caribbean star #44 vol. 4

44
V If you miss out in the last tour, Take Advantage of this Magical Tour of Europe LOW FARES AIRLINE TICKETS ON SALE GUYANA SURINAME JAMAICA TRINIDAD 917-407-9090 718-291-9292 Also serving other Destinations to the Caribbean, Latin America, The Indian Subcontinent and the world. Enquire about group fair and Senior citizen discount Revised Destinations Now to Include Geneva & Paris TO SECURE YOUR SEAT PLEASE CALL: CALL KT&T 718-291-9292 917-407-9090 2015 Nov. 3rd Nov. 18th At No Extra Cost, the date is now changed to 26th July - 9th August 2015, when school closed so that children can now join now parents on the tour. Call us for further info. 718-291-9292 • 917-407-9090. New Date See More on Page 17 See More on Page 10-11 See More on Page 20 NEW YORK 1 DEAD, 9 INJURED IN 3-VEHICLE CRASH IN QUEENS WEEKLY NEWSPAPER [email protected] 347-759-3934 DISTRIBUTED IN BROOKLYN, QUEENS, BRONX, LONG ISLAND, and MORE! Caribbean Star May 29–June 4, 2015 Vol.4 #44 GUYANA GUYANA DPP RECOMMENDS COP BE CHARGED OVER MFK MURDER WEST DEMERARA REGIONAL HOSPITAL TO BE UPGRADED – PUBLIC HEALTH MINISTER Newly appointed Minister of Public Health, Dr. George Norton says the West Demerara Regional Hospital (WDRH) will be upgraded. See Page 38 See Page 15 PRESIDENT DAVID GRANGER DAVID GRANGER, A PRESIDENT FOR ALL PEOPLE …. I DON’T HAVE MUCH CONCERN ABOUT PERSONAL WEALTH OR FAME, BUT I HAVE A MISSION … COLONIALISM MADE US FEEL INFERIOR “CHANDERPAUL NO LONGER GOOD ENOUGH TO PLAY FOR WEST INDIES - HOLDING”" SPORT

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Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

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Page 1: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

BELGIUM • G AUSTRIA • ITALY • VATICAN • SWITZERLAND • FRANCE

V June 14th - 28th 2015 —

If you miss out in the last tour, Take Advantage of thisMagical Tour of Europe

C

LOW FARES AIRLINE TICKETSON SALEGUYANA

SURINAMEJAMAICATRINIDAD

917-407-9090718-291-9292

Also serving other Destinations to theCaribbean, Latin America, The Indian

Subcontinent and the world.Enquire about group fair and

Senior citizen discount

Revised DestinationsNow to Include Geneva & Paris

TO SECURE YOUR SEATPLEASE CALL:

CALL KT&T 718-291-9292917-407-9090

V R J

2015Nov. 3rd Nov. 18th

At No Extra Cost, the date is now changed to 26th July - 9th August 2015,when school closed so that children can now join now parents on the tour. Call us for further info. 718-291-9292 • 917-407-9090.New Date

See More on Page 17

See More on Page 10-11

See More on Page 20

NEW YORK

1 DEAD, 9 INJURED IN 3-VEHICLE CRASH IN QUEENS

WEEKLYNEWSPAPER

[email protected]

DISTRIBUTED IN BROOKLYN, QUEENS, BRONX, LONG ISLAND, and MORE!

CaribbeanFirst Interfaith Newspaper, Serving The Community

Star

May 29–June 4, 2015 Vol.4 #44

GUYANAGUYANA

DPP RECOMMENDS COP BE CHARGED OVER MFK MURDER

WEST DEMERARA REGIONAL HOSPITAL TO BE UPGRADED – PUBLIC HEALTH MINISTERNewly appointed Minister of Public Health, Dr. George Nortonsays the West Demerara Regional Hospital (WDRH)will be upgraded.

See Page 38

See Page 15

PRESIDENT DAVID GRANGERDAVID GRANGER, A PRESIDENT FOR ALL PEOPLE …. I DON’T HAVE MUCH CONCERN ABOUT PERSONAL WEALTH OR FAME, BUT I HAVE A MISSION …COLONIALISM MADE US FEEL INFERIOR

“CHANDERPAUL NO LONGER GOOD ENOUGH TO PLAY FOR WEST INDIES - HOLDING”"

SPORT

Page 2: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

2 Caribbean Star NewspaperMay 29–June 4, 2015

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Page 3: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

3Caribbean Star Newspaper May 29–June 4, 2015

See page 13

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Ruling puts Obama’s immigration legacy in jeopardyLatest legal blow could put final decision close to the end of his presidency

By JOSH GERSTEIN and ADAM B. LERNER

A series of setbacks and delays in the key legal challenge to President Barack Obama’s executive actions

on immigration could irreparably damage his legacy on the issue, even if the Su-preme Court ultimately upholds his au-thority to act.

The latest blow came Tuesday as a three-judge appeals court panel voted, 2-1, to deny the administration’s request to proceed with Obama’s plan to grant quasi-legal status and work permits to millions more illegal immigrants while lit-igation over those actions plays out.

Two and a half months after the Justice Department sought an emergency stay of a judge’s order blocking Obama’s moves, the 5th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals turned down the request.

If the administration can’t get the Su-preme Court to act promptly to lift the injunction or chooses not to try, the White House could find Obama’s long-promised immigration actions on hold until the Su-preme Court rules definitively on the legal questions at stake — a ruling that likely wouldn’t come until next June.

Police officers are illuminated by pa-trol car lights during a protest against the acquittal of Michael Brelo, a patrolman charged in the shooting deaths of two un-armed suspects, Saturday, May 23, 2015, in Cleveland. Brelo was acquitted Satur-day in a case involving a 137-shot barrage of gunfire that helped prompt the U.S. Department of Justice determine the city police department had a history of using excessive force and violating civil rights. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

ALSO ON POLITICOOn edge, Cleveland reaches policing

deal with Justice DepartmentNICK GASS and ADAM B. LERNERBy then, the presidential campaign will

be in full swing and Obama’s final term will be winding down, prompting some illegal immigrants to consider holding off apply-ing until the dust clears.

“I think the big question there comes back to, depending on how close we are to the election, will people find confidence enough to come forward and apply,” said Marielena Hincapié of the National Immi-gration Law Center. “The longer this stuff — the delay — basically, the harder the im-pact will be on our communities.”

One former top immigration official says that regardless of the eventual out-come of the litigation, the delay is likely to undermine the willingness of immigrants to take the much-vaunted step out of the shadows.

“I think the longer the program lan-guishes the more uncertainty is going to build. That’s going to create a reluctance for people to come forward and partici-pate,” said Paul Virtue, a former immigra-tion service chief counsel now with law firm Mayer Brown.

Such a showdown could also vault the immigration issue into higher prominence in next year’s presidential election. So far, Democratic presidential candidate Hillary

Clinton has said she would try to expand Obama’s executive actions, while most Republican hopefuls have vowed to re-scind them.

One worry for some immigrants is that the personal information and biomet-rics they provide when applying for the Obama programs could be used by a fu-ture administration to track down foreign-ers for deportation.

“People have to look at a prospective change in administration and ask, ‘Am I registering to be deported?’” Virtue said.

However, some immigrant advocates think most of those eligible for the pro-

grams will apply despite the uncertainty because the benefits of quasi-legal status and a work permit are huge.

“A delay here is not good, but I still think people will apply — people will still want to have some sort of paper,” said David Leo-pold, former president of the American Immigration Lawyers Association.

Tuesday’s ruling came in a legal chal-lenge by 26 states to a pair of executive actions Obama announced in November: an expansion of a program for illegal im-migrants who entered the country as chil-

Page 4: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

4 Caribbean Star NewspaperMay 29–June 4, 2015

Prime Minister Moses Nagamootoo and United States Embassy Charge´ d´ Affaires Bryan Hunt after their meeting

AS government officials from A Partnership For National Unity (APNU)

+ Alliance For Change (AP-NU+AFC) settle in after their victory at the 2015 Regional and General Elections, several dignitaries have been paying courtesy calls on Guyana’s new President and Prime Minis-ter. Yesterday, Charge’ d´Af-faires of the United States Embassy, Bryan Hunt, paid a courtesy call on Prime Minister Moses Nagamootoo at his tem-porary office at the Office of Climate Change located in the Ministry of the Presidency.

Charge´ d´ Affaires, Bryan Hunt of the United States Em-bassy is welcomed by Prime Minister Moses Nagamootoo during a courtesy call During the meeting, the two officials discussed several means of strengthening the bilateral re-lations between Guyana and the U.S.

Hunt noted that it is his be-lief that there are great oppor-tunities for the countries to strengthen their relationship,

and continue to move forward, especially in some key areas.

“I think there is tremendous opportunity both in the eco-nomic sphere and in the govern-ment to government coopera-tion sphere, and development to find new means and new models, that we can support the vision that Prime Minister Nag-amootoo and President David

Granger have laid out for their Government.”

He added that it is clear that the vision of the new adminis-tration is very close to that of the U.S.A. for Guyana.

This includes “a profession-al civil service, national unity, building bridges and taking all Guyanese forward.” Hunt add-ed that it is his hope that the

U.S. can partner with the AP-NU+AFC Government in mak-ing this a reality.

Meanwhile, PM Nagamootoo described Hunt as a friend of the Guyanese people and reaf-firmed the “close and fraternal bonds” with the government and people of the U.S.A.

He said that he looks forward for their continued support and

commitment in the future to aid in the transition.

In addition, some of the ar-eas to be addressed will be the professionalization of the me-dia and the public service in order to eliminate any traces of discrimination, bias, and un-fairness with regard to public service employees and jobs in general.

Bolstering Guyana /U.S. relations discussed – as PM Nagamootoo meets with U.S. Charge d’ Affaires

Page 5: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

5Caribbean Star Newspaper May 29–June 4, 2015

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Page 6: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

6 Caribbean Star NewspaperMay 29–June 4, 2015

20

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THE FALL OF THE PPPBy Ralph Ramkarran

The PPP’s boast has always been that it never lost elections. While it gained

the highest votes in 1964, it was the PNC that was invited to form the government, which it did in coalition with the United Force. The slogan of ‘cheated not de-feated’ resounded through the decades. The slogan is once again rearing its head. The claim that it lost as a result of fraud al-lows it to maintain the delusion, for the benefit of its supporters, that it has never lost elections. This also serves to protect its leaders and policies from critical analysis and corrective action and revive its historic claims to victimology, now of an openly posturing ethnic political entity, to sustain the sympathy of its innocent supporters against the tribal hordes.

The fall of the PPP, though a shock to its leaders and mem-bers, which will take some time for them to come to terms with, was a gradual process and com-menced in 1997 with the pass-ing of Cheddi Jagan. He was the only person within the PPP who

kept alive the flame of national unity by way of a coalition, de-spite the triumphalism in 1992 and a deeply hostile PNC. When he passed in 1997, those forces in the PPP that opposed nation-al unity by coalition, gained to-tal control and the subject was never again discussed. It was no secret that Mrs. Jagan was a firm opponent of any political accommodation with the PNC.

Another course had been available. In 1997 Mrs. Jagan had declined nomination as the presidential candidate and had recommended an option that could have seen forward-looking political initiatives and a different PPP orientation. But Mrs. Jagan was presented by Dr. Luncheon, supported both silently and vo-cally by others, a distinct minority, with the superficially irresistible argument that, apart from the op-tion being unacceptable to them, the PPP could lose if she was not the candidate. He argued that the PPP had never gone to the elec-torate without a Jagan at its head; that the PPP had in her a Jagan who was available. Mrs. Jagan was then pointedly asked whether she

wanted to take a chance of the PPP losing the elections by de-clining to be the candidate. Unfor-tunately she capitulated.

It was not a strategy to win the elections. That was a foregone conclusion after the outpour-ing of national support at Dr. Jagan’s funeral. It was, rather, a calculated manipulation to derail the option Mrs. Jagan had pre-sented, install her as a one-term president, during which period the opponents of the option would have a better opportuni-ty to position themselves in the anticipated succession struggle. It did not quite work out that way and any possibility of future political initiatives towards na-tional unity was foreclosed.

The ambitious Bharrat Jagdeo, who followed Mrs. Jagan, had his own plans for personal greatness, which precluded the sharing of political power. Citing opposition by Mrs. Jagan, political agree-ments with the opposition were not implemented. But by 2006 he was master of his universe. Soon to publicly insult Mrs. Ja-gan, he had no opposition within the leadership. Instead of using

his political capital to seek a real political solution, he wasted it by devoting his energies to micro managing, manipulating, domi-nating and, since early 2008, en-suring post-presidential authori-ty and control by engineering the presidential candidacy of Donald Ramotar. But by then the PPP’s leadership had been tarnished and its image sullied.

After the 2011 elections the PPP could have recovered by pursuing a political solution, but it took the wrong fork in the road. Instead, Jagdeo campaigned on a disastrously flawed campaign strategy based on race. The end result was that the PPP leader-ship succeeded in gifting to the PNC/PNCR/APNU the electoral victory that had eluded it since its formation in 1957.

The bare nod given in the di-rection of reform at its recent Central Committee meeting signifies no serious intent. Any substantial reform based on evidence and research, rather than broad and shallow gener-alizations, which is usually what happens, will expose the defi-ciencies of Party leaders and will

demonstrate that, in addition to deep reforms and restructur-ing, cooperation with the gov-ernment for development and constitutional reform is the best course for the PPP.

Instead of examining its strat-egy and leadership line up after the loss of 2011, the PPP de-generated into race baiting and presented the same leaders to the electorate. The presidential candidate was nominated again in 2015 and will no doubt return in 2020, unless the contrived effort to secure a third term for Jagdeo is allowed by the courts. Moreover, he will not loosen his control and the leadership has no will to confront him, even though they know it was he who lost them the elections, this time around as well as in 2011. He dominates every discussion, has the final word, and has loy-al lieutenants. He is not going anywhere, anytime soon and will continue to lead the rest of the leadership and members, per-haps as a Member of Parliament, maybe later as general secretary and a future presidential candi-date, like lambs to the slaughter.

Page 7: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

7Caribbean Star Newspaper May 29–June 4, 2015

Jai Seeta Ram!My name is Yasodra Jadubans

and I am a very ardent and loving devotee of the Shaanti Bhavan Mandir, a holy shrine where only peace and love resides.

I am happy to pen a few thoughts of advice and noble teachings on “Family Values” that relates to the teachings in the Holy Shri Ram-charitamanas. As Hindus, we have a library of texts that we follow, but the one that stands out on this topic is the Ramcharitamanas. This holy txt teaches us of so many virtuous family relations that pre-vail, and how Lord Ram came on earth and lived accordingly so that mankind can learn and try to make themselves better individuals.

What is a family? A family is a combination of individuals both male and female which began since creation through marriage or common law, “living together” and giving birth to children. We are re-minded as Hindu brothers and sis-ters of Manu & Satrupa, the first motherly and fatherly relationship that was established by God. The mother and father are the denom-inators and should be the ones to set the standard for a very good family relationship. Family can be created by adoptions and also friends can be regarded as family. Once a relationship exists where love, respect and a bond is molded by individuals, this is considered a family.

Family value plays an important part in all human societies, but in the behavioral pattern between people and the development of a spiritual and economical life in a community. The value is a tag fixed to determine, evaluate, strengthen or decrease the growth of family relationships. For a sound rela-tionship or family value to survive, and I say so unhesitatingly, all indi-viduals must be engulfed in uncon-ditional love, a code of ethics and moral principles must be adhered to, where honesty is prevailing in all circumstances as recorded in the Ramcharitamanas.

A concrete example of rich value displayed by an individual in the Ramayana is Lakshman. Although Lakshman had the opportunity to inherit the throne and disregard Lord Rama, he did not. Instead, he stood by the side of his broth-er with love, support and kind-

ness, ensuring the success of his brother. Bharata also could have done the same but gave his broth-er his support as well. Here we see rich values from their characters, which teaches us how to live. An-other example of rich family value is Mataa Sumintra. Lord Rama was not her biological son, but when she was informed of the news that he will be given the throne, she prayed for his success as well. Here we are shown that we should always be happy for others.

It is said that “a family that prays together stays together” and noth-ing can be easier than chanting or saying the name of god. Prayers enable man to enjoy peace and comfort which is so much required in our society today. A family that is divine in thoughts, deeds and actions, is somewhat at a disad-vantage to deal with situations in a proper and meaningful way. With-out those traits, lives of families can be disrupted by a behavioral pattern of one or more in a fam-ily unit, and an entire family can be ruined. “One bad apple spoils the entire barrel,” generally family

members have bitter quarrels and fights over simple issues and at times over bigger ones. This type of situation is very prevalent, and it is sad to say, especially in Hin-du families’ ego, power, dishon-esty and the urge to gain materi-al heights, are in most cases the cause, which often ends in injury or fatality.

I cannot see any reason for chil-dren to be at a different end of the sword with their parents. Our par-ents are our earthly Gods, “Maatru Devo Bhava, Pitru Devo Bhava”, as it is being preached in the Shaan-ti Bhavan Mandir every week by our very own and priceless Pandit Manoj-ji. Let us not become vic-tims of such behavior, as it only leads to regret and remorse.

Great family values can easily be derived from standards, well set by Raja Dashratha, the great lead-er and king of Ayodhya. Relations of father and son, mother and Son, Guru and chelas, Ram and Seeta, not forgetting Hanuman-ji and his wonderful entourage. Lord Ram and his brothers along with oth-er relations portrayed very good

traits for our day to day lives, whereby if we can try to inculcate a few, this world can be a much more peaceful place.

Sitting around the dinner table is a very rich source of family value. Not the delicacies on the table, but Mother, Father, and Children all conversing intelligently about each other’s day at work or school, just creates such a relaxing and very happy atmosphere for the family. We as parents should always try to give moral support to our children so that they would be able to pass it on to other families.

As a Bhakta of Hanuman-Ji, I personally live by principals and standards set by my parents and can always look back at my live with contentment. Let us strive for a better tomorrow with a well-es-tablished set of family values, full of peace, love, contentment, re-spect and happiness. Let us all try to build bridges instead of digging trenches. Hope my few comments will raise a few eyebrows and we can all benefit somehow along this corrupted environment in which we live.

I leave with you this chowpaii from Ayodhya Kaanda where Lord Shri Ram who came to leave foot-prints for us to follow, teaching us that you can take a bitter moment and turn it into something positive.

SUNU JANANI SOI SUTA BARABHAGI, JO PITU MATU BACHAN ANURAGI

TANAYA MATU PITU TOSAN-IHARA, DULABHA JANANI SAKALA SANSARA

“Ram tells Kaikeyi that blessed is that child, oh Mother who listens and respects the words of his par-ents. In this world today in which we live, to find such a child, is very rare”

Ram teaches us that although his life was about to change because of the request of mother Kaikeyi, he was not going to allow that to come between his relationship with his mother and family. He responded to her in a positive way. This example should teach us that although family members can place us in awkward situations, we should try and make the best of the situation. Lord Rama could have retaliated but he showed his unconditional love and respect for his parents.

Jai Ho and Bhagwan’s Blessings.

