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Caribbean Times 65th Issue - Friday 5th August 2016

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Informative, reliable, enriching!<br />

<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>5th</strong> <strong>August</strong> <strong>2016</strong> A n t i g u a a n d B a r b u d a<br />

Vol.7 No.65 $2.00<br />

RAYMOND O’KEIFFE<br />

By Everton Barnes<br />

The media fraternity in<br />

Antigua and Barbuda and<br />

across the <strong>Caribbean</strong> is<br />

mourning the loss of well-respected<br />

media practitioner,<br />

Raymond O’Keiffe.<br />

O’Keiffe, who spent over<br />

twenty years working as the<br />

communications officer at<br />

the OECS Secretariat in St<br />

Lucia, died Wednesday night<br />

in Martinique where he was<br />

flown for medical attention.<br />

The reports out of St Lucia<br />

state that O’Keiffe died<br />

from haemorrhaging of the<br />

brain and kidney failure after<br />

he sought medical attention<br />

for high blood pressure.<br />

When it became clear that<br />

the medical facilities in St<br />

DIES IN MARTINIQUE<br />

Lucia could not deal with his<br />

condition, he was flown out<br />

to Martinique for more advanced<br />

care. He nonetheless<br />

died while under their care.<br />

O’Keiffe worked briefly<br />

at Radio ZDK before joining<br />

the staff at ABS Radio &<br />

Television in the mid-1980’s<br />

where he was attached to the<br />

sports department. He excelled<br />

in the field of sports<br />

journalism covering all<br />

sporting events and including<br />

on-air presentation and<br />

live cricket commentary.<br />

He went to the University<br />

of the West Indies where he<br />

gained a B.A degree in Mass<br />

Communications. Following<br />

his studies, O’Keiffe, went<br />

to work at the OECS Sec-<br />

Raymond O’Keiffe<br />

retariat where he was employed<br />

until his death at 49.<br />

Members of the media<br />

fraternity in Antigua expressed<br />

shocked on learning<br />

of his death and many spoke<br />

glowingly about him as a<br />

cont’d on pg 3<br />

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2 c a r i b b e a n t i m e s . a g<br />

<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>5th</strong> <strong>August</strong> <strong>2016</strong><br />

Recent judgement will set precedent<br />

By Everton Barnes<br />

This week’s ruling by the<br />

London-based Privy Council<br />

in the case where an applicant<br />

for citizenship had<br />

to wait for some 27-months,<br />

will likely set legal precedents<br />

similar to the Pratt and<br />

Morgan case in Jamaica.<br />

That’s the assessment of<br />

the lawyer who argued the<br />

case before the Privy Council,<br />

Dr David Dorsett of Watt<br />

Editor’s Note<br />

<strong>Caribbean</strong> <strong>Times</strong> is printed<br />

and published at Woods<br />

Estate/Friars Hill Road.<br />

The Editor is Justin Peters.<br />

Contact: <strong>Caribbean</strong> <strong>Times</strong>,<br />

P.O. Box W2099,<br />

Woods Estate/Friars Hill<br />

Road,<br />

St. John’s,<br />

Antigua.<br />

Tel: (268) 562-8688,<br />

Fax: (268) 562-8685.<br />

Visit us online at our website:<br />

www. caribbeantimes.ag<br />

We ask you to send:<br />

Pertinent news items to<br />

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Letters to the editor to<br />

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and Dorsett. According to<br />

Dorsett, the case is that of<br />

Guyanese national Clive<br />

Oliveira who arrived in the<br />

country in 1993 and was<br />

joined the same year by his<br />

wife.<br />

As his lawyer explained<br />

Oliveira was convicted and<br />

acquitted twice on the same<br />

charge of sexual assault.<br />

During his encounters with<br />

the law, his passport was<br />

confiscated and he was denied<br />

extensions and even a<br />

work permit.<br />

Over time his wife qualified<br />

for, and gained Antigua<br />

and Barbuda citizenship.<br />

But when Oliveira applied<br />

in 2009, he was given an interview<br />

date of 2010.<br />

Dr Dorsett said many<br />

hurdles were placed in the<br />

way to delay the granting<br />

of citizenship to his client<br />

and he took the matter to the<br />

court. He lost at the court<br />

The Organisation of Eastern <strong>Caribbean</strong><br />

States mourns the passing of Raymond<br />

O’Keiffe in Martinique on the 3 rd <strong>August</strong><br />

<strong>2016</strong>, after a short battle with illness.<br />

The OECS has lost a colleague, a mentor<br />

and a friend to many. Ray’s passion for<br />

broadcasting and communication brought<br />

news and light from across the region and<br />

indeed the world to many over a long period<br />

of time. He gave a voice to the voiceless.<br />

Indeed, Ray was a beloved and close<br />

member of the broader media family and he<br />

not only leaves a lasting legacy but his indelible<br />

mark in ways far beyond his work at the<br />

of first and second instance<br />

and they decided to appeal<br />

before the Privy Council<br />

which heard the case earlier<br />

this year and handed down a<br />

judgement in favour of Oliveira<br />

on Tuesday.<br />

The attorney said the<br />

Constitution guarantees citizenship<br />

to anyone who marries<br />

an Antigua and Barbuda<br />

citizen.<br />

“This is a right conferred<br />

by the Constitution. It is not<br />

a privilege. Yet government<br />

officers are putting road<br />

blocks in the way of people<br />

and denying them their Constitutional<br />

rights. ‘Citizenship<br />

delayed is Citizenship<br />

denied’,” he declared.<br />

Dr Dorsett said both he<br />

and his client feel vindicated<br />

with the Privy Council ruling<br />

because you can’t have a<br />

situation where a court looks<br />

at a person who is denied<br />

his Constitutional right and<br />

shrug it off by simply saying<br />

‘that’s how the system<br />

works’.<br />

“Where ever this is happening<br />

it means that the system<br />

is not working according<br />

to the law, according to<br />

the Constitution,” he stated<br />

emphatically.<br />

He opined that the case<br />

will have a similar impact<br />

as the Pratt and Morgan<br />

case where sets a time limit<br />

on how long a person may<br />

remain on death row before<br />

that sentence is commuted.<br />

The Oliveira case, he added,<br />

means that when government<br />

processes are not<br />

completed within reasonable<br />

time then there is a breach of<br />

the person’s Constitutional<br />

rights.<br />

“The rights guaranteed to<br />

a person under the Constitution<br />

must be available to that<br />

person in a timely manner,”<br />

Dr Dorsett stated.<br />

Statement by the Director General of the<br />

OECS on the passing of Raymond O’Keiffe<br />

OECS Commission. As a devoted husband,<br />

father and musician, his musical talent could<br />

be heard in many a Sunday Mass. Ray was<br />

also a gifted songwriter having written the<br />

official OECS Song.<br />

We give profound gratitude for Ray’s life<br />

comforted in the knowledge that he rests in<br />

eternal peace. Our thoughts and prayers are<br />

with his wife, children and extended family<br />

at this time.<br />

Dr. Didacus Jules<br />

Director General<br />

Organisation of Eastern <strong>Caribbean</strong> States


<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>5th</strong> <strong>August</strong> <strong>2016</strong> c a r i b b e a n t i m e s . a g 3<br />

