Showing posts with label Youth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Youth. Show all posts

Sunday, January 18, 2015

"Brian Payne" not affiliated to Youth Ministry

Tuesday, January 13, 2015 | 12:54 PM    

KINGSTON, Jamaica – The Ministry of Youth and Culture says it has become aware that a man who gives his name as ‘Brian Payne’ has been falsely representing himself as recruiter for the Ministry.

The Ministry in a release said that it received a complaint from Crescent Primary School that the man had “hired” young people to assist teachers at the school with the promise that they would be recompensed by the Ministry.

The Ministry noted that is not familiar and is not associated in any way with the activities of ‘Brian Payne’.  Additionally, the Ministry of Youth and Culture does not hire assistants for teachers in schools.

The Youth Ministry further advised all schools that have been approached by ‘Brian Payne’ or anyone else with a similar proposal to report it to the Ministry of Education for advice and guidance.

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"Brian Payne" not affiliated to Youth Ministry

Sunday, September 28, 2014

Teens escape from Tennessee youth detention facility for second time this month

Youth Detention Escap_Cham640.jpg September 2, 2014: Police work in front of the Woodland Hills Youth Development Center in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)

NASHVILLE, Tenn. –  Security upgrades at a troubled youth detention center in Nashville were not enough to prevent 13 teenagers from escaping Friday, the second major breakout from the facility this month.

Tennessee Department of Children’s Services spokesman Rob Johnson said several teens overpowered a guard at the Woodland Hills Youth Development Center about 11 p.m. Friday. They took the guard’s radio and keys and let themselves out of a dormitory. All but one were recaptured within hours.

The breakout was the latest in a series of problems that have alarmed Tennessee authorities, including a mass breakout by 32 teens on Sept. 1. The state has since begun conducting a review of youth detention security in the state.

Security improvements since the Sept. 1 breakout include securing the bottom of the fence that surrounds the facility in concrete. Workers also have reinforced aluminum panels under the dormitory windows that the teens were able to kick out during the first escape.

“A lot of shortcomings were exposed after that first breakout,” Johnson told The Associated Press in a telephone interview. “They’ve been working hard and fast and have made a lot of improvements, but there’s still more work to do.”

Johnson said Friday’s breakout began while a guardhouse was empty and a guard was out checking the perimeter. According to the official, the teens smashed the guardhouse window with a rock and one went through the broken window and opened the gate for the others.

The guard who was overpowered in the dormitory was treated at a hospital and released, Johnson said. Another worker also was injured, but not seriously.

Within hours of the breakout, Nashville’s Metro police and Tennessee Highway Patrol officers had regained custody of all but one youth, a 16-year-old. The recaptured teens were taken to the juvenile court detention center. The 52 other teens being held at the Woodland Hills complex remained calm during the disturbance, Johnson added.

Thirty-two teenagers escaped from the same center on the night of Sept. 1. Two days later, riots broke out on the grounds of the facility, with teens brandishing fire extinguishers and sticks.

Johnson said many of the teens who participated in Friday night’s breakout were involved in the previous disturbances. Two of the teens who escaped in the earlier breakout remain at large.

Gov. Bill Haslam was in Afghanistan on Saturday. His spokesman, Dave Smith, said in an email that officials have brought in a national expert to review the situation at Woodland Hills, and DCS Commissioner Jim Henry has been visiting other states to learn about best practices.

“As the governor has said, our goal is to find the right balance of providing educational and rehabilitation opportunities for the youth we’re serving there along with their safety, the safety of others,” Smith wrote.

The Woodland Hills center has a history of violent clashes, breakout attempts and attacks on guards.

The recent problems have shed light on the difficulty of maintaining order at a center where most of the 14- to 19-year-olds have committed at least three felonies, and the challenges faced by Tennessee’s Department of Children’s Services in trying to fix the issues.

In an interview earlier this month, DCS Commissioner Henry said policies were being reviewed to see if guards could be given weapons such as stun guns to help control unruly detainees. Currently, he had said, guards do not carry weapons and must rely on talking with the inmates to quell disturbances.

However, some lawmakers in Tennessee have said that’s not enough. They want the state to reopen a facility closed in 2012, Taft Youth Development Center, which primarily housed older, more violent offenders. They say the inmates at Taft were transferred to Woodland Hills, which then saw a spike in assaults.


