Archive for May, 2010

iPad removes netbook popularity

iPad removes netbook popularity

| 27/05/2010 | 0 Comments
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The new research, conducted by consumer electronics site Retrevo amid over 1,000 Americans, has shown the iPad popularity has been growing enormously eliminating netbooks’ one.

The research found iPad sales to significantly increase in comparison with netbooks sales. Obviously, Apple’s iPad popularity is hurting netbook sales as the iPad offers many of the same advantages that netbooks offer over a traditional laptop, such as higher portability and longer battery life.

The Retrevo survey also asked respondents whether they are planning on buying an iPad or a netbook: 78% said they would be choosing an iPad, while only 22% would choose a netbook.

Respondents were asked whether they held off on buying a netbook: 30% answered that they did, and consequently bought an iPad, while 40% did hold back but eventually bought a netbook instead. 30% of consumers responded they did not hold back and just bought a netbook.

However, regular laptops are still popular amid Americans, according to the research, especially the cheap lower-end models. 65% responded they would go for a laptop instead of a netbook when faced with the choice this year.

Those who preferred netbooks over laptops or iPads responded that the main feature that attracted them to a netbook was the smaller footprint of the machines (55%), while 20% considered price, and 19% considered battery life as the main trait.

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Digicel Series Cricket Schedule

Digicel Series Cricket Schedule

| 27/05/2010 | 0 Comments
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The West Indies Cricket Board on Wednesday announced the changes to the schedule of matches in the Digicel Series between West Indies and South Africa. The matches which were slated to be played in Jamaica will now be played in Trinidad.
The fifth Digicel ODI will be played at Queen’s Park Oval on Thursday June 3 and the first Digicel Test Match will also be played at Queen’s Park Oval from Thursday June 10 to Monday June 14. The two-day warm-up match for the South Africans will be played on June 6 and 7 at a venue which will be announced in the coming days.

DIGICEL SERIES SCHEDULE
Wednesday, May 19: 1st Digicel T20 at Sir Vivian Richards Stadium, Antigua
Thursday, May 20: 2nd Digicel T20 at Sir Vivian Richards Stadium, Antigua
Saturday, May 22: 1st Digicel ODI at Sir Vivian Richards Stadium, Antigua
Monday, May 24: 2nd Digicel ODI at Sir Vivian Richards Stadium, Antigua
Friday, May 28: 3rd Digicel ODI at Windsor Park, Dominica
Sunday, May 30: 4th Digicel ODI at Windsor Park, Dominica
Thursday, June 3: 5th Digicel ODI at Queen’s Park Oval, Trinidad
Sunday, June 6 to Monday June 7: South Africa warm-up match – venue TBA
Thursday, June 10 to Monday June 14: 1st Digicel Test at Queen’s Park Oval, Trinidad
Friday June 18 to Tuesday, June 22: 2nd Digicel Test at Warner Park, St Kitts
Saturday, June 26 to Wednesday, June 30: 3rd Digicel Test at Kensington Oval, Barbados

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Cricket Officials move matches from Jamaica due to violence from failed attempt to capture “DUDUS”

Cricket Officials move matches from Jamaica due to violence from failed attempt to capture “DUDUS”

| 27/05/2010 | 0 Comments
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(CNN) — West Indies cricket officials have moved two international matches from Jamaica due to the outbreak of violence on the Caribbean island.

The final one-day international of the series against South Africa has been switched to Trinidad along with the first of three five-day Tests against the tourists, as a state of emergency is in effect in the Jamaican capital of Kingston.

More than 500 people have been arrested, the Jamaican government said on Tuesday, with at least 44 dead according to reports following violence after a failed attempt to arrest a suspected drug kingpin.

Cricket South Africa chief executive Gerald Majola backed the move by the West Indies board.

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Christopher ‘Dudus’ Coke Negotiating Surrender With U.S., DEA Pilots On Alert

Christopher ‘Dudus’ Coke Negotiating Surrender With U.S., DEA Pilots On Alert

| 27/05/2010 | 1 Comment
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U.S. law enforcement officials have put Drug Enforcement Administration Air Wing pilots on alert and planes on standby as they wait out the ongoing discussions between alleged Jamaican drug lord Christopher “Dudus” Coke and the U.S. government — and wait to see whether Coke will be brought out of hiding in handcuffs or in a body bag.

US Marshals, DEA agents and federal prosecutors are working hand in hand with senior Jamaican military and police officials in an effort to effect a surrender and extradition of Coke, who is wanted on federal drug and firearms charges, to the United States.

At least 60 Jamaicans, including both civilians and security officers, have died since Jamaican authorities began moving in on Coke’s barricaded West Kingston neighborhood in an attempt to capture him Monday. The U.S. has wanted to extradite Coke since 2009, but the Jamaican government had resisted until this month.

