分类: society

  • WATCH: Edwin Allen High mourns 14-y-o student killed in crash

    WATCH: Edwin Allen High mourns 14-y-o student killed in crash

    EDWIN ALLEN HIGH SCHOOL, Clarendon — The campus of Edwin Allen High School stood in solemn silence on Monday as students and faculty collectively mourned the tragic passing of 14-year-old Jaydon Smith, a ninth-grade student who lost his life in a devastating single-vehicle collision.

    The fatal incident occurred Sunday evening along the Chapelton main road in Clarendon, where Smith was traveling with a relative. Despite being rushed to medical facilities, the young student succumbed to his injuries. School authorities have explicitly clarified that this tragedy is unrelated to the disappearance of another Jamaican student, 14-year-old Jayden Smith from Manchester High School, who remains missing since late September.

    In response to the profound loss, the school’s behavioral management and student services team mobilized comprehensive support measures. Guidance counselors, the dean of discipline, Health and Family Life Education instructors, and the school nurse conducted specialized grief-counseling sessions through devotional gatherings for all present students.

    The school’s current rotational attendance system, implemented due to infrastructure damage from Hurricane Melissa, meant only upper-level students were physically present for the counseling sessions. Principal Jermaine Harris confirmed to Observer Online that the institution is providing ongoing psychosocial support for both students and staff members affected by the tragedy.

    The educational community continues to navigate the emotional aftermath while maintaining academic operations, demonstrating resilience in the face of sudden loss and the ongoing challenges posed by recent natural disasters.

  • JCF warns public of scam targeting vehicle sellers and ride-share drivers

    JCF warns public of scam targeting vehicle sellers and ride-share drivers

    KINGSTON, Jamaica—Authorities in Jamaica have issued an urgent public warning regarding a sophisticated fraud operation targeting citizens who have recently sold or are contemplating selling their private vehicles. The Jamaica Constabulary Force (JCF) has detailed a multi-layered scheme where criminals pose as law enforcement officials to extort money from unsuspecting victims.

    According to an official security advisory, perpetrators initiate contact by telephone, falsely identifying themselves as police officers. They allege that vehicles previously sold by the recipients are actually stolen property, creating immediate panic and confusion. Utilizing this fabricated crisis, the fraudsters then demand urgent cash payments under the guise of either shielding the seller from potential prosecution or facilitating reimbursement to the alleged buyer.

    The scheme employs an additional deceptive layer by recruiting ride-share drivers, who remain unaware they are participating in criminal activities. These drivers are enlisted as couriers to collect cash payments from victims and transport the illicit proceeds to predetermined drop locations, further obscuring the criminals’ identities.

    Superintendent Victor Barrett of the Counter-Terrorism and Organised Crime Investigation Branch (C-TOC) confirmed that multiple incidents are under active investigation. “These criminals are strategically exploiting fear and manufactured urgency to override their victims’ rational judgment,” Superintendent Barrett stated. “We emphatically advise the public to terminate any such communications immediately and report them to authorities.”

    The JCF has released specific protective guidelines for public awareness:
    – Absolutely no payments should be made to individuals demanding money over the phone.
    – Legitimate police operations never involve soliciting or collecting cash from citizens to resolve criminal allegations or reimburse third parties.
    – Immediately terminate any suspicious call and report the incident to local police or the Crime Stop hotline at 311.

    Ride-share drivers received special caution against accepting requests to transport unaccompanied packages, particularly those suspected of containing currency, as such actions could inadvertently involve them in money laundering or other criminal proceedings.

    The public is encouraged to report suspicious activity to C-TOC at 876-967-1389, the emergency police line 119, or any local police station.

  • Spared by Melissa, Happy Grove High still reeling from Beryl

    Spared by Melissa, Happy Grove High still reeling from Beryl

    HECTOR’S RIVER, Portland — Happy Grove High School continues to battle the devastating aftermath of Hurricane Beryl while simultaneously addressing new challenges arising from Hurricane Melissa. Despite three consecutive rain-free days, water persistently drips from the principal’s office ceiling—a constant reminder of the structural damage that has rendered the entire top floor of the main building unusable.

    Acting Principal Devon Wilson clarified that while Hurricane Melissa caused minimal institutional damage, it exacerbated existing problems created by July 2024’s Hurricane Beryl. The 127-year-old educational institution lost multiple classrooms and suffered critical damage to Harvey Hall auditorium during Beryl’s passage. Although state authorities have since replaced the auditorium roof, six classrooms remain completely non-functional, forcing administrators to repurpose specialized facilities including the library, technical drawing room, science laboratory, and music room to accommodate displaced grade 10 students.

    The school’s administrative block suffers from severe leakage, damaged windows, and missing window panes. Wilson emphasized that while government assistance has commenced, substantial repairs are still required. The administration actively seeks support from both public institutions and private sector organizations, additionally appealing to alumni for project-based assistance to improve learning conditions.

