Showing posts with label Manchester. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Manchester. Show all posts

Saturday, January 24, 2015

Manchester United 3-1 Newcastle United

by Ian WHITTELL

Friday, December 26, 2014    

Wayne Rooney scored twice as Manchester United rewarded manager Louis van Gaal’s decision to grant his players Christmas Day off by beating Newcastle United 3-1 on Friday.

Rooney, relishing the deeper midfield role which he has been assigned recently, effectively decided the contest with two lethal finishes and set up a third goal for Robin van Persie in the second half.

But although United won for the 18th time in their last 21 Boxing Day outings, they were obliged to survive a spirited opening quarter to the match from Alan Pardew’s visitors.

Rooney settled nerves with an excellently worked 23rd-minute opener, but United had lived dangerously up to that point, despite enjoying a glut of possession.

The visitors looked dangerous on the counter-attack and United were fortunate to avoid conceding a penalty when Juan Mata appeared to clip the heels of Yoan Gouffran, sending the Newcastle man clattering to the ground.

Just six minutes later, United were indebted to the ever-impressive David de Gea as the Spanish goalkeeper flew to his right to keep out a magnificent 25-yard shot from Daryl Janmaat, who had been set up by Newcastle’s teenage debutant Adam Armstrong.

The 17-year-old Armstrong was an unwitting accomplice to the opening goal, showing brilliant pace to beat Paddy McNair but then wasting possession by shooting directly at the legs of a United defender.

It proved a costly decision by the teenager as Rooney broke upfield and squared the ball for Mata, who, in turn, launched an accurate pass into the area for Radamel Falcao.

The Colombian forward seemed poised to shoot from a tight angle, but instead squared the ball for Rooney to convert into a gaping goal.

It was an impressive assist from Falcao, who could have single-handedly put the game beyond Newcastle in the first half, given the amount of half-chances that came his way.

On 13 minutes, he should have done better from Ashley Young’s left-wing cross, appearing to duck out of the way of the winger’s fiercely hit centre.

Then, shortly after United had taken the lead, the on-loan Monaco striker did connect with a cross from Young, only to glance his header just wide of the far post.

Rooney, however, did not need a second invitation to double United’s lead after 36 minutes with another goal orchestrated by a magnificent Mata pass.

After Falcao won the ball back, Phil Jones found Mata, who waited for Rooney to arrive and slipped through a perfect assist for the England captain, who made no mistake with a clinical 12-yard finish.

It did not take long for United to punish Newcastle further in the second half, with Rooney this time the provider.

He advanced, paused, and then lifted an inviting pass forward for Van Persie, who steered a header past the dive of Jak Alnwick.

Not for the first time, a brilliant Young cross was wasted as Van Persie and Falcao both failed to make a connection.

Meanwhile, Rooney, seeking a hat-trick, went close with a 19-yard free-kick that soared over the wall and dipped onto the roof of the Newcastle goal.

Van Persie also spurned a glorious chance, completely mis-kicking with an attempted volley, while Ayoze Perez, one of the few bright points on the day for Newcastle, forced De Gea into a rare piece of action, low at the foot of his near post, as the game wore down.

The visitors’ consolation finally came, five minutes from time, after Jones needlessly tripped Jack Colback and substitute Papiss Cisse convincingly beat De Gea with a penalty into the top-right corner.


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Manchester United 3-1 Newcastle United

Thursday, January 22, 2015

Jamalco pumps $80 million into Manchester relocation exercise

BY KARENA BENNETT Business reporter bennettk@jamaicaobserver.com

Sunday, January 18, 2015    

BAUXITE mining and alumina refinery, Jamalco is pumping $80 million into the sub-division development of 291 residential lots at its reclaimed site in Blenheim, Manchester.

The sub-division, which commenced last September, forms part of Jamalco’s resettlement land development strategy, which includes providing alternate living arrangements for persons who were displaced during the bauxite/alumina company’s acquisition of the land to conduct mining operations.

