Saturday, May 30, 2026
Home Blog Page 151

‘Ninja Man’ out on bail

Street character Anthony Fitzpatrick “Ninja Man” Lynch is out today after he secured bail at the High Court yesterday.

This Content Is Only For Subscribers

Please subscribe to unlock this content. Enter your email to get access.
Your email address is 100% safe from spam!

Celebration of Chinese culture, cuisine 

0

Thousands of Barbadians and visitors alike gathered in the spacious facility of Carifesta House, Waterford, St Michael to witness the 12th Fish and Dragon Festival.

“I have never seen so many young people. I’m talking about those from primary and secondary schools, early 20s,” said producer Adisa AJA Andwele, during a post-production interview.

It was a sentiment underscored by the youthful audience serenaded by top local entertainers and personnel of the Confucius Institute at the University of the West Indies Cave Hill recently.

Patrons, which included a well-represented cross-section of ages, not only experienced the Chinese cuisine but revisited some of Barbados’ delicacies.

This year – the celebration of the horse, the festival was moved to Carifesta House because of renovations to its traditional venue, the gymnasium at the Garfield Sobers Sports Complex.

Carifesta [House] was the only venue that had a roof,” Andwele said. “You can’t keep doing things the same way all the time, there’s nothing wrong with a change.

“And a venue change means that you will bring a different perspective to the event. I would like to explore keeping it there again because it brought a whole different dynamic and excitement,” he said.

Andwele said the public feedback was amazing while also crediting the Central Bank of Barbados and the Embassy of the People’s Republic of China in Barbados for their sponsorship of the festival.

Barbados Ambassador to CARICOM David Comissiong, who attended the festival, said it was an expression of the flourishing relationship between Barbados and the People’s Republic of China going back to 1977.

He spoke of China’s contribution to Barbados as a result of the friendship – the Chinese medical cooperation at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, the road-building contracts in the Scotland District, the Chinese gift of a new national stadium that is under construction, a partnership in developing a global technical vocational education institution, the partnership in developing and building the  Barbados Food and Agriculture Institute in St Lucy, and the University of the West Indies technology institution in China where local students take a course in technology half of the time studying in the Caribbean and the other
two years in China.

“I was very pleased to see the level of Barbadian support for the festival. I mean, there were literally thousands of people in attendance and this is very important because it comes at a time when some other powers are trying to impose a Cold War logic on Barbados and the rest of the Caribbean,” Comissiong said, as he hoped the festival would grow from strength to strength. (JS)

Caribbean legislators condemn Trump’s freeze on visas

0

NEW YORK – Caribbean-American legislators have strongly condemned the Trump administration’s sudden freeze of visas for 75 nations, including many in the Caribbean, effective January 21, disrupting legal immigration pathways.

“Long before he retook office, we knew Donald Trump’s war against immigrants would never be limited to his sadistic obsession with certain undocumented people. Secretary Rubio’s recent announcement that immigrant visas for 75 countries, most of which are majority populated by persons of colour, is just another chapter in the Trump administration’s long crusade of xenophobic cruelty against the most vulnerable people in the world,” Congresswoman Yvette D. Clarke, the daughter of Jamaican immigrants, told the Caribbean Media Corporation (CMC).

“Time and time again, this White House tries to masquerade its prejudices as policy and pretend that its actions are in the legitimate interests of Americans’ needs – as if an administration that slashes public benefit assistance at every opportunity truly cares about the hunger and economic stability of the American people,” added the chair of the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC).

“I, like Secretary Rubio, am a child of immigrants,” continued Clarke. Rubio is the son of Cuban immigrants, who migrated to Miami.

“Who I am is inseparable from who I come from. No matter how desperately Mr. Rubio rejects his identity, the same will always be true for him. With this bigoted action, he has not only betrayed all those from around our world who believed in the American dream, he has betrayed his very heritage as a Cuban-American.

“I suggest that Marco Rubio take a look in the mirror. If his parents were treated the way immigrants are being treated under his leadership, he would never have had the opportunity to be referred to as Secretary Rubio.

“I demand Secretary Rubio to reverse this racist policy immediately. He should promptly apologise for the pain, confusion, and heartbreak that he has already inflicted on families and their communities all across these United States.”

