The New Commissioner of Police, Mr Edvin Martin has pledged to work with all stakeholders to tackle crime and violence in the TCI. He aims to transform the Royal Turks and Caicos Islands Police Force (RTCIPF) into a more effective, efficient, and accountable organisation that prioritises public safety
Judges have to impose prison sentences for all firearm convictions
– Court of Appeal
certifies
BY DELANA ISLESJudges in the TCI will now be required to impose a custodial sentence (imprisonment) on those convicted of firearm offences, after the Court of Appeal found that several Supreme Court sentences were unlawful and too lenientmany of which involved American tourists.
The Appellate Court’s decision was handed down this week, following a hearing last January, in which the Attorney General sought the opinion of the higher court to confirm the true position of the law as it relates to the application of ‘exceptional circumstances’ in firearm cases.
In five separate cases - David O’Connor, Alex Guzman, Alec Keith Nash, Michael Grimm and Michael Williams - all within a two-year period, the Supreme Court found that there were exceptional circumstances. Four of the offenders were fined and one was given a custodial sentence below the mandatory minimum.
In those cases, the defendant pleaded guilty to charges of possession of an unlicensed firearm and ammunition under the Firearms Ordinance 2022, and
the judges found that there were exceptional circumstances and concluded that sentencing was therefore ‘at large’ (discretionary).
However, the Attorney General submitted to the Appellate Court that the judges in the aforementioned cases were wrong in finding that exceptional circumstances existed, and the sentences imposed were unlawful, and even if lawful, were unduly lenient and manifestly inadequate.
She thereby sought clarification as to whether the facts of those cases did actually constitute exceptional circumstances in keeping with legal principles and whether, in any event, the Ordinance allowed the Supreme Court to impose noncustodial sentences.
The decision handed down
Published by Turks & Caicos News Company Ltd.
Cheshire House, Leeward Highway, Providenciales
P.O. Box 52, Turks & Caicos Islands, BWI
W. Blythe Duncanson - Publisher/Editor-in-Chief
Faizool Deo - Sports Editor (At Large)
Cord Lowe - Graphics Consultant (At Large)
Email: (Advertising) tcnews@tciway.tc, (News) tcweeklynews@gmail.com
Tel. 649-946-4664 (office), 649-232-3508 (after hours)
Website address: www.tcweeklynews.com
Follow us on:
Facebook: facebook.com/tcweeklynews
Twitter: twitter.com/tcweeklynews1
Instagram: @tcweeklynews1
by the Court of Appeal clarified the law, affirming that where exceptional circumstances exist the court has no authority to impose a non-custodial sentence.
The Appellate Court stated that judges can impose a custodial sentence for a term and a fine that is fair and just in the circumstances, consistent with the exceptional circumstances, however, it must give its reasons for doing so, including any reduction in sentence.
Acting Director of Public Prosecutions, Dr. Angela Brooks welcomed the certification by the Court of Appeal and confirmed that since the recent amendments to the Firearms Ordinance, eight firearms and ammunition prosecutions in total were done involving tourists from the United States, three of which are currently before the court with each of the defendants on bail.
AG QUESTIONS AND APPELLATE COURT RESPONSES
In her application to the Court of Appeal, the attorney general submitted several questions for the court to answer and or clarify.
In question one, The AG asked the court: “What set of circumstances may be considered exceptional under section 30 of the Firearms Ordinance?”
In its answer, the court stated that “without unduly restricting the discretion of the judge, the court is at this time unable to identify essential ingredients, as it were, or prerequisites for a certain set of facts to be capable of constituting exceptional circumstances. The Redfern test is a good starting point: ‘...if to impose five years’ imprisonment it would amount to an arbitrary and disproportionate sentence’ (Rehman at [16]).
They noted that this test is consistent with human rights principles contained in the TCI Constitution which states at s.3 that ‘no person shall be subjected to torture, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment’ and similar constitutions whose wording adopts Article 5 of the United Nations Human Rights Convention.
“The court must continue to rely on the opinion of the first instance judges.
“In order to maintain consistency and to avoid the appearance of arbitrariness, where facts and circumstances appear to be materially the same as a previous case the judge must give reasons for his or her departure from the earlier opinion in order to distinguish it.
“While decided appeals on the question of exceptional circumstances are not binding precedents, because of the varied facts that may arise, they can be a strong guide in a particular case to whether or not the facts and circumstances constitute exceptional circumstances.
They said this is evident from the relatively long string of cases from the appellate court cited by the Attorney General in which it upheld the findings of no exceptional circumstances.
“It is our opinion that this court ought not to fetter the discretion of the judge at first instance, but due regard should be given to the decisions of this court in similar circumstances.
“The set of circumstances which according to Rehman may be considered exceptional would be those which “if to impose five years’ imprisonment would amount to an arbitrary and disproportionate sentence” (Rehman at [16]).
“We approve that test. Within the legal framework of the TCI and considering the obiter statements made in R v Merrion and R v Kelly earlier, we would take the test for exceptional circumstances to mean ‘a set of particular and unusual circumstances that affect the offender or the offence and which in the opinion of the court justify it in not performing its statutory duty of imposing the mandatory minimum sentence. In forming that opinion, the court must have regard to the dominant purpose of Parliament in enacting the section’.
The Appellate Court thereby certified to the Attorney General that for the reasons stated, its opinion on question one is that the court should not fetter the discretion of the judge by setting out a set of circumstances which
may be considered exceptional or capable of being exceptional under s. 30.
“Instead, the judge should exercise his or her discretion applying the test set out above in this answer.”
Question two, as submitted by the AG: “Are the circumstances in O’Connor; Guzman; Williams; Nash and Grimm indeed exceptional?”
In response to this question, the appellate court noted: “The court in each case gave its judgement (above) on the correctness of the opinion of the trial judges in their finding of exceptional circumstances.
“Except for Williams where in our opinion the judge was clearly wrong in assessing exceptional circumstances, on the facts given and having regard to the constraints of an appellate court, in none of the cases could it be said that the judge was clearly wrong.”
They added: “With the exception of Williams we certify that it is our opinion on the facts presented and the authorities we cannot say that the judges were clearly wrong in forming the opinion that there were exceptional circumstances.
“Once the judge has exercised his discretion and has done so properly, it is not within this court’s remit to make its own determination of whether the circumstances were exceptional except within the parameters laid down by the authorities.”
A third question asked: “Where exceptional circumstances are properly found to exist, what sentence under section 3(3) of the Firearms Ordinance, is the Court empowered to impose as proportionate to the exceptional circumstances found, and consistent with the dominant purpose or intent of the Legislature?”
The Appellate Court stated that as provided by the 2022 Ordinance section 3(3) requires the court to impose both a sentence of imprisonment and a fine even if it finds that there are exceptional circumstances.
“Proportionality consistent with the exceptional circumstances and the dominant purpose of Parliament in enacting the section can be reflected in the length of the term and the quantum of the fine.
“However, in our judgement judges must give their reasons for the reduced sentence imposed. If reasons are not given an appellate court may not have sufficient material on which to determine whether or not the judge was
New top cop vows to tackle crime and restore public trust in police force
BY OLIVIA ROSEThe New Commissioner of Police Mr Edvin Martin has pledged to work with all stakeholders to tackle crime and violence in the TCI, and transform the Royal Turks and Caicos Islands Police Force (RTCIPF) into a more effective, efficient, and accountable organisation that prioritises public safety.
Martin, sworn into the position on Monday, April 22, 2024, has vowed to make the RTCIPF a force of competence, professionalism, and integrity, and to work with stakeholders and community members to build a national coalition against criminality in all its forms.
“Colleagues, we must do everything possible to inspire confidence in our police force and improve our legitimacy as gatekeepers of law and order,” said Commissioner Martin.
“We will seek to establish an emotionally intelligent police force. We will strive to have our officers versed in the application of the law and customer relations, discretion, and compassion while firm and decisive in responding to law violations.”
Underscoring the urgency of the situation, Commissioner Martin
amended that there have been too many “senseless, irrational, gutwrenching killings and other acts of violence in our community”.
“The glaring disregard for human life and the safety of our communities is outrageous and unacceptable. It robs society of its human capital needed to foster growth and development.”
“I am calling on officers, stakeholders, and community members to build a national coalition against criminality in all its forms,” Commissioner Martin said.
“Let us work together to flush this evil menace of violence from our midst. Let us adopt an all-hands-
Judges have to impose prison sentences for ...
clearly wrong in imposing the lighter sentence.
“For the reasons stated we certify that in our opinion where exceptional circumstances exist, the court has no jurisdiction to impose a non-custodial sentence.
“It can impose a custodial sentence for a term and a fine in a quantum that is fair and just in the circumstances, consistent with the exceptional circumstances and having regard to the dominant purpose of Parliament in enacting the section. However, it must give its reasons for doing so including a reduction under s.30(3) b.”
A fourth question asked: “Were the sentences imposed in O Connor; Guzman; Williams; Nash and Grimm lawful and even if lawful, were they unduly lenient?
The Appeals Court stated that where non-custodial sentences were imposed it was wrong in principle because the Judge had no jurisdiction to impose such a sentence.
“They were therefore unlawful and unduly lenient.
“In the case of Williams, the sentence was also unlawful because it purported to suspend a part of a three-year sentence when on the authority of this court suspension can only apply if the sentence is ‘not more than two years’.
“For the above reasons we certify that in our opinion all of the non-custodial sentences imposed were unlawful and therefore unduly lenient, and the custodial sentence imposed in Williams was unduly lenient because in our opinion the finding of exceptional circumstances was clearly wrong.”
to progress in building safer communities.
He said: “We will work aggressively to address the spate of violent crimes.
“We will collaborate with stakeholders to address safety challenges in the tourism industry. I understand how critical it is to our economy.
“We will seek to redefine the police force’s image and, by extension, become the “Pride of TCI.”
“We will foster greater technology integration into law enforcement; (drones, bodycams, CCTV and links).
on-deck approach. There should be no bystander in addressing this carnage in our communities.”
The Commissioner outlined several specific actions that the Force’s Executive will take
“We will restructure better to serve our people’s current and future needs and achieve better alignment with contemporaries.
“We will create a transparent and accountable force.
“We will expand community policing efforts while merging intelligence-led policing with problem-oriented policing into our strategic planning processes.” Martin said the police force will increase its collaboration with stakeholders and the community through frequent town hall meetings.
“We will focus more on meeting our officer’s needs, including safety at police stations.
“We aspire to have a welltrained, well-equipped, technologically advanced police force that can adequately address our community’s security needs.”
He explained that in the coming days, he will visit communities across the TCI to engage residents to foster greater partnership as the police force charts the way forward.
Govt makes strides in border security, ports, and aviation
BY OLIVIA ROSEThe Turks and Caicos Islands government is making significant strides in border security, ports, and aviation, according to the Minister of Immigration, Border Services, Customs, Labour and Employment Services, Hon Arlington Musgrove.
In his recent address to the House of Assembly last week, Minister Musgrove highlighted the government’s achievements in these areas, especially as it relates to strengthening border security.
The Ministry of Immigration and Border Services has made significant progress in securing and protecting the borders of the Turks and Caicos Islands.
In October 2023, the Border Force was launched, and in the year 2023/2024, the team processed, detained, and repatriated over 4,400 persons from 35 boats, Musgrove revealed.
Additionally, the number of seizures of prohibited and restricted goods at the borders totalled 332, with penalties amounting to approximately $315,000. The Customs and Inland Department also attracted revenue amounting to $159m.
INVESTING IN PORTS
Musgrove reported that the Ports Authority has made significant progress in rebuilding and
expanding the Turks and Caicos Islands ports system. In the 2023/24 financial year, the Ports Authority invested $1,765,000 on capital projects on all islands, and the government invested a further $11.8 million in port-related projects.
Investments totalling close to $40m have been contracted to date for the new port office complex and phases 1 and 2 of the redevelopment project.
The rehabilitation of the South Caicos port has also been completed, including the construction of asphalt pavement.
DEVELOPING AVIATION
The Turks and Caicos Islands continue to be a world-class luxury destination, with an increasing influx of international and private airlifts.
The TCI Airports Authority has initiated a congestion alleviation plan, which encompasses renovations aimed at enhancing various critical aspects of the airport.
Musgrove said the goal is to minimise disruptions to daily airport operations and develop a Strategic Master Plan (SMP) for the TCIAA, inclusive of sub-master plans specific to each airport.
“The government is committed to providing a safe and secure environment for residents and visitors alike, and we are making significant progress in these areas.
“We continue to work hard to improve our border security, ports, and aviation, and we are confident that these efforts will make the Turks and Caicos Islands a better place to live and visit”, he added.
HISTORIC BUDGET
A colossal national spending bill totalling $498,665,638 for the 2024/2025 fiscal year, geared towards expanding the economy, stimulating growth and development, and improving social and environmental conditions was approved in the House of Assembly this week.
The 2024/2025 budget which sets the wheels in motion for the new financial year to formally begin and dictates spending for various ministries within the Turks and Caicos Islands Government was passed on Thursday, April 18, 2024, at 1:53 am. Premier and Minister of Finance Investment & Trade Hon Charles Washington Misick, laid the Expenditure Estimates for Financial Year 2024/2025 on the table of the House for debate on Tuesday, April 17, 2024.
The initial expenditure estimates were tabled at $485m, an increase of $48.3m over last year’s budget. What are your thoughts?
Political season
The election is around the corner. However, increased budgetary expenditure in and of itself is not a bad thing - but in TCI (like the rest of the Caribbean) everything becomes political and the expenditure is mainly in the ‘blessed’ party political circle - and so shall it be.
Positive for the country
Excellent, this is what the country needs. Now learning how to have an efficient civil service is a vital step.
Election budget
This is a general election budget pure and simple. Just a cursory examination of the line item budget totals in relationship to the itemised project shows over-inflation of costs. This means that these were inflated to provide for electioneering and not in line with what such a project should cost even with inflation. When will our governments start to implement proper long-term planning for
see anything in for ourselves”.
It cannot be a great budget where the ultimate and underlying policy position keeps the TCIslander in the status quo ante. There are no bold moves, no serious empowerment items just another major fiscal exercise to “keep the bills paid”.
That cannot be a remarkable achievement by any measure of “measuring things”. It should be the policy position of any government that the average Turks & Caicos Islander in the public service should earn a living wage.
It is, however, a situation where there are over 2000 civil servants who earn less than $2,000 monthly. While this may be a huge salary in Haiti, the Dominican Republic, the Eastern Caribbean, it is hardly a living wage in the Turks & Caicos Islands.
Yet, this government managed to only give that tier of the public service a paltry 10% increase. They then came back with significant increases to the National Insurance (NIS) monthly premium. Whatever they gave in that 10% was taken back by the NIS increase and the ongoing strident onslaught of inflation.
Consequently, the budget does not do much to advance the cause of the Turks & Caicos Islander, his situation and plight in the midst of this expansionary, yet inflationary economy. Either you are building a people or developing a permanent under-class.
Break from tradition
real sustainable development of their people instead of programmes to win elections every four years? The only people who seem to win every time are the politicians and their cronies while the rest of us remain beggars. We don’t need handouts but protection for our businesses from unfair competition and incentives by way of concessions which does not cost the government anything.
Missing agenda
Even when the budget balloons to $1.5bn it will be of no surprise as fiscal budgets, as a matter of automaticity, increase annually. This is just the nature of things. Should a budget stay “as is” or project lower than a previous year, the government of the day should resign.
Budgets are a policy statement; a report card on what a government has done and what they ‘plan’ ” to do.
There is an element of nuance here because one could surmise that this budget occasions near to the removal of former Ministry of Finance, the Hon EJ Saunders, who would have completed most, if not all, of the budget for the current fiscal period. So, whose budget is it? The Premier’s or that of the former Deputy Premier. Whose plan or vision is it? This year, should a poll be taken of the public, certain things are likely to be certain and that is, “we do not
of writing to applicants for scholarship denial letters that “we do not have sufficient funds”. The way these letters are written, it seems that they have some level of glee in doing so. It cannot be a serious policy position on the part of the Premier, His 14=1 MPS and appointed members to have a huge salary for the Premier and those at the top and still be writing denial letters that ‘we do not have enough money for scholarships’. The Premier’s salary and those at the top, are all competing against the people and issues at the bottom for proper allocation.
Too little for the people
To the extent that people are looking to the budget to see what’s in it for them, there is very little to show. Coming into the 2021 General Elections, this PNP government, while in opposition, carried a message of fair play and equity for all.
These platitudes fall flat when faced with reality. The promise of egovernment and taking TCI to an electronic and “efficient’ way of doing business, to make things more “economical” is nowhere to be seen.
In this debate, the Leader of the Opposition decided to break from tradition and take on all of the Ministers in responding to the budget. He was not given that chance but this would have been new and remarkable because he has signalled that this is not business as usual. We cannot be doing the same thing every four years and expecting a different result. This is quite remarkable nonetheless.
Controversial allocation
There is a very controversial allocation in the budget and that is the Premier’s salary. Since it is projected that the budget will hover in the region of $500m, then his salary must be considered huge and exceptional. This Premier is not known to host wild parties and orgies where such an allocation would go towards defrayment, so why the huge allocation.
There are some projects laid out in the budget that are significantly less than the Premier’s salary. It is something to be reviewed and the Premier ought to really consider reducing his package, that of the ministers and top civil level servants and reallocate the monies to urgent areas in critical need. Currently the scholarship policy and budget are both deficient because of the largess being given to “those at the top”. The Scholarship Board is in the business
People still have to stand in long lines to license their cars, pay national insurance, NHIP and to get business licensing. Egovernment remains a flat dream and not yet implemented. They have made an allocation for ‘digitisation’ but no real policy or proposed legislation on how it would work. Egovernment is huge, carries significant constitutional and administration import and to that extent, “nothing of any substance” has been done.
There is little work and no savings in the budget for egovernment because it has not been implemented. With little savings anywhere there is little that a TCIslander business person could look forward to from this budget. No significant monies are allocated for empowerment loans, low-interest facilities and a means for the islander to get access to capital that he cannot get from the commercial banks.
One dimensional
There is little to show in the budget that there is any significant pivot in economy strategy, if any. Right now the TCI is
Opposition leader calls Appeals court Crown land decision unconscionable
says it disenfranchises Turks and Caicos Islanders
Leader of the PDM and the official Opposition, Hon Edwin Astwood believes the court of appeal decision in the Gilbert Selver case with the Government is unfair and does not protect the rights of the people of the TCI.
In a decision last week, the Court found that Selver illegally occupied three parcels of land and when given the opportunity to regularise his occupancy of said land, did not accept the offers, and ignored several notices to vacate the properties.
As such he has been ordered off the land within 90 days, has to pay the government’s legal costs and will not be compensated for the structures that reside on the land parcels.
In response to the judgement, Astwood stated: “While we respect the jurisdiction of the Courts, we do not always agree with its rulings.
“To that end, I do not agree with the Turks and Caicos Court of Appeal ruling against our local businessman Mr. Gilbert Selver.”
He stated that in his opinion, the judgment does not ‘reaffirm the government’s authority to act in
the best interests of the people of the Turks and Caicos Islands and ensures responsible stewardship of our finite land resources’.
The above quote cited by Astwood, is taken from a press release issued this week by the Attorney General Chambers in which it made several statements regarding the government upholding the law for the benefit of the populace.
“I do not think that ‘the principles of justice and fairness’ are being upheld by this ruling,” the party leader stated.
“No Turks and Caicos Islander should be contented or in any way agreeable with this ruling.
“Mr Selver is a Turks and Caicos Islander businessman who has invested hundreds of thousands of dollars in developing these properties, and if allowed to be executed, this ruling will greatly hurt the position of this native Turks and Caicos Islander businessman.”
He shared that the ruling also demonstrates that the Crown Land Ordinance is not in the interests of Turks Caicos Islanders.
“It cannot be right, and called transparent and accountable Crown land practices, when we have in place an informal settlement unit that is seeking ways to regularise persons, the majority of whom are not Turks and Caicos Islanders, who are squatting on government land and have constructed entire settlements, adhering to no building codes, no health codes, no electrical codes, no standards of any kind.
“But the government is seeking ways to regularise them, while in the same breath, taking everything from a Turks and Caicos Islander through the use of the Crown Land Ordinance.”
He said this is telling him that only Turks and Caicos Islanders are subject to the laws in the country, and “others can build where they want, when they want, how they want, and nothing will be done to them”.
“Additionally, after breaking the laws the government is seeking to regularise you. This cannot be right.”
Astwood stated that a ‘caring government’- as the PNP tout themselves - would be seeking ways to regularise its people, not allowing their life’s work to be taken away.
He said the Crown Land Ordinance needs to be reformed
to make it easier for Islanders to apply for and obtain commercial and residential land, and that the system currently being used should be immediately discontinued and replaced with a more equitable and justifiable process for the distribution of Crown land.
“I call upon the government to not leave this one in the hands of the Crown Land Unit and to instruct the Unit to reach a settlement with Mr Selver, because despite what the Court says about the government taking possession of the property and buildings, Cabinet should go in a different direction, one that protects our people’s interest, which is protecting Mr Selver’s interest.”
He is calling on the government to table a Bill in the House of Assembly to amend, repeal and replace the Crown Land Ordinance, with land laws that are serving the people in the context and environment that they live in today.
He said the PDM’s position is that Crown land must return under a minister and a ministry of government, so that Crown land can be readily accessible to the people of the Turks and Caicos Islands for both commercial and residential development, in a transparent, justifiable, and responsible manner.
leaning and depending solely on this current economic expansion wrought by a changing world economy. Should there be a global recession, an outbreak of war and other circumstances that would limit mobility and travel, the TCI would be at certain risk. We could be in an economic bubble. This budget does not reflect any serious allocation to agriculture and the diversifying of the economy but more emphasis on drinking from the usual tourism cup.
Huge savings need to be found to strengthen certain areas. Teachers at all levels are left exposed and not properly compensated even though 90% of the teaching profession is local and TCIslander dominated.
There should be a plan in the budget to give teachers and other professionals in the public service an “equalising salary base”. There should be an allocation to train people in agriculture, farming and fisheries. Farmers should be given significant grants to expand and start new farming ventures. Fishing is a multibillion-dollar business and
Continued
monies should be directed to maritime development to reduce reliance on tourism revenues.
Priorities
This week the Court of Appeal sided with the Crown Land Unit to rule that the arcane and archaic Crown Land Ordinance has pre-eminence over the investment and empowerment agenda of the Turks & Caicos Islander in the Gilbert Selver case.
This 2024/25 budget must now be amended to provide an allocation for a consultancy to get rid of these backward laws. Even so, the leader of the Opposition, the PDM Leader, has called on the government to instruct the Attorney General’s Chambers to sit with Mr Selver and to settle the case.