The project is currently at an advanced stage with infrastructure development being carried out on roads, drainage, provision for water distribution and electricity as well as the creation of a green space for community residents.

Industry protocol requires mining companies like Jamalco, to exercise several relocation options including temporary housing rental, cash payment, or the development of sub-divisions on reclaimed land or the acquisition of land where applicable.

“We are simply fulfilling routine obligations that we have to our host communities in keeping with the standards of our industry,” manager of corporate services and government affairs at Jamalco, Leofric Lambert told the Jamaica Observer in an emailed response.

“Phase 1A is currently under construction. Several houses have already been built in the area so our focus at this time is therefore on improving the social infrastructure. The provision of electricity by the JPSCo is all that is outstanding to complete the exercise,” he added.

The development project is spread across 827,006 square metres of land; with 71 lots under construction in phase one, 69 assigned as residential lots and two for drainage.

“Some persons have been allocated more than one lot depending on how much of their land was acquired for mining,” Lambert told the Sunday Finance.

No timeline has been set for work to commence on the remaining two phases. Jamalco is eyeing potential partnerships with private housing development companies to complete the project, Lambert said.

The Clarendon-based plant mines an average of 1.4 million tonnes of alumina per year.

Last year, Hong-Kong based global commodities company, Noble Resources, finalised a deal to buy out Alcoa’s stake in the Jamalco’s alumina refinery for US$140 million ($15.9 billion). The deal gives Noble a 55 per cent stake in the Jamaican alumina refinery and allows the company to access a further 780,000 tonnes of annual alumina from the Jamaican plant.

Prior to the acquisition, Noble already secured up to 6.1 million tonnes of alumina from Jamalco’s output over a 12-year period through a US$120-million forward sale contract with Clarendon Alumina Production (CAP), a company wholly owned by the government, which owns the remaining 45 per cent.

Alcoa will however continue to manage the operations of Jamalco over the next two years.

Minister of Science, Technology, Energy and Mining, Phillip Paulwell, reportedly described the new partnership as providing tremendous prospects for the future. He said that as one of the largest global supply chains companies in the world, Noble’s decision to invest in Jamaica was an encouraging indicator for the industry and the country as a whole.


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Jamalco pumps $80 million into Manchester relocation exercise

Tuesday, January 6, 2015

West Brom 1-3 Manchester City

by Brendan McLoughlin

Friday, December 26, 2014    

Manchester City kept the pressure on Premier League leaders Chelsea with a convincing 3-1 victory at West Bromwich Albion on Friday.

Fernando, Yaya Toure and David Silva were on the scoresheet as Manuel Pellegrini’s second-placed side provided an emphatic response to Chelsea’s win against West Ham earlier in the day.

It was a seventh successive win for the champions as they continued their excellent recent form and provided further evidence they remain firmly in the title race with just three points separating them from Chelsea.

They will have few easier games this campaign, however, after being gifted the initiative early on by a poor Baggies side and, such was City’s dominance, they already had the game won by the time heavy snow started to make playing conditions difficult in the second half.

Alan Irvine’s side, who scored a late consolation via Brown Ideye with his first Premier League goal, have now won just one of their last eight games and that sequence combined with their disappointing level of display, leaves the head coach’s position under increasing pressure.

Midfielder James Milner again led City’s attack for the Boxing Day trip in the absence of the injured Sergio Aguero and Edin Dzeko, with the fit-again Stevan Jovetic only ready to be named among the substitutes.

It made no difference, however, as Pellegrini’s side raced into a two-goal lead within the opening 13 minutes.

Yet the Baggies had only themselves to blame after a pair of costly errors from two of their most experienced campaigners.

First, Ben Foster had a moment to forget in the eighth minute as he dropped what a appeared a routine Jesus Navas cross – gifting Fernando the simplest of finishes into the empty net.

Then five minutes later, Joleon Lescott – in his first appearance against the side he left for the Hawthorns in pre-season – mis-timed a challenge on Silva to hand the champions a penalty.

