An unwillingness to disrupt the status quo at the level of government, deep-rooted corruption, ease of land sale, and a protracted crisis in Haiti are some of the key contributing factors to the growth and development of Dock Yard—TCI’s most populated informal settlement.
Lower power bills for July as fuel factor continues to fall
FortisTCI in its monthly report, recently reported that fuel factor rates across some service territories have declined by 10.42% in July.
They say this is as market fuel prices continue to fall, which is a continuation of the downward or generally stable trend across the islands that has been consistent since February.
The utility company is reminding residents that factors that influence their electricity costs include the amount of energy they consume every month and the price of fuel.
The fuel factor rate on July's electricity bill for Providenciales, North Caicos, and Middle Caicos customers has decreased by 10.42% from the prior month's $0.1986 to $0.1779 per kilowatt hour (kWh), Fortis said.
While Grand Turk and Salt Cay customers' fuel factor rates also reflect a significant decline, with a 9.4% reduction from the prior month's $0.2019 to $ 0.1829 per
kWh.
This month's fuel factor rate for South Caicos is said to be available soon.
“It is worth noting that South Caicos fuel factor rate for last month (June) decreased by 8% from the prior month's $0.2109 to $0.1941 per kWh,” the utility shared.
WHAT IS THE FUEL FACTOR?
The fuel factor rate (or power cost adjustment) is a mechanism used to recover the cost of fuel used to produce the electricity consumed by each customer.
It is calculated monthly and is based on the fuel consumed for the specific period and determined by the actual price of fuel at the time it is purchased, from FortisTCI’s supplier, Sun Oil Limited.
The fuel factor fluctuates with world market prices and allows for both reductions and increases to the consumer.
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NHIP Appeal Tribunal trained by Bahamian Appellate Judge
BY DELANA ISLESThe newly appointed National Health Insurance Appeal Tribunal have been professionally trained and are now ready to delve into their work adjudicating claims made to the insurance board.
The Appeal Tribunal, which came into effect on July 1, comprises Chairman Mark Fulford of F Chambers; Bishop Coleta Williams of the Abundant Life Ministries international Church and Jena Janse, real estate professional.
The Appeal Tribunal has been
appointed for two years, starting July 1, 2023, to March 31, 2025.
The training was conducted by the TCI’s Judicial Education Institute (JEI) on July 28.
Hosted under the patronage of Chief Justice Mabel Agyemang, it was upon the tribunal chairman’s request that he and his two team members be properly guided on their roles and requirements on the appeal tribunal.
Fulford stated that the key to doing anything successfully is first understanding what is required of you, then arming oneself with
the tools, be it resources or skills necessary to carry out your task.
He noted: “As a tribunal adjudicating on persons claims with NHIP is a very important responsibility that my tribunal members and I take very seriously. We decided our first step is to reach out for training by the Judiciary of the Turks and Caicos Islands to be able to do a proper job at adjudication.
“With the training now completed, and having received
We welcome letters from all members of the public on a variety of topicsChief Justice Mabel Agyemang, Attorney Mark Fulford and Bishop Coleta Williams (Photo: F Chambers)
Corruption, unchecked development, and Haiti’s crisis fuelled Dock Yard’s rapid growth – study reveals
BY OLIVIA ROSEAn unwillingness to disrupt the status quo at the level of government, deep-rooted corruption, ease of land sale, and a protracted crisis in Haiti are some of the key contributing factors to the growth and development of Dock Yard—TCI’s most populated informal settlement.
This was revealed in a pilot study conducted on Dock Yard in 2022, by the TCIG Statistical Department.
Dock Yard, sometimes referred to as Duck Yard, is a predominantly informal and unregulated Haitian Community located at the back of Kew Town, Providenciales.
As part of the government’s efforts to regularise housing in the TCI, an in-depth study of Dock Yard, which was identified as the most prominent of these communities was undertaken to better understand the ecosystems of these communities.
The proliferation of informal settlements in the Turks and Caicos Islands has presented several national challenges, which, if not addressed, can have dire consequences.
The study aimed at improving and reshaping these communities to facilitate service delivery, and ensure sustainability and security, was recently made public by the ISU.
The data-driven study which used an evidence-based methodology to gather baseline information, exposed the realities of the situation in the community.
KEY CONTRIBUTING FACTORS
The study pinpointed some of the key factors that have contributed to the growth and prosperity of Dock Yard which includes the ongoing crisis in neighboring Haiti, as well as the pull and push factors such as opportunities for work; romantic and familial relations; lack of opportunities and conflict/insecurity in the home country.
“Dock Yard attractions and strengths: support systems; wellserviced community; reception system and protections for irregular persons; employment through community networking.
Other contributing factors such as; “Attraction for criminals, High cost of accommodation in the TCI, living standard, TCIG challenges: resources; corruption”, were outlined in the study.
FINDINGS AND ANALYSIS
The study revealed that Dock Yard is located on private land and evolved over time through the settlement, sale and resale of portions of parcels of land; the legality and legitimacy of most are in question.
It noted that Dock Yard’s inferred population size is just under 3000 persons, having increased approximately four (4) times the rate of the wider TCI population over the last 10 years, and 69% of this population identified as being status holders, with 25% confirming that they are not.
Further, the report pointed out that Haitians account for 88% of the Dock Yard population, with the majority being females between the ages 30-39 years, while Turks and Caicos Islanders account for approximately 4%.
“Dock Yard is part of the locality Honda Road and can be divided into three (3) distinct areas: i. Dock Yard Central (the original settlement –1970’s): − a single parcel of 12.21 acres; belongs to several members of one family, portions (100x100 feet) have been resold; several
cautions are on the parcel.”
The study also revealed that during 2010, Dock Yard expanded east of the original settlement and several parcels were sold and legitimately subdivided with further unauthorized subdivisions of 10x10/20 feet, while in the 2020’s the community expanded north and west of the original settlement with not as densely populated; groups of structures but there is evidence of ongoing construction.
According to the study, the area is predominantly high-density with sub-portions of land well below the prescribed acreage.
“Many structures are small wooden shacks, but an increasing number are being constructed with more permanent materials.
“Most residents are renters, 18% claim to own the land that they reside on, while under 10% admit to be squatting. Planning records indicate that 17 of the 38 parcels in Dock Yard are legitimately owned by Haitians”.
Another shocking revelation detailed in the report is the internal systems in the community
for managing ‘intrusions’ from law enforcement ranging from gatekeepers to escape tunnels.
The findings further disclosed that Dock Yard has a very vibrant commercial economy accessing both legal and illegal goods and services.
Some 12% of homes have businesses attached, while most work in less technical roles in hospitality, home care and construction, enabling easy access to Employment, the report noted.
The Dock Yard community has been likened to Brazilian Favelas and Haitian slums in the study due to the similarities such as irregular self-constructed housing that are occupied illegally, and often crowded; poor sanitation networks, electricity, water and other basic necessities
“Dock Yard does not have access to some standard utilities such as sanitation infrastructures, networked plumbing nor pipeborne water.
“10.98 % of homes have electricity, some of which are serviced by meters (the validity of which is questionable); many
however are connected through unauthorised redistribution, at a cost.
“Formal water pipelines do not enter the Dock Yard community, as such residents purchase truckborne water, which is often connected to a standpipe system for redistribution at an inflated cost", the report stated.
Coupled with this, the study pointed out that there are “no formal systems for sewage disposal and limitations to garbage collection which results in unsanitary conditions, infestations and a persistent stench throughout the community”.
As it relates to some cultural practices and norms that are accepted within the Dock Yard community, the report noted that these differ from those of TCI’s native population.
Additionally, several shortcomings within enforcement systems have handicapped control measures: resource limitations –human and financial; expansive unmanageable remits and the lax in due diligence processes were highlighted in the report.
NHIP Appeal Tribunal trained by Bahamian ...
CONTINUED FROM 4
expert guidance and advice on adjudication of claims we will now set out the list of tools and support systems we need established to commence the tribunal's work.”
The training was conducted by Madam Justice Stella Maureen Crane-Scott under the theme ‘Providing Skills for Adjudication and Determination of Appeals’.
Members were engaged in interactive sessions, by Justice Crane-Scott and Training Facilitator Tanya Carter, Executive Director within the Office of the Chief Justice.
Commenting on the training provided, Chief Justice Agyemang said she was happy to oblige Fulford’s request: “It was a welcomed request by the tribunal chairman for the JEI to design a specific course geared towards training its members in understanding the skills necessary for adjudication and determination of appeals.
“The Judicial Education Institute of the Turks and Caicos Islands is pleased to offer this training to provide access to justice everywhere in the islands.”
Fulford expressed his thanks to the Chief Justice for honouring his request, stating: “Thanks to Honourable Chief Justice Agyemang for answering the call and arranging for the training of the members of the NHI Appeals Tribunal.
“We take our work very seriously and I want to ensure that my members and I are armed with the right skills for determination of appeals, given that most health matters are always a matter of life and death decisions.
“Our facilitator of the training was indeed knowledgeable, useful and practical and we thank Honourable Madam Justice Maureen Crane-Scott of the Bahamian Court of Appeal for taking the time to conduct this training.”
Earlier in July when the appeal tribunal was first appointed, Minister of Health, Hon Shaun Malcolm had indicated that claims awaiting adjudication date back several years.
He said at the time: “There are claims that need adjudicating those dates back as far as two years.
“I have chosen this team as they are all known to me as dedicated persons who can get the job done.
“I have full confidence that the tribunal will deliver justice swiftly and will deal with the backlog of claims immediately. The public can have faith in knowing that their claims will be heard.”
Fulford has promised that his team will work within the remit of the law and their terms of reference to adjudicate matters in a fair, impartial and swift manner.
“We will deliberate with the level of seriousness that is deserving of such a tribunal. It is my vision that we modernise, and where possible make electronic the process and work of the tribunal to provide a more people-centred approach to adjudicating these claims.”
THE END OF SHANTY TOWNS
The Informal Settlements Unit (ISU) established last year to tackle a myriad of issues relating to the proliferation of shanty towns in the Turks and Caicos Islands, will soon be fully operational and aims to return the TCI to its former glory.
During the opening of its office on Tuesday, July 25, at Unit 20-22 Laporte's Plaza, Academy Way, Downtown Providenciales, the stakeholders involved explained that the unit would work to rid the country of shanty towns in an effort to make communities throughout the islands safe again.
Governor Dileeni Daniel-Selvaratnam said: "This unit being set up is a very welcome approach, but I think it also is a fundamental foundation in tackling this and providing appropriate safeguards and protections. It demonstrates the whole system's approach in recognising the issues, it is not just about tackling the hazardous building, the social, the environmental, the economic but also the wider implications..." What are your thoughts?
Correct
She's correct. If our government works to remove policies that degrade the country and add policies that upgrade it, we will soon see the difference. It seems obvious, but this government is the first to notice that.
Wishful thinking
It is a mighty and pious aspiration to seek to return the Turks & Caicos Islands “to its former glory”. Sadly, those halcyon days are gone. The TCI has been invaded by the needs and absolute desire to survive of the Haitian illegal migrant community.
Her Majesty’s government and a series of TCI governments were complicit in this and by awarding illegals the right to live in the TCI. The shacks, shanty towns, and ghettos that erupted in the wake of the population migrant wave lingered even though they were being given papers and “rights to citizenship”.
Over the last fifty years in TCI, ghettos just sprung up around the country and elected governments refused to do anything about it.
It seems as if they just wanted to win elections, earn huge salaries, and take bribes but never had any serious intent to represent the people. Why take office if that is the reason? Not doing anything is defensible because they always get elected. Various ministers of works, and ministers of planning sat idly by and on their hands while
they witnessed the rush to build shacks and ghettos in the TCI. The mere fact that in 2023 they are establishing an Informal Settlements Unit (ISU) to tackle the myriad of issues is a stinging rebuke to the political system in the TCI. It is not fit for purpose. Somehow internal groupings, urged by the UK Government must be made to get the locally elected government to do the things they were elected to do and fully possessed of the powers to do. This ISU 50 years after the fact of illegal migrant housing confirms that TCI governments were asleep.
Are they serious?
Ministers should be asked what is the meaning of the phrase ISU? It could not be termed Informal Settlements Unit because a more appropriate reference must be, “Is you serious”. You all have sat around, on your hands, ignoring the situation, seeing the development of ghettos in your country and remaining silent as lambs.
Either ministers do not know their powers, do not know what to do with those powers, or as the public is sadly becoming aware, they really do not care one iota about this country except their salaries.
TCI ministers are never really tested because they are related to persons all across the political divide and the electorate will not countenance anyone, calling out their cousin, brother, or distant relative.
So, they feel free to take office, betray the trust of the people, misapprehend their
mandate and simply travel for that per diem. Elected ministers since the start of the ministerial system were the only ones with legislative, political and real power to do something with the shanty towns in the TCI. No governor, deputy governor, or permanent secretary ever had those policing powers to make that difference. They however elected to “Do Absolutely Nothing”. Now the TCI is a country of extreme Wealth, gilded and surrounded by huge gaps of ghettos and poverty. Rest assured they will go into the next election to campaign that they have done something about an issue which, but for their indolence, was created while they presided over it.
Funny and sad at the same time
Unit being set up to deal with illegal migrants and ghettos -what a lark. Where is the Unit designed to empower the native-born Turks & Caicos Islander in his country?
While all of this is happening, ministers are free to sit around and play games. Where is the unit, the fund or the money set aside to empower Turks & Caicos Islanders?
Not the Small Business, MSME programme at Investtci. It is time to get serious about the issues that affect TCI people and their welfare. The need for the ISU exposes deep gaps in concern and proper public in the TCI. It seems that the entire political system is on trial in the TCI and people are asking why do we need to vote. Evidence is seen in the numbers at the last election, 2021. Given the sentiment on the “street”. It is time ministers take the TCI and its people seriously. This enterprise of trading in shacks is not one of those ‘serious moments”. The fact is that TCI allowed itself to be invaded by illegal migrants. Ministers were aware that there were marriages of convenience but did little and nothing to police those social infractions. They now “reap the wind” and it is paying dividends to a dysfunctional community.
Better late than never
As bad as things are now—they can get so much worst.
There is no denying that the governments of the TCI have been asleep at the wheel. That is a discussion for another time. We need to start this process; we need our country back.
Brazen daylight shooting in Grace Bay leaves man dead –
Armed men and police shootout in Dock Yard
Police in the Turks and Caicos Islands are investigating a brazen daytime shooting in Grace Bay, which has left one man dead.
The piercing sounds of bullets, ringing out in the heart of Grace Bay sent visitors and residents scampering to safety, shortly after 2 pm, on Wednesday, August 2, 2023.
The execution-style murder in TCI’s bustling tourist district is believed to be a targeted gangrelated attack on the individual who was killed, according to the Commissioner of Police Mr Trevor Botting.
Botting who condemned the murder of the male victim whose identity has not been released up to press time, described the bold attack as “shocking and highly concerning”, in a statement issued a day after the incident.
He said: “This murder was targeted against the man who died and is, we believe, linked to gangrelated serious crime, motivated by revenge and retribution.
He added that this is the twelfth murder for 2023, with the majority of these deaths being linked to gang and serious crime activity.
Shortly after the incident in Grace Bay, the RTCIPF were summoned to the Dock Yard area where a group of armed men
suspected to be involved in the shooting were spotted.
Upon responding to the report, officers were subjected to sustained gunfire from the men who were armed with automatic weapons, the Police Commissioner said.
He said: “In order to protect themselves, the police officers also discharged their firearms.
“ It is not known if any persons were injured as a result of the exchange although I can say that due to the protection afforded by the armoured vehicle, no police officers were injured in this cowardly attack on our law enforcement.
“Very soon after this event, the second RTCIPF armoured vehicle also deployed to Dock Yard and the armed gang members dispersed.”
INCREASED POLICE PRESENCE
In an attempt to push back against the upsurge in gun-related crime, Commissioner Botting said the Police Force is ramping up its visibility across Providenciales.
“I also remain concerned that further shootings will be carried out between gangs of young men involved in organised gang activity, motivated by drugs, guns, and retaliation.
“ For this reason, the RTCIPF is on high alert and is undertaking
robust operations in our communities, on our roads, and through intelligence-led targeted operations to locate and bring to justice those seeking to cause harm and fear across the TCI.”
He emphasized that the Force remains committed and resolute in keeping communities in the TCI safe.
“The Turks and Caicos Islands Government investment in policing have led to the purchase of two armoured vehicles to protect police officers from reckless and violent individuals as we chase them down and chase them down, we will.
“We have more tactical officers than in 2022, specialists who are well-trained and equipped to tackle the threats we are facing.
“I remain grateful to the Hon Premier and his government for their support of the work of Policing across the TCI.”
He warned criminals that threats and attempts on the lives of police officers, will not be taken lightly.
He said: “You need to know the reality, if you threaten a police officer with a firearm, you must expect to be challenged and your threat will be met with potentially lethal force.
“In the days ahead, you will see more police officers on the streets,
in your communities, and carrying out policing operations on the roads and in neighbourhoods.
“ Please ensure that if you are around this operational policing, do not threaten officers and comply with any instructions given, this will help officers do their job.
“One other way that you can assist is to ensure that your vehicle is properly registered, displaying number plates, and that your window tints do not exceed the legal limits. Officers will be checking non-compliant vehicles and whilst you may end up with a fine, you must also expect to be challenged robustly when officers stop you.”
He reminded residents that criminals often use cars that are heavily tinted and have no registration plates to carry out their malicious activities.
Botting further appealed to residents to law-abiding residents in Dock Yard to report to the Police any information about the
individuals.
He said: “ Tell us where they are living and who they are, you don't need to leave your name, just tell us what you know, and we will deal with the fear and harm they are creating within the community.
“Our young men on the TCI are dying needlessly through senseless violence. This matter is under active investigation, and I am asking you, our community, to tell us what you know about this and other serious crimes.
“You can do this in a number of ways and if you wish to stay anonymous, you can use Crimestoppers to tell us what you know. You don't need to leave your name and the information will be passed to us.”
The wider public is being asked to provide any photographs or videos to the Royal Turks and Caicos Islands Police Force along with any information they may have regarding this murder or other criminal activity.
New Deputy Chief Environmental Officer appointed
Ms Crivanne Adams is the new Deputy Chief Environmental Officer within the Ministry of Health and Human Services.
The Office of the Deputy Governor of the Turks and Caicos Islands announced her appointment on Monday, July 31 in a statement.
Ms Adams holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Environmental Science from Keele University in the United Kingdom (UK) (2019), where she won the Environmental Science Dissertation Prize for her Dissertation: “The Evaluation of Waste Management Strategies of an Island Nation. The Turks and Caicos Islands as a Case Study”.
She also holds a Master’s in Environmental Engineering and Project Management from Leeds University UK (2020).
During her studies, she benefited from several work experience opportunities within the Turks and Caicos Islands Environmental Health Department starting in the summer of 2015, which she credits as a catalyst for her current career
path.
In 2021 Ms Adams officially joined the Turks and Caicos Islands Environmental Health Department as an Environmental Health Officer and is now being appointed to the post of Deputy Chief Environmental Health Officer.
Commenting on her appointment, Ms.Adams said is “honored and humbled” to have been given the opportunity to demonstrate her ability and take on her new role as Deputy Chief Environmental Health Officer.
She said: “First and foremost, I thank God for my journey thus far as he continues guiding my steps. I sincerely thank my Mother, Father, Brother, extended family, friends, and colleagues for their unwavering support.”
She added: “The Environmental Health Department is developing and transitioning into a more modern era of operations, I am committed to the growth and success of my department, and I
look forward to contributing to this process of securing a safe and healthy Turks and Caicos Islands.”
Deputy Governor and Head of the Public Service, HE Anya Williams, in extending congratulatory remarks to Ms Crivanne Adams, stated: “It gives me great pleasure to officially announce and congratulate Ms. Crivanne Adams on her appointment to Deputy Chief Environmental Officer in the Ministry of Health and Human Services.
She continued “Crivanne, many years ago, took a keen interest in the area of Heath, more specifically Environmental Health, and has prepared herself educationally and professionally to make a positive contribution to the leadership and management of this department as it works to strengthen its remit and to improve environmental health in these islands.
“A known scholar, it no doubt that Ms Adams will do exceptionally well in this new role, congratulations on your promotion Ms Adams!”
Do not get distracted by chronic complainers
Listen but stay focused
There is constructive criticism and there is chronic complaining. Know the difference. Constructive criticism involves identifying issues and providing feedback with suggested solutions. Chronic complainers find almost everything to complain about it. They are very negative, and they feel good about themselves when they complain. They also try to influence others with their chronic complaints, creating a toxic environment. Many times, these chronic complainers do not have anything positive to say and furthermore, they do not offer any solutions for the issues they are complaining about.
Listen to the constructive criticism and the chronic complainers but do not get distracted by the chronic complainers. You must stay focused, otherwise, you may fall into the trap that the chronic complainers set for you.
I know it is hard but sometimes to manage chronic complainers, you need to avoid them, and
BY DREXWELL SEYMOURdoing so will require you to stay away from the environment these chronic complainers are in. If you are in an office setting with chronic complainers, ask to move to another area or even find out if it is possible to work remotely. Many chronic complainers also use various social media platforms to complain. Sometimes, it is best for you to stay off these platforms where these chronic complainers are.
