Archive for February, 2010

PLAYLIST: FREDDIE MCGREGOR – I WAS BORN A WINNER

PLAYLIST: FREDDIE MCGREGOR – I WAS BORN A WINNER

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Click Here For LyricsBIG CHUNE!!!One of the main reasons why I can never get enough of stage shows and annual reggae festivals is because they always bring out the classics.It’s not always about the newcomers and latest trends.. it’s about the music that truly touches the soul. The good vibe that only the VETERANS can give you.BIG UP to the ones who made a path.. Sugar Minott, Freddie McGregor,


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I OCTANE LIVE PERFORMANCE IN AMSTERDAM

I OCTANE LIVE PERFORMANCE IN AMSTERDAM

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Do I have to go to Amsterdam to see a quality performances??I really rate I Octane..I love his voice.. his conscious lyrics and the energy he brings during his performances. Now I understand that you have to leave the people wanting more.. but when I see him perform in JA its like he drops two lines of a hit song and then NEXT.. on to the next one.But from checking out this clip from his recent


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PLAYLIST: BUJU BANTON – LOVE BLACK WOMAN (FEELING SOUL RIDDIM)

PLAYLIST: BUJU BANTON – LOVE BLACK WOMAN (FEELING SOUL RIDDIM)

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When the song BROWNING became a huge controversy, Buju quickly released this single to clear up any misunderstandings..Buju loves ALL BLACK WOMEN, regardless of complexion because BLACK is BEAUTY!To hear BROWNING, click here!


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Apple iTunes hits another milestone, 10 billion songs served!

Apple iTunes hits another milestone, 10 billion songs served!

| 24/02/2010 | 0 Comments
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We jumped the gun on this one the other day, but it’s finally official, so break out the noise makers, throw up the confetti, and let the parties begin. Apple iTunes has reached its ten billion song download milestone today. For those that are counting, that is an astounding ten billion songs downloaded in a mere seven years of operation; nine billion of which have been downloaded since February 23, 2006, the date iTunes reached its one billionth song milestone and almost four years ago to the date. With Apple rumored to be moving iTunes to the cloud using the talent and technology it acquired in its recent Lala purchase, we can most likely assume this number to continue to climb at its astounding rate and in less than five years from now, we may be celebrating the 20th billion download.

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ANTIGUA: Opposition party urges government to mount campaign in the United States

ANTIGUA: Opposition party urges government to mount campaign in the United States

| 24/02/2010 | 0 Comments
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ST JOHN’S, Antigua, CMC – The main opposition Antigua and Barbuda Labour Party (ALP) is calling on Baldwin Spencer government to mount an information campaign in the United States to counter the negative publicity the island is receiving from the fraud allegations linked to disgraced Texan financier, Sir Allen Stanford.

Last week, the Antigua and Barbuda government described as “unbelievable” a class action lawsuit filed in the United States by a group of disgruntled investors against the Eastern Caribbean Central Bank (ECCB) and five other entities including the government.

The so-called Stanford Victims Coalition, which filed the action in a New York court, claims its 28,000 members fell prey to Sir Allen, who has been charged by financial regulators in the United States for running an alleged “massive” Ponzi scheme through his Antigua-based Stanford International Bank.

According to a release from the organisation, the lawsuit was filed by Morgenstern & Blue, LLC and seeks at least US$100 million in compensation “for ECCB’s unlawful seizure last year of the Bank of Antigua, a crown jewel in Allen Stanford’s fallen financial empire”.

The ALP said it rejected the validity of a class action suit and praises the ECCB for acting responsibly “and in keeping with its clear mandate to protect depositors and creditors of the Bank most of whom were citizens and resident of Antigua and Barbuda”

The ALP said that the Spencer government should “mount an information campaign with tour operators and travel agents in the United States to counter the propaganda of the so called Victims Coalition by presenting the facts of the matter”.

The ALP noted that the disgruntled investors have not filed any class action suit against the US Securities and Exchange Commission that should have properly regulated the Stanford Group.

“As we understand it, transactions also took place in several Latin American countries including Venezuela, Mexico, Peru, Ecuador and Panama, but again no class action suits have been pursued against the governments of these countries or their regulatory bodies.

“The ALP is left to surmise that our small size presents us as a candidate for bullying,” adding that it also “deplores the call by the former voluntary Stanford clients for a boycott of tourism to Antigua and Barbuda”.

Sir Allen has consistently denied running a Ponzi scheme. His trial is due to start next January in the United States.

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TURKS AND CAICOS: Temporary suspension of issuing permanent residence

TURKS AND CAICOS: Temporary suspension of issuing permanent residence

| 24/02/2010 | 0 Comments
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PROVIDENCIALES, Turks and Caicos Islands, CMC – A major backlog of applications has been blamed for a decision to temporarily suspension of the processing permanent residence certificates in this British Overseas Territory.

