belize times july 27, 2014

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The Belize Times The Truth Shall Make You Free Established 1957 27 JULY 2014 | ISSUE NO: 4905 www.belizetimes.bz | $1.00 SCAN HERE Pg. 18 COURTS DISMISSES CASE AGAINST PENNER, COLA WILL APPEAL SABOTAGE!!! Pg. 14 Pg. 14 Elvin Penner Mother of 2 accused of common-law husband’s murder BELMOPAN CITY, Thursday, July 24th, 2014 To no one’s surprise, Elvin Pen- ner, the disgraced former UDP Min- ister, walked out of the Belmopan Magistrate’s Court from the Immi- gration criminal charges on Thurs- day morning 24th July, 2014. The UDP’s Penner is the first Government Minister to be caught red-handed in a scandal of major proportion over Belize passports. So stink was the stench of the scandal that PM Barrow, knee deep in his Government’s corruption cover-up, had to shovel Penner out of his Cab- inet in September of last year. Barrow at first publicly told Be- lizeans he would support the dis- graced Penner to the maximum. He hastily visited Penner’s constitu- ency and at public meetings was caught on camera telling Cayo voters that he had “millions upon millions of dollars” which he would spend to keep Penner as the elected area representatives. Subsequently, Barrow has done everything possible to prevent Penner from answering to the nation. First, a citizen’s effort to recall Pen- ner was sabotaged when personnel from the Elections and Boundaries, overstepped their authority and de- prived just a sufficient amount of voters on the recall referendum, which would KHMH IN CRISIS!!! CEO urges PM to intervene; blasts Ministry of Health for lack of support Belize City, July 24, 2014 Reports of the financial woes at the nation’s main public referral hospital, Karl Heusner Memorial Hospital, have been greatly understated according to a letter written by the hospital’s Chief Executive Officer Dr. Fran- cis Gary Longsworth which was sent to the Chairlady of the Board, Chandra Cansino. In the May 30th 2014 letter, leaked to the BELIZE TIMES, CEO Longsworth explained to HON. FRANCIS VISITS SOUTHSIDE RESIDENTS Pg. 7 Felix Alamilla

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Belize Times July 27, 2014

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Page 1: Belize Times July 27, 2014

The Belize TimesThe Truth Shall Make You Free

Established 1957

27 JULY 2014 | ISSUE NO: 4905 www.belizetimes.bz | $1.00

SCAN HERE

Pg. 4

Pg. 18

Courts dismisses Case against Penner, CoLa wiLL aPPeaL

SABOTAGE!!!

Pg. 14

Dean Barrow

Pg. 14

Elvin Penner

mother of 2 accused of common-law

husband’s murder

BELMOPAN CITY, Thursday, July 24th, 2014

To no one’s surprise, Elvin Pen-ner, the disgraced former UDP Min-ister, walked out of the Belmopan Magistrate’s Court from the Immi-gration criminal charges on Thurs-day morning 24th July, 2014.

The UDP’s Penner is the first Government Minister to be caught red-handed in a scandal of major proportion over Belize passports. So stink was the stench of the scandal that PM Barrow, knee deep in his Government’s corruption cover-up, had to shovel Penner out of his Cab-inet in September of last year.

Barrow at first publicly told Be-lizeans he would support the dis-

graced Penner to the maximum.He hastily visited Penner’s constitu-

ency and at public meetings was caught on camera telling Cayo voters that he had “millions upon millions of dollars” which he would spend to keep Penner as the elected area representatives.

Subsequently, Barrow has done everything possible to prevent Penner from answering to the nation.

First, a citizen’s effort to recall Pen-ner was sabotaged when personnel from the Elections and Boundaries, overstepped their authority and de-prived just a sufficient amount of voters on the recall referendum, which would

KHmH in Crisis!!!CEO urges PM to intervene; blasts Ministry of Health for

lack of support

Belize City, July 24, 2014Reports of the financial

woes at the nation’s main public referral hospital, Karl Heusner Memorial Hospital, have been greatly understated according to a letter written by the hospital’s Chief Executive Officer Dr. Fran-

cis Gary Longsworth which was sent to the Chairlady of the Board, Chandra Cansino.

In the May 30th 2014 letter, leaked to the BELIZE TIMES, CEO Longsworth explained to

Hon. FranCis Visits soutHside

residents Pg. 7

Felix Alamilla

Page 2: Belize Times July 27, 2014

THE BELIZE TIMES 27 JUL2014 202

serving Belize since 1957 as the longest continuous newspaper.

Founder: Rt. Hon. George Cadle Price, People’s United Party Leader Emeritus

EDITOR

Alberto Vellos

LAYOUT/GRAPHIC ARTIST

Chris Williams

OFFICE ASSISTANT

Roberto Peyrefitte

Printed and Published ByThE BElIzE TImEs PREss lTD.

Tel: 671-8385#3 Queen StreetP.O. BOX 506

Belize City, BelizeEmail: [email protected]

[email protected]

The Belize TimesThe Truth Shall Make You Free

Established 1957

14 APR 2013 | ISSUE NO: 4840 www.belizetimes.bz | $1.00

SCAN HERE

CANADIAN DOLLAR (CAD): $ 0.56

Guatemala Quetzal (GTQ): $ 3.94

Sterling Pound (GBP): $ 0.30

Euro (EUR) : $ 0.37

Eastern Caribbean (XCD):$ 1.36

Barbados (BBD): $ 1.01

United States (USD): $ 0.50

CHINESE YUAN (CNY): $ 3.04

Trinidadian (TTD) : $ 3.22

INDIAN RUPEE (INR): $ 31.14Exchange rate

of One Belize Dollar

6 Feb

LOCAL wEAThER26 Mar 27 Mar29 Jul 30 Jul28 Jul27 Jul26 Jul25 Jul

Gino Peck

OPINIONOUT OUT

! !

Diaspora, what have

you done for me lately?

Time for Action Against Corruption

in Public Health Service

DEAR EDITOR,“Churchill in 1940

emphatically refused to make plans to dis-patch the British fleet to American ports in

the event of Britain’s defeat, and he argued against evacuating children to Canada. Both measures he thought were “defeatist”. Any discussion of transferring the fleet he wrote “is bound to weaken confidence here at the moment when all must brace themselves for the supreme strug-gle.” When asked a few days later if the Royal family and certain valuable art works should be sent to Canada for safety when things looked most bleak, Churchill replied “None must go. We are going to beat them”.” - pg 13, Churchill on Leadership, Steven F. Hayward, Three Rivers Press, 1998

Lately, some members of the Belizean Diaspora in the USA have been clamoring for political power; arguing that dual citizens should be allowed to hold elected political office in Belize. There has been no clear articulation about how such an arrangement would work in practice, particularly about how such dual cit-izens would avoid the obvious con-flict of interests that are bound to arise in the practice of state craft.

Some argue that naturalized Belizeans are allowed to hold such office and therefore it is unfair to disallow “born Belizeans” the op-portunity to hold high political office as well. Of course, this is comparing mangoes and oranges. No apples here, sorry!

I do not support the view that dual citizens should hold elected po-litical office in Belize, simply because

DEAR EDITOR,I would really like to

know how much corruption or distasteful action Beliz-eans will ignore in the Min-istry of Health before they

get riled up and demand the removal of those persons who are depriving the country of funds needed to assist peo-ple in need of help.

it seems wholly self defeating. Why should we grant political power to those who do not have to remain in Belize to live with the consequences of their polit-ical decisions?

Many in the Diaspora fled Belize to escape the harsh economic realities. What makes you think they will not run in the face of an invading Guatemala? Or some great natural catastrophe? Or a sustained economic depression? Or deep internal political conflict? We need leaders that are as committed to Belize as Churchill was to Britain. Such commit-ment is diluted by dual citizenship.

The Diaspora as far as I have been able to gather is disorganized. They car-ry no political weight in the USA and collectively they have done nothing for Belize as a nation state. I do not make reference to the remittances sent to their families; this is a personal undertaking, though it is important to our Gross Na-tional Product.

Many in the Diaspora have been ab-sorbed into American culture. I do not fault them. American culture is infectious because it is predicated upon human weaknesses—selfishness and greed predominates. It takes a high level of enlightenment to exist in such a culture and not be overcome by it. The lack of a strong national identity makes Belizeans even more vulnerable to the appeal of

American culture, thus many in the Dias-pora are more American than they are Be-lizean.

When one speaks in the manner that I am now doing, the first thing that the Di-aspora does is to accuse you of being jeal-ous. They assert that you are envious be-cause they are living the American dream and you are not.

I advance however, that they have giv-en us too much of the USA as it is. They have given us a first world mentality that clashes bitterly with our third world reality. The Diaspora has given us summer, au-tumn, winter and spring. They have given us thanksgiving and super bowl parties; gay rights disguised as human rights; gang bangers and crack heads.

The Diaspora has given us many things, but my question to the Diaspora re-mains. What have you done for me lately?

