Tuesday, April 21, 2026
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Ex-thug on God’s side

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by MARLON MADDEN and ANESTA HENRY
BAD MAN, thug for life, Death Row, Out Law, Black Jesus and F…$ The World are tattooed on various parts of his body. He also once lived by the slogans of his gang: Ride Or Die and Thug Til I Die.Shawn Marshall was too busy living the life of a gangsta to consider life’s positives. That was then.Since March of this year he has turned his life around, and is now a man of God. He’s on a mission to help transform the lives of those who now live the life he shuns.Marshall, 34, said he was part of a gang for more than ten years.In an interview with the SUNDAY SUN, Marshall said he had a rough life growing up and that that was one reason he had joined the gang: one based in Black Rock, St Michael.“My life growing up was hard. My mother was a domestic worker and I didn’t have a father or a father figure. So I didn’t grow up with that guidance, and that is what a lot of the youths are growing up without.” He grew up seeing his sisters being sexually exploited by other relatives – debilitating images that remained etched in his mind for many years.“But I forgave,” Marshall declared.“Seeing my sisters being abused was mental abuse for me . . . . And my mother and I never had the relationship that a mother and son should,” he disclosed.Marshall, who joined his gang at 17, and whose “speciality” was robbery, told of some of his activities.“We had rivalry. We had ‘beef’ and war with other turfs – about three or four other gangs. We used to roll up on them and shoot at the men, and so on. “The men used to roll with nine-millimetres and Glock 40s and .38s. Drugs land here, and it doesn’t land without guns. “I wasn’t involved with the drugs, but robbery was my line; and I had this sort of theory, ‘God put me here for them sort of people who think them real cruel’. “I felt like I was invincible, like nothing could touch me; but God showed me He had a plan for me,” said the St Thomas resident.Marshall said that sometimes the gang he was a part of used other people to carry out their game plans.“You know there are youngsters that honour you; so things that you know you are not going to do, you send them to do. But if it is something that they can’t handle, you would handle it yourself. “They had a hit man on the block, and he died at age 17. His job was just to shoot and kill people. The last time he did [a killing], the next week he got killed.“We bought guns. We never landed without them – there are weed-runners and gunrunners in Barbados. We could get one gun for $5 000, depending on the type; and then we could get them more expensive too. “The gangstas on the street have guns just like what the police have,” Marshall claimed. During a decade of mischief and crime, and a life of uncertainty and cruelty, he has been sent to Dodds several times. But it was during his recent stay there, nine months of it, that he took time out to reflect on all he had done. “I am telling this story for the other young people out there; to show them that God changed me. If God could change me, he can change them. But they have to want to change too. “I think God put me in jail for a reason. I wasn’t vex for being in jail – because of the way that I was rolling. “God had to slow me down that year because I was on a fast pace; and he put me there to work on me. I had time to reflect. Maybe if I didn’t go at that time I would have gone at a different time for a bigger charge – maybe murder or something; or maybe someone would have killed me,” the repentant gansta testified.He hasn’t returned to the block since, and hasn’t smoked any ganja either, he insists.Marshall said he was now waiting on God to direct him when he should go back on the block to help him “change some of the youngsters out there”.He has a few regrets – among them the tattoos.“I wish I could take them off now. They may look pretty, but they are openings for demons . . . ,” he lamented. “I got them anointed with oil.”Marshall said that being involved in gang-related activities was not easy, and that it was a life no one should aspire to live.“Don’t take it up. Don’t start,” he warns. “Don’t even look at it. I have friends that are dead and some doinglong prison terms because of gang activities. “It might look sweet because you smoking and rolling with guns and with people who you think have your back. But, at the end of the day, if you are not one of the lucky ones, you will die in it.“I know some people are crying down the youths, but it doesn’t start with the youths. It had to start somewhere before,” Marshall argues.The former gangsta believes it started with the youths’ parents – and the parents before them. The children didn’t just wake up one morning and decide to be how they are, he insists. “It has to do with the Government too. You see poverty? It force you into doing things you don’t want to do.”

Picture this!

