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UK leader in peril after Treasury chief axes ‘Trussonomics’ Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

LONDON (AP) — The UK’s new Treasury chief ripped up the government’s economic plan on Monday, dramatically reversing most of the tax cuts and spending plans that new Prime Minister Liz Truss announced less than a month ago. The move raises more questions about how long the beleaguered British leader can stay in office, though Truss insisted she has no plans to quit.

Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt said he was scrapping “almost all” of Truss’ tax cuts, along with her flagship energy policy and her promise — repeated just last week — that there will be no public spending cuts.

While the reversal of policy calmed financial markets and helped restore the government’s economic credibility, it further undermined the prime minister’s rapidly crumbling authority and fuelled calls for her to step down before her despairing Conservative Party forces her out.

Truss declined to attend the House of Commons to answer a question on the economy from the leader of the opposition, sending House of Commons leader Penny Mordaunt in her place. Mordaunt denied a lawmaker’s suggestion that Truss was “cowering under her desk” to avoid scrutiny.

“The prime minister is not under a desk,” Mordaunt said, words hardly likely to inspire confidence in the leader who only came to power last month.

Truss’ spokesman said the prime minister and Hunt had jointly agreed on the economic changes. But Hunt told Conservative lawmakers that Truss “backed him to the hilt in making difficult decisions” — suggesting he has a free hand to make policy.

With Truss sitting silently beside him, Hunt told lawmakers that he was cancelling Truss’ plan to reduce the basic rate of income tax by 1 percentage point and most of her other libertarian economic policies. In a message aimed squarely at reassuring the financial markets, he said Britain was “a country that funds our promises and pays our debts.”

“And when that is questioned, as it has been, this government will take the difficult decisions necessary to ensure there is trust and confidence in our national finances,” Hunt said.

Hunt was appointed Friday after Truss fired his predecessor Kwasi Kwarteng, who spent less than six weeks in the Treasury job. Hunt is seeking to restore the Conservative government’s credibility for sound fiscal policy after Truss and Kwarteng rushed out a plan for tax cuts without detailing how they would pay for them.

Truss and Kwarteng jointly came up with a Sept. 23 announcement of 45 billion pounds ($50 billion) in unfunded tax cuts that immediately spooked the financial markets. The cuts fuelled investor concerns about unsustainable levels of government borrowing, which pushed up government borrowing costs, raised home mortgage costs and sent the pound plummeting to an all-time low against the dollar. The Bank of England was forced to intervene to protect pension funds, which were squeezed by volatility in the bond market.

Over the weekend, Hunt has been dismantling that economic plan. The government had already ditched parts of its tax-cutting plan and announced it would make a medium-term fiscal statement on Oct. 31, weeks earlier than previously scheduled.

On Monday, Hunt went further. He scaled back a cap on energy prices designed to help households pay their bills. It will now be reviewed in April rather than lasting two years — sweeping away one of Truss’ signature plans to help Britons facing a cost-of-living crisis as food, fuel and mortgage prices soar.

Hunt told lawmakers that the measures he announced would save 32 billion pounds a year, but that spending cuts were also coming.

“There remain, I’m afraid, many difficult decisions to be announced” in the fuller budget statement on Oct. 31, he said.

Hunt also said he was setting up a new Economic Advisory Council of economists and investment bankers to help inform policy — a far cry from Truss’ bid to throw out economic “orthodoxy.”

The pound rose more than one per cent to above $1.13 in London after Hunt’s announcements. That pushed the UK currency back above where it was trading on Sept. 22, the day before Kwarteng announced the tax cuts.

Yields on 10-year government bonds, an indicator of government borrowing costs, fell to 3.947 per cent from 4.327 per cent on Friday. It was 3.495 per cent on Sept. 22. Bond yields tend to rise as the risk of a borrower defaulting increases.

Paul Johnson, director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies think tank, said Monday’s announcements would not be enough “to undo the damage caused by the debacle of the last few weeks. But they are big, welcome, clear steps in the right direction.”

The financial fiasco has turned Truss into a lame-duck prime minister. She took office just six weeks ago after winning a party election to replace Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who was forced out in July after ethics scandals ensnared his administration. Many Conservatives now believe their only hope is to replace Truss — but they are divided about who should take over.

