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Quinn-Williams and crew undertake ‘back-breaking’ clean-up project in Hodges Bay community, earning residents’ approval

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

REAL NEWS- Pearl Quinn-Williams, the United Progressive Party (UPP) Candidate for St. John’s Rural North, is the latest political hopeful to undertake a successful clean-up drive.

Quinn-Williams went out with a crew of private citizens to clean up an area of Hodges Bay that had been stacked with rotting tree branches. The debris reportedly had become a breeding ground for rodents and other vermin.

The Candidate says several of her brothers joined in the effort, as well as her husband, Steve, and they “toiled in the blazing sun for six hours.”

She notes that it was back-breaking work, but the team laboured on, “with the critters angry” that their home was being disturbed.

Reports are that a prominent constituent was passing by, saw the effort, and lent his assistance to what he felt was a commendable exercise.

Quinn-Williams says she was thankful for the assistance, since those who were hard at work were exhausted and the help was timely.

At least four other UPP Candidates have undertaken similar clean-ups or garbage-collection drives in their constituencies.

Unembarrassed by his Administration’s failure to provide these services to a number of communities, Prime Minister Gaston Browne took to Facebook last week to criticize the UPP’s efforts as political gimmickry.

However, Quinn-Williams disagrees, branding their work as civic pride, while the affected residents referred to it as true representation.

She adds that it was a demonstration to parliamentary representative Charles “Max” Fernandez that things can get done even when one is not in office.

The Candidate says that Hodges Bay residents were elated and appreciative of the hard work of her team; and she, personally, feels joy and pride in having gotten the work done for the community.

It is alleged, by a constituent, that Fernandez says he was happy with the outcome of the effort. However, she says, she is hoping he will be happy with the outcome of the elections when he loses.

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Urgent measures needed by Region to control skyrocketing food prices—Pres. Ali

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana
President Dr Irfaan Ali addressed the Development Bank of Latin America (CAF) dialogue on Food Security in Latin America and the Caribbean.
The event was held on the sidelines of the 77th session of the United Nations General Assembly in New York.

President Dr Irfaan Ali has called on Governments across the region to collaborate and devise appropriate, urgent measures to shield the most vulnerable from increasing food prices.

He said that the strategic actions implemented must ensure that food supply is strengthened and maintained in the coming years.

This call was made at a forum hosted by the Andean Development Corporation (CAF) Development Bank of Latin America on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA), to highlight food security in Latin America and the Caribbean and to discuss challenges, strategies and urgent action.

President Ali said that “the vulnerabilities and uncertainties in the region’s food system must be fixed to make them more inclusive, and sustainable, ensuring that delivery targets the wellbeing of the people and feed our societies”.

He posited that national protection systems must be expanded, protecting the most vulnerable, maintaining food to supply markets, maintaining investment in food production and farming, and investing in green resilient and inclusive food systems.

As Lead Head for agriculture, agricultural diversification and food security in CARICOM, the Guyanese Head of State reminded the gathering of the challenges facing the world in relation to poverty and hunger and its devastating effects.

“Over the last five years alone in Latin America and in the Caribbean, we have an additional 13.2 million persons who are undernourished, most of whom are children and women. This has a direct impact on educational outcomes and health outcomes. The issue of food security is interrelated to educational output, we have to understand this.”

The President also highlighted that in 2030, it is estimated that “hunger will affect 67 million people in the region, a figure that does not take into account the repercussions of the Covid-19 pandemic”.

In identifying additional concerning statistics, he explained that if this trend continues, it would be impossible to achieve the targets set out in Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) goal two (zero hunger) by 2030.

“As of March 2022, food inflation across 20 countries in the English and Dutch-speaking Caribbean increased by 10.2%; food inflation alone increased by 10.2%. This can be linked to the insecurity problems we’re having in more and more countries, the population becoming more and more uneasy; more persons responding by taking to the streets.”

In Guyana, he noted, the Government has taken steps both locally and regionally to reduce food imports by 25% by 2025 through investments in technology, research and development, removal of trade barriers, institutional strengthening and expanding access to agricultural lands.