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Forty pieces of photography by young Barbadians are now on display at the Barbados Museum after the National Geographic Photo Camp’s Exhibition was launched last Friday night.The exhibition, under the theme Waterworks: A Visual Expedition Of Barbados, was a culmination of a one-week camp held earlier this year, with 20 students of various schools in Barbados being trained by top photographers and graphic artists of National Geographic to capture island images of a water theme. The project was also funded by the United States Embassy.United States Charge d’Affaires Dr Brent Hardt and his wife Sasha Hardt, deputy assistant secretary Julissa Reynoso and council president of the Barbados Museum & Historical Society, Dr Trevor Carmichael, participated in the opening, showering the budding photographers with praises.The artistic quality of the photos suggested that the offerings could be at home in any national art gallery, the poignant images of varied Barbadian life calling out for them to be kept longer on display atThe Museum.Photo camper Melanie Grant described the week as a once in a lifetime opportunity where students were taught many valuable principles by top professionals. She said they had developed lasting relationships, and “it all climaxed” when they were given their own SLR digital cameras.Barbados also topped the National Geographic record for such camps, with students contributing2 900 images. (KB)

Jones: Step up, parents

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MINISTER of Education Ronald Jones is urging parents to step up to  the plate to confront  the menace the cellular phone fever is posing  to their children.And he says by the end of the term, every single parent will receive a brochure outlining the rules on cellphones  in schools.Delivering the keynote address at a graduation for theological students and a thanksgiving service for benefactors of Codrington College yesterday, Jones said he was concerned that over half a billion dollars was pumped into education annually only to be frittered away “by persons who can’t settle down in any classroom”.Before an audience that included Archbishop John Holder, former bishop Rufus Broome and  ex-Cabinet minister  Sir Frederick Smith,  Jones said parents needed to understand the uncontrolled use of cellphones could have on primary and secondary schoolchildren.“We can’t have our young people caught up  in all kinds of behaviours that are not good for them as individuals. They are using Wi-Fi and Bluetooth to transfer images that they don’t understand and when they come across an image, it just spreads like fire on dry grass.“I love the use of technology, but I am an adult and I know how to take the decision as to what flows into my being, but many of our young people, six, seven, eight years-old, have not reached that maturity to be facing the barrage of what they have to face,”  he said.The outspoken minister said he had an unequivocal position on the use of cellphones within schools and would not retreat.“I keep telling people  I am not a politician,  I am a community worker. Sometimes we make measurements as ‘if I do this, I am not going to get that vote’.“Let me say I don’t worry about the vote, because if I worry about the vote, then I slip, the country slips and all of us are destroyed. Somebody has to step to the plate and say enough is enough.  “I have been challenged to work with young people as Minister of Education and therefore I don’t apologise.“The phones are yours, keep them at home. Do not bring them into the school,” he said.Jones told budding priests and their relatives the modern-day technology and its spin-offs presented a far different challenge  to yesteryear. “It isn’t the black-and-white television with everyone sitting around it anymore. It is every child with a cellphone with technologies that are way beyond what the black-and-white TV had,”  he said. The minister said the major reason for attending school was to learn values and be enriched in education rather than “having a cellphone for cheating in an exam, to provide pornography or all manner of negatives”.
• mikeking@ nationnews.com

Google to sell Nexus One offline, close Web store

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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Google Inc. will close an online store that it set up to sell its Nexus One phone and rely on traditional retailers instead.The shift announced Friday ends Google’s attempt to develop a new sales model for the mobile industry. Google had hoped to shake things up by establishing its online store as the only place to buy the Nexus One, which the company hailed as a “super” phone when it debuted amid fanfare in January.But consumers didn’t embrace the idea of buying a phone without any hands-on experience.“As with every innovation, some parts worked better than others,” Andy Rubin, a Google executive overseeing the Nexus One, wrote in a Friday blog post.Rubin said Google will stop selling the Nexus One in its Web store as soon as it lines up other U.S. retailers to carry the device.Google hasn’t disclosed how many Nexus One units it has sold so far.Nexus One is just one of many different smart phones that rely on Google’s free Android operating system.The alternatives also are proving to be an obstacle for the Nexus One. Two major carriers, Verizon Wireless and Sprint Nextel Corp., recently decided not to support the Nexus One because they prefer other Android-powered phones.

