Archive for September 1st, 2009

Tropical depression could form within 48 hours

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009
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NHC/NOAA graphic

NEW YORK, USA (Reuters) — The US National Hurricane Center said on Monday a broad area of low pressure about 500 miles east of the Lesser Antilles in the Atlantic Ocean had a high chance of becoming the season’s next tropical depression during the next 48 hours.

Showers and thunderstorms continued to show signs of organization. However, there was no well-defined surface circulation center as of 2 p.m. EDT, the NHC said.

The system had a greater than 50 percent chance of becoming a tropical depression during the next day or so as it moves west-northwest at around 15 miles per hour.

The NHC said interests in the Lesser Antilles should monitor the progress of the system.

Forecast tracks show it crossing to the north of some of the islands, with one track showing it close to Anguilla, the Virgin Islands or Puerto Rico.

More CARICOM countries on board for Caribbean Wellness Day

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009
   
GEORGETOWN, Guyana — With less than two weeks to go to Caribbean Wellness Day, 13 September, plans are in high gear across the Caribbean region to mark the day.

Bermuda, which already has a national healthy lifestyle programme called Well Bermuda, will continue to strengthen that programme in partnership with the private sector and Non-Government Organizations (NGO’s) in that country. In addition, they plan to distribute leaflets to all households, focusing on acceptable ranges for risk factors, encouraging health checks and indicating the type of screening necessary for varying age group. For the national activity, Bermuda plans to have a torch relay from district to district and anchoring in its city, Hamilton.

Dominica has planned a week of activities leading up to CWD, which includes Public Service Announcements (PSAs) to promote healthy lifestyles; physical activities such as cycling, dancing, mass aerobics and cricket competitions in each district. A month of activities has already commenced in Nevis, under the slogan Choose to Move; Love That Body. In addition, a wellness march is slated for September 9, while all Saturdays in September have been devoted to parish-based walks.

Caribbean Wellness Day was introduced in 2008 as a part of several actions taken by the CARICOM Heads of Government to fight Chronic Non-Communicable Diseases (CNCDs).

The day will be observed under the theme Love that Body, and is expected to build on last year’s observance.

Venezuela bolivar may fall as Chavez delays measures

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009
 
By Matthew Walter and Andrea Jaramillo

CARACAS, Venezuela (Bloomberg) — Venezuela’s bolivar may weaken in the unregulated market after President Hugo Chavez said the government will delay a decision on whether to devalue the currency or modify exchange-market rules, according to RBS Securities Inc.

“We may see some disappointment in the short term,” said Boris Segura, senior economist at RBS Securities Inc. in Stamford, Connecticut. The parallel-market rate “had been gaining amid expectations the currency measures would be announced soon and now the market will have to wait.”

Venezuela’s President Hugo Chavez. AFP PHOTO

Chavez is considering devaluing the official exchange rate for the first time since 2005 after last year’s plunge in oil — which is the source of about half of government revenue — swelled the country’s financing needs. Central Bank President Nelson Merentes said Sunday the government is preparing measures to reduce the gap between the official and parallel exchange rates, while declining to give details.

The bolivar trades at 6.44 per dollar in the parallel, unofficial currency market on Aug. 28, a rate that is 67 percent weaker than the official rate of 2.15 bolivars per dollar. Venezuelans turn to the parallel market when they can’t get government authorization to buy dollars at the official rate.

“Is there going to be an adjustment? I can’t respond to that right now,” Chavez said Sunday at the presidential palace in Caracas. “If any adjustment comes, it will be in September, towards the end of the month.”

For the past two weeks, both Chavez and Finance Minister Ali Rodriguez have said the government planned to implement measures to reduce the gap between the exchange rates, helping spur a rebound in the bolivar. It has gained 8.7 percent in the parallel market since Aug. 4.

The bolivar was little changed this morning in the parallel market. Monday’s rate of 6.44 per dollar compares with a close of 6.45 on Aug. 28, according to Russell Dallen, head trader at Caracas Capital Markets, a unit of BBO Financial Services Inc.

Credit Suisse said in a report Aug. 28 it expects the government to avoid a devaluation, instead increasing sales of dollars at the official rate and selling dollar-denominated debt to the parallel market.