New York State Assembly member, Brian Cunningham, the son of Jamaican immigrants, said the Trump administration’s decision to suspend immigrant visa processing for the 75 countries not only disrupts lawful immigration pathways but also “creates harm, and instills fear in families, employers, and communities across New York.

“Let’s not forget that Brooklyn’s diversity is what makes us stronger,” Cunningham told CMC. “I am standing in steadfast defense with Brooklyn’s diverse elected officials at every level of government — from our legislative leaders in Albany, to our Attorney General, to trailblazing elected officials across our borough.”

He said family reunification has been central to the US immigration system, providing predictability for families planning their lives and for employers relying on a stable workforce.

Cunningham said he was speaking “from personal experience here, as the son of Jamaican immigrants, who was fortunate enough to have a stable home life, which I largely attribute to the success I’m blessed with today.

“Across the state, entire communities, such as the ‘Little Caribbean’ area I represent in the State Assembly, have been built through these lawful processes, all of which were suddenly cut off,” he said.

“Suspending visa processing without a clear or functional alternative doesn’t just disrupt stability, it destroys families and harms everyone.”

Cunningham’s Assembly colleague, Rodneyse Bichotte Hermelyn, also told CMC: “As a daughter of Haitian immigrants representing one of the largest Caribbean communities in the US, the Trump administration’s suspension of visa processing really hits home. (CMC)

Spain train crash recovery continues

0

ADAMUZ– Spanish rescuers used cranes and heavy machinery on Tuesday to gain access to the worst-hit carriages in one of Europe’s deadliest train crashes as they sought to recover the remains of people still missing in a disaster that left at least 41 dead.

Spaniards are reeling following the first-ever deadly accident on the country’s extensive high-speed rail network, which occurred on Sunday evening near Adamuz in Cordoba province, about 360 km (223 miles) south of Madrid. Experts say a faulty rail joint might be key to determining the cause of the derailment that led to the collision between two trains.

Emergency services used heavy machinery overnight and in the early hours of Tuesday to level the ground around the front carriages of the train belonging to the state-run Alvia service, which had plunged down a 4-metre (13.1 ft) embankment after the crash, and the rear carriages of the train operated by private consortium Iryo, the Andalusian regional government said in a statement.

Two cranes were added to the rescue operation, the government said.

The collision occurred in rolling, olive-growing countryside in the foothills of a mountain range in a site only reachable by a single-track road that made it difficult for rescuers to access it with heavy machinery.

Another body was found overnight within the wreck of the Iryo train, which had derailed and caused the crash, raising the death toll to 41, authorities said on Tuesday.

At least three bodies are still trapped in the wreckage, Interior Minister Fernando Grande-Marlaska told a press conference on Tuesday.

He said police had received 43 missing-person reports, which broadly matched the provisional death toll, but cautioned that the final number would not be confirmed until rescue teams had lifted the worst-affected carriages to see what was underneath.

Some relatives continued to wait for news of their loved ones as authorities worked on identifying the dead.

Osiris Sevilla described her anxiety as she waited for news about her husband outside an emergency centre in Cordoba.

“Every second that goes by lasts a lifetime,” she said, adding that she hadn’t given up hope that he’d survived.

“He didn’t like trains… Since we got together, this is the first time he took a train,” she said.

Spain’s King Felipe and Queen Letizia visited the site of the tragedy on Tuesday and spoke to residents, including 16-year-old Julio Rodriguez, who with his mother and a friend was one of the first to reach the scene of the accident. (Reuters)

Trump threatens 200% tariff on French wine

0

President Donald Trump early Tuesday threatened to impose a 200 per cent tariff on French wine and champagne in an effort to pressure France to join his intergovernmental Board of Peace organisation.

Trump made the comments early Tuesday to reporters at Palm Beach International Airport before boarding Air Force One to take him to Washington, DC.

“I’ll put a 200 per cent tariff on his wines and champagnes, and he’ll join,” Trump said, referring to President Emmanuel Macron of France, who is reportedly not planning to accept his offer to join the US-led Board of Peace.