Another way to manage chronic complainers is to be brave and call them out for their behaviour. Tell
them they complain too much, they are distractors, and they need to be grateful. Use reverse psychology on them and tell them to identify some positive things about that individual or situation they are complaining about. Also, ask them to offer some solutions or better yet, give them a task to resolve the issues they are complaining about.
I know my first point is to avoid them, but you should also consider listening to the complainers. Maybe there is a deeper problem in their lives, and they need to be heard and need help. Maybe some
of the issues they are complaining about are valid. By listening to them, you may be able to resolve the issues even though they may find other things to complain about.
In a chronic environment, if you are not careful, you may end up doubting yourself and start believing everything the chronic complainers are saying. You may also be worried and threatened
about what is being said and you can lose your focus. On the other hand, some people may be easily influenced and become chronic complainers too. Stay focused. In conclusion, establish your goals and boundaries. Know your purpose and don’t let the chronic complainers distract you or overpower you. Recognise that some people will always complain about something.
The rise of global food insecurity: How is the TCI responding?
The world is stunned, as Russia’s hypersonic missiles pounded the Ukraine city of Odesa – a major seaport and transport hub, graced by the Black Sea's northwestern shore and one of three harbours for grain exports.
Not only are those on the battlefield expunged, but an unlikely victim – food – is caught in the crosshairs. The Russians’ aggression is destroying farms, crops and food supplies, and disrupting the global food market.
After weeks of negotiations, Moscow exited the UN-brokered grain initiative, which facilitated the export of grains from the Black Sea– expired on July 17, 2023.
This move has compounded the global food crisis and now, communities worldwide are at risk of acute food insecurity at unprecedented proportions. The number of people impacted has increased from 135 million in 53 countries to 345 million in 79
BY D MARKIE SPRINGcountries this year.
Prior, we witnessed labour shortages and supply chain disruptions from manufacturing to grocery stores; but now, the paradigm has shifted following the Russian invasion of Ukraine, as trade policies imposed by countries soared and this has increased domestic supply to reduce prices.
And India, the world’s largest rice exporter to 140 countries and accounting for 40 per cent of all rice exports, seems to be the biggest champion of these transborder policies. Since then, New Delhi has banned rice exports,
aimed at curbing the current food dilemmas, while ensuring adequate food supplies for Indian citizens.
Like other nations, the future of the TCI lies in its ability to achieve sustainability and food security, as the TCI is not immune to world events.
More so, lawmakers should know, as of June 2023, twenty countries have implemented 27 food export bans and another 10 implemented 14 export-limiting measures.
The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development's 10-year assessment of agriculture
commodity and fish market at the global and national levels detected a threat to global food security. The analysis submits that soaring agriculture input prices and rising fertiliser costs will lead to higher food prices.
Considering that these projections are based on current trade-related policies, consumer preferences and production technology, uncertainties in worsening climatic conditions like prolonged droughts and extreme temperatures; geopolitics as seen worldwide and; economic development in India could also influence production capacity.
Besides, lawmakers must know, global food shortage is inescapable owing to the aforementioned factors and only countries with proactive measures will survive.
And so, countries worldwide are investing heavily in food and agriculture to improve the resilience of food systems and;
therefore, the TCI is urged to strengthen its agriculture sector.
To achieve this target, policymakers must work to enhance its climate resilience and adopt climate-smart agriculture practices, while increasing competitiveness and inclusion, and ensuring medium to long-term food security.
So I ask, how is the TCI navigating through these tectonic shifts in world politics? How can we thrive when the sustainability of food and agriculture is constantly disrupted by severe climatic conditions, global conflicts and inflation? And why is nonintervention so prevalent?
The government’s interest and ability to efficiently respond to these questions will determine our survival.
My hope is, one day, the TCI can be self-sustained in food production and help us survive in the impending global food crisis!
We welcome letters from all members of the public on a variety of topics
Lessons on leadership from one of history’s greatest leaders
KENYATTA E. LEWIS
We are going to be continuing on from the last article on leadership from King David’s life as recorded in the Bible. If you have not read it yet, it would be good to do so, even though you can read this as a standalone. Besides possessing humility and courageous vision, David also possessed the following leadership skills.
Faith: One of the key factors in David’s success was his unwavering faith in God. Whether he was facing a giant in battle or running for his life as a fugitive with a bounty on his head or crying out to God in a moment of despair, David’s faith was an ever-present reality in his life. It must be noted that this faith was not some nebulous, frothy, meaningless thing, it was real and present. It was faith in Yahweh, the God of Israel and God of all things created, seen, and unseen. David’s faith in Yahweh was shown in several ways.
He was a man of worship. Though he was a warrior and excellent administrator, David’s faith was most obvious in how he
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.
worshipped God. As part of his legacy, he wrote a collection of Hebrew songs, which we know today as the Psalms, that showcased his heart for the authentic worship of God. He practiced, and teaches us all, that it is important to praise God through the good and bad times. Look at what he wrote in Psalm 103: 1-4 - Let all that I am praise the Lord; with my whole heart, I will praise his holy name. Let all that I am praise the Lord; may I never forget the good things he does for me. He forgives all my sins and heals all my diseases. He redeems me from death and crowns me with love and tender mercies. He fills my life with good things.
I would encourage you to read the rest of this beautiful poem, and as you read it I hope you see how deeply David loved God. And as you do that, I also hope you would
see the deep connection between faith in God and sound leadership. Another aspect of David’s faith was his honesty and vulnerability in repenting of his sins. Someone once said that the Christian life is a repenting life and David lived that out. His repentance after his sins with Bathsheba and Uriah displayed a true leader's humility and accountability. He acknowledged his wrongdoings and sought forgiveness. In doing so David did not shy away from expressing his emotions and struggles publicly without it becoming exhibitionism.
Leaders need to be aware of their struggles and share them with those they lead for several compelling reasons. Firstly, acknowledging their vulnerabilities and challenges fosters an atmosphere of authenticity and trust within the
team. By openly acknowledging their struggles, leaders create a safe space for their followers to share their own concerns and seek support, ultimately enhancing team cohesion and emotional wellbeing.
Secondly, sharing struggles allows leaders to model vulnerability, which is a key aspect of effective leadership. Brené Brown a renowned researcher on vulnerability, aptly states in “Daring Greatly”, "Vulnerability is not winning or losing; it's having the courage to show up and be seen when we have no control over the outcome". Embracing vulnerability enables leaders to connect with their team on a deeper level, fostering empathy and understanding.
Furthermore, acknowledging struggles humanizes leaders, making them more relatable and
approachable. This approachability encourages open communication and feedback, enabling leaders to make more informed decisions and lead with greater insight. Additionally, sharing struggles offers an opportunity for growth and development. By seeking input and support from their team, leaders can tap into diverse perspectives and ideas, leading to more innovative and effective solutions.
Ultimately, leaders who are willing to be vulnerable and share their struggles create a culture of authenticity, openness, and collaboration, fostering a stronger and more resilient team. As leadership expert Patrick Lencioni in the book "The Five Dysfunctions of a Team" advises, "Great teams do not hold back with one another. They are unafraid to air their dirty laundry. They admit their mistakes, their weaknesses, and their concerns without fear of reprisal". In repenting of his sins to God, David modeled a depth of leadership that is hardly seen today. Do the same, practice sharing with those you serve with honesty and openness. But most importantly, turn to God when you sin and repent quickly and specifically. You Are Loved.
The dirtiest places in your home
From doorknobs, countertops, kitchen appliances, Ipad screens, and TV remotes, our homes are packed with germs. I thought we should address these once and for all.
What are the dirtiest places in your homes?
Ranging from bad to worse, these are the dirtiest places in your house.
KITCHEN COUNTERTOPS
It is very common to think of the stove and fridge as focal areas to clean, but in fact, countertops and handles need the same care and attention. We place lots of produce, rest bags from outside, create coffee stains, leave crumbs and spill liquids_ And while we use cutting boards to cut our meats, vegetables and fruits, it is still possible to have a transfer of bacteria. Wipe often!
BY DAVIDSON LOUISRachel Wolchin once said: “If we were meant to stay in one place, we’d have had roots instead of feet.” On this quest to self-discovery, TC Islander Davidson Louis vowed to travel, write, paint, laugh and forgive. Subsequently, he hopes to find himself and or, leave behind a few pieces of himself. Contact him at hello. octopen@tcinews.tc
SPONGES
While you’re in the kitchen, keep an eye on your sponge, too. If you start to notice a mildew, musty smell every time you walk into your kitchen, it may be your kitchen sponge. Keep spares in the house.
COFFEE MACHINE
People use coffee makers and bottled water dispensers daily, but both are often overlooked places when cleaning the kitchen. If there’s stagnant coffee
or water, it can grow mildew or mold and create an unsanitary odor. To sidestep it? Clean the coffee maker and reservoir in your water dispenser with a sponge, water and dish soap.
FAUCETS
When it comes to keeping faucets clean, I am talking about cleaning underneath the faucets in the kitchen — an area you should pay particular attention to if you drink tap water or cook with it. Tap water can contain minerals, like calcium,
which will cause a hard, crusty buildup on the faucet screen and surrounding components. Do not forget to clean it!
BATHROOM AND SHOWERS
Showing in them is not enough. Daily usage will leave your showers with soap scum, water stains, hairs, dirt, rust and grime over time. Build the courage and time to clean at least once a week.
BATHROOM RUGS
One more troublesome spot in the bathroom: rugs. Typically, when you clean your bathroom, you pick up the rugs as part of the routine and then place them back on the floor after you’ve mopped. But that neglects the rug itself — which can be full of dust, hair, and God knows what else. Have a few, and stick them in the washer, everyone now and then.
DOOR KNOBS
Everyone touches it, and they touch it multiple times a day. Door knobs are famous to be the place that carries and transfers germs. Use your elbow where possible. Use a tissue where you can. Push with your shoulder _ Anything to avoid your adding to the build-up. Wash your hands as often as possible.
KEYBOARDS
This is the winner. Your keyboard may be the yuckiest thing in your home. They can have gunk, hair, dust and more — and since you never wash them, it’s no wonder it’s one of the dirtiest spots in your home.
What do you think?
Do you agree?
Do share your cleaning tips on louisedens@gmail.com
CPA engage members on adapting their legislative bodies to global challenges
The Turks and Caicos Islands recently concluded the successful hosting of the 45th Commonwealth Parliamentary Association (CPA) Caribbean, Americas and Atlantic Regional Conference, with members coming away with a renewed sense of purpose.
Hosted from July 21 to 28, the conference brought together Parliamentarians and Clerks from jurisdictions across the CPA CAA Region for discussions on the theme ‘Building a resilient region in the face of global challenges’.
The sessions – all hosted at The Shore Club in Long Bay, Providenciales - covered topics including disaster preparedness, biodiversity and climate change and included a meeting of women Parliamentarians in the region, a youth Parliament and several workshops.
Delegates heard presentations from parliamentary leaders throughout the region, including seven Speakers of Parliament, as well as external experts from the law enforcement, banking and health sectors.
CPA Chairperson, Hon. Ian Liddell-Grainger, and CPA Deputy Secretary-General, Jarvis Matiya, were also in attendance.
At the opening ceremony, TCI’s
Premier, Hon. Charles Washington Misick, discussed sustainability, telling delegates: “I believe what we are looking at today is a more comprehensive definition of sustainability. When I think of sustainability, I think of turbulent change, adaptation, sustainability in terms of infrastructure –institutional, our social systems and ecosystems.”
Hon. Gordon Burton, Speaker of the TCI’s legislative assembly and CPA CAA Regional Chairperson,
reflected on how the CPA gives Caribbean nations a voice on the international stage.
“We are small island states in the Caribbean but together we have a voice that can resonate throughout the Commonwealth and impact decisions made on a global scale,” Burton told the gathering.
During the week, the CAA Region of the Commonwealth Women Parliamentarians (CWP) network also hosted their 13th Conference.
Hon. Valerie Woods, Speaker of the House of Representatives of Belize and Chair of the CWP CAA Region, opened the conference.
“The purpose of a women’s parliamentary network in the region is because women are still under-represented. If Parliaments are to be truly representatives of the people, then it needs to reflect this in its numbers and currently in the region, it does not. There is much more work to do,” Woods stated
The two-day conference
addressed the crucial role of women Parliamentarians in democratic governance, the shared experiences across the region of women in leadership and the issue of youth crime.
On July 26, young people from across the region took part in the 16th CPA CAA Regional Youth Parliament. The Youth Parliament mirrored the structure of the TCI’s House of Assembly and delegates debated a motion based on the main theme of the conference.
The CPA CAA Region comprises 19 legislatures, including Small Island Developing States, British Overseas Territories in the Caribbean and Central and South American states, such as Belize and Guyana.
The Commonwealth Parliamentary Association connects, develops, promotes and supports Parliamentarians and their staff to identify benchmarks of good governance and the implementation of the enduring values of the Commonwealth.
The CPA is an international community of around 180 Commonwealth Parliaments and Legislatures working together to deepen the Commonwealth’s commitment to the highest standards of democratic governance.
The ravages of philosophy
Someone once said that it is important to be more educated today than you were yesterday and even more tomorrow. With that, I make it my duty in many ways to do so, because our lives and outcomes are driven by what we believe and our beliefs are developed by what we hear, watch and read.
History is often written from two perspectives: the conqueror and the conquered. It takes a little work to get close to the truth.
Our children attend various institutions of learning and many people attend various religious affiliations. Often, the education received is influenced by the religious beliefs of the various organisations which eventually impact the curriculums and are being challenged with the idea of no God in classrooms. You would notice that I used a capital G. Many would not have noticed that, but it
BY KEITH DAVISKeith Davis is an IT Consultant resident on Providenciales, Turks and Caicos. He is married and has two wonderful boys. His desire is to contribute to the advancement of the country, but more importantly the youth.
is important.
The word ‘god’ is an identifier, used by civilizations hundreds and thousands of years old to identify a superior being or influence. Jesus did not invent the term and you would notice that he used the term father, to reflect his relationship. The oldest continual civilization known to man is Egypt. They had numerous gods, of whom the sun god was the greatest. Pharaoh, the king of Egypt, was also considered a god.
The New Testament which is written in Greek and heavily influenced by the culture, includes
some of the gods of the Grecian empire. Paul references Apollos, Artemis, Hermis, and the allpowerful Zeus. The Canaanite nations driven out by Israel had their conglomerate of Gods. They all believed that these gods had some bearing on how they lived. This brings us to a very interesting intersection.
The countries I was born now live in were colonised by the British. That empire was Catholicised hundreds of years ago. That means that when they conquered, those nations took on that religion and their god.
The Incas, Mayans and other South American nations were conquered by the conquistadors from Spain. These were men who were religious zealots and wanted to save the pagan world from damnation. Ironically, their religious zeal was overtaken by their greed for wealth and eventually wiped out many of the people they came to ‘save.’
How about Africa? Many parts of that continent endured the conquest and invasion of the Muslims empire and now believe in their god. Is it possible that we the descendants of slaves who ended up on this side of the world may have been worshiping in the Muslim tradition?
There are thousands of religious books written by authors of the same faith who have differing beliefs. Does that make sense? Are you going to read all these books? Which ones are more correct and
beneficial? Remember that when you read them, you’re hearing the philosophy of an individual that was likely heavily influenced by who conquered them.
That’s very challenging. So where does Jesus fit in? Well, my conclusion has led me to believe that religion and religious zealots killed him. So, I don’t think religion was his message. The sermon on the mount, which is considered by many, even non-believers, to be one of the greatest delivery ever recorded, was a deliberation on how we should live, love, respect, have mercy, be peacemakers and have a good heart. These are qualities that if all humans live by, the world will be a better place. You may believe in the capital G god or you may not. But I can guarantee that the above will enrich your life and those around you. That’s a part of my philosophy.
By the way—Ido.
Government launches programmes to supply affordable, quality homes to TCI residents
To address the housing shortage and barriers to homeownership, improve the living conditions of existing homeowners and renew communities across the islands, the TCI Government recently launched its National Housing Policy.
The Ministry of Physical Planning and Infrastructural Development (PPID) unveiled the National Housing Policy and three short to medium-term Programs at a launch event on Thursday, July 27, 2023, at Brayton Hall Venetian Road Providenciales.
The event was well attended by members of the government, cooperate community, and civil society.
Speaking at the launch, Minister of Physical Planning and Infrastructural Development (PPID) Hon Jamell Robinson, described the milestone as a “proud moment” for the Turks and Caicos Islands.
He said: “We recognise the lack of housing options, the lack of quality homes and at affordable rates, and that this deficiency was experienced on all islands and was needed at all income levels throughout the population.
“ In our quest to develop sustainable communities and provide quality housing for all this progressive government, the People's Government began by building a dedicated team to examine the housing needs developed and approved the housing the National Housing Policy Framework, as well as committed $3 million to implement the initial housing programs.”
Robinson stressed that a “safe and secure home” is every citizens’ right.
“ Homeowners, landowners and those keen on their own first home will be supported by this government with each of
these programmes that are being offered.”
He underscored that by providing more affordable housing units to the legal residents of the TCI, the government is aiming to reduce the expansion of informal settlements and illegal housing developments.
Robinson further disclosed that the National Housing Policy is also replete with medium to long-term plans for the future of housing in the Turks and Caicos Islands.
He said: ‘The following programs will be further developed in the months and years to come; “Inclusion inclusionary zoning, this program will require developers to designate a percentage of housing or development to low to moderateincome households, large-scale housing schemes through publicprivate partnerships.”
In an effort to manage public and private funding related to housing, a National Housing Authority will be established to foster greater collaboration with developers, contractors, and other stakeholders to facilitate housing programs that include subsidies, government guarantees interest rates, and other credit management schemes.
Robinson said: “We will also consider creating a housing a National Housing Trust to pilot these programs, a Help to Buy scheme is another measure you can expect to see delivered in the second phase of this policy.”
This program will specifically assist first-time homeowners who are unable to assess affordable mortgage loans due to insufficient deposits.
HUMAN RIGHT
Premier Washington Misick during his remarks, emphasised that adequate housing is a human right enshrined in international human
rights law, and his Government is endeavoring to deliver on a promise made in its manifesto in this regard.
He said: “It is said that a man's home is his castle, but a man doesn't have to have a castle to have a home, and so what we're addressing here, the provision of homes for everyone who has a legal right to be in this country.
‘The United Nations, I think in article 25 speaks to adequate housing, affordability, adequacy, and other classifications.
“My government in the party's manifesto has made it clear that the habit of giving people a piece of dirt stops here, our plan is to give people keys instead of dirt roads, and unfinished settlements, our focus is on building safe communities for all of our people to live in and that is the genesis of our housing policy.”
HOUSING DEMAND
The demand for housing has exploded in recent years, leading to a severe housing shortage in the territory, Dominique Durham, Deputy Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Physical Planning and Infrastructure Development who gave an overview of the programmes said the 2012 census provided an alarming statistic, that at the time, only 11% of Turks and Caicos Islands were homeowners.
He said: “We've reviewed the current population policy report, which predicted that population by 2040 is expected to be 70,000 thus exemplifying the immediate demand.
“We've also reviewed the National Physical Development Plan 2020 to 2030, which produces the demand that we will be needing
up to 13,000 new homes in the next two decades…would have heard Mr. Williams from planning mentioned 650 homes per year for the next 20 years, that is the current demand.”
He pointed out that a national housing needs survey was undertaken to provide data that would help the Government to better understand the housing crisis.
“The respondents of that survey provided that majority of households spend more than 50% of their income on housing expenses, now as a rule of thumb, especially in America, if you are spending more than 30% of your household income on housing needs that is deemed not affordable.
“ Here we are in the Turks and Caicos spending more than 50%
Government launches programmes to supply ...
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of our income, on housing expenses.
“It also provided that 21% of us are living in rooms that are actually in need of repair, provided that 69% are actively looking to purchase a new home within the next five years,” he added.
PROGRAMMES IN A NUTSHELL
PROGRAMME ONE: HOUSING CONCESSIONS FOR RESIDENTIAL DEVELOPERS
For this programme, the Government will collaborate with the private sector to develop full-service communities and increase equitable housing stocks at an affordable rate.
The Government will be subsidizing the land, construction, infrastructure, or duties, negotiated on
a case-by-case basis with the developer, and the cost savings will be transferred as benefits to the homeowners.
PROGRAMME TWO: HOME IMPROVEMENT FOR EXISTING HOMEOWNERS
This programme is an amendment to the existing Turks & Caicos Islands Citizens Homeowner Policy and will provide for home improvement grants of up to a maximum of $50,000 for eligible homeowners.
To this end, the government will assist homeowners directly by providing financial and technical assistance to repair and renovate their homes.
The programme is only geared towards owneroccupied stand-alone homes. The applicant is required to provide clear photographs to demonstrate the building or site condition and its surroundings that require
improvement.
This includes structural damage, leakages, substantial missing roof repairs or termite-infested timber components.
PROGRAMME THREE: COMMUNITY RENEWAL AND INFILLING
This initiative aims to build new homes for vulnerable individuals in communities based on a needs assessment, similar to the Turks and Caicos Islands Hurricane Ike Reconstruction and Rehabilitation Project.
