President General of the Oilfield Workers’ Trade Union Ancel Roget has given the assurance that their acquisition of the former Petrotrin refinery will benefit every single citizen in T&T. Receiving the news of their success during a walkabout in Point Fortin in support of two Movement for Social Justice (MSJ) local government candidates yesterday afternoon, Roget and union members broke out in celebration, chanting to union songs. Finance Minister Colm Imbert announced in Parliament that OWTU-owned Patrotic Energies and Technologies Services Ltd, won the bid for the refinery with an offer of US$700 million. Some 70 bids were initially made for the refinery’s acquisition. It is the first time in the history of T&T that a union has taken control of a state enterprise, one that was once considered a major revenue earner. Speaking with the media at Newlands, Mahaica, shortly after receiving the news, Roget said, “While everybody was preparing for the celebration of Christmas last year, on December 17 the OWTU would have been busy with the process of incorporating a company for the acquisition of the refinery and that company is the Patriotic Energy and Technologies Services Ltd.” He said this was something the union and the people deserved. “I also want to say that the acquisition of the refinery for the OWTU on our part is not just for the Petrotrin workers, it’s for the Petrotrin workers that is a fact. It is not just for the OWTU members, it is for the OWTU members that is also a fact, but it is for and behalf all of the people of T&T. We did this on the focus of the country, knowing full well that if that refinery had gotten into any other hands it would not have benefited T&T. We would have struggled, we would have prayed, we would have fasted and at the end of the day the Almighty God would have showered blessings on us not just us but on the people of T&T,” he said. He added: “The people T&T certainly deserve a lot more and we are going to ensure that our acquisition of those assets do not go in vain. It will go for every single citizen that walks this land.” Thanking all well wishers and members who supported the union in every step of the journey, he said, “The acquisition of those assets is not a gift from the Government. We did not get any gratis or nobody did us any favour. We deserve it, the people deserve it.” Roget suggested that not all the workers who were fired will be rehired. “All of the workers who were in support of the union for the acquisition of those assets, those workers will not be disappointed,” he said. Roget said their first order of business will be a national prayer service to give thanks to God. The company, he said, will also have to receive its formal document from the Government stating that they had acquired the refinery. “Once that occurs we will be able to take it from there,” he said. In due time, he said the board members of Patriotic Energy and Technologies Services Ltd will be disclosed. Last year Roget, in an interview with Guardian Media, indicated that a foreign investor was interested in partnering with OWTU in a joint venture lease of the refinery. The Government claimed the state oil company was losing money and Petrotrin was shut down on November 30. Thousands of workers were terminated. The assets were divided into four companies, Trinidad Petroleum Holdings Ltd, Heritage Petroleum Company, Paria Fuel Trading Company and Guaracara Refinery Ltd. Source: Guardian, Sept. 24, 2019.
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Irresponsible residents are contributing to flooding in the country by dumping garbage in the waterways.
Five Government ministers yesterday expressed their disappointment over what could be described as the trashy behaviour of some Trinbagonians whose actions cause many to suffer. National Security Minister Stuart Young said the breaches of the riverbanks where people steal the materials are under investigation and once there is evidence the police will go after these inconsiderate people. Young held a news conference yesterday at the National Security Ministry, Port of Spain, to update the media on the aftermath of Tropical Storm Karen. He was accompanied by Local Government Minister Kazim Hosein, Public Utilities Minister Robert Le Hunte, Works Minister Rohan Sinanan and Agriculture Minister Clarence Rambharat. Source: Trinidad Express, Sept 23, 2019 UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres said the world is in a climate crisis and steps must be taken by all world leaders including those in the Caribbean to mitigate the effects of global warming and climate change.