I do not wish to make light of the fact that there a quite a few Belizeans in the Di-aspora who have achieved great personal success in the USA and who possess crit-ical skills that Belize so desperately needs to advance its development. My point is that if one truly wishes to help with nation-al development there are other ways to do so other than by way of political office. You need only look to Dr. Arlie Petters, Dr. Bul-wer, Reginald Jex, et al.

It is intriguing to me why it is that the Diaspora has been so silent in the face of

Pg. 10

With the present scandal over the huge price paid for x-ray ma-chines, over a million dollars has been wasted at the Ministry of Health in the last four years alone. Yet, the Minister of Health and CEO in that Ministry, under whose watch these scandals keep occurring, have both been allowed to keep their jobs. In a similar way the ring leaders in these major financial scandals in the health service have also all been allowed to keep their jobs. What kind of trans-parency in government is that?

In the colonial days of Belize, when Captain Foot money was em-bezzled (stolen) and nobody was prosecuted, this little song hit the streets “Captain Foot money gone and nobody no know we e gone.” Now, we are in an independent Be-lize but that little song is still appli-cable. These facts should remove any doubts about that: over $85,000 spent under questionable terms from the Central Health Region; over $366,000 gone from the Southern Regional Hospital. Before these dis-tasteful or corrupt actions thousands and thousands of dollars went miss-ing from the public health service with bloated contracts and payment for supplies that have never been

delivered, and now the Board of the KHMH has asked the Auditor General to investigate suspected corruption in the purchase of x-ray machines for the health facility. As with Captain Foot money that went missing, no one has been prosecuted for embezzlement or distasteful actions in the health ser-vice.

Such wrongdoings amount to the abuse of over a million dollars that could have been used to do a lot for poor people of this nation. As a starter, the huge bucks embezzled from the Ministry of Health in less than five years could be used to ad-dress the pressing housing needs of scores of families on the south side of Belize City. Some of the huge bucks mismanaged from our health service could also be used to compensate the mothers of 13 babies, who died within a month at the KHMH, due to unhealthy conditions in the intensive care unit.

It is time that we as a people do something to stop these distasteful and corrupt practices in the Ministry of Health that are denying the country funds for a better health service and other needed community projects.

Sincerely yours,Gilroy Usher, Sr. (629-6560)

the many challenges that confront us as a nation— the eastward drift by Guatemala, a stalled economy, the KHMH crisis, the rape of our precious Rosewood, the Penner betrayal and so on and so forth. Yet they thirst for political power.

Go figure!

Signed:Major Lloyd Jones (R)

Page 3: Belize Times July 27, 2014

THE BELIZE TIMES27 JUL 2014 3

Continued from page 1

03

Francis Fonseca

Residents Condemn Barrow’s Abusive Gun Laws

PUP Yaad Meeting in Port Loyola

Belize City, July 21, 2014On Saturday July 19th, 2014

Gilroy Usher Sr. and the PUP Port Loyola Committee held a very suc-cessful yard meeting in the division with a number of families in atten-dance. Special invited speakers at the meeting included Party Leader and Freetown Area Representative

Hon. Francis Fonseca, Chairman of the Eastern Caucus and Standard Bearer for the Pickstock Division Dr. Francis Smith, PUP Legal Advisor and Standard Bearer for the Queen Square Division, Senator Hon. An-thony Sylvester.

One of the main topics of the meeting was the draconian gun law imposed on Belizeans by the Bar-row Government.

The People’s United Party has drafted recommendations for revi-sions to the gun law to make it fair-er to Belizeans. Currently, the law casts a wide net as it gives the Po-lice the authority to detain anyone found on any premises where ille-gal guns or ammunition are found. This has led to the arrest of many innocent persons, including senior citizens and minors. The law also imposes a mandatory remand for persons detained for illegal guns or ammunition, removing the Magis-trate’s powers to grant bail.

Other pressing topics covered at the meeting included the need for affordable housing, the massive unemployment situation, the high cost of living, and the terrible crime situation.

During a question and answer

session on national issues, the Par-ty Leader assured those in atten-dance that their concerns would be addressed in every possible by the next PUP Government. Party Leader Hon. Francis Fonseca said

Continued on page 15Port Loyola PUP Standard

Bearer Gilroy Usher address-ing the gathering

Senator Hon. Anthony Sylvestresaid the Government has ignored the PUP’s proposed amendments

to the gun laws

PUP Leader Hon. Francis Fonseca said the abusive laws

must be revised

Page 4: Belize Times July 27, 2014

THE BELIZE TIMES 27 JUL2014 4

Officer Down!

04

PUP at 60% of threshold

A new vision for Southside Belize City

on the

By Francis w. FonsecaThis past Saturday I

spent the day on the South-side of Belize City visiting with residents in the Meso-potamia Division and partic-ipating in a Yard Meeting in the Port Loyola Area.

Southside Belize City represents both the “good” and “bad” of Belize.

Residents are vibrant, energetic, passionate and loud. People of every culture and ethnicity live togeth-er. Kids are running every-where shooting basketballs into makeshift rims and kick-ing footballs on overgrown pitches.

Every street corner has a gathering with dominoes and card playing, food cook-

ing, drinks serving, music blasting, and lots of gos-siping.

Hustle and Bustle is the order of the day!

Southside is of course also the Murder capital of our Country. It is where the blood of our young black men flows most vividly and violently. It is where our brothers and sisters live in pockets of extreme poverty and hopelessness.

Jobs are hard to come by and for too many, even high school education re-mains elusive.

Southside Belize City also features prominently too many broken families, young single mothers, and immature and irresponsi-

ble young fathers.Gang violence has

created an environment of fear, terror and per-haps most disturbing a cold numbness in which a whole new generation is coming of age.

The Southside “Chal-lenge” is one which nei-ther political Party, PUP or UDP, has been able to effectively and success-fully tackle.

In 2014 the South-side boasts 6 UDP “BIG MAN” including the Prime Minister and the Ministers of Education and Human Develop-ment, yet it remains among the most eco-nomically and socially

depressed areas of our country.The UDP programs aimed at

increased dependency have not worked and are clearly not the answer.

Southside needs a Plan and Sustainable Solutions.

Southside needs a targeted Education, Health, Housing and Jobs Agenda but equally im-portant is Leadership and Rep-resentation that offers respect, hope, upliftment and unity.

Families there need to know that we care and that we are committed to their futures.

The cycle of poverty, vio-lence and hopelessness will not be easy to break but the PUP understands the issue and we know how to fix it.

The UDP has demonstrated very clearly over the past six years that they simply don’t give a “damn” about the residents of Southside Belize City beyond their vote.

The PUP respects South-side. You are real to us. We want to work with you to improve your lives, your families futures, and your communities.

It is time for the Southside to give the PUP a chance!!

BeLieve

Page 5: Belize Times July 27, 2014

THE BELIZE TIMES27 JUL 2014 5

Barrow’s Doing

PUP STATEMENT ON DISMISSAL OF PENNER CASE

05

EDITORIAL

Most Belizeans would not be surprised that Elvin Penner walked a free man from the private prosecution initiated by the brave Citizens Organized for Liberty thru Action (COLA). This is because even though the private prosecution was suggested by Prime Minister Dean Barrow, he had already declared on national ra-dio and television, many months ago, that he does not see anything criminal in Penner’s actions. Anyone who knows how Barrow rules, will tell you that his declara-tion was as good as a royal decree. Even the Commis-sioner of Police trembled at Barrow’s trumpeting. He found a cave to hide.

The news, therefore, is really that COLA will not back down and plans to appeal the travesty that took place at the Magistrate’s Court this Thursday, July 24th morning. The case was just about to get interesting, with COLA seeking the Court’s permission to summon Commissioner Allen Whylie, Immigration Minister Godwin Hulse and even Prime Minister Dean Barrow to Court. Many believe they are keeping information about Penner secret from us all. But the truth will come to light!

While Penner walks after giving away our passport and nationality to an international fugitive, hundreds of normal Belizeans are being carted off to Court like heavy criminals for much, much less wrongs such as not riding a bicycle equipped with bells and lights.

The Barrow Government has given orders to the Po-

lice to crack down on all petty offences. This has brought frustration to Belizeans, especially the poor, who must now find money in these hard times to pay fines or bail out their family members. According to the UDP Gov-ernment, the purpose of imposing the sudden harsh treatment on Belizeans is to restore law and order. Do you see the double standard in this? What happened to meting out justice for wrongdoings done by UDP pol-iticians such as Penner, Mark King, Edmond Castro or Denny Grijalva? Are they more equal than the rest of us Belizeans?

While the UDP ensured that Penner’s prosecution fails, they have been busy prosecuting innocent gran-nies and minors under cruel and punishing laws intro-duced by the Barrow Government that arrest and deny bail to citizens without a proper trial. These violations to human rights are bad for Belize. The UDP seems to be hell-bent on their vicious rampage against Belizeans, since they have overlooked and rejected the Opposi-tion PUP’s recommendations for the law to be revised and made fairer.