Page 8: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

8 Caribbean Star NewspaperMay 29–June 4, 2015

Sir Shridat calls on Guyana to arise as a model of good governance

SIR Shridath Ramphal, a for-mer Guyana Government Minister and Secretary

General of the Commonwealth, during an address to Guyanese at the inauguration ceremony for Guyana’s eighth President, His Excellency David Granger, said this is a time for healing in Guyana, as he commended the spirit of unity that permeated the Independence Anniversary commemoration. Sir Ramphal, speaking at the inauguration ceremony on Tuesday at the Guyana National Stadium, not-ed that at Independence, all Guyanese aspired to Guyana’s worthy destiny to being one na-tion and one people, and this has been the case ever since.

“We were one people then, and we have been ever since, save in our politics through which we sometimes deceive ourselves into believing that our motto of one people was false; it was not false and we must not let the vicissitudes of politics and the discord inher-ent in the democratic process diminish our oneness.”

In the moment of transition, Sir Shridath said, it is the duty of all to work hard at destroy-

ing the myth of ‘otherness’ and cultivating by conscious effort a reality of oneness, which is Guyana’s historical birthright. Guyana, he said, is now on the cusp of a great future, even though Eldorado may have been a city of the mind, but the nation of one people is poised for greatness.

“The quality of our human re-sources matches the richness of our natural resources, and in their fusion is our future.”

However, he noted that in moving forward, there are great challenges ahead, both inter-nal and external, which is why national unity must not be an empty slogan, but a living credo -an ethic of governance.

“I congratulate the coalition of parties that has taken a cou-rageous first step in this direc-tion, and I praise our people who have answered the ques-tion, ‘do you want us together or apart?’ in a definitive way.”

Sir Shridath added that for national unity, this is not the end of the journey, but the be-ginning of a journey that never ends, as the nation’s aspira-tions must not end nationally as Guyana is part of a larger family

of the Caribbean Community.He lamented the fact that Guy-

ana cannot be a model of good governance at home if it does not acknowledge that vibrant Carib-bean homeland and give leader-ship in occupying it together.

He believes that all that is needed for national unity is within the compass of the vi-sion that marks this time of transition.

With regard to the Presi-dent’s inauguration, Sir Shri-dath said already the earliest days of President Granger’s presidency have brought a path of healing and its concomitant quest of unity to Guyana.

Hence he noted that it is each citizen’s solemn duty to sup-port the new administration towards fulfillment of the trust the people of Guyana has re-

posed in him and his coalition colleagues.

“May divine blessing hound these efforts and bring forth Guyana’s renewal through the efforts and cohesion of its peo-ple; the path is not impossible, indeed it is within our grasp particularly in the grasp of our young people who want to build a future that looks forward and not backward to the past.”

Sir Shridath Ramphal speaking at the inauguration of President David Granger

Page 9: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

9Caribbean Star Newspaper May 29–June 4, 2015

PPP/C objections ‘not based on concrete evidence’ – GECOM CommissionerVincent Alexander

CONCRETE evidence to support the People’s Progressive Par-ty/ Civic (PPP/C) contention of

irregularities in the electoral process was not provided to the Guyana Elec-tions Commission (GECOM), according to one of its Commissioners, Mr Vin-cent Alexander.In a letter to the press, he said, “It is true that the PPP/C sought to question approximately 34 Statements of Poll (SoPs) in the case of District 4, but in no instance did they present original statements of polls as the basis for their contention.

“They presented a spreadsheet, which purportedly reflected the state-ments of polls in the PPPC`s pos-session. In the specific case of Dis-trict 4, they made those objections on Thursday through Friday (May 14 and 15) and were requested to pro-duce the evidence by Saturday, May 16. They returned to the verification process on May 16 without the origi-nal Statements of Polls, thus leaving the RO with no alternative, but make the declaration since the objection was not based on concrete evidence.” Alexander’s letter follows a statement signed by three GECOM Commission-ers – Mohamood Shaw, Athmaram Mangar and Sase Gunraj – who de-tailed several attempts to have a num-ber of irregularities discovered in the electoral process addressed, attempts they contended proved futile.

PROCESS EXPLAINED

In detailing the process of a final declaration of election results, he ex-plained that, “[Some] 2299 results were to be determined at the places of poll and documented on statements of poll, copies of which were to be made available, immediately after the count, to the Presiding Officer, the Assistant Presiding Officer, the Counting Officer and the parties’ agents. Also, a copy was to be posted outside of the related polling station and enveloped copies sent to the Returning Officer (RO) via the Deputy Returning Officer and like-wise a copy sent to the Chief Elections Officer (CEO), Mr Keith Lowenfield.

“…two parallel counts were to be conducted: a count at the level of each RO, for the purpose of 10 district/re-gional/constituency declarations and a count by the Information Technology (IT) unit after the statements bound for the CEO would have been delivered to GECOM, signed off on by at least two present Commissioners and trans-mitted to IT for tabulation, after which they should have been transmitted to the CEO`s office for custodial purpos-es.

“The CEO informed the Commis-sion of his intention to conduct an independent tabulation, once the statements were delivered to his of-fice, thus allowing him a comparator relative to the IT tabulation and the eventually submitted 10 declarations. The 10 declarations were to be used

as the bases for the CEO`s summa-tive count; the calculation of the allo-cation of seats; and the presentation of a report to the Commission, for its approval, prior to the final declara-tion of results and allocation of seats. On these bases,Alexander refut-ed claims that there were mate-rial irregularities in the system. “I am verily informed that this pro-cess was followed and am unaware of any complaint in that regard, from any quarter. The most critical point to note is that the three most relevant author-ities (ROs, the CEO and the parties) should have been in possession of the original and identical statements of poll,” he said.

FAKE SoPs DISCOVEREDOn the question of the discovery of

falsified SoPs, Alexander explained that it was the Chief Elections Offi-cer who made the discovery and took measures to address the problem. He said, “Those statements were sup-posedly received, opened and record-ed by Logistics; were signed off on by Commissioners; and data entered by IT before being delivered to the CEO. The CEO discovered documents that were not original documents. He also observed a disparity with the results on those documents as well as he ob-served some statements on which the votes cast were in excess of the divi-sional electoral rolls…on one hand, it was decided that he would abandon the use of statements of poll.

ч“…in relation to what actually oc-curred, there has been no evidence or complaint that the statements of poll,

which were delivered to the ROs, were corrupted. Each RO conducted a verifi-cation that involved the political parties and in no instance did the statements of poll used by the RO and those in the possession of the parties not correspond. …GECOM verified that it had not used the falsified results and that there was no dif-ference between what GECOM used and what was recorded on the statements of poll presented by the PPP/C.”

IMMATERIAL TO DECLARATION

Notably, the PPP/C, in addition to the falsified SoPs, have raised objections to the refusal of GECOM to have pub-lic vetting of polling-day staffers, many of whom were discovered to be activ-ists of the political Opposition; misdi-rection by some GECOM staffers who advised voters; damaged stamps that saw some ballots not being properly stamped; the fact that persons with-out identification cards were allowed to vote, even though their images did not match those in the files of GECOM staff; and denying proxy holders the use of their proxies, among others.

Recounts were requested before and after the official declarations were made, but these were rejected. Also de-nied was the PPP/C request for the SoPs, Tally Sheets and a breakdown of results of each Polling Division or ballot boxes. Additionally, on May 20, Gunraj wrote in his capacity as a GECOM Commis-sioner, to Mr Lowenfield to request several things, including the:

• Results from each Electoral Dis-trict, disaggregated by Polling Division, as compiled by the Chief Elections Officer;

• Results from each Electoral Dis-trict, disaggregated by Polling Division, as compiled by the Re-turning Officer of each Electoral District;

• Report from the Information Technology Department, disag-gregated by Polling Station;

• Photocopies and/or electronic copies of Statements of Poll of each Polling Station, as submit-ted to the Chief Elections Offi-

cer; and• Photocopies and/or electronic

copies of Statements of Poll of each Polling Station, as submit-ted to the Returning Officer of each Electoral District.

According to him, the Chief Elections Officer responded the next day, May 21. “The Chief Elections Officer ac-knowledges receipt of the correspon-dence and stated that he requires the consent of the Commission to release the requested information,” the Com-missioner said.

However, according to Al-exander, these requests made are “immaterial” to the declara-tion of the 2015 election results. “It should also be noted that the in-formation requested on May 20th is immaterial to the declaration…for all intents and purposes, the CEO pro-duced electronic results based on the uncorrupted and verified information, which he obtained from the ROs; and the manual report in the form of the actual district reports,” he declared. GO TO COURT

All considered, he advised that the PPP/C move to the courts to raise its objections.

“The PPP/C or, as a matter of fact, any contestant has only one recourse at this time, which is to the court,” Al-exander said.

The PPP/C is currently compiling documentation to support the filing of an election petition to challenge the 2015 election results in the High Court.

Mohamood Shaw

Athmaram Mangar

Sase Gunraj

Vincent Alexander

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10 Caribbean Star NewspaperMay 29–June 4, 2015

President David GrangerDavid Granger, a President for all people .... I don’t have much concern about personal

wealth or fame, but I have a mission ... Colonialism made us feel inferiorTHERE is an almost tangible, re-

newed sense of respect for the Office of the Presidency. With it,

a re-introduced sense of national pa-triotism has engulfed Guyana, more so Guyanese. This renewed national pa-triotism, is reflected aptly in the coun-trywide clean-up efforts which were spurred mere hours after the swearing in of the 8th Executive President of the Cooperative Republic of Guyana, at the Independence Arch.Guyana to-day observes its 49th Anniversary as an Independent and Sovereign Nation. Independent from its colonial masters. The nation commemorates that time in its still young history when the Golden Arrowhead was hoisted and fluttered majestically atop the skyline for the first time, and the British Union Jack was for-ever lowered as a symbol of supreme power in Guyana.

On Sunday, May 17, 2015, literally hours after he was sworn in as Execu-tive President, Brigadier (ret’d) David Granger, MSS., made his way to the Independence Arch, on Brickdam in Georgetown, Guyana’s Capital City.

He commenced the clean-up and res-toration of Guyana’s ambience, begin-ning at its symbol of nationhood and sovereignty—a monument that was al-lowed to be overtaken by its surround-ings over time, serving almost solely as a resting place for vagrants at night.

HIS EXCELLENCYI sat with His Excellency, the President,

this time mere hours before the Golden Arrowhead is hoisted symbolically at the Independence Arch, in observance of Guyana’s 49th Anniversary, to report on his perspective and thoughts of Guy-ana as a nation state, its Independence Anniversary, its people and of course, their newly elected leader.

Placing this symbol of nationhood back in the public domain, President Granger said he hopes it will contribute in bringing Guyanese together.

He said, “I really hope it will contrib-ute to national unity, that feeling of oneness.” The President surmised that Guyanese have been “battered over the years, by being treated like pariahs when they travel.”

This sentiment expressed by the President immediately brought to mind the infamous ‘Guyanese Bench’ locat-ed at an international airport in one of Guyana’s sister CARICOM countries.

The President spoke too of the many thinking Guyana to be a “rogue state…they feel that we are a nation of mi-grants, people just looking for work to take away work from other people (in other countries).”

The President said he hopes the ini-tiative which began on Sunday May 17, “regenerates pride in country.”

1966When Guyana gained its indepen-

dence 49 years ago today, in 1966, the President said it was a time of eupho-ria for Guyanese. He said when Guyana gained its independence, Guyanese rec-ognized and truly appreciated what it meant to break free from the colonial-ists and the concomitant potential that freedom brings to a nation.

While he was not in Guyana on the

day Guyana gained its independence, Granger said by the next week he was home and that there was ‘great expec-tation’ among Guyanese.

Guyanese people, he said were excit-ed. The straight talking former military commander said bluntly, “Gary, colonial society is not nice.”

HUMBER WHISKEY BICYCLESSitting across from the massive or-

nate wooden Presidential Desk with the Golden Arrowhead behind him on its staff, the President shifted position barely, and with his silvery hair as testi-mony to speaking from experience, said bluntly that was a time, before 1966 that is, when Guyanese were even re-stricted in the places they could go.

Providing an example of the era, the President pointed to advertisements at the time.

There were cars of the day, such as Humber, Vauxhall and Hillman, Presi-dent Granger recalled, but recalled too that these were advertised primarily to the “whites” Black people, President Granger recollected, advertised bicy-cles. “It makes an impact on you,” a now impassioned President Granger said, and added, that “the only time you see black people in advertisements (at the time), rum and bicycles.”

White people, according to President Granger, “advertised whiskey and cars.”

Explaining his frank description of colonial society, President Granger said his examples used are “symbiotic of what society was like.”

It was a time in Guyana, according to the President, where the whites domi-nated the prestigious positions of Of-fice. He pointed to Offices such as the Governor General, since replaced with Office of the President, now Ministry of the Presidency.

The Governor General of Guyana was the British Emissary and custodian of executive power in the land at the time, a white man, President Granger recalled.

The posts of Chief of Staff, Archbish-op, the Vice Chancellor as well as a large percentage of the professional work-force, were all whites.

There was a ‘social ceiling’ in place for Guyanese as against the British living here, according to President Granger.

The President said this brought a feeling of inferiority among Guyanese people. “You get the feeling, are we an inferior people?”

This was essentially removed with In-dependence.

ALOOF?He will, as Head of State, witness the

hoisting of the Golden Arrowhead at the Independence Arch today. He will, God willing, lead Guyana’s Executive Government for the next five years and while a resume can certainly be googled, it was thought best that the Guyana Chronicle, as the State’s newspaper, follow up on its profiles of the new Cab-inet published last Sunday, with a per-sonal discourse with the nation’s leader.

He’s been described in some circles as “Aloof” and a “Strict Military Man”, while others have grown to know a more personable individual.

I asked the President if he considered himself aloof? His response, “I really

belong to the people.”The President said he is happy when

he is among the ordinary people, either in rural or urban settings.

“I am not aloof in any way,” the Presi-dent added. He said persons that would have observed him on the campaign trail would be able to attest to this.

The President said he is warmly re-ceived by many when he visits places and he does not shun people.

“In fact I say to my security let the people come.”

BLACK SHIRT-JACKWith the eradication of poverty and

the elimination of racial discrimination guiding his actions as Executive Pres-ident, I was interested in what mould-ed our Head of State into the man he is, what his life experiences were that prepared him for the job. He did after all drive himself to Church on his first morning as the country’s Head of State.

He was born on July 15, 1945, which would make his Zodiac Sigil, ‘Cancer’ for those interested. With a smile softening the sober creases on his stern, state-ly profile, he straightened his neatly pressed black shirt-jack, reminisced as it were for a moment, and said as a boy growing up, “I was always conscious of the differences in the three main plac-es in which I grew up, Bartica in the Es-sequibo, Whim on the Corentyne, and Georgetown in Demerara….I became aware of the diversity, of course, among the people.”

He was speaking to the various eth-nicities making up Guyana and said too “I became aware of the diversity in reli-gion too.” He chuckled at religious con-fusion as a lad, raised as an Anglican, starting off formal education at an An-glican school, then moving to a Catholic school.

Bartica for a young David Granger “was the greatest place on earth.”

Looking upwards to the ceiling of his no longer frigid office, as if to visualize what he was saying, the President spoke of waking up in the mornings to the mist rising off of the mighty Essequibo River.

Corentyne also contributed to Grang-er’s growth as an individual, which he recalled for its rice, sugar and fishing. while there was the hustle and bustle in the Capital City.

Living life as a young man split across the three diverse communities in each of Guyana’s counties, President Granger said, “I think it contributed to my broad mindedness…I was able to see different sides of Guyana.”

Understanding Guyana’s diversity is a credit, Granger surmised, and reminded that on May 16, when he was sworn in as Head of State, he said “I am a presi-dent for all the people….maybe people didn’t understand what I meant, but I can’t think purely in terms of PNC any more, I have to think in terms of the na-tion.”

CLASSICAL ARTSSome complain that school hardly

ever teaches lessons needed for real life, while others disagree; whatever your supposition, there is little doubt that in school young men and women tend to hone in on their interest.

He attended the prestigious Queen’s

College. According to the President, while there, he leaned towards what was called the Classics Stream, which entailed modern languages, history and such like.

The President said, “That is where my interest was, although many of my friends were going into science, I stayed with History and English and Literature.”

Pondering on his response to my question, President Granger said his upbringing ahead of high school would no doubt be responsible for direction of study in school.

“If I had been the child of a doctor or an engineer, I might very well have gone into a different field,” the President said as he spoke proudly of his books at home that he read at the time.

As a school child, Guyana was still a colony and a great deal of the teachers were foreigners, whites, British citizens. But the cork helmets worn (at Q.C.) were among the fond memories.

A stickler for discipline, seemingly en-coded in his DNA, the President said as a young man in high school he enlisted in the Cadets in his mid-teens and also credits this aspect of his upbringing to helping mould the man he would be-come.

Learning, he said, seemed easier in those days, and of course there was ‘caning’ executed by the headmaster from time to time.

He said, Potter, whom the Cyril Potter College of Education is named after, and E.R. Burrowes, after whom the Burrow-es School of Art is named, were among his teachers, “real gentlemen,” he said, adding “I am proud to have been taught by them.”

6 OF THE BESTAsked about ‘caning’ and his appoint-

ments if any with the Headmaster wield-ing the cane, President Granger, with an ear to ear grin said, “We took what they called six of the best, normally it was six strokes of the cane for misdemeanors; but we took it in our stride.”

He said the occasional six strokes of the cane were not regarded as any form of cruel or corporal punishment.

“I don’t think we were psychologically damaged because of that,” said Presi-dent Granger.

Regarded today as a respected histo-rian and academic, Granger said he does not think he performed that admirably in school, in fact he said he only did “ad-equately” in school “because those were the years of the disturbances and our education, particularly between 1962 and 1964, was disturbed because of what was taking place in politics.”

This reality, President Granger said, affected not just him, but his colleagues as well, pointing out that at one stage even the teachers were on strike.

He said the political friction between the then People’s Progressive Party (PPP) Government, the Peoples Nation-al Congress (PNC) and The United Force (TUF)—a significant political force at the time—led him to feeling that there was literally a threat to the way of life.

Political inclination, even at that time, told President Granger, “There was a

See page 11

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11Caribbean Star Newspaper May 29–June 4, 2015

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threat in the sense some things were said and some things were being done which were pulling society apart.”

The President was adamant however, leaving Guyana permanently was never an option, one that had been exercised by many, almost in a mini exodus of the time. Brigadier Granger, now Executive President of Guyana, said he was never attracted to go live “in not a single for-eign country.”

GUYANA HOMEThe President said while he would

have had to travel and live for some time overseas, be it in Nigeria or neigh-boring Trinidad and Tobago, to further his studies, he did not have any desire to take up residence, to live permanent-ly in any of them.

The greater part of his life at home has been spent in the Guyana Defence Force, ascending to and retiring with the rank of Brigadier, Commander of the Army at the time.

While upward mobility professional-ly was recognized, such a rank was the least of his concerns as he made what he calls a smooth transition into the Military, five decades ago. By this time Granger had already ascended the ranks of the Cadets at Queen’s College to that of Sergeant, and he formally enlisted in the Army shortly after its creation.

Being in the Cadets, according to Granger, ‘was fun rather than rigid. While in the classroom, learning some

history, he reminisced, “it was fun, we go on camps, we go on marches…the person sitting next to you in class could be a Corporal and you could be a Pri-vate, but we were friends, it was not rigid.”

NEW & EXCITINGHe joked, “We know that when we

went on parade he could give you or-ders, it was giggles, we weren’t enemies, we weren’t adversaries, so it wasn’t ever a problem for me going in the Army.