Primary beneficiaries of this program will be landowners with properties that have sustained physical damage or be in bad condition, and households in vulnerable positions with priority given to the elderly/ handicapped/ special needs/ low-income group, assessed through a scoring mechanism.
Lillian Swann-Misick appointed as new NHIB chairperson
Former parliamentarian Lillian Swann-Misick has been appointed the new chairperson of the National Health Insurance Board (NHIB).
On Monday, July 31, she was formally introduced to staff at the offices of the National Health Insurance Plan in the Salt Mills Plaza, Grace Bay.
Speaking on her appointment to the post, Misick - who previously served as one of the two Governor’s appointed member in the Ewing administration - said she is looking forward to the challenges the new position will no doubt present.
“Based on some of the preliminary meetings I have had, this is going to be my most challenging and difficult board, and I have chaired many,” she said.
She added: “I am a serviceoriented individual, I have chaired other bodies that faced challenges and I believe, given my view, and given the type of person that I am,
I feel that I can rise to challenges.
“I believe that I have the will and the wherewithal to overcome challenges, because my approach to life is that everything should be done equitably, fairly and because it is the right thing to do.”
Minister of Health, Hon. Shaun Malcolm, who joined Misick in meeting the staff, said he has confidence that the new chair will get the job done.
“I have full confidence that Hon. Lillian Swann-Misick can accomplish that goal in the best interests of the people of this country. She enjoys my full confidence as the minister.”
Last week, members of a newly established NHIB appeals tribunal were taken through training by members of the judiciary to equip them with the knowledge on how to properly adjudicate claims made to the board.
Commenting on this appeals
Rubis launches $9k summer promotion
Rubis Turks and Caicos Limited launched its first summer promotion following the introduction of its Rubis Ultra Tec fuels to the public midFebruary.
The summer promotion, Rubis Ultra Summer Giveaway promises to excite new and loyal customers!
Motorists who purchase $25 or more in fuel at any Rubis service station in Providenciales or Rubis Fulford in Grand Turk will have the opportunity to win over $9,000 in prizes.
Rubis Sales Executive, Zaneta Burton asserts motorists can choose from seven Rubis service stations with gasoline or diesel to easily participate and win! “We want residents
to experience Rubis Ultra Tec fuels, premium fuel formulated for optimum performance and more miles for the dollar.”
The grand prizes for this giveaway are six months’, four months’, and two months’ supply of free fuel. Additionally, customers can win amazing weekly prizes valued at $500 that include grocery gift cards and travel vouchers.
To enter, customers must take a photo of their Rubis fuel receipt and upload the photo by scanning the QR Code, visit www.rubis-turksandcaicos.com or visit Rubis Turks & Caicos Facebook page. The promotion ends September 11th, 2023.
tribunal, the health minister said the move to establish the tribunal is part of the process they are undertaking to refocus the board.
He stated: “It is a requirement in the Ordinance to have an appeals process, so this is fulfilling that mandate, and with that team, I do have full confidence that that area would get cleaned up as well.”
Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Health, Desiree Lewis – also present – said she too is confident in Swann-Misick’s abilities to ably get the job done.
“Knowing Swann-Misick and having worked with her for a number of years, I know she comes with a strong background in governance. I believe she will bring value to the board and to the government and working along with the NIB.”
Lewis added: “We want fairness, but one of the key things that we also want is best health
outcomes. We are looking for the changes as it relates to treatment abroad, the management of the scheme, and new ideas as to how we can best serve the people of the Turks and Caicos Islands, while
ensuring we work in collaboration with the hospital and the ministry of health, particularly our primary healthcare department, as all three organisations should work in tandem.”
Calls made for more female politicians in region
A call for the inclusion and involvement of young women was echoed last Saturday, at the opening of the 13th Conference of the Commonwealth Women’s Parliamentarian, CWP, of the region.
Delegates from the Caribbean,
Americas and Atlantic Region gathered, for the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic, to commence a two-day conference under the theme “Building a Resilient Region in the face of Global Challenges”.
Keynote speaker, Mrs Doreen
Quelch-Missick, Attorney at Law and President of the Labour Tribunal, highlighted the absence of young women and members of the youth parliament.
“Where are our 5th and 6th formers? We need to encourage them from early so that they are
able to take their rightful places,” she said.
This gap was first acknowledged by the CWP Chair, Hon Valerie Woods, Speaker of the House of Representatives of Belize in her opening remarks.
“We must dismantle real and
perceived guides of women’s political participation and support the next generation of political leaders”, Missick said, as she called for the promotion of gender equality and empowerment of all women and girls at all levels.
She noted that at some point
during her stint as chair and president of the Human Rights Commission of the Turks and Caicos Islands, between 2014 to 2010, women in parliamentary positions were at an all-time high of 46%.
This representation, she noted, has taken a significant downturn since then.
Per the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals, women’s representation across small island states is not where it should be at this juncture.
Missick charged the delegates, both males and females, to seek out women of different ages and
aid in their preparation to serve in parliaments and women’s parliamentary caucuses across the region.
Bemoaning the lack of political will to implement gender-affirming policies, she added that parliaments are to adopt and strengthen sound policies and enforceable legislation striving for social cohesion.
Domestic violence is a common scourge, especially plaguing women, throughout the region.
Missick believes that this issue has not received the necessary attention and response as needed in the Turks and Caicos Islands.
“Where is our safe house? Eight
budget cycles have passed and still no safe house”, she exclaimed.
She firmly encouraged the delegates to advocate for more of an inclusive parliament and work together to protect the interest of women with gender-responsive legislation and protection.
Topics discussed in depth over the two days included the Critical Role of Women Parliamentarians and Women Caucuses in Democratic Governance, Current Experiences of Women in Parliament across the regions and Youth Crime in the Caribbean and the role of Women Parliamentarians in combating this Regional Challenge.
Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Belize, Bermuda, British Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands, Jamaica, Montserrat, St Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia and Trinidad were represented.
The Governor, HE Dileeni Daniel-Selvaratnam, Deputy Governor, HE Anya Williams, the current CPA Caribbean, Americas and the Atlantic Regional Chair, Hon Gordon J. Burton, Speaker of the House of Assembly of the Turks and Caicos Islands, were among the representatives of the Turks and Caicos Islands.
The CWP represents over 3,000 women parliamentarians, in over
180 Commonwealth national and sub-national Parliaments, across all nine regions of the CPA.
The Association’s mission is to promote the representation of women in CPA Branches and Women’s full and equal participation in all political and parliamentary leadership at all levels.
The two-day CWP 13th conference was a part of the 45th Annual Conference of the Caribbean, The Americas and the Atlantic Region of the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association held July 21 to 28 in Providenciales, Turks and Caicos.
Footfall is the joy
‘Les Grenadières’ make history at the 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup
The assertion that I am not exactly an embodiment of athleticism is not only a monumental understatement but is also an affront to a man named Gary Jones, a fanatical Physical Education teacher from Wales. It was Mr Jones who once expressed his contempt, saying, “your attitude to sports is an insult to sportsmanship”. I epitomised everything this man loathed. An insufferable wannabe teenage intellectual who listened to Beethoven and revelled in the works of Thomas Mann. My sportrelated triumphs were not found in exertion or achievements but in the devising of strategies to exert as little effort as possible even if this meant cutting a gruelling ‘track and field’ exercise short by hailing a taxi. It shall come as no surprise that I managed to receive a failing grade in Physical Education, an “achievement” I viewed as a “badge of honour” at the time.
Decades later, while still not an enthusiastic athlete, I have come to appreciate physical exercise through hiking, especially around Salt Cay. Equally, I’ve found joy in following football as a spectator, whether at local fixtures or watching international matches.
As the celebrated author Terry Pratchett so eloquently put it, “The
BY TITUS DE BOERthing about football - the important thing about football - is that it is not just about football”. This statement resonates especially when commenting on Women’s football and no team in recent football history has impressed me and much of the football world more than Haiti’s ‘Les Grenadières’.
The ‘Les Grenadières’ or ‘The Soldiers’, recently made sporting headlines when they won against Chile by a score of 2:1 and thereby, unexpectedly, qualified for the 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup hosted jointly in Australia and New Zealand.
‘Les Grenadières’ represent a nation that has long struggled to heal the deep wounds left by colonialism and slavery, in large part because of the burdensome debt levied by France in exchange for its freedom. Haiti is the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere and over the last 13 years its citizens
have endured deadly earthquakes and devastating floods. Since the assassination of its President, in 2021, gangs have controlled much of the area in and around the capital Port-au-Prince. With vigilantes having taken up arms against these gangs, the United Nations has recently called for an international peacekeeping force to help restore order. Against this bleak background, Haiti’s participation in the 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup is nothing short of miraculous, especially when you consider the fact that this is a team with no corporate sponsorship whatsoever and its national football association in complete disarray.
The Haitian team, which is placed 53rd in the FIFA world teams rankings, is also one of the youngest to ever represent a country. Most of its players were children in 2010 when a 7.0-magnitude earthquake struck the island nation, killing
approximately 300,000 people and levelling much of the capital, Portau-Prince. “It’s something that no Haitian has ever forgotten,” its star player, Melchie Dumornay, recently remarked in an interview, “So many of our loved ones died. There’s been a lot of sadness, despair, and pain, both emotional and physical. It taught us to be more careful, to take a more serious approach to what we do in life, and to always be determined, because we can tell ourselves that we’ve still got a life to live.”
If you thought the prospects of facing England, China and Denmark at the group level would have intimidated the Haitian team, think again. Hardship has a peculiar way of forging a spirit of iron-clad tenacity. This spirit was on full display on Saturday 22 July, when Haiti squared off against England in its group stage opener. England, ranked fourth in
the world, understandably bursting with self-confidence, clearly had underestimated the resilience of the Haitian team. For much of the game, Melchie Dumornay looked like the best player on the field, while goalkeeper Kerly Théus blocked shot after shot. With Haiti down only 1-0, in the 80th minute, striker Roseline Éloissaint sprinted half the length of the pitch, scooped up a pass, tore past three English defenders and launched a right-footed laser strike that would have found the back net had it not been for an agile diving save from England’s goalkeeper, Mary Earps.
Realistically, the odds of Haiti progressing to the knockout stage were always going to be long. On Friday, 28 July, they put up a valiant effort against China, the Asian champions, but narrowly lost. Haiti’s next opponents are Denmark who are ranked 13th in the world. Yet, the fact that Haiti qualified for this year’s World Cup is an achievement with which ‘Les Grenadières’ have written a new page in the history of world football. In the words of the Haitian midfielder, Danielle Etienne, “There’s a lot of unhappiness in the country and
FortisTCI breaks ground for transformative solar microgrid in Twin Islands
BY DELANA ISLESAs promised earlier this year, FortisTCI has started construction of the territory’s first solar microgrid in North and Middle Caicos that will see the Twin Islands being 30% powered by solar energy.
On July 14, the ground was officially broken for construction to begin on the 1.2MW solar plus battery microgrid at Fortis’ location in Kew, North Caicos.
Once commissioned in 2024, the project will reduce the amount of fuel needed to generate electricity, thereby lowering carbon emissions and the cost of energy production over time in the two islands.
“We continue to advocate for supportive and modernised regulations to help advance the energy transition,” Fortis said following the groundbreaking.
In June, the utility company officially signed the contract for the construction of TCI’s first solar microgrid on the Twin Islands which starts this year, with Salt Cay next in line for a similar project in 2024.
Both microgrids represent an investment of approximately $8 million.
The battery system will store solar energy for release when needed for up to a maximum of four hours and allow the twin island's electricity system to disconnect and operate independently from the grid, if necessary. This will support the system's response and recovery in a mass power outage.
Both islands receive electricity via an undersea cable from Providenciales, thus the battery energy storage system will help to reduce grid disruptions and
strengthen redundancy.
Speaking at the commissioning ceremony were President and Chief Executive Officer of FortisTCI, Ruth Forbes and Chief Executive Officer at Compass Solar, Justin Cunningham.
Forbes said the mega grid project is transformative, not just for North and Middle, but the entire Turks and Caicos Islands.
“We are building a new energy system that will integrate solar with the current energy source,” Forbes said.
Canadian Solar, one of the world's largest solar photovoltaic product providers, will deliver the solar panel modules. Caribbeanbased renewable energy firm, Compass Solar, will lead the installation of the solar panels. Hitachi Energy, a global technology company, will provide a battery energy storage system to support the integration of this latest stream of renewable energy into the grid.
Chief Executive Officer at Compass Solar, Justin Cunningham said his company is excited to get the project off the ground, noting that the project will provide opportunities for locals in the Twin Islands.
Noting that it is a unique location, thus a challenging endeavour, Cunningham stated: “This is removed from the traditional areas of where we would build this, this is a little bit more remote, but we are really looking forward to bringing this microgrid to North and Middle Caicos.
“We are going to seek to maintain our commitment that we’ve had throughout our company’s history of a high level of quality and high level of product that we are going to install for you, and most importantly
was a great day for
providing opportunities locally for North and Middle Caicos residents in order to be part of this, to learn and gain knowledge on how we are going to build this and maybe have some of that knowledge stay here and provide opportunities going forward for other systems.”
MarketingThe twin islands microgrid is the company’s largest green energy investment to date and is intended to create value across various local sectors.
What this means for the consumer is that the grid will be more efficient and reliable.
Bahamas commits to sending 150 officers to Haiti if UN passes resolution
THE Bahamas is committed to sending 150 officers to Haiti as part of a multi-national force to curb the violence in that country, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a press statement this week.
The commitment marks an evolution in the Davis administration’s public stance on the matter. Prime Minister Philip “Brave” Davis previously said leaders hoped “boots on the ground will not be necessary” in Haiti.
Privately, officials acknowledged that a multi-national force in Haiti is far from certain and faces a significant barrier: Russia and China, with their veto powers, may not support a UN Security Council resolution establishing the force. The resolution is the condition for The Bahamas’ involvement.
“We now urge the passing of a UN Security Council Resolution in support of this force,” the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs said on Tuesday.
Asked who would comprise the group of people sent to Haiti, Foreign Affairs Minister Fred Mitchell said defence force officers “mainly”.
“The Royal Bahamas Defence Force prepares for all eventualities,” RBDF Commodore Raymond King said yesterday.
“I was made aware of the article from a Kenyan news source today. However, I have not been advised from the government on that matter as purported.”
The Bahamas’ commitment comes after Kenya said it would send 1,000 police officers to lead a multi-national force in Haiti.
Kenya said it would launch an assessment mission in Haiti in the coming weeks and, through the support of a UNSC resolution, send officers to help train and assist Haiti’s police “to restore normalcy
RBDF officers pictured earlier this year
in the country and protect strategic installations”.
After Kenya’s announcement, the United States said it would soon introduce a resolution to the UNSC authorising a multi-national force to Haiti. The US recently announced the withdrawal of nonemergency personnel from its embassy in Port-au-Prince and has urged US residents to leave that country.
For months, Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry has called for a “specialised armed force” from other countries to curb the crisis in his country. According to the US State Department, the chaos there is worsening, with high reports of kidnapping, crime, civil unrest and
poor health care infrastructure.
“The Bahamas looks forward to working with Kenya and other partners in Haiti to assist in efforts to bring about peace and stability,” the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said yesterday. “We appreciate that this is, as the Kenyan Foreign Minister Alfred Mutua stated, a decision to ‘stand with persons of African descent across the world, including in the Caribbean, and aligns with the African Union’s diaspora policy and our own commitment to Pan Africanism’. We also look forward to cooperating with hemispheric partners, including the United States and Canada.”
“The Bahamas will continue
to support the CARICOM-led Eminent Persons Group, which includes former Prime Ministers Perry Christie, Dr Kenny Anthony of St Lucia, and Bruce Golding of Jamaica, and the Organisation of American States’ Haiti Working Group chaired by Trinidad and Tobago. These regional and Diasporic approaches to addressing insecurity caused by gang violence are critical to creating a safe space to foster political consensus and to restore democratic order.”
Between 1994 and 1996, 141 defence force officers conducted security operations in Haiti as part of a United Nations peacekeeping operation. (Tribune242)
US advises nationals not to travel to Haiti
The US State Department is urging Americans to stay away from the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) country of Haiti, due to kidnapping, crime, civil unrest, and poor health care infrastructure.
The Department issued a Level Four Alert – Do not travel to Haiti, saying the updated measure reflects the ordered departure of non-emergency US government personnel and eligible family members for the Embassy in Portau-Prince.
“US citizens in Haiti should depart Haiti as soon as possible by commercial or other privately available transportation options, in light of the current security situation and infrastructure challenges,” the State Department said, urging nationals to monitor local news and only leave the country when considered safe.
It said kidnapping is widespread, and victims regularly include US citizens.
“Kidnappers may use sophisticated planning or take advantage of unplanned opportunities, and even convoys have been attacked. Kidnapping
involve ransom
citizen
have been physically harmed during kidnappings. Victim’s families have paid thousands of dollars to rescue their family members,” the State Department said.
It said violent crimes, often involving the use of firearms, such as armed robbery, carjackings, and kidnappings for ransom that include US citizens are common.
“Mob killings against presumed criminals have been on the rise
since late April. Travellers are sometimes followed and violently attacked and robbed shortly after leaving the Port-au-Prince international airport.
“Robbers and carjackers also attack private vehicles stuck in
heavy traffic congestion and often target lone drivers, particularly women. As a result, the US Embassy requires its personnel to use official transportation to and from the airport.”
The State Department said protests, demonstrations, tire burning, and roadblocks are frequent, unpredictable, and can turn violent.
“The US government is extremely limited in its ability to provide emergency services to US citizens in Haiti,” the Department said, noting that local police generally lack the resources to respond effectively to serious criminal incidents.
“Shortages of gasoline, electricity, medicine, and medical supplies continue throughout much of Haiti. Public and private medical clinics and hospitals often lack qualified medical staff and even basic medical equipment and resources.”
The Department said that US government personnel are limited only to the confined area around the Embassy and are prohibited from walking in Port-au-Prince.
The US State Department said kidnapping is widespread, and victims regularly include US citizens
cases often
negotiations and US
victims
Regional News
African, Caribbean nations join forces to call for reparations for slavery
REPRESENTATIVES from various African and Caribbean entities joined forces at a historic event this week in the capital of Barbados, Bridgetown, to demand reparations for slavery and its legacy in today’s society.
The University of the West Indies (UWI), the Economic, Social and Cultural Council of the African Union (AU), Barbados’ government, grantmaking network Open Society Foundations and the Caribbean Pan African Network teamed up to “call for reparations for historical crimes”.
The meeting in Bridgetown, from Monday to Thursday, included strategy sessions and plenaries and marked the beginning of an “intercontinental campaign”, the UWI said in a statement, describing it as “ground-breaking”.
Attendees included ambassadors and representatives
from AU member states and the Caribbean Community political and economic union (CARICOM).
“This is a historic moment… humanity cannot go forward with all the toxic interferences
of colonisation,” Hilary Beckles, head of the CARICOM Reparations Commission, told a news conference yesterday. “We have to clean up this mess to allow humanity to function.”
The CARICOM reparations commission, which was set up to seek reparations from former colonial powers such as the United Kingdom, France and Portugal, “sees the persistent racial victimisation of the descendants of slavery and genocide as the root cause of their suffering today”, it said in its 10-point reparation plan.
Outcomes of the meeting include a proposal for a roadmap for cooperation between the AU and CARICOM, the UWI statement said.
“It is crucial to recognise how slavery, colonialism and racism intersect and impact the lives of Black people around the world,” said AU official Youssouf Mandoha.
From the 15th to the 19th century, at least 12.5 million Africans were kidnapped and forcibly transported by European ships and merchants and sold into slavery. Those who survived the
brutal voyage ended up toiling on plantations under inhumane conditions in the Americas, mostly in Brazil and the Caribbean, while others profited from their labour.
Barbados, where the meeting took place, received 600,000 enslaved Africans between 1627 and 1833, who were put to work in sugar plantations, earning fortunes for the English owners.
The Caribbean island ditched Britain’s late Queen Elizabeth as head of state in 2021 and renewed its campaign for reparations.
The idea of paying reparations or making other amends for slavery has a long history but the movement is gaining momentum worldwide.
The EU said earlier this month that Europe’s slave-trading past inflicted “untold suffering” on millions of people and hinted at the need for reparations for what it described as a “crime against humanity”. (Reuters)
Bahamas: Inflation’s high but ‘not as frightening’
Inflation “may not be as frightening as it was a year to 18 months ago”, a governance reformer argued this week, despite food and beverage costs rising by almost 13 per cent during the year to April 2023.
Hubert Edwards, the Organisation for Responsible Governance’s (ORG) economic development committee head, told Tribune Business there were some signs that the US battle against inflation is having success and that this could eventually rub off on The Bahamas given its status as this country’s major trading partner.
Acknowledging that food and energy costs continue to be the “major driver” of Bahamian inflation, and the sustained upward pressure on multiple costs across the economy, he added that this nation may be able to afford “to wait and see” if the Federal Reserve’s concerted interest rate rises can bring US inflation down closer to its 2 percent target within the coming months.