These harsh realities in which normal Belizeans are treated as criminals and UDPs like special members of society, is the new Belize under Prime Minister Dean Barrow. To undo this, Belizeans will have to wake up and take a stand. It is National Hero Phillip Goldson who reminded us that the time to save our country is before you lose it.

July 24, 2014Today is a DARK DAY for the Belizean

Nation.Elvin Penner, the individual who many

Belizeans feel is most directly responsi-ble for the illegal sale of our Belizean na-tionality and passports, walked freely out of the Magistrates Court in Belmopan City today without even answering one single question regarding his involve-ment in the Won Hong Kim matter.

We share the disappointment, dis-gust and anger of so many Belizeans in respect of today’s decision but we are not shocked by it.

This UDP Government has obstruct-ed and impeded every effort to have a full, independent inquiry into this mat-ter and has consistently covered-up for Elvin Penner.

This case did not fail because of a lack of evidence. It failed because the UDP placed its political interests ahead of the national interest.

There was a concerted effort by the relevant state authorities to suppress evidence and an absolute refusal to make that evidence available for CO-LA’s private prosecution of Elvin Pen-ner.

The Commissioner of Police, the Office of the DPP, and the Im-migration Department all failed in their responsibilities to the Beliz-ean people.

It must now be abundantly clear to the Belizean people that justice will not be served in this case under a UDP Government.

The UDP chose Penner over Belize and the Belizean people must now choose Belize over the UDP.

We stand in support of COLA’s decision to appeal this decision.

Page 6: Belize Times July 27, 2014

THE BELIZE TIMES 27 JUL2014 606

UDP Impotent on Crime

Francis Fonseca

HAVE HOPE! The PUP will Serve The People

PuP Leader

BeLiZe CitY

visits residentsin Mesopotamia

Listening to the concerns of senior citi-zen residents on George Street

Party Leader Hon. Francis (far right), Mesopotamia Chairperson Dorla Vaughan & supporters

Greeting Ms. Lavern on George Street

Greeting residents on Church Street

Hon. Francis & the leg-end, Father Stone

Meeting with mother who sells creole bread for a living

Page 7: Belize Times July 27, 2014

THE BELIZE TIMES27 JUL 2014 7 07

woman in tHe House

How Not to Govern!By Dolores Balderamos Garcia

Last month there were a slew of graduations all over the country. In Belize Rural Central we had our share as well. Flag-ship high school for the constit-uency, Ladyville Technical High School, held their graduation I believe for the tenth time, and they consistently produce good graduates who are versed in the technical skills that put them at good advantage in the working world.

Many other schools, being the primary schools throughout the area, also held their end of year or graduation ceremonies, and I tried to make it to several of them so as to witness their success and participate with school officials, parents and students in the ceremonies.

Notable this year, were more examples of how this dastard-ly UDP government continue to politicize just about everything in their path.

I attended the Standard Six and Pre-School graduation for the Gales Point Government School. Although there were only nine standard six and seven pre-school graduates, it turned out to be a delightful ceremony. Howev-er, the down-side was that Minis-try of Education personnel were required to read out a form letter from the Minister of Education which said among other things that “your UDP government con-tinues to work for you in provid-ing the high school subsidy for students.” But not all students are receiving it.

At the Hattieville Government School graduation the guest speaker was a UDP village councillor, whose speech was inordinately lengthy and full of uncalled-for partisan rhetoric which was completely out of place at a commencement exercise.

By attending other graduations I found out that each school was told that they had to read the Minister’s letter, and without exception school officials complied, being apprehen-sive, no doubt, about the result if they did not duly fall in line.

For instance, at the graduation for the twenty-seven students of Ladyville Seventh Day Adventist School, the letter was read out. But only seventeen of the twenty-seven graduates received the vouchers for the subsidy. These vouchers were distributed during the graduation exercises, and parents of those stu-dents who did not receive the subsi-dy vouchers were visibly dismayed. They very audibly questioned why their own children did not receive the high school subsidy.

Worst of all was at the Our Lady of the Way RC graduation. The UDP political officer called up the Principal and did not request, but announced that she had been asked to read the Minister’s form letter and to distribute the subsi-dy vouchers. Eighty-two students

graduated from Ladyville RC, as it is called. But only twen-ty-eight students received the subsidy vouchers.

There were boos from the back of the church, where the ceremony was held, and there was much consternation that less than one-third of the grad-uates received the subsidy, yet there was a very public distribu-tion thereof. (We also learned afterwards that all the students who graduated from All Saints Primary School received the subsidy.) One parent wondered aloud whether the Education Minister had indeed “set up” the political officer, since it was clear that there was disappoint-ment and vexation among fami-lies with how things transpired at the graduation.

Yes, this facey UDP govern-ment and their operatives and supporters continue their she-nanigans in unevenly, and in a partisan political way, doling out the high school subsidies and politicizing ceremonies that should be devoid of such unac-ceptable behavior. I must say that my own reaction at these scenarios is that they are once more showing the Belizean peo-ple HOW NOT TO GOVERN!!

Maya Centre, Stann Creek West, Sunday June 22, 2014

Page 8: Belize Times July 27, 2014

THE BELIZE TIMES 27 JUL2014 808

PUP

– Freetown’s Mr. Quitar?

Freetown Christmas Party 2012

Oscar Requena’sPUP TOLEDO WEST

Football CUP 2014

over 24 teams – 90 Games

Toledo District, July 18, 2014The first of its kind Oscar Requeña Football

Cup was a huge success in Toledo west.On Saturday July 12th, a crowd of over 700

supporters gathered in San Pedro Columbia to witness hon. Requeña awarding the 1st place winners San Vicente FC, 2nd place winners Silver Creek, 3rd place winners San Pedro Columbia FC and 4th place San Elena FC.

The Oscar Requeña Football Cup started on March 15. For the next 16 weeks, up until July 12th, it would provide over 250 football players the opportunity to put their passion for and skill in football on display. After a few games, the sup-porters identified Belize’s version to Messi and Robben.

90 games were played in total. Referees and game officials were hired, Police officials kept the peace at each game. Each match, played at selected fields in four zones, turned out to be a festive affair as the teams competed for the top prize.

The Cup was truly one a kind. It’s planning was managed by the community, whether it was the Parent Teachers Association of schools, Village Council or the local church. Opportuni-ties were created for small vendors and creative salesmen who benefitted from the events.

“It was beautiful to see the community come out united and to see our young people engaged in a positive initiative,” hon. Requeña told the BELIZE TIMES, “I want to take this opportunity to say a big thank you to all who supported the Oscar Requeña Football Cup to make it a great success.”

PUP Area Representative, Honorable Oscar Requena addressing the fans for the Oscar

Requena’s Cup 2014 finale

Oscar Requena’s Cup 2014 Champions, San Vicente

Silver Creek Team - 2nd Place

Third place went to Columbia FC Santa Elena won the fourth prize

Page 9: Belize Times July 27, 2014

THE BELIZE TIMES27 JUL 2014 9

Brand New Mahoga-ny Heights Basketball

Court Christened!!

Continued from page 7

09

Edmund Castro

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Community activist Joel “Dara” Robinson is giving Reggae music fans a good reason to celebrate life at his special Lucky Dube concert planned for Sunday, August 3rd, 2014 at the Bird’s Isle.

The concert is one of his efforts to raise funds for a feeding programme he runs at his Dunn Street home address.

The concert, now in its 7th year, is a tribute to great South African reggae musician and Rastafarian, Lucky Dube.

During his career, Lucky Dube produced many con-scious songs, speaking to black pride and unity in Af-rica. Dube was murdered in the Johannesburg suburb of Rosettenville on the eve-ning of 18 October 2007.

Dara said Dube is one his personal favorites, and this year, he has titled the concert “Celebrate Life” to send a message to the community that life is too precious to waste with nonsense and crime.

The concert will feature well know DJs such as the Mad Rocka, Selecta Kwame Scott and Cloud 9 Sounds.

There will be a big screen that will feature special Lucky Dube con-certs. The event starts at 4pm and the entrance fee is $10.00

NEWSEntERtaInMEnt

“Celebrate life”

Page 10: Belize Times July 27, 2014

THE BELIZE TIMES 27 JUL2014 10

by kELSEy Hemsley

VEGAS COME UP AGAIN!

1st Annual Spartan Fitness Club

Bodybuilding Classic

Lord’s Bank Sunrise

10 SPORTS THE BELIZE TIMES 20 JUL2014

City Boys Jrs. wins 2014

SMART Mundialito

Edgar Rogers wins

Belize City, July 19, 2014The City Boys Jrs. won the

2014 SMART Mundialito champi-onship, blasting the Ladyville Ris-ing Stars 4-1 in a penalty shootout at the Yabra green in Belize City on Saturday.

The Ladyville Rising Stars held the City Boys Jrs. to a nil zip draw through regulation time and over-time, going to a penalty shootout to decide the winner. City Boys’ Shad-rick Lord, Denzell Carr, Ken Galvez and MVP Akeem Sutherland con-verted their penalties, but only Ken-roy Allen scored for Ladyville.

