After 50 years inside Gloriavale, one of the community’s longest-serving members has her first job on the outside and is attempting to remove the leadership while still living within the compound.At age 64, mother of 13 Sharon Ready…
Category Archives: headline
Herald morning quiz: February 20
Test your brains with the Herald’s morning quiz. Be sure to check back on nzherald.co.nz at 3pm for the afternoon quiz. To challenge yourself with more quizzes, CLICK HERE.
Rongokako's name is missing from Te Mata Peak's entrance. It cannot be erased
OPINION: One of my ancestors has died.I read the obituary on a new signpost at one of the entrances to a Hawke’s Bay tourist trail. The tupuna was Rongokako, and he was the first-born of our family line in Aotearoa some 18 generations…
Anti-Doping Agency places Federation on temporary list of compliant countries
BASSETERRE, St. Kitts — The Federation of St. Kitts and Nevis was recently placed on a temporary list for anti-doping by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA), according to Minister of Sports, the Honourable Jonel Powell.
Anti-doping comprises a range of activities aimed at eliminating doping in sports, as well as protecting clean athletes and the integrity and sports values.
“The Department of Sport can boast that just this week we have received notice from WADA to inform us that after many years, St. Kitts and Nevis has been placed on a temporary list of compliant countries. This compliance will be confirmed in October and we are very proud of that,” said Hon. Powell. “This achievement did not occur overnight.
“This isn’t something that just happened,” he said. “It is as a result of the efforts within the Department of Sport to set up a secretariat for anti-doping led by Mattaniah Wallace and Shawn Seabrookes. This team did a lot of work in recent months to achieve this success and I congratulate them.
“The Department of Sport received a grant of some US $35,000 from the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) “to assist in the buildout of the secretariat and to assist with education and development in terms of anti-doping.”
According to information from www.wada-ama.org, WADA was established in 1999 as an international independent agency composed and funded equally by the sport movement and governments of the world. Its key activities include scientific research, education, development of anti-doping capacities, and monitoring of the World Anti-Doping Code – the document harmonizing anti-doping policies in all sports and all countries.
The code works in conjunction with eight international standards, which aim to foster consistency among anti-doping organizations in various areas. These standards include the International Standard for Testing and Investigations (ISTI); the International Standard for Laboratories (ISL); the International Standard for Therapeutic Use Exemptions (ISTUE); the International Standard for the Prohibited List (The List); the International Standard for the Protection of Privacy and Personal Information (ISPPPI); the International Standard for Code Compliance by Signatories (ISCCS); the International Standard for Education (ISE) and the International Standard for Results Management (ISRM).
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Government and Facebook at loggerheads as talks continue
Treasurer Josh Frydenberg and Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg are set for another weekend of talks as the tech giant's shutdown of Australian pages rolls on.
The government's pursuit of a media code, which forces internet companies to pay media organisations for news it shares on its platforms, will move into the senate next week.
And other governments around the globe are watching developments in Australia closely with the possibility they could pursue crackdowns of their own.
READ MORE: PM 'calls out' Facebook using 2019 Christchurch massacre
Tom Tugendhat, the Chair of the British Parliament's powerful foreign affairs committee told 9NEWS, "if we want to defend local democracy we've got to defend local media that means taking on some of these giants."
In an apparent 11th hour bid to try and force changes to the media code, Facebook restricted Australian news pages on Thursday but the measures imposed by the trillion-dollar company also impacted government departments, charities even local business and memorial pages.
WATCH: Facebook executive explains Australian news ban
"Threats are made and that is not a good way to deal with this government..you want to do business here, you work according to our rules," Prime Minister Morrison said.
READ MORE: Treasurer tells Facebook 'we're not backing down'
While Anthony Albanese labelled Facebook's actions "reprehensible".
On Friday, Treasurer Frydenberg renewed talks with Mark Zuckerberg but there was no breakthrough.
"We talked through their remaining issues & agreed our respective teams would work through them immediately," Mr Frydenberg tweeted after the meeting.
A spokesperson for Facebook told 9NEWS the company had three issues.
https://twitter.com/JoshFrydenberg/status/1362538539984973827?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw
"1. Mandating commercial arrangements with every single one of a large number of publishers regardless of the value they provide to the people who use our products
2. A process that removes all autonomy to decide our commercial arrangements and uses binding arbitration to determine price over good-faith negotiations
3. A non-differentiation clause that prevents us from offering commercial terms to certain publishers and changing how we display their content regardless of whether we agree a deal. This means that if one publisher is out, all Australian publishers need to be out."