“Inflation is always a concern because it reduces buying power,” Mr Edwards told this newspaper. “If there’s any good news on the inflation front it’s that the US seems to some extent to be levelling out on inflation and, because it’s our major trading partner and The Bahamas is a net importer of inflation, that augurs well for the country.”
US inflation dropped to 3 percent in June, representing a two-year low, but consumer prices remain high. The increase was the
smallest for more than two years since March 2021 and down from a four-decade high of 9.1 percent in June 2022.
“In The Bahamas, the big thing which is affecting us is that inflation on food and energy are the major drivers of local inflation,” Mr Edwards added. “Those two areas are also maintaining a higher rate than in the US. I think overall, while it seems with us for a while, inflation may not be as frightening as it was a year ago or a year-anda-half ago, so maybe we can wait and see if the US gets inflation down to its 2 percent target.
“If that happens this year it could be a major shift on the local front if they get anywhere close to that.” However, Mr Edwards warned that further interest rate hikes by the US Federal Reserve will increase debt servicing costs that have to be paid by Bahamian taxpayers as costs on the Government’s US dollar variable rate bond issues will also rise. (Tribune242)
Meanwhile Kwasi Thompson, the Opposition’s finance spokesman, urged the Government to do more as inflation “continues to ravage ordinary Bahamians” through the continuing cost of living crisis driven by price rises such as the 12.7 percent food and beverage hikes in the year to April 2023.
He accused the Davis administration of making this worse by the up to 163 percent increase in Bahamas Power & Light’s (BPL) fuel charge, and
71 percent rise in the all-in cost of electricity, due to the failure to support the utility’s fuel hedge with more cut-price oil purchases.
As a result, Mr Thompson said energy cost rises were having a “devastating inflationary effect” on Bahamian households and businesses. He added: “Bahamians have seen their light bills double and triple, and also face a second whammy when businesses have to increase their prices to allow them to meet higher energy costs.”
He called on the Government to bring further relief to vulnerable Bahamians by expanding the
electricity assistance programme under social services; eliminating VAT on breadbasket food items; and providing energy and inflation assistance grants for small businesses via the Small Business Development Centre. The exminister of state for finance also urged the provision of free energy audits and a public education campaign on energy saving measures.
John Rolle, the Central Bank’s governor, warned earlier this week that Bahamians will have to wait for BPL’s soaring energy bills to ease before “the moderation of
inflation starts to look more like” other countries.
Acknowledging that the “highest level of inflation we have observed in The Bahamas did occur post-2022”, as numerous families continue to grapple with the cost of living crisis, Mr Rolle said the country’s status as an importing nation means any easing of prices here will occur after the same is experienced in the US and elsewhere.
“The point to stress for The Bahamas is that the timing is delayed partly because the adjustments that we are seeing, save the electricity and related costs, are much later than those that are already taking place in other countries,” he added. “To some extent we are going to have to experience the full amount of whatever adjustment and catch up that is likely to happen in the electricity costs before we see the inflation moderation start to look more like what is happening abroad.
“It should be stated that the peak rates of inflation that we have seen in The Bahamas so far did not reach the rates that were attained in the US.” The Central Bank, in its justreleased monthly report for June, said: “Average domestic consumer price inflation, as measured by the All Bahamas Retail Price Index, firmed to 5.6 percent during the 12 months to April from 3.8 percent in the corresponding 2022 period, reflective of the pass-through effects of higher international oil prices and other costlier imports.
Bill Barr says Donald Trump
Former US attorney general Bill Barr has spoken out against Donald Trump ahead of his court appearance for allegedly plotting to overturn his election defeat in 2020.
Mr Barr, who was appointed by the former president, said that Mr Trump “knew well he lost the election”.
Mr Trump is accused by federal prosecutors of lying repeatedly about mass voter fraud and pressing officials to change results to keep him in power.
He will be formally charged later.
The 77-year-old Republican, who is running for election again, is expected to plead not guilty when
he appears in court in Washington at 16:00 EDT (20:00 GMT). He has denounced the charges as politically motivated.
Trump lawyer John Lauro has called the indictment an attack on free speech and said: “There’s nothing more protected under the First Amendment [the right to free speech] than political speech.”
But Mr Barr, who quit the top job in the US legal system shortly after Joe Biden won that election in November 2020, said free speech is not a valid defence.
“They are not attacking his First Amendment right. He can say whatever he wants, he can even lie. He can even tell people that the election was stolen when he knew
better,” Mr Barr told CNN.
“But that does not protect you from entering into a conspiracy.”
By saying his former boss knew he had lost the election, Mr Barr is undermining another plank of Mr Trump’s defence which is that he was not defrauding the American people because he always believed he had won.
He added that the former president’s alleged actions, as outlined in the indictment, are “nauseating” and “despicable”.
In this latest indictment, Mr Trump faces four counts, including conspiracy to defraud the US, obstructing an official proceeding and conspiracy against the rights of citizens to have their votes counted.
Lucy Letby: Juror discharged in nurse murder trial
A juror deliberating in the murder trial of nurse Lucy Letby has been discharged.
Judge James Goss said the move was for “good personal reasons” and it was “not possible” for the person to continue.
The remaining 11 jurors will continue their discussions on Friday, having so far deliberated for more than 60 hours.
Ms Letby, 33, is accused of murdering seven babies and attempting to kill 10 others at Countess of Chester Hospital between June 2015 and June 2016.
Judge Goss thanked the jury member for serving on the trial for the last 10 months.
He said: “Thank you very much for your devotion.” (BBC)
Arrests after Greenpeace protest at Rishi Sunak’s North Yorkshire home
Five people have been arrested after activists climbed on the roof of the prime minister’s home to protest at 100 new North Sea oil and gas licences.
Campaigners had unfurled “oil-black fabric” on the house in a North Yorkshire village, Greenpeace said.
Two men and two women were arrested on suspicion of causing criminal damage and public nuisance after they returned to ground level at about 13:00 BST.
A third man was also arrested on suspicion of causing a public nuisance.
North Yorkshire Police said all those arrested remained in police custody.
Rishi Sunak’s office confirmed neither the prime minister nor his family were present at the time.
One of the protesters had earlier told the BBC they had scaled the building to “bring home to the prime minister the really serious consequences of a new drilling frenzy in the North Sea”.
Campaigners had unfurled “oil-black fabric” on the house in a North Yorkshire village, Greenpeace said
North Yorkshire Police said the force had been made aware of the incident at Mr Sunak’s constituency home at about 08:05.
Officers had “contained the area” and no-one had entered the building, a spokesperson said. A large cordon was put in place
and specialist police liaison officers were used to bring the protesters down from the roof of the property, they added.
Assistant Chief Constable Elliot Foskett, said: “There was no threat to the wider public throughout this incident which has now been
brought to a safe conclusion.”
When asked about the incident, Deputy Prime Minister Oliver Dowden said he thought the British people were “sick of these stupid stunts”.
Labour’s shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper said the incident was “disgraceful”.
“This is against the law and rightly the police are taking enforcement action.
“The prime minister’s home and family should never be targeted in this way.”
‘UNDER ASSAULT’
Meanwhile, the Conservative chair of the Commons Foreign Affairs Committee Alicia Kearns said the action by Greenpeace was “unacceptable”.
She said the family homes of politicians should “not be under assault”.
“Before long police will need to be stationed outside the home of every MP,” she said.
Responding to the protest, a
No 10 source said: “We make no apology for taking the right approach to ensure our energy security, using the resources we have here at home so we are never reliant on aggressors like Putin for our energy.
“We are also investing in renewables and our approach supports 1000s of British jobs.”
A former deputy chief constable of North Yorkshire Police said he was “absolutely astonished” by the incident.
Peter Walker, who left the force in 2003, told BBC Radio York: “You really have to wonder how people have been able to gain access to the prime minister’s residence without hindrance.”
Mr Sunak purchased the house after becoming the MP for the rural Richmond constituency in 2015.
The Grade II listed property was built in 1826 and has extensive gardens.
In 2021, planning permission was granted for an annex with a swimming pool, gym and tennis court. (BBC)
‘knew well he lost the election’
World News
Canada PM Justin Trudeau and wife Sophie separate
Canada’s PM Justin Trudeau and his wife Sophie are separating after 18 years, following “meaningful and difficult conversations”.
The couple said they would remain “a close family with deep love and respect” in an Instagram post.
They were married in Montreal in 2005 and have three children together.
In a statement, Mr Trudeau’s office said that while the couple had signed separation agreement they will still make public appearances.
“They have worked to ensure that all legal and ethical steps with regards to their decision to separate have been taken, and will continue to do so moving forward,” the statement said, adding they would be on holiday as a family next week.
Sophie Grégoire Trudeau will no longer take part in official duties, nor will the government help in arranging her own appearances,
Canadian media reports.
The couple have asked for privacy for the “well-being” of their children, Xavier, 15, EllaGrace 14, and Hadrien, nine.
“We remain a close family with deep love and respect for each other and for everything we have built and will continue to build,” Mr Trudeau, 51, and Ms Grégoire Trudeau, 48, said.
They have been seen together publicly less frequently in recent years, though they attended the coronation of King Charles III together in May and hosted US President Joe Biden in Canada in March.
When Mr Trudeau first became prime minister in 2015, the couple appeared in a high-profile Vogue spread where she told the magazine that at the end of dinner after their first date he said, “I’m 31 years old, and I’ve been waiting for you for 31 years”.
In a wedding anniversary post on Instagram in May 2022, Ms Grégoire Trudeau wrote about the challenges of long-term relationships, saying “we have navigated through sunny days, heavy storms, and everything in between”.
Mr Trudeau has also spoken about the challenges in their marriage, writing in his 2014 autobiography: “Our marriage isn’t
perfect, and we have had difficult ups and downs, yet Sophie remains my best friend, my partner, my love. We are honest with each other, even when it hurts.”
The two began dating in 2003, when Ms Grégoire Trudeau was working as a TV personality. She is also known for her charity work around mental health and eating disorders.
Coincidentally, Ms Grégoire
Trudeau had been at school with Mr Trudeau’s younger brother, Michel.
Mr Trudeau is the second Canadian prime minister to announce separation while in office. The first was his father, the late Pierre Elliott Trudeau, and mother Margaret Trudeau, who announced their split in 1977 after six years together. They later divorced. (BBC)
Africa’s latest coup is a headache for the West and an opportunity for Russia
Days after the democratically elected president of Niger was deposed in a military coup, thousands of supporters of the takeover thronged the French embassy in the nation’s capital to deliver an unmistakable message to their former colonial power and its Western allies.
As President Mohamed Bazoum was being held captive by his soldiers at the presidential palace in Niamey, tense scenes played out down the road where pro-coup Nigeriens, some waving Russian flags, chanted “long live Putin” and “down with France” as a plaque at the embassy was torn down.
The images reverberated through the halls of power at the Elysee Palace in Paris, thousands of miles away. French President Emmanuel Macron threatened retaliation against any attacks on French nationals and condemned the coup as “completely illegitimate and profoundly dangerous for the Nigeriens, Niger and the whole region.”
The United States and other Western nations also condemned the coup, and a bloc of Western African countries threatened to intervene militarily if Bazoum was not reinstated.
US President Joe Biden called for the immediate release of Bazoum in a written statement
commemorating Niger’s Independence Day, saying Washington “stands with the people of Niger” as the country faces a “grave challenge to its democracy.
The toppling of Bazoum was just the latest in a spate of recent coups stretching from one side of Africa to the other. Five countries in western and central Africa have been seized by military juntas in the past three years, five of them former French colonies.
The coups have unfolded within
the context of a wider struggle between the West and Russia for influence in Africa, where experts say a rising tide of anger in former French colonies has left the door open for the Kremlin. While there is no sign that Russia helped instigate Niger’s rebellion, Moscow has sought to take advantage of antiWestern sentiment around the region in recent years.
US officials warn that the Russian mercenary group Wagner, which helps prop up several military juntas in the region, could seek to exploit
the crisis in Niger. Wagner boss Yevgeny Prigozhin has celebrated the putsch and offered to help the country’s new leaders.
As Western countries raced to evacuate their people from Niamey on Wednesday, one of Niger’s coup leaders flew with a delegation to neighboring Mali, where hundreds of Wagner contractors are stationed, to seek support from that nation’s military ruler.
AN IMPORTANT WESTERN ALLY
The coup in Niger has deprived Western nations, particularly France and the United States, of a key ally in a troubled region.
The largest country in West Africa, Niger had been touted as a democratic success story on the continent and Bazoum was seen as a crucial partner in the fight against Islamist jihadists in the region.
About 1,100 US troops are stationed in the country, including at a drone base that aids the Nigerien military in countering insurgents affiliated to ISIS and al Qaeda.
The French military also maintains two permanent bases in the Sahel region, one of which is in Niamey. This was the main base for its flagship Operation Barkhane, a broader French antiterror initiative targeting militants
across the Sahel, including in Burkina Faso.
The number of violent events involving militant Islamist groups in the Sahel has doubled since 2021, according to a report published Monday by the Africa Center for Strategic Studies, a Pentagon think-tank.
Niger is also a leading supply of uranium to the European Union and produces around 5% of the world’s supply of the mineral, according to the World Nuclear Association.
ANTI-FRENCH BACKLASH
Despite its wealth of resources, Niger remains one of the poorest countries in the world. Many Nigeriens, especially in the younger generation, see France as responsible for prevailing poverty levels in their country.
This resentment has spilled over into a burgeoning anti-French sentiment that is rising across the former French colonies in West and Central Africa, said Oluwole Ojewale, an analyst with the Institute for Security Studies.
“There’s a sense that even though France granted independence … they are still tied to the umbilical cord of France. There’s a subtle thinking that nothing takes place in Francophone countries without the tacit approval of France,” Ojewale told CNN.
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OFFERED FOR SALE IN THE TURKS & CAICOS ISLANDS
A well-established Ceramic Arts Studio is available for sale on the thriving island of Providenciales in the Turks & Caicos Islands.
The Studio is well-connected to local galleries, resorts and retailers, and the current owner, who wishes to semi-retire, will gladly stay on to oversee the transition. She is also interested in maintaining some of her own production in an arrangement attractive to the new owner, and in continuing to teach ceramics classes on a commission basis.
The Studio currently leases 1,500 square feet on two floors, and there is also an owned 40-foot storage container adjacent to the Studio. The current lease runs through November, 2023, and includes the option to renew for a further two years at a rent to be negotiated.
Studio equipment includes three computer-controlled kilns, two throwing wheels, a custom electric slab roller, a pug mill for the recycling of used clay, a clay extruder with assorted dies and a full range of molds and dies to facilitate highvolume production. Inventory comprises raw clay, paints and glazes and a wide selection of plaster molds, as well as glaze-combination samples and a complete selection of general and specialized tools.
Full details of the Company’s assets and operating results from the year 2020 onward are available to prospective purchasers upon the signing of a Confidentiality and Non-Disclosure Agreement.
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Offered at $USD 250,000.
Interested parties are invited to reply by e-mail to lorne@mgmtsupport.tc. 38003
United Way TCI engage youths in conversations on literacy and future plans
A three-series enrichment programme put on by United Way TCI saw members of the community engaging with youths, aged 7 to 12, on their social skills and academic aspirations.
Started two months ago, the three-series community conversation was aimed at finding ways to improve the TCI’s literacy rate, through programmes and initiatives.
United Way hosted Canapés and Conversation for the ladies, Grazing and Conversation for the men and Playground and Conversation for the children.
The children’s conversation started with enrolment of 65 children in a three-week enrichment programme where they were assessed and put into groups that matched their academic and social skills.
“It is now week three and we are so proud to put them on display for our community. We have learned so much from them and about them, which we will be using to create more fun learning programmes for them,” United Way TCI Board Chairman Mark Fulford relayed this week.
While the focus was on academic support, other areas of interest popped up during the
sessions.
“Because we had a mixed group of children, we realised that we have some very brilliant minds that if not mentored can lead down wrong paths.”
One of those “wrong paths”, according to the organisation is the interest displayed in nontraditional careers, and while not wrong, they said it was the misconception shared by some of the youths that they will not need academics to achieve their goals.
Fulford said: “These children are not interested in traditional careers, they want to be YouTubers, Tic Tokers, Gymnast, Dancers, Models and whilst they are great careers, the children seem to think that it can be achieved without going to school, why waste their time in school when money can be made easily overnight.”
United Way asserted that this mindset is dangerous, and the youth of today need appropriate guidance about their futures.
“Therefore, we were happy to have members of our community present to share in this conversation.”
Attending the three-week sessions to share their knowledge and wisdom with the youths were Minister of Education Rachel
Taylor; Director of Education Edgar Howell; Education Curriculum Development Officer Elisann Delancy; Principal of Louise Thomas High School Kordell Forbes; Former Education Minister Karen Malcolm; United Way TCI Board Chairman Mark Fulford; Board Vice Chairman Rex Messam; and Treasurer Snjenza Andrews.
Also sharing with the youths were community business partners Drexwell Seymour and Carl Mills, as well as community influencers and volunteers Melanie Smith; Andy Missick; Antwon Walkin; and Miss Teen Grand Turk Danya Russell.
Parents were also invited to listen in and share in the conversation, as their children were engaged on topics such as school life and their future plans.
United Way said the goal of the programme was to help 65 students improve their reading, maths and science skills through fun learning activities.
“I can truly say that we have accomplished that goal and the children got an opportunity to display some of their learning and fun activities with community partners, which left them feeling valued, inspired and confident,” Fulford said. (DELANA ISLES)
Russell and Dickenson crowned queens at TI SummaJam
THE much-anticipated summer festival, the TI SummaJam, showcased the beauty, intelligence and talent of TCIslanders and crowned two new Grand Turk queens in the process.
The packed multi-day event held recently, proved to be a hub of activities. Despite the talent on display, which unveiled talented teens and young women full of poise, grace, beauty and intelligence, two stood out.
In the Ms Teen Grand Turk 2023 pageant, Danya Russell, 14, sponsored by Jack Shack, won the overall title and every section, including: Best Introduction, Best Sports Segment, Best Dress and Best Talent.
Voniqua Skippings, sponsored by Chuka Tours, finished as the first runner up and Sierra Samuels, sponsored by Cargo Express, was the second runner-up.
The three top finishers won cash and gift prizes, while all contestants were given complementary prizes by the organisers and gift certificates sponsored by Gender Affairs.
In the Ms Grand Turk Pageant, the main event of the festival, six highly competitive young ladies vied for the title and although a plethora of talent was on display, crowd favourite Ms Bereniece Dickenson, sponsored by Olympic Construction, emerged victorious.
Along with the overall title, she also won Best Introduction.
Erline Dorastine, sponsored by Provo Water, finished with the Best Dress award and in the first runnerup position, while Tinell Garland sponsored by Grand Turk Liquors finished as the second runner-up.
The Best Talent went to Widlina Brevil sponsored by Long Bay Express.
The TI SummaJam was more than just pageants, it was a spectacle of activities, perfectly packaged for the TCI as it showcased our history, culture, cuisine, music, talent and much more in a clean and safe environment.
The promoters, the Gardiners, along with their teams went all out in bringing the event to the people.
Prior to the pageants, the participants took part in a motorcade. They were chauffeured in their own personalised Hummer sponsored by Funtastic Tours.
This was a promotion of the pageants as the girls were introduced to the nation as they waved to bystanders lining the streets who assembled just to get that first glimpse of the beauties— and they were not disappointed.
The event officially opened on Thursday, July 20 and the evening activities began with an African dance choreographed by Cleon Astwood and Kia Swann.
This was followed by the teen pageant.
One day later, the participants of the feature event, took to the stage for the Ms Grand Turk pageant.
Patrons also witnessed the 6th Annual Music and Culture Awards, which honoured 11 persons who have made outstanding contributions to the music and culture segment of the TCI.
Special guest artistes for the evening were Crystal ‘Tess’ Charles and Elroy Simmons along with Pro Vision Band and TCI’s Most Wanted DJ Shakes, who ended the evening with a bang.
TI SummaJam came to a climax on Saturday evening with the Parade of Nations/Flag Day Float Parade.
A number of countries displayed their flags in one of the longest float parades Grand Turk has ever seen. But on stage, the Dominicans showed up in huge numbers
displaying their culture through their national dress, anthem, song, history, and dance. Other countries, who put on a great showing of their culture were Haiti, Jamaica and the Philippines.
In the line-up also were Mexico, Trinidad and Tobago, India, Pakistan, USA and the Bahamas.
According to information from the organisers, they would like to thank all their sponsors, the committee members and the dancers among other people, who “provided the entertainment and of course the patrons for their support in making this festival a great and successful one”.
Police issue 35 tickets for weekend traffic infractions
Last weekend saw police out in full force on the roadways, ensuring that road users comply with the laws of the territory.
On Saturday and Sunday (July 29 and 30) Officers attached to the Operational Response and Tactical Unit conducted 186 traffic stops at two checkpoints - Susie Turn roundabout and the intersection at Five Cays and South Dock.
Among the 186 traffic stops, police conducted five stop and search of vehicles.
They also issued eight tickets for improper license plates, two tickets for failing to exhibit prescribed lights, and two tickets for illegal tints.
