NEWS
OWTU: We’re not forcing anyone
Former Petrotrin workers who come out to the Oilfield Workers Trade Union’s (OWTU) march on May Day, will receive favourable consideration from the union when it acquires Paria refinery in Pointe-a-Pierre from the Government. An e-mail from OWTU general secretary Richard Lee urged that all union members come out in their numbers to the May 1 march at the Pointe-a-Pierre roundabout. Lee’s e-mail as well as several WhatsApp messages which subsequently followed, were sent to Newsday yesterday by an ex-Petrotrin worker who is an OWTU member. Read more here
Filthy Easter campers leave trail of garbage
More than 150 truckloads of garbage had to be removed from the north-eastern beaches and rivers yesterday left behind by over 6,000 campers and beach lovers over the long Easter weekend. Chairman of the Sangre Grande Regional Corporation Terry Rondon described the rubbish pile-up as the worst he had seen in years. He called on Government to take decisive action against campers, visitors and beach lovers who continue year-after-year to leave piles of garbage behind after days of enjoyment and fun. Read more here
POLITICS
Mitchell: Carnival Village, special cruise being planned
Tourism Minister Randall Mitchell says his ministry is in discussions on the establishment of a Carnival Village and a special Carinval cruise. He was responding to a question in Parliament Tuesday on why cruise-ship arrivals were not timed to coincide with Carnival activities. Mitchell explained cruise lines booked their itineraries two to three years in advance and those bookings were made at the discretion of the cruise line. He reported during the 2019 Carnival period culminating in Carnival Tuesday 4,457 cruise passengers arrived in TT. Read more here
Ministry, stakeholders meet on SEA results issue
Ministry of Education’s Chief Education Officer Harrilal Seecharan says a decision on whether the Secondary Entrance Assessment results will be published is still to be determined. “We will bring to bear on the table all the views and the legal advice from our legal department before our decision is made,” Seecharan in an interview with Guardian Media yesterday morning, hours before the topic was discussed at a strategic executive meeting at Education Tower, Port-of-Spain, yesterday. “I am not at this point at liberty to say that will be a final decision but certainly, it is up for discussion.” Seecharan admitted, however, that other stakeholders who were not scheduled part of yesterday’s meeting will still need to be consulted about the decision. “We have to also take on board the views of the different stakeholders NPTA, teachers’ union, parents, so that all of those will be taken on board, I guess, during the discussion. This meeting this evening will primarily be with the strategic executive team in the ministry, if need be I suspect that we may further engage others,” he said. Read more here
BUSINESS
TTSE profit rises to $14.9m for 2018
Chairman of the Trinidad and Tobago Stock Exchange (TTSE) Ray Sumairsingh has announced improved results in the financial performance of the TTSE and its subsidiary, the Trinidad and Tobago Central Depository (TTCD), for the year ended December 31, 2018. Read more here
REGIONAL
Measles Risk - Tufton Raises Concern Amid Global Outbreaks And Local Decline In Vaccination
Health Minister Dr Christopher Tufton has raised concerns about the fall-off in recent years in the number of Jamaicans vaccinated against measles even as he sought to assure the country that no imported case of the disease has been recorded. In a statement in the House of Representatives yesterday, Tufton said that no local or imported cases of measles have been recorded locally, but acknowledged that “over the last few years”, the uptake of the measles vaccines has been on the decline, dropping to 89 per cent coverage of MMR1 and 82 per cent coverage of MMR2 last year. Read more here
INTERNATIONAL
Kim Jong-un in Russia for Vladimir Putin summit
Sri Lanka investigates Easter bombings
Terror has turned into grief in Colombo during a wake for a young Sri Lankan family who died in the Easter Sunday attacks at St. Anthony's Shrine. Prathap Kanagasabai, his wife Anistie Napoleon and two daughters, Andreena, 7, and Abriana, 1, did not usually go to St. Anthony's services. But on Sunday, they decided to attend a special Easter mass alongside hundreds of worshippers and the suicide bomber. After the explosion, their relatives searched desperately for the family at the local hospital, the mortuary and, finally, the church. It was there where relatives found their bodies in pieces. Fazal Haniffa, a family friend who is Muslim, expressed his horror over the act of brutality. "They [the suicide bombers] are not humans, they are animals," he told CNN. Read more here
24th April 2019