Ricardo Drue gives $10,000 to MSJMC<br />

By Justin Peters<br />

This past July, Ricardo<br />

Drue staged ID Land the<br />

Youth Fair, a festive event<br />

headlined by various local<br />

musicians with a focus on<br />

children. The proceeds of<br />

the gate were to be donated<br />

to the Mount St. John’s<br />

Medical Centre. Drue who<br />

captured the <strong>2016</strong> Soca<br />

Monarch Groovy title, made<br />

good on his promise when<br />

he presented a check for<br />

$10,000 made out to the<br />

Mount St. John’s Medical<br />

Centre, in a small handover<br />

ceremony.<br />

The charitable gesture is<br />

the first benefit from what<br />

he expects to be an annual<br />

event with the date, July<br />

9th, 2017 already set for<br />

next year’s ID Land. Ricardo<br />

challenged the sponsors<br />

to match the money he raises<br />

next year to increase the<br />

amount that is donated to the<br />

worthy cause. He commended<br />

the hard work that corporate<br />

citizens such as Digicel,<br />

Pine Hill, Joe Mikes, Learning<br />

Ladder and Neverland<br />

who stepped up to the plate<br />

to sponsor the event’s first<br />

year have shown.<br />

With the resounding success<br />

of the event, the sponsors<br />

have committed to supporting<br />

next year and into<br />

the foreseeable future.<br />

cont’d from pg 1<br />

professional and as a human<br />

being.<br />

“Of the young journalists<br />

joining the Antigua journalistic<br />

fraternity in the heady<br />

1980’s,Raymond showed<br />

the most improvements over<br />

time, testimony to his eagerness<br />

to confer/listen to more<br />

experienced colleagues,”<br />

King Frank I wrote in the<br />

Grammarians Whats App<br />

Group blog.<br />

Sports Editor at ABS<br />

Radio Television, Jack Matthew,<br />

described O’Keiffe as<br />

‘full of energy and enthusiasm’<br />

with the confidence that<br />

he would excel at whatever<br />

he put his mind and heart<br />

into. “I felt very encouraged<br />

by his enthusiasm. He<br />

was always willing to go the<br />

extra mile in pursuit of the<br />

news,” Matthew recalled.<br />

Former classmate, Senator<br />

Colin James, himself a<br />

journalist, remembered him<br />

as a friend and colleague and<br />

recalled his days as a sports<br />

enthusiasts and his love for<br />

music.<br />

Over the years, O’Keiffe<br />

distinguished himself as a<br />

top-notched journalist and<br />

broadcaster by producing<br />

the daily, OECS Newslink<br />

radio programmes heard<br />

throughout the sub-region.


4 c a r i b b e a n t i m e s . a g<br />

<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>5th</strong> <strong>August</strong> <strong>2016</strong><br />

Young Destroyer and wife arrested<br />

By Everton Barnes<br />

Popular calypsonian, Young Destroyer,<br />

Leston Greenburg Jacobs, and<br />

his wife have been arrested and charged<br />

with drug possession.<br />

Both have since been released on<br />

bailed. According to police sources<br />

a search warrant was executed at his<br />

home in Potters Extension on July 30<br />

and the police discovered 253 grams of<br />

By Alecia McPherson<br />

Having been slapped<br />

with five charges, Tio Henry<br />

of St. John’s Street yesterday<br />

appeared before Magistrate<br />

Conliffe Clarke at the<br />

St. John’s Magistrates Court.<br />

The details leading up to his<br />

arrest were not mentioned<br />

in court; Apparently, the defendant<br />

exhibited combative<br />

behaviour against lawmen<br />

By Alecia McPherson<br />

A Bathlodge man has found himself<br />

before the court after he was caught with<br />

seven cannabis plants and 73 grams of cured<br />

cannabis.<br />

32-year-old Hopeton Anthony Stewart,<br />

pleaded guilty to possession of cannabis,<br />

and cultivation of cannabis yesterday before<br />

Magistrate Conliffe Clarke at the District ‘A’<br />

Court.<br />

As a result of information received, Officers<br />

from the Rapid Response Unit went to<br />

the defendant’s premises to execute a search<br />

warrant for controlled drugs, unlicensed<br />

firearms and ammunition at about 7:00<br />

p.m. on July 26th, <strong>2016</strong>. The defendant was<br />

at home when officers arrived; while searching<br />

the backyard several cannabis plants<br />

were seen growing in pots, they were uprooted<br />

and counted to be seven (7).<br />

cannabis (marijuana).<br />

Jacobs claimed the drugs were his<br />

and he was arrested and charged on<br />

three counts; possession of cannabis,<br />

possession with intent to transfer and<br />

being concerned with the supply of<br />

cannabis.<br />

The police sources said when Jacobs<br />

appeared in court on Thursday he<br />

would only accept responsibility for<br />

during the execution of their<br />

duty, as the charges indicates:<br />

obstruction of justice,<br />

battery on police, indecent<br />

language, being armed with<br />

offensive weapon, and resisting<br />

arrest. No pleas were<br />

taken.<br />

The defendant’s lawyer,<br />

Leon ‘Chaku’ Symister<br />

made an application for<br />

station bail and requested<br />

Bathlodge man caught growing cannabis<br />

Further search of the home revealed a<br />

white bucket which contained a quantity of<br />

cured substance. It is reported that the defendant<br />

readily accepted ownership upon being<br />

cautioned. He was taken into police custody<br />

and given the mentioned charges.<br />

The substance weighed 73 grams with an<br />

estimated street value of $730EC, and the<br />

plants an estimated street value of $150EC.<br />

The court heard that Stewart has had several<br />

previous convictions of a similar nature;<br />

two years ago he was convicted and fined<br />

$200 for unlawful possession and $250 for<br />

cannabis cultivation.<br />

Yesterday, he was convicted and fined<br />

$500 for Unlawful Possession, to be paid<br />

forthwith or serve two months at HMP. On<br />

Cultivation, he was convicted and fined<br />

$2,000 forthwith, or serve two months at<br />

HMP, with sentences to run concurrently.<br />

one charge. With this development, the<br />

police arrested his wife, Jordan Jacobs,<br />

and charged her jointly with him.<br />

They were both released on bail to<br />

appear in court on September 16.<br />

The sources said the magistrate<br />

presiding over the case will determine<br />

what sentence to hand down if the pair<br />

is found guilty. Jacobs has had a previous<br />

arrest on drug charges.<br />

Henry faces charges for obstruction of justice<br />

further ‹that the defendant<br />

not be made to report to<br />

a police station as part<br />

of the bail condition› he<br />

explained that eliminating<br />

this aspect would<br />

provide protection for his<br />

client. Symister stated to the<br />

court that “the incident involves<br />

a very senior officer<br />

with an affinity for violence.<br />

In light of this, the less contact<br />

my client makes with<br />

this officer during the pending<br />

of this matter would be<br />

best!”<br />

Symister also made an<br />

application for the prosecution<br />

to produce as part<br />

of their disclosure ‘records<br />

showing the senior officer’s<br />

bad acts’. However, to this<br />

request he was told to make<br />

an application to subpoena<br />

the records he desires, if<br />

there is such authority to do<br />

so in this matter.<br />

Bail was granted in the<br />

amount of $3,500 with a<br />

cash component of $500<br />

and two Antiguan Sureties.<br />

He must continue to reside<br />

at his current abode at St.<br />

John’s Street, and report to<br />

the St. John’s Police Station<br />

twice weekly, every Tuesday<br />

and Thursday between<br />

the hours of 6:00 a.m. to<br />

6:00 p.m. He must also surrender<br />

all travel documents<br />

and give notice to the Immigration<br />

Department to facilitate<br />

any travel.<br />

He will return to court<br />

on October 12, <strong>2016</strong> for preliminary<br />

hearing.


