Showing posts with label British. Show all posts
Showing posts with label British. Show all posts

Monday, January 26, 2015

Hoax call put through to British prime minister

Sunday, January 25, 2015 | 6:57 PM    

LONDON, United Kingdom (AFP) – A hoax caller pretending to be a spy chief was put through to British Prime Minister David Cameron yesterday, prompting a review of security procedures, a government spokeswoman said.

The caller pretended to be the director of Britain’s electronic spy agency GCHQ Robert Hannigan, and was put through to Cameron on an official mobile phone, the spokeswoman said.

The “brief” conversation ended once it was revealed to be a hoax and no sensitive information was disclosed, she added.

It followed a previous hoax call to GCHQ on Sunday, in which Hannigan’s mobile phone number was given to the caller.

“Following two hoax calls to government departments today, a notice has gone out to all departments to be on the alert for such calls,” the spokeswoman said.

“A hoax caller claiming to be the GCHQ director was connected to the prime minister. The prime minister ended the call when it became clear it was a hoax.

“Both GCHQ and Number 10 take security seriously and both are currently reviewing procedures following these hoax calls to ensure that the government learns any lessons from this incident.”

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Hoax call put through to British prime minister

Sunday, January 25, 2015

Stranded Jamaican, Lloyd Bogle, gets British visa

Friday, January 23, 2015 | 4:56 PM    

KINGSTON, Jamaica – Lloyd Bogle has received a visa to return to England.

The 64-year-old Jamaican, who has been living in England for the past 54 years, has been stranded in the island since October 2014.

He will now be able to return to England.

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Stranded Jamaican, Lloyd Bogle, gets British visa

Monday, October 27, 2014

Disabled Russian container ship towed away from British Columbia coast

Ship Adrift_Cham640.jpg October 17, 2014: In this aerial photo provided by the Department of National Defense Maritime Forces Pacific, a Canadian Coast Guard helicopter flies near a Russian container ship carrying hundreds of tons of fuel drifting without power in rough seas off British Columbia’s northern coast. (AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Department of National Defense Maritime Forces Pacific)

PRINCE RUPERT, British Columbia –  A large tug boat was pulling a disabled Russian cargo ship along British Columbia’s coast, ending fears that the vessel carrying hundreds of tons of fuel would drift ashore, hit rocks and spill.

Lt. Paul Pendergast of the Canadian Forces’ Joint Rescue Co-ordination Centre said the Barbara Foss arrived Saturday evening and the tow of the Simushir was going well.

Pendergast said authorities will wait until the Simushir is comfortably north of Haida Gwaii before they make a decision on where it will be towed. Prince Rupert is the nearest container ship port, 93 nautical miles away.

The Simushir lost power late Thursday off Haida Gwaii, also known as the Queen Charlotte Islands, as it made its way from Everett in Washington state to Russia.

The Coast Guard ship Gordon Reid earlier towed the disabled ship away from shore, but a towline got detached and the ship was adrift again for six hours Saturday.

The 10 crew members were trying to repair the broken oil heater that has left the vessel disabled, Royal Canadian Navy Lt. Greg Menzies said.

The fear of oil spills is especially acute in British Columbia, where residents remember the Exxon Valdez disaster of 1989. Such worries have fed fierce opposition — particularly from environmentalists and Canada’s native tribes — to a proposal to build a pipeline that would carry oil from Canada’s Alberta oil sands to a terminal in Kitimat, British Columbia, for shipment to Asia. Opponents say the proposed pipeline would bring about 220 large oil tankers a year to the province’s coast.

The president of the Council of the Haida Nation warned Friday that a storm coming into the area was expected to push the ship onto the rocky shore, but President Pete Lantin later said their worst fears had subsided.

“If the weather picks up it could compromise that, but as of right now there is a little sense of relief that we might have averted catastrophe here,” Lantin said.

About 5,000 people live on the islands and fish for food nearby, Lantin said.

The Simushir, which is about 440 feet long, was carrying a range of hydrocarbons, mining materials and other related chemicals. That included 400 tons of bunker oil and 50 tons of diesel.