Guterres, spoke at a media conference yesterday, at the office of Prime Minister's Dr Hubert Minnis in The Bahamas after arriving for a two day visit on the island. He first met with the Bahamian Prime Minister to discuss the devastating impact of Hurricane Dorian that assaulted The Grand Bahama Islands and the Abaco islands almost two weeks ago. "The financial cost of the damage caused by Dorian is not clear, but it will be in the billions of dollars.The Bahamas cannot be expected to foot this bill alone.These new large scale climate-related disasters demand a new multilateral response," Guterres said. Sending a strong message to World and Caribbean leaders Guterres said, "Climate financing is on element.We must reach the target of $100billion dollars per year from public and private sources, for mitigation and adaptation in the developing world, as rich countries have been promising for nearly a decade." Making reference to the Bahamas, he said, "In cases like yours I strongly support proposals to convert debt into investment in resilience. Concessional financing must be made available to highly-indebted middle-income countries that are vulnerable to extreme weather events. But most importantly, the entire international community must address the climate crisis through raising ambition and action to implement the Paris Agreement." Guterres said this was extremely important as he painted a grim picture over the next ten years, if climate change was not taken seriously. "We are in a battle for our lives.But it is a battle we can and must win." The UN Secretary General said his heart went out to the people of The Bahamas and pledged relief and other assistance. Prime Minister Minnis said they did all they could have from the very first day the hurricane hit the islands. He said that despite the fact that they were facing a major obstacle trying to find accommodation for several thousands he was certain that over a period of time the problem would be solved. PM Minnis said the Bahamas was still economically sound and its "major financial hub of Nassau was unaffected an still open for business." Source: The Guardian, September 14, 2019 Greedy butchers have been identified by Agriculture Minister Clarence Rambharat as being a key reason for the continuing trade of illegal livestock and wild meat from Venezuela. The T&T Coast Guard intercepted a vessel just south of Icacos with two male Venezuelan nationals on board, 42 goats, 1 sheep and 12 bottles of alcohol on Sunday night.
In a Facebook post, Rambharat commended the law enforcement officers as well as the ministry’s staff saying vets and other animal health personnel were involved in the action which included the eventual destruction of the animals due to public and animal health concerns. “Venezuela has been red-flagged as a potential source of Foot and Mouth disease, a major threat to livestock,” Rambharat stated.He said over the past few years, there has been an upsurge in the illegal entry of livestock and wild meat from Venezuela. “Despite the best efforts to stop the trade, it is being encouraged by greedy butchers looking for a cheap source of meat.”He said the livestock which are brought in illegally usually show signs of disease.“We have warned consumers about buying from vendors who may be purchasing from unscrupulous butchers or who may themselves be buying or importing animals illegally.” Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) is a highly contagious virus disease and is one of the most serious livestock diseases. It affects cloven-hoofed animals (those with divided hoofs), including cattle, buffalo, camels, sheep, goats, deer and pigs.Symptoms include fever, blisters in the mouth and on feet, drop in milk production, weight loss, and loss of appetite, quivering lips and frothing of mouth. Source: Newsday TT, September 2019. HAVING lived through years of darkness because of cataracts, two 70-year-old grandmothers could not stop smiling and offering thanks after chosen for surgery by a medical team on the USNS Comfort, a US Navy hospital ship. The ship is anchored near the Brighton Port at La Brea. Today a team of doctors will begin to prepare grandmother of five Jemina George of Biche. George smiled as she waited to the board the vessel. “To me, this is like a dream come true. I am so happy to be chosen and I am excited about being able to see.” George told Newsday. She said she had given up hope of having her vision restored. “I think what these people are doing is so nice, and may God continue to bless them. They have made me a happy woman. This is one of the best gifts I have ever received.” Point Fortin grandmother Shirley Best felt the same. When Newsday boarded the ship, Best was being taken to the surgical area for her second operation. “I feel great. I had a cataract removed from my right eye here and now I am going to remove the cataract from my left eye.” Best said she was grateful to the doctors and happy to be selected. “I can’t wait to return home to see my children and begin to see properly,” she said. Media personnel were given a tour of the hospital ship and invited into the operating theatre to witness Best's second cataract operation. The ship's tour captain Charles Cather said in 1987 the ship, a former oil tanker, was converted into a hospital for disaster relief and humanitarian work. He said the crew was happy to assist citizens and migrants. Audrianna Chastain, medical assistant chats with Point Fortin resident Shirley Best who had two Cataract surgeries done onboard the USNS Comfort medical ship, docked off the port of Brighton, La Brea. Photo by Lincoln Holder “We are here to help when health care systems start to get overrun with higher volumes of patients than expected. We are happy to be here.”
