MOTTAC Music Festival a Huge Success!
MOTTAC (Musicians of the Turks and Caicos Islands) launched their first Music Festival at the Downtown Ballpark on Saturday, October 26th 2019 which was commissioned by the Premier Hon. Sharlene Cartwright-Robinson and sponsored by the Office of the Premier, Local Government and Community Affairs. More than 20 local artists both solo and groups performed at what will be an annual event.
The event started at 12 noon with a family fun day and kid’s fair with games and prizes and featured performances by the Adelaide Oemler Primary School Rip Saw Band, Long Bay Highschool Choir, RAJ the Entertainer and the British West Indies Collegiate Steel Pan Ban.
The set list for the evening included artists from across the Islands featuring performances from: -
- DJ Savage
- Team Up Records
- Island Boys
- Super P
- Inna Groove
- DJ DAYOH
- Sea Breeze
- Johnna Messam
- Carl ‘Choice’ Lewis
- Sax O Pan Serenades
- Mikey
- Quinton Dean
- Gemma
- Tess
- Julian
- Stanley Roots
- Q-Band Lynx
- Pro-Vision
- Mohen Cox
- Prime DJ’s
- Noel and Tiffany Brown
- V6 Band Boys
Premier Hon. Sharlene Cartwright-Robinson commenting on the success of the festival stated: “I was blown away by the production quality and showmanship of the MOTTAC Music Festival and all the entertainers who performed! It is a testament to the caliber of talent we have across all areas of entertainment in the Turks and Caicos Islands. It is important for my Government to keep its mandate to providing a platform where TCI’s talented musicians, entertainers and production technicians can showcase their various gifts; hence, the creation of Musicians of the Turks and Caicos and the commissioning of the Music Festival.
The Office of the Premier was a proud sponsor of the MOTTAC Music Festival and will continue to support this initiative in the future.
Congratulations to the MOTTAC Team for their first successful event and I look forward to what they have in store for years to come!”
The establishment MOTTAC was commissioned by the Premier Robinson earlier this year and will be held during Heritage Month annually. The Office of the Premier is a proud sponsor of the festival.
BURGLARS ARRESTED AFTER CAUGHT IN THE ACT
Two men were arrested after Officers caught a burglary in progress at a Villa on Corona Close, Grace Bay, Providenciales.
The homeowner contacted 911 at 3:20 a.m., on Sunday, October 27th, 2019 and reported that unknown persons were trying to burglarize his home. Officers who were on patrol in the Grace Bay area were dispatched and quickly responded to the said location when they spotted two men, a 44-year-old and a 21-year-old.
Both men were arrested on Suspicion of Burglary and are still in Police Custody.
Adopt-A-Roundabout Project Underway
The Office of the Premier, Local Government and Community Affairs as part of its wider community enhancement project launches the Adopt-A-Roundabout Programme a project that will allow sponsors to formally adopt, beautify and maintain the roundabouts in the Turks and Caicos Islands, starting with those along the Leeward, Highway in Providenciales
.
The programme, similar to the Adopt-A-Highway Programme launched earlier this year, features Public-Private sector partnership to enhance all roadways in the Turks and Caicos Islands, ultimately keeping the communities of the TCI ‘Beautiful by Nature and Clean by Choice’.
Interested sponsors can apply through the Office of the Premier and successful applicants will be afforded the responsibility to create their own innovative design and to maintain and upkeep the environment in their adopted roundabouts.
Applications can be submitted to the Office of the Premier in Grand Turk and Providenciales or via email at adoptahighway@gov.tc.
Haitian diplomat urges government not to send nationals to jail on minor immigration offences
NASSAU, Bahamas (CMC) — A Haitian diplomat is appealing to The Bahamas government not to imprison nationals from his country who have been convicted of minor immigration offences even as Nassau continued the programme of deporting illegal immigrants, including Haitians, last weekend.
Haitian Chargé d'Affaires Dorval Darlier said he had held talks with Attorney General Carl Bethel on the issue.
“We discussed a lot of things. I think that the first point of view is that some people are in Fox Hill (prison0 for minor things like the immigration matter. I know that The Bahamas is a country of law, but sometimes you have to see it like the humanitarian way because…there isn't a major crime,” Darlier told the Nassau Guardian newspaper.
He said that instead of sending illegal Haitian migrants to jail, they should be sent to the detention centre “and be repatriated to Haiti,” adding “they don't have to spend time in Fox Hill”.
He said it was harsh to send Haitians to prison for petty offences, adding that it is an expensive undertaking to keep Haitians in prisons.
“If you keep someone in jail, you are to take care of them. You are to feed [them]. I think it's [better] for the government to just send them back. It's not a big deal. It's not a big crime. Just ship them back, send them back to Haiti. This is one of the main concerns that we were discussing.”