The violence shows no signs of abating and has spread to adjoining neighborhoods. The police and military effort to curb it now has by some estimates “thousands” of troops on the streets. Jamaican authorities allege that Coke brought in gunmen from other parts of Jamaica and other Caribbean islands to help prevent his capture.

The 2009 U.S. indictment of Coke charges that he shipped firearms back to Jamaica from the U.S. The island nation has one of the highest murder rates in the Western Hemisphere. Nearly 1700 people were slain in 2009, out of a population of about three million, and as 2010 approaches the halfway mark about 1300 have already been killed.

On Tuesday, U.S. authorities said they believed Coke had escaped through a ring of hundreds of cops and soldiers who had surrounded the West Kingston neighborhood of Tivoli Gardens. Jamaican and U.S. authorities report that Coke may have slipped through police lines and escaped into one of two adjoining areas, either Denham Town or Jones Town.

Jamaican Prime Minister Bruce Golding had resisted U.S. efforts to extradite Coke, citing doubts about the use of wiretaps to gather evidence against Coke. Golding dropped his resistance to Coke’s extradition during the week of May 10, 2010, under intense pressure from Jamaica’s main political parties, the ruling Jamaica Labour Parties (JLP) and the opposition People’s National Party, or PNP. On May 17th Golding announced that he would direct his Attorney General to sign an order that would allow Coke’s arrest.

Following that announcement, the West Kingston communities allied to Coke began non-violent protests. But even then it was apparent to authorities that Coke’s supporters were gearing up for an armed confrontation. They fortified their neighborhood with sandbags, threw up road blocks, installed improvised explosive devices and electrified fencing, all in an effort to block Coke’s arrest.

Coke’s forces are heavily armed with an arsenal that includes automatic rifles and hand grenades. Authorities are attempting to confirm reports that the drug gang also has rocket launchers.

According to the indictment issued in New York in 2009, Coke is alleged to head an international criminal posse known as “The Shower Posse” that operates in Jamaica and the United States. He has been charged by U.S. authorities with conspiracy to distribute marijuana and cocaine and conspiracy to traffic in firearms.

Coke is alleged to have sold crack cocaine and marijuana in the New York area since the 1990s and to equip his gang members with illegally procured weapons.

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ABC NEWS BRANDS JAMAICAN PM AS “KNOWN CRIME AFFILIATE” OF DUDUS……

ABC NEWS BRANDS JAMAICAN PM AS “KNOWN CRIME AFFILIATE” OF DUDUS……

| 27/05/2010 | 0 Comments
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U.S. Report: Jamaican Prime Minister Is ‘Known Criminal Affiliate’ Of Hunted Drug Lord
As Christopher ‘Dudus’ Coke Eludes Capture, 30 Reported Dead In Spreading Violence

As official reports surface of accused drug lord Christopher Coke’s escape from his barricaded Kingston, Jamaica neighborhood, where Jamaican authorities have been attempting to arrest him for extradition to the U.S., ABC News has learned that a U.S. government report refers to Jamaican Prime Minister Bruce Golding as a “criminal affiliate” of Coke.

Golding, who led resistance to Coke’s extradition before public opinion forced him to reverse himself, is described in a document read to ABC News as a “known criminal affiliate” of Christopher “Dudus” Coke. According to official U.S. accounts , Golding’s Jamaican Labour Party (JLP) was voted into power through “Coke’s murderous and strong-arm tactics.”

Recently, Golding and other senior Jamaican officials have been electronically intercepted talking to Coke inside his fortified redoubt, US authorities say.

The major police action to capture Coke began Monday morning. On Tuesday, U.S. authorities said they believed Coke had escaped through a ring of hundreds of cops and soldiers who had surrounded the West Kingston neighborhood of Tivoli Gardens. Jamaican and US authorities report that Coke may have slipped through police lines and escaped into one of two adjoining areas, either Denham Town or Jones Town.

By Monday night, Coke’s gun-toting supporters had taken control of the Kingston Public Hospital, and the hospital’s one surgeon has been treating at least 14 Coke loyalists.

Jamaican police are reporting that 30 people — 26 civilians and four members of security forces — have died during firefights in West Kingston as authorities attempt to capture Coke.

ABC News has learned that authorities believe at least 15 alleged gangsters have been slain. Police and soldiers have been doing battle with the alleged drug lord’s heavily armed supporters and outside mercenaries that Jamaican authorities say Coke has hired. U.S. authorities say some of the mercenaries are believed to be Haitian.

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In addition to the Kingston Hospital gunshot victims, the University of the West Indies (UWI) Hospital has treated 21 gunshot victims. Six of those – five civilians and one soldier – have died.

The island’s Minister of National Security Dwight Nelson has alerted a third hospital, Andrews Hospital, to expect wounded and the National Blood Transfusion Service has issued an appeal to the public to donate blood. An emergency operations center has been activated to coordinate health sector responses as well as hospital security.

