Daily Brief - Wednesday 17th January, 2018

NEWS

Woodbrook residents: Lower music for Carnival

Residents of Woodbrook and environs are calling on bandleaders, fete promoters and music truck marshals to lower the volume levels when they are at a standstill en route to their destinations. Speaking with Newsday, several residents said they have been asking stakeholders from the Carnival committee to deal with the issue. Read more here

Malabar man shot dead by intruder

A 22-year-old Arima man was killed and his 16-year-old brother wounded as they attempted to protect their father from an armed intruder on Monday night. According to reports, around 9.30 pm Dominique Koon Koon and his younger brother were liming in the porch of their home at Koon Koon Street, Malabar, Arima, when a stranger came to the front gate and called out to their father. Read more here

Machel Changes Tune

Soca star Machel Montano says consent before winning is important if men are to make women feel safe and respected. “Once you get consent, take a wine and have a time. Let us all have an inclusive and respectful and most of all safe 2018 Carnival season,” Montano said in an exclusive written response to the Express yesterday evening. Read more here

 

POLITICS

PM: No more contract-padding

The time for padding contracts is over, Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley said when he addressed a Joint Consultative Council (JCC) Breakfast with the Prime Minister at the Hyatt Regency in Port-of-Spain yesterday. Noting that some contractors had in the past operated in “an environment of ‘happy times’ where some amazing awards and payments were commonplace and the taxpayer was taken advantage of, at every turn,” he said even if his administration does intend to have such practices continue. Read more here

Mark accuses Govt of private secret service

Senate vice-president Nigel De Freitas was forced to suspend proceedings for 15 minutes yesterday after Opposition Senator Wade Mark accused the Government of operating a private secret service. Read more here

 

BUSINESS

35 new buses coming from China

Thirty five Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) buses, specially designed for the geographical environment of T&T are on their way to this country. The Public Transport Service Corporation (PTSC) confirmed the buses would be here soon. Read more here

Bitcoin not the answer to forex unavailability

Local economist Marla Dukharan says cryptocurrencies, which have dominated international business headlines for the last two months, cannot ease Trinidad and Tobago’s (T&T) foreign exchange crisis, although they are convertible to US dollars. Read more here

 

REGIONAL

Guns, No Problem - Judges In Western Ja Blasted For 'Light' Sentences In Illegal Firearm Cases

Dozens of persons who were convicted for illegal possession of guns and ammunition in St James and three other western parishes last year got off easy, as High Court judges opted for suspended sentences and fines as low as $70,000, an explosive document compiled by the police has revealed. In one case, a St James man, convicted for illegal possession of firearm and ammunition, was admonished and discharged. In several other cases, judges opted for probation orders. The document cited 35 cases that were disposed of in the circuit courts in Trelawny, St James, Hanover, and Westmoreland. Read more here

St Vincent threatens to sue T&T over forex

The ongoing currency issue in which Vincentian traders in agricultural produce are unable to convert their earnings to Eastern Caribbean dollars after plying their trade in T&T could end up before the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ). Prime Minister of St Vincent and the Grenadines, Dr Ralph Gonsalves, told a press conference on Monday that while his government has implemented short-term measures of “a sensible, practical nature” to deal with the matter in Kingstown, a long-term solution is needed. Read more here

 

INTERNATIONAL

Ex-CIA officer Jerry Chun Shing Lee held 'in China spying case'

A former CIA officer has been arrested in the US on charges of unlawful retention of classified information. Jerry Chun Shing Lee, a naturalised US citizen, was held at New York's JFK airport on Monday, the US justice department said. He worked for the CIA between 1994 and 2007, when he left for Hong Kong. The case is thought to be linked to an FBI investigation, which began in 2012, into the crippling of the CIA's spy operation in China. In the two years before, some 20 informants had been killed or jailed - one of the most disastrous failures of US intelligence in recent years. Read more here

President Trump expands US military footprint despite candidate Trump's rhetoric

At one rally after the next, candidate Donald Trump lamented the "trillions of dollars spent and thousands of lives lost" in the Middle East, criticized his opponent as a warmonger and signaled he would scale back US military commitments abroad. "America First" would become the driving mantra, and the US would refocus taxpayer dollars on domestic problems rather than foreign ones, he said. Much of the Washington foreign policy establishment worried that Trump would usher in a diminished -- perhaps even isolated -- US posture. Read more here

17th January 2018

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