NEWS
Digicel shortlisted for international award
Digicel has been shortlisted four times in three categories at the World Communications Awards, which take place in London, England, on October 30. In a release, Digicel said its Dominica CEO Nikima Royer Jno Baptiste was shortlisted in the Women in Telecoms category for her phenomenal work and leadership in the aftermath of category five Hurricane Maria, which ravaged Dominica in 2017. Digicel also scored a shortlisting in the best operator in an emerging market category for its work to connect the unconnected in Papua New Guinea. Read more here
Troubled Life of a Teen Killer
At the weekend, the public was shocked by news that a pregnant mother of three, Alistra Mack-Kampo, had been fatally chopped by a close teenage male relative, with most condemning the alleged offender. However, one person sought to present a different view, posting to Facebook yesterday that the alleged killer, said to be a 19-year-old, had been depressed and frustrated at having to parent his younger siblings. Read more here
POLITICS
Moonilal warns of arrests of religious leaders, political opponents
After the detention of Tobago House of Assembly (THA) minority leader Watson Duke by the police for questioning, Oropouche East MP Dr Roodal Moonilal is warning that more arrests are to come. “I warn you, watch for arrests of religious leaders, political opponents,” Moonilal told a packed audience at the United National Congress (UNC) Monday night forum at the Debe High School. He said this was a sign of a totalitarian government. “As I speak to you now, trade union leader and minority leader in the THA Watson Duke is being questioned by the police.” Read more here
Kamla warns of possible fuel shortages
Opposition Leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar says the Prime Minister's recent 'attack' on public servants could be an indication that he plans to fire them. Speaking at the UNC's Monday night forum, Persad-Bissessar said the government is finding it difficult to find money to pay public servants because Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley had shut down Petrotrin without creating new avenues for revenue generation. She predicted a dire future saying there will also be fuel shortages because of the mishandling of T&T's petroleum resources. "Dr Rowley says public servants are lazy. He denigrates public service. In every crop of people, there is good, bad and indifferent. Why he comes now to say public servants lazy? Read more here
BUSINESS
New oil chairmen meet management
Trinidad Petroleum Holdings Ltd’s (TPHL) newly appointed chairman Michael Quamina said the company and its subsidiaries would continue working towards becoming sustainably profitable. Quamina and Newman George met with members of the TPHL management teams to get an overview of the operations and business update. Last week Energy Minister Franklin Khan announced that Quamina is the new chairman of TPHL as well as two of its subsidiaries—Heritage Petroleum Company Ltd and Petrotrin Company of Trinidad and Tobago Ltd (legacy company). Read more here
REGIONAL
Rescue Mission - Papine High Moves To Bring Students Suffering From Trauma Of Violence Back From The Brink
Administrators at the St Andrew-based Papine High School and neighbouring August Town Primary School have been forced to arrange counselling and other interventions for dozens of students afflicted by post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and other mental health disorders. The situation is directly linked to gang violence, which has resulted in a majority of the students losing a close relative – many times a father – to warring factions in the communities in which they live. “The situation is compounded in that you have instances where in some classes, you have students on opposing sides. In other words, you have the survivors of the victims’ families and the perpetrators’ families sharing the same classroom,” said a source who alerted The Gleaner to the situation. Read more here
INTERNATIONAL
Amazon fires: Brazil to reject G7 offer of $22m aid
Indonesia's capital city isn't the only one sinking
Indonesia has said the country would be relocating its capital city, in part because it's sinking into the Java Sea. Jakarta is one of the fastest sinking cities in the world, according to the World Economic Forum, due to rising sea levels and the over-extraction of groundwater. But it isn't the only city in trouble. Here's a look at some others that are also at risk. Read more here
27th August 2019