Trinidad-born US Navy sailor Mitchell Julien said it has been nine months since he joined the navy and he has already been to several countries. But even though the visit was brief he was excited to be in TT to visit his family. The 20-year-old Julien, from Arima, encouraged other young men to remain positive despite any challenges they may face. “Work hard and do what you have to do. Stay focused and you can make it.” The Comfort's medical team was expected to treat about 100 patients a day for the next five days. The international medical professionals on board are expected to provide a wide range of surgery, dental screening and treatment, optometry screening and eyewear distribution, among other services. The ship is anchored three miles off the port and the mission also has medical clinics on land at different venues, including the National Energy Skills Centre at La Brea and Funsplash at Debe. Source: Newsday, Sept. 6, 2019 Four million people have fled Venezuela, as the country continues to face economic and political crisis.
40,000 have gone to the small Caribbean islands of Trinidad and Tobago, just seven miles off the coast. But life isn’t easy for those who arrive, and some locals have made it clear they’re not welcome. The BBC’s Ashley John-Baptiste went to find out more. In 2018 - more than 35,000 people were forced to flee their homes every day - that's one every two seconds. This story is part of a BBC News series, called "The Displaced" - a selection of stories exploring the human impact of this movement, and how it is changing our world. Check back next week, Monday 23rd September, for our next episode in Uganda #TheDisplaced If you have been affected by these issues in Trinidad or anywhere else in the world and would like to speak to the BBC, email haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk With the ‘bacchanal’ and whimsical beauty of carnival costumes showcased at the West Indian Day Parade celebrations still poignant on the streets in Brooklyn, Michelene Auguste, the Trinidadian model and owner of Dem Vintage, staged a unique sidewalk runway show Tuesday evening just parallel to the bridge in Chinatown. Michelene said, “A lot of my friends are Caribbean, so they were at all the parties,” who skipped the annual Labor Day festivities to focus on bringing Dem’s runway ambitions to life. “They were all asking me, ‘Are you coming out?’” Various designers from Trinidad & Tobago were invited for the show. Favourite looks from the event, which was held guerilla-style on the sidewalk environment included a billowing, black feathered evening dressing from Claudia Pegus, Anya Ayoung-Chee’s wax-print pants and crop tops, and handmade jewelry from Coco Vintage Jewelry, all of which was mixed and matched with clutch vintage finds from the shop—think Roberto Cavalli animal-print denim from the ’90s and ’80s kitten heels. “At first when we were styling the show, we thought that every look was doing a little too much,” Auguste said laughing. “But that’s how I grew up! I wanted to stay true to my culture and show a mix of the NYC-downtown look, and that you can mix these prints in so many ways.” Part of a limited-edition capsule of her own, the hand-painted workwear pants and silk dresses were created with the help of Auguste’s partner, artist Jordan Sullivan. Beaming with satisfaction from the curb-side front row was Gabrielle Elizabeth Roth, Auguste’s mother who flew in from Trinidad to support her daughter. “From a young child, she showed an interest in fashion,” Roth said. “She was always dressing in my clothes and walking in my shoes.” The show’s soundtrack, utilised the island sound of the steelpan musician, Kareem Thompson, who frequently pops up at Dem for sidewalk sets. The ‘vibes’ were proudly evident, with models dancing along the impromptu runway. Friends and family were grooving to the rhythms, spilling out onto the streets as they we served delicious coconut rum cocktails. The entire scene felt closer to a Trinidadian ‘lime’ (local parlance for a hanging out/gathering) than your traditional fashion soirée, where editors and buyers typically rush on to the next event on their jam-packed agendas. With its relaxed pace and convivial energy, Dem injected a spectacular island breeziness within the idea of the show. Source: IZZS September 2019 AS TOLD TO BC PIRES