Browne: It’s up to govt

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 RESTORING CONFIDENCE in the market after the CLICO crash was Trinidad and Tobago’s key action  and responsibility.And while not seeking to offer Barbados a prescription for how to handle the controversial CLICO International Life Insurance Company, Trinidad’s junior finance minister Mariano Browne said where there  was no market-based solution, it is incumbent on the state to step in.“What we have sought to do is to return confidence to the market by indicating that [government] will guarantee the survival of the insurance company,” said Browne, a former Butterfield Bank (Barbados) managing director who was asked to serve in the Patrick Manning Cabinet two years ago.“As you are aware, CLICO is not just a financial entity. It is very much a conglomerate with a number of financial interests and those interests were financed by policyholders’ funds. So it acted very much like a bank, effectively, in real terms but without many of the controls of a bank, so we in Trinidad and Tobago had to act in a fashion that is wide-ranging,” he told BARBADOS BUSINESS AUTHORITY in an interview  in Port-of-Spain last week.“We had a diverse approach  to what is a multifaceted and  difficult problem and we have  operated to give confidence to the marketplace to ensure that depositors are protected in all instances,” Browne pointed out.The junior finance minister said there were precedents for how to deal with insurance companies that ran into difficulty.According to Browne, the parts  of the insurance company that were “salvageable” should be taken over  by the marketplace.“Where there is a market-based opportunity, use the marketplace. Where there is none, then the role  will have to be taken by the state.  The state will have to make a determination . . . .  I am not in a position to give Barbados advice on what it should do but to point out  that there is [a] precedent elsewhere, and the precedent in the Caribbean would be Jamaica.“They had a significant financial collapse involving insurance companies and non-bank financial intermediaries in the 1980s and 1990s and they had to take some decisions and work out some solutions. The relevant example would be Sagicor, which grew substantially by purchasing many of the insurance companies that got into  difficulty,” he noted.After pumping more than  TT$5 billion (BDS$1.5 billion) into  the CL Financial group, the ultimate parent company of CLICO Holdings Barbados Limited, Browne said going forward, financial sector regulation in Trinidad would be more “robust”. He said a number of pieces of legislation governing the financial sector  would be heading to parliament  in the next session.

Consulting firm: Exciting times ahead

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While the regulatory fallout for international business jurisdictions  has been viewed with trepidation by some since the global financial crisis, one international financial consultant thinks Barbados is in a good position to profit from coming changes.Jérôme de Lavenère Lussan, founder and chief executive officer of the London-based Laven Partners consulting  firm, is of the opinion  that there are “exciting opportunities” ahead  for this island as businesses look to move away from jurisdictions that have not been as “cautious” as Barbados has been in terms of the types of businesses it licenses and regulates.As he addressed the April monthly luncheon  of the Barbados International Business Association (BIBA) recently, Lussan said  that Barbados’ immediate positioning on the top tier of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation  and Development  “white list” of tax- transparent jurisdictions was “phenomenal” in helping firms like his  promote Barbados to international investors.He added that Barbados needed to use the momentum gained from that to go “one step further” and enthusiastically market the island, especially in the area of fund management, because  it had the potential to  be “the Luxembourg  of the Caribbean”.Lussan told BIBA members at the Savannah Hotel in Hastings, Christ Church, that despite Barbados’ being a  well-regulated, well-respected jurisdiction,  it was not as well known for its financial industry among international investors as the Cayman Islands or the British Virgin Islands. Lussan raised the concern that Barbados’ lack of membership in the international Financial Action Task Force (FATF) was harming its chances as a jurisdiction of first choice. Although Barbados is a member of the Caribbean Financial Action Task Force,  Lussan noted that some international institutions were prohibited for compliance reasons from conducting business in countries that were not FATF members.  (PR)

FIREARM CHECKS

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THOROUGH BACKGROUND CHECKS are a must before you can possibly get a firearm licence. Commissioner of Police Darwin Dottin stressed this point yesterday as he responded to critics of the time it has been taking for licensed firearm applications to be processed.“As was said by a member of staff, issuing firearm licences is not issuing for the importation or sale of bread. These are implements or weapons that are lethal,” the police chief told the SUNDAY SUN. “And so I think that you have to be certain about whatever measures that are put in place, and that they don’t put the society at risk.”Dottin’s comments followed recent charges by local gun dealers that the slow process by police was seriously affecting their businesses.But the top cop said:” [Processing applications] is going to take some time, given the increase in the number of applications, given the background checks that have to be carried out, just to make certain that firearms don’t fall into the hands of undesirable persons.“So I think that is a small price to pay for our security in this country.”Noting there was a significant increase in applications for firearms over the past years, Dottin said the approval rate had been “veritably stable”.“In 2008 we processed 157 applications; in 2009 we processed 204. In 2008, 94 applications were refused, 57 approved; and we granted 27 changes of [firearm] calibre. In 2009, 41 applications were refused and 64 approved; and [there were] 71 changes of [firearm] calibre.”Dottin also said that a number of the applications made for firearm licences were in most cases status quo requests.“I think that by far and away the majority of the applications we get are [from] people [drawing] attention to their personal property. Also it’s about the type of job they hold. There are some people who feel that because they are law-abiding citizens, that gives them an entitlement to have a firearm,” he said. The police chief also spoke specifically about a concern to firearm dealers.“We have had a recent audit of all firearm dealers and there are some findings that have caused me some concern; and I am going to be having a meeting with firearm dealers to bring some observations to their attention.“Such that we can improve some of the practices and standards that we feel are required for the functioning of firearm dealers. We certainly would also be having those discussions with shooting clubs,” he said.Dottin also disclosed that countries that exported firearms and ammunition to Barbados were also concerned about the significant quantities of ammunition being used locally.