RBS’s Segura predicts Chavez will maintain the 2.15 official rate for imports of “priority goods” such as food and medicines and will also create a second, official market for dollars that’s more formalized than the current parallel market.

Most importers would be channeled to this new market, where government entities will provide dollars, either through the sale of US currency or by offering dollar-denominated debt payable in bolivars, Segura said.

The parallel rate will continue to “exist as an outlet for capital flight and a last resort place for importers who won’t have access to neither the official nor the implicit foreign exchange market,” Segura wrote in a report Monday. “Key to this policy change would be the ability to reduce the delays in the liquidation of actual approvals for dollars by” the government’s Foreign Exchange Administration Commission, known as Cadivi.

Chavez left last night for a trip that will include stops in Libya, Algeria, Syria, Iran, Belarus and Russia to strengthen economic, petroleum and political ties. He returns Sept. 11.

Merentes said Sunday in an interview broadcast on the Televen network that Venezuela has taken steps in recent years to strengthen the bolivar in the parallel market.

“We’re going to get involved to bring it down to a difference that’s manageable for the private sector,” he said.

As oil rebounded in recent months, the government increased dollar sales at the official exchange rate and has brought itself up to date on 70 percent of back orders for dollars that had built up, Merentes said. Oil accounts for more than 90 percent of Venezuela’s exports.

Petroleos de Venezuela SA, the state oil company, also started paying off $12 billion in debts that accumulated this year to its service providers, Merentes said.

Venezuela’s inflation rate, the highest in Latin America, reached an “inflection point” this year and the central bank aims to reduce it to less than 10 percent by 2012, he said. Consumer prices in Caracas rose 28.3 percent in the 12 months through July.

Merentes said the weakening of the bolivar in the parallel market over the past year increased prices for imported goods, helping stoke inflation.

TUESDAY’S SPECIAL

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

LENTIL PEAS AND RICE; COW HEEL SOUP

MACARONI PIE; FRIED PLANTAIN

BAKED PORK; BBQ CHICKEN

FRIED POT FISH; GRILLED BARRACUDA

SWEET POTATO PIE; BBQ PIG TAILS

TURKEY STEW; FISH GRAVY

PICKLED CUCUMBER; POTATO SALAD

Mexico tries to evacuate thousands ahead of Jimena

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

LOS CABOS, Mexico – Emergency workers struggled to evacuate thousands of reluctant slum dwellers as extremely dangerous Hurricane Jimena approached Mexico’s resort-studded Baja California Peninsula on Tuesday.

Jimena, just short of Category 5 status with winds of near 155 mph (250 kph), could rake the region of harsh desert fringed with picturesque beaches and fishing villages as a major hurricane by Tuesday evening

Police, firefighters and navy personnel drove through shantytowns, trying to persuade some 10,000 people to evacuate shacks made of plastic sheeting, wood, reeds and even blankets.

“For the safety of you and your family, board a vehicle or head to the nearest shelter,” firefighter Ricardo Villalobos bellowed over a loudspeaker as his fire truck wound its way through the sand streets of Colonia Obrera, a slum built along a stream bed that regularly springs to life when a hurricane hits.

Asked how many people were paying attention, he noted wryly, “Not many.”

Many residents feared that their few possessions — a TV, radio or refrigerator — would be stolen if they left.

Jose Miguel Leyva, a cab driver, nailed another plastic sheet to his rickety wood framed shack, vowing to stick it out as long as he could.

“We’re putting all we can into the house,” Leyva said. “They told us to go to a shelter. If it gets bad maybe we will. We can go in my car.”

Roberto Hernandez, a community organizer, said he and other activists had formed a security brigade to ride out the storm and watch over their neighbors’ possessions. “A lot of times, people steal their furniture, or whatever they can find,” Hernandez said.

But Miguel Angel Juarez, an unemployed iron worker, packed clothing and his countertop gas grill into the trunk of his car before taking his family to a shelter.

“I’m not staying here,” he said, eyeing the stream bed that runs a few feet from his front door. “They say that when it rains here, this becomes a river.”

The government warned that those who refuse to evacuate would be forced to do so.

“We are going to start by inviting people to leave … the moment will come when we will have to make it obligatory,” said Garibaldo Romero, interior secretary for the municipal government.

