Showing posts with label Kingston. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kingston. Show all posts

Monday, January 12, 2015

Police seize eight firearms, arrest four men in Kingston and St Andrew

Tuesday, January 06, 2015 | 5:06 PM    

KINGSTON, Jamaica – The police say eight firearms were seized and four men arrested in separate incidents in Kingston and St Andrew on Monday, January 05.

In the first incident, lawmen were reportedly on patrol about 7:30 am in the 8 Miles area of Bull Bay, St Andrew, when they allegedly observed a man acting suspiciously. They say the man then headed to a nearby shop where he discarded an object, which the officers later retrieved. It was found to be a Taurus 9mm pistol containing six 9mm rounds of ammunition.

The police say one man was taken into custody, however, his identity is been withheld pending further investigations.

The second seizure happened in the same area about 9:45 am when officers searched a church premises and found five homemade firearms on the roof. No one was arrested in connection with this seizure.

Meanwhile, about 1:15 pm, one 9mm Taurus pistol and nine rounds of ammunition were seized on Orange Street in downtown Kingston. One man was arrested and charged.

He is 18-year-old Nicholas Haughton of West Street, Kingston. He is to appear before the Home Circuit Gun Court on Friday, January 16.

Reports are that the Police were on operation in the area when Haughton was seen acting suspiciously. On seeing the lawmen, he dropped the firearm and was subsequently accosted. The firearm and ammunition were retrieved.

In the final incident which took place about 11:45 pm, one 9mm Browning pistol and nine .380 cartridges were seized on Dunrobin Road, St Andrew during a stop and search operation in the area. Two men were taken into custody; however, their identities are being withheld pending further investigations.

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Police seize eight firearms, arrest four men in Kingston and St Andrew

Tuesday, December 16, 2014

Firearm seized at Fleet Street downtown Kingston

Monday, December 15, 2014 | 10:16 AM    

KINGSTON, Jamaica – Members of the security forces reportedly seized a Taurus 9mm pistol containing 4 rounds of ammunition at Fleet Street, Kingston on Sunday, December 14.

Reports from the Kingston Central Police are that about 4:00 pm, a joint police-military team carried out a raid on Fleet Street after hearing explosions in the area. A building was searched and the illegal firearm and ammunition were found. No arrest was made in connection with the find.

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Firearm seized at Fleet Street downtown Kingston

Thursday, October 9, 2014

AGD rocks Kingston

Singer Phyllisia Roselooked amazing after her performance with Jah Cure.

MCs for the evening ZJ Liquid and Yendi Phillipps pose during the Arthur Guinness Day concert.

Bugle in performance.;

Agent Sasco pleasing the patrons.

Guinness’ Gareth Geddes relaxes backstage with the Queen of the Dancehall Lady Saw.

The annual Arthur Guinness Day concert pulled a massive crowd to the National Arena recently to celebrate the legacy of the founder of the great brew.

An amazing showcase of entertainment, including performances by Bugle, Lady Saw, Jah Cure, Assassin and Soca Artistes, Skinny Fabulous and Mr Killa, as well as a fashion show, kept the interest of Guinness lovers at peak level.

A surprise unveiling of a brand-new, gold-foiled bottle was met with applause by the thousands. A male and female from the crowd were selected for the best gold outfits and given special prizes.

The evenings proceedings were hosted by ZJ Liquid and Yendi Phillipps who were looking regal in their gold and black, Guinness-inspired outfits courtesy of Carlton Brown and Drenna Luna, respectively. Here are some highlights:


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AGD rocks Kingston

Sunday, June 29, 2014

Bikini Sundayz invades East Kingston


Unleashed Entertainment, the promoters of Wray & Nephew White Rum Bikini Sundayz, made a stop in east Kingston with a dashing road party at 121 Windward Road (Skateland) last Sunday.

The party vibes were not turned up until minutes after 11 p.m. as the Team Unleashed disc jocks – Santana, Scientist, Krazy Dean, and Simple raised the tempo. The selectors – played one of Vybz Kartel’s lastest songs, Backas, and requested the girls to set in new positions for summer 2014.

The girls obliged and gyrated, much to the delight of their male counterparts.

The next event for Unleashed Entertainment is Bikini Sundayz beach party at Ultra Beach Club (Beside Waves Beach) in Hellshire, St Catherine.

