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9th in the World! Barbadian female archer wins big in Santo Domingo Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

Charlene Goddard will represent Barbados in the 2023 Central American and Caribbean Games [CAC] following her recent performance at the Copa Merengue CAC qualifier world ranking event.

The competition, which was hosted at Pabell?n de Arquer?a, Parque del Este in Santo Domingo, took place from September 6 to September 11, 2022.

Speaking to Loop Sports, 28-year-old Goddard said that she was feeling conflicted about her performance.

“I have mixed emotions about my performance,” she explained. “I struggled a bit to settle down in the qualification round and it resulted in me not shooting a score I would have liked, but I picked myself back up in eliminations and felt better about my performance during then.”

The Medical Laboratory Technologist who works at Bayview Laboratory in Belleville, St Michael revealed that she not only placed second in the CAC qualifier, but also ninth in a world ranking event against over 100 competitors.

“I competed in two competitions while I was there. One being the CAC qualifier which I placed second overall and opened a Senior Compound female slot for Barbados. The second was a world ranking event in which I placed ninth overall.”

Goddard, who is an experienced archer having been shooting for over 15 years, disclosed that this was not her first time competing abroad, however, the weather conditions in the Dominican Republic were something she had never experienced before.

“I have been competing overseas for quite some time. My last competition would have been a world ranking shoot in Medellin Colombia last year May, which I would have finished fourth overall. There hasn’t been much difference with competing at different competitions. The only thing I can think about is the weather. Some countries I have competed in have been freezing while others, for example Dominican Republic, was extremely hot, I have never experienced heat like that in my life.”

Currently, Goddard is focusing on training for the CAC games with her eyes set on the 2023 Pan American Qualifier as well.

“I would like to attend the Pan American Qualifier next year. I am unsure of dates but for now, I am mainly focusing on my training for the CAC games.”

Looking ahead with determination, she took a moment to thank her family and friends who play an important role in her archery career. “My coach, family, husband and friends, each one of them play an important role in my archery career.” She added, “They are always proud of me no matter the outcome.”

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Some communities in western, southern parishes out of power – JPS Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

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

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As the outer bands of Tropical Storm Ian continue to impact southern and western parishes, Jamaica Public Service Company (JPS) is reporting that a few small pockets in these parishes have had their power service interrupted.

In a release on Sunday morning, the company said it expects to return these areas to normality on Sunday.

The affected areas include sections of Liguanea in St Andrew; Red Ground and Flanker in St James; and Blackwind Deeside in Trelawny.

The power company said waterlogged soil resulting from the rainy conditions, along with lightning, remain the biggest threats to the restoration and stability of the power supply.

The company it will continue to closely monitor the situation to address customers’ needs as they may arise.

JPS said it remains dedicated to serve with the highest levels of safety in mind.

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Winter’s approach sets clock ticking for Ukraine, Russia Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — The onset of autumnal weather, with rains making fields too muddy for tanks, is beginning to cloud Ukraine’s efforts to take back more Russian-held territory before winter freezes the battlefields, a Washington-based think tank said Sunday.

Russia, meanwhile, pressed on with its call-up of hundreds of thousands of men to throw into the seven-month war, seeking to reverse its recent losses. Without control of the skies over Ukraine, Russia is also making increasing use of suicide drones, with more strikes reported Sunday in the Black Sea port city of Odesa.

The Russian mobilization — its first such call-up since World War II — is sparking protests in Russia, with fresh demonstrations Sunday. In Dagestan, one of Russia’s poorer regions in the North Caucasus, police fired warning shots to try to disperse more than 100 people who blocked a highway while protesting the call-up, Russian media reported.

It is also opening splits in Europe about whether fighting-age Russian men fleeing in droves should be welcomed or turned away.

For Ukrainian and Russian military planners, the clock is ticking, with the approach of winter expected to make fighting more complicated. Already, rainy weather is bringing muddy conditions that are starting to limit the mobility of tanks and other heavy weaponry, according to the Institute for the Study of War.

But the think tank said Ukrainian forces are still gaining ground in their counteroffensive, launched in late August, that has spectacularly rolled back the Russian occupation across large areas of the northeast and which also prompted Russian President Vladimir Putin’s new drive for reinforcements.

The partial mobilization has triggered an exodus of men seeking to avoid the draft — and sharp differences of opinion in Europe in recent days about how to deal with them.