And Facebook has not indicated if or when it plans to reverse restrictions.
"It has left us facing a stark choice: attempt to comply with a law that ignores the realities of this relationship, or stop allowing news content on our services in Australia. With a heavy heart, we are choosing the latter," a Facebook spokesperson told 9News.
The Prime Minister said he was willing to "listen to them on the technical issues of this, just like we listened to Google," but at the same time is seeking global support for his moves to force online platforms to pay for the news content they post.
Mr Morrison mentioned the Facebook feud with India's Narendra Modi last night as he seeks global support.
On Friday Scott Morrison told journalists he'd also held talks about the size of the power of tech giants with Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson.
Nevis Water Department reminds customers of disconnection exercise
CHARLESTOWN, Nevis — The Nevis Water Department advises its valued customers that disconnections will be conducted across the island of Nevis from March 1.
Customers who are in arrears for more than 90 days are encouraged to settle their outstanding amounts on their water bills on or before the above-mentioned date.
We look forward to your kind co-operation and understanding during this time.
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Nevis recommences COVID-19 sensitization sessions, registration open to select persons in tourism industry
CHARLESTOWN, Nevis — The Ministry of Tourism in the Nevis Island Administration and the Nevis Tourism Authority (NTA) has announced COVID-19 sensitization sessions for select persons in the tourism industry.
“Are you employed within one of the tourism sectors listed below and was unable to attend any of the COVID-19 Sensitization sessions in 2020? Let us know by using the link below to register,” says the announcement. “Please note that we do not yet have a date for the next session but we will let you know when we do.”
1. Hotel, guest house and villa employees
2. Transportation (Taxi Operators, Catamarans, Water Activities, Water taxi operators)
3. Tourism retail outlets/Attractions/Tour Operators (land based) / DMC / Meetings and Events
4. Allied Agencies
5. Entertainers
https://forms.gle/SgHu6oyqvNgosWKn8
“If you are unable to access the link, please call the Ministry of Tourism (469-5521 Ext.6441) or the Nevis Tourism Authority (469-7550/1042) for assistance.”
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CARPHA launches COVID-19 Vaccine Acceptance Survey
PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad and Tobago — As the Caribbean rolls out COVID-19 vaccines, the Caribbean Public Health Agency (CARPHA) launched a survey on February 17 to obtain views on the COVID-19 vaccines from people living in the region and to determine their willingness to be vaccinated.
“There is a growing concern about vaccine hesitancy. The World Health Organization (WHO) identified vaccine hesitancy as one of the ten global health threats the world faces in 2019 and beyond, in its five-year strategic plan,” said Dr. Joy St John, CARPHA Executive Director.
“In the Caribbean, recent studies conducted to determine acceptance of the COVID-19 vaccines reported that vaccine hesitancy ranged from 62 percent to 32 percent among adult populations of several Caribbean countries,” she said. “In order for vaccination programmes to be successful, there must be wide uptake, acceptance, and trust of COVID-19 vaccines.”
The CARPHA COVID-19 Vaccine Acceptance Survey, which has received ethical approval, aims to assess the beliefs and opinions of Caribbean residents, about COVID-19 vaccines and the potential barriers to acceptance of these vaccines. This information will help to inform regional public education vaccine campaigns to address concerns, build trust and understanding, and engage and empower the public.
CARPHA is working with several public health partner agencies including the Ministries of Health and the Regional Health Communication Network to launch the survey in-country.
Persons are encouraged to complete the survey by using the link provided here https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/CARPHA_COVID-19_Vaccine_Acceptance_Survey. The survey is also accessible on all CARPHA’s social media platforms including Facebook.
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Second phase of traffic light installation nearing completion on Wellington Road

BASSETERRE, St. Kitts – Roadwork is nearing completion on the second phase of traffic lights installation on Wellington Road, according to Engineer at the Public Works Department, Livingston Pemberton.
“We would have done phase one and would have done three intersections and now this is phase two where we are doing seven intersections,” explained Pemberton. “On phase one, the intention was to do more than three intersections, however, due to financial constraints, only three intersections were done. Now, we are now continuing that project and are calling it phase two where we are now introducing seven additional intersections.
