Thursday, June 9, 2011

St. Martin Book Fair closes off with cookbook launching

page8a016PHILIPSBURG--The ninth annual St. Maarten Book Fair was closed off at Belair Community Centre Saturday evening with the official launching of Yvette Hyman's cookbook From Yvette's Kitchen To Your Table ? A Treasury of St. Martin's Traditional and Contemporary Cuisine.

St. Maarten's first hardcover cookbook was launched in the presence of relatives of the "first lady" of local cuisine and founder of Yvette's Restaurant in French Quarter, who passed away in August 1999. Many among the audience seized the opportunity to have copies of the book signed by Hyman's relatives.

The Book Fair opened at the Chamber of Commerce Building in Marigot on Thursday with a keynote address by Nobel Prize laureate Derek Walcott of St. Lucia, who received the President's Award from Book Fair coordinator Shujah Reiph and House of Nehesi Publishers President Jacqueline Sample on Saturday.

Walcott received the distinction for his outstanding contributions to the 2011 Book Fair. The poet, playwright, writer and visual artist was among several authors who read from their work during a well-attended poetry and prose recital at Le Charolais Restaurant at Maho Plaza on Friday.

Other authors who read from their work during Friday's event were Georges Cocks (Guadeloupe), Stephanie Stokes Oliver (Anguilla), and Drisana Deborah Jack (St. Maarten).

Other highlights of the three-day event included the roundtable discussion on freedom of expression, the theme of this year's Book Fair, held at University of St. Martin (USM) on Friday afternoon. Publicist and political scientist Joseph H. Lake Jr., Drisana Deborah Jack and Calypso King 2011 Clement "Kaiso Brat" Richards gave an overview of their professional experiences with regard to freedom of expression.

Several workshops were held at USM between 8:00am and 4:30pm Saturday, with the workshop conducted by archaeologist Jay Haviser on the history of salt in St. Maarten being among those well-attended. Other workshops included a spiritually-based motivational session by Cokes Oliver and a sound-mixing workshop by DJ Mix Master Pauly.

Saturday's closing ceremony was graced by a performance by Isidore "Mighty Dow" York, who received a Lifetime Achievement/Hall of Fame Award during the 30th edition of the International Reggae and World Music Awards (IRAWMA) ceremony in Port-of-Spain, Trinidad, on May 28.

Guest speaker was Director of Tourism Regina Labega who, with an eye on the cookbook presentation, elucidated on the cultural value of traditional cooking and the importance of culinary tourism.

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/17473-st-martin-book-fair-closes-off-with-cookbook-launching.html

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St. Martin Book Fair closes off with cookbook launching

page8a016PHILIPSBURG--The ninth annual St. Maarten Book Fair was closed off at Belair Community Centre Saturday evening with the official launching of Yvette Hyman's cookbook From Yvette's Kitchen To Your Table ? A Treasury of St. Martin's Traditional and Contemporary Cuisine.

St. Maarten's first hardcover cookbook was launched in the presence of relatives of the "first lady" of local cuisine and founder of Yvette's Restaurant in French Quarter, who passed away in August 1999. Many among the audience seized the opportunity to have copies of the book signed by Hyman's relatives.

The Book Fair opened at the Chamber of Commerce Building in Marigot on Thursday with a keynote address by Nobel Prize laureate Derek Walcott of St. Lucia, who received the President's Award from Book Fair coordinator Shujah Reiph and House of Nehesi Publishers President Jacqueline Sample on Saturday.

Walcott received the distinction for his outstanding contributions to the 2011 Book Fair. The poet, playwright, writer and visual artist was among several authors who read from their work during a well-attended poetry and prose recital at Le Charolais Restaurant at Maho Plaza on Friday.

Other authors who read from their work during Friday's event were Georges Cocks (Guadeloupe), Stephanie Stokes Oliver (Anguilla), and Drisana Deborah Jack (St. Maarten).

Other highlights of the three-day event included the roundtable discussion on freedom of expression, the theme of this year's Book Fair, held at University of St. Martin (USM) on Friday afternoon. Publicist and political scientist Joseph H. Lake Jr., Drisana Deborah Jack and Calypso King 2011 Clement "Kaiso Brat" Richards gave an overview of their professional experiences with regard to freedom of expression.

Several workshops were held at USM between 8:00am and 4:30pm Saturday, with the workshop conducted by archaeologist Jay Haviser on the history of salt in St. Maarten being among those well-attended. Other workshops included a spiritually-based motivational session by Cokes Oliver and a sound-mixing workshop by DJ Mix Master Pauly.

Saturday's closing ceremony was graced by a performance by Isidore "Mighty Dow" York, who received a Lifetime Achievement/Hall of Fame Award during the 30th edition of the International Reggae and World Music Awards (IRAWMA) ceremony in Port-of-Spain, Trinidad, on May 28.

Guest speaker was Director of Tourism Regina Labega who, with an eye on the cookbook presentation, elucidated on the cultural value of traditional cooking and the importance of culinary tourism.

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/17473-st-martin-book-fair-closes-off-with-cookbook-launching.html

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Dubai Public Library launches ?Our Summer is All About Arts and Culture? initiative

The Dubai Public Library, under the Dubai Culture & Arts Authority (Dubai Culture), the Emirate?s dedicated Authority for heritage, culture and the arts, has launched the ?Our Summer is All About Arts & Culture? initiative featuring fun and educational summer activities for children and adults, to be held from June 26 to July 21, 2011. 

One of Dubai Public Library's educational activities
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Source: http://www1.albawaba.com/dubai-public-library-launches-%E2%80%98our-summer-all-about-arts-and-culture%E2%80%99-initiative-over-130-educationa

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?Snowflake? case hearing suspended until August

~ Case against Miguel Arrindell thrown out ~

PHILIPSBURG--Following the death of Hector Miguel Arrindell (32), who was shot and killed Wednesday, the Court of First Instance declared the Prosecutor's case on cocaine-smuggling charges inadmissible, during Thursday's preliminary hearing of the so-called "Snowflake" case.

Cappuccino bar and restaurant owner Arrindell, who was shot in broad daylight, was one of four suspects the Prosecutor's Office is holding responsible for large-scale drugs-smuggling operations.

Prosecutor Leomar Angela requested the judge to declare his case against main suspect Arrindell inadmissible, following the man's "tragic" death.

The trial against the three remaining suspects, among whom is Arrindell's 38-year-old brother, will continue with a preliminary hearing set for August 24, the Court decided, following lawyers' requests to suspend the hearing because the shooting had left their clients in shock.

The defence lawyers are to shed light, on August 24, on the question whether the Prosecutor's Office made unforgivable mistakes in compiling the case file.

Lawyers had already cried foul, on March 23, over the Prosecutor's Office's surprise move to retract a previous request that the judge throw out the case because of irregularities in the file.

In what appeared to be a 180-degree change in position, the Prosecutor then stated that "advanced judgement" had led him to the conclusion that these irregularities had not affected the case.

Judge Monique Keppels had refused to make an immediate decision on the request to declare the case inadmissible, in December 2010. Instead, she ordered additional investigations into the alleged antedating by members of the Kingdom Detective Cooperation Team RST of documents that marked the start of investigations into the large-scale drugs-smuggling operations.

