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Caribbean Times 5th Issue - Friday 30th September 2016

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Informative, reliable, enriching!<br />

<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>30th</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>2016</strong> A n t i g u a a n d B a r b u d a<br />

Vol.8 No.5 $2.00<br />

YOUTH TAKE OVER<br />

PARLIAMENT<br />

By Joanna Paris<br />

The youth of Antigua and<br />

Barbuda got their opportunity<br />

to shine as part of the<br />

National Youth Parliament,<br />

which convened on Thursday.<br />

The event, which was<br />

televised, was widely attended<br />

by students who represented<br />

both private and<br />

public academic institutions<br />

across the island.<br />

The eager youngsters The youth of Antigua and Barbuda got their opportunity to shine as part of the National Youth Parliament,<br />

which convened on Thursday.<br />

assembled in the gallery as<br />

they listened intently to the spective schoolmates on the<br />

points posited by their re-<br />

floor.<br />

The debate on the Sexual Minister of Social Transformation,<br />

the Hon, Samantha<br />

Offences (Age of Consent)<br />

Bill <strong>2016</strong> featured the views Marshall and Youth Development<br />

Officer within the<br />

of the young people on the<br />

sensitive social issue. Ministry of Youth Affairs,<br />

The bill seeks to establish Senator Govia and her team<br />

the age for consent to sexual were able to garner the views<br />

intercourse and related activity.<br />

country, and it was evident<br />

of young people around the<br />

The National Youth Parliament<br />

is the brain child to the age of consent were<br />

that inconsistencies relating<br />

of Senator Shenella Govia, prevalent.<br />

who indicated her desire Senator Govia has noted<br />

that she is “very happy”<br />

to reinstate the event in the<br />

Prime Minister, the Hon., Gaston Browne, among others, observed country’s yearly calendar. with the level of debate and<br />

as the youth took over the Parliamentary Chambers. With the assistance of cont’d on pg 3


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

<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>30th</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>2016</strong><br />

Italian man murder trial begins<br />

By Renio Abbott<br />

A 12-member Jury comprised<br />

of six (6) male and six<br />

(6) female will deliberate in<br />

the murder trial of 73-year<br />

old Italian, Umberto Schenato<br />

who allegedly murdered<br />

his wife Edda Schenato on<br />

June 3rd, 2013 at the Epicurean<br />

Supermarket parking<br />

lot on Friars Hill Road.<br />

Christina Francis was<br />

sworn and cautioned as the<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 />

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We ask you to send:<br />

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interpreter who is also from<br />

Italy by Judge Ramdhani.<br />

Three persons took the<br />

stand to give evidence in the<br />

first day. The first witness,<br />

an off-duty security officer,<br />

in their account of the day<br />

in question stated that they<br />

went to see their supervisor<br />

at the supermarket.<br />

Upon exiting the premises,<br />

she heard a scream which<br />

sounded like it came from<br />

the eastern side of the parking<br />

lot. She witnessed an old<br />

Caucasian male (a customer),<br />

coming out of the supermarket<br />

and heading towards<br />

the parking lot between two<br />

pared cars.<br />

She followed him thinking<br />

that someone had fallen<br />

and was in need of assistance,<br />

but to her surprise,<br />

witnessed the accused on top<br />

of an elderly white lady on<br />

the ground.<br />

The customer who just<br />

came out to the parking lot<br />

attempted to pull the accused<br />

off of the lady, but<br />

was met with aggression as<br />

the assailant swung a silver<br />

and black knife at him. As<br />

the good Samaritan stepped<br />

back, he witnessed the accused<br />

stabbed the victim<br />

twice.<br />

The witness then observed<br />

blood flowing from<br />

the victim’s head. The customer<br />

tried once again in<br />

futility to pull him off of<br />

the victim. The witness ran<br />

to the supermarket for assistance,<br />

returning with two<br />

other individuals.<br />

A plain clothes police<br />

officer arrived on the scene,<br />

making attempts to speak to<br />

the accused who was still<br />

brandishing the knife, which<br />

he had placed squarely on<br />

his own throat. As the officer<br />

approached him trying to<br />

calm the situation, he swung<br />

at the officer several times,<br />

while heading to the western<br />

Informative, reliable, enriching!<br />

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

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Or news@caribbeantimes.ag<br />

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

side of the parking lot where<br />

he removed a set of car keys<br />

from his pocket and attempted<br />

to get away in a rental car.<br />

Other civilians tried to<br />

stop him from leaving the<br />

scene; after being blocked by<br />

a delivery truck, police reinforcements<br />

and paramedics<br />

arrived finally getting the<br />

situation under control and<br />

arresting the accused.<br />

The second witness is<br />

a bag packer at the above<br />

mentioned supermarket stated,<br />

”I was taking out a customer<br />

white in complexion<br />

to his car. In the process of<br />

packing out his groceries, I<br />

saw the accused walking to<br />

an old white lady.<br />

“I thought he was thumping<br />

her so the man and I went<br />

to him n when I got over<br />

there, I saw the lady bleeding<br />

lying flat on the ground.<br />

The accused was still on top<br />

of her stabbing her several<br />

times. Another customer<br />

tried to stop him but he<br />

turned around and was trying<br />

to stab the customer”.<br />

The third witness, a corporal<br />

of Police, qualified in<br />

the Forensics department<br />

with many years of experience<br />

while in the service of<br />

the Royal Police Force of<br />

Antigua and Barbuda testified<br />

to the photographs and<br />

fingerprint that were taken<br />

along with the other evidence<br />

that were collected<br />

from the crime scene.<br />

The case Continue on<br />

Thursday 29th <strong>September</strong><br />

<strong>2016</strong> at 9:00 am


<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>30th</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>2016</strong> c a r i b b e a n t i m e s . a g 3<br />

cont’d from pg 1<br />

the quality of arguments that were delivered.<br />

The National Youth Parliament<br />

comprised of:<br />

Abigail Piper- Speaker (Christ the King<br />

High School)<br />

Jahmal Gordon – Clerk to Parliament<br />

(St. Joseph’s Academy)<br />

Alicia Paul- Antigua Girls High School<br />

Clare Christopher- St. Anthony’s Secondary<br />

School<br />

Georgia Joseph- St. Mary’s School of<br />

Excellence<br />

Ikayla Casear- All Saints Secondary<br />

Jemeul Caleb-Antigua Grammar<br />

School<br />

Leshawn Andrews- St. Joseph’s Academy<br />

Martina Lewis- ClareHall Secondary<br />

Reon King- Antigua Grammar School<br />

Shirdel Martin- Christ the King High<br />

School<br />

Jahnissi Adams – Pares Secondary<br />

School


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

<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>30th</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>2016</strong><br />

