NEWS
CARICOM Rapporteur to fight for persons with disabilities
Jamaican Senator Floyd Morris, CARICOM Special Rapporteur on Disability, on his second visit to this country, made no bones about expressing his desire to go out and get some good Trini food prompting laughter from the audience, but on a serious note, vowed to fight for persons with disabilities in the region. The senator was at the time addressing the audience at the US Embassy World Down Syndrome Day Workshop held at the US Embassy Public Affairs Section in St. Clair yesterday. Read more here
Met Service: Another wave of Saharan dust coming
The Health Ministry is advising citizens to take personal precautions as a fresh plume of Saharan dust is expected to enter T&T’s atmosphere on Monday. Since the beginning of the dry season, the country has experienced several waves of the dust however; the Met Office said this year’s occurrences are no different from that seen in previous years. “This is nothing out of the norm. Years gone by in this office here, we had severe dust outbreaks with the visibility was down to less than one kilometre,” an official from the office told Guardian Media. He said that according to their model, this plume is expected to be less than the last. Read more here
POLITICS
Rowley unfazed by Trump blank: So what?
The Prime Minister was unfazed by a perceived snub by the US whose President will tomorrow Friday meet five Caribbean leaders but left out TT. Donald Trump will hosts leaders of the Bahamas, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, Jamaica, and Saint Lucia at his private resort at Mar-a-Lag to discuss the Venezuelan crisis and China trade practices. Rowley said a man’s house was his castle and so Trump was free to invite who he liked. Read more here
PM waiting on good bids for Paria Fuel
Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley says if someone is buying, then the Government will sell Paria Fuel Trading Company. He made the comment yesterday as he gave the Government’s final stance on the company’s future at the post-Cabinet briefing at the Diplomatic Centre, St Ann’s. He explained that while the Government had not yet put the company up for sale, it would indeed be open to offers. “There is no position taken by the Government to sell the Paria company, which is the fuel supply company, but based on what proposal is made to us, Paria is an asset which the Government will leverage to the best interest of the people of Trinidad and Tobago,” Rowley said. Read more here
BUSINESS
Down syndrome and employment
Employment is more than merely a source of income. It gives persons a sense of purpose, it fulfils the need for an individual to be productive, it promotes independence, and enhances self-esteem. However, most importantly, in relation to persons with Down syndrome, it will allow for participation in the mainstream of life so that they are no longer forced to remain in protected or sheltered environments where their potential runs the risk of being stifled. I have previously discussed the lack of inclusion in the mainstream education system. This lack of access to education and training in skills relevant to the labour market is a major barrier to the job market for persons with Down syndrome. Read more here
REGIONAL
Running Scared - Teacher Bruised In Bust-Up With C-Bar Track Stars; Champs Sponsors To Probe Assault
A teacher at Calabar High School is now scared for his safety after making several attempts to ensure that two of the school’s elite track athletes serve suspensions for allegedly assaulting him in December 2018. The Gleaner was reliably informed that the teacher told a senior colleague at the Red Hills Road, St Andrew, school that he would not enter the premises after he was summoned to a meeting late yesterday evening for fear of being harmed. The teacher, who has requested anonymity because of security concerns, had released a media advisory early yesterday saying that he would be pressing charges against the athletes, who are expected to play roles in Calabar’s title defence at the 2019 staging of the ISSA/GraceKennedy Boys and Girls’ Athletics Championships next week, after the school failed to adequately discipline the athletes. Read more here
INTERNATIONAL
Cyclone Idai: 300 to 400 bodies washed up on Mozambique road, eyewitness says
As many as "300 to 400" bodies line the banks of a road out of the city of Beira, in Mozambique, according to an eyewitness account, suggesting that the human toll of Cyclone Idai is likely to far exceed official estimates. The harrowing scene, described by Zimbabwean Graham Taylor, follows reports from aid agencies on the ground detailing how entire villages and towns have been completely flooded in the wake of last Thursday's high-end Category 2 storm. Taylor said the bodies were located on a 6 kilometer (3.7 mile) track of highway, where flood waters had created an inland ocean, submerging entire villages around a "densely populated" sugar-cane plantation. The area is a mere fraction of the land in the southeast African nation left flooded after two major rivers burst their banks in the days following the storm. Read more here
Brexit: Departure date pushed back by at least two weeks
22nd March 2019