<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>5th</strong> <strong>August</strong> <strong>2016</strong> c a r i b b e a n t i m e s . a g 5


6 c a r i b b e a n t i m e s . a g<br />

<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>5th</strong> <strong>August</strong> <strong>2016</strong><br />

Queen Thalia to represent Antigua<br />

and Barbuda in regional competition<br />

By Joanna Paris<br />

Antigua and Barbuda’s reigning<br />

Calypso Monarch, Queen Thalia<br />

travelled to Anguilla on Wednesday,<br />

where she will be preparing to compete<br />

in the <strong>2016</strong> Leewards Islands<br />

Calypso Competition.<br />

The young lady, who won her<br />

second Calypso Monarch crown on<br />

July 31 st during the <strong>2016</strong> Wadadli<br />

Beer Calypso Competition, will compete<br />

against the best in the region<br />

By Everton Barnes<br />

The current shortage of<br />

liquid petroleum gas (LPG)<br />

largely sold in 20-pound cylinders<br />

will end in the coming<br />

weeks, according to the<br />

Chief Executive officer of<br />

the West Indies Oil Company,<br />

Gregory Georges.<br />

He said the company the<br />

company has ordered at least<br />

two shipments of both the<br />

100-pound and 20-LB cylinders,<br />

and while the first,<br />

mainly 100-LB cylinders<br />

has already arrived, the second<br />

with the smaller cylinders<br />

will arrive in just over<br />

a week.<br />

Georges blames the<br />

shortage on two key factors;<br />

firstly he said the company<br />

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Call <strong>Caribbean</strong> <strong>Times</strong> at (268) 562 8688<br />

Email: editor@caribbeantimes.ag<br />

Or news@caribbeantimes.ag<br />

Reach us now with that breaking news!<br />

this coming Sunday.<br />

In an interview with local media<br />

prior to her departure, Queen Thalia<br />

indicated that she is ready for the big<br />

stage.<br />

She said that she will be going into<br />

the competition “with more energy<br />

and more vibes”, with her aim being<br />

to deliver a confident and convincing<br />

performance.<br />

Queen Thalia expressed that it is<br />

always a privilege to represent the<br />

has had to recall many of<br />

the cylinders due to leakage<br />

and other issues, and that the<br />

previous majority owners of<br />

WIOC, National Petroleum<br />

Ltd., had refused to purchase<br />

replacement cylinders because<br />

they were considered<br />

uneconomical to continue.<br />

The new owners, including<br />

the Antigua and Barbuda<br />

government, are now<br />

playing catch-up; replacing<br />

recalled cylinders with new<br />

ones.<br />

“The then owners felt<br />

that the 20-LB cylinders<br />

were subsidised by the government<br />

and that continuing<br />

with supplying them to the<br />

market was no longer profitable<br />

hence there was no investment<br />

into this area,” he<br />

explained.<br />

Because of this, Georges<br />

further explained, the shortage<br />

of these cylinders became<br />

quite acute over time.<br />

twin island state and pledged that she<br />

will do her best to win the coveted<br />

crown.<br />

She also thanked all of her supporters<br />

and other well wishers for<br />

their continuous support of her efforts.<br />

Antigua and Barbuda currently<br />

holds the Leeward Islands Calypso<br />

crown. Last year’s Calypso King,<br />

Keithroy “De Bear” Morson was victorious<br />

in 2015.<br />

Cooking gas shortage to end soon<br />

“You would recall that ten<br />

years ago, the other supplier<br />

in the market, Texaco, abandoned<br />

the 20-LB cylinder<br />

market making WIOC the<br />

sole supplier. That’s because<br />

Texaco, too, realised that<br />

this business was unprofitable,”<br />

he noted.<br />

The CEO said now that<br />

the shipment is arriving soon<br />

with both sizes of cylinders<br />

he is confident that the market<br />

for LPG will be satisfied.<br />

“By the third week of the<br />

month, we will have LPG<br />

available to all customers,”<br />

he declared.<br />

Over the Carnival period,<br />

many customers had difficulty<br />

acquiring LPG, especially<br />

the 20-LB cylinder<br />

that is used in most homes in<br />

Antigua and Barbuda.<br />

Georges said the company<br />

has been working assiduously<br />

to fulfil customers’<br />

demands.


<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>5th</strong> <strong>August</strong> <strong>2016</strong> c a r i b b e a n t i m e s . a g 7<br />

