Tuesday, January 28, 2014

MAJOR UPSET

BY GERALD REID OBSERVER WRITER


Tuesday, January 28, 2014    


JOBS Lane “A” inflicted a major upset win when they defeated defending champions JAMALCO 27-24 in the 2013/2014 Jamaica National Building Society (JNBS)/Netball Jamaica Open League competition at the Leila Robinson Courts on Saturday last.


It was the first defeat for the Winston Nevers-coached Clarendon-based JAMALCO, while the Spanish Town-based aggregation maintained their unbeaten run to put themselves at the top of the point standings in Group 2 ahead of the defending champions. Both teams had won their earlier matches before their exciting rivalry. JAMALCO beat arch-rival Waulgrovians “A” 38-32, while Jobs Lane “A” outscored Hampshire “A” 20-13.


Herman Thorpe, coach of Jobs Lane “A” said he was very pleased with his team’s win. “Our team is a very fit and young combination and the players stood up to the task nicely in what was a very exciting encounter right to the final whistle,” Thorpe opined. He said the players were confident that they could have beaten JAMALCO based on the fact that the top teams are weakened as a result of the soon-to-start semi-professional league.


“It was a wonderful game and also the best performance this season by the players who were confident they could have beaten JAMALCO. The players felt very good and we are looking for another tough encounter when we face former many-time champions Waulgrovians “A”,” Thorpe indicated.


Losing coach Winston Nevers said despite the defeat the team played very well. “We are currently in a rebuilding phase with several young schoolgirl players whom we think will blossom quickly, say, within another three years. It is hard to start from scratch and but they will get theirs,” Nevers, the JAMALCO coach, said Jobs Lane “A” played well and are playing some very good netball. “I have been watching them over the years, and their win over us was not a surprise especially after losing so many players to the semi-pro.”


Results of matches played on Sunday were:


Maxfield Park “A” beat Drewsland “B” 24-013; Friendship outscored De La Vega 21-8; Blades United “A” and UTECH Knights played to a 19-19 draw; Maverley defeated Alexander Strikers “B” 21-15.


Pembroke Hall got the better of Rivoli United “B” 21-15; Molynes United “C” noosed out Maxfield Park “B” 19-18; Jetsetters “A” beat Alpha “A” 24-12; Rivoli United “A” defeated Upper Camp 24-11; Waulgrovians “B” rushed past Braeton United 33-10.


Mico “A” hammered Jetsetters “B: 39-5; Fresh Approach for the better of Hampshire “B” 15-9; Blades United “A” outscored Maverley 27-9; Maxfield Park beat Liguanea “B” 21-14; De La Vega beat Alexander Strikers “B” 21-11; UTECH Knights outscored Drewsland “B: 32-5; Mico “B” got past Jetsetters “A” 16-12; Alpha “B” got by Pembroke Hall 16-13; SPEG defeated Molynes United “C” 24-13; GC Foster Strikers “B” outscored Maxfield Park “B” 28-14.


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MAJOR UPSET

Schafer arrives today for new stint as national football coach

BY IAN BURNETT SPORTS EDITOR burnetti@jamaicaobserver.com


Tuesday, January 28, 2014    


WINFRIED Schafer is scheduled to arrive in the island today to begin a four-year stint as head coach of Jamaica’s senior men’s team leading to the 2018 FIFA World Cup Finals in Russia.


The German is slated to arrive at the Sangster International Airport in Montego Bay, St James, directly from his native Germany.


The 63-year-old, who has coached in his homeland, as well as Africa, Asia and the Middle East, agreed to terms with the Captain Horace Burrell-led Jamaica Football Federation (JFF) in recent days, after mulling over a contract presented to him last December.


Captain Burrell confirmed to the Jamaica Observer yesterday that Schafer would be returning and that the deal was reached after “extensive negotiations”, but he was not prepared to reveal much, only that “details would be announced at a later date”.


But the Observer understands that the man who led Cameroon to the African Cup of Nations title in 2002 and, on a golden run, steered the Africans to the final of the FIFA Confederations Cup in 2003, is expected to immediately announce his plans for the


senior men’s football programme, especially with the Caribbean Cup, a qualifier for the CONCACAF Gold Cup, slated for the back end of the year. He is also expected to lend his expertise and play a lead role in the restructuring of the JFF technical programmes and the operations of the age-group teams.


Part of the delay in re-signing Schafer was predicated on efforts to identify corporate partners to assist in covering his salary, but the Observer also understands that the coach was not only concerned about his own salary, but that the overall programme be supported sufficiently for him to seriously move it forward.


“He says he is not coming here (Jamaica) for a pension, but to work hard to improve the sport on the island,” the source told


the Observer.


Schafer joined the Reggae Boyz at the tail end of the failed Brazil 2014 World Cup campaign last August, after succeeding Theodore Whitmore, on a four-month contract which ran out on November 30.


The source added that Schafer wants to have all age-group teams playing under one philosophy, and that he could even ask to have direct control of the Under-23 team.


It is also thought that it is Schafer’s intention to have open dialogue and working relationships with all the National Premier League teams — coaches, physical trainers and managers in an effort to better prepare local-based players.


The Reggae Boyz are expected to face 1998 World Cup winners France in a friendly international on June 8 at the Stade Pierre-Mauroy in Lille, France, and could be in action earlier, as the JFF is is still in negotiations for other games, which could be finalised before long.


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Schafer arrives today for new stint as national football coach

Digicel joins other sponsors for AISK Sportsfeva

BY RUDDY ALLEN OBSERVER WRITER


Tuesday, January 28, 2014    


Digicel is now partnering with the American International School of Kingston (AISK) for the first time as an associate sponsor to host the fourth staging of the 2014 Lasco Food Drink AISK Sportsfeva which is presented by Gatorade, it was announced at a press conference yesterday at AISK in Kingston.


Jacqueline Burrell Clarke, public relations manager at Digicel said that her company is a huge supporter of sports and they are always happy to assist with the development of young people.


“We are very excited to be a part of this event for the first time. We are a huge supporter of sports and what the AISK programme is offering to the youth. We are really pleased to be on board to aid in the development of youngsters,” Burrell Clarke said.


Sherianne Thompson, brand representative of Lasco food drink, the main sponsors of Sportsfeva said that her company’s continued involvement with the AISK’s youth development programme was never in doubt.


“It is truly a pleasure to be here today as the students express themselves through sports. I am pleased to announce my company’s commitment in sponsoring this event as it is a programme that is building our youth,” Thompson said.


Also at the launch, Mitchell Watson of Pepsi Cola Jamaica, representing the presenting sponsor, Gatorade said that they are happy to be on the team sponsoring SportsFeva.


“Gatorade is an iconic energy drink that gives the athletes proper energy to take part in sports and we are honoured to provide our product,” he said.


Kelly Jarrett, the chairperson of the SportsFeva committee said that the school is very excited to be staging the event and to have participants from various schools in Jamaica and the Bahamas taking part. “Each year the event gets bigger and bigger and we are looking forward to the future and continued growth of the event.”


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Digicel joins other sponsors for AISK Sportsfeva

ICC’s controversial Test cricket proposal re-drafted

Monday, January 27, 2014 | 9:50 PM    


DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (CMC) –A controversial proposal designed to put more power in international cricket in the hands of India, Australia and England has been re-drafted for presentation before the International Cricket Council (ICC) meeting in Dubai on Tuesday, reports indicate.


The proposal calling for a complete overhaul of the ICC’s administration and revenue distribution has triggered uproar in the cricket world.


Proposals to be watered down include a two-tier format for Test cricket and the relegation of the bottom two ranked into the ICC Intercontinental Cup, ESPN Cricinfo has reported.


The other proposal which could be reworked pertains to a newly formed Executive Committee (ExCo) and its possible expansion from four to five, with a second nominee coming in from the “small seven,” as opposed to only one according to the draft position paper.


India, Australia and England were lobbying six of the seven members to secure their support should the proposal go to a vote on Tuesday.


Reports from Dubai say India has been leading the talks while the three cricket boards have been making offers to the rest of the boards in a bid to obtain their support.


Cricket South Africa, the only member that has publicly objected to the proposal, has been left out of the discussions and the benefits being offered to the rest of the boards.


There has been public protest in Bangladesh, including a crowd gathering of close to 3,000 in Dhaka on Saturday, over the possibility of their cricket board ceding Bangladesh’s Test match status.