Do not take the land from him. In his release, the Leader of the Opposition stated, “This ruling also demonstrates that the Crown Land Ordinance is not in the
interests of Turks & Caicos Islanders. It cannot be right, and called transparent and accountable crownland practices, when we have in place an informal settlement unit that is seeking ways to regularise persons, the majority of whom are not Turks and Caicos Islanders, who are squatting on government land and have constructed entire settlements, adhering to no building codes, no health codes, no electrical codes, no standards of any. But the government is seeking ways to regularize them, while in the same breath, taking everything from a Turks and Caicos Islander through the use of the Crown Land Ordinance. It is telling me that only Turks & Caicos Islanders are subject to the laws in the country, others can build where they want, when they want, how they want, and nothing will be done to them. Additionally, after breaking the laws the government is seeking to regularise you. This cannot be right. A caring government would be seeking ways to regularise its people, not allowing their life’s work to be taken away. This Crown Land Ordinance needs to be reformed to make it easier
for Turks & Caicos Islanders to apply for and obtain Commercial and Residential Crown Land. The system currently being used should be discontinued immediately, and replaced with a more equitable and justifiable process for the distribution of crown land.” To do this, there must be a nationwide consultancy on what we want as a people and a country. It will require an immediate in the direction of Government and a “tour de force” with respect to the budget.
It is an issue of such huge importance that the trains must now stop to deal with it. These calls for a settlement between the government and Gilbert Selver, are echoed ironically by former Premier Michael Misick. There is a sentiment and a call from the street for something to be done. If the budget is to be used as an instrument of empowerment then changes must be made. Otherwise, we will be spending $500m for the sake of spending “all kinds of money”. To fight for our people and re-order the priorities of the government through a revised budget must now be the order of the day.
“We must face the hard facts”- Premier says – Government’s 2023/2024 expenditure falls short
BY OLIVIA ROSEThe Turks and Caicos Islands government is facing “tremendous challenges” in developing and implementing big-ticket projects.
Although the TCI has a historic national spending bill totalling a staggering $485m for the 2024/2025 fiscal year, Premier Hon Charles Washington Misick delivered a sobering message about the shortcomings of the 2023/2024 fiscal year relating to the delivery and implementation of capital projects, during his budget speech in the House of Assembly on Tuesday, April 16, 2024.
He revealed that the government spent $389.2m in the last financial year, which was $47.8m below budget.
He said: “Just $29m of the 57.8m allocated for the capital programme was spent…we must face the hard facts.
“We have a capacity problem.
“We are facing tremendous
challenges in developing and implementing big-ticket projects”, Misick stressed.
This significant shortfall was attributed to several factors, including “onerous processes” and other obstacles.
number of initiatives aimed at addressing these challenges.
He allocated $300,000 for a procurement ordinance review and $1.8m for project initiation and development plans.
He said: “Our goal is to develop project delivery plans a year in advance, when done this way, all the essential components of the project would have been determined and the project ready for the procurement process immediately after the passage of the budget.
These are positive steps, but it remains to be seen whether they will be enough to make a significant difference.
consistently increased our social spending such as daycare and after-school programmes.
“In FY 2021/2022 just over 3.6m was spent on social development.
“We have increased the allocation every year and for 2024/2025, we are spending almost 10.2 million dollars.
“Mr Speaker, we believe in fairness. If helping the vulnerable and those facing hardships and needing a hand up is what defines a welfare state, then this government is guilty as charged.
“After all, fairness means providing money to help the poorest among us, the sick, the vulnerable, and the elderly”, Misick opined.
Misick said: “Public servants are working hard, but the onerous processes, insufficient resources, inadequate technology, outdated laws, an unwillingness to adapt by some and bureaucracy are frustrating delivery. That must change.”
Misick also pointed out that the Leader of the Opposition in a previous debate accused the government of promoting a welfare state.
He argued that the Government must prevent prolonged poverty and give those burdened by hardship “a hand up.”
The Premier announced a
In an initiative to “forge ahead” and build a stronger, more sustainable ministry, the newly appointed Minister of Public Safety and Utilities, Hon. Kyle Knowles, and his Executive Team have embarked on a mission to familiarise themselves with the various departments under the Ministry.
On April 19th, 2024, the minister and his team, which included Permanent Secretary Mrs. Bridgette Newman; Director of Water Undertaken, Mr Omowale Harvey; Head of Secretariat Ms Shanetta Thompson and Executive Administrator Ms. Jasmine Malcolm, visited Salt Cay.
He said: “That is why we have
Although this is a laudable approach, the Premier acknowledged that it is important to ensure that the government’s spending is effective and efficient as it has a responsibility to manage its finances responsibly and to provide essential services to its citizens.
The purpose of the visit was for the minister to get acquainted with the staff and to tour the water plant and all water distribution sites on the island.
The Public Safety and Utilities Minister also took the opportunity to engage with the community and learn first-hand about the
department’s successes, challenges, and concerns, a recent statement from the ministry explained.
This is just one of many visits that the minister and his team will be making to various departments across the islands as they work to build a stronger and more sustainable ministry.
Knowles who was sworn into the Washington Misick-led Cabinet on Wednesday, March 6, 2024, reiterated his commitment to communicating with the people and ensuring that they are well informed about the work being done by the Ministry of Public Safety and Utilities. (Olivia Rose)
Two American tourists charged with possession of ammunition
– days after Appellate Court delivers significant judgement
BY DELANA ISLESEyes are now on the two American tourists charged this week with illegal possession of ammunition at two ports of entry in the TCI, particularly given the court of appeal ruling that all convictions under the Firearm Ordinance carry custodial sentences.
The two men are 31-year-old Tyler Scott Weinrich of Virginia – who was picked up at the Grand Turk Cruise Centre – and Ryan Tyler Watson, 40, of Oklahoma, arrested at the Howard Hamilton International Airport on April 12. Both men were in possession of ammunition.
Another American tourist, Bryan Hagerich is also awaiting a hearing on his possession charge.
In a significant ruling last week, the Court of Appeal certified that the Supreme Court of the TCI does not have the authority to impose non-custodial sentences on persons convicted under the Firearm Ordinance of the TCI.
The decision came following several cases where American tourists were given a slap on
the wrists after being found in possession of ammunition, under the guise of ‘exceptional circumstances’, fined a severely reduced amount, and sent on their way.
The court found that while the circumstances may have been exceptional – a determination that is to be made by the presiding judge – said judge does not have the authority to impose only a fine, with no jail time, even if the
circumstances are found to be exceptional.
The decision comes months after the TCI made its policy clear to visitors that the law of the TCI prohibits the possession of guns and ammunition not legalised in the country.
The US Embassy of the Bahamas also chimed in with several advisories to US citizens to check their luggage and not travel with guns and ammunition
to another country unless proper authorisation is granted by the visiting country.
Despite these warnings, American tourists (predominantly) continue to enter the Turks and Caicos Islands with unauthorised ammunition.
Weinrich was arrested while going through a routine security check after arriving on a cruise ship docked at the Grand Turk Cruise Centre, and it was discovered
that he had ammunition in his possession.
Officers of the Grand Turk Police Station were called, and Weinrich was arrested and subsequently charged. He appeared before a Magistrate on Wednesday and was remanded to His Majesty’s Prison in the capital.
He will appear before the court on June 7 for a sufficiency hearing.
Watson was arrested on April 12, at the Howard Hamilton International Airport in Providenciales. He appeared in court on Wednesday.
On Thursday, following a bail application in the Supreme Court, he was granted $15,000 bail and ordered not to travel out of TCI without the court’s permission, surrender his passport and all other travel documents to the court, report to Grace Bay Police Station on Tuesdays and Thursdays between the hours of 8am and 4pm, and to reside at the given address in Providenciales, with any address change to be provided to the court.
He too will appear in court on June 7, for a sufficiency hearing.
CABINET MEETING SUMMARY
Turks and Caicos Islands post Cabinet meeting statement
HE Governor Dileeni Daniel Selvaratnam chaired the 11th meeting of the Cabinet on Wednesday, April 10, 2024, at the Office of the Premier on the island of Providenciales.
All members were present with the exception of the Hon Ministers of Tourism and the Environment and the Ministry of Home Affairs who were away from the islands on official duties.
AT THIS MEETING CABINET:
● Approved the Border Force Bill 2024 as a standalone bill creating the legal framework for the legal operation of the Border Force for advancement to the House of Assembly
● Approved the Customs (Amendment) Bill 2024 as a standalone bill creating a legal framework for the legal operation of the Border Force
for advancement to the House of Assembly
● Approved the Crime Prevention Strategy Targeting At Risk Youth
● Granted approval to establish the Juvenile Prevention and Intervention Council (JPIC), who will subsequently work collectively to develop policy and procedures, crime prevention strategy and service legal agreements that will govern all services upon completion
● Granted approval to TBH Provo Ltd. (The Hotel Operating Co. Ltd./Beach House) to extend a Refurbishment Order previously granted to complete refurbishments previously agreed
● Noted an information paper on the TCI National ID Concept Core Model
● Approved the reappointment of Mr. Joseph Connolly as a Member of the National Insurance Board
(employer representative) effective April 15, 2024 for a period of 3 years
● Approved the appointment of Mr. Jermaine Fulford as a Member of the National Insurance Board (insured person) for a period of 3 years effective April 15th, 2024
● Noted an information paper on the Statutory and Good Governance Pay and Grading Review as of April 9, 2024, which is scheduled to take place from April to July, 2024 and establishing the Governance Committee
● Accepted the resignation of Bishop Vernal G. Clarke as a Member of the Health Regulation Board and agreed to rescind this appointment
● Approved the appointment of Bishop Andrew Stone as a Member of the Health Regulation Authority Board for a period of 3 years effective April 15, 2024
● Approved the appointment of the
following individuals as Members of the Labour Tribunal for a period of two years effective April 1, 2024:
Mr Edward Hall, Senior Member (representative of employees)
Mr Samuel Williams, Senior Member (representative of employers)
Mr Vernon Alco Williams, Senior Member (representative of employees)
Ms Arnelle Taylor, Attorney (representative of employers)
Mr Carlis Williams (representative of employees GDT)
Mrs Kenya Forbes-Jagger (representative of employers)
Ms Kerchelle Bain, Attorney (representative of employees)
Ms Yolander Forbes (representative of employers)
Ms Veronica Rigby (representative of employees) New appointment
Ms Mary Cunningham (representative of employers) New appointment
Businessman booted off of Crown Land
–
Appellate court overturns decision granting him right of occupation
BY DELANA ISLESBusinessman Gilbert Selver has 90 days to vacate three parcels of Crown land in Providenciales, following a decision by the Appellate Court last week.
The case was initially heard before Justice Carlos Simmons and a decision in Selver’s favour was delivered on April 29, 2022, whereby the judge made certain findings against the government.
The matter surrounds three parcels of land - 60602/429 (“429”), 60602/430 (“430”) and 60602/431 (“431”) – upon which Selver took occupation, purportedly, according to the government, without lawful authority and without obtaining the requisite leases.
In its decision on April 17, the Court of Appeal overturned Simmons’ ruling and affirmed the Government’s position on critical issues involving Crown land procedures and the implications of the Crown Land Ordinance.
“We welcome the Court of Appeal’s ruling in this pivotal land case,” Attorney General Rhondalee Braithwaite Knowles said in a statement on the matter.
She added: “This decision vindicates our steadfast efforts to clarifying the impact of the Crown Land Ordinance on some of the
legacy matters that we are seeking to bring to a close.
“This judgement is another helpful decision of our courts that clarifies the Crown Land Ordinance’s governance over the disposition of Crown Land since its enactment.
“The judgement reaffirms the government’s authority to act in the best interests of the people of the Turks and Caicos Islands and ensures responsible stewardship of our finite land resources.”
The Attorney General also said that the government is grateful to the Court of Appeal for their thorough consideration of the legal issues at hand and their commitment to delivering just and equitable outcomes.
“This ruling provides clarity and certainty for all stakeholders involved and underscores the importance of transparent and accountable Crown Land practices,” she added.
In the initial ruling, Simmons found that the freehold to the properties be transferred to Selver for the prices of US$30,800 and US$73,500 respectively together with the survey and registration fees as detailed in a letter to Selver from the Government dated October 29, 2008.
He also denied the government’s
declaration as regards the easement of the properties, as well as special damages (contract and interests), and Selver was awarded his costs of the action.
The Crown’s position in the Supreme Court was that Selver was a trespasser after failing to accept the offers for the sale of said Crown land presented to him prior to the coming into force of the 2012 Crown land Ordinance and after receiving notices to discontinue the use and occupation of the said Crown Land, all of which were ignored.
The Court of Appeal overturned Simmon’s judgments, awards and decision, granting the Government the entirety of its ask.
The Attorney General submitted to the court that based on the documentary evidence and the evidence in the proceedings before Judge Simmons it was not open to him to find that there was a contract formed between Selver and the government.
They said the judge held that the letter from the Ministry of Lands and Resources dated October 29, 2008, relaying Cabinet’s decision at its meeting on October 8, 2008, created a contract between the parties.
However, the judge failed to address the question of the
Airport fiasco and measures to correct issues
Dear Editor,
My wife and I are property owners. Yesterday (Wednesday), my son and his girlfriend came down on the daily flight from Atlanta. They arrived a bit early and were greeted by a massive line at customs.
They determined that the reason for this was that there were 4 customs agents and the line moved at a snail’s pace. Given the fact that the plane arrivals are bunched around that time, all of the positions, or virtually all of them, should have been open as they were when my wife and I arrived
this past Friday on the same flight at the same time. My daughter arrived later that afternoon on the Delta flight from JFK and was greeted by the same. Everyone in my family who came yesterday waited nearly 2 hours to get through customs. This would not have happened had the airport been adequately staffed. It is reasonable to assume that the customs authority can find out the number of passengers arriving on the daily flights and plan adequately.
Also, the work that they started on the airport needs to be finished. The walkway that is at
respective offers made ‘without prejudice’ and ‘subject to contract’, nor did he consider Selver’s outright rejection of the offer and the counteroffer.
They also submitted that he failed to consider the effect of the Crown Land Ordinance on the purported offer of 2013, as such he erred in law in erroneously applying the wrong legal principles and thereby concluding that the letter of October 29, 2008, was the basis of a binding contract between the government and Selver.
He is also said to have erred in finding that the offer set out in the letter of February 4, 2003, in respect of the CPL over parcel 130 now 429 had not expired, and that an offer existed for a CPL over parcel 430.
That finding was not supported by the evidence the AG submitted to the appeals court.
DECISION
The court found that where the judge concluded that the government is not entitled to possession of the properties, he based this finding on, his erroneous conclusions about the non-expiry of the CPL, the existence of the contract, and apparently equitable considerations of ‘the expenditure that the plaintiff has outlaid on the properties’.
The court stated: “Unless I agree that it would be inequitable to remove Selver, the government is entitled to possession of 429 and 430 there being no enforceable contract between Selver and the government, and possession of 431 as Selver was never given permission to enter or remain thereon.
“I do not agree. Equitable relief was not pleaded in the alternative to the declarations sought. Further, no submission was made on suitable equitable relief.
“Finally, in view of my finding
that Selver unlawfully remained on 431, without proper explanation, Selver cannot be considered to have ‘clean hands’.
“Accordingly, I grant the appellant the orders for possession sought.”
As it relates to damages, the court stated that, save for asserting that it was deprived of the rental value of the parcels, the government has not provided evidence on how any damages for unlawful occupation should be quantified.
“Ms. Clerveax’s witness statement does not assist with quantifying loss or damages. It does not include information to show loss of rent, or the rental value of the parcels. Accordingly, I will disallow damages.”
The court noted that the appellant, in its counterclaim, requested that in the alternative of an order that Selver pull down and remove the buildings and/or infrastructural works on the parcels, that regards the improvements attached to the land no compensation be payable to Selver.
“In my view in all the circumstances, and in view of his unlawful entry on 431, this order is appropriate.”
In its disposition, the court ordered: “The government is entitled to possession of parcels 60602/431; 60602/429 and 60602/430.
“The respondent (Selver) shall vacate parcels 60602/431; 60602/429 and 60602/430 within 90 days from the date hereof.
“The government is entitled to all attached buildings and/ or infrastructural works on the parcels 60602/431; 60602/429 and 60602/430 attached to the land and no compensation is payable to the respondent.
“Costs to the appellant both here and below to be taxed if not agreed.”
best one-half built should either be completed or demolished. The former would be the best option. As well, the expansion of the upstairs departure lounge should be completed. Simply put, finish what is started. Don’t make a big splash advertising these improvements and then not do them!
I love the Turks! It is paradise! It was a great decision to buy here. Everyone I bring loves it and wants to return. Do not cheapen their experience with lousy conditions at the airport.
Regards, Nowland GwynnGovernor confident in new police commissioner’s ability to tackle crime
BY OLIVIA ROSEAs the Turks and Caicos Islands continues to face a myriad of national security challenges and a proliferation of barbaric gang crime, the territory’s governor is optimistic that the Royal Turks and Caicos Islands Police Force (RTCIPF) will put a dent in these issues with the newly sworn-in Commissioner of Police at the helm.
HE Governor Dileeni DanielSelvaratnam recently addressed the Turks and Caicos Islands community in a powerful speech condemning the recent acts of violence and senseless aggression that have plagued the nation.
Speaking at the swearingin ceremony for the new police commissioner Mr Edvin Martin
on Monday, April 22, 2024, the Governor highlighted the importance of unity in fighting this scourge and called on all citizens to work alongside the police force to create a safer environment for everyone.
Governor Daniel-Selvaratnam condemned the recent acts of violence that continue to gnaw at the fabric of the Turks and Caicos Islands society and expressed her sincere condolences to the families and friends of those who lost loved ones over the weekend.
She said: “I know the trauma of the loss is felt keenly by all, with increased concern for the safety of our communities and the lives of our youth. It is particularly sobering that the mother of one of the victims is a dedicated social worker who works diligently to
ensure protection and safeguards for our at-risk youth, these are sobering times indeed.”
The Governor pointed out that even as the Turks and Caicos Islands thrives with a steadfast economy and its picturesque beauty is renowned, many national security factors continue to threaten the nation’s peace and prosperity.
In this vein, she expressed her confidence in Mr Martin’s ability to lead the force in addressing these issues, stating, “The selection of Mr Martin as our new Commissioner was guided by the need for an experienced policing lead, consummate in tackling effectively complex organised crime and who could strengthen the bond between
law enforcement and communities across our islands.
“The appointment of Mr Edvin Martin as the Commissioner of Police comes at a pivotal time, our current greatest challenge is that of threats aligned with national security, both internal and external - transnational crime and irregular migration.”
She underscored that Commissioner Martins brings with him a wealth of operational and regional experience, with a distinguished career in law enforcement that spans many years.
“His leadership roles include his tenure as the head of the Royal Grenada Police Force and his instrumental role in leading
‘Targeted attacks’ claim the lives of two young men
Two targeted shooting have claimed the lives of Anlinco John Lightbourne in Providenciales, and Omarion Gardiner in Grand Turk, all in the space of a few hours.
Acting Commissioner of Police, Rodney Adams this week described the shooting deaths of both men as tragic and senseless acts which have traumatised the TCI communities.
Homicide detectives are actively investigating the two separate incidents.
Police said based on preliminary investigations, around 11:38 pm April 20, a report was made to the Chalk Sound Police Station concerning a shooting incident.
Officers were dispatched to a location in the Bight, Providenciales and found the
lifeless body of 31-year- old Anlinco Lightbourne.
The second incident occurred on April 21, at about 3:18am in Grand Turk.
Investigations revealed that Omarion Gardiner, 20, was out with friends when three armed men shot at the group.
Officers from the Grand Turk Police Station were notified and commenced searches along Duke Street. They subsequently found Gardiner’s body.
Both victims suffered gunshot wounds, suggesting a targeted attack, Adams reported.
The Royal TCI Police Force is urging the public to notify the closest police station, contact 911, the Serious Crime Unit at 231-1842, Crime Stoppers at 1-800-8477, and anonymously give any information on these
shootings and illegal activity.
Addressing the tragic loss of life of one of his constituents, Honourable Otis Morris said Gardiner’s senseless killing has left the community of Grand Turk in shock and mourning.
“He was a bright and promising individual, beloved by all who knew him. His untimely passing has shattered the hearts of his family, friends, and neighbours. We grieve alongside them, sharing their pain and sorrow during this incredibly difficult time.”
Morris said that as the community comes together to support Omarion’s family, “let us offer them our love, prayers, and unwavering support. No words can fully ease their grief, but may they find solace in the knowledge that they are not alone”.
“In moments of profound
loss, we often turn to scripture for comfort and guidance. Psalm 147:3 reminds us that ‘He heals the brokenhearted and binds up their wounds’.
“May this truth bring a measure of peace and strength to Omarion’s family as they navigate through their grief.”
The member of parliament stated that the constituency of Grand Turk South stands united in condemning all forms of violence and senseless acts of aggression.
“Together, let us honor his memory by advocating for justice, peace, and healing within our community.
“As the Government representative for Grand Turk, I will work tirelessly to ensure that all be done to protect our communities.
the CARICOM Gun Crime Intelligence Unit with regional and international partners, which are a testament to his leadership skills and unwavering commitment to the cause of justice.
“Your committed public service and regional policing expertise confirm the public service that I know you will deliver dutifully as our Commissioner of Police.”
Governor Daniel- Selvaratnam who has responsibility for national security, said tackling the worrying rise in violent gang-related crime and threats to TCI’s border security is the government’s key focus.
To this end, she revealed that the National Security Council is working to develop strategic interventions that will strengthen criminal justice outcomes for the islands, critically starting with prevention and the development of community policing; and looking holistically at detection and investigation, charges and prosecution, hearings, sentencing and rehabilitation.
“In support of our border security efforts, we are working with the joint maritime security centre to embed new assets to secure our maritime domain awareness and support patrols of our waters.
“We are sharpening the tip of our spear by investing significantly in our front-line enforcement agencies so that they are strengthened with new strategic, tactical and operational capabilities.
“We are resolute - we will not back down from any challenge and we will not ignore the threats that touch us all”, she added.
In her closing remarks, the governor expressed her gratitude to Deputy Commissioner Adams, the force’s executive and the rank and file of the force for their committed service in keeping the Turks and Caicos Islands safe.
$90.5m allocated to address healthcare needs in TCI
– Ministry to focus on primary care, emergency preparedness, and migrant health
BY OLIVIA ROSETo foster a healthcare system that prioritizes the needs of residents in the Turks and Caicos Islands, the government has allocated a whopping $90.5M in its recently passed national spending bill to healthcare delivery.
To this end, Minister of Health and Human Services Hon Shaun Malcolm recently outlined a number of priorities for the 2024/2025 fiscal year during his ministerial speech in the House of Assembly following the passage of the National Budget.
The Health Minister informed that his ministry will focus on improving the Child Health Immunization Programme to increase vaccination rates for children under the age of five, to protect the population against vaccine-preventable diseases.
Minister Malcolm said work will also be done to improve the migrant health system and make the process of obtaining a migrant health certificate more efficient and streamlined.
Additionally, the ministry is looking to enhance emergency preparedness to improve its response capabilities in the event of a public health emergency.