CIBC First<strong>Caribbean</strong> new<br />

mobile app a hit with users<br />

CIBC First<strong>Caribbean</strong>’s<br />

mobile banking app for<br />

smartphones has proven a<br />

big hit with thousands of<br />

customers of the regional<br />

bank with a 4.8 rating in<br />

app stores since its launch<br />

two months ago.<br />

“We are simply elated<br />

that our customers by the<br />

thousands have embraced<br />

our latest efforts to provide<br />

them with cutting-edge<br />

banking solutions that fit<br />

their lives,” said Trevor<br />

Torzsas, Managing Director<br />

of Customer Relationship<br />

Management and<br />

Strategy.<br />

“To have our app rated at<br />

4.8 out of a possible 5 and<br />

downloaded by thousands<br />

tells us that many of our<br />

customers who are increasingly<br />

leading very busy<br />

lifestyles, want to do their<br />

banking on the go and we<br />

are happy to provide them<br />

with a secure user-friendly<br />

app to do so,” he said.<br />

He also announced a<br />

major update to the app<br />

which now allows CIBC<br />

First<strong>Caribbean</strong> Credit Card<br />

holders to monitor their<br />

credit card rewards points.<br />

The Credit Card Rewards<br />

Monitor allows customers<br />

to keep track of and understand<br />

how many rewards<br />

points they earn when they<br />

use their credit card. The<br />

monitor also allows them<br />

to set point goals and track<br />

how close they are to that<br />

goal.<br />

Every time a customer<br />

uses their card, the rewards<br />

points earned on that transaction<br />

will instantly show<br />

on the Mobile Banking<br />

App once they have set up<br />

the rewards monitor on the<br />

app and already have their<br />

credit card linked to their<br />

internet banking account.<br />

Mr. Torzsas said the<br />

bank continues to roll out<br />

innovations to help customers<br />

determine the banking<br />

experience they want and<br />

which gives them control<br />

over how, when and where<br />

they do their banking.”<br />

The new app which can<br />

be downloaded from the<br />

playstore, the apple store<br />

and blackberry world is accessed<br />

via Android, Apple,<br />

Blackberry and Windows<br />

devices.<br />

It affords users the convenience<br />

of checking their<br />

account balances, transferring<br />

funds, paying bills<br />

and locating branches and<br />

Instant Tellers, all from<br />

their mobile device.<br />

CIBC First<strong>Caribbean</strong> is<br />

the largest, regionally-listed<br />

bank in the English and<br />

Dutch speaking <strong>Caribbean</strong><br />

serving over 400 000<br />

customers in 16 markets,<br />

through approximately<br />

2,900 staff, across 100<br />

branches and offices. The<br />

bank, which has almost 250<br />

years of combined experience<br />

in the region, offers<br />

a full range of market-leading<br />

financial services in:<br />

Corporate and Investment<br />

Banking, Treasury Sales<br />

and Trading, Retail Banking,<br />

Wealth Management,<br />

Small Business and Credit<br />

Cards.<br />

CIBC First<strong>Caribbean</strong><br />

is a member of the CIBC<br />

Group. CIBC is a leading<br />

Canadian-based global financial<br />

institution with<br />

nearly 11 million personal<br />

banking and business<br />

clients. Through our three<br />

major business units – Retail<br />

and Business Banking,<br />

Wealth Management and<br />

Wholesale Banking – CIBC<br />

offers a full range of products<br />

and services through<br />

its comprehensive electronic<br />

banking network,<br />

branches and offices across<br />

Canada with offices in the<br />

United States and around<br />

the world.<br />

ATTENTION ALL EMPLOYERS<br />

AND SELF EMPLOYED PERSONS<br />

The Antigua & Barbuda Social Security Board (ABSSB)<br />

advises of its intent to commence criminal prosecution on<br />

ALL non-compliant employers and self employed persons.<br />

To this end, all employers and self employed persons, who<br />

are in breach of their statutory obligation to Social Security,<br />

are strongly urged to contact the Social Security office to<br />

regularize their status between June 1, <strong>2016</strong> and <strong>August</strong> 31,<br />

<strong>2016</strong>.<br />

The ABSSB wishes to commend all employers and self<br />

employed persons who have consistently complied with<br />

their statutory obligation and encourages all employers and<br />

self employed persons to ensure that moving forward every<br />

attempt will be made to adhere to their Social Security obligations.


8 c a r i b b e a n t i m e s . a g<br />

<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>5th</strong> <strong>August</strong> <strong>2016</strong><br />

IMF: Light up its darker crannies<br />

The International Monetary Fund<br />

(IMF), which has tormented small <strong>Caribbean</strong><br />

economies for five decades<br />

with austerity measures and fierce<br />

conditionalities, has been exposed as<br />

adopting utterly different standards towards<br />

Europe, especially the countries<br />

of the European Currency Union. That<br />

is except for Greece, which, throughout<br />

its economic crisis, the IMF treated like<br />

a third-world country.<br />

According to a report, published on<br />

28 th July by the IMF’s watchdog, the<br />

Independent Evaluation Office (IEO),<br />

the Fund’s top staff worked in cahoots<br />

with the European Commission and the<br />

European Central Bank to misrepresent<br />

the situation in Greece to their own<br />

Executive Board; laboured diligently<br />

to protect the Eurozone in the interests<br />

of its larger members, such as France<br />

and Germany (which, incidentally, are<br />

also the main controllers of the IMF);<br />

and punished Greece with the burden<br />

of alone carrying the cost of a bailout<br />

– something that had not been done to<br />

any other European Union country.<br />

In a revealing and telling sentence<br />

in the executive summary of its report,<br />

the IEO declared that: “In general, the<br />

IMF shared the widely-held “Europe is<br />

different” mindset that encouraged the<br />

view that large imbalances in national<br />

current accounts were little cause for<br />

concern and that sudden stops could<br />

not happen within the euro area”. The<br />

report, “The IMF and the crises in<br />

Greece, Ireland, and Portugal: an evaluation<br />

by the independent evaluation<br />

office” can be read at: http://www.<br />

ieo-imf.org/ieo/files/completedevaluations/EAC__REPORT%20v5.PDF<br />

and<br />

it is strongly recommended that officers<br />

of all Finance Ministries and Central<br />

Banks in the <strong>Caribbean</strong> should read it.<br />

The authors of the report stated unequivocally<br />

that: “The IMF’s handling<br />

By Sir Ronald Sanders<br />

of the euro area crisis raised issues of<br />

accountability and transparency, which<br />

helped create the perception that the<br />

IMF treated Europe differently. Conducting<br />

this evaluation proved challenging.<br />

Some documents on sensitive<br />

issues were prepared outside the regular,<br />

established channels” and either<br />

disappeared or were not made available<br />

to the Evaluation Team.<br />

The principal reason for handling<br />

the financial crisis in Greece differently<br />

was primarily to protect the Eurozone<br />

at the insistence of the European Commission,<br />

which negotiated on behalf of<br />

the Eurogroup, subjecting IMF staff’s<br />

technical judgments “to political pressure<br />

from an early stage”. As a result of<br />

this, in May 2010, the IMF Executive<br />

Board approved a decision to provide<br />

exceptional access financing to Greece<br />

“without seeking pre-emptive debt restructuring,<br />

even though its sovereign<br />

debt was not deemed sustainable with<br />

a high probability”. The truth is that<br />

the actions in relation to Greece (hidden<br />

from the Executive Board by the<br />

management) were designed to make<br />

French and German banks ‘whole’;<br />

never mind what Greece was forced<br />

to endure. In other words, Greece<br />

was ‘sucker punched’ or, ‘fiscally water-boarded’<br />

to use the more emotive<br />

description of the former Greek Finance<br />

Minister Yanis Varoufakis (now<br />

Professor of Economics at the University<br />

of Athens).<br />

In a robust response to the IEO report,<br />

Varoufakis observed that: “The<br />

establishment press were claiming that<br />

a finance minister of a small, bankrupt<br />

nation which is being water-boarded by<br />

the high and mighty troika functionaries<br />

cannot afford to say, in public or in<br />

private, that his small, bankrupt nation<br />

was being water-boarded”. But, he<br />

said Greece had “tried silence and obedience<br />

from 2010 to 2014. The result?<br />

A loss of 28% of national income and<br />

grapes of wrath that were “…filling<br />

and growing heavy, growing heavy for<br />

the vintage”.<br />

Of course, Greece, though a small<br />

European economy, is significantly<br />

larger than the small economies of the<br />

<strong>Caribbean</strong>. When Finance Ministers<br />

of small <strong>Caribbean</strong> countries complain<br />

about the conditionalites of IMF programmes<br />

that hurt more than help, as<br />

Antigua and Barbuda’s Prime Minister<br />

Gaston Browne did in <strong>August</strong> 2014,<br />

they are roundly criticised for their audacity.<br />

Browne had remarked about<br />

the IMF strait-jacket that his government<br />

inherited when it was voted into<br />

office: “The fiscal problems have not<br />

been resolved, but yet still we are being<br />

asked to pay back US$119 million<br />

over the next four years. We have to<br />

pay back even before the problem is<br />

solved”. And, small economies have<br />

no capacity to stand-up to the IMF and<br />

those who control it. Greece proved<br />

that point and is now struggling as a<br />

result.<br />

Varoufakis feels that Greece is<br />

owed an apology and officials of the<br />

IMF should be fired now that the IEO<br />

has exposed duplicity – even conspircont’d<br />

on pg 9


<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>5th</strong> <strong>August</strong> <strong>2016</strong> c a r i b b e a n t i m e s . a g 9<br />

