Dr Simone Badal-McCreath is focused on becoming a pioneer in cancer treatment......She is also working with a group of experts to create a novel JAMAICAN cancer cell line, since the Caucasian cell line is what is being mostly used for testing.

BY NADINE WILSON All Woman writer  Monday, March 03, 2014 
SHE was recently recognised as the leading young female chemist in Latin America and the Caribbean; holds two masters degrees and a doctorate; was named the Young Scientist of the Year in Jamaica in 2011; and has several other awards to boast about, but though noteworthy, Dr Simone Badal-McCreath believes her greatest achievement to date is having a good character.
Dr Simone Badal-McCreath
The 32-year-old believes she has her father and her Christian upbringing to thank for this and feels her tenacity to be her best self has spilled over into her professional and academic life. Now in the middle of her research aimed at developing drugs to treat cancer, managing a lab and lecturing, she is penning her first book A woman's journey to success.
"It redefines success as we know it, not meaning success in terms of achievement, but being at a place that is divinely designed," she said. "It's achieving what God has ordained for you to achieve, even if you were supposed to sweep the floor, you do it to the best of your ability and realise that in sweeping the floor, you are making an environment clean."
Dr Badal-McCreath has no doubt that her journey to becoming a top-ranked scientist was divinely ordained. Her intention throughout high school was to become a doctor, but then she was unable to do physics in CXC and decided to apply to do pure and applied sciences at the University of the West Indies (UWI) first in order to matriculate into medicine. However, she had a change of heart once she realised how much she loved bio-chemistry. more

RECORDED: SULTRY SUNDAY SLOW JAMZ w/ RULA BROWN & NANS 3/2/14. Reggae singer, Ann Payne wins contest. Museikjunkie leads with 5 wins. SWA is second with 3 wins.


Video streaming by Ustream

Nearly six thousand suspected cases of Chikungunya virus reported in the Caribbean.....Chikungunya is a mosquito-borne viral disease causing symptoms such as fever, joint pain, muscle pain, headache and nose and gum bleeding.

STOCKHOLM, Sweden, Sunday March 2, 2014, CMC – The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDPC) says there are reports of new cases of the chikungunya virus in the Caribbean.
The ECDPC said in the past week, 293 new cases of chikungunya have been reported in the region, with confirmed ones in St. Martin (French), Martinique, St. Barthélemy and Guadeloupe.
New cases also surfaced in Dominica and French Guyana as well as St. Kitts and Nevis.
image
The European Centre for Disease
Prevention and Control said as
 of February 21, 2014, more than 5,900
 suspected cases have been
 reported in the Caribbean.


 
The ECDPC said as of February 21, 2014, more than 5,900 suspected cases have been reported in the region.
An outbreak of chikungunya in the Caribbean was reported from the French part of the island of St. Martin on December 6. The chikungunya transmission was detected during a concomitant dengue outbreak in the Caribbean. Both diseases are transmitted by the Aedes aegypti mosquito.
Chikungunya is a mosquito-borne viral disease causing symptoms such as fever, joint pain, muscle pain, headache and nose and gum bleeding.Chikungunya is present in parts of Africa, Southeast Asia and on the Indian subcontinent. more 

IN JAMAICA: Careers & Education... St George’s Primary in downtown Kingston is where girls do well....over 100 years preparing young girls to become ladies so that they can make a positive contribution to nation building.

These girls enjoy their lunch break by
playing Jacks.

The school currently has over 700 students enrolled. Unfortunately, the historic Anglican building out of which the school operates is unable to accommodate any more than this. In fact, instead of walls, chalkboards are used to partition the classrooms in the church hall. "Right now one of the challenges we have is space. We really want a building, we really want a school," said Ridley.

AS the only all girls' primary and infant school in Jamaica, St George's Girls' Primary and Infant School in downtown Kingston has spent over 100 years preparing young girls to become ladies so that they can make a positive contribution to nation building.
The school, which operates from a church hall, has more than its historical legacy to boast about. It is currently one of the schools most sought after by parents because of its academic achievements.
"The standard is very high. Academically the girls do very well. We usually perform above the national average in all areas for external examinations," said principal Collett Ridley.
Janet Davids has the full
 participation of the students
 in her grade six class.
"When it's registration time it is really overwhelming. It is the preffered school for parents to send their daughters," she said. "We have so many girls who want to come, so I don't think we'll ever go co-ed."
There have been efforts to spruce up the old building, but this does not solve the general space issue the school struggles with. "At the end of each academic year a project is done so we have renovation, we have the painting, fixing of windows and doors and so forth to maintain the building, so we have tried," Ridley said. more

IN JAMAICA: HORROR/DISAPPOINTING STORIES for people meeting online: All Woman...He flew in to MoBay and paid my fare to fly there from Kingston too. I was to spend the night,.My prince was wearing a doo-rag with his pants below his butt, and his Ebonics was peppered with Ni@#@ ...... ‘Three of his top teeth were gold...’ My worst online date

