NEWS
Relatives: Police delay led to murder victim's death
As the tents and chairs were being laid out for the wake of Charan Dev Singh on Thursday, neighbours believed he would be alive if police responded to their distress call in time. Singh, 24, of San Francisco Settlement, Chickland, Freeport was shot in the chest around 8.50 pm on Wednesday at his neighbour’s home but later died while being treated at the Couva District Health Facility. Police said Singh along with his father, retired police officer Mathura Singh, Mary Ann Edmund and her brother-in-law, Micahel Jeoffroy, were standing in front of Edmund’s parlour after he helped review some CCTV footage. Two masked men brandishing guns approached the group, announced a hold-up and ordered them to lie on the ground. The older Singh who became afraid for his life drew his personal Sig Sauer nine millimetre and fired one shot, which police believed struck one of the bandits. Read more here
Griffith: Carnival fetes safest place to be in T&T
Police Commissioner Gary Griffith is assuring that despite the surge in murders, measures are being taken to restore a level of security to citizens especially during the Carnival season. The pledge comes as the public continues to grapple with an uptick in crime and violence and lament their vulnerability to criminals. During a drill with various arms of the Trinidad and Tobago Police Service (TTPS) ahead of the Carnival season yesterday at the Police Academy, Commissioner Griffith said the current bloodshed was not related to the Carnival season and added that measures have been put in place to bolster the protection of citizens. “There is an operational plan for every single event, so probably the safest event to be is attending Carnival fetes. So I want the public to be comfortable. No need to be fearful, just be careful. We are out in full force at every Carnival event.” Read more here
POLITICS
Don’t Blame Patriotic
OWTU head Ancel Roget said his union’s Patriotic Energy and Technologies Company has not sought any time extension in its negotiations to buy Pointe-a-Pierre refinery, in apparent contrast to recent remarks by the Prime Minister. On Wednesday Dr Rowley told the House of Representatives, “There is some element of delay involved but we can’t go faster than Patriotic is prepared to go...So if Patriotic has asked for some additional information in this review of the plant, that’s just part of the process.” Finance Minister Colm Imbert on September 20, 2019, gave Patriotic a month to spell out its US$700 million business plan. Roget told Newsday Patriotic has long been ready to inspect the refinery but has been delayed by having to wait for the Ministry of Energy’s nod. Read more here
BUSINESS
Massy makes $167m in profit in first quarter
Massy Holdings Ltd has registered a $167 million in profit after tax for the first quarter (Q1) of the 2020 financial year. In the company’s financial statement, Massy chairman Robert Bermudez said, “Lower effective tax rate (arising from Barbados tax reforms in 2019) produced an even higher increase in profit after tax (PAT) of 13 per cent to $167 million.” The company also posted third- party revenue of $3.27 billion, two per cent above the prior year’s Q1 third-party revenue. The group’s profit before tax (PBT) of $250 million was also eight per cent higher than PBT in Q1 prior year. The organisation’s earnings per share (EPS) saw an increase from $1.37 per share in the prior year to $1.57 per share in Q1 of FY 2020, which represents a 15 per cent increase. Read more here
Govt, Opposition at odds over tax bills
Finance Minister Colm Imbert said the Government could not risk having important legislation failing in the Parliament and affecting this country’s relationship with the Global Forum. Read more here
REGIONAL
Dollars For DUST - J$40m Compensation For JISCO/Alpart Nuisance
Close to 1,200 residents in 10 St Elizabeth communities affected by a dust nuisance emanating from the JISCO/Alpart mud lake in the parish have been offered a J$40-million compensation package after days of discussions, at times heated, with the bauxite company about their concerns. Daryl Vaz, minister without portfolio in the Ministry of Economic Growth and Job Creation, said yesterday that the affected communities of Upper Warminster, Myersville, Alvalley, Lower Warminster, Upper Brinkley, Northampton, Lower Brinkley, Austin, Bounevista Housing Scheme, and Genious are to receive the compensation from the management of JISCO. “JISCO has agreed to compensate for the dust events that took place in December and one which took place in early January, at total settlement for four days compensation,” Vaz told residents, following a visit to the affected area. Read more here
Banks DIH pours money into education institutions
Education is inseparable from economic development, President David Granger reminded at the Banks DIH Jubilee Republic Anniversary Education Celebration and Award Ceremony on Thursday. The ceremony was held at the Arthur Chung Conference Centre and saw the local beverage company handing over donations of $250,000 each to 15 public education institutions, many of them technical and vocational institutions. President Granger described the initiative as a celebration of Guyana’s statehood, public education and a private corporation’s demonstration of social good. The President related that celebrating education as part of the country’s Jubilee Republic anniversary is very apt as “education was a central feature of the republic’s pursuit of national development”. Read more here
INTERNATIONAL
Over 1,700 frontline medics infected with coronavirus in China presenting new crisis for the government
Ning Zhu, a nurse in Wuhan, the central Chinese city at the heart of a deadly coronavirus outbreak, is restless. Instead of helping on the frontlines, she has been under self-quarantine at home for weeks, after a chest scan on January 26 revealed that she had a suspected case of the novel Coronavirus. Zhu was told to wait for a nucleic acid test that would provide the final verdict, but it never came. "Right now, it's really a problem. Our hospital already has more than 100 people who are quarantined at home," she told CNN over the phone. An additional 30 medical workers have been confirmed to have the virus, she said. "If the tests are fine, we can go back to work. I actually don't have any symptoms, there's just a slight problem with my CT scan, it seems there's a bit of infection," she said. Read more here
Antarctic island hits record temperature of 20.75C
14th February 2020