sunday, November 13, 2022) at approximately 6:45am.

Another 9 male migrants previously arrived on November 10, followed by 10 on November 11 who came ashore on Cayman Brac.

According to CBC, the migrants will be processed in accordance with CBC’s established protocols.

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Grenadian woman granted bail after stabbing husband

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Port of Spain Magistrates’ Court
Photo: Sureash Cholai

A GRENADIAN woman, 36, accused of stabbing her common-law husband, was granted $30,000 bail with a surety on Friday by a Port of Spain magistrate.

As a part of her bail conditions, a police press release said, she was ordered not to communicate with her husband and must also report to her local police station once weekly until her next hearing on December 9.

According to police, on November 4 at 11.30 pm, a man was at his Laventille home with his common-law wife when they began arguing.

Police were told the man was hit by his wife, who then used a scissors to stab him twice in the chest causing serious injuries.

Assisted by neighbours, he escaped, and was taken for treatment at the Port of Spain General Hospital.

The accused was arrested on November 10 and charged with one count of grievous bodily harm by WPC Phillip of the Gender-Based Violence Unit (GBVU).

The investigation was supervised by acting Snr Supt Claire Guy-Alleyne and acting Assistant Superintendent Lystra Bridglal of the GBVU.

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