Prosecutor Bart den Hartigh had said at the time that the antedating had been done "deliberately and on purpose," and was beyond repair. "This affects the administration of justice, which means there will no longer be a fair trial," Den Hartigh had said, before asking the judge to throw out the cases.

The suspects' detention has been lifted since December 1, 2010.

After presenting a voluminous dossier to the Court on March 23, Prosecutor Angela stated that the document had indeed been "erroneously antedated," but added that this "grave mistake" had been repaired and had not caused any infringement of the suspects' right to a fair trial.

It is expected that the defendants' lawyers will try to convince the judge otherwise during the August 24 hearing.

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/17214-snowflake-case-hearing-suspended-until-august.html

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Stiff sentences for four armed robbers

PHILIPSBURG--The Court of First Instance meted out sentences of between 15 years and four months and 22 years and 10 months against four men it held responsible for committing a range of violent armed robberies.

The most brutal of these crimes was the abduction of Dutch resident Wouter Romeijn (41), who was robbed, kidnapped and left for dead along Rhine Road in Maho on October 16, 2010.

Stevie A. Richardson (25), nicknamed "Scare", received the highest penalty of 22 years and ten months. He was given a 14-month reduction on his sentence for overspending his time in police detention.

Three weeks ago, Prosecutor Manon Ridderbeks had asked the maximum sentence of 30 years for Richardson, whom the Prosecutor's Office held as the instigator and organiser of the robberies, most of which were committed in October 2010.

During several of the armed robberies shots had been fired, while victims had also been threatened with firearms and knives. Several victims were injured and had feared for their lives.

Judge Monique Keppels stated in her written verdict that she held it against Richardson and his accomplices that less than a week after Romeijn's death, the men had burglarised a house in Pointe Blanche during which they had exerted violence against a man who had been sleeping.

First offender Alesco E. Violenus (21), against whom the prosecutor had asked for 26 years, was sentenced to 19 years.

Omar "Chucky" Nelson (20), who stood trial in absentia after he escaped from detention at the Pointe Blanche prison on March 19, was sentenced to 18 years. The Prosecutor's Office had asked for 22 years. In sentencing, the Court took into account that Nelson had cooperated with the police investigations.

Julio C. Encarnacion Vargas received the relatively light sentence of 15 years and four months, whereas the prosecutor had asked for 18 years.

During his trial, repeat offender Vargas had also admitted he had committed burglaries in Guana Bay, which the judge also took into account in sentencing. Seeing that he had overspent his time in police detention by eight weeks he received a reduction of eight months on his 16-year sentence.

The Prosecutor's Office is considering an appeal against the verdicts.

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/17389-stiff-sentences-for-four-armed-robbers.html

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Expired Wilki hens still on supermarkets shelves

page6a009~ Supermarkets urged to remove or risk prosecution~

PHILIPSBURG--The Inspectorate of Health's Food Safety Department is sending a stern message to supermarkets to remove all expired Wilki hens from their shelves or risk facing prosecution.

The department issued, on Tuesday, a "consumer recall" of the expired 1,000g packs of Wilki hens with expiration date 31- 03-2011 which had been distributed to supermarkets when it was already expired.

Despite announcing the consumer recall Food Safety Department Head Michael Somersall said inspections by the department show that the items are still being sold at some smaller supermarkets.

He urged supermarkets to remove the expired items immediately and return them to the supplier or risk facing prosecution.

When the expired item was first discovered during routine inspections, the owner of the supermarket was notified. The owner said he received them two days prior from his supplier. A second said he got them a week ago. The department checked with the supplier who confirmed distributing the product after the item had been expired. The Inspectorate decided to issue the recall to safeguard the public on short notice.

Consumers can return the product with a receipt to their point of purchase. Supermarkets are obligated to return this product to their supplier and suppliers are obligated contact the Inspectorate to schedule the dumping and destruction of this product.

Somersall said spot checks will also be made at suppliers for the expired product. The inspectorate can be reached at 542-2059/79 for more information.page6a009

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/17215-expired-wilki-hens-still-on-supermarkets-shelves.html

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St. Maarten, Anguilla look to ?functional cooperation?

page3a001~ Agree to meet quarterly ~

PHILIPSBURG--St. Maarten and Anguilla have agreed to what Anguilla's Chief Minister Hubert Hughes calls a "functional cooperation" between the two territories, similar to the kind of cooperation that exists among the Scandinavian countries.

Hughes stressed the long-standing relationship between the two islands and the strong family ties that bind them together during a meeting in Anguilla on May 13, with a high-powered St. Maarten delegation led by Deputy Prime Minister Theo Heyliger, which included Justice Minister Roland Duncan.

"These are indeed reasons for us to have a stronger and more structural relationship," Heyliger said. "There are many areas in which we can make our cooperation more functional and meaningful," he added, pointing to Princess Juliana International Airport as a sub-regional hub. Other areas include the possibility of joint marketing activities and the Tourism Statistical Information System (TSIS).

The St. Maarten delegation, which also comprised Angelique Roumou who represented Tourism Minister Franklyn Meyers, Director of Tourism Regina LaBega, and officials of St. Maarten Tourist Bureau as well as Peter Mazereeuw, gave a presentation on TSIS to the Anguillan authorities who were reportedly "very excited" about it.

"TSIS offers the opportunity to obtain psychographic information about visitors, which means not just their profiles, but also their behaviour patterns," explained LaBega. "There is an opportunity to build on the system and add Anguilla's inventory to it, thus being able to provide valuable information about visitors going to Anguilla from St. Maarten, information that would be important in attracting visitors by air as well as strengthening the hub facilities."

Providing residents and visitors of Anguilla "smoother entry" into St. Maarten was another major point of discussion at the talks. It was agreed that the process for visitors to Anguilla via St. Maarten needs to be simplified, and service needs to be improved.

St. Maarten needs to facilitate the immigration processing of in-transit visitors to Anguilla, which, according to the authorities of that island, sometimes takes visitors up to five hours waiting time. It was suggested that an in-transit line and an information desk could hasten the process.

Duncan mentioned the strategy of the immigration office at the Simpson Bay bridge staying open late to accommodate visitors heading to Anguilla via St. Maarten. The Justice Minister also revealed that the immigration process is already being worked on to allow, for example, Guyanese legal residents of Anguilla to travel to St. Maarten to shop, since St. Maarten is viewed as a shopping mall for Anguilla residents.

Another area of cooperation that was discussed was cooperative marketing, in particular, a US$ 90,000 joint venture with St. Maarten and COPA airlines to attract visitors from South America.

Furthermore, Anguilla demonstrated initial interest in cooperating with WestJet and Jet Blue from Puerto Rico in view of the loss of the American Eagle flight from the said market. However, it was noted that the increase of flights by Jet Blue should take the transfer in and out of Anguilla into consideration.

Also, the Anguilla government and private sector indicated their commitment to attending the 10th anniversary of St. Maarten Annual Regional Trade Show, SMART. This would be an opportunity for Anguilla to learn first-hand about the TSIS system and how it can enhance their individual products, Anguilla, and the sub-region, in general.

