NEWS
Entrepreneurship can help reduce violence
US Ambassador to TT Joseph Mondello said entrepreneurship, when used properly, played a vital role in reducing violence and extremism. He made the comments at the start of the RISE Woman’s Conference, held at the US Embassy’s American Centre, Briar Place, Sweet Briar Road, Port of Spain. The three-day conference, which began yesterday, brought together female entrepreneurs from countries in the Caribbean and Latin America, including Barbados, Guyana, Suriname and Venezuela. Read more here
Bail for 2 cops charged in sex assault on girl, 16
A Sangre Grande magistrate has allowed two police officers accused of sex offences against a 16-year-old girl to continue on station bail until their next court appearance. Inspector Christopher Fuentes, 55 and Cpl Dindial Joseph, 45, were both charged with sexual offences against the teenager following instructions from the Director of Public Prosecution Roger Gaspard on Wednesday night. Both officers were granted police station bail by a Justice of the Peace at Sangre Grande Police Station that same night. Fuentes, who was last attached to Arouca Homicide Bureau, Region II, who was charged with three counts of sexual penetration, abduction of a child and false imprisonment, was granted $500,000 bail. Joseph, who was last stationed at Northern Division, was charged with sexual touching and was granted $80,000 bail. Read more here
POLITICS
Projects should be completed to benefit citizens
Works and Transport Minister Rohan Sinanan says he will encourage any government that comes into office to complete any projects that will benefit the country and its citizens. Asked if the realisation of the project depended on the PNM winning the next general election which is expected to be held next year, Sinanan said one did not govern a country based on winning an election, but for the improvement of the country. Read more here
Yesenia wants Young with her on visit to cops
Venezuelan refugees say they have nowhere to turn for redress over the injustices they experience while seeking refuge in T&T because both Immigration Division officials and police officers are also meting out unjust treatment to them. Venezuelan-born activist Yesenia Gonzales made the claim yesterday, as she responded to a call by National Security Minister Stuart Young for Venezuelans who have evidence of such treatment to take it to the police. In an interview with Guardian Media yesterday, Gonzales agreed with Young’s call for such matters to be investigated but said it’s not as straightforward as making a report to the officials. She said this was so because information reaching her from the refugees indicates the police and immigration officials are also implicated in the abuse of refugees. Read more here
BUSINESS
‘PM did not negotiate gas prices’
Communications Minister Stuart Young yesterday, said Prime Dr Keith Rowley Young did not negotiate a “bad price” for natural gas supplied by multinational energy companies operating in T&T’s waters when he travelled to Houston in Texas in March 2017. Read more here
REGIONAL
Plane Pain - Legal Action On The Cards As Flight School Tragedy Leaves Students’ Families With Million-Dollar Debts
The mothers of the two student pilots killed in the November 2016 flight school plane crash are reliving nights of anguish, anxiety, and anger following the publication of a 60-page report detailing a litany of regulatory and operations shortfalls that led to the tragedy. To compound the pain, they say they have been left with millions of dollars of debt just over two years after their sons, Danshuvar Gilmore, 19, and Ramone Forbes, 17, were killed when the Caribbean Aviation Training Centre-owned Cessna aircraft went down in Greenwich Town, seconds after take-off from the Tinson Pen Aerodrome in Kingston. Read more here
INTERNATIONAL
The cartoonists who helped take down a Malaysian prime minister
A humongous pink gemstone perches on a woman's finger, matched only in extravagance by her hair, which is half the height of her body. A pendulous necklace and Hermès handbag hang from her other arm. For Malaysians, the figure pictured is instantly recognizable as Rosmah Mansor, wife of disgraced former Prime Minister Najib Razak and -- according to prosecutors in the US and Malaysia -- a modern day Imelda Marcos who accrued luxury goods worth millions of dollars using money embezzled from the state investment fund, 1MDB. Read more here
Brexit: Last chance to guarantee 22 May delay, MPs told
29th March 2019