Lithuania, a European Union member-country that borders Kaliningrad, a Russian Baltic Sea exclave, said it won’t grant them asylum. “Russians should stay and fight. Against Putin,” Foreign Minister Gabrielius Landsbergis tweeted.

His counterpart in Latvia, also an EU member and bordering Russia, said the exodus poses “considerable security risks” for the 27-nation bloc and that those fleeing can’t be considered conscientious objectors against the invasion.

Many “were fine with killing Ukrainians, they did not protest then,” the Latvian foreign minister, Edgars Rinkevics, tweeted. He added that they have “plenty of countries outside EU to go.”

Finland also said it intends to “significantly restrict” entry to Russians entering the EU through its border with Russia. A Finnish opposition leader, Petteri Orpo, also said fleeing Russian military reservists are an “obvious” security risk and “we must put our national security first.”

Officials in other EU nations, however, say Europe has a duty to help, and fear that turning away Russians could play into Putin’s hands, feeding his narrative that the West has always hated Russians and that the war is being waged to safeguard their country against Western hostility.

“Closing our frontiers would fit neither with our values nor our interests,” a 40-strong group of senators in France said in a statement. They urged the EU to grant refugee status to Russians fleeing mobilization and said turning them away would be “a mistake by Europe in the war of communication and influence that is playing out.”

The mobilization is also running hand-in-hand with Kremlin-orchestrated votes in four occupied regions of Ukraine that could pave the way for their imminent annexation by Russia.

Ukraine and its Western allies say the referendums in Kherson and Zaporizhzhia in the south and the eastern Luhansk and Donetsk regions have no legal force. The votes are set to wrap up Tuesday but are being dismissed in Ukraine and the West as a sham, with footage showing armed Russian troops going door to door to pressure Ukrainians into voting.

Ukraine’s Reintegration Ministry said Russia has brought people from Belarus, Brazil, Egypt, South Africa, Syria, Togo, Uruguay and Venezuela to act as supposed outside observers. The ministry warned that they “will be punished,” without specifying how.

In cities across Russia, police have arrested hundreds of protesters against the mobilization order. Women opposed to the call-up protested Sunday in the Siberian city of Yakutsk. Videos shared by local media showed a crowd of a few hundred people, mostly women, holding hands and marching in a circle around a group of police. Police later dragged some away or forced them into police vans. News website SakhaDay said the women chanted pacifist slogans and songs.

At least 2,000 people have been arrested in recent days for similar demonstrations around the country. Many of those taken away immediately received call-up summons.

Other Russians are reporting for duty. Putin and Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu have said the order applies to reservists who recently served or have special skills, but almost every man is considered a reservist until age 65 and Putin’s decree kept the door open for a broader call-up.

The Kremlin said its initial aim is to add about 300,000 troops to its forces in Ukraine, struggling with equipment losses, mounting casualties and weakening morale. The mobilization marks a sharp shift from Putin’s previous efforts to portray the war as a limited military operation that wouldn’t interfere with most Russians’ lives.

By JON GAMBRELL, Associated Press

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Roban generador eléctrico de residencia en Dorado

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

Un escalamiento fue reportado a las 4:56 de la tarde del sábado en una residencia localizada en el Barrio Los Puertos de Dorado.

De acuerdo a la información preliminar, alega la querellante del área de la marquesina se robaron de un generador eléctrico A-iPower 12000 valorada en cinco mil dólares.

La querella fue investigada preliminarmente por el agente José Allende del distrito de Dorado y referida al Cuerpo de Investigaciones Criminales de Vega Baja para la investigación correspondiente.

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El dólar cobra fuerza e incrementa su diferencial ante el euro en los pagos internacionales

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El uso del euro como medio de pago internacional en agosto logró su mínimo de 2 años, mientras que el dólar alcanzó su máximo en el mismo periodo, se desprende del informe del sistema interbancario SWIFT publicado este miércoles, recoge Bloomberg.

Según las estadísticas, para el 31 de agosto el porcentaje de la moneda europea en el comercio internacional se redujo hasta un 34,5%, mientras el del dólar subió un 42,6%. Los extremos previos fueron alcanzados en el marzo del 2020, cuando la tasa de la moneda norteamericana en intercambios globales fue de un 44,1%, y la del euro un 30,8%.

El diferencial entre dólar y euro, siendo de solo un punto porcentual en febrero, superó los 8 puntos para agosto. Según Bloomberg, tal descenso en el uso del euro en los pagos internacionales pudo deberse a la inflación récord, la crisis energética y depreciación del 12% de la moneda europea respecto al dólar. No obstante, pese a todas las dificultades, el euro preserva el segundo lugar en la lista de divisas utilizadas en el comercio mundial.