The vessel is not a tanker but rather a container ship. In comparison, the tanker Exxon Valdez, spilled 35,000 metric tons of oil.

A spokesman for Russian shipping firm SASCO, the owners of the vessel, said it is carrying 298 containers of mining equipment in addition to heavy bunker fuel as well as diesel oil for the voyage.

The U.S. Coast Guard had a helicopter on standby in the event that the crew members need to be pulled off the ship.  Officials said the injured captain was evacuated by helicopter, but they were given no further medical details.

The Simushir is registered in Kholmsk, Russia, and owned by SASCO, also known as Sakhalin Shipping Company, according to the company’s website. The SASCO website says the ship was built in the Netherlands in 1998.


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Disabled Russian container ship towed away from British Columbia coast

Sunday, September 28, 2014

British minister resigns over explicit photos report

Saturday, September 27, 2014 | 2:04 PM    

LONDON, England – (AFP) – A British minister announced his unexpected resignation on Saturday as a newspaper reported he sent an explicit photo of himself online, in the latest setback to David Cameron’s Conservative-led government.

“I have decided to resign as Minister for Civil Society having been notified of a story to be published in a Sunday newspaper,” said Brooks Newmark, a Conservative member of parliament since 2005.

“I would like to appeal for the privacy of my family to be respected at this time. I remain a loyal supporter of this government as its long-term economic plan continues to deliver for the British people,” Newmark said.

The Sunday Mirror reported that Newmark exchanged a series of sexually explicit photos online with a freelance reporter who was posing as a young female activist.

In a private message conversation on a social networking site, Newmark “sent a graphic picture exposing himself while wearing a pair of paisley pyjamas” the tabloid newspaper reported.

The then-minister also invited the reporter to meet with him during the Conservative party conference that begins on Sunday, when the party will set out its case for re-election in the May 2015 election.

It was the second blow to the prime minister on the eve of the conference, following the defection of a Conservative lawmaker to eurosceptic party UKIP earlier on Saturday.

“The prime minister has accepted Brooks Newmark’s resignation from his role as Minister for Civil Society. His replacement will be announced shortly,” Cameron’s office said in a statement.

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British minister resigns over explicit photos report

US, allies hit ISIS in Syria near Turkey border - British planes prepare for first mission against ISIS

BEIRUT –  U.S.-led coalition warplanes struck Islamic State fighters in Syria attacking a town near the Turkish border for the first time Saturday, as well as positions in the country’s east, activists and a Kurdish official said.

The Islamic State group’s assault on the Syrian Kurdish town of Kobani has sent more than 100,000 refugees streaming across the border into Turkey in recent days as Kurdish forces from Iraq and Turkey have raced to the front lines to defend the town.

Nawaf Khalil, a spokesman for Syria’s Kurdish Democratic Union Party, or PYD, said the strikes targeted Islamic State positions near Kobani, also known as Ayn Arab, destroying two tanks. He said the jihadi fighters later shelled the town, wounding a number of civilians.

The United States and five Arab allies launched an aerial campaign against Islamic State fighters in Syria early Tuesday with the aim of rolling back and ultimately crushing the extremist group, which has created a proto-state spanning the Syria-Iraq border. Along the way, the militants have massacred captured Syrian and Iraqi troops, terrorized minorities in both countries and beheaded two American journalists and a British aid worker.

The latest airstrikes came as Syria’s Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem told the Lebanon-based Al-Mayadeen TV that airstrikes alone “will not be able wipe out” the Islamic State group. Speaking from New York where he is attending the U.N. General Assembly, al-Moallem said in remarks broadcast Saturday that the U.S. should work with Damascus if it wants to win the war.

“They must know the importance of coordination with the people of this country because they know what goes on there,” al-Moallem said. The U.S. has ruled out any coordination with President Bashar Assad’s government, which is at war with the Islamic State group as well as Western-backed rebels.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the coalition’s strikes near Kobani came amid heavy fighting between the Islamic State group and members of the Kurdish force known as the People’s Protection Units, or YPK.