Permanent secretary in the Ministry of Border Control and Labour, Clara Gardiner, told the Caribbean Media Corporation (CMC) that the hold on receipt and processing of new applications will take effect from February 26 and continue until May 31.

“This was due to a significant backlog of cases that have been in the system for a number of years,” Gardiner said.

She explained that under “ideal circumstances” the process of issuing permanent resident certificates would take “two to three months” but because of some administrative changes, many applications have not been processed.

A government statement said while the hold is in effect “only completed applications received on or before February 26, 2010 will be processed”.

The British government last year resumed day-to-day control of the Turks and Caicos Islands, located to the south east of the Bahamas and north of Haiti, amidst widespread allegations of corruption involving local government officials.

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ECCAA officials bodies found???

ECCAA officials bodies found???

| 24/02/2010 | 0 Comments
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ST JOHN’S, Antigua, February 24, 2010 – With lab tests expected to confirm what they already believe, family and colleagues of two Eastern Caribbean Civil Aviation Authority (ECCAA) officials who perished in the Haiti earthquake are now grieving their loss.

The ECCAA announced yesterday that the bodies of Director General Rosemond James and Director of Flight Safety Gregory McAlpin, who were in Port-au-Prince to attend a Caribbean Aviation Safety and Security Oversight System (CASSOS) meeting when the devastating quake hit on January 12th, have been found. The discovery brought an end to the six-week search for either the men or their bodies.

The ECCAA said yesterday that the Civil Aviation Authority of Haiti (OFNAC), one of the entities representing the authority in the recovery efforts, said the bodies were retrieved on Monday from the rubble of the Montana Hotel which partially collapsed in the quake.

“Although the bodies were identified based on their jewelry and their driver’s licenses, secondary confirmation through a laboratory identification process will be conducted by the end of this week. When this is completed, the repatriation process will take place,” the ECCAA statement said.

The authority offered condolences to the family and friends of the Trinidadian McAlpin, and St Lucian-born James, who had made Antigua his home.

The Chairman, Board of Directors, management and staff of LIAT also expressed their sympathy to the family, friends, colleagues and workmates of the two.

“Both of these officials at all times exemplified the highest standards of professionalism, integrity and dedication to the ideals of aviation safety and security, and their passing represents a tremendous loss to the civil aviation community in the Eastern Caribbean,” a statement from the airline said.

James’ wife, DenVanter Roach-James, issued a statement late yesterday, in which she spoke for the first time since her husband went missing.

She said the last six weeks has been a tremendously difficult time for the family and the most difficult part of the ordeal was “the uncertainty of the outcome”.

Roach-James said the news that her husband’s body had been recovered allowed the family some measures of comfort, even though the grieving process has just begun.

“We wish to take this opportunity to thank the Eastern Caribbean Civil Aviation Authority and the search team which they were instrumental in putting together as well as the Haitian Civil Aviation Authority for their support. They have gone above and beyond their call of duty in being our information lifeline…We say thank you to our extended family, our circle of friends and all those who have called, visited, prayed with us, or for us, during this time of extraordinary heartbreak,” she added.

She also expressed sympathy to McAlpin’s relatives, saying the two families were united in their grief.

The ECCAA has already appointed an interim team to take the organisation forward. A recommendation has been forwarded to the Heads of Government and Ministers of Civil Aviation in the Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States for the endorsement of Donald McPhail to act as the Director General, it was announced earlier this month.

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Not A Sweet Deal: Italians back out of Jamaican Sugar Deal

Not A Sweet Deal: Italians back out of Jamaican Sugar Deal

| 24/02/2010 | 0 Comments
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KINGSTON, Jamaica, CMC – The Jamaica government is facing a major setback in the planned divestment the sugar industry after the Italian Firm – Eridania Suisse, frowned on the offer to take over the three remaining state controlled sugar factories.

Agriculture Minister Dr. Chris Tufton told Parliament that after months of conducting feasibility studies on the Frome, Moneymusk and Bernard Lodge sugar factories, Eridania Suisse has indicated that it is no longer interested in taking over the loss-making entities.

Tufton said that the Italian firm was not prepared to invest over US$100 million to complete the transaction.

He said the Italians were of the view that the factories could not produce the required 200,000 tonnes of sugar annually giving limited returns on investment and a prolonged loan repayment period.

Cabinet has since put in place a plan of action to continue the operations of the three factories, including the appointment of former banker Aubyn Hill as the Chief Executive Officer of the Sugar Corporation of Jamaica (SCJ) Holdings Limited.