This includes increasing vector control efforts to prevent the spread of mosquito-borne diseases, improving water and sanitation infrastructure, recruiting and training new staff to fill key positions and improving the overall quality of care.
Malcolm said that the mission of the ministry is to “provide high-quality health services to the people of the Turks and Caicos Islands (TCI) through the hard work and commitment of dedicated professional care providers and
policymakers, in partnership with communities and organisations”
ACHIEVEMENTS
The ministry has had a successful year, with a focus on primary healthcare according to the minister.
He stressed that the Child Health Immunisation Programme has been a major focus for the ministry and that its staff have made great strides in improving it.
“Through the hard work of the Primary Healthcare Department, the TCI won the Henry C Smith Immunization Award for improvements achieved in vaccination rates for children under the age of five years at the 37th Meeting of Caribbean Immunization Managers Meeting in Belize City, Belize on October 31, 2023.
“These gains are significant for the protection of the population
against the re-emergence of vaccine-preventable diseases.”
The migrant health system has also been a success story. The department has digitised the process for obtaining migrant health certificates, making it much more efficient.
Malcolm explained this has been an area whereby numerous concerns were raised in the past regarding the processing time for migrant health certificates.
“ Mr Speaker, to date the migrant health programme is now fully digitalised, and once information is uploaded and all documents are in order, and, there is no outstanding information needed, approvals can be granted within two-three days.”
In addition to these accomplishments, the Ministry has also recruited and trained many new staff.
This has helped to improve the quality of care that is available to
CONTRIBUTORS
Do you have a subject of interest that you’d like to share with our readers?
Perhaps you’re a great cook and have created lots of delicious recipes that use local ingredients. Maybe you have ideas on how to save money when shopping and know where to find all the latest bargains. Or are you an entrepreneur who would like to share tips on setting up a new business?
We need regular contributors of 400 word
TRAINING AND RECRUITMENT
In highlighting the ministry’s recruitment efforts, Malcolm noted that within the health sector, there is competition to attract health professionals, especially when the demand is great, and first-world countries such as those in North America and Europe seem to dominate the market.
Nevertheless, the ministry’s human resource capacity has been further strengthened as a number of key positions were successfully filled during the 2023/2024 financial year.
He said: “Mr Speaker, I am even more pleased to announce that all of the positions below have been filled with local certified talent: Deputy Chief Medical Officer, Chief Medical Technologist (2) Deputy Chief Environmental Health Officers, (1) Training Officer - Health Disaster Education and Training, (2) Senior Program Officers – in the Health Promotion and Advocacy Unit (HPAU) and 2 (Temporary) Vector Control Officers.”
“Whilst we are overjoyed regarding the aforementioned recruitment efforts, we encourage other locals to apply for the vacancies which will be advertised within the coming days.
EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS EFFORTS
As it relates to emergency preparedness, Malcolm said the ministry is continuing its efforts
to further strengthen its response capacity and capability.
As such, the following initiatives were undertaken: The Caribbean Public Health Agency (CARPHA) follow-up Missions on Virtual Training in Integrated Vector Management (IVM) and insecticide resistance testing (IRT) within the TCI.
The aim of the IVM approach was to contribute to the achievement of the global targets set for vectorborne disease control, by making vector control more efficient, costeffective, ecologically sound and sustainable.
The ministry’s ongoing planning, preparedness, and response aims to effectively manage the risk of outbreaks of cholera, and other communicable diseases on the islands, especially in the prisons and informal migrant settlements.
Malcolm said: “The Department of Environmental Health conducted a water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) assessment on the islands of Grand Turk and Providenciales in collaboration with the Pan American Health Organization/ World Health Organization (PAHO/WHO). This assessment exercise was geared to improve WASH in these areas to reduce the risk of outbreaks, which would also impact the wider population.”
Coupled with these efforts, the National Public Health Laboratory has been further strengthened through the donation of the BioFire Film Array Assay Technology by the UKHSA and was introduced during the first quarter of 2023.
This PCR Technology has improved local testing capacity significantly. This allows for the timely identification of pathogens to facilitate the necessary response to prevent further disease spread.
Minister Malcolm further stressed that is it important for the government to continue its efforts in the fight against the spread of Dengue in the TCI.
“As such, my government is investing over $1m in street cleaning, and an additional $1m is being invested in the Ministry of Health and Human Services in the area of community enhancement”, he added.
The capital programme for the financial year 2024/2025 makes provision for a mobile clinic for the community of Blue Hills, Providenciales and a vehicle for health promotion and advocacy in Providenciales; and repairs to the Sylvia Melhado Wellness Centre in Grand Turk.
“Nothing done, nothing completed, and everything coming”
Opposition leader in rebuttal to 2024/25 budget
BY DELANA ISLESThe 2024/2025 budget has been passed, but it has left a sour taste in the mouth of the Opposition, which continues to chastise the government about its lack of progress and the economic position of the country that is pricing Islanders out.
In his statement on the budget last week, Leader of the PDM and the Opposition, Honourable Edwin Astwood once again laid into the government about what he presumes is their failure.
“We have heard a lot from the Premier, who is the new minister of finance, it is the same empty rhetoric that he has been trying to sell the people of this country for the last year.
“The economy is booming, for who? Not for Turks and Caicos Islanders. You are living your best lives, not Turks Islanders, only you, the Premier and your Ministers are living your best lives.”
He said after three years that is their record, “Nothing was done, nothing was completed, and everything coming”.
He said every time the government gives something to the people with one hand, they take it back with another.
“The premier and his government’s record have also been that they give with one hand, and they take even more with the other.
“Additionally, every time they give something to the people, they take more for themselves. A proven fact,” Astwood alleged.
He said none of the problems or concerns of the country are addressed directly by the budget.
“Furthermore, none of the government ministries, departments, and units are being provided with an adequate budget for operation and achieving their mandate.
“Nor are they being provided with adequate staff for optimal production.
“This budget is also leaving many of these departments and units without the necessary vehicles, equipment, or software necessary for carrying out their duties.”
He said the budget is a complete mess, and the affairs of the country are being left by the wayside.
“Over the last three years, we have all seen our fair share of
mistakes and blunders from the party opposite.
“They have dropped the ball on every predicament facing our people, especially crime, illegal immigration, cost of living and health care.
“It is a shame that for the Turks and Caicos, in 2024, we have in office a premier who thinks the cost of living crisis is nonexistent ‘and that things are booming for all.
“A former minister of finance who thinks that people are living their best lives. A minister of health who thinks our people are the healthiest in the world. A minister of immigration who thinks that our borders are the most secure in the region. A minister of infrastructure who always has ambition before performance. A minister of tourism who thinks that foreigners will market our tourist product better than our own people
“An education minister who puts Turks and Caicos Islands children last in our education system. A minister of home affairs who wants to turn the country into a welfare state. A minister of public safety who abandoned his ‘can’t breathe’ ‘clean air’ campaign, once his government took office.
“And the worst part is that the country has seen all of them hide and cower from every major issue being faced by our country and our people. They are afraid to speak to you, for fear of being exposed and their real hidden agenda uncovered.”
Astwood said over the last three years, the country has seen the most Cabinet, Ministry, and Department shuffles in the history of elected governments in the Turks and Caicos Islands.
“Every week people have to ask who is the new minister of this ministry, what are the departments under this ministry, when this change took place, where can I now find this minister or department, why the premier moved this department, and how will this work.
“And all we see is the premier and deputy premier smiling as the ship goes down.”
He said they are leaving it to the next PDM government to clean up the mess, “as we always have to do”.
The party leader said from his budget address, it is evident that the Premier and his Cabinet are just
going to carry on with underfunding ministries and departments, underfunding programs, coming for a supplementary, and carrying on failing.
He said the biggest risk to the people’s recovery and success is four more years of this premier and his band of ministers, who would take them down a path of, “four more years of falling confidence, four more years of confusion, four more years of boats landing every night, four more years of record levels of crime, four more years of Turks and Caicos being left behind and four more years of a PNP party stubbornly clinging to the failed policies and ideas of the past”.
He alleged that while the government fills their pockets first, their party’s second and the people and the country last, it is the
working people paying the price for their failed policies and failed government.
“Food prices are 20% higher and still going up, construction materials still going up, gas is still going up, electricity going up, rents still going up, local and international ticket fees have gone up, overall cost-of-living still going up and guess who they made pay for all these increases - yes they made you our working people pay.”
He stated that through the four supplementary budgets presented in the last fiscal year, the government has purchased land and buildings with sums of money they failed to spend, only to have them sit up for months with no current use nor plans for future use.
“For example, White Sands
Property. Check if anything is in the budget for works or for the usage of that property or Community College Building, no budget for its renovation and improvements.
“Through the four supplementary, and with sums of money they failed to spend, the Premier and His Ministers have provided seed money for a mortgage corporation to be set up, again, with no real plan, and nothing more budgeted for it.”
He said it appears that the Premier got wind that this was something placed in his party’s new manifesto, and wanted to beat them to it, “so he pushed it through during the final days of the financial year”.
More on the Opposition Leader’s budget scrutiny in our next issue.
New Commissioner of Police sworn-in
BY OLIVIA ROSEThe long-awaited Commissioner of Police Mr Edvin Martin, officially took the reins of the Royal Turks and Caicos Islands Police Force (RTCIPF) this week.
Commissioner Martin took command of the over 300 men and women of the RTCIPF on Monday, April 22, 2024, after he recited the Oath of Allegiance and Oath of Due Execution of the Office of the Commissioner of Police to HE Governor Dileeni Daniel and
signed a letter of appointment. The swearing-in ceremony was held with much pomp and fanfare, and attended by Premier Hon Charles Washington Misick, Deputy Governor, HE Anya Williams, cabinet ministers, and other public officials, as well as officers of police force.
During the event, the RTCIPF’s Marching Band serenaded attendees at the Downtown Ballpark in Providenciales.
Martin is a seasoned lawman with over three decades of law
enforcement experience, having led the Royal Grenada Police Force and served as President of the Association of Caribbean Police Chiefs.
During his inaugural address to the audience, the new Commissioner spoke about his vision for the future of the police force, emphasising community engagement and collaboration.
He said, “I look forward to working collaboratively with police officers, stakeholders, and the National Security Council to
improve safety and security for all.”
“I also feel an unprecedented opportunity and distinguished privilege to serve the people of this beautiful nation by leading the police force into an era of modern policing and greater community engagement,” he continued.
Martin also acknowledged the challenges facing the police force, including transnational organised crime, gang violence, illegal drugs, and firearms.
He called on the community to
collaborate with the RTCIPF to address these issues, saying, “We cannot do this alone.”
“We need you. Your community needs you. The TCI needs you. I need you. Your Police Force needs you to work with us ‘Side by Side’ to help us better serve you, deter the criminal elements that threaten our safety and security, and create a safer community.”
Cognizant of the dynamic, complex, diverse, and
Community kidney screening in Grand Turk and Salt Cay a hit
– more islands added, dates to be announced
InterHealth Canada TCI Hospital recently joined with the Ministry of Health to host two Community Kidney Screening Events in Grand Turk and Salt Cay, promoting kidney health awareness and early detection.
On April 12, at the Dillon Hall in Grand Turk and April 13, at the Ministry’s Clinic in Salt Cay, residents had the opportunity to
receive immediate screening results and personalised guidance from dedicated healthcare professionals.
The collaborative effort was aimed at empowering residents to prioritise their kidney health and take proactive steps toward their well-being.
Commenting on the event, Dr Denise Braithwaite-Tennant, the hospital’s CEO said: “We are
happy to see the positive impact of the community kidney screening events in Grand Turk and Salt Cay.
“By providing accessible screenings and expert guidance by our clinical teams, including our nephrologist and internist, we equip individuals with the knowledge to make informed decisions about their kidney health.”
Dr Camelia Clarke, Directorof the Health Promotion and Advocacy Unit shared similar sentiments, expressing her satisfaction with the outcome: “These events have showcased the importance of early detection and preventive care in maintaining optimal kidney health.”
The hospital and ministry stated that the support of sponsors, including the TCI Boating Club,
Air and Sea Agency, The Olympic Group Limited, Flow and Digicel, played a crucial role in the success of the events.
They said that a series of Kidney Community Screenings with dates for Providenciales, North and Middle Caicos, and South Caicos will be revealed soon, further extending the impact of this important initiative.
CONTINUED
multidimensional nature of the local, regional, and global criminal landscape, Martin said“I accept this responsibility”.
EFFICIENT, TRANSPARENT AND ACCOUNTABLE
In outlining some of his goals for the police force, the new Commissioner stressed that he will steer the force towards increasing efficiency and effectiveness, fostering greater transparency and accountability.
He said: “The Royal Turks and Caicos Islands Police Force must retool and re-engineer its structure, methods, and approaches to prevent, respond to, and detect acts of criminality and those responsible.
“It is understood that the community we serve demands greater efficiency and effectiveness from FORCE in ensuring community safety and security.
Commissioner Martin underscored that the force’s “true strength lies in its capability and arsenal”, but more importantly in its partnerships and collaborations to create safer and more resilient neighbourhoods.
He told officers that the public deserves an “accountable police force, and one that is also professional and responsive to the needs of its citizens.
He continued: “One that is trusted and has the support of the people it serves, in this context, as a service organisation, and with any such organization, there will be allegations which cause the
public to question our integrity.
“As law enforcers, we must seek out and purge the organization of any semblance of bias, corruption, and malfeasance.”
He stressed that at the executive level, the Force must address the issues that negatively impact morale and motivation, to ensure “fairness and impartiality in providing opportunities and ensuring the best candidates are promoted.”
“Anything less will be an injustice to the organization and, by extension, the public”, he added.
In her remarks, Governor Daniel Selvaratnam stressed that the appointment of Mr Martin as the Commissioner of Police comes at a critical time, as the Turks and Caicos Islands navigates a plethora of crime-related threats and challenges.
She said: “Our current greatest challenge is that of threats aligned with national security, both internal and external - transnational crime and irregular migration.
“I am delighted to welcome you, Commissioner Martin, to your new role and to the Turks and Caicos Islands. Your committed public service and regional policing expertise confirm the public service that I know you will deliver dutifully as our Commissioner of Police.”
During the event’s proceedings, the Premier Hon Charles Washington Misick delivered brief remarks underscoring the government and citizen’s expectations of the new Commissioner as he assumes his
role during a critical period in the nation’s security landscape. Misick extended best wishes to Commissioner Martin and his family, expressing hopes for
positive results, particularly in addressing the issue of crime within the islands.
In keeping with the ceremonial ritual practiced in Commonwealth
It’s art if you see it as art!
Witnessing the creation of the Grand Turk Art Car
“You want to do what?!” were the first words from local artist Aysha Stephen when I shared my idea for an art project with her. It was a Wednesday morning in early February, and I planned to propose this idea to a group of primary school children later that day. Aysha, the in-house artist at TDB Fine Arts, is notoriously transparent with her emotions -her facial expressions reveal her thoughts before she speaks. As a result, I half-joked that she should steer well clear of poker. That morning, her incredulous look conveyed it all. “Titus,” she seemed to say, “I always knew you were a bit mad and idiosyncratic, but...say that again - you want to do WHAT?!”
By the time we arrived at Ona Glinton Primary School to deliver the first of our scheduled art lectures nationwide, Aysha had fully embraced my concept for a unique art project. We excitedly announced to a group of eager third graders that we would soon return with a car for them to transform into a rolling masterpiece. This marked the exciting beginning of the Grand Turk Art Car Project.
Creating an Art Car is far from a novel concept. Traditionally, vehicles primarily served the straightforward purpose of transporting people and goods. However, as these modes of transportation evolved, the allure of turning them into mobile works of art grew. This practice resonates globally, reflecting a rich tapestry of cultural expression. In Haiti, vibrantly painted ‘Tap-tap’ buses zip along the rugged terrains that pass for roads, their lively designs mirroring the spirited culture of the island. In Pakistan, the tradition of truck art traces back to former fresco painters who once adorned the walls of royal Mughal and
BY TITUS DE BOERTitus de Boer was born in Hamburg and spent his formative years in the West Indies. He moved to the TCI in 1989 and founded the country’s first professional art gallery in 1990. These days he manages an art gallery, TDB Fine Arts, located in the Turks and Caicos National Museum on Grand Turk. (www.facebook.com/tdbfinearts). Readers wishing to contact Titus, can to so on tdbtci@aol.com.
The Grand Turk Art Car,
Rajasthani palaces. These artists now apply their intricate skills to trucks, transforming these vehicles into ornately decorated canvases that carry history down every highway. Then there are the Jeepneys in the Philippines which weave through bustling streets, ferrying passengers hither and thither in flamboyant style.
It’s no surprise that the automotive industry has embraced the trend of art cars. Today, several car manufacturers offer special “art series” vehicles. In 1979, Andy
Warhol, a leading figure in the New York New Wave movement, famously transformed a BMW M1 racing car into an art piece using 6 kg of paint in a mere 28 minutes. Similarly, in 2004, Brazilian painter Romero Britto applied his vibrant Pop-art cubism to a new Volvo estate for a children’s charity and later decorated an Audi RS 4 Quattro, infusing both with his signature bold, vivid colours.
Several Art Cars have become icons of modern art, including a 1964 356 SC Porsche once
owned by rock legend Janis Joplin. Famously singing, “My friends all drive Porsches,” Joplin purchased this car in 1968 and commissioned her roadie, Dave Richards, to paint “The History of the Universe” on it for $500. The mural featured images of her band, Big Brother and the Holding Company, Californian landscapes, the eye of God, Capricorn signs, skulls, mushrooms, and more, turning the Porsche into a true “Art on Wheels” display. Sadly, Joplin passed away in 1970, just two years after acquiring the car.
In the 1990s, her siblings restored it to its former glory, hiring artists Jana Mitchell and Amber Owen to replicate Richards’ mural. After being showcased in museums for years, the Porsche was auctioned for a record-breaking $1.76 million to support charities in Joplin’s memory.
It’s Friday, 19 April - a mildly gloomy day casting a slight shadow over the Nation’s Capital. A striking orange car rolls into the schoolyard at Ona Glinton Primary School, to the wide-eyed anticipation of about forty children. These kids, selected for their keen interest in art, have been buzzing with excitement. According to their teacher, Ms. Matrisa Lowe, today’s activity is a special treat for them. After a quick introduction, artist Aysha Stephens unleashes the moment they’ve all been waiting for with a booming, “WHO’S READY TO PAINT?!” The response is electric. For the next few hours, a whirlwind of brushes and colours takes over, as the children’s boundless enthusiasm transforms the car into a dazzling canvas. Both Aysha and I stand back in awe at the day’s end, marvelling at a masterpiece that far surpassed our expectations.
The adventure doesn’t end there. The following day, as Aysha navigates the multicoloured spectacle down Front Street on her way to the TDB Fine Arts Gallery, she’s pulled over by two officers of the Royal Turks and Caicos Islands Police Force, not for speeding or a forgotten seatbelt. With grins as wide as the children’s had been, they say, “We just want to have a closer look at the art.” This column salutes the spirited students at Ona Glinton Primary School, whose brushes with greatness turned a small car into a big masterpiece.
Follow the rules and be in good standing
Break the rules and face the consequences
Rules are in place to ensure that there is order, fairness, transparency, and consistency. Some of us do not want to follow the rules, we believe we can do what we want and when we want to but that is not how it works.
Some of us also believe that we should have different rules for different people. I think it is important not only for us to have rules but for us to follow the rules. If you break the rules, then you will face some negative consequences. Furthermore, when we do not follow the rules, we will end up creating a “Wild Wild West” environment and society. Is this what we want?
As Christians, our way of life is based on the rules of the Bible. The Bible has clear instructions on how we should live. If we
BY DREXWELL SEYMOURDrexwell Seymour is a certified public accountant and is the managing partner for HLB TCI. His favourite hobby, however, is writing. He has a personal website, www.drexwellseymour. com, where all of his writings are posted. He also has a YouTube channel where you can find inspirational videos. Drexwell has a BA in Accounting and an MBA in Finance.
follow the rules of the Bible, we will be in good standing with our relationship with God. If we break the rules of the Bible, then we will face horrible consequences and may end up in jail.
The workplace has rules and processes that employees are expected to follow. Follow the rules and be in good standing
with your employer. Of course, there may be some rules that you feel do not make sense. Rather than trying to break the rules, recommend the proposed changes to your employer. Who knows, your employer may just amend the rules especially if the proposed changes make sense. However, if you break the rules, you face the
possibility of being suspended or even being fired.
There are rules for playing sports and games such as basketball, soccer, football, and dominoes. Rules ensure that there is structure and fairness. If there were no rules, then playing sports and games would create confusion and chaos. If you break the rules in sports, you can face penalties and possibly expulsion from the game.
Many of us are faced with health issues and the doctor advises you what you should or should not do. Some of us do not follow the doctor’s advice or even take the prescribed medication. As a result, our health conditions worsen.
You should not just do what you want to do or show up when you want to. Follow the rules.
Nowadays some Christians will face some challenging times in the workplace because some countries are passing rules that are contrary to the beliefs of Christians. Some Christians refuse to honour the rules that are against their beliefs and as a result, some end up losing their jobs. This is a very challenging scenario, but it exists. You may ask what you should do; do you follow the rules of the Bible or do you follow the rules in the workplace? In my opinion, the Bible takes precedence and if there are rules in the workplace that compromise your religion, then you may want to consider leaving that job or get legal advice to determine if it is fair and right for you to do something contrary to the Bible.
The impact of population growth in the TCI and sustainable development
We are living in an age of unprecedented population growth. Since the mid-twentieth century, the global population has more than tripled in size, registering nearly eight billion people in 2022.
Still, the world’s population is expected to grow even more owing to a slew of natural causes, like birth and death rates.
However, the TCI has had its own unique population growth indicators. Surrounded by countries with struggling economies, the islands have been experiencing steady migration problems for decades.
Moreover, the government’s response to perceived labour skill shortages has spawned immigration; instead of, increasing training, as it is a costly endeavours.
Like other nations, TCI’s widening population is consequent to advances in healthcare and technological innovations; not withholding, improved living conditions, which are leading to longer life spans.
And while the nation’s
BY D MARKIE SPRINGD Markie Spring, a TCI resident of 15 years, is an expert in law enforcement. He worked as a detective in the Royal TCI Police Force and was director of security at Beaches Turks and Caicos.
demographic expansion is positively impacting the health of the economy in many ways, it is not without challenges.
Conversely, if the population continues to surge, it will engender a strain on economic resources, especially on capital, land and labour. Ultimately, this will hike unemployment and poverty, while increasing the demands for housing, education and healthcare services.
Meanwhile, this phenomenon could emit social challenges in communities and especially, in dense communities like Five Cays, social unrest would certainly continue to unravel.
Likewise, it will continue to
propel crime rates; coupled with, fashioning challenges of equitable opportunities for all and resource depletion. As the population increases, so will the demand for a hoard of resources like water, energy and raw materials.
This can exasperate the already dire situation in the TCI and lead to overexploiting fisheries and the meager homegrown food supply.