cont’d from pg 8<br />

acy – in the way the country<br />

was treated by the IMF,<br />

including - and especially<br />

- not being granted any significant<br />

debt relief, through a<br />

debt write-down or a reduction<br />

in the sum of the debt,<br />

while having an austerity<br />

programme stuffed down its<br />

throat. But, he is realistic<br />

enough to say: Is any of this<br />

going to happen? Or will the<br />

IMF’s IEO report light up<br />

the sky fleetingly, to be forgotten<br />

soon? The omens are<br />

pointing to the latter”.<br />

Concern about the findings<br />

of the IEO report, particularly<br />

the obvious political<br />

interference in the IMF’s<br />

processes by the European<br />

Union and the European<br />

Central Bank, has evoked<br />

editorial comment from<br />

leading financial publications.<br />

For instance, the UK<br />

Financial <strong>Times</strong> newspaper<br />

editorialised on 28 July<br />

about “Europe’s outsized influence<br />

over the governance<br />

of the IMF” and expressed<br />

the view that such influence<br />

“must continue to decline<br />

if the institution is to retain<br />

credibility”.<br />

But, the reality is that<br />

recent reforms in the voting<br />

power of the IMF still leave<br />

the European governments<br />

with enormous and undeserved<br />

power. As the Financial<br />

<strong>Times</strong> observed, rather<br />

belatedly (and perhaps with<br />

an eye to yet another unthought-of<br />

consequence of<br />

Brexit): “The EU has also<br />

yet to demonstrate that it has<br />

abandoned the traditional<br />

stitch-up by which it, in effect,<br />

appoints the head of the<br />

IMF”.<br />

The United States of<br />

America (US) aids and abets<br />

the EU in its imposition of<br />

the IMF chief in return for<br />

the right to name the President<br />

of the World Bank. Between<br />

them, they operate a<br />

cabal of control of the international<br />

financial system.<br />

The IEO report is a valuable<br />

document. Developing<br />

countries, including those<br />

in the <strong>Caribbean</strong>, should not<br />

allow its findings “to run<br />

through our leaders’ fingers<br />

like thin, white sand” as the<br />

former Greek Finance Minister<br />

vividly put it.<br />

Instead, it should be used<br />

as a beacon to shine a bright<br />

light on the dark crannies of<br />

an organisation that was created<br />

to help countries out of<br />

dire fiscal straits, but whose<br />

prescriptions result in hurting<br />

more than it helps, except<br />

when the interests of its<br />

controllers are affected.<br />

At the World Bank/IMF<br />

meeting this autumn, the<br />

IEO report should be prominent<br />

among the items that<br />

Finance Ministers emphasize.<br />

It should become a<br />

tool for the re-examination<br />

of IMF policies and more<br />

considered discussion of the<br />

many governance issues,<br />

highlighted in the report and<br />

which, in the interests of all,<br />

have to be addressed effectively.<br />

Editor’s Note: The opinions<br />

expressed in this Op-ed<br />

are those of the author and<br />

do not necessarily reflect the<br />

views of <strong>Caribbean</strong> <strong>Times</strong>.


10 c a r i b b e a n t i m e s . a g<br />

<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>5th</strong> <strong>August</strong> <strong>2016</strong>


<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>5th</strong> <strong>August</strong> <strong>2016</strong> c a r i b b e a n t i m e s . a g 11


12 c a r i b b e a n t i m e s . a g<br />

<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>5th</strong> <strong>August</strong> <strong>2016</strong><br />

IICA supports agro processors in Antigua<br />

With support of the Inter-American<br />

Institute for<br />

Cooperation on Agriculture<br />

(IICA), a group of 23<br />

agro-processors, comprising<br />

mostly rural women, participated<br />

in a competition for<br />

the best processed products<br />

made with mango, during<br />

Antigua’s <strong>2016</strong> Mango Festival.<br />

Their participation in the<br />

Agro-processing competition<br />

was also supported by<br />

the Ministry of Agriculture,<br />

Lands, Fisheries and Barbuda<br />

Affairs and the Ministry<br />

of Education, Science and<br />

Technology.<br />

According to the organizers,<br />

the main objective of<br />

the contest was to support<br />

the rural women group and<br />

other local agro-processors<br />

with the exposure of their<br />

products.<br />

The competition was<br />

divided into six categories<br />

which included:<br />

Jams, jellies and marmalade<br />

Chutney and achar<br />

Desserts, cakes and pastries<br />

Sauces<br />

Drinks, juices, smoothies,<br />

crushes and wines<br />

Dried fruits, vegetables<br />

and confectionery<br />

First place winners presented<br />

products including<br />

mango jam, chutney, sorbet,<br />

vinaigrette, bait-up and<br />

sweet potato chips.<br />

According to Craig<br />

Thomas, IICA´s technical<br />

specialist in Antigua and<br />

Barbuda, the competition<br />

seeks to enable small-scale<br />

enterprises, particularly<br />

women, to strengthen value-added<br />

processes and<br />

market opportunities to meet<br />

the demands of retailers and<br />

consumers.<br />

“To promote agribusinesses,<br />

it is important to<br />

strengthen the use of local<br />

raw materials such as mangoes,<br />

pineapples and other<br />

fruits and vegetables”, he<br />

added.<br />

The <strong>2016</strong> Mango Festival<br />

took place in Victoria<br />

Park, Botanical Gardens, on<br />

July 24 and 25. The slogan<br />

of the activity was “Mango<br />

and carnival mek fu (made<br />

for) sweet bacchanal”.


<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>5th</strong> <strong>August</strong> <strong>2016</strong> c a r i b b e a n t i m e s . a g 13<br />