Anthony Minott photos

Scenes during Wray & Nephew White Rum Bikini Sundayz Road party at 121 Windward Road (Skateland) in East Kingston last Sunday.


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Bikini Sundayz invades East Kingston

Bikini Sundayz invades East Kingston


Unleashed Entertainment, the promoters of Wray & Nephew White Rum Bikini Sundayz, made a stop in east Kingston with a dashing road party at 121 Windward Road (Skateland) last Sunday.

The party vibes were not turned up until minutes after 11 p.m. as the Team Unleashed disc jocks – Santana, Scientist, Krazy Dean, and Simple raised the tempo. The selectors – played one of Vybz Kartel’s lastest songs, Backas, and requested the girls to set in new positions for summer 2014.

The girls obliged and gyrated, much to the delight of their male counterparts.

The next event for Unleashed Entertainment is Bikini Sundayz beach party at Ultra Beach Club (Beside Waves Beach) in Hellshire, St Catherine.

Anthony Minott photos

Scenes during Wray & Nephew White Rum Bikini Sundayz Road party at 121 Windward Road (Skateland) in East Kingston last Sunday.


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Bikini Sundayz invades East Kingston

Friday, June 27, 2014

Aisha Davis for Kingston on the Edge


Aisha Davis

The National Gallery of Jamaica’s Last Sundays programme for June 2014 is scheduled for Sunday and is presented in association with Kingston on the Edge (KOTE), Jamaica’s first urban arts festival. The programme will run from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

The featured performance for the day, scheduled to start at 2 p.m., is by Aisha Davis. A singer, songwriter, dancer and actress, Aisha excites her fans with her soulful vocals and dance moves. She has toured internationally and has had the opportunity to share the stage with acts such as Ky-mani Marley, Cocoa Tea, Alborosie, Shaggy, Jimmy Cliff and Shabba Ranks.

Dubbed ‘Anything with Nothing: Art from the Streets of Urban Jamaica’, the exhibition will be the focus of the programme, but the permanent exhibitions will also be open for viewing. Anything with Nothing, which will close on July 11, features 10 street artists from the Corporate Area and Spanish Town, showcasing work specially created for the exhibition and photo-documentation of the street art.

The featured street artists are Kemar Black, Anthony Brown, Cleaver Cunningham, Vermon ‘Howie’ Grant, Ricardo ‘Ricky Culture’ Lawrence, Donavon ‘Danny Coxon’ McLeod, Dion ‘Sand’ Palmer, Michael Robinson, Andrew ‘Designer Ice’ Thomas and T. Earl Witter. There will be indepth guided tours of the exhibition, presented by members of the National Gallery curatorial staff, at noon, 1 p.m. and 3 p.m.

Admission and the guided tours and children’s activities will be free. Gift and coffee shop will be open for business and contributions to the donations box are welcomed.


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Aisha Davis for Kingston on the Edge

Kingston makes UN highest murder rate survey

Andr? Williams, STAR Writer

Kingston, Jamaica’s capital, has been listed among an international survey of world cities with the highest murder rates, The WEEKEND STAR understands.

According to www.theguardian.com, who published the top 10 list on Tuesday, data from the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) shows the most up-to-date available homicide rates per 100,000 people for the most populous cities of 137 countries.

The WEEKEND STAR gathered that the Americas overtook Africa as the region with the highest murder rate in 2012, with eight of the world’s 10 deadliest cities found there.

Kingston sits on the list at number 10.

The data shows that Kingston, Jamaica, has a murder rate of 50.3 per 100,000 people in 2011.

The UNODC numbers capture intentional homicide, defined as ‘unlawful death purposefully inflicted on a person by another person’.

Additionally, the report stated that a total of 328 people were murdered in Kingston in 2011, significantly down on previous years.


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Kingston makes UN highest murder rate survey

Thursday, June 26, 2014

Madman paid $100 to have sex - Crowd watches him and homeless woman in downtown Kingston

A mentally ill man and a homeless woman were the ‘stars’ of a short pornographic film, which was done by the pair for only $100.

The movie was reportedly filmed in the downtown Kingston area sometime ago, in front of a large crowd.