“As we move forward, we must be able to find innovative ways of bridging the gap. How are we going to bridge the financing gaps? How are we going to restructure loans to ensure that there is a mix of concessional financing and loans to help farmers to increase production, to help countries, to invest in drainage and irrigation systems, to invest in climate resilient agriculture, in Smart Agriculture? Who is going to provide the financing? What is the cost of that financing?”

The President presented several other questions as he outlined the areas that require collective attention and action.

“We have to look at this as a region and come up with regional policies and programmes that will address this issue holistically…This is how we are going to ensure sustainability.”

He also spoke about the importance of encouraging the next generation to embrace agriculture and to “see it as something exciting, innovative, challenging”.

Failure to do this, he lamented, would lead to the inability to create a sustainable framework for the production of food, sustainability, and resilience of the region’s agricultural sector.

President Ali and a Government delegation are in New York for the 77th UNGA.

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APNU+AFC identifies nominees for NRF committees, but awaits ruling on court case – Norton

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana
Opposition Leader Aubrey Norton

While the A Partnership for National Unity/Alliance For Change (APNU/AFC) Opposition has identified persons to take up positions on the various committees to overlook the Natural Resource Fund, it is withholding its nominations until the court makes its ruling.

During a press conference on Tuesday, Opposition Leader Aubrey Norton was asked by this publication about the Opposition nominees for the various committees that are overlooking the NRF.

Specifically, the Opposition is supposed to submit nominees for the Public Accountability and Oversight and the Investment Committees. According to Norton, however, he does not intend to make any nominations until their court matter has been resolved.

“We have not yet provided nominees. You know we have a case before the courts on this question of the Natural Resources Fund. We know the people we want to put there,” Norton explained.

“But this has to be taken in the context of how the Government operated with the Natural Resources Fund. Let us recall that we made recommendations that the Government refused to consider. And they actually moved to appoint the people they wanted there.”

That being said, Norton did not completely rule out nominating persons to the committees before the court case concludes. As he put it, his party can adapt if there is a need for the persons to be appointed.

“We are holding on that until we deal with the other issues. We have the court case. We are awaiting the outcome. If the need arises, to put people before, we are a political movement that adapts. And we will take action.”

The Opposition has gone to court challenging the legality of the NRF Bill that was passed into law last year. Opposition Chief Whip Christopher Jones and Trade Unionist Norris Witter, earlier this year, filed a Fixed Date Application which was converted to a Statement of Claim by Justice Singh, arguing that due to the absence of the parliamentary Mace – the most significant symbol in the National Assembly and some members not being seated – the Act cannot be regarded as being lawfully passed.

On the night of December 29, 2021, members of the APNU/AFC had dislodged the Mace from its position at the House Clerk’s desk and protested in an attempt to prevent the Natural Resource Fund Bill from being passed.

At one point in the National Assembly proceedings, the Speaker’s Personal Assistant was seen latching onto the Mace while lying on the floor in an attempt to secure it, while the Opposition parliamentarians stood by hurling racial slurs and taunts at him. However, the Opposition’s protest and its mounting calls for the Bill to be sent to a Special Select Committee had no effect as the Government passed the Bill.

House Speaker Manzoor Nadir is, however, adamant that the NRF Act was lawfully passed, noting that a replica Mace was in place. He had explained that almost all Parliaments in the Westminster System have two Maces in case one is not being found or is stolen.

The court case continues on November 8. However, Attorney General Anil Nandlall has asked that the court dismiss the challenge. In his Affidavit in Defence, Nandlall contended that the claim is an abuse of the court process and without any legal basis. In light of this, he has urged the court to dismiss the matter.

According to the Attorney General, there is no principle known to the law, neither does the Constitution nor the Standing Orders of the National Assembly require that the Mace must be present and in place for Parliament to exercise its constitutional power to make laws for the peace, order, and good governance.