Henceforth, these resources will eventually become scarce – spurring competition for access. In fact, we’re already experiencing low water pressure in Providenciales and this limited interruption spells bad news.
Although we have not suffered
widespread food shortages, it is the prices of these resources, which are skyrocketing right now.
Consequently, the growing population, especially in Providenciales, is clamouring for more infrastructures, like healthcare centres, schools, and roads.
However, health concerns are central, since the spread of diseases is more likely in overcrowded spaces. Moreover, it can stretch TCI’s health facilities, as witnessed during the recent coronavirus pandemic.
Obviously, the burgeoning island city infrastructure is not keeping apace with its population growth; hence, inadequate education facilities and road congestion, and other public services issues.
The Big question is, what should be the government’s response to limit the negative impacts of population growth? In the past, we consistently produced well-thought-of answers to policymakers; however, they’ve fallen on deaf ears.
Nonetheless, the government must gather and assess relevant data, involve all stakeholders and plan extensively to mitigate the footprints.
Building more roads to accommodate the increased number of vehicles and reduce traffic jams is critical; in addition to investing in water distillation plants and renewable energy sources for constant water and energy supplies.
Moreover, lawmakers must heavily fund farming activities to feed the growing population, reduce food imports, and introduce housing schemes to eliminate the shortage of living accommodations.
Understanding the impact of rapid population growth in the TCI is key to a proactive government’s response to inherent challenges and harnessing probabilities for continuous growth.
Ratifying these plights would enable lawmakers to formulate frameworks and strike a balance between demographics and sustainable development.
No matter who you are you can make a difference
It is easy to feel small and insignificant in this world. Especially when you see the movers and shakers of the political, business, cultural, and entertainment world hobnobbing with each other behind closed doors only coming out to wave to the adoring crowds and dispensing their vision for your life. In a world that stresses individual freedom and the power to be whatever you want to be, it must be horribly galling to recognise that it is the decision-makers of this world who are the ones defining your life. They determine what you eat, where you go and what’s good for you. These overlords choose when the world slips into recession, and what slice of the pie you get to have. Truth be told, you are not the captain of your ship. You are being taken for a ride and you have no say in it.
Well, that’s not totally true. You see, no matter how small and
KENYATTA E. LEWIS
Kenyatta Lewis is the pastor of Harvest Bible Chapel, a growing church committed to taking followers of Jesus deeper and going further in their faith. Besides loving, serving, and helping people he has watched the extended Director’s cut of the Lord of the Rings trilogy multiple times.
insignificant you think you are, you can make a world of difference in how things work. Take these two ladies, Ruth and Naomi. They lived during a time of gross immorality, lawlessness, and evil (see last week’s article on the time of the Judges). They were both widows after losing their husbands. They were both childless- Naomi, the older woman, had lost two sons in addition to her husband- skillless and poor. As a matter of fact, the future looked equally bleak for both of them. Naomi was so despondent that she gave herself
a nickname, “mara”. If you speak Hebrew you would know that “mara” means “bitter”. That’s how bad things were for her. They were not close to the power brokers of the day, to the point that they had to depend on the generosity of a farmer named Boaz to get enough food to survive. And yet they changed history.
But not in the way you think. They did not invent or write anything, they lived quiet, faithful, obscure, ordinary lives. So how did they do it? Well, Ruth, Naomi’s daughter-in-law, while looking for
food stumbled upon the farm of a relative of her mother-in-law who allowed her to pick up some of the harvested crops that fell from the reapers. However, her dedication, hard work, and integrity soon got the attention of a few people. To the point that her benefactor, Boaz (he owned the farm she was working on) began to take extra notice of her. When Naomi recognised this she instructed Ruth to show her interest in Boaz, which she did. Before long they got married and had a bouncing baby boy. He had a grandson named David. That
grandson was the greatest king of Israel and had a descendant who was the greatest man who ever lived, Jesus. Because of him, the world is a different place today, and one day, everything that is broken Jesus will fix.
Ruth changed the world, because she acted with integrity and faithfulness, though she was poor and had to eke out a living by begging for food. She worked hard, she did not complain about her plight and she trusted the advice of those who loved her. More than anything, she believed in the one true God, Yahweh. And because she did, though she was one woman in a big bad world she made a world of a difference.
And you can too. Right where you are, even if you are doing the same things day in and day out. Work hard, walk in integrity and righteousness, and worship the true God.
Eight subtle redflags you shouldn’t ignore
This is from experience, so listen to it closely. Don’t be a fool_ we ought to learn from one another.
Love has a way of making us overlook even the most glaring red flags. It’s easy to get swept away in the excitement of a new fling, and sometimes we only realize we’re in trouble when it’s too late. Drugged and high on love, we may sometimes fall, quite literally, and only notice when we have someone’s foot on our neck. Ignoring red flags and losing sight of our standards may lead to turmoil. On this wonderful journey of love and self-discovery, you’re bound to encounter bumps in the road. However, whatever you do, don’t turn a blind eye to obvious inconsistencies—they’ll only grow more troublesome over time. I don’t want to rain on your parade, but you need to stay grounded, darling. The same advice goes for me.
Some warning signs are clear as day, like a partner who punches a wall when their meal is a bit cold or a date who makes racist or homophobic comments. The worst are the subtle cues when they lie to meet you, never introduce you to their friends, have three cell phones, are rude
BY DAVIDSON LOUISto strangers, only meet you out of town, make you crawl through windows at 2:00 AM, and think everyone else is crazy except them.
Note: even the healthiest relationship will have its hiccups, but it’s crucial to decide early on if certain behaviors are dealbreakers. If not addressed, these small annoyances can become significant problems and by ignoring them, you’ll only have yourself to blame.
I searched the web high and low. I dug deep into my skeletonfilled closet and had a few chats with myself and this is what I have for you this week. Here are some apparent red flags with deep-rooted issues that you may have ignored, but today is a brand new one. Get a machete_ we are clearing the weeds, after
all, it is still spring.
THEY FORGET YOU WHEN YOU ARE AWAY FROM THEM
The honeymoon phase eventually ends, but if your partner starts ignoring you after just two months, that’s a red flag. If they’re constantly too busy to spend time with you, there’s likely something going on. I think you can read between the lines.
THEY PUSH YOUR PHYSICAL BOUNDARIES, EVEN IN “INNOCENT” WAYS
The name-calling, the fat-shaming and the constant teasing will only get worse. It will erode your selfesteem until there aren’t any left. While you still have some, pack your bag and go find happiness in
someone else.
INCONSISTENCY
If they say one thing and do another, or if their actions don’t align with their words, it can indicate dishonesty or unreliability.
In the exact words of Ms Brown, “ Aint nobody got time for that.”
THEY DESCRIBE ALL OF THEIR EXES AS “CRAZY”
Some relationships end so badly that we’re still sour about an ex years down the line—but if your new partner spews vitriol at any and all of their “crazy” former lovers every chance they get, it’s a good clue that they might be the problem.
THEY DON’T TRULY LISTEN TO YOU
We’re not talking about your significant other forgetting to pick up eggs or needing to be reminded of your adorable dog’s birthday, again. This is about those important aspects of yourself that you share with them, like your hobbies, your traditions, and the people in your life who make you feel whole.
DIFFERENT CORE VALUES
This won’t get you anywhere unless you are looking for a migraine, you should leave. It will only lead to ultimate frustration living with someone who has nothing in common with you.
SEXUAL INCOMPATIBLY
There is a beautiful world out there when you finally find someone who matches your energy. Explore and be explored!
LYING WHENEVER POSSIBLE
If they can lie effortlessly, chances are they will lie to you as easily. Be vigilant and be aware; honesty is the cornerstone of any relationship, and without it, there’s nothing to build on.
Navigating the crazy world of love is difficult, I advise you to not make swift decisions because some things may not be as black and white. In the same breath, you should not let anyone walk over you. Fix it, Jesus!
Care to share?
Do so here: louisedens@gmail. com or @daviid.l2
Regional News
Bahamas: PM says divorce is a solution for marital rape
GIVING no firm indication that his administration will criminalise marital rape, Prime Minister Philip “Brave” Davis suggested this week that divorce is the solution for women who believe their spouse has raped them.
Mr Davis also noted that criminalising marital rape was not a priority listed in his administration’s pre-election manifesto, Blueprint for Change.
He confirmed the government had not gotten around to dealing with a draft amendment to the Sexual Offences Act that would remove language indicating that rape cannot be committed against one’s spouse.
Insisting he is not insensitive to the issue, he said: “My thing is that the time when, any time, a couple was married in a blissful marriage reach the stage where they’re going to report their husband for rape, it seemed to me that marriage was irretrievably broken down, meaning that they’re no longer married even though it may not have been so pronounced by a court.”
Asked about making it easier for people to get a divorce, Mr Davis said the divorce process could already be “easy”.
“In so far as making it easier to have a divorce in those certain situations, the law is there, it could be easy,” he said. “The problem is that most women they’re abused in
the sense that the abuse itself sort of disarmed them, disarmed them from moving forward because of another fear, the fear of surviving what will happen if I divorce.”
Mr Davis said the government is creating mechanisms to ensure that such people will be provided with a “safety net” to survive on their own.
He said judicial challenges prevent people from finalising divorces as quickly as they should, adding that when he practised law, several divorces could be settled in
a week depending on the judge and the case circumstances.
“In fact, technology, to my mind, has really slowed down the process in the administration of justice,” he said. “But we have to find an answer to that. I’m, in fact, meeting with the officials in the judiciary to see how we could speed up those things.”
Bahamas Crisis Centre director Sandra Dean-Patterson recently said the laws relating to protecting women victims of marital rape are inadequate. (Tribune242)
CDB President resigns with immediate effect
President of the Barbados-based Caribbean Development Bank (CDB), Dr Hyginus ‘Gene’ Leon, has resigned with “immediate effect” from the regional financial institution.
The Caribbean Media Corporation (CMC) reported that according to a three-page letter sent to the Bank by his St Lucia-based lawyers, Leon is of the opinion that “he will never be treated fairly” after he had been sent on administrative leave in January.
“It is also evident that the Bank has lost all trust and confidence in our client by the failure of the Board of Governors to prevent
the continued violations of its Charter, policies, rules and regulations with regard to its elected President.
“Our client has therefore made the extremely difficult decision to resign his elected position of the President of the Bank with immediate effect”, the letter said, according to CMC.
The lawyers have given the regional financial institution until May 4 “to negotiate unamicable separation” indicating also that their correspondence should be viewed “as our client’s pre-action protocol letter” regarding the entire situation. (Stabroek News)
Jamaica: Super Lotto player wins $163m jackpot using dad’s lucky numbers
A north coast-based businessman in Jamaica has won the J$163 million Super Lotto jackpot using numbers his father has been faithfully buying for years.
The winning numbers were 04, 08, 09, 15, 30 and SuperBall 02.
“This win is surreal, beyond anything I could have ever imagined,” said Supreme Venture Limited’s newest super millionaire at the official handover of his winnings recently.
When pressed to say whether he will be sharing his windfall with the man who provided the lucky numbers, his answer was a resounding yes.
“Even though I’m the one who won the jackpot, this money will be used to help the whole family. I don’t plan to braff or anything like that, I’m looking to invest in my business, buy real estate and of course make sure Daddy get his share,” he said. (Jamaica Observer)
“I buy Super Lotto occasionally and I only bought this ticket because my father gave me the numbers and told me to buy a ticket. He’s the one who checked the results told me that the numbers hit. I was in shock when he called me and told me. It’s almost unbelievable!” he continued.
Regional News
Jamaica formally recognise Palestine as a state
Jamaica has taken the decision to recognise the State of Palestine.
Prior to Jamaica, Barbados on Monday, also announced that it will recognise Palestine as a state.
A release from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade in Jamaica on Tuesday said the decision was confirmed by portfolio minister, Senator Kamina Johnson Smith, following deliberations of the Cabinet on Monday.
“Jamaica continues to advocate for a two-state solution as the only viable option to resolve the longstanding conflict, guarantee the security of Israel and uphold the dignity and rights of Palestinians,” Johnson Smith advised. “By recognising the State of Palestine, Jamaica strengthens its advocacy towards a peaceful solution.”
Commenting on the Government’s decision, she said
that it aligned with Jamaica’s strong commitment to the principles of the Charter of the United Nations, which seeks to “engender mutual respect and peaceful co-existence among states, as well as the recognition of the right of peoples to self-determination”.
Johnson Smith provided further context for the decision by reiterating Jamaica’s concerns regarding the war in Gaza and the ever-deepening humanitarian crisis, together with the Government’s advocacy for a peaceful resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict through diplomatic dialogue rather than military actions.
The foreign minister reaffirmed Jamaica’s support for an immediate ceasefire, the release of hostages and increased access to humanitarian aid for the people of Gaza, especially the many women and children who are suffering daily.
BVI about to go to the next level of success—opines Premier
Despite cries from Opposition members and some residents that the government needs to do more in all areas of the territory, Premier Dr Natalio Wheatley has expressed that the BVI is getting ready to go to the next level of success.
The Wheatley administration took office amid infrastructure woes exacerbated by yearly natural disasters, tensions between the UK and elected leaders, and a slew of global challenges hammering the territory’s reputation as a financial services powerhouse.
Amid criticisms that his government often has misplaced priorities, Premier Wheatley said he remains optimistic about the territory’s prospects.
“I remain optimistic about my
US’s hurricane centre monitoring area of low pressure in Central Subtropical Atlantic
The US National Hurricane Center (NHC) is watching a weather disturbance located in the EastCentral Subtropical Atlantic. It has a low chance of development.
In a Special Tropical Weather Outlook issued around 4 pm, NHC said an area of low pressure located about 900 miles northwest of the Cabo Verde Islands has been producing a small but persistent area of showers and thunderstorms to the east of its center since this morning.
However, the low is forecast to move southwestward at 10 to 15 mph into an area of stronger upperlevel winds tonight and tomorrow, and additional development is not expected.
NHC said no additional Special Tropical Weather Outlooks are scheduled for this system unless conditions warrant. It noted that Regularly scheduled Tropical Weather Outlooks will resume on May 15, 2024, and Special Tropical Weather Outlooks will be issued as
necessary during the remainder of the off-season.
The disturbance has a 10 per cent (low) formation chance through 48 hours and a 10 per cent (low) formation chance through 7 days.
Although it is only April, this is a good reminder that the 2024 Atlantic Hurricane Season is just around the corner. The Atlantic Hurricane Season runs from June 1 through November 30.
(Loopnews)
BVI, you’re not going to see me preaching a message of doom and gloom — not when we have so many talented people, [and a] beautiful environment; not when we have so many God-fearing, praying people in the BVI. I’m not going to paint a picture that it’s all over. The BVI is about to go to the next level of success,” the leader told the House of Assembly recently. “What we need is persons who can see the vision, embrace the vision and execute the vision.”
While some have said the delays in the territory’s development are partly caused by the Premier’s unwillingness to overrule senior permanent secretaries in various ministries, the leader told the House of Assembly that he will not blame
of
civil servants for any shortcomings. Rather, he said he will continue to communicate his vision to public officers who oversee the operations of the government.
“Persons speak about civil servants, I’m not going to blame civil servants for anything. I’m going to work harder to communicate and articulate the
all the people including the public officers and ask them to grasp and embrace the vision a reality,” Premier Wheatley said.
Regional News
Cayman says reinsurance market is booming
Executives promoting the Cayman Islands as “one of the fastest growing reinsurance domiciles in the world” are citing the “second to none” quality of life there as one of the reasons.
In an AM Best TV interview, they talked about their hope for the US qualified jurisdiction status and how Cayman regulators will be able to help companies, even with the technological changes in the insurance industry that are being brought about by artificial intelligence.
The Cayman market last week launched what is planned as an annual reinsurance conference at the Ritz-Carlton Grand Cayman, an event they believe will ensure the emergence of the island as a major reinsurance market.
The [Re]Connect reinsurance conference was expected to attract some 400 delegates, including about 160 visitors, according to the Cayman International Reinsurance Companies Association, an organisation formed three years ago to drive reinsurance growth.
A Cayman Finance article said reinsurance in the islands is booming.
The Cayman Islands has eight Class D reinsurers with a physical presence and at least 80 Class B (iii)-licensed captive reinsurers. Last year, Cayman’s regulator issued 41 international insurance licences, the largest number in a decade, driven partly by the growing reinsurance sector.
The Circa event over Thursday and Friday included Life & Annuity and Property & Casualty reinsurers already on the island. The conference is designed to grow that business and also concentrate on the insurtech business.
Cayman is pursuing, mainly US business, and keeping an eye on US concerns over adequate asset testing for ceded reserves.
Circa said the Cayman Islands’ Financial Services industry is valued at approximately $5 trillion, with 680 international insurance licenses. The association said that the jurisdiction attracted 50 reinsurers and $25 billion in reinsurer asset growth in the past three years.
David Self, Circa chair, and Steve Papciak, Marketing Committee chair, recently told Lori Chordas, the AM Best TV
interviewer, that Cayman has created a buzz in reinsurance circles and the conference was a good way to show what they had to offer.
Cayman already hosts the largest captive domicile conference in the world and is home to one of the largest funds industries.
Mr Papciak said: “Reinsurance is still growing and (Cayman is) one of the fastest growing reinsurance domiciles in the world and people are wondering why.”
Mr Self said the strategic focus on US business: “enables us to
laser focus on the requirements of the US-based companies that are looking to come here and means we don’t have to worry about other jurisdictions”.
But he also said: “The quality of life in Cayman is second to none. We have a simple work permit process to get on the island.
“There’s a path to citizenship in Cayman. There’s real estate that’s available. You can buy a home. It’s a lovely spot to live, good schools for the kids.”
Mr Papciak said: “The regulator here, the Cayman Islands Monetary
Authority, is prudent and riskbased.
“And what you see in the insurtech industry is there’s new emerging risks that some of the previous rules-based regimes might not be fully equipped for, or fully tailored to.
“So, when you have a riskbased regime that can respond nimbly and quickly, and most importantly, robustly to these new emerging risks, which I think really characterises the insurtech industry, it really just becomes a perfect fit.” (RoyalGazette)
Haiti situation ‘catastrophic’ and growing worse, UN warns
Three million children in Haiti are in need of humanitarian assistance as continuing gang violence hampers aid delivery, the head of the UN children’s agency, Unicef, has said.
Catherine Russell said the situation in gang-wracked Haiti was “catastrophic” and growing worse “by the day”.
She told a meeting of the UN Security Council that in many areas essential services had collapsed. Meanwhile, a transitional presidential council has still not been sworn in.
While Haiti has been blighted by gangs for years, the armed groups stepped up their attacks at the end of February when Prime Minister Ariel Henry travelled to Kenya to seal a deal for a multinational security force to be deployed to the Caribbean nation.
Mr Henry was prevented from returning to Haiti as the gangs attacked the international airport, forcing its closure.
He agreed last month to step
council’s nine members have yet to be sworn in before they can take over power.
However, the formation of the council has been beset by delays and internal disagreements. The
Even though the gangs said that their main aim was the ouster of Mr Henry, they have continued to carry
out attacks on the police force.
They have also looted universities and libraries, torched pharmacies and forced the closure of the capital Port-au-Prince’s largest hospital.
Non-governmental groups say the armed groups now control an estimated 90% of Port-au-Prince.
According to Unicef, 2.7m people live in areas under effective gang control with children often becoming victims of their attacks.
“Each day, children are being injured or killed. Some are being recruited, or they are joining armed groups out of sheer desperation,” Ms Russel told the UN Security Council meeting in New York on Monday.
“Recent Unicef data indicates that anywhere from 30% to 50% of armed groups in Haiti currently have children within their ranks,” she added.
Local media reported attacks in the poor Lower Delmas neighbourhood of Port-au-Prince over the weekend.
And on Monday, the Varreux terminal - through which most of the fuel destined for the capital passes - was forced to suspend operations as armed men seized trucks and blocked access roads.
US economic growth slows but inflation grows
The US economy grew by less than forecast in the first three months of this year but inflation gathered pace, which could delay an interest rate cut.
Official figures revealed the economy expanded at an annualised rate of 1.6%, far below expectations and the growth seen in the final months of 2023.
Meanwhile, inflation, which measures the pace of price rises, has increased.
At the start of the year, experts had been forecasting a series of interest rate cuts in the US.
However, inflation is yet to fall back to the Federal Reserve’s 2% target, and on Thursday, figures from the US Department of Commerce showed that inflation increased by 3.4% in the first three months of 2024. This is compared to an increase of 1.8% in the final three months of 2023.
Raising interest rates makes borrowing - for things such as loans
and mortgages - more expensive and theoretically is meant to encourage people to spend less. The idea is that this helps to bring inflation down by dampening demand.
However, US inflation has not fallen back as quickly as expected.
At the same time, economic growth - measured as gross domestic product (GDP) - has slowed from 3.4% growth in the final three months of last year to 1.6%.
Economists had been expected it to decelerate but only to 2.4%.
Olu Sonola, head of US economic research at Fitch, the credit rating agency, said: “The hot inflation print is the real story in this report.
“If growth continues to slowly decelerate, but inflation strongly takes off again in the wrong direction, the expectation of a Fed interest rate cut in 2024 is starting to look increasingly more out of reach.”
US Supreme Court divided on whether Trump can be prosecuted
For nearly three hours on Thursday, the Supreme Court weighed whether former presidents are immune from prosecution and what exactly it means if they are.
Its answer will determine whether former President Donald Trump can be tried on charges of trying to subvert the 2020 election.
Whatever the decision, each justice indicated that it would shape US democracy for years to come.
“We’re writing a rule for the ages,” Justice Neil Gorsuch said.
The case, heard in a special session one day after the court’s last scheduled argument of this term, hinges on Mr Trump’s claim that he is entitled to absolute immunity from criminal charges for actions committed while in office.
According to Mr Trump, this immunity shields him from criminal charges brought by US Special Counsel Jack Smith that he allegedly attempted to overturn the results of the 2020 election.
That trial will remain on hold until the court issues its decision, expected in June.
The justices’ pointed questions, levelled at both sides, indicated division within the bench, and suggested a split decision may be likely.
The questions, along with tense exchanges and high-stakes hypothetical scenarios, also showed that both the conservative majority and liberal minority are making the decision with an eye to history. Would total immunity mean a future president was free to use the US military to kill his or her rivals? Or, without it,
would presidents leaving office be subject to the whims of individual prosecutors and thrown in jail as part of political vendettas?
While the conservative side seemed most open to the idea that all former US presidents should have some degree of immunity, all the justices sounded sceptical of arguments made by Mr Trump’s lawyer, Dean John Sauer, that a former president has near-total protection from prosecution.
Answering questions first, Mr Sauer was grilled by the nine justices on the breadth of that protection.
“How about if the president orders the military to stage a coup?” asked Justice Elena Kagan, one of the court’s three liberal justices.
Mr Sauer appeared hesitant to respond before saying it would
“depend on the circumstances”. Justice Kagan, sounding incredulous, replied: “That sounds pretty bad, doesn’t it?”