Continue reading Second phase of traffic light installation nearing completion on Wellington Road
Trade case filed by Belize against Federation withdrawn from Caribbean Court of Justice
BASSETERRE, St. Kitts — Minister of International Trade et al, the Honourable Wendy Phipps, said diplomacy and negotiations by the Attorney General’s Chambers and the Office of the Solicitor General, St. Kitts and Nevis has been successful in having the Government of Belize, through its Ministry of International Trade, withdraw the recent case from the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ).
Minister Phipps’ comments were voiced during the sitting of the National Assembly on February 18 under Personal Statements by Ministers.
Minister Phipps notified the Honourable House of the lawsuit at the sitting of Parliament on October 13, 2020.
“At that sitting of October 13, 2020, I informed the House about the background to the case,” said the Hon. Phipps. “Belize had accused St. Kitts and Nevis, along with Trinidad & Tobago, of importing sugar from Guatemala and Honduras without the application of the Common External Tariff (CET) to these goods.
“In other words, the State of Belize alleges that St. Kitts and Nevis allowed these imports from Guatemala and Honduras to occur without the necessary taxes being paid, as befitting goods not produced in Caribbean Community (CARICOM),” said the Hon. Phipps. The period in question was November 2018 to June 2020, during which time Belize alleged that the Federation imported some 975 metric tons of sugar imports from Guatemala and Honduras free of duty.”
On December 16, 2020, the Minister of International Trade told Parliament that St. Kitts and Nevis was “definitely at fault for non-application of the 40 percent CET on imports of brown sugar originating outside of CARICOM. The source countries for the sugar were indeed Guatemala and Honduras.”
“Upon discovering this liability, the Government of St. Kitts and Nevis would have written to the Government of Belize to begin negotiations geared towards removing the case from the CCJ and settle it amicably between the parties,” said the Hon. Phipps.
“The key features that we would have committed to in that request included (a) immediate re-application of the CET on all non-CARICOM sugar imports, at the established rate of 40%; and (b) settlement on terms of reference insofar as the implementation of a monitoring mechanism that ensures that there will be no future suspension of the CET on non-CARICOM brown sugar unless done, with justification, via the appropriate derogation application to the CARICOM Secretariat and COTED – as per the provisions of the Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas,” she added.
The Hon. Phipps reported that this discontinuance of the case, an out of court settlement, was ably executed without any financial burden on the Government and Taxpayers of St. Kitts and Nevis.
“I am happy to report that this entire matter has been settled without any financial burden whatsoever on the government and taxpayers of St. Kitts and Nevis contrary to the local political chatter, the innuendo and the conjecture that surrounded the case,” she said.
The Hon. Phipps provided proof of the settlement in the form of a notification of an agreement to discontinue that was filed on January 21, 2021. The document was received by the Attorney General’s Chambers on February 2, 2021.
“Our government would have taken the decision not to make any type of announcement on the issue until we had the official document firmly in our possession,” she said.
The minister said the schedule of the notification of agreement to discontinue has two conditions. They read as follows:
“Pursuant to Part 16.2 (1) of the Caribbean Court of Justice Original Jurisdiction Rules 2019, we the Solicitors of record for the Claimant and the First Defendant in this Originating Application notify this Honourable Court that the Parties have agreed to discontinue proceedings.
“Pursuant to Part 16.2(2) the Parties give further notice that subject to any alteration, or suspension of the CET approved pursuant to Article 83 of the Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas, the First Defendant will impose the Customs External Tariff of 40% on the imports of brown sugar from extra-regional countries.”
The Hon. Phipps said that the Team Unity Government is grateful that the matter has been quickly and amicably settled.
“We sincerely trust that our government will never be placed in such a precarious situation again as a result of clear violations of the terms of the Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas,” she said. “Our government appreciates the open-mindedness of the Government of Belize in agreeing to remove the case from the CCJ and in also agreeing to settle the matter without compensation of any sort to the Government of Belize.”
She added that the Ministry of International Trade in St. Kitts and Nevis owes a debt of gratitude to the Solicitor General Simone Bullen-Thompson and Attorney General the Honourable Vincent Byron for the “swift and professional and astute manner in which this matter has been disposed of within just four short months.”
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