Since the passage of the legislature last December, the Government has gone on to establish the Natural Resource Fund Board. Following parliamentary approval, the Government has made two withdrawals from the fund amounting to $83.3 billion.

This sum, which was taken out following parliamentary approval, has been transferred to the Consolidated Fund to finance national development priorities.

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No es prioritario para LUMA revelar salario de celadores contratados para reparar el sistema tras el paso de Fiona

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El director de seguridad pública de LUMA Energy, Abner Gómez, no quiso compartir los detalles sobre cuánto cobrarán los celadores que vinieron desde el extranjero, específicamente bajo su empresa matriz, Quanta Services, para trabajar la emergencia energética tras el paso del huracán Fiona.

A preguntas del periodista Isaac Rosado en Pega’os en la mañana sobre cuánto se cubrirá en gastos de transporte, dieta y alojamiento, el funcionario indicó que el equipo administrativo de LUMA Energy, en conjunto con el Negociado de Manejo de Emergencias y Administración de Desastres (NMEAD), ofrecerá los datos más adelante.

Sí. Son de Quanta y tenemos disponibles técnicos de Quanta, que son unos cinco mil, para llegar a Puerto Rico. Sí son necesarios. Ya son personas entrenadas para responder a emergencias de restauración de sistema. Ese es su trabajo cuando ocurren desastres en estados y otros países […] Nosotros estamos enfocados en la respuesta a esta emergencia. Esos datos, con mucho gusto, eventualmente se ofrecerán. Estamos enfocados en responder y restaurar el servicio. Esos datos numéricos, yo estoy seguro, que en el camino se van a proveer a ustedes, los medios. Eso no es prioridad ahora mismo para restauración. Nuestra prioridad es restablecer el sistema, restablecer y reparar”, expresó al aclarar que tampoco tienen una fecha para compartir tal información.

En el día de ayer, la privatizadora informó sobre la llegada del equipo.

Gómez informó que tienen sobre mil empleados laborando en reparación “Nuestros hombres y mujeres están en la calle haciendo el trabajo. Tenemos gente que ha estado llegando a Puerto Rico […] Tenemos la gente en las calles, más las ayudas que están llegando de distintos estados continentales”, informó.

En los pasados meses ha sido tema de discusión pública la llegada de personal para trabajar la red eléctrica del país con un pago cuantioso, cuando Puerto Rico cuenta con expertos que conocen el sistema. Asimismo, portavoces y activistas han denunciado que muchos de los empleados de la privatizadora no cuentan con la expertise necesaria para laborar.

Nota relacionada: LUMA anticipa podría haber sectores sin luz hasta octubre tras paso del huracán Fiona

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Funcionario de LUMA Energy niega expresarse sobre posible investigación federal

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El director de seguridad pública de LUMA Energy, Abner Gómez, dejó al equipo legal de la privatizadora la tarea de enfrentar un posible investigación a la empresa, según fuera solicitada por la fiscal general de Nueva York, Letitia James.

“Ese particular no está dentro de mis capacidades gerenciales en LUMA. Eso yo […] se lo dejo a nuestros abogados. Cuando llegue el momento, nuestro equipo estará hablando de eso, pero en estos momentos, la prioridad es responder. Estamos en una emergencia. Todas estas cosas que no van a apoyar la emergencia serán atendidas en su momento”, expresó el funcionario.

En el día de ayer, la fiscal solicitó a la autoridades federales, mediante una carta, seguirle la pista tanto al desempeño de LUMA Energy, como a la situación energética en la isla. El comunicado, el cual tiene la firma de la comisionada residente Jenniffer González Colón, va dirigido a, entre otras, la Agencia Federal para el Manejo de Emergencias (FEMA, por sus siglas en inglés).

Nota relacionada: No es prioritario para LUMA revelar salario de celadores contratados para reparar el sistema tras el paso de Fiona

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Tropical Storm Warning & Hurricane Watch Issued for Bermuda Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

The US National Hurricane Centre (NHC) has issued both a Tropical Storm Warning and Hurricane Watch for Bermuda as Hurricane Fiona heads north towards the territory.