Moravians reject same-sex marriages<br />

By Everton Barnes<br />

The Moravian Church<br />

says it will not sanction<br />

same-sex marriages as the<br />

church maintains its tough<br />

stance against homosexuality.<br />

The church’s position<br />

is detailed in the Delegates<br />

Report from the 43rd Unity<br />

Synod (27th Synod of the<br />

Renewed Moravian Church)<br />

that was held at Rosehall,<br />

Jamaica, from August 12<br />

to 19, which has just been<br />

made public.<br />

Chairman of the Eastern<br />

West Indies Province<br />

(EWIP) Provincial Elders<br />

Conference, Rev. Dr Cortroy<br />

Jarvis, said the issue of<br />

homosexuality consumed<br />

a significant portion of the<br />

discussion at the Unity Synod,<br />

which meets once every<br />

seven years, and which sets<br />

broad policies for the church<br />

worldwide.<br />

“It ended in Resolution<br />

#44 “Message to the<br />

America North Province”.<br />

It Resolved that, Christian<br />

Marriage in the Moravian<br />

Church is between a man<br />

and a woman; It Resolved<br />

that, the Unity Synod <strong>2016</strong><br />

declares to the American<br />

Northern Province that the<br />

actions of its June 2014 Synod<br />

concerning the marriage<br />

of same gender couples and<br />

ordination of homosexual<br />

people is not in accordance<br />

with the <strong>2016</strong> Unity Synod’s<br />

understanding of marriage,”<br />

Rev. Jarvis reported.<br />

He explained that the<br />

America North Province<br />

which comprises the Moravian<br />

church in the northern<br />

United States and Canada<br />

had adopted same-sex marriages<br />

at its 2014 Synod and<br />

was rallying to have the Unity<br />

Synod adopt similar provisions<br />

at the <strong>2016</strong> Synod.<br />

“The proposal was overwhelmingly<br />

defeated with<br />

the Provinces of the <strong>Caribbean</strong><br />

and Latin American region<br />

along with all 12 Provinces<br />

in Africa voted against<br />

the motion,” Rev. Jarvis revealed.<br />

He added that the America<br />

North Province had not<br />

only approved same-sex<br />

marriages, but it had also<br />

conducted such ceremonies<br />

as well as allowing openly<br />

gay people to be ordained as<br />

ministers.<br />

The EWIP chairman said<br />

word had reach the worldwide<br />

body of the Moravian<br />

church that this policy<br />

had triggered an exodus of<br />

people from the church as<br />

they felt that the church was<br />

moving away from one of its<br />

core tenets.<br />

According to Rev. Jarvis<br />

the actions of the America<br />

North Province are against<br />

the Moravian Covenant for<br />

Christian Living and Scripture;<br />

and there was a further<br />

Chairman of the Eastern West<br />

Indies Province (EWIP) Provincial<br />

Elders Conference, Rev. Dr<br />

Cortroy Jarvis<br />

motion that the Unity Synod<br />

<strong>2016</strong> commissions the Unity<br />

Board to observe the developments<br />

in the America<br />

Northern Province, to take<br />

necessary measures.<br />

Meanwhile, Rev. Jarvis<br />

has been elected to serve<br />

as President of the Unity<br />

Board, the highest administrative<br />

position in the Moravian<br />

Church worldwide.<br />

He currently serves as<br />

vice-president and he takes<br />

up the appointment in January<br />

of next year. He will<br />

serve in the position for a<br />

two-year term.


<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>30th</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>2016</strong> c a r i b b e a n t i m e s . a g 5<br />

Call for annual youth parliament<br />

By Everton Barnes<br />

There’s a call for an annual staging<br />

of the youth parliament following Thursday<br />

successful event where young people<br />

fully participated in a parliamentary<br />

debate. The call comes from the chief<br />

organizer of the event, Senator Shenella<br />

Govia, the youth representative in the<br />

Senate.<br />

“My overall assessment of the event<br />

was that it was really good and judging<br />

from what was on display at the session,<br />

I feel very confident that the future of our<br />

nation is in good hands,” Govia stated.<br />

She said it was clear that the participants,<br />

all of whom representative a<br />

secondary school, were well-researched<br />

and despite only having three one-hour<br />

practices, were fully conversant with the<br />

parliamentary rules and procedures.<br />

The senator made a case for the event<br />

to take place annually and be placed<br />

within the activities marking Youth<br />

Week.<br />

“We had a bill specifically drafted by<br />

the Legal Affairs Department called the<br />

Sexual Offences; Age of Consent Bill,<br />

<strong>2016</strong>, which formed the basis for Thursday’s<br />

session. I hope our policy makers<br />

were paying attention that the views of<br />

young people will inform policies,” she<br />

added. She said it was clear from the<br />

speakers that no one wanted the age<br />

of consent lowered; some stated that it<br />

should remain at 16 years, while others<br />

wanted it to be higher.<br />

Govia also wants systems to be put in<br />

place through which the views of young<br />

people will not only be heard but will<br />

By Joanna Paris<br />

Plans are being made to<br />

further develop the Villa Primary<br />

School.<br />

This confirmation comes<br />

from Government’s Chief of<br />

Staff, Lionel “Max” Hurst,<br />

who has indicated that Cabinet<br />

was informed by Prime<br />

Minister, the Hon, Gaston<br />

Browne and Minister of<br />

Foreign Affairs, the Hon.<br />

Charles “Max” Fernandez<br />

that the United Arab Emirates<br />

(UAE) will provide a<br />

grant of US$1.5 million dollars<br />

to modernize the academic<br />

institution.<br />

This decision was made<br />

during meetings with foreign<br />

Government officials,<br />

in the margins of the United<br />

Nations General Assembly,<br />

held last week in New York<br />

City.<br />

Hurst noted that “the<br />

UAE’s Minister Responsible<br />

for Foreign Development<br />

find a way to influence decision-making,<br />

especially those affecting that segment<br />

of society.<br />

She is encouraging the young people<br />

to prepare a report of Thursday’s discussion<br />

and to present it to the government.<br />

The youth senator added that earlier<br />

in the year, she had made a promise to<br />

organize the youth parliament and she<br />

is real pleased to see that it came to a<br />

successful fruition. “‘Promises made;<br />

promises kept’,” she declared.<br />

Government to receive assistance<br />

in the Education sector<br />

Assistance visited the Villa<br />

Primary School earlier this<br />

and instantly in love with the<br />

children at the Villa Primary<br />

School and made a special<br />

effort to secure the funding”<br />

The funds are expected to<br />

be transferred to Antigua before<br />

the end of the year.<br />

Meanwhile, the Government<br />

has been informed<br />

right the Kingdom of Morocco<br />

has agreed, to fund<br />

one wing of the new Secondary<br />

School to be built at<br />

Tomlinson’s.<br />

Prime Minister Browne<br />

will travel to Marrakech,<br />

Morocco, in November, to<br />

attend the 22nd Conference<br />

of the Parties (COP22) of the<br />

Framework Convention on<br />

Climate Change (UNFCC).<br />

He has been invited by<br />

the King of Morocco. At that<br />

time, it is anticipated that the<br />

Prime Minister will sign-off<br />

on the official agreement.


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

<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>30th</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>2016</strong><br />