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Jamaica’s business is the Caribbean’s Business

Jamaica’s business is the Caribbean’s Business

| 27/05/2010 | 0 Comments
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Jamaica’s business is the Caribbean’s business
By Sir Ronald Sanders
(The writer is an International Consultant and former Caribbean Diplomat)

The widely publicised bloody clashes over the last few days between law enforcement agencies and armed gangs in Jamaica are as bad for the economic and social well-being of the people of Caribbean countries as they are for Jamaicans.

While the members of the Caribbean Community and Common Market (CARICOM) see themselves as a “Community of Independent Sovereign States”, most of the rest of the world regard them as one area. Only the most knowledgeable make a distinction between them. So, events in Jamaica impact all other CARICOM countries whether they like it or not.

In meaningful terms, therefore, Jamaica’s business is CARICOM’s business. Neither CARICOM governments nor the people of CARICOM can sit back and pretend that events in Jamaica in which criminals defy the authority of the State are not relevant to them. CARICOM countries are tied together and none can deny cross-border relationships in trade, investment and people.

Jamaica is the biggest of the CARICOM countries in population terms and it impresses and influences the world far more than other CARICOM countries. Of course, the impression and influence have been both beneficial and inimical to Jamaica and the wider region.

On the positive side, the vibrant music of Jamaica and its musicians, led by the iconic Bob Marley, have clearly given Jamaica global recognition. So too have its holiday resorts which are playgrounds for tourists from all over Europe and North America. Jamaican agricultural products, such as its Blue Mountain Coffee, and many of its manufactured goods have been able to penetrate foreign markets more deeply than those from other regional countries.

And, CARICOM’s negotiations with large countries and groups of countries would be much weaker and far less effective without the participation of Jamaica. Its relatively large population of close to three million people makes Jamaica a more attractive market than the majority of CARICOM countries which, with the exception of Trinidad and Tobago, each number less than a million people. Because of the size of its population, even with the limitations of educational opportunities, Jamaica also has more qualified technical people for bargaining internationally than its partner countries in CARICOM. Therefore, the participation of Jamaican negotiators in CARICOM teams is extremely valuable.

Jamaicans also constitute the largest number of the West Indian Diaspora in the United Kingdom, the United States and Canada. To the extent that the West Indian Diaspora is a group whose votes are wooed by political parties in these countries, much is owed to Jamaicans for the attention paid to Caribbean concerns.

On the negative side, Jamaica’s internal crime, and organised crime that its gangs have exported to Britain, Canada and the United States have created an unwholesome image for the country and severely damaged it economically. In the process, CARICOM has been weakened economically as well, for an economically weak Jamaica is unable to serve as a dynamo for economic activity and growth throughout the area.

Jamaica’s high crime level has been bad for business and bad for its economy. A 2003 study found that the total costs of crime came to J$12.4 billion which was 3.7% of GDP, and a 2007 UN report projected that if Jamaica could reduce violent crime to Costa Rica’s low level, the economy would grow by 5.4%. In a World Bank survey, 39% of Jamaica’s business managers said they were less likely to expand their businesses because of crime, and 37% reported that crime discourages investment that would have encouraged greater productivity.

Apart from scaring away investment, high crime in Jamaica has also caused many of its professionals and middle-class families to flee the country seeking safer environments abroad. More than 80 per cent of Jamaica’s tertiary educated people have migrated to the world’s industrialized nations.

It doesn’t take much imagination to work out how much more socially and economically developed Jamaica would have been today had it not been plagued by over 30 years of escalating crime and its debilitating consequences.

From time to time, outbursts of violent crime have affected the country’s tourism which contributes about 10 per cent of the country’s GDP. It is only because of expensive and extensive advertising and public relations campaigns in the main tourist markets that Jamaica has managed to keep its tourism arrivals by air fairly stable.

This latest, globally-publicized, bloody confrontation between security forces and criminal gangs protecting a Drugs Don, Christopher “Dudus” Coke, from being served with an order for extradition to the United States and arrested, will damage the tourism industry harshly, and, again, once it is over, Jamaica will be forced to spend large sums repairing its image and assuring tourists of its safety.

Other CARICOM countries will not be immune from the Jamaica disturbances. On the basis that tourists see the Caribbean as one place, other Caribbean destinations will also have to spend more on promoting themselves.

The fact that “Dudus” could be protected by well-armed, criminal gangs who have neither respect for, nor fear of, Jamaica’s security forces or the authority of the State, is a direct consequence of governance gone badly wrong. From the mid-1970s the two main political parties in Jamaica, the Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) and the Peoples National Party (PNP) have formed alliances with gangs that have been well-armed and in many cases are involved in the drugs trade. Having taken that step that renders politicians beholden to criminals, the political hierarchy began an inexorable downward spiral to disaster.