In a BBC interview, Truss conceded that she had made mistakes. But, she vowed, “I will lead the Conservatives into the next general election.”

Few believe that possible. The Conservative Party still commands a large majority in Parliament, and — in theory — has two years until a national election must be held. Polls suggest holding an election now would be a wipeout for the Tories, with the Labour Party winning a big majority.

Labour Party economics spokeswoman Rachel Reeves said Truss was “barely in office, and she is certainly not in power,” and claimed the Conservatives could not fix the problems they had caused.

“The truth is an arsonist is still an arsonist, even if he runs back into the burning building with a bucket of water,” she said.

Chris Beauchamp, chief market analyst at online trading firm IG, said the markets were reassured by the presence of Hunt, a former UK foreign secretary and health chief.

“I think markets in some ways would rather things just stayed as they are for a while,” he said. “OK, the PM has found her authority quite truncated. But at least you’ve got the chancellor in place almost running the country.

“I think they’re quite content with that slightly odd state of affairs, for the moment.”

___

Jo Kearney contributed to this story.

By: Jill Lawless and Danica Kirka

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Dasheen cuisine, delights score at Blue Food Festival

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

A group of friends from Atlanta, USA enjoy local meals at Blue Food Festival, Bloody Bay, Sunday. – Photo by David Reid

Hundreds of people turned out to the Bloody Bay Recreation Ground in Sunday for the annual Tobago Blue Food Festival.

During the past two years of the pandemic, a scaled-down version of the festival, one of the island’s signature events, was held with curbside pick-ups and online activities. But this year, the event, which celebrates the versatility of the dasheen, again welcomed patrons from all over the world.

Bon Accord resident Phil Williams, left, buys a black cake made from dasheen, from vendor Susan Harnandez, at Blue Food Festival, Sunday. – Photo by David Reid

The Prime Minister, Chief Secretary Farley Augustine, members of the THA and other specially invited guests sat in a VIP area.

“I really missed this event during the pandemic because I usually come every year,” a woman from Barbados told Newsday. The woman said she enjoys eating the provision and wild meat, especially the iguana and tattoo.

Sharlene John, left, serves a buss-up shut meal to a customer at Blue Food Festival on Sunday. – Photo by David Reid

She said she also enjoys the fruit cake, ice cream, wine and pholourie.

A group of friends from Georgia, Atlanta was seen satisfying their palates with the local meals.

More than 30 cooks from Bloody Bay, L’Anse Fourmi and surrounding areas participated in the festival. But one of the more popular products on sale was Nedd’s dasheen punch.

Alana Nedd told Newsday the punch was made with secret ingredients. “We have the dasheen, we have milk, the richest that you can find, and we have lots of spices and other secret ingredients in the punch.

“It is made with love so when you taste it, it is the best,” she said with a chuckle. Pressed on why patrons are always making a beeline for the dasheen punch, Nedd said, “That is a secret and I cannot let out my secret. But when you taste it you will love it.”

Nedd said she has been making the punch for the past five years. “Coming from a family that has always been involved in the Blue Food Festival and we have always been doing different things from the dasheen, I decided I will specialise in doing punch. So that is my area.” Nedd said her parents prepare the dishes and ice cream while she does the punch.

Alana Nedd with her popular dasheen punch. – Photo by Corey Connelly

Apart from the delicacies, drinks and indigenous craft market, members of the Wildlife Association of Tobago also put on a display for the patrons. Visitors got the opportunity to pet snakes, a caiman, monkeys and parrots. This delighted onlookers, many of whom took out their cellphones to capture the spectacle.

Organisers also gave away tickets for the highly anticipated Tobago, Music, Arts and Culture Festival concert on October 27 at the Plymouth Recreation Ground. The concert features Grammy-winning Nigerian singer Burna Boy and a host of other local entertainers., including Kes The Band, Lyrikal and Nailah Blackman.

Another highlight of the Blue Food Festival was the lively entertainment, which featured several Tobago artistes and other local performers. A brief musical segment with several traditional characters, baby doll, minstrel, dame Lorraine, midnight robber, heralded the official entertainment. It included speech band pieces, calypso, reggae, soca and rhythm and blues.