Noticia original de RT en Español

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dolar euro

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Aumenta el precio de la gasolina en EE.UU.

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

Este domingo el precio medio de la gasolina en EE.UU. alcanzó los 3,71 dólares por galón, según los datos de la Asociación Estadounidense del Automóvil.

En algunos estados el precio es mucho más alto que el promedio del país. Por ejemplo, en California, el estado con la gasolina más cara, este domingo el galón alcanzó los 5,76 dólares, mientras que en Hawái se mantiene en casi 5,24 dólares, y en Nevada ronda los 5,09 dólares.

El valor de la gasolina en el país lleva subiendo 5 días consecutivos, después de 98 días de descenso. El aumento comenzó a partir de este miércoles, cuando el galón subió un centavo, llegando a los 3,68 dólares.

Noticia original de RT en Español

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EEUU gasolina

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Axelle René est Miss Martinique 2022

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Rédaction web
Dimanche 25 Septembre 2022 – 12h13

Axelle René (21 ans, 1m 77), Miss Martinique 2022. – DR

Ce samedi soir (24 septembre), Axelle René a été élue Miss Martinique 2022. La Robertine de 21 ans participera au concours de Miss France 2023, le 17 décembre 2022 à Déols (Centre-Val de Loire).

Axelle René succède à Floriane Bascou, Miss Martinique 2021 et première dauphine de Miss France 2022. Elles étaient 10 candidates pour une couronne de Miss Martinique 2022.

C’est finalement la Robertine de 21 ans, étudiante en Master 1 Géosciences & planétologie, qui a obtenu les faveurs du jury et du public, ce samedi soir (24 septembre), au Grand Carbet de Fort-de-France.

Elle s’impose devant Taïna Perro Tuong-A-Taï, Catherine Edouard, Adeline Gouyé-Martignac et Sarah Henry. 

Sur le thème “Perles des Caraïbes”, les candidates ont présenté notamment Cuba et Trinidad et Tobago, à travers 6 tableaux. 

Le concours s’est déroulé en présence de Cindy Fabre, Miss France 2005, originaire de la Guadeloupe, et nouvelle directrice du comité national de Miss France.

Miss Martinique 2022 se rendra à la 93e édition de Miss France, lors du concours de Miss France 2023, qui se tiendra le 17 décembre 2022 à Déols (Centre-Val de Loire), afin d’offrir peut-être un premier sacre historique à la Martinique. 

  L’Aéroport Martinique Aimé Césaire …

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Les pr?occupation et appels de la Chambre de commerce et d’industrie

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Le Nouvelliste

<>, peut-on lire dans une note de presse sign?e par le pr?sident de cette chambre de commerce, Laurent St-Cyr et treize autres membres, 24 septembre 2022.

<>, souligne cette note.

<>.

<>, a appel? cette note..

<< Cependant, ?tant donn? que le Premier Ministre ainsi que plusieurs acteurs importants de la Communaut? Internationale ont confirm? que cette crise ?tait l’oeuvre d’acteurs politiques et ?conomiques identifi?s comme auteurs de ce nouveau <>, nous leur exigeons de prendre les dispositions qui s’imposent contre lesdits auteurs >>, a ?galement appel? la CCIO, soulignant que <>.

<< Ces deux semaines de fermeture qui semblent vouloir s’?tendre davantage ont d’?normes cons?quences ?conomiques pour le secteur priv? des affaires, fait remarquer la CCIO. Cet ?ni?me <> qui semble interminable, engendre des cours financiers importants et imprevus nour tous les acteurs du secteur priv? >>, a soutenu cette chambre de commerce.

<>, peut-on lire dans cette note qui lance un autre appel.

<>, croit la CCIO.

<>, selon la CCIO .

La Chambre de Commerce et D’Industrie de l’Ouest (CCIO) exprime ? nouveau son inqui?tude face ? la situation d?sastreuse dans laquelle le pays s’enlise et exige que l’Etat prenne les mesures n?cessaires afin d’?viter une crise humanitaire extr?me >>, a conclu cette note de presse.

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Florida monitors a growing Tropical Storm Ian in Caribbean Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Authorities and residents in Florida were keeping a cautious eye on Tropical Storm Ian as it rumbled through the Caribbean on Sunday, expected to continue gaining strength and become a major hurricane in the coming days on a forecast track toward the state.