The Britain-based group, which relies on activists inside Syria, had no immediate word on casualties from Saturday’s strikes. The Observatory reported Friday that 13 civilians have been killed by the strikes since they began.

Kurdish fighter Majid Goran told the Associated Press by telephone from Kobani that two bombs were dropped over the nearby village of Ali Shar, at 6 a.m. (11 p.m. Eastern Friday), but that the positions they struck were empty.

Turkey’s Dogan news agency reported Saturday that the sound of heavy fighting could be heard from the Turkish border village of Karaca. The agency said Kurdish forces retook some positions they had lost to the Islamic militants a few days ago. It did not cite a source for the report.

Dozens of people wounded in the fighting arrived in Turkey for treatment on Saturday, it said.

Another Kurdish fighter, Ismet Sheikh Hasan, said the Turkish military on Saturday night retaliated after stray shells landed on Turkish territory, firing in the Ali Shar region. He said the Turkish action left Kurdish fighters in the middle of the crossfire.

He said that on Friday, the Islamic militants were attacking the Kobani area from the east with tanks and artillery, advancing on Ali Shar and Haja. He said some 20 people were killed, including Kurdish fighters and civilians, while another 50 people were wounded.

The fighting around Kobani sparked one of the largest single outflows of refugees since Syria’s conflict began more than three years ago. The Syrian Kurdish forces have long been one of the most effective fighting units battling the Islamic State, but the tide has turned in recent weeks as the Islamic militants have attacked with heavy weapons likely looted from neighboring Iraq.

The Observatory said other coalition airstrikes targeted Islamic State compounds in the central province of Homs and the northern regions of Raqqa and Aleppo. The group said 31 explosions were heard in the city of Raqqa, the group’s de facto capital, and its suburbs.

The Local Coordination Committees, another activist group, said the strikes in the east hit the province of Deir el-Zour as well as Raqqa. The LCC also said the coalition targeted grain silos west of Deir el-Zour city.

It was not immediately clear why the silos were targeted.

Max Blumenfeld, a spokesman for U.S. Central Command, said the U.S. airstrikes “don’t target food or anything else than can be used by the civilian population.” But he said that until the military reviews images from planes that participated in the strikes, he could not rule out that silos were hit.

He said the airstrikes are aimed at specific Islamic State targets such as command and control centers, transportation and logistics, and oil refineries, “but not food that could have an impact upon the civilian population.”

“Our targets are structures that combatants would use,” he said.

Blumenfeld later said the U.S. did target what he called an Islamic State grain storage facility on Tuesday near Boukamal, a town close to the Iraqi border which was seized by the Islamic State group earlier this year.

In recent days coalition warplanes had struck oil-producing facilities in eastern Syria in a bid to cut off one of the Islamic State group’s main revenue streams — black market oil sales that the U.S. says generate up to $2 million a day.

The coalition striking Syria includes Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain and Jordan, and the strikes are an extension of the U.S. campaign in neighboring Iraq launched in August.

Near the capital Damascus, Syrian troops meanwhile entered the once rebel-held northeastern suburb of Adra after days of clashes, Syrian state TV said. The advance came two days after troops captured the nearby Adra industrial zone.


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US, allies hit ISIS in Syria near Turkey border - British planes prepare for first mission against ISIS

Saturday, September 27, 2014

THE BRITISH ARE COMING: Fighters take off for combat shortly after vote

Britain’s Ministry of Defense says warplanes have taken off for their first combat mission over Iraq since Parliament approved airstrikes targeting the Islamic state group.

The Tornado GR4 aircraft took off from RAF Akrotiri on Cyprus on Saturday, hours after Britain joined the U.S.-led coalition of nations that are launching airstrikes against the extremists.

The Ministry of Defense says that the Tornados “are now ready to be used in an attack role as and when appropriate targets are identified.”

There were six Tornado jets stationed on Cyprus that have been used previously to fly reconnaissance flights, The Independent reported.

Prime Minister David Cameron has described U.K. involvement as critical to security on home soil, arguing that facing down terrorists has become a matter of urgency. He says the hallmarks of the campaign would be “patience and persistence, not shock and awe.”