Women police hold three-day retreat<br />

The women within the Royal Police<br />

Force of Antigua and Barbuda, in<br />

the next couple of days will be locked<br />

away in the first of its kind, “Women<br />

Police Retreat.” The historic occasion<br />

will be held at the Grand Royal Antigua<br />

Resort from October 3rd - 6th, under<br />

the theme, “Strong Women Bonding<br />

Together to Make a Difference.”<br />

The three-day event will commence<br />

with an official opening ceremony on<br />

Monday 3 rd October at 7 PM. A number<br />

of dignitaries are expected to be in<br />

attendance for the opening. During the<br />

period, several notable lecturers and<br />

presenters from a wide cross section<br />

of society are expected to address over<br />

150 women police officers, both from<br />

the Regular and the Fire Departments.<br />

The Role of Women in Law Enforcement;<br />

Women in Leadership;<br />

Emotional Intelligence; Domestic Violence\Gender<br />

Violence; Life after Policing,<br />

to mention a few, are some of<br />

The chairman of Elite<br />

Island Resorts, Mr. Rob A.<br />

Barrett, expressed his strong<br />

support for the statements<br />

made by Senator the Honourable<br />

Lennox Weston,<br />

Minister of State within the<br />

Ministry of Finance & Corporate<br />

Governance, as it<br />

pertains to the Antigua and<br />

Barbuda Tourism Authority<br />

(ABTA).<br />

“It is a national disgrace<br />

that there are no statements<br />

given by the ABTA on their<br />

activities and spending of<br />

resources provided by the<br />

people of Antigua & Barbuda.<br />

the subjects expected to be covered.<br />

The sessions will to start each day from<br />

5:00 AM with morning devotions, followed<br />

by a half hour of physical exercise,<br />

and then into the work sessions.<br />

According to a number of senior<br />

female officers, one the primary objectives<br />

of this retreat is for women within<br />

the Royal Police Force of Antigua and<br />

Barbuda to become more relevant. It is<br />

also for them to have a sense of purpose<br />

and belonging, especially within<br />

There should be at least<br />

a quarterly statement on the<br />

achievements and spending<br />

by the Authority.<br />

At this time, there are<br />

no clear benefits and no accountability<br />

as to what the<br />

Authority has been doing. In<br />

my view this entity has not<br />

been functional from inception,<br />

even under the former<br />

administration.<br />

If the ABTA continues to<br />

underperform, then this unit<br />

should be managed by the<br />

private sector while providing<br />

clear accounts of what<br />

the unit is doing.<br />

I would further want it to<br />

be known that should there<br />

be no statements forthcoming<br />

on the activities and accounting<br />

of the ABTA, that I<br />

will start to redirect the 2%<br />

tax towards the Tourism Authority<br />

Marketing Fund currently<br />

being paid by my hotels<br />

in Antigua directly into<br />

to the Consolidated Fund.”<br />

Elite Island Resorts<br />

represents an impressive<br />

collection of all-inclusive<br />

beachfront properties in the<br />

<strong>Caribbean</strong>.<br />

Each resort provides<br />

something unique for every<br />

traveller, with offerings<br />

ranging from destination<br />

a male dominated organization. It is<br />

to bring about that oneness and unity<br />

among women police officers, and to<br />

give them a distinctive voice.<br />

Commissioner of Police, Wendel<br />

Robinson has fully endorsed the bold,<br />

yet historic move made by the women<br />

within the organization, highlighting<br />

that a number of them exemplified<br />

leadership qualities, and are making<br />

meaningful marks on the fabric of the<br />

organization<br />

Chairman of Elite Island Resorts supports<br />

ABTA underperformance comments<br />

weddings and romantic escapes<br />

to family retreats and<br />

eco vacations. Resorts include:<br />

St. James’s Club &<br />

Villas, The Verandah Resort<br />

& Spa, Pineapple Beach<br />

Club Antigua and Galley<br />

Bay Resort & Spa, all in Antigua;<br />

St. James’s<br />

Club Morgan Bay, St.<br />

Lucia; Long Bay Beach<br />

Club in Tortola, BVI; Palm<br />

Island Resort & Spa in the<br />

Grenadines; The Club, Barbados<br />

Resort & Spa; and<br />

Los Establos Boutique Hotel<br />

in Boqueté, Panama.<br />

For more information visit<br />

www.eliteislandresorts.com


<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>30th</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>2016</strong> c a r i b b e a n t i m e s . a g 7<br />

Antigua and Barbuda participates<br />

in World Emergency Services Expo<br />

Antigua and Barbuda<br />

will be well represented at<br />

this year’s World Emergency<br />

Services Expo in New<br />

Orleans Louisiana as a seven-member<br />

delegation departed<br />

the island yesterday,<br />

bound for the USA.<br />

Moments before departure,<br />

head of the unit, Shawn<br />

Greenidge, explained that<br />

the October 1st to 8th Expo<br />

is the trendsetter for Emergency<br />

Medical Technicians<br />

where education, training<br />

and execution of duties are<br />

concerned.<br />

He added that EMS Practitioners<br />

from across the<br />

globe will be attendance to<br />

share ideas in improving<br />

pre-hospital care.<br />

One of the individuals<br />

who is also making the trip<br />

is Joanna Otto and she is<br />

hoping that she can come<br />

Iesha Russel<br />

back better equipped for the<br />

task ahead.<br />

“I am going to just represent<br />

the Antigua and Barbuda<br />

EMS. We are off to<br />

New Orleans and I hoping to<br />

come back with some fresh<br />

information and new strategies<br />

so we can apply here<br />

in Antigua”, a smiling Otto<br />

said.<br />

Another individual on<br />

the trip is Shift Supervisor,<br />

Jamon Roberts, and<br />

he promised to bring back<br />

something new for the Antiguan<br />

public.<br />

“I would like to first thank<br />

the public for all the donations<br />

they made to the EMS<br />

and I look forward to bringing<br />

back something new for<br />

the country, new techniques<br />

and any little thing that I can<br />

use to help the visitors and<br />

locals alike”, he said.<br />

CUB take-over complete<br />

EMS employees as they leave Antigua to attend the World Emergency<br />

Services Expo in New Orleans, Louisiana.<br />

By Everton Barnes<br />

The government take-over of the <strong>Caribbean</strong><br />

Union Bank (CUB) is now complete<br />

and a signing ceremony is taking place today<br />

to ‘seal the deal’.<br />

Cabinet spokesman, Lionel Max Hurst<br />

has announced that Prime Minister, Gaston<br />

Browne, surrounded by other government<br />

officials will participate in a press conference<br />

where the formal announcement and<br />

signing will take place.<br />

During the ceremony at the Prime Minister’s<br />

office, the transfer of the majority<br />

ownership shares in CUB will take place,<br />

with a signing in public. The Prime Minister,<br />

as Minister of Finance, and other officials<br />

of Government will join with CUB’s<br />

other shareholders to consummate the purchase.<br />

Earlier in the year, PM Browne announced<br />

that the government would pump<br />

some $30 million into the struggling finance<br />

institution to help it better navigate<br />

its current difficulties.<br />

At the time, Browne said the move<br />

forms part of the government philosophy to<br />

acquire private entities for the purposes of<br />

generating profits for the people of Antigua<br />

and Barbuda. The purchase of WIOC also<br />

fell into that category.<br />

Janel Joseph, who is also<br />

a shift supervisor at the Antigua<br />

and Barbuda Emergency<br />

Medical Services said that<br />

she is certain that the Expo<br />

will take her career to the<br />

next level.<br />

“It will help me in my<br />

day to day runnings at EMS;<br />

I am certain that it will give<br />

me new ideas and teach me<br />

new skills and so on that I<br />

could help with saving other<br />

lives.<br />

“EMS has helped me to<br />

be a people person, it has<br />

helped me to be compassionate,<br />

caring and understanding<br />

because in some<br />

situations you have to be understanding”,<br />

Joseph noted.<br />

Others making the trip<br />

are Iesha Russel who recently<br />

made headlines with her<br />

lifesaving procedures on a<br />

toddler, Brandon Browne as<br />

well as Vermalie Brodie who<br />

was already in the USA.<br />

The contingent will return<br />

on October 9th.


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

<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>30th</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>2016</strong><br />