Ultra Noel, left, and Noella Robinson enjoy dasheen-made ice cream at Blue Food Festival on Sunday. – Photo by David Reid

Among those performing were former Road March winner Marvin Lewis, soca artiste Shurwayne Winchester, Tobago Heritage Monarch Shamika Denoon, calypsonian Leslie Ann Ellis, Keshorn Jack, Ray Charles, Super Power, L’Anse Fourmi Methodist Primary School and the United Nations-sponsored cultural performers among others.

The Chief Secretary, who is the representative for Speyside Parlatuvier L’Anse Fourmi, welcomed guests to the “nicest part of the island.” He observed it was perhaps the first Blue Food Festival which had “hot, hot sun and no rain.”

Augustine told patrons they must not simply visit Bloody Bay to attend the festival to purchase dasheen products. “Come on this side of the island every chance you get and support their businesses and their enterprise.” He also urged them to be safe as the island’s carnival approaches from October 28 to 30. “Carnival is in a few weeks. So whether you jump on the stage, in the sea, or you jump on the road, be safe. Tobago is the place to be right now.” Tobago Festivals Commission Ltd CEO John Arnold also spoke.

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PNM marks legacy of George Chambers

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

George Chambers, the second Prime Minister of Trinidad and Tobago served between the period of 1981-1987. – File photo/ T&T News Centre Ltd

The People’s National Movement (PNM) is to mark the life and legacy of late prime minister George Chambers, who died 25 years ago on November 4.

The party is planning a series of events, led by Dr Nyan Gadsby-Dolly, including a youth essay/poetry competition, as well as an art competition, from October 17-30.

An exhibition will also be hosted at the National Library from November 4-18.

In a media release, the party encouraged the national community, especially young people, to participate in the upcoming events, in his honour.

Chambers (1928-1997) was TT’s second prime minister after Dr Eric Williams, and led the party to a general election victory in 1981. The release said he was known for “his courage, patriotism, boldness…and undisputed love for TT.”

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Ministry, Catholic Board offer support to Jamal’s schoolmates

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Minister of Education Dr Nyan Gadsby-Dolly. – FILE PHOTO/JEFF K MAYERS

THE Education Ministry and the Catholic School Board are to provide counselling and comfort to students of the Carapichaima RC Primary School, after one of them was killed over the weekend.

Jamal Modeste, nine, was shot in the back in a drive-by shooting at the African Recreation Grounds in Enterprise, Chaguanas on Saturday night. He was taken to the Chaguanas Health Centre, where he died while being treated.

His family was left in shock and disbelief over his death.

On Monday, Education Minister Dr Nyan Gadsby-Dolly confirmed that the ministry’s student support services unit would be offering counselling services to students at the school.

“Yes. As in all such tragic cases, the staff of the student support services will offer support.”

Gadsby-Dolly added. “It would have begun today (Monday).”

Catholic School Board CEO Sharon Mangroo said the board will offer support to students at the school as well.

“The parish priest will visit the school tomorrow (Tuesday).”

Mangroo said the board was advised that the Education Ministry would be sending counsellors to the school on Monday. Under those circumstances, the board did not think it wise to overwhelm the students by having the priest also visit the school on Monday.

“Assistance will also be sought from the parish for the family.”

School principal Thomas Metivier confirmed that a social worker from the Education Ministry visited on Monday to speak with students and staff. He also confirmed that the Catholic Board would send someone on Tuesday to counsel students and staff over Jamal’s death.

Metivier described the mood at the school as “solemn, sombre and reflective.”

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Police Identify Victim Of Fatal Shooting In Gros Islet – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

– Advertisement –

Police have identified the fatal shooting victim in Beausejour, Gros Islet, as 34-year-old Nevern Dujon.

According to law enforcement officials, at about 12:05 am on Monday, October 19, 2022, they received a shooting report at Beausejour, Gros Islet.

Dujon, a resident of Monier, Gros Islet, was in a parked motorcar when unknown individuals accosted him, firing multiple gunshots.

According to reports, he died at the scene.