Liquid Gold models Monae and Trivis
BY DONNA HUSSEY-WHYTE All Woman Writer  Monday, March 03, 2014 
WITH finding friends on sites like Facebook and Twitter becoming the norm nowadays, it's also becoming the most natural thing for couples to hook up online.
And while many love stories have come from the Internet, so too have more and more horror stories of hook-ups gone wrong.
Persons have confessed to being lied to about the physical appearance of the other party, turned off by hygiene and turned off by the person's true character. Here some readers share their stories of their worst online dates.
Shellie M, 40:
I met this very nice guy on Facebook. We would message each other a lot and we eventually exchanged numbers and started calling each other regularly. He lives in the US and so we talked about either me visiting or him coming to Jamaica. It ended up that he came here. This was about nine months after we first started talking. I picked him up at the airport and believe me, he looked nothing like what he looked like on Facebook. Apparently he only posted pictures of himself when he was much younger and he never smiled in any of those photos. When I met him he was short, and three of his top teeth were gold. Gold teeth? That was the biggest turn off for me. So all the plans we had about what we would do when he came just went right down the drain for me. I refused to be seen in public with a man whose mouth was full of gold teeth. The thought of kissing him was so repulsive I felt like vomiting. I texted my cousin and we made up a story about a family emergency and I apologised profusely for leaving him the same day he came but I wasn't going to stick around. The worst part though is that I am the reason he came to Jamaica, so I still called him to ask if he was OK and sounded concerned and distressed that I could not be with him. Of course it was just a show.
Paula, 33:
This American guy found my blog online and contacted me, telling me I was cute. We chatted for a few months and he even said he had told his mom about me, he was that serious. He said he was an engineer, so of course I had the clean-cut image in my head. I had seen photos, but nothing that I could really use to judge. He flew in to MoBay and paid my fare to fly there from Kingston too. I was to spend the night, though I hadn't thought about the dynamics. He met me at the airport and I was immediately disappointed. My prince was wearing a doo-rag with his pants below his butt, and his Ebonics was peppered with Ni@#@ and Rap foolishness. I'm not one to judge but bwoy, what a let down. It was late so we went to the hotel, where, of course, he had weed and smoked. I spent the whole night on the couch hoping I wouldn't be attacked. He emailed me for a long time after that, but I was never into guys like that. more

100,000 JAMAICAN women, girls suffer pelvic disease......"Depending on how severe the disease is, if you don't get treatment, it can result in loss of productivity so you can't attend work or school," .....Shauna Fuller-Clarke, is urging employees and school administrators to become more sensitive

BY TANESHA MUNDLE Obsrever staff reporter mundlet@jamaicaobserver.com  Monday, March 03, 2014  
AS the country observes March as Endometriosis Month, co-founder of the Better Awareness and Support for Endometriosis (BASE) Foundation, Shauna Fuller-Clarke, is urging employees and school administrators to become more sensitive to and supportive of the approximately 100,000 women and students grappling with the disease locally.
According to Fuller-Clarke, who has been diagnosed with stage four endometriosis — a condition that occurs when cells from the lining of the uterus grow in other parts of the body causing a string of symptoms including intermittent and/or chronic pelvic pain, bowel or urinary disorders, irregular bleeding, painful menstruation, rectal pain, painful intercourse and infertility — loss of productivity is perhaps the biggest challenge those affected face.
"Depending on how severe the disease is, if you don't get treatment, it can result in loss of productivity so you can't attend work or school," she said. "I know of a university student who had missed her final exams because of the pain she was feeling and when she told the school they thought she was faking the pain and she had to resit the course."
"I also know of another girl who has gone through five jobs because of the number of sick days that she has taken," Fuller-Clarke added. In addition to the loss of productivity, the endometriosis advocate said the disease also affects relationships, in some case resulting in divorce. more

'12 Years A Slave' Wins Best Picture Oscar At 86th Annual Academy Awards.....Best Actor: Matthew... Best Actress: Cate...GOLDEN GIRL: Lupita Nyong'o Gets Standing Ovation... SWEEP: Gravity Grabs Golds... Victories For 'Frozen'... (VIDEO)

Lupita Nyong'o, Best supporting actress
A little more than six months after "12 Years a Slave" debuted at the Telluride Film Festival, Steve McQueen's slavery drama has been named Best Picture at the 2014 Oscars.
Based on the memoir by Solomon Northup, a free man kidnapped and sold into slavery in 1841, "12 Years a Slave" topped "American Hustle," "Captain Phillips," "Dallas Buyers Club," "Gravity," "Her," "Nebraska," "Philomena" and "The Wolf of Wall Street" for 2014 Best Picture honors. The film received eight other Oscar nominations this year, also winning awards for Best Supporting Actress (Lupita Nyong'o) and Best Adapted Screenplay (John Ridley).
Mr. & Mrs. Will Smith
Will Smith presented McQueen's film, which was also produced by Brad Pitt, with the Best Picture Oscar. Pitt accepted the award before giving way to McQueen, a fellow producer. The 44-year-old made Oscars history by becoming the first black man to win an Oscar in the Best Picture category. (He lost Best Director, however, to Alfonso Cuaron for "Gravity.") McQueen thanked his mother, his children and Pitt. "Everyone deserves not just to survive, but to live. This is the legacy of Solomon Northup," McQueen said. He dedicated the Oscar to the people who spent their lives suffering in slavery..... more