Throughout the more than two-minute clip, it was the man’s sexual prowess or lack thereof, which was the main source of entertainment for the onlookers.

The man who could be seen attempting to penetrate the woman, but failed miserably, much to the disappointment of the spectators.

“Shub it inna it …” one of the onlookers instructed the fumbling man, to which he responded, “ah rise it ah rise, seet rise! It rising!” the man declared while flashing his instrument as evidence to the onlookers.

But after multiple attempts, the man failed to penetrate the woman.

Getting his money’s worth

In apparent frustration and bent on getting his money’s worth, another spectator instructed, “Use yuh mouth man! Use yuh mouth!” to which the man without hesitation, proceeded to perform fellatio on the woman, much to the delight of the spectators.

Another spectator quipped, “yuh nyam too much… that’s why yuh … lazy” as he continued to struggle to engage in intercourse with the woman.

But despite being at the centre of the spectacle, the woman appeared oblivious to what was happening to her, even as her ‘co-star’ attempted to rouse a response from her by attempting to remove the top of her dress, she was still unmoved.

The woman simply laid there quietly with her dress hiked to her knees, legs splayed with her hands resting on her stomach as the man did his bidding.

No reports

After his failed performance, an irate spectator began to demand a refund after his expectations of a grand show were unfulfilled.

“Gi we back we $100, cause yuh … nah stand up! Gi we back we … money!” the man demanded.

Unwilling to relinquish his payment, the man made another feeble attempt to penetrate the woman, “yuh see mi … a stand up?” to which an onlooker jeered, “yuh waa some Viagra! Dat nuh in deh!”

The STAR contacted Head of the Kingston Central Division, Superintendent Michael Scott, and he stated that he has received no reports about persons engaging in sexual activities with homeless or mentally ill people in the area.

Meanwhile, Head of the Centre for the Investigation of Sexual Offences and Child Abuse, (CISOCA), Veronica Gilzean, told The STAR, “I have heard of it anecdotally, but we have received no such reports.”


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Madman paid $100 to have sex - Crowd watches him and homeless woman in downtown Kingston

Wednesday, June 25, 2014

UDC to increase office, business space in downtown Kingston

The Urban Development Corporation (UDC), has declared its intention to continue acquiring historic and derelict buildings in downtown Kingston and restore them.

According to Desmond Malcolm, General Manager of the UDC, the plan is to refurbish these buildings as part of a drive to develop more office space to attract businesses and government offices. 

Malcolm, speaking at a recent JIS “Think Tank,” explained that the UDC will either refurbish the buildings or seek developers to rehabilitate them. This strategy, he said, should also take advantage of the low real estate prices now prevailing in the market.

He also said the UDC’s initiatives support the work of Kingston Restoration Company (KRC), which is an urban regeneration agency, that has spearheaded the restoration of several historic buildings in the city.

Cultural Centre

The UDC recently received the Jamaica Architects’ Award for Excellence in remodelling/refurbishing, for its work on the Simon Bolivar Cultural Centre at North Parade and Church Street in downtown Kingston.

The Corporation acted as project manager, by preparing architectural drawings; obtaining the necessary approvals; and overseeing the construction of the centre.

“It is a spectacular building and will certainly add a lot of benefit to the Parade area,” Mr. Malcolm declared.

The historic Ward Theatre in downtown Kingston, which is located next to the Simon Bolivar Cultural Centre, is also receiving technical support from the UDC.

Mr. Malcolm said although the Corporation does not have responsibility for the Ward Theatre, it will provide support.

“So, the plan is to upgrade Love Lane… so that the entire corridor will be rehabilitated,” he said.


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UDC to increase office, business space in downtown Kingston

Tuesday, June 24, 2014

Kingston Wharves shareholders to receive dividends next month

Holders of shares in Kingston Wharves will receive some of  the company’s earnings at the end of  next month.  

The company has declared an interim dividend of 10 cents per unit, payable on July 30. To qualify for the dividend, shareholders would have to own the stock on July 14. 

Kingston Wharves has more than 1.43 billion shares outstanding, which means this interim dividend will be in the region of $143 million dollars.