At 8am, the eye of Hurricane Fiona was located 1,125 kilometers southwest of Bermuda.

Hurricane Fiona is a dangerous category four hurricane and it is packing winds that are near 130 mph (215 km/h).

On the forecast track, the center of Hurricane Fiona is expected to approach Bermuda late on Thursday.

Photo: NOAA

The Bermuda Weather Service said forecasts show Hurricane Fiona is expected to pass about 115 miles (185 km) northwest of the island on Friday.

“Prepare for strong tropical storm winds and hurricane force gusts from Thursday night – a brief period of sustained hurricane force winds remains a possibility. The worst conditions are now expected near dawn on Friday,” the Bermuda Weather Service said. “Take note of the potential for storm surge affecting low-lying coastal areas prone to flooding, as Fiona’s passage is now expected to be coincident with high tide. Dangerous surf on south shore and large swells will be experienced from today.”

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NHC: TS Gaston is strengthening Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

US Hurricane Centre: TS Gaston is strengthening Loop Barbados

The storm is currently not a threat to land

Loop News

1 hrs ago

NEWYou can now listen to Loop News articles!

The US National Hurricane Centre (NHC) has said Tropical Storm Gaston has grown stronger as it swirls away in the Atlantic Ocean.

Gaston is located about 1,370 km west of the Azores and it has winds that are near 65 mph (100 km/h).

Photo: NOAA

NHC forecast that the storm will strengthen further before it gradually weakens.

The storm is currently not a threat to land.

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Jamaican shines as US Navy recruiter in Florida Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

While assigned to the US Navy Talent Acquisition Group (NTAG) Miami, Jamaican Oneil James has been awarded the Navy and Marine Corps Commendation Medal, recognised as Recruiter of the Month, Recruiter of the Quarter, and received multiple accolades.

According to the Navy Office of Community Outreach, these attest to the sailor’s commitment and dedication to moulding tomorrow’s Navy.

“There is no better feeling than seeing an applicant transition from future sailor to sailor,” Hospital Corpsman 2nd Class James said. “Knowing you were part of changing and impacting their life, and the gratitude they express is beyond humbling.”

James is from Ocho Rios in Jamaica. He was recruited out of Port St Lucie, Florida, just over eight years ago as a Hospital Corpsman, and is currently assigned to NTAG Miami.

James always aspired to protect and serve. He had an initial interest in law enforcement, however, after learning about the Navy, he found his true calling and enlisted.

When asked why he chose to join the Navy, without skipping a beat, James replied: “To be a part of something greater than myself.”

Before becoming a recruiter and being assigned to Navy Recruiting Station Lake Worth, he was stationed at Naval Hospital Jacksonville and subsequently, in the medical department aboard the Wasp-class amphibious assault ship, USS Iwo Jima (LHD 7). While assigned, he earned the Enlisted Surface Warfare Specialist qualification.

James said he pursued recruiting duty because he genuinely enjoys helping people.

“The Navy has provided me and my children stability and the ability to live a great life. For that, I am thankful, and I want to share that with as many people that will listen,” James said.

The Jamaican started his recruiting career 15 months ago and said he sees his assignment as an esteemed opportunity to be entrusted to man the fleet with the best and brightest sailors. He has embraced that responsibility, welcoming the challenges and achievements alike.

According to James, he finds recruiting so unique because he can have a conversation with someone who has no idea what the Navy is, or perhaps they are uncertain what to do next with their life, and then they find themselves answering their own call to serve and wanting to join the very next day.

He finds it rewarding to connect others with the same life and career opportunities the Navy has provided him and his family.

James said he is appreciative of the US Navy for many reasons. A few of those are the financial support to pursue a college education, a pathway to citizenship, and that it has allowed him to have future financial and career goals in real estate.

James spends his off-duty hours immersed in giving back to the community. He volunteers with the Boys and Girls Club of West Palm Beach, the USS Iwo Jima Sea Cadets, Haverhill Youth Soccer Club, and as the assistant football coach at Wellington High School.