IN JAMAICA: Spellbound - Murder, Music, Mystery Grip The Nation....the trial of dancehall star Vybz Kartel and four co-accused has captured full national and international attention....For sociologist and radio talk-show host, Dr Orville Taylor, Kartel, even without his legal worries, is a newsworthy personality who has significant influence,


Spellbound - Murder, Music, Mystery Grip The Nation

Erica Virtue, Senior Gleaner Writer
It is not the most important case to have passed through the island's courtrooms in the last 20 years. It offers no groundbreaking precedent like the Shanique Myrie case before the Caribbean Court of Justice, nor will it change the status quo like the 1993 Pratt and Morgan ruling of the Privy Council.
Vybz Kartel
Vybz Kartel
However, the trial of dancehall star Vybz Kartel and four co-accused has captured full national and international attention.
The self-proclaimed 'World Boss' and leader of the Gaza Empire in Portmore, St Catherine, has been imprisoned for the last 30 months, charged with the murder of Clive 'Lizard' Williams.
Courtroom drama
The public is being treated to a daily diet of courtroom drama, including real-time reports about late and sick jurors; temporary adjournments and dramatic legal arguments presented in Patois and English.
But what has made this 'made-for-media' trial so captivating to the public, and why has it attracted this wide a global audience?
Supporters of Vybz Kartel gather outside the Supreme Court, downtown Kingston, to catch a glimpse of the 'World Boss'.-    Norman Grindley/Chief Photographer
Supporters of Vybz Kartel gather outside
 the Supreme Court, downtown Kingston, to
 catch a glimpse of the 'World Boss'.-
Norman Grindley/Chief Photographer
For sociologist and radio talk-show host, Dr Orville Taylor, Kartel, even without his legal worries, is a newsworthy personality who has significant influence and following from uptown and downtown.
According to Taylor, one of the factors keeping so many glued to the media is that the main accused is not from uptown.
"The way everything is woven and the tales being told, the issue comes across as something to be watched on (television shows) Crime Scene Investigation (CSI) or Law and Order.
"The personalities involved, from prosecution to accused, to defence, are major factors keeping the nation spellbound," said Taylor... more

IN JAMAICA: PAAC split by Goat Islands issue.....THE row over the proposed Chinese investment in the Goat Islands has become the major issue in Parliament, and has now seeped into at least one committee of the House of Representatives

Sunday, March 02, 2014    
THE row over the proposed Chinese investment in the Goat Islands has become the major issue in Parliament, and has now seeped into at least one committee of the House of Representatives -- the Public Administration and Appropriations Committee (PAAC).
PHILLIPS (right) and DALEY ...
both believe that
 there is a political agenda
For the past two weeks the question of whether or not the PAAC should invite the Jamaica Environmental Trust (JET), and other stakeholders in the proposed project, to its meeting has dominated issues before the committee.
The members spent more than an hour deliberating on the matter last Thursday, before dealing with the First Supplementary Estimates 2013/14, while public servants invited to the meeting waited in the lobby.
Two weeks ago, members of committee agreed that there was no problem in accepting a request from JET to make a presentation on the environmental issues surrounding the proposed Goat Islands project. In addition, former Minister of Transport and Works, Opposition MP Mike Henry wants the committee to invite other stakeholders, as well, including the Port Authority of Jamaica (PAJ), to answer questions similar to those being sought by JET from the Government.
Government members had no problem with JET being invited to make a presentation, but felt that the issue was not important enough to be included in the current agenda.
Chairman of the committee Edmund Bartlett, on the other hand, thinks that it is important enough to warrant urgent attention from the committee.
On Thursday, as the committee went over the minutes of the previous meeting, the issue arose again, after Henry sought clarification on whether the PAJ would be asked to provide the answers to his questions. The Opposition MP is insisting that there is information which the Port Authority has, based on its discussions with China Harbour Engineering Company (CHEC) on the project, which should be disclosed to the committee. more

Sir Alexander Bustamante, 'Busta set Jamaica back' : New book blames National Hero for political violence, dividing the national unity movement

BY DESMOND ALLEN Executive editor - special assignment allend@jamaicaobserver.com