Skin cancer deadlier for black people<br />

OHIO, United States –<br />

American researchers have<br />

found that blacks are less<br />

likely to survive melanoma<br />

– the deadliest form of skin<br />

cancer – despite whites having<br />

a higher chance of developing<br />

it.<br />

And although patients<br />

of colour are more likely to<br />

be diagnosed with melanoma<br />

once it has spread and<br />

is harder to treat, they also<br />

have the worst survival rates<br />

for every stage of the disease.<br />

Melanoma can appear<br />

anywhere on the body, but<br />

is most commonly found<br />

on the back, legs, arms and<br />

face, and even underneath a<br />

fingernail or toenail.<br />

People of colour are additionally<br />

prone to skin cancer<br />

in areas that aren’t commonly<br />

exposed to the sun,<br />

including the palms of the<br />

hands and the soles of the<br />

feet.<br />

Though less common<br />

than other forms of skin cancer,<br />

melanoma often spreads<br />

to other organs in the body,<br />

making it more deadly.<br />

According to study author<br />

Dr Jeremy Bordeaux,<br />

from the Case Western Reserve<br />

University in Cleveland:<br />

“Everyone is at risk<br />

for skin cancer, regardless of<br />

race.<br />

“Patients with skin of<br />

colour may believe they aren’t<br />

at risk, but that is not the<br />

case and when they do get<br />

skin cancer, it may be especially<br />

deadly.”<br />

For the latest research,<br />

scientists studied nearly<br />

100,000 patients who had<br />

been diagnosed with melanoma<br />

between 1992 and<br />

2009.<br />

While whites had the<br />

highest incidence rates, they<br />

also had the best survival<br />

rates. Hispanics were second<br />

most likely to survive melanoma,<br />

followed by Asians,<br />

Native Americans, and Pacific<br />

Islanders.<br />

Dr Bordeaux claims there<br />

may be biologic differences<br />

in melanoma among patients<br />

of colour, resulting<br />

in more aggressive disease<br />

in these patients, and advocates<br />

further research to determine<br />

why survival rates<br />

differ among different ethnic<br />

groups.<br />

In the meantime, he<br />

stresses the need for prevention.<br />

“Because skin cancer<br />

can affect anyone, everyone<br />

should be proactive about<br />

skin cancer prevention and<br />

detection,” he said.<br />

“Don’t let this potentially<br />

deadly disease sneak up on<br />

you because you don’t think<br />

it can happen to you.”<br />

According to Dr Bordeaux,<br />

ultraviolet (UV) radiation<br />

exposure is the most<br />

preventable skin cancer risk<br />

factor, and everyone, regardless<br />

of skin colour, should<br />

protect themselves from the<br />

sun’s harmful UV rays.<br />

Recommendations from<br />

the American Academy of<br />

Dermatology include using a<br />

broad-spectrum, water-resistant<br />

sunscreen with an SPF<br />

(Sun Protection Factor) of<br />

30 or higher; wearing protective<br />

clothing, and staying<br />

in the shade whenever possible.<br />

Dr Bordeaux noted that<br />

skin cancer is most treatable<br />

when detected early, so everyone<br />

should regularly examine<br />

their skin for new or<br />

suspicious spots.<br />

He stressed that people<br />

should be especially careful<br />

to examine hard-to-see areas<br />

when monitoring their skin<br />

for signs of skin cancer, asking<br />

a partner to help if necessary.<br />

“If you notice any spots<br />

that are different from the<br />

others, or anything changing,<br />

itching or bleeding on<br />

your skin, make an appointment<br />

to see a board-certified<br />

dermatologist,” he advised.<br />

Other signs to look out<br />

for include asymmetrical<br />

spots with two very different<br />

halves; spots with a mix<br />

of colours, and spots larger<br />

than one-quarter-inch in diameter.<br />

(<strong>Caribbean</strong>360)


14 c a r i b b e a n t i m e s . a g<br />

<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>5th</strong> <strong>August</strong> <strong>2016</strong><br />

Thursday’s Sudoku Solution<br />

S U D O K U<br />

CROSSWORD<br />

Across<br />

1. Necessities<br />

6. It may need a boost<br />

9. Bitter<br />

14. Texas player<br />

15. Nobelist Hammarskjöld<br />

16. Veronica of “Hill Street<br />

Blues”<br />

17. Jefferson’s veep<br />

19. Peke protector<br />

20. Dividing word<br />

21. Chip, maybe<br />

23. From __: slight progress<br />

24. D.C. lobbying gp.<br />

26. Flea remedy<br />

29. Acura model<br />

31. Close<br />

32. Editor’s mark<br />

33. Moan and groan<br />

36. Black-and-tan dog<br />

43. Cruising<br />

44. Curtain shade<br />

45. Long-ago Ford<br />

49. Like much of the Old<br />

West<br />

52. Cardiac regulator<br />

55. Bee follower<br />

56. Hook’s hand<br />

57. Rapper Lil’ __<br />

58. Robert of “The Sopranos”<br />

60. Practices in the ring<br />

62. Exam with sounds<br />

66. Brings home<br />

67. WWII craft<br />

68. French states<br />

69. Not as forthcoming<br />

70. Date<br />

71. Recap<br />

Down<br />

1. Calf’s cry<br />

2. “Born in the __”<br />

3. More exact<br />

4. 1982 Disney film starring<br />

Jeff Bridges<br />

5. Novelist Susan<br />

6. E-mail address ending<br />

7. “Ninotchka” actress<br />

8. Storied baddies<br />

9. “Bingo!”<br />

10. Crenshaw kin<br />

11. Caveat __<br />

12. Fix one’s hair again<br />

13. Far from tight-lipped<br />

18. Certain Afrikaner<br />

22. It’s heavy, in Le Havre<br />

24. Tower site<br />

25. Not behind<br />

27. Grammy winner Lou<br />

28. Evil glance<br />

30. Summer along the Seine<br />

34. Tee follower<br />

35. “Let __ hang out”<br />

37. Mustachioed surrealist<br />

38. Sharp as __<br />

39. Fam. member<br />

40. Cone filler<br />

41. Celtic language<br />

42. Subterfuge<br />

45. Scads<br />

46. Brass band sound<br />

47. Like a rainy day<br />

48. Without end, in poetry<br />

50. Nike competitor<br />

51. Kane creator<br />

53. Serum holders<br />

54. Entertain<br />

59. Dramatic words of accusation<br />

61. Lith., once<br />

63. Way to go: abbr.<br />

64. Old-time actor Erwin<br />

65. Dose amt.


<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>5th</strong> <strong>August</strong> <strong>2016</strong> c a r i b b e a n t i m e s . a g 15<br />

Today’s weather forecast<br />

Antigua and Barbuda<br />

Cloudy with occasional rain<br />

showers.<br />

High - 85ºF<br />

Low - 78ºF<br />

Wind: East 14 mph<br />

Sunrise 5.48 am; Sunset 6.37 pm<br />

Thursday’s Crossword Solution<br />

HOROSCOPE<br />

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You<br />

don’t always claim credit for<br />

the marvelous outcomes you<br />

create. Often you give others<br />

more credit than they deserve<br />

in order to raise morale. This<br />

will be one of those times.<br />

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22).<br />

Asking for, listening to and<br />

acting on feedback will lead<br />

to you improving in ways you<br />

couldn’t have seen on your<br />

own. In a related story, you’ll<br />

soon have a major advantage<br />

over your competition.<br />

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23).<br />

You know enough to continue<br />

a project on your own, and yet<br />

you ask for more opinions and<br />

information. That’s the smart<br />

way. The more you learn, the<br />

better your work will be.<br />

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21).<br />

You’ll be very aware of what<br />

you are feeling and you’ll<br />

process less comfortable emotions<br />

quickly and effectively<br />

then move toward the positive<br />

spectrum you want to get to.<br />

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-<br />

Dec. 21). You gave the controls<br />

over to someone who<br />

didn’t handle it well. It seemed<br />

like the right thing to do at the<br />

time, but times have changed.<br />

There will be an opportunity<br />

to discreetly and graciously<br />

take back the power.<br />

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.<br />

19). You love a good story,<br />

and today delivers. There’s<br />

more here than you’ll understand<br />

at first listen. Revisit<br />

later. The tale will continue to<br />

develop for the next few days.<br />

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.<br />

18). You expect yourself to be<br />

organized. It’s not always the<br />

case. Since it feels to you like<br />

any amount of time you spend<br />

looking for things is a waste,<br />

the time you spend creating a<br />

better system will be worthwhile.<br />

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20).<br />

You feel a strong empathy<br />

with one who is going through<br />

an intense experience. Empathy<br />

is a powerful expression<br />

of love. The more you apply<br />

it, the more it widens your perception<br />

and opens your heart.<br />

ARIES (March 21-April 19).<br />

If the task you’re on is less<br />

than fascinating, try giving it<br />

even more of your attention.<br />

The details — the glorious,<br />

captivating details — will enthrall<br />

you if you give them a<br />

chance.<br />

TAURUS (April 20-May 20).<br />

The ones who work hard and<br />

play hard understand your<br />

pattern of extremes. You may<br />

find yourself trying to explain<br />

it, but unless they share your<br />

passionate intensity, this is a<br />

wasted effort. Seek the company<br />

of kindred spirits.<br />

GEMINI (May 21-June 21).<br />

Just because you believe it<br />

doesn’t make it true. In fact,<br />

one of your dearly held beliefs<br />

is not only false; it’s getting in<br />

the way of you being able to<br />

achieve your goal. You’ve an<br />

inkling what this is about. Are<br />

you ready to take it on?<br />

CANCER (June 22-July 22).<br />

The way you look and the way<br />

you feel don’t always match<br />

up perfectly, but there’s a correlation.<br />

It won’t matter if you<br />

work from the inside out or<br />

the outside in: You can bring<br />

yourself up to a new level<br />

from either angle.