"I am very happy at the outcome of the meeting," Heyliger said. "Although we met on Friday the 13th, there was nothing scary or superstitious about the talks," he mused, adding that these were overdue and would be structured into a periodic consultation between the governments of these islands.

Heyliger had led a St. Maarten delegation to St. Barths on a similar mission a week earlier and explained that these meetings formed part of the government policy to establish a closer working relationship with our immediate neighbours, which would be beneficial to all parties. The Anguillan authorities applauded the initiative taken by St. Maarten and expressed confidence that it would yield concrete, positive results for both parties.

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/16935-st-maarten-anguilla-look-to-functional-cooperation.html

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Conflicting reports about Winair board nominees

PHILIPSBURG--There are conflicting reports about the appointment of new members of the Supervisory Board of Windward Islands Airways International Winair.

Shareholder Representative of the company Prime Minister (PM) Sarah Wescot-Williams, head of the ad-hoc committee to overlook affairs at Winair Michael Ferrier and Corporate Governance Council (CGC) Chairman Louis Duzanson all had different status updates regarding potential new members of the board.

Wescot-Williams said at the weekly Council of Ministers press briefing Wednesday that members of the board "have been nominated and appointed." She added that she didn't have the names at hand, but "they have been sent on to the Corporate Governance Council." Ferrier had indicated on Tuesday that government was awaiting the advice of the CGC before moving ahead.

However, Duzanson gave a different account when contacted. He said the CGC was not in possession of any names of potential candidates for the Winair board and was not in the process of issuing any advice to the Shareholder Representative.

He also explained that the PM had stated in a letter dated April 6, "Due to unforeseen circumstances, the three persons that were proposed as the new supervisory board members have retracted their availability. We will inform you in due course about new candidates and for now we kindly ask you to await further communication from me before issuing an advice."

The CGC has not had any further correspondence from Wescot-Williams regarding the Winair board or potential candidates for the said board since receiving that letter, Duzanson said. He declined to comment on her statement that board members had been nominated and appointed.

Wescot-Williams could not be reached by press time for clarification.

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/16727-conflicting-reports-about-winair-board-nominees.html

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Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Schotte: Tromp was out to blackmail me

WILLEMSTAD--Cura�ao Prime Minister Gerrit Schotte (MFK) called an urgent press conference after his heated meeting with Central Bank director Emsley Tromp to say the latter had tried to blackmail him with accusations against cabinet members to avoid giving clarity on his own dubious role in a NAf. 3-million loan.

The young prime minister said that, based on recent reports that he had arranged a

NAf. 3-million loan for two companies without any collateral from a commercial bank, the Council of Ministers had required further explanation, after Finance Minister George "Jorge" Jamaloodin had reported on his talk with the Central Bank director on the same topic earlier that day.

Schotte said that instead Tromp had launched serious allegations without presenting proof against him and other ministers, even claiming that Jamaloodin had threatened to plant drugs in the car and/or office. He called it an unsuccessful attempt at blackmail and nothing but a smokescreen.

Jamaloodin had put a distance between himself and his company Speedy Security when he had become minister and a committee had chosen government's "house bank" based on purely objective and well-established criteria, in a completely transparent manner.

It was Tromp who had received NAf. 3 million in his personal bank account from a loan that lacked any collateral. "So the question is: What did the Central Bank give or owe that bank instead?"

The prime minister added that the ties of a direct subordinate of Tromp at the Central Bank to the two companies that had benefitted from the loan made it all even more dubious. He said it was actually the audit team of the Central Bank that had noted the irregularity, "but word apparently came from above not to touch the matter, because it involved the boss."

There were more issues, he said, such as an insurance company operating without the required coverage from abroad. An attempt had been made to obtain such from another island nearby, but it had failed, he added.

"These matters affect the integrity of the institution and government had a right to demand clarity."

Asked what will happen now, Schotte said he would have talks about the matter with experts during his trip to the Netherlands, which starts today, Thursday, but that things could not stay this way.

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/17174-schotte-tromp-was-out-to-blackmail-me.html

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Bahrain to invest US$6 billion in refinery capacity expansion

Bahrain?s Energy Minister, Abdul Hussein Mirza, stated the kingdom is seeking to increase its refinery capacity from 267 thousand barrels per day to about 400 thousand barrels per day. This will be achieved through the modernization of Bahrain Refinery with a total cost of about US$ 6 billion.

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Source: http://www1.albawaba.com/main-headlines/bahrain-invest-us6-billion-refinery-capacity-expansion-377526

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Police begin enforcing hours of operation for heavy equipment

page4b298PHILIPSBURG--Triggered by the death of Silvia Lynch, who was killed by a dump truck moments after exiting a school bus last week Friday, the police have begun a strict zero-tolerance initiative to enforce operation hours for heavy equipment.

Two police controls were held in Sucker Garden and on the Pondfill opposite L.B. Scott Sports Auditorium in Philipsburg from 11:30am to 2:00pm Tuesday. The police control focused on heavy equipment similar to the dump truck that was involved in the death of 12-year-old Lynch.

Heavy equipment is forbidden to operate on the public roads between 6:30 and 8:30am and from 12:00 noon to 2:00pm.

Police issued several fines for operating outside the designated hours to drivers of heavy equipment. They also checked documents belonging to drivers and their employers. Inspections of large trucks and machinery were also carried out by the police to ensure public safety.

Silvia Lynch was run over during the time heavy equipment should not have been on the road. The driver of the dump truck reportedly does not have a valid driver's licence and was working as an undocumented alien in St. Maarten.

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/16682-police-begin-enforcing-hours-of-operation-for-heavy-equipment.html

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Rocketing values for cattle in Brazil anticipate ?beef prices will remain high?

Grazing land loosing ground to two-crops per annum agriculture  World beef prices look set to stay high long term given the rocketing prices of raising cattle in Brazil, and the lack of an obvious successor as the world's low-cost producer.

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Garbage truck catches afire

page4d018BUSH ROAD--A Meadowlands N.V. Sterling brand garbage truck burst into flames next to the Texaco gas station on Bush Road at 7:44pm on Tuesday. The fire started beneath the cab, which suggests that the fire could have been the result of an electrical problem. The truck had been parked there since Monday morning.

The vehicle's owner Friede Richardson said, "You know this could have been a real disaster if the truck would have parked by the gas station's fuel tanks where I usually keep it. Man, I just put a new Caterpillar engine in it too."

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/17545-garbage-truck-catches-afire.html

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Egyptian-Israeli trade on the rise

Statistics released by Israel Exports Institute estimated the total trade volume between Israel and Egypt at US$502 million in 2010 compared with US$405 million in the previous year. These figures translate into an increase of 24%.

Israel?s exports to Egypt rose from US$135 million to US$147 million during the mentioned period, a 10% rise.

Israel?s merchandise imports from Egypt rose to US$271 million in 2010, an impressive 105% rise compared with the previous year.