In effect, part of the State has been captured by leaders of criminal gangs to whom political parties are obligated. Nothing else but this sense of obligation to “Dudus” Coke can explain why Jamaica’s Prime Minister Bruce Golding, as Leader of the JLP, would have intervened at party level to influence a law enforcement matter between his government and the government of the US.

The Jamaican government now has to assert the authority of the State over “Dudus” and his gang, and it must be done if Jamaica is to be freed from the captivity of criminal gangs.

And, when this particular confrontation is over, Jamaica must start the gruelling process of openly and transparently dismantling all party political connections with gangs, reasserting the supremacy of the State, and weeding out gangs that are the scourge of the society. Any alternative scenario is too terrifying to contemplate but it does include Jamaica being plunged into the status of a failed State.

This is why it behoves the current party political leaders to set to the task of recovering the State from the influence of criminals and establishing broad based institutions empowered by law to oversee public services and political practices. Jamaica will be economically stronger, socially better and politically more stable than it has been for decades and, as a consequence, CARICOM will benefit.

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Support of Kamala given by NY Trini’s

Support of Kamala given by NY Trini’s

| 27/05/2010 | 0 Comments
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NY Trinis praise Kamla

Thursday, May 27 2010

TRINIDAD and Tobago nationals residing in New York have congratulated Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar and the People’s Partnership coalition on their victory in Monday’s General Election.

Robin Gosine, spokesperson for the group of TT/US nationals, said Persad-Bissessar’s campaign to become this country’s first woman prime minister attracted the attention of many Trinidadians living in New York and other parts of the United States. Gosine said the group wished Persad-Bissessar and her Government a successful term in office, expressing the hope that their actions would redound to the benefit of the country.

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No sign of “Dudus” ???

No sign of “Dudus” ???

| 27/05/2010 | 0 Comments
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WITH the immediate threat of the overrun of the capital city by criminals backing Christopher ‘Dudus’ Coke behind us the million-dollar question Jamaicans were asking yesterday was: “Where is ‘Dudus’?”

Officials maintained that they had no clue to the whereabouts of Coke, but in the absence of official information, speculation was rife. Usually accurate Observer sources suggested that the deposed Tivoli Gardens strongman had voluntarily surrendered himself to the United States, which wants him to face trial for alleged trafficking in drugs and guns.

“The admission by Coke’s lawyers that after their meeting with the US embassy in Kingston Monday night ‘a window of opportunity’ had been opened, is the surest sign that ‘Dudus’ was ready to hand himself over,” the source insisted.

“The view is that Coke feels it is in his best interest to be taken to the US, rather than to a Jamaican jail where he could meet a similar fate as his father, the late Lester Lloyd Coke, alias ‘Jim Brown’, whom he eventually succeeded as the ‘don’.

Jim Brown died in a mysterious fire at the General Penitentiary where he was incarcerated while awaiting extradition.

But there are other claims that Coke might be in Venezuela, whose leader is known to be hostile to the United States. Cynical Jamaicans also insist that Coke was moved out of Tivoli by highly connected individuals, before the military moved in to break down barricades.

Asked if he had heard of the claim that Coke had handed himself in to the US embassy, Information Minister Daryl Vaz said that was the first time he was hearing it.

“I suspect that is a rumour. If it were true I think I would have heard of it. Up till now (Observer press time) we have no idea where he is.”

Coke’s lawyer, Paul Beswick, who met with the US embassy personnel, said: “I am in no position to answer any question at this time. “I’m sorry.”

The US network ABC reported US officials as saying Coke had slipped through the ring of hundreds of soldiers and police and escaped into nearby Denham Town or Jones Town.

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State of Emergency in Jamaica:  Cruise ships…”Unfazed”

State of Emergency in Jamaica: Cruise ships…”Unfazed”

| 27/05/2010 | 0 Comments
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THE Caribbean’s biggest cruise lines, including industry giant Carnival, say they will continue visiting Jamaica despite tensions in the country’s capital, Kingston.

“The disturbances in Jamaica and associated state of emergency are focused in Kingston,” Carnival said in a statement, adding that Ocho Rios and Montego Bay — where the ships make weekly calls — were “not experiencing any issues”.

Montego Bay is more than 100 miles west of Kingston while and Ocho Rios, which is located in St Ann on the country’s northern coast, is more than a two-and-a-half hour’s drive away.

Carnival said its 2,974-passenger Carnival Conquest called on Montego Bay Tuesday, while the 2,974-passenger Carnival Liberty is scheduled to call at Ocho Rios today, followed on June 3 by the 2,052-passenger Carnival Inspiration.

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Annual roundup captures stray dogs in Little Havana

Annual roundup captures stray dogs in Little Havana

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The filthy stray poodle snarled at the dogcatchers trying to put a leash around her 10-pound frame.

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