Cost of slavery reparations now within the<br />

boundaries of the politically acceptable<br />

A U.N. panel has declared the United<br />

States owes reparations to African<br />

Americans, as compensation for “the<br />

legacy of colonial history, enslavement,<br />

racial subordination and segregation,<br />

racial terrorism and racial inequality.”<br />

The panel’s recommendations,<br />

which were presented on Monday, in<br />

no way require the U.S. government<br />

to make payments and will likely have<br />

no practical effects — but they could<br />

occasion a new national debate about<br />

what the country owes its black citizens.<br />

In the past, proponents of reparations<br />

have been stymied by a range of<br />

practical and conceptual objections.<br />

For the past year, however, American<br />

voters have been listening to prominent<br />

presidential candidates talk about all<br />

kinds of outrageously expensive proposals.<br />

By comparison, proposals for<br />

reparations for slavery look downright<br />

modest, at least in terms of cost.<br />

A researcher at the University of<br />

Connecticut recently published a new<br />

estimate of the value of U.S. slave labor<br />

in the 89 years from the country’s<br />

founding until the end of the Civil War.<br />

Based on the wages paid to laborers in<br />

the antebellum period and assuming an<br />

average of 12 hours of work a day, seven<br />

days a week, the researcher, Thomas<br />

Craemer, concluded that U.S. slave labor<br />

would be worth roughly $5.9 trillion<br />

today.<br />

That is equal to the 10-year cost of<br />

Republican presidential nominee Donald<br />

Trump’s most recent tax plan, and<br />

it is significantly less than the price<br />

tag on former Democratic presidential<br />

candidate Bernie Sanders’s health-care<br />

plan.<br />

Craemer ignored colonial history<br />

before U.S. independence, when the<br />

U.K. government would arguably have<br />

been liable. He also did not calculate<br />

the costs of thefts and lynchings after<br />

the war and excluded more modern<br />

forms of discrimination, focusing instead<br />

on forced labor, an easily defined<br />

and indisputable example of economic<br />

injury.<br />

Paying reparations “doesn’t bring<br />

anybody back that’s dead. It doesn’t begin<br />

to repair for the damages incurred,”<br />

Craemer said. “At least it is a symbolic<br />

gesture that is more meaningful than<br />

just saying, ‘Sorry.’ “<br />

His personal interest in the problem<br />

of reparations results from his childhood<br />

in Germany. The German government<br />

has been paying reparations<br />

to victims of the Nazi regime for more<br />

than 60 years. Craemer did not know<br />

about the payments until he learned<br />

about them from a widow of a friend<br />

who had survived the Holocaust.<br />

Incidentally, an independent analysis<br />

by the nonpartisan Tax Foundation<br />

estimated Trump’s proposed tax plan<br />

could cost the government as much as<br />

$5.9 trillion in foregone revenue over a<br />

decade. That figure does not take into<br />

account the effects of tax relief on the<br />

broader economy. An increase in the<br />

overall size of the economy because of<br />

reduced taxes could limit the costs to<br />

between $2.6 trillion and $3.9 trillion<br />

over 10 years, according to the foundation.<br />

On the other hand, those economic<br />

benefits are uncertain — and a year<br />

ago, Trump proposed an even more<br />

exorbitant plan that would have cost<br />

as much as $9.5 trillion, according to<br />

the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center. Sixty-seven<br />

percent of the benefits would<br />

have accrued to the wealthiest one in<br />

five households.<br />

While Trump’s revised plan is less<br />

expensive, he campaigned on the original<br />

plan for nearly a year. It was his<br />

official position when the Republican<br />

Party nominated him. The GOP primary<br />

contest demonstrated that voters<br />

will seriously entertain policies that are<br />

vastly more expensive than the cost of<br />

compensating slaves’ descendants for<br />

their unpaid labor.<br />

On the left, Sanders proposed a<br />

health-care plan that would have cost<br />

the government no less than $32 trillion<br />

over a decade, by the Tax Policy<br />

Center’s estimate.<br />

During the campaign, Sanders said<br />

he was opposed to reparations.<br />

“Sanders says the chance of getting<br />

reparations through Congress is ‘nil,’<br />

a correct observation which could just<br />

as well apply to much of the Vermont<br />

senator’s own platform,” Ta-Nehisi<br />

Coates, who has argued forcefully for<br />

reparations, wrote in The Atlantic.<br />

Indeed, compared with Trump’s<br />

tax plans and Sanders’s health-care<br />

plan, compensating the descendants of<br />

slaves for their ancestors’ forced labor<br />

would be a modest expense — especially<br />

considering that these estimates<br />

for Trump’s and Sanders’s proposals<br />

are only for the first 10 years, and the<br />

costs would continue to accumulate<br />

year after year.<br />

In the second decade under Trump’s<br />

tax plan, for example, the foregone<br />

revenue would exceed $15 trillion, according<br />

to the Tax Policy Center.<br />

To be sure, Craemer’s estimate,<br />

based on an average of 12 hours a day<br />

of wages for 89 years of slave labor in<br />

the United States, only accounts for a<br />

portion of the reparations that could<br />

conceivably by claimed by African<br />

cont’d on pg 9


<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>30th</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>2016</strong> c a r i b b e a n t i m e s . a g 9<br />

Why is systemic technology training<br />

so important to our island?<br />

cont’d from pg 8<br />

Americans today.<br />

Craemer developed a second estimate<br />

of compensation for all 24 hours of the day,<br />

noting that even slaves’ sleep belonged, in<br />

a sense, to their masters (since they slept at<br />

their owners’ discretion and were only permitted<br />

to so that they could provide more<br />

forced labor). That debt would amount to<br />

$14.2 trillion today. Craemer also notes that<br />

racial exploitation and terrorism continued<br />

through most of the 20th century, with substantial<br />

economic consequences.<br />

What kinds of abuses to include in calculating<br />

any reparations is just the first of<br />

many difficult questions that proponents<br />

must answer.<br />

Some argue that instead of payments to<br />

individual descendants of slaves, there are<br />

Starting October 3rd,<br />

<strong>2016</strong>, iLabGlobal will continue<br />

a unique program<br />

Computational Thinking at<br />

Antigua Grammar School.<br />

Ms. Makŏ Williams,<br />

Founder of iLab Global,<br />

says that Systemic Technology<br />

Integration is important<br />

to our country because it<br />

levels the global economic<br />

playing field for small<br />

countries, like ours. She<br />

believes that it will increase<br />

the job market for citizens<br />

in our region.<br />

By the year 2020, fifty<br />

(50%) of all jobs in computing<br />

will require computational<br />

thinking skills and<br />

these jobs will have in excess<br />

more than a half-a-million<br />

unfilled positions. <br />

Presently, there are extremely<br />

low numbers of<br />

students in Antigua, Barbuda<br />

or the <strong>Caribbean</strong>, graduating<br />

with computer science-related<br />

skills.<br />

iLabGlobal develops<br />

multiple training programs<br />

and seven (7) primary<br />

school technology books to<br />

bridge the gap and heal the<br />

digital divide.<br />

Two graduates of the<br />

program, Mr. Canice James<br />

and Trevan Solomon are<br />

excited to collaborate with<br />

other students of like minds,<br />

while gaining invaluable<br />

experience in an accelerated<br />

program, called the iLab<br />

Master Technicians.<br />

This part of the program<br />

is an exclusive internship<br />

for budding innovators who<br />

demonstrate specific skills.<br />

Computational Thinking<br />

skills allow students<br />

to develop multiple ideas<br />

for solutions to both simple<br />

and complex problems.<br />

These skills are in high demand<br />

globally.<br />

Even if a child is not<br />

interested in creating computer<br />

games and programs<br />

as a career, the chances are<br />

very high that they will be<br />

required to take a computer-programming<br />

course, because<br />

of the advantages that<br />

learning to code teaches.<br />

Computational Thinking<br />

is categorized as a set<br />

of skills that helps students<br />

look at problems in a<br />

unique way.<br />

It supports a deliberate,<br />

Step-by-Step thinking process;<br />

that develops innova-<br />

other uses of the country’s resources that<br />

would do more to help black communities.<br />

If payment were issued, there would be<br />

practical problems: Who would be eligible<br />

to receive payments? Over how many years<br />

would the reparations be paid off?<br />

“’What interest rate would apply?’<br />

would be probably the most important<br />

question to ask,” Craemer said. A minor<br />

difference in the interest rate accruing over<br />

the century and a half since the end of slavery<br />

could drastically alter estimates of the<br />

total liability.<br />

However, the costs are calculated, this<br />

unusually extravagant presidential campaign<br />

suggests they are not the reason<br />

American politicians so rarely talk about<br />

reparations.<br />

Source: Washington Post<br />

tive ideas and this ability is<br />

sought-after by employers<br />

in every career field today.<br />

These skills allow participants<br />

to clearly identify<br />

a problem, break the problem<br />

down into its smallest<br />

parts, analyze the conditions<br />

under which the problem<br />

exists, looks for the<br />

patterns and conditions that<br />

are creating the problem, in<br />

order to develop more that<br />

one solution to solve the<br />

problem.<br />

Computational Thinking<br />

skills are extremely relevant<br />

for graduates of top<br />

business programs today<br />

and in all career fields.<br />

Employers are looking<br />

for leaders, with these<br />

skills, who will be leaders<br />

in the Digital Age. iLab-<br />

Global takes an innovative<br />

approach to teaching computing<br />

skills to students in<br />

Antigua & Barbuda.<br />

iLab believes that students<br />

should not just play<br />

games; they should make<br />

games and digital products.<br />

Through this program,<br />

students will be trained to<br />

succeed in the New Global<br />

Economy.<br />

Classes will be held at<br />

Antigua Grammar School<br />

Monday’s 2:30 - 4 pm<br />

and Wednesday’s 4:15 -<br />

5:45. Call Makŏ Williams,<br />

268.783.3000, to become<br />

tomorrow’s problem solvers.