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Source: http://www1.albawaba.com/main-headlines/egyptian-israeli-trade-rise

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Public urged to get vaccinated before taking summer vacation

~ Make use of Open House on Saturday ~

PHILIPSBURG--Youth Health Care (YHC) is urging persons who are planning summer vacations to capitalise on YHC's open house this Saturday and be vaccinated.

The open house will be held at YHC offices at the Vineyard Office Park, W.G. Buncamper Road #33, from 9:30am to 5:00pm.

YHC said there is a measles outbreak in Europe. Measles has been reported in Belgium, Bulgaria, France, Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands, Norway, Serbia, Spain, Switzerland, Turkey and the United Kingdom.

Measles is caused by a virus that normally grows in the cells that line the back of the throat and lungs. It is a human disease and not known to occur in animals. The first sign of measles is usually a high fever that begins about 10 to 12 days after exposure to the virus from a measles case. A runny nose, cough, red and watery eyes and small white spots inside the cheeks can develop in the initial stage, followed by a rash on the face and upper neck.

"If you are travelling to any of the affected European countries, you should safeguard yourself and your family by ensuring that your and your children's immunisations against measles are up to date," it was stated in the release. "Immunisation is a way of protecting children against serious vaccine-preventable diseases. Once a child or an adult has been fully vaccinated, their bodies can fight those diseases if they come into contact with them."

Unprotected children are at greatest risk of contracting the virus. Parents and guardians must ensure that their children are protected, YHC said.

Persons returning from Europe experiencing a sudden high fever accompanied by a rash should seek medical attention immediately by going to their family physician.

Endemic measles has been eliminated in the Americas, with the last case reported in 2002. For the Caribbean, this year marked the 20th anniversary without an indigenous case of measles.

Parents who will be going to the Open House on Saturday should take along their children's vaccination booklets/cards. "If you are not sure of the vaccination status of your child, you should contact your general practitioner, paediatrician, or YHC for children up through 17 years of age," it was stated in the release.

Additional information can be obtained from YHC at tel. 542-3003, 542-2078 or 542-3553.

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/17213-public-urged-to-get-vaccinated-before-taking-summer-vacation.html

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CFT to prepare budget involvement schedule

PHILIPSBURG--The Committee for Financial Supervision CFT will put together a schedule chronicling when it would deem its involvement in the budget preparation necessary to help with compiling a balanced budget. The Council of Ministers requested this during its meeting with CFT on Tuesday.

Committee Chairman Hans Weitenberg told the press on Wednesday that CFT had no issue with this. He said CFT wanted a hands-on approach with the budget and would like to know from the onset how the process was going.

There has been "some reluctance" from government to share information, thus the schedule would prevent hiccups in the future, Weitenberg said. His comments mirrored somewhat those of Prime Minister Sarah Wescot-Williams, who had told the press earlier in the day at another press conference that talks with the CFT had focused on "communication."

She noted that the reporting schedule for the budget process is outlined in the Kingdom Law on Temporary Financial Supervision, but the involvement in the preparation of the budget is not mapped out. The Council of Ministers "cautioned" that, if the involvement of CFT in the preparatory stages is not put within context, i.e. a schedule, there could be issues.

Weitenberg said ministers were not clear at the time as to what information had been passed on to CFT and that created issues as to whether it had been completed information or topics that were still being finalised. He noted that CFT would make it a point to write down a schedule to be able to get necessary information as the budget process developed, rather than wait until the last moment when not much could be done. "Good cooperation" between government and CFT would be "helpful."

Asked if CFT has a position on the termination of the contract of former Finance Head Bastiaan "Bas" Roorda, Weitenberg said, "That's not our business."

To further identify loopholes and deficiencies in and to strengthen the financial management, CFT has proposed that government set up a "taskforce" to review the financial administration similar to that of Cura�ao. This taskforce will enable government to see where improvement is needed and whether or not doing business as it is conducted now is most efficient.

One of CFT's goals is to have the financial management of the former Netherlands Antilles islands in compliance with international financial management norms (as applied by the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank) by 2015. With those norms attained and put into continuous practice, the financial health of the islands will be sustainable.

Among the norms is proper and consistent reporting. CFT had insisted in early 2010 that St. Maarten begin to produce monthly financial reports. These were submitted on time up to October and CFT would like to get this back on track. Weitenberg said there was "some understanding" for government not meeting the monthly deadlines and he also looked forward to getting the quarterly reports. He said the monthly ones by no means cancelled out the quarterly ones, as the latter reports would provide "more essential statistics" about the financial health. The monthly and quarterly reports are not only beneficial to CFT, but to government as well, as they can be used as guides for future planning.

The CFT board of Weitenberg, Margo Vlieghart, Alberto Romero and Max Pandt together with outgoing Director Geert Bergsma and incoming Director Kees van Nieuwamerongen and CFT personnel also had separate meetings with Governor Eugene Holiday, Wescot-Williams, Finance Minister Hiro Shigemoto and the Central Committee of Parliament.

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/16969-cft-to-prepare-budget-involvement-schedule.html

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Iraq to invest $7.25 billion in new town

The Iraqi National Investment Commission has awarded Hanwha Engineering and Construction a $7.25 billion deal to build a new town at Besmaya, 25 kilometers east of Baghdad. The company intends to begin construction on the 1,830 hectare site later this year and anticipates the project to take at least 7 years to complete.

Hanwha, a Korean construction company, will be in charge of engineering, procurement and construction of the town. The town will contain 100,000 housing units and the infrastructure to support 600,000 residents.

Iraqi PM Nuri Al-Maliki announced this deal as the beginning of his goal to build 1 million housing units in Iraq
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Source: http://www1.albawaba.com/main-headlines/iraq-invest-725-billion-new-town-376795

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Syrian TV: Police officers killed in ambush

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London, (Pal telegraph) - Syria's state television says at least 80 police officers have been killed in the northern town of Jisr al-Shughour in an ambush by "armed groups".

Source: http://www.paltelegraph.com/world/middle-east/77-middle-east/9371-syrian-tv-police-officers-killed-in-ambush.html

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Yara denies affair with married man

Lebanese singer Yara has denied recent circulating rumors in the press that she is intimately involved with a married man. Rumors had it that Yara has been involved with an in interior designer with two kids for some time now.

 

Yara
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Source: http://www1.albawaba.com/latest-news/yara-denies-affair-married-man-377397

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Despite profit declines - good time to buy shares of ElSewedy Electric?

On April 7, 2011, EFG Hermes produced its fourth quarter earning?s report on ElSewedy Electric, reiterating a ?buy? rating for the Egypt-based company. ElSewedy Electric, the leading integrated cable and electrical products manufacturer in the Middle East, has over 10,000 employees and 30 production facilities in more than 15 countries worldwide. 

ElSewedy Electric reported net profit in 2010 totaling EGP 796 million, up 26% from 2009
� 2011 Al Bawaba (www.albawaba.com)

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Source: http://www1.albawaba.com/main-headlines/despite-profit-declines-good-time-buy-shares-elsewedy-electric

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Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Tenuous truce in Yemen amid uncertainty

alt

London, (Pal Telegraph) - A truce seems to be holding between rival groups in the Yemeni capital Sanaa following two weeks of fierce clashes as Ali Abdullah Saleh, the country's president, recovers in neighbouring Saudi Arabia from wounds that he sustained in an attack last week on his presidential palace.