Defending champs Brown Bombers won 2-0 over the Collet Strikers for 3rd place. Jovaun Ra-mos scored the 1st goal against the Strikers goalie Jayron Salazar in the 1st half, and Bombers’ team captain

Dion Cacho scored a 2nd goal in the 2nd half.

To stimulate the fu-ture development of Be-lizean football, Bombers’ Dion Cacho and Jovann Ramos, and Shemar Waight of Hattieville Unit-ed Youth Football Club will attend the FC Barcelona Football Camp in Miami from July 28 to August 1. SMART is sponsoring the players travel and chaper-one is fully sponsored by Smart.

Smart’s manager Anthony Mahler present-ed the trophies to the champs, 2nd and 3rd place winners, and the in-dividual awards:

Awardees:Best coach: Leaton StClair

– City BoysBest Goalkeeper: Jayron

Salazar – Collet StrikersBest Defense: Shemar

Bowen – Collet StrikersBest Midfield: Denroy

“Bobo” Lopez – City BoysBest Forward: Dion Cacho

– Brown BombersMost Goal: Camryn Loza-

no – Rising Stars (8 goals)MVP: Akeem Sutherland –

City Boys

City Boys’ goalie makes a save

City Boys team

Corozal Town, July 19, 2014The taller, leaner, more

sculpted Placencia fitness buff, Edgar Rogers, took 1st place in the Overall Category to win the 1st annual Spartan Fitness Gym Bodybuilding Classic organized and hosted by Mr. Belize, Rigo Vellos and Spartan Fitness Gym.

Rogers had won the Over 70 Kilos Category. 2nd place in that category went to Marvin de la Rosa of Power Gym of neigh-boring Chetumal, Quintana Roo. 3rd Place was won by Guy Neal

of Neal’s Gym at Roger’s Stadium in Belize City.

In the Up to 70 Kilos Catego-ry, Meffi de la Rosa, also of Power Gym, won 1st place. 2nd place went to David Requena while 3rd Place went to veteran bodybuilder Jaime Santa of Bios Gym FCB in Escarcega, Campeche, Mexico

In the Bikini Category, Belize City’s Ann Lyn Apolonio won 1st place, while fitness queen Gina Lovell got 2nd place and Corozal Town’s Vianie Blades won 3rd place.

Mr Belize Rigo Vellos & some of the compet-itors: Ann Lyn Apolonio, Eduar Burns, Guy

Neal & Gina Lovell

Team Digicel 4G’s Isaiah Willacey

win weekend warriors’ road race

Belize City, July 20, 2014Team Digicel’s 4G Isaiah Willacey of the

“B” division won the Weekend Warriors Cycling Club’s 50-mile circuit race on the George Price Highway to Burrell Boom and back via the Hattieville bypass on Sunday, with Digicell’s Robert Mariano coming 2nd to win the “A” division and Truckers Posse’s Dennis Mckoy winning the “C” division.

A/B Division1st Isaiah Willacey - Team Digicel’s 4G

- 2:24:162nd Robert Mariano - Team Digicel’s 4G3rd James Frampton - Santino’s “Ride

to Glory” 4th Wilbert Jones - Benny’s Megabytes5th Santino “Chief” Castillo - Team San-

tino’s 2nd in “B” Division6th Shelton Graham – invitee7th Kenneth Butler - Belize Water Ser-

vices 8th Mark Gentle - FT Williams/Belize

Bank9th Ernest Olivera - FT Williams/Belize

Bank - 3rd in B div.10th Jack Sutherland - Team Digicel’s 4G C Division1st Dennis Mckoy - Truckers Posse -

2:13:332nd Wayne Arnold - FT Williams/Belize

Bank 3rd Manuel Esquiliano – Truckers Posse

- 2:13:484th Valentine Sosa – Truckers Posse -

2:13:59.

Digicel 4G’s Isaiah Willac-ey wins 1st in B division

James Frampton wins 2nd in A div.

Page 11: Belize Times July 27, 2014

THE BELIZE TIMES27 JUL 2014 11

Godwin Hulse

Customs advances to softball playoffs

Belize fails at U-20 UNCAF

qualifiers

in female softball

11SPORTSTHE BELIZE TIMES20 JUL 2014

Telemedia outs Beacon 12-1

Belize Bank & BdF win in Firms volleyball

El Salvador, July 20, 2014Belize did not qualify to the 2nd round of the Under-20

World Cup Qualifiers, which is at the UNCAF stage, after losing to El Salvador 6-0 and then to Nicaragua 4-0.

Against El Salvador, the first goal against Belize came from a penalty which was called when a hand ball was played in the 18s box. By the end of the first half, El Sal-vador scored another goal. The four other goals were scored by El Salvador in the 2nd half.

Belize’s second game was played against Nicaragua on July 21st. Following the 4-0 defeat, they were elimi-nated while Nicaragua advanced.

The next stage of the qualifiers will be Concacaf to be held next year in Jamaica.

Belize City, July 18, 2014The Belize Telemedia ladies hammered Beacon 12-1 by mer-

cy rule in the 4th inning in the Belize City female softball compe-tition at the Rogers Stadium in on Friday night

Beacon collected 4 hits off Telemedia’s pitcher Kenisha Sutherland, who struck out 4 batters and walked 4, but even with 5 errors by the BTL diamond, only Lydia Ferguson scored for Beacon.

Telemedia got 9 hits off Beacon pitcher Kimani Smith, who also struck out 2 batters and walked 4. The Beacon diamond also made 14 errors, allowing Earlene Belisle, Babsy Cadle, Suther-land, Christine Jacobs and Martha Rhys to score 2 runs each while Lydia Cacho and Sherlene Humphreys scored a run apiece.

Belize City, July 19, 2014Customs/Central Bank bombed Telemedia

24-11 by mercy rule in their first win to qualify as the No. 4 seed entering the Belize City interoffice softball playoffs at the Rogers Stadium over the weekend.

They were led by Gilbert Gordon and Marlon Garnett, who scored 5 runs each, while Sasha Brown scored 3 runs as Customs hitters collected 16 hits off Telemedia’s pitchers Bernard Pitts and Shanti Roches. Keemar King, Kareem Michael and Kendra Dyer scored 2 runs apiece and Basil Mat-thews, Elbert Neal, Kay Macfadzean and Shannon Gordon scored a run apiece

Telemedia actually led 8-5 in the bottom of the 1st inning when Muschae Macdonald scored 2 runs while Bernard Pitts, Nelson Tillett, Misty Wil-liams, Andrew Kelly, Melissa Williams and Shanti Roches scored a run apiece. Only Lupito Acosta and Bernard Pitts scored again in the 5th inning.

On Saturday, Customs also won 7-4 over Be-lize Water Services/Ministry of Education nightcap.

The BEL Powersockets and the Belize Bank Bulldogs also qualified as the No. 2 and No. 3 seeds respectively. Both picked up easy 7-0 wins by default on Saturday. The National Sports Council is the top seed.

Customs’ Efrain Phillips pitches

Dragons’ Alex Evans hits

BWS, Atlantic Bank, Belize Bank Bulldogs & Digicel 4G post

wins in Interoffice Basketball

Alejandro Baptist scored 14pts

Page 12: Belize Times July 27, 2014

THE BELIZE TIMES 27 JUL2014 12

Page 13: Belize Times July 27, 2014

THE BELIZE TIMES27 JUL 2014 13

Bes & Holy redeemer boys lead basketball competition

Awards 30 scholarships

ARIEL ROSAdO MEMORIAL FOUNdATION

Belize City, July 15, 2014The life of avid cyclist

and attorney-in-the-making Ariel Rosado, whose sud-den and untimely passing saddened the country in May 2011, has been im-mortalized in acts of kind-ness and a commitment to uplift human kind.

Parents Dr. Alvaro and Dr. Dorla Rosado say that Ariel believed in the val-ue of education and was actually pursuing higher education at the time of his death. Following his passing, Mr. and Mrs. Ro-sado called on Ariel’s close friends and supporters to give life to the Ariel Rosado Memorial Foundation, an initiative whose objective was to provide opportuni-ties for access education for needy Belizean children and youth.

Today, just two and a half years since its initia-tion, the Foundation dis-tributed 30 scholarships and acknowledged that his was a huge milestone.