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

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

<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>30th</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>2016</strong><br />

Antiguan among new batch of Sandals’<br />

Management Trainee graduates<br />

After a two-year journey which saw<br />

her working the ranks in every department<br />

in various resorts all across the region,<br />

Antiguan Orena Nurse is among<br />

25 participants in Sandals Resorts International’s<br />

(SRI) Management Trainee<br />

Programme who have officially shed<br />

the trainee title and will now move into<br />

management roles, following a graduation<br />

ceremony held last weekend.<br />

The new managers were selected<br />

from a pool of 1,500 applicants two<br />

years ago and include a number of Jamaicans<br />

as well as nationals from Antigua,<br />

Barbados, the Bahamas, Grenada,<br />

St. Lucia, and the Turks and Caicos<br />

Islands and both previous employees<br />

of the Sandals/ATL Group and new recruits.<br />

The Management Trainee Programme<br />

(MTP) identifies and grooms<br />

outstanding young recruits to become<br />

managers in the company through<br />

a two-year programme of hands-on<br />

learning and training at resorts across<br />

the region. All participants experience<br />

rotations through various positions and<br />

departments across the group before<br />

selecting an area of specialisation. The<br />

MTP is the centerpiece of SRI’s Management<br />

Succession Planning Strategy<br />

and is one component of the company’s<br />

ongoing efforts to invest in capacity-building<br />

throughout its operations.<br />

Nurse, a former team member at<br />

Sandals Grande Antigua, is also a graduate<br />

of the Antigua Girls High School,<br />

Antigua State College and University<br />

of the West Indies – Mona. She now<br />

moves into the exciting role of Front<br />

Office Manager at Sandals Negril<br />

Beach Resort and Spa in Jamaica.<br />

She recalled that the training programme<br />

was intensive but one through<br />

which she learned much about the Sandals<br />

brand and what it takes to be a<br />

manager.<br />

“The journey has been an exciting<br />

and fulfilling one. I had challenges, but<br />

challenges make you stronger; they<br />

teach you lessons,” Nurse said.<br />

“As Mr Mark Pike (SRI programmes<br />

manager) always tells us, take comfort<br />

in uncertainty. There were a lot of times<br />

when I was unsure of what was going<br />

on, what steps to take, but through it all<br />

Orena Nurse, left<br />

I overcame it and I truly believe I am a<br />

better person because of it.”<br />

Speaking at the graduation ceremony<br />

held at Sandals Ochi Beach Resort,<br />

Wayne Cummings, director of business<br />

processes and administration, himself<br />

a product of the MTP, reaffirmed the<br />

company’s commitment to investing in<br />

young leaders.<br />

“This Group is on the move”, he<br />

said, “this Group is growing and for us<br />

to grow and evolve we need to invest<br />

in people. We need to invest in the new<br />

leaders of the Group.”<br />

As the graduates move into their<br />

new roles within the company, Cummings<br />

urged them to always remember<br />

their journey and treat their colleagues<br />

with respect. He said, “Remember the<br />

things you went through, remember<br />

your subordinates. They are your colleagues<br />

and they are even more important<br />

than you. Have a very healthy<br />

respect for them as you seek to lead<br />

them.”<br />

He also reminded the new managers<br />

of the limitless potential within each of<br />

them as well as within the company.<br />

“You are competent, you are able and<br />

you are at the right place, at the right<br />

time and with the right company. The<br />

journey has just begun. We are a company<br />

on the move”, he emphasised.


<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>30th</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>2016</strong> c a r i b b e a n t i m e s . a g 13<br />

St Vincent schoolboy killed as<br />

Tropical Storm Matthew passes<br />

KINGSTOWN, St. Vincent<br />

and the Grenadines –<br />

A teenage boy is dead after<br />

being crushed by a boulder<br />

as Tropical Storm Matthew<br />

passed St. Vincent and the<br />

Grenadines last night.<br />

According to local media<br />

reports, the secondary<br />

school student, 16-year-old<br />

Kenron Antoine, was trying<br />

to remove debris behind<br />

his home, to clear a path<br />

for water that was flooding<br />

the house in Layou, a small<br />

town in the southwestern<br />

parish of St. Andrew. But a<br />

boulder rolled down from<br />

the nearby cliff as he was<br />

doing so, and he was pinned<br />

against the house.<br />

Prime Minister Dr. Ralph<br />

Gonsalves, who is in Barbados,<br />

called in on the stateowned<br />

National Broadcasting<br />

Corporation late last<br />

night and expressed sympathy<br />

to the boy’s family.<br />

He also assured that his<br />

ST. JOHN’S, Antigua – Regional airline<br />

LIAT resumed normal operations this morning,<br />

for the most part, with Tropical Storm<br />

Matthew having passed the Windward Islands.<br />

However, it said, some services would be<br />

delayed.<br />

“Although the weather conditions have<br />

improved, some areas in the network are<br />

still being impacted by wind gusts which are<br />

affecting our operation,” the Antigua-based<br />

airline said in an advisory late this morning.<br />

Two flights, however, were cancelled.<br />

Tropical Storm Matthew’s heavy rains caused flooding and overflowed rivers. The photo at left, shows<br />

the situation at one bridge. At right, occupants of this house escaped unhurt when this wall collapsed.<br />

government would assist<br />

those who needed help in the<br />

aftermath of the storm.<br />

“I am very sorry about<br />

the death of the young man<br />

in Layou, and also those<br />

who have suffered any physical<br />

damage, and for those<br />

LIAT getting flights back on track<br />

Flights LI527 (Puerto Rico-Tortola-St.<br />

Kitts-Antigua) and LI650 (Trinidad-St Vincent-Barbados)<br />

were called off.<br />

The carrier said that customers affected<br />

by the disruptions who wish to rebook for<br />

a later date will be allowed to do so without<br />

change fees or fare differences for a period<br />

of two weeks from the date of their original<br />

scheduled travel.<br />

Following the two-week grace period,<br />

passengers will be required to pay applicable<br />

fare and change fees when re-booking.<br />

(<strong>Caribbean</strong>360)<br />

who have suffered loss . . .<br />

The authorities are working<br />

in a focused manner and we<br />

will mobilize the necessary<br />

resources, as we have always<br />

done, not just for this<br />

relief period but for the period<br />

of recovery and reconstruction,”<br />

he said.<br />

“I want you to know that<br />

my prayers are with you.<br />

I’ve been praying for you,<br />

the people of St. Vincent and<br />

the Grenadines and I want<br />

you to know that I love you<br />

and I’m there with you and<br />

focused with you at this moment,”<br />

the Vincentian leader<br />

told residents.<br />

Dr. Gonsalves has<br />

been struck in Barbados in<br />

Tuesday as he tried to return<br />

home from meetings in<br />

the United States and Puerto<br />

Rico last week, according to<br />

iWitness News.<br />

Tropical Storm Matthew<br />

battered St. Vincent and the<br />

Grenadines with heavy rains<br />

and winds during the night.<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>30th</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>2016</strong><br />