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Kingston Wharves shareholders to receive dividends next month

Monday, June 23, 2014

Police fatally shoot man in Kingston 11, firearms seized

Sunday, June 22, 2014 | 1:27 PM    

KINGSTON, Jamaica — An unidentified male was fatally shot during a confrontation with the Police about 2:35 am Sunday, June 22 on Payne Avenue, off Spanish Town Road, Kingston 11, the Jamaica Constabulary Force has reported.

According to the Corporate Communications Unit (CCU) a .380 pistol with a magazine containing four rounds and a .38 revolver were seized in the incident.

The matter has been reported to the Independent Commission of Investigations (INDECOM), the CCU reported.

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Police fatally shoot man in Kingston 11, firearms seized

UDC acquiring, refurbishing derelict buildings downtown Kingston

Sunday, June 22, 2014 | 10:16 AM    

KINGSTON, Jamaica (JIS) — Urban Development Corporation (UDC) General Manager, Desmond Malcolm, says that the agency is continuing its acquisition and refurbishing of historic and derelict buildings in downtown Kingston, to provide more office space for public and private sector entities.

Malcolm says this engagement, which complements renewal efforts being carried out in that section of the city by the Kingston Restoration Company (KRC), will be undertaken either by the UDC, or through contracted developers.

The UDC General Manager made the disclosure during a recent Jamaica Information Service (JIS) Think Tank at the latter agency’s head office in Kingston.

Malcolm said the UDC is also currently refurbishing markets in downtown Kingston — the Jubilee Market, Red Rose Fish Market, and phase two refurbishing of the Coronation Market.

This, he explained, is being done “because we recognize that the market district is a very important part of the commercial activities in downtown Kingston.”

The UDC recently remodelled and refurbished the Simon Bolivar Cultural Centre at the North Parade/Church Street intersection in downtown Kingston, for which the agency received the Jamaica Institute of Architects’ Award for Excellence.

The Corporation, in its capacity as project manager, undertook the preparation of architectural drawings; obtained the necessary approvals; and supervised the construction works.

“It is a spectacular building, and will certainly add a lot to the Parade area,” said Malcolm.

The UDC is also providing technical support for maintenance of the historic Ward Theatre, which is adjacent to the Simon Bolivar Cultural Centre.

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UDC acquiring, refurbishing derelict buildings downtown Kingston

Sunday, February 2, 2014

Gertrude Daley, 102, walked from Portland to Kingston barefooted


By DONNA HUSSEY-WHYTE Sunday Observer staff reporter husseyd@jamaicaobserver.com


Sunday, February 02, 2014    


Tomorrow, Gertrude Pounall Daley will celebrate her 102nd birthday.


The centenarian, who never once fell ill throughout those years, is able to recall the very dates of important events in her life.


Daley, who was born in Montpelier, St Andrew, spoke easily about the days of walking from St Andrew to Portland then back to Kingston barefooted with loads on her head and the incidents surrounding her three marriages.


“Mi carry load on mi head, walking from down where mi live – from Montpelier (St Andrew Hills) to Ray Piece in Portland to buy load put it on mi head and walk from there go to Kingston go sell it,” Daley recalled. “And then walk come home,” she added.


“And mi have to walk because that time we never have any vehicle … walk with the load go and come. Because if you never sell off you have to walk back with what was left,” she stated.


She said that poverty was so rampant that she could not afford a pair of ‘crepe’ that cost six pence at the time.


“And we had to walk over whole heap of hill and gully, and you foot bun you,” she stated.


Along with the pressure of the load, the long distance and the burning of her feet, Daley had another obstacle to encounter.


“When you walk and go buy the load a bush they didn’t cook, so when you reach you hungry. But sometimes they used to make up a big fire and throw the yam in and it roast. Who can’t eat roast yam put in their basket and who can eat, eat it. But when hungry lick you, you better eat it. And those times were poor, poor times. Nobody couldn’t think ’bout ‘salting’ to put wid it,” she recalled.


Daley said that other times when she and the lady whom she travelled with were hungry, they would “shake off the load on the (river) bank and use yu hand scoop up water and drink it”.


But despite how hard people complain that things are now, the centenarian said that things are ‘sweet’ currently, when compared to 100 years ago.


“Now nobody have to walk with load because they have car parked up at home or car pick them up at their gates,” she said. “Plus if you carry yu load to Coronation (market) now by 3:00 pm yu done and go back home.”