Gov. Ron DeSantis declared a state of emergency for all of Florida the previous day, expanding an initial order that had covered two dozen counties. He urged residents to prepare for a storm that could lash large swaths of the state with heavy rains, high winds and rising seas.

“We encourage all Floridians to make their preparations,” DeSantis said in a statement.

President Joe Biden also declared an emergency, authorising the Department of Homeland Security and the Federal Emergency Management Agency, or FEMA, to coordinate disaster relief and provide assistance to protect lives and property. The president postponed a scheduled Sept. 27 trip to Florida due to the storm.

The National Hurricane Centre said Ian was expected to strengthen before moving over western Cuba and toward the west coast of Florida and the Florida Panhandle by the middle of the week. The agency advised Floridians to have hurricane plans in place and monitor updates of the storm’s evolving path.

The centre issued an updated advisory at 5 am Sunday, which noted the tropical storm was forecast to begin “rapidly strengthening later today” with the “risk of significant wind and storm surge impacts increasing for western Cuba.”

Ian was expected to become a hurricane Sunday and a major hurricane as soon as late Monday. The storm had top sustained winds of 50 mph (85 kph) on Sunday morning as it swirled about 345 miles (555 kilometres) southeast of Grand Cayman, in the Cayman Islands.

A hurricane warning remained in effect for the island and hurricane watches were issued for western Cuba.

John Cangialosi, a senior hurricane specialist at the Miami-based centre, said it was not yet clear exactly where Ian will hit hardest. He said Floridians should begin preparations, including gathering supplies for potential power outages.

“At this point really the right message for those living in Florida is that you have to watch forecasts and get ready and prepare yourself for potential impact from this tropical system,” he said.

In Pinellas Park, near Tampa, people were waiting in line at a Home Depot when it opened at 6 a.m. Saturday, the Tampa Bay Times reported. Manager Wendy Macrini said the store had sold 600 cases of water by early afternoon and ran out of generators.

People also were buying up plywood to shore up their windows: “Better to have it and not need it than to need it and not have it,” Matt Beaver, of Pinellas Park, told the Times.

Elsewhere, powerful post-tropical cyclone Fiona crashed ashore Saturday in Nova Scotia in the Atlantic Canada region, washing houses into the sea, tearing off rooftops and knocking out power to more than 500,000 customers in two provinces.

___

By ANTHONY IZAGUIRRE, Associated Press

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Newsmaker… Week: Chang gets support, criticism for ‘fire back’ remarks Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

This week’s featured development as Newsmaker of the Week just ended is National Security Minister, Dr Horace Chang, standing firmly behind his comments that police officers should “fire back” if they are engaged by gunmen in fire fights.

Two Thursdays ago, Chang, who is also the Deputy Prime Minister, made headlines when he said police personnel should not miss when they respond to criminals who use deadly force to resist being arrested.

The comments have been widely viewed as the minister suggesting that cops should “shoot to kill” criminals. However, those words were never uttered by Chang.

“They (the police) not out there shooting down people like that. There are fatal shootings because man shoot gun after dem. I not telling police not to fire back, and a say it right here in Westmoreland, I not sending no ambulance out there either,” declared Chang on September 15.

He was then addressing a ground-breaking ceremony for a new Frome Police Station in Westmoreland.

“Anytime a man take up a gun after police, I expect the (police) commissioner to train the police when they must not miss,” he indicated then.

Still, there were several criticism of Chang’s remarks, with many suggesting that he used the term “shoot to kill” in his statement.

Chief among them were the Independent Commission of Investigations (INDECOM) and some human rights groups, such as Jamaicans for Justice (JFJ).

They all insisted that Chang’s statement was seemingly suggesting that police officers should “shoot to kill” when confronted by armed criminals, and called for him to retract the comments.

For his part, Opposition Leader and People’s National Party President, Mark Golding, described Chang’s remarks as having been “ill-advised”, and said it “sends the potential signal of endorsing unlawful killings”.

However, last Wednesday Chang addressed a post-Cabinet press briefing and did not double down or withdraw from his comments a week earlier.

“I don’t think there was anything there to withdraw or to change. It was felt that the circumstance in which I said it would stimulate the police officers to take, maybe, unusual action. I don’t think so,” he stated.

“I think training of the police force is now adequate, strong, and is creating a force (not only) for good, but a highly disciplined operation,” he said.