The Board of Peace is a US-led intergovernmental organisation proposed by Trump in connection with his Gaza cease-fire plan, which was endorsed by the United Nations Security Council in a resolution related to its Gaza peace mandate.

Though initially conceived as a mechanism to establish peace in Gaza, the charter now makes no mention of the Palestinian enclave, suggesting it may have larger ambitions to address global conflicts, The New York Times reported. The Times also reported that the United States is asking participating countries to pay more than $1 billion to join the board.

Several countries have already accepted Trump’s invitation, including Hungary, Vietnam and Morocco.

Trump told reporters early Tuesday that he has invited Russia, led by authoritarian President Vladimir Putin.

When asked about Macron reportedly turning aside his invite, Trump responded with an insult: “Well, nobody wants him because he’s going to be out of office very soon.”

France is to hold presidential elections next spring, with Macron ineligible to run again due to the country’s constitutional two-term limit.

Trump frequently uses tariffs as a bargaining tool, employing the economic measures as a negotiation tactic. However, those he has imposed during his second term have been challenged in court, as Congress constitutionally controls the nation’s taxing authority.

He recently announced a ten per cent tariff on goods from several European nations, including France, over their opposition to his plan to seize Greenland from Denmark.

Trump later Tuesday posted online what he said was the text of a message Macron had sent him seeking to arrange a dinner in Paris on Thursday while he is in Europe for the World Economic Forum, running Monday through Friday.

“I do not understand what you are doing on Greenland,” Macron wrote, according to Trump. (UPI)

BERT targets productivity boost

0

With labour productivity growth averaging just  0.8 per cent annually since 2018, Government is seeking to boost it under the Barbados Economic Recovery and Transformation plan 2026 (BERT 2026).

Enhancing productivity and competitiveness is Pillar 1 under BERT 2026 and the plan is to raise economy-wide productivity through digital public infrastructure, build new export engines through innovation and reindustrialisation, and strengthen the institutional capacity to deliver complex reforms
at speed.

The new economic reform plan flagged productivity constraints, stating that “the foundation of long-term economic growth is productivity, and in this area, Barbados’ performance remains suboptimal”.

Government is planning to establish a small, empowered Productivity Delivery Unit, operating on a GovTech-style delivery model “to close the implementation capacity gap identified across high-friction business and citizen processes”.

“Labour productivity growth has averaged just 0.8 per cent per annum since 2018, reflecting persistent inefficiencies in public administration, low technological diffusion in key industries, and skills mismatches in the labour market,” the economic reform document noted.

“Without a decisive productivity agenda, including investments in innovation, digital skills, and regulatory streamlining, Barbados risks reverting to a low-growth path despite macroeconomic stabilisation.”

The BERT 2026 plan said that raising productivity was “the single most important lever for unlocking higher, sustainable growth in Barbados”.

The new Productivity Delivery Unit will focus on “end-to-end process redesign, automation, and key performance indicators reporting across priority journeys, including permits, customs clearance, construction approvals, company registration, and work permits”.

 Its mandate will be to accelerate execution, improve service outcomes, and ensure that productivity reforms translate into measurable results.

Other key reforms outlined under the productivity and competitiveness pillar included “full operationalisation of the Barbados Electronic Single Window to reduce trade friction and processing times.

Other plans were:

 Implementation of the second phase of Business Barbados modernisation, merging business registration, payment, and verification processes into a single digital platform. 

 Expansion of the Trusted Trader Programme and digitisation of customs and logistics infrastructure.

 Strengthening of the Investment Facilitation Centre and the launch of the Barbados Investment Plan, which targets sectors with high growth and export potential such as logistics, high-end tourism, agro-processing, blue economy industries, and renewable energy services.

 Implementation of a Single Digital ID and Business Identity System, supported by legislative and cybersecurity reforms.

 Support for innovation and digital entrepreneurship through Business Barbados, the newly launched state-owned enterprise tasked with championing service delivery excellence in business registration, licensing, and technical assistance.

 Establishment of a Barbados Global Research and Development Hub Programme aimed at attracting frontier research partnerships and converting innovation into patents, investable firms, and export revenues.

The BERT 2026 plan also targets improved productivity via workforce health and wellness.