Eight persons were warned and asked to remove their illegal tints, four tickets were also issued for unlicensed motor vehicle, four persons were warned of intended prosecution for traffic offences, and
two persons were issued tickets for seatbelt violations.
The operation is part of a strategic plan to combat illegal activities in the Turks and Caicos Islands which includes having increased visibility of law enforcement on the Islands’ roadways.
Police said they will continue to conduct these operations and thanked the public for their patience and support.
Members of the public are asked to comply with all instructions of law enforcement personnel, especially when stopped and questioned during this time.
Additionally, motorists are asked to obey the law, as failure to obey will result in a fine.
Residents are also being reminded to notify the closest police station, 911 or TCI Crimestoppers at 1-800-8477 and give any information on illegal activities anonymously.
Customs department hosts trade and compliance workshop for importers
Several importers in the Turks and Caicos Islands were recently equipped with the necessary knowledge to streamline their import processes, mitigate risks, and ensure compliance with customs laws.
This comes as the customs department recently hosted an Importer Awareness Session under the theme “Harmonising Trade Facilitation and Compliance”
Participants were given valuable insights into the intricacies of customs procedures, regulatory requirements, and best practices for successful import operations at the workshop held on the 29th July, 2023 at the OPUS conference room in Providenciales.
The workshop aimed at empowering importers to make informed decisions that drive their business forward, covered a wide range of topics we covered, including; understanding customs regulations and relevant trade law, the role of the customs department and broker and navigating documentation and record-keeping requirements.
Other topics discussed at the session included; tariff classification and the valuation process, trade facilitation measures
and customs procedures, and customs audit and penalty avoidance strategies.
The attendees also had the opportunity to engage in Q&A
sessions with Customs officials, network with fellow brokers, and gain valuable insights from industry peers.
Commenting on the secession,
the customs department in a brief statement extended appreciation to all participants who attended.
“ Let us carry the knowledge and insights gained and apply them
in our daily practices, ensuring compliance and efficiency in our import operations, TCI Customs and Brokers: Together we make the difference”, the Department stated
DOMESTIC WORKER
LABOURER
Mixes mortar; lays bricks and stones and/ or concrete sidewalks; makes and repairs steps
IS URGENTLY LOOKING FOR A
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.
CONTACT: 231-3788
Application must be honest, reliable and willing to work. Steel work on all jobs for the company.
DOMESTIC WORKER
get dressed, eat, bathe and complete light housekeeping duties, such as dishes or folding laundry. Plan, prepare and monitor meals. Run errands, remind patients of
CONTACT: 341-3075
CONTACT: 244-1862
DOMESTIC WORKER
DOMESTIC WORKER
Sweeping,
CONTACT: 242-2716
Cleaning outside the property with sweeper, pick up yard waste and collect leaves, dispose of trash, clean windows, and doorframes.
CONTACT: 341-0497
BABYSITTER
Ensuring a safe environment, preparing and giving meals, bathing and dressing children, administering medicine, doing housework, and disciplining children when necessary.
Salary: $8.00 hourly
CONTACT: 333-7970
Keeps equipment available for use by inspecting and testing vehicles; completing preventive maintenance such as, engine tune-ups, oil changes, tire changes, wheel balancing, and replacing filters.
CONTACT: 333-7970
DOMESTIC WORKER
MACENA
STORE ATTENDANT
Ensuring a safe environment, preparing and giving meals, bathing and dressing children, administering medicine, doing housework, and disciplining children when necessary.
Salary: $8.00 hourly
CONTACT: 348-9917
BELONGERS APPLY TO THE LABOUR BOARD
HOUSEKEEPER
Help the patient get dressed, eat, bathe and complete light housekeeping duties, such as dishes or folding laundry. Plan, prepare and monitor meals. Run errands, remind patients of medications. Salary: $350.00 weekly
CONTACT: 343-4554
Shampooing, cutting, 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: 243-2925
PRESSER
Supplies
CONTACT: 333-5559
CONTACT:
ASSOCIATED MEDICAL PRACTICES
MEDICAL DOCTOR
• On call duty 1 in 3 nights per week plus 1 in 3 weekends
• Must have 3 years post qualification experience and be registered with the Medical and Dental Council/HPA.
CONTACT: 946-4242
EMAIL: AMP@TCIWAY.TC
BARTENDER
Experienced English speaking bartender 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.
JOB OPPORTUNITY
Candidate must be willing to work weekends and holidays. Salary $8/hr. Duties will include erecting signs, clearing paths and cleaning properties. Position held by work permit holder. Turks & Caicos Islanders are invited to submit their resumes to the Labour Department.
CONTACT WALTER AT 941-4100 OR EMAIL: WALTER@TCIBROKERS.COM
1991 TOYOTA LANDCRUISER PRADO
2.4L TURBODIESEL
TC13930 VIN: LJ780017368
Excellent everyday transportation. New shocks, brakes all around, and complete custom-built exhaust system. Great air conditioning and good tires. Outstanding reliability and impeccably maintained. Only one owner since arriving on Provo in 2001. ASKING $US 9,000 FOR
BEEN CONSTRUCTION
ROOFER @ $10.00 PER HOUR, LABOURER @ $9.00 PER HOUR, MASON @ $10.00 PER HOUR, CARPENTER @ $10.00 PER HOUR, PAINTER @ $10.00 PER HOUR, TILER @ $10, HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR @ $12.00 PER HOUR, ELECTRICIAN @ $15.00 PER HOUR, PLUMBER @ $10.00 PER HOUR, CLEANER $9 PER HOUR.. NEEDED 5 DAYS A WEEK.
All applicants must have at least 10 years’ experience in the commercial and residential construction industry. Salary negotiable depending on qualification and experience level.
EMAIL RESUME TO GBEEN@TCIWAY.TC. T: 231-6920
GARDENER
On behalf of our client JOSEPHINE MILLSPAUGH a Gardener is required. To work 6 days per week, must be hardworking and dependable. Must be able to speak English and like animals. Main duties include maintain flowers and trees, including fruit and vegetable garden, general upkeep of property.
Salary at $8.00 per hour.
SUITABLE AND INTERESTED BELONGERS ARE ENCOURAGED TO SUBMIT RESUMES TO GRIFFITHS & PARTNERS, JC@GRIFFITHSANDPARTNERS.COM.
PROSPECTIVE ISLANDERS ARE ALSO ENCOURAGED TO FILE AN APPLICATION WITH THE LABOUR DEPARTMENT.
DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS OR EXPRESSIONS OF INTEREST IS SEPTEMBER 8, 2023.
A WORK PERMIT HOLDER CURRENTLY HOLDS THIS POSITION.
38047
HOUSEKEEPER REQUIRED
For a private villa in PARROT CAY operated by RCI Ltd. Experienced Live-in Housekeeper is needed to work six days a week.
Applicants must speak English, must be fit and able and must have at least twelve years’ experience with housekeeping and maintenance at a villa.
Salary is $3,000.00 a month.
This job position is currently held by a work permit holder.
DOMESTIC WORKER
Cleaning the house, laundering sheets, towels and personal clothing and other housework.
Salary: $8.00 Hourly
CONTACT: 347-2885
MANAGER REQUIRED
New retail business in Providenciales, specializing in the import and sale of fruit and vegetables from Europe and the Dominican Republic seeks a manager immediately.
Candidate must be fluent in Spanish and English and must be prepared to travel monthly to the Dominican Republic to source and check product prior to shipping.
Travel to Europe will be required, at least twice per year and the candidate must have appropriate Visas or be exempt from Visa requirement for the EU and the UK.
A thorough knowledge of the fruit and vegetable market, farm to table, wholesale and retail, is required.
Salary commensurate with experience.
APPLICATIONS, IN WRITING ONLY, WITH CURRICULUM VITAE AND REFERENCES TO TCIATTORNEY@GMAIL.COM.
QUALIFIED ISLANDERS PREFERRED
D&B AUTO LTD.
38001
AUTO MECHANIC
• At least 6 years or more experience as an Auto Mechanic
• Able to maintain vehicle functional condition by listening to customers/ operator complaints, conduct inspections, repair engine failures, repair mechanical and electrical systems malfunctions and replace parts and components according to manufacturer standards specially Japanese vehicles.
• Must hold a valid driver license
• Knowledge of tools and equipment required to conduct all repairs.
• Basic wage is $11.00 per hour
HANDY GUY CONSTRUCTION
Airport Rd., North Caicos Is seeking to employ a
BABYSITTER
Ensuring a safe environment, preparing and giving meals, bathing and dressing children, administering medicine, doing housework, and etc.
Salary: $8.00 Hourly
CONTACT: 341-3075
BELONGERS ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY TO THE LABOUR BOARD
3 CLEANERS
Stocking and supplying designated facility areas, dusting, sweeping, vacuuming, mopping, restroom cleaning etc.
CONTACT: 649-333-1782
BELONGERS ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY TO THE LABOUR BOARD
JAMES W. COX
CARPENTER
Follow blueprints and building plans. Install structures and fixtures. Measure, cut, or shape materials. $14.00 Hourly
HANDYMAN
Fix and maintain mechanical equipment, buildings, and machines. Plumbing work, painting, flooring repair and upkeep, electrical repairs, etc.
$9.00 Hourly
CONTACT: 345-0174
37828
RESPONSIBILITIES:
• Appearing in civil Courts and Tribunals and Appellate Courts.
• Assisting senior attorneys and Leading Counsel in legal research in a variety of work, in particular commercial litigation.
• Drafting of pleadings, statements and other documents for Court cases.
• Obtaining, compiling and analyzing records for discovery including incoming discovery documents.
• Pre-trial preparation and other trial management assistance.
EXPERIENCE:
• At least eight (8) to ten (10) years of experience in legal court and tribunal procedures and significant advocacy experience.
• Experience in the operation, practices, and procedures of a law office engaged in commercial and civil litigation.
• Experience in a variety of work including commercial litigation, civil litigation, judicial review and public law litigation, insolvency law, and employment law.
• Demonstrated ability to manage a large workload including completing multiple tasks to deadlines.
• Must be proactive and able to work both independently and with a professional team.
• Experience in mentoring and training junior attorneys and trainees is essential.
JOB QUALIFICATIONS:
• Candidates should have a law degree from a leading University including qualifications in commercial and company law.
• Must have relevant professional qualifications, be admitted to practice in the Turks and Caicos Islands (or eligible for immediate admission), or be admitted in a common law jurisdiction.
• The applicant must have at least eight (8) to ten (10) ten years of relevant experience in practice.
• Computer proficiency with office software including MS Office.
• Professional references and appropriate references in respect of advocacy skills.
TERMS OF EMPLOYMENT
Griffiths & Partners offer competitive remuneration for this role. We will also offer support to help professional development and a friendly and collegiate work environment. Salary range between $90,000 to $150,000 per annum depending on seniority and experience.
Closing date for application is August 25, 2023.
GRIFFITHS & PARTNERS, P.O. BOX 143, PROVIDENCIALES TURKS AND CAICOS ISLANDS EMAIL: JC@GRIFFITHSANDPARTNERS.COM FAX: +1 (649) 941-8251 TURKS AND CAICOS ISLANDERS SHOULD COPY THEIR APPLICATION TO THE LABOUR DEPARTMENT APPLY WITH CURRICULUM VITAE TO: 38002
DOMESTIC WORKER
DOMESTIC WORKER
To perform general cleaning on both exterior and interior surfaces for commercial and residential properties. Basic Salary: $8 per hour
CONTACT: 341-3002
ARE TO SEND A COPY OF THEIR RESUME TO THE
CONTACT: (649) 231-7363
37615
C & S PROFESSIONAL SHAPAN M. HINSON
Acting on behalf of Five Cays, Providenciales, TCI Is seeking to employ a
Sweeping the house, mopping the floor, clean bathrooms, toilets, kitchen, living room, laundering sheets, towels and personal clothing and other housework.
To assist in all basic cleaning, mopping, sweeping, and dusting. Laundering Clothes and preparing meals.
Basic Salary: $8.00 hourly
CONTACT: 649-345-9583
Cleaning outside the property with sweeper, pick up yard waste and collect leaves, dispose of trash, clean windows, and doorframes. Salary: $350.00
CONTACT: 242-4551/344-1386
BELONGERS ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY TO THE LABOUR BOARD
Help the patient get dressed, eat, bathe and complete light housekeeping duties, such as dishes or folding laundry. Plan, prepare and monitor meals.
Salary: $6.25 hourly
CONTACT: 243-4987
BELONGERS ONLY APPLY/RENEWAL
Coastal Marine and Design Build Limited is
A Bachelor’s or Master’s Degree in Construction & Engineer Management will be an asset
• 5 -10 years or more experience in Marine Construction work as it relates to, Seawalls & Jetties
• Manage and supervise building of docks and jetties, laying mooring buoys, building/repairing sea defenses, dredging, underwater pipeline installation and boat maintenance.
• Manage team for installation of sheet piling, boardwalk, and boat lifts
• Inspect, monitor and supervision of suction Embedded anchor (SEA) installation
• Completion of multiple contracts, meets the targeted milestones, budgets, and work quality
• Responsible for code compliance, analyzed blueprints and specifications to forecast projects and prepare estimates.
• Ensuring the project adhere to health & safety policies compliant with industry regulations as it relates to the Marine.
• Create project schedules, daily reports, track, and submit weekly payroll cost and sub- contractor’s estimates and prepare vendor contracts.
• Project material projection and procurement.
Project Manager salary is paid based on experience
You will be required to travel to various locations or countries to represent the company’s projects as needed.
A COPY OR YOUR RESUME SHOULD BE SUBMITTED TO THE LABOUR DEPARTMENT AND EMAIL TO: SAM@CMS-SL.COM New Work Permit 37871
Receive payment by cash, checks and credit cards, Issue receipts, and change due
CONTACT: 1-649-243-2482
BELONGERS ARE TO APPLY TO THE LABOUR BOARD WORK PERMIT RENEWAL
JOB ADVERTISEMENT
Wymara Resort and Villas is a contemporary luxury full-service boutique resort on Grace Bay Beach. We are looking for driven and energetic professionals with Five Star experience and who are committed to achieving excellence by ensuring Five Star standards and services are continuously delivered.
JOB SUMMARY:
The Certified Charted Account will be responsible for leading financial audits, analyzing, implement and monitor accounting systems and controls to effectively meet year end goals. This role will require comprehensive knowledge of hospitality accounting and controls, auditing, preparing monthly financial reports utilizing Microsoft office, SAP (Systems Applications and Products) and R-Data SQL (Structured Query Language).
ESSENTIAL DUTIES INCLUDE BUT NOT LIMITED TO:
• Analyze accounting processes, procedures, and relevant compliance with regulatory framework (IFRS and IFRS for SMEs).
• Establishes and audits all internal financial controls, including purchasing, cash handling and disbursements, inventories and Resort and Villas FFE and personnel time records.
• Prepares forecast and budgets as required (Annual, Quarterly, Monthly, and/or on Owner’s requests).
CAICOS SHIELD SECURITY
Old Airport Road, Provo Is seeking to employ a
6 SECURITY OFFICERS
Secures premises and personnel by patrolling property; monitoring surveillance equipment; inspecting buildings, equipment, and access points; permitting entry. Obtains help by sounding alarms.
Salary: $8.00 hourly
CONTACT: 431-2367/245-9660
EMAIL: EUGENEWALKINEQUIPMENT@GMAIL. COM OR HALL_JERVON275@YAHOO.COM
BELONGERS ONLY APPLY/RENEWAL
37805
CAICOS AUTO REPAIR SHOP
MECHANIC
Inspecting and testing vehicles, engine tune-ups, oil changes, tire changes, wheel balancing, and replacing filters. $10.00 Hourly
HELPER
Helping the mechanic with inspecting and testing vehicles, engine tune-ups, oil changes, tire changes, wheel balancing, and replacing filters. $8.00 Hourly
CONTACT: 649-347-1757
BELONGERS ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY TO THE LABOUR BOARD
37821
• Develop and implement effective accounting policies and processes.
• Regularly report to Head of Finance and CEO on the company’s financial position and recommend solutions to improve results.
• Ensure you remain up to date on industry changes and changes in regulations.
• Recommends and implement measures to control/reduce costs.
• Works closely with the Heads of Department in regard to inventory taking, cost control, loading, ordering and storing.
• Conduct periodic audits to guarantee accuracy in financial records, expenses, and savings.
• Ensure financial reporting in line with GAAP.
• Government tax preparation and submission.
• Oversee accounting and Banking functions.
• Review balance sheet reconciliations and monthly financial statements.
• Takes required corrective action to ensure operations are in accordance with the company standards and objectives.
• Ensures that regular, on-going communication occurs in all areas of operation (e.g., pre-shift briefings, staff meetings).
SPECIFIC JOB KNOWLEDGE, SKILL AND ABILITY:
The individual must possess the following knowledge, skills and abilities and be able to explain and demonstrate that he or she can perform the essential functions of the job satisfactorily.
• Excellent customer service and interpersonal skills
• Masters’ of Science Degree in Accounting, financial management and control.
• Bachelor’s Degree in Business Administration, Certified
Internal Auditor, Finance or related field, or equivalent combination of experience and education. ACA designation essential.
• 5 years preferred years of experience in a hotel environment or related field with minimum 4 years managing an accounting function within a luxury resort/hotel environment.
• Exceptional organizational skills and aptitude for numbers.
• Outstanding tax knowledge of Government regulations.
• Strong leadership skills with the ability to recruit, train, develop, mentor and motivate a team.
• Demonstrated success at delivering results through establishment of standard procedures, disciplined coaching and management with strong problem-solving skills
• Possess excellent financial and computer skills in MS Office, Opera PMS; SAP financial management system is a plus.
• Self-motivated and dependable with an exceptional work ethic and strong problem-solving skills.
• Deadline oriented with the ability to multi-task and establish priorities.
• Strong oral and written communication and interpersonal skills; ability to speak, read and write fluently in the English language.
• Must be able to work on weekends and holidays.
Compensation: $60k - $70k per annum
*LABOURER
- Must have experience in a resort, knowledge of cleaning and preventative maintenance process and pays keen attention to details. Transports and generally maintain all of Maintenance areas. Compensation: $8.00 per hour
*FOOD & BEVERAGE MANAGER
Oversees daily operations of the restaurant. Directs the activities of restaurant service personnel, Bartenders, Beverage Attendants, Host/Hostess. Resolve customer complaints regarding food service. Train workers in food preparation, and in service, sanitation, and safety procedures. Observe and evaluate workers and work procedures to ensure quality standards and service. Assign duties, responsibilities, and workstations to employees in accordance with work requirements. Previous experience working in a multicultural 5 Star property. Extensive wine knowledge. Proficiency with general office PC applications (i.e. Microsoft Office software, Opera, Micros POS, Open Table, Timeclock,). Must be fluent in English, Compensation: $35k - $45k per annum
Interested applicants can contact our Human Resources Department, Monday through Friday 9am to 5pm on (649)941-7555. E- Mail cover letter outlining your interest and supporting experience in a particular position along with your Resume or C.V. to Hr@wymararesortandvillas.com
Landscaping, cutting and trimming of trees and decorating.
Salary: $10.00 Hourly
CONTACT: 649-343-1420
BELONGERS ARE TO APPLY TO THE LABOUR BOARD. RENEWAL
2 DOMESTIC WORKERS
Cleaning the house,sheets,laundering towels and personal clothing and housework.other
Salary: $8.00 Hourly
CONTACT: 649-333-1246
BELONGERS ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY TO THE LABOUR BOARD RENEWAL
37896
Set up equipment, run lines for power tools, erect scaffolding, lay out tools, mixing concrete, hand tools to workers, and cleaning work site. $500.00 Weekly
CONTACT: 649-333-1199
BELONGERS ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY TO THE LABOUR BOARD
VALUE FOR YOUR MONEY!!
THE LARGEST READERSHIP IN THE
PUBLIC CONSULTATION NOTICE
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT (EIA) REPORT – FOR THE SCHOOL OF MEDICINE AND MEDICAL CENTRE FOR PLANNING APPLICATION PR16983 – BLOCK AND PACEL NUMBER 60804/147, PROVIDENCIALES, TURKS AND CAICOS ISLANDS
The Environmental Impact Assessment Report – for the School of Medicine and Medical Centre for Planning Application PR16983 – Block and Parcel Number 60804/144, Providenciales, Turks and Caicos Islands has been finalized and is available online for public review at https://gov.tc/planning/images/docs/PR16297.pdf https://gov.tc/planning/images/docs/HUSM.pdf
Hard copies of the EIA Report are also available at the Department of Planning Offices in Providenciales and Grand Turk.
POSITIONS AVAILABLE
The 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.
The Environmental Impact Assessment Report was submitted in accordance with Section 44 (1) b of the Physical Planning Ordinance. Comments on the EIA report can be sent to the Department of Planning at planningconsultation@gov.tc or to the Department of Planning, Emily House, Leeward Highway, Providenciales, or at South Base, Grand Turk on or before September 1st, 2023.
A Public Consultation on the EIA will be held on Tuesday, September 12th, 2023 at 5:00p.m. – 6:00p.m. at the Department of Planning, Emily House, Leeward Highway, Providenciales, Turks and Caicos Islands.