After official hurricane warnings were broadcast, organizers of an international financial meeting scheduled for Cabo San Lucas this week decided to move their conference — including more than 170 representatives from 54 countries — to Mexico City.

“The meeting has been planned for two months and the meteorological conditions, by their very nature, are unpredictable,” said Anthony Gooch, spokesman for the Global Forum on Transparency and Exchange of Information, sponsored by the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

Many tourists rushed to leave, leaving hotels with a 25 percent occupancy rate, according to the local hotel association. The group estimated 7,000 tourists were left in Los Cabos.

But on Cabos’ famous beaches, some tourists were doing just the opposite, jumping into the Pacific to play in the hurricane’s big waves.

Although city officials shut down the port, lifeguard Roman Dominguez with the Cabo San Lucas Fire Department said there’s no feasible way to close a beach.

“We struggle a lot with surfers,” he said. “They’re looking for waves.”

Lifeguards perched in a tower looked on Monday as two women, one with her boogie board, another on a surf board, paddled into pounding surf under cloudy skies.

Clay Hurst, 52, a fencing contractor from Malibu, California, and Ben Saltzman, 28, an emergency medical technician from Pacific Palisades, California, emerged from a swim in the 10-to-12-foot (3-to-4-meter) waves and pounding surf.

“We are waiting anxiously, wanting to be right in the middle of it,” said Hurst, who said he has never seen a hurricane as powerful as Jimena.

“We were advised to leave, but we want to be here,” he said. “I’ve always wanted to be in one … a real bad one.”

Saltzman echoed his friend’s enthusiasm: “It’s an adrenaline rush,” he said.

Early Tuesday, Jimena was a Category 4 storm with maximum sustained winds near 155 mph (250 kph) and was moving north-northwest near 12 mph (19 kph), the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami reported. It was centered about 155 miles (250 kilometers) south of Cabo San Lucas.

Hurricane force winds extending as far as 45 miles (75 kilometers) and tropical storm force winds 140 miles (220 kilometers).

Hurricanes reach Category 5 at 156 mph (250 kph).

Farther out in the Pacific, Tropical Depression Kevin had top winds of 35 mph (55 kph) and was expected to weaken to a remnant low later in the day or Monday night. It was centered 830 miles (1,335 kilometers) west-southwest of the Baja peninsula’s southern tip.

TUESDAY’S SPECIAL

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

LENTIL PEAS AND RICE; COW HEEL SOUP

MACARONI PIE; FRIED PLANTAIN

BAKED PORK; BBQ CHICKEN

FRIED POT FISH; GRILLED BARRACUDA

BBQ PIG TAILS; SWEET POTATO PIE

PICKLED CUCUMBER; POTATO SALAD

Bird takes UPP to task on media access

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

Opposition Leader Lester Bird is not relenting in his demands to gain access to state owned media despite an explanation from the government that airtime is available.

Bird has been speaking out about the issue, the most recent being in his weekend address claiming that he has been denied broadcast time “on the state-owned radio and TV stations, while the UPP leader commandeers them at will for party political and partisan broadcasts.”

The government has, however, called Bird’s allegations baseless and put it down to mere propaganda.

While speaking to the AntiguaSun in response to the government’s statements, Bird said for him to submit his speeches to the radio and television station two days before is unacceptable. “It only admits of my responding to the prime minister. That is unacceptable,” Bird said.

According to him, as leader of the opposition, he is entitled to initiate a statement from the Antigua Labour Party (ALP) and from himself. “It’s not just to respond to the prime minister because ABS does not belong to the UPP, it does not belong to the prime minister, it belongs to the country,” Bird told the SUN.

He is of the firm view that he should have access to the media at will. “Whenever it is necessary for me to make a public statement in the interest of this country, I am entitled to do so, not just respond to the prime minister,” Bird added.

The government said that they made it clear to the ALP that the policy of the United Progressive Party (UPP) Administration in the expression of political views on the state-owned media outfit “allocated to the honourable leader of the opposition equal prime airtime on ABS TV and Radio in response to a national address by the honourable prime minister.”

The government’s policy further directed that “a copy of the address is to be made available to both the television and radio managers at least 24 hours prior to the broadcast date.”

Bird has promised to give a more definitive statement on this matter today.

