Jamaica

  • Nicholson hopeful oil deal will survive Chávez

    KINGSTON, Jamaica – FOREIGN AFFAIRS and Foreign Trade Minister Senator A.J. Nicholson yesterday said that if the late Hugo Chávez's United Socialist Party wins in another national election “we would dare to hope that the PetroCaribe and other projects would continue.” In an interview on Radio Jamaica yesterday, Nicholson sought to allay fears regarding the PetroCaribe deal, noting that Venezuelan…

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  • No fatalities from accident involving Caribbean students

    KINGSTON, Jamaica, CMC – There are no reports of fatalities in the aftermath of an accident in Cuba which involved Caribbean nationals on Saturday. According to a release from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs here, the accident that took place close to the town Santa Clara, involved several Caribbean students studying in Havana, who were on their way to Camaguey…

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  • IDB praises on-the-job-programme in Jamaica

    WASHINGTON, CMC – The Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) is heaping praise on a project in Jamaica that is providing new ways the transfer of cash to poor families in exchange for meeting certain conditions such as sending their children to school. The IDB said for more than two decades, several Latin American and Caribbean countries have transferred cash to poor…

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  • Deficit of meritocracy in the Caribbean

    KINGSTON, Jamaica – A meritocracy exists where selection and promotion of people is based on merit, more specifically, their qualifications and performance. Regrettably, there's a deficit of meritocracy in the Caribbean. In the national political arena, selection is based on political party affiliation, amount of money donated, race, class and gender. Civil servants are mostly promoted by seniority. Longevity and…

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  • CCJ begins hearing evidence in historic sitting in Jamaica

    KINGSTON, Jamaica, CMC – The lead attorney for the Barbados government, Queen Counsel Roger Forde, will continue his cross examination of Jamaican Shanique Myrie on Tuesday as the Trinidad-based Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) continues its first ever sitting here in the case in which the Jamaican national has sued Barbados. Myrie, 25, who was granted leave by the CCJ…

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  • PM Gonsalves’ ‘confrontation’ with two BBC journalists

    KINGSTON, Jamaica – THOSE of us in the Caribbean journalism profession who have long come to appreciate the excellent, almost reverential, ethical standards established by the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), would always share the disappointment and sense of hurt whenever colleagues of this internationally renowned media institution fall victim to improper behaviour and activities. Consequently, colleagues of regional and national…

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  • Antigua workers protest decision to hire Trinidadian

    KINGSTON, Jamaica – Workers employed at the Antigua Public Utilities Authority (APUA) stayed away from their jobs on Friday protesting the decision of the utility company to hire a 65 year-old Trinidadian as a manager. The Antigua and Barbuda Workers Union (ABWU) said that the company had replaced electricity manager Lyndon Francis with the un-named Trinidadian and that at least…

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  • New meaning of sovereignty

    KINGSTON, Jamaica – The Bank of Jamaica posted on its website February 15 an IMF press release with the caption, 'IMF and Jamaica authorities reach staff-level agreement on key elements of the EFF-Supported programme'. This is the first of two steps in the approval process; the other is approval by the IMF board that should take place by the end…

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  • EDITORIAL – The CCJ: a declaration of relevance

    KINGSTON, Jamaica – An important event is unfolding in Kingston today which, perhaps, may be a defining moment for Jamaica. We hope it is. The matter to which we refer is the sitting here of the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ), albeit in its original jurisdiction, which it is to say in its capacity as arbiter of the Revised Treaty…

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  • CCJ convenes in Jamaica today with finger-rape case

    KINGSTON, Jamaica – THE Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) will today convene for the first time in Jamaica when it sits at the Jamaica Conference Centre in downtown Kingston to hear the case against the Barbadian Government by Jamaican Shanique Myrie. Myrie is seeking damages for what she said was discriminatory treatment by Barbadian Customs and Immigration officials when she…

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