Meanwhile, activists say the American-led coalition attacking a jihadi group in Syria has launched airstrikes on its positions including wheat silos in the country’s east.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says the strikes targeted compounds for the Islamic State group in the central province of Homs and the northern region of Raqqa.

The Local Coordination Committees, another activist group, said the Saturday strikes hit the eastern province of Deir el-Zour as well as Raqqa.

VIDEO: ALLEN WEST SAYS GROUND FORCES NEEDED IN ISIS FIGHT

The LCC also said the coalition targeted wheat silos west of the eastern city of Deir el-Zour.

The coalition, which began its aerial campaign against Islamic State fighters in Syria early Tuesday, aims to roll back and ultimately crush the extremist group, which has created a proto-state spanning the Syria-Iraq border.

Britain did not approve airstrikes in Syria. 


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THE BRITISH ARE COMING: Fighters take off for combat shortly after vote

Monday, July 28, 2014

British man sentenced for trying to smugggle ganja

Bjorn Burke, Staff Reporter

A British man who attempted to smuggle more than 14 pounds of ganja out of the island, was sentenced to 18 months’ imprisonment in the Corporate Area Resident Magistrate’s Court last Thursday.

Charged with possession of, dealing in, conspiracy to export and taking steps to export ganja is 19-year-old Filipe Smith. He pleaded guilty to the charges.

Allegations are that on the day in question, Smith, attempted to board a flight back to his homeland, was accosted by authorities at the Norman Manley International Airport and was searched. Inside his luggage, officials reportedly saw a quantity of canned ackee products, as well as an assortment of bars of soap. Further inspection of the items revealed that they were tampered with and contained 14 pounds three ounces of ganja. Smith was subsequently arrested and charged.

Smith’s attorney argued that his client was merely a young misguided victim who has suffered a traumatic childhood.

“He has to extend his stay though,” Senior Resident Magistrate Judith Pusey said.

Smith broke down crying as he waited to hear his fate uttering: “In the UK, I’m a victim of child exploitation. I’ve been abused all my life,”

“I’m a simple Jamaican girl, you come from the UK to have a good time and 14 pounds of ganja find you? How come when I’m in England nobody don’t give me drugs to carry to Jamaica?” RM Pusey remarked, seemingly unmoved. “You come from England and a come from Jamaica and a carry back Irish Spring soap? People come here and think that it is love and joy with the hand cart boy!”

Smith was fined of $15,000 or six months for possession; $45,400 or six months for dealing; $113,500 or six months for taking steps to export ganja and sentenced to 18 months. A fingerprint order was also made.


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British man sentenced for trying to smugggle ganja

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

British visitor killed in road accident

A British national was killed in a motor vehicle mishap on the Rose Hall Main Road in Montego Bay, St. James last night.


Diane Esty, 47, was staying at the Holiday Inn SunSpree Resort located along the Rose Hall main road.


She was crossing the road when she reportedly walked into the path of  a minibus.

Esty who sustained multiple head injuries and died at hospital.


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British visitor killed in road accident

Wednesday, July 9, 2014

British nationals plead guilty to cocaine smuggling

Christopher Thomas, STAR Writer

WESTERN BUREAU:

Two British nationals who reportedly attempted to smuggle liquid cocaine on a flight out of Jamaica last year will be sentenced in the Montego Bay Resident Magistrate’s Court today, after they pleaded guilty to the offence on Friday.

Twenty-nine-year-old Jaharie Silvera, a sales representative, and his 27-year-old cousin Rene Henriquez, both of London addresses, had initially pleaded not guilty to the charges of possession of, dealing in and attempting to export cocaine. However, they changed their plea to guilty last Friday, following which their case was set for sentencing today.

It is alleged that on May 11, 2013, at approximately 2:30 p.m., Silvera and Henriquez were seen at the Sangster International Airport, in Montego Bay, with travelling bags, which were searched by officers on duty at the airport.