Coming out of High School at Queen’s College, a young Granger attended University in the same compound he recalled, as the current edifice at Tur-keyen, East Coast Demerara had not yet been built by the Forbes Burnham Ad-ministration.

“I had already made up my mind I was going to settle in Guyana and I was not going to migrate,” said President Grang-er. He was speaking to 1965 when he formally enlisted in the GDF.

The Army was formally constituted on November 1, 1965, and by December, the following month, he joined up.

“It was new, it was exciting, we were becoming independent…we didn’t have any prospect about becoming Brigadier or Chief of Staff,” he said, interrupted by a well-earned yet seemingly blushing chortle.

Earning his first promotion by 1969, President Granger said, “In a way it was expected,” as long as there wasn’t the commission of any grave sins, of course.

LAST BRITS

“We were expected to advance,” he said. According to the former Military Commander, now Executive President, he and his colleagues were well aware of the fact that the plethora of British Officers in the GDF would have to leave. The last of the British Officers left the GDF in 1969, he recalled.

“So we knew that there would be up-ward mobility sooner or later…People knew that in time you would be given higher responsibilities and you would be given higher ranks””

I asked if he considered himself as al-ways being an ambitious person, even at that age, to which he replied, “It is difficult to expect a person not to be ambitious. You want to do better, you want to get higher training; you want to achieve a higher rank, I think that is normal.

According to President Granger, it would be good to be wary of persons content with living a mediocre life.

45 YEARS OF MARRIAGEThough cliche sounding, there seems

to be some truth in the saying that speaks to the woman behind every great man. Married 45 years to Sandra (nie Chan-A-Sue), the two, before tying the knot, lived in Queenstown, Georgetown, a couple of blocks apart from each oth-er. She was a friend of the family, and according to the president, the two first met at his father’s house.

“It was natural in a way,” the two get-ting together and eventually getting married. He said it was not a case where

“I didn’t go out looking for a girlfriend and she didn’t go out looking for a boy-friend, there we were, together and we’ve been together ever since.”

He said it was her decency that solid-ified his decision to marry the woman, now First Lady.

The President did slip in, “She’s a beautiful girl, but sheer decency, you know.”

He said of his spouse, “we have a fam-ily and she is a good mother to our chil-dren, she is a good wife to me.”

It’s been a quality life with his wife, according to President Granger. He di-vulged, “I can spend time with her and family without having to really go out and carouse.”

His wife, he said, is a hard worker, “and she expects me to work hard too.”

When the two met, President Grang-er had by that time already earned for himself the rank of Lieutenant and by the time the two got married, he was a Captain in the Army, and according to Granger, both worked hard to raise their children.

The President is of the view family is the foundation of communities and communities are the foundation of the nation.

According to Granger, at the time he realized he was elected president of Guyana, he also knew, “it gives me an opportunity to fulfill a vision for Guy-ana, I don’t have much concern about personal wealth or fame, but I have a mission.”

Continued from page 10

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13Caribbean Star Newspaper May 29–June 4, 2015

dren, and the creation of a new program for illegal immigrant who are parents of U.S. citizens.

U.S. District Court Judge Andrew Hanen imposed an injunction on Obama’s plan earlier this year after holding that the ad-ministration failed to announce the new policies as a formal government rule re-quiring official public notice and an op-portunity for public comment.

Writing for the majority Tuesday, Judge Jerry Smith said the Justice Department had not met the legal standards required to block the lower court ruling.

In an opinion joined by Judge Jenni-fer Elrod, Smith sounded sympathetic to claims that Obama’s actions exceeded the authority given to the president and the executive branch by Congress.

“Although the Secretary [of Homeland Security] is given discretion to make im-migration decisions based on humanitari-an concerns, that discretion is authorized for particular family members and forms of relief,” Smith wrote. “Congress has developed an intricate process for un-lawfully present aliens to reside lawful-ly … in the United States on account of their child’s citizenship. … Against that background, we would expect to find an explicit delegation of authority to im-plement [Deferred Action for Parents of Americans] — a program that makes 4.3 million otherwise removable aliens eli-gible for lawful presence, work authori-zation, and associated benefits — but no such provision exists.”

Smith also said the federal govern-

ment had failed to show that Hanen erred when he concluded that the new program amounted to a formal rule that should have been put through formal notice-and-comment procedures. The Obama administration claims that the policy involves the exercise of case-by-case discretion, but the appeals court found the evidence on that point to be conflicting and said Hanen’s conclusion wasn’t “clearly erroneous.”

Judge Stephen Higginson, the sole Democratic appointee on the 5th Circuit panel, dissented from Tuesday’s ruling. He portrayed Obama’s moves not as fa-vors for certain groups of illegal immi-grants, but a logical effort to prioritize deportation efforts.

”I would say [the Department of Home-land Security] is adhering to law, not der-ogating from it,” Higginson wrote.

“It is undisputed that the Executive presently is deporting a total number of immigrants at a faster rate than any ad-ministration before, ever; that the Exec-utive is and should allocate limited re-sources to deport violent and dangerous immigrants, ahead of citizen-children’s parents who self-report to DHS acknowl-edging their illegal presence; and finally, that even categories of persons, like im-migrants cooperating with the govern-ment in criminal cases or who contribute to our Armed Forces, historically receive deferrals,” the 5th Circuit judge added.

Higginson said he believes the lawsuit brought by the states is “non-justiciable,” meaning it is in a category of disputes the courts refrain from ruling on because doing so would impinge on the executive

branch’s traditional authority.The Obama administration can now

turn to the Supreme Court for a green light to proceed with the program, or Jus-tice Department officials could wait un-til the 5th Circuit rules on the merits of Hanen’s legal rationale for the injunction he entered in February. A different panel of the appeals court is expected to hear arguments on those issues in early July.

A White House official had no direct comment on the possibility of Supreme Court action but said the Justice Depart-ment will consider what steps to take as the litigation goes forward.

White House spokeswoman Brandi Hoffine said the ruling Smith and Elrod issued Tuesday was off base.

‘Two judges of the Fifth Circuit chose to misinterpret the facts and the law in denying the government’s request for a stay. As the powerful dissent from Judge Higginson recognizes, President Obama’s immigration executive actions are fully consistent with the law,” Hoffine said.

Hoffine called Obama’s immigration moves “squarely within the bounds of his authority, and they are the right thing to do for the country.”

Early reaction to the 5th Circuit ruling came in a tweet from Republican Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, who as Texas attorney general launched the charge for the states attacking Obama’s moves.

“Texas just won the Executive Amnesty case at the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals,” wrote Abbott, using a shorthand for Texas v. United States. “The constitution wins.”

House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) painted the decision as a defeat for a law-

less president.“The president said 22 times he did not

have the authority to take the very action on immigration he eventually did, and the courts have agreed once again,” Boehner said in a statement. “House Republicans are leading the fight to rein in President Obama’s executive overreach and uphold our Constitution, and we will continue to follow this case closely.”

However, immigrant-rights activists urged Obama to act swiftly to get the Su-preme Court’s blessing to move forward with the programs.

Hinacapiu encouraged the administra-tion to move “quickly and aggressively” by “taking the matter to the Supreme Court as quickly as possible. “

“The longer this justice is delayed, the harder the impact will be on our commu-nities,” she said in a conference call with reporters. “We know that this decision is on the wrong side of the law. We know that we are on the right side of history.”

The three 5th Circuit judges deciding the case were randomly selected. Smith was appointed by President Ronald Rea-gan, Elrod by President George W. Bush and Higginson by Obama.

Hanen ruled in February that Obama’s November actions violated federal law because they were not properly an-nounced and opened for public comment before being put into effect. The judge did not rule explicitly on questions many Re-publicans in Congress have raised about the president’s legal authority to carry out his moves.

Seung Min Kim contributed to this re-port.

Continued from page 3

$2.5M bail but Warner remains in custodyJACK Warner was granted

$2.5 million bail but has failed to secure his release.

In addiiton, his attorney were unable to secure an emergen-cy sitting of a judge in the High Court, to consider his bail ap-plication. Warner is now at an unknown location. It is uncer-tain whether he will spend the night at the Maximum Security Prison, Arouca, or at a police station.

Warner appeared be-fore Chief Magistrate Mar-cia Ayers-Caesar in the Port of Spain Magistrates' Court, charged with 12 offences re-lated to racketeering, corrup-tion and money laundering allegedly committed in the ju-risdiction of the United States and Trinidad and Tobago, dat-ing as far back as 1990.

Each of the charges was read to Warner, who was not called upon to plead.

He was represented by at-torney Fyard Hosein who told the court that Warner, a for-mer Special Reserve Police of-ficer and school teacher, was now a Parliamentarian of good character.

Hosein said Warner had vol-untarily surrendered to the police on learning that a war-rant had been issued for his arrest, and had not travelled out of Trinidad and Tobago for four years.

Senior Counsel Pamela Elder said that the attorneys repre-senting the Central Authority had examined the details of the offences and the provisions of the Bail Act, and after careful consideration, would not ob-ject to bail being granted.

However, she asked that conditions be attached.

Magistrate Ayers-Caesar or-dered that Warner report to the Arouca Police Station ev-ery Monday and Thursday be-tween 6 a.m and 6 p.m.

He was ordered to reappear in court on July 9.

Warner's court appearance came within hours of the US Department of Justice's re-quest to the Office of the Attorney General's Central Authority that Warner be ex-tradited to the US to face a series of charges related to his time as a FIFA Vice-President.

Warner's court appearance

was the culmination the US Justice Department's inves-tigation that spanned years, involved individuals on three continents and probed a money trail dating back 24 years. Investigators moved on Wednesday against the defendants in a surprise raid

on a five start hotel in Swit-zerland, where FIFA officials had gathered ahead of Friday's FIFA presidential election. The seven FIFA officials who were arrested at the hotel also face extradition to the US.

The Federal Bureau of Inves-tigation, a US law enforcement

organisation, also raided the headquarters of the Confeder-ation of North, Central Amer-ica and Caribbean Association Football (CONCACAF) in Mi-ami.

Warner's two sons have pleaded guilty to related charges in the US.

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14 Caribbean Star NewspaperMay 29–June 4, 2015

ISLAM Peace / submission to the will

of our creator.

Invite to the truth.“And whose words can be better than his, who calls (people) to-wards Allah, and performs good deeds. And says: ‘I am one of those who submit to Allah!’”

Certain commentators have written that whoever invites people to Al-lah through any means deserves

the honor mentioned in the above verse.For instance, the prophets call people

to Allah by means of miracles, and su-pernatural actions, the scholars invite them by preaching and arguments, the Muslim warriors call them by means of conquest; and the muazzins call them by means of the azaan. In short, whoever invites people to good deeds deserves this reward, whether he calls them to the formal observances of Islam or to the internal improvements of the spirit, like the mystics who stress the purifica-tion of the heart and the realization of Allah’s attributes. Such a person should also be proud of the honor bestowed on him by Allah, of being categorized as a Muslim, and he should proclaim this honor in words.

Some other commentators interpret that he should not be proud of being a preacher, but should consider himself as an ordinary Muslim.

“(O Prophet! SALLALLAHU ALAIHI WASALLAM) preach to them (the Truth), for preaching proves very beneficial for the Believers.”

The commentators have written that by preaching is meant instructing the believers through the verses of the Holy Qur’an, for these would guide them to the Right Path. But such a preaching can be useful for the disbelievers also, for thereby they may become believers. However nowadays, preaching is not performed regularly and properly. Gen-erally the object of the preachers is to show off their ability and eloquence to the listeners, whereas the Holy Prophet (SALLALLAHU ALAIHI WASALLAM) has said:

“Whoever learns the art of declama-tion in order to attract the people to-wards himself, his prayers and obser-vances, whether obligatory or optional,

will not be accepted on the Day of Judg-ment.”

“And command your family to observe the prayers, and also perform these yourself regularly. We do not ask you for sustenance. We will give you suste-nance; and the ultimate success is for the God-fearing.”

Numerous traditions say that when-ever anyone complained of poverty to the Holy Prophet (SALLALLAHU ALAIHI WASALLAM), he recited this verse, and advised him to perform his prayers reg-ularly, as though pointing to the fact that regularity in prayers will lead to ample provision.

It has been stressed in this verse to do a thing yourself before giving in-structions to other, because this is a more effective and successful method of preaching. That is why all the prophets themselves first did what they preached to others. Thus they became examples for their followers, who would not then think that the teaching of their religion are so difficult to carry out.

Moreover, Allah has promised ample provision for those who perform the prayers regularly, so that they should never feel that prayers can interfere with the earning of their livelihood, whether through trade, service, etc. Thereafter it is stated as a rule, that ultimate suc-cess and salvation will be attained by the God-fearing only.

“0 son! Perform thy prayers regu-larly; and command people to do good deeds, and prevent them from forbid-den things, and bear patiently whatever befalls you (in the preaching of Truth): undoubtedly this demands courage!” (Surah Luqmaan: 17)

In this verse, several important things for a Muslim have been mentioned, which can be a means for our salvation; but we have neglected these very bad-ly. Not to speak of the lack of preach-ing the truth, we have neglected even

the prayers, which is a basic principle of Islam, in fact the most important after faith. There are so many people who do not perform their prayers at all; but even those who do, hardly perform it with all its requisites, such as congregational prayers. It is the poor only who perform the prayers with congregation in the mosque, while the rich feel it below their dignity to be present in the mosque.

“0 careless person! What is an insult for you, is a matter of pride for me.”

“0 Muslims! there must be a group among you who would invite people to Good; and would command them to do good deeds, and would prevent them from forbidden things; and these are the people who will attain salvation.*’ (Surah Aaliimraan: 105)

In this verse, Allah has clearly com-manded the Muslims to prepare a group or party which would preach Islam throughout the world: but we see that the Muslims have totally neglected this commandment. On the other hand, the non-Muslims, are preaching their re-ligion day and night. For instance, par-ties of Christian missionaries have been specially assigned to propagate their religion in the whole world; similarly other communities are trying their best to preach their own religions. But the question is, is there such an organization among the Muslims? The answer, if not in the negative, cannot be in the affirma-tive either.

If any individual or any party among the Muslims arises for the preaching of Islam, unreasonable objections are raised against them, instead of giving them help and co-operation, whereas it is the duty of every true Muslim to help those who preach Islam, and to remove shortcomings where necessary; but these people neither do anything them-selves to preach Islam, nor help those who have devoted their lives to this sa-cred cause. Thus the result is that even the sincere and unselfish preachers are disappointed, and give up their efforts in this regard.

“0 Muslims! You are the best of peo-ples, who have been selected for the guidance of mankind; you enjoin them to do good deeds, and prevent them from forbidden things; and you have firm faith in Allah.” (Surah Aali Imraan: 10)

That the Muslims are the best of all nations, has been asserted in certain sayings of the Holy Prophet (SALLALLA-HU ALAIHI WASALLAM) also; and there are some verses of the Holy Qur’an that corroborate this. Even the above-men-tioned verse bestows the honor of ‘Best Nation’ on us, provided we preach Islam, command people to do good and pre-vent them from evil.

The commentators have written that in this verse, the preaching of truth and prevention of evil has been mentioned

before faith even, whereas faith (Imaan) is the root of all Islamic beliefs and ac-tions. The reason is that faith has been a common factor among all the nations of the world, but the special thing that has particularly distinguished the Mus-lims is the mandate enjoining people to do good, and to prevent them from evil.

So, this is the real basis for the supe-riority of the Muslims, whenever they fulfilled it; and since in Islam good ac-tions are of little value without faith, it is therefore specifically mentioned at the end of the verse. In fact, the real object in this verse is to emphasize the impor-tance of enjoining people to do good deeds, and this is the distinguishing feature of the Muslim Ummah. It is not sufficient to enjoin good and to prevent from evil only now and then, but this practice should continue at all times and on all occasions regularly.

Reference to the task of preaching the truth are found in earlier religions, but the distinguishing merit of the Muslim Ummah lies in taking it up as a regu-lar assignment. This is not a temporary work, but a permanent one.

“In the talk of an assembly of common folk there is no good at all, except those who command people to give charity (to the poor) or instruct them to do good things, or make peace between people (they will be rewarded by Allah). And whoever does this only to please Allah, soon he will receive a great reward from Allah.” (Surah Nisaa: 114)

In this verse, Allah has promised a great reward for those who preach truth; and how great and honorable can be the reward that has been called ‘great’ by Allah.

In this context, the Holy Prophet (SAL-LALLAHU ALAIHI WASALLAM) has said, “A man’s words may be a burden (sin) for him, except those that he has spoken for giving instructions for good deeds, and preventing others from forbidden things, or for remembering Allah.”

In another Hadith, the Holy Proph-et (SALLALLAHU ALAIHI WASALLAM) has said, “Shall I tell you a virtue better than optional prayer, fasting and chari-ty?” His Companions said, “You must tell us that virtue, 0 Messenger of Allah!” (SALLALLAHU ALAIHI WASALLAM). He said: “To make peace between people, for hate and mutual conflict uproot good deeds, just as a razor removes the hair.”

There are many more verses of the Holy Qur’an and sayings of the Holy Prophet (SALLALLAHU ALAIHI WASAL-LAM) that instruct us to make peace be-tween people. What we mean to empha-size here is that to make peace between people is also another form of instruct-ing them to do good and preventing them from evil. To introduce peace and cooperation in the society should there-fore be given due importance.

Page 15: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

15Caribbean Star Newspaper May 29–June 4, 2015

West Demerara Regional Hospital to be upgraded – Public Health MinisterNewly appointed Minister of Public Health, Dr. George Norton says the West Demerara Regional Hospital (WDRH) will be upgraded.

He said that the new A Partnership for National Unity + Alliance for Change (APNU+AFC) Government

will ensure key services such as a 24-hour operating theatre are put in place shortly.

“The West Dem Hospital should be of a quality not too different from the George-

town Hospital, however no doubt more resources need to be available to this hospital,” Norton said during a visit to the West Demerara Regional Hospital yester-day, according to GINA.

The minister said that, “the staff know exactly what they want, understand their

limitations, conscious of their challenges and give the impressions that they want to overcome those challenges.”

GINA said that Norton also interacted with the staff and a number of concerns were raised, including the shortage of drugs and the unavailability of key equip-ment. The Minister said, “Like so many other areas that affect the health sector in general, like the on and off availability of drugs, medical equipment or materials, it is plaguing this hospital, the issue of cath-eters, or proper sutures and some essen-tial medications. It’s happening all around. I get that while the authorities (the staff) are conscious of this, they are always will-ing to do the necessary things to correct the situation.”

As it relates to the neonatal unit, while there is adequate equipment, there is a shortage of staff, GINA said. “That unit is not functioning and many of times pre-mature babies have to be transferred to Georgetown, we have a shortage of fetal monitors and so on, and those are things we need to put in place as early as possi-ble,” Norton stated.

Meanwhile, a visit was also made to the Versailles Health Centre. This facility was constructed in 2010 on a wide expanse of land, and according to the Minister, it is still cramped for space. This issue will be rectified shortly, he said.

Minister of Public Health, Dr. George Norton (centre) interacting with some of the staff at the West Demerara Regional Hospital (WDRH), Region Three (GINA photo)

CONCACAF raid: Federal agents carry out boxes of evidence taken from the headquarters of the Confederation of North, Central America and Caribbean Association Football (CONCACAF,) in Miami Beach, Florida, USA. Swiss prosecutors opened criminal proceedings into FIFA's awarding of the 2018 and 2022 World Cups, only hours after seven football officials were arrested yesterday pending extradition to the US in a separate probe of "rampant, systemic, and deep-rooted" corruption.