PUBLIC CONSULTATION NOTICE
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT
ASSESSMENT (EIA) REPORT
– FOR THE MOLO HOTEL DEVELOPMENT FOR PLANNING APPLICATION PR15987 – BLOCK AND PACEL NUMBERS 60813/17,18, PROVIDENCIALES, TURKS AND CAICOS ISLANDS
The Environmental Impact Assessment Report – for the Molo Hotel Development for Planning Application PR15987 – Block and Parcel Numbers 60813/17,18, Providenciales, Turks and Caicos Islands has been finalized and is available online for public review at: https://gov.tc/planning/images/docs/PR15987.pdf
Hard copies of the EIA Report are also available at the Department of Planning Offices in Providenciales and Grand Turk.
The Environmental Impact Assessment Report was submitted in accordance with Section 44 (1) b of the Physical Planning Ordinance. Comments on the EIA report can be sent to the Department of Planning at planningconsultation@gov.tc or to the Department of Planning, Emily House, Leeward Highway, Providenciales, or at South Base, Grand Turk on or before September 1st, 2023.
A Public Consultation on the EIA will be held on Tuesday, September 12th, 2023 at 6:30p.m. – 7:30p.m. at the Department of Planning, Emily House, Leeward Highway, Providenciales, Turks and Caicos Islands.
DOMESTIC WORKER
DOMESTIC WORKER
WASTER CHERY
BABYSITTER
Ensuring a safe environment, preparing and giving meals, bathing and dressing children, administering medicine, doing housework, and disciplining children when necessary. Salary: $8.00 hourly
CONTACT: 243-8144/ 342-7932
BELONGERS APPLY TO THE LABOUR BOARD
WILLIN BELLIARD
Ensuring a safe environment, preparing and giving meals, bathing and dressing a 2 year-old, administering medicine, doing housework, etc. Fluent in Spanish, verbal and written. Work 6 days a week.
Salary: $8.00 hourly
CONTACT: WBELLIARD@ GMAIL.COM
The Turks and Caicos Islands Hospital are currently seeking experienced candidates to join the Facilities Management Department at Cheshire Hall Medical Centre.
C HESHIRE HALL MEDICAL CENTRE, PROVIDENCIALES:
HOSPITAL PORTERS
– Duties including patient movement, movement of specialist equipment, specialist cleaning including use of industrial equipment, and deep cleaning included. Previous experience of standard Portering Duties is required. Additional training is supplied for specialist tasks. $9.16 Per Hour
DOMESTIC ASSISTANT (HOSPITAL HOUSEKEEPERS)
– Seeking experienced Housekeepers to join our established team responsible for maintaining the highest hygiene and infection control standards across our Clinical and Administrative Departments. Duties will include standard and hospital cleaning regimes. Candidates will be trained for specialist tasks, however previous Housekeeping experience is required. $8.12 Per Hour
FOOD SERVICE ASSISTANT
– Carries out general catering assistant duties under the direction of the supervisor. Ensures health and safety compliance in the use of equipment and hygienic food handling. Performs a variety of tasks in preparation, service and delivery of food products and/or service operations (i.e. prepare, mix, assemble, portion, serve and store food as directed; receive, inspect, store, secure, disburse and control of inventory of foodstuffs, supplies and equipment). $8.12 Per Hour
All applicants must have relevant experience in the field they have applied for, and be able to work 40 hours per week (5 shifts allocated over 7 days and include weekend working and bank holidays).
Excellent customer service skills, communications skills, and good standards of spoken and written English are required for all posts.
Interested candidates, kindly request Job Description and submit your resume to: VFULFORD@ INTERHEALTHCANADA.TC
Qualified Belongers will be given first consideration
CLOSING DATE: August 14th 2023
GENERAL MANAGER
– InterHealth Canada Construction & Services (TCI) Ltd
InterHealth Canada Construction & Services (TCI) Ltd seeks to appoint a General Manager for its operations within the Turks and Caicos Islands to oversee and manage all of its contractual operations & services at Cheshire Hall Medical Centre and Cockburn Town Medical Centre.
We are seeking someone with experience in contract management and administration of FM services in a public private partnership framework with an emphasis on compliance and strategic performance with detailed understanding of project agreements and working with twin SPV models under a PPP contract. Experience in the development of plans, processes and corporate policies to ensure that the organization conforms to the requirements of relevant legislation. Proven track record in creating and implementing strategies, together with a senior management team, to determine company direction. Dealing with company obligations under a PPP legal framework with experience of policies from government departments and external bodies, which may impact the organization. Planning, developing and evaluating methods and processes for gathering, analyzing, interpreting and presenting data and information. Proven track record in guiding process development at a board level, implementing high-risk, high impact, strategic projects across a multi-disciplinary, multi-functional team of business professionals with experience in providing and receiving highly complex, sensitive or contentious information, negotiate with senior stakeholders on difficult and controversial issues including performance and change, communicating across audiences, effectively defining and utilizing escalation paths and updating executive stakeholders.
Candidates must have a minimum of 15 years TFM (Total Facilities Management) experience at General Manager level with 10+ years’ experience being within a Healthcare environment with appropriate supporting qualifications. For an extensive list of requirements and experience needed for this role please contact vfulford@ interhealthcanada.tc
Qualified Belongers will be given first consideration.
SALARY: Negotiable, commensurate with qualifications and experience.
14th 2023 Applications will not be accepted after the closing date.
Duties: Clean my yard put sheets in the garbage, then classify the materials scattered in my yard.
Salary: $8.50 per hourly
CONTACT:1(649) 431-0421
BELONGERS ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY TO THE LABOUR BOARD
THAMARA’S HAIR BRAIDING
BRAIDER
DUTIES: twisting, braiding, and tying many small braids all over the head of the clients.
Salary: $8 per hourly
CONTACT: 1(649) 345 9455
BELONGERS ARE ENCOURAGED
Basic manicures, artificial nails, gel nails, hand massages,
CONTACT: 345-5137
DOMESTIC WORKER
Cleaning the house,sheets,laundering towels and personal clothing and housework.other Salary: $8.00 hourly
CONTACT: 245-0200
Cleaning the house, laundering sheets, towels and personal clothing and other housework.
Salary: $8.00 Hourly
CONTACT: 343-9642
CARETAKER
Help the patient get dressed, eat, bathe and complete light housekeeping duties, such as dishes or folding laundry. Plan, prepare and monitor meals. $8.00 Hourly
CONTACT: 649-246-3137
H2O
Performing a variety of cleaning activities such as sweeping, mopping, dusting and polishing. Ensuring all rooms inspected according to standards.
Salary $8.00 Hourly
CONTACT: 232-4260
D&B AUTO LTD.
AUTO PARTS SPECIALIST
• Must have ten (10) years or more working experience on Japanese Automotive Industry
• Capable to assists customers with selecting required parts and suggest related parts
• Knowledgeable to use multiple Auto Parts system
• Able to multi-task, answer phone calls, provide quotes and other information
• Knowledgeable on inventory and stock leveling
• Basic wage is $12.00 per hour
EASYWAY EMPLOYEMENT SERVICES
REGISTERED LAND ORDINANCE,
9.01 NOTICE OF LOST LAND CERTIFICATE
Whereas, ROSELIN IANTHE GIBSON RUSSELL of Palm Beach Street, Nassau, Bahamas has declared that the Land Certificate for the abovementioned title number(s) registered in the name of ROSELIN IANTHE GIBSON RUSSELL was inadvertently mislaid and cannot be found.
38050
Take Notice that I, Nicholas Arculus, Solicitor (England of Wales) The Registrar of Lands, shall cancel the Land Certificate for the said title six weeks of the date of the first publication of this Notice in a Local Newspaper and the Gazette.
JANCILLA A. COX
T: 342-5965
Mary Jane Lanes, Blue Hills
Cleaning the house, make beds, cook, wash, iron and care for my children.
NANNY CAREGIVER
PASHA JENNINGS NORTH CAICOS
T: 243-7299
Caring for my sick son, bathing and feeding him, giving medication and monitor him and care for him.
Salary: $8.00
ALL TIME BARBERSHOP
T: 345-2694
Kew Town
Maintaining the cleanness of the barbershop, cleaning stations and mirrors, bathroom and continuously sweeping the barbershop after each clients. Salary: $8.00
CLEANER PLUMBER
BRUTUS LANDSCAPING
T: 343-1420
Millennium Highway
Fit and maintain water systems in building, hotel, villas and private home and apartment. $10.00
DOMESTIC WORKER
JOHNNY NEAT T: 342-5736
Five Cays
Cleaning the house, make beds, cook, wash, iron and care for my children. Salary: $ 8.00
CAROLINA PHARMACY
Dated this 29th day of June 2023
Publicized by Order Registrar of Lands.
VALUE FOR YOUR MONEY!! THE LARGEST READERSHIP IN THE TURKS & CAICOS
EASYWAY EMPLOYEMENT SERVICS
342-9278
38045
PHARMACIST FULL TIME
• Responsible for providing safe and appropriate pharmacy services in a retail pharmacy.
• Experience with and knowledgeable of computers and kroll software.
• Excellent communication skills.
• Able to work independently.
• Proficient in English Language. However, a second language will be an asset.
• Must be willing to work flexible hours, including holidays and weekends in rotation.
• Be able to manage, supervise, and train pharmacy support staff.
• To do daily auditing of sales and submit reports, both on a weekly and monthly basis.
MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS:
• Bachelors of Science in Pharmacy from an accredited University.
• Ten (10) years of experience in retail pharmacy.
• Eligible for registration with the Health Practitioners Board Turks and Caicos Islands.
stores, shelves, countertop, adding products on shelves daily.
WATER DELIVERY SERVICES
346-9099
Kew Town
WATER DELIVERY MAN
$8.00 hourly
Delivering water and materials
ANDREGE ALEXANDER
343-1437
Cherokee Road
DOMESTIC WORKER
$8.00 Hourly
Eaning the house, make beds, cook, wash, iron and care for my children
ESTHER A. DUVEAU
341-8483
Five Cays
GOVERNESS (CHILD CARE)
$8.00
Caring for my child, ensure my child take their medicine, bath and dress and feed my child
W & V CONSTRUCTION
MASON
$12.00 hourly
Laying blocks and plastering
J & V CONSTRUCTION
Blue Hills
242-2880
TILE MAN
$ 12.00 hourly
Laying tile and grout tiles
Mason $ 12.00 hourly
Laying blocks and plastering
J & C CONSTRUCTION
242-8244
Kew Town
LABOURER
$8.00 hourly
Laying up equipment, run lines for power tools, erect scaffolding, layout tools, pouring of concrete foundation.
DELIVERY & AUXILIARY SERVIES
Bay Road, Blue Hills 345-7912
LABOURER
$8.00 hourly
Assisting with delivering water, blocks, cement, construction materials, delivering furniture, cargo pick up and delivery
S & F WHOLESALE
CASH AND CARRY LTD.
Grand Turk, Turks and Caicos Island
Contact No: 1649-9462811
IS NOW HIRING
STORE SUPERVISOR
• Candidate must have at least 6-8 years experience in the field
• Must have through knowledge of the following:
• Advanced knowledge and skills in computer systems, most specifically,
• QuickBooks Pro 2020, Microsoft Excel, and Inventory control management.
• Extensive knowledge of SMS Front & Back Office POS System
• Extensive knowledge of NCR 7456 POS
• Manage retail staff, including cashiers and people working on the floor.
• Ensure pricing is correct. Work on store displays.
• Coach, counsel, recruit, train, and discipline employees.
• Evaluate on-the-job performance.
• Identify current and future trends that appeal to consumers.
• Maintain inventory and ensure items are in stock.
• Keep up with fluctuating supply and demand.
• Maintain store cleanliness and health and safety measures.
• Organize and distribute staff schedules.
• Manage different departments within the store.
• Handle customer questions, complaints, and issues.
• Committed to work flexible hours, days, nights, weekends and holidays.
• Able to safely lift boxes
• Salary $9.00 Per Hour.
• This Position is for work permit renewal .
LABOURER(S)
• Responsible for doing manual work
• Loading and unloading Container
• Assisting in stocking shelves
• Should be physically fit to lift products 50lb or more.
• Being able to work at heights
• Committed to work flexible hours, days, nights, weekends and holidays.
• Salary $8.00 per hour.
• This position is for renewal and for first time work permit application..
DOMESTIC WORKER(S)
• Maintain cleanliness and tidiness of the grocery store premises, including aisles, restrooms, entrance, and parking area.
• Perform routine cleaning tasks such as wiping down surfaces, disinfecting high-touch areas, and emptying trash receptacles.
• Restock and organize cleaning supplies as needed.
• Assist in maintaining inventory of store supplies, such as paper towels, toilet paper, and cleaning products.
• Committed to work flexible hours, days, nights, weekends and holidays.
• Salary $8.00 per hour.
• This position is for renewal and for first time work permit application.
PRODUCE CLERK (S)
• Responsible for doing Manuel work
• Loading and unloading Container
• Assisting in stocking shelves
• Knowledge on produce products and sanitary methods
• Should be physically fit to lift products 50lb or more.
• Committed to work flexible hours, days, nights, weekends and holidays.
• Salary $8.00 per hour.
• This position is for renewal and for first time work permit application.
NOTICE OF SALE BY PUBLIC AUCTION
Scotiabank (Turks and Caicos) Ltd. Of Cherokee Rd, Providenciales, Turks and Caicos Islands hereby gives notice of its intention to sell by Public Auction the following properties pursuant to its power of sale as registered Chargee under the Registered Land Ordinance of the Turks and Caicos Islands.
PARCEL 10308/158 CENTRAL, GRAND TURK
– Four-bedroom, two bathroom house approximately 2045 sq. ft located in Palm Grove, Grand Turk
Registered Proprietor: Dudley Moore
PARCEL 60717/107K2 CHESHIRE
HALL AND RICHMOND HILL, PROVIDENCIALES
– One bedroom, one bedroom condominium unit approximately 448 sq. ft located near Five Cays, Providenciales.
Registered Proprietor: Celo Celeste N Lightbourne Powell
PARCEL 60717/107K8 CHESHIRE HALL
AND RICHMOND HILL, PROVIDENCIALES
- One bedroom, one bedroom condominium unit approximately 448 sq. ft located near Five Cays, Providenciales.
Registered Proprietor: Donvonno D Cox
The auction will be held at the office of Scotiabank (Turks and Caicos) Limited, 88 Cherokee Road, Providenciales at 10 o’clock in the morning on Monday, the 15th day of August 2023.
A reserved price will be fixed on all parcels and a deposit of 10% is due immediately upon all accepted bids. Conditions of Sale available upon request or at the Auction.
PAMPERED PAWS
61 Gumbo Limbo, Discovery Bay, Providenciales, TCI
• Experience is essential. No less than a minimum of 5 years consecutive and verifiable experience in grooming and animal behavior will be accepted, references will be required
• Experience in Quickbooks
• Must be able to read write and speak the English language
• Must be able to start work at 6am
• Must be able to bath dogs in preparation for grooming, including comb outs, brush outs, stripping, detangling, de-matting and clipping
• Must be able to de-tick manually and use chemicals safely and responsibly
• Cleaning of animals quarters outside and inside bathing and grooming areas, including feces pick up on a hourly basis
• HEAVY LIFTING REQUIRED
• Must have own transport and willing to transport animals in vehicle
• Hourly rate is $8 and is based on experience.
Position is currently held by work permit holders. Belongers are encouraged to send their resume to labor department and Pampered Paws
QUALITY CONTROL SPECIALIST
• Create, update, and maintain standard operating procedures for lab.
• Process and analyze the microbiology of the beer (and water) being produced, use this knowledge to make educated recommendations to the brewers, water production managers, and other members of management team for quality improvement.
• Measure and track dissolved Oxygen and CO2 levels.
• Maintain and calibrate laboratory equipment.
• Collect and quantify packaged beer archive for sensory panels.
• Manage sensory panels and record results for stability analysis and shelf-life recommendations.
• Perform microbiological testing (aseptic techniques, enrichment, plating, microscopy, PCR) on raw ingredients, in-process beer, and finished beer.
• Develop and manage yeast program including ordering, propagating, monitoring viability and pitch rates with input from Lead Brewer.
• Assist with troubleshooting production issues.
• Research and develop the QA/QC Department.
• Reporting all the above to our Head Brewer, Water Production Manager and General Manager as appropriate.
• Other brewery & water related tasks that may require assistance.
• Any other related duties delegated to by a manager. Salary $62000 per year or commensurate with experience.
DOMESTIC WORKER
Cleaning the house, laundering sheets, towels and personal clothing and other housework. Applicant must be honest, reliable and willing to work.
Salary: $8.00 hourly
CONTACT: 244-7953
BELONGERS ARE ENCOURAGED
DOMESTIC WORKER
To assist in all basic cleaning, mopping, sweeping, and dusting. Laundering Clothes and preparing meals.
Basic Salary: $8.00 hourly
CONTACT: 649-346-4605
SUNNY FOOD STORE CASH AND CARRY FIVE CAYS
South Dock Providenciales, Turks and Caicos Island Contact No: 1649-9462811 IS
NOW HIRING
SALES CLERK
STORE CLERK
Assist customer with merchandise
Organized products for retail sale
Manage daily cash flow
Basic Salary: $8.00 per hour
CONTACT: 649-242-1172
BELONGERS ARE ENCOURAGED TO SUBMIT THEIR RESUME TO THE LABOUR BOARD.
IS NOW HIRING PURCHASER
• Must have prior experience purchasing Asian & American Products.
• Must be have prior experience with Quick Books 2020.
• Must be available to work on Holiday, Nights and weekends. Both Saturday and Sunday nights are required with a day off during the middle of the week.
• Must be have good communication skills in able to commutate with overseas vendors and logistics companies .
• Ensures orders are placed in timely manner, customer request are met quick and efficiently.
• Must have extensive knowledge on NCR 7456 or similar POS system.
• Setting up training programs for employees on proper merchandising and customer service skills.
• Most work is required by standing for long periods of time and working in an environment that is not air conditioned such as a dry warehouse.
• Salary $8.00 per hour.
• This position is for renewal and for first time work permit application..
Interested applicants can email their resume to jobstci@ alliedcaribbean.net or send their resume to the Labour Board. Belongers need only to apply.
• Promoting and selling the company’s products and services using excellent sales skills and customer service and developing return customer relationships
• Greeting customers, promoting customer awareness of sales and store promotions, providing customer service, directing customers to merchandise, cross-selling and increasing purchase sales
• Standing for extended period of time
• Committed to work flexible hours, days, nights, weekends and holidays.
• Able to safely lift boxes
• Salary $8.00 per hour.
• This position is for renewal and for first-time work permit application.
LABOURER(S)
• Responsible for doing manual work
• Loading and unloading Container
• Assisting in stocking shelves
• Should be physically fit to lift products 50lb or more.
• Being able to work at heights
• Committed to work flexible hours, days, nights, weekends and holidays.
• Salary $8.00 per hour.
• This position is for renewal and for first time work permit application..
LOGISTIC CLERK
• Coordinate and oversee logistics operations in the grocery store
• Manage inventory levels, including ordering and restocking products
• Ensure accurate and timely receiving and checking of deliveries
• Coordinate with suppliers and vendors for smooth logistics operations
• Organize and maintain proper storage and arrangement of products in the store
• Monitor and control stock levels to prevent shortages or excess inventory
• Collaborate with other departments to optimize logistics processes
• Prepare and update reports on inventory levels, shipping, and logistics activities
• Ensure compliance with safety and sanitation regulations in handling and storing products
• Committed to work flexible hours, days, nights, weekends and holidays.
• Salary $8.00 per hour.
• This position is for first-time work permit application..
Interested applicants can email their resume to jobstci@ alliedcaribbean.net or send their resume to the Labour Board. Belongers need only to apply.
37908
receive payment by cash, checks and credit cards, Issue receipts, and change due
CONTACT: 246-1778
MAINTENANCE
CARETAKER
Help patient with daily tasks and complete light housekeeping duties. Plan, prepare and monitor meals. Run errands, remind patients of medications.
CONTACT: 242-0952
CONTACT: 342-3444
Applicant will be cleaning property, cleaning windows and doors, disposing of garbage, trash, planting plants etc.
CONTACT: 649-431-0658
CONTACT: 347-3112
DOMESTIC WORKER
Cleaning the house, laundering sheets, towels and personal clothing and other housework. Salary: $8.00 Hourly
CONTACT: 232-2267
CONTACT: 245-3160
BELONGERS ARE ENCOURAGED
MASON
DOMESTIC WORKER
CONTACT: 348-0903
CONTACT: 347-7769
STORE CLERK & BEACH ATTENDANT
Duties:
Duties:
DOMESTIC WORKER
KITCHEN HELPER
CONTACT: 342-1515
CONTACT: 342-4644
DOMESTIC WORKER
2 BARBERS
other instruments.
$8.00 hourly
2 NAIL TECHNICIANS
Basic manicures, artificial nails, gel nails, hand massages, nail repair, and nail polishing.
$8.00 hourly
CONTACT: 342-8799
Duties include but not limited to:
Carrying out daily cleaning including sweeping, moping, cleaning windows, dusting etc.
Must be willing to work weekends and holidays as required.
Ability to speak a foreign language (e.g. Spanish and Creole) would be helpful.