But Michael Dreeben, representing the US government, faced the same sharp interrogation as the justices walked through the consequences of leaving US presidents without some level of criminal protection.
“Did I understand you to say... if [the president] makes a mistake... He’s subject to the criminal laws just like anybody else?” Justice Samuel Alito asked.
“You don’t think he’s in a special, peculiarly precarious position?” he continued.
Mr Dreeben responded that “making a mistake” would not land someone under criminal prosecution. (BBC)
Portugal must ‘pay costs’ of slavery and colonial crimes, president says
President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa said late yesterday that Portugal was responsible for crimes committed during transatlantic slavery and the colonial era, and suggested there was a need for reparations.
For over four centuries, at least 12.5 million Africans were kidnapped, forcibly transported long distances by mainly European ships and merchants, and sold into slavery.
Those who survived the voyage ended up toiling on plantations in the Americas, mostly in Brazil and the Caribbean, while others profited from their labour.
Portugal trafficked nearly 6 million Africans, more than any other European nation, but has failed so far to confront its past
full responsibility” for the wrongs of the past
and little is taught about its role in transatlantic slavery in schools.
Instead, Portugal’s colonial era, during which countries including Angola, Mozambique, Brazil, Cape Verde and East Timor as well as parts of India were subjected to Portuguese rule, is often perceived as a source of pride.
Speaking at an event with foreign correspondents late on Tuesday, Rebelo de Sousa said Portugal “takes full responsibility” for the wrongs of the past and that those crimes, including colonial massacres, had “costs”.
“We have to pay the costs,” he said. “Are there actions that were not punished and those responsible were not arrested? Are there goods that were looted and not returned? Let’s see how
we can repair this.”
The idea of paying reparations or making other amends for transatlantic slavery has been gaining momentum worldwide, including efforts to establish a special tribunal on the issue.
Activists have said that reparations and public policies to fight inequalities caused by Portugal’s past, including systemic racism, are essential.
Rebelo de Sousa said last year that Portugal should apologise for transatlantic slavery and colonialism but stopped short of a full apology. He said on Tuesday that acknowledging the past and taking responsibility for it was more important than apologising.
“Apologising is the easy part,” he said.
US secretly sent long-range missiles to Ukraine after months of resistance
The US delivered long-range missiles to Ukraine earlier this month that the Biden administration had previously refused to send following a directive from President Joe Biden, the Pentagon said Wednesday.
Biden secretly approved the transfer of the long-range ATACMS missiles in February for use inside Ukrainian territory.
The ATACMS missiles were then quietly included in the $300 million aid package announced on March 12 and ultimately delivered to Ukraine earlier this month, according to Pentagon spokesman Lt. Col. Garron Garn.
“It was not announced that we are providing Ukraine with this new capability at the time in order to maintain operational security for Ukraine at their request,” Garn said, deferring questions about
their use to Ukraine’s military.
The Biden administration had resisted sending the longrange missiles in part because of readiness concerns. The powerful missiles require time and complex components to produce. Lockheed Martin, which manufactures the ATACMS missiles, is in fullrate production and produces approximately 500 missiles per year, a spokesman for the company said in September.
The US worked behind the scenes to address the readiness concerns, which included buying more ATACMS missiles and filling US military stocks.
“As a result, we were able to move forward with this provision of ATACMS while also maintaining the current readiness of our armed forces,” said Pentagon spokesman Maj. Charlie Dietz.
US President Joe Biden secretly approved the transfer of the long-range ATACMS missiles in February for use inside Ukrainian territory
Biden also directed his team to take this step following Russia’s procurement and use of North Korean ballistic missiles against Ukraine, and Russia’s attacks on civilian infrastructure in Ukraine, a US official said.
“We had warned Russia against acquiring North Korean ballistic missiles and against renewing its attacks against Ukraine’s civilian infrastructure,” Dietz said. “With our readiness concerns resolved,
we were able to follow through on our warning and provide this longrange capability to Ukraine.”
More of the missiles are expecting to be included in the new military assistance package the Pentagon announced on Wednesday after Biden signed into law an aid package providing nearly $61 billion in assistance for Ukraine following months of delays in Congress.
Last fall, the US first sent Ukraine the mid-range variant
of the ATACMS missile system, which can reach about 100 miles, while the longer-range version can reach as far as 190 miles.
Ukrainian officials have been asking the US in private and in public for the long-range missiles to target deeper behind Russian lines. American officials have previously resisted, citing supply issues and concerns about further provoking Moscow if they are deployed. (CNN)
Spanish prosecutors ask judge to scrap case against Prime Minister’s wife
Public prosecutors in Madrid have called for a preliminary inquiry to be dismissed into Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez’s wife, hours after he said he was suspending his duties to assess whether he would remain in office.
In an appeal to the Madrid court, prosecutors said there was no evidence in the complaint against Begoña Gómez.
The court began the case into claims by a right-wing anticorruption group.
But the group has since acknowledged the allegations could be false.
The Spanish Prime Minister announced he was cancelling his agenda on Wednesday evening, in a dramatic online statement that said he needed “stop and reflect”. He complained of “unprecedented slander and harassment from the right and far right”.
He said his wife would work with the judiciary to make clear there was no substance to the claims and that he would make a decision on his political future on Monday.
The Madrid prosecutor’s opposition to the case which has been brought against Ms Gómez is a boost for the prime minister as he
considers his future.
But with the justice system often moving slowly, it could take some time for the case against Ms Gómez to be shelved, if that is the ultimate decision.
The complaint against Begoña Gómez was raised by anticorruption campaigners Manos Limpias (Clean Hands), led by a man linked to the far right called Miguel Bernad.
Given the track record of Clean Hands, which has presented a litany of unsuccessful lawsuits against politicians in the past, the public prosecutors’ decision is not necessarily surprising.
Although the court in Madrid did not give details of the case, the complaint emerged online showing a list of allegations culled from news websites including El Confidencial and Voz Populi.
Manos Limpias put out a statement on Thursday signed by Mr Bernad acknowledging that its allegations might be false: “If they are not true, it will be up to those that published them to take responsibility for the falsehood.”
This episode will do little to improve the image of Spain’s judiciary, which a 2023 barometer showed was one of the least independent in the EU in the eyes of its citizens.
Some left-wing politicians have even accused the judiciary of being weaponised by the political right.
For proof, they point to alleged smear campaigns against the leftist Podemos party and Catalan independence leaders.
Mr Sánchez complained in a statement of a “strategy of harassment” over months aimed at weakening him politically and personally targeting his wife. “I am not naive,” he said, arguing they were “denouncing Begoña” for no other reason than that she was his wife.
The court did not give details of the accusations against Begoña Gómez other than to say it had begun investigating allegations of influence peddling and corruption on 16 April.
However, the Cadena Ser website published the allegations, culled from news websites including El Confidencial and Voz Populi.
El Confidencial reported on Wednesday that the inquiry was looking into Begoña Gómez’s links to private companies that had secured government money or public contracts.
In particular, it cited a “sponsorship agreement” involving tourism group Globalia and a foundation she ran in 2020 called IE Africa Center. In 2020, Globalia secured a €475m (£407m) bailout for its airline Air Europa, as part of a series of government rescue packages for companies during the Covid-19 crisis.
With significant elections approaching in the next two months, Conservative Popular Party leader Alberto Núñez Feijóo accused the prime minister on Thursday of creating “a political survival operation” and turning it into a show.
Mr Sánchez has been in power since 2018, and his Socialist party is due to contest European Parliament elections in June and elections in the Catalonia region of north-eastern Spain next month. (BBC)
World News
Giuliani among 18 charged in Arizona election scheme
Rudy Giuliani, a former lawyer for Donald Trump, is among 18 people charged in Arizona with illegally seeking to claim the state’s 2020 electoral votes for the then-U.S. president, in an indictment that names Trump as an unindicted coconspirator.
The indictment, reached on Tuesday and unsealed on Wednesday, stems from the attempt by Trump and his allies to pressure election officials in several states to overturn the presidential election won by Joe Biden, efforts for which Trump has been indicted in Georgia and in federal court.
The court papers list “a former U.S. president,” referring to Trump, as an unindicted co-conspirator.
The indictment in Maricopa County Superior Court names 11 defendants and redacts the names of seven others. Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes said in a press release announcing the charges that those names would be made public after all of the defendants had been served with the indictment.
Giuliani is among those whose names are redacted, a spokesperson for him, Ted Goodman, confirmed, criticizing the prosecution of the former New York mayor as political.
Another defendant whose name was redacted is described in the indictment as chief of staff in 2020, the position Mark Meadows held in the Trump White House at that time.
officials – is proud to stand up for the countless Americans who raised legitimate concerns surrounding the 2020 U.S. Presidential Election,” Goodman said.
The indictment alleges the defendants pressured the Maricopa Board of Supervisors, the Arizona Legislature and then-Governor Doug Ducey to change the election results.
U.S. presidents are chosen by electors from each state, who cast votes in the Electoral College, where votes are allotted based on each state’s population.
Arizona is the fourth U.S. state where participants in the elector scheme have faced criminal charges.
Three people who held themselves out as Trump electors in Georgia were charged alongside Trump in the sweeping racketeering case brought by Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis.
a request for comment on the indictment.
Trump, Giuliani and Meadows are co-defendants in the Georgia case, where they are charged with a racketeering conspiracy to overturn Biden’s victory in that state. They have pleaded not guilty there.
Trump has also pleaded not guilty in the federal election-subversion case in Washington.
Trump, a Republican, says all the cases are a political “witch hunt” to prevent him from defeating Democrat Biden in this year’s presidential rematch.
“Christina Bobb is a former Marine Corps officer, who served our nation and the President with distinction. The Democrat platform for 2024: if you can’t beat them, try to throw them in jail,” Cheung said.
Giuliani spokesperson Goodman also called the Arizona indictment an example of “the continued weaponization of our justice system,” saying it “should concern every American as it does permanent, irrevocable harm to the country.”
“Mayor Rudy Giuliani – one of the most effective prosecutors in American history who took down the Mafia, cleaned up the streets of New York and locked up corrupt public
Another defendant whose name is redacted is Trump lawyer Christina Bobb, Trump spokesperson Steven Cheung confirmed, calling the Arizona indictment “another example of Democrats’ weaponization of the legal system.”
Hamas officials say group willing to disarm if Palestinian state is established
Some Hamas officials are signalling that the militant group could give up armed struggle against Israel if the Palestinians get an independent state in territories captured by Israel in the 1967 war.
The messaging suggests a softening of Hamas’ position as its fate hangs in the balance with Israel’s pummelling of the Gaza Strip, which Hamas ruled before the war. The Palestinian militant group has long called for the Jewish state to be destroyed.
Basem Naim, an Istanbulbased member of Hamas’ political bureau, told CNN on Thursday that the group would agree to disarm if an independent Palestinian state was established.
“If an independent state with its capital in Jerusalem, while
preserving the right of return for refugees, (is created) Al Qassam could be integrated into (a future) national army,” he said, referring to the group’s armed wing.
Hamas has traditionally rejected a two-state solution that would see a Palestinian state established alongside Israel and has instead advocated the creation of a Palestinian state in all of historic Palestine that today encompasses Israel, the occupied West Bank, occupied East Jerusalem and Gaza.
Mustafa Barghouti, President of the Palestinian National Initiative, said he wasn’t aware of Hamas offering to lay down its arms before, but said it would be a significant move if true.
“It’s significant in the sense that Palestinians are resisting
In Arizona and almost all other states, the winner of the state’s popular vote receives all of that state’s electoral votes. To win the presidency a candidate needs 270 electoral votes – a majority of total 538.
Arizona has 11 electoral votes, and the 11 defendants named in the indictment would correspond to those people who purported to be electors for Trump.
Arizona is one of seven states where Biden won but Trump allies sought to award the electoral votes to Trump. Many of the races were close. Arizona was decided by little more than 10,000 votes or 0.3% of the ballots cast.
The charges include fraud, forgery and conspiracy, three classes of felony that with a conviction could have sentences ranging from 6 months to more than 12 years in prison.
Sixteen people who falsely claimed to be legitimate Trump electors in Michigan were indicted in July 2023 by state Attorney General Dana Nessel. Authorities in Nevada charged six people, including the state Republican chair, with taking part in the scheme.
The so-called fake elector plan also plays a prominent role in the federal case against Trump brought by Special Counsel Jack Smith, accusing the former president of a multi-part scheme to overturn the results of the 2020 election. Trump will press his claim that he should be immune from those charges at the U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday.
Besides Meadows, Giuliani and Bobb, the other defendants whose names were redacted were three attorneys and the director of election day operations for the Trump campaign. The unindicted co-conspirators also include were two former members of the Arizona legislature and two former attorneys for the Trump campaign. (Reuters)
The messaging suggests a softening of Hamas’ position
occupation because there is an occupation,” he told CNN. “If the occupation is not there, they don’t need to resist it,” he said, referring to Israel’s military control of territories captured in 1967, where millions of Palestinians live.
OFFER CRITICISED AS PR STUNT
Inbar, president of the
Jerusalem Institute for Strategy and Security, said the demand for Palestinian refugees’ return to their ancestral homes in what is today Israel would be a non-starter as it would amount to “the destruction of the state of Israel” where Jews form a majority.
He characterised Hamas’ offer as a public relations stunt aimed at Western nations.
“They see that there’s a lot of support in the Western world (for the Palestinians)… and they try to show that they’re the good guys, and Israel are the bad guys, and Israel will say no,” he said.
The United States and European states may use this to ask Israel “to give them a chance,” he said, but Israel is likely to take the gesture “with a grain of salt.” (CNN)
Cleaning outside the property with sweeper, pick up yard waste and collect leaves, dispose of trash, clean windows, and doorframes. Salary: $8.00 Hourly
CONTACT: 341-1683
CONTACT: 231-7278
LABOURER
Cleaning property, pick up yard waste and collect leaves, dispose of trash, clean windows, and doorframes.
CONTACT: 341-8252
HAIRDRESSER
CLEANER
Cleaning outside the property with sweeper, pick up yard waste and collect leaves, dispose of trash, clean windows, and doorframes.
CONTACT:
CONTACT: 344-9852
BELONGERS
CLEANER
Stocking and supplying designated facility
Applicant must be very good caring for the elderly. Feeding, giving medication, bathing, dressing, washing and cleaning.
CONTACT: 241-7248
Ensuring a safe environment, preparing and giving meals, bathing and dressing children, administering medicine, doing housework, and etc.
$8.00 hourly
CONTACT: 342-5356
CONTACT: 341-9379
BOARD
CONTACT: 343-1844
CONTACT: 347-3974
#52
MAINTENANCE WORKER
Fix and maintain mechanical equipment, buildings, and machines. Plumbing work, painting, flooring repair and upkeep, electrical repairs, etc. Salary: $8.00 hourly
CONTACT: 342-4721/241-3729
BELONGERS ONLY APPLY/RENEWAL
MASON
Mixes mortar; lays bricks and stones and/or concrete sidewalks; makes and repairs steps and plasters.
Salary: $9.00 Hourly
CONTACT: 341-9379
BOARD RENEWAL
Assemble install, test, and maintain electrical or electronic wiring using tools and power tools Salary: $11.00 hourly
BOARD RENEWAL
FRONT DESK CLERK
Salary: $8.00 hourly
CONTACT: 244-9300
KEITH
LABOURER
Applicant will be cleaning property, cleaning windows and doors, disposing of garbage, trash, planting plants etc.
Salary: $8.00 Hourly
CONTACT: 649-332-0214
BELONGERS ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY TO THE LABOUR BOARD RENEWAL
CONSTRUCTION LABOURER
MASON
341-8332
LABOURER
will be cleaning property, cleaning windows and doors, disposing of garbage, trash, planting plants etc.
$8.00 Hourly
Cleaning outside the property with sweeper, pick up yard waste and collect leaves, dispose of trash, clean windows, and doorframes.
BOARD
LABOURER
Cleaning outside the property with sweeper, pick up yard waste and collect leaves, dispose of trash, clean windows, and door frames.
Salary: $8.00 Hourly
CONTACT: 242-2661
BELONGERS ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY TO THE LABOUR BOARD
MASON
Mixes mortar; lays bricks and stones and/or concrete sidewalks; makes and repairs steps and plasters.
CONTACT: 241-0435
MASON
Mixes mortar; lays bricks and stones and/or concrete sidewalks; makes and repairs steps and plasters.
Salary: $9.00 hourly
CONTACT: 244-2995
CARPENTER
LABOURER
LABOURER
Cleaning outside the property with sweeper, pick up yard waste and collect leaves, dispose of trash, clean windows, and doorframes.
Salary: $8.00 hourly
MECHANIC
LABOURER
Cleaning outside the property with sweeper, pick up yard waste and collect leaves, dispose of trash, clean windows, and doorframes.
Salary: $8.00 Hourly
CONTACT: 341-8168
BELONGERS ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY TO THE LABOUR BOARD RENEWAL
CONTACT: 242-3581
Megan Thee Stallion: Cameraman accuses rapper of ‘hostile’ workplace
Megan Thee Stallion has been accused of fat-shaming her former cameraman - and having sex next to him in a car - in a new lawsuit.
The US rapper is alleged to have made an “intolerable” work environment by ex-employee Emilio Garcia.
In a claim filed in Los Angeles, Mr Garcia also claims a change to his contract left him with unpaid
wages.
Megan’s lawyers told BBC Newsbeat the claim was “an attempt to embarrass her”.
“This is an employment claim for money with no sexual harassment claim filed and with salacious accusations,” they said, adding that they will deal with the lawsuit in court.
Mr Garcia claims to have started working for the Savage rapper in
2018 as her personal cameraman, and remained in the role full-time until June 2023.
In the legal documents, his lawyers say that he was trapped in a moving car with Megan - real name Megan Pete - while she had sex “right beside” him.
It allegedly happened during a trip to Ibiza in 2022, when he says he was left “embarrassed, mortified and offended”.
Rebel Wilson book published in the UK with blacked out
The autobiography of Australian actress Rebel Wilson has been published in the UK - but one contentious section has been redacted.
The publication of Rebel Rising caused a storm in the US earlier this month because of Wilson’s allegations against Borat star Sacha Baron Cohen.
The British edition of the book, published on Thursday, has blacked out the text believed to be relating to him.
A note has been added to the page saying the redaction has been made “due to the peculiarities of the law in England and Wales”.
A spokesman for Baron Cohen said the redactions represented a “clear victory”, and reiterated his position that Wilson’s claims were “demonstrably false”.
A spokesman for publisher HarperCollins told BBC News: “We are publishing every page, but for legal reasons, in the UK edition, we are redacting most of one page with some other small redactions and an explanatory note.
“Those sections are a very small part of a much bigger story and we’re excited for readers to know Rebel’s story when the book is released.”
A spokesman for Baron Cohen told BBC News: “Harper Collins did not fact check this chapter in the book prior to publication, and took the sensible but terribly belated step of deleting Rebel Wilson’s defamatory claims once presented with evidence that they were false.
“Printing falsehoods is against the law in the UK and Australia; this is not a ‘peculiarity’ as Ms. Wilson said, but a legal principle that has existed for many hundreds of years.”
The statement described the redactions as a “clear victory
for Sacha Baron Cohen” adding that the claims Wilson made were “demonstrably false” and a “shameful effort” to sell books.
Other sections of the British edition feature further redactions, but much shorter ones with just the occasional sentence omitted.
It has been reported the entire chapter relating to Baron Cohen has been redacted in Australia and New Zealand, making the version released in those countries the most censored of any edition of the book.
In the original edition of the memoir, Wilson wrote about her negative experience working with Baron Cohen on the 2016 film Grimsby.
aron Cohen has vehemently denied any impropriety, and the British comedian’s lawyers previously said the evidence shows her allegations have “no basis in reality” and are part of a “cynical commercial ploy to promote her book”.
They have supplied video footage of one scene in question, plus email exchanges, script excerpts and testimony from producers and crew members, which his lawyers say back up his case.
In a statement earlier this month, Baron Cohen’s spokesperson said: “While we appreciate the importance of speaking out, these demonstrably false claims are directly contradicted by extensive detailed evidence, including contemporaneous documents, film footage, and eyewitness accounts from those present before, during and after the production of The Brothers Grimsby.”
The Daily Mail published outtake video footage from one of the scenes Wilson described. She claimed the release of the “unauthorised and misleading”
text
footage was “bullying and gaslighting me”.
POOR REVIEWS
The book as a whole has so far not received positive reviews from British critics.
In a two-star review, Emily Watkins of iNews described it as “so poorly written it’s distracting”.
“While no one picks up a celebrity memoir expecting to be transported by its exquisite prose, I’m afraid that the writing in Rebel Rising verges on distracting,” she wrote.
Watkins described the “clangers” in the book as “a shame, because Wilson’s life story is interesting and her voice largely compelling”.
She concluded: “Despite my gripes about the writing, there’s no question that it feels conversational – for fans of Wilson, Rebel Rising will be a treat, like sitting opposite her with a glass of wine. Less devoted readers, meanwhile, might emerge needing more than one stiff drink.”
The Telegraph’s Tim Robey was similarly unenthusiastic, also awarding the book two stars in a review headlined: “Chunks of Rebel Wilson’s book have been redacted – were they the funny bits?”
He said the British edition read like a “potpourri of weak jokes and self-indulgence”.
“Rebel Rising has a frankness that’s sometimes not to its benefit,” Robey said. “Wilson includes old diary entries about her fluctuating weight and her determination to ‘make her own destiny’: these read like Bridget Jones if Helen Fielding had lost her touch.
“Still, there’s a bravery to flapping them around in public, which goes hand-in-hand with Wilson’s look-no-filter persona.”
‘Lost’ Gustav Klimt painting sells for $30m
A painting by the Austrian artist Gustav Klimt that was believed lost for the past 100 years has been sold at auction in Vienna.
The unfinished work, Portrait of Fraulein Lieser, fetched €30m (£26m; $32m).
It was commissioned by a family of Jewish industrialists in 1917, a year before Klimt’s death.
However, there are many unanswered questions about the painting and debates about who the woman in the portrait is, as well as what happened to the painting during the Nazi era.
It is believed to depict one of the daughters of either Adolf or Justus Lieser, who were brothers from a wealthy family of Jewish industrialists.
Art historians Thomas Natter and Alfred Weidinger say the painting is of Margarethe Constance Lieser, the daughter of Adolf Lieser.
But the im Kinsky auction house in Vienna, which auctioned the artwork, suggests the painting could also depict one of the two daughters of Justus Lieser and his wife Henriette.
Henriette, who was known as Lilly, was a patron of modern art. She was deported by the Nazis and died in the Auschwitz concentration camp during the Holocaust.
Her daughters, Helene and Annie, both survived the Second World War.
The auction house said in a statement that the exact fate of the painting after 1925 was “unclear”.
“What is know is that it was acquired by a legal predecessor
of the consignor in the 1960s and went to the current owner through three successive inheritances.”