Last week, The Bahamas government defended its decision to deport illegal migrants, mainly Haitian nationals, following the passage of the Category 5 storm on September1 that killed an estimated 60 people and left millions of dollars in damage on the Abaco Island and Grand Bahama.
The Geneva-based Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) has called on the Hubert Minnis administration to halt the deportations, but Nassau responded by saying “it is unfortunate sometimes that international organisations – with all respect – apply standards to little countries like The Bahamas that they do not enforce in their own countries.
“The government of The Bahamas wishes to assure that there was adherence to all due process; and the requisite procedures for proper documentation via captured biometrics were followed to determine every individual's constitutional right to reside lawfully in the Commonwealth of The Bahamas,” the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement.
It said all individuals found in violation of the Immigration Act were “lawfully removed” from The Bahamas “in accordance with the requisite court orders”.
Earlier this month, Senior Magistrate Carolyn Vogt-Evans, said she was prepared to adopt a harsher line of action in dealing with illegal immigrants after indicating that fines do not seem to be a deterrent.
The magistrate sentenced several undocumented migrants to prison for immigration offences, including five Haitian men who were sentenced to the Bahamas Department of Correctional Services for illegal entering the country.
Meanwhile, 24 people, including 17 Haitians, were repatriated last Saturday.
The Department of Immigration said that six women were among those deported to Port au Prince and that two boys had been transferred from the department's “safe house” to the Children's Emergency hostel after their mother was convicted in court on charges of illegal landing and sent to prison for two months.
Emergency landing as aircraft wheel comes off during take off at Kenya airport
(CNN) - A passenger aircraft lost a wheel during takeoff on Monday morning forcing an emergency landing at Kenya's Eldoret International Airport.
The aircraft, operated by domestic airline Silverstone Air, took off from the Lodwar airstrip in Kenya's northwest and was heading to the capital Nairobi when the incident occurred Monday morning. The captain landed the aircraft at a nearby airport, the airline said.
"This was a precautionary action, and the aircraft landed safely," the airline said in a statement.
Passengers were booked on another plane and flown to the capital.
A spokeswoman for the airline declined to comment on the number of passengers on board, saying that the airline was still investigating the incident.
Another Silverstone aircraft carrying 55 people skidded off the runway at a local airstrip in Nairobi and slammed into trees, leaving some of its passengers injured earlier in October, officials said.
Following Monday's incident, many Kenyans expressed concerns about the safety of the company's aircraft and said the regulatory body had neglected its duties.
Gilbert Kibe, director-general of the Kenya Civil Aviation Authority (KCAA), said the agency is auditing the airline and accidents involving its planes to check the company's compliance with its regulations.
"KCAA reassures the public that safety and security remain within the Kenyan airspace remains a paramount priority, and we encourage you to remain vigilant in reporting safety concerns," Kibe said in a statement.
Kenya has a strong air safety record and achieved the 60 percent Effective Implementation (EI) score recommended for member states in the Global Aviation Safety Plan, according to the International Civil Aviation Organization in 2018.
The wearable cyborgs that use brain waves to power up your muscles
Tokyo (CNN) - Kristen Sorensen was 55 when she became paralyzed from the neck down last year.
"It came out of nowhere," says Sorensen. "I'd been fine and exercising every day, but it just started with tingling in my fingertips then progressed."
Diagnosed in October 2018 with Guillain Barre syndrome, a rare disorder that affects the body's nervous system, she never expected to walk again.
But earlier that year, the Brooks Cybernic Treatment Center in Jacksonville, Florida, became the first US center to use a unique rehabilitative technology developed in Japan -- the Hybrid Assistive Limb (HAL).
HAL -- essentially a wearable cyborg -- helps those with spinal cord injuries and muscular dystrophy regain their movements and strengthen their nerves and muscles. Known as exoskeletons, they're a type of lightweight suit, with joints powered by small electric motors, that serve as mechanical muscle.
Here's what's truly mind-blowing: Patients use their brain waves to control them.
When Sorensen heard about the brain wave-controlled exoskeleton, which was developed by Japanese roboticist Yoshiyuki Sankai, she knew she had to give it a try. She was determined to walk at her daughter's wedding a few months later in December.
But it's not just those with disabilities or injuries who stand to benefit. By 2050, there will be more than 2 billion people over age 60, according to the World Health Organization (WHO), and exoskeletons could offer a solution to the world's aging population.
In the future, as human bodies wear down with age, an exoskeleton -- powered by active minds -- could help people stay on their feet.
With such huge potential applications available, the global medical exoskeleton market will be worth an estimated $2.8 billion by 2023, according to research company Markets and Markets.