Foundation officials handed out scholarships for 10 primary school, 17 high school and three tertiary level students. 15 of them are new scholar-ships, whose recipients were Vidal Adolphus (Ray Auxillou Memorial) at-tending St. Ignatius High School, Justin Williams (Belize Bank Internation-al Scholarship) attend-ing Corozal Community

College, Juanita Logan (Clive Alexander Tucker Memorial) at-tending Nazarene High School, Dairon Peralta (Cynthia and Gary Magnus Scholarship) at-tending Belmopan Comprehen-sive, Ashanti Wade (FULTEC Systems Ltd. Scholarship) at-tending E.P. Yorke High School, Heidy Canales (INFOTEL Scholarship) attending Pallotti High School, Kenton Arzu (Joan and Said Musa Scholarship) attending Wesley College, Fran Malic (Joyce & Arthur Barrow Memorial) also attending Wes-ley College, Sabrina Jackson (Louis and Doreen Humphreys Scholarship) attending St. Catherine’s Academy, Tayesha Neal (Ralph Fonseca Jr. Memo-rial) attending Wesley College, Diana Chavarria (Rosaura and

ing Nazarene High School, Keldra Woodeye (SMART Scholarship) also attending Nazarene High School, Riana Stein (UNICOMER/COURTS Scholarship) attending Wesley Col-lege and Sabrina Ulloa (Wet Lizard Scholarship) attending Nazarene High School.

The Foundation is supported by a Board of Directors headed by Dr. Alvaro Rosado. As part of their future plans, Dr. Dorla Rosado ex-plained that they plan to establish a resource center that will provide computers and other tools to their students to conduct research to aid their studies.

The Foundation reported news very worthy of reporting. All their scholarship recipients have been excelling in their studies. In many cases, their students have ranked among the top five in their classes. Also, four scholarship recipients have completed their studies. They are Kimberly Searle who graduated with Bachelor’s Degree in Account-ing from Galen University, Kennisha Nicholas graduating from Wesley College, Symeon Kelly graduating from St. John’s College, and Kene-sha Gabourel from Gwen Lizarraga High School.

Erdulfo Nunez Scholarship) attending E.P. Yorke High School, Latrell Gabourel (Sharon and Chester Walker Scholarship) attend-

Ariel Rosado’s parents, Dr. Dorla & Alvaro Rosado (far left & far right) with scholar-

ship recipients

Page 14: Belize Times July 27, 2014

THE BELIZE TIMES 27 JUL2014 14

Continued from page 1

WESTERN BALLAz

SABOTAGE!!!have removed Penner from office as the Area Representatives for Cayo North East.

This did not break the resolve of citizens’ efforts to see Penner brought to justice and so in February, of this year, following the sabotaged recall referendum, the citizen group, Citizen Organized for Liberty through Action (COLA), felt compelled to take to the Courts, when it was clear the Barrow government would do nothing.

COLA public called for assistance of attorneys to help it file its suit. At-torneys Edwin Flowers, Kareem Musa and Anthony Sylvestre on the instruc-tions of the Leader of Opposition, the Hon. Francis Fonseca answered the call and their efforts were rewarded when the Chief Justice of Belize ordered the Barrow Government to make sure a criminal investigation be undertaken in relation to Penner’s role in the Kim Won Hong Belizean passport scandal.

Responding to further public out-cry and as the six month limitation pe-riod for the arrest and laying of charges for criminal wrongdoing approached, COLA and its attorney Kareem Musa made history by launching a private prosecution in which two criminal charges were filed against Penner.

Despite every effort to dodge the court process and justice, this histor-ic and unprecedented move, resulted in Penner having to appear in the Bel-mopan Magistrate Court to answer to two criminal charges of “vouching the fitness of an applicant” and “making a statement in a material particular”, both specifically in relation to a passport and nationality documents procured on behalf of South Korean criminal Won-Hong Kim. And this is in spite of all efforts of the Barrow Government, in-cluding the police, to railroad the court process and seeing Penner face jus-tice.

Without any help from the Director of Public Prosecutions and the Com-missioner of Police, the court was un-able to have statements by witnesses available to them. As a result, Penner got away, this time.

While the Attorney General may characterise this case as “an exercise in futility”, what this case has done is to show that a line has been drawn. On the one side, there is the Attorney General, the Commissioner of Police, Auditor General, Ombudsman, Direc-tor of Public Prosecution and last but not least, the Prime Minister. And on the other side, stands the people of Belize.

Let it be known, the disgraced Penner is certainly not off the hook as he will face indictable charges in the Supreme Court.

If there is one truth the Prime Min-ister has uttered during his tenure it is that he “is no George Price”. Barrow’s insatiable greed and lust for power are more important than our patrimony. And because of this, Thursday the 24th July, 2014 was yet another dark day for Belize under Barrow and the UDP. And like Penner, Barrow and the UDP must face the justice of the people. Dean Barrow is truly the anti-Price.

mother of 2 accused of common-law husband’s murderSan Pedro Town, Ambergris Caye, July 23, 2014

37 year old Anabel Bacelis Kumul, a mother of two chil-dren, has been detained by the Police in San Pedro as the main suspect in the vicious stabbing murder of her common-law hus-band, 28 year old Felix Alamilla.

Kumul, who is of a Mexican nationality, was arrested around 7:00am on Wednesday morning outside the Tropic Air office on

the island. Her common-law hus-band died about half an hour earli-er at the San Carlos Medical Cen-ter from multiple stab wounds he had sustained.

Unconfirmed reports are that on Wednesday Alamilla was sleeping at a house he takes care of in the Boca Ciaga Area, when around 5:30 that morning Kumul arrived and attacked him with a knife.

Alamilla sustained stab

wounds to his thigh, shoulder and one of his eyes. He was rushed to the medical center on a golf cart by his step fa-ther but he did not survive.

A knife with suspected blood stains on the blade has been retrieved by the Police.

Reports are that the at-tack was caused by rage, af-ter Kumul learnt that Alamilla was seeing another woman. He had not been home for two days.

Kumul and two others, including her sister who was with her at the airstrip, are detained pending charges.

Page 15: Belize Times July 27, 2014

THE BELIZE TIMES27 JUL 2014 15

Continued on page 18

“My dad wasn’t kidnapped to extort money out of our family, he was killed. It was a contract or a hit to kill him,” –

Ramon Cervantes Jr.

Continued from page 3

Cervantes family unsatisfied with Police investigation

PUTTING VALUE BACK INTO“YOUR WORD”

VISIT OUR OFFICE TO CHECK IF ANY BUSINESS HAS COMPLAINED ON YOU

CREDIT MASTER SYSTEMS#11 DOUGLAS JONES STREET

BELIZE CITYTEL: 223-5845/223-2283

Email: [email protected]

Visit our website: www.cmssearch.bz

NOTICENotice is hereby given that the company have been dissolved and struck off the International Business Companies Registry with effect from the dates indicated:

20th day of June, 2014 -- BEST ACTIVE CO., LTD.

20th day of June, 2014 -- FOREVER BEST LIMITED

16th day of July, 2014 -- Chromatic Technology International Co., Ltd.

16th day of July, 2014 -- Watery Peace Pte. Ltd.

Power Point Trust (Belize) Limited

Registered Agent

PUP Yaad Meeting in Port Loyola

that he will lead a Government that is focused on working for the people and country and not to fill the pockets of Ministers and political cronies as is taking place under the UDP Govern-ment.

This was the first in a series of yard meetings that will be held across Belize City to educate the Belizean people about the cause of their suffering and the plans of the People’s United Party to make life better for all Belizeans.

Dr. Francis Smith addressing those in attendance

Party Leader Francis Fonseca listening to residents’ concerns

For SaleBy Order of the

Scotiabank (Belize) Ltd., a company duly registered under the Companies Act, Chapter 250 of the Laws of Belize, Revised Edition, 2000, and having its registered office at Cor. Albert and Bishop Streets, Belize City, Belize, hereby gives notice of its intention to exercise its power of sale as Mortgag-ee under a Deed of Mortgage made the 14th day of March, 2008 between EMOGENE yOUNG RAMCLAM of Lord’s Bank Village, Ladyville, Belize District, Belize of the one part, and Scotiabank (Belize) Ltd., of the other part, and recorded in Deeds Book Vol. 9 of 2008 at Folios 1359 – 1388, the said Scotiabank (Belize) Ltd. will at the expiration of two months from the date of the first publication of this notice sell the property described in the schedule hereto.

All offers to purchase the said property must be made in writing and full particulars and conditions of sale may be obtained from the said Scotiabank (Belize) Ltd.

SCHEDULEALL THAT LEASEHOLD INTEREST IN ALL THAT piece or parcel of land being Lot No. 37 situate in the vicinity of Lord’s Bank Village, Belize District and bounded as follows:

On the North for 27.423 Metres by 40 feet street;On the Northeast for 4.310 Metres by a Truncation;On the South for 30.475 Metres by Lot No. 38;On the East for 21.333 Metres by a 50 feet street; On the West for 24.380 Metres by Lot No. 36, con-

taining 883.33Square Yards of land as shown on Entry No. 6040, Register No. 23 at the office of the Commissioner of Lands and Sur-veys TOGETHER with all buildings and erections standing and being thereon.

DATED this 24th day of July, 2014.MUSA & BALDERAMOS LLP

91 North Front StreetBelize City

Attorneys-at-Law forScotiabank (Belize) Ltd.

Ramon Cervantes Sr.