“It is a big thing, (to us) this status. In13 years Bangladesh have managed to win four Test matches. India and New Zealand did not win their first Test till 30 years,” a senior Bangladeshi cricket official was quoted as saying.


“So how come these people are now telling Bangladesh that you will need to fight out in the I-Cup to retain your Test status.”


Zimbabwe Cricket, despite its financial debt to the tune of $18 million dollars is expected to vote in favour of the proposals largely because of their good relations with the BCCI.


Among the other Full Member nations, New Zealand Cricket had come out in support of the proposal while the West Indies Cricket Board only stated that they had taken a position “in the best interests of West Indies cricket”.


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ICC’s controversial Test cricket proposal re-drafted

Old Harbour’s confidence soars after big mid-season scalps

BY OSHANE TOBIAS OBSERVER WRITER


Tuesday, January 28, 2014    


SPANISH TOWN, St Catherine — Portmore United’s Under-21 team are the current leaders of the LIME/St Catherine Major League. But you can forget about them. They are just a guest team. The real competition is between Frazsiers Whip and Old Harbour Bay United, two of the parish’s most exciting footballing prospects in the last four seasons.


Frazsiers and Old Harbour sit second and third respectively in the 17-team competition after eight games. But, in reality, they are first and second, given that Portmore U-21s are only playing in this competition on an invitation from the St Catherine Football Association.


With that in mind, Frazsiers and Old Harbour duly met in last Friday’s mid-season final at the Spanish Town Prison Oval. The game was deservedly won by Old Harbour, and the huge 4-1 victory did not exaggerate their performance. They were that good.


But, rather than settling the score, this result has only heightened the debate surrounding which of these two teams, if any, will lift the title at the end of the season.


Old Harbour, a club formed just four seasons ago, are so far having a magnificent season. They are actually on course to win the St Catherine Triple Crown and qualify for the National Premier League.


Just two Thursdays ago they scored their most high-profile victory to date after beating top premiership team Portmore United in the semi-final of the Happy Sutherland Knock-out. They now await Rivoli United, who knocked out Frazsiers in their semis, in the championship decider on Sunday. In some ways, their current form mirrors Frazsiers’ success in this competition a few years ago when they beat both Portmore and Rivoli en route to the title.


These two high-profile victories in space of a week mean they will now go into the final of the Happy Sutherland final full of self-belief. And there’s no telling what a third big major scalp could do to their confidence, for already they are talking about securing promotion to next season’s Premier League.


But, while they are simply awesome in the one-off, cup games, Old Harbour have so far been playing second fiddle to Frazsiers in the Major League.


They are currently five points adrift of the Red Pond club on 14 points, having won four, drawn two and lost of their seven games played. Over the course of those matches, they have scored nine goals and conceded five.


Frazsiers, on the contrary, have been second best only to Portmore who are yet to taste defeat in their seven games, winning six and tying the other; 18 goals for and three against.


The only blot on Frazsiers’ record — eight games, six wins, one draw, one defeat, 15 goals for and seven against — at the half way stage is that mystifying 5-0 thrashing given to them by sixth-placed Tru-Juice (13 points) a few weeks ago. Experts, who have been following them closely this season, actually believe that defeat might have “shattered their confidence”.


“Since di man dem lose to Tru-Juice is like dem nu memba how fi play football,” one observer said following Friday night’s defeat.


True or not, the team that showed up against Old Harbour was definitely not the same Frazsiers who simply tore teams to shreds in seasons past. And for a change, their fans weren’t the loudest inside the Oval. “Frazsiers a baby side,” jeered the Old Harbour United supporters. “Dem need nipple bottle.”


Luckily for them, this is only a psychological win for Old Harbour and nothing else. They are still leading the league and could very well get a chance to avenge this awful loss, providing that these latest defeats aren’t a sign of things to come.


Sunday’s results:


Newland 3-2 Black Lion, Rodwood 0-3 Royal Lakes, De La Vega City 2-1 Portsmouth, Albion 1-0 New Raiders, Flamingo 0-0 DB Basovak, Tru-Juice 1-2 Christian Pen


Today’s Games


Portmore United v Newland @ Ferdie Neita Park, Frazsiers Whip v Naggo Head @ Frazsiers Content


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Old Harbour’s confidence soars after big mid-season scalps

Action surges in Western Confederation Super League

PAUL A REID OBSERVER WRITER


Tuesday, January 28, 2014    


PITFOUR, St James — Tomorrow’s People, last season’s mid-season champions and defending champions Wadadah FC will this afternoon seek wins that will bolster their hopes for a place in the mid-season final of the Jamaica Football Federation’s Captain’s Bakery and Grill/Charley’s JB Rum Western Confederation Super League.


Tomorrow’s People who have scored 17 goals from their last four games, all wins, are in fifth place on 17 points and are facing a tough Granville United team in Pitfour where a victory would give them second place on goal difference over Savannah SC.


Wadadah FC’s three-game winning streak was snapped by Granville United last Wednesday but they are still in the running for a mid-season place and have an easier task when they take on a slumping Montego Bay Boys Club at the UDC Field. The champions are on 15 points and don’t control their own destiny as far as the mid-season race is concerned.


The race was thrown wide open on Sunday after leaders Reno FC and then second placed Sandals Whitehouse both suffered 2-1 upset losses to Savannah SC and Holland United respectively.


Despite losing at Frome for the first time in two seasons, Reno FC still lead with 22 points, two more than Savannah SC, with Sandals Whitehouse-18, Tomorrow’s People-17 and Holland-16 points behind them.


Over the past two seasons Granville United and Tomorrow’s People have met three times in the regular season and both have won once with the other game ending in a 1-1 draw and another close contest is expected.


As they proved when they beat Wadadah FC 2-0 last week and earlier when they stopped Reno 3-2, Granville are not to be discounted and despite being out of the mid-season finals race are still a formidable opponent for any team on any given day.


Wadadah FC should bounce back from their loss against a Boys Club team still seeking their first win for 2014.


On Sunday, Savannah SC, champions two years ago, won back-to-back games for the second time with a big come-from-behind victory over Reno who were threatening to run away from the field.


Denmark Gillings scored his joint league leading ninth goal in the 12th minute to give Reno the lead but Shamar Bernard brought the ‘home’ team level in the 44th minute just before the half-time break before Shanar Cattan gave them all three points in the 79th minute.


Sandals Whitehouse’s five game win streak also came to a halt when Holland United came from back-to-back losses to win their fourth game of the campaign.


Sandals gifted the home team the lead in the 9th minute with an own goal and Romaine Lewis doubled the advantage in the 14th minute. Tristan Sommerville pulled one back for Sandals in the 65th but that was all they could muster on the day.


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Action surges in Western Confederation Super League

PHOTO: Gone clear


The Grace/STETHS Invitational track meet was held at the STETHS Sports Complex in Santa Cruz on Saturday. Photos show IAAF World Youth gold medalist Marvin Williams winning the 400 metre hurdles in 55.15 seconds.


(PHOTO: PAUL REID)


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PHOTO: Gone clear

Hughes confident

By Howard Walker Observer senior reporter walkerh@jamaicaobserver.com


Tuesday, January 28, 2014    


Last year the name Zharnel Hughes was not widely known until he defeated two of the island’s most promising youngsters — Jazeel Murphy and Jevaughn Minzie — at the Carifta Games in the 100m.


The lanky sprinter from Anguilla won in 10.44 seconds to Murphy’s 10.48 in March, then returned in August and repeated his dominance over Jamaica’s prodigy at the Pan Am Junior Championships, lowering his time 10.31 seconds. Murphy finished fourth in 10.46 seconds.


Hughes, 18, the unknown sprinter, had become the fastest youngster in the region, encompassing the Caribbean and the Americas.


He has become a targeted man after making his seasonal debut, and then easily dispatching another of Jamaica’s most promising runners in Jaheel Hyde — the 110m hurdles World Youth Champion — in the 400m last Saturday.


Hughes, drawn in lane one and Hyde in lane six, utilised his 100m speed and covered the field quite comfortably before cruising home in 48.80. Hyde, who did 46.63 at Champs last year, finished second in 49.16 seconds.


“I know everybody is targeting me right now, but if they keep on targeting me, they might end up messing up their events. So, I will just tell them keep focussing on what they have to do and not on me,” Hughes told the Jamaica Observer.


“It was a great experience. I just came out here with a race plan today…despite the lane that I got, which was lane one, I got out real hard, just went in at the back stretch and closed up on the guys. I used one of the guys as a target and when he kicked, I just waited for a while then kicked afterwards. Overall the race was great,” Hughes explained.