My name is Gary Griffith and I am a St Mary’s/Sandhurst old boy and I’m using all the traits I acquired at those two institutions to try to make TT a better country. I spent most of my life as an only child in the very boring Valsayn Park, but I (often) ran away to my grandmother’s massive family in Diego Martin to enjoy things that, unfortunately, many people don’t experience in Trinidad now. Doors were left open and children could walk free.You could go up the hill, pick mangoes, climb over the mountain, come back in the afternoon. Boat-racing in the canal. Now, young persons, inclusive of my son, have to spend their time behind locked doors and in front of some screen. I really didn’t need to become commissioner of police. Both my parents died back-to-back about three months before I became (the United National Congress) national security minister. And they both did pretty well, so I inherited quite a bit. They were divorced for 25-odd years so it looks like they couldn’t live with each other but, apparently, couldn’t live without each other either. My father was an old QRC boy and a true Trini. He loved everyone and everybody loved him. My mother was rigid, meticulous, stringent.I take character traits from both. One day, round the Savannah – I was about 14 – I asked a sno-cone man if he had a valid food badge. I never get cussed so in my life! I realised that day I mustn’t use all the traits of my parents! This country is full of negativity. In England, if Newcastle is being demoted from the Premiership, there will be 80,000 people in the stands for their last game. In TT, as soon as we feel we may not qualify, nobody turns up. That is how we are. Everyone who’s tried to do something for this country – the Brian Laras, the Stern Johns, the Russel Latapys, the Dwight Yorkes, Minshall, Rudder – they’re recognised as role models internationally – but they’re ridiculed at home. The national U-15 football team – little boys just trying to play football – and the country tried to destroy and undermine them. You can criticise it but you must stand firm with your country. Who has more problems now than the United States or the United Kingdom? But how many of them attack their own country? In Africa, all over the world – but, in this country, we attack our own. You may not have voted for a prime minister but he or she still represents YOU! The more you ridicule the prime minister, the more you undermine your own country! I’ve noticed that the people who know very little about any topic are the ones who speak the most. I want to tell people: have faith! Believe! Trust! When it comes to the main problem, crime, people feel the easiest thing to do is to blame the politicians, blame the police. But when you do that, you’re attacking your own. We are not the enemy. Trying to demonise us is not helping. Maybe it’s my military training but I work towards a chain of command of my God, my country and the citizens. If BC Pires tells me that people say I like to pose with guns for pictures, I ask, “Who wants death threats?” I don’t need to advertise. If people say, “Gary Griffith loves the camera,” it shows (their own) ignorance. I am just doing what is required. I see individuals who do that as hypocritical. I don’t go to the media, the media comes to me. So, because of me being accessible, you try to condemn me for it? I have stepped on many toes. There have been 27 death threats on me and my family from criminal elements in my first year as police commissioner. Before me, there wasn’t any death threat on any commissioner probably for years. So it means I’m doing something right. I’ll be turning the screws even harder. So I expect twice as many next year. In total contrast to what people may think, I have the world of respect for (businessman and social activist)] Kirk Waithe, who has attacked me for (what he apparently worries might be the militarisation of the police force). I think he has the interests of the country at heart and is just trying to make sure that checks and balances are in place. Kirk Waithe could be an asset towards my intention to clean up this country. My Sandhurst comrade Raffique Shah has attacked me. But at least I’m using my military training to try to help the country, not to overthrow it. The camouflage matter was blown totally out of proportion. Another unit used camouflage for 22 years. I’m not saying that makes it right, but there was a precedent. One point three million people did not see it as an issue. The five persons who did had access to the media and continued to pump it. In hindsight, if it hurt those five people so much – and one of those people is BC Pires – I could have held it back for a month. I have no problem with people who criticise me in a classy manner. But social media has provided (People’s National Movement) red and (UNC) yellow sycophants with an avenue. People try to call me a puppet – but this puppet stood firm against (the) government (in which he was a Cabinet minister) against (the programme associated with alleged corruption) Life Sport. That probably caused him to get fired. This puppet said state contracts shouldn’t be given to gangs. This puppet was bold enough to clear (controversial parliamentary revelations by now Prime Minister Keith Rowley) E-mailgate and (controversial accusations against then Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar) Plant-like-substance-gate. So who am I a puppet to? Well, I am a puppet – but to my God. People want change, they want the country to become better – but it mustn’t affect them personally. Don’t come and tell me I can’t drive intoxicated. Why you picking on us? Is because we are the One Per Cent! Why you only arresting us? Is because we are the little black boys! Go after everybody else but don’t harass me, my people, my race, my community. Gangs aren’t even involved in robberies much any more, because they’re getting easy money from the State. If you have two pothounds – and I refer to gang members as pothounds – in fact, I take that back: pothounds are very nice animals – if you give two pothounds two plates of food, they’re good. But if you take away one plate of food, they start attacking one another in the cage! So be it! The majority – almost 90 per cent – of our homicides involve people engaged in questionable activity. As much as the lady in the towel cries, “He was a good boy, police too wicked!” I called gang leaders, “cockroaches” and people were upset, so I wish to apologise: gang leaders are not cockroaches. Because cockroaches will get into your food, but they do not deliberately try to harm you. A gang leader is worse than a cockroach. So I wish to apologise…to the cockroaches! I might lose some fans with this statement, but I have NEVER eaten doubles in my life. One day I’ll try to understand why 20 people would stand up in front a wooden box on Sunday morning with curried channa running down their mouth because they just have to eat two more. I just don’t get it. A Trini is a citizen of the greatest country in the world. Simple as that. What TT means to me is this: I plan to live for my country. But I am prepared to die for it.[PHOTOs BY MARK LYNDERSAY] Source: Newsday TT, August 26, 2019 The 79-year-old star tells Helen Brown why she’s had enough of victim blaming at Carnival, about not smoking with her friend Bob Marley and why ‘that Donald Trump does not like nobody, not even himself’ Six months before the #MeToo movement went viral in October 2017, women across the Caribbean were united by a feminist anthem celebrating their right to party without being manhandled. During the annual carnivals in Trinidad and Tobago, women danced through the streets in bikinis, singing Calypso Rose’s “Leave Me Alone”: “Boy don’t touch me!/ I there in the party/ Enjoying my body/ With my friends I am happy/ So leave me alone!”
Their act was political. Local activists said that sexual assaults on women had been tolerated as part of the carnival scene for too long. The previous year Japanese musician Asami Nagakiya was strangled at the Port of Spain carnival. When her bikini-clad body was found in a park the following day, mayor Raymond Tim Kee claimed her clothing had led to her (still unsolved) murder. “The woman has the responsibility to ensure that [she is] not abused.” he told the press. “It’s a matter of, if she was still in her costume – I think that’s what I heard – let your imagination roll.” Seventy-nine-year old Calypso Rose – delighted to be playing at the Womad festival this week – has no patience with such victim blaming. “Carnival is to be loose! To be free! We have to let everybody know that women should not be walking behind the men any more. Women should be walking in front!” she tells me with a broad smile via a video link from France. “I know it is a scary time. But I am here to tell women: don’t be afraid. Enjoy yourselves!” Despite a series of heart attacks and one bout of cancer, the calypso queen is still an electrifying performer and engaged interviewee, regularly breaking off an anecdote mid-sentence to lean towards the camera and sing a snatch of one of her 800 songs, big pearls swinging from her ears. Calypso Rose was born McCartha Linda Lewis in Tobago in 1940. “We had no electricity and there was no music, no nothing to hear at all,” she tells me. “My dad was a preacher and my mum had 11 living children. I was the fifth. It was a lot for her, and I was adopted at the age of nine by my uncle’s wife and went to live in her big house in