    While the school itself escaped Melissa’s worst effects, many students faced significant personal hardships. Numerous households suffered structural damage, water intrusion, and prolonged loss of electricity, internet, and water services. Students from severely affected communities including Rolandsfield, Bath, and Seaford encountered particular difficulties attending classes due to dangerous travel conditions and ongoing power outages that persisted weeks after the storm.

    With communication networks compromised, remote learning proved impossible, leaving many students without educational access during the critical post-hurricane period. The school has implemented flexible attendance policies, permitting casual attire and excusing absences for students from hardest-hit St. Thomas communities.

    External examination preparedness presents additional concerns. Fortunately, most Caribbean Secondary Education Certificate (CSEC) fees had been paid pre-Melissa, and deadline extensions have allowed nearly complete registration for eligible candidates. City and Guilds exam registration scheduled for January anticipates more normalized operations.

    Despite its own challenges, Happy Grove High has offered to accept students from western Jamaican schools devastated by Melissa. With capacity for additional enrollment and comprehensive CSEC curriculum coverage exceeding 28 subjects, the institution stands ready to assist displaced students continue their education during the ongoing crisis.

  • Holness leads tributes to first female chair of ECJ Dorothy Pine-McLarty

    Holness leads tributes to first female chair of ECJ Dorothy Pine-McLarty

    Jamaica’s legal fraternity is enveloped in profound grief following the passing of distinguished attorney Dorothy Pine-McLarty, whose death was confirmed on Sunday. With an illustrious career spanning over half a century, Pine-McLarty exemplified legal excellence and transformative public service until her retirement from the prestigious law firm Myers, Fletcher & Gordon.

    Her professional journey included groundbreaking leadership roles, serving as head of the firm’s Property Department from 1992 to 1995 and subsequently as managing partner of its London office from its establishment in 1995 until 1998. Her legal expertise gained international recognition when she was admitted as a solicitor of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom in 1995.

    Prime Minister Andrew Holness led the national tributes, recognizing Pine-McLarty’s extraordinary contributions to Jamaican democracy. ‘She dedicated her life to strengthening our democracy, upholding integrity, and serving the Jamaican people with courage and grace,’ Holness stated in an official social media tribute.

    Pine-McLarty’s career was marked by numerous pioneering achievements. In 1973, she shattered glass ceilings by becoming the first female partner at Myers, Fletcher & Gordon. Her most significant public service role came as chairman of the Electoral Commission of Jamaica (ECJ), a position she held from 2013 until her retirement in 2019, having initially joined the commission in 2000.

    Her tenure at the ECJ witnessed transformative electoral reforms, including the successful oversight of four parliamentary elections, four local government elections, and numerous by-elections. She spearheaded critical initiatives such as the residence reverification project, implementation of the Electronic Voter Identification System, and the establishment of political party registration and campaign financing regulations.

    Beyond her electoral work, Pine-McLarty contributed significantly to Jamaica’s financial sector through her board membership at Jamaica National Building Society and subsequent appointments to the boards of The Jamaica National Group and JN Financial Group following the institution’s restructuring.

    Born in 1940, her exceptional public service was formally recognized in October 2007 when she was vested into the Order of Jamaica, the country’s fourth-highest national honor. Prime Minister Holness extended deepest condolences to her family, friends, colleagues, and all Jamaicans impacted by her remarkable legacy of service.

  • Farmers to benefit from insurance payments

    Farmers to benefit from insurance payments

    KINGSTON, Jamaica—The Banana Board of Jamaica has initiated a significant financial relief program for agricultural producers impacted by recent hurricane damage. A total of 116 registered banana and plantain growers will receive compensation through the Catastrophe Insurance Fund to support field rehabilitation efforts.

    Board General Manager Janet Conie confirmed in an exclusive JIS News interview that approximately $20 million Jamaican dollars will be distributed following comprehensive damage evaluations by assessment teams. The administration is currently contacting eligible farmers to expedite claim processing procedures.

    “We prioritize rapid disbursement to enable immediate access to crucial agricultural inputs, particularly fertilizers essential for crop resuscitation,” Conie stated. “The fund targets complete distribution within a 30-day timeframe to accelerate recovery from windstorm devastation, including widespread breakage and uprooting of plants.”

    The recovery strategy emphasizes technical agricultural practices, particularly “chopping back”—a commercial term describing field clearance operations that remove damaged vegetation to facilitate fertilization and new growth. Conie explained this critical process: “Farmers must clear roots and mats to enable fertilizer application within six weeks, followed by sucker selection for the next generation. Proper execution can yield harvestable crops within seven months.”