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Teens escape from Tennessee youth detention facility for second time this month

Tuesday, July 1, 2014

JOA President clears the air about team selection for Youth Olympics

President of the Jamaica Olympic Association, Mike Fennell, has sought to clear the air regarding selection of Jamaica’s team to the Youth Olympic Games this summer in China, noting the process is being done through qualification.

Jamaica will be represented in four sporting disciplines at the games, track and field, beach volleyball, fencing and swimming.

Speaking with RJR Sports Online, Fennell explained that each athlete selected would have earned a place in the squad on merit.          

“Each International Federation for the sport set their own criteria as approved by the IOC for how you qualify”, Fennell commented.  “You will recall that last year we had the qualification of the two young beach volleyball players, the fencer qualified by competing in England, the track and field athletes qualified through the Junior Carifta Championships and the swimmers also”, Fennell further added.

Noting that plans have been going well for the Games with a youth ambassador also to be included on the team, Fennell says the athletes will be involved in more than just sports at the Games.

“The Youth Olympic Games has some special features,” Fennell said.  “It is not just a sports competition, but it also has a cultural and educational component which is compulsory for all participants”, Fennell highlighted. “So any athlete going to the Games, has to take part in the cultural and educational programme, because the IOC in its prescription for the Games are quite clear that they want this to be about the development of the whole person and no just your physical ability to win medals in a sport” the JOA head noted.  

Jamaica’s team to the second Youth Olympic Games set for August 16 to 28 in Nanjing China, will be announced next week.     

Sprinter Odean Skeen won Jamaica’s lone medal, at the inaugural Games in Singapore in 2010 taking gold in the boys 100 meters. 


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JOA President clears the air about team selection for Youth Olympics

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Youth to be major focus of Caribbean Wellness Day

News

BY RENAE DIXON Sunday Observer reporter dixonr@jamaicaobserver.comSunday, September 08, 2013

OCHO RIOS, St Ann — With non-communicable diseases the major cause of preventable deaths in Jamaica, the Ministry of Health will be seeking to get youth involved in this year’s Caribbean Wellness Day to be celebrated on September 14 across Caricom nations.The event which is celebrated every second Saturday in September, in keeping with the Port of Spain Declaration of 2007 to stop the epidemic of non communicable diseases, will include health fairs, sports and youth fora across the island.The Ocean Village Shopping Centre in Ocho Rios, will be the location for the national event for Caribbean Wellness Day. The event will be held under the theme “Love your body. Treat your body right”.In calling for the observance of Caribbean Wellness Day to be used to reinforce the right to a smoke-free environment, Minister of Health Dr Fenton Ferguson said that focus will be placed on youth aged 15 to 29.Dr Ferguson was addressing the launch of the Caribbean Wellness Day last Friday at the Rooms on the Beach hotel in Ocho Rios.“We want to specifically focus on the youth, especially since our children are most vulnerable to tobacco use,” Dr Ferguson stated.He pointed out that over a 10-year period, the prevalence of smoking in the 13 to 15 age group had increased from 15 per cent in 2001 to 24.6 per cent in 2010.“We hope to have the involvement of young persons throughout the day to help us to spread the message of healthy lifestyle among their peers,” he stated.Takese Foga, director of health promotion and education in the Ministry of Health encouraged persons to participate in activities across the island and to become more health conscious in order to reduce NCDs.She said that next Saturday will be more than observing a day in the Health Ministry, but a partnership among other ministries and civil society to promote healthy living throughout the year.Minister of Health Dr Fenton Ferguson (left) and chairman of the Board of the North East Regional Health Authority Leon Gordon discuss plans for Caribbean Wellness Day 2013 during the official launch on Friday. Caribbean Wellness Day will be celebrated on September 14 with the national event being held at the Ocean Village Shopping Centre in Ocho Rios, St Ann, under the theme “Love your body, treat your body right”.

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Youth to be major focus of Caribbean Wellness Day

Sunday, September 1, 2013

Bronze for young Sunshine Girls at World Youth Netball Champs

Sport

Saturday, August 31, 2013 | 10:36 AM

KINGSTON, Jamaica — The young Sunshine Girls won the bronze medal at the World Youth Netball Championships today, beating England 52-33.The Jamaicans played superb as they got out to an early lead taking the first quarter 14-11.In the second quarter Jamaica began to stamp their authority over the English to take a commanding 25-18 lead at half-time.In the third quarter Jamaica further pulled away from England outscoring them 15-5 to go into the final quarter leading, 40-23.In the final quarter England tried to fight back but the young Sunshine Girls were merciless yet again outscoring them, taking the match 52-33.New Zealand and Australia play in the gold medal match later.