Page 16: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

16 Caribbean Star NewspaperMay 29–June 4, 2015

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1 dead, 3 injured as car slams into pole on Belt Parkway: NYPD

One person was killed and three others were hospitalized when a car crashed into a pole on the Belt

Parkway in Brooklyn early Monday, ac-cording to the NYPD.

The driver was dead on the scene of the 1:15 a.m. accident on the Erskine St. exit ramp in the Spring Creek area, police said.

First responders rushed the car’s three passengers to Brookdale Hospital, where one was in critical condition, according to cops.

NYPD officials didn't identify any of the four victims of the single-car accident early Monday morning. Investigators ex-amined the scene overnight.

Photos from the site near the Gateway Center shopping complex show firefight-ers prying a man’s body from the driver’s seat of a Nissan sedan and administering aid to a female passenger on a stretcher.

A speeding 27-year-old driver died elsewhere on the parkway in November when his car careened over a guardrail and off the highway in Canarsie.

FDNY firefighters attempted to free the body of a driver, who was dead on the scene, from the man's smashed Nissan sedan early Monday morning in Brooklyn.

Cops kill man who fatally shot woman at Queens casino: cops

The brutal ambush murder of his helpless ex-girlfriend was just the start of spurned lover Dalton Branch’s sadistic last stand.

The unrepentant ex-con twice dialed victim Pat-sy Mohammed’s elderly aunt, taunting her about the point-blank shooting death. The insanely jeal-ous Branch texted a vile message to Mohammed’s male friend, who barely escaped the gunfire out-side Resorts World Casino in Queens.

The self-proclaimed “Grim Reaper” later opened fire on three police officers in the park-ing lot of a school in East New York, Brooklyn, where Branch died in a hail of 20 bullets. That was about 6 a.m. on Tuesday — just three hours after Mohammed was pronounced dead.

A weeping Rosemary Guilford, 75, recounted her chilling chat with the cold-blooded Branch after the phone rang in her home at 2:52 a.m.

“He said, ‘Go get your clothes and find the undertaker because I got her,’” Guilford told the Daily News hours after the slaying outside the South Ozone Park casino. “He told me that I should prepare myself to bury my niece.”

Branch, 51, a two-time convict who survived being shot by an NYPD cop in 1983, wasn’t done with the heartbroken senior citizen. Eight minutes later, he called back for a second hateful harangue.

“He told me, ‘I gave it to her good. She’s dead, so prepare yourself. And I could come and burn your house down,’” Guilford recalled. “I couldn’t say anything. What was I going to say? ... He was a very brutal type of guy.”

The enraged Branch believed his former lover of 10 years was seeing a new man, and he went after the pair as they stood chatting in the casi-no parking lot, police said.

Mohammed, 55, was with a friend whom po-lice sources identified as Kenneth Hickman, an off-duty casino shuttle bus driver who was once Branch’s supervisor. The two were speaking for about an hour when Branch attacked his ex-girl-

friend and his former boss, police said.The shooter drove a rented, white Dodge

Charger at the pair and fired a shot.As Hickman, 51, ran for his life, Mohammed

tried to hide inside her car — but Branch shot her three times through one window, walked around to the other side and fired another shot into the car, said NYPD Chief of Detectives Rob-ert Boyce. Hickman, after barely escaping the gunfire, soon received a mocking text from the 300-pound killer.

“How you like that p---y now?” asked Branch. Hickman dialed 911 to identify Branch as the shooter, and the three-hour manhunt for the

Dalton Branch who was shot dead by NYPD Officers on Pennsylvania Ave at Stanley Ave on Tuesday after he allegedly shot his ex-girlfriend at Resorts World Casino in Queens and fleeing to Brooklyn

See page 17

Page 17: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

17Caribbean Star Newspaper May 29–June 4, 2015

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1 Dead, 9 Injured in 3-Vehicle Crash in QueensOne person was killed and nine oth-

er people were injured, including 7 children, in a three-car crash in

Queens on Tuesday morning, according to the NYPD. A GMC Suburban collided with a Dodge Neon at South Conduit Avenue and 130th Street in South Ozone Park, police said. That forced the Neon in front of a box truck, which crippled the car and pushed it up against a guard rail, police said.

More than a dozen firefighters arrived at the scene and tried to remove someone from the Neon.

Nine people, including seven children, were taken to area hospitals, the NYPD said. The Neon’s passenger, 53-year-old Carmen Gonzalez of Greenbush, was pro-nounced dead upon arrival at Jamaica Hospital Medical Center. The 30-year-old woman driving the Neon was taken to the same hospital in stable condition.

Seven children were headed to school in the Suburban. They were taken to an area hospital with minor injuries, police said. The driver of the Suburban was taken to an area hospital in stable condition.

Geeta Bisram’s two nephews were among the injured. She said one of the boys injured his nose when he was forced against the front seat during the crash. She said the other boy, who was in the front seat, injured his legs.

• Girl, 4, Accidentally Shoots Self in Face: Police

“They’re pretty traumatized,” Bisram said.

The driver of the box truck was treated at the scene, according to police.

• Gunman’s Twisted Texts After Al-leged Ex-GF Slay

Police said the investigation is ongoing and that no one has been arrested.

fugitive kicked into gear.One of Branch’s relatives recounted an un-

comfortable Monday meeting where the ex-con “snapped.” “She kept pushing his buttons, and she pushed the last button,” said Eric Woodruff, 58. “He had a lot of tension built up. He explod-ed.” Woodruff said the ex-con dialed him just 18 minutes after the 2:20 a.m. killing to admit pull-ing the trigger. “I love you,” Branch told him. “I did it. I’m not going back to jail.”

Woodruff knew exactly what the message meant: “I expected it. ... He was a loose cannon.”

Branch, during one of his calls to Guilford, vowed that he was “going out hard” — and proved good on his word, said Boyce.

“I think he started shooting immediately,” Boyce said.

The suspect and three cops were just 10 feet apart when the first shot was fired, and Branch wound up with 15 bullet holes. None of the offi-cers were injured.

Cops say this gun was recovered from mur-der suspect Dalton Branch, who was shot dead by NYPD officers in Brooklyn on Tuesday after he allegedly killed his ex, Patsy Mohamed, at Re-sorts World Casino in Queens.

Branch’s handgun, an Italian-made .380-cali-ber Beretta, was cocked when recovered at the scene, police said.

The fatal showdown marked the second time Branch was shot by police. While still a teen in 1983, he was popped in the knee by cops after robbing a Queens couple and then pulling a gun on a police officer.

Daisy Carter, 76, who helped raise Branch as a kid and later took him in as an adult, was stunned by the murder of Mohammed — but not by the violent death of her surrogate son.

Continued from page 16

Page 18: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

18 Caribbean Star NewspaperMay 29–June 4, 2015

Ages 16 and above

Page 19: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

19Caribbean Star Newspaper May 29–June 4, 2015

LESSONS WE CAN LEARN FROM DANIELWe live in a fantasy world in which we are known by what we drive, what we eat, the compa-ny we keep, the place we work or the type of job we do. In reality, we are known by what we follow after, what we flee from, what we fight for, and what we are faithful to. The prophet Daniel can teach us some important things about true values. Let us discover what he was known for and what can make us outstanding for God.

Christian values are different from the

world’s values. When King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon

invaded Jerusalem, Daniel and his peers were among the Israelites taken to Babylon as captives. These boys were teenagers of noble descent. It was heartbreaking to see them taken into captivity (virtual slavery) because of the sins of others. To the Jew, it was a disgrace to live under heathen au-thority and under non-kosher conditions. Jews were of a religious system that was opposed to the culture of heathen Baby-lon.

The name Daniel meant God is my judge. Hananiah meant Jehovah is gra-cious. Mishael meant Who is God? Azari-ah meant the Lord helps. The Babylonians gave them new names: Daniel changed to Beltashezzar meaning may Bel protect his life. Hananiah to Shadrach – command of Aku the moon-god, Mishael to Meshach meaning who is Aku, and Azariah to Abed-nego meaning servant of Nebo, son of Bel. To the Babylonians, it was an honor to bear the names of their gods. To the Jews it was insultive and offensive. They were offered royal food – non-kosher. They risked the king’s displeasure by refusing. “But Daniel purposed in his heart that he would not de-file himself with the portion of the king’s meat, nor with the wine which he drank: therefore he requested of the prince of the eunuchs that he might not defile himself. Now God had brought Daniel into favour and tender love with the prince of the eu-nuchs…Thus Melzar took away the por-tion of their meat, and the wine that they should drink; and gave them pulse. As for

these four children, God gave them knowl-edge and skill in all learning and wisdom: and Daniel had understanding in all vi-sions and dreams.” Daniel 1:8-17.

God’s people hold different values be-cause God values holiness and eternal things. It’s because God put value on our eternal souls, Jesus died for us. This mes-sage may not be popular with worldly peo-ple, but it is precious to us.

What you do today lays the foundation

for your future! Satan looks for God’s children with tal-

ents, promise, influence and potential. He will corrupt your thoughts so you cease appreciating Christ’s sacrifice for your sal-vation. You will begin to believe Modern and Post-modern philosophies that say in summary: “just be a nice person, do what-soever feels good, and respect what others feel is good for them. You will be accepted and even become popular.”

Being in a strange country, under an-other authority, and given new names, were not enough to cause these Hebrews to compromise their faithfulness to God. Daniel had a foundation in the Torah and respected the Presence of Jehovah. Let us not forsake our foundation in the Word of God. We need to renew our consecration to God daily. Our salvation cost Jesus His life. He was willing to endure the pain and give up His life. Don’t forget it!

The grace of God and a good disposition

can open doors.Daniel and his peers did not choose

the position they found themselves in. They were not responsible for the sins of

the people, yet were called upon to share the consequences. This should speak to grownups – our sins will affect our young ones. The younger generation must have a response to this environment. They were not impetuous youth (rash, reckless, hasty, hotheaded, impulsive), but individuals of a calm spirit, committed to a relationship with Jehovah. Daniel was of a pleasant per-sonality. You can have a lot of good things going for you, but if you can’t be relational you will fail. Humility, courtesies, respect and a giving spirit are good marks of suc-cessful personalities. God used Daniel in a darkened world because he remained con-secrated. Whilst we may not understand everything, God can use us anywhere.

Everyone needs a support system.Jesus never intended for any Christian

to fight their battles alone. That’s why He founded the Church – a Body of believers who together serve and establish His king-dom. Daniel went to his friends. They were a group of praying people. They stayed together. No one jumped ship when faced with fire.

We must choose who will be our support group. People behave in a crowd in ways they won’t behave when by themselves. The energy, motivation and pressure of the crowd influence their behavior. It can blind their good judgment or catapult them into greater success. You can choose the wrong crowd to hang out with and end up with bitter regrets. Too many young lives carry hurts because of wrong friendships. Satan would like to link you up with people who will lead you away from Christ. Your best friends are people who know how to pray, who care for you, and love you even when you fail. Your best friends are in Church!

God elevates people for a purpose.“Now at the end of the days that

the king had said he should bring them in, then the prince of the eu-nuchs brought them in before Nebu-chadnezzar. And the king communed

with them; and among them all was found none like Daniel, Hanani-ah, Mishael, and Azariah: therefore stood they before the king. And in all matters of wisdom and understand-ing, that the king enquired of them, he found them ten times better than all the magicians and astrologers that were in all his realm. And Daniel continued even unto the first year of king Cyrus.” Daniel 1:18-21. Daniel and his friends were promoted. He was in position to intervene on behalf of his people so they were treated respectfully whilst in captivity. The Jews were given freedom to build houses, develop farms and business-es, and build synagogues for worship (temple substitute). Daniel was able to hold his position in government for 70 years under 5 kings.

When God elevates you to high posi-tions, remember your purpose. Give back to God. Serve God and your fellow man with faithfulness and integrity. Stay fo-cused. Keep eternal values in view. Can God Count on you?

Take your family to church this week-end.

Pastor Haniff BacchusCalvary Assembly

of God102-07 Rockaway Blvd, Ozone Park, NY 11417

Tel. 718-659-4500www.calvaryozone.org

Page 20: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

20 Caribbean Star NewspaperMay 29–June 4, 2015

DPP recommends cop be charged over MFK murderThe Director of Public Prosecutions

(DPP) has recommended that a policeman be criminally charged

in connection with the murder of well-known businessman Mohamed F Khan while another should face departmental charges for his role in the crime.

Stabroek News was reliably informed that last week, police sent a file to the DPP’s Chambers located at Eve Leary with respect to three persons – a re-tired Assistant Commissioner of Police

(ASP) and two policemen. They were all detained and questioned after a murder accused implicated them in the murder of the businessman.

The Chambers in a short press release yesterday said that the file was received last Thursday and was returned to the Guyana Police Force earlier in the day with the recommended advice.

When contacted late yesterday Crime Chief Leslie James told Stabroek News that the file had been received. He con-

firmed that advice was being sought with regards to multiple persons. He lat-er said that charges were recommend-ed. Asked for more information on the charges he responded “I would prefer to just say charges were recommended”.

This newspaper has since learnt that it was recommended that a police ser-geant be charged with conspiracy to commit murder. The DPP also recom-mended that another police sergeant be charged departmentally with neglect of

duty. There was insufficient evidence to recommend that charges be institut-ed against the ASP, this newspaper was told. The police were also advised to conduct further investigations and the specific information required was indi-cated in the file which was returned.

According to reports, police swung into action a few weeks ago after alleged hit-man Lennox Wayne called “Two Colours” began implicating persons. Wayne alleged that he was framed for the murder of teenager Ashmini Harri-ram on July 10 last year. It was after an intense police investigation that Wayne was caught and placed before the court on September 8 last. Wayne and his al-leged accomplice Melroy Doris who was also charged were arrested days earlier.

It is suspected that MFK disappeared on August 9 last after visiting a lawyer’s office and was subsequently murdered. The ASP was said to have telephoned Khan on the day he was last seen. Wayne has reportedly given a statement to po-lice detailing everything that he knows about Khan’s murder.

Khan was reported missing last Oc-tober by a friend on behalf of relatives. He had travelled from his home in Ven-ezuela where he lived with his wife and their children to meet with his attorney and to look after some business in the interior.

On September 22 last a decapitated corpse was found at Cummings Lodge, East Coast Demerara. The corpse was also missing one leg from the knee down and a foot from the other leg was ap-parently severed at the ankle. The head which was in a plastic bag was found nearby.

It was Khan’s wife who positively identified a belt and pants found on the corpse as being her husband’s property. A mark was also found in the stomach area of the corpse and it was believed to be from a gunshot wound Khan sus-tained during a failed execution attempt months earlier. The pathologist could not confirm if the mark was a gunshot wound, given the decomposition of the body. The cause of death was inconclu-sive.

Subsequently samples were sent to a lab in Trinidad for DNA testing. In March they returned with a positive match.

Mohamed Khan

Page 21: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

21Caribbean Star Newspaper May 29–June 4, 2015

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Tide plus downy 140oz

$1299$1299

Listerinetwin pack 3 liters

Listerinetwin pack 3 liters

$1099$1099

Ovaltine800g Ovaltine800g

$1299$1299

NYQUIL OR ZZZQUIL

Lipton tea bags -2 boxes

$6.99

Championchowmein 4 for

$5.00

Jergens lotiontriple pack

$10.99

Olay Ultra Moisturesoap -16 bars

$13.99

Quaker oats 2-40oz pks

$6.99

Nescafe Taster's choiceinstant coffee -12oz

$13.99

Crest cavity protectionreg toothpaste 4pk

$8.99

Tide powder bucket -9kg

$26.99

Honey bunchesof oats cereal

$6.99

Gatorade -32oz 2 for

$3.00

Irish Spring Soap - 20 pk

$9.99

Tide liquid -156oz

$19.99

Allegra macaroni-16 oz

$.79c

Goya chick peas 6lb 14oz

$3.99

Palmolive dishliquid original -90oz

$6.99

Scott toilet tissue single roll

$0.69 each

Page 23: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

23Caribbean Star Newspaper May 29–June 4, 2015

Choice of Sada Roti, Oil Roti or Bake Served with Choice of Side (Ask)

Served with Brown Rice or Fried Rice

$5.00 Each Sem

Pumpkin

Okra

Bora

Spinach

Katahar

Karela

Bhaigan Choka

Potato Choka

Saltfish

Corned Beef

Corned Mutton

Dhal Puri ..................$2.00

Oil Roti

Sada Roti ................$1.50

Bake ...........................$1.00

Dhal ............................$2.00

Rice ............................$2.00

Doubles .. $1.50...$2.50*

*W/Any Meat

Chicken

Cowheel

Sweet Com

Vegetable

Bread . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2.50

Tennis Rolls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2.50

Sweet Bread (6 in Pack) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2.50

Butter Frap (3 in Pack) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1.75

Salara (3 in Pack) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2.50

Pinetart . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1.00

Chinese Cake . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1.00

Cheese Roll . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1.00

Cassava Pone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2.00

Chicken/Beef Patties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1.50

Pholourie . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 for $1.00

Egg Ball . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1.50

CassavaBall . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 for $1.00

Chicken Wings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $7.00

Hot Wings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8.00

BBQ Chicken . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8.00

Spicy Garlic/General Tso’s Chicken . . . . . . . $11.00

Jerk Chicken . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9.00

Cha Cha Ki Chicken . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9.00

Fried Chicken . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $7.00

Fried Snapper . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$10.00

Fried Bangamary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$10.00

Fried Shark . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$10.00

Pepper Shrimp . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$12.00

Hot&Spicy or Fried Shrimp. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$12.00

Fried Calamari . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$10.00

Pepper Steak . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$10.00

Roast Lamp . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $11.00

Roast Duck . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9.00

Roast Pork . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9.00

Jerk Pork . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9.00

French Fries\Platain Chips . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $5.00

Vegetable Fried Rice/Lomein/Chowmein . . . . . .$7.00

Chicken Fried Rice/Lomein/Chowmein . . . . . . . .$8.00

Roast Beef Fried Rice/Lomein/Chowmein . . . . .$9.00

Roast Pork Fried Rice/Lomein/Chowmein . . . . .$9.00

Shrimp Fried Rice/Lomein/Chowmein . . . . . . . . .$9.00

Mixed Fried Rice/Lomein/Chowmein . . . . . . . . .$9.00

Jerk Chicken Fried Rice/Lomein/Chowmein . . .$9.00

Jerk Pork Fried Rice/Lomein/Chowmein . . . . . .$9.00

Chinese Fried Rice/Lomein/Chowmein . . . . . . . .$9.00

Roast Duck Fried Rice/Lomein/Chowmein . . $11.00

Boneless Chicken Fried Rice/Lomein/Chowmein . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$9.00

Lamb Fried Rice/Lomein/Chowmein . . . . . . . . $11.00

Pepper/Hot&Spicy Shrimp Fried Rice/Lomein/Chowmein . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $12.00

General Tso’s/Spisy Garlic Chicken Fried Rice/Lomein/Chowmein . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $11.00

Steam Chinese Vegetable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8.00

Broccoli w/ Garlic Sauce . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8.00

Steam Broccoli . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8.00

Mix Vegetable w/ Oyster Sauce . . . . . . . . . . . $8.00

Broccoli w/ Oyster Sauce . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8.00