Toure made no mistake with the resulting spot-kick and, although Foster guessed the right way, the Ivory Coast midfielder’s shot was precisely dispatched inside the left post to leave the goalkeeper with no chance.

So poor were their opponents, City looked capable of scoring every time they ventured forward and it was no surprise to see them add a third before the interval.

Fernando drove forward unopposed before slipping the ball out wide to Jesus Navas, he laid off neatly to Silva, on his inside, and the unmarked Spaniard curled expertly inside the far upright.

It was so straightforward for City that they were twice guilty of complacency moments later as Albion were gifted two gilt-edged opportunities.

First, a Toure challenge on Stephane Sessegnon inadvertently handed Craig Gardner a strike at goal only for the midfielder to fire straight at Joe Hart.

Then, just seconds later, James Morrison’s slide-rule pass sent Saido Berahino through from the left channel yet he fired disappointingly wide.

City were capable of carving their opponents open at will and they came agonisingly close to a fourth when, after more slick combination play, Samir Nasri’s shot deflected agonisingly wide.

With their next game against Burnley just 48 hours away, Pellegrini even had the luxury of being able to replace Silva just after the hour mark.

Lescott, who has admitted to disappointment at the way his five years at City ended despite winning the double with them last season, spurned a good chance when he headed over the crossbar.

Yet the home side pulled one back in scrappy circumstances with three minutes remaining when Hart flapped at a Baggies corner before the ball was inadvertently diverted goalwards by club-record signing Brown after a deflection off the back of Bacary Sagna’s head.


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West Brom 1-3 Manchester City

Sunday, December 21, 2014

Police Constable Preddie Murder In Slain Manchester Just 2 Nights Ago… Such A Gruesome Sigh

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MANDEVILLE, Manchester — Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP) for Police Area Three, which includes the parish of Manchester, Kevin Blake, is describing the murder last night of Constable Orville Preddie as a wicked act and one which must be condemned by the entire society.

“This is further evidence that while significant gains have been made in reducing the number of murders in 2014, the fight against criminals is not over.

“The manner in which Constable Preddie was murdered speaks to the callousness of these murderers. We mourn for our colleague and I offer my personal sympathies and that of the Constabulary to the family, friends and colleagues of Constable Preddie,” ACP Blake told OBSERVER ONLINE Friday morning.

Police say Preddie who was off duty and unarmed was relaxing with friends at a bar in the remote community of Farm in the Asia police division of southern Manchester when several men armed with guns entered the premises.

The criminals proceeded to rob patrons and in the process of going through their pockets discovered Preddie’s police identification. One of the gunmen promptly shot him in the head. He reportedly died on the spot.

Police Divisional Commander for Superintendent Melvin Brown says “no stone will be left unturned” in the hunt for the killers of the 34 year-old constable.

“We will be unrelenting, turning over every stone, exploring every angle… we are resolved to find those responsible,” Brown told OBSERVER ONLINE.

Preddie was married with two children aged eight years and 18 months.

He is the second policeman to be killed in 2014.

standard facebook ico Police Constable Preddie Murder In Slain Manchester Just 2 Nights Ago... Such A Gruesome Sighads.forum.jamaicansmusicz.comPosted in: Breaking News, Current News, International, Local. Tags: Police Constable Preddie Murder In Slain Manchester Just 2 Nights Ago… Such A Gruesome Sigh.

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Police Constable Preddie Murder In Slain Manchester Just 2 Nights Ago… Such A Gruesome Sigh

Saturday, July 19, 2014

Manchester robber gets two years

The Manchester police are reporting that 19-year-old Richard Whyte, otherwise called ‘Richie’, of West Road, Manchester, was convicted of robbery with aggravation when he appeared in the Mandeville Resident Magistrate’s Court last Friday, and sentenced to two years at hard labour.

This conviction stemmed from an incident that occurred about 10:15 p.m. on Wednesday, July 8, during which a Belgium national was robbed of her handbag, cellular phone, camera, and a quantity of cash while walking along Hargreaves Avenue in Mandeville, Manchester.