Daley said that after accepting Jesus Christ as her personal saviour, she had to walk some 10 miles from Montpelier to Ginger Ridge to be baptised at 7 o’clock on the morning of June 20 1948.


Daley is the first of 17 children for her mother, all of whom emerged from the result of two marriages. The first produced 13 and the second, four. With the exception of Daley, all the other siblings from the first marriage have since died. While the four from the second marriage are all living in Freetown, St Andrew, only houses apart from each other. Daley now lives with her brother.


Daley also worked the field as a livelihood and sold her goods in the market.


“I was married three times,” she told the Jamaica Observer while sitting in her living room last week. “The first time was 17th of July 1937, the second time was 1954 and the third time was 1986,” she said. Her three sisters and niece, who were sitting nearby, confirmed this.


Daley’s first husband died in 1953 after a brief illness.


“My second husband now, him go foreign – England – and mi wait 20 years, and when mi go post office one day mi get a register letter. When mi go home is divorce papers. That happen after him leave for 20 years,” Daley explained. “I don’t even remember how soon after we married he went to England. But him never use to keep in touch with me much, and him never come out,” she disclosed.


Her third husband also emigrated to England after his children filed for him. He died there.


“You see how much husband God give me? Three!” she said. “And some people can’t even get on!” she laughed. “Sometimes if them fi get one, them have to kill the wife to get the husband. Look how much hoe deh bush and they can’t get no stick to fit they hoe! Every ‘tump’ of hoe have they stick a bush you know. All you do you pray and wait. You will get you own hoe,” Daley advised.


She said that when she got married in 1937, those were the days when men had to ask parents for their daughter’s hand in marriage.


“When he asked my mother and father for me I was 17 and they say mi did too young. And mi had to wait. After that, my father died and him still have to go ask my mother for me,” Daley recalled. That was eight years later.


“And you see when mi suppose to wash clothes for him? Him come and him have to ask her (Daley’s mother), and she say ‘yes’, and you see when mi wash the clothes and spread them on the line, she look on the clothes and say, ‘but look how you wash you and the man own clean and look at mine how you wash them dirty’. And she take her clothes off the line and rub them up in the dirt and mi couldn’t do nothing but cry and wash them over,” Daley said. “But mi did wash them clean from first,” she went on.


Daley also played a major role in the upbringing of her siblings after their father died leaving a daughter as young as four months. She was 18 years old at the time.


After the birth of her four other siblings to her mother’s new husband, Daley was also straddled with the responsibility of helping to care for them.


“She was strict man,” said Leslie Manderson, Daley’s 81-year-old brother, and the only male of her mother’s 17 children. “But she never used to slap me. She could have done that, but you know why she didn’t? My father was a very strict man and when him touch the four of us children, we well touch, so ‘Sister’ never had no need to touch you again.”


While none of Daley’s three marriages produced any children, her sister, 79-year-old Francella Manderson-Davis said that she adopted six children and grew them as her own. She agreed with her brother that Daley was indeed very strict.


“She was cross so we had to hear,” she said. “She never beat us, but one look and you know what she means. And when she talk she mean what she say, so we had to just hear. And she is kind.”


Today, Daley is still able to walk around aided by a walking stick, she sees clearly, hears well and said the only ailment she has is arthritis.


She believes her long life is as a result of her obedience to God.


After attesting to Daley’s strictness, her sister 77-year-old Inez Manderson recalls the delicious rice and peas that Daley would cook years ago. She also described her eldest sister as a hard worker who treated people well and would enjoy taking care of their children.


The centenarian’s youngest sibling Laura Manderson-Daley, 79, who was married to the son of Daley’s husband, simply described her sister as very nice and an ‘allright person’.


But it was her niece, Carmen McLean-Pascoe who explained the impact of Daley’s strictness on others.


“I remember at church, Woodford Seventh-Day Adventist, if the children doing something wrong, as they see her they quake up because she not afraid to lick them all in church. She draw her ‘kerchief or rag and slap them. She was that sort of person,” McLean-Pascoe said. “And she thinks about others. Even when I was married and living on my own when ‘Sister’ go market, she would always bring something say she carrying for me or my children. And she like to work her garden; even when she couldn’t do much she would sit on a bag on the ground and plant things and they would come, and come good,” she said.