His goals are to complete his bachelor’s degree, continue advancing along his enlisted career path, and serve a full 20-year career in the Navy.

He enjoys the discipline and the mentorship the Navy has provided and the fact that he can pay it forward amongst his peers and future sailors.

“If there is ever anything my sailors or I need, there is always someone I can reach out to. Whatever the problem or the need is, it will get resolved, and we will be taken care of,” James said. “It truly is a family.”James said just as leaders and mentors had invested in him in his eight years, he is devoted to returning that investment.

Commander, Navy Recruiting Command consists of a command headquarters, two Navy Recruiting Regions and 26 Navy Talent Acquisition Groups that serve more than 1,000 recruiting stations across the world. Their combined goal is to attract the highest quality candidates to assure the ongoing success of the US Navy, the Navy Office of Community Outreach.

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Roger Federer’s goodbye will be in doubles, maybe with Nadal Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Roger Federer is known for his elegant style of play, for his longevity, for his 20 Grand Slam titles — and for occasional tears in his most emotional post-match moments, whether after victory or defeat.

There was none of that sort of sadness Wednesday, just smiles and some chuckles at his own jokes, as Federer appeared at a news conference to discuss his retirement from professional tennis at age 41 after a series of knee operations. He will close his career with a doubles match at the Laver Cup on Friday — perhaps alongside longtime rival Rafael Nadal.

Federer said he is now at peace with the decision to walk away, which comes a few weeks after Serena Williams played what is expected to be her last match at the U.S. Open, and he wants this farewell to be a celebration.

“I really don’t want it to be a funeral,” Federer said. “I want it to be really happy and powerful and party mode.”

Wearing a blue blazer with the sleeves rolled up to his elbows and a white polo shirt, Federer took questions for about a half-hour at the arena that will host the team competition founded by his management company.

“I’m nervous going in, because I haven’t played in so long,” he said. “I hope I can be somewhat competitive.”

Federer, who announced last week via social media that he would be retiring after the Laver Cup, said it took him a bit to get used to the idea of stepping away from competition.

But it was something he understood he needed to do after running into setbacks in July during his rehabilitation from what was his third surgery on his right knee in about 1 1/2 years.

“You try to go to the next level in training, and I could feel it was getting difficult. … Then, I guess, I was also getting more tired, because you have to put more effort into it to be able to sort of believe that it was going to turn around. You start getting too pessimistic. Then I also got a scan back, which wasn’t what I wanted it to be,” Federer explained. “At some point, you sit down and go, ‘OK, we are at an intersection here, at a crossroad, and you have to take a turn. Which way is it?’ I was not willing to go into the direction of: ‘Let’s risk it all.’ I’m not ready for that. I always said that was never my goal.”

And the hardest part came when he knew he needed to stop.

“You’re sad,” Federer said, “in the very moment when you realize, ‘OK, this is the end.’”

The last procedure on his knee came shortly after a quarterfinal loss to Hubert Hurkacz at Wimbledon in July 2021, which will go into the books as the last singles match of a superlative career that began in the 1990s and included 103 tournament titles, a Davis Cup championship for Switzerland, Olympic medals and hundreds of weeks at No. 1 in the ATP rankings.

In his online farewell message last week, Federer referred to retirement as a “bittersweet decision.”

He was asked Wednesday what aspect was most bitter and what was most sweet.

“The bitterness: You always want to play forever,” he said. “I love being out on court. I love playing against the guys. I love traveling. … It was all perfect. I love my career from every angle.”

And then he added: “The sweet part was that I know everybody has to do it at one point; everybody has to leave the game. It’s been a great, great journey. For that, I’m really grateful.”

He will play doubles for Team Europe against Team World on Day 1 of the event, then will give way to 2021 Wimbledon runner-up Matteo Berrettini for singles over the weekend. That plan was run by the ATP and both team captains, John McEnroe and Bjorn Borg, Federer said.