Belize City, July 20, 2014The family of murder victim Ra-

mon Cervantes Sr. has accused the Orange Walk Police Department of not doing enough in the homicide investi-gation.

Cervantes Sr., a well-known busi-nessman, former politician, and cane farmer, was kidnapped on Tuesday, July 1st during his regular work visits of his cane field in the outskirts of San Roman Village. Four days later, he was found dead, buried in a shallow grave which had been dug in an abandoned farm along the Honey Camp area of Or-ange Walk District. The Police were led to the site by three men who allegedly took part in the brazen scheme.

The Cervantes family believes the abduction and vicious murder are part of a greater criminal ring operating in Orange Walk. This ring could involve Police Officers and it has triggered se-rious concern.

Cervantes Sr. had been beaten to death. His eyes were covered with duct tape and his hands were hand-cuffed. Reports are the handcuffs used in the crime were traced to the Police Department. They were reportedly sold to the men who were involved in the kidnapping and homicide by two Police officers.

Those two Police Officers were identified and allegedly detained and questioned but released. Now, it ap-pears that the officers have disap-peared from town and possibly left the country, according to Ramon Cervant-es Jr.

“We have noted slight little changes during the last few days and we are very disappointed in the fact that the policeman whose handcuffs were used to handcuff my dad was identified. I don’t know if he was arrested but if he was ar-rested he was released. In other words nothing was done to that policeman and we understand from rumours that in fact he has left the country and that disturbs us great-ly,” said Cervantes Jr.

The main suspect believed to have been the mastermind of the murder has been identified as 37 year old Man-uel “El Pelon” Castillo. Castillo has had a colourful history with law enforce-ment officials. He was first deport-ed from North Carolina, USA in 2004 for drug trafficking and possession of

Page 16: Belize Times July 27, 2014

THE BELIZE TIMES 27 JUL2014 16

The Enemies of Industrial Growth Part I

Home Economics

By Richard harrisonBelize’s colonial history left

the country inheriting laws, pol-icies and practices....and cul-ture...of harvesting raw materi-als and sending them abroad...with preference for importing and consuming finished prod-ucts. Production and value-add-ing is not a part of our genetic make-up or conditioning. Amend-ments to our laws, policies and practices since Independence has only been done in response to narrow special interest lobby, on a political discretionary leash not based on a NATIONAL DE-VELOPMENT PLAN, which has exacerbated imbalances in devel-opment and wealth creation and distribution...therefore, while the economy has grown, wealth continues to pile up only in the hands of those favored special interests. The grass is growing, but the horse is starving....for most. A cursory view suggests 20% increasing in wealth....40% stagnant and looking on....40% in rapid decline.

Belize is a relatively infant na-tion and many of the choices that it makes reflect this infancy (as opposed to maturity) and these choices have determined the scale and scope of its develop-ment thus far. Allow me to point out a few of these choices, espe-cially those that are the principal enemies of industrial growth.

1. IDEALISM vs PRAGMA-TISM

Very few Belizeans have ex-tensive exposure in the world…much less in the developed world. Their world-view is thus formed mostly from what they read in local newspapers opin-ionated editorials and other limit-ed published material available in Belize, seen on pirated television feeds or hearf from those who share their travel experiences. A small percentage now have some travel exposure in our un-der-developed region and access to internet but mostly use it to gain exposure to music, enter-tainment and social media…and as feed for a growing skeptical and cynical ghetto gangsta cul-ture.

The elder “intelligencia” of Belice has been mostly influ-enced by the period of ideolog-ical “debates” that took place during the pre- and post-Inde-pendence period, during which two or three articulate leaders actively engaged the people on a grass-roots level, convincing them that the ideal of socialism was better than capitalism and

pushed “rights” without corre-sponding “responsibility”. The new “intelligencia” are the very chil-dren and/or proteges of the elder ones…since they were the ones that got the scholarships and grew up listening to and adopting their arguments and points of view. Be-lizeans, in general, are still stuck in this idealist ideological frame…even though socialism fell with the walls of Berlin.

To give an example….the entire foreign affairs of Belize has been controlled through all these years by seeds of the same tree. It shows in the company we keep close, the relationships that we cherish and seek to develop and those that we choose to stay far from, and only use if and when we can. It has been able to use the Guatemalan claim as the unifying factor to forge and justify the ONLY “bi-partisan” institution in Belice…with the same “bipartisan” people controlling it (whether direct-ly or remotely) since Independence.

Most public institutions of Be-lize that drive policy are dominated by seeds of this era....but they talk like Che, rule like Pinochet and live like Batista.

Belize needs to grow up….and realize that the truth is some-where in between…and take on a more pragmatic ideology of the mixed economy….believe in it….and act accordingly. It needs to hate entrepreneurship, investments and honest profit-making-initiative less….reward gainful employment, competitiveness and productivity more…and create a better enabling environment for advancement more through merit, ability and integrity….than on favors and “accommodation agreements”. It needs to advance its culture from a “colonial” one that views foreign and imported as supe-rior…that divides us by envy, jealou-sy and hate....to an “independent” one that values and supports more that which is Belizean, so that we can rapidly grow our production in quality and quantity....that unites us through greater cooperation, collab-oration, cohesion and coordination.

2. CONSERVATION VS SUS-TAINABLE DEVELOPMENT

The tree which bore the seeds of socialism mentioned above, also harbored its friends and allies….extremist tree-huggers from devel-oped countries who were gong-ho about saving the planet from cap-italist pigs. They came with their extremist conservationist ideas…in-filtrated our institutions and formed new ones where they were facilitat-ed...which led to the current situa-tion where half of the country, and most of our natural resources are un-der “protected areas” and “co-man-

aged” and controlled mostly by foreign interests through their lo-cal “representatives”.

BUT…the road to hell is paved with good intentions….and the abundance of natural resources of Belize have been kept sheltered from the “people of Belize”…not only from its development, but also from its knowledge. Hence, as the population has grown, so also has unemployment and pov-erty rates…even while “illegal im-migrants” risk pirating the natural resources of the pirates of Be-lize…and mostly get away with it.

This holding of our natural re-sources under “lock and key” for some imagined “future genera-tion” has not allowed for devel-opment that creates opportuni-ties for gainful employment and wealth creation, therefore, our people continue to flee at earliest opportunity. They are replaced by newcomers seeking to improve their lot. Hence, “the people of Belize” is a continuously changing demographic….far different from the time of Independence and will be completely different 10-20 years from now. It is a transient population….only here for a time to enjoy the socialist bounty of rel-atively free education, health, land and conservation grant-money that we have created since Inde-

pendence, mostly living outside the sphere of taxation and then moving on to greener pastures as quickly as possible.

Belize needs to swing its pen-dulum away from extremist con-servatism, towards a more sus-tainable-development focus….so that the natural resources be developed in sustainable ways to improve the lot of ALL the “peo-ple of Belize”…and so that more people choose to stay here vol-untarily to develop and enjoy the otherwise beautiful and bountiful country. While industries can and should be developed by import-ing raw materials and value add-ing them, the most of our wealth can come from sustainably devel-oping our natural resources. The laws, policies and practices of the country need to be modified in or-der to swing this pendulum. It will not happen on its own.

Richard Harrison is a local businessman and investor in the manufacturing and service industries. Mr. Harrison holds a Masters in Business Admin-istration degree from Lancast-er University, United Kingdom. Send comments to [email protected]

Page 17: Belize Times July 27, 2014

THE BELIZE TIMES27 JUL 2014 17

Illegal Guatemalans caught panning for gold inside the Chiquibul forest

Reid

It not now…when?

Many believe that the Prime Minister will call elec-tions early but I am not so convinced. he loves power too much and knows that no way in hell, he

will win any election now. he barely scrape-dog the last one and were it not for the thousands and thousands of improperly pro-cessed immigrants, he would not have won by 60 votes but would have lost by 6,000.

By G. Michael ReidNow I think I know what you

tried to say to meAnd how you suffered for

your sanityAnd how you tried to set

them freeThey would not listen, they’re

not listening stillPerhaps they never will ~ from the song Vincent by

Don McleanIt is becoming painfully and

increasingly obvious that besides throwing concrete over every grassy knoll, this current UDP administration has absolutely no clue as to how to govern this na-tion. Things are out of control in every aspect; be it judicial, eco-nomical, educational or moral. New laws are being written, old ones are being amended but yet, the guilty walk and only the innocent are going to jail. We are closing down schools and firing teachers but more children are out of school than ever before. Politicians are growing rich and traveling the world in style while the number of people below the poverty line grows exponentially. Oil companies and big business get lavish accommodation agree-ments but the unemployment fig-ures continue to rise. It seems we have busted loose from our every social and philosophical mooring. Captain, this ship is adrift and the seas are getting rough!

Unfortunately, this adminis-tration has succeeded in creating an atmosphere of intimidation and fear that has silenced many of the powerful voices in our so-ciety. Those not docile and sub-missive have been bought with prestige, profit or even cake; ‘tis a sad state of affairs indeed.