“Productivity is not only a function of technology and regulation but also of a healthy and resilient workforce. Rising levels of illness and absenteeism erode output and increase social insurance costs, with NIS sickness benefits alone amounting to $21 million in just six months. BERT 2026 will therefore integrate health and wellness as a core productivity driver,” it stated.

“This will include workplace wellness initiatives, preventive health care programmes, and targeted policies to reduce absenteeism and prolong active working lives. The Ministries of Health and Labour will collaborate to track health indicators and report on their impact on national productivity outcomes.” (SC)

Windies lose first T20I

2

West Indies slumped to a 38-run defeat against Afghanistan in the first T20I yesterday at the Dubai International Cricket Stadium.

Opting to bat first, the hosts posted a formidable 181 for 3 on a surface offering appreciable turn. The innings was powered by Ibrahim Zadran’s unbeaten 87 from 56 balls and an assured 84 from Darwish Rasooli, the pair combining to put West Indies under sustained pressure. In reply, the target never truly appeared under threat, as the Men in Maroon limped to 141 for 9. Debutant Quentin Sampson topscored with 30, striking two fours and two sixes in an otherwise subdued batting effort.

The series had been framed as one designed to bring role clarity under head coach Daren Sammy ahead of next month’s T20 World Cup. Instead, it raised familiar questions as the West Indies were outplayed by a clinical Afghanistan outfit, just a day after their Under-19 side had been comprehensively beaten by 138 runs by the same opposition in the ongoing Under-19 World Cup.

West Indies started the match brightly as Rahmanullah Gurbaz was run out off the very first ball, undone by Gudakesh Motie’s sharp direct hit as he fell short of his ground at the non-striker’s end. Sediqullah Atal followed soon after, edging a short ball to Brandon King at first slip, who completed a superb one-handed catch. At 19 for 2, the hosts were momentarily stalled.

Subscribe now to our eNATION edition for the full story.

For the latest stories and breaking news updates download the Nationnews apps for iOS and Android.

Over $8b in debt repaid since 2018

0

Barbados has repaid $8.49 billion in debt since 2018, nearly double the $4.83 billion borrowed in that period.

This is outlined in the latest Barbados Economic Recovery and Transformation (BERT) plan (BERT 2026), which has identified maintaining debt and fiscal sustainability as a key pillar of the new programme.

BERT 2026 was laid in the House of Assembly last Tuesday ahead of Parliament’s dissolution yesterday to enable the February 11 General Election.

“Since 2018, Barbados has repaid $8.49 billion in debt, nearly double the $4.83 billion borrowed, demonstrating a firm commitment to restoring the country’s financial integrity,” the new economic reform plan stated.

Subscribe now to our eNATION edition for the full story.

For the latest stories and breaking news updates download the Nationnews apps for iOS and Android.

Court of Appeal gives reasons for disbarring Pile

The Court of Appeal yesterday handed out the reasons for its decision in the disbarring of former attorney Vonda Minerva Pile.

Last June, Chief Justice The Most Honourable Leslie Haynes, along with Justices of Appeal Francis Belle and Margaret Reifer, accepted the recommendation from the Disciplinary Committee of the Barbados Bar Association that Pile’s name be struck off the list of attorneys who are able to practise law in Barbados. Her disbarment was published in the Official Gazette.

The decision, handed out to attorneys from the Bar Association, as well as its Disciplinary Committee, stated that having considered submissions, “and bearing in mind our duty to the profession and to the public, we are of the view that the misconduct complained of is serious and the sanction that must be imposed has to reflect the very serious nature of this matter”.

The Court of Appeal had blocked the disgraced attorney from touching any of the funds in her clients’ accounts and ordered the Registrar to summons her, along with the secretary of the Bar Association, to a meeting, within seven days of the decision, so as to make arrangements for the production of all the civil, criminal and probate matters in which she had appeared.

Subscribe now to our eNATION edition for the full story.

For the latest stories and breaking news updates download the Nationnews apps for iOS and Android.

Valentino, Italian haute couture ’emperor’ who painted fashion red, dies at age 93

0

 A mix of carmine and scarlet, with a hint of orange – a new hue, inspired by an elderly woman at Barcelona’s opera house, whose elegance struck a young Valentino Garavani.