As for his doubles partner for the last hurrah? Federer would not say definitively — he said that’s up to Borg — but the not-so-hidden secret is that it is expected to be Nadal, who holds the men’s record of 22 major championships.

Back in February, when word emerged that Federer would be in London this week, he said Nadal messaged him last year suggesting they play doubles together again. They teamed up to win a doubles match during the first Laver Cup in 2017.

“If we’re able to possibly share the court one more time as a doubles pairing,” Nadal said in February, “then this would be a truly special experience for us both at this stage in our careers.”

While other contemporaries of Federer and stars of the sport are on Team Europe, such as 21-time Slam champ Novak Djokovic and three-time major winner Andy Murray, the Federer vs. Nadal matchup will go down in history as among the greatest rivalries in tennis or any other sport.

They played each other 40 times in all (Nadal won 26), with 14 Grand Slam matchups (Nadal won 10). Nadal came out on top in their classic 2008 Wimbledon final, considered by some the greatest match in history; Federer won their last showdown, in the 2019 semifinals at the All England Club.

“It could be quite, I don’t know, a unique situation, if it were to happen,” Federer said about the doubles pairing. “For us, as well, to go through a career that we both have had and to come out on the other side and being able to have a nice relationship, I think, is maybe a great message, as well, to not just tennis but sports and maybe even beyond.”

As for his future?

The father of two sets of twins — girls 13, boys 8 — wouldn’t say exactly what he has planned, other than a vacation, but he did say he would remain connected to tennis in some capacity.

Recalling the way Borg stayed away from the sport for years after retiring, Federer sought to reassure his own fans by saying: “I won’t be a ghost.”

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Scotland Yard assessing allegations regarding abduction and torture of Mehul Choksi

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

NATIONAL HERALD: The War Crimes Team of London’s Metropolitan Police, popularly known as Scotland Yard, is examining a complaint made by a British human rights lawyer Michael Polak. This accuses four people, said to be United Kingdom residents, of abducting and torturing Indian-born Antiguan diamond merchant Mehul Choksi.

In a characteristically conservative manner, Scotland Yard revealed: “We can confirm that the Met’s War Crimes Unit, part of the Counter Terrorism Command, received a referral on 7 June 2021 which relates to allegations of torture. The referral is being assessed by officers, in accordance with the CPS/SO15 referral guidelines for war crimes and crimes against humanity.”

The four seem to be 31-year-old Hungarian Barbara Jarabik, 45-year-old Gurdip Bath of St Kitts and Nevis, 50-year-old British national Gurjit Singh Bhandal and 63-year-old Gurmit Singh, an Indian.

The complaint is that on 23 May, Choksi, 62, was kidnapped in Antigua, bound, beaten and blindfolded and forcibly taken to Dominica by sea. There he was charged with illegal entry by Dominican authorities and detained. The Indian government wants him to be directly deported to India to face trial for allegedly defrauding Punjab National Bank of thousands of crores of rupees – without being returned to Antigua, the country of his current citizenship.

Even though the crime is said to have been committed in the Caribbean, British authorities are empowered to investigate, arrest and prosecute persons involved by virtue of a Universal Jurisdiction Act. The purpose of this legislation was to hold “those who commit the most serious crimes accountable for their actions” and “not provide a safe haven for war criminals or those who commit other serious violations of international law”.

Narendra Modi narrowly escaped being detained when he visited the UK as chief minister of Gujarat in 2003. The application to take him into custody for his suspected role in the 2002 riots in the state failed in court on a technicality. In fact, the security around him was upgraded by British police in anticipation of a citizen’s arrest, which would have adversely impacted Indo-British relations.

Distinguished diplomat Satyabrata Pal, then the Indian deputy high commissioner in London, later noted: “Two days into the visit, the (British) Foreign Office called the (Indian) High Commission in a panic to report that they had learnt that, following a precedent set during a recent visit by Robert Mugabe (then president of Zimbabwe), an attempt would be made to put Narendra Modi under citizen’s arrest, permitted by British law, while some lawyers were approaching a magistrate for a more conventional arrest warrant.”