The matter was reported to the police who acted quickly and went to a location in Porus where a man fitting the description given by the complainant was seen and accosted. The stolen items were found in his possession and the man subsequently identified by the complainant.

The matter was expeditiously dealt with and Whyte was placed before the Mandeville Resident Magistrate’s Court where he was tried and convicted on July 10.

The victim, who has since left the island, has expressed her sincere gratitude to the police for their quick actions, which led to the recovery of her valuables.


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Manchester robber gets two years

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Manchester Parish Council Secretary/manager moving on

Latest News

Tuesday, December 31, 2013 | 3:43 PM

MANCHESTER, Jamaica — Christopher Powell, who has held the position as Secretary/Manager of the Manchester Parish Council for the last year, will be taking up a similar role at the St Mary Parish Council.Mayor Brenda Ramsay made the confirmation on Monday. Powell is reportedly trading places with David Parkes who is slated to take up office in Mandeville on Thursday January 2.Ramsay said that due to the “exigencies” of the service transfer is a natural procedure for Secretary/managers.She sought to dispel rumours that Powell was leaving for political reasons.“The Public Service Commission (which manages public sector appointments and transfers) is a professional body…. I have never heard Mr Powell speak one way or the other. It’s not a political office that he has,” she insisted.Powell could not be reached for a comment on Tuesday. Director of Finance David Harris is temporarily acting as Secretary/manager.The 15-member Manchester Parish Council is controlled by the ruling People’s National Party (PNP).- Alicia SutherlandLike our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/jamaicaobserverFollow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/JamaicaObserver

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Manchester Parish Council Secretary/manager moving on

Manchester Parish Council Secretary/manager moving on

News

Tuesday, December 31, 2013 | 3:43 PM

MANCHESTER, Jamaica — Christopher Powell, who has held the position as Secretary/Manager of the Manchester Parish Council for the last year, will be taking up a similar role at the St Mary Parish Council.Mayor Brenda Ramsay made the confirmation on Monday. Powell is reportedly trading places with David Parkes who is slated to take up office in Mandeville on Thursday January 2.Ramsay said that due to the “exigencies” of the service transfer is a natural procedure for Secretary/managers.She sought to dispel rumours that Powell was leaving for political reasons.“The Public Service Commission (which manages public sector appointments and transfers) is a professional body…. I have never heard Mr Powell speak one way or the other. It’s not a political office that he has,” she insisted.Powell could not be reached for a comment on Tuesday. Director of Finance David Harris is temporarily acting as Secretary/manager.The 15-member Manchester Parish Council is controlled by the ruling People’s National Party (PNP).- Alicia Sutherland

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Manchester Parish Council Secretary/manager moving on

Monday, December 30, 2013

Newport, Manchester Post Office damaged by fire

Latest News

Monday, December 30, 2013 | 12:16 PM

MANCHESTER, Jamaica — The Manchester Fire Department has confirmed that fire damaged the Newport Post Office in South Manchester early Monday morningThe building which is said to be an older type structure is reportedly out of use and is being refurbished for reopening.Reports are that at about 5:29am the fire department was alerted and one unit from Mandeville responded.The blaze which was reportedly confined to the inside of the building was extinguished before extensive damage was done to the exterior of the structure. Preliminary investigation suggests that the fire could be as a result of an electrical defect.-Alicia SutherlandLike our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/jamaicaobserverFollow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/JamaicaObserver

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Newport, Manchester Post Office damaged by fire

Newport, Manchester Post Office damaged by fire

News

Monday, December 30, 2013 | 12:16 PM

MANCHESTER, Jamaica — The Manchester Fire Department has confirmed that fire damaged the Newport Post Office in South Manchester early Monday morningThe building which is said to be an older type structure is reportedly out of use and is being refurbished for reopening.Reports are that at about 5:29am the fire department was alerted and one unit from Mandeville responded.The blaze which was reportedly confined to the inside of the building was extinguished before extensive damage was done to the exterior of the structure. Preliminary investigation suggests that the fire could be as a result of an electrical defect.-Alicia Sutherland