“I am pleased with my performance. I am pleased with the time because I am not a 400m guy, so I am thankful for it,” he added.


The talented youngster from Albena Lake-Hodge Comprehensive School in Anguilla in the Leeward Islands, with a population of approximately 14,000, won a scholarship to attend the IAAF’s Regional High Performance Training Centre (HPTC) in Kingston.


Hughes, who has been training with the likes of Usain Bolt, Yohan Blake and Warren Weir at Racers Track Club, will also wear the purple and white jersey of Kingston College (KC) this season.


“At KC it is just amazing man,” he said with a smile on his face. “The guys… they gave me some nicknames there, I wonder where they get them. Being at KC is just an enjoyable experience and I am enjoying myself representing the school. So, I am looking forward to the upcoming events.”


With no Murphy around, Hughes is expected to renew his battle with Minzie of Bog Walk and the impressive Calabar High pair of Javon Francis and Michael O’Hara, setting the stage for some enticing races.


“I am preparing myself really good. I can tell you that I feel as if I got much stronger this year, so when the time comes to run you will see what happens,” said a confident Hughes.


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Hughes confident

No time to celebrate - Cricket Association’s new CEO

BY SANJAY MYERS OBSERVER STAFF REPORTER myerss@jamaicaobserver.com


Tuesday, January 28, 2014    


COURTNEY Francis, the new chief executive officer of the Jamaica Cricket Association, says he is happy for the appointment, but he added that the challenges ahead leave him no time to celebrate.


Francis, who headed the cricket operations arm of the JCA for years, had been the interim CEO since late 2013, until the board of directors of the association confirmed his appointment last week.


“I’m happy and elated that the new administration has seen it fit to put me in such a position of leadership,” he said, referring to the move by the Wilford ‘Billy’ Heaven-led administration.


“The work starts now. I’m taking the challenges a day at a time to see how best I can continue to contribute to the development of cricket in this country. I personally have a number of things I’d like to see done, but they have to be in sync with the manifesto and the general policy direction of the JCA,” said the former national youth player.


Francis told the Jamaica Observer that high on the agenda is to generate income and to get the Sabina Park facility and its operations ready for international cricket next month.


The West Indies will host Ireland in two Twenty20 (T20) Internationals and a lone One-Day match at Jamaica’s premier cricket venue. The T20 matches will be played on February 19 and 21, respectively, while the 50-over match is scheduled for the 23rd.


Sabina Park Holdings, the entity — made up of Kingston Cricket Club and JCA members — which manages the venue and its facilities, has long struggled with aspects of its upkeep, particularly a spiralling electricity bill.


Francis said the association will also need to get its business in order for the first-class competition which is expected to commence in March.


He added that his office has already been working to ensure the streamlining of the national selection policy, the implementation of work


e-mail accounts for staff and the advertising of vacancies within the JCA before going outside.


The JCA, for several years wallowing in financial doldrums, has been without a CEO since early 2011 when Robert Bryan, after less than a year in the job, handed in his resignation to then president, Paul Campbell.


Lyndel Wright led the association between 2011 and 2013 without the help of a corporate executive, but after he stepped down and Heaven swept to presidential victory in November last year, the latter made it a priority to appoint a CEO to run the JCA’s business.


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No time to celebrate - Cricket Association’s new CEO

Monday, January 27, 2014

Santa Maria fire families await justice

27 January 2014 Last updated at 08:26 ET The heart formed by 242 candles in front of the Kiss nightclub during the overnight vigil The BBC’s Julia Carneiro reports from Santa Maria, southern Brazil, where a vigil was held overnight to mark the first anniversary of the deadly nightclub fire that killed 242 people last year.


It is well past midnight and the hundreds of people gathered in a vigil in front of the Kiss nightclub in Santa Maria, in the southern state of Rio Grande do Sul, start counting out loud while 242 candles are lit in the middle of the street, forming a heart of flames.


As they reach 242 – the number of victims in last year’s nightclub fire – the chant breaks into cries for justice. Sirens sound at 03:00 local time to mark the hour when, a year ago, the nightmare started.


Kiss’s once charred facade is now covered with pictures of the young, smiling faces of those who died, most of whom were university students enjoying a Saturday night out.


The facade of the Kiss nightclub, now covered with pictures and banners The facade of the Kiss nightclub, now covered with pictures and banners

Brazil’s deadliest fire in the last 50 years started after a member of the band performing onstage lit a flare as part of the show.


Sparks hit the ceiling and flames quickly spread over the foam used for acoustic protection.


Holes were hammered into this facade as firemen, survivors and parents desperately attempted to rescue those trapped inside.


Bodies blackened by smoke were carried out of the venue and taken to hospital – or loaded on to army trucks and taken straight to a makeshift morgue set up in a sports gymnasium.


Police investigations showed that a series of faults made the fire especially deadly.


The venue was too full, had only one entrance/exit and did not have the proper licences. The fire extinguishers failed and there were no lights showing the exit.

Seeking justice One of the mothers of NGO Forever Cinderellas set up a shrine with objects that belonged to her daughter, who would have turned 23 years old last Saturday One of the victims’ mothers set up a shrine with objects that belonged to her daughter, who would have turned 23 on Saturday

A year on, pain has given way to anger and bitterness as the families and friends of the victims sense how hard it will be to achieve justice.


Eight people are being tried for the accident – among them two of the disco’s owners and two band members.


The four were arrested right after the fire but released on bail in May.


Police say the disco did not have all the documents required by law, and the victims’ families are demanding that the authorities answer to charges of negligence.


“Some people say we have to get on with our lives,” says Ligiane Righi da Silva, wearing a T-shirt bearing the image of the smiling face of her daughter, Andrielle.


“But nobody knows what it’s like to wake up with a phone call at five in the morning, spend the day looking for your daughter and find her [charred] body at five in the afternoon.”


Andrielle had been celebrating her 22nd birthday with her four girlfriends. All died.


Kelen Ferreira burnt her arms, hands and lost her right foot in the fire Kelen Ferreira burnt her arms, hands and lost her right foot in the fire

Their mothers founded the NGO Forever Cinderellas to carry out charity work in their memory.


“It’s so hard to get up every day and face her bedroom door. I keep expecting her to come back,” says Ms Silva, who tattooed Andrielle and the name of her other daughter, now an only child, on her wrist.


Police initially pointed to the city’s mayor, Cezar Schirmer, and other city officials as some of those who were to blame for the event.


Public prosecutors dropped the charges for lack of evidence, infuriating organisations formed by victims’ parents.


But the police are still carrying out their investigations and the public prosecutors will have to re-examine the whole process after new reports are produced.


Parents have also been demanding more action to prevent similar accidents.


In the aftermath of the fire, the authorities held raids in venues across Brazil. The accident prompted a debate on the country’s safety regulations and triggered demands for more rigorous legislation and enforcement.


A year on, the spotlight has moved elsewhere and there is less urgency in Congress to look into the issue.


A new law was drafted in June to establish national safety standards in nightclubs, bars and theatres, but has yet to be voted on by Congress.

‘Wall of fallen people’ 242 bodies were painted in front of the nightclub As part of the vigil, 242 bodies were painted on the tarmac to symbolise the scale of the loss

The fire’s first anniversary is being marked with memorial services, marches and charity campaigns.

The city’s shops have white ribbons and flowers on their windows. A conference has been debating safety and prevention in public venues, gathering families and friends of the victims – and survivors of the tragedy.

The fire left more than 600 people injured.


Twenty-eight-year-old Natalia Greff still has to undergo respiratory physiotherapy every week.


She was with two old friends who had travelled to Santa Maria for a reunion. One of them was celebrating his birthday.


When the chaos started, they thought it was a fight – until they saw the fire.


“We took three steps and a curtain of black smoke descended on us. Another three steps and I hit a wall of fallen people.


“A crowd came from behind and pressed me towards them. My friend hugged me and suddenly I felt his body loosen. I fainted onto the pile right after that.”


Natalia then remembers her head banging on the tarmac as a man pulled her outside by her legs and screamed for help.


She went into a coma and woke up four days later in a hospital in the state’s capital, Porto Alegre. Only later was she told that her two friends were dead.


Twenty-year-old Kelen Ferreira suffered third-degree-burns over 20% of her body, including her arms and hands.


Her right leg had to be amputated below the knee because her shoe had become glued to her foot, producing necrosis.