CONTACT:
THIS POSITION IS FOR A WORK PERMIT RENEWAL
POSEIDON CHARTERS
BOAT CAPTAIN
Perform all maintenance and mechanical needs.
$250.00 Daily
2 DECK HANDS
Clean boat, assist captain, serve passengers.
$150.00 Daily
Clean boat, assist captain, serve passengers. $150.00 Daily
CONTACT: 232-3633 EMAIL: INFO@POSEIDONTCI.COM
Providenciales, Is seeking to employ a COX LABOUR SERVICES 37869 Cleaning and maintaining of Provo Golf Club and the Grace Bay Strip. Be willing to work weekends and holidays.
37849
Salary: $8.00 per
Apply paints and coatings to walls, new buildings, etc.
$10.00 Hourly
Follow building plans to meet the needs of clients. Install structures and fixtures.
$10.00 Hourly
Install materials on floors, walls, etc.
$10.00 Hourly
CONTACT: 241-5131
APPLY/RENEWAL TRUCK DRIVER 2 CARPENTERS TILER 2 PAINTERS South Dock Rd., Is seeking
• Assemble, draft, edit, and review reports, customer quotes, and technical documents.
• Communicate scheduling changes and relevant infrastructure shifts to affected staff.
CONTACT: 941-5579
• Coordinate and track project progress and schedules.
•
THIS IS A POSITION CURRENTLY BEEN HOLD BY A WORK PERMIT 65 Beachwood Grace Bay, Is Looking for
with clients and staff both verbally and electronically.
JOHN JOSEPH
KATHY
KEMEO LEO SELVER
LOVINA
Installs pipes and fixtures, installs supports for pipes, equipment, etc.
Five Cays Is seeking to employ a
LABOURER
BELONGERS
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
BELONGERS ONLY
M & E CLEANING SERVICES
LABOURER Phase 2, Blue Hills Is seeking to employ a
BELONGERS ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY TO THE LABOUR BOARD RENEWAL
37903
Blue Hills Is seeking to employ a MANPOWER SERVICES GROUP LTD.
CARPENTER 3 Hope Street, Grace Bay, Providenciales Is seeking to employ a
BELONGERS ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY TO THE LABOUR BOARD
MASON HELPER
BELONGERS ARE
BELONGERS ARE
SPA THERAPIST Kokomo Botanical Resort Venetian Road, Providenciales Is seeking to employ a LARRY JOSEPH CONTACT: 247-3599 37819 BELONGERS ARE ENCOURAGED TO SEND A COPY OF THEIR RESUME TO THE LABOUR BOARD. RENEWAL Cleaning outside the property, pick up yard waste and collect leaves, dispose of trash, clean windows, and doorframes. Salary: $8.00 hourly LABOURER Airport Road, South Caicos Is seeking to employ a LORLEAN WILSON 37834 BELONGERS ONLY APPLY/RENEWAL Duties Include: Yard Maintenance. Cleaning and trimming of weeds and plants. Upkeep of property. Taking Care of dogs. Work 5 days. Salary $8.00 hourly LABOURER Long Bay, Providenciales, TCI Is seeking to employ a CONTACT 331-7026 LVA MANAGEMENT LTD CONTACT: 649-941-8118 CONTACT PERSON: MARIA@ LVAMANAGEMENT.COM 37804 BELONGERS ARE ENCOURAGED TO SUBMIT A COPY OF THEIR RESUME TO THE LABOR DEPARTMENT. RENEWAL Waste pick up, landscaping maintenance, General Maintenance of the property. Salary $8.00 hourly. LABOURER NO. 107 Turtle Cove Drive, Providenciales Is seeking to employ a MARIE EVANA GARDINER 37877 Mixing concrete, cleaning tools, moving and handling blocks, cleaning site, etc. Salary: $8.00 Hourly
37893
37921
Science & Technology
Varying sleep time leads to unhealthy changes to gut bacteria
Small differences in sleeping habits between work and rest days could lead to unhealthy changes to the bacteria in our guts, a study suggests.
This may be partly a result of people with “social jetlag” having slightly poorer diets, the UK researchers found.
Heavily-disrupted sleep, particularly shift work, is known to have a negative impact on health.
Keeping bed times and wake times consistent and eating a balanced diet may help reduce our risk of disease.
The study of nearly 1,000 adults by Kings College London scientists found that even a 90-minute difference in the midpoint of your night’s sleep over the course of a normal week could influence the types of bacteria found in the human gut.
Having a wide range of different species of bacteria in your digestive system is really important. Some are better than others, but getting the right mix is key to preventing a number of diseases.
“[Social jetlag] can encourage microbiota species which have unfavourable associations with your health,” said Kate Bermingham, study author and senior nutrition scientist at health
Keeping bed times and wake times consistent and eating a balanced diet may help reduce our risk of disease
science company Zoe.
Going to sleep and waking up at very different times during the week, compared to the weekend, is known as having social jetlag.
It is thought to affect more than 40% of the UK population, the study says, and is most common in teenagers and young adults, then tapers off as we age.
Participants in this study, in the European Journal of Nutrition, had their sleep and blood analysed, stool samples collected and
Alpha-gal syndrome: Meat allergy linked to tick bites rising, CDC says
The rate of Americans developing a rare meat allergy from tick bites is rising, researchers say, and may have already impacted as many as 450,000 people.
New data released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on Thursday shows a steep increase in cases of alpha-gal syndrome.
The allergy triggers a possibly life-threatening reaction to several types of meat or animal products.
US scientists have traced alphagal to saliva from the lone star tick.
The tick is identified by the white spot on its back and is mostly found in southern and eastern parts of the US. But experts warn that their range is expanding due to climate change.
Blood-sucking bites from the lone star, formally called the Amblyomma americanum, can make a person sick when they consume certain meat and animal products made from mammals.
The list of dangerous foods
for people suffering from alphagal syndrome include pork, beef, rabbit, lamb, venison, gelatine, milk, some dairy products and certain pharmaceuticals.
Symptoms from the littleunderstood syndrome include stomach cramps, diarrhoea, hives and shortness of breath that could trigger fatal anaphylaxis.
Alpha-gel syndrome reactions can be different from person-toperson, ranging from mild to severe or even life-threatening, the CDC says. Anaphylaxis, a potentially life-threatening reaction involving multiple organ systems, may need urgent medical care.
But people may not have an allergic reaction after every alphagal exposure, the CDC notes.
Because of how slowly the body digests meat, it can be very difficult to spot any symptoms that do appear.
More than 110,000 cases have been detected since 2010, the CDC says. From 2017 to 2021
recorded everything they ate in a food questionnaire.
Those who had social jetlag (16%) were more likely to eat a diet laden with potatoes, including crisps and chips, plus sugary drinks, and less fruit and nuts.
Previous research showed people with social jetlag ate less fibre than those with more consistent sleeping times. Other studies found social jetlag was linked to weight gain, illness and mental fatigue.
“Poor quality sleep impacts choices - and people crave higher carb or sugary foods,” says Dr Bermingham.
An unhealthy diet can then affect levels of specific bacteria in the gut.
The researchers found that three out of the six microbiota species which were more plentiful in the guts of the social jetlag group are linked to poor diet quality, obesity and higher levels of inflammation and stroke risk.
The relationship between sleep, diet and gut bacteria is complicated and there is still a lot more to find out, the research team says.
In the meantime, their advice to keep things consistent, if you can, over the course of a week.
“Maintaining regular sleep patterns, so when we go to bed and when we wake each day, is an easily adjustable lifestyle behaviour we can all do, that may impact your health via your gut microbiome for the better,” says Dr Sarah Berry, from King’s College London.
WHAT IS A HEALTHY DIET?
The NHS website recommends you try to: eat at least five portions of a variety of fruit and vegetables every day base meals on higher fibre starchy foods like potatoes, bread, rice or pasta have some dairy or dairy alternatives, and go for lower-fat or lower-sugar where possible eat some beans, pulses, fish, eggs, meat and other protein choose unsaturated oils and spreads, and eat them in small amounts drink plenty of fluids (at least six to eight glasses a day) (BBC)
the number of cases increased by around 15,000 per year.
Due to difficulties with diagnosis, the CDC says that up to 450,000 Americans in total may have developed meat allergies due to alpha-gal.
A survey of 1,500 doctors and health workers from last year found that 42% of them had never heard of the syndrome.
In the survey, which was also released by the CDC on Thursday,
easily identifiable
about one-third of the group said they were “not too confident” in their ability to identify the disease. Only 5% said they were “very confident” in their ability.
The syndrome was not discovered until 2008 by accident after US researchers found unexpected results while testing a drug used to treat cancer.
The Ixodes holocyclus - aka the paralysis tick - has also caused similar meat allergies in the Sydney
region of Australia.
Experts warn people to cover up outdoors and to regularly check their bodies for tick bites. Tick bites can cause several dangerous illnesses - such as Lyme disease - and are most common during warmer months.
The CDC advises people outdoors to use insect repellent, such as those containing DEET, or to pre-treat clothing with a chemical called permethrin. (BBC)
Science & Technology
Central Florida is a hot spot for leprosy, report says
When a 54-year-old landscaper came into an Orlando dermatology clinic with a splotchy, painful rash, Dr Rajiv Nathoo took five or six biopsies. The rash was spreading from the man’s limbs to his face, but previous doctors had been stumped by what was causing it.
The biopsy results confirmed Nathoo’s hunch, a diagnosis he described as something “you read in your textbooks”: leprosy.
However, the man didn’t have the obvious risk factors that most doctors would expect with the hard-to-catch infection. So after noticing a cluster of other cases in the area, Nathoo, a dermatologist and complex clinic director for Advanced Dermatology and Cosmetic Surgery Clinics in Orlando, began to suspect that Central Florida could be an unexpected leprosy hotbed.
Now, his team is cautioning other health care providers to be on the lookout for similar cases in the area.
According a research letter published by Nathoo and his colleagues in the journal Emerging Infectious Diseases, Central Florida has reported among the highest rates of leprosy in the United States.
In 2020, 159 cases were reported nationwide, compared with 200,000 new cases each year around the world, according to the World Health Organization. The new letter says Central Florida accounted for 81% of cases in Florida and nearly 1 out of 5 leprosy cases nationwide.
Also known as Hansen’s disease, leprosy is caused by the bacteria
The new letter says Central Florida accounted for 81% of cases in Florida and nearly 1 out of 5 leprosy cases nationwide
Mycobacterium leprae, which attacks nerves under the skin. Scientists aren’t completely sure of how it spreads, but most believe that it’s transmitted via droplets when an infected person coughs and sneezes. Its telltale symptoms include lesions and rashes that are numb or lack sensation because of the involvement of nerves.
Nine-banded armadillos in the Southeastern United States can also carry the bacteria, and gene studies have linked human infections to the leprosy strains carried by armadillos, although it’s not always clear how humans encounter armadillo-carried bacteria. Many patients can’t recall ever having contact with the animals.
The disease is not transmitted through casual contact like shaking hands or sitting next to an infected person. Instead, spread requires prolonged close contact with someone who has untreated leprosy over many months, according
to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Roughly 95% of people aren’t susceptible to the infection because their immune systems are genetically programmed to resist it.
As a result, leprosy is a rare disease in the United States. Historically, most cases of leprosy in the US affect people who travel to countries with high rates of disease or who are exposed to armadillos that carry the disease. But there are cases in which doctors never know how a person was exposed.
“In certain states, we see more cases than others. Florida is one of them,” said Dr. Linda Adams, chief of the laboratory research branch at the National Hansen’s Disease Program, a federal program that coordinates treatment for Americans who are diagnosed. “In all of these areas, we do see cases that we cannot explain. There’s been no foreign travel, for example, or no contact with armadillos.”
The 54-year-old man in the new report told his doctors that he had never left the state of Florida and had no exposure to armadillos and no extended interaction with people from countries with high rates of leprosy, though he did spend a lot of time outdoors.
About 34% of new cases between 2015 and 2020 didn’t have those traditional risk factors, according to the research letter. Instead, the people appear to have been infected locally, a finding that suggests that leprosy has become endemic in Florida, the letter says.
Experts agree that leprosy is becoming endemic in the region. But that need not cause a public health panic, said Dr. Nicole Iovine, chief hospital epidemiologist at the University of Florida Health Shands Hospital. “Endemic” simply means there are regular levels of a disease in a region but not that rates are climbing, she explained.
“It’s really rare still,” Nathoo said. “These numbers are still relatively super low here. We’re not that concerned with it.”
However, Nathoo has tracked down clinical records of 15 biopsyproven leprosy cases clustered in eastern Orlando and Volusia County over the past five years. Fourteen of them have not traveled outside the United States, and none of them is connected to each other in any way.
Though there’s a “strong geographic predilection” for the illness in central Florida, there’s a misconception among doctors that leprosy happens either only in foreign-born people or only in
those with exposure to nine-banded armadillos, according to Dr. Charles Dunn, a study author and chief resident at Advanced Dermatology and Cosmetic Surgery Clinics.
Since their patients lacked those traditional risk factors, Dunn believes that it’s worth dispelling those assumptions. Even though armadillos are the “textbook example,” there is no perfect vector for leprosy that the medical community can pinpoint, he added. After all, most people don’t have prolonged contact with ninebanded armadillos.
“That was the crux of our paper, to say, ‘hey, this guy walked into our clinic. We’ve iagnosed him, and when we look at our database of people in Florida, they seem to be aggregated here,’ ” Nathoo said. “That’s something to just keep an eye out for.”
Still, the cluster of potentially endemic cases in Central Florida worries Iovine. Left untreated, the disease can paralyze the hands and the feet, cause blindness, and cause fingers and toes to shorten. The infection is curable, but treatment involves a combination of antibiotics taken over a few years.
Also, a cure may not resolve things like nerve or skin damage in people whose diagnosis has been delayed, which is a common situation in the US, where doctors aren’t used to seeing the disease.
One of the challenges with leprosy is how slowly the bacteria grows. Depending on the type of infection, according to the CDC, it can take up to 20 years to develop symptoms like pale numb blotches, rashes, ulcers and lesions.
A “cancer-killing pill” has appeared to “annihilate” solid tumours in early research - leaving healthy cells unaffected.
The new drug has been in development for 20 years, and is now undergoing pre-clinical research in the US.
Known as AOH1996, it targets a cancerous variant of a protein called proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA).
In its mutated form, PCNA is “critical” in the replication of DNA, and the repair of all “expanding tumours”.
AOH1996 is being worked on by City of Hope, one of America’s largest cancer research and treatment organisations.
Professor Linda Malkas, who has been developing the drug, explained: “PCNA is like a major airline terminal hub containing multiple plane gates.
“Data suggests PCNA is uniquely altered in cancer cells, and this fact allowed us to design a drug that targeted only the form of PCNA in cancer cells.
“Our cancer-killing pill is like a snowstorm that closes a key airline
hub, shutting down all flights in and out only in planes carrying cancer cells.”
While initial results are promising, the research so far has only concluded that AOH1996 can suppress tumour growth in cell
and animal models - with the first phase of a clinical trial in humans now under way.
The pill has been shown to be effective in treating cells derived from breast, prostate, brain, ovarian, cervical, skin and lung
cancers.
PCNA had previously been labelled as “undruggable” - and it is hoped the breakthrough could lead to more personalised, targeted medicines for cancer in the future.
(Sky News)
‘Cancer-killing pill’ that appears to ‘annihilate’ solid tumours is now being tested on humans
Science & Technology
‘Potentially hazardous’ asteroid poses no immediate risk to Earth, scientists say
A new NASA-funded scanner recently captured its first ‘potentially hazardous’ asteroid, researchers said.
The nearly 600-foot-long asteroid, dubbed 2022 SF289, was discovered during a test drive of next generation algorithm using the Atlas Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS) in Hawaii, the University of Washington reported.
ATLAS is an early warning system developed by the University of Hawaii and funded by NASA. The system consists of four telescopes (two in Hawaii, one in Chile and one in South Africa) which automatically scan the sky several times each night looking for moving objects.
The algorithm was designed to find near-Earth asteroids for the Vera C. Rubin Observatory’s upcoming 10-year survey of the sky.
The asteroid, researchers said, poses no risk to Earth “for the foreseeable future.”
The finding confirms the nextgeneration algorithm, called HelioLinc3D, can identify the nearEarth rocky bodies “with fewer and more dispersed observations than required by today’s methods.”
“By demonstrating the realworld effectiveness of the software that Rubin will use to look for thousands of yet-unknown potentially hazardous asteroids, the discovery of 2022 SF289 makes us all safer,” said scientist Ari Heinze, a researcher at the University of Washington, the principal developer of HelioLinc3D.
ABOUT 3000 MORE AWAITS DISCOVERY
A number of asteroids orbit close to the Earth, but those with a trajectory that takes them within about 5 million miles of Earth’s orbit (about 20 times the distance from Earth to the moon), warrant special attention.
The “potentially hazardous asteroids” (PHAs) are systematically searched for and
The algorithm was designed to find near-Earth asteroids
monitored to ensure they won’t collide with Earth, a potentially devastating event. Scientists search for PHAs daily using specialized telescope systems like ATLAS, run by a team at the University of Hawaii’s Institute for Astronomy. A discovery is made when they notice a point of light “moving unambiguously in a straight line over the image series.”
According to the University of Washington, scientists have discovered about 2,350 PHAs using this method, but estimate there are about 3,000 more awaiting discovery.
“This is just a small taste of what to expect with the Rubin Observatory in less than two years, when HelioLinc3D will be discovering an object like this every night,” said Rubin scientist
Mario Juric, director of the DiRAC Institute, professor of astronomy at the University of Washington and leader of the team behind HelioLinc3D. “More broadly, it’s a preview of the coming era of data-intensive astronomy. From HelioLinc3D to AI-assisted codes, the next decade of discovery will be a story of advancement in algorithms as much as in new, large, telescopes.” (USAToday)
Vegetarians 50% more likely to break their hips - study
Both men and women who are vegetarian are at a 50% greater risk of suffering a hip fracture compared to people who regularly eat meat, according to the results of a large-scale study at the University of Leeds in the UK.
It has been known that women who are vegetarian have an elevated risk of hip fracture, but the reasons why are unclear, and studies looking at the impact of a vegetarian diet on men have been small scale and inconclusive.
Global population growth and longevity increase the number of older adults worldwide, so the prevalence of chronic diseases including frailty, osteoporosis, and sarcopenia (the gradual loss of muscle mass) is therefore rising, thus increasing the risk of falls and fractures. Hip fractures result in a significant loss of independence and quality of life, risk of refracture, other chronic illnesses, and premature death. Many days of hospitalisation after such a fracture comprise a significant economic burden to healthcare systems, so minimizing the risk of hip fracture is therefore a public health priority.
The British researchers analysed data on more than 400,000 people
The health benefits of a vegetarian diet, including a lower risk of cancer and cardiovascular disease, may still outweigh any increases in hip fracture risk
– both men and women – and found that they provide the first indication that vegetarian men also face a greater risk of hip fracture than men who regularly eat meat. It also identifies some of the factors that may be putting vegetarians –both male and female – at increased risk.
They published their findings under the title “Risk of hip fracture in meat-eaters, pescatarians, and vegetarians: a prospective cohort
study of 413,914 UK Biobank participant” in the BMC Medicine. How do vegetarian diets lead to higher risk of hip fractures?
James Webster, a doctoral researcher at the university’s School of Food Science and Nutrition who led the study, said:
“Hip fractures are a growing problem in an ageing society, and can trigger debilitating health conditions and a loss of quality of life. This study shows that while
vegetarians face a greater risk of hip fracture than meat-eaters, this translates to three more hip fractures per 1,000 people over 10 years. The health benefits of a vegetarian diet, including a lower risk of cancer and cardiovascular disease, may still outweigh any increases in hip fracture risk. Our analysis suggests that low bodymass index (BMI) may be a key factor in why their risk is higher.”
Recruited between 2006 and 2010, the individuals in the study –all part of the UK Biobank project – supplied information on their diet and were categorised as either a regular meat eater who consumed meat five or more times a week; an occasional meat eater eating meat fewer than five times week; a pescatarian who they ate fish but not meat; or a vegetarian who ate dairy foods but no fish or meat. The data on the individuals was linked to their hospital records and a cases of hip fracture were recorded in the follow-up period to 2021.
Among the 413,914 participants, there were 3503 cases of hip fracture, which was an overall incidence rate of less than one percent (0.8%). Although the overall risk of having a hip fracture
was low, the relative risk between vegetarians and regular meat eaters was large. The researchers found that vegetarians had a 50% greater risk than regular meat-eaters, regardless of gender; that there was no difference in risk between occasional and regular meateaters; and that pescatarians had a slightly greater risk (8%) than regular meat-eaters, but this was not a significant difference.
The scientists calculated how these relative differences may translate to real-world cases. They predicted that on average, 6.5 regular meat eaters and 6.5 occasional meat eaters would experience a hip fracture and that there would be seven cases among pescatarians and 9.5 cases among vegetarians.
In addition, Webster said, vegetarians were about 17% less likely to meet protein recommendations than meateaters. “So, important messages from our study are that vegetarians need to ensure they are getting a balanced diet with enough protein and maintain a healthy BMI. This will help vegetarians to maintain healthy bones and muscles.”