Sunday, March 02, 2014 

WHILE the Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) was celebrating its revered founder Sir Alexander Bustamante last week, a Canadian-based Jamaican journalist was launching a scathing attack on the National Hero for Jamaica’s lack of progress.
Michael Manley (PNP
Against the backdrop of the 130th anniversary of Sir Alexander’s birth, commemorated by the Opposition party on February 24, Ewart ‘Fats’ Walters said Jamaica would have been much farther ahead if Bustamante had not split from the People’s National Party (PNP) and damaged the national movement.
“Jamaica could have been much farther ahead now, had William Alexander Bustamante remained as a supporter of the national movement in which Norman Manley’s People’s National Party played a major role, and not the adversary he became,” Walters wrote in the prologue to his latest book, We Come From Jamaica - The National Movement 1937-1962, 2014.
Norman Manley (L) and Bustamante (R)
Walters said that many Jamaicans had recognised that the two-party system divided the country and fractured the national unity that attended the discussions and activities that began in the late 1930s. The Westminster system of government, derived from the British, created an artificial fractiousness that left the losing party to “oppose, oppose, oppose” regardless, he argued.
“The exciting spirit of creativity, volunteerism and togetherness that was fomented by the movement towards nationhood was blunted the moment in 1943 that Bustamante was persuaded by the British to keep Manley in check by forming his Jamaica Labour Party,” Walters said.
Walters, who is remembered for the time when he was deputy editor of the now defunct Jamaica Daily News, also quoted another author, Obika Gray, who wrote Demeaned but Empowered, blaming Bustamante for the introduction of political violence in Jamaica. more

5 POLICEMEN KILLED THIS MAN, LUIS RODRIGUEZ IN FRONT OF HIS WIFE. THEIR VIDEOTAPED REACTIONS ARE HORRIFYING.....be warned it is extremely distressing,

Even the police say that the worst Luis Rodriguez did was "fail to cooperate" when asked for his identification. But five officers still felt it was necessary to pepper spray the man and tackle him to the ground, crushing him and causing his death in front of his family.
Rodriguez's wife, Nair, videotaped the incident with her phone and can be heard crying and begging police for an explanation. Around 0:53, the officers seem to realize something is wrong and all stand up, giving each other anxious looks as the man's body lays perfectly still.
Nearly as disturbing as Nair's emotional distress is the nonchalance of the officers. At 1:15 in the video, one officer even appears to make a callous shrugging gesture towards Nair's camera, as if to say, "what do you want from me?"
The family has made the raw video available to the public, but be warned it is extremely distressing, particularly Nair's heartbreaking screams when she realizes her husband has been killed. more

WESTMORELAND, JAMAICA: Norwell Prep Has One Shot To Repeat Success....SHARA-KAY ALLEN, the lone entrant in the upcoming March 2014 Grade Six Achievement Test (GSAT) for Norwell Preparatory


Norwell Prep Has One Shot To Repeat Success

WESTERN BUREAU: Karrie Williams, Gleaner Writer
Norwell Preparatory's GSAT student 
Shara-Kay Allen and principal Noreen
 Rodney are all smiles as they go
 through a textbook. -
 PHOTOS BY KARRIE WILLIAMS
SHARA-KAY ALLEN, the lone entrant in the upcoming March 2014 Grade Six Achievement Test (GSAT) for Norwell Preparatory School, Westmoreland, has her school standing firmly behind her, offering maximum support.
She will have the task of defending the school's record of achievement in GSAT, which saw the institution placing among the three schools from the parish which managed to surpass the national GSAT average last year.
While having just one student sitting the GSAT from a student population of 17, principal Noreen Rodney said careful preparations are being done to ensure that the school's high average is maintained.
"We cultivate an intimate learning atmosphere where we target students based on their individual learning needs," said Rodney. "Whatever it takes to have our students excel, we are willing to do it."
Extra sessions
She said 'sleepover classes', which take place two nights per week, along with weekend classes, are used to prepare the students sitting the GSAT. Also, students are constantly assessed on their level of learning, and any problems identified are handled in the extra classes....more

EDITORIAL by Nadine Queen: SOLUTIONS TO HELP ERADICATE THE VICIOUS MURDERS/CRIME RATE & POVERTY IN JAMAICA.

by Nadine Queen
March 1, 2014


It's a little too late but at least they are realizing they have a problem...
However, to quell or eradicate crime and criminals in Jamaica they have to start with the manipulators & Instigators, the bigger heads of command who are the bosses who gives the orders.

Stop the flow of the Guns in the Country and then start with the young kids, by educating them and letting them see that the country do care about their well-being i.e; their need to be successful at whatever ambitious/career path they so choose...A child without direction/education is a child lost...He/she then becomes an adult who is ignorant/dyslexic/illiterate/angry & arrogant and knowing nothing means you have no reason to live or be remorseful about anyone or anything/they feel they have no self-worth. 