Kelen goes through a gruelling routine of treatment every day, but has now managed to return to university, where she studies occupational therapy.


“I want to graduate and help others recover from burns and amputations.”


She stopped hiding her scars and now wears short-sleeved shirts showing her arms.


“I figured these marks will be with me forever.”


So Kelen added another one to her body – and had the word “faith” tattooed on the back of her neck.


Map of the location

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Santa Maria fire families await justice

Sunday, January 26, 2014

Fiery demonstration on Orange Street

Tuesday, January 21, 2014 | 6:08 PM    


KINGSTON, Jamaica — The police have confirmed that residents in downtown Kingston are protesting at this time and have mounted a fiery roadblock on Orange Street in the vicinity of the York Park Fire station.


The police could not confirm the reason for the protest saying only that the protesters are shouting “We want justice”.


However, OBSERVER ONLINE has learned from sources on the ground that the residents are protesting the shooting death of a resident by the police.


The residents are threatening to continue their protest unless they are visited by Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller, their member of parliament or Commissioner of Police Owen Ellington.


The police are advising motorists to avoid this area at this time and to use alternative routes.


More information later.


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Fiery demonstration on Orange Street

Exporters ignoring TV route into US market, says CIN

BY BALFORD HENRY Observer Senior staff reporter balfordh@jamaicaobserver.com


Sunday, January 26, 2014    


NEW York-based Caribbean media network boss, Stephen Hill, believes that Jamaican exporters are ignoring the most critical route into the huge North American diaspora market, that of television.


And Hill is in a position to know, because he owns the Caribbean International Network (CIN-TV), an internationally-broadcast English language television channel in the tri-state area (New York, New Jersey, Connecticut) which focuses on Caribbean culture, news, sports, lifestyle, opinions, and entertainment, watched by over half-a-million Caribbean nationals daily on channels 73 and 25.


“It’s time to stop talking and start doing something,” Hill insisted as he spoke to the Jamaica Observer about the lack of support from local exporters, while lunching at his favourite local spot, the classic Liguanea Club in New Kingston.


“In Jamaica, from thine kingdom come, the politicians, the business people have been saying that they are going to export more and more; but until now, no one has been able to get that done except for a few major companies, like GraceKennedy and Jamaica National,” he commented.


Hill and his partner, Bob Gore, who heads Bob Gore Productions, a New York television syndication company, are disappointed by the low interest shown by local exporters. They feel that they have done enough to open the media gateway into the heart of the Caribbean diaspora, but are failing to attract the traffic they expected into this prized market.


A survey last year by the highly-thought-of Hope Research Group gave CIN just over 57 per cent of the English-speaking Caribbean heritage viewership residing in the New York area, when it is on air. This was a higher viewership than highly established networks like Fox, CBS, ABC and the Discovery Channel.


The US 2012 census showed that the English-speaking Caribbean audience (by households) in New York totalled 450,589. CIN had a minimum viewership of 238,812, but when extrapolated to include other persons watching together, it was found that the viewership could increase to as many as over half-a-million.


The Hope Research Group pointed out that CIN is watched equally by both men and women and has reach among all age groups, but is particularly strong among 30-49-year-olds. It has a 64.3 per cent popularity rating, with Caribbean people earning US$12,001 and above, and 59.4 per cent popularity among the first-generation Caribbean nationals polled.


Its most popular programme is Cover Story (Jamaica News), with 57.3 per cent of the survey’s respondents tuning in. This is followed by the music video programme, Irie Vibes, with 37.7 per cent and Entertainment Report with Anthony Miller at 33.3 per cent.


“What you have to bear in mind is that all they recorded were from the English-speaking Caribbean market. But we know that there are a lot more people – Haitians, French, Dominicans – apart from the 558,000 people from the English-speaking Caribbean market who they say were watching,” Hill emphasised.


According to Gore, who first came up with the idea of a Caribbean-owned and controlled television network, utilising a former NYC council commercial channel, CIN not only has the numbers, but the quality viewership, too.


“The largest share of our audience are those people with the most disposable income, and those are the customers you want to go after. Those are the ones who will make a difference,” Gore stated.


“Those are the people who are buying the kind of products you want to introduce into the US marketplace. My view is that the New York area is the second-largest Caribbean market in the whole world, outside of the region. There are more people from the Caribbean, or with Caribbean roots in the New York metropolitan area (than anywhere else outside the Caribbean),” Gore noted. “So, if you want to reach Caribbean viewers, without going through the costly major networks, we have a Caribbean audience that are watching us before they watch ABC, CBS or NBC, and that’s an achievement.”


But Hill lamented that despite this saturation of the tri-state Caribbean market, CIN has failed to get the level of support it expected from Jamaican exporters who need to penetrate the area’s huge commercial market.


He said that what Jamaican manufacturers need to understand is that the reason Americans have so many global American brands is that they have been able to create media which is seen around the globe.


“They trumpet their brands like Coca Cola and Pepsi Cola, and the only way the Caribbean is going to have that kind of success and create global brands is to have media that is doing the same thing,” he argued.


“We are strategic and we are sort of like guerrillas: We have gone right into New York and we are doing what they have been doing successfully around the world. Now a Jamaican can turn on his television in New York, today, and see shows like Oliver or Joint Tenants, and so on,” he explained.


CIN began as an idea and a single half-hour programme 20 years ago, founded by Hill, a very prominent Jamaican impressario of the 1970s and 1980s, and advertiser Ronnie Nasralla.


They went to New York with a few segments of local television series Oliver, starring Oliver Samuels, and a dream of creating the first television service targeting the rapidly growing Caribbean population. Now each day CIN can be seen on channel 73 reaching the five boroughs of New York, and on NYCTV reaching 18.9 million people in New York, Connecticut and New Jersey. With new extended reach, CIN makes sure that the over two million Caribbean-Americans stay connected to their history and culture, through a menu of news, sports, drama and music programmes created exclusively for the large Caribbean diaspora.


CIN recently acquired the rights to broadcast the Jamaican police drama, Squaddy, which was introduced on Flow TV in October last year, as a partnership between Flow and eMedia. Other programmes on the network include: What a Gwaan; Schools’ Challenge Quiz; The Ity and Fancy Cat Show; the drama Me & Mi Kru and the Jamaica Information Service’s (JIS) Jamaica Magazine.


Hill said that the network believes it can also become the gateway into the US market for Caribbean music videos and sitcoms and fashion shows. He said that in the future, the company also hopes to be able to carry live coverage of popular calendar shows like Reggae Sumfest and Rebel Salute.


However, he said that will take some serious planning, creative thinking, and more advertising revenue.


View the original article here



Exporters ignoring TV route into US market, says CIN

Guyana police seeking Jamaican in probe of another Jamaican"s death

Friday, January 24, 2014 | 2:08 PM    


GEORGETOWN, Guyana (CMC) — Guyana police were searching for a 36-year-old Jamaican as they continue investigations into the death of a Jamaican woman, whose body was found in a hotel room earlier this week.


Police say they want to question Anthony Lloyd Neville Morrison in relation to the death of Beverley Anesta Gardner, whose body was found in a room of the New York Car Wash and Hotel on Wednesday.


The woman reportedly arrived in Guyana a few weeks ago and checked in at the hotel with her partner who has since disappeared. 


Jamaican passports belonging to Morrison and Gardner were found in the hotel room where her body was discovered.


The police said an autopsy would be performed on the body later Friday.


View the original article here



Guyana police seeking Jamaican in probe of another Jamaican"s death

Man assaults woman in dispute over oral sex payment


with Tanesha Mundle


Sunday, January 26, 2014    


MUFFLED laughter and snide remarks greeted an accused man who was brought before the Corporate Area Resident Magistrate’s Court last week for reportedly assaulting his cousin’s girlfriend, in the aftermath of a dispute with her friend over payment for oral sex at a dance.


The accused, Lee Val Williams, 43, a farmer and construction worker of Lawrence Tavern in West Rural St Andrew, was arrested and charged with unlawful wounding after he allegedly used a Guinness bottle to inflict a wound to the complainant’s face while they were partying at a bar in the Lawrence Tavern Square on November 30 last year.


According to the complainant, Williams, who had paid her friend to perform oral sex on him, demanded a return of his money after the act and got upset and attacked her.


The complainant told the court that they were at a dance when she and her friend were getting ready to leave, but she noticed that her friend had disappeared and went in search of her. She said that she later found her friend in the bathroom at the bar.