16 c a r i b b e a n t i m e s . a g<br />

<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>5th</strong> <strong>August</strong> <strong>2016</strong>


<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>5th</strong> <strong>August</strong> <strong>2016</strong> c a r i b b e a n t i m e s . a g 17<br />

All members of the Antigua and Barbuda Ex-Servicemen Association<br />

are notified of the monthly general meeting, to be<br />

held on Saturday 6 <strong>August</strong> <strong>2016</strong> at 3 pm, at the Association`s<br />

Headquarters. Please notify the secretary or Chairman of any<br />

apologies on 720-0058 or 723-3452. The main item on the<br />

agenda will be the outcome of the RCEL 32nd Malaysia conference<br />

on 25-30 June <strong>2016</strong>.<br />

Jennings Secondary School will register new students on<br />

10th and 11th <strong>August</strong>, <strong>2016</strong>. The cost for boys is $ 200.00<br />

and $ 105.00 for girls.<br />

Fees are to be deposited on the school’s account at Scotiabank<br />

# 7014071<br />

Parents who are to be accompanied by students are to present<br />

the following:<br />

1. The child’s birth certificate or passport and a copy of<br />

the same<br />

2. The child’s health record and a copy of the same<br />

3. The clearance form from the Board of Education,<br />

which would have been issued by the Book Scheme Manager<br />

at the Primary School<br />

4. The receipt from the Bank of Nova Scotiabank<br />

Registration will be between the hours of 9 a.m to noon on<br />

both days.<br />

Parents and students are expected to comply with the dress<br />

code in place for all government offices.<br />

The principal and staff of the Ottos Comprehensive School<br />

wishes to inform the general public of its registration date,<br />

for students who have gained scholarships to the Ottos Comprehensive<br />

School.<br />

Registration of new students and collection of text books<br />

will be held on Tuesday 16th <strong>August</strong>, <strong>2016</strong> on the school<br />

compound, between the hours 9:00am – 12:00pm.<br />

Parents/ Guardians are asked to bring along the following<br />

documents when coming to register your child/children:<br />

• Registration Fee of $225.00<br />

• Book Clearance form from previous school<br />

• 2 RECENT passport size photos<br />

• Original and photocopy of Birth Paper<br />

• Original and photocopy of Health Card<br />

• Copy of Passport information page and original<br />

passport<br />

• Non- Nationals- Copy of Passport page showing<br />

time in the country and Passport<br />

• Pen and note book to write down the name of books<br />

issued to the students<br />

The collection of textbooks for students transferred to the<br />

Ottos Comprehensive School will also be on Tuesday 16th<br />

<strong>August</strong>, <strong>2016</strong> at 9:00am.<br />

Are you a Building Technology student and are interested in<br />

furthering your education in this field? Or are you thinking<br />

of entering the field of Architectural Technology? Earn a full<br />

scholarship to the Antigua and Barbuda International Institute<br />

of Technology (ABIIT) to pursue an Associate Degree in Architectural<br />

Technology. Simply apply to ABIIT and enroll in<br />

the Architectural Technology program and write a 500 word<br />

essay on “Why the field of Architecture is important and how<br />

will attaining a degree in this field enable you to achieve your<br />

academic and professional goals” Submissions may be dropped<br />

off at the Coolidge campus or emailed to dmartin@abiit.edu.<br />

ag and kbjoseph@abiit.edu.ag. Deadline for submission is 2nd<br />

September <strong>2016</strong>.<br />

VACANCIES at OSEC<br />

The following VACANCIES are currently registered at the One<br />

Stop Employment Centre (OSEC):<br />

** SERVER/BARTENDER<br />

3 Years related experience required<br />

** LINE CHEF<br />

4 Years related experience required<br />

** COOK<br />

1 year experience<br />

Must have a passion for cooking<br />

** SECURITY OFFICER<br />

Police record required<br />

** CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVES<br />

A Minimum of 3 CXC’s (including English)<br />

Bi-lingual (Spanish) a plus<br />

Proficient personal computer skills<br />

Strong written and oral communication skills.<br />

** NURSES<br />

Must be a graduate of an accredited nursing school<br />

Must be currently registered with the Antigua & Barbuda Nursing<br />

Council<br />

Customer Service skills<br />

** EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR<br />

5 Years education facility management experience<br />

** RESTAURANT OPERATIONS MANAGER<br />

5 years experience in similar role<br />

** MAINTENANCE CO-ORDINATOR<br />

General knowledge and experience of the hotel & hospitality<br />

industry is an asset<br />

3 years experience in similar role<br />

Must have experience in plumbing and electrical training<br />

If you are currently registered at OSEC and interested in a listed<br />

vacancy, kindly contact OSEC. If you are NOT registered<br />

with OSEC you may call the centre for more information on<br />

registration requirements. Our centre is located on Old Parham<br />

Road in the Ryan’s Building, next to Antigua Motors. OSEC<br />

telephone numbers are 5628533/34/35.<br />

[Kindly note that the DEADLINE FOR ALL APPLICATIONS<br />

is Thursday 11th <strong>August</strong>, <strong>2016</strong>]


18 c a r i b b e a n t i m e s . a g<br />

<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>5th</strong> <strong>August</strong> <strong>2016</strong><br />

Hope replaces Chandrika in WI Test squad<br />

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West Indies have included<br />

Shai Hope, the 22-yearold<br />

opening batsman from<br />

Barbados, in their squad for<br />

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the third Test against India,<br />

which begins on <strong>August</strong> 9<br />

in St Lucia. Hope replaces<br />

Rajendra Chandrika, who<br />

made scores of 16, 31, 5 and<br />

1 in the first two Tests, and<br />

saw his Test average drop<br />

to 14.00, the worst by any<br />

West Indies opener who has<br />

played 10 or more innings.<br />

Hope, a right-hand batsman<br />

who is also capable of<br />

keeping wickets, has played<br />

six Tests so far, scoring 171<br />

runs at an average of 15.54.<br />

He has been in excellent<br />

form in recent months, with<br />

two hundreds in his last four<br />

matches in the WICB Professional<br />

Cricket League<br />

four-day tournament, and a<br />

century for the WICB President’s<br />

XI in the Indians’ first<br />

warm-up match in St Kitts.<br />

The selectors have made<br />

no other changes to West<br />

Indies’ 14-man squad. India<br />

lead the four-Test series 1-0.<br />

West Indies squad for<br />

third Test: Jason Holder<br />

(capt), Kraigg Brathwaite<br />

(vice-captain), Devendra Bishoo,<br />

Jermaine Blackwood,<br />

Carlos Brathwaite, Darren<br />

Bravo, Roston Chase, Miguel<br />

Cummins, Shane Dowrich,<br />

Shannon Gabriel, Shai<br />

Hope, Leon Johnson, Alzarri<br />

Joseph, Marlon Samuels.