Louis Vuitton owner offers to buy jewelry icon Tiffany & Co
Hong Kong (CNN Business) - French luxury goods giant LVMH (LVMHF) has offered to buy Tiffany & Co., the iconic New York jeweler known for its little blue boxes.
LVMH, which is run by billionaire CEO Bernard Arnault and owns brands such as Louis Vuitton and Christian Dior, confirmed its interest on Monday following media reports of an offer over the weekend.
The French fashion conglomerate said it held "preliminary discussions" regarding a "possible transaction" with Tiffany. "There can be no assurance that these discussions will result in any agreement," it added.
Tiffany (TIF) confirmed Monday in a statement that it is reviewing an all-cash proposal from LVMH to buy the company for $120 per share. That's a premium of more than 20% over the stock's closing price on Friday.
Such a deal would value Tiffany at roughly $14.5 billion, but analysts believe there's a good chance that Tiffany holds out for a sweeter offer.
Oliver Chen, an analyst at Cowen, predicts that LVMH would need to propose at least $160 per share to secure a deal. Other luxury companies — such as Richemont, which owns Cartier — could make competing bids, he said.
Shares of Tiffany skyrocketed more than 30% in premarket trading Monday to nearly $130 per share, suggesting investors also expect a more lucrative offer. LVMH's stock barely budged in Paris.
"A takeover of Tiffany could make a lot of sense," analysts at Bernstein wrote in a research note. While it's one of the world's best-known luxury brands, analysts say it still has room to grow, particularly in jewelry and watches.
Cowen's Chen pointed to the company's strong brand as a "diamond and bridal authority," as well as its growth potential in China
.
The deal would boost LVMH's presence in the United States, which accounts for about a quarter of its revenue. And it would bolster the French company's jewelry and watch lineup, which includes European legacy brands such as Bulgari, Hublot and TAG Heuer. As of January, the jewelry and watch unit only brought in 9% of overall revenue, according to a letter to shareholders.
LVMH is the world's biggest luxury group. The company is home to 75 different brands, and it has for years been the top seller of high-end goods, according to a Deloitte analysis published this year. Last year, the retail giant took in 46.8 billion euros ($51.9 billion) in revenue.
Tiffany has had a more complicated story. The company has long dealt with slumping sales, and in 2017 it replaced its CEO after disappointing financial results. Since then, it has been working to rebrand its image to attract more millennials — adding more products that are designed to appeal to young shoppers, rolling out more targeted marketing and revamping its historic flagship store in New York City to draw in more customers.
In the company's most recent earnings report in August, it said that global sales dropped 3% in the first half of this year. But it also said it enjoyed "strong growth" in mainland China, where the slowing economy has put pressure on the broader luxury sector.
An acquisition of Tiffany would be one of LVMH's splashiest deals to date. In 2017, the company took over Christian Dior for $13 billion, and last year it snapped up the ritzy Belmond hotel chain for $2.6 billion.
Baghdadi is gone, but ISIS isn't dead yet -- and could be poised for a resurgence
(CNN) - The head of ISIS, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, is dead. The man who led the state that called itself Islamic -- first capturing Raqqa in Syria and then leading a blitzkrieg through Iraq, rampaging through Mosul, Tikrit, to the gates of Baghdad -- is no more.
ISIS established a horrifying standard of brutality, re-establishing slavery, practicing what amounted to genocide against the Yazidis, carrying out mass executions and beheadings -- all caught on camera -- and demolishing religious sites and antiquities.
The United States, with the help of its coalition allies, Iraq and the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), destroyed the Islamic State and killed Baghdadi.
ISIS, however, is far from finished. It operates in West Africa, Libya, Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, Afghanistan and the Philippines, and has followers in Europe and elsewhere. That, in addition to as many as 18,000 fighters still on the loose between Syria and Iraq, according to a report issued by the Pentagon's Inspector General in August.
There is no reason to conclude that the threat from ISIS' far-flung network of affiliates and sympathizers has disappeared with the passing of Baghdadi. He may have excelled in his evil mission, but he was at the top of a pyramid of power and others will come forward to claim his mantle of leadership and perhaps learn from his demise.
Unlike Osama bin Laden or Abu Musab Al-Zarqawi, who led al Qaeda in Iraq, Baghdadi maintained a low profile.
He appeared only once in public, in July 2014, when he delivered a sermon in Mosul's Grand Mosque.
After that, ISIS' al-Furqan media wing and social media accounts released sporadic audio messages purported to be from the ISIS leader. Then, earlier this year, another video resurfaced apparently showing Baghdadi sitting in casual clothes on the floor. He declared the "battle for Baghouz is over."