It seems that no one is bold

enough to criticize this government without also criticizing the previ-ous government. We lump them together and try to chew but it is a bite too big! Back in 2004/2005 when the people’s emotions were aroused by incessant propaganda, no one pulled the UDP into the fray. This despite the fact that the years 1993-1998 were in fact, dubbed the worse five years ever! The eco-nomic train had derailed and things were so bad that the people took to the streets in droves to protest against that administration’s un-fair policies. (Who can forget that

sea of blue that marched to Yabra green?). There was no wanton de-struction like occurred in Belmo-pan in 2005 but people made their feelings known. Today, things are even worse! Yet, none is willing it seems, or even able to say that you know what, the UDP is corrupt and incompetent “all on their own”. It al-ways has to be, “the two of them are the same and two of them are to blame”. Let us be fair and let us be fearless.

In the past few years, the neo-acronym PUDP has been coined and used to suggest that both parties are the same; nothing could be further from the truth. I believe that the UDP themselves have coined this phrase and put it out there in an attempt to murky the waters.

The People’s United Party has never been as hungry for power as this United Democratic Party has proven to be. Dean Barrow was will-ing to spend “millions and millions” in Cayo to protect Penner’s seat in the House and made no secret as to his reason why. Although Castro was caught red-handedly dipping into the Airport Authority’s funds, Mr. Barrow rose in the House to defend his actions. Corruption after corruption has plagued this admin-istration and each time, instead of pulling out his “double-edged ma-

chete”, the Prime Minister has pulled out his lawyer’s cloak. The UDP has proven over and over again that they will go to any lengths to hang onto power.

The question is asked, why then, why with all that is going on, the PUP’s have not taken to the streets and are not encouraging public un-rest. The answer is simple. The PUP does not feel the need to break up and destroy our country, even if it means landing them in power. The PUP has been busy instead, con-sulting and formulating plans for the revival of their social agenda programs and in figuring ways to grow the economy. The next PUP government will not go in green and stumbling in the dark like the UDP did, they will be prepared to gov-ern and govern well. Mistakes of the past will serve as lessons for the future and the focus will be on service not on tyrannical rule. Belizeans deserve this and it has

been a long time coming!Many believe that the Prime

Minister will call elections early but I am not so convinced. He loves power too much and knows that no way in hell, he will win any elec-tion now. He barely scrape-dog the last one and were it not for the thousands and thousands of im-properly processed immigrants, he would not have won by 60 votes but would have lost by 6,000. I sin-cerely hope that Belizeans will not just sit idly by and allow that same unscrupulous exercise to repeat

itself. This might get them a few votes but it leads to some major problems in the long run. This unwise practice results in widespread illegal squatting and an unsustainable burden on our social services. Our unemployment figures are al-ready sky high and these immi-grants come in willing to grab up the few existing jobs and work for menial wages. Serious problems are created for the economy, our healthcare sys-tem and even national security. This wholesale nationalizing of immigrants without the prop-er vetting exposes us to some very dangerous conditions. Most come from neighboring Guatemala, a country that re-mains a perpetual threat to our sovereignty. They are required to submit a police record, not from their country but from ours. Of course they don’t have

a local record; many only arrive the day that they are naturalized. Even the required health certifi-cation is circumvented and leads to the intro-duction of potentially serious health problems that creates an addition-al burden on our already overwhelmed hospitals and health centers. We must demand a mora-

torium of at least a month or two before any election. This requires no new legislation; it is already in the Constitution.

Phillip Goldson once said that, “The time to save your country is before you lose it.” How ironic that the very par-ty he supported and helped to start would be the one that puts our country at the worst risk. I don’t know Phillip, seems they didn’t listen then and are not listening still; perhaps they never will!

Page 18: Belize Times July 27, 2014

THE BELIZE TIMES 27 JUL2014 18

Continued from page 1Continued from page 15

KHmH in Crisis!!!

Cansino that the financial situation is so terrible that the hospital has been denied supplies by certain vendors who have been demanding pay-ments owed to them.

Longsworth warned, “…this matter is now at the point of crisis” and added that there is a possibility that the hospital “will not be able to meet next month’s payroll”. Earlier this month, when Cansino gave media interviews regarding the almost 600 members of staff and the likeli-hood that they won’t benefit from the Govern-ment’s salary increase, she seemed to overlook the fact that the hospital’s financial crisis may deny the staff’s regular pay.

So, how did it come to this point where the hospital can’t meet its bills and puts at risk its entire operational capacity? In the letter, Long-sworth laid the blame on the misguided Minister of Health Pablo Marin and unpopular CEO Peter Allen.

Longsworth pointed out that the Ministry of Health’s present financial support via its annual subvention to the KHMH is inadequate. He said that he had requested an additional $2.4 million in order for the hospital to meet its expenses that include a larger wage bill due to salary in-creases for its medical staff and also an increase in the amount paid as overtime payments in the nursing services.

His requests have been ignored and disre-garded, and at times even mocked.

“It is my opinion that we have not ac-quired the financial support from Ministry from subvention, nor have we gotten sup-port for our budget submissions over the last several years, as reflected in a zero per-cent increase in the budgetary allocation to the hospital for this fiscal year,” revealed Longsworth in his letter.

Why would the Ministry of Health discount the hospital’s urgent need for financial assis-tance? According to Longsworth, in one in-stance his request was viewed as “not being worth anything” by the Ministry’s CEO, Peter Allen.

Lately, Allen has become a very unpopular figure. Wherever there has been smoke and fire in the Ministry of Health, you will find Peter Allen and his minion electrician Minister hiding behind him. These two have proven to be a di-saster to the country’s health system.

According to KHMH CEO Longsworth, Al-len stood in the way of the hospital’s appeal for support.

Longsworth’s letter may have not been well received by the Ministry’s CEO, who may have more to do with the KHMH Board’s decision not to renew Longsworth’s contract for a 3rd tenure than the public has been told.

Board Chairlady, Cansino, did not allude to any friction between Longsworth and members of the Board, but from the tone of the leaked letter it is clear that there were serious prob-lems.

The reasoning for the hospital’s decision to part ways with Longsworth, according to Can-sino, was that “I think it’s time for us now as a Board to look at the available options that we have out there in the general population and that’s the reason for opening it up for applications”.

There is also evidence that the Board was disintegrating for some time. Two Board Di-rectors Milagro Garel and Maude Sylvester resigned suddenly in May of this year. Then in July, the embattled Director of Finance Carlos Perrera left under a cloud of scandal for ques-tionable purchases done by his office.

Cervantes family unsatisfied with Police investigation

weapon with intend to kill. In 2007 he made his way back to the United States where he was detained for illegal entry and spent thirty six months in prison after which he was de-ported to Belize.

Last week, Interpol re-leased a wanted notice for Castillo. The BELIZE TIMES has learnt from sources that Castillo was also reportedly detained for questioning by the Police but set free. He is also believed to have fled the country.

In fear that the murder

case will simply go unsolved the family has appealed to the Police Department to treat the investigations with some level of importance.

“We don’t have a motive yet and that is why I think the police should carry on this investigation. That is why we are disturbed that everybody else that had been detained was released. Some of them must know and must be able to lead them to who is the owner of the vehicle and who drove the vehi-cles and to much more information. Like I said, this doesn’t stop here, we want to know the motive, we want to know the main conspirator; who finance this operation; who is at the head of this operation. That’s what we

want to know because it’s a fact that my dad wasn’t kidnapped to extort mon-ey out of our family, he was killed. It was a contract or a hit to kill him. It’s not just

what we feel, but the facts establish that,” he said.

The three persons detained and charged for the murder are Guatema-lan National 22 year old Mateo Daniel Gonzalez, 28 year old Belizean Mateo Pott Jr., and 19 year old Belizean Angel Cardenas, all residents of Trial Farm Village. The men were remanded to prison until August 13th.

They were also charged for the murder of Sonia Abac, whose decom-posed body was found in a well near the grave where Cervantes Sr.’s life-less body was discovered. Abac had gone missing in April of this year. Her disappearance and murder remains a mystery.

Page 19: Belize Times July 27, 2014

THE BELIZE TIMES27 JUL 2014 19

Would You Accept A Beer From Jesus?

Like the aged veterans who always came together to play dominos outside the village Chinese store, believers enjoy coming together to share stories, sing songs, and blast out resounding ‘amens’ and ‘hallelujahs’ that shake the rafters of the ceiling. They call this meeting ‘church’. Every Sunday (and Monday prayer meetings and Tuesday Bible studies), Chris-tians fill chairs or pews and sit for a few minutes or hours in a building. They get ‘recharged’ for the coming week and are satisfied with the way things are. So satisfied, that I think that if Jesus Himself visited some of our churches and shook things up, ‘Christians’ would crucify Him.

