NEWS
Couva, Mt Hope Paediatric to be 'centres of excellence'
The North Central Regional Health Authority (NCRHA) will manage operations indefinitely at the Couva Medical and Multi-Training Facility and will provide pharmaceuticals for CPAD patients, as well as diagnostic imaging services such as CT and MRI scans by referrals from the five regional health authorities, starting in July. This was announced on Tuesday by health minister Terrence Deyalsingh, who, along with heads of the NCRHA and the University of the West Indies (UWI), gave an update on the $1.6 billion facility's short-term plans and long-term ambitions, at a media conference at the Ministry of Health, Park Street, Port of Spain. Read more here
2 escapees hiding in Las Lomas forest
Villagers at Saroop Trace in Las Lomas No. 2 were left traumatised and forced to lock up in their homes early yesterday afternoon, after the two remaining prisoners who escaped from Golden Grove in Arouca were seen running through the area. Michael Findley, from Laventille and Olantungi Denbow, of Port-of-Spain, are said to be armed and very dangerous. Up to press time, a special team of police officers from the Special Operations Response Team, Northern Division Task Force and Canine Unit, supported by an aerial search team in the Strategic Services Agency (SSA) helicopter, were combing the thick forested area of Las Lomas, Centeno and Brazil Village for the prisoners, who were the only two remaining from a batch of eight who made a daring escape from the Remand Section of the Golden Grove Prison between Tuesday night and Wednesday morning. Read more here
POLITICS
More co-ordination with WASA needed
Collaboration between the Ministries of Local Government and Works and Transport and the Water and Sewage Authority (WASA) were among some of the recommendations put forward by a Joint Select Committee on Land and Physical Infrastructure yesterday. Speaking at a press conference concluding inquiries made by the committee, member Nigel De Freitas said, “Trinidad has a higher per capita usage of water compared to other territories in the region. There is 50 per cent of unaccounted-for water. The collaboration of entities like WASA and the Ministry of Works and Transport is not exactly where it should be to allow for the timely fixing of leaks. Read more here
HSF board without quorum to function
The multi-billion-dollar Heritage and Stabilisation Fund (HSF) does not have a legally constituted board of governors. Checks by Guardian Media have revealed that the tenure of three members ended on April 19, 2019 and there is no documentation or confirmation that those three have been re-appointed or that new replacement members have been submitted to Cabinet for approval. This means that for almost a month, there has was no way that the HSF could have convened a meeting to make determinations on foreign investments. The three out-tenured board members include Central Bank Governor Alvin Hilaire. His lapsed appointment is perhaps the most critical, as according to the HSF guidelines the fund must always have a representative from the Central Bank. Read more here
BUSINESS
Business Day Editorial: Imbert unfair to Claire
As if the unfurling tale of the fate of Atlantic’s Train One amid BPTT’s “disappointing results” from its infill drilling programme off the south-eastern coast of Trinidad, on Monday night, Finance Minister Colm Imbert decided to add one more bizarre dynamic to this already compelling story. “The current (regional president) of BP(TT) is not a geologist. Nor is she a petroleum engineer. She’s an accountant. She’s an auditor but she has been working in the sector a long tome so therefore she has to rely on the technocrats, the geophysicists, the geologists, the engineers and so on to establish the framework for hydrocarbons and on this particular case, this particular individual decided to press the pause button, that’s all,” Imbert said in Parliament as he wound up the debate on the mid-year budget review. Read more here
JMMB to own 20% of New Sagicor
Sagicor Financial announced yesterday that the T&T listed JMMB Group has agreed to invest between US$200 and US$250 million in shares that will result in the Jamaican financial services company owning 20 per cent of New Sagicor. Read more here
REGIONAL
Trafficked Teen Attempted Suicide 16 Times After Rescue
Open your eyes and beware of wolves in sheep’s clothing. That was the message from Deputy Superintendent Carl Berry, head of the police’s Anti-Trafficking in Persons Unit, as he sought to drive home the point of how vulnerable children are to human traffickers as he addressed scores of primary- and high-school students yesterday. At the HUSH: Children Symposium, put on by the Institute of Jamaica at its downtown Kingston offices, Berry related the horrors experienced by a 13-year-old girl, who lived on an island off the coast of Haiti. According to the cop, one grand market night, she, along with her father, took a 45-minute boat ride to the Haitian mainland. While window shopping – as many people do the night before Christmas – they both encountered three Jamaicans, who convinced them of educational opportunities the young girl could take up. Read more here
INTERNATIONAL
They tried to use rape to silence women protesters. It didn't work
Weeks into the protests that would eventually topple Sudan's dictator, the government realized it had an unprecedented problem on its hands: the number of women in the streets calling for change far outnumbered the men. So the regime's top brass sent a chilling message down to its officers on the ground: "Break the girls, because if you break the girls, you break the men." What followed, several officials told CNN, was a systematic attempt to target the women at the heart of the biggest anti-government protests in decades. Read more here
Labour-Tory Brexit talks end without deal
17th May 2019