– Advertisement –

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UN agency to help Trinidad and Tobago manage migrants

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Attendees at the Launch of the United Nations Network on Migration – Trinidad and Tobago (UNNM-TT) held Monday at The Brix, Autograph Collection, Port of Spain.
(L-R back row) Sheldon Ramroop from the World Food Programme, UNICEF Migrant Response Coordinator Alma Jenkins, Colombian Ambassador Martha Cecilia Pinilla Perdomo, United Nations Development Programme Resident Coordinator a.i. Gerardo Noto, International Organization for Migration Port of Spain Head of Office Jewel Ali, PAHO/WHO Country Representative Dr Erica Wheeler, UNFPA Liaison Officer Aurora Noguera-Ramkissoon, UNHCR Legal Associate Gina Maharaj, and Karyce Phillips from FAO. (L-R front row) Minister of Social Development and Family Services Donna Cox, Minister of Foreign and CARICOM Affairs Dr Amery Browne, Minister of Planning and Development Pennelope Beckles-Robinson, and Minister of Labour Stephen Mc Clashie. –  Photo by Paula Lindo

Foreign and Caricom Affairs Minister Dr Amery Browne said he appreciated the assistance the UN Network on Migration TT (UNNM-TT) would be able to give the government in managing the flow of migrants into and through the country.

He was speaking at the launch of the initiative on Monday at the Brix Hotel, Cascade.

The Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration (GCM) was adopted worldwide in 2018, and local and regional migration mechanisms were formed as part of this agreement under the responsibility of the International Organisation for Migration (IOM).

Browne said the number of migrants worldwide has grown dramatically as people flee famine, poverty, warfare, sometimes persecution and political turmoil, while many also seek improved circumstances for themselves and their families.

“As countries that become migrant destinations expand, the need for co-ordinated and collaborative efforts among countries and organisations becomes more urgent than ever before. No one entity can manage migration globally, including the TT government, especially if the ultimate aim is to ensure the safety of migrant populations, the manageable accommodation, integration and facilitation of new beginnings for those who had to leave their homeland, and support for systems in the countries they transit and the countries that receive them.

“I consider the work of the IOM, safeguarding the rights of migrants and providing assistance to source, transit, and destination countries, to be particularly crucial at this time. Collaboration between the PoS IOM and my ministry is therefore a matter of tremendous importance, constituting part of our commitment to regional integration efforts such as Caricom and regional instruments such as the GCM.”

Browne said facilitating the movement of people is an imperative for TT and the region.

“Unregulated flows are often impractical and have negative social, economic, and security impacts. As we seek to engage with partners to ensure that the delicate and problematic balance between managing the wellbeing of migrants and the perhaps unavoidable domestic concerns as a destination country is properly developed and maintained, the concerns of all constituents within the framework of migration must matter. TT welcomes the inception of the UNNM-TT and eagerly anticipates the support this partnership will bring to capacity-building, knowledge-sharing, information collection, data analysis, and the development of the national action plans.”

UN resident co-ordinator Dennis Zulu said the UNNMTT would lead to a more co-ordinated approach to migration, as the project would take into account specific factors unique to TT.

IOM PoS project manager Zeke Beharry said migration will not slow or stop, so it needed to be strategically managed to facilitate orderly, safe, responsible, and regular migration.

He said the UNNM-TT would co-ordinate the responses of 15 UN agencies and NGOs, with space for any other interested UN agencies. He said the network would encourage the government to endorse the GCM, support the implementation of the 26 GCM objectives, implement capacity-building activities that support the government in strengthening the approach to migration in TT, and ensure a comprehensive understanding of the evolving migration dynamics and provide leadership for a co-ordinated and collaborative approach to action to migration in TT.

Colombian ambassador Martha Pinilla-Perdomo said in Colombia, the International Organization for Migrants in Bogota supported the establishment of a network similar to the UNNM, and the country is seen as a model one for migrants and migration matters. She said it has facilitated the management of at least two million Venezuelans living in diverse regions of Colombia who need to be integrated into the society.

“Migrants are characterised for being creative and having the strength to be able to go to a new world, capable of executing their ideas. Many of them are well educated in technical and professional knowledge that may supplement the local capacities. They are also consumers and taxpayers if they are regularised.”

She said it’s a win-win situation if the receiving countries and their national institutions, as well as expert NGOs and the international community which manages the different aspects of migrant implications, are able to work together harmoniously.

Pinilla-Perdomo said substantial migration brings new challenges in diverse areas such as registration, temporary shelter, emergency health services, feeding, regularisation, housing, public utilities, labour, education, and permanent health services, which makes a co-ordinating mechanism even more important.