<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>5th</strong> <strong>August</strong> <strong>2016</strong> c a r i b b e a n t i m e s . a g 19<br />

Chase - I knew only a ton could save us<br />

KINGSTON, Jamaica, CMC – Batting<br />

hero Roston Chase says he, along<br />

with a few teammates, had plotted the<br />

strategy on the previous night, on how<br />

to draw the second Test against India<br />

on Wednesday’s critical final day at Sabina<br />

Park.<br />

In a discussion on Tuesday night<br />

with wicketkeeper Shane Dowrich<br />

and reserve player Carlos Brathwaite,<br />

Chase said it had been determined then<br />

that either he, or Dowrich, of the specialist<br />

batsmen remaining, would need<br />

to reach triple figures in order to save<br />

the game.<br />

West Indies began the day on 48<br />

for four in their second innings – still<br />

requiring 256 runs to avoid an innings<br />

defeat – and batted all day to reach 388<br />

for six and force a stalemate.<br />

Chase led the way with a superb<br />

unbeaten 137 – his maiden Test hundred<br />

in only his second game – while<br />

Dowrich stroked 74 and captain Jason<br />

Holder, an unbeaten 64.<br />

Jermaine Blackwood slammed a<br />

quick-fire 63 from 54 balls early in the<br />

morning session to complete his second<br />

half-century of the game.<br />

“Last night, me, Dowrich and Carlos<br />

were having a conversation. We<br />

were speaking about drawing the Test<br />

match and I told them that once me or<br />

Shane gets a hundred we’ll be safe,”<br />

Chase said.<br />

“[We knew because] Blackwood<br />

plays a bit aggressively there would<br />

still be a lot of time so either me or<br />

Shane, and probably Jason, would have<br />

to get a hundred in the match.<br />

“Also the innings that was played by<br />

the Sri Lankan [Kusal Mendis] a couple<br />

of days before, that really inspired<br />

me and actually made me believe more<br />

that I could save the match for us.<br />

The 21-year-old Mendis struck 176<br />

to help fire Sri Lanka to a shock 106-<br />

win over Australia in the first Test in<br />

Pallekele last week.<br />

Chase, 24, matched Mendis. He<br />

struck 14 fours and a six in an innings<br />

that spanned 269 balls and nearly six<br />

hours. He posted 93 with Blackwood<br />

for the fifth wicket, 144 with Dowrich<br />

for the sixth and 103 in an unbroken<br />

seventh wicket stand with Holder.<br />

He had also claimed five for 121<br />

with his unassuming off-spin in India’s<br />

first innings of 500 for nine declared,<br />

and on Wednesday became only the<br />

fourth West Indian to score a century<br />

and take a five-wicket innings haul in<br />

a Test.<br />

“It’s a great match for me. I’m just<br />

looking to move on from here, stay<br />

humble and take it Test match by Test<br />

match,” the right-hander said.<br />

“It is a great confidence booster for<br />

me to know that I can actually perform<br />

at this level. I know people will be<br />

expecting a lot from me so I will just<br />

go out there and play it Test match by<br />

Test match and keep on looking to improve.”<br />

He added: “They say I am cool [and<br />

that] I don’t really show any emotion<br />

and stuff but I just believe in my ability<br />

so when I do stuff that people don’t really<br />

expect me to do and they say ‘you<br />

did great but you don’t really show any<br />

emotion’, I just think it’s my job to perform.<br />

“So when I perform, I thank God<br />

and just look to perform again. I just<br />

don’t look to stop at that performance.<br />

I just want to keep going on and going<br />

on.<br />

Chase has been in the Windies<br />

frame for some time. When the Australians<br />

toured the <strong>Caribbean</strong> last year, he<br />

scored a half-century in either innings<br />

of the President’s XI tour game in Antigua.<br />

He followed that up with over 700<br />

Roston Chase<br />

runs in the regional first class tournament<br />

for Barbados Pride which kept his<br />

name on the lips of selectors.<br />

And despite a tough debut in Antigua<br />

where West Indies suffered an innings<br />

defeat, Chase said he was enjoying<br />

his stint at the highest level.<br />

“I’m enjoying the experience because<br />

I’ve waited all my life to get<br />

here and I’ve finally gotten here,” he<br />

explained.<br />

“I never thought it was easy but all<br />

the guys I’ve spoken with, who played<br />

before me and are playing now, told me<br />

it’s a very hard task but just try to enjoy<br />

it.<br />

“Right now I’m enjoying it although<br />

we’re behind in the series and<br />

we’re fielding 160 overs every innings<br />

but I’m enjoying it while I’m out there<br />

and while I’m batting as well.”


20 c a r i b b e a n t i m e s . a g<br />

<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>5th</strong> <strong>August</strong> <strong>2016</strong><br />

Sir Viv thrilled by Windies character<br />

KINGSTON, Jamaica – Cricket legend<br />

Sir Viv Richards has praised West<br />

Indies for their “character and fight” after<br />

they produced a magnificent batting<br />

display on the final day of the second<br />

Test, to earn a precious draw in the second<br />

Test at Sabina Park here Wednesday.<br />

Starting the day on 48 for four in<br />

their second innings – still requiring<br />

another 256 runs to avoid an innings<br />

defeat – West Indies lost just two wickets<br />

and batted all day to finish on 388<br />

for six.<br />

They were led by a splendid unbeaten,<br />

maiden Test century from Roston<br />

Chase who finished on 137 while<br />

wicketkeeper Shane Dowrich got 74,<br />

captain Jason Holder 64 not out and<br />

Jermaine Blackwood, 63.<br />

Following the amazing back-to-thewall<br />

performance, Sir Viv made his<br />

way to the West Indies players’ area to<br />

applaud the team for facing up to the<br />

challenge.<br />

“This is a marvelous performance<br />

from this young team. I am really proud<br />

of them,” said Sir Viv, a member of the<br />

television commentary panel for the series.<br />

“They really stood up to the challenge<br />

and we should be proud of this<br />

kind of performance. They did not win<br />

the Test match but if we can see more<br />

efforts like this I am sure this team is on<br />

the way to very good things.<br />

“They applied themselves and were<br />

rewarded. This should be great for them<br />

and it shows that they can play at this<br />

level. This has lifted the series and I<br />

hope it lifts this team as well. There is<br />

talent, there is fight and there is character<br />

in that West Indies dressing and we<br />

saw it here today.”<br />

Chase’s innings was the highlight<br />

of the day. All told, he faced 269 deliveries<br />

in a knock lasting just shy of<br />

Sir Vivian Richards, right, shakes the hand of Roston Chase, who struck his maiden Test<br />

century with an unbeaten 137 runs.<br />

six hours and which included 14 fours<br />

and a six.<br />

The knock came in just his fourth<br />

innings and followed his five wickets<br />

for 121 runs in the Indian first innings<br />

of 500 for nine declared.<br />

Chase also created history by becoming<br />

just the fourth West Indian to<br />

make a century and take five wickets in<br />

the same Test match. The last occasion<br />

was by Sir Garfield Sobers in England<br />

50 years ago.<br />

Sir Viv, renowned for never having<br />

lost a Test series as captain, said self-belief<br />

would now be critical for Chase as<br />

he tried to build on the performance.<br />

“My advice to him is keep believing<br />

in [himself]. He’s off to a tremendous<br />

start in his Test career – with a terrific<br />

five-wicket haul and then a significant<br />

century like this which saved the<br />

match,” said Sir Viv.<br />

“He’s now being mentioned and respected,<br />

where this is concerned with<br />

making a ton and taking a five-for. So<br />

I urge him and the team to keep growing<br />

and keep believing in themselves.”<br />

(CMC)

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