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Newport, Manchester Post Office damaged by fire

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Manchester police probing death of 65-y-o man

News

Wednesday, September 11, 2013 | 3:28 PM

MANCHESTER, Jamaica — The Manchester Police are continuing investigations into the death of an elderly man in the parish on Monday.The deceased is identified as 65-year-old Cyrus Lewis of Balvenie Heights, Mandeville.The police reported that at about 7:40 pm a relative went to visit Lewis after efforts to contact him by telephone were unsuccessfulOn his arrival at the house he reportedly observed that the grille to the main entrance was unlocked.Lewis was then found lying in a room of the house with several wounds to the head.He was pronounced dead at hospital.— Alicia Sutherland

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Manchester police probing death of 65-y-o man

Sunday, September 1, 2013

Manchester claim KW U15 cricket title

Manchester were crowned the new champions of the 24th Kingston Wharves Under-15 Cricket Competition on Friday at Sabina Park, after defeating St Ann by six wickets.

Both teams were playing in the final for the first time.St Ann, who defeated former champions St Andrew in last Wednesday’s semi-final, won the toss and made just 109 all out in 39.4 overs on the back of Shamar Smith’s 23, and Rashand Richards’ 22. The wickets went to Kevon Anniord, who took 3 for 12 in nine overs, Rushane Allen, 3 for 24 in 10 overs, and Ian Codner, 2 for 30 in 10 overs.St Ann lost their first wicket with 19 runs on the board and continued to lose wickets at regular intervals throughout the innings.Manchester, in reply, got off to a shaky start losing their first wicket with just one run on the board, but they recovered after some poor fielding by St Ann, who dropped six catches.The victors eventually overhauled St Ann’s score, making 110 for 4 in 32.5 overs. Javardi Francis, 37 not out, Rushane Allen, 28, and Xavier Burton, 18, were the main run scorers. Shamar Smith was the most successful bowler after getting two wickets for 29 runs in 10 overs.Gary Graham, coach of Manchester, who spoke after the final, said: “We are happy to reach the final for the first time and more so to win it. We have a young team, which we are grooming, so we expect to be able to defend our title next year. We were not worried by the score, as we consistently made more runs than that during the competition.”St Ann’s coach Orville Pennant, on the other hand, said: “We did well to get to the final after taking out the defending champions, but faltered because our boys fielded poorly, having dropped six catches. The target was low and so we had to bowl them out in order to win and we did not. We will come back stronger next year as we will have several players from this year’s team.”Mark Williams, marketing manager of Kingston Wharves, the title sponsor, committed his company’s continued support to the competition for the long haul as well as announced that 30 cricketers would be invited to a camp to be held in October to sharpen their skills.The awards presentation followed shortly after the end of the game. All the members of both teams got gift vouchers to be used to purchase books, while there were three special awardees who also got gift vouchers. The awardees were Rushane Allen of Manchester — man of the final for getting three wickets and making 24 runs; MVP of Manchester — Javardi Francis wicketkeeper, who made 226 runs (average 56.51), and MVP of St Ann — Shamar Smith for his 214 runs (average 71.66) and nine wickets at 10.06 apiece.Manchester cricketers celebrate with the Kingston Wharves Under-15 Cricket Competition Trophy, as Patrick Reid (left), manager of the Manchester team, Milton Henry (second right), first VP Jamaica Cricket Association, and Mark Williams (right), chief marketing manager Kingston Wharves, look on last Friday at Sabina Park. (PHOTO: MICHAEL GORDON)

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Manchester claim KW U15 cricket title

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

South Manchester twins mourn killing of their mother

KENESHA Nelson will never be able to forget that fateful day when Joseph Francis stood in the dock of the Mandeville Circuit Court and confessed why he killed her mother, Claudette Reid-Nelson, 49, as he was about to be sentenced.

