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ZIZ Evening News – September 28, 2022

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: ZIZ Broadcasting Corporation

ZIZ Evening News presented every day at 7 PM. The Evening News is streamed live on YouTube and Facebook @ZIZOnline, ZIZOnline.com and aired live on ZIZ Television.

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Antigua and Barbuda Represented at GCF Global Programming Conference 2022

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room
Ambassador Diann Black-Layne making a presentation during the session on “Integrated Resilience Planning” at the GCF Global Programming Conference, photo is courtesy of the Green Climate Fund (GCF).

On September 13 -15, 2022, Director of the Antigua and Barbuda Department of Environment,  Ambassador Diann Black-Layne and the Deputy Project Coordinator of the Enhanced Direct Access (EDA) Project, Christa-Joy Burton, along with a range of global leaders, experts and companies attended the fifth (5th) annual Green Climate Fund (GCF) Global Programming Conference (GPC).

The event, hosted in Incheon, South Korea, brought together private and public sector stakeholders to explore innovative ways the private sector can mobilize and scale up finance to accelerate climate action in developing countries like Antigua and Barbuda.

The GPC 2022 focused on unlocking capital for climate action by providing a platform to address market failures, showcase new ideas, and forge new partnerships within the climate finance sector.

Attendees left the conference with a new perspective and shared experiences on innovations and best practices for scaling up public-private partnerships toward climate action.

According to Ms. Burton “As one of the first accredited Direct Access Entity (DAEs) to have a regional EDA pilot project approved by the GCF, it was important to be in attendance to share on our progress and lessons learnt thus far.

Through the in-person bilaterals and joint sessions, we were able to have candid discussions with the GCF representatives on the effectiveness of the technical support and funding procedures provided by the GCF, and also had the opportunity to strengthen our partnerships not only with the GCF, but with other NDAs and AEs.

I think this is especially key to improving climate action and project support across developing countries through the sharing of new and best practices, and exploring areas for innovation for climate action.”

For more information contact Christa- Joy Burton at 462-4625 or via email at [email protected].

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UPP Embarks on Diaspora Connect Roadshow to Secure Credible Investment Opportunities

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

In the countdown to the general elections in Antigua and Barbuda which are constitutionally due by March 2023, the Opposition United Progressive Party (UPP), has embarked on a tour of the Antiguan and Barbudan Diaspora in the United States.

A delegation comprising Political Leader Harold Lovell, Deputy Political Leader Jamale Pringle and four candidates will lead this initiative, as part of an investment and nation building campaign to create jobs through strategic investment.

The theme of this initiative is “Partnership for Investment and Nation Building.” The first leg of the tour, slated for September 28 – October 3, will make stops in Florida, Georgia and New York, the three main regions of the United States where most Antiguan and Barbudan nationals reside.

The UPP will appeal to thousands in the Diaspora who claim Antiguan and Barbudan ancestry, as well as others who feel linked to the country by friendship, business, education, interest or affinity.

“The UPP regards the Diaspora as a key stakeholder in the development of our nation,” said Lovell. “Typically, the Government pursues foreign direct investment (FDI) via credible investors for some of its larger capital projects. But as part of our development strategy, the UPP will empower Antiguans and Barbudans in the Diaspora who have the means – and the interest – to invest in their country of ancestry.”

In addition to engaging nationals who are interested in the investment landscape, the Political Leader wants to engage them in national conversations.

Many UPP plans and programs will also affect those who have an interest in returning home or establishing a second home.

Lovell is expected to make several announcements about a structure to facilitate Diaspora Direct Investments (DDI), as well as special investment packages.

Lovell will also appeal to Diasporans to become ambassadors and to encourage their own extensive networks of family, friends and business colleagues to invest or engage in nation building initiatives.

A UPP government will launch the Linking Experts and Advocates in the Diaspora (LEAD) project to engage highly qualified experts, professionals and advocates, and to tap into their skills and expertise.

The Political Leader will also identify and engage with key influencer groups across the US, that have Antiguan and Barbudan connections – including business networks, cultural and sporting associations, and community groups – encouraging them to invest.

The UPP delegation will participate in a series of press briefings and interviews with representatives from the broadcast, digital and print media.

To learn more about Diaspora Connect Roadshow contact: DSW Consulting Media. Tel: 862-216-3290.

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LETTER: Give ABLP another term in office and they will muzzle ALL news media

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

Dear Editor,

You must understand that, according to the ABLP, news is only important if it paints a positive view of their administration.