File photo of a police team patrolling a hotbed community.

In relation to armed confrontations, Chang maintained that while all citizens have a right to life, in a situation where the police and gunmen are in armed combat, the first right to life is relative to the law enforcers.

“… In a combat situation…, the first right to life, I think, is that of the policeman who is acting to protect (himself) and the wider society,” Chang insisted.

Added the minister: “… I said if they (the police) are attacked by criminals, or policemen come under attack by criminals, they should return fire. The term I used was ‘fire back’.

“It’s a standard use-of-force policy anywhere on the globe. If you come under deadly attack, you are entitled to respond.”

Chang also clarified his comments on the training of policemen to not miss when firing at gunmen in conflicts.

“… I further indicated that I am entreating the commissioner of police to train them (the police) well. If they are not properly trained and they miss, they get killed and (maybe) other members of the community.

“That’s my position, and that’s what I said, and I don’t expect anyone to consider that if I am sending police officers out there, I would be committing an act of negligence if I send half-trained police officers to face hardened criminals with firepower which they (the police) don’t have,” said the national security minister.

According to him, the Government is “not allowed” to provide police with the types of weaponry that the gunmen now have.

While in the presence of Chang on Wednesday during a tour of Spring Village, St Catherine, where three persons were shot dead and six others injured at a football field on Sunday, Police Commissioner, Major General Antony Anderson, threw his support behind the minister and echoed his sentiments.

“I hear calls all over the place to ask me to comment on what the minister had said about shooting. Every single time that the police and gunmen engage, the police must win,” the commissioner declared.

According to Anderson, the police force ensures that its members are well trained.

“We shoot centre of mass; that’s where we shoot, that’s where we are trained to shoot… We ensure that our members are well-trained,” he said.

Police Commissioner, Major General Antony Anderson.

Turning to Sunday’s mass shooting incident in Spring Village, Anderson said: “The enemy has a face and is identifiable, and you saw them the other day. That’s how they look like, and that’s how they operate. They don’t care!

“They (the gunmen) can shoot randomly. If you pressure them, they just kill everybody. We (the police) are constrained and restrained in how we function.

“So when you hear the nonsense, trying to make those guys — those youngsters (young policemen) who put themselves in harm’s (way) to protect the rest of Jamaica — as the problem, it’s nonsense,” declared the commissioner.

Public support has been growing for Chang’s remarks, as well as that of Anderson’s relative to the view that police should “fire back” and “win” against criminals during armed conflicts. That support has spread across various social media platforms.

“Don’t take back you talk minister, say it again one more time, every time the crowbate them defend them gunman friends and family and no defender for the victims,” commented Wayne Montaque, a Facebook user.

Shared author Kwame McPherson: “Well said Chang. Any gunman mad enough to challenge the police in a gun battle, shoot to kill should be the response… no argument.”

But Loraine McKay-Lewis disagreed, and commented that, “They (criminals) have right to life fi real. A somebody pickney dem to.”

Kassian Neil agreed with that sentiment.

“Law and order is the standard procedure and everyone is innocent until proven guilty, Mr Chang. Please retract those remarks because it sends the wrong signal internationally,” Neil opined.

Still, there were more persons who commended the deputy prime minister for not backing down from his remarks.

Whitbourne Johnson commented: “I stand with the police. Argument done”.

Facebook user Emmanuel Dunn wrote: “Sir, I stand with you 1,000%. When gunman a shoot people, they are shooting to kill, so if the police come under fire, why shouldn’t they shoot to kill?

“I am not for any of these government in Jamaica, but I am calling it like I see it,” he added.

Robert Martin commented: “Yes, I like how the (police) commissioner backing the minister, because police must win when they confront criminals. No if, but nor maybe there.”

However, another social media user had reservations about the views that were being proffered in support of Chang.

“Listen, I have no issue with the police taking evasive action against gunman, but what happen to the corrupt cop who will now use excessive force because he’s blood thirsty or have a grudge?” questioned Pauline James.

Andrea Lowe shared her perspective: “No police is going to stand and let criminals fire at he or she and they don’t fired back.

“My concern is knowing most of the corrupt police, they’re going to use this opportunity to kill innocent (people).”

But William Mimmie told Lowe that, “No innocent person going to fire at the police”.

Echoing a similar sentiment was Vincent Cole, who opined: “No innocent citizen firing back at police in shootout, so all who a chat, chat and a talk, a tek side with criminals point blank, and it done desso!”

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