Their solution is to turn to VIOLENCE & GUNS because that is where their strength lies. A country that has no job to offer its children upon graduating/leaving School is a society headed for doom/demolition. You cannot build a country on un-educated youths and POVERTY, that is a Recipe for Crime & Criminals...

Poverty leads to no education (vice versa) no education leads to poverty...Kids need some form of assurance and direction and if they aren't getting it from their parents or their government then they will find their own solutions. A great Country & a Crime-less country starts with EDUCATION & JOBS a lot of these professors and Politicians need to be mentors to some of these Children and must NOT keep Success and education to themselves but to share what they have learned and accomplish over the years with the younger Generations. 

When people are frustrated and fed up they resort to VIOLENCE so if the politicians and bigger heads reach and teach, that is how you prevent Crime & Poverty. Each one teaches one...Give a man a fish you only feed him for a day, teach him how to fish and you feed him for life. 

Jamaica is a beautiful Country and it's People, but we need to be EDUCATED and spread more LOVE & EMPATHY. Just my views though. N.Q.

IN JAMAICA: Lying Cops - Nearly 100 Officers Fail Lie-Detector Tests......half the number of police officers who voluntarily took lie-detector tests in the first eight months of 2013 have failed.

Published: Saturday | March 1, 2014
As the Police High Command continues its drive to root out double-dealing ahead of next month's visit by the Inter-American Convention Against Corruption, half the number of police officers who voluntarily took lie-detector tests in the first eight months of 2013 have failed.
Police Commissioner Owen Ellington - File
Police Commissioner
 Owen Ellington
As global human-rights watchdog Amnesty International highlights the conundrum faced by the Police High Command in the absence of specific legislation to deal with corruption and other issues, the National Integrity Action (NIA) is frowning at the Government's failure to push anti-corruption laws through Parliament.
Amnesty International referred to The Jamaica 2013 Human Rights Report, in which that data supplied by the Jamaica Constabulary Force (JCF) revealed that up to August last year, 95 of the 190 police officers who opted to take lie-detector tests, did not pass or complete the test.
Amnesty said it was unable to determine whether Police Commissioner Owen Ellington would discipline those officers who failed the test.
NIA Executive Director Professor Trevor Munroe and his team are scheduled to meet with the representatives of the Inter-American Convention Against Corruption next month. Munroe noted that member states are reviewed by a group constituted of other member states.
PEER REVIEW
"The peer-review group is going to be visiting Jamaica, and the NIA will be meeting with them on April 1," he disclosed.
Added Munroe: "The purpose of the meeting is for them to get our perspective, and the extent to which the entities designated to carry out the convention's obligations are actually functioning." more

Sean Paul tops Billboard's Reggae Album chart with "Full Frequency" despite weak sales.....The Atlantic Records/VP Records set opened with 2,160 copies.....Tarrus Riley's "Love Situation" has sold 1,126 copies after 3 weeks.....Shaggy's Out of Many, One Music is at number 14 with 83 copies sold over the tracking period. Its total sales are 2,777 copies.

Saturday, March 01, 2014    
FULL Frequency, the new album from Sean Paul, has debuted at number one on Billboard's Reggae Album chart.
Sean Paul
Although this is the Grammy-winning deejay's fourth album to top that chart, he did so with paltry sales.
The Atlantic Records/VP Records set opened with 2,160 copies. This pales in comparison to impressive numbers by two of Sean Paul's previous albums Dutty Rock and The Trinity. Dutty Rock opened with 65,000 copies in November 2002 and went on to sell over six million copies worldwide.
Released in 2005 The Trinity set a best opening week record for a Jamaican act with over 107,000 copies. It eventually sold over 4.3 million copies worldwide.
Elsewhere on the Billboard Reggae Album chart, the long-running number one Reincarnated by Snoop Lion falls to number two, selling 663 copies in the past week for total sales of 91,955 copies.
The sales of Jamaican acts continue to be dismal. Gospel deejay Papa San's One Blood falls to number five, having topped the chart more than three weeks ago. Its sales tally stands at 1,820 copies. Tarrus Riley's Love Situation, which was number one two weeks ago, slips to number eight. After three weeks, it has sold 1,126 copies. more 

IN JAMAICA: Governor General Sir Patrick Allen & Leaders make joint appeal to take Ja back from criminals and "energise a national movement for the restoration of peace, love, honesty, forgiveness and reconciliation".

