NEWS
Couva hospital may open in September
Two flagship projects started under the former People's Partnership government could be opened in September. These are the Couva Adult and Children's Hospital and the University of the West Indies (UWI) South Campus in Debe. UWI St Augustine campus principal Prof Brian Copeland expressed optimism about both projects after a news conference at the campus yesterday. During the conference, UWI Vice-Chancellor Prof Hilary Beckles said the university will replicate the Couva hospital model in other parts of the region. Beckles disclosed Barbados is the first place this could happen. Read more here
Blackout hits Sando General Hospital
An electrical blackout at the San Fernando General Hospital left patients hungry and in tears yesterday. The hospital, which accommodates more than 750 patients, went dark around 1 pm. Before the blackout, patients were told that electrical works had to be done and there would be a disruption in supply from 1 pm to 7 pm. When the T&T Guardian visited the hospital around 5 pm the corridors on the lower floors were in complete darkness. Visitor Rajesh Maharaj, who went to Ward One, said, “You need a torchlight to go in there. The whole place dark and it is not even night time as yet.” Read more here
POITICS
Mahabir: Delays not meals, the main woe
While debate raged yesterday over whether or not illegal immigrants were dining on lamb and turkey at the Immigration Detention Centre (IDC), for Independent Senator Dr Dhanayshar Mahabir, said detainees' most pressing problem is delays in their application for asylum or to fight deportation, often caused by a lack of access to legal representation. “The meals amounted to the least of their problems and could easily be remedied,” Mahabir said. More crucially than meals, he hoped detainees seeking refugee status could better access to legal representation, and that the authorities could act more decisively, one way or the other, on those detainees facing deportation, so as to repatriate them or resettle them in TT. Read more here
Ramdeen: T&T needs border protection plan
Wednesday’s tragedy concerning the Venezuelan boat which overturned en route to T&T reinforces the need for this country—as Venezuela’s closest neighbour—to have a better border protection framework, says the Opposition United National Congress. Opposition senators spoke about the issue yesterday following their meeting with the Election and Boundaries Commission. Multiple deaths were feared after the “Jhonnaly Jose,” believed to have been carrying 34 people—mainly women—overturned en route to Trinidad’s west coast on Wednesday. The vessel sank near Patos Island, five miles off Venezuela’s coastline and in Venezuela’s maritime rescue co-ordination zone. Yesterday evening, acting National Security Minister Edmund Dillon said T&T’s Coast Guard reported nine people were rescued—but 25 others were still unaccounted for up to then. The T&T Coast Guard was aiding search/rescue operations. Read more here
BUSINESS
Lawyers seek to stop CL Financial asset sale
Attorneys representing a CL Financial shareholder have filed an application before High Court judge Kevin Ramcharan seeking to put a stay on the further sale of CL Financial assets until the joint liquidators present audited financial statements. Read more here
REGIONAL
Fake Drug Ring - Smugglers Make Millions In Black Market Racket
Several players in Jamaica’s underworld, with assistance from unscrupulous medical practitioners, are now raking in millions of dollars from the sale of counterfeit pharmaceuticals, an emerging frontier that can have deadly consequences for the public, a senior police investigator has revealed. Viagra, Cialis, saline solution, and a stomach medication sold on the local black market as an abortion pill are just a few of the pharmaceuticals being counterfeited by criminal networks. But even as local law-enforcement agencies seek to understand the breadth of the scheme, Assistant Superintendent of Police Victor Barrett, head of the intellectual property unit in the Counter-Terrorism and Organised Crime (C-TOC) division, signalled that the police are ready to take down one network. Read more here
INTERNATIONAL
Saudi Arabia said they confessed. But court filings show some executed men protested their innocence
Long before Saudi Arabia announced it had carried out one of the largest mass executions in its history earlier this week, some of the men condemned to death had made impassioned pleas to the courts in a bid to save their lives. Many said they were totally innocent, that their confessions had been written by the same people who had tortured them. Some claimed to have evidence of their abuse at the hands of their interrogators. And one reaffirmed loyalty to King Salman and his son, Mohammed bin Salman, in hopes of getting leniency from the court, trial documents show. Read more here
Sri Lanka bombings ringleader died in hotel attack, president says
26th April 2019