Steam Baby Pak Choy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8.00

Curry/Stew Chicken . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8.00

Curry/Stew Beef . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9.00

Curry Goat or Lamb . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9.00

Curry Duck . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9.00

Curry Shrimp . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9.00

Curry/Stew Fish . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$10.00

Boneless Chicken Curry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8.00

Pachownie . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$10.00

Pepperpot . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$10.00

Oxtail Stew . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$10.00

Cook Up Rice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8.00

Beans and Rice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8.00

Boil and Fry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $6.00

* Selected Cuisine varies by day. Call ahead to hear Daily Selections

Choice of Sada Roti, Oil Roti or Bake Served with Choice of Side (Ask)

Served with Brown Rice or Fried Rice

$5.00 Each Sem

Pumpkin

Okra

Bora

Spinach

Katahar

Karela

Bhaigan Choka

Potato Choka

Saltfish

Corned Beef

Corned Mutton

Dhal Puri ..................$2.00

Oil Roti

Sada Roti ................$1.50

Bake ...........................$1.00

Dhal ............................$2.00

Rice ............................$2.00

Doubles .. $1.50...$2.50*

*W/Any Meat

Chicken

Cowheel

Sweet Com

Vegetable

Bread . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2.50

Tennis Rolls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2.50

Sweet Bread (6 in Pack) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2.50

Butter Frap (3 in Pack) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1.75

Salara (3 in Pack) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2.50

Pinetart . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1.00

Chinese Cake . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1.00

Cheese Roll . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1.00

Cassava Pone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2.00

Chicken/Beef Patties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1.50

Pholourie . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 for $1.00

Egg Ball . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1.50

CassavaBall . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 for $1.00

Chicken Wings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $7.00

Hot Wings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8.00

BBQ Chicken . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8.00

Spicy Garlic/General Tso’s Chicken . . . . . . . $11.00

Jerk Chicken . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9.00

Cha Cha Ki Chicken . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9.00

Fried Chicken . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $7.00

Fried Snapper . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$10.00

Fried Bangamary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$10.00

Fried Shark . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$10.00

Pepper Shrimp . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$12.00

Hot&Spicy or Fried Shrimp. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$12.00

Fried Calamari . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$10.00

Pepper Steak . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$10.00

Roast Lamp . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $11.00

Roast Duck . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9.00

Roast Pork . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9.00

Jerk Pork . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9.00

French Fries\Platain Chips . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $5.00

Vegetable Fried Rice/Lomein/Chowmein . . . . . .$7.00

Chicken Fried Rice/Lomein/Chowmein . . . . . . . .$8.00

Roast Beef Fried Rice/Lomein/Chowmein . . . . .$9.00

Roast Pork Fried Rice/Lomein/Chowmein . . . . .$9.00

Shrimp Fried Rice/Lomein/Chowmein . . . . . . . . .$9.00

Mixed Fried Rice/Lomein/Chowmein . . . . . . . . .$9.00

Jerk Chicken Fried Rice/Lomein/Chowmein . . .$9.00

Jerk Pork Fried Rice/Lomein/Chowmein . . . . . .$9.00

Chinese Fried Rice/Lomein/Chowmein . . . . . . . .$9.00

Roast Duck Fried Rice/Lomein/Chowmein . . $11.00

Boneless Chicken Fried Rice/Lomein/Chowmein . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$9.00

Lamb Fried Rice/Lomein/Chowmein . . . . . . . . $11.00

Pepper/Hot&Spicy Shrimp Fried Rice/Lomein/Chowmein . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $12.00

General Tso’s/Spisy Garlic Chicken Fried Rice/Lomein/Chowmein . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $11.00

Steam Chinese Vegetable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8.00

Broccoli w/ Garlic Sauce . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8.00

Steam Broccoli . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8.00

Mix Vegetable w/ Oyster Sauce . . . . . . . . . . . $8.00

Broccoli w/ Oyster Sauce . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8.00

Steam Baby Pak Choy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8.00

Curry/Stew Chicken . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8.00

Curry/Stew Beef . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9.00

Curry Goat or Lamb . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9.00

Curry Duck . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9.00

Curry Shrimp . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9.00

Curry/Stew Fish . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$10.00

Boneless Chicken Curry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8.00

Pachownie . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$10.00

Pepperpot . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$10.00

Oxtail Stew . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$10.00

Cook Up Rice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8.00

Beans and Rice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8.00

Boil and Fry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $6.00

* Selected Cuisine varies by day. Call ahead to hear Daily Selections

Cricket Team Special on tray`s of food with free delivery

Page 24: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

24 Caribbean Star NewspaperMay 29–June 4, 2015

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Page 25: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

25Caribbean Star Newspaper May 29–June 4, 2015

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GUYANA TRINIDAD

'Dudus' likely informed about police operation

Christopher 'Dudus' Coke

DEPUTY Police Commis-sioner Glenmore Hinds testified at the Tivoli

Commission of Enquiry yes-terday that it was possible that Christopher 'Dudus' Coke and his cronies were aware of when the police would launch their operation to apprehend him.

Hinds, who was responding to questions from Commission Chairman Sir David Simmons, said police intelligence suggests that it was rumoured when the operation was to have started.

"See, my speculation is not so

stupid after all," Simmons said in response to Hinds' answer.

Responding to another ques-tion, Hinds said he wouldn't doubt that Coke could have got information on the operation from the police as criminals seek information within the force in the same way that the police seek to get information from gang members.

However, when questioned by commission member Professor Anthony Harriott on whether Coke was assisted by police to flee Tivoli Gardens on May 24, 2010, Hinds said he had no such information.

Hinds testified that the in-telligence was that Coke was in Tivoli Gardens when the opera-tion to apprehend him started, adding that injuries to members of the security forces caused the delay in covering the ground to get to him.

According to Hinds, Coke fled leaving a plate of uneaten brown stew fish behind.

"So you are saying that he left in a hurry and hungry? Simmons asked.

"He left in a hurry," Hinds re-sponded.

Responding to questions from Queen's Counsel Garth McBean (attorney for the com-mission), Hinds said that the national broadcast by then Prime Minister Bruce Golding in which he announced that the authority would be given to ar-rest Coke made the police's job more difficult and forced them to adjust their tactics.

He said that he wasn't sur-prised that the police weren't given advanced warning of what was going to be said in the broad-cast, and added that "nothing in politics" surprised him.

Hinds also told the commis-sion that the police, in 2009, planned on arresting Coke in relation to a case of abduction and hold him in custody, pend-ing the extradition request from the United States. But he said that plan didn't mate-rialise.

The commission is looking into the circumstances of the May 2010 operation that led to the deaths of more than 70 ci-

vilians and a member of the se-curity forces in Tivoli Gardens.

Yesterday, as Hinds took the witness stand when the enqui-ry resumed its sitting following a break in April, he testified, under the guidance of attorney Valerie Neita-Robertson, that Coke ran a surrogate govern-ment in Tivoli Gardens.

He testified that Coke pro-vided telephone services to the residents in the mid-to-late 1990s, bypassing the legal telecoms provider, and that he operated an illegal cable com-pany in the community.

Hinds also disclosed that very few residents in Tivo-li Gardens paid bills to utility companies, adding that the money was paid to Coke at a discounted rate.

The DCP also spoke about Coke's 'Champions in Action' stage show, saying that corpo-rate companies were coerced into sponsoring it and that top entertainers had to perform on the show for free.

Proceeds from the show were used to help Tivoli Gar-

dens residents with back-to-school expenses.

According to the deputy po-lice commissioner, Coke also operated his own criminal jus-tice system of which he was chief judge and juror and that he had others who executed his judgement which would in-clude a broken limb or a gun-shot to the foot, depending on the offence for which a person is convicted in his 'court'.

He described the former Tivoli Gardens strongman as the "don of all dons" and said that his rule was unchallenged.

Hinds said, too, that Coke had 'deputies' in communities like Denham Town and Fletch-er's Land, and that he provid-ed protection for gangs across the island, including the feared One Order gang in Spanish Town, St Catherine.

According to DCP Hinds, Coke's affiliations stretched beyond the shores of Jamaica, as he had affiliated gangs in Tampa, Florida, and Cleveland, Ohio, in the United States, as well as in London, England.

Page 26: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

26 Caribbean Star NewspaperMay 29–June 4, 2015

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Page 27: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

27Caribbean Star Newspaper May 29–June 4, 2015

My name is Shaw Ryan Khan. I am

known to many as the Voice of the

Youth. But, I will never forget where

I came from. I am the son of Shaw

M. Khan and Camille Zeena Khan

and I am the grandson of Haji Ali

Akbar Khan and Azeezan Khan from

Canegrove, Guyana ,as well as Harry

Singh and Lillian Ganpati Singh from

Industry, Guyana. My respect to my

parents and my grandparents always.

I want to talk about something a bit different this week. It pertains to something that is also very close to

my heart. Back when I was in High School,

my uncle Eusa would pick me up from school. I won’t lie; certain days I would get in the car and end up falling asleep. Not because I was bored but because I was just so tired from the night before due to the mass amounts of Homework I had. But the other days, where I actually was not tired, were days that I won’t forget because of the amazing conversations I had with my uncle. When we talked, we would discuss politics, philosophy, religion, and the list goes on. I’ll share one sto-ry I learned from him. If we were to go back to a time when America was still “young”, we’d find so many individu-als who we know, in the present day, to be influential individuals. There was a story that basically said rather than these historical figures going out to have drinks and get drunk, they in-vited each other over for a cup of tea and discussed how to make this world a better place. At that point in time, they were not only thinking about themselves but also about the society and the future society.

After hearing this story, it made me start to think…We’ve reached a point in society where we rarely have get-togethers without it being for partying or for mourning. Quite frank-ly, there aren’t many individuals who would come together with others, sit at a table, and just talk and brain-storm ideas. We now tend to rely on Governmental officials to do that for us and we tend to blame them when they “ignore” us. We have to realize that the Government is doing the best work it can; sure it can make mistakes but don’t we all? What I am trying to say is that we need to stop relying on others to do things for us. Don’t get

me wrong, I don’t mean you should become a vigilante. I am simply say-ing that it is time we come together as one and work to make this world a better place through positivity.

2 years ago, I thought I would be able to bring society together by talking about life lessons I have learned either from personal experi-ences or from experiences of others. And quite frankly, I failed in doing so. We have come to an age where indi-viduals don’t have time to read. We have come to an age where newspa-pers are becoming obsolete, where movie stars and singers are more read about than what is occurring around the world. We have come to a point where we need phones with “curves” on them because it saves a few sec-onds of time to go to certain appli-cations. I remember a few months ago, there was an “ALS Ice Bucket Challenge” trend happening. And if you look at the videos of some peo-ple doing this challenge, more than half of them did not know what in the world this challenge is for! We are too caught up in the fanciness and glamor of life that we forget reality. Reality is that the world is tough, reality is that the world is hungry, that the world is slowing dying, that the world is slow-ly running out of resources for us. We forget that cigarettes are shown to have caused illnesses in those who smoke and even those who just inhale it second handedly. We forget that we are inhabiting Mother Earth and that Mother Earth is not immortal. We forget so many important things yet remember who died last in Game of Thrones or the Walking Dead!

About 10 months ago, uncle Eusa reminded me of that story of the his-torical figures brainstorming. And it was as if God instilled this into my un-cle because God wanted to remind me that there can be something done. I

can’t simply do this by myself, it is too much for one person to do. In October of last year, I finally decided that it’s time for a change. After discussing my ideas and concepts of a better tomor-row, 6 other individuals agreed to join me and help imitate what these his-torical individuals did. And in Novem-ber of last year, Beacon of Peace was born. Beacon of Peace is a non-profit organization, created by myself and these 6 individuals (which includes my uncle Eusa). It is our hope to cre-ate a better tomorrow for society and help to spread peace and serenity to those we encounter. Our organization is not a religious one, but we are com-prised of individuals with different re-ligions. Each member of the Board in this organization has seen life and has seen that there is so much that can be done to help.

Since its creation, we have done 2 major events (at least we call these events major). We donated food to feed 25 individuals and we invited Santa and his helpers to come take pictures with children in the commu-nity. Before I continue, I just want to say this; you don’t realize how power-ful of a positive impact you can have on someone until you experience it. I remember one little girl came to Santa and asked Santa if he was real. Santa replied by saying of course! And the little girl smiled and said “I knew it! No matter what anyone tells me; I will always believe you are real and I’m al-ways going to be a good little girl so I can keep being on your nice list!”

Over the last few months, the or-ganization became a little less active. I won’t put the blame on any other person other than myself. Handling an organization, school, work, and a personal life wasn’t easy at all. But af-ter going to a philosophical seminar a few weeks ago, it made me realize so much more. The man who spoke said that the phrase “I give up”, or “I lost”, or “I failed”, should never be in your vocabulary. Rather, it is either you win or you’ve learned a lesson. I’ve realized that I learned a huge lesson. I’ve learned that the 6 other board members isn’t enough, we need more people to help us to make this world a better place.

Beacon of Peace is something I want to grow and keep alive. It’s something my board members want to grow and keep alive as well. It’s something for all ages who are interested in help-ing to make this world a better place. Beacon of Peace is now actively re-cruiting and awaits your call to join. What can we offer you? Not much. We can offer you an organization that can swear and attest that we wish to help the world, educate society, and help those in need. We can offer you a membership in the organiza-

tion whereby you are not just anoth-er number in the roster but rather a friend in our hearts. We can offer you a chance to join us in our journey to obtain peace and serenity for our-selves and for others. And hey, it also looks good in your transcript/resume! Schools and workplaces love an indi-vidual that gives back to society. We can offer you a spot in our family. So join us and become part of the family who will stay together, pray together, work together, learn together, and help together.

For more information, please call us at 347-557-5457. To apply, you can check out our website which has the application form at www.beaconof-peace.org. Lastly, be sure to like our Facebook page at Facebook.com/Bop.beaconofpeace. We hope to hear from you soon and we hope you join our family! Together, we can make a difference. Together, we will become the most powerful instrument anyone could be gifted with; an instrument of peace.

Before I end my article, I just want to say this; may God continue to bless each and every one of you and I wish for you to achieve peace and serenity in your lives!

Lastly my readers, in your jour-ney through life, I hope you heed my advice. I want nothing except peace and serenity. And remember this; “Coming together is a begin-ning; keeping together is a prog-ress; working together is a success.”

God bless you all and see you in two weeks!

(Like my articles? Want to give me feedback? Do you have a topic suggestion for my next article? Let me know! Add me via Facebook @ Face-book.com/ryankhan0721 or give me a call @ 646-269-8227 or 718-849-1006)

Voice Of The Youth

Page 28: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

28 Caribbean Star NewspaperMay 29–June 4, 2015

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Page 29: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

29Caribbean Star Newspaper May 29–June 4, 2015

World News Highlights

ZURICH - The corruption charges engulfing soccer’s gov-erning body have heaped shame and humiliation on the game, FIFA President Sepp Blatter said on Thursday, although he flatly rejected calls to resign over the scandal. | Video

ZURICH - FIFA needs to learn from the Olympic movement’s experience and become more transparent if it is to regain its credibility, the president of the International Olympic Commit-tee Thomas Bach told delegates at the opening of the FIFA Con-gress on Thursday.

MOSCOW - President Vladi-mir Putin on Thursday declared deaths of Russian soldiers during special operations carried out in peacetime to be classified as a

state secret, a move that comes as Moscow stands accused of sending troops to fight in eastern Ukraine.

PANEVEZYS, Lithuania - Ukraine’s defense minister said on Thursday Russia had moved forces into eastern Ukraine and there was a risk of fighting re-suming between the army and pro-Russian separatists in com-ing months.

ABUJA, Nigeria - As he entered his final week in office, Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan of-fered up a prayer for the success of Muhammadu Buhari, the for-mer military ruler who takes the helm of Africa’s biggest economy on Friday.

GENEVA - Nigerian Presi-dent-elect Muhammadu Buhari’s promised campaign to defeat Boko Haram could drive more

militants over the country’s bor-ders, raising the need for coop-eration between governments across the region, senior U.N. officials said on Thursday.

MADRID - Spain’s state pros-ecutor charged the leader of Nigerian Islamist militant group Boko Haram, Abubakar Shekau, with terrorism and crimes against humanity over a 2013 attack on a Nigerian town in which a Spanish nun was assaulted, court papers said.

LONDON - The European Union must amend its founding treaties to accommodate Brit-ain’s renegotiation drive, Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond said on Thursday, warning that Lon-don needed a meaty deal to per-suade voters to stay in the bloc.

DRESDEN, Germany - British finance minister George Osborne

said other European Union coun-tries were willing to negotiate over Britain’s push to reform the bloc before it holds a referendum on whether to stay in the EU.

ZURICH - Britain’s FIFA vice-president David Gill will stand down in protest if Sepp Blatter is re-elected as president on Friday.

LUANDA - An Angolan jour-nalist was given a six-month sus-pended sentence on Thursday after he was convicted of slander for accusing generals of human rights abuses at diamond mines, concluding a high-profile trial in one of Africa’s most repressive states.

AGADEZ, Niger - In a sandy compound in the Niger desert town of Agadez, a white-tur-baned imam blesses a circle of African migrants, some of them

little more than boys, to protect them on the journey across the Sahara toward Europe.

BRUSSELS - Libya is on the verge of economic collapse as ri-val factions haggle over a political settlement, the United Nations special envoy said on Thursday.

ZURICH - UEFA president Mi-chel Platini delivered one of his most emotional and animated performances since his playing days when he said it was time for Sepp Blatter to quit as president of FIFA with world football’s body facing yet another corruption cri-sis.

WASHINGTON - The U.S.-led coalition has staged 26 air strikes since early Wednesday targeting Islamic State militants in Syria and Iraq against, according to the Combined Joint Task Force lead-ing the air operations.

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Sita Ram everyone! My name is Brianna Persaud and I am a proud member of the Naujavaan Man-

dalee youth group of the Shaanti Bhavan Mandir. My topic this week will be about decisions. How do we make the right ones?

When making decisions the first thing that you should do is stop and think of your choices. It is important to think about how it will affect you and the ones that you care about. Ask yourself, is this the right decision I am making? If I make this decision, how will it make me feel personally? You will know if it’s the right decision by making a list of the pros and cons. This process will help you weigh your options but sometimes you can just go with your gut feeling. Make the decision that you know is the right and remember not to over think it too much. You will know by the end result if it will benefit your life.

Another way to help make the right decisions is through reflecting on your past experiences. Think of situations you’ve been in before and how you re-sponded to it or got through it. If you haven’t had an experience like this be-fore you can use this situation for future references which will guide you to make the right choice.

One simple example can be when you’re in bed and it’s a nice day. You have the choice of either sleeping or watching T.V. in bed or you can get up and enjoy the beautiful day and get things done. This decision is very tricky because at the time that you are in bed it might feel so good and you just want to stay there. But once you pull yourself up,

you’re ready to get started. However, if you went the other way you would have regretted it sooner or later. This is just a minor predicament we all have, but there are more complex decisions that all of us also have to make. One example can be deciding which college to go to. Your parents might want you to go the college they want, and your best friends are go-ing to another. In this situation you have to pick what you really want because it’s about something that will affect your whole life. Another situation that can be decided by using facts is a buying a car. You can research different cars and find the best one that is also cheap. The more information you have the easier it is to make a choice.

These are a few tips that may help you with making decisions. Once you find what you really want it will be easy to make a choice. If you take some of these tips into consideration then you will find that making decisions isn’t very hard.