Saturday, March 01, 2014    
THE nation's leaders yesterday made an unprecedented joint appeal to Jamaicans to take the island back from criminals and "energise a national movement for the restoration of peace, love, honesty, forgiveness and reconciliation".
Gov. General Sir Patrick Allen
In a statement issued from King's House, the head of state, Governor General Sir Patrick Allen; Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller; and Opposition Leader Andrew Holness asked Jamaicans to use the Lenten period to ponder what needs to be done for the country to be healed.
"Today, the leadership of this nation calls on all Jamaicans to come together and make a concerted effort to take back our island from the grip of crime and the shroud of negativity," the leaders said.
"We ask that each and every Jamaican reflect on where we are as a people and how far we have fallen from the values and traditions which our forefathers held as sacred."
Jamaica, they noted, "is passing through a moral crisis such as we have never seen before. Most of us are still reeling from the shock of the heinous crimes committed against our people, young and old alike, babies and young children, pregnant women, as well as fathers and mothers from all across this land. It is clear that hatred, heartless vengeance and evil have so taken control of a few of our people that they murder and abuse their fellowmen without a second thought. No place is held sacred as they commit these dastardly acts, even on church premises. To these criminals, even their own life lacks value and meaning". more

HUGE SNAKE Slithers Into Reporters Pants On Live TV.....KCCI-TV Meteorologist Kurtis Gertz got quite a surprise during a live broadcast from the Iowa State Fair

IN JAMAICA: Probe into bank clerk's Dwayne Grigg death intensifies after car recovered....According to the police, one man was killed during the 2-hr gun battle operation and two others, including a 17-year-old girl...

by Kimmo Matthews Saturday, March 01, 2014  

THE police yesterday intensified their probe into the death of bank clerk Dwayne Grigg whose motor car was recovered following an alleged shootout with its occupants off Waltham Park Road, St Andrew, early yesterday.
01According to the police, one man was killed during the operation and two others, including a 17-year-old girl, were held some time later. Her name is being withheld by the police pending further investigations. A firearm was also allegedly seized.
Police report that between 12:30 am and 1:00 am, Grigg's white Suzuki Swift was seen driving along Waltham Park Road. The police signalled the driver to stop, but their order was ignored by the occupants of the vehicle who proceeded to open fire at them.
A two-hour gunbattle ensued which saw the police chasing the vehicle along the busy thoroughfare. They were able to corner the men as the car crashed into a light pole," Senior Superintendent of Police Richard Stewart, who is in charge of the Hunts Bay Police, told the Jamaica Observer yesterday.
"We suspect that five people were in the vehicle; two of them are still on the run," SSP Stewart added.
Meanwhile, the early-morning gunfight left the community on edge.
"A the most gunshot me ever hear. To the amount a shot me hear a [it] wake me out of me bed," one man related as detectives processed the scene.
Grigg, a Scotiabank employee, went missing on Tuesday. His body was found early Thursday in a secluded area of Cherry Gardens, St Andrew, with multiple stab wounds. His eyes were gouged out.
Yesterday, the police issued a call for anyone knowing the whereabouts of his killers to come forward with the information. more

OBAMA WARNS RUSSIA: BACK OFF: OBAMA: 'There Will Be Costs' For Russian Military Intervention... Russian Military Reportedly Controlling Crimea... Armed Men Take Airport... REPORT: Russia Hired Occupying Forces... Ukraine To Putin: End 'Provocations'... Calls For Extradition... Yanukovych's Assets Frozen... Leaks Reveal Regime's Excess... UN Emergency Meeting... Boycott Sochi G8 Summit?... U.S. Warns Against Travel... Yanukovych Speaks...

President Barack Obama spoke on the situation in Ukraine on Friday, saying "we are now deeply concerned" about recent events.
Obama said any military movements taken by Russia inside of Ukraine would be "deeply destabilizing."
"The Ukrainian people deserve the opportunity to determine their own future," Obama said.
Obama said the United States will stand with the international community, warning Russia "there will be costs" for any military intervention in Ukraine.
Below, more from the AP:
WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. officials said Friday that President Barack Obama may scrap plans to attend an international summit in Russia this summer and could also halt discussions on deepening trade ties with Moscow, raising specific possible consequences if Russia should intervene in Ukraine. Obama himself bluntly warned of unspecified "costs" for Russia.
"Any violation of Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity would be deeply destabilizing," Obama declared. Such action by Russia would represent a "profound interference" in matters that must be decided by the Ukrainian people, he said.
While the president spoke only of "reports" of military movements inside Ukraine, the officials said the U.S does believe that Russia is intervening. more

Jamaica Could Decriminalize Marijuana This Year.....But Jamaican leaders feared that loosening pot regulations would defy international treaties and possibly bring sanctions from the United States

It's been nearly 40 years since Peter Tosh said "Legalize It," and Jamaica is finally thinking about moving in that direction.
Marijuana JamaicaMarijuana is in some ways a part of Jamaican culture. Citizens of the island nation have used it medicinally for decades; Rastafarians believe it brings them closer to God; there's even a small marijuana tourism industry for foreign visitors. Nevertheless, growing and possessing cannabis has been a criminal offense in Jamaica since 1913.
But that could change soon. Jamaican Parliament member Phillip Paulwell told a local newspaper Monday that he thinks the possession of small amounts of marijuana could be decriminalized this year. Doing so would make pot a civil violation rather than a criminal offense.
Efforts to ease Jamaica's anti-weed laws have been in the works for more than a decade. A government-appointed commission recommended decriminalization back in 2001, noting that marijuana was "culturally entrenched" in the country. But Jamaican leaders feared that loosening pot regulations would defy international treaties and possibly bring sanctions from the United States, according to The Associated Press. Jamaica is the Caribbean's largest exporter of cannabis to the U.S., the AP notes, and drug war violence has taken its toll in parts of the country. more