The identity of the current Austrian owners has not been made public.
The painting was sold on behalf of these owners and the legal successors of Adolf and Henriette Lieser, based on the Washington Principles - an international agreement to return Nazi-looted art to the descendants of the people the pieces were taken from.
Ernst Ploil from im Kinsky told the BBC: “We have an an agreement, according to the Washington principles, with the whole family”.
The im Kinsky catalogue described this agreement as “a fair and just solution”.
However Erika Jakubovits, the executive director of the Presidency of the Austrian Jewish Community, said there were still “many unanswered questions”.
She has called for the case to be researched by “an independent party”.
“Art restitution is a very sensitive issue, all research must be carried out accurately and in detail, and the result must be comprehensible and transparent,” Ms Jakubovits said.
“It must be ensured that there is also a state-of-the-art procedure for future private restitutions.”
Klimt’s art has fetched huge sums at auction in the past.
His Lady with a Fan piece sold for £85.3m at Sotheby’s in June 2023, making it the most valuable work of art ever sold at auction in Europe.
There’s Still Tomorrow: The film which beat Barbie at the box office in Italy
Greta Gerwig’s Barbie may be the most financially successful movie ever to be directed by a female filmmaker, and the highestgrossing film of 2023. But it was beaten at the box office in Italy by another film, also made by a woman and speaking directly about the female experience.
There’s Still Tomorrow (C’è Ancora Domani), by 50-year-old actress, writer and singer Paola Cortellesi, is now being released across Europe, including the UK. It
became a phenomenon in Italy last year, taking more money than both Barbie and Oppenheimer.
As of last month, it had made around £31.5m in cinemas, was the country’s biggest film of 2023, and the most successful film ever directed by an Italian woman.
Cortellesi tells BBC News that she still can’t quite believe its success.
“No-one could ever have predicted the wave of participation and affection from audiences over
this movie,” she says.
“I’ve been an actress for nearly 30 years, and I’ve written scripts for the last 10 years, now I’ve made my first film aged 50. And to share the screen and the box office with a huge film like Barbie, that also deals with the experiences of women, it’s got to be a good thing.”
Part of the reason There’s Still Tomorrow might have struck such a chord in Italy, however, is that the heroine, Delia, (also played by Cortellesi) suffers violent physical and emotional abuse by her husband. In the film, Delia is a housewife and mother living in poverty in postwar Rome in 1946, the year Italian women first got to vote.
However, the film’s story resonates with contemporary Italian audiences. According to recent police statistics, 120 women were murdered in Italy in 2023, about one every three days. The report said just over 50% of them were killed by partners or expartners. A quarter of them were killed by their children - in 89% of those cases, their son.
The issue of femicide erupted in Italy in November 2023, a few weeks after the release of There’s Still Tomorrow. Mass protests were held over the killing of 22-yearold university student Giulia Cecchettin, allegedly murdered by her ex-boyfriend, who is awaiting trial.
Her funeral was attended by thousands of people and her death triggered major protests and calls for more protection for women.
Cortellesi says that her film partly attempts to explore a cultural mentality that she argues, “has been going on for millennia”.
So-called “crimes of passion” were only criminalised in Italy in 1981 and in July 2023, judges in Rome made worldwide headlines when a school caretaker was acquitted of groping a 17-yearold schoolgirl, because the sexual assault lasted less than ten seconds. A “brief groping” become a trend on Instagram and TikTok in Italy, along with the #10secondi hashtag.
“The subject of the killing of women is unfortunately very, very topical, especially in Italy,” Cortellesi explains.
“But femicide is often the tragic end of something that didn’t begin that way. What we don’t know is the history that culminates in a horrendous act of violence and a death of a woman every 72 hours in Italy. We can only infer a history of violence which is often not even brought to the authorities before it escalates.”
The director says that the themes of violence against women has been part of her scriptwriting for years, as well as in her stage and screen work as an actor, although she says she hasn’t personally experienced it herself.
TECHNICIAN
LABOURER
Cleaning outside the property with sweeper, pick up yard waste and
Salary: $9.00 hourly
CONTACT: 348-6756
Salary: $8.00 Hourly
CONTACT: 649-347-2480
CONTACT: 244-6531
2 STORE CLERKS CLEANER
Salary:
CONTACT: 345-1449
LABOURER
Cleaning outside the property with sweeper, pick up yard waste and collect leaves, dispose of trash, clean windows, and doorframes.
Salary: $8.00 Hourly
CONTACT: 649-342-0374
BELONGERS ARE ENCOURAGED
Applicant must have experience as a Floral Assistant or Florist. Must have extensive knowledge of tropical flowers, foliage and potted plants, including their names, seasonal availability and lifespan. Candidates must have experience using current styles in floral design while at the same time understanding the traditional use of certain flowers for weddings, funerals etc. salary commensurate with experience.
As a Customer Service Representative, you will play a crucial role in ensuring our customers have a seamless and exhilarating experience from the moment they express interest in our adventures to the post-trip follow-up. You will be the primary point of contact for adventure seekers, providing information, guidance, and support to enhance their journey with us.
KEY RESPONSIBILITIES
• Adventure Booking Assistance
• Customer Communication
• Pre-Trip Support
• Issue Resolution
• Customer Feedback and Improvement
• High School Diploma (Preferably CXC/GCSE in Mathematics and English)
• Previous experience in customer service roles, preferably in the adventure tourism industry.
• Excellent communication and interpersonal skills.
• Detail-oriented with strong organizational abilities.
• Ability to thrive in a fast-paced and dynamic environment.
• Computer Literate
Salary will be based on experience
1 SALES CLERK & 1 LABOURER
Cleaning outside the property with sweeper, pick up yard waste and collect leaves, dispose of trash, clean windows, and doorframes.
Salary: $8.00 hourly
CONTACT: 649-331-4416
SALES CLERK/ ONE LABOURER
CONTACT: 232-7124
BELONGERS ARE
DOMESTIC WORKER
Sweeping the house, mopping the floor, clean bathrooms, toilets, kitchen, living room, laundering sheets, towels and personal clothing and other housework. Salary: $8.00 hourly
CONTACT: 347-5225
LABOURER
Cleaning outside the property with sweeper, pick up yard waste and collect leaves, dispose of trash, clean windows, and doorframes.
Salary: $350.00 weekly
CONTACT: 244-5514
TECHNICIAN
Install, troubleshoot, repair and maintain production and facility equipment according to safety, predictive and productive maintenance systems. Salary: $10.00 Hourly
CONTACT: 649-242-2604
Cleaning outside the property with sweeper, pick up yard waste and collect leaves, dispose of trash, clean windows, and doorframes. Salary: $8.00 Hourly
CONTACT: 649-344-9806
BOARD
DOMESTIC WORKER
Cleaning the house, laundering sheets, towels and personal clothing and other housework.
Salary: $8.00 hourly
CONTACT: 341-4502
CARPENTER
Follow blueprints and building plans. Install structures and fixtures. Measure, cut, or shape wood, plastic, and other materials.
Salary: $12.00 Hourly
CONTACT: 246-3355
CONTACT: 342-9699
DOMESTIC WORKER
Prepare and serve food Haitian and Caribbean food or banquets, weddings, and corporate events. Assist with food service item stocking as required.
CONTACT: 342-9699
Sweeping, mopping and other related work.
Clean baths, doors, windows, ceiling and walls.
Salary: $8.50 hourly
CONTACT: 946-2475
BELONGERS ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY. RENEWALS
CLEANER
Cleaning all areas within the yard, cleaning the gutters, trimming down the trees in the yard, Sweeping and removing debris from outside.
Salary: $8.00 per hour.
MAINTENANCE
TO APPLY. General knowledge of carpentry, electrical, plumbing, and mechanical systems. Clean the property. The salary is 9.00 per hour.
333-9436
BELONGERS ARE
YVETTE DELHOMME
BABYSITTER
Care for my son, supervise while I am at work, maintain the house clean, wash dishes, clean
CONTACT: 342-9699
FIRST TIME, BELONGER WILL BE
BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT MANAGER VACANCY
PRIMARY OBJECTIVE OF THE JOB:
The position of Business Development Manager has been created to work with the Business Operations team to grow the business and help support the department in meeting its sales targets. It involves the development, support of both standard and non-standard ICT solutions using multiple vendors and technologies throughout the design stage to post sale support.
MAIN DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES:
• Support and negotiate agreements and contracts for major accounts
• Create business cases for new opportunities to Group support teams
• Assist in knowledge transfer (to team members) of contract drafting, sales force and business cases.
• Handle non-standard pricing and quote requests from top tier customers;
• Participate in pre-sale customer meetings to assist in solution design;
• Participate in customer Quarterly Business Reviews
• Identify upsell opportunities for new and existing customers;
• Assist in ongoing development & enhancement of systems, policies, and procedures;
• Act as the dedicated point-of-contact for assigned customers; manage customer requests and issues - answering questions, handling objections, providing advice, and keeping customers engaged in the service
• Develop and manage project activities based on customer needs to ensure the milestones and objectives are being met
• Monitor overall customer support performance and satisfaction; propose and implement action plans with relevant stakeholders to improve and/or sustain performance
• Serve as support for various projects and/or activities that will drive efficiencies, operational scale, and technology and/or process enhancements
• Develop referenceable experiences with the customers that can be leveraged. Coordinate with sales and marketing to create the collateral associated with these experience that can be shared with other customers as well as within Digicel.
• Assist in the ongoing improvement of the processes, definitions and tools to drive a remarkable customer experience through activities such as retrospectives, post-mortem
ACADEMIC QUALIFICATIONS AND EXPERIENCE REQUIRED FOR JOB:
• Minimum APSS/APDS/ACIS/CMNA and/or CCNA accreditation
• Cisco/Avaya training and certification training path (Cisco Business Value Analysts certification would be an asset)
• Avaya/Nortel/HP/Veeam design training and certification
• At least 5 years’ experience in Business Development engagements. Minimum of first degree or equivalent
DEADLINE:
Position open to all qualified Turks and Caicos nationals. Interested applicants can forward their resumes to https://careers.digicelgroup.com
Deadline for applications is May 10th, 2024.
The salary range for this position is between 75,000-85,000.
CASABLANCA CASINO
is accepting applications for the following positions:
BLACKJACK DEALERS/DICE DEALERS
Salary $9.00-$16.00/ hour
All candidates should have at least 2-3 years of experience in the same field, excellent full knowledge of all casino table games and excellent knowledge of Blackjack table game and/or dice game. Job summary: carry out specific tasks in the gaming operation to the highest standard of efficiency and customer service in accordance with gaming policies and procedures set by the company and gaming laws.
LABOURER
Salary $8.00 - $9.00/ hour
Must have several years kitchen helper experience, stock refill, cleaning experience of the full casino with knowledge of covid requirements and be physically fit. Also provide routine building cleaning and maintenance including painting, sanding, lifting, and moving heavy equipment.
HOST
Salary $12.00/ hour
Facilitate a positive guest experience by greeting guests and providing information. Provide a point of contact for customer feedback and help to resolve customer issues. Assist with food and beverage service as needed. Assist with casino shuttle driving as needed.
Positions presently held by work permit holders.
Working hours are Mon-Fri, weekend and holidays when called upon. Salary is $8.00 per hour 8am – 5pm.
Successful candidate will be cleaning office complex.
DORINE SHARLINE BOTTEX
Blue Hills / 348-9876
DOMESTIC WORKER
Caring for my children and taking care of my household needs. $8.00
EASYWAY EMPLOYMENT SERVICES
333-1236 / Alice & Alice
3X HELPER
Pick up waste, dispose waste, maintain cleanliness of property and assist with on going construction. $8.00
FRANKLIN PINTURA TCI Leeward Highway / 343-7291
LABOURER
To carry out and assist with continuous maintenance
work, painting apartment interior & exterior and assist with construction work site.
$8.00
ROLIN BERNARD
South Dock / 241-7845
HELPER
Pick waste on my apartment complex, dispose waste, maintain cleaness of rental complex and assist with new ongoing construction. $8.00
IDLIN PIERRE VICTOR
Behind Mara / 342-1088
HELPER
To assist with construction on my apartment Complex Behind Mara. $8.00
WELDER
We are looking for a skilled Welder to cut and join metal and other materials at our source center. You will operate appropriate equipment to put together mechanic structures or parts with a great deal of precision. Your job is important as it provides the foundation for strong infrastructure.
Must be competent in using potentially dangerous equipment following all safety precautions. The ideal candidate will also have a steady hand and great attention to detail. Knowledge of different kinds of metal and their properties is essential.
RESPONSIBILITIES
• Determine the appropriate welding equipment or method based on requirements.
• Set up components for welding according to specifications (e.g. Cut material with powered saws to match measurements)
• Operate angle grinders to prepare the parts that must be welded.
• Align components using calipers, rulers etc. and clamp pieces.
• Weld components using manual or semi-automatic welding equipment in various positions (vertical, horizontal or overhead)
Salary: $10 hourly
Turks and Caicos Islands oldest and leading publishing house is in need of additional staff to fill the following posts:
WRITERS/ PHOTO JOURNALIST
Candidates must have at least five (5) years’ experience working full-time for daily newspapers and/or news/features magazines, reporting on hard news, features and parliamentary/court proceedings. Salary paid weekly will commensurate with experience.
FOR MAGAZINES AND OTHER PERIODICALS GRAPHICS PRODUCTION DESIGNER/ PAGINATOR
This position requires someone with at least five (5) years’ experience working with Macintosh or PC computers. Must be skilled in the make-up of advertising and pagination. Proficiency using InDesign, Illustrator and Photoshop software for print is essential. Some technical, networking and web design knowledge an asset. Salary paid weekly will commensurate with experience.
COURT REPORTER
College or high school graduate with at least five (5) years’ experience in community reporting. Ability to drive and use a camera a desirable asset. Salary paid weekly will commensurate with experience.
ADVERTISING SPACE SALES PERSON
Candidates must have had actual hands-on experience selling advertising space for newspapers and magazines. Ability to assist clients with the writing of copy for ads and gathering of collateral an asset. Salary is commission based.
NORMA FORBES
LABOURER
Cleaning outside the property, ensure that waste is collected and disposed properly, assist in other cleaning activities around the property.
CONTACT: 443-0480
(341-5751)
Hills. Providenciales
WORKER
hourly
(241-4108)
JOURNALIST
TILE LAYER
Install materials on floors, walls, ceilings, countertops. Level the surface with a layer of mortar or plywood.
Salary: $8.00 hourly
CONTACT: 231-2397
CONTACT: 241-3176
Monitor work equipment and prepare metal surfaces. • Direct electrodes on or across metal work pieces • Mix and apply protective or decorative coats on finished products
CONTACT: 333-8687
(649) 941 7331
DOMESTIC WORKER
DOMESTIC
Cleaning the house, laundering sheets, towels and personal clothing and other housework. Salary: $175.00 weekly, 5 days per week
241-5434
the property with sweeper, pick up yard waste and collect
CONTACT: 432-2857
TILE LAYER
STEELMAN
steel girders, columns, and other construction materials to form structures. Cut, position, and bolt down steel bars. $2,500.00 Monthly
dispose of trash, clean windows, and doorframes.
Salary: $8.00 hourly
CARETAKER
CONTACT: 649-241-6266
GENERAL PRACTICE SURVEYOR
The successful applicant must possess:
• MSc / BSc in Land Economy & Valuation Surveying
• (RICS-recognised Qualification).
• Ten years post qualification work experience.
• Computer literate with experience in Word, Excel, MS Project & Argus.
Duties will include and candidates should have experience in:
• Market appraisals and secured lending valuations.
• Development feasibility studies.
• Facilities and Asset portfolio Management.
An annual salary of $36,000.00 plus performance related commission is offered for this position.
The suitable candidate will be able to work under his own initiative and be able to see through projects from concept to completion.
This position is available immediately and closing date for application is 29th April 2024.
Qualified Turks And Caicos Islanders Preferred.
JOB ADVERTISEMENT CLEANER
Blu Wave Cleaning, a reputable cleaning company located on Leeward Highway, Providenciales, is seeking four (4) dedicated and detail-oriented Cleaners to join our team. As a Cleaner, you will play a crucial role in maintaining the cleanliness and hygiene of various facilities. If you take pride in your work and enjoy creating a spotless environment, we encourage you to apply!
RESPONSIBILITIES:
• General Cleaning:
• Perform routine cleaning tasks, including dusting, sweeping, mopping, and vacuuming.
• Clean and sanitize restrooms, break rooms, and common areas.
• Empty trash bins and replace liners.
• Specialized Cleaning:
• Handle specific cleaning tasks such as window washing, carpet cleaning, and floor polishing.
• Follow established protocols for handling hazardous materials.
• Maintenance:
• Report any maintenance or repair needs promptly.
• Keep cleaning equipment and supplies organized and well-maintained.
• Safety and Compliance:
• Adhere to safety guidelines and use appropriate protective gear.
• Follow company policies and procedures.
REQUIREMENTS:
• Experience: Previous experience as a Cleaner preferred.
• Physical Stamina: Ability to perform physically demanding tasks.
• Attention to Detail: Thoroughness in cleaning and maintaining high standards.
• Reliability: Punctuality and consistency in work performance.
• High School Diploma or Equivalent: Preferred but not mandatory
• Team Player: Willingness to collaborate with colleagues and supervisors
PAY:
• $10 per hour
If you are interested in this position, please send your resume and cover letter to bluwave649@gmail.com or call us at 649-343-5343. We look forward to hearing from you!
Date: 18/04/2024
CAICOS DREAM TOURS
Caicos Dream Tours is a renowned boat excursion tour company specializing in providing memorable and immersive experiences in Turks and Caicos Islands!
POSITION TITLE:
HUMAN RESOURCES MANAGER
Are you passionate about shaping company culture and building exceptional teams? Do you thrive in dynamic environments where your ideas can make a real impact? Caicos Dream Tours is seeking a talented HR Manager to establish and lead our new HR department.
POSITION OVERVIEW:
As our HR Manager, you will have the unique opportunity to assess the development of our HR department from the ground up. You will be responsible for creating and implementing HR policies, procedures and initiatives that align with our company values and support our strategic objectives.
KEY RESPONSIBILITIES:
- Develop and implement HR strategies and initiatives aligned with the overall business strategy.
- Establish HR policies and procedures in compliance with Turks and Caicos Labour Law and industry best practices.
- Oversee all aspects of the employee lifecycle, including recruitment, onboarding, performance management, offboarding, scheduling, etc.
- Drive employee engagement and retention efforts through innovative programs and initiatives.
- Provide guidance and support to managers and employees on HR related matters.
- Implement and manage HRIS to streamline processes and enhance data management capabilities.
QUALIFICATIONS:
- Bachelor’s degree in human resources, Business Administration, or related field
- 4+ years of HR experience, including at least 2 years in managerial role.
- Strong knowledge of HR best practices, employment laws and regulations.
- Experience developing and implementing HR policies, procedures, and initiatives.
- Excellent communication, interpersonal and leadership skills.
BENEFITS:
- Competitive salary - Flexible working opportunities
- Training provided to enhance skills and knowledge.
- Work in a dynamic and passionate team.
If you are ready to embark on a fulfilling career at Caicos Dream Tours, apply now by submitting your resume to careers@caicosdreamtours.com. Don’t forget to mention for which position you desire to apply! Join us in creating unforgettable memories for our guests!
42074
up equipment, run lines for power tools, erect scaffolding, lay out tools, mixing concrete, hand tools to workers, and cleaning work site.
• Childcare for 2
meal preparation and light housekeeping.
• Primary level and childcare experience required, CPR and First Aid certification preferred
References
bricks and stones and/or concrete sidewalks; makes and repairs steps and
DESIGN BUILD ASSOCIATES
REQUIREMENTS
• Certificates/Diplomas/Degree in any of Business Management, Construction Technology, Engineering preferred
• 10+ years management experience on several construction sites of 10 or more staff
• Proficient knowledge of software such as Excel, AutoCAD/Revit, Blue Beam Software. Sage Contractor
• Excellent communication skills, organization, ability to quantify orders, high attention to detail
• Have a high-quality standard and work ethic and drive to succeed and motivate others. Oversee all aspects of operations for the construction division
DUTIES
• Manage and Schedule activities to maintain budgets and timelines.
• Maintaining a high degree of quality in workmanship of trades.
• Keeping records of inventory, management of staff, time control, schedule orders.
• Management of inventory, equipment and tools getting to sites, maintained, and all safety measures are in place.
• Write subcontract agreements and scopes of work
• Prepare cost estimates, schedules and cash-flow projections
• Manage the procurement process
• Manage the public tendering process and bid analysis
• Write subcontract agreements and scopes of work
• Prepare monthly project status reports for clients
• Handle all accounting for the construction division
• Assist with Business Development efforts
Work week is full time Monday to Friday 7am-5pm and 7am-12pm on Saturdays.
Salary $800-1500 per week dependent upon level of experience
649-241-5715
PROGRAM MANAGER
•
•
• Strong
• RIBA part 1 exemption.
• 3+ years’ experience using Autodesk Revit.
• Diploma in Architectural Technology and/or Architectural Technician.
• 3+ years’ experience creating construction documentation.
• 1 year+ experience using Autodesk Dynamo.
• 1 year+ experience in Lumion.
EMPLOYEE PREFERRED REQUIREMENTS
• Second language (Spanish or French)
• 4+ years using the Adobe suite.
• 1-2 years Sketchup experience.
SALARY: $55,000.00 USD per annum Monday-Friday 9:00 am to 5:30 pm studio@jameshamiltonarchitects.com 202 West Venture House Plaza, Grace Bay Rd., Provo 649-232-3083
VACANCIES
and delegating tasks.
MIDWIFE
AND DUTIES
• Degree in Midwifery or equivalent from an accredited University
• Minimum of 5 years fully registered Midwife
• Minimum of 5 years’ experience in community midwifery, birthing centers
• Able to do IVs, venipuncture, injections, vitals, dressings, ECG
• Ultrasound certifications an asset
• Must create and teach birth preparation,
breast feeding and parenting classes
• Setup for and assist doctors with procedures, examination
• Able to work with little or no supervision, ensure proper flow of patients
• Computer knowledge, scheduling appointments, action patients result, update and maintain patients EMR file
Monthly salary $3500.00 to $4500.00. Belongers only need to apply.
steel frames and install steel bars.
DELANO RIGBY
Blue Hills / Tel: 232-2296
DOMESTIC WORKER $8.00 p/h
Cleaning, sweeping, mopping
SAMMY’S RESTAURANT
RESTAURANT
Five Cays / Tel: 347-5587
SOUS CHEF $10.00 p/h
the food preparation
READY TO GO Butterfield Square / Tel: 964-8583
KITCHEN HELPER
per hour perform various cleaning, maintenance, preparation, and stocking duties in the kitchen
VILLA DEL MAR Bonaventure Cres, Grace Bay Tel: 649-941-5160
HOUSEKEEPER $8.50 p/h
execute all task relating housekeeping.