T20 FINALE

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by HAYDN GILLFOR THE second time in three years, the eyes and ears of the cricket world will be on Barbados and Kensington Oval.A packed ground of 14 000 and a global television audience of more than one million viewers will turn their attention to the finals of the ICC World Twenty20 today.A short, snappy tournament packed with drama, intrigue and excitement on the field and filled with entertainment, energy and enthusiasm beyond the boundary will climax with decisive matches in the men’s and women’s competitions.After 40 games spread over 16 days at four venues, there was a huge sense of anticipation yesterday in the build-up to the day of decision.The men’s final, which bowls off at 11:30 a.m., is a showdown between awesome Australia and title-starved England in a match where no one will dare call a winner because of the unpredictable nature of the shortest form of the game.At 4 p.m., the women’s final will be a battle between Trans Tasman rivals Australia and New Zealand.While Kensington, which was also the venue for the World Cup final three years ago, was going through its final preparations, those involved in the action were waiting for the moment.Paul Collingwood is leading an England side which has never won a global title.“This is literally the ultimate. You’ve got through to a World final, you’re playing against the old enemy Australia. It doesn’t get much better than this,” he said.England were losing finalists in the 1979, 1987 and 1992 World Cup finals and the 2004 Champions Trophy. Victory here will mean the world to their many supporters.In contrast, Australia have an outstanding record – having won the last three World Cups and two Champions trophies. The only missing piece of the puzzle for Michael Clarke’s team is a World Twenty20 title.“It would be fantastic [if we won]. We came here to try and win. We haven’t won it before. We’d be much happier leaving Barbados with that one last trophy,” Clarke said.

Obama rooting for LeBron

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WASHINGTON, DC – Include President Obama as another Chicago Bulls fan rooting for LeBron James to move to Chicago, Illinois.

“He doesn’t want to tamper,” senior adviser to the president – and former Bulls season-ticket holder – David Axelrod said.

“But as a Chicago fan, the president thinks LeBron would look great in a Bulls uniform.”

James, whose Cleveland Cavaliers were eliminated from the play-offs pn Thursday by the Boston Celtics, becomes a free agent on July 1.

Many believe he could be headed to the Bulls.

The president, a former United States senator from Illinois and state senator from Chicago, has never shied away from his sporting roots. 

He frequently wears his Chicago White Sox cap; has attended a Washington Wizards victory over the Bulls last season; and also hosted the Bulls on a tour of the White House. (AP)

Jackson fires first Lakers salvo

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EL SEGUNDO, California – When the Los Angeles Lakers clinched a berth in the Western Conference finals on Monday, Lakers coach Phil Jackson had nothing but praise for his team’s upcoming opponents, the Phoenix Suns, saying that the Suns are playing their best basketball of the season.

On Friday, Jackson retreated from praise and started posturing when asked if it was difficult to simulate the Suns and their star point guard Steve Nash in practice during the long lay-off before Game 1.

“Yeah, because you can’t carry the ball like he does in practice,” Jackson said, smiling as he moved his arm and turned over his palm, the symbol for an illegal carry in the unofficial sign language of basketball.

“You can’t pick that ball up and run with it.”

The 36-year-old Nash is averaging 17.8 points and 9.0 assists per game in the post-season after averaging 13.8 points and 9.0 assists in four regular-season games against LA.

Jackson called Nash the Suns’ “provocateur” in their offence and said the point guard was an equal threat as both a scorer and a distributor, so the Lakers’ defence would have to “balance out,” stopping both aspects of the 14-year veteran’s game.

“He’s a great passer, great penetrator and he’s a great shooter,” Kobe Bryant said.

“You put those things all in one player and now you’re in a situation where you have to pick your poison. They surrounded him with great shooters and finishers to make things very challenging.” (AP)