“An organised migration system to receive and integrate those who for diverse reasons have had to leave behind their countries, belongings, friends, and in many cases, their families, gives them back their dignity as the human beings they are, assuring them their respect and guaranteeing them their human rights.”

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Fifa-cursussen voor arbiters op het veld en in de zaal

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

door Marinio Balsemhof PARAMARIBO — De veld- en zaalvoetbalarbiters gaan drukke dagen tegemoet. Van 20 tot 24 oktober is er

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L’enquête se poursuit après le « commando » armé dans une pizzeria du Lamentin

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Dans la nuit de samedi à dimanche (15 au 16 octobre), six hommes ont braqué la pizzeria Delice 32, dans le bourg du Lamentin et détroussé les clients. Les investigations sont en cours.

« Un commando armé ». Dans la bouche des policiers, c’est véritablement à cela que les gérants, employés et clients d’une pizzeria ont eu affaire dans la nuit de samedi à dimanche, au Lamentin. 

Ce soir-là, six hommes, munis de bandanas, de capuches pour certains, mais le visage découvert pour d’autres se sont présentés au Délice 32 pour braquer l’établissement situé dans le bourg du Lamentin. 

Trois d’entre eux, dont deux armés, sont entrés dans le snack et demandé la caisse. Ils ont mis la main sur 350 euros.

Un blessé par balle

Les braqueurs ont profité de cette scène violente pour dépouiller les clients présents de leurs téléphones, bijoux et autres effets personnels. 

L’un d’eux, qui refusait de se laisser faire, a été pris pour cible et blessé par balle. Hospitalisé, son pronostic n’est heureusement pas menacé. 

Une enquête de police, pilotée par la Direction Territoriale de la Police Nationale, a été aussitôt ouverte. Des constatations ont été effectuées sur les lieux. Les policiers exploitent les éléments afin de retrouver au plus vite les six braqueurs.

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Le public invité à découvrir les moyens disponibles pour le secourir

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guadeloupe FranceAntilles

La semaine nationale de la Résilience en Guadeloupe s’est achevée samedi au centre commercial de Destreland. L’ensemble des acteurs associatifs et institutionnels spécialiste dans la gestion de crise était mobilisé. Des animations et des  démonstrations ont été proposées au grand public.

La journée nationale de la Résilience, une fois n’est pas coutume,  s’est muée en semaine, ponctuée de différentes actions et interventions à destination des scolaires et du grand public comme l’explique le préfet, Alexandre Rochatte. Il est venu à la rencontre des différents acteurs de la prévention et de la gestion des risques naturels. « Nous avons l’habitude en Guadeloupe de faire un certain nombre de journée ou de semaine de sensibilisation et d’information aux risques…


France-Antilles Guadeloupe

886 mots – 17.10.2022

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UCC and StarApple A.I announce strategic partnership Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

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

1 hrs ago – Updated


Michael Gordon (left), Chief Innovation Officer, University of the Commonwealth Caribbean (UCC) and Adrian Dunkley, CEO, StarApple Analytics shake hands following the signing of an MOU at the UCC’s Worthington Avenue campus.

NEWYou can now listen to Loop News articles!

The University of the Commonwealth Caribbean (UCC) and StarApple A.I have entered into a strategic partnership, to combine data science and artificial intelligence (A.I) solutions with academic innovations.

With data and technology playing an increasingly important role in the state of the planet, economies and our everyday lives, an unrelenting drive for innovation and future thinking is required to ensure the Caribbean is at the forefront of global technology.

“Jamaica’s creativity per square mile is unmatched, we can channel that into a technological renaissance that will benefit all Jamaicans,” said Adrian Dunkley, Founder of StarApple A.I and President of the Jamaica Technology and Digital Alliance.

Dunkley noted that the UCC-StarApple partnership is a powerful combination and a catalyst for regional change using human-centred technology.

Michael Gordon, UCC’s Chief Innovation Officer said the institution is “focused on developing the next generation of leaders with transformative education and economic growth as our driver, together we will unlock the full potential of the Jamaican Technology ecosystem.”

The partnership has already proven fruitful, with pilots of several solutions including an A.I supported financial aid tools to help working students, a sports lab utilising A.I drones and gamified learning labs teaching private and public-sector professionals how to apply data analytics in their daily work efficiently.

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