PLUMBER - $9.00 hourly Installs pipes and fixtures, installs supports for pipes, equipment, etc.
CARPENTER
$15 hourly Follow blueprints and building plans. Install structures and fixtures. Measure, cut, or shape wood, plastic, and other materials
TILE LAYER
$9 hourly
materials on floors, walls, ceilings, countertops. Level the surface with a layer of mortar or plywood.
TILE SETTER
$8.50 hourly Install materials on floors, walls, ceilings, countertops. Level the surface with a layer of mortar or plywood.
CABINET MAKER
$9 hourly Create various types of highgrade cabinet, furniture and fixtures.
ENGINEER
$15 hourly Invent, design, analyze, build and test machines and gadgets.
mortar; lays bricks and stones and/or concrete sidewalks; makes and repairs steps and
JOB DESCRIPTION:
PROJECT MANAGER
Plan and supervise a wide range of construction projects from start to finish, experience in managing large scale vertical construction projects is necessary. You will organize and oversee construction the construction team procedures and ensure they are completed in a timely and efficient manner.
RESPONSIBILITIES:
• Collaborate with engineers, architects etc. to determine the specifications of the project.
• Negotiate contracts with external vendors to reach profitable agreements.
• Determine needed resources (manpower, equipment, and materials) from start to finish with attention to budgetary limitations.
• Plan all construction operations and schedule intermediate phases to ensure deadlines will be met.
• Acquire equipment and material and monitor stocks to timely handle inadequacies.
• Hire contractors and other staff and allocate responsibilities.
• Supervise the work of all construction team members and give guidance when needed.
• Evaluate progress and prepare detailed progress reports.
• Ensure adherence to all health and safety standards and report issues.
REQUIREMENTS:
• Proven experience as construction project manager, minimum 10 years’ experience managing projects greater then USD $15 MIL.
• In-depth understanding of construction procedures and material and project management principles
• Familiarity with quality and health and safety standards
• Good knowledge of MS Office, MS Projects
• Familiarity with construction/ project management software Procore and Blue Beam
• Outstanding communication and negotiation skills
• Excellent organizational and time-management skills
• A team player with leadership abilities
Salary: $2000/weekly
be cleaning property, cleaning windows and doors, disposing of garbage, trash, planting plants etc.
Sweeping, mopping, clean bathrooms, toilets, kitchen, living room, laundering sheets, towels, personal clothing, and other housework.
Cleaning outside the property with sweeper, pick up yard waste and collect leaves, dispose of trash, clean windows, and doorframes. Salary: $8.00 hourly
CONTACT: 342-5532
TURKS AND CAICOS ISLANDS AIR TRANSPORT LICENSING AUTHORITY
Form 8 - Publication of Decision of the Air Transport Licensing Authority Re: Grant/Refusal/ Suspension/Revocation of a Licence
In accordance with the provisions of Regulation 17 of the Air Transport (Licensing of Air Services) Regulations, 2018, the Air Transport Licensing Authority hereby publish the following particulars of their decision regarding the grant/refusal/suspension/ revocation of a Licence to operate the undermentioned service:
Applicant/Licence Holder: Ambergris Cay Aviation Ltd.
Licence No (if any) 01/24 5th April 2024
Date of Licence
Route(s)
Providenciales
— Ambergris Cay — Providenciales___________
Frequency of flights As Per Demand_____________
Type of aircraft Navajo and Cessna Caravan
Decision
Licence granted Yes________________
Application refused
Licence No. _______________ revoked
Licence No. suspended
Reasons
Signed
Secretary Air Transport
3 GARDENERS
CARETAKER
KITCHEN HELPER
MAINTENANCE WORKER
LIGHT VEHICLE OPERATOR
STORE CLERK
DOMESTIC WORKER
CONTACT:
MAINTENANCE MAN
CONTACT: 333-1236
Bellingham wants ‘more extreme consequences’ for fans who racially abuse players
Real Madrid star Jude Bellingham said players should have greater involvement in how decisions are made to tackle racism in soccer.
Bellingham has used his platform to speak out on the matter throughout his short career, most recently calling for more support from soccer’s governing bodies after Madrid teammate Vinícius Júnior was the subject of yet more racist abuse.
“I do think there’s got to be more extreme consequences,” said
Speaking to CNN’s Amanda Davies after winning the Laureus World Sports Breakthrough of the Year award on Monday, the 20-year-old midfielder said he wanted to see tougher punishments for fans who direct racist abuse at players in the stadium.
Bellingham. “I think that’s the best way to try and stop people from doing it in the future,” he added.
“What would be interesting is having the players involved. The players are the ones who are having to experience it, not these people in charge of the game.
“So if they really want to know what they think is fair
• Cleaning inside and outside the shop.
• Remove garbage and garden weeds.
• Remove, flat and dispose all merchandise/ packaging.
• Help and assist customers for heavy merchandise.
• Help to carry out merchandise from backdoor to proper isle location.
• Collect shopping cart at the parking lot and return to proper cart area.
• Unloading of container.
• Salary: $8.00 Hourly
Required up to 5 days weekly. Wages $250 per week. Must have good knowledge of all housekeeping work including cooking as well as child care. For an interview or appointment phone Sandy Lightbourne at 231-1092. Resumes and references would be a plus. Applications would be considered from Belongers only and must be received by 30th April, 2024.
This is a senior position, as the successful applicant will oversee all areas of the YACHT CONCIERGE business. This includes all enquiries, technical, IT infrastructure and general shoreside yacht support activities. As the Yacht Concierge Operations Manager, the successful candidate will be required to produce a Standard Operation Procedure, develop and maintain a culture of excellence in customer service, people development and the assortment and presentation of services for large yachts.
REQUIREMENTS AND QUALIFICATIONS
• Must have on board experience with offshore vessels
• 10+ years of experience in yacht concierge activities
• Demonstrated achievement in yachting operations based on internationally recognized schemes with proven success
• Must identify, develop and implement business strategies and report to the CEO on operational and financial performance
• PADI certification ideal
• First Aid Certificate required
• Knowledge and experience in dealing with hazardous and dangerous substances
• Able to work long hours, including holidays and weekends if required Salary for this position will be in the range of $25k to $35k per annum depending on experience.
Bellingham wants ‘more extreme consequences’ for fans who ...
or if they are confused, there are players all over Spain and all over the world that they can speak to, and I’ll tell them to take advantage of that,” added Bellingham, who told CNN in 2022 that he questioned whether authorities cared about racist abuse directed at Black players.
‘IT SHOULDN’T BE HAPPENING’
Earlier this year, Brazilian superstar Vinícius Jr broke down in tears in an emotional media conference while speaking about his experience with racist abuse while playing for Real Madrid in Spain.
The 23-year-old Brazilian has been subjected to racism from fans of opposing teams on multiple occasions, including an effigy of the Brazilian being hung from a bridge before his side’s clash against city rival Atlético Madrid in January 2023 and persistent racial abuse in a match against Valencia later that year.
TC
LABOURER
Cleaning outside the property with sweeper, pick up yard waste and collect leaves, dispose of trash, clean windows, and doorframes.
Salary: $8.00 Hourly
CONTACT: 344-7371
Racist slurs have also been caught on camera during Madrid’s matches at Osasuna, Mallorca, Real Valladolid and Atlético.
“I just want to play football, but it’s hard to move forward … I feel less and less like playing,” an emotional Vinícius told reporters earlier this year.
Bellingham is aware it shouldn’t be up to players to solve the issues themselves, but he’s intent on raising awareness to pressure the game’s governing bodies to act.
“We can all say that we want to do things or say it should change, but I think we can all come together, regardless of what color you are, to help get rid of it because we’re all on the same team at the end of the day and we all think it’s disgusting,” said Bellingham.
“It shouldn’t be happening. So yeah, I look forward to seeing how the people in charge incorporate the players into the process
T.C.I DRINKING WATER
LABOURER
Bottling water and ensuring the distribution stations are stocked and all locations are sanitized and kept clean.
Salary: $8.00 Hourly
CONTACT: 246-3402
BARTENDERS
Experienced English speaking bartenders required from 12 noon to 8 pm for small poolside bar.
Starting Hourly Wage of $9 to $10 per hour subject to qualifications and experience.
Additional Service Charge Payout Averaging $9 per hour.
Resumes can be dropped off at hotel or emailed to tlewin@portsofcallresort.com
of preventing it in the future.”
CNN has reached out to La Liga and the Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) for comment.
In 2023, La Liga told CNN Sport that it cannot impose punishments on clubs or fans itself. Instead, it must report incidents to RFEF committees or regional prosecutors who then deal with them as legal cases before sporting punishments are handed out. (BBC) World soccer’s governing body FIFA reiterated its stance on fighting racism to CNN Sport, and said the issue will be an agenda point at the FIFA Congress in May.
“The 74th FIFA Congress will mark a milestone in FIFA’s ongoing efforts to fight racism with new and stricter measures to be applied worldwide in cooperation with all our member associations and the confederations,” FIFA President Gianni Infantino said in a statement.
ROCHELLE BEEN
DOMESTIC WORKER
Duties:
$8.00 per hour
CONTACT: 342-6413
COSMETOLOGIST
cutting,Shampooing,coloring, and styling hair, and massaging and treating scalp. Makeup, dress wigs, perform hair removal, nail and skin care services.
Salary: $8.00 hourly
CONTACT: 344-4801
LABOURER
DUTIES: To perform tasks
Involving physical labour
SALARY: $8.00 per hour
CONTACT: 241-5130
DOMESTIC WORKER
Sweeping the house, mopping the floor, clean bathrooms, toilets, kitchen, living room, laundering sheets, towels and personal clothing and other housework. Salary: $8.00 Hourly
CONTACT: 649-231-1926
BELONGERS ONLY APPLY/RENEWAL
Science & Technology
Low-Calorie diet has unexpected effect on aging
Our diets play a key role in the way our bodies age, but the relationship between the two is much more complicated than we once thought.
Numerous studies in animals have shown that restricting calories can increase longevity. Indeed, calorie restriction also appears to reduce various signs of aging in humans too.
“There are many reasons why caloric restriction may extend human lifespans, and the topic is still being studied,” Waylon Hastings, a postdoctoral researcher at the Tulane School of Medicine who earned his doctorate in biobehavioural health at Penn State, said in a statement. “One primary mechanism through which life is extended relates to metabolism in a cell.
“When energy is consumed within a cell, waste products from that process cause oxidative stress that can damage DNA and otherwise break down the cell. When a person’s cells consume less energy due to caloric restriction, however, there are fewer waste products, and the cell does not break down as quickly.”
To replace these worn-out cells, our bodies need to create new
ones—and this requires copying the DNA present in the existing cells.
Our DNA is like a shoe lace— at the end of each strand is a molecular “cap” that protects it from becoming frayed or tangled. These caps, called telomeres, become slightly shorter every time the DNA is copied to produce new cells. And so the length of our telomeres is a useful indicator of the biological age of our cells.
Age, stress, illness, diet and genetics can all influence how often our cells replicate, and thus how quickly our telomeres shrink. But the impact of calorie restriction on human telomeres is less well understood.
To explore these effects, Hastings and colleagues at Penn State collected data from the national CALERIE study—the first randomized clinical trial of calorie restriction in humans. The team analysed data from 175 participants after 24 months of caloric restriction.
“We hypothesised that telomere loss would be slower among people on caloric restriction,” the study’s senior author Isan Shalev, an associate professor of
biobehavioral health at Penn State, said in a statement.
However, what they found was less black and white. After one year of caloric restriction, the participant’s actually lost their telomeres more rapidly than those on a standard diet. However, after two years, once the participants’ weight had stabilised, they began to lose their telomeres more slowly.
At the end of the two-year period, those on calorie-restricted diets had roughly the same length telomeres as those on a standard diet.
“This research shows the complexity of how caloric restriction affects telomere loss,” Shalev said.
Further research is required to determine whether an additional year of restricted calories would create a statistical difference in biological aging between the participants. However, despite the ambiguity of these results, and the complex relationship between calorie consumption and telomere length, the CALERIE study has highlighted numerous other benefits of calorie restriction on human health, including reduction in “bad” cholesterol and blood pressure. (Newsweek)
Gary Khan was paralysed by a rare immune system disorder before receiving blood plasma treatment
Blood plasma donations help man walk again
A man whose paralysis was reversed by a treatment he described as “like a miracle” has urged more people to donate blood plasma.
Gary Khan from Alcester receives monthly infusions of a medicine derived from the substance to combat a rare immune system disorder.
The 56-year-old musician described plasma treatments as “life-changing”, for about 17,000 patients in England a year.
“They liken it to flicking a trip switch,” he said.
Mr Khan, a keen cyclist, became ill in 2020, with symptoms of pins and needles and joint pain progressing to the point where he could no longer stand up.
He was diagnosed with Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating Polyneuropathy (CIDP), a rare disorder caused by the immune system attacking the nervous system.
It leads to progressive weakness and impaired sensory function in the legs and arms, and in Mr Khan’s case, steroid and plasma exchange treatments failed to help.
Ancient 30-foot relative of great white shark unearthed in Mexico quarry
Complete fossils from an enormous shark that lived alongside the dinosaurs reveal crucial information about this enigmatic predator — including it being an ancient relative of the great white shark.
“I couldn’t walk downstairs, brush my own teeth, cut my own food,” he said. “In 2021 I was at my lowest point, paralysed.”
A professor at Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham suggested a course of immunoglobulins, and a 5-day course proved transformative.
“There was a lot of deterioration because of the illness, but I could now stand up on my own two legs overnight,” Mr Khan said.
Plasma is a yellow liquid that makes up part of the blood, responsible for carrying antibodies around the body.
Dedicated donation centres in Birmingham, Reading and Twickenham have specialist machines which separate red blood cells and haemoglobins and retain plasma.
The substance is then used to make immunoglobulins, which strengthen and stabilise the immune system.
NHS Blood and Transplant said medicines made from plasma treated more than 50 immune disorder diseases, but said thousands more donors were needed.
Mr Khan said he had never heard of plasma donations before becoming ill but hailed the “generous and selfless” donors who helped him.
“I have been doing rehab and now have very few problems,” he added.
“The discovery of complete Ptychodus specimens is really
The sharks, from the genus Ptychodus, were first discovered in the mid-eighteenth century. Descriptions of this genus were largely based on their teeth — which could be nearly 22 inches (55 centimeters) long and 18 inches (45 cm) wide, and were adapted for crushing shells — found in numerous marine deposits dating to the Cretaceous period (145 million to 66 million years ago). Without the ability to examine a fully intact specimen, researchers had hotly debated what the shark’s body shape might look like — until now.
“[Blood plasma] is transforming lives and saving lives in some cases, there’s just not enough of it.
“I applaud the people who don’t have a personal interest who just go and donate anyway.”
Science & Technology
Voyager-1 sends readable data again from deep space
The US space agency says its Voyager-1 probe is once again sending usable information back to Earth after months of spouting gibberish.
The 46-year-old Nasa spacecraft is humanity’s most distant object.
A computer fault stopped it returning readable data in November but engineers have now fixed this.
For the moment, Voyager is sending back only health data about its onboard systems, but further work should get the scientific instruments back online.
Voyager-1 is more than 24 billion km (15 billion miles) away, so distant, its radio messages take fully 22.5 hours to reach us.
“Voyager-1 spacecraft is returning usable data about the health and status of its onboard engineering systems,” Nasa said in a statement.
“The next step is to enable the spacecraft to begin returning science data again.”
Voyager-1 was launched from
Earth in 1977 on a tour of the outer planets, but then just kept going.
It moved beyond the bubble of gas emitted by the Sun - a domain known as the heliosphere - in 2012, and is now embedded in interstellar space, which contains the gas, dust and magnetic fields from other stars.
A corrupted chip has been blamed for the ageing spacecraft’s recent woes.
This prevented Voyager’s computers from accessing a vital segment of software code used to package information for transmission to Earth.
For a period of time, engineers could get no sense whatsoever out of Voyager, even though they could tell the spacecraft was still receiving their commands and otherwise operating normally.
The issue was resolved by shifting the affected code to different locations in the memory of the probe’s computers.
Voyager-1 departed Earth on 5 September 1977, a few days after
The 46-year-old Nasa spacecraft is humanity’s most distant object at over 15 billion miles away
its sister spacecraft, Voyager-2.
The pair’s primary objective was to survey the planets Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune - a task they completed in 1989.
They were then steered towards deep space, in the general direction of our galaxy’s centre.
Their power comes from radioisotope thermoelectric
generators (RTGs), which convert heat from decaying plutonium into electricity. The continual decay process means the generators produce slightly less power each year.
How much longer the Voyagers can continue is uncertain, but engineers have until now always come up with strategies to eke out
a few extra years of operations. Voyager-2 is a little behind its twin and moving slightly slower. It’s just over 20 billion km (13 billion miles) from Earth.
Even though both are travelling at over 15 km per second (9 miles/s), they would not approach another star for tens of thousands of years. (BBC)
Cigarette prices motivating more quit attempts, study says
The rising price of cigarettes is motivating more people - one in four adults in England - to give up smoking, research suggests.
In a survey of nearly 6,000 people, health concerns were still the top reason for quitting.
But highlighting the money that could be saved by stopping smoking could encourage even more quit attempts, the University College London study said.
The average price of a packet of 20 is more than £14, rising to £16 in 2026.
DYING EARLY
Cigarettes are the number-one preventable cause of death and disease in the UK.
The tobacco and toxins they contain can lead to lung cancer, lung disease and heart disease, with about half of all lifelong smokers dying early.
Giving up smoking reduces these risks - and health experts say it is never too late.
The study, which surveyed smokers every year between 2018 and 2023, found a continued rise in
the proportion trying to quit since the start of the Covid pandemic - and that could have motivated others.
Latest figures show 12.7% of adults in England smoke - down from nearly 20% in 2011.
When people were asked why they had tried to stop: half said it was because they
were worried about the effects on their health (both current and future) a quarter said it was down to the price of cigarettes - up from a fifth before the pandemic Writing in the journal BMJ
Public Health, the researchers say the pandemic probably raised smokers’ awareness of the health
dangers, leading to a rise in healthmotivated quit attempts in 2020 and 2021.
But Covid also led to the loss of jobs and income for many people, which has since been compounded by a cost-of-living crisis.
“If you smoke, you can reduce your outgoings by switching to e-cigarettes,” Dr Sarah Jackson,
from UCL, said.
“This might be a helpful message in any future government campaign to get more people to stop smoking.”
Previous research, from 2018-22, found smokers spent, on average, £20 on cigarettes each week, with e-cigarette users spending £6.30.
As prices rose, smokers either reduced the number of cigarettes they smoked or switched to cheaper hand-rolled cigarettes - but at some point, there would have been a limit.
SMOKING LAWS
Recent research found a rise in the proportion of middle-class and richer women aged under 45 smoking in England.
Last week, MPs voted to ban anyone born after 2009 from buying cigarettes in the UK.
The Tobacco and Vapes Bill proposes some of the strictest smoking laws in the world.
It also aims to make vapes less appealing to children, with restrictions on flavours and packaging. (BBC)
Science & Technology
Pluto gained a ‘heart’ after colliding with a planetary body
A huge heart-shaped feature on the surface of Pluto has intrigued astronomers since NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft captured it in a 2015 image. Now, researchers think they have solved the mystery of how the distinctive heart came to be — and it could reveal new clues about the dwarf planet’s origins.
The feature is called Tombaugh Regio in honour of astronomer Clyde Tombaugh, who discovered Pluto in 1930. But the heart is not all one element, scientists say. And for decades, details on Tombaugh Regio’s elevation, geological composition and distinct shape, as well as its highly reflective surface that is a brighter white than the rest of Pluto, have defied explanation.
A deep basin called Sputnik Planitia, which makes up the “left lobe” of the heart, is home to much of Pluto’s nitrogen ice.
The basin covers an area spanning 745 miles by 1,242 miles (1,200 kilometres by 2,000 kilometres), equivalent to about one-quarter of the United States, but it’s also 1.9 to 2.5 miles (3 to 4 kilometres) lower in elevation than the majority of the planet’s surface. Meanwhile, the right side of the heart also has a layer of nitrogen ice, but it’s much thinner.
Through new research on Sputnik Planitia, an international team of scientists has determined that a cataclysmic event created the heart. After an analysis involving numerical simulations, the researchers concluded a planetary body about 435 miles (700 kilometers) in diameter, or roughly twice the size of Switzerland from east to west, likely collided with Pluto early in the dwarf planet’s history.
The findings are part of a
The New Horizons spacecraft took an image of Pluto’s heart on July 14, 2015
study about Pluto and its internal structure published Monday in the journal Nature Astronomy.
RECREATING AN ANCIENT ‘SPLAT’ ON PLUTO
Previously, the team studied unusual features across the solar system, such as those on the far side of the moon, that were likely created by collisions during the early, chaotic days of the system’s formation.
The researchers created the numerical simulations using smoothed particle hydrodynamics software, considered the basis for a wide range of planetary collision studies, to model different scenarios for potential impacts, velocities, angles and compositions
Ancient 30-foot relative of great white shark ...
exciting because it solves one of the most striking enigmas in vertebrate paleontology,” lead author Romain Vullo, a researcher at Géosciences Rennes, told Live Science in an email.
In a study published Wednesday (April 24) in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, researchers have described complete fossils of the shark discovered in limestone quarries in Nuevo León, northeastern Mexico. Its outline was still fully preserved, and its body shape suggests it hunted sea
turtles — which could explain its extinction around 76 million years ago as it was competing with other animals that ate the same prey.
The specimens “show an exquisite preservation,” because they were deposited in a quiet area with no scavengers, Vullo said. “The carcasses of animals were rapidly buried in a soft lime mud before being entirely disarticulated.”
Analysis of the fossils reveals this large predator belonged to the mackerel shark group (Lamniformes), which includes great whites (Carcharodon carcharias), mako, and salmon
AFTER IT SMACKED INTO PLUTO?
“Somewhere beneath Sputnik is the remnant core of another massive body, that Pluto never quite digested,” said study coauthor Erik Asphaug, professor at the University of Arizona’s Lunar and Planetary Laboratory, in a statement.
The teardrop shape of Sputnik Planitia is a result of the frigidity of Pluto’s core, as well as the relatively low velocity of the impact itself, the team found. Other types of faster and more direct impacts would have created a more symmetrical shape.
“We are used to thinking of planetary collisions as incredibly intense events where you can ignore the details except for things like energy, momentum and density. But in the distant Solar System, velocities are so much slower, and solid ice is strong, so you have to be much more precise in your calculations,” Asphaug said. “That’s where the fun starts.”
of the theorized planetary body’s collision with Pluto.
The results showed that the planetary body likely crashed into Pluto at a slanted angle, rather than head-on.
“Pluto’s core is so cold that the (rocky body that collided with the dwarf planet) remained very hard and did not melt despite the heat of the impact, and thanks to the angle of impact and the low velocity, the core of the impactor did not sink into Pluto’s core, but remained intact as a splat on it,” said lead study author Dr Harry Ballantyne, research associate at the University of Bern in Switzerland, in a statement.