    Remarkably, some proactive growers had already restored 50% of their fields through chopping back techniques within two days of the disaster. The Board continues to provide agronomic guidance through its technical support hotline (876-922-5490), reinforcing its commitment to restoring Jamaica’s vital banana and plantain industries.

  • Crawford in step with Govt’s host school initiative

    Crawford in step with Govt’s host school initiative

    In response to the widespread devastation caused by Hurricane Melissa, Jamaican authorities and community partners have initiated a comprehensive educational support program for displaced students. The Solidarity Student Exchange Programme, spearheaded by St Catherine North Western MP Damion Crawford, aims to provide uninterrupted schooling for children from the hardest-hit southwestern parishes.

    This initiative complements the Ministry of Education’s host school framework announced by Education Minister Senator Dr. Dana Morris Dixon on November 21. The government program facilitates temporary enrollment of students from non-operational schools into functioning institutions, ensuring educational continuity despite the catastrophic damage.

    Minister Morris Dixon emphasized the temporary nature of the arrangement, noting that strong regional coordination, psychosocial services, and accountability measures would support both hosting schools and displaced students. She expressed encouragement at the overwhelming response from educational institutions nationwide, describing it as a demonstration of Jamaica’s collective commitment to its children.

    Opposition education spokesman Crawford endorsed the ministry’s approach while launching the complementary exchange program. “North West St Catherine may not have faced the worst damage, but we have the capacity and duty to stand with children whose lives were upended,” Crawford stated, characterizing the effort as an emergency humanitarian and educational intervention.

    The comprehensive program will provide consistent schooling, safe accommodation, counseling services, mentorship programs, nutritional support, and protective structures. Beginning December 18, the initiative will serve 200 students over a six-month period through multi-organizational collaboration.

    The Linstead Ministers’ Fraternal will manage homestay recruitment and screening processes while providing pastoral oversight and emotional support. The Quality Education Circle will facilitate school placements, and undamaged schools throughout the constituency have committed to integrating students, assigning mentors, and maintaining educational continuity alongside child protection standards. Food for the Poor has pledged classroom furniture and care packages for incoming students.

  • Brazilian teen killed after climbing into lion enclosure at zoo

    Brazilian teen killed after climbing into lion enclosure at zoo

    A profound tragedy unfolded at the Arruda Camara Zoobotanical Park in João Pessoa, Brazil, when a 19-year-old man was fatally attacked by a lioness after deliberately entering the animal’s enclosure. The incident, which occurred on Sunday morning, was witnessed by horrified zoo visitors.

    The young man, identified by local media as Gerson de Melo Machado, scaled a six-meter security wall and navigated protective fencing before descending into the enclosure via a tree. Viral footage of the encounter shows the lioness, named Leona, initially resting near the visitor viewing glass before immediately moving toward the intruder. The animal pulled Machado from the tree, with subsequent struggle visible through shaking vegetation before the victim disappeared from view.

    Authorities confirmed Machado succumbed to injuries sustained during the animal attack. In the aftermath, municipal officials closed the zoo indefinitely as environmental agencies conducted a comprehensive site inspection.

    Park veterinarian Thiago Nery defended the facility’s safety protocols, characterizing the event as ‘completely unpredictable.’ Zoo management confirmed that euthanasia for Leona was never under consideration, noting the lioness displays no aggressive behavior outside this specific context.

    Beyond the immediate tragedy, a deeper narrative emerged regarding Machado’s severe mental health challenges. Child protection counselor Veronica Oliveira revealed she had worked with Machado for eight years as he navigated institutional care systems. According to Oliveira, Machado’s mother and grandparents suffered from schizophrenia, yet he never received adequate state-supported care.

    Interviews with family members and officials painted a portrait of a vulnerable individual who dreamed of becoming a lion tamer. His cousin, Icara Menezes, disclosed that in the week preceding the incident, Machado expressed desires to travel to Africa. Previous concerning behavior included breaching airport security to hide in aircraft landing gear, apparently believing the plane was Africa-bound.

    Correctional officials revealed Machado had been detained 16 times in juvenile and adult facilities. Ivison Lira de Paiva, a disciplinary chief at a local prison unit, described Machado as having the intellectual capacity of a five-year-old and characterized his case as a ‘tragedy waiting to happen.’

  • When the mind is sharp, and the body is frail

    When the mind is sharp, and the body is frail

    In the sterile environment of a hospital ward, a 93-year-old woman’s fate hangs in bureaucratic limbo. “She’s going to rehab tomorrow,” states a clerk, whose casual sympathy reveals the numbing frequency of such cases. When questioned about subsequent arrangements, the response is unsettlingly vague: “We don’t know. I guess we’ll see how rehab goes.

    This patient represents the cruel paradox of modern aging: a mind retaining remarkable sharpness trapped within a failing body. Despite scoring perfectly on cognitive assessments and demonstrating precise recall of medications and medical history—including an osteoporosis injection due exactly six months after her last administration—her physical autonomy has vanished.