Silvera’s bag was found to contain 10 plastic bottles which had a green-and-blue liquid substance in them, while Henriquez’s bag had five bottles of a similar substance. Subsequent tests revealed that Silvera’s bottles had one pound and 13 ounces of cocaine in them, while Henriquez’s bottles had over 14 ounces of cocaine. Both men were arrested and charged.

Attorney-at-law Ernie Smith, who is representing both men, asked Resident Magistrate Wilson Smith to be lenient in sentencing them, as they had been tricked into carrying the contraband.

“It is clear that they are neither drug users nor dealers, but they were tricked by a combination of friends and relatives, because they had only come to Jamaica to visit distant relatives, and they were both asked to take back gifts for other persons. They were asked to take back therapeutic liquid soap,” said Smith.

“They have thrown themselves at Your Honour’s mercy, this is a case in which Your Honour could favourably consider not imposing a custodial sentence,” he added.

“I will pass sentence on the 7th of July. Their bails are extended,” replied RM Smith.


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British nationals plead guilty to cocaine smuggling

Tuesday, July 8, 2014

Hamilton closes gap in title race with British Grand Prix win

lewis-hamilton-british-gp-740 Lewis Hamilton wins the British Grand Prix (Credit: BBC)

SILVERSTONE, England, Monday July 7, 2014, CMC – Lewis Hamilton came from behind to win the British Grand Prix for the first time in six years here Sunday, cutting Mercedes teammate Nico Rosberg’s lead to four points and reviving his hopes of winning the Formula One driver’s title.

Starting from sixth on the grid following a mistake in Saturday’s final qualifying, Hamilton drove superbly, capitalising on Rosberg’s retirement with gearbox failure, to win the contest at Silverstone in a time of two hours, 26.52 minutes.

With the victory – his fifth of the season – Hamilton moved to within four points of Rosberg on 161 points.

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Valtteri Bottas of Williams was second while Red Bull’s Daniel Ricciardo finished third.

“I think this weekend really just showed that, for one, you never give up. Yesterday wasn’t a case of giving up, I didn’t think I could do the lap, I was really shocked that the last sector was so fast,” said Hamilton referring to his botched qualifying session on Saturday.

“But coming here today I had my family with me [and I was] just focused. The support from the fans, as I said, just spurred me on, and I really couldn’t have done it without them.”

He continued: “Yesterday, after qualifying, it looked so hard. I really was almost speechless when I spoke to [the fans], and it was no one else’s fault but mine. I was just so disappointed in myself. And then to get that result today, to really climb through… the team have just done an incredible job.”

The 27-year-old Brit was off to a great start, moving from sixth to fourth on the first lap and was quickly up to second following a break in the race caused by a crash involving Finnish driver Kimi Raikkonen.

raikonnen-crash-british-gp-740 Crash involving Finnish driver Kimi Raikkonen (Credit: BBC)

He then chased down Rosberg, gaining on every lap before the German’s gearbox failed on the 29th lap, leaving Hamilton in control of the race.

Hamilton, whose paternal grandparents hail from Grenada, is seeking his first World title since 2008.

That same year, he was honoured by the Grenada government for bringing international exposure to the country.


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Hamilton closes gap in title race with British Grand Prix win

Thursday, July 3, 2014

British drug mule fined after almost dying on Caribbean flight

Cocain lines and pocket with cocain closeup

HAMILTON, Bermuda, Wednesday July 2, 2014, CMC - A 48-year-old British drug mule, who feared he was dying after swallowing more than half a pound of cocaine while flying from Antigua to London, has been fined US$800 in a Bermuda court.

The fine was imposed by Senior Magistrate Archibald Warner on Colmin Smith after he pleaded guilty on Tuesday to possession of a controlled drug.

Smith lost consciousness aboard the Virgin Airlines flight on May 16 shortly after telling airline staff he had ingested a large amount of cocaine and believed one of the pellets had opened inside his stomach, forcing the jetliner to make an emergency landing in Bermuda, Magistrates’ Court heard.

After being taken to the King Edward VII Memorial Hospital, government analysts determined Smith had ingested a total of 61 pellets containing 239.39 grams of cocaine. The drug was found to have a purity of 73 per cent and carried a street value of US$68,250, prosecutor Takiyah Burgess told the court.