“I saw Williams holding her up by the neck and she holding onto her bag,” the complainant said.


The complainant said that when she enquired what was going on, her friend told her that Williams, after paying her for oral sex, had demanded his money back.


According to the woman in her statement, she asked her friend if Williams had climaxed and her friend told her ‘yes’.


However, she told the court that Williams, after seeing her, started to get boisterous while demanding his money and she alerted her boyfriend who came to pacify the situation, but Williams would not relent and threatened to fight his cousin.


“My boyfriend said to him, ‘my youth me an you a blood, me nah war you’,” but was told by Williams that he is a ‘badman’ and would kill him.


The complainant said that Williams then shoved her boyfriend, who pushed him in return and they then ‘started to fist it out’.


She said that during the fight, Williams reached for a Guinness bottle and moved towards her boyfriend but before she could move, he hit her in her face.


As the woman relayed the story there was stifled laughter in the court as persons looked on at Williams with disgust and unflattering comments.


But Williams stood expressionless, neither denying nor confirming the complainant’s report.


However, when he was asked by Senior Magistrate Judith Pusey if he had hit the complainant, he simply replied, “No, maam.”


His bail was extended for him to return to court on March 13.


Young girl and friend freed after breaking into ex-lover’s home


Two young girls who also faced the court for kicking off a man’s door and breaking into his house were freed after the court heard that one of them was his ex-girlfriend.


Monique Livermore, 20, and Yakeisha Smith, 17, both of Jameson Street in downtown Kingston, broke into the 44-year-old vendor’s house on Smith Lane in downtown Kingston on January 9 and stole his standing fan and three colognes, all valued at $8,030.


Both women were subsequently charged with housebreaking and larceny.


But last Thursday when the matter was mentioned, it was revealed that Smith and the complainant had a relationship.


“We and him a friend and more time we sleep ova him yard,” Livermore said when asked by the magistrate why they had broken into the complainant’s home.


“Why you sleep over his house,” probed the magistrate.


“When we go a party and come in late we sleep over his house,” she answered.


She then told the court that Smith and the complainant were involved and that he owed her something which he promised her and so they broke into his house.


The complainant, who admitted that he had a two-month long relationship with Smith from last November, denied having anything for Smith.


“Me did promise her a money but me give har from Christmas to buy clothes and things,” he said, noting that he did not give her any permission to take anything from his house.


However, Pusey, after checking on Smith’s age to ensure that she had reached the age of consent at the time of the relationship, told both women to go home and made a no-order ruling in the matter.


“Sleep a unu yard,” Pusey warned them as they left the court.


Woman requests help to fix damaged ear


A bar owner who lost a piece of her ear during a fight with her employee told the court that all she wanted is for her damaged ear to be repaired.


Tamara Thomas, who was missing the lower part of her ear, told the court that Lasonya Sergeant, whose employment she had earlier terminated, attacked her at her bar after she told her to stay away from her.


“I heard she had been bad-mouthing me and talking a lot of things behind me and on the day I saw her at my bar and said, “yu nuh hear fi avoid me, and she just grab on pon me ears and when people a draw har off, piece a it come off,” Thomas said.


Sergeant was subsequently arrested and charged with unlawful wounding. But Thomas was also charged with malicious destruction


of property, following allegations that she broke Sergeant’s silver chain during the fight.


However, this was denied by Thomas who claimed that she did not get a chance to retaliate as people had intervened the moment she


was attacked.


According to Thomas, her flat screen television was destroyed during the fight, after Sergeant’s hand accidentally knocked it off the table. But she said she was not interested in the television or having Sergeant punished.


“All I want is for my ear to be fixed,” she said.


However, Pusey told them that they will have to wait on the medical report and extended both their bails for them to return to court on March 18.


Judge scolds driver for bribing cop with $1000


Laughter erupted in the court after the magistrate chastised a driver for bribing a policeman with $1,000.


“You look on the good, good officer and give him $1,000? You don’t even offer him something better than that?” Pusey said to 26-year-old accused Yraerc Creary.


Creary attempted to bribe a policeman on January 9 after he was stopped along Washington Boulevard, St Andrew, for speeding and was charged with attempting to bribe a policeman.


Last Thursday when he appeared in court he pleaded guilty, while noting that he was sorry for his action and that he had apologised to the policeman.


But the magistrate told him that he would have to face the consequence of his actions as he was one of those individuals who was contributing to corruption.


“I have always maintained that in order for there to be an act of corruption, there has to be a corruptee and a corruptor,” she said. “You know you can go to prison for three years.”


“Oh God, no ma’am”, Creary shouted out right away.


“I sorry for you,” Pusey said, as the seriousness of Creary’s action dawned on him.


He then pleaded with the magistrate for mercy, claiming that his action was a mistake. However, Pusey told him that she needed time to think about his sentence and revoked his bail.


He was then remanded into custody and is scheduled to return to court next Thursday.


Businessman accused of stealing customer’s gold chain


A businessman was also taken before the court, following allegations that he stole a customer’s gold chain valued at $300,000, after collecting it to fix it.


It was revealed that the accused, Sunil Daswani, after completing the repair, gave the complainant a different chain in return for his expensive jewellery.


But Daswani, who was arrested and charged with larceny by trick, denied the charge last Thursday when he appeared in court.


But the complainant insisted that he was robbed of his gold chain, which he said he had for about 20 years.


“No, the man exchange me gold chain and give me a small one,” said the complainant who was obviously irritated.


Daswani’s bail was then extended for him to return to trial on February 13.


According to allegations, on December 21 last year, the complainant, who is also a businessman, went to the jewellery store on King Street, in downtown Kingston to replace a safety lock on his gold chain.


It was reported that the complainant enquired about the cost and was told that the gold safety lock would cost him $4,000 while the gold-plated one would cost him $1,200. As a result the complainant reportedly chose the cheaper option and handed over his chain to Daswani.


Shortly after, the complainant’s chain was returned but the complainant upon inspecting the item of jewellery noticed that it was not the same chain and brought it to Daswani’s attention but he insisted that it was the same chain.


The matter was then reported, and Daswani was charged.


When cautioned about the allegations, the court was told that he responded: “I am a businessman, I have no reason to steal his chain.”


View the original article here



Man assaults woman in dispute over oral sex payment

"Mi a go kill somebody over yah"

BY PAUL HENRY Co-ordinator Crime/Court Desk henryp@jamaicaobserver.com


Thursday, January 23, 2014    


THE 12 fish pots stand in Dog Bridge River in Thornton District, St Elizabeth as a memorial to their teenage owners — Desrick Williams and Ashnell Coke — who were savagely murdered there on January 8.


The section of the river that runs through an area of Thornton called Jackass Pasture, where the murders occurred, isn’t deep and the pots are easily accessible.


On more than one occasion David Williams, Desrick’s father, suggested to Ashnell’s father, Joscelyn Coke, that they retrieve them. But for Coke, a return to the area where the 15-year-old boys were savagely hacked to death, is too painful a task.


In a cruel twist of fate, the teens started setting their fish pots at Jackass Pasture, about two miles from their homes, after their crayfish and shrimp catch were repeatedly stolen at the closer Line River and on the recommendation of the senior Williams.


In October last year, the 26-year-old man accused of killing the boys cleared a small patch of land on the bank of the Dog Bridge River where he planted ganja among legal crops, against the wishes of his father.


The 52-year-old father often told his son to give up farming in the area because his produce would be devoured by grazing cows and goats. The father wanted his son to seek a job at which he could apply his mind and put his five CXC subjects to use.


On the other side of the shallow river, across from where the murder suspect had his field, 53-year-old Earl Thompson reared cows and goats and the animals would graze on both sides of the river. They would trek through the suspect’s field and trample his crops, causing him to bristle at the damage.


Desrick Williams, who attended Balaclava High School in the parish, started fishing for crayfish and shrimp in 2010 as a means of helping to support the family and sending himself to school, following an accident in July of that year which left his father unable to work. His frail mother was also unable to work. Older sisters and a brother would help out, but they had their own challenges.


Desrick sold the crayfish he caught for $200 and $300 a pound and the shrimp he would sell for $150. Desrick, who is considered a bright boy, was desirous of attending university after completing high school, so he kept working.


Aiding Desrick was his friend from childhood, Ashnell Coke, a student of Maggotty High School. Ashnell, a quiet boy, was very helpful in his own home, cooking for his father and doing other chores, and at Desrick’s where he was very close to the senior Williams who regarded him as a son. Whenever Ashnell wasn’t at his home he would be at the Williams’, just a few gates away. He also planted his own patch of pumpkin, sorrel, plantain and gungo.