AMAZZIINNNG...WATCH BOLT GIVING A JOLT IN TRINIDAD in 13 secs Flat (VIDEO)

ENTER CHAT, LISTEN & WATCH BROADCAST LIVE 24/7
               FOR AUDIO ONLY (No Commercials) - CLICK PLAYER ABOVE on RIGHT
                                                                              OR
                  FOR USTREAM VIEWING & RBN CHATROOM CLICK ON PLAYER BELOW    



To listen, click PLAY icon above then unmute speaker icon at bottom left on player after a brief commercial. Enjoy the sweet music.To chat below, please sign in with your RBN account. Scheduled shows are PALVS & SSSJamz w/ RULA BROWN. Please support the scholarship program by considering to donate at least $10.00 at www.PALAS1.org. PALAS awarded 115 scholarships to students in the Caribbean in the past 3 years, No amount is too small. Thank you very much.

IN JAMAICA: Dr Omar Davies....."there is no likelihood of China's proposed Goat Islands investment coming on stream within five years."

BY BALFORD HENRY Senior staff reporter balfordh@jamaicaobserver.com  Friday, February 28, 2014    
MINISTER of Transport, Works and Housing Dr Omar Davies says there is no likelihood of China's proposed Goat Islands investment coming on stream within five years.
Dr. Omar Davies
"The port is not expected to be engaged in trans-shipment activities for several years yet," Dr Davies told the House of Representatives, in a statement on Tuesday.
"It will require time for technical development after the signing of the implementation and concession agreements prior to the start of construction, and another period for construction," he stated.
"Assuming that the agreements will be concluded about a year from now, the port will not be in operation for approximately four years. It is also expected to be limited in scope at the start," he added.
Davies, who was speaking on the issue of competition between the Chinese proposed development, and the planned privatisation of the Kingston Container Terminal (KCT), noted that, on the other hand, the KCT concessionaire will be acquiring a going concern with excess capacity and with the ability for that capacity to be expanded within a short time frame through changes to the equipment at the terminal. more 

GOOD ECONOMIC NEWS FOR JAMAICA: Fitch moves Jamaica’s credit rating up a few notches to “B-“ from “CCC.”......The outlook was also upgraded to “Stable”.

imageAccording to the Wall Street Journal, the upgrade concludes Fitch's assessment of the country's domestic debt exchange offer launched on February 12.



NEW YORK, United States, February 27, 2014, CMC – International credit rating agency, Fitch, has upgraded Jamaica's credit rating after the country completed its debt exchange Thursday.
The agency lifted Jamaica's long-term foreign currency issuer default ratings to triple-C, seven notches into junk territory, from  restricted default .
According to the Wall Street Journal, the upgrade concludes Fitch's assessment of the country's domestic debt exchange offer launched on February 12.
“The ratings firm considered the operation a distressed debt exchange as the swap hurts the original contractual terms of domestic bondholders,” the paper said.
On Tuesday, a Jamaica government statement issued said Fitch Ratings upgraded the island’s long term foreign currency and local currency Issuer Default Ratings (IDR) to “B-“ from “CCC.”
The rating agency also raised the short-term foreign currency rating from “C” to “B” and the Country Ceiling from “B-“ to “B”, the statement said. The outlook was also upgraded to “Stable”. more
  

Barbados labour minister, Dr. Esther Byer Suckoo calls on citizens to help reverse economic woes

imageLabour Minister Dr. Esther Byer Suckoo said that whilst the Freundel Stuart government was fully conscious of the challenges and has a mandate to seek and implement solutions which will engender economic recovery, “we all have a role to play in the recove
BRIDGETOWN, Barbados, Thursday February 27, 2014, CMC – 
A senior Barbados government Minister Tuesday said every citizen must play a role in the turning around the ailing economy warning “if you are not part of the solution you are part of the problem”.
Labour Minister Dr. Esther Byer Suckoo, addressing the Productivity Council’s Week of Excellence, said that whilst the Freundel Stuart government was fully conscious of the challenges and has a mandate to seek and implement solutions which will engender economic recovery, “we all have a role to play in the recovery process. 
“We know that there is no panacea for all the challenges which we encounter, whether it be at the level of Government, social partnership, the workplace or even in our personal lives; but whatever the solutions we decide upon, ingenuity, proactivity and fortitude would make them attainable,” she said. more: 

IN JAMAICA: Turn In The Guns, McGregor Tells Peace-Hungry Gangsters......Has to be genuine "But people have to be genuine in what they are saying ... a man can't say 'peace' and have his two hands behind him with his guns."