Francis had, some three- and-a-half years before, used a large kitchen knife to almost sever the woman’s head before fleeing the quiet farming village of Warwick in South Manchester.The killer stared at the woman’s two daughters, the only ones brave enough to follow the trial through to the end, and tried to explain why he committed the sordid act.“He said he killed her because she was going abroad and was not coming back to him. At first he gave a statement that it was provocation, but when he made that confession on the final day the judge declared that the act was premeditated murder and sentenced him to 21 years,” Nelson said.Francis has since appealed the sentence, but was slapped with four more years after his appeal was rejected.But despite the extended sentence, the woman’s twin daughters realise that nothing Francis will go through during his time behind prison walls will bring back their beloved mother.“Even if him get a million years it will not bring back my mother,” Kenesha, the more talkative of the two, said.For Denesha, not even the death penalty would be enough.“There are times when I think about it and wish he was put to death, but you realise that death is no revenge and can’t remedy the situation, even though I get very angry at times,” she said.Kenesha and Denesha were 17 years old at the time of the incident, and nine years later, both are mothers but neither has been able to come to grips with the way their mother was taken away from them.Reid-Nelson was a businesswoman and a farmer who operated a small shop in the district. Years before her untimely demise she had hired Francis to assist on her farm.Eventually, both became lovers although he was more than a decade her junior.The union was not approved by Reid-Nelson’s four daughters and they constantly warned their mother to get rid of Francis.But the woman did not heed their warning and on one fateful morning in June 2004, when she did not awake early as usual to tend to her grandchildren’s needs, her four-year-old grandson went in search of her in her room.The child stumbled on a gruesome scene.His grandmother was lying in a pool of her own blood. Her head was attached to her body only by a tiny string of flesh and she suffered several stab wounds.There was also a footprint in her back.To date, that child has not recovered from the sight and has been relocated from the community to live with his father’s relatives.“He will never recover. Up until now that boy don’t get over it and all the while I worry for him,” Denesha told the Jamaica Observer.A black and white merino, a bloodied pair of jeans and a knife were found by residents at the back of the shop where the couple lived and were handed over to homicide investigators.The night that she was killed, Reid-Nelson held a dance and residents reported that Francis had begun acting strangely and started to chase patrons away.The dance reportedly made $80,000 in profit but that money was never found.Residents also reported that days before the murder, Francis had been seen sharpening a large knife and swearing that he was going to commit murder, but no one took him seriously.“You feel traumatised all the time. I see the image of her body all the time and it keeps haunting me. It is not nice. It not pretty,” Denesha said.Her sister was too traumatised to look at the gory sight and never saw her mother’s remains until the day of her funeral.Francis had been on the run for all of two years before he was eventually collared, and during that time Reid-Nelson’s relatives and residents of Warwick, a community which had never before experienced any kind of violent murder, were fearful that he would return to the community and do more harm.Everyone was on the alert.“He never liked me one bit because I always told her to get him out. I know he would have killed me if he got the chance, so not even six o’clock would catch us on the street and if it did, we paid people to follow we home,” Denesha said.Francis was captured after an all-night trek through thick bushes in the district of Orange Vale in deep rural northern St Catherine.After a six-hour operation during which the cops used no flashlights or machetes and moved stealthily in a bid not to alert Francis, the lawmen finally found him huddled inside a small two- walled hut about three feet high, which was covered with branches and leaves.The unkempt Francis, dressed in shorts and a torn shirt and with dirt caked in his hair and on his body, welcomed his capture and during the long trek back to civilisation, confessed to the cops that he had murdered his lover. The cops also claimed that Francis confessed to another murder — that of a man known only as ‘Friday’ from Riversdale, St Catherine in 1999.Months before, Francis had managed to avoid capture after cops went after him in a district known as Freedom, close to Riversdale.As news of his capture spread, an angry mob descended on the Alligator Pond police station in Manchester and demanded that he be handed over to them so that they could deliver their own brand of justice.But even though the man who had caused them untold woe had now been captured and was behind bars, the trauma continued for Reid-Nelson’s relatives as it took over two years for his trial to get underway.Yanique Daley, Reid-Nelson’s granddaughter, was only 12 at the time of the macabre murder but the memory still remains fresh in her mind.“I am still jerked up about it. You can never get over things like that no matter how long ago it happened,” she said.For Denesha the memories flood her mind and tears flow freely every Mother’s Day.“It is especially hard when we hear other people sending out greetings to their mother and to know that we lost our mother at the hands of a villain. It is very painful,” she said.But her sister said that she is trying to stay strong in the face of an inestimable tragedy.“No matter what, we will have to live with it and try to cope,” she said.The pain also still lingers in Warwick and, according to Reid-Nelson’s neighbour Gladstone Allwood, the road to recovery will be long and arduous.“This is something the community will never forget because things like that never happen around here,” he said.Reid-Nelsons twin daughters Denesha Reid (left) and Kenesha Reid (centre) and her granddaughter Yanique Daley are all still traumatised after her gruesome murder nine years ago. (PHOTOS: GARFIELD ROBINSON)Reid-Nelson’s daughter Denesha Reid, in a reflective mood.The late Claudette Reid-Nelson.