BUT WHAT HAPPENED TO THE PLANETARY BODY
PLUTO’S MURKY ORIGINS
While studying the heart feature, the team also focused on the internal structure of Pluto. An impact early in Pluto’s history would have created a mass deficit, causing Sputnik Planitia to slowly migrate toward the dwarf planet’s north pole over time while the planet was still forming. This is due to the fact that the basin is less massive than its surroundings, according to the laws of physics, the researchers explained in the study.
However, Sputnik Planitia is near the dwarf planet’s equator.
Previous research has suggested that Pluto could have a subsurface ocean, and if so, the icy crust over the subsurface ocean would
be thinner in the Sputnik Planitia region, creating a dense bulge of liquid water and causing a migration of mass toward the equator, the study authors said.
But the new study offers a different explanation for the feature’s location.
“In our simulations, all of Pluto’s primordial mantle is excavated by the impact, and as the impactor’s core material splats onto Pluto’s core, it creates a local mass excess that can explain the migration toward the equator without a subsurface ocean, or at most a very thin one,” said study coauthor Dr. Martin Jutzi, senior researcher of space research and planetary sciences at the University of Bern’s Physics Institute.
Kelsi Singer, a principal scientist at the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado and co-deputy principal investigator on NASA’s New Horizons Mission, who was not involved with the study, said the authors did a thorough job of exploring the modeling and developing their hypotheses, though she would have liked to have seen “a closer tie to the geologic evidence.”
“For example, the authors suggest the southern portion of Sputnik Planitia is very deep, but much of the geologic evidence has been interpreted to point to the south being shallower than the north,” Singer said.
The researchers believe that the new theory regarding Pluto’s heart could shed more light on how the mysterious dwarf planet formed. Pluto’s origins have remained murky given that it exists on the edge of the solar system and has only been studied up close by the New Horizons mission.
The large predator belonged to the mackerel shark group
sharks. It grew to around 33 feet (10 meters) long and is known for its massive, grinding teeth, which are unlike those we see in sharks today.
It was widely believed that
Ptychodus fed on invertebrates from the seabed — the ancient relatives of clams and mussels. But the new fossils challenge that, revealing that this ancient shark had a streamlined body shape, indicating it was a
fast-swimming pelagic predator. “The newly discovered fossils from Mexico indicate that Ptychodus looked like the living porbeagle shark,” Vullo said, but with “unique grinding dentition.”
Tiger Woods’ 15-year-old son Charlie to attempt US Open qualification
His father’s name is written prominently in the history of the US Open. On Thursday, Charlie Woods will look to pen a chapter of his own.
Tiger Woods’ 15-year-old son will tee up at an 18-hole local qualifier in Port St. Lucie, Florida, as one of an 84-player field vying for a spot at the 124th edition of the major.
The five top finishers at The Legacy Golf and Tennis Club will advance to the second and final qualifying stage – dubbed ‘Golf’s Longest Day’ – held at 36-hole events across 10 US and three international venues in May and June.
Those that progress from there will stamp their ticket to Pinehurst Resort and Country Club in North Carolina on June 13, joining reigning champion Wyndham Clark and the rest of the 50 top-
ranked players in the world already exempt for the third men’s major of the season.
Having competed alongside his 82-time PGA Tour winning father at four PNC Championships – an unofficial team event on the PGA Tour Champions – the young Woods got his first taste of Tour qualifying in February when he teed up in a pre-qualifier for the Cognizant Classic.
Pursued by big crowds around Lost Lake Golf Club in Hobe Sound, Florida, the teenager shot a 16-over par 86 to fall short of making it to the next stage.
Woods is one of 10,052 entries for US Open qualifying this year with hopefuls – who must have a handicap not exceeding 0.4 or be professional to be eligible – spanning all 50 states and 70 foreign countries.
Fifa announces deal with Saudi oil company Aramco
Fifa has announced a partnership with Saudi Arabia’s state-owned oil company, Aramco.
The deal is in place until 2027, giving Aramco sponsorship rights for the men’s World Cup in 2026 and the Women’s World Cup the following year.
The company already has sponsorship deals within Formula 1 and is a partner of the International Cricket Council.
“Aramco has a strong track record of supporting worldclass events, but also a focus on developing grassroots sport initiatives,” said Fifa president Gianni Infantino.
The partnership means the Gulf kingdom continues to increase its influence on sport globally.
Saudi Arabia has been accused by critics of investing in sport and using high-profile events to improve its international reputation - a process that has been labelled ‘sportswashing’.
It has been criticised for its human rights violations, the 2018 murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, women’s rights abuses, the criminalisation of homosexuality, the restriction of free speech and the war in Yemen.
A report published in November 2023 found that there were 312 sponsorship deals from Saudi Arabia across 21 sports.
It is the only bidder for the 2034 World Cup, officially launching its campaign in March after Australia pulled out of the running in October. Fifa will confirm the hosts later this year.
Fifa
Amnesty International said the Aramco deal “raises human rights concerns” and called on Fifa to make “binding agreements with Saudi Arabia to protect people from exploitation, discrimination, and repression” before awarding it the tournament.
The sponsorship deal with Aramco - the biggest oil producer in the world - raises further questions about world governing body Fifa’s climate impact.
The 2030 World Cup has drawn criticism from environmental groups because it is being held across six countries from three different continents, but Fifa said it would “take all required measures to mitigate the environmental impact”.
In June 2023, a Swiss regulator said Fifa made false claims about the reduced environmental impact of the 2022 World Cup, which was
held in Qatar.
Following news of the Fifa deal on Thursday, campaign group Fossil Free Football said: “Saudi Aramco and the Saudi state are determined to keep the world addicted to fossil fuels.
“They now get the world’s biggest platform to sell their polluting products and try to clean up their image.”
It said Fifa “should break its ties to big polluters”, adding: “Fans and players deserve better.”
A spokesperson for Greenpeace described it as an “own goal” for Fifa and a “brazen example of sportswashing”.
“Aramco is using a sport loved by billions of people around the world to distract the public from the consequences of their climatewrecking business,” the statement added.
Spanish government to oversee football federation
The Spanish government has formed a special committee that will oversee the country’s football federation (RFEF).
The committee will be in place until the governing body holds new elections following the scandal surrounding its former president, Luis Rubiales.
Rubiales was arrested earlier this month as part of a corruption investigation.
He is also separately due to go on trial for sexual assault for kissing Spain player Jenni Hermoso after last summer’s World Cup final.
Hermoso said that the kiss “was not consensual” but Rubiales consistently denied any wrongdoing until his eventual resignation in September.
The government’s involvement
The Spanish government will oversee the country’s football federation until a new president is elected
has come “in response to the crisis in the organisation and in defence of the general interest of Spain,” said the country’s National Sports
Council (CSD).
“The Spanish government has taken this decision in order to correct the serious situation that the RFEF is going through and to allow the organisation to begin a period of regeneration,” it added.
The council is the government agency that is responsible for sport in Spain and its statement added that the committee would be led by “independent persons of recognised prestige.”
Football’s world governing body Fifa and European governing body Uefa say they are closely monitoring the situation with great concern.
Fifa regulations state that member nations shall manage their affairs independently and without influence from third parties.
“Fifa and Uefa will seek additional information to assess the extent to which the CSD’s appointment of the so-called ‘Supervision, Normalisation and Representation Commission’ may affect the RFEF’s obligation to manage its affairs independently and without undue government interference,” they said in a joint statement.
Investigations into corruption during Rubiales’ tenure led to police raiding the RFEF headquarters in Madrid last month, resulting in the firing of other members of the federation.
Pedro Rocha, who was standing in as president, was also placed under investigation after he testified as a witness in the corruption probe.
Nadal begins Madrid Open with emphatic win
Rafael Nadal began his Madrid Open farewell with a crushing straight-set win over American teenager Darwin Blanch.
The five-time Madrid champion, who has indicated he plans to retire after the 2024 season, took just 63 minutes to complete a 6-1 6-0 victory against his 16-year-old opponent.
Nadal, 37, said this week he will only play at the French Open next month if he feels “capable enough to compete”.
He will play Australian Alex de Minaur, who beat him in the second round of the Barcelona Open last week, in the next round in Madrid.
Spain’s 22-time major winner
was making his return in Barcelona following a three-month injury absence, having feared he may not be able to play again on the professional tour.
The French Open, where Nadal is a record 14-time champion, starts on 26 May.
“Playing here has always been a huge pleasure and the support is difficult to describe in words,”
Nadal told Sky Sports in Madrid on Thursday.
“I just enjoyed the fact I was able to go out there one more time, and victory gives me the chance to go out there again in two days.
“It’s emotional. I am a passionate person but I’m also a
stable personality, so I’m enjoying it but also focusing on what I need to be and seeing how far I can go in terms of pushing my physical performance.”
In the women’s draw, world number one Iga Swiatek beat China’s Wang Xiyu 6-1 6-4 to reach the third round.
American third seed Coco Gauff recorded a resounding 6-0 6-0 victory over Dutch player Arantxa Rus, while Greek fifth seed Maria Sakkari beat Croatia’s Donna Vekic 6-3 6-2.
But four-time major winner Naomi Osaka is out following a 6-2 4-6 7-5 loss to Russian 15th seed Liudmila Samsonova.
Tevez released from hospital after chest pains
Former Argentina international Carlos Tevez has been released from hospital after suffering from chest pains.
The 40-year-old Independiente head coach was taken to hospital in Buenos Aires on Tuesday.
Argentinian top-flight side Independiente said Tevez has now been discharged.
“He will return home to rest and return to training [on Thursday],” the club said.
Former Manchester United, Manchester City and West Ham
striker Tevez, who won 76 caps for Argentina between 2004 and 2015, took over as Independiente boss in August 2023.
Tevez retired as a player in June 2022, after a third spell with Boca Juniors, and previously had a short stint in charge of Rosario Central.
He made 201 appearances in the Premier League between 2006 and 2013, winning the Premier League title twice with United (2007-08 and 2008-09) and once with City (2011-12). (BBC)
Man City thrash Brighton to narrow gap on Arsenal
Manchester City moved smoothly to within one point of Premier League leaders Arsenal with a game in hand after a routine victory over Brighton at the Amex Stadium.
What threatened to be a dangerous fixture was effectively over by the interval as City romped into a three-goal lead, moving ahead of Liverpool into second place and closing ominously on Arsenal.
Kevin de Bruyne’s first header in his 68 Premier League goals, a magnificent flying effort into the top corner, set City on their way before Phil Foden controversially doubled the advantage nine minutes layer.
Referee Jarred Gillett awarded City a free-kick despite Foden only appearing to slip, Brighton seeing insult added to injury as his resulting set-piece strike took a deflection off Pascal Gross to
wrong-foot keeper Jason Steele.
Any hope of a Brighton comeback was extinguished after 34 minutes by a smooth Foden finish into the bottom corner, after the Seagulls had been caught in possession trying to play out from the back.
It was then simply a case of damage limitation for Roberto de Zerbi’s side but City extended their lead just after the hour when the ball ran away from Steele as he went into a challenge with Kyle
Walker and Julian Alvarez was on hand to pounce.
MAN CITY LOOKING OMINOUS
Manchester City are at it again, reaching peak form just when it matters to turn up the pressure on pace-setters Arsenal as the title race reaches the final few fences.
Liverpool’s recent decline continued as they were beaten by Everton in the Merseyside derby but Arsenal are not going away, with a win at Wolverhampton Wanderers followed by the 5-0 thrashing of Chelsea at Emirates Stadium.
This did not have any impact on City, who have been through this tension before, as what was pitched as a tricky trip to the south coast turned into a formality.
It had all the hallmarks of a City performance close to the Premier
League finishing line - calm and ruthless with flashes of brilliance from those who can change any game for manager Pep Guardiola.
De Bruyne is renowned for just about anything apart from his heading ability but he scored an athletic effort to open the scoring. It was then Foden’s turn to add further flourishes.
Such was their comfort that Guardiola was even able to give De Bruyne and Foden a breather by substituting them before the end with the game won, conserving energy for the weekend visit to struggling Nottingham Forest.
BRIGHTON RUNNING OUT OF STEAM
Brighton were chasing European football in thrilling style at this stage last season under De Zerbi - a mission they accomplished successfully.
Sports International
London Marathon 2024: Jepchirchir breaks women’s only world record
Olympic champion Peres Jepchirchir of Kenya stormed to victory in a women’s only world-record time of two hours 16 minutes and 16 seconds in the London Marathon.
World record holder Tigst Assefa and Megertu Alemu, both of Ethiopia, and Kenya’s Joyciline Jepkosgei also beat the previous women’s only record of 2:17:01, set by Mary Keitany in 2017.
Kenya’s Alexander Mutiso Munyao held off distance-running great Kenenisa Bekele to win the
men’s race in 2:04:01.
The British duo of Emile Cairess and Mahamed Mahamed finished third and fourth.
Cairess’ time of 2:06:46 makes him the second-fastest British man of all-time over the distance and the first to finish on the podium since Sir Mo Farah in 2018.
Both Cairess and Mahamed are now set to go to this summer’s Olympics after finishing well under the qualifying time of 2:08:10.
It was double success for Switzerland in the wheelchair
Slot confirms he wants Liverpool job
Arne Slot has said he hopes to take over from Jurgen Klopp as Liverpool manager at the end of the season.
Liverpool opened talks with Feyenoord on Wednesday about Slot’s potential appointment.
The Dutchman confirmed his interest in the job to ESPN before Feyenoord’s 3-1 league victory on Thursday against Go Ahead Eagles.
“It seems clear to me that I would like to work there,” Slot said.
“All I can say about it is that the clubs are in negotiations. I’m in the waiting room.”
He added that he was “confident” Liverpool and Feyenoord would be able to reach an agreement.
Slot, 45, led Feyenoord to the 2022-23 Eredivisie title and this season’s Dutch Cup, and he has previously been linked with
Peres Jepchirchir clocked two hours 16 minutes and 16 seconds in the London Marathon
races as Marcel Hug and Catherine Debrunner sealed comfortable victories.
Hug, who has now won four successive London Marathons, finished 31 seconds ahead of USA’s Daniel Romanchuk, with Great Britain’s David Weir third. Debrunner led for a time and finished more than six minutes clear of compatriot Manuela Schar to win her second London Marathon.
‘I DIDN’T EXPECT IT TO BE ME’
The field for the women’s race was considered one of the best ever assembled with three of the
four fastest women in history competing.
They were on track for women’s only record - a record for a marathon run on a course without any male athletes in the race - throughout with the leading pack immediately putting distance between themselves and the rest of the field.
When the lead group began to thin it was Jepchirchir, Assefa, Jepkosgei and Alemu left standing.
They stayed together until Jepchirchir kicked for home in the last few hundred metres and the 30-year-old Kenyan was able to see off Assefa to win in London for the first time.
“I am feeling grateful. I am so happy for the victory. I was not expecting to run a world recordI knew it might be beat but I did not expect it to be me,” Jepchirchir told BBC Sport.
“I knew the history and the ladies were strong. I was working extra hard. My time was lower but I’ve come good today and set a PB.
“I am so happy to qualify for the Olympics and I feel grateful. I’m happy to be at Paris and my prayer is to be there and run well to defend my title. I know it won’t be easy but I’ll try my best.”
Mhairi MacLennan was the first British finisher in 11th place. (BBC)
Xavi to remain as Barcelona coach until 2025
Barcelona coach Xavi will remain at the club until at least the end of his contract in June 2025 after changing his mind that this would be his last season.
The 44-year-old announced in January he would step down as boss this summer.
Tottenham Hotspur and Leeds United.
Liverpool will have to negotiate a fee with Feyenoord if Slot is appointed, as he does not have a release clause for this summer.
There is one in his contract, but it cannot be activated until next year.
On Wednesday, Reds captain Virgil van Dijk said that Slot’s playing philosophy would suit the club, describing him as “one of the better Dutch coaches at the moment”.
It is believed that the attacking style of Slot’s teams, his personality and his ability to develop players are key factors in making him Liverpool’s preferred candidate. He took over as Feyenoord manager in 2021 and confirmed his interest in managing in the Premier League when he was linked with Spurs in 2023.
But, with president Joan Laporta keen for him to remain, the former Barcelona and Spain midfielder has performed a U-turn.
Laporta said: “We know that he made some statements in the middle of the season, but today we have the good news that he is staying and he has conveyed to me the enthusiasm and confidence he has in the project.”
Xavi took charge in November 2021 after leaving Qatari club Al Sadd and guided Barca to the Spanish title in his first full season in charge in 2022-23.
However, they are 11 points behind La Liga leaders Real Madrid with six games left to play in the current campaign.
Barcelona exited the Champions League last week following a quarter-final defeat by Paris StGermain.
Xavi, who won 25 honours during an illustrious playing career at Barcelona, had said he felt “liberated” following the
that he would step
When he announced he was leaving after defeat by Villarreal, he felt he was not being protected by the club and there was no clear direction.
But since that moment, when Xavi felt able to take a more relaxed approach, the team’s results improved.
They went 10 games unbeaten
in the league before losing 3-2 at Real Madrid on Sunday.
A meeting took place in Laporta’s house on Wednesday and the pressure from the club for him to stay was obvious.
If Xavi is unable to improve the team by the end of the 202425 season, Barcelona will look to persuade one of the high-profile managers out of contract thenincluding Pep Guardiola, Luis Enrique and Mikel Arteta.
BJK Cup Finals revamped with knockout format
The Billie Jean King Cup Finals will switch to a knockout format this year, with the final taking place in Seville on 20 November.
An extended nine-day event will overlap briefly with the men’s Davis Cup Final 8, which begins in Malaga on the eve of the Billie Jean King Cup final.
The International Tennis Federation (ITF) says the aim of revamping the women’s event is to “maximise the visibility” and to create a “fortnight of World Cup tennis” in Andalucia.
Great Britain qualified for the Billie Jean King Cup Finals by beating France in Le Portel in April. Canada are the defending champions and Iga Swiatek, Coco
Fernandez to miss rest of season after operation
Chelsea midfielder Enzo Fernandez will miss the rest of the season after undergoing successful surgery on a groin issue.
The 23-year-old Argentina international will be absent for the club’s remaining six Premier League games of the 2023-24 season.
But he could target a return in time for the Copa America, which starts on 20 June.
Fernandez joined Chelsea from Benfica for a British record £107m transfer fee at the end of the 2023 winter transfer window.
That move came after he
Gauff and Naomi Osaka could compete for Poland, the USA and Japan respectively.
The eight-team line-up for the Davis Cup showpiece will not be confirmed until September.
Great Britain will face opposition from Canada, Argentina and Finland when they try to qualify in Manchester.
The Billie Jean King Cup Finals were previously played over six days, with the 12 teams split into four groups and the winners contesting the semi-finals.
With this year’s changes, four teams will receive a bye to the last eight while the other eight nations compete for a place in the quarterfinals.
The Seville event will begin on Tuesday, 12 November, three days after the conclusion of the WTA Finals in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
This will give players time to travel and acclimatise to the conditions in southern Spain. World number one Swiatek opted out of the 2022 and 2023 Billie Jean King Cup Finals as the schedule allowed her no time to prepare following WTA Finals staged in Texas and Mexico.
The first six days of the women’s team event will clash with the men’s ATP Finals in Turin, but the ITF will hope its midweek semi-finals and final are watched by a large audience.
The draw for the new-look Billie Jean King Cup Finals will take place on 30 April. (BBC)
was named young player of the tournament during his country’s 2022 World Cup triumph.
Fernandez has made 40
St Ange and Spring lead Police to huge cricket win
A solid half-century by eventual man-of-the-match Damian St Ange and a destructive spell of bowling by Haiden Spring, propelled Police to a 132-run victory over rivals Beaches when action in the TCICA T20 competition continued on Sunday last at the Downtown Ball Park
Beaches won the toss and inserted the Lawmen to take first strike, but it was to their detriment as the batsmen demolished their bowling attack.
In total, Police scored 30 fours and five sixes during the 20 overs, which pushed their score to a whopping 226-7.
Batting at three, St Ange did the bulk of the scoring. His score of 59 came off of just 34 balls and included eight fours and two sixes.
St Ange however had help, four other batsmen scored over 15 runs, including Alpha Edwards, whose flamboyant stroke plays helped him to a quick-fire 41 (5x4s, 2x6s) from 18 balls.
appearances for the Blues in a difficult campaign for the club this season, scoring seven goals. (BBC)
Ian Ganess added 34 (6x4s, 1x6); Kareem Jack 28 (6x4s) and Sabuton John 17 (4x4s).
Beaches ace player, Anthony McKnight was able to rebound from a first over trumping (20) to get the wickets of St Ange and Jack. Support came from Sidue Hunter, who also took two wickets.
Faced with the enormous task of scoring 11.35 runs per over for victory, McKnight began the fightback, but he was pegged into a reserve role after Lyndon Tyson got the wickets of Jerome Daley (0) and Kevon Hinds (0) with his medium pace bowling in the first over.
Spring was however the architect of destruction as he decimated the middle order to finish with 4-13 from three overs.
St Ange was also in wicket-taking mode, he took two lower-order wickets as Beaches succumbed for 94 in 12.4 overs.
On the non-striker’s end, McKnight was stuck on 49 not out. His innings, which spanned 37 balls, included seven fours and two sixes.
The second highest score in the innings via a batsman was five by James Brown.
SWA SHARKS WIN WPL KNOCKOUT FINAL
The SWA Sharks registered a comprehensive 4-0 win against Cheshire Hall on Friday, April 19 at the TCIFA Academy Field in the Women’s Premier League (WPL)
Knockout final. The Sharks opened the scoring in the 23rd minute, via Vanessa Joseph, before a Cheshire Hall own goal late in the half made it 2-0.
In the second period, Chanile Butterfield and Anika Harry both found the back of the net in the space of 10 minutes to carry their team way ahead.
Prior to that clash, Teachers WFC whipped the Academy Eagles WFC 7-0 in the third-place clash.
Wandelis Marte, who opened
CHHS looking to be competitive at Penn
the scoring, and Fredelyne Brave, both scored twice, while Rosario Talbot, Sendia Marcel and Syniah Forbes also found the back of the net.
Relays—Coach Ford
National Coach Randy Ford, who is leading his school team to the Penn Relays in Philadelphia, USA, is optimistic that the side would be competitive.
‘Clement Howell has always had very good relay teams but usually not all parties were able to travel. So it’s the first time we got together a male team that is competitive and also all have appropriate travel documents.”
Despite the competitive nature of the squad, the school still had to do without two “great athletes” according to the coach.
“We have two great athletes who didn’t make the trip due to limited funding. We will just put that behind us and focus on giving a good showing at this high-level relay carnival. We remain committed to developing the quality of our track and field at Clement Howell and in the TCI.”
The all-male team left on Wednesday and would take to the track on Friday for their relay race.
The athletes are Johnsly Gaspard, Love Joseph, Josias Morency, Markey Zephrin and Peguy Francios.