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Warner told Smith he was lucky to both be alive and to only be charged with possession of a controlled drug, which carries a maximum penalty of $1,000.

Smith said he thought death was inevitable, thanking God and the quick thinking of the plane’s crew for being alive.

“After I informed the flight attendant, in my mind, I died,” said Smith, who lives in Birmingham in the English Midlands. “I felt the death coming.”

Warner told Smith “I guess you are lucky, but there are other technical reasons for why you’ve been charged with this but let’s put it down to luck. You should thank whoever you worship or look to, because you are really lucky.”

Warner said Smith could also count his blessings for landing in Bermuda.

“You didn’t go to the first heaven but you came to the second heaven,” he said.

Smith agreed, adding: “I’ve met a lot of nice people here.”

If Smith fails to pay the US$800 fine he faces 80 days’ he faces imprisonment.


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British drug mule fined after almost dying on Caribbean flight

Sunday, June 29, 2014

Third oldest Commonwealth parliament wants to dump British political system

The Parliament Buildings (Bridgetown/Barbados); photographed in october 2007 The Parliament buildings in Bridgetown, Barbados (Credit: Caribbean360/Bigstock)

BRIDGETOWN, Barbados, Friday June 27, 2014, CMC – With experience of the Westminster parliamentary system for 375 years in their consciousness, Barbadian politicians are saying they want a change from this adversarial mode of governance.

Speaker of Parliament, Michael Carrington, on Thursday said the one reservation he had regarding Barbados’s Parliament is that the adapted the British Westminster system, which, “appeared to pit Government and Opposition inexorably against each other in aggressive, contentious and oftimes seemingly unnecessary confrontation”.

Carrington, an elected member of government, was speaking at a joint meeting of the two chambers of parliament – House of Assembly and Senate – to mark the 375th anniversary of that institution in Barbados.

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“Hunkering down behind traditional battle lines of political tribalism cannot help this country,” Opposition Leader, Mia Mottley, said, adding “bipartisan cooperation, led by a new generation of patriots who put the national interest above all else, is what Barbados needs”.

“Genuine parliamentary reform must find creative ways to embrace all talents and welcome all constructive contributions,” she said.

Within the Commonwealth, only the British Parliament, started in 1215, and the Bermuda Parliament, that began in 1620, are older than the Barbados Parliament.


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Third oldest Commonwealth parliament wants to dump British political system

Friday, June 27, 2014

British national smuggles weed

A female British national who was caught smuggling cannabis worth ?51,000 ($9.6 million) from Jamaica through Gatwick Airport has been jailed for two years.

Margaret Simms, 57, of Peat Moors, denied bringing 17 kilograms of the drug into the United Kingdom in November last year.

According to a report on www.oxfordmail.co.uk, She was convicted by a jury at a previous hearing and sentenced on Tuesday.

The woman had flown to the Caribbean to visit her Jamaican husband. Inner London Crown Court heard she was acting under duress. She told the jury she was a victim of threats.

Prosecutor Francis Gaskin said: “The evidence heard in total about her role came from the defendant and must have been disbelieved by the jury. There is no credible evidence of threats or pressure. The prosecution said she knew exactly what she was doing and was motivated by financial gain.”

But Simms’ lawyer said there was no evidence of financial gain or a ‘criminal lifestyle’.


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British national smuggles weed

Sunday, January 26, 2014

St Lucia police say British tourist died from asphyxia

CASTRIES, St Lucia (AP) — An autopsy found that a British man attacked aboard his yacht anchored in St Lucia died from asphyxia as a result of being beaten, police said Tuesday.


Authorities said five suspects were in custody and would be charged at a later date. They did not specify when.


The killing of 62-year-old Roger Pratt late Friday surprised many people and raised questions about safety on this island in the eastern Caribbean. His wife, Margaret Pratt, also was beaten and was treated at a hospital for cuts and bruises.


Police said Pratt found her husband’s body floating in the water minutes after the attackers fled. She said her husband was not shot, contrary to some media reports.