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South Manchester twins mourn killing of their mother

Saturday, August 10, 2013

Four teens held for Manchester murder

News

Thursday, August 08, 2013 | 6:14 PM

MANDEVILLE, Manchester — The Manchester police have confirmed that four teenagers between the ages of 16 and 19 have been taken into custody in relation to a murder in the parish Monday night.Dead is 53-year-old Richard Spence, a farmer and shopkeeper of Resource District in South Manchester.Police reports are that Spence was at a party in Blenheim, Newport in the parish when an altercation developed between a group of men.Spence reportedly intervened and was chopped and stabbed several times.He was rushed to the Mandeville Regional Hospital where he was pronounced dead on arrival.

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Four teens held for Manchester murder

Missionaries robbed in Manchester

News

Friday, August 09, 2013

MANDEVILLE, Manchester — Head of the Police Area Three Assistant Commissioner Derrick Knight says the police are “working with four names” as they pursue persons who robbed missionaries at a rented house at Oxford in north west Manchester on the border with north east St Elizabeth, early yesterday.The police reported that four men, armed with machetes, knives and an axe, took Jamaican and US currency as well as personal valuables from six missionaries of a total of 26, ranging in age from 15 to 50.Knight said the hoodlums entered the house by forcing open a window about 1:30 am.The missionaries were deprived of J$170,000, US$60, four cellphones, and a laptop.Knight urged those with knowledge of the incident to give the information to the police.“These people came here to help us, some of them probably paying their own airfare and we need to catch those who carried out this dastardly act,” said Knight, who has responsibility for St Elizabeth, Manchester and Clarendon.Members from a team of missionaries who were robbed yesterday morning in Oxford District were in good spirits later in the day as they contemplated if they should cut their oneweek trip short. (PHOTO: GREGORY BENNETT)

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Missionaries robbed in Manchester

Monday, July 8, 2013

17-y-o Philesha Powell of Lincoln, Manchester missing

News

Monday, July 08, 2013 | 4:14 PM

MANCHESTER, Jamaica — An Ananda Alert has been activated for 17-year-old Philesha Powell, otherwise called ‘Phil’ of Lincoln district, Manchester, She has been missing since Sunday, July 7.Philesha is of brown complexion, slim build and about 5-feet-3-inches tall.The Mandeville Police report that Philesha was last seen at home about 6:00 pm. Her mode of dress at the time she went missing is unknown.Anyone knowing Philesha’s whereabouts is being asked to contact the Mandeville Police at 961-5538-5, Police 119 emergency number or the nearest police station. No photograph of Philesha was available at the time of this publication.
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17-y-o Philesha Powell of Lincoln, Manchester missing