Thank and Jai ho

Page 30: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

30 Caribbean Star NewspaperMay 29–June 4, 2015

“If you want to be trusted, be honest” — Vp premIer

(March 21-April 19)You’re thinking about your overall style as the week begins, but something else requires a

fine-toothed comb. It may be a challenge to zero in on the details, but you’ll be very happy you did. Getting stuff started (at work, at home, even in ro-mance) is favored around Wednesday and Thurs-day. Kick it off and watch it f ly! From Friday until Sunday afternoon, though, your usual oomph may be missing in action. However, taking things slow isn’t a bad idea right about now. By late Sunday, new energy comes to help boost you into a great new week.

ARIES(April 20-May 20)Your sensuous side’s in the forefront as the week begins, with the cosmos smiling on your romantic endeavors

and boosting your attraction factor. Make hay while the proverbial sun shines! You may be wrapped up in work around Wednesday and Thursday, and it could involve some exciting stuff. Don’t go overboard, though, because your health may be a bit delicate now. Passion’s back in your personal stars from Friday until Sunday afternoon, but beware of possessiveness. Hold on loosely, because love needs wiggle room. Late Sunday, a realization comes your way.

TAURUS(May 21-June 20)Check in with family or friends at the beginning of the week, and

make sure the lines of communica-tion are clear and open. Relying on them to divine your feelings isn’t going to cut it. Around Wednesday and Thursday, you’re extra smart as well as super sexy. What you don’t have: follow-through, especial-ly at work. So take necessary steps to keep track of things. You’re capable of all sorts of helpful calcu-lations from Friday until Sunday afternoon. Seeing things clearly sure makes your path easier to discern! By late Sunday, you’re ready for your next step.

GEMINI

(June 21-July 22)Interpersonal connections are crackling as your week begins, and

the cosmic forces-that-be are smiling on any plans you make now. Put a little extra thought into it and you’ll reap big rewards, both right away and later. Around Wednesday and Thursday, however, the peo-ple factor demands additional attention. Spend some time figuring out others’ motivations. You experience things intensely from Friday through the weekend. It’s up to you to make it intensely good! Take good care of yourself, and gather favorite characters and things to have around you.

CANCER(July 23-Aug. 22)You’re happy to let someone else have the limelight as you start your

week. You’ve got more in-depth or long-term stuff on your mind, and you also have the concentration and analytical skills to deal with it. It’s more about sharing the spotlight (or is it candlelight? Things could get romantic now!) around Wednesday and Thursday. Plan for fun with a friend or a certain someone. Then, from Friday through the weekend, powerful energy’s coming your way. You can intensify it by using both your mind and heart in any and all decision-making.

LEO(Aug. 23-Sept. 22)Those around you ain’t seen nothin’ -- until the beginning of this week,

that is, when the ambient star power magnifies all things great about you. Whatever you want to do, get right to it. Around Wednesday and Thursday, though, a choice must be made, and it’s not so easy. Consult someone who ‘gets’ you -- your mentor, partner or maybe a trusted friend. You may want to plan some-thing different, something exciting and stimulating to your heart and mind, on Friday or over the weekend. You’re liable to feel restless!

VIRGO

LIBRA(Sept. 23-Oct. 22)It’s all about the details as the week begins, and they might totally over-

whelm you if you don’t make an extra effort to concentrate. Allow for some downtime, too. Life’s more about love around Wednesday and Thursday, or at least it should be. Where’s your heart? Where do you want to be emotionally? Move toward it, and the stars will give you a nice push. From Friday through the weekend, you might be thinking about a purchase or about something you already own, but the cosmic forces have something bigger (and probably way better) in mind. Look deep now.

(Oct. 23-Nov. 21)Lend a friend a hand, give a coworker a boost or recommit to your volunteer work or giving at the beginning of

the week. The cosmic forces have their eye on you! Your sheer power of determination doesn’t make a certain decision any easier around Wednesday and Thursday. In fact, pressuring yourself for an answer could create a problem. Have patience, because things look like they’ll really clear up, as well as heat up, for you from Friday through the weekend. Your personal power’s building now, and same with your attraction factor. Dang!

SCORPIO SAGITTARIUS(Nov. 22-Dec. 21)Early in the week, minimize the team stuff at work and reschedule social en-gagements. You’ve got powerful mental

energy, but you’ll need to be solo to make the most of it. On the other hand, you love being around people, and they’re loving you around Wednesday and Thursday. Getting out of your usual circle could make it even more fun (and make new contacts a real possibility, too). From Friday through the weekend, your imagination’s incred-ibly active. That means you can be very creative, but you may also read more into things than you should.

PISCES(Dec. 22-Jan. 19)Get that planner updated, make certain inquiries and do some very

productive thinking as the week begins. Give those re-lationships (or potential ones) a little care and feeding now, too. Around Wednesday and Thursday, the con-nections aren’t quite clear, and you’ll be glad for the interpersonal foundations you’ve laid. But never fear: Your personal power’s back on high from Friday until Sunday afternoon. You’re great with romance or social stuff now, but be sure you take time to look within, too. Later on Sunday, ideas count, so listen to them.

(Jan. 20-Feb. 18)There may be some weird energy in your interactions at the beginning

of the week. What’s really going on here? Being up front about your own motives is a good place to start. Around Wednesday and Thursday, though, the bonds you have with those around you can become exponen-tially stronger. Offer your help and say yes to an offer someone makes you or an invitation you receive. Emo-tions may run high from Friday through the weekend, and your instinct might be to hole up. But other peo-ple have fresh energy and even some good advice.

AQUARIUS(Feb. 19-March 20) Your analytical powers are pretty awesome as the week gets going. If you can recognize when to go ahead

and take action, you’ll be sitting pretty indeed. Are you ready for some out-of-season spring cleaning around Wednesday and Thursday? Whether it’s your workspace or your heart, there’s stuff to toss out. Make room for the new! From Friday until Sunday afternoon, you might just want to cozy up with a certain someone or enjoy the company of good friends. Keep those plans low-key. Sunday could actually turn into your lucky day.

CAPRICORN

The weekly horoscopes are updated on every week to gives you an in-depth insight into your family, your love life, any career opportunities, friends and money issues.WEEKLY HOROSCOPE

Page 31: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

31Caribbean Star Newspaper May 29–June 4, 2015

Entertainment NewsTaylor Swift, Beyonce And The Most

Powerful Women In Entertainment

The women in entertainment on Forbes’ list of The World’s Most Powerful Women are the perform-

ers, tastemakers, executives and entre-preneurs who are making an impact. Our criteria is based on the reach of each woman’s influence and relevance, and ranked by money and media momentum. The 11 women in entertainment on our list are all at the top of their game and are committed to inspiring change. They have a combined social media imprint ex-ceeding six billion followers and fans.

Oprah Winfrey, Angelina Jolie, and Sha-kira Mebarak use their celebrity to bet-ter the lives of people around the world through philanthropy or humanitarian efforts. Bonnie Hammer, Donna Langley, Dana Walden are Hollywood power play-ers, shaping financial and creative deci-sions at billion-dollar media companies.

Ellen DeGeneres and Sofia Vergara are TV stars translating fame into business empires. With the release of her block-buster album 1989, Taylor Swift became the first artist ever to have three mil-lion-selling albums in the first week.

Indian Court Gives Convicted Bollywood Star Salman Khan Permission to Travel Overseas

Convicted Bollywood star Salman Khan has been allowed to travel to Dubai where he is scheduled to ap-

pear at an awards show on May 29.One of India's most bankable stars,

Khan, 49, was convicted and sentenced to five years in a 2002 hit-and-run case, in which the actor — driving under the in-fluence — ran over and killed a homeless man and injured four others in Mumbai.

The Mumbai sessions court found him guilty of “culpable homicide not amount-ing to murder.” Following his May 6 conviction, Khan was immediately given bail by the high court, with instructions to deposit his passport with authorities and seek permission for overseas travel. Khan's case is set for another hearing in July.

As reported earlier, organizers of the Arab Indo Bollywood Awards in Dubai had confirmed on the event's website that the actor was scheduled to make an appearance during the award ceremony's

finale.Last week, Khan's lawyers filed an ap-

plication seeking travel permission. The Bombay High Court on Tuesday allowed the actor to travel to Dubai but with conditions. Khan will have to deposit a cash security of about $3,000 (rupees 200,000) and provide details of his travel itinerary, which runs from May 27-30. In addition, other information required in-clude his flight numbers and their timings and details about his hotel accommoda-tion.

Reports also quoted the court judg-ment stating that Khan will have to in-form the Indian consulate in Dubai about his arrival and departure. The actor will also have to hand over his passport to authorities within 12 hours of his arrival back in India.

Meanwhile, Khan has resumed work and just wrapped filming his ongoing pro-duction Bajrangi Bhaijaan, which co-stars Kareena Kapoor.

Could Bollywood's Aamir Khan Be China's Next Big Movie Star?

He may not be up there yet with Holly-wood actors Tom Cruise or Vin Die-sel, and he’s no threat at the moment

to the status of China’s Huang Bo or Fan Bingbing. But as far as non-Hollywood for-eign stars in China go, he’s right at the top of the heap

The record-setting PRC release of his Bollywood satirical comedy PK has now ce-mented Aamir Khan’s standing as the high-est grossing foreign star of non-English lan-guage films in China. As of this past weekend his current release there, PK, owns the re-cord for the most successful Indian film in Chinese history, and if it can continue to perform well for another week or so it could even become the mainland’s highest gross-ing non-English language foreign film ever.

Lest that seem like only a modest achieve-ment, consider this: for his next film Khan is paired with no less a Chinese luminary than mega-star Jackie Chan in a China-India co-production film that’s scheduled to re-lease in 2016.

With their action-comedy vehicle Kung Fu Yoga, Khan and Chan aim to set a high bar for movies being made under the India-Chi-na film treaty. Each country stands to benefit by opening up more revenue opportunities in the other’s territory, and there’s no better way for them to do that than by putting their top film emissaries up to the task.

Khan’s trajectory as a box office magnet in China began in 2011 with the release of his

hugely successful buddy comedy 3 Idiots. While it grossed only a modest $2 million in theaters, the film found great popularity on TV and online and made Khan a household name. His next film to be released there, Dhoom 3, earned 56 percent more than 3 Idiots, and now PK looks set to more than triple the revenue that Dhoom 3 took in.

With its strong story-telling tradition and its extensive filmmaking talent pool and in-frastructure, India could be the foreign part-ner that China has been seeking to create films for the global marketplace. And with his growing status as a star in China, Aamir Khan is well positioned to lead the charge.

After reality show, former Miss India set for her Bollywood debut

After showcasing her athletic side in the reality show Zor Ka Jhatka — Total WipeOut hosted by Shah

Rukh Khan, former Miss India Priyanka Shah is all set for her acting debut with the Hindi film I Love Desi. Releasing May 29, the film is a family drama in which Priyanka plays the role of a hoity-toity Punjabi NRI, who learns the value of her culture after getting married to an Indian.

The nuances of the spoilt yet so-phisticated NRI came easy to her, says Priyanka, thanks to her background in fashion. An engineer in electronics and telecommunication from Pune, Priyanka was already dabbling in modelling when she decided to participate in Miss India in 2007, where she was placed in the top 10. Following that, she won the Miss Tourism 2007 international pageant and since then has modelled for some of the most well-renowned fashion designers and choreographers.

Talking about the film, Priyanka says, "I was apprehensive about the film initially as it stars a newcomer and has a relative-ly new team. I usually never end up doing

films I want to, but this worked out well. For instance, I was called for look tests for Chak De but it didn't work out since I was a student. This movie came in an unexpected way. The makers didn't even disclose the script to me till they had signed me."

Even though she is now focused on a career in films and TV, this multi-facet-ed actress loves to model and indulge in sports too. "I was the former captain of the Indian netball team and also repre-sented the country at the Asian Games. Right now though, acting is my priority. I have done another Bollywood film and am in talks for a few more projects, in-cluding TV."

Page 32: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

32 Caribbean Star NewspaperMay 29–June 4, 2015

Arnold signs films he can watch with his kids!

New Delhi, May 24 -- Hollywood star Arnold Schwarzenegger has said that he keeps his kids in mind

while signing a film."It works on two levels. One, the public

demands it. Two, I'm a family man myself now, and I'm always concerned about what kind of movies I can go and see with my daughters. Right now, they're so young they basically only watch cartoons. But let's assume they're five, six, or eight years old. What will they want to see? That makes me think about films where the entire family can go out and see a movie and have a great time and not be offended by too much violence and all these other things," says the 67-year-old.

Unlike his earlier action films, Arnold's upcoming film is a serious, dramatic zom-bie movie. Titled Maggie, the flick, direct-ed by Henry Hobson, tells the story of

Arnold's character. His daughter Maggie, played by actor Abigail Berslin, is ailing with a serious infection that is turning her into a zombie. Premiered at the 2015 Tribeca Film Festival, this film is set to re-lease across India on May 29.

I became an Aamir fan overnight: Jackie Chan

Jackie Chan has always been vocal about his love for India, and now, the Hollywood actor has confessed his

love for Aamir Khan, too."I watch very few Bollywood movies,

but I loved 3 Idiots (2009). It was a huge success in Hong Kong. I became an Aamir Khan fan overnight. I think he is a terrific actor," says the 60-year-old Chinese star.

The Dragon Blade actor, who last visit-ed India in 2013 to inaugurate a Chinese film festival, tells us that he will be back soon to shoot for a film. "I am planning to start a new movie called Kung Fu Yoga. So, I will be returning to film it in India. Hopefully, we will start filming in au-tumn," he adds.

Jackie is open to acting in Bollywood too. He says, "I don’t think about acting in terms of doing a Bollywood or Holly-wood movie. The most important thing is the script. So yes, if there is a good script here, I would love to do a film."

In fact, scripts are so important for the actor that he has still not worked with an-

other action star, Sylvester Stallone, be-cause he is yet to find a worthwhile script for them to collaborate on.

"I have been talking to Stallone about working together, but we haven’t found the right script so far. The discussion is still open and I hope that one day, we will feature on a poster together," says the actor, who had earlier refused a role in Stallone’s 2014 film, The Expendables 3.

Tracy Morgan Settles Suit Against Walmart Over Highway Crash

NEWARK, N.J. — Actor-comedi-anTracy Morgan has settled his lawsuit against Walmart over a

New Jersey highway crash that killed one man and left Morgan and two friends seriously injured. Terms of the settlement are confidential, Walmart andBenedict Morelli, the attorney for Morgan and his two friends, said in a statement.

"Walmart did right by me and my family, and for my associates and their families," Morgan said in a statement. "I am grateful that the case was re-solved amicably."

Walmart U.S. president and CEO Greg Foran added "Our thoughts continue to go out to everyone that was involved in the accident. While we know there is nothing that can change what hap-pened, Walmart has been committed to doing what's right to help ensure the well-being of all of those who were impacted by the accident. We worked closely with Mr. Morelli, and we are pleased to have reached an amicable settlement that ends this litigation. We are deeply sorry that one of our trucks was involved."

Morelli stated, "Walmart and I worked diligently to reach this settle-ment for the plaintiffs and their fam-ilies. Walmart took full responsibility for the accident, which we greatly ap-preciate."

A Walmart truck slammed into the back of a limo van carrying Morgan and the others back from a show in Delaware last June. Comedian James

"Jimmy Mack" McNair was killed. Mor-gan suffered head trauma, a broken leg and broken ribs.

Walmart reached a settlement with McNair's two children in January.

The truck driver, Kevin Roper, of Jonesboro, Georgia, faces several criminal charges, including death by auto, in state court. He has pleaded not guilty. He wasn't a defendant in Mor-gan's federal lawsuit.

Morgan suffered what his lawyer, Benedict Morelli, has referred to as a traumatic brain injury. Morelli said in March that Morgan wasn't fully recov-ered but was "working very hard to get better, physically, emotionally and mentally." Morgan had hoped to attend the 40th anniversary show ofSaturday Night Live in February but was unable to.

Passengers Ardley Fuqua, of Jersey City, New Jersey, and Jeffrey Millea, of Shelton, Connecticut, also suffered serious injuries in the June crash and were plaintiffs in the lawsuit against Wal-Mart.

According to the criminal complaint, Roper was operating the truck without having slept for more than 24 hours.

A preliminary investigation by the National Transportation Safety Board estimated that Roper was driving 65 mph in the minute before he slammed into Morgan's limo van on the New Jer-sey Turnpike. The speed limit on that stretch of the turnpike is 55 mph and was lowered to 45 mph that night be-cause of construction.

Page 33: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

33Caribbean Star Newspaper May 29–June 4, 2015

Meenakshi Dixit: I'm not late to join Bollywood

She's been acting in South films since 2009 but it's now that actress Meenakshi Dixit will be seen making

her Bollywood debut with Kundan Shah's P SE PM TAK.

Ask her the reason for delay and she says, “I'm not late to join Bollywood. I've had my journey and I don't come from a film background at all. I come from a very simple professional family background. I just gave an audition because I thought I was a decent dancer. I did Nach Le Ve with Saroj ji. She was the first one who told me to be an actor and try for acting. That encouraged me to pursue acting.”

She goes on to add, “But I was getting South Film offers before that. I was get-ting a chance to groom myself as an ac-tor in every way with different languages and different directors. I needed to pre-pare myself to do something bigger than what I was doing. Also, I was waiting for a good Bollywood offer. At the same time I wasn't prepared to enter Bollywood.”

George Clooney Says Hollywood Gender Pay Talks "Only Good Thing that Came Out of the Sony Hack"

George Clooney is weighing in on the increased discussion in Hollywood of a pay disparity between men and

women, calling that conversation, "proba-bly the only good thing that came out of the Sony hack."

Clooney, who spoke at length in defense of the studio shortly after leaked emails from Sony executives began surfacing at the end of last year, condemned the cy-berattack in a conversation on BBC Radio 4, calling it "an abomination."

But he indicated he was glad that leaked emails like those revealing that Jennifer Lawrence and Amy Adams were paid less than their male American Hustle co-stars

for their work in the film has led to discus-sion about gender inequality.

"One good thing that's come out of [the Sony hack] is the conversation in very lib-eral Hollywood that women aren't being paid the same and ... there's something like 15 female directors in a town of directors," Clooney said. "I think it's a very good con-versation that they're starting to have."

Clooney's fellow summer movie star Charlize Theron also referenced the American Hustlerevelations in a recent interview.

The Tomorrowland star's comments came in response to a question about the film having a number of smart, strong

women."I love that idea," he said, noting that his

production company Smokehouse has a number of female executives.

Clooney shared his views on aging, say-ing that he's accepted the idea that he's getting older and encouraged other actors to do the same.

"I think for all of us you have to come to terms with getting older and not trying to fight it," he said. "You have to get used to the idea that your roles in films and who you are and how you're perceived is going to change and that'll disappoint people at times ... I'm a big believer in the idea that you can't try to look younger, you just

have to look the best you can at the age you are."

He also praised host Jenni Murray for how she asked him the question he's been posed during many appearances to pro-mote this film: Does he want to have kids?

"This is, I have to say, maybe the best version of getting to that question that I've had," Clooney said. "I've also had, 'There's a kid who plays you as a small child in the film, when would you like to have a small child like that in the film? And I've had, 'This is a film that plays to kids, if you had a child, would he come see the film?' "

Listen to Clooney's interview with Mur-ray below.