Over time, Desrick’s income became threatened by people who stole his crayfish and bait from the fish pots he would set before going to school, or overnight.


To avoid a serious run-in with them, Desrick’s father advised him to move his pots to Dog Bridge River, and in December, three weeks before the fateful January 8 day, helped him to move. Desrick would make the daily two-mile journey to Jackass Pasture on his bicycle by himself for two weeks in the latter part of December until Ashnell was able to help out.


Toward the end of December, Thompson went to his field and discovered two of his goats slaughtered. Some time after, he said he was at his home on the Thornton main road when he was approached by the suspect, who, he alleged, had a machete.


Thompson told the Jamaica Observer that the suspect started accusing him of again walking his children through his ground.


“Earl,” Thompson said the suspect said to him, “mi wi kill you and you pickney dem.”


Thompson said he responded, “Mi no go back over yu place nor the pickney dem.”


Thompson said that a week after that he was passing by the suspect’s ground when the accused man told him that somebody had been walking “up and down” in his ground.


“Mi a go kill somebody over yah eno, Earl,” Thompson said the suspect told him, adding that the man threatened that if he caught anybody in his field, no matter where they ran to, he was going to chase and chop them up.


Thompson and other residents said the suspect had started to act aggressively leading up to the incident.


On January 8, Desrick and Ashnell returned from their respective schools, took in their goats from the field, did their other chores and left home on their bicycles to check on the fish pots.


The boys were long in returning home, which worried the senior Williams. Ashnell’s father was worried too, as his son didn’t usually stay out late. He began thinking that something might have gone wrong. Williams made his way to the river, but there was no sign of the boys. He left and returned with a search team of about 10 men who were going night fishing. The first thing they saw was a bicycle. Close by, slippers. Then, to Williams’ horror, Desrick’s hacked body. His heart sank. He immediately went to the police station to report the find. On another search, Ashnell’s body was found under shrubs by the same spot.


The suspect was taken into custody the following day without incident, though there was a crowd that wanted to exact their brand of justice.


Last Friday, the Observer visited the unfinished house that the suspect shared with his father up to the time of the incident.


The first question the man’s father asked was if his son had been charged. He said if his son was guilty he should be brought to book and confess to the crime.


He showed the news team to his son’s room. The words ‘Never legal’ were scribbled on the door in ink. Inside, a dusty television set sat on a small table beside a bed.


The father said his son had moved back to the area in October after a run-in with his brother in Manchester where they grew up with their mother.


He said his son’s behaviour started to get strange following two accidents — one when he was about 10 years old and the other when he was 14 — in which he was flung from his bicycle and had injured his head. A part of the strange behaviour, the father said, was that his son would sit and talk to himself, which would turn to a quarrel with himself.


His son, he said, was on medication for a mental condition. He also said that his son, since moving back to Thornton, seldom ate and would sit and stare. When asked if the family has a history of mental illness, the father said one of his brothers in Montego Bay, St James, is mentally ill. The father said he feared for his own life as he has received death threats.


On Friday, the police visited the homes of the victims, praying with their loved ones and offering words of comfort. At Ashnell’s home a relative asked that the suspect be brought to justice. But a senior officer pleaded for patience.


The suspect is yet to be charged.


View the original article here



"Mi a go kill somebody over yah"

I finished early — A delicate flower gone at 39

Alicia Sutherland


Sunday, January 26, 2014    


AT only 39 years old, illness took aesthetician Sheryl Althea Whyte away from her family.


While the pain of her loss was evident and tears flowed freely at the service of thanksgiving for her life on Saturday, January 11, her family has come to terms with the realisation that her untimely passing does not quite mean that her life was cut short.


“I finished early, I did it my way, and then God had his way,” said Roxanna Harriott as she read the eulogy for her cousin affectionately known as Tracey.


Born August 9, 1974 Harriott told the gathering Whyte received her education at the Christiana Moravian Primary school, Edwin Allen Comprehensive High and a number of other institutions that supported her interests.


She is remembered as free-spirited with a love for her family, her only child John-Ross Greaves, and a passion for fashion.


In a tribute done by Yanique Hall-Harriott, on behalf of family members overseas, Whyte is described as a delicate flower.


“Externally she personified immense strength. However, her life’s anthem was built on songs of tenderness. She was blessed with physical beauty, equally impressive were the elements of her character,” she said.


“Tracey will give her everything,” said Linnette Campbell of the House of Styles clothing store where the deceased spent a period of her working life.


Whyte’s aunt, Gladys Harriott, said that she was at her 75th birthday party in December and she did not know that she would have attended Whyte’s father’s funeral, her mother’s funeral and now her funeral.


Family members and friends believe that one of the most significant achievements for her was accepting the lord and symbolising it through baptism at the Refuge Temple Church of Jesus Christ Apostolic Faith in George Reid, Manchester, before she passed on.


“Death doesn’t look at the colour of your skin; it doesn’t look at how pretty you are or how handsome you look…. Don’t wait on your friends to come (to the Lord), let your friends follow you,” one church member told the congregation.


General secretary of the Jamaica Council of Churches and Whyte’s cousin Reverend Gary Harriott prayed for the family.


Among the loved ones she left behind are her siblings Jamaica Observer photographer Gregory Bennett, Joy Whyte and Oneil Whyte.


Whyte was interred at the Oaklawn Memorial Gardens.


View the original article here



I finished early — A delicate flower gone at 39

Health minister hosts JAHJAH

Tuesday, January 21, 2014 | 7:53 AM    


KINGSTON, Jamaica — Health Minister Dr Fenton Ferguson will on Wednesday host members of the group Jamaicans Abroad Helping Jamaicans At Home (JAHJAH) at a reception at the Mona Visitors Lodge on the University of the West Indies campus.


The group is staging its first Annual Paediatric Cancer Conference at the venue. 


This cocktail reception is in support of the collaboration between the Bustamante Hospital for Children and the New York Presbyterian/Morgan Stanley Children’s Hospital. It is also in an effort to share ideas to improve the care and treatment of paediatric cancer.


JAHJAH Foundation is a nonpartisan organisation founded in March 2011 for “the advancement of Jamaicans living in Jamaica with the help of Jamaicans and friends of Jamaica throughout the globe”. 


Current JAHJAH director is Dr Trevor Dixon, who is also the founder.


View the original article here



Health minister hosts JAHJAH

Food for thought


AS we settle into 2014 — which the United Nations has declared the International Year of Family Farming — no doubt thoughts about how much food was wasted over the holidays come to mind.


The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and its sister organisation the Food and Agriculture Organisation in their Think.Eat.Save — Reduce Your Foodprint campaign last year, revealed that one-third of all food produced each year, equivalent to 1.3 billion tonnes, is lost or wasted.


 Around 300 million tonnes of this – more than enough to feed the estimated 870 million people who face hunger each day across the globe – is discarded by producers, retailers and consumers. Much of it ends up on landfills, where it decomposes and releases the potent greenhouse gas methane.


  Not only that, but it would mean that the energy, water, fertilisers and land that went into the production would also have been wasted. Juxtapose this against the fact that there are still nearly one billion people suffering from hunger. Simultaneously, 65 per cent of the world’s population live in countries where obesity kills more people than those who are underweight.


  Fortunately, however, these are problems that we can solve, and the growing focus on food security issues — in Jamaica at least — provides some hope. To that end, here are 10 food resolutions for 2014:


1. Meet Your Local Farmer/Support Family Farmers


Know your farmer, know your food (KYF2) aims to strengthen local and regional food systems. Meeting your local farmer puts a face to where your food comes from and creates a connection between farmers and consumers.

2. Eat Seasonal Produce

  By purchasing local foods that are in season, you can help reduce the environmental impact of shipping food. And your money goes straight to the farmer, supporting the local economy.


3. End Food Waste


More than 1.3 billion tons of edible food is wasted each year. Tips to reduce waste include planning meals ahead, buying “ugly’’ fruits and vegetables, being more creative with recipes, requesting smaller portions, composting, and donating excess food.

4. Promote a Healthy Lifestyle


 Many diseases are preventable, including obesity, yet 1.5 billion people in the world are obese or overweight. Promote a culture of prevention by engaging in physical activity and following guidelines for a healthy diet. Gaps in food governance must also be addressed to encourage healthy lifestyles, including junk food marketing to children.