News like the debacle at Clareview is not considered worthy of reporting because it exposes the incompetence of the ABLP administration.

Give them another term in office, and they will muzzle ALL news media that does not heap praise on Gaston and his minions.

To be forewarned is to be forearmed. Beware of despots!

Keep the Freedom Flag Flying

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Editor

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Cornell Matthew 64-year-old reported missing

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

Mr Cornell Matthew 64yrs old was reported missing from the Hevently Nursing Home in Bathlodge on 12/9/2022. If seen contact the CID at 4623913/4 or the nearest Police Station

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‘Gypsy’ on $146m allocation: ‘NCC will have to make do’

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

NCC chairman Winston “Gypsy” Peters.

Chairman of the National Carnival Commission (NCC) Winston “Gypsy” Peters has said he and his team will make the money allocated to the commission this year bear fruit.

The 2023 budget’s draft estimates of expenditure gave the NCC a little over $146 million to run its operations for the fiscal year, all of which Peters said will be invested into Carnival.

“It will bring back more than $1 billion to TT.

“We could have done with a little more, but that is what the country can afford now. We will have to make do. It’s an investment worth its salt and it’s not going to go down the drain. As soon as Carnival is announced it will start to bear fruit,” Peters told Newsday in a phone interview.

He said in addition to the monetary rewards, the peace of mind as a result of the opportunities the Carnival celebrations provide cannot be discounted.

“A lot of people will be employed for Carnival. Do you know how happy people will feel knowing they have a way of earning something to take care of their families?…The country is under stress and this investment is going to bring back in excess of $1 billion. The feeling that that is going to bring people cannot be monetised.”

The NCC falls under the purview of the tourism and cultural sectors, which have been among the hardest hit by the covid19 pandemic, with the temporary closure of the borders to international and regional visitors, a fall in hotels’ and guest houses’ occupancy rates, the suspension of the cruise season, and the shutdown of the entertainment industry.

This resulted in the cancellation of Carnival 2021 and only a “taste of Carnival” in 2022 at a cost of $30 million.

“Carnival would normally cost $150 million or thereabouts, but, in this case, because it’s a taste of Carnival and our economic circumstances are not very healthy right now, we are going to make do with whatever we have,” Peters had told Newsday in February, adding that it was a showcase and advertisement for Carnival 2023.

Giving his opinion as a former minister of arts and multiculturalism, Peters said the budget, delivered by Finance Minister Colm Imbert on Monday, was a good one.

“The attention was paid to the essential aspects of our country. There will always be people who will not be satisfied, but in my view, it was a good one, given the current circumstances.”

President of Pan Trinbago Beverley Ramsey-Moore said she didn’t “see anything jumping out for the creative sector” in Monday’s budget.

“Because we get funding from the NCC, we will now have to wait to see how it will now distribute.”

In a media release in response to the budget, MP for Moruga Tableland Michelle Benjamin said the Tourism, Culture and the Arts Minister, Randall Mitchell, lacked innovative and creative measures to boost the industry. She said she had hoped the budget would say the “latest digital technology would be leveraged to enhance the visitor experience or even our locals,” and that tourism sites such as the Caroni Bird Sanctuary, the Pitch Lake and Devil’s Woodyard would be developed and modernised.

“Instead, the government’s plan is to build more hotels for what influx of visitors? The minister has been tirelessly accused of not consulting the relevant agencies including small tourism enterprises…,” the release said.

Imbert announced government’s plans to invest in digitising the tourism and creative sectors by offering incentives to small and micro-enterprises, as well as to continue making investments in the hotel and cruise industries.

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Coast Guard got $11.2m for upgrades

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

File photo: A Trinidad and Tobago Coast Guard vessel.

TO strengthen the patrolling of the nation’s borders, the Trinidad and Tobago Coast Guard (TTCG) was given $11.2 million in the 2021/2022 budget allocation to improve its facilities.

For fiscal year 2022/2023 the National Security Ministry was allocated $5.798 billion, $134 million more than the 2021/2022 allocation of $5.664 billion.

According to the Public Service Investment Programme (PSIP) documents, the TTCG sought the funds to improve its infrastructure at its various bases and to maintain its naval assets to improve maritime operations.

Of the $11.2 million, $5.2 million was set aside to upgrade utilities which include its electrical, potable water and wastewater treatment system, as well as air conditioning at Staubles Bay. Some of the money was allocated for preliminary designs for a facility at the Heliport, Chaguaramas, maintenance of naval vessels and for two standby generators to improve the electrical distribution at Staubles Bay.