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Gertrude Daley, 102, walked from Portland to Kingston barefooted

Friday, September 6, 2013

16-y-o Roxann Laing of Washington Gardens, Kingston missing

News

Sunday, September 01, 2013 | 9:53 AM

KINGSTON, Jamaica — An Ananda Alert has been activated for 16-year-old Roxann Laing of Whitney Drive, Kingston 20, who has been missing since Saturday, August 31. Roxann is of dark complexion, medium build, about 5-feet-8 inches tall and wears glasses.The Duhaney Park Police say that Roxann was reportedly last seen at a bus stop near the Juicy Beef outlet in Duhaney Park about 4:30 pm dressed in a black blouse and blue jeans pants.Anyone knowing Roxann’s whereabouts is being asked to contact the Duhaney Park Police at 933-4280, Police 119 emergency number or the nearest police station.

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16-y-o Roxann Laing of Washington Gardens, Kingston missing

Sunday, September 1, 2013

16-y-o Roxann Laing of Washington Gardens, Kingston missing

Latest News

Sunday, September 01, 2013 | 9:53 AM

KINGSTON, Jamaica — An Ananda Alert has been activated for 16-year-old Roxann Laing of Whitney Drive, Kingston 20, who has been missing since Saturday, August 31. Roxann is of dark complexion, medium build, about 5-feet-8 inches tall and wears glasses.The Duhaney Park Police say that Roxann was reportedly last seen at a bus stop near the Juicy Beef outlet in Duhaney Park about 4:30 pm dressed in a black blouse and blue jeans pants.Anyone knowing Roxann’s whereabouts is being asked to contact the Duhaney Park Police at 933-4280, Police 119 emergency number or the nearest police station. Like our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/jamaicaobserverFollow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/JamaicaObserver

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16-y-o Roxann Laing of Washington Gardens, Kingston missing

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

St Andrew in Kingston Wharves U15 Cricket semis

Sport

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Defending champions St Andrew will face St Ann in the first of two semi-finals in the Kingston Wharves Under-15 Cricket Competition today at Lucas Cricket Club in Kingston beginning at 10:00 am.The other semi-final will see Manchester taking on Westmoreland at Manchester High School. That match is also scheduled for a 10:00 am start.St Andrew come to the semis without losing any of their preliminary round matches. Two of the five matches were not played due to rain. Their captain Dominic Samuels, 126, scored the only century of the competition so far. St Ann, on the other hand, lost one of their matches while winning three.Manchester ended the preliminary round with the highest score of the round of 286 for 9 against St Catherine, while Westmoreland, though topping their zone, come to the semis short of matches due to rain which affected most of their matches. They had only one completed match of a possible four matches.The final is scheduled for Friday at Sabina Park in Kingston and is scheduled to start at 10:00 am.

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St Andrew in Kingston Wharves U15 Cricket semis

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

24th Kingston Wharves U15 Cricket Competition launched

THE 24th Kingston Wharves Under-15 Cricket Competition was launched on Friday at Lucas Cricket Club in Kingston with St Andrew and Portmore teams in attendance.