5. Commit to Resilience in Agriculture

  A large portion of food production is used for animal feed and biofuels — at least one-third of global food production is used to feed livestock. And land grabs are resulting in food insecurity, the displacement of small farmers, conflict, environmental devastation, and water loss. Strengthening farmers’ unions and cooperatives can help farmers be more resilient to food prices shocks, climate change, conflict, and other problems.


6. Buy (or Grow) Organic

 The Environmental Working Group (EWG) has found that at least one pesticide is in 67 per cent of produce samples in the US Studies suggest that pesticides can interfere with brain development in children and can harm wildlife, including bees. Growing and eating organic and environmentally sustainable produce we can help protect our bodies and natural resources.


7. Go Meatless Once a Week


To produce 0.45 kilograms (one pound) of beef can require 6,810 litres (1,799 gallons) of water and 0.45 kilograms (one pound) of pork can require 2,180 litres (576 gallons) of water. Beef, pork, and other meats have large water footprints and are resource intensive. Consider reducing your “hoofprint” by decreasing the amount and types of meat you consume.

8. Cook

 In Michael Pollan’s book Cooked, he learns how the four elements — fire, water, air, and earth — transform parts of nature into delicious meals. And he finds that the art of cooking connects both nature and culture. Eaters can take back control of the food system by cooking more and, in the process, strengthen relationships and eat more nutritious — and delicious — foods.


9. Consider the ‘True Cost’ Of Your Food

  Based on the price alone, inexpensive junk food often wins over local or organic foods. But, the price tag doesn’t tell the whole story. True cost accounting allows farmers, eaters, businesses, and policymakers to understand the cost of all of the “ingredients” that go into making fast food —including antibiotics, artificial fertilisers, transportation, and a whole range of other factors that don’t show up in the price tag of the food we eat.


 — UNEP/Danielle Nierenberg


View the original article here



Food for thought

Traffic chief renews call for cyclists to wear helmets

BY ALICIA DUNKLEY-WILLIS Senior staff reporter dunkleya@jamaicaobserver.com


Thursday, January 23, 2014    


HEAD of the Police Traffic Division, Deputy Superintendent Gary McKenzie, says the police are in serious discussions with the Road Safety Unit to make it mandatory for pedal cyclists to wear helmets.


“We believe some of those injuries that result in death could have been avoided and certainly other injuries, especially head injuries, could be minimised if cyclists protected their heads,” DSP McKenzie told the Jamaica Observer in a recent interview.


“It has been proven, especially with our motorcyclists, that those who wear their helmets survive. We continue to have problems where we have motorcyclists who are not adhering to wearing safety helmets, but that is something we have to be more vigilant with and that is something we are going all out this particular year to reduce…,” he said.


According to DSP McKenzie, the police already have one solution in mind which might be particularly painful for riders.


“One of the things the police is definitely trying to do is that when a person is stopped without wearing the helmet we would like for them not to continue to ride even when we have given them the ticket. We really want a situation where once we stop them, in order for them to move away, they should have on a helmet,” he said.


“We will not have helmets on hand, but what would happen is that we would keep the motorcycle until they have the necessary protective device to actually ride. Those motorcycles would be held for safekeeping until the person gets a helmet,” DSP McKenzie explained.


“One of the police’s responsibility is to prevent breaches of the law from continuing and so that is an area that we think we could actually make some significant inroads as it relates to reducing the number of fatalities that occur as it relates to persons riding without a helmet,” he added.


In the meantime, he said the police had no intention of sneaking up on the public with the changes.


“One of the things we would want to get out to the public because the kind of strategy we are pursuing is not the Nicodemus type where we want to be like a thief in the night, we want the public to understand that these are the things that are causing us to die. When we don’t wear protective devices, when we drive at excessive speeds, when we drink and drive it causes deaths on our roads,” he said.


“What we have continuously focused on, in a large way, is deaths but let us recognise that serious injuries also affect the lives of people. Many persons have lost limbs, persons have become blind, persons have been maimed and it takes significant resources to take care of persons when this occurs,” the traffic head pointed out.


He said the police, who have been a part of the process in terms of crafting the new Road Traffic Act, are looking forward to seeing many of the issues they have brought to the fore addressed by the provision.


“In particular, as it relates to motorcycles, that was one of the things that were brought up that we believe will be addressed when that new Act is [completed]. Certainly, we have to do all within our powers in terms of trying to prevent serious injuries and deaths when we have accidents. In doing that, although enforcement plays a major role, we really want the public to be educated and for major change to actually take place,” DSP McKenzie told the Observer.


View the original article here



Traffic chief renews call for cyclists to wear helmets

Returned resident"s shooting a contract killing, say police

BY PAUL HENRY Co-ordinator — Crime/Court Desk henryp@jamaicaobserver.com


Tuesday, January 21, 2014    


THE murder last Friday night of a 75-year-old returned resident in St Elizabeth is believed by the police to be a contract killing.


Robert Campbell was attacked and shot near his two-storey home on Baptist Road in Middle Quarters by a gunman who called out to him before opening fire. Campbell’s household helper, who was travelling with him in his van, wasn’t injured.


A police source told the Jamaica Observer about the suspicion of a hit, while adding that the ‘trigger man’ and two other men had been in the area for two days interacting with residents of the quiet district in west St Elizabeth, before committing the crime.


The men were travelling in a Toyota Camry motor car. It was after the incident that residents started coming forward with the information.


According to Deputy Superintendent Lanford Salmon, Campbell’s murder could have been prevented had residents been more vigilant and reported the presence of the three strange men in the area.


“The citizens of St Elizabeth need to realise that the landscape has changed,” said Campbell, who is head of operations for the parish.


“St Elizabeth people are nice people and welcome [all] in their home, but they should look at strange men in the area as suspects and check them out with the police. We have intelligence that migrant criminals are coming into the parish seeking safe haven. The people are too friendly and need to wise up,” he added.


Campbell’s murder came a week after his wife died of natural causes in hospital. He leaves behind five grandchildren.


Meanwhile, grieving relatives and residents had nothing but kind words about Campbell, who reportedly returned to live in the island in the late 1990s after spending approximately 50 years working in the United States of America.


He’s been described as friendly, kind, helpful and a person who likes to give advice and a listening ear.


His grandson Kemar Campbell told the Observer that these qualities may have led him to stop when flagged down by a stranger around 8:45 on that fateful Friday night.


Speaking of Campbell’s kindness, Kemar said that whenever there was a shortage of water in the area, Campbell would allow people to catch the commodity from his tank, free of charge.


Residents said that on occasion when he was leaving his house in the morning and saw children on the road he would pack them into his van and take them to school.


“I always watch it on TV and my heart would sink,” Campbell’s sister, Gracelin Wilson, said in relation to news reports of murders, “but I never knew it was coming right at our door.”


View the original article here



Returned resident"s shooting a contract killing, say police

Robberies choking Walkerswood All-Age

BY RENAE DIXON Sunday Observer staff reporter dixonr@jamaicaobserver.com


Sunday, January 26, 2014    


WALKERSWOOD, St Ann — Parents, teachers and other staff members of the Walkerswood All-Age School in St Ann have stated that they are fed up with a series of robberies which has been plaguing the institution.


The most recent robbery occurred some time over last weekend, with thieves removing food items from the school’s canteen valuing at over $7,000.


According to school officials, items bought last week totalled over $7,000; however, there were other items in the canteen before that purchase.


The school has lost several items in eight robberies which have occurred since May 2011, with six robberies within the last six months. Among the items lost are three toilet boils which were removed from the students’ restroom. The discovery of the missing toilets was made as the school prepared for the new term earlier this month.


Two weeks later, the school was to make another depressing find. Five gallons of oil, a half-a-bag of cornmeal, along with several other food items, including eggs which were to be used to prepare meals for the students during the course of last week, were taken.


The string of robberies has been disheartening for the teachers. According to Principal Marsha Henry, during a staff meeting on Tuesday morning, January 21, teachers openly cried.


“We have to start all over. We had a meeting this morning and teachers were crying,” Henry said.


“It is as if the effort we have made is not appreciated,” she added.


The school is still trying to recover from previous robberies which saw all six computers owned by the institution being removed, along with an HP laser jet printer, a camera, an IBM laptop, laptop bag, a television and a Toshiba DVD Player. A refrigerator was also taken from the school.


“Everything that can use to enhance teaching and learning has been taken away,” Henry told the Jamaica Observer during


an interview.


