FRIDAY, MAY
07, 2021
VOLUME 115, No.18
Higher electricity bills Page 3
www.thevincentian.com
Children, elderly abandoned Page 4
ECGC pledges $1m Page 11
FORMER TRACK ATHLETE SHOT DEAD McFee, known to his family and friends as Lopez, is said to have been running from his assailants when he was shot several times. Persons who were either ‘liming’ and others who were casually making their way along the street outside the National Lotteries Authority headquarters, spoke of hearing sounds of rapid gunfire that caused panic. According to reliable
information, Lopez was in the vicinity of the Bishop College Kingstown, apparently waiting for transportation to his current abode in Redemption Sharpes, when a white minivan pulled up and two men alighted and opened fire in Lopez’s direction. He tried to escape the hail of bullets by running away from his Continued on Page 3.
Curtis Lopez McFee – though still unconfirmed by police, looks likely to be entered into the record books as this country’s 13th homicide victim so far for 2021. by KENVILLE HORNE A FORMER TRACK ATHLETE added to this country’s homicide count for the year when he was gunned down in Paul’s Avenue, Kingstown, just before 8:00pm on Wednesday, May 5. Curtis Lopez
EC$1.50
A crowd of quickly surrounded Lopez’s body as it lay on the street in a pool of blood, long before the police arrived on the scene.
Lennox Scully Hunte Page 12&13
Rastas assist Rastas Page 24
FAMILY WANTS ANSWERS by SHERON GARRAWAY THE FAMILY OF 22-YEAR OLD Vincentian Romario Morgan, who was found dead in a hotel in Canada, wants answers. Reports from the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) revealed that Morgan was discovered Romario Morgan did not live unresponsive to even begin to fulfill his contract as a fruit picker. and flat on his back on April 29th, in a Mississauga hotel where he was in quarantine, in accordance with the mandatory 14day isolation required for persons entering Canada. According to Morgan’s older sister, Roshina Jack, Morgan had received a first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine in early March before he left the country. He was in Ontario to pick fruits and his cousin had gone with him. Jack, still in shock from the news, said the family would like answers. The family doesn’t know when Morgan left St. Vincent and when he arrived in Canada, but family members know he left after the La Soufrière erupted on April 9. They were told he took a cruise ship to Grenada and then travelled on to Canada. His cousin, Jack said, was isolating in the same hotel and when he realized that Morgan was not responding to messages (telephone), he asked another worker to check on him. That worker found him dead. “He was just lying there. There was no blood, nothing,” Jack said the cousin reported. The company that had employed Morgan called his mother to let her know an autopsy was scheduled for last Friday. The family awaits the results. Jack said she did not know the name of his employer. CBC reported that a police investigation has been launched to determine the death of Morgan. There is also word that the activist group Justice for Migrant Workers is monitoring investigations by the police, but has also called for an independent investigation into Morgan’s death, to determine if there is a connection to his work.