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Bronze for young Sunshine Girls at World Youth Netball Champs

Bronze for young Sunshine Girls at World Youth Netball Champs

Latest News

Saturday, August 31, 2013 | 10:36 AM

KINGSTON, Jamaica — The young Sunshine Girls won the bronze medal at the World Youth Netball Championships today, beating England 52-33.The Jamaicans played superb as they got out to an early lead taking the first quarter 14-11.In the second quarter Jamaica began to stamp their authority over the English to take a commanding 25-18 lead at half-time.In the third quarter Jamaica further pulled away from England outscoring them 15-5 to go into the final quarter leading, 40-23.In the final quarter England tried to fight back but the young Sunshine Girls were merciless yet again outscoring them, taking the match 52-33.New Zealand and Australia play in the gold medal match later.Like our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/jamaicaobserverFollow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/JamaicaObserver

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Bronze for young Sunshine Girls at World Youth Netball Champs

Monday, August 26, 2013

Sunshine Girls whip Scotland 65-30 at World Youth Netball Champs

Jamaica’s Under-21 netballers made it two from two with a comfortable 65-30 win over host Scotland in Group C action at the World Youth Netball Championship in Glasgow, Scotland, yesterday.

The young Sunshine Girls are atop the group with maximum points following their opening 64-20 win over Samoa, on Friday.Jamaica will be in action again today at 6: 45 am when they take on a Cayman Island outfit which was trounced 21-73 by Scotland on Friday.Head coach Oberon Pitterson-Nattie was pleased with the performance towards the end in a game they led from start to finish.Jamaica took a 10-point first-quarter lead, 24-14, and increased that to 16 points at the half-time break leading 33-17. By the time the end of the third quarter was complete, Jamaica had opened up a massive 27-point gap, leading 50-23. They outscored Scotland 15-7 in the fourth quarter for the comfortable win.“It didn’t start that well as we wanted to… a little shaky, some unforced errors, but I thought they collected themselves and did what they normally do,” said Pitterson-Nattie, in a post-match interview posted on the official website of the championships.“Playing a team like New Zealand or Australia, we definitely want to start strong so that we don’t make too many errors.”“We stuck together as a team and teamwork was the key today and we all played our part,” said captain Vangelee Williams.With two games left of the group stages, Williams was confident in her expectations.“We’re very much confident. We’e pretty sure we’ll win.”Jamaica, the bronze medallist from the last championship, are drawn in Pool C alongside Scotland, Cayman Islands, Wales and Samoa.The 20 competing countries are Australia, Barbados, Bermuda, Cayman Islands, England, Fiji, Israel, Jamaica, Malta, Namibia, New Zealand, Northern Ireland, Papua New Guinea, Republic of Ireland, Samoa, Scotland, Singapore, South Africa, Trinidad and Tobago, and Wales.The World Youth Netball Championships will comprise 70 games, held over a 10-day period. Every team will be guaranteed to play seven games, and every team will be awarded a placing from first to 20th as a result.In the preliminary games, the 20 teams will be divided into four pools of five teams and will play a single round robin, until the semi-finals and final games to determine a winner.Meanwhile, defending champions Australia got off to a flying start demolishing newcomer Israel 123-6 on Friday, while England trounced Republic of Ireland 108-9, and followed that up with an 82-27 win over Singapore yesterday.New Zealand flogged Bermuda 107-16 on Friday and returned yesterday with a 94-6 mauling of Malta. Trinidad and Tobago won the clash of the Caribbean teams, beating Bermuda 47-31. Barbados whipped the Republic of Ireland 84-5; Wales got the better of Samoa 65-31, and South Africa beat Fiji 64-32, also yesterday.— Howard WalkerJamaica’s goal shooter Shantal Slater (right) collects the ball ahead of Shaunagh McCuaig of Scotland during their Group C preliminary round game yesterday. (PHOTO: COLLIN REID COURTESY OF SUPREME VENTURES, COURTS, SCOTIABANK)

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Sunshine Girls whip Scotland 65-30 at World Youth Netball Champs

Saturday, August 24, 2013

Jacques Road youth overcomes adversity, moving on to study law

DESPITE being a slow learner while growing up in the depressed and often violence-ridden community of Jacques Road, which runs off Mountain View Avenue, 21-year-old Renee Atkinson has managed to beat the odds and will enter university to study law this semester.