Source: http://www.paltelegraph.com/world/world-news/9374-tenuous-truce-in-yemen-amid-uncertainty.html

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American Express Middle East celebrates customer service excellence

American Express Middle East and North Africa recently held an award ceremony to celebrate customer service excellence within the organisation. More than 80 of the company?s loyal employees were recognised for their individual contributions at the American Express Service Excellence Awards.

William Keliehor, CEO and Mazin Khoury, COO of American Express MENA with winners of the Service Excellence awards
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Source: http://www1.albawaba.com/american-express-middle-east-celebrates-customer-service-excellence-377376

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Ragama hospital Director and deputy apologise to HRC

The two top officials from the Ragama Teaching Hospital, who barred human rights officials from speaking to people injured in last Monday’s protest at Katunayake, today apologized for their actions after being summoned to the Human Rights Commission (HRC).
 
Hospital director, Dr. U.L.R.H Perera, and deputy director, Dr. Champa Aluthweera, said they acted in such a manner in order to prevent interested parties such as politicians and members of the media from hassling patients.
 
The HRC officials had first approached Dr. Aluthweera to seek permission to speak to those injured during the protest. He in turn contacted Dr. Perera, who then denied them their request.
 
Furthermore, Dr. Aluthweera is reported to have avoided all telephone calls made to him by officials from the HRC.
 
After learning of the incident, HRC Chairman Priyantha Perera, a former Supreme Court Judge, summoned the two officials to the commission today, to explain why they should not be reported to the Supreme Court.
 
The clash between Free Trade Zone workers and the police at Katunayake, over a proposed private sector pension bill, left scores of people from both sides injured and 22-year-old Roshen Shanaka dead.    

Source: http://www.sundaytimes.lk/index.php/latest/7963-ragama-hospital-director-and-deputy-apologises-to-hrc

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?Day after? election jitters surface in Argentina?s capital and money markets

Deputy Economy minister Roberto Feletti helped fuel uncertainty  Argentina?s capital flight is forecasted to reach 17 billion US dollars in 2011, above the 11.4 billion of last year because of electoral year uncertainties, and in spite of a larger trade surplus.

Source: http://en.mercopress.com/2011/06/07/day-after-election-jitters-surface-in-argentina-s-capital-and-money-markets?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss&utm_content=main&utm_campaign=rss

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American Express Middle East celebrates customer service excellence

American Express Middle East and North Africa recently held an award ceremony to celebrate customer service excellence within the organisation. More than 80 of the company?s loyal employees were recognised for their individual contributions at the American Express Service Excellence Awards.

William Keliehor, CEO and Mazin Khoury, COO of American Express MENA with winners of the Service Excellence awards
� 2011 Al Bawaba (www.albawaba.com)

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Source: http://www1.albawaba.com/american-express-middle-east-celebrates-customer-service-excellence-377376

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Hospital to take disciplinary action against gynaecologist

~ Says there's an unwritten policy to use sterile gloves~

CAY HILL--The St. Maarten Medical Center (SMMC) will be taking disciplinary measures against Gynaecologist Dr. Diederik Smit who is alleged to have shoved a ward supervisor who admonished him about the use of unsterilized gloves recently.

In a press release issued Tuesday SMMC said the Obstetrics/Gynaecology ward at SMMC had an unwritten policy for use of sterile gloves and indicated that the specialist in question was not informed about this unwritten policy.

"The new specialist was accustomed to using regular gloves when executing pelvic exams by patients and he was not informed of this unwritten SMMC policy. At the moment of the incident the choice of gloves was brought forward as questioning the medical authority of the specialist...

"We regret that the incident occurred and do not condone nor accept that any staff member has any verbal outbursts or physical confrontations with any other person within SMMC," the SMMC stated in its press release on Tuesday which was signed by General Director Dr. George Scot in his capacity on the SMMC Board of Directors.

"Disciplinary measures will be taken against the specialist after Dr. [George] Scot Board of Directors of SMMC receives an advice from the Medical Staff Board of the specialists. The Medical Staff Board is an organised independent body of which all specialists operating at SMMC are members. The advisory process is a required procedure in line with the rules and regulation of the Medical Staff Board."

In the release SMMC said it also refutes what it claims had been incorrect statements which were given in recent press coverage with regard to the incident. The hospital said the information "damages the reputation of SMMC and by extension the reputation of our employees. We regard the statements as slander and question the reasons why they were made. It is important that the public receives the correct information so that they know and understand that management and employees will do everything to make and keep the SMMC a safe place when they are in need of medical treatment."

SMMC said the incident, where the specialist pushed a ward supervisor during a heated discussion was witnessed by two other employees. The incident happened in the nurse's station and no patients were present as previously reported in the media.

SMMC said "the specialist deeply apologises for the occurrence of the incident and is heavily affected by the reactions it caused as well as the false accusations against him as a professional. He has requested and received approval, to take some time out in order for all parties to be able to focus on the continuity of patient care."

Regarding the use of gloves SMMC said all patients at SMMC are examined with new gloves that are only used once. "We absolutely refute the statements indicating otherwise. The discussion between the Specialist and the Ward Supervisor regarded the specific use of new sterile gloves versus new unsterile gloves. Sterile gloves have undergone a special process and are separately packed to ensure its sterile state and are only used for medical indications.

"Many hospitals in various countries, including the Netherlands, have the policy that if there is no clear medical indications requiring the specific use of sterile gloves, patients are examined with the use of regular gloves (unsterile). There is no scientific proof indicating that the risk of infection by female patients increases with the use of regular gloves.

"At the Obstetrics/Gynaecology ward at SMMC there is the unwritten policy to use sterile gloves when performing pelvic exams by patients. Although there is no scientific proof that this will contribute to any extra safety, SMMC has adapted this practice and will continue to do so from a precautionary standpoint."

Dismissing staff

SMMC said it also refuted any statement that other staff members have been dismissed for similar or less incidents. "In the past five years there were eight incidents where staff members were dismissed on an average workforce of 200 employees, five for proven fraudulent actions, two for frequent absenteeism and one for sexual assault.

"As a professional organisation we stand for just conduct towards our patients and to our employees. The employees are SMMC. We are working with people for people. Conflicts can happen, therefore it is important to have policies and procedures in place to ensure that they can be addressed in a responsible manner. This means hearing all parties and understanding the root of the issue at hand. SMMC is giving this matter it fullest attention to ensure a safe and healthy environment for its patients and employees," stated the release.

Source: http://mx.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/16684-hospital-to-take-disciplinary-action-against-gynaecologist-.html

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Kidnapped in Gaza

(The following article was provided by Daniela Loffreda, a close friend of Vittorio Arrigoni.  She writes: 'This is a chilling account from Vittorio's blog of what happened to him and other ISM activists when they were kidnapped by the Israeli military in 2008. The media keeps focusing on how Hamas doesn't have control of Gaza and security. And I ask myself, had Vittorio tried to leave via Israel what would of happened to him, again? He was jailed and captured (and tortured) by IDF twice.')