“There were no knives, no guns, although of course, considerable violence in the attack,” Pratt said in a brief interview distributed by the government information service. “We’ve not felt unsafe in St Lucia until the events of those final tragic minutes, and have had considerable kindness from very many people.”


Police Commissioner Vernon Francois said the Pratts apparently heard noises outside the yacht and were attacked when they went to investigate. He said the attackers demanded money and other items and had used a stolen small boat to get to the yacht.


The Warwickshire couple had been travelling aboard their yacht, the Magnetic Attraction, since June to celebrate her 60th birthday. The attack occurred while the yacht was anchored off the southern town of Vieux Fort.


Pratt said the couple had been in St Lucia for nearly three weeks and were preparing to leave for Bequia, an island that is part of St Vincent and the Grenadines.


Chester Nathoniel, part-owner of Action Adventure Divers, said in a phone interview Tuesday with The Associated Press that he met the couple on January 14 and took them diving twice.


“They were quite lovely people,” he said. “It is really, really sad news. …We’ve had some incidents in the past. It’s not something that happens regularly, but it shouldn’t happen in the first place.”


“I remember telling my wife about the two of them,” he added. “I told her, ‘I wish we could be like that when we grow up.’ They were happy together.”


The St Lucia Tourist Board issued a statement Tuesday saying the prime minister and other high-ranking officials had met with the victim’s wife.


“As a country, we collectively condemn this random and heinous act of violence,” the board said.


St Lucia, an island of about 163,000 people, has seen an increase in violent crimes that authorities blame on drug trafficking. However, police reported 34 killings last year, the lowest in four years.


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St Lucia police say British tourist died from asphyxia

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

British naval vessel to help with Jamaica"s drug fight

News

Paul Henry Monday, August 05, 2013

JAMAICA’S effort to tackle the perennial problem of drug-trafficking in her waters will be getting a much needed boost from Britain’s Royal Navy.Come early next week, Her Majesty’s Ship Lancaster, which is currently docked at the Kingston Harbour, will set out in search of drug-runners, Commander Steve Moorhouse told reporters who were given a tour of the 400-foot-long vessel on Friday.Moorhouse described the effort as a “strengthening of bonds” with Jamaica and said that the exercise is a joint-effort with a number of countries — including the United States of America — to “stop the flow of narcotics” in the region.Highlighting the benefits of having such a vessel in the drug fight, Moorhouse said that his ship, during an exercise in the eastern Caribbean recently, inter-cepted a yacht and go-fast boat carrying a “sizeable amount” of ganja and cocaine.He said that five people were arrested in that incident, but declined further details about the operation.The ship, which is equipped with two 20-foot speedboats and a multi-purpose Lynx helicopter, will end its tour in December, Lieutenant Oliver Bekier told reporters.The authorities have reported an increase in the quantity of narcotics seized in Jamaican waters since the start of the year. In all of 2012 some 5,713 pounds of marijuana was intercepted by Jamaica’s Marine Police. Up to July this year, the Marine Police had already seized 5,908 pounds of ganja and 44 high-end boats 

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British naval vessel to help with Jamaica"s drug fight

Monday, August 5, 2013

British Virgin Islands profile

2 May 2013 Last updated at 06:51 ET Map of the British Virgin Islands The British Virgin Islands, or BVI, comprise more than 40 Caribbean islands and islets with subtropical vegetation, white sandy beaches and coral reefs.


The British overseas territory forms part of an island chain, alongside the neighbouring US Virgin Islands. Tortola, the largest of the 16 inhabited islands, is home to more than three quarters of the population.


Tourism and offshore finance dominate the economy. Beef Island airport opened in 1968 and, a year later, the first yacht charter business was established, heralding the growth of a lucrative tourist industry.


With its agreeable climate, tranquil and clear waters, yachting and water sports, it is easy to see why the BVI is a popular destination. The islands are, however, prone to tropical storms and hurricanes.


School kids on BVI Islanders, such as these students pictured in the 1950s, have been entitled to British passports since 2002

Financial and business services account for nearly half of the islands’ GDP. Legislation adopted in the mid-1980s enabled a rapid expansion of international financial services.