(JPost)
Sports International
Lionel Messi scores two as Inter Miami beat Orlando City 3-1
Lionel Messi continued his fine start for Inter Miami as he scored twice in a 3-1 win over Orlando City in the Leagues Cup on Wednesday.
The 36-year-old’s two close range goals helped his side progress to the last 16 of the tournament.
Miami were winless in 11 games before Messi’s arrival, but have now won their last three matches in a row.
Messi’s former Barcelona team-mate Jordi Alba made his Miami debut, coming on as a 64th minute substitute.
The pair’s former Camp Nou colleague Sergio Busquets has also made the move to Florida, while exBarca and Argentina manager Tata Martino is in charge after replacing Phil Neville in the dugout.
Messi’s team-mate and former Newcastle defender DeAndre Yedlin believes the Argentine strikes “fear” into rivals.
“He just gives everyone around him confidence. You can give him balls in difficult situations and know he’s going to make something out of it,” Yedlin said postmatch.
“The flipside is that for the teams we’re playing against, it puts a bit of fear in their
eyes. They’re dropping back on their heels a bit and that gives us more space to play.”
David Beckham-owned Miami will next take on FC Dallas in Texas on Sunday for a spot in the quarterfinals of the Leagues Cup, which debuted in 2019 and sees sides from the United States and Mexico compete in a knockout format. (BBC)
NOTICE
An Application, REGISTERED PR 16960, by RUTH GARDINER-FORBES AND KENO FORBES for OUTLINE DEVELOPMENT PERMISSION for THE CONSTRUCTION OF AN APARTMENT COMPLEX: TWO (2) TWO STOREY BUILDINGS CONTAINING FOUR (4) STUDIO UNITS, EIGHT (8) ONEBEDROOM UNITS, SIX (6) TWO-BEDROOM UNITS, GAZEBO, SWIMMING POOL AND DECK AND ANCILLARY FACILITIES. This application has been submitted to the Department of Planning for consideration of Outline Development Permission on Block & Parcel 60810/158, which is 0.90 acres of land located at Pond View Drive, The Bight, Providenciales. The proposed development is inconsistent with a plan which has been approved.
Anyone wishing to make representation(s) may do so in writing to the Director of Planning, South Base, Grand Turk or the Department of Planning, Emily House, Leeward Highway, Providenciales, within twenty-eight (28) days of publication of this Notice. You may also make representation(s) via in person or video conferencing at the sitting of the Physical Planning Board when this application would be considered. If you are desirous so to do via video conferencing or in person, contact the Secretary of Physical Planning Board. Dated: July 31st, 2023
REGULATION 8 OF THE PHYSICAL PLANNING (DEVELOPMENT PERMISSION). REGULATIONS, 2021
An Application, REGISTERED PR 16843 by AD RENTALS LTD. for OUTLINE DEVELOPMENT PERMISSION for THE CONSTRUCTION OF AN APARTMENT COMPLEX CONSISTING OF ONE (1) 3-STOREY BUILDING CONTAINING SIX (6) ONE BEDROOM UNITS, EIGHTEEN (18) EFFICIENCY UNITS, MANAGER’S OFFICE, GYM, SPA, SWIMMING POOL AND DECK AND ANCILLARY FACILITIES.
This application has been submitted to the Department of Planning for consideration of Outline Development Permission on Block & Parcel 60906/130 which is 0.77 acres of land located at Sunshine Loop, Leeward Going Through, (Grace Bay), Providenciales.
The proposed development is inconsistent with a plan which has been approved.
Anyone wishing to make representation(s) may do so in writing to the Director of Planning, South Base, Grand Turk or the Department of Planning, Emily House, Leeward Highway, Providenciales, within twenty-eight (28) days of publication of this Notice. You may also make representation(s) via in person or video conferencing at the sitting of the Physical Planning Board when this application would be considered. If you are desirous so to do via video conferencing or in person, contact the Secretary of Physical Planning Board.
REGULATION 8 OF THE PHYSICAL PLANNING (DEVELOPMENT PERMISSION). REGULATIONS, 2021
England are now fifth in the early stages of the third World Test Championship
The Ashes: England lose two-thirds of World Test Championship points for slow over rates
England have lost two-thirds of the World Test Championship points they earned in the Ashes after bowling consistently slow over rates.
Ben Stokes’ side did not bowl at the required rate in four of the five Tests and have lost 19 of the 28 points they won for two wins and a draw.
Australia have lost 10 points for a slow over rate in the fourth Test.
England and Australia players have also been fined 5% of their match fee for each point lost.
Teams are docked a point for each over they are short. England have lost two points for two missing overs at Edgbaston, nine from the Lord’s Test, three for Old Trafford and five for The Oval.
The third edition of the Test Championship has just begun, with a final due to be played in 2025.
Woods has not competed since withdrawing from the Masters in April
England sit fifth in the early standings, with Australia in third and Pakistan top after their series win over Sri Lanka.
Sides accumulate points from each Test they play over a twoyear cycle, with the leading two teams meeting in a one-off match to decide the Championship.
Australia won the 2021-23 competition, beating India by 209 runs at The Oval in June. (BBC)
Tom Brady: NFL legend becomes minority owner of Birmingham City
Seven-time Super Bowl champion Tom Brady has become a minority owner of Championship side Birmingham City.
The NFL legend, who retired from the sport in February, has “entered a partnership” with Blues’ new owners Knighthead Capital Management LLC.
The 46-year-old will become chairman of a new advisory board at St Andrew’s.
“Tom Brady joining the Birmingham City team is a statement of intent. We are setting the bar at world class,” Knighthead co-founder Tom Wagner said.
“Tom is both investing [as well as] committing his time and extensive expertise.
“As chair of the advisory board Tom will have a direct impact on the club. The men’s, women’s, and academy teams are going to benefit from [his] knowledge.
“The goal that Tom has committed to is to make Birmingham City a respected leader in nutrition, health, wellness, and recovery across the world of
The club said Brady would also work closely with the board and the management team on global marketing efforts and the identification of new commercial partnership opportunities.
A number of American stars have made minority investments in English football clubs in recent months.
Former NFL defensive end
JJ Watt became a shareholder
at Burnley in May, while actor and producer Michael B Jordan invested in Bournemouth at the end of last year.
American golfers Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas, and NBA AllStar Russell Westbrook are also minority stakeholders in Leeds United.
Fellow NBA star LeBron James also become a minor partner in Fenway Sports Group (FSG), the owners of Liverpool, in 2021.
Tiger Woods has joined the PGA Tour’s Policy Board as a player director in a move which will give golfers a bigger say in major decisions.
Woods’ appointment follows the merger between the Tour, Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund and the DP World Tour in June that left players blindsided.
The 15-time major winner becomes the board’s sixth player director, joining Rory McIlroy and four others.
“I am honoured to represent the players of the PGA Tour,” said Woods, 47.
“This is a critical point for the Tour, and the players will do their best to make certain that any changes that are made in Tour operations are in the best interest of all Tour stakeholders, including fans, sponsors and players.”
The players will work with Tour commissioner Jay Monahan to amend the policy board’s governing documents so “no major decision can be made in the future without the prior involvement and approval of the player directors”.
Woods joins fellow players McIlroy, Patrick Cantlay, Charley Hoffman, Peter Malnati and Webb Simpson on the board.
In addition to the the six player directors, the other board members are five independent directors, and the PGA of America director.
The player directors will have full transparency and the authority to approve or decline any potential changes to the Tour as part of the Framework Agreement discussions.
Two months ago the golf world was left stunned by the announcement of a partnership between the PGA Tour and Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, which controls LIV Golf.
The surprise announcement came after a year of unprecedented disruption in the men’s game following the launch of LIV Golf, with many top players lured its huge prize funds.
Masters champion Jon Rahm said players felt a sense of “betrayal” that the merger was negotiated in secret, with Monahan facing calls to resign.
Olympic champion Xander Schauffele also said before last month’s Scottish Open that he and other players ad lost a lot of trust in Monahan.
“I am committed to taking the necessary steps to restore any lost trust or confidence that occurred as a result of the surprise announcement of our Framework Agreement,” said Monahan.
“My job in the negotiations - in partnership with our player directors, PAC (Player Advisory Council) and the broader membership - is to advocate for what is best for the PGA Tour members today and in the future.
“Any agreement we reach must be shaped by our members’ input and approval earned through our player directors.”
The Tour says 41 players have expressed support for the board changes, including McIlroy, Schauffele, Rahm, Jordan Spieth, Justin Thomas, Shane Lowry and Matt Fitzpatrick. (BBC)
Woods joins PGA Tour’s board as player director in move to give players more controlTom Brady retired in February after 23 seasons in the NFL football.”
Sports International
Jamaica defy the odds as Marta bows out
Jamaica manager Lorne Donaldson said his team had “never had this much fun” after reaching the Women’s World Cup last 16 for the first time, leaving Brazil devastated.
They battled out a cagey encounter in Melbourne and Jamaica put in a stubborn defensive display to ensure their impressive tournament still has another chapter.
The Reggae Girlz, ranked 43rd in the world, have kept three clean sheets in the group stages of their second World Cup, having conceded 12 goals in three defeats in 2019’s competition.
“We were not expected to be in the World Cup in 2019,” said Donaldson. “The programme was fairly new and we said, ‘Oh, we’re in!’. It was like being deer in headlights.
“We were very young and happy to be there. This time around we said, ‘Hey, we’re not just going to show up. We’re going to get out of the group.’ Our mentality was that nothing is impossible.”
strong position when they held group favourites France to a goalless draw and followed it with a crucial 1-0 win over Panama without star striker Khadija Shaw, who was suspended after being sent off in their opening match.
Manchester City’s Shaw returned to the side in Melbourne on Wednesday, adding muchneeded threat for Jamaica on the counter-attack.
Former Arsenal centre-back Rafaelle Souza largely kept Shaw at bay, though the Jamaican’s presence alone caused problems and she almost scored with 10 minutes remaining, firing over the bar on the break.
defence and offering very little in a desperate fight to stay in Australia.
They almost found a golden touch in the third minute of secondhalf stoppage time when Andressa pounced on a scramble in the box, but Spencer was again equal to it and Brazil’s substitutes fell to their knees in despair in the dugout.
It is a disappointing early exit for the South American champions who took their European counterparts England to a penalty shootout in the Women’s Finalissima at Wembley in April and had high hopes coming into the World Cup.
“There’s a lot of feelings of course,” said Brazil manager Pia Sundhage. “In the locker room there’s many sad players and coaches.
Brazil, who recalled striker Marta to the starting XI, could not find the goal they needed and England held their nerve to earn a stunning win over Australia for the first time at a Netball World Cup and finish top of Group F in South Africa.
England overturned an eightgoal third-quarter deficit to win 5655 in front of a thrilled crowd.
It is only the second time the Roses have beaten Australia since their Commonwealth Games triumph in 2018.
England will face New Zealand in the semi-finals while Australia will play Jamaica.
England will contest their semifinal at 10:00 BST on Saturday, with the second at 15:00. Both matches will be live on BBC iPlayer and the BBC Sport website and app.
Defending champions New Zealand suffered their biggest ever loss at a World Cup with a 5948 defeat by Jamaica but South Africa’s 52-50 win over Uganda was not enough to overtake the Silver Ferns.
England were already assured of their last four place going into the match on Thursday, but the result means they maintain their unbeaten record with six wins from six.
They have never won a Netball World Cup, having taken the bronze medal at the past three
stages of their second World Cup
world, have kept three clean sheets in
failed to progress for the first time in 28 years.
Marta, 37, is the all-time leading scorer in men’s or women’s World Cups with 17 goals but will not feature again on this stage, with her sixth tournament coming to an end having made three group-stage
appearances. After this goalless stalemate, Jamaica could face Colombia or Germany in the last 16, while France go through as Group F winners following their victory over Panama in the other match. Jamaica put themselves in a
That was Jamaica’s only real chance as Brazil built pressure and searched endlessly for the goal they needed to take them through to the knockout stage.
Marta, who went off to huge cheers after 80 minutes, had a few glimpses at goal, while Debinha, Luana and Tamires all drew saves from Jamaica goalkeeper Becky Spencer.
But Brazil were predictable and lacklustre, struggling to break down Jamaica’s well-organised
“At the end of the day I’m responsible for the result. Of course I’m not alone, but the way we have worked and have prepared is something I need to look back on and see if we could have done things differently.
“We put in a lot of work, but at the end of the day it’s Jamaica [who progress]. It’s not a big distance between failure and success.” (BBC)
Netball World Cup 2023: England 56-55 Australia - Roses beat Diamonds in thriller
editions.
However, they will gain huge confidence from the way they fought back against world number ones Australia and kept their composure in the final seconds to seal an important win.
“The fact we were eight goals down, to be pushed in the last 15 minutes and still come out on top - you can’t underestimate what that tells me about where the group are at mentally,” head coach Jess Thirlby said.
“We know that we’ve got two games to come and it means nothing if we can’t follow it up. But for today, it is important to allow the players to celebrate.”
TENACIOUS ENGLAND SECURE VICTORY
After England cruised through the rest of their preliminary matches, their clash against 11-time world champions Australia marked their first real test of the tournament.
Thirlby has tinkered with her starting line-up in Cape Town, figuring out the best combination for starting the match and who will have the biggest impact from the bench.
England fired out of the blocks to lead by two after the opening
quarter, with favoured shooting partnership Helen Housby and Eleanor Cardwell in scintillating form, missing just one goal between them all match.
But, seeking to reclaim the world title they lost to New Zealand four years ago, Australia adapted quickly, with defender Sarah Klau the key.
Changes were needed in the second half for England to overturn the deficit and they arrived in the form of inexperienced defensive duo Funmi Fadoju and Fran Williams as well as wing-attack Chelsea Pitman.
The substitutions had the desired effect as former Diamond Pitman injected some creativity into the attack while Fadoju and Williams added crucial interceptions along with Imogen Allison, who has had a stellar tournament so far.
With the score poised at 45-44 in favour of Australia going into the final 15 minutes, the Roses struggled to break down the Diamonds’ defence.
But a crucial tip from Williams in the final seconds meant England could maintain possession and play down the clock to take an historic win.
“Every win is a confidence boost for us,” said mid-courter Allison.
“It is something that keeps us going day after day - getting one over Australia is a good one.
“We’ve had some games where we’ve been able to throw out different combinations and that is why we were able to go and do it out there. All the girls that came on had a huge impact.”
England will be keen to not get carried away - Australia lost their final pool match against Jamaica at last year’s Commonwealth Games and went on to win the title - but a win against the Diamonds before the semi-final is a huge marker to lay down.
JAMAICA CONTINUE FORM WITH NZ WIN
With two matches in two days against two top teams, it was perhaps no surprise that New Zealand started slowly against the Sunshine Girls, who raced into a four-point lead after the first quarter.
The Silver Ferns managed to engineer a way to grow back into the game and, led by captain Ameliaranne Ekenasio and Maia Wilson in attack, they cut the deficit to three points at the interval.
Somalia suspends sports official over slow sprinter
Somalia has suspended a sports official for nepotism after a novice sprinter was allowed to compete in an international sports competition.
Nasra Abubakar Ali took almost twice as long as the winner to finish the 100m at the World University Games in China.
An investigation by the Somali Ministry of Youth and Sport revealed she is “not a sports person, nor a runner”.
The chairwoman of the Somali Athletics Federation has been accused of abusing her power and defaming Somalia.
Khadijo Aden Dahir was stood down following a meeting between the country’s sport’s ministry and its National Olympic Committee.
Their preliminary investigation also found that a sports body known as the Somali University Sports Association does not exist.
The ministry said it will pursue legal action against both the chairman of the Athletics Federation of Somalia and others responsible for the “falsification” of the sports group.
It did not elaborate on what the connection between Ms Dahir and Ms Ali is.
In a video of the event, the athlete is soon left out of shot and eventually completes the race with a jovial skip.
The novice athlete completed the race in 21.81 seconds - more than 10 seconds behind the
eventual winner.
Sports Minister Mohamed Barre Mohamud described the incident as an embarrassment.
“What happened today was not representation of the Somali people... we apologise to the Somali people,” he said.
The fact that she reportedly had no previous experience of competing has prompted some Somalis to wonder why she was ever selected.
“It’s disheartening to witness such an incompetent government. How could they select an untrained girl to represent Somalia in running?” wrote one social media user, Elham Garaad. “It’s truly shocking and reflects poorly on our country internationally.”
Tino Livramento: Newcastle United agree £40m deal for Southampton defender
Newcastle United have agreed a deal for Southampton right-back Tino Livramento worth £40m including add-ons, reports BBC Radio Solent.
The 20-year-old joined the south-coast club from Chelsea in 2021 for £5m.
Livramento’s departure comes after Southampton were relegated from the Premier League last season.
The England Under-21 defender made just two outings last term after suffering an anterior cruciate ligament injury in April 2022.
He came on as a substitute in Southampton’s final two games of campaign against Brighton and Liverpool.
Livramento played 32 games during the 2021-22 season, 28 of those in the Premier League.
Newcastle have signed Italy midfielder Sandro Tonali and England winger Harvey Barnes this summer as the Tyneside club look to push on from their top-four
Skyhawks, Sequest remain unbeaten in PAL 17U basketball
by
finish last season.
Eddie Howe’s side begin the new Premier League campaign on 12 August when they host Aston Villa. (BBC)
Against Commanders, Skyhawks won
Morris
Commanders, who had won their week one clash, were led
Sequest’s second win was an eight-point victory, 40-32 against Guardians. V. Gbemudu led the attack with 16 points, while Leroy Hymar assisted with 12.
In the other 17U clash, the Avengers defeated the Badgers 48-30. Codney Capron was on fire from the three-point line as he sank four shots from beyond the arc for a game-high 15 points.
Sports National
SWA Sharks wing out for CONCACAF Caribbean Club Shield
TCI’s dominant club team, the SWA Sharks FC left Providenciales this week to attend their second consecutive CONCACAF Caribbean Club Shield.
The international tournament, for all small nation Caribbean islands league champions, is being held in St Kitts and Nevis and according to the Sharks’ manager, Chris Bryan, the team is “fired up” and ready for the upcoming battles.
“The team is stronger than ever and are fired up and ready to give it everything they have”. Bryan is confident they will improve on their performance of last year with
a good chance of making it to the finals of the competition.
The Sharks’ progression has been nothing short of extraordinary.
The Turks and Caicos Island’s longest running club had its first appearance in a five-a-side competition in 1996 held at Club Med (at the time the only grass field in Providenciales).
The club was officially established as a TCIFA team in 1998 and has participated in every “Provo Premier League” (PPL) season since. Fast forward to 2019, under the guidance of former TCIFA president Bryan as manager,
Realest FC ahead in Scott’s Car Rental and Sales Masters League
REALEST FC surged to a 7-2 win in the latest clash of the Scott’s Car Rental and Sales Over-35 Masters League, which was played last Saturday in Providenciales.
Barrington Somers netted a hat trick in the clash to lead the attack. He scored in the 3rd, 11th and 32nd minutes, while Diego Alvert added a brace (18th and 27th minutes).
Fritz Gerald Norvius and Ganel Joseph scored the others.
Beaches were led by Damion Dunkley who scored in the 38th and 40th minutes.
Realest are the front runners for the title and have now accumulated 15 points from six games.
Their main rivals will be Police,
who also stamped their authority, with a commanding 12-0 win when they battled against Teachers, also on Saturday last.
In that clash, Kevern De Bellot struck five goals (2nd, 4th, 39th, 40th and 42nd), while Christopher O’Neil added four (6th, 15th, 22nd and 50th).
Kemoy Piper (34th and 35th) and Omar Edwards (33rd) also scored for the winners.
Realest are on 15 points from five wins in six games, with Police in second on 12 points from four wins in six games.
Beaches are third on nine points from three wins, with Teachers FC in fourth.
the Sharks became consistent winners and have since won every subsequent league championship.
After winning the 2021-22 PPL season, the Sharks became the first TCI club team to be invited to an international tournament; the CONCACAF Caribbean Shield, held in Puerto Rico.
Here, the club received plaudits for their structured possessionbased football and resilient displays against semi-professional teams from all over the Caribbean. They represented the TCI well, their efforts culminating in two narrow 1-0 defeats against the champions of
Guadeloupe and Curacao and a 3-1 win against Real Rincon of Bonaire.
In the coming days, they will again push to make a statement. Their first group game is set for Friday, August 4th against SV Dakota (Champions of Aruba), while on Sunday, August 6th, they play Club Sando (Trinidad and Tobago) and Solidarite Scolarie (Guadeloupe) on Tuesday, August 8th.
If they win the group, they will advance to the semifinals.
According to Bryan, “Taking our 22-strong contingent to St Kitts for the week-long competition is a significantly expensive endeavour
and we want to thank SWA Architects for standing by and supporting us throughout as well as Carlisle Supplies for additional significant financial support making this trip a reality, our team will not disappoint!”
The CONCACAF Caribbean Club Shield is a small nations gateway competition ultimately leading to the CONCACAF Champions Cup which involves professional teams from all other countries of the Federation including such international football powerhouses as Canada, USA, Mexico and Costa Rica.