The well-spoken young man is testimony that poverty is no excuse for lack of ambition, and despite all the negative distractions is sternly focussed on using education as a tool to lift himself out of poverty.“I stay inside most of the time so I never got involved,” Atkinson told the Jamaica Observer yesterday. “My grandmother keeps the family together and makes sure we don’t get into any wrongdoing. It wasn’t easy at times, but I knew what I had to do.”Atkinson attended St George’s College where he passed eight Caribbean Secondary Education Certificate subjects — Mathematics, English Literature, Religious Education, Principles of Accounts, and Information Technology at grade one level and English language, Principles of Business and History at grade two.Of note is the fact that he gained the highest possible grade in Mathematics while still a fourth former and was awarded twice by the Home School Association for being an outstanding student.He then matriculated to sixth form where he gained eight CAPE units with four distinctions and four credits.Now he is heading to the University of the West Indies, Mona Campus to pursue his dream of becoming an attorney.“I always wanted to be a lawyer. I am not sure if I will do criminal law or financial law, but I am sure that I want to become an attorney-at-law,” the modest young man said.But life was not all roses for Atkinson, who lives with his grandmother and not his parents.Although his schoolmates were from more affluent backgrounds, he was never intimidated by his economic circumstances.“Luckily my friends don’t stereotype, so I never felt too much pressure, and because I was doing well academically it took off some of the negatives,” he said.Living in the tough Jacques Road neighbourhood was not easy for the young man who oftentimes studied while gunshots rang out as community gang members fought each other or defended themselves from heavily armed thugs from neighbouring communities.Those street battles threw the Mountain View area into chaos for years before peace was brokered.“Sometimes when we hear the gunshots we have to just ignore them and keep studying,” Atkinson said. “It was scary, but because I hardly go outside it never really affected me that much.”Atkinson was one of 70 students from the East Kingston and Port Royal constituency who were presented with cheques to assist in their tuition by Government member of parliament Phillip Paulwell at the Petroleum Corporation of Jamaica auditorium yesterday.Although Jacques Road is situated in the neighbouring constituency of South East St Andrew, Atkinson was still singled out for assistance by Paulwell because of his academic achievement and economic situation.“He does not really live in the constituency (East Kingston and Port Royal), but we have to help all the young people we can because education is the vehicle of progress for our people,” Paulwell said.Atkinson has been getting assistance from Paulwell since his days at Rollington Town Primary School.“He was a slow learner, but we kept him back in the After-School Project and made sure he caught up. I am very proud of his achievement and know he will do well at the tertiary level,” Paulwell said.The After-School Project is part of Paulwell’s constituency educational drive for students at the primary level who are slow learners.Yesterday, Atkinson was also handed a cheque to assist with his university tuition by Paulwell, who doled out $5 million worth of awards to needy students. This is the 10th year the member of parliament has assisted students in his constituency.“I have not opened the envelope, but I am very grateful for the assistance,” the young man said, flashing a smile.

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Jacques Road youth overcomes adversity, moving on to study law

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

17 Indian athletes tossed from Asian Youth Games

Sport

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

NEW DELHI, India (AFP) — India’s bungling sports officials were left red-faced yesterday after 17 track and field athletes were thrown out of the Asian Youth Games underway in Nanjing, China, for being over-age.The athletes, who were part of a 27-member track and field squad, were barred from taking part in the Games because they were above the stipulated age of 17, an official said.“It should not have happened. We are trying to find out the reason,” the Indian Olympic Association’s interim chief Vijay Kumar Malhotra told reporters in New Delhi.Two days ago, four Indian badminton players were prevented from competing in Nanjing because organisers said their names had not been entered for the competition by officials back home.India has been suspended from the Olympic movement by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) since December last year for electing corruption-tainted officials to its local association.The country’s young sports stars are taking part in the Nanjing Games as “independent” Olympic athletes under the IOC flag.They were selected by the Athletics Federation of India (AFI) and approved by the state-run Sports Authority of India (SAI).Athletics officials would not comment on the over-age problems, but SAI chief Jiji Thomson blamed the AFI for the mix-up.“When a federation gives us a list, we never question it,” Thomson told the Times of India. “It’s entirely the responsibility of the federation to pick a team and ensure everything is in order.”

