NEWS
Mother, sons chopped, beaten
Bandits broke into a house at Espinozar Avenue, Enterprise, Chaguanas, and chopped, beat and robbed a 62-year-old mother and her two adult sons on Monday. The woman and her sons, police said, are now in serious condition at the Eric Williams Sciences Complex. Police said the woman was chopped on her head while her sons' ages 32 and 35 were chopped to their chest and hands. According to a police report, at about 2 am, two men broke into the family’s home by prying open the front door. Read more here
Spike in police-related killings in 2019
As police confront a sustained wave of violent crime in the country, some 23 people have been killed in officer-involved shootings this year, a 64% increase over a similar period in 2018. The 23 fatalities occurred in 14 officer-involved shootings, according to the Police Complaints Authority. Over a similar period in 2018, some 14 people were killed in 11 shootings involving police officers. Two incidents in the last several days -in Carenage and Enterprise- have triggered a debate about whether police are being too heavy-handed in dealing with suspects. This allegation is often times levelled by the same people who ask police to help stamp out crime and criminals in their neighbourhoods. Read more here
POLITICS
PM: DPP has AV Drilling details
The Prime Minister on Monday invited Naparima MP Rodney Charles to “come outside,” in the climax to his impassioned defence of the authorities’ handling of the AV Drilling “fake oil” scandal, in the House of Representatives. Accusing the Opposition of trying to confuse the public, Rowley said Petrotrin had done an investigation into the matter and all details had since been lodged with the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) to see if there had been any wrongdoing. “The matter is in arbitration between AV and Petrotrin, where contractual liabilities are to be determined. If there is any criminal conduct, that is in the hands of the DPP.” Read more here
Opposition senator evicted from Senate
For the second week in a row, an Opposition Parliamentarian—this time a Senator—was put out of the Parliament chamber. Last week it was UNC MP Barry Padarath who was evicted from the Parliament chamber by the House Speaker for insisting on raising water shortage in his constituency. Yesterday it was Opposition senator Taharqa Obika for an offensive remark. The situation occurred when Obika asked Foreign Affairs Minister Dennis Moses about Ugandan nationals who were terminated from T&T’s High Commission in Uganda and if they were paid terminal benefits in accordance with their terms and conditions of employment. Read more here
BUSINESS
Are we prepared for wet season?
Two business groups are questioning if proper provisions have been put in place before the coming wet season in the event there is a repeat of the devastating flooding that occurred last year. Read more here
REGIONAL
Salute To A Teacher - Model Educator Solomon Scott Undaunted By Polio, Kidney Disease
Even though he has polio and, since 2017, kidney disease, 60-year-old teacher Solomon Scott has never harboured the slightest thought of giving up on life or resorting to depend on people for his survival. Those traits have earned him the admiration of many, and today, Teachers’ Day, he will be honoured by the Abilities Foundation, where he has taught the art of furniture making to intellectually challenged students for the past 14 years. “I became a victim of polio from my first year in primary school. Right now, I am suffering from kidney disease. Doctors say high blood pressure caused the kidneys to fail,” Scott told The Gleaner yesterday. “The day before primary school, they used one needle to give the whole school polio vaccination. The following morning, I couldn’t go to school,” he recounted. Since then, he has been getting treatment at the Spanish Town Hospital in St Catherine and the Sir John Golding Rehabilitation Centre in Mona, St Andrew. Read more here
INTERNATIONAL
Iranian leader announces partial withdrawal from nuclear deal
Iran will partially withdraw from a landmark nuclear deal signed with six other nations in 2015, amid heightened pressure from the United States in recent weeks. President Hassan Rouhani said in a televised speech Wednesday that Iran would reduce its "commitments" to the deal, but would not fully withdraw. The move comes a year after the US unilaterally withdrew from the deal, over the stringent objections of other signatories. Rouhani said those signatories -- France, Britain, Germany, Russia and China -- had been informed in advance of Tehran's move. He accused "hardliners" in the US of working to undermine the deal, saying it was "in the interests of the region and the world, but not the enemies of Iran, therefore they spared no effort since 2015 to undermine (the deal)." Read more here
Asia Bibi: Christian leaves Pakistan after blasphemy acquittal
8th May 2019