The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) removed the territory from its list of uncooperative tax havens in 2002, although a British government commission called on the Islands, along with other Territories and Crown Dependencies, to improve standards of regulation in an October 2009 report.


As a result, the islands – along with Bermuda, the Cayman Islands, Anguilla, Montserrat and the Turks and Caicos Islands – signed agreements in May 2013 on sharing tax information with Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Spain.


Named by Christopher Columbus in 1493, the islands were settled by the Dutch until 1666. The main island of Tortola was annexed by the Leeward Islands governor in 1672. The BVI as a whole became part of Britain’s Leeward Islands colony in 1872.

Self-rule

The Leewards were administered under a federal system until 1956. After the Leewards had been de-federated, the BVI were granted separate colony status in 1960 and were awarded a limited degree of self-rule in 1967. Subsequent legislative amendments over the next few decades gradually extended the islands’ autonomy.


In 2002 the British Overseas Territories Act granted British citizenship to the islanders, who can hold British passports and may work in the UK and EU. The territory has tightened its immigration regulations; illegal migrants have used the islands as a springboard to the US.


A new constitution adopted in 2007 established a greater degree of self-government. Under this constitution, the post of premier replaced that of chief minister as head of government.


Virgin Gorda island Before the arrival of explorer Christopher Columbus, the islands were home to Caribs and Arawaks

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British Virgin Islands profile

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Rihanna wins case against British fashion chain

Latest News

Wednesday, July 31, 2013 | 5:33 PM

LONDON (CMC) — The Barbados-born international pop star, Rihanna, Wednesday won a case against British fashion chain, Topshop, which had been using her image on a T-shirt without her approval.High Court Justice Colin Birss, who did not make an assessment of damages, ruled in favour of Rihanna, saying buyers were likely deceived in believing the singer had authorized the sale.“I am quite satisfied that many fans of Rihanna regard her endorsement as important. She is their style icon. Many will buy a product because they think she has approved of it. Others will wish to buy it because of the value of the perceived authorization itself. In both cases they will have been deceived,” the judge said.He said the sales caused a loss of control over Rihanna’s reputation in the fashion realm, where the singer has been trying to carve out a name as a designer. She has a clothing line in her name at a rival store.The T-shirts were first sold as the ‘Rihanna Tank’ and after her complains, they were sold as being the ‘Headscarf Girl Tank’ and the ‘Icon Tank’.Topshop’s owner, Arcadia Group Brands Ltd, had argued that Rihanna was seeking legal recognition for a flawed assumption that only a celebrity could market a product bearing his or her image.Topshop said it was surprised and disappointed by the ruling and was considering an appeal.Like our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/jamaicaobserverFollow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/JamaicaObserver

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Rihanna wins case against British fashion chain

Friday, July 26, 2013

British Airways appoints new head for Americas

Business

Friday, July 26, 2013

BRITISH Airways has appointed Sean Doyle its new general manager and executive vice president for the Americas, effective September 1, 2013.He will be responsible for the airline’s extensive commercial business in the USA, Canada, Mexico, South America, the Caribbean and Bermuda, said the carrier in a press release.The airline added that Doyle will oversee sales and marketing and will lead the airline’s efforts to grow the Atlantic joint business between American Airlines, British Airways, Iberia and Finnair.“Sean’s extensive experience managing alliance relationships, combined with his global mindset, made him the ideal candidate for this position. Our transatlantic business is incredibly important and presents a large growth opportunity and we are excited to have Sean lead the way forward,” noted Drew Crawley, British Airways’ chief commercial officer.Doyle previously held the position of head of business planning and strategy for British Airways, where he focused on alliances, network and fleet planning, infrastructure development and corporate business planning. He brings with him a wealth of experience, including managerial roles in Cargo and the Asia Pacific region, the airline said.Doyle graduated from University College Cork with a Bachelor of Commerce degree. He is also a Chartered Management Accountant. In his new position, he will divide his time between the British Airways global headquarters in London Heathrow and the Americas regional head office in New York City, stated the airline.

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British Airways appoints new head for Americas