    Her medical narrative includes a pacemaker implantation, cardiac stents following a 2017 heart attack, and an extensive network of physicians whose names she remembers with clarity. These medical relationships have increasingly replaced her social circle as friends gradually passed away. Where her daily planner once overflowed with social engagements, church activities, and book club meetings, it now primarily documents medical appointments.

    The contrast between mental acuity and physical deterioration creates what physicians recognize as the geriatric dilemma—the inevitable choice between preserving cognitive function or physical capability in advanced age. Her hands, deformed by osteoarthritis, struggle to grip a pen. Her knees produce audible grating sounds with movement. Standing requires assistance from two people against the invisible downward force of vertebral collapse from osteoporosis.

    Walking with a walker resembles a Herculean effort against imaginary leg weights, actually caused by fluid accumulation from circulatory issues. Neuropathic pain generates electric shock sensations down her legs, treated with medications that induce dizziness. Macular degeneration has stolen her ability to read, severing connection with her lifelong passion.

    Despite these accumulating adversities, her will remains unbroken. When confronted with end-of-life decisions regarding resuscitation, she responds with unequivocal clarity: “I want to live. Do whatever you would do for anybody else.” Even when warned that CPR would likely leave her machine-dependent and fundamentally altered, she maintains her stance, momentarily refusing to engage with the distressing hypothetical.

    This encounter leaves the attending physician with a profoundly unsettling thought: in such circumstances, cognitive clarity may become its own form of torture when the body can no longer obey the mind’s commands.

  • Tobago man gets community service for threatening CPO

    Tobago man gets community service for threatening CPO

    A Tobago handyman has been ordered to complete 240 hours of community service after pleading guilty to issuing death threats against a senior government official through social media platforms. The Scarborough Magistrates’ Court delivered the verdict following the defendant’s admission of posting threatening comments targeting Chief Personnel Officer Dr. Daryl Dindial.

    Jason Wright, 49, of Moriah, Tobago, appeared before Magistrate Gill in the Scarborough Magistrates’ 2nd Court facing charges of making statements prejudicial to public safety. The case originated on November 24 when Dr. Dindial received a WhatsApp message containing a link to a TikTok video featuring a public service announcement. Beneath the video, a user identified as ‘Buju B’ – subsequently revealed to be Wright – had posted explicit threats stating: ‘HE IS A PNM AND HE WILL NOT PAY THAT MONEY AT TIME… PPL NEED TO FIXED HIM GOOD TAKE HIS LIFE.’

    The threatening message prompted immediate concern from Dr. Dindial, who expressed genuine fear for both his personal safety and that of his family members. He promptly filed an official report with the Scarborough Police Department on the same day.

    Law enforcement authorities, under the leadership of ASP Piggott and Insp Mohammed, conducted a thorough investigation that led them to Wright’s residence. During questioning, the defendant confessed to publishing the threatening comment and demonstrated apparent remorse for his actions. Police confiscated three mobile devices as evidence during the arrest operation. Wright was formally charged under Section 241 of the Emergency Powers Regulations by acting Cpl Moses of the Scarborough Police Station.

    The court has established stringent consequences for non-compliance with the sentencing terms. Should Wright fail to complete the mandated community service hours, he will face alternative penalties of a $3,000 fine or six months’ simple imprisonment. This case highlights the legal system’s increasing attention to digital threats and establishes precedent for social media accountability.

  • PHOTOS: Removal of Derelict Properties in St John’s Rural South Commences

    PHOTOS: Removal of Derelict Properties in St John’s Rural South Commences

    A comprehensive community enhancement project has been initiated in the St John’s Rural South constituency, spearheaded by local representative Daryll Matthew. The multifaceted program, which officially commenced operations this week, focuses primarily on the systematic removal of abandoned and dilapidated structures throughout the neighborhood.

    In his official communiqué released Sunday, Matthew detailed the project’s core objectives, emphasizing that eliminating derelict properties represents just one component of a broader strategy to foster safer, more aesthetically pleasing residential environments. The parliamentarian explicitly called upon community members to actively participate in maintaining their neighborhoods, advocating for collective responsibility in creating family-oriented living spaces.

    Characterizing the initiative as embodying positive ‘Sunday morning vibes,’ Matthew promoted a philosophy of civic pride with his exhortation for residents to ‘love where you live.’ He further elaborated on the psychological and social benefits of clean, well-maintained public spaces, noting their significant contribution to overall community wellbeing and quality of life.

    This targeted cleanup effort forms an integral part of a larger, constituency-wide campaign aimed at elevating both the visual appeal and environmental health standards across the Ottos region and broader Rural South district. The program represents a coordinated approach to urban revitalization that addresses both immediate safety concerns through structural removal and long-term community development through sustained citizen engagement.