Laventilleans join in search for 10-year-old girl
The desperate search for a missing ten-year-old girl turned to near violence in the Laventille community yesterday, when scores of irate residents clashed with heavily-armed police and soldiers. In their bid to locate Tecia Henry, a pupil of St Rose’s Girls’ Primary School, angry residents blocked the major roads with burning debris, demanding swift and more efficient action by law enforcement officials. Tecia went missing after leaving her mother’s home on Essex Street, John John, around 7.30 am on Saturday. The child was sent to K and G Mini-mart, at the lower end of John John, to purchase a phone card and other items. She never made it to the shop.
Sitting in front of the parlour, which was closed yesterday, the child’s mother Diane was visibly distraught. She tried to comfort her 12-year-old twin daughters, Tia and Tamara, who sat at their mother’s feet shedding tears for their missing sister. According to Diane, the walk from her home to the mini-mart is a mere three minutes. “When I saw a certain time I sent one of her sisters to check on her. The owner of the shop said he glimpsed her going up Crook Street,” Diane said.
Believing the mini-mart might have been closed, Diana said she thought her daughter might have gone to another shop on St Paul Street, not too far from where the child’s grandmother lived. “I called the aunt, but they said she not around. I call everybody and they say she not around.” Diane said her daughter never ran away from home. “It was school and home; nothing else.” Tecia Henry was last seen wearing a pink and grey jacket, a denim skirt, a shower cap and slippers.
By: GEISHA KOWLESSAR of Guardian
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Information Minister Neil Parsanlal says no new powers are being granted to the President under the Proceeds of Crime Bill 2009. Parsanlal said this yesterday in his contribution to the debate on the legislation in Parliament. He was responding to an earlier claim by Princes Town North MP Subhas Panday who said too much power was being granted to the President in the bill. Panday was referring to a provision which gave the Head of State the power to pardon someone guilty of money laundering and to return illicit assets confiscated by the State.
From as early as next week, the newly implemented ttconnect mobile service will allow T&T citizens to use their cellular phones and the SMS text messaging service to receive traffic updates as well as other important news about the Fifth Summit of the Americas. Public Administration Minister, Kennedy Swaratsingh, made the announcement last Tuesday as he delivered the feature address during the official launch of the ttconnect suite of services at the Chaguanas Service Centre located at Gaston Street, Chaguanas.
Members of the US Secret Service and local law enforcement bodies are expected to be involved in all-day meetings today to synchronise security arrangements as the Fifth Summit of the Americas draws closer. A source close to the arrangements said the meeting, which began on Thursday afternoon was supposed to continue yesterday at 11 am. However, it was postponed until today.
The fate of Soca Warriors coach, Colombian Francisco Maturana and his technical staff which includes assistant coach/player Russell Latapy, is to be the main topic of discussion at a T&T Football Federation (TTFF) emergency technical meeting on April 9. The meeting is expected to take place at Concacaf’s Port-of-Spain office and will be chaired by T&TFF special advisor and Concacaf president, Jack Warner.
CNC3’s newscast at 7 pm will now be simulcast on Gayelle the Channel. Gayelle announced on Tuesday that it was closing its newsroom, with effect from March 31, 2009, and paying severance to 16 displaced news staff. Based on a strategic alliance with CNC3 which was formalised yesterday, viewers of Gayelle will now see the CNC3 news at 7 pm in the time slot of Gayelle’s former newscast. Managing Director of the TPCL Grenfell Kissoon stated that CNC3 (a division of TPCL) was happy with the strategic alliance. The official signing ceremony took place yesterday, in the boardroom of TPCL, St Vincent Street, Port-of-Spain.
An electrician employed at the Brian Lara Stadium in Tarouba appeared in court yesterday charged with possession of $1 million worth of compressed marijuana. Seven packets of marijuana weighing 56.4 kilogrammes were brought to the San Fernando Magistrates’ Court in three crocus bags. The marijuana was wrapped in plastic.
For the second time in their controversial political relationship, Opposition Leader Basdeo Panday yesterday stripped UNC MP Ramesh Lawrence Maharaj of the UNC’s lead spokesman position in the Parliament. After a group led by Maharaj and UNC deputy leader Jack Warner were involved in a fracas outside UNC’s Rienzi Complex office two Sundays ago, Panday moved to bring Maharaj to heel—stripping him of the portfolio of Opposition chief whip which Maharaj had held since the start of the term in 2007.
GEORGETOWN–England won the first one-dayer after a calamitous misreading of the rain regulations by the West Indies coach. Australian John Dyson waved his batsmen in when they were offered the light with 27 needed from 22 balls. But Stuart Broad’s vital wicket had made all the difference, and England’s total of 270-7 gave them a one-run win under Duckworth-Lewis rules.
Days before the resumption of hearings of the Uff Commission of Enquiry into the local construction sector, House Speaker Barendra Sinanan has ruled that Udecott must appear before the Committee of Privileges for breaches of Parliament. The Speaker’s ruling was given during yesterday’s sitting of the Lower House. It was in response to last week Friday’s matter of privilege, which was brought by Caroni East MP Dr Tim Gopeesingh.
Peter Kelly is well known to local audiences as a radio personality, actor, local comedian, football referee and economics teacher. Six years ago he retired from the national stage because of his Christian beliefs. He promised at the time that he would return to act with the Crazy Catholic in the future, since he stays away from smut and obscenities.
It was literature professor Jesse Solomon, from a university in Orlando, Florida, who wrote Joanne “Tigress” Rowley’s stinging political commentary Yuh Ent See Wajang Yet. The composition earned Rowley second place in the Calypso Monarch competition and quarter million dollars.
Two men were murdered within a 24-hour period, bringing the total murders for the year, up to late yesterday to 114. They are Randy Prescod of Diego Martin and Salim Benoit of Malabar. On the scene yesterday residents of North West Road, Patna Village uttered comments such as: “Is just another badman dead from Patna Village. “One plate (of food) less. “Same old same old, nothing new. “Just one more less to talk about.” The statements were made as undertakers removed the body of Randy Prescod, which was found in some bushes near his home with multiple gunshot wounds to the chest. He was shot five times.
Youthful ignorance and a lack of national pride were what drove the person(s) to deface the paintings on The People’s Canvas, outside the Queen’s Park Oval. That’s the view of Keith Nexar, director of Advantage Advertising Ltd. The beautiful paintings that adorn the Oval’s wall, which took about one year of planning and eight months to be completed, were defaced sometime over the two days of Carnival.
There was a complete shutdown of the Port-of-Spain Port yesterday as rumours spread throughout the country that a container with missing children had been discovered. The airwaves of radio and television stations, along with newspaper newsrooms, were buzzing with activity, as concerned people called about the rumours.
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