Page 34: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

34 Caribbean Star NewspaperMay 29–June 4, 2015

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Squatters can face prosecution- CHPA

THE Central Housing and Planning Authority (CHPA) has warned that squatting is illegal and persons can be

prosecuted. It is therefore urging persons to apply to the Authority for house lots. In a release issued yesterday, the CHPA pointed out that it has been observed that large groups of persons have been demar-cating vacant lands from Diamond Housing Scheme, East Bank Demerara, to Bush Lot, West Coast Berbice, for the purpose of squatting, under the pretext that President David Granger instructed this.

The release pointed out that “squatting is an illegal act that would not be con-doned by the Government of Guyana.” The CHPA added that lands squatted on after January 1, 1998, would not be regu-larised. It added that persons attempting to occupy those lands would not have the opportunity to legally own the lands. In addition, they may be liable for prosecu-tion under the relevant Act.

While pointing out that all Guyanese deserve a good life, the CHPA also noted that with Government’s wanting to assure all Guyanese of fair and equitable access to lands, interested persons should apply to the authority for house lots.

According to reports reaching the CHPA, persons began demarcating plots

on May 15, 2015, one day before Presi-dent Granger was sworn in as President of Guyana. The release added that over the weekend of May 16 and 17, 2015, that systematic land grabbing activities intensified.

The most sought area for land grab-bers is behind Diamond Housing Scheme, where there is empty land. CHPA has since placed a sign on the open space, notifying the public that trespassers will be prosecuted.

Land grabbers have also targeted gov-ernment reserves, leased lands and plots, earmarked for playgrounds and schools. The targeted areas include Sophia, Mon Repos, Enmore, Haslington, Nabaclis, Hope Experiment, and Bush Lot. Officers of CHPA will be closely monitoring these areas to ensure persons do not unlawful-ly occupy the lands.

A Partnership for National Unity/Alliance For Change Government (AP-NU+AFC) has urged persons not to be misled into committing unlawful acts. Guyanese will be given fair and equitable access to land under the Government’s land distribution policy. As such, CHPA is requesting persons to desist from squat-ting and have patience as government implements its policy.

Haiti airline to expand to more Caribbean destinations

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti, Wednesday May 27, 2015 – Haiti’s Sunrise Airways is moving to increase flights between Port-au-Prince and Santo Domingo to regularly scheduled status and expand to other destinations throughout the Caribbean.

The expansion is being made pos-sible with Sunrise Airways being awarded a Part 129 Operating Per-

mit from the Dominican Institute of Civil Aviation. It is the first Haitian airline to earn Part 129 status.

“We’ve taken another big step forward with this announcement, one that will have a significant impact on our ability to successfully grow our route network in the months to come,” said Philippe Ba-yard, president of the airline which was launched in December 2012.

“My hat goes off to our dedicated team whose commitment to excellence in every phase of our operations made this possi-ble. We’re proving something that many would’ve likely thought impossible not long ago: that Haiti can produce a world-class airline.”

Sunrise Airways’ new regularly sched-uled service to Santo Domingo builds on its scheduled operations between Port-au-Prince, Haiti and Santiago de Cuba, Cuba. Travellers can connect on same-day service from Santo Domingo to Santiago de Cuba, via Port-au-Prince or vice versa.

The carrier also operates 52 weekly scheduled domestic flights between Port-au-Prince and Cap Haitien – four rotations daily Monday-Saturday, plus two rotations on Sundays.

“Even as we were working toward Part 129 certification, we were already in ex-pansion mode, increasing our domestic flights between Port-au-Prince and Cap Haitien to meet consumer demand.” said Bayard. “Now we’re looking at acquiring larger aircraft to better connect the Carib-bean.”

The current Sunrise Airways fleet is comprised of 19-seat Jetstream 32 EP air-craft.

2 policemen held for DUI bribery

TWO male constables assigned to the Central Division were detained at their workplace on Monday by

officers of the Professional Standards Bureau and taken to the Port-of-Spain CID where they remained detained up until late yesterday.

The officers who are both in their twenties were expected to be placed on identification parades last evening. It is alleged that the two were on duty at St Helena Junction on May 2, when they stopped the driver of a car and ordered that he undergo a breathalyser test. The driver of the vehicle reportedly failed the test and claimed he was asked to hand over $600 to the two officers to forego prosecution.

The man also alleged that he was taken to a police station in the Central Division where he was again asked to undergo another breathalyser and again made to pay another $600. In his statement to the officers of the Standards Bureau he also alleged that he was taken by the two of-ficers to an ATM in the Central Division and forced to withdraw $800.

That money he claimed was given to the

two officers. The man was then allowed to go free but alerted the E999 officers who took his report and the matter was referred to head of the Central Division, Snr Superintendent Johnny Abraham.

Snr Supt Abraham advised that the matter be referred to the Professional Standards Bureau and an investigation was launched. Newsday understands that the station diary where the two officers worked were seized and CCTV footage obtained from the ATM where the alleged incident occurred.

On Monday senior officers gave in-structions for the two officers to be detained. The two constables have ve-hemently denied all allegations levelled against them and have given statements claiming that the driver made false accu-sations.

Sources at the Professional Standards Bureau told Newsday that following the ID parades the matter will be referred to the Office of the DPP for directions in the matter. The two detained constables were visited by their respective attorneys yesterday and they were allowed to meet with their relatives.

Page 35: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

35Caribbean Star Newspaper May 29–June 4, 2015

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St Lucian pastor shot multiple times in drive-by shooting outside US church

CONNECTICUT, United States, Monday May 25, 2015 – A St. Lucian pastor

was seriously injured in a drive-by shooting, outside the church he heads in the United States, early yesterday morning.

Reverend Dr. Augustus Sealy was shot three times – twice in his right leg and once in his left shoulder – around 6:30 a.m, as he was placing flags on the lawn of the First Church of the Naza-rene on Capitol Avenue as part of an annual tradition for the church’s Memorial Day celebra-

tion.According to police, a witness

saw a black Nissan Altima slow-ing as it passed 54-year-old Sealy. Five gunshots were heard before the car sped away and the Massachusetts-based pastor was left wounded.

Investigators found seven shell casings at the scene.

Sealy’s family had been gather-ing that day to travel to Hartford for an appreciation service and lunch honouring his fifth anni-versary at the Nazarene church, the Hartford Courant reported.

His wife, Dr. Sharon Sealy, who described the shooting as dev-astating, said he had to undergo surgery for his shattered femur and a metal rod was placed in his leg.

He has been listed in critical condition, but doctors say he is expected to survive.

The pastor was born and raised in St. Lucia and headed a church in his home country.

He subsequently moved to the United States, where he has served five churches, according to US media reports.

AUGUSTUS SEALY, 54, THE PASTOR OF THE HARTFORD FIRST CHURCH OF NAZARENE, IS PICTURED ON THE LEFT ALONGSIDE HIS WIFE.

US toddler dies after accidentally shooting himself in

the head

WASHINGTON, United States (AFP) – A two-year-old boy died Wednesday several days

after he picked up a loaded handgun ly-ing out in a Virginia home and acciden-tally shot himself in the head, US media reported.

The boy and his parents were visiting a residence in an isolated area in southern Virginia on Monday when he found the firearm on a dresser, local NBC affiliate WWBT reported.

The toddler was alone in a bedroom, picked up the firearm and pulled the trig-ger, shooting himself in the head, WWBT said.

The two-year-old was rushed to a hos-pital in the state capital of Richmond, where he died of his injuries Wednesday.

An investigation into the incident is un-der way, local media reported.

Gun-control advocacy group Moms Demand Action For Gun Sense in Amer-ica said that on average, around 100 chil-dren under the age of 17 die each year in the United States in firearm accidents.

Page 36: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

36 Caribbean Star NewspaperMay 29–June 4, 2015

CEO: Kevin MohabirChief Editor: Rhoda Mohabir

Head Of Distribution: Shevin MohabirDirector/Sales Manager: Kevin Mohabir

Distribution: William Despot, Sham Mohabir, & Shevin Mohabir

Sports Editor: Darshan Chikery Layout & Design: Michelle

Disclaimer: Caribbean Star Newspaper Inc. & Advertisers are not responsible for typographical errors on the published Ads. We accept articles, artwork, and photography which are in accordance with our Mission. We reserve the right to accept, reject, or edit any material we receive but do our best to honor the integrity of the author/artist. We do not endorse any particular writer or advertiser. We simply offer our readers information

on various subject matters. It is expected that all material is submitted in “Good Faith” with no intent to mislead or harm others. It is the readers responsibility to make intuitive decisions that are right for themselves.

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Pineapple industry leaves Costa Rican communities high and dry

SAN JOSE, Costa Rica, Wednesday May 27, 2015, IPS – Twelve years after finding the first traces of pes-

ticides used by the pineapple industry, in the rural water supply, around 7,000 people from four communities in Costa Rica’s Caribbean region are still unable to consume their tap water.

The communities of Milano, El Cairo, La Francia and Luisiana are located in the municipality of Siquirres, 100 km north-east of the capital, San Jose, in an agricul-tural region where transnational corpo-rations grow pineapples on a large scale.

For years the four towns have depend-ed on tanker trucks that bring in clean

drinking water.“It’s hard,” the head of the Milano com-

munity water board, Xinia Briceno, told IPS. “And while the truck used to come every day, now it comes every other day. And when it breaks down, or there’s an emergency in some other place, or it’s a holiday, people go without drinking water for up to four days.”

Briceno, the president of the commu-nity association that runs the rural wa-ter system in Milano which serves some 1,000 families, is frustrated with the de-lay in resolving the situation. “As of next August we will have been dependent on the tanker truck for eight years.”

AN EMPLOYEE OF COSTA RICA’S WATER AND SANITATION UTILITY, AYA, FILLS THE CONTAINERS OF LOCAL RESIDENTS IN MILANO DE SIQUIRRES, WHO DEPEND ON WATER FROM TANKER TRUCKS BECAUSE THE LOCAL TAP WATER HAS BEEN POLLUTED SINCE AUGUST 2007. (PHOTO: SEMANARIO UNIVERSIDAD)

Water protest in S/Grande

Dr Rupert Grifith, MP Toco/San-gre Grande promised residents of Rose Road, Marigold Lane and Lily

Extension Road, that they will receive a pipe-borne water supply soon, and those who paid for WASA connection will be connected after he met with one repre-sentative of the protesters at his constit-uency office yesterday.

Residents of the above mentioned roads, armed with placards, staged a pro-test for water in their respective roads. The residents claim that other roads which close to them, have a water supply, but they had no such supply.

Latoya Holder St Rose, spokesperson for the areas without water said WASA connection began in the North Eastern Settlement, and suddenly the project stopped. They were told by WASA offi-cials that officials from the Land Settle-ment Agency have told WASA to stop the water connection, as they have no monies to pay workers, and the project stopped in 2014.

It is only about three roads that are without pipe-borne water. The lines have already been laid by WASA. It is only the connections now. St Rose said they spoke with their representative Dr Rupert Grif-fith about the problem with LSA agencies, and nothing has been done up to today.

Some residents have paid for water

connection to the tune of $1,300 since 2014, and they are yet to get connection.

Trummaine Lyons and Ingrid Lew-is showed their WASA bill, they having paid for connection. When these single parents went to WASA Office they were told they stopped connections because of LSA, and when they went to LSA they were told that they have no problem with WASA making connections in the North Eastern Settlement that were not con-nected. And what hurt most was when the resident asked to be refunded their monies, clerks at the front desk told them thayt they will only get back two-thirds of their monies. This triggered the anger of the residents.

The residents said they felt like they were being cheated, and decided to bring their problems to their MP Dr Rupert Griffith. According to St Rose a meeting with Dr Rupert Griffith resulted in the problems being resolved.

Dr Griffith promised to have two wa-ter tanks placed in the short term at the roads without pipe-borne water. A meet-ing is carded for Saturday with residents at the MP’s office at Eastern Main Road, Sangre Grande, to have the issues ironed out.

The protesters agreed with the deci-sions and left satisfied with what Dr Ru-pert Griffith had promised them.

Page 37: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

37Caribbean Star Newspaper May 29–June 4, 2015

Jamaica to roll out programme to keep out mosquito-borne Zika virus

KINGSTON, Jamaica, Wednesday May 29, 2015 – Government will soon roll out an integrated vec-

tor control programme to prevent the Zika virus from reaching the shores of Jamaica, and step up its public educa-tion campaign on the disease.

The virus, which has caused a re-cent health scare in the South Amer-ican country of Brazil, is spread by the bite of an infected Aedes Aegypti mosquito.

Its symptoms include severe fever, joint and muscle pains, headaches, rashes and conjunctivitis. These symptoms usually appear within three to 12 days following a bite.

“We are going to come very short-ly with an integrated clean-up pro-gramme, (including) drain cleaning, but the citizens of the country must also take responsibility for their health, even as Government must lead the process,” emphasised Minister of Health Dr. Fenton Ferguson.

He said his ministry has already started a public education campaign encouraging persons on ways to pro-tect themselves if the virus should come to Jamaica, but stressed that having surroundings where people

gather remain clean, is key to pre-venting all mosquito borne diseases.

“It is the same Aedes Aegypti mos-quito that is responsible for that Zika virus, and unless we clean up around our homes, place of worship, and workplaces, the country will be vul-nerable to the disease,” the minister said.

Dr. Ferguson recently met with the Director of the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), Dr. Carissa Eti-enne, and Jamaica would be getting support from that group with its vec-tor control programme.

He said PAHO has helped Jamaica in the past in other health emergency drives, and in this they will be giving technical support.

“I had the commitment of getting additional support with our vector control programme, and more so, the integrated programme, for the control of mosquitoes,” Dr. Ferguson said.

In the meantime, the health minis-ter wants Jamaicans to be vigilant by destroying mosquito breeding sites by: filling old tyres with dirt or getting rid of them and any other container in which water can settle; punching holes in tins before disposing of them;

changing water in vases and cleaning them regularly to destroy mosquito eggs; and covering large drums, bar-rels and tanks holding water. Other

Caribbean countries are also on alert for the Zika virus.

However, there have been no cases in the Caribbean to date.

THE ZIKA VIRUS, WHICH HAS CAUSED A RECENT HEALTH SCARE IN THE SOUTH AMERICAN COUNTRY OF BRAZIL, IS SPREAD BY THE BITE OF AN INFECTED AEDES AEGYPTI MOSQUITO.

Bouterse’s party returned to office in Suriname elections

PARAMARIBO, Suriname, Tuesday May 26, 2015 – The incumbent National

Democratic Party (NDP) has won another term in office, taking more than half of the 51 seats up for grabs in yesterday’s general elections.

Preliminary results show the Desi Bouterse-led NDP won 27 seats, with 80 per cent of the votes counted.

The V7 coalition of six parties led by former justice minister Chandrikapersad Santokhi se-cured 17 seats. Five of the other seats have gone to the Alter-native Combination, while the remaining two seats went to the Party for Democracy and Devel-opment in Unity (DOE) and Pro-gressive Worker and Farmers

Union (PALU).To serve as president for a

second five-year term, 69-year-old Bouterse needs at least 34 lawmakers – two thirds of those sitting in the National Assem-bly – to vote for him when the National Assembly chooses a president in a few weeks.

Although the results are only preliminary, NDP supporters have been celebrating.

Santokhi said he was still waiting for the official results, but admitted that he was disap-pointed at the outcome, saying it was “worse than I had expect-ed”.

“We did not make it. That is a disappointment. The voters have spoken and we have to re-spect that,” he said.

SURINAME’S PRESIDENT DESI BOUTERSE AND HIS WIFE INGRID. (PHOTO: BBC)

Page 38: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

38 Caribbean Star NewspaperMay 29–June 4, 2015

& SportsCRICKET

Chanderpaul no longer good enough to play for West Indies - Holding

Michael Holding, the former West Indies fast bowler, has backed the chairman of selectors Clive

Lloyd’s logic of jettisoning Shivnarine Chanderpaul for the Australia series. Holding said that Chanderpaul, who has managed 183 runs in his last 11 innings at 16.64, was no longer good enough to be picked for West Indies.

“I don’t believe that cricketers should just get a series for getting a series sake. I don’t think Shivnarine Chanderpaul has proven in recent times that he is still a good enough player to be playing for West Indies,” Holding told ESPNcricinfo. “He has done yeoman service for over two decades. West Indies should be hap-

py to have had him playing for them for that long. All good things have to come to an end.

“I saw him play against South Africa re-cently and he certainly did not look like the Shivnarine Chanderpaul that I was accustomed to seeing. He was a little bit slow with his reactions to the fast bowl-ers and we know what Australia are going to be bringing.”

Holding also echoed Lloyd’s sentiment of making way for youth though it would take time to fill the Chanderpaul-sized void.

“Chanderpaul has to make way for someone younger. The person that comes in obviously is not going to fill

Chanderpaul’s shoes immediately. He has done so much good work for West Indies. But it is time for someone younger than him who can grow into those shoes.”

While Chanderpaul’s former team-mate, Brian Lara, criticised the ‘despica-ble’ treatment meted out to Chanderpaul and called for a farewell series akin to the one arranged by the BCCI for Sachin Tendulkar, Holding said that he had “no problems” with the way the WICB had dealt with the issue. Chanderpaul is just 86 short of equaling Lara’s record of be-ing the highest West Indian run-scorer in Tests.

“From what I have heard I don’t think anybody can complain. From what I heard

they called him, had a meeting with him. They told him exactly what they would like to do and I have no problems with that,” Holding said.

“I don’t think Chanderpaul is ever go-ing to be one to say, ‘listen, my time has come and I have to move on’. So they have done the right thing.”

When asked about the legacy left be-hind by Chanderpaul, Holding said: “Chanderpaul’s legacy will be someone who went and played for West Indies and gave his all for a very long time. To show everyone that if you can go out and work hard, if you have deficiencies in tech-nique and you work hard enough, you can produce the goods.”

Chanderpaul has earned farewell series - Lara

Brian Lara has berated the West Indies selectors and the WICB for seeking to deny Shivnarine

Chanderpaul the chance of a final Test series against Australia, demanding that his former teammate be reinstated for a farewell along the lines of that given to Sachin Tendulkar by the BCCI.

Chanderpaul, 40, was omitted from the West Indies training squad ahead of their two Tests against Australia following a significant downturn in his run-making during his two most recent series, where his average dipped to little more than 16 over six matches.

However, Lara said that Chander-paul’s contribution to the game, which left him narrowly short of surpassing Lara as the most prolific Test batsman in the history of the Caribbean region, merited a more respectful farewell than the one ultimately decided on by conve-nor of selectors Clive Lloyd and coach Phil Simmons.

“This has absolutely nothing to do with runs or numbers,” Lara told the Trinidad and TobagoGuardian. “It has to do with respect and Chanderpaul has earned the right to say goodbye in an acceptable way. In fact, he should be al-lowed to do it in his own way.

“The manner in which they deal with their players is despicable and should no longer be tolerated. When you look back to so many of our heroes and the manner in which they were dumped, it makes you shudder.”

Lara contrasted Chanderpaul’s fate with that of Tendulkar, who was grant-ed a specially scheduled Test series at home against West Indies to end his own storied career. “What did they do?” Lara asked. “They organized a Test se-ries in his honor and gave him a farewell in keeping with his contribution to the game.

“In that way, there will be no hostility

and whether he makes a double-centu-ry or a duck, it doesn’t matter, it will be his farewell series and the entire crick-eting world will know that. He deserves it. The WICB and the Caribbean owe it to Shiv to send him off with dignity and respect. He has earned it.”