Trinidad. Suddenly, I was the only child. My auntie – Miss Robbie – gave me all the love she had. I could sit in peace, suck my fingers and play with my pikkie [short, Afro textured] hair!” Miss Robbie also loved calypso music: a genre descended from the west African “kaiso”, sung by the slaves imported to work on the sugar plantations from the 17th century onwards. Under the guise of jaunty melodies, it was used to mock slave masters and communicate. After the abolition of slavery in 1873, calypso music dominated the annual carnivals celebrated in the days before Lent. “My auntie, she had all the calypso records,” says Rose. “She would grind up the gramophone and tell me: dance, dance, dance! On Sunday night she’d take me down to the clubs where they would be singing and moving until Monday morning, oh my God it was fantastic! I was on the roof! My auntie would be wearing her shorts and we were all just wiggling the bamsee [bottom] left-right, left-right.” Rose was just 13 years old when she wrote her first calypso: fighting for justice from the get-go. “In the market one Sunday morning, we saw a guy run up and snatch the glasses from off the eyes of a vendor. We yelled, ‘Thief! Thief Thief!’ Well I went home and wrote ‘Glass Thief’ to warn Tobagonian boys not to be like those naughty Trinidadian boys.” It was the first calypso denouncing sexual inequality. Her second song was inspired by the Can Can dance craze: “I sang about the girls who can can!” But she was writing and singing against the grain. Women were not welcome on stage in the calypso tents of the 1950s. “When I began entertaining at 15,” she says, “They said: ‘Why are you singing calypso? It does not belong to a woman. Calypso belongs to the men.’ Well, I told them the good Lord has given me the inspiration to create and I will not be like the foolish virgin in the Bible. I will not bury my talent in the soil! I will be jiggy jiving! I fought the battle as a woman and I won.” Rose came of age as the world began to embrace calypso. In 1956, Harry Belafonte’s album Calypso spent 31 weeks at the top of the Billboard chart, becoming the first album by a solo artist in history to sell more than one million copies. In 1963, Rose became the first woman to win the annual Calypso King competition with a song called “Cooperation”. Four years later, she was on tour in the US with Bob Marley. “He was such a spiritual man,” she says. “He never lifted his guitar off the stage without putting his head onto the wall and praying. He loved to dance to my songs.” she says. “We learned a lot from each other… except the smoking. I did not learn that. When he was smoking he would try to reassure me saying: ‘No threaten, no threaten.’ He meant: don’t be afraid. And I am lucky that I have never been afraid. The men have always respected me a great lot.” But being barred from the Calypso King contest on gender grounds did cause Rose to quit the scene in the early 1970s. “I went to New York and studied criminology,” she says. “But those steel pans were still playing in my head, they sent me crazy! I kept running from explosives classes to write lyrics in the restroom. And when they changed the title from Calypso King to Calypso Monarch in 1978, I came back for my crown.” Rose still lives in New York, from where she is proud to support the many waves of female calypsonians to have followed in her wake. “I swung back the door and welcome them in,” she says. “Come in! Come in!” She praises a new generation of young artists such as Nailah Blackman and stresses that they must continue to sing up for the women’s rights that are threatened by the current US administration. “That Donald Trump does not like nobody, not even himself," she says. "He should shut his mouth up. Put a clip on his tongue. He should listen to my song, ‘Human Race’. Those Mexican children in cages at the border? It is a pain in my heart.” Featuring no-nonsense lines like “Nobody cannot say this for true/ Who the hell descended from who”, the anti-racist anthem “Human Race” appears, alongside “Leave Me Alone”, on Rose’s 2016 album Far From Home, written with French artist Manu Chao. “Can you believe that I won a French Grammy Award for that record?” she grins. “I’m in Lyon now, on my way to the stage in Barcelona and then your Womad.” Rose says the thrill of performing has only increased with time: “It’s great to sing, it’s great to see the fans. Especially those young-young boys winding it in front of the stage. Oh my God! I’m still enjoying the music, I’m still enjoying me.” Source: Independent, July 2019 |
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