Among the dozens of ISIS fighters and their wives and children CNN interviewed this spring during the battle of Baghouz, the group's last stronghold, in eastern Syria, few mentioned the name of Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi. The diehards, the ones who still remained loyal to the ideology of ISIS, stressed their allegiance to ad-Dawla al-Islamiya -- the Islamic State, not to its leader.
Baghdadi never had a cult of personality. He did stress that he was a descendent of the Prophet Muhammad to burnish his Islamic credentials, but he never rose to the level of al Qaeda's Osama bin Laden, who was recognizable the world over.
Bin Laden first came to fame during the 1980s, when he led the so-called Arab mujahideen in the war against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. In the 1990s, from Sudan and then Afghanistan, he gave interviews to the Western media, including CNN, and even after the 9/11 attacks on the United States he issued statements and put out videos.
As khalifa, or caliph, of the Islamic State, Baghdadi never granted an interview to anyone. Yet in the end the Americans found him, and killed him, "whimpering, screaming and crying," according to US President Donald Trump.
ISIS is not going to disappear. It may morph into something else, just as Osama bin Laden's Arab mujahideen morphed into al Qaeda, which gave birth to al Qaeda in Iraq, which transformed into ISIS.
Regardless of what comes of ISIS, the terrain for extremist groups in the Middle East remains fertile. Authoritarian regimes here have developed a predictable template. They crush the political center by terrifying it into silence, by jailing anyone who calls for change, by killing or torturing opponents real or imagined, by co-opting others and driving the rest into exile.
What real opposition left is dominated by the most extreme and violent elements, their ranks often replenished by those who are able to emerge from the prisons and torture chambers in places like Damascus, Cairo, Baghdad and Riyadh.
As a result, the populace is faced with a stark choice: subdued, quiet acceptance of the authoritarian state and its inherent corruption, or siding with the extremists. In the end, the former usually happens.
The West, particularly the United States, still pays lip service to democracy and human rights, but it too for decades has fallen into the same trap. As distasteful as some of its Middle Eastern allies are, the thinking goes, they're preferable to the extremists.
And unless and until the dictator's template is smashed, new Abu Bakr al-Baghdadis will emerge.
There are more wealthy Chinese than Americans for the first time
London (CNN Business)For the first time, there are more rich Chinese than Americans in the top 10%.
A new report from Credit Suisse (CS) shows that wealth in China is ticking up, and the country now accounts for 100 million of the richest 10% of people in the world. There are 99 million Americans in the same category.
The United States still has many more millionaires — 18.6 million, or 40% of the world's total, versus 4.4 million in China. It's also adding to the millionaire count at a faster clip. The report credits low interest rates and Republican tax cuts for the country's 11th consecutive year of rising wealth.
The average American is also still much richer than their Chinese counterparts, with US wealth per adult at $432,365 compared with $58,544 in China.
But China holds claim to a growing piece of the pie, replacing Europe as the principal engine of global wealth growth. That's in spite of the trade war that's weighing on the nation's economy.
"Trade conditions and debt levels are causing concern, but signs for the coming years are otherwise fairly positive," Credit Suisse observed in its annual Global Wealth Report.
The report highlights the extent to which global wealth is concentrated at the very top. The bottom 50% of adults account for less than 1% of total wealth, while the top 10% own 82%. The top 1% alone owns almost half of all global assets, according to Credit Suisse.
Has the 1% peaked?
The threshold to make it into the top 10%, globally, is roughly $109,400 in net assets. To be in the top 1%, you'd need just above $936,400.
Still, the picture of wealth inequality since the 2008 financial crisis is complicated. While artificially low interest rates and bond-buying programs from central banks led to a boom in asset prices, raising the share of the top 1% of wealth holders, inequality "continued to decline for those below" that segment, Credit Suisse notes.
The share held by the bottom 90% now accounts for 18% of global wealth, up from 11% in 2000. Since 2016, the share held by the top 1% has broadly eased back, per the bank.
"While it is too early to say that wealth inequality is now in a downward phase, the prevailing evidence suggests that 2016 may have been the peak for the foreseeable future," the report's authors write.
- CNN
Lori Harvey arrested after hit-and-run accident
(CNN) - Lori Harvey, a model and the stepdaughter of comedian and television host Steve Harvey, was arrested over the weekend after a single vehicle car accident, according to the Beverly Hills Police Department.
She received a misdemeanor hit-and-run citation, BHPD Sgt . James Keenaghan told CNN, for allegedly hitting a parked vehicle around 9 p.m. Sunday and then leaving the scene.
Harvey was stopped and the cited shortly thereafter, police said.
Details on the make and model of her car or where exactly this happened in Beverly Hills were not immediately released.
- CNN
