NEWS
CoP defends blasting media: It’s constructive criticism
Police Commissioner Gary Griffith this afternoon stood by earlier remarks criticising media houses for "biased" coverage. He said it was intended as constructive criticism and to raise the standard of reporting in TT. Newsday spoke with Griffith. who said the reports from some media houses showed favouritism towards criminals. "I want the media to see it as constructive criticism. If you see when we did the operation on the Beetham last Thursday, the only people this media house could get to interview were two fellas at the corner that were obviously affiliated or had a sense of loyalty to certain persons of interest. Read more here
Fire guts century-old building in Princes Town
One of the oldest buildings in Princes Town has been destroyed in a fire. Police said Carlos Bar on High Street, caught fire around 3 am on Monday. One of the property owners Sheridan Mohammed said he was uncertain what caused the fire. “At this point, we are thinking it could have been an electrical problem,” Mohammed said even though there were no power surges or noticeable electrical malfunctioning prior to the blaze. Read more here
POLITICS
UNC PRO: AG deflecting from his incompetence
UNC PRO Anita Haynes has responded to Attorney General Faris Al Rawi's comments that the Opposition was not supporting certain bills by saying he is "a stranger to the truth." Haynes made the comment in a media release yesterday. “The Attorney General’s recent accusation that the Opposition is not supporting certain bills is a complete fabrication," she said. "The Opposition supported each of the bills mentioned by the Attorney General often after rigorous debate and strengthening of laws to protect citizens’ rights. Once again, Mr Al-Rawi is a stranger to the truth and is engaging in a desperate attempt to try to deflect attention from his incompetence.” Read more here
Stuart probes contracts for gang leaders
Minister of National Security Stuart Young has confirmed he has reports before him of people allegedly engaged in criminal activity who have been given state contracts and intends to act on it. Young made the comment at a media conference at the ministry’s Port-of-Spain headquarters yesterday, as he responded to a questions over a Guardian Media report that a top-secret National Security document had identified several of the men arrested during last week’s anti-gang sweep, who are suspected gang leaders, as having benefited from lucrative government contracts. According to the article, the document traced the men’s affiliations to companies which received multi-million dollar State contracts over the past 14 years. The 17-page report was compiled by Commissioner of Police (CoP) Gary Griffith back in 2014 when he served as national security minister. Read more here
BUSINESS
RBC MD: Banks must re-evaluate after ‘unprecedented events’
BANKS must re-evaluate themselves after unprecedented events in the industry, said RBCTT managing director Gretchen Camacho-Mohammed. She was speaking last week Tuesday at the formal reopening of the RBC St Augustine branch. "In banking, unprecedented events in the last couple of years have changed the expectations of our industry, among them new technology, new competitors, more stringent regulatory environments and volatile economic conditions. Every country and every bank has been affected, and these changes have been the catalyst for us to re-evaluate what a bank means to its clients and how we can best meet those expectations." Read more here
REGIONAL
Insurance Hazard - Study Finds Most Motorists Driving Without Coverage
More than half the vehicles in Jamaica are uninsured, a statistic that is of huge concern to road-safety officials and one which the police consider “frightening”. A study conducted by the Jamaica National Group, based on data culled from Tax Administration Jamaica and the Insurance Association of Jamaica (IAJ), shows that up to 57 per cent of vehicles were not covered by an insurer in 2016. Of a gross figure of 609,086 vehicles registered, only 259,269 were insured. But other data which the researchers gleaned from TAJ and IAJ are in conflict with those statistics, indicating a slightly lower variation. That analysis shows that of 537,449 motor cars, motorcycles, tractors, trailers and trucks, 52 per cent had no insurance policies. Read more here
INTERNATIONAL
Bernie Sanders launches second presidential campaign
After months of deliberation, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders announced Tuesday that he is running for president again in 2020. It will be Sanders' second consecutive bid for the Democratic nomination after losing to Hillary Clinton in 2016. "What I promise to do is, as I go around the country, is to take the values that all of us in Vermont are proud of -- our belief in justice, in community, in grassroots politics and town meetings -- that's what I'm going to carry all over this country," Sanders said in his announcement on Vermont Public Radio Tuesday morning. Read more here
Pulwama attack: Pakistan warns India against military action
19th February 2019