In September last year, National Security Minister Fitzgerald Hinds met with technical advisers and members of the protective services to assess the efficacy of TT’s border security measures.

At the meeting, Hinds is reported to have said: “I have only outlined some of the issues that are affecting us as a country, of which border security is just one, but this issue is one that happens to be a high-priority issue for the government of TT and specifically, for the Ministry of National Security.”

In May, Hinds signed an MOU to enter stage five of the European Commission’s Cocaine Route Programme Seaport Co-operation (SEACOP) project. This phase will focus on reinforcing the effectiveness of maritime intelligence and maritime/riverine control networks. It will also strengthen the Coast Guard’s ability to integrate that knowledge to deal with maritime threats and transatlantic illicit trafficking routes.

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Man robs Princes Town family, leaves stolen cellphones behind

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

File photo

Princes Town CID are searching for a man who broke into a house and robbed an elderly woman and a male relative of valuables, including two cellphones.

The thief also made the relative, a 33-year-old man, to drive him near a cemetery in New Grant. In his haste to get away, the man forgot the stolen cellphones.

The police said the ordeal began before dawn on Tuesday at the family’s home on Petit Café Road in Princes Town.

At around 3.30 am, a 69-year-old female victim was awakened by a man’s voice in her bedroom.

The unknown man announced a robbery, saying he had a gun.

He also demanded her valuables. Fearful for her life, she handed him some jewellery, a cellphone, and $100.

He ordered her to wake up the male relative in an adjacent room. The relative had returned home from work minutes earlier at around 2.45 am, locked the doors and went to sleep.

The thief robbed him of a cellphone, gold jewellery, and $1,000.

The thief then ordered him to take him to his van and told him to drive towards New Grant.

On reaching a cemetery, the man ordered the driver to stop, got out and ran off, leaving the two stolen cellphones in the van.

The man is of African descent, is medium-built and has a dark brown complexion and a tattoo of a knife on his left hand.

Princes Town police were alerted and searched for the culprit, who could not be found.

They later learnt the man got into the house by prying a window open.

PC Clarence is leading investigations.

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‘Takari’ from Penal charged with sacrilege

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Ganesh Murti Image source: Wikimedia

A 45-year-old labourer from Penal is expected to face a Siparia magistrate on Thursday charged with sacrilege.

The police charged Dave “Takari” Bharat on Wednesday night.

It is alleged that he broke into Lakrani Ganesh Mandir at Gopie Trace, Penal, and damaged a murti (Lord Ganesh), drank milk from a fridge, and ate nuts.

Bharat lives at Gopie Trace, about a quarter-mile from the mandir.

On Friday at around 8 am, a worshipper discovered the mandir had been broken into.

A speaker box mounted on a tripod, worth between $3,000 and $4,000, and a flash drive with religious information were missing.

The woman reported that she had locked all the doors and windows and doors on Wednesday before she left.

The thief had pried open a door and got into the mandir.

Sgt Boodlal led the investigations, and Hosein laid the charge.

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Inclement Weather Forces Early Closure Of Schools In Saint Lucia – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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Inclement weather on Thursday forced the early closure of schools in Saint Lucia.

The Ministry of Education, Sustainable Development, Innovation, Science, Technology and Vocational Training has informed parents and guardians that based on urgent advice provided by the National Emergency Management Organisation (NEMO), all schools Islandwide would close today,  Thursday 29th September 2022 at midday as a result of an impending weather system.

In a press release, the Ministry advised parents and guardians to make all necessary arrangements immediately to pick up their children or wards at various learning institutions.

In addition, the Ministry encourages all to remain safe during this rainy period.

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According to the Saint Lucia Meteorological Services, an intertropical convergence zone still lingers in the area since Monday, dumping rain on the Island on Monday and Tuesday.

And although the country experienced some respite on Wednesday, Meteorological Services Director Andre Joyeux told St Lucia Times that the Island expected a few more showers and thunderstorms Thursday.

“The models are showing that this afternoon there would be a little more moderate to heavy showers,” Joyeux disclosed minutes before noon on Thursday.

The Meteorological Services Director expects more showers on Friday with some improvement during the weekend.

However, Joyeux observed that the intertropical convergence zone has ‘a mind of its own’.

And noting that the models do not give a clear picture, he asserted that the system could linger a little longer.

Nevertheless, he explained that the Meteorological Services will continue to monitor.

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