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17 Indian athletes tossed from Asian Youth Games

Monday, August 12, 2013

Federal prosecutors to review case of J"can youth killed by NYPD officer

NEW YORK, United States (CMC) — United States federal prosecutors say they will review the case of a Jamaican youth killed by a New York Police Department (NYPD) officer to determine whether the civil rights of the unarmed youth were violated.

The US Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York made the announcement a day after a grand jury in the Bronx, New York refused to re-indict white police officer Richard Haste, who last year shot dead Ramarley Graham, 18, in his Bronx home.Haste was indicted in June 2012, four months after the shooting of Graham on February 2, 2012, in the bathroom of his home.But, in May, Bronx Supreme Court Justice Steven Barrett tossed the case, stating that an assistant district attorney wrongly instructed the grand jury to disregard whether other cops had told Haste that Graham was armed. Graham was, in fact, unarmed, prosecutors said.Barrett gave the Bronx District Attorney’s Office leave to re-indict Haste, but the second grand jury this week decided against a manslaughter charge.The announcement by the US Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York came as demonstrators Thursday protested the grand jury’s decision.They likened the case to that of Trayvon Martin, the 17-year-old black youth, who was fatally shot by neighbourhood watch volunteer, George Zimmerman, in Sanford, Florida.In what protesters said was a blatant miscarriage of justice, Zimmerman was acquitted last month of the charges by an all-white female jury.“The criminal justice system has failed us, just as it failed the family of Trayvon Martin,” said Constance Malcolm, Ramarley’s Jamaican-born mother, at a rally outside of the Bronx District Attorney’s office.Frank Graham, Ramarley’s Jamaican-born father, also repeated the words of Martin’s parents after Zimmerman was acquitted of second-degree murder.“If Ramarley had been white, would this have happened. He was in his home, where you’re supposed to be free and safe.”Graham family attorney, Jeffrey Emdin, described the decision not to indict Haste as a punch in the gut. “We feel it’s an injustice. We feel that this officer is getting away with murder. It’s a really, really sad day. The family is terribly disappointed. They think it’s a travesty, and we are going to be pursuing a federal investigation.”Bronx District Attorney Robert Johnson said his office is “surprised and shocked by the grand jury’s finding of criminal liability in the death of Ramarley Graham. “We are saddened for the family of the deceased young man,” he said.Patrick Lynch, president of the Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association, the union that represents law enforcement officers in New York City, agreed with the grand jury’s decision.“This grand jury recognised that Police Officer Haste was pursuing what he had every reason to believe was a man with a gun,” he said, adding that Haste faced “imminent danger”.The NYPD said Haste remains on modified duty following the grand jury’s decision.

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Federal prosecutors to review case of J"can youth killed by NYPD officer

Saturday, August 10, 2013

Council says partnership agreement has youth focus

THE National Partnership Council has hit back at claims made by the National Youth Council of Jamaica (NYCJ) that the recently signed social partnership agreement does not address youth issues.