Published: Friday | February 28, 2014
McGregor

Turn In The Guns, McGregor Tells Peace-Hungry Gangters

Even as he welcomed early signs that the 'combatants' in the protracted gang feud in west Kingston appear to be finally embracing peace, Superintendent of Police Steve McGregor yesterday warned that the first order of business is for the guns to be taken out of the hands of gangsters.
"The proof of the pudding is in the eating," said McGregor, who has been in charge of the tough Kingston Western Police Division since late 2013. "It's early days and it's just word of mouth. We want to see the action that will support such talk."
The Gleaner reported yesterday that gangsters in the area were seeking to initiate peace after two years of severe bloodletting that claimed scores of lives. A peace dance and march was reportedly held on Tuesday as a signal of their intent.
McGregor said fresh in his mind was the violence unleashed on the other side of the Corporate Area in east Kingston on Valentine's Day, when men who were under the impression that communities had agreed on peace, ventured into a neighbouring area, but were turned back.
17-month-old killed
The men reportedly returned with high-powered guns and opened fire. When the smoke cleared, a 17-month-old baby and a man lay dead. The shooting triggered reprisals in which a two-month-old infant narrowly missed death, as his parents took bullets for him.....more

KINGSTON, Jamaica — IRIE FM radio has reported that its CEO and managing director Chad Young died at his St Ann home today (Thursday, February 27) at age 27.

Chad Young owner CEO Irie FM Zip FM dead 27 brain tumor cancer
27 y-o Chad Young
KINGSTON, Jamaica — IRIE FM radio has reported that its CEO and managing director Chad Young died at his St Ann home today (Thursday, February 27) at age 27.
Young’s death follows a brief illness. Young took over management and control of Grove Broadcasting Company, which also operates ZIP FM, following the death of his father Karl Young, four years ago.
The company has expressed “its deep sorrow” over Young's passing, the St Ann-based radio station reported. more

Spanish Town, St Catherine: Shock, anger over 15-y-o, Rachael Robinson's death.......police said they wanted to speak to a 25-year-old man who is reported to be the boyfriend of the girl

 BY KIMMO MATTHEWS Observer staff reporter matthewsk@jamaicaobserver.com  Friday, February 28, 2014    
RESIDENTS of St John's Road, Spanish Town, St Catherine, were yesterday morning still expressing anger and shock at the death of a 15-year-old girl whose body was found inside a house in the community Wednesday night.
ROBINSON… found dead inside a
 house (PHOTOS: GARFIELD ROBINSON)
"We are calling on the police to step up their probe into the incident as we are all in shock," said the girl's grandmother, Janice Lewin.
"She was a humble and jovial person," added Lewin, her pain obvious.
Yesterday, the police said they wanted to speak to a 25-year-old man who is reported to be the boyfriend of the girl, who was identified as Rachael Robinson.
The St Catherine North Police said that a visitor to the house discovered the body of the teen about 7:00 pm and raised an alarm.
"Police are at this time awaiting a post-mortem to determine the cause of death," head of St Catherine North Police Division Anthony Castelle said. Police say, while they continue to search for clues, they were not ruling out foul play. The residents said they believe Robinson was beaten and strangled. more

IN JAMAICA: 17-year-old St Jago High School student athlete Cavahn McKenzie.....Cavahn’s autopsy inconclusive Government considering further tests to determine junior athlete's cause of death......Trinidad Express newspaper that the athlete died "from a massive heart attack".

THE Government of Jamaica is considering further scientific tests to "conclusively" determine the cause of death of 17-year-old St Jago High School student athlete Cavahn McKenzie, who died after competing in the 6K race at the North American, Central American and Caribbean Athletics Association Cross-Country Championship in Tobago on Saturday.
Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller (in hat);
 minister with responsibility for sports,
 Natalie Neita Headley (with hands clasped)
 and Cavahn McKenzie’s parents
Pauline Dennis (third right), and John McKenzie
 (second right, partly hidden) watch as
Cavahn’s body arrives yesterday 
The Office of the Prime Minister disclosed yesterday that the results of the autopsy done in Trinidad were "inconclusive" immediately after the athlete's body arrived at the Norman Manley International Airport on a Caribbean Airlines flight.
"The results of the autopsy to determine the cause of Cavahn's death are inconclusive. Consequently, further tests are underway in Trinidad and Tobago. The Government of Jamaica, in accordance with procedures, is also considering further scientific review in an attempt to conclusively determine the cause of his death," the OPM said in a release.
Yesterday's disclosure came amidst reports by the Trinidad Express newspaper that the athlete died "from a massive heart attack". The article, published on the Trinidad Express website on February 24, quoted Peter Samuel, public relations officer of the twin-island's National Association of Athletics Administrations, as saying that the autopsy had confirmed the cause of death. more