These strong words followed those uttered by the Guyana Cricket Board secretary Anand Sanasie, also a WICB director. Sanasie said that the WICB president Dave Cameron had petitioned the selectors for a more generous view

of Chanderpaul’s situation but had been rebuffed.

“Let me make it clear that the pres-ident and vice-president and myself tried our best to get Shiv retained. In the end the selectors have the final say,” Sanasie told a press conference in Guyana. “So to those who say that this is a WICB decision, that is not true . Shiv was never told that the match in Barba-dos (against England) was his last and they wanted to cover up a wrong with another wrong.

“We trust that our selectors can find it within themselves to revisit this crucial matter of gross disrespect now being meted out to one of the greatest cricket-ers to have graced the field of play with this most ungrateful display to Chan-derpaul. Shiv’s record speaks for itself and we are shocked at the manner that this panel is seeking to destroy him.”

The 12 members of the West Indies training squad are currently in Barba-dos, preparing for the two Tests to be played in Dominica and Jamaica.

Brian Lara: «The WICB and the Caribbean owe it to Shiv to send him off with dignity and respect. He has earned it.»

Page 39: Caribbean Star #44 vol. 4

39Caribbean Star Newspaper May 29–June 4, 2015

39Caribbean Star Newspaper May 8–14, 2015

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De Villiers to miss Bangladesh Tests, Steyn rested for ODIs

AB de Villiers will miss South Africa’s upcoming two-Test series in Bangladesh while he

takes paternity leave but will play the limited-overs matches beforehand. As cover, South Africa have named wicketkeeper-batsman Dane Vilas, who is one of four new Test caps. Opening batsman Reeza Hendricks, left-arm spinner Aaron Phangiso and fast bowler Kagiso Rabadahave all earned maiden call-ups which left no room for Dane Piedt or Kyle Abbott, who were part of South Africa’s last two Test squads.

South Africa’s limited-overs squad retains the core of its World Cup players with only one new cap. Leg-spinner Eddie Leie has been included in the T20 squad. Dale Steyn and Ver-non Philander will be rested from the ODIs and T20s, from which Morne Morkel and Imran Tahir will also be given time off.

Although the Bangladesh tour is South Africa’s first post the World Cup, it precedes a bumper 2015-16 season, which includes four Tests, five ODIs and three T20s in India and the same from an incoming England tour, which explains the part-experi-mentation on this visit.

The first area of South Africa’s fo-cus will be at the top, where they will look for an opening batsman to fill the spot left vacant by Alviro Peters-en’s retirement. Stiaan van Zyl is the favorite to assume the role, despite being a regular No. 3, and was moved to open the batting for his franchise, Cape Cobras, last summer. He enjoyed success in the latter half of the season when he scored a century and a fifty in two of the last three matches.

Whether van Zyl will get the op-portunity to play in that position on the Bangladesh tour will depend on if South Africa’s management pre-fer to use him in the middle-order in de Villiers’ absence. If van Zyl is deployed lower, instead of reserve batsman Temba Bavuma or reserve wicketkeeper Vilas, Hendricks could get an opportunity to open the bat-ting. Hendricks is a regular open-er who has performed well for the South Africa A side but did not stand out last season. He was 15th on the first-class run-scorers’ charts with 540 from nine matches at an average of 31.76, 349 behind the leader Ste-phen Cook, who is also an opener.

The South Africa attack will be overseen by a yet-to-be-named bowling coach for whom the Ban-gladesh tour will be the first assign-ment. That person, likely to be Charl Langeveldt, will work with Rabada in his first Test series. Rabada was part of the South Africa squad that won the Under-19 World Cup last year and has been fast-tracked through the franchise and national struc-tures. He was third on the first-class wicket-takers’ list last season, with 39 from eight games at 21.12 includ-ing best match-figures of 14 for 105,

a franchise record in South Africa.The only thing stopping Rabada

from being handed a Test debut is where to fit him in, in an attack that includes Steyn, Morkel and Philan-der and could also see two specialist spinners playing, given conditions in Bangladesh. For that purpose, South Africa will take offspinner Simon Harmer, who debuted against West Indies, and left-arm spinner Phangi-so, who has only played limited-overs matches to date.

Phangiso’s first-class record does not stand out, with 109 wickets from 60 matches at 35.20, but he has not played as much first-class franchise cricket as he might have liked, with Lions’ attack well-equipped in that

department. He was preferred ahead of Piedt, who took eight wickets on debut against Zimbabwe. He was sidelined for much of last season with a shoulder injury but has since recovered.

Phangiso will also play a major role in the limited-overs matches, espe-cially the T20s where Tahir will be rested. There could be a debut for Leie, as South Africa explore their bowling options ahead of next year’s World T20 in India. The Lions’ leg-spinner has had good results over the last two seasons and finished last season’s T20 competition as the joint second-highest wicket-taker with 14 at an economy of 5.93, the lowest among the top 15 bowlers.

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40 Caribbean Star NewspaperMay 29–June 4, 2015

The Executive Board of the Queens Branch of the Bhuvaneshwar Mandir

Reminds all our members that election for Trustees will take place on Sunday May

31, 2015 from 12:00pm to 6:00pm. Please be early to cast your vote.

Thank you from the bottom of our hearts.You can call any member of the Executive for information

646-407-8672, 917-202-0394, 917-497-6409, 917-599-7153Jai Shree Raam!

We urge you to vote for Acharya Arun Gosain, Roy Brijlall and Dr Tara Singh. At the polling station, you just need to mark an (x) in one box for all three of the Trustees. You can only mark (x) one box. This Trustee team has also been endorsed by the well-known community-based organization, Holi Sammelan & Festival Committee (HSFC), which comprises a collection of several Mandirs and NGOs.

Date and Time; Sunday May 31, 2015 from 12pm to 6pm at the Bhuvaneshwar Mandir, 86-06 101 Avenue, Ozone Park, NY 11416.

For those of our members who do not have transport, we’ll arrange to pick you up and drop you back home.

Our slate of candidates for the position of Trustee are: Acharya Arun Gosain, Roy Brijlall and Dr Tara Singh. All of these candidates fully satisfy the required qualifications for the position of Trustee as stated in article IV, Section (c) of the Mandir’s constitution.

Mission: Should this slate of Trustees win the election they will restore the dignity and glory of the Mandir within 6 months. All operations at the Mandir will be “open,” and accountability will be our mantra. Monthly financial statements and minutes will be posted on the Mandir’s Notice Board. The Candidates are committed to open governance and the furtherance of Hindu dharma and Hindu learning.

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41Caribbean Star Newspaper May 29–June 4, 2015

ICC - Fewer fielding restrictions, more free-hits on cards

Removing the batting Powerplay and allowing five fielders outside the circle between overs 41 and 50 were among the major suggestions made by the ICC’s

cricket committee that met in Mumbai over the weekend. The committee also suggested a free-hit for all no balls in ODI and T20s, and not just for the front-foot calls.

The recommendations made during the meeting were subject to the approval of chief executive’s committee (CEC) that will meet in Barbados during the ICC’s annual conference week from June 22 to 26.

The committee suggested the changes as it felt that field-ing teams were at times left with limited defensive options. The alterations, if ratified, would mean there would be two fielders outside the circle for the first 10 overs , four for the next 30 and five for the last 10 overs.

The doing away of the batting Powerplay meant only one block of 10-over Powerplay remained, two less than in the 2011 World Cup. Additionally, the requirement of placing two fielders in catching positions in the first 10 overs has also been relaxed.

On the topic of the balance between bat and ball, the committee discussed the size of bats, the boundaries and the durability of white ball and concluded that although the ICC will not introduce any regulations on the bat size, it will provide inputs for the consultation process ahead of MCC’s redrafting of laws in 2017.

Reviewing the reports from the first-class matches played with pink balls, the committee asked Test-playing nations to identify opportunities and make provisions for play to extend later into the day. The idea of four-day Tests, however, was rejected.

Mumbai Indians outplayed Chennai Super Kings for second IPL title

Mumbai Indians 202 for 5 (Simmons 68, Rohit 50, Bra-vo 2-36) beat Chennai Super Kings 161 for 8 (Smith 57, Mc-Clenaghan 3-25 ,Harbhajan 2-34) by 41 runs

Mumbai Indians completed one of the most remarkable turnarounds in the eight-

year history of the Indian Premier League by transforming a terrible start to the tournament - they were at the bottom of the table for the first two weeks - into a title win.

The final, a repeat of their 2013 success at the same ground against the same opposition, turned out to be one of the easier outings after an unbridled early onslaught by Shar-ma and Lendl Simmons, both of whom hit half-centuries, stunned Chennai Super Kings - veterans of IPL finals - into submission. Super Kings were not even given a sniff.

MS Dhoni’s choice of bowling first on a patchy Eden Gardens pitch was interesting, not because he might have over-compensated for the presence of dew later on but because it was a departure from a strategy that had worked for Super Kings during in their two previous title wins - bat first, score big, then

apply the squeeze.The start was perfect; Faf du

Plessis ran out Parthiv Patel bril-liantly and Ashish Nehra ensured only one came off the first over. But that was it, because once Rohit tore into the second over, picking 16 off Mohit Sharma, Super Kings were al-ways chasing the ball.

R Ashwin was introduced in the fourth over, overstepped once and paid the price with a 12-run over. Jadeja was also bowled inside the Powerplay but Simmons smashed him for 14 runs to make it 61 runs off the first six. After seeing Rohit kick-start the innings with a flur-ry of boundaries in the first three overs, Simmons had played all but one ball in the next three and had overtaken Rohit.

The spreading of field was not going to have an effect on the tiny outfield. Simmons continued hog-ging majority of strike and contin-ued finding boundaries to reach his sixth half-century of the season in the 10th over.

The run-rate showed no signs of stemming but Dhoni continued to hold back Dwayne Bravo, the lead-ing wicket-taker of the tournament. As fate had it, it was Bravo who broke the dangerous stand in his

first over - the 12th of the innings - by which time Rohit, too, had reached his half-century, of just 24 balls, and the run-rate was hover-ing around 10.

An animated speech by Dhoni in the team huddle at Rohit’s dis-missal had a brief effect: Dwayne Smith sent Simmons back with his first ball of the tournament and 30 runs came off four overs. But on 150 after 16 overs with Kieron Pollard and Ambati Rayudu warmed up, Mumbai Indians were waiting to explode.

Nehra bore the brunt - he was hit for three sixes and a four in the 17th by Pollard - and Mumbai In-dians finished for only the second ever 200-plus total in an IPL final.

Super Kings’ chase needed early thrust but it never came. Smith, as had happened throughout the sea-son, struggled to time the ball. He did reach a half-century - his sec-ond this season - but Super Kings needed more from him than a strike rate of 118. Harbhajan Singh dismissed Smith an over after he had removed Raina, Malinga struck too and Mitchell McClenaghan collected three. Super Kings’ wait for their third title entered its fifth year.

Taufel wants change in attitude to Indian umpiringSimon Taufel has expressed

disappointment at the general perception preva-

lent not just among fans but im-portantly also among the Indian players that the Indian umpires were not meeting global stan-dards. Taufel said the umpires from the country have made “tremendous progression” de-spite there being no Indian presence on the ICC’s Elite Pan-el.

Taufel - who is advisor and mentor to the BCCI’s Elite pan-el of umpires - was blunt in his remarks against the Indian play-ers who he felt did not give the required respect to the umpires. “We would love the players to appreciate and show equal em-pathy for the difficult nature of our job, appreciate that better umpires get it right, that we are human beings after all,” Taufel told ESPNcricinfo in an inter-view in Kolkata, last Sunday. “We do it because we love it and because we want to add value.”

Relations between players and the umpires have always been frosty, but Taufel managed to keep his head high based on the high percentage of correct decisions he made. However, most umpires have received flak, at times in public, from

the players. One prominent ex-ample occurred recently when Chennai Super Kings’ captain MS Dhoni called Richard Illing-worth’s decision “horrible” after the England umpire had ruled Dwayne Smith lbw erroneously.

The players, Taufel said, need-ed to provide constructive feed-back and not just grumble about the shortcomings of the match officials. “When the umpires do well they won’t get noticed. When the umpires do something wrong they stick out,” he said. “So within the cultural aspect here in India I’d love the players and the captains to realise they need to be part of the solution to improve Indian umpiring and not part of the problem. At the end of the day, you can tell a winning captain’s report from a losing captain’s report. Umpires either have given too many lbws or they have not given enough. What we are trying to promote is transparency and integrity. The BCCI tried to address the issue several years ago by put-ting in video cameras. That is important.

“Don’t tell us they missed three caught-behinds and three lbws. Tell us he seemed to lose concentration and focus in the last session on day 1. That he

was not in a good frame of mind to communicate effectively. That he was in a bad position to make that run-out decision.”

Asked whether players taking up umpiring could change the mindset, Taufel said that could definitely prove useful. “What I would like to see more in India is players respecting how difficult umpiring is; maybe try it them-selves. It would be great to see a Rahul Dravid or a Sachin Ten-dulkar donning a white coat,” Taufel said.

Taufel said that historically the match officials, the third team in any match, have nev-er been acknowledged. But people involved have to start altering that long-standing trend. “Everybody has a role to play. The media in the way it promotes positiveness of um-piring and match officiating. The players in the way respect the role and they conduct themselves on the field and the feedback that they give us. The administrators in creating an environment where people can excel and the pathways are clearly defined. And public in the way they talk about um-piring and in the way they en-courage people to be involved in the game as well. We are not

soft targets. We are partici-pants in the game.”

Since the Elite Panel was con-stituted by the ICC in 2002 only one Indian - S Venkataraghavan - has been on it. It has been a matter of debate frequent-ly, but without many answers. “The goal is not to put an Indian umpire on the Elite Panel. It is a nice by-product,” Taufel said. “The goal here is to improve and to shift umpiring in this country and position ourselves and de-liver best umpiring to people who play.”

At the time of the interview Taufel had been highly im-pressed by Ravi going through

the first three days of the Lord’s Test without being noticed (a measure of success in the Taufel book of umpiring). Ravi is part of the group of four Indian um-pires who are overseen close-ly by Taufel. Anil Chaudhary, C Shamshuddin and Vineet Kulkarni are the other three. According to Taufel, who start-ed working with Indian umpires from 2006 when he came as part of a Cricket Australia team, one of the big changes he has noticed in the Indian umpires is they have become more honest about their work and that only helps in the assessment and growth.

«We would love the players to appreciate and show equal empathy for the difficult nature of our job,» Simon Taufel said

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42 Caribbean Star NewspaperMay 29–June 4, 2015

England complete dramatic turnaround win

England 389 (Root 98, Stokes 92, Boult 4-79, Henry 4-93) and 478 (Cook 162, Stokes 101, Root 84, Boult 5-85) beat New Zealand 523 (Williamson 132, Guptill 70) and 215 (Anderson 67, Watling 59, Stokes 3-38, Broad 3-50) by 124 runs

Shortly before lunch on Saturday, New Zealand were 404 for 3, build-ing a lead, and England’s new era

was heading for a difficult start. At 6pm on Monday, with less than 10 overs of a compelling Test match remaining, Trent Boult upper cut Stuart Broad towards third man where Moeen Ali, stationed there by Alastair Cook but not right on the boundary edge, took a superbly judged running catch to earn England a 124-run victory and complete a remark-able turnaround.

Less than a year after falling one wicket short of beating Sri Lanka on this ground England were just beginning to get twitchy as Boult and Matt Henry negotiated eight overs with the ball starting to fall short or wide of fielders. But Broad, from round the wicket, dug the ball in and Boult, who had blocked unconventionally, could not resist play-ing. That it was taken at a position that needed some astute captaincy was the perfect finish for Cook, who had been so central to England’s fightback with his 162.

Raza Hasan banned for two years

Raza Hasan, the Pakistan left-arm spinner, has been suspended from

playing any form of cricket for two years, having tested positive for a prohibited sub-stance.

The Pakistan Cricket Board had conducted dope tests during the Pentangular one-day cup 2015 in Karachi. The sample collected from Hasan was subsequently analyzed at a World Anti-Doping Agency accredited laboratory. The results were relayed to the PCB, who banned Hasan on the basis of their anti-doping rules.

“During the period of ineli-gibility, he will not be entitled to participate in any capacity, in any cricket match or ac-tivity (other than authorized anti-doping education or rehabilitation programs) au-thorized or organized by the PCB,” a PCB release said

The PCB had notified Hasan of their findings on March 24, and he did have the opportunity to request a hearing within 14 days, but did not do so.

The 22-year old Hasan has played 10 Twenty20 matches

for Pakistan, having made his debut in September 2012. He went on to participate in the World T20 later in the month,

where he took three wickets in four matches at an econo-my of 4.93.

His ODI experience is lim-

ited to only one match, and he last played international cricket in December 2014 against New Zealand.

Raza Hasan played for Pakistan in the World T20 in 2012 © Getty Images

USA youth coach Owen Graham dies

Owen Graham, one of northern California cricket’s most beloved figures, passed away on Saturday

at the age of 48. Known to most peo-ple as “OG”, he was a hugely influential youth coach in the San Francisco Bay Area.

Over the last decade, he has helped develop many of USA’s elite junior play-ers from the North West Region, includ-ing Saami Siddiqui and Saqib Saleem, who went on to play for the senior team, as well as Shiva Vashishat, who led USA to the ICC Under-19 World Cup in 2010.

“Today I lost a mentor, coach, friend, man who has made me the cricketer I am today, man who has impacted my life in so many ways, man who gave me my nickname, man who has taught me the art of captaincy, man who has taught me to have discipline in all aspects of life....I was blessed to have you in my life,” Vashishat posted in a message on social media late Saturday night.

Graham had endured a three-year battle with cancer after he was diag-nosed with multiple myeloma in 2012. He underwent chemotherapy in ear-ly 2013 when he was initially cleared. However, the cancer resurfaced and he left California for his native Jamaica at the end of 2014.

Graham had moved to the United States in his early 20s and spent near-ly half his life playing and coaching youth cricket in the Northern Califor-nia Cricket Association (NCCA), one

of America’s oldest leagues founded in 1892. Described by former NCCA pres-ident Ganesh Sanap as “NCCA’s guiding light”, Graham started the NCCA Ju-nior program in 2002 and was also the founding coach of both the California Cricket Academy and East Bay Youth Cricket Association.

A prolific batsman for Caribbean Cricket Club in the NCCA, Graham also had the unique distinction of being one of the key batsmen for the San Francis-co Freedom in Pro Cricket, the now de-funct US professional T20 league start-ed in 2004. Freedom were champions in Pro Cricket’s lone season, defeating a New Jersey Fire squad featuring former India allrounder Robin Singh and West Indies batsman Ricardo Powell in the final.

An eight-team charity Twenty20 tour-nament named after Graham, now in its second year, was held this weekend in the San Francisco Bay Area to help pay for his medical costs. The event raised more than $20,000 last year and a sepa-rate crowdsourcing web page had raised more than $6,000. Sanap said that al-though players are in mourning, the tournament will continue with the final day’s matches being webcast with a live video stream. Graham’s daughter Adria will also be in attendance at the final to present the trophy to the winning team.

“The cricket must go on,” Sanap told ESPNcricinfo. “OG wouldn’t have want-ed it any other way.” Owen Graham presenting a trophy to NCCA Youth player © Peter Della Penna

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May 29–June 4, 2015

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