Chairman of the NYCJ, Ryan Small last week said that none of the six objectives of the agreement — inked by Government, civil society, trade unions, the private sector, and academia — showed that there was any recognition of and appreciation for youth as catalysts for social change.But speaking with the Jamaica Observer on Monday, youth representative on the council, Kemesha Kelly said nothing could be further from the truth.“The National Youth Council was one body I consulted to get feedback for the document,” she said during the newspaper’s weekly Monday Exchange.“Everything in this document has some bearing on Jamaican youth. At the end of the day, we talk about Vision 2030, it is the current crop of youth that will really realise Vision 2030 and this document has that visionary thrust as well. We have set these targets with consultation and youth participation,” she added.As an example, she pointed to the goal to reduce youth unemployment from the current 37 per cent to 25 per cent by 2016.“I’m particularly pleased that the partnership is so greatly concerned about youth unemployment and there is going to be great effort to bring that down. From the civil society perspective as well, [because] the document also focuses on female unemployment,” she said.The target is to bring female unemployment down from 17.8 per cent to 12 per cent, while the goal for general unemployment is to reduce the figure from 14.2 per cent to 10 per cent.Academia representative Professor Alvin Wint, who along with Kelly, labour union representative Oneil Grant and another academia rep Professor Neville Ying were guests at the Monday Exchange, also weighed in on the youth focus discussion.“I’ve heard comments that this is not for the youth [but it] is for the youth,” he reiterated.“We’re trying to create a Jamaica where Jamaicans will want to live and work and [do business]… but we have to move with greater assertiveness and aggression. And we need the energies of our young people to come on board,” he said.Asked how it intended to achieve the lower unemployment figures given the persistent softness of the economy, the council told the Observer that the strategy was not to consider unemployment in isolation, but in tandem with the other goals, including a reduction in murders, the debt-to-GDP ratio and the cost of energy, coupled with an increase in real economic growth and an improvement in the ease of doing business ranking.“We’re not trying to increase employment as an action in and of itself,” professor Wint explained.“We’re looking at it as part of a general programme of reforming and rebuilding and [reinjecting] confidence into the Jamaican economy and society to make people feel much more confident about the direction of the country,” he said, referencing the linkages between crime, security, economic stability and the ability to attract investors.“It’s important to understand that the whole thrust of this agreement is to harden the economy, to make it stronger, so these aren’t issues that are being considered in isolation of each other…If we don’t improve our regulatory environment, if we don’t improve our security, if we don’t improve our economic environment, we’re not going to get investment so that is why these things are all happening in tandem,” the professor stressed.Added to that, Wint said businesses make employment decisions based not only on current situations, but also on expected direction of the country at any particular point.“It’s not just that they have to see where the country is now, but they have to have some sense of where it is going. This is why this thrust is so important to rebuild confidence in where we are and where we’re going as a country, and this is why consensus is so important,” he told the Observer.And, he said, it’s “not beyond the realm of possibility” to achieve.“If you take unemployment, we’re at 14 per cent and the goal is to get to 10 per cent. But not too long ago we were at 11 per cent,” he argued.The partnership agreement was signed at King’s House last Wednesday after nearly two decades of dialogue.Public consultations on their elements and the way forward are to start within the next two months and youth advocate Kelly has committed to ensuring that the youth are duly represented in those fora.“It is important that all Jamaicans come on board to support this partnership and young people need to really throw their energies behind it,” she told the Exchange. “I’m going to make it my personal responsibility to ensure that young persons from across the length and breadth of Jamaica get involved in these consultations so their voices can be heard… Any strategy going forward must have the input of the young persons and their energy as well to achieve it.”(L-R) WINT… the partnership is for the youth. KELLY… everything in this document has some bearing on Jamaican youth (PHOTOS: NAPHTALI JUNIOR

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Council says partnership agreement has youth focus

Friday, July 12, 2013

Thompson, Burton in 100m hurdles final at World Youth Champs

Sport

BY PAUL A REID Observer WriterThursday, July 11, 2013 | 10:35 AM

MONTEGO BAY, St James — Yanique Thompson and Rushelle Burton both ran personal best times to qualify for the finals of the women’s 100m hurdles at the 8th IAAF World Youths Championships underway in Donetsk, Ukraine.The finals will be held later today and Thompson is the fastest qualifier with a new Jamaican Youth best 13.10 seconds, the second best all times.Burton also ran 13.37 seconds to win her semi-final heat as Jamaica seek their first medals at the championships.Also Thursday morning, men’s 400m runners Martin Manley and Devaughn Baker qualified for their finals while Rochelle Frazer is in the finals of the women’s shot put, a first for Jamaica at any global championships.Both women’s 100m runners Jonielle Smith and Saqukine Cameron failed to advance to the final set for later today while Michael OHara and Waseem Williams will run their 100m semis later.

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Thompson, Burton in 100m hurdles final at World Youth Champs

Yanique Thompson wins Jamaica"s first gold at World Youth Championships

Latest News

By PAUL A REID Observer WriterThursday, July 11, 2013 | 1:33 PM

MONTEGO BAY, St James — Yanique Thompson delivered Jamaica’s first gold medal in the women’s 100m hurdles at the World Youth Championships in fine style when she ran a World Youth best 12.94 seconds in Donetsk, Ukraine earlier today.Thompson, who was unbeaten all year and had the World Youth Leading time going into the championships, beat American Dior Hall 13.01 seconds and Mikiah Brisco 13.29 seconds, both personal bests, while the other Jamaican Rushelle Burton was fourth in 13.32 seconds, also a lifetime best.It was disappointment in the men’s 100m as Michael OHara and Waseem Williams finished outside the medal frame.Like our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/jamaicaobserverFollow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/JamaicaObserver

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Yanique Thompson wins Jamaica"s first gold at World Youth Championships

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Hurdler Burton starts Jamaica’s bid at World Youth Champs

MONTEGO BAY, Jamaica — Sprint hurdler Rushelle Burton will be the first Jamaican athlete in action as the 8th IAAF World Youth Championships gets underway in Donetsk, Ukraine at 1:30am Wednesday (local time).