“Luckily, the application for the warrant failed in court, and the British threw an invisible cordon around Modi to prevent the feared citizen’s arrest; so he strutted and fretted on his London stage a few days more, and left on schedule, his departure warmly welcomed by both governments,” Pal added.

A Whitehall notification states: “Crimes of universal jurisdiction can be reported to the police in the same way as any other offence.”

It continues: “The war crimes team of the Metropolitan Police Counter Terrorism command is responsible for the investigation of all allegations of war crimes, crimes against humanity, genocide and torture.”

Significantly, since torture is included in the list of offences for which prosecution under the Universal Jurisdiction law can take place, Polak highlighted in his complaint that Choksi was tortured. “He was severely mistreated by the use of electric shocks, being threatened with a knife, and beaten during this forced rendition to Dominica.”

The complaint pieces together the accused travelling on same flights and boats in an attempt to establish that they were working in harness. In April, all four took the same British Airway flight from Antigua to London. Bath and Jarabik arrived and departed between Antigua and Dominica the same month. On 25 May, Bhandal and Singh are recorded as entering Dominica on the same boat; and on 28 May the two, with Jarabik, leave this island on the same flight.

Interestingly, it looks like Bhandal and Singh were in April denied immigration by Dominica. An email submitted as evidence by Polak to Scotland Yard (headed “suspected human smuggling ring”) from Rhoan Barker, operations supervisor at the Joint Regional Communication Centre in Barbados, in an intelligence alert to several island states in the region, wrote: “Please note that the undermentioned subjects were intercepted in Dominica on April 12, 2021, having arrived into the country on a yacht (Lady Anne) manned by two Saint Lucian nationals. Subjects appeared to be involved in a smuggling ring. Singh and Bhandal were attempting to disembark the vessel to board a flight to the UK. They were both denied landing and subsequently left for Antigua on the said yacht.”

After the pair apparently returned to Antigua, Randy Baltimore, principal inspector of customs, in a hand-written note on the email said “both passengers arrived on the 15.4.21… and departed same day on o/b (on board) BA2156 (which is a British Airways flight from Antigua to London Gatwick).”

Bath and Jarabik reportedly live in London. Bhandal and Singh are supposed to be Birmingham-based. If Scotland Yard agrees with Polak’s contention, all four can be interviewed to explain themselves. Bath may, however, enjoy diplomatic immunity. He met Narendra Modi in September 2019 at an India-CARICOM (Caribbean Community) summit in New York and posted photos of them in conversation on Twitter. The prime minister of Antigua and Barbuda, Gaston Browne, has been following him on Twitter.

In March 2018, Princess Latifa, daughter of the ruler of Dubai Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, escaped from the UAE to seek asylum in India. The yacht on which she sailed was intercepted by Indian forces in the Arabian Sea and she was returned to her father against her will.

In December 2019, a high court judge in London concluded: “The description of the way in which Latifa was treated by the Indian security services… does not give any indication that this was a ‘rescue’ (her father’s story) rather a ‘capture’.”

The United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention (WGAD) in its verdict echoed: “The detainee (Latifa) was extradited by the Indian forces, which had intercepted her yacht in international waters off the coast of Goa in March 2018, after the Prime Minister of India had made a personal telephone call to the Prime Minister of the United Arab Emirates and the ruler of the Emirate of Dubai.”

In the same verdict, WGAD noted about the claimed extradition of British aviation consultant Christian Michel from Dubai to Delhi: “On 4 December 2018, Mr Michel was reportedly handcuffed, blindfolded and transported by private jet to India, in a hurried and unlawful manner that prevented him from challenging any decision.”

The Indian government has been silent on the Latifa affair; but has taken umbrage about WGAD’s views on the Michel matter.

From all accounts, a private jet was again deployed to bring back Choksi to India from Dominica. A lawful pursuit of him is certainly justifiable. But commando-style operations, circumventing due process, do not generally impress the democratic world.

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