She said that all the computers used in the library to help to enhance the children’s reading were taken, along with the one computer in the administrative office.


“We are back at square one,” she said. “All the computers that the school has ever owned were taken.”


Henry said that she has to be doing things the old way; getting letters done by hand, for example.


Several of the items stolen were donated by Coldax Mart through the Digicel Foundation. Thieves have also made off with a Literacy Cart donated by the Foundation. The cart was one of 50 donated to schools across the island.


A safe at the institution, with important documents, was stolen last year. Henry said that she was preparing for national inspection and had put all her documents together when the safe was removed.


She believes that the culprits may have thought that the box contained money.


Materials bought to be used to make tablecloths in a dinning area for the school’s 147 students were also stolen.


Following several robberies at the school in 2013, the Ministry of Education ensured that the school had adequate lighting and that all classrooms had doors. However, that has not deterred criminals who have repeatedly picked the locks and entered the school to remove items.


What has been even more unsettling for Henry and her staff is the way the criminals have been operating.


“They close back the doors, the windows and grilles when they leave, so you do not know that there has been a robbery until you actually go inside,” she explained.


She pointed out that with the robbery of the toilets, she only found out that they were missing when the janitor went to clean the restroom, as the culprits had closed back the door and turned off the water leading to the facility.


During the robberies, charts and several other items used by teachers were also destroyed.


With work being done on the institution, workmen had left plyboard in a classroom at the institution, some of which were also stolen.


The school currently has no security guard or watchman and is not fenced and so it is forced to continue to operate at risk, until the situation is addressed.


“There is nothing we can do but try and protect ourselves,” Henry stated.


She said students are depending on the school for meals, and so food items will still have to be bought although there is no guarantee that they will not be stolen.


Henry and her team are now awaiting plans by the ministry to have the school secured.


According to her, Regional Director Maxine Headlam, head of Region Three, and other personnel have been very supportive. She explained that Headlam is now looking to have security personnel placed at the institution.


Henry said that she has written a letter to the ministry outlining the urgency with which the matter needs to be addressed.


Parents staged a peaceful demonstration at the institution on Tuesday. They said that if nothing is done to address the issues faced by the school they will mount a bigger demonstration.


Henry said that the school has been receiving assistance from the Jamaica Defence Force, which has collaborated with the Ministry of Education to get work at the institution done. The Ferncourt High School has also been assisting with metal work to increase the security at the school.


“A number of persons have offered to assist,” Henry said.


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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

Police to wear body cameras

Thursday, January 23, 2014 | 6:41 PM    


KINGSTON, Jamaica — National Security Minister Peter Bunting has announced plans for select police units to wear body cameras even as concerns are being expressed over allegations of extra-judicial killings and professional misconduct by members of the force.


Making the disclosure at Thursday’s Post Cabinet Press Briefing at Jamaica House in St Andrew the National Security Minister said that the project to deploy body worn cameras for select Jamaica Constabulary Force Units is scheduled to commence rollout in the second half of this year.


More information later.


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Police to wear body cameras

Canada tragedy

L’ISLE-VERTE, Quebec (AP) — Crews struggled with frigid temperatures and ice as thick as two feet (60 centimetres) as they searched yesterday for more bodies in the remains of a burned-out Quebec retirement home as friends and relatives of the victims awaited news. Just eight bodies of the 32 presumed dead have been recovered.


A massive blaze swept through the three-storey building in L’Isle-Verte, about 140 miles (225 kilometres) northeast of Quebec City early Thursday. Quebec Provincial Police Lt Guy Lapointe at a news conference lowered the number of missing from about 30 to 24 based on more detailed information. The official confirmed death toll remained at eight.


“The 24 people that are still missing, I think we can assume the worst. We’re not going to confirm any deaths until we’ve actually recovered the remains,” Lapointe said.


The coroner’s office identified two of the victims as Juliette Saindon, 95, and Marie-Laureat Dube, 82.


The cause of the blaze that burned down the Residence du Havre was under investigation, and police asked the public for any videos or photos that might yield clues. Lapointe declined to confirm media reports that the fire began in the room of a resident who was smoking a cigarette, but he said it “is one hypothesis among many”.


“When you conduct an investigation of this magnitude, you have to determine all the facts and not simply just one or two in order to achieve a conclusion,” he said.


Frigid temperatures continued to hamper the search, with Lapointe saying the ice in certain places was as thick as 60 centimetres (two feet).


Search teams brought in equipment normally used to de-ice ships that pushes out very hot air.


“You can imagine how difficult it is to go through the ice, melt it, and do it in a way that we preserve the integrity of potential victims,” he said. “So it’s very difficult work again today. It’s very cold.”


On Friday, teams of police, firefighters and coroners slowly and methodically picked their way through the ruins, working in shifts in the extreme cold with temperatures hovering around minus four degrees Fahrenheit (minus 20 degrees Celsius).


As crews used steam to melt thick sheets of ice coating the rubble, Marc-Henri Saindon waited for his mother’s body to be recovered. Marie-Jeanne Gagnon, five months shy of her 100th birthday, had moved to the home on New Year’s Eve, her son said.


“She really liked it there. She was well-treated and she had friends there,” Saindon said.


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Canada tragedy

Warner Park, St Kitts boosts lighting for international cricket fixtures

Tuesday, January 21, 2014 | 11:12 AM    


KINGSTON, Jamaica — A lighting project at the Warner Park Cricket Stadium in St Kitts has beefed up the venue to better accommodate international night cricket and also allow for training at nights.


According to a report from the St Kitts and Nevis Information Service (SKNIS) people moving throughout Basseterre the capital town last week may have noticed the rack of outdoor sports lights mounted on four, two-pole design structures. 


“There are 72 individual bulbs on each structure for a total of 288 bulbs. These will provide about 3,600 lux of lights to illuminate the field for night matches. Lights have also been erected at the Len Harris Cricket Academy located in Warner Park allowing players to train at nights – a convenience not available anywhere else in the Caribbean,” SKNIS said. 


SKNIS added that five screens, including a 44×22 foot ‘jumbotron’, were now being installed by local electrical engineers guided by the expertise of officials from Ardent Lighting Group in the United States. 


“The next five to seven days is going to be critical,” SKNIS reported Senior Sports Officer Vernon Springer as saying. “It’s going to be an ongoing process and all of this is in preparation for two scheduled games which are already on the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) calendar.”


 The first match is between the Leeward Islands and the Combined Campus and Colleges teams slated for February 28 to March 03. The second is a day-night match slated for March 07 to 10 between the Leeward Islands and Jamaica.


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Warner Park, St Kitts boosts lighting for international cricket fixtures

Well said, Dr Nicely


THE response by the Jamaica Teachers’ Association (JTA) to a police study on education and crime has received support from Jamaica Observer online readers. The study — which sampled 894 prison inmates and their backgrounds, including the schools they attended —identified 18 schools that were largely attended by individuals now in prison. In his response, JTA President Dr Mark Nicely says it was unfortunate to label the schools as producers of prisoners as the move contradicts the Ministry of Education’s push to end discrimination against non-traditional high schools. Here are some edited comments:


george


It is a well-written report. But to associate the schools as a contributor is garbage. Another thing, we should eliminate the category non-traditional and traditional high school. If they are now high schools, then we should address them as such.


fieldgar


Well said, Dr Nicely.


Really


Some of these children do not have a choice because of where they live. Maybe the dons and gangs enforce their will that the students must join their illegal activities or some form of punishment will be meted out to them. Look at the article in the newspapers on the window washers who work on shifts and have to give their money to someone who controls them. It was very poor of Mr Thwaites to name the schools and it seems as if there is an unwritten claim that these schools mainly produce thugs and criminals.


Which school did ‘Dudus’ attend? Would the minister also point his finger at that school as ["Dudus"] is considered a criminal? Mr Thwaites, it appears as if you were hasty and did not think of the backlash when you happily made your statement. You ought to do the correct thing and apologise to the schools named. I wonder which schools the people who are accused of corruption in the Government attend?


Gary B


Where does the minister get off? If that’s the case, as he suggested, wouldn’t that be a telltale of the kind of education system that his ministry is governing? One would’ve thought that a study of that nature would encompass society, communities, governance and security.


guest


This may very well be a crude and unscientific survey, but the conclusion is worthy of note and be the catalyst for improvement. Would not be surprised if this study was done on the orders of the minister.


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Well said, Dr Nicely