Wanted principal surrenders to police

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

The principal, who is alleged to have had inappropriate discussions with a girl student, has turned himself in to the police.

The man, who is reportedly in his early 40s, went to the station yesterday morning where he was detained. He is now assisting the police with investigations into the allegation.

It is alleged that the man engaged the student in questionable conversations and also sent her photographs.

Reports are the 12-year-old’s mother found out about the improper communication between her daughter and the head teacher.

She was allegedly able to learn his identity when she struck up conversation with him from her daughter’s chat window.

Allegations are that based on her online conversation with the principal, the woman questioned her daughter and later reported the matter to the police.

Mixed reviews for new Independence parade route Helicopters and planes steal show at 47th parade

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009
FOLLOW THE LEADER: Police officers from the Traffic Branch division during yesterday’s parade. -Photo: JERMAINE CRUICKSHANK

An appreciative crowd lined the streets of uptown Port of Spain yesterday, as they tried to get a glimpse of this country’s national forces in action during the annual Independence Day parade.

From as early as 7 a.m., parents with babes in arms, along with children, and even the elderly, all of whom were clad in national colours, cheered on various arms of law enforcement as they marched through the city’s streets in celebration of the country’s 47th anniversary of independence.

This year’s Independence Day parade was much different to previous years, however, in that the traditional inspection of the forces by President George Maxwell Richards, as well as the parade of the Mounted Branch and K9 Unit, did not take place.

The parade, which normally takes place at the Queen’s Park Savannah, Port of Spain, was also a lot shorter than in previous years due to the alterations made this year and received a mixed response from those in attendance afterwards.

Several persons felt “it (the parade) was short and sweet”.

READY TO FIRE: Members of the Naval Unit of the Trinidad and Tobago Defence Force display their gear during yesterday’s Independence Day parade along Tragarete Road, Port of Spain. -Photo: ABRAHAM DIAZ

“We did not have to stand in the hot sun whole day to see our boys march,” Belmont resident Agnes St John said.

Others felt too much of the parade’s traditional elements had been chopped out, saying this took away from what was an even more glamorous spectacle. (See Page 11).

The parade, which started promptly at 8 a.m. at Memorial Park, began with the T&T Regiment playing their traditional tune of “The More We Get Together.”

Even Chinese labourers working on the National Academy for Performing Arts Centre took a few minutes off to view the parade. With a bird’s eye view of the proceedings, the Chinese seemed somewhat in awe as they gaped and at times clapped as the members of the armed forces went through their routines.

But the main attraction which seemed to enlighten those present, especially the children, was the display of various vehicles used by law enforcement and also the fly past.

As they looked skyward with fingers pointing, spectators were greeted by two helicopters belonging to the Special Anti Crime Unit (SAUTT)-AS 355 (Viper One) and Sikorsky S-76- two airplanes from the Air Guard and a BO-105, the national helicopter.

Following the eyes right formation, the parade then continued along the streets of uptown Port of Spain and ended at the newly-refurbished Police Barracks in St James.

Panday: Our response is ready

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

 

Opposition Leader Basdeo Panday says the Opposition UNC is ready to deliver its reply to the national budget next week.

“We knew the financial year comes to an end on the 31st of September. We have been preparing, we are ready,” Panday told the Express yesterday in a telephone interview.

He said the Opposition team, comprising himself, deputy leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar, Opposition MPs Vasant Bharath, Tim Gopeesingh and Opposition Senator Wade Mark, will be meeting with various stakeholders today in consultation.

During yesterday’s Independence Day parade at Memorial Park in Port of Spain, Finance Minister Karen Nunez-Tesheira announced that Budget Day would be next Monday. She also said there would be a deficit.

Said Panday, “We expected that. Government has been on a course of reckless spending. That has been warned by everybody, the Governor of the Central Bank, the Opposition.”

Panday said Government has been squandering taxpayers’ money and not spending it on basic necessities such as water, roads and health care.

Questioned on what he hopes to hear next week, Panday said, “That they cut back on all extravagant and useless expenditure and non-productive expenditure. The rapid rail is not as urgent as crime for example, it is not as urgent as people getting water or farmers having proper access roads.”

He said Government needs to understand that infrastructural development is not about having tall buildings in the capital city, but providing first for the development of the people and delivering the basic necessities.