Work resumes in Dominica after<br />

storm but PM urges caution<br />

ROSEAU, Dominica – Even as<br />

large portions of Dominica remained<br />

without power on Thursday after Tropical<br />

Storm Matthew passed, Prime<br />

Minister Roosevelt Skerrit announced<br />

that business and government agencies<br />

would resume operations as normal today.<br />

Schools, however, remain closed<br />

for the rest of the week to ensure the<br />

safety of the island’s children, he said.<br />

“We don’t want to have a situation<br />

where we have our children at school<br />

and the after effects of the rain manifests<br />

themselves and our students find<br />

themselves in difficulties,” Skerrit explained<br />

on the state-owned DBS Radio<br />

this morning.<br />

As for those heading to work, the<br />

Prime Minister urged them to exercise<br />

caution.<br />

“We have received a tremendous<br />

CASTRIES, St. Lucia<br />

– Thousands were without<br />

electricity in St. Lucia, rivers<br />

overflowed their banks,<br />

and several communities<br />

were flooded last night and<br />

into today.<br />

And Tropical Storm Matthew<br />

which passed through<br />

the Windward Islands<br />

Wednesday is to blame.<br />

A tropical storm warning<br />

that was issued late yesterday<br />

morning after the storm<br />

developed was lifted, and<br />

the all clear given.<br />

The George F.L. Charles<br />

Airport was scheduled to<br />

reopen at 8 a.m., while the<br />

Hewanorra International<br />

amount of rain and also wind. Therefore,<br />

we are asking for people to be<br />

cautious and careful as they move<br />

around doing their own business. Because<br />

of the level of saturation which<br />

the soil has, one can expect land slippages,<br />

erosions, landslides, mudslides<br />

and the like.”<br />

The tropical storm warning that had<br />

been in place for Dominica, along with<br />

five other <strong>Caribbean</strong> islands has been<br />

discontinued.<br />

But Skerrit noted that forecasters<br />

expected rain throughout the course of<br />

the day and the weather situation would<br />

therefore be monitored.<br />

Also speaking on radio, public relations<br />

officer of the Dominica Electricity<br />

Services Ltd (DOMLEC) Adina Bellot-Valentine<br />

confirmed that there was<br />

no power in the southern part of Dominica,<br />

or in parts of the north, west, and<br />

Flooding was reported all across St. Lucia.<br />

Airport was set to resume er, people still need to exercise<br />

caution. Persons should<br />

operations two hours later.<br />

However, residents have still try to remain home.<br />

been urged to be cautious. Small craft operators should<br />

“The threat from Matthew<br />

is diminished. Howev-<br />

Lucia Meteorological<br />

not go out today,” the St.<br />

Office<br />

The Roseau River after Tropical Storm Matthew<br />

east.<br />

“As the weather eases up or as it<br />

permits we will try to restore power as<br />

quickly as possible,” she said, noting<br />

that some high voltage lines and poles<br />

were down.<br />

Other damage reported as a result of<br />

the storm’s passage was flooding and<br />

landslides. (<strong>Caribbean</strong>360)<br />

St Lucia reports flooding, power outages as storm impacts<br />

advised.<br />

Prime Minister Allen<br />

Chastanet, who is overseas,<br />

also appealed to citizens on<br />

local radio to stay off the<br />

roads and allow the emergency<br />

services to do their<br />

jobs.<br />

Many bridges and roads<br />

were impassable because of<br />

flooding, as well as downed<br />

electricity poles and trees.<br />

Officials had indicated<br />

early in the day that power<br />

would be restored to most<br />

areas by the end of the day.<br />

There were also reports<br />

of landslides as well as water<br />

outages in some areas. (<strong>Caribbean</strong>360)


<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>30th</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>2016</strong> c a r i b b e a n t i m e s . a g 15<br />

Thursday’s Sudoku Solution<br />

S U D O K U<br />

CROSSWORD<br />

Across<br />

1. Makes a choice<br />

5. Greek vowel<br />

10. Unclosed<br />

14. Not messy<br />

15. Plane’s captain<br />

16. Colorless<br />

17. Narrative<br />

18. Hangar occupant<br />

19. Mound<br />

20. Swing back and forth<br />

22. Copier’s need<br />

23. Brother’s daughter<br />

24. West’s opposite<br />

25. Off kilter<br />

28. Branch of math<br />

31. Adult male<br />

32. Assaults<br />

36. Burglarize<br />

37. Bride’s vow (2 wds.)<br />

38. San Diego athlete<br />

39. Take advantage of<br />

40. Brief sleep<br />

41. Pretend to sing (2 wds.)<br />

43. Pose<br />

44. Brunch dishes<br />

46. Fire remains<br />

48. Grade<br />

49. Soup dipper<br />

52. Insensitive<br />

54. Fierceness<br />

58. Chest bones<br />

59. Roof overhangs<br />

60. Saturate<br />

61. Norway’s capital<br />

62. Move furtively<br />

63. Green Gables girl<br />

64. Mediocre grades<br />

65. Plant beginnings<br />

66. Moistens<br />

Down<br />

1. Atop<br />

2. Pod dwellers<br />

3. Powder mineral<br />

4. Beer mugs<br />

5. Granny Smith, e.g.<br />

6. Fragrant shrub<br />

7. License ____<br />

8. Sharpen<br />

9. Had a bite<br />

10. Be against<br />

11. Artist’s need<br />

12. Model ____ Macpherson<br />

13. Poetic contraction<br />

21. ____ Marie Presley<br />

22. Labels<br />

24. Comic ____ DeGeneres<br />

25. Kind of acid<br />

26. Woman’s title<br />

27. Unsuitable for surgery<br />

28. Well-ventilated<br />

29. ____ O’Donnell of TV<br />

30. Helps a crook<br />

33. Grudge<br />

34. Plant fluids<br />

35. Commercials<br />

41. Permits<br />

42. Serene<br />

45. Cowboy’s ropes<br />

47. Playground feature<br />

49. River embankment<br />

50. Leading<br />

51. Students’ tables<br />

52. Gator’s relative<br />

53. ____ and shine!<br />

54. Barn ornament<br />

55. Not any<br />

56. Is unable<br />

57. Squeaks by<br />

59. Double curve


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

<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>30th</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>2016</strong><br />

Today’s weather forecast<br />

Antigua and Barbuda<br />

Cloudy with showers.<br />

High - 84ºF<br />

Low - 77ºF<br />

Wind: East 13 mph<br />

Sunrise 5.57 am; Sunset 5.56 pm<br />

Thursday’s Crossword Solution<br />

HOROSCOPE<br />

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

Thinking too much will only<br />

complicate matters unnecessarily.<br />

This is one of those<br />

times when your energy is<br />

best spent doing, creating, acting<br />

and reacting.<br />

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

With your combination of expertise,<br />

grit and passion, you<br />

have all the internal resources<br />

necessary to make a creative<br />

project fly. As for the external<br />

resources — well, that’s what<br />

you’ll work on getting today.<br />

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-<br />

Dec. 21). There’s a difference<br />

between projecting yourself<br />

into a bright future and just<br />

wishing to be somewhere else,<br />

thereby wasting the moment<br />

you’re in. It’s a day to give<br />

your full attention to the task<br />

at hand.<br />

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

19). To an outsider, this is a<br />

very exciting thing you’re<br />

doing today. Even better is<br />

how you’re doing it — with<br />

the smooth style of one who’s<br />

done it a million times, which<br />

you practically have.<br />

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

18). Often being the bigger<br />

person is about being the<br />

smaller person. Extreme greatness,<br />

in fact, is often achieved<br />

best by figuring out how to set<br />

others up to shine and then<br />

getting out of the way, so as<br />

not to overshadow.<br />

PISCES (Feb. 19-March<br />

20). To endure and prevail is<br />

to know great fortune. Therefore,<br />

any little bit of weirdness<br />

or challenge or discomfort<br />

that comes your way could be<br />

your conduit to stellar luck.<br />

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

Changes at work are coming:<br />

This could be the luckiest turn<br />

of events that’s happened in<br />

months. To prepare yourself,<br />

bone up on your skills and<br />

make sure your client base is<br />

ample.<br />

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

Exaggerate, minimize, glorify<br />

or vilify — you’ll play with<br />

different ways to understand<br />

what happened to you. There’s<br />

more than one way that will<br />

ring true, fit and make sense,<br />

so don’t be afraid to try different<br />

directions.<br />

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

What’s making you anxious?<br />

What do you not want to face?<br />

It’s time to deal with it. If it<br />

were the only thing you did in<br />

this day, you would be most<br />

supremely satisfied at day’s<br />

end.<br />

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

Some of the stressors can’t<br />

be eliminated yet, but you<br />

can combat fatigue by doing<br />

something every day that<br />

brings you joy. It’s funny that<br />

you still see this as a selfish<br />

move when it’s the move that<br />

will help you have more to<br />

give.<br />

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

there are frustrating<br />

aspects to living where you<br />

do, but when you experience<br />

the kindness of people in your<br />

community, it makes you happy<br />

to be a part of it.<br />

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

As you teach, you learn. While<br />

you’re showing someone how<br />

to accomplish a task you will<br />

understand it in a different<br />

way, and you’ll see how it can<br />

be done better, too.