The colour, introduced to the fashion world several years later, in 1959, with a strapless cocktail dress of draped tulle, has carried his name – “Valentino red” – ever since, doubling as the eponymous Italian fashion group’s signature.

“I think a woman dressed in red is always wonderful, she is the perfect image of a heroine,” Valentino wrote in the book “Rosso” (Red), released in 2022. He would include at least one red dress in every one of his collections.

Valentino, the Italian fashion designer who built one of the country’s most celebrated luxury houses and was known in the industry as “the emperor”, died on Monday at his home in Rome, his foundation said. He was 93.

The cause of death was not immediately known.

Valentino ranked alongside Giorgio Armani and Karl Lagerfeld as the last of a leading generation of designers, from an era before fashion became a highly commercial industry run as much by financiers and marketing executives as by couturiers.

Scaling the heights of high fashion, he was the first Italian to feature on the exclusive Paris haute couture catwalks.

Passionate about film, he dreamed as a young man of dressing the “beautiful ladies of the silverscreen”, as he called them, among them 1950s Hollywood stars Lana Turner and Judy Garland.

Valentino would eventually design Elizabeth Taylor’s wedding gown, and was the first choice for numerous Oscar winners, including Sharon Stone and Penelope Cruz.

His romantic designs, simple at first glance, were full of intricate detail. “I love beauty,” Valentino said. “It is not my fault. And I know what women want: they want to be beautiful.”

The designer, who also dressed Jackie Kennedy, created a business empire under his own name before selling it off ahead of his retirement, in 2008.

Valentino was an only child, born into a well-to-do family in Voghera, south of Milan, where his father ran an electrical supplies company.

Having started drawing and appreciating high-end clothes from a young age, he studied couture in Milan and Paris, where he then worked as an apprentice for designer Jean Dessès. He returned home in 1960, opening his own fashion house in the heart of Rome.

That year, Elizabeth Taylor chose a white Valentino gown for the premiere of blockbuster “Spartacus”.

Also in 1960, he met Giancarlo Giammetti in a Roman cafe. Giammetti would go on to be his partner in business and in life.

“To share life with a person for your whole existence – every moment, joy, pain, enthusiasm, disappointment – is something that cannot be defined,” Valentino said of him.

Giammetti took on the managerial part of the business, leaving creative matters to the designer.

“To be with Valentino as a friend, as a lover and as an employee is a bit the same: you need a lot of patience,” Giammetti said in “Valentino: The Last Emperor”, a documentary that followed the designer in the last two years of his career.

Valentino’s georgette fabrics, chiffon ruffles and ornate embellishments, including the exclusive budellini technique – where long strips of sheep’s wool are hand rolled into tubes, wrapped in silk and stitched together – won him a multitude of awards, including France’s highest civilian distinction in 2006.

“Fame and fortune didn’t change him,” Giammetti said at the time. “He is still the little guy I met 45 years ago.”

Superstitious and introverted, Valentino loved chocolate, skiing and his pugs. He told Corriere in 2017 that he was afraid of death.

In 2007 he wowed Rome with lavish celebrations to celebrate his decades in fashion – a three-day event that included dinners, parties and exhibitions with thousands of guests flying in from around the world.

Months later he announced that he would stop designing for his company, which he no longer controlled after selling the firm almost a decade earlier for some $300 million.

“I have decided that this is the perfect moment to say adieu to the world of fashion,” he said. “As the English say, I would like to leave the party when it is still full.”

His last catwalk show was held in January 2008 in Paris, a city he called his second home and which he said had taught him to love fashion and life.

The business that bears his name was bought by Qatari fund Mayhoola for 700 million euros in 2012. French luxury group Kering bought a 30% stake in 2023, with a commitment to fully acquire the business from 2026, but then deferred the move to 2028 at the earliest.

Valentino and Giammetti remained active in supporting the arts. Their foundation opened the PM23 gallery in the centre of Rome in 2025, next to the Valentino headquarters.

Fittingly, the opening exhibition – “Horizons/Red” – focused on the colour most closely associated with Valentino.

“Red isn’t just a colour,” Giammetti said at the time. “It’s a symbolic and aesthetic force of extraordinary power.” (Reuters)