Tufton told parliament that Hill would be paid an annual salary of J$7.5 million (US$84,500) as well as a specially arranged commission of one per cent of the sugar proceeds if he successfully completes the divestment of the sugar factories

Jamaica has been trying to divest the factories following the European Union’s decision to reform its sugar regime in 2005.

The huge debt burden of the Sugar Company of Jamaica (SCJ), which manages the government-owned factories, is also a major factor for the divestment.

The Bruce Golding government has been looking to other private sector investors, since negotiations with the Brazilian firm, Infinity Bio-Energy (IBE), fell through in January.2009.

Meanwhile, the Agriculture Minister said a Commission of Enquiry has been appointed to review the sugar industry’s regulatory institutional and pricing arrangements.

Tufton said that a review of the relevance of the current regulatory and pricing arrangements is part of special conditions for the release of approximately Euro 17 million (US$23 million) in grant funding to the island.

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From Slavery to Sarkozy

From Slavery to Sarkozy

| 24/02/2010 | 0 Comments
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(CNN) — Haiti’s emergence as the first free black republic, forged against the backdrop of Caribbean and North American slavery, is pivotal to today’s discussions of citizenship, democracy, and freedom.
Now, 206 years after its declaration of independence, Haiti’s dire poverty, the earthquake and its massive death toll have triggered yet another global “first,” one with potentially major geopolitical consequences.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy recently visited Haiti, the first French president to set foot on Haitian soil. His historic trip recalled long-standing colonial wounds, even as he graciously offered much-needed economic assistance to a ravaged Port-au-Prince. The visit also offered a glimpse of the Caribbean republic’s paradoxical relationship with its former colonial master.
A country once known as the “Pearl of the Antilles,” Haiti ‘s downfall was not of its own making. Its tragic poverty stems from a brutal history of colonial subjugation, one that caused an unexpected and globally shattering revolution that toppled the colonial rule of France, an imperial power that Alexander Hamilton had dreamed of dismantling in the Americas.
Haiti’s war of independence, from 1791 to 1803, was won through a combination of bravado and a political self-determination embodied in the bracing personality and ingenuity of Toussaint L’Ouverture. Toussaint was helped by U.S. President John Adams, who saw in him a temporary ally in the quasi-war against France, from 1798 to 1801.
The young United States sought to muster its strength through naval expansion and indirectly curtail France’s power in the Caribbean. In 1799, the United States lifted the embargo against Haiti (Saint-Domingue) by providing it with arms, food supplies and naval intelligence that aided Toussaint’s war against the pro-French elites.
But positive U.S. policies toward Haiti and the political gains orchestrated by Toussaint L’Ouverture under the Adams administration were dramatically reversed under Thomas Jefferson. He supported the punishing French blockade of Haiti and allowed the French naval power to rise under the leadership of Napoleon, which culminated in the arrest and deportation of Toussaint to France.
The French blockage and closing of U.S. ports to Haiti stunted the embryonic republic’s economic growth. France demanded reparations from Haiti of 150 million francs — about $21 billion in today’s money. This forced debt crippled Haiti’s economy and took 122 years to repay.
So, on the one hand, President Sarkozy’s visit to Haiti initiated a new chapter between that country and France. Indeed, according to Sarkozy, “Haiti must set the conditions for a national consensus on which to base a national project. Haiti for the Haitians.”

In a very real sense, Sarkozy’s visit offered a glimpse of a more promising future for Haiti, one marked by cooperation with former colonial rulers, in which prosperity replaces endemic poverty.
Haiti’s proud and resilient citizens, who have endured a seemingly endless series of setbacks since independence in 1804, remain hopeful that Sarkozy’s visit ushers in a long-overdue political alliance with France. But they are also aware that the nations’ contentious history cannot be repaired by a single visit from a French president.
Although global observers may interpret French promises of economic aid to Haiti as a gesture of goodwill to the earthquake-stricken nation, Haitians will take a more complex view.
Some observers may also interpret France’s assistance as just another in a long line of handouts, but students of Haitian history know better. That assistance has been paid for many times over in the blood of countless unknown Haitians who toiled and died under French rule.

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PLAYLIST: VYBZ KARTEL – BAD REPUTATION (BAD REPUTATION RIDDIM)

PLAYLIST: VYBZ KARTEL – BAD REPUTATION (BAD REPUTATION RIDDIM)

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Click Here For LyricsI love this song!Kartel.. I wanna cuss you everyday but yuh spot NAH BUDGE! You’re one of Jamaica’s TOP artiste.. and you know, maybe it’s just a bad reputation.To hear more from VYBZ KARTEL, click here!


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