NEWS
Let’s talk about suicide
For too long, suicide has been a shadowy almost taboo topic, lurking in the dark corners of society. But this needs to change.“Talking about suicide opens the conversation and reduces stigma,” Wendy Jeremie, of the Trinidad and Tobago Association of Psychologists (TTAP), said as she spoke on Saturday at the association’s latest community seminar. With statistics that show a suicide every two days in this country, Jeremie said the association wants to point to these realities as well as long-held taboos, stigmatization and misconceptions which shows a need for suicide and suicide prevention as being topics which need to be pushed to the front of the national discourse. Read more here
Junior Sammy’s $3.5m court levy delayed
A contracting company was yesterday forced to temporarily withdraw its levy against Junior Sammy Contractors Limited over an unpaid $3.5 million court judgement. Court marshals, police officers and lawyers representing Western General Contractors Services Limited went to Junior Sammy’s compound in Claxton Bay, around 6 am yesterday morning, to execute the judgement and begin the process of seizing items to recover the debt. However before they could enter, the Registrar of the Supreme Court instructed them to put the process on hold as Junior Sammy Contractors had applied for a stay of the judgement pending an appeal. Read more here
POLITICS
Le Hunte: Multi-faceted plan to fix water issues
A multi-faceted plan is the only route to address water issues, Minister of Public Utilities Robert Le Hunte has said. Current figures show one of WASA’s four dams is at half its average water level and another contains a third of the usual amount. The other two are also well below average levels. But Le Hunte is confident if all plans work, the water situation will remain stable, even if this year’s rainfall doesn’t replenish reservoirs in time for next year’s dry season. He told Newsday his ministry will focus on addressing the issues of interconnectivity, supply, and demand. Read more here
Rowley: Former PM told Marlene about charges month before arrest
An incongruous political situation led Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley to reveal to the Parliament that Opposition Leader Kamla Persad Bissessar tipped off her political adversary, Marlene Mc Donald one month before her arrest. “I didn’t know Marlene Mc Donald was going to get arrested but one month before she was arrested the Leader of the Opposition could have called her to her office and tell her she was going to be arrested,” Rowley said. As the disclosure echoed through the Chamber of the Parliament on Monday night, gasps and wows emanated from the Government bench. Read more here
BUSINESS
Focus on power generation
BP, one of the world’s largest oil and gas companies, is concerned about the global rise in energy consumption. “BP’s position is we want to see a rapid transition to a low carbon energy system,” said Spencer Dale, chief economist of the BP Group. “The first question you may ask is really? You’re BP, you sell oil and gas, surely you don’t want a rapid transition to a low carbon energy future because that’s going to move away from the things you sell,” he said. Read more here
REGIONAL
$20-BILLION DRAIN PLAN - Gov’t Hopes To End Recurring Corporate Area Flooding Nightmare
The Andrew Holness administration is looking to shell out up to US$150 million (J$20.5 billion) to construct a new drainage network across Kingston and St Andrew to put an end to the flooding nightmare in areas of the Corporate Area after heavy rainfall. Holness, the prime minister, announced yesterday that already a request for proposals for the design of the drainage system has been completed. “Hopefully, they will go to contracting within a month and the period of design will be about six months,” he told the House of Representatives. “So, hopefully, we will have that ready in terms of the major drains that will have to be reconstructed or new drains to be put in for Kingston and St Andrew.” Read more here
INTERNATIONAL
Arab nations condemn Netanyahu's Jordan Valley annexation plan
Why John Bolton had to leave and what to expect next
John Bolton had to go -- because he wanted to cancel President Donald Trump's worldwide reality show. For a time the now ex-national security adviser, who first caught Trump's eye with his tough talk on Fox News, was useful to the President -- sharing his desire to shake up the globe. But like everyone else in Trump's dysfunctional foreign policy team, Bolton wore out his welcome, standing in the way of his boss' impetuous instincts and seeking a share of the spotlight. Only in the bizarre Trump orbit could the exit of a national security adviser seen as an ideologue and aggressive hawk also be perceived in some ways as the removal of a stabilizing force. But he did have a view of American interests and the use of US power that while hardline was predictable and logical and positioned within the historic boundaries of US diplomacy. Read more here
11th September 2019