By Vittorio Arrigoni

Last Tuesday the sea was a placid, liquid blanket, unruffled and as smooth as oil when Darlene, Andrew and I, human rights activists with the ISM sailed from the port of Gaza on three Palestinian fishing boats. The warm sun, clear blue sky and complete absence of wind had led us to expect a plentiful day’s catch for our fishermen friends. Around 11 AM we were intercepted and circled by eight Israeli military boats opening fire against the fishing boats, obstructing our way, after which they proceeded to kidnap us three internationals and fifteen Palestinian fishermen. They abducted us and stole the boats, leading us and the boats from the Palestinian water zone right to the border with Israel’s. We were about six miles from the coast of Gaza, which according to international laws is unequivocally in Palestinian waters (the Oslo Treaty gives the Palestinians sovereignty up to 20 miles from the coast of the Strip), meaning ours wasn’t an arrest but a full-blown abduction, with the fishing boats being stolen rather than confiscated. A veritable terrorist blitz. Israeli Navy special forces, commandos, balaklava-wearing, unfathomably armed, all to stop just three small wooden boats that could barely stay afloat.

I tried to speak to the Israeli Officer who seemed the highest in ranking, asking him whether they were planning to kill me. I could see more than ten pistols, guns and cannon barrels pointing at me, following my every move. Before the Israeli soldiers jumped on board the fishing boat, I asking him and them what kind of obsessive fear Israel nurtured, what degree of extreme danger for its domestic security could be represented by a bunch of simple Palestinian fishermen going offshore, within their own sea zone, to catch just enough fish to feed their families with.

The Israeli Officer, so iron-willed and authoritarian when barking orders in Hebrew at his soldiers and in English (with a distinctly Australian accent) at me, had nothing to say in reply to my simple query. These soldiers, all muscles and stony coldness, are trained to kill a man in less than a second (or less when he’s Palestinian), without even batting an eyelid. But it’s obvious they’re unable to willingly grasp the meaning of simple terms such as “right to exist” and “right of sustenance”.

Since we were far from Israeli borders, I told the Israeli Officer I didn’t recognize his authority, nor their right to kidnap myself and my friends, the fishermen. I therefore decided I would resist passively, non-violently. I climbed onto the cabin roof, and from there onto the iron structure used as a jib to lift the fishing nets, at the boat’s stern. Three soldiers followed me, pointing guns in my face. Their eyes behind the black balaklavas seemed to me like the best representation of hatred that I had ever seen, a hatred taught in years of lessons learnt off by heart, on how to best defeat an enemy, even when that enemy doesn’t exist. Not in the least bit intimidated, I asked them whether they intended to kill me, and if so to go ahead and finish off their job then and there. Go ahead and kill a civilian, a disarmed Italian on a Palestinian fishing boat, gone fishing with his Palestinian friends on Palestinian waters. A fourth soldier came forward, and I recognized the weapon he was holding, a taser gun. I told him the truth, that I have a heart condition. His weapon could have given me a cardiac arrest. The soldier got closer, the Officer gave him the order and I turned my back on both of them, so as not too feel too much compassion for them. The soldier shot me in the back, an electric shock that knocked me right out, then all four soldiers tried to push me down the three-meter leap, down onto the stern’s steel floor that could have provoked serious fractures in me. I lunged forward and leapt into the sea, swimming slowly with what strength I had left. I swam towards the shore on the horizon, towards Gaza, towards my home. Indifferent to the intimidating bullets hitting the water a few centimeters from my head, I swam for a good half hour, followed at a short distance by the eight war ships. But when my teeth started to chatter uncontrollably and the palms of my hands turned blue, I had to give in and let the soldiers pull me out of the water, beating me up as they did so. I narrowly missed hypothermia.

When we got to the port of Ashkelon, myself, Darlene and Andrew were marched out of the Israeli war ship and were met by a scenario reminiscent of the Holocaust. It was something that reminded me of Schindler’s List, or the horror-imbued prose of Primo Levi. All the fishermen were made to kneel, stark naked, chained at the ankles and handcuffed with their arms behind their backs, blindfolded. These were the conditions they had been made to travel in, on an open deck for 50 nautical kilometers.

Why so? For what reason on earth does Israel, through its army and government, soil its reputation with such crimes against the civilians of Gaza on a daily basis? Why does it impose these collective punishments? Preventing harmless fishermen from catching fish a few miles from the coast, in their own water zone, and more generally starving Gaza’s population held captive in its siege, certainly doesn’t favor the peace process, nor will it give Israel more security. The exact opposite is true.

Us three internationals were lead into a prison at Ben Gurion, followed by another one in Ramle, where we immediately went on a hunger strike to ask for the immediate release of the Palestinian fishermen, which eventually took place.

I was held for six days in that Israeli jail in terrible conditions, in filthy and claustrophobic cells, crawling with insects and parasites that feasted on my skin. But coming from Gaza, I was used to being held under chain. Through Israel’s will, Gaza is the biggest open-air prison in the world. All the industries have had to close down, over 80% of the population survives under the poverty line and the highest rates of unemployment in the world are recorded in Gaza. There’s no electricity or fuel. Hospitals need medicine, the vast majority of the population need food and the bare essentials. The Israelis only conducted me from one open-air prison to another of their own smaller ones, where at least, unlike in Gaza, they regularly serve rations and both electricity and drinking water are available almost daily.

But I was denied the most basic of human rights, such as the faculty to contact my attorney or consulate at my own discretion rather than my jailers’. Furthermore, I am keen to speak out against the prison of Ramle, twenty kilometers from Tel Aviv, where hundreds of African refugees, mostly Ethiopian, Eritrean and Sudanese, are virtually buried alive. They have perfectly valid UN visa passes; in any self-styled civilized country they would have been assigned accommodation and the bare essentials to survive. They’re fleeing from war – they’re no terrorists. But once again, when it comes to human rights, and more generally to international law, Israel have demonstrated that it’s just a bunch of hollow words to them outside their borders, as well as within them. I’ll do everything in my power to let the inhuman conditions of my inmates be known – I promised them I would.

In the end, Andrew, Darlene and I were deported. We didn’t appeal to an Israeli court so as not to legitimize our arrest, which is considered a kidnapping under international law.

Our lawyers will battle it out to have the fishing boats returned. Besides the financial loss suffered by the boats’ owners, what’s really aggravating us is the thought of fifty unemployed fishermen, and about thirty Palestinian families without a means of sustenance for the last week.

Those boats robbed by Israel are a symbol of the siege under which Gaza is forcibly held, the illegality bordering on terrorism with which the Israeli Army operates outside its territory. Personally, I, Vittorio Arrigoni, declare that I’m a lion. The more I get flogged, the more they jail me, the steelier my will to fight for human rights becomes. It was no laughing matter for Gandhi and his companions to shake off the British occupation, nor for Mandela to defeat the Apartheid that reigned supreme in South Africa. Neither the wounds inflicted upon me in these months in Gaza, nor has my last confinement sufficed to make me take a single step back on the path towards the non-violent civic struggle I undertook. It’s a moral matter that spells freedom for the Palestinians, and simultaneously peace and security for the Israelis.