Sixteen Jamaicans will be in action on the opening day with two medals at stake, the men’s shot put and women’s discus throw that will have the preliminaries in the morning session and finals later in the afternoon.Burton runs from lane five in the second of six first round heats while World Youth number one ranked Yanique Thompson will be in lane two in the fifth heat.The top three in each heat and the six fastest finishers will advance to the semi-finals.Following is the schedule of Jamaicans taking partGirls 100m hurdles heats – 1:30 am Rushelle BurtonYanique ThompsonGirls discus throw preliminaries — 1:35amPaula-Ann GayleBoys shot put preliminaries qualifiers — 2:05amDemar GayleBoys 400m heats – 2:10amMartin ManleyDevaughn BakerGirls 400m heats — 3:50amYanique McNeilTiffany JamesBoys 100m heats — 4:45amMichael O’HaraWaseem WilliamsGirls 400m hurdles — 9:00amAndrenette KnightBoys’ 400m hurdles — 9:35amMarvin WilliamsOkeen WilliamsGirls triple jump qualifiers — 10:10amTamara MoncrieffeGirls 100m heats — 10:15amJonielle SmithSaqukine CameronLike our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/jamaicaobserverFollow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/JamaicaObserver

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Hurdler Burton starts Jamaica’s bid at World Youth Champs

Friday, June 28, 2013

World Youth team for one-week camp in Ukraine

BY PAUL A REID

Observer WriterMONTEGO BAY, St James — Head coach of the Jamaican team to the 8th IAAF World Youth Championships to be held in Donetsk, Ukraine July 10-14 is expecting the team to perform up to expectations after their outstanding performances at the recent JAAA/Supreme Ventures National Junior Championships.The 26-member team was announced by the Jamaica Athletics Administrative Association (JAAA) Wednesday morning and includes three female throwers for the first time ever.Sprinter Michael O’Hara, who will be seeking Jamaica’s first-ever male sprint double at the global age group level, and sprinter hurdler Yanique Thompson, had returned World Youth Leading times at the Trials held two weeks ago.Devaughn Baker is also the 400m World Youth leader with 46.64 seconds.O’Hara had won the 100m in a personal best 10.39 seconds and the 200m in a joint leading 20.75 seconds, while Thompson had improved her World Leading time in the 100m hurdles to 13.23 seconds.O’Hara’s 100m time has since been surpassed by Denmark’s Kristopher Hari’s 10.37 seconds run last weekend.The team is scheduled to leave the island on Monday for Ukraine where they will take part in a one-week camp organised by the IAAF and this Carr said would benefit the team.“This will help in a big way as the athletes will get acclimatised and will get a chance to sharpen up for the competition,” he said.Jamaica won nine medals in the most recent staging, in Lille, France last year, which included four gold medals, a silver and four bronze after just two medals in 2009 in Bressanone, Italy.In addition to O’Hara, Baker and Thompson, Jamaica will have several other highly ranked athletes in the team including Christoff Bryan second in high jump; Yanique McNeil second and Tiffany James number four in girls 400m; Rushelle Burton fourth in 100m hurdles and Jaheel Hyde and Martin Manley at 5th and 6th respectively in the 400m.Team:Girls –Isheka Binns, Rushelle Burton, Saqukine Cameron, Rochelle Frazer, Paul-Ann Gayle, Daeshon Gordon, Tifanny James, Andrenette Knight, Yanique McNeil, Tamara Moncrieffe, Shanice Reid, Jonielle Smith and Yanique Thompson.Boys — Devaughn Baker, Odane Bernard, Clayton Brown, Christoff Bryan, Jordan Chin, Demar Gayle, Jaheel Hyde, Martin Manley, Michael OHara, O’Brian Waysome, Marvin Williams, Okeem Williams and Waseem Williams.Officials — Team manager, Ewan Scott; assistant manager, Nerine Pommells; assistant manager, Hamlin Pagon; head coach, Michael Carr; coaches — Keilando Goburn, Shanikie Osburn, Marlon Gayle, Ruel James; doctor, Tahira Redwood; physio, and Andrea Saunders.

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World Youth team for one-week camp in Ukraine