<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>30th</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>2016</strong> c a r i b b e a n t i m e s . a g 17<br />

Join the members of All Saints Anglican Church at its<br />

18thAnnual Food Fair on Saturday, 1st October, <strong>2016</strong> from<br />

1:00 pm until 9:00 pm at its rectory grounds at Matthews<br />

Road, All Saints. There will be a variety of dishes, dinners,<br />

cold treats, snacks, sweets, and beverages as well as outdoor<br />

activities and entertainment. Come out with your family and<br />

friends and experience an enjoyable afternoon of family,<br />

food, fun, and fellowship with us. Tickets: $20.<br />

The National Public Library has extended its opening hours<br />

to the general public as of Monday,3rd October, <strong>2016</strong>. The<br />

Library will now be open 9:00 am - 7:00 pm Mondays -<br />

Thursdays and 9:00 am - 5:30 pm on <strong>Friday</strong>s.The Library is<br />

also looking for volunteers. Interested persons may contact<br />

Carolyn Spencer at 5624503.<br />

VACANCIES REGISTERED AT OSEC<br />

* Cook/Chef - Restaurant<br />

• Have minimum 3 years experience<br />

• Strong culinary skills<br />

• Strong interpersonal and problem solving abilities<br />

• Highly responsible & reliable<br />

• Ability to work cohesively as part of a team<br />

• Menu creation & analysis<br />

• Costing and supervisory skills preferred<br />

• Experience working in a fast-pace restaurant environment<br />

* Carpenter - Hotel<br />

• Have minimum 3 year's experience<br />

• Hard working<br />

• Highly responsible & reliable<br />

* Sales Representative - Auto<br />

• Must have driver’s license<br />

• 2-3 years experience in Sales<br />

* Deputy Housekeeper –Hotel<br />

• Report to the Executive Housekeeper & Assistant Hotel<br />

Manager and responsible for a team of Line Staff<br />

• Have minimum 3 years Housekeeping Leadership experience<br />

• Front Office knowledge preferred<br />

• Computer literate in Microsoft Window applications preferred<br />

• Highly responsible & reliable<br />

• Ability to focus attention on guest needs, and courteous<br />

at all times<br />

• Any overseas experience in USA; Europe or the <strong>Caribbean</strong><br />

at Luxury Hotels of comparable standards will be an asset<br />

• Experience working in a hotel/resort environment<br />

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

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

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

on registration requirements.<br />

Our centre is located on Old Parham Road in the Ryan’s<br />

Building, next to Antigua Motors. OSEC telephone numbers<br />

are 562-8533/34/35.<br />

Deadline for applying is Tuesday 4rd October, <strong>2016</strong><br />

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

Association are notified of the monthly general meeting on<br />

Saturday 1 October at 3 pm, followed by the monthly social.<br />

Please bring a suitable dish or notify the executive of any<br />

apologies by calling 723-3452, 720-0058 or 721-1970.


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

<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>30th</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>2016</strong><br />

Zimbabwe to host Sri Lanka for<br />

Tests, West Indies for tri-series<br />

Zimbabwe Cricket has<br />

announced that they will<br />

host Sri Lanka for two<br />

Tests followed by a one-day<br />

tri-series that will also involve<br />

West Indies.<br />

The two Tests will be<br />

played in Harare, with the<br />

first one from October 29<br />

and the second from November<br />

6.<br />

The tri-series will begin<br />

from November 14 with<br />

the first match between the<br />

hosts and Sri Lanka at the<br />

Harare Sports Club.<br />

The three teams will play<br />

each other twice, making it<br />

a total of six round-robin<br />

matches, before the final on<br />

November 27. The last four<br />

ODIs and the final will all<br />

be played in Bulawayo.<br />

Sri Lanka’s tour of<br />

Zimbabwe was originally<br />

scheduled in the FTP with<br />

two Tests, three ODIs and a<br />

T20I.<br />

Later, there were chances<br />

of the tour being replaced<br />

by the tri-series with West<br />

Indies, as the Tests were not<br />

being considered as financially<br />

viable, but now the<br />

Tests and tri-series both will<br />

take place. Had that happened,<br />

Zimbabwe would<br />

have gone without playing a<br />

Test for 11 months.<br />

There were chances of<br />

the Tests being scrapped because<br />

of Zimbabwe Cricket’s<br />

growing debt and the<br />

economic situation of the<br />

country as a whole.<br />

Recently, the Harare-based<br />

players had refused<br />

to train in protest over<br />

unpaid match fees, which<br />

dated back to July last year.<br />

The protests ended after<br />

being given an assurance<br />

by the Zimbabwe Cricket<br />

chairman Wildfred Mukondiwa.<br />

Zimbabwe and Sri Lanka<br />

last played a Test in a<br />

two-match series in 2004.<br />

They have played 15<br />

Tests against each other<br />

overall, with Sri Lanka<br />

winning 10 of them and<br />

five ending in draws. (ES-<br />

PNcricinfo)<br />

L&S Superette fall to Digicel<br />

in Cool & Smooth league<br />

By Carlena Knight<br />

L & S Superette suffered their second straight defeat in<br />

the Cool & Smooth Digicel Business Basketball league on<br />

Wednesday night at the JSC Sports complex losing to Digicel,<br />

58-45.<br />

Morlon ‘Little’ Davis had 16 points while teammate,<br />

Teyon Lake chipped in with 10 points for the losers.<br />

Digicel’s Jamal ‘Buffy’ Williams had 15 points with Kareem<br />

Blair contributing 13.<br />

This win now gives Digicel a 3-0 record.<br />

In the second match of the night, Antigua Barbuda Transport<br />

Board Authority bounced back from their upsetting loss<br />

to the defending champs, Kennedy’s, by defeating Board of<br />

Education, 67-53.<br />

Kareem ‘Macky’ Edwards led his team to victory with<br />

25 points.<br />

Erol Henry scored 23 points for Board of Education. He<br />

as assisted by Elvin Anthony with 10 points.<br />

Action will continue on Saturday night with four games.<br />

At 6:30, L & S Superette will face Eye Mobile Vision<br />

Care, Board of Education will battle Sunrise Ballers at 7:30,<br />

8:30, Antigua Barbuda Transport Board Authority will play<br />

APUA Head Office and at 9:30, Sandals will face off versus<br />

Kennedy’s.<br />

All games will be played at the JSC Sports complex.


<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>30th</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>2016</strong> c a r i b b e a n t i m e s . a g 19<br />