Stay human,

Vittorio Arrigoni

Source: http://palestinechronicle.com/view_article_details.php?id=16893

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Highest point reached at Hope Estate phase two

page1a012HOPE ESTATE--Minister responsible for public housing Theo Heyliger was hoisted by crane in a three-person construction basket and poured champagne over the highest point of the Hope Estate phase two apartment project on Monday. The project consists of 24 three-bedroom apartments.

The Minister lauded the fact that the project is nearing completion and, although just a drop in the housing demand bucket, will offer homes to some persons who need them the most. He pointed out that although monies from Dutch funding agency USONA for public housing had been depleted, it was time for St. Maarten to find creative ways to fund future construction of affordable homes.

In this context he mentioned "seriously looking at" housing bonds, finding ways of tapping into the pension fund, the housing foundation obtaining feasible interest rates at the banks, etc. He also gave a guarantee to St. Maarten Housing Development Foundation (SMHDF) Director Henry Lynch that government would soon sign over properties "to further develop affordable homes" for the people of St. Maarten.

As phase II is an extension of the 70 apartments that comprise Hope Estate phase I, the 24 units will be managed by SMHDF through a management agreement with government.

The project is being financed by USONA for approximately NAf. 4.4 million through the Social Economic Initiative funding. Government is contributing NAf. 1.1 million, NAf. 900,000 of which is designated for infrastructure and NAf. 100,000 for drainage provisions. SMHDF also is contributing NAf. 169,000.

The 24 apartments are in three separate three-storey buildings located adjacent to the three buildings of Hope Estate phase I.

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/17320--highest-point-reached-at-hope-estate-phase-two-.html

BBC Egypt Energy industry Sevilla Doctor Who Debit cards

Saudi unemployment rate hits 15%

Adel Faqih, the Saudi Minister of Labor said the new "bands" program which is expected to be applied soon will stop 99% of the corruption involved in the visas trading activity in the Kingdom.

The Minister of Labor held a meeting with businessmen in Jeddah in order to share details of the new system. He stressed that the situation in the Saudi private sector does not exist in any other country in the world, where 90% of the employees are foreign, while Saudi nationals do not represent more than 10% of the labor force.

Saudi bankers at the NCB bank in Jeddah
� 2011 Al Bawaba (www.albawaba.com)

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Source: http://www1.albawaba.com/main-headlines/saudi-unemployment-rate-hits-15

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25 killed in northern Syria clashes

At least 25 Syrians were reported killed on Sunday during a government security crackdown in a northern Syrian town. According to the AP, Rami Abdul-Rahman of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the deaths in the town of Jisr al-Shughour included four policemen.

The report said 19 civilians and six members of the security forces were killed.

Human rights groups claim more than 1,200 people have died in the crackdown against anti-government protesters since March. 

Syria riots
� 2011 Al Bawaba (www.albawaba.com)

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Source: http://www1.albawaba.com/main-headlines/25-killed-northern-syria-clashes-376940

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Kidnapped in Gaza

(The following article was provided by Daniela Loffreda, a close friend of Vittorio Arrigoni.  She writes: 'This is a chilling account from Vittorio's blog of what happened to him and other ISM activists when they were kidnapped by the Israeli military in 2008. The media keeps focusing on how Hamas doesn't have control of Gaza and security. And I ask myself, had Vittorio tried to leave via Israel what would of happened to him, again? He was jailed and captured (and tortured) by IDF twice.')

By Vittorio Arrigoni

Last Tuesday the sea was a placid, liquid blanket, unruffled and as smooth as oil when Darlene, Andrew and I, human rights activists with the ISM sailed from the port of Gaza on three Palestinian fishing boats. The warm sun, clear blue sky and complete absence of wind had led us to expect a plentiful day’s catch for our fishermen friends. Around 11 AM we were intercepted and circled by eight Israeli military boats opening fire against the fishing boats, obstructing our way, after which they proceeded to kidnap us three internationals and fifteen Palestinian fishermen. They abducted us and stole the boats, leading us and the boats from the Palestinian water zone right to the border with Israel’s. We were about six miles from the coast of Gaza, which according to international laws is unequivocally in Palestinian waters (the Oslo Treaty gives the Palestinians sovereignty up to 20 miles from the coast of the Strip), meaning ours wasn’t an arrest but a full-blown abduction, with the fishing boats being stolen rather than confiscated. A veritable terrorist blitz. Israeli Navy special forces, commandos, balaklava-wearing, unfathomably armed, all to stop just three small wooden boats that could barely stay afloat.

I tried to speak to the Israeli Officer who seemed the highest in ranking, asking him whether they were planning to kill me. I could see more than ten pistols, guns and cannon barrels pointing at me, following my every move. Before the Israeli soldiers jumped on board the fishing boat, I asking him and them what kind of obsessive fear Israel nurtured, what degree of extreme danger for its domestic security could be represented by a bunch of simple Palestinian fishermen going offshore, within their own sea zone, to catch just enough fish to feed their families with.

The Israeli Officer, so iron-willed and authoritarian when barking orders in Hebrew at his soldiers and in English (with a distinctly Australian accent) at me, had nothing to say in reply to my simple query. These soldiers, all muscles and stony coldness, are trained to kill a man in less than a second (or less when he’s Palestinian), without even batting an eyelid. But it’s obvious they’re unable to willingly grasp the meaning of simple terms such as “right to exist” and “right of sustenance”.

Since we were far from Israeli borders, I told the Israeli Officer I didn’t recognize his authority, nor their right to kidnap myself and my friends, the fishermen. I therefore decided I would resist passively, non-violently. I climbed onto the cabin roof, and from there onto the iron structure used as a jib to lift the fishing nets, at the boat’s stern. Three soldiers followed me, pointing guns in my face. Their eyes behind the black balaklavas seemed to me like the best representation of hatred that I had ever seen, a hatred taught in years of lessons learnt off by heart, on how to best defeat an enemy, even when that enemy doesn’t exist. Not in the least bit intimidated, I asked them whether they intended to kill me, and if so to go ahead and finish off their job then and there. Go ahead and kill a civilian, a disarmed Italian on a Palestinian fishing boat, gone fishing with his Palestinian friends on Palestinian waters. A fourth soldier came forward, and I recognized the weapon he was holding, a taser gun. I told him the truth, that I have a heart condition. His weapon could have given me a cardiac arrest. The soldier got closer, the Officer gave him the order and I turned my back on both of them, so as not too feel too much compassion for them. The soldier shot me in the back, an electric shock that knocked me right out, then all four soldiers tried to push me down the three-meter leap, down onto the stern’s steel floor that could have provoked serious fractures in me. I lunged forward and leapt into the sea, swimming slowly with what strength I had left. I swam towards the shore on the horizon, towards Gaza, towards my home. Indifferent to the intimidating bullets hitting the water a few centimeters from my head, I swam for a good half hour, followed at a short distance by the eight war ships. But when my teeth started to chatter uncontrollably and the palms of my hands turned blue, I had to give in and let the soldiers pull me out of the water, beating me up as they did so. I narrowly missed hypothermia.