O’neil Cruickshank, the competition coordinator who spoke at the launch, explained that this year’s competition comprises the 14 parishes, including Portmore.Portland will not compete this year as they pulled out at the last minute. Each team will now play five preliminary matches, while the top four will play the semi-finals and them the final, which is scheduled for Friday, August 30. The teams are divided into four zones.The top 30 cricketers will be invited to a camp to be held during the Heroes holiday later this year. The camp will cover cricket skills, along with media training, personal etiquette and cricket history, among other topics such as doping control.Grantley Stephenson, chairman and chief executive officer of Kingston Wharves, indicated that the company was more than happy and proud to renew its sponsorship of the competition because it continues to achieve a number of objectives, including the further development of cricket skills, instilling discipline, strengthening concentration, fostering sportsmanship and camaraderie among the young cricketers.He also said that they are seriously committed to the development of the young men selected for the competition.Milton Henry, first vice-president of the Jamaica Cricket Association (JCA), welcomed Kingston Wharves’ sponsorship, heaping praise on the fact that it was the longest sponsored competition in the JCA. He said that it represented a valuable training tool for the young cricketers and was one of the pillars on which Jamaica’s Under-15 cricket stood.He also indicated that every national player in recent times had passed through the Kingston Wharves Under-15 Cricket Competition and this augured well for the competition, as well as the cricketers who benefited from participating in it.He also said that there was an alignment of the competition with the regional one organised by the WICB and that this would make it more valuable to the JCA’s preparation of the Jamaica team in the future.In the day’s feature match, defending champions St Andrew defeated Portmore by nine wickets in a low- scoring game. Portmore won the toss and batted, making just 78 all out in 20.1 overs with captain Kirk McKenzie, 33 top scoring. Keffin Murray, 13, was the only other batsman to get into double figures. The bulk of the wickets went to Raewin Senior, who took 4 for 10 in 4 overs, and Kyle Pottinger, who bagged 3 for 3 in 3.3 overs. Portmore lost their first wicket for 20 runs and continued to lose wickets at regular intervals throughout the innings.St Andrew, in reply, made light work of the total after reaching 79 for 1 in just 11.4 overs on the back of Okarchi Brown, 26 not out, Raewin Senior, 20 not out, and captain Dominik Samuels, 18. The lone wicket to fall went when the score was on 42. Sachin Simms got the wicket for 13 runs.The next set of matches are scheduled for Monday with several matches across the island.Grantley Stephenson (right), chairman and chief executive officer of Kingston Wharves, in discussion (from left), Milton Henry, first vice-president of the Jamaica Cricket Association (JCA), Kirk McKenzie, captain of Portmore, and Domink Samuels, captain of St Andrew, during the launch of the 24th Kingston Wharves Under-15 Cricket Competition at Lucas Cricket Club last Friday. (PHOTO: MICHAEL GORDON)

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24th Kingston Wharves U15 Cricket Competition launched

Thursday, August 1, 2013

3 firearms, 106 rounds seized at Lincoln Ave Kingston

Latest News

Wednesday, July 31, 2013 | 4:25 PM

KINGSTON, Jamaica — Police seized three firearms and 106 rounds of ammunition during an operation on Lincoln Avenue in Kingston 13, Tuesday afternoon.The Organized Crime Investigation Division (OCID) said that about 4:50 pm a team of officers was on an operation in the area. During a search a Ruger .44 pistol, a Taurus .38 revolver, a Taurus 9mm pistol and 106 assorted rounds of ammunition were discovered. One man was taken into connection with the find. His name is being withheld pending further investigations.Like our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/jamaicaobserverFollow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/JamaicaObserver

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3 firearms, 106 rounds seized at Lincoln Ave Kingston

Monday, July 29, 2013

Kingston 19 resident Andrew Shelton missing

News

Monday, July 29, 2013 | 7:43 AM

KINGSTON, Jamaica — Fifty-one-year-old Andrew Shelton, a salesman of Rohampton Circle, Kingston 19, has been missing since Sunday, July 14.Shelton is of brown complexion, medium build and is about 5-feet-10-inches tall.The Constant Spring Police report that Shelton was last seen at home. His mode of dress at the time he went missing is unknown.Anyone knowing Shelton’s whereabouts is being asked to contact the Constant Spring Police at 924-1421, Police 119 emergency number or the nearest police station.

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Kingston 19 resident Andrew Shelton missing

Girls missing from Kingston Children’s home

News

Sunday, July 28, 2013 | 11:59 AM

KINGSTON, Jamaica – Two girls 12-year-old Lashana Walters and 16-year-old Kamtaneisha Ellis, both of the Elcy Girls’ Home in Meadowbrook, Kingston 19, went missing on Saturday.Lashana is of brown complexion, medium build and about 5-feet-4-inches tall.Kamtaniesha is of dark complexion, medium build and about 5-feet-3 inches tall.The Constant Spring Police report that the two were last seen about 12:45 pm. At the time Lashana went missing she was wearing a blue blouse, blue jeans pants and had black and gold braids in her hair. Kamtaniesha was wearing a yellow blouse, black and white leggings, yellow shoes and had blue and black braids in her hair. Anyone knowing the whereabouts of Lashana or Kamtaniesha is being asked to contact the Constant Spring Police at 924-1421, the Police 119 emergency number or the nearest police station.

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Girls missing from Kingston Children’s home