Windies hoping to turn corner<br />

SHARJAH, United Arab Emirates –<br />

On the heels of an embarrassing whitewash<br />

in the preceding Twenty20 series,<br />

West Indies’ three-match One-Day International<br />

series against Pakistan will<br />

take on new value when it bowls off<br />

here <strong>Friday</strong>.<br />

The reigning T20 World champions<br />

showed little of their usual swagger as<br />

they suffered heavy defeats in every<br />

game and with the tour quickly going<br />

horribly wrong, it will be left to the ODI<br />

side to arrest the slide, especially with<br />

the Test series following.<br />

West Indies’ batting looked a shadow<br />

of the fearsome machine it has become<br />

in recent years as it stumbled and stuttered<br />

on slow pitches in Dubai and Abu<br />

Dhabi, and against both pace and spin.<br />

However, ODI captain Jason Holder<br />

said he expected a different approach<br />

from his side in the 50-overs format, as<br />

batsmen would have the benefit of time<br />

on their side to explore the Pakistan attack.<br />

“You have more time. It’s 300 balls<br />

in one-day cricket whereas in T20s there<br />

are less balls,” he told reporters here<br />

Thursday.<br />

“It’s obviously an opportunity for<br />

our guys to have a longer look. In terms<br />

of our opening batsmen they can have<br />

a longer look and not have to run the<br />

game down.<br />

“I just think it’s important that we lay<br />

that foundation and as we always speak<br />

about in the dressing room, it’s always<br />

important for one of our top four batsmen<br />

to bat as deep as possible and get<br />

a big score.<br />

“I think once we do that, more often<br />

than not we get a very, very good total<br />

and that’s just the way we go about planning<br />

our cricket.”<br />

Holder will also be confident that the<br />

West Indies fortunes can turn around<br />

with the several changes made to the<br />

ODI side.<br />

He welcomes the experienced quartet<br />

of wicketkeeper/batsman Denesh<br />

Ramdin, left-hander Darren Bravo,<br />

left-arm spinner Sulieman Benn and<br />

Test vice-captain, Kraigg Brathwaite –<br />

though the latter is yet to play an ODI.<br />

Off-spinner Ashley Nurse, another<br />

seasoned campaigner in domestic cricket,<br />

has also joined the squad along with<br />

talented 19-year-old fast bowler Alzarri<br />

Joseph and experienced left-hander Jonathan<br />

Carter.<br />

The Windies, with the same core of<br />

players, were good enough to reach the<br />

final of the Tri-Nations Series involving<br />

Australia and South Africa back in June<br />

in the <strong>Caribbean</strong>.<br />

And Holder believes they can use<br />

that momentum to get the better of Pakistan<br />

and also improve their status in<br />

the international rankings, with qualification<br />

for the 2019 World Cup also in<br />

mind.<br />

“Obviously with the points system<br />

and the way the ICC has structured<br />

the cricket going forward, we have to<br />

take each game as a very, very serious<br />

game,” Holder pointed out.<br />

“Every game is points-related obviously<br />

and the points are very close [with<br />

Pakistan’s] at this present time. We can<br />

only control what we can control and<br />

that’s us playing good cricket so we just<br />

want to start this series.<br />

“We had a very good series last series<br />

in the Tri-Nations Series and it’s<br />

just important that we continue on from<br />

there, keep the momentum going into<br />

that one.”<br />

The last time the two teams met in<br />

an ODI, West Indies inflicted a heavy<br />

defeat on the Asian side, with a 150-run<br />

victory during last year’s Cricket World<br />

Cup.<br />

However, West Indies have not beaten<br />

Pakistan in a bilateral series in 24<br />

years, a disappointing trend which the<br />

<strong>Caribbean</strong> side will be hoping to end.<br />

Holder said West Indies were looking<br />

at different aspects of their game –<br />

especially the death stages of the innings<br />

– during planning sessions and were focussed<br />

now on executing properly.<br />

“We’ve obviously mentioned the<br />

death overs in our meetings. If it is one<br />

area we need to pay special attention to<br />

is obviously the death,” Holder noted.<br />

“Most teams around the world structure<br />

their plans around the first few<br />

overs and also pay special attention to<br />

the death overs. Most games are won<br />

and lost there and I just think it is very,<br />

very important that we sit down and<br />

plan properly.<br />

“I think most of the bowlers have a<br />

general plan of what they are looking<br />

to do and it’s just important for me and<br />

them to be on the same page. I think<br />

once we have good communication in<br />

terms of bowlers and the captain, then<br />

it make life a bit easier, and if you have<br />

options – in terms of a Plan A and then<br />

a Plan B – it also makes life a lot easier<br />

going into pressure situations.”<br />

The game bowls off at 3 pm (7 am<br />

Eastern <strong>Caribbean</strong> time). (CMC)<br />

SQUADS:<br />

PAKISTAN – Azhar Ali (captain),<br />

Sharjeel Khan, Babar Azam, Asad<br />

Shafiq, Shoaib Malik, Sarfraz Ahmed<br />

(wk), Umar Akmal, Mohammad Rizwan,<br />

Mohammad Nawaz, Imad Wasim,<br />

Yasir Shah, Rahat Ali, Mohammad<br />

Amir, Wahab Riaz, Hasan Ali, Sohail<br />

Khan.<br />

WEST INDIES – Jason Holder<br />

(captain), Sulieman Benn, Carlos<br />

Brathwaite, Kraigg Brathwaite, Darren<br />

Bravo, Jonathan Carter, Johnson<br />

Charles, Shannon Gabriel, Alzarri Joseph,<br />

Evin Lewis, Sunil Narine, Ashley<br />

Nurse, Kieron Pollard, Denesh Ramdin,<br />

Marlon Samuels.


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

<strong>Friday</strong> <strong>30th</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>2016</strong><br />

Sailing Academy students gain<br />

professional qualifications<br />

The National Sailing Academy is<br />

pleased to announce that six of its students,<br />

all Antiguan, aged 16 – 18 years,<br />

have now achieved their Royal Yachting<br />

Association qualifications as certified<br />

dinghy and keelboat sailing instructors.<br />

The course, which took place this<br />

month over a period of 10 days, was<br />

delivered by two RYA Coach/Assessors<br />

from the U.K. The first day of sailing assessment<br />

required the students to demonstrate<br />

that they had sufficient sailing<br />

skills to enable them to teach others and<br />

the remainder of the time was ‘teaching<br />

them to teach’<br />

The RYA Sailing Instructor Certificate<br />

gives them the credentials to gain<br />

employment anywhere in the world that<br />

teaches dinghy/keelboat sailing.<br />

The Academy regards this as the first<br />

rung on the ladder of qualifications that<br />

we would like them to obtain in their<br />

chosen fields of sailing/yachting – thus<br />

underlining the fact that sailing is the<br />

only sport in Antigua that can lead to well<br />

paid employment for significant numbers<br />

of our young people.<br />

The candidates were:<br />

Jules Mitchell - Age 17 – graduated<br />

St Joseph’s Academy 2015. Having<br />

completed his STCW10 and now his<br />

RYA Sailing Instructor course, he will be<br />

working at the National Sailing Academy<br />

in English Harbour where he will teach<br />

young sailors how to race dinghies and<br />

also work with disabled children and<br />

adults on the Sailability programme.<br />

His ambition is to be a racing sailor and<br />

to represent Antigua & Barbuda at the<br />

Olympics.<br />

Tyrese Loctar - Age 16 – graduated<br />

from St. Mary’s High School <strong>2016</strong>. He<br />

is already working as an apprentice Marine<br />

Engineer and wishes to pursue this<br />

as a career with the aim of becoming an<br />

engineer on a megayacht. His excellent<br />

proven sailing skills will add to his credentials<br />

when he starts to apply for employment<br />

in this field. He will continue<br />

sailing as a hobby and enjoys sailing both<br />

dinghies and yachts.<br />

Joshua Daniels – Age 17 – graduated<br />

from All Saints Secondary School in<br />

2015 and is now attending the Institute of<br />

Technology for further studies. He started<br />

sailing in 2014 at the Academy and<br />

intends to gain further qualifications with<br />

the ambition of eventually becoming a<br />

yacht captain. He will be spending time<br />

at the Sailing Academy, weekends and<br />

holidays, helping to teach young sailors.<br />

Maliek Patterson – Age 18 – graduated<br />

from All Saints Secondary School in<br />

2015 and is now entering his second year<br />

at State College. He also started sailing<br />

in 2014 and enjoys both recreational and<br />

competitive sailing. He would like to further<br />

his sailing career in dinghies by becoming<br />

a Senior Dinghy Sailing Instructor,<br />

but would additionally like to pursue<br />

the opportunity of Marine Engineering.<br />

He will also be helping part-time at the<br />

Academy teaching young sailors.<br />

Kamar James – Age 18 – graduated<br />

All Saints Secondary School 2015 and<br />

also now entering his second year at State<br />

College. He started sailing with Joshua<br />

and Maliek and also wishes to train<br />

further with the ambition of becoming a<br />

Senior Instructor. He is also interested in<br />

training on Yachts and eventually becoming<br />

a yacht captain.<br />

Jahdean Jeffers – Age 17 – graduated<br />

All Saints Secondary School <strong>2016</strong>. He<br />

started sailing at the Academy in 2014<br />

and now plans to enter further education<br />

in the field of culinary arts whilst also<br />

pursuing his sailing career to gain additional<br />

sailing/yachting qualifications.

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