When we got to the port of Ashkelon, myself, Darlene and Andrew were marched out of the Israeli war ship and were met by a scenario reminiscent of the Holocaust. It was something that reminded me of Schindler’s List, or the horror-imbued prose of Primo Levi. All the fishermen were made to kneel, stark naked, chained at the ankles and handcuffed with their arms behind their backs, blindfolded. These were the conditions they had been made to travel in, on an open deck for 50 nautical kilometers.

Why so? For what reason on earth does Israel, through its army and government, soil its reputation with such crimes against the civilians of Gaza on a daily basis? Why does it impose these collective punishments? Preventing harmless fishermen from catching fish a few miles from the coast, in their own water zone, and more generally starving Gaza’s population held captive in its siege, certainly doesn’t favor the peace process, nor will it give Israel more security. The exact opposite is true.

Us three internationals were lead into a prison at Ben Gurion, followed by another one in Ramle, where we immediately went on a hunger strike to ask for the immediate release of the Palestinian fishermen, which eventually took place.

I was held for six days in that Israeli jail in terrible conditions, in filthy and claustrophobic cells, crawling with insects and parasites that feasted on my skin. But coming from Gaza, I was used to being held under chain. Through Israel’s will, Gaza is the biggest open-air prison in the world. All the industries have had to close down, over 80% of the population survives under the poverty line and the highest rates of unemployment in the world are recorded in Gaza. There’s no electricity or fuel. Hospitals need medicine, the vast majority of the population need food and the bare essentials. The Israelis only conducted me from one open-air prison to another of their own smaller ones, where at least, unlike in Gaza, they regularly serve rations and both electricity and drinking water are available almost daily.

But I was denied the most basic of human rights, such as the faculty to contact my attorney or consulate at my own discretion rather than my jailers’. Furthermore, I am keen to speak out against the prison of Ramle, twenty kilometers from Tel Aviv, where hundreds of African refugees, mostly Ethiopian, Eritrean and Sudanese, are virtually buried alive. They have perfectly valid UN visa passes; in any self-styled civilized country they would have been assigned accommodation and the bare essentials to survive. They’re fleeing from war – they’re no terrorists. But once again, when it comes to human rights, and more generally to international law, Israel have demonstrated that it’s just a bunch of hollow words to them outside their borders, as well as within them. I’ll do everything in my power to let the inhuman conditions of my inmates be known – I promised them I would.

In the end, Andrew, Darlene and I were deported. We didn’t appeal to an Israeli court so as not to legitimize our arrest, which is considered a kidnapping under international law.

Our lawyers will battle it out to have the fishing boats returned. Besides the financial loss suffered by the boats’ owners, what’s really aggravating us is the thought of fifty unemployed fishermen, and about thirty Palestinian families without a means of sustenance for the last week.

Those boats robbed by Israel are a symbol of the siege under which Gaza is forcibly held, the illegality bordering on terrorism with which the Israeli Army operates outside its territory. Personally, I, Vittorio Arrigoni, declare that I’m a lion. The more I get flogged, the more they jail me, the steelier my will to fight for human rights becomes. It was no laughing matter for Gandhi and his companions to shake off the British occupation, nor for Mandela to defeat the Apartheid that reigned supreme in South Africa. Neither the wounds inflicted upon me in these months in Gaza, nor has my last confinement sufficed to make me take a single step back on the path towards the non-violent civic struggle I undertook. It’s a moral matter that spells freedom for the Palestinians, and simultaneously peace and security for the Israelis.

Stay human,

Vittorio Arrigoni

Source: http://palestinechronicle.com/view_article_details.php?id=16893

Darren Bent Employment law Middle East Extradition Gabriel Agbonlahor JS Bach

Monday, June 6, 2011

Prisoners launch peaceful protest

POINTE BLANCHE--Inmates at the Pointe Blanche House of Detention protested yesterday their living conditions and the recent theft of an inmate's pay.

Inmates stayed in their cells and refused to report for work.

According to a senior prison official, the prisoners believe unsatisfactory living conditions within the prison remain unaddressed.

The police were sent to the premises to ensure that prisoners remained peaceful and did not pose a threat to the safety of staff or one another.

There were no indications of any altercations between inmates and guards. The protest remains ongoing up to press time.

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/16821-prisoners-launch-peaceful-protest.html

Snowboarding Guantánamo Bay Kevin Campbell CVs Russell Brand Mervyn King

Malcolm Maidwell passes away at 73

Page1C296SIMPSON BAY--Malcolm Maidwell, much loved doyen of the sports community, passed away at his home on Saturday afternoon after succumbing to a ten-year battle against prostate cancer. He was 73.

His wife Liz and all four of his children were at his bedside. Michael Maidwell from Orange Grove band flew in from Holland to be there. Tributes have been pouring in to the Maidwell home over the weekend and countless condolence messages posted on Facebook.

Daughter Suzy told The Daily Herald while the cancer had worsened her father was determined to be awake at the end.

"He said everybody he loved and wanted to be with was alive. He had been too weak to communicate before but he suddenly said very clearly to us 'I love you all...I'm going now.' He saved all his energy to say that. It was beautiful," Suzy recalled.

His body will be cremated today Monday but that will be a private family affair.

In tribute to his immense contribution to sports, cyclists will meet at the Maidwell home on Saturday, May 14 at 3:00pm from where they will carry his ashes around the Lagoon to the runners who will be waiting at Port de Plaisance to continue the procession. The runners will finish at Kim Sha Beach before handing the ashes over to the Kayakers who will spread his ashes in the bay. A gathering will be held on the beach around 5:00pm where people will be able to pay their personal tributes.

Malcolm Maidwell was something of a visionary and responsible for starting and promoting sports such as road running, cycling, triathlons, and kayaking during the early days when those sports did not exist on the Dutch side.

He came to the island in 1969 and started a boat-building business with Peter Spronk in 1971. At the time he was an avid runner and soon formed the Road Runners Club with another sports enthusiast Dr. Frits Bus in 1984. The club is now in its 26th year.

It was around 1992 that Malcolm started the Friendly Island Triathlon Association and subsequently opened the Tri Sport shop as a means to import bikes for a growing number of triathletes. His brainchild, the Mini Triple Triathlon, encouraged many newcomers into the sport due to its flexibility of distances and disciplines.

In 1998 the Friendly Island Cycling Association was formed. Prior to this cycling clubs were all on the French side.

Following a cycling accident, he changed tacks and formed the Friendly Island Aquatic Club in 2002 which promoted Kayaking.

In 2005 he was decorated by Queen Beatrix of Holland for his contribution to sports.

Malcolm Maidwell will be remembered for his infectious enthusiasm and encouraging scores of sedentary people into healthy, sporty, lifestyles. He delighted in seeing his new-found athletes' progress.

Said Frits Bus; "I've lost my best and closest friend. We shared the same interests and passion for sports. Malcolm was always the driving force behind the forming of clubs and events. We did a lot together. The way he approached people and motivated them was amazing. We will miss him terribly."

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/16602-malcolm-maidwell-passes-away-at-73.html

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