I attended a funeral a few weeks ago. Afterwards, the family had light refreshments set up on the lawn of the church for the attendants of the ceremony. A few of the mourners took out their beers and cigarettes and proceeded to light up, right outside of the church doors. A concerned church brother grew significantly offended at the actions of those people and was not quiet about what he viewed as a disgrace to the sacred ground of the church. Soon a group of concerned church sisters and brethren huddled together inside the sanctuary, lambasting the wickedness and ungod-liness of those outside. In their eyes, they were right to feel affronted.

Thank God the only eyes we need to worry about are His. See, the ‘Christians’ remained inside the church, judg-ing those outside and making smart comments about their behavior. Now, I’m not saying God’s house shouldn’t be kept holy, but this is the problem with most churches in the world. The Body of Christ is ineffective because the people of God hide inside four walls and peer out at the lost souls on the lawn. Instead of stepping out and offering an alternative that will lead to a path of life, they are quite satisfied to feel strong, powerful and vindicated inside four useless, lifeless blocks of concrete.

Do you know where Jesus would have been? He would have been right out there amidst the smoking, drinking, cussing persons. He would have been reaching out to them. Not acting high and holy and mighty, but being relatable and relevant and friendly. And you know what? If the beer had run out, I believe Jesus would even have gotten them some more. The people would have stood in amazement as Jesus commanded the ushers to fill the kegs with pipe water, and watched as the best brewed beer poured out. If you don’t believe me, check out John 2. I dare you.

Christ was unconventional only because He was so real. Ironically, the only Perfect Man was more humble than some modern church members who act as though they have never sinned in their entire lifetime! If believers want to continue behaving as though Christ’s Body is a cult and only the select are ‘worthy’ enough to become a part, then those who are thirsty for hope will never receive it and countless lives will be lost because of pride and arrogance. The good news is that Jesus isn’t hiding inside the church building and it is our job to follow His example.

Until next week,God bless.

TENDER NOTICEtEnDER FoR tHE GEnERaL sECURIty anD sURVEILLanCE oF tHE sUPREME CoURt BUILDInG, tHE oLD tREasURy BUILDInG, tHE CoURt oF aPPEaL anD tHE sUPREME CoURt LaW LIBRaRy BUILDInG, tHE BELIZE FaMILy CoURt, tHE VItaL statIstICs UnIt BUILDInG anD tHE CHIEF JUstICE’s REsIDEnCE.

tenders are invited for the general security and surveillance of the supreme Court Building, the old treasury Building, the Court of appeal and the supreme Court Law Library Building, the Belize Family Court, the Vital statistics Unit Building and the Chief Justice’s Residence.

1. the tender shall be for a period of two (2) years ( sept 1 2014 to aug 31 2016)2. the successful tender will be expected to provide the following security and surveillance

to the following locations:a. Provide 24 hours security to the supreme Court Building – 3 guards for 7 day

per weekb. Provide 24 hours security to the old treasury Building – 3 guards for 7 day

per weekc. Provide 24 hours security to the Court of appeal and the supreme Court Law

Library Building – 1 guard for 7 day per weekd. Provide security to the Belize City Family Court from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. on

Monday to thursday and from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. on Fridays – 2 guardse. Provide 24 hours security service to the Vital statistics Unit Building – 1 guard

for 7 days per weekf. Provide 24 hours security service to the Chief Justice’s Residence – 1 guard

for 7 days per weekthe cost incurred to visit the facilities to be guarded and the preparation of the bids is the sole responsibility of the tenderer.

the lowest or any tender may not necessarily be accepted.

tenders are to be submitted in sealed envelopes marked “tEnDER FoR tHE GEnERaL sECURIty anD sURVEILLanCE oF tHE sUPREME CoURt BUILDInG, tHE oLD tREa-sURy BUILDInG, tHE CoURt oF aPPEaL anD tHE sUPREME CoURt LaW LIBRaRy BUILDInG, tHE BELIZE FaMILy CoURt, tHE VItaL statIstICs UnIt BUILDInG anD tHE CHIEF JUstICE’s REsIDEnCE” no later than aug 15, 2014.Envelopes to be delivered to: Registrar General General Registry Department treasury Lane Belize City, Belize

the General Registry Departmentthe attorney General’s Ministry

Handelson Ltd. # 66,008(“the Company”)

Pursuant to Section 102(8) of the International Business Companies Act, Chapter 270 of the Laws of Belize, Re-vised Edition 2000, notice is hereby given that Handel-son Ltd. has been dissolved as at 23rd July, 2014 and has been struck off the Register of International Business Companies.

Cititrust International LimitedRegistered Agent

Standberg Ltd. # 69,753(“the Company”)

Pursuant to Section 102(8) of the International Business Companies Act, Chapter 270 of the Laws of Belize, Re-vised Edition 2000, notice is hereby given that Stand-berg Ltd. has been dissolved as at 23rd July, 2014 and has been struck off the Register of International Business Companies.

Cititrust International LimitedRegistered Agent

Page 20: Belize Times July 27, 2014

THE BELIZE TIMES 27 JUL2014 20

Happy Holidays!

By Katie N. Usher“I work, I have a regular job, I’ve

had it for 18 years. I paint at night and on the weekends, when I have free time,” he said calmly

“And you farm?”“Yes!” He responded, completely

dodging my attempt to make it all sound daunting.

“How do you find time for all that? Balance…your work, farming, husband-ry and still make art?”

I asked genuinely befuddled.“Well you just find a way,” he stated

as coolly as could be. Freddy Bencomo exudes cool. His

approach to his work is a scheduled and patient one.

He recounts that he grew up farming with his parents in Corozal, in Cristo Rey

Freddy

Bencomo

Debuts

at the

Factory

village. There, he went to school and

began making art. “All my books were covered

with drawings, and sketches, and doodles.”

Bencomo would draw all the time and everywhere.

After having his brain molded at school, he would go home and cultivate the land with his parents.

Freddy has since relocated to Belize City, where he works and lives with his wife and family. On the weekends, he visits the farm to prepare the field, for the cattle that will eventually graze there. They are also developing a greenhouse.

“I paint because I have to. It is my passion. I just have to. Sometimes I have so many paintings, I just give them away. I just keep painting.”

I must say, I marvel at purists like Freddy Bencomo who make art, not in pursuit of fame or mon-

ey, but just to feed that hunger that the need to create builds in a soul and then become hungry again. So really creation and processing, thinking and making never cease.

“I never exhibited be-cause I lack confidence, but luckily, I have a lot of support. Family and friends give me encouragement.

It is because of them, that I am exhibiting now.”

His style is reflective of what he says “is needed to make a masterpiece, more than a day, it needs time and...”

“Patience,” added his wife.“Yes, patience,” he smiled

and said.Freddy admits to dedicating

hours and even days to a single piece. “Just to get it right, all the details.”

And his pieces do show this, interest with small details and a finish, polished, evidence of careful, intentioned brush-

strokes. “I think I got the art from

my mom, but the interest in details, that’s from my dad.”

Recently, on vacation in Mexico, he saw and loved the ‘pushed-tin’ work. A thin piece of metal, with the image pushed out.

He loved the technique, practiced it until he mastered it and will display one in this exhibit.

He has managed to carve out a quiet place, amid the noise, and distraction-filled City. And there he works with the “pa-tience needed by all artists to create” every day, at all tasks.

I look at the Pegasus he’s painted, blindingly white, on a background which has all the colours of a twilight sky.

Maybe it helps him achieve balance amid chaos.

The show launches at 7 p.m. on Friday July 25 and will be on display for the duration of July.

Page 21: Belize Times July 27, 2014

THE BELIZE TIMES27 JUL 2014 2121REGIONAL &

INTERNATIONAL NEWSTHE BELIZE TIMES27 JUL 2014

Microsoft to cut 18,000 jobs worldwide

US widow awarded $23.6bn tobacco payout

US firm to lay off thousands of staff, in-cluding nearly half of Nokia employees

who joined in April after acquisition

Microsoft has announced the biggest layoffs in its 39-year history, outlining plans to cut 18,000 jobs worldwive in a move that marks the chief

executive’s sharpest pivot yet away from his predecessor’s drive for the company to make its own devices.

Although some job losses had been expected ever since Microsoft acquired Nokia’s mobile-device unit, the number, which amounts to 14 percent of the Micro-soft workforce, is about twice the total ana-lysts had estimated.

The cuts announced on Thursday will include about 12,500 jobs associated with the Nokia unit - nearly half of the 28,000 em-ployees Microsoft brought on board in April through the acquisition, the AP news agen-cy reported.

When the cuts are complete, the com-pany will still have about 10,000 more em-ployees than before the Nokia acquisition, with an overall headcount of 109,000.

In a public email to employees, chief ex-ecutive Satya Nadella, who was appointed in February, said the changes were needed for the company to “become more agile and move faster”.

The move also pushes Nokia to focus solely on the Windows Phone operating sys-tem.

A Florida jury has awarded the widow of a chain-smoker who died of lung cancer

punitive damages of more than $23bn in her case against the RJ Reynolds Tobacco, the nation’s second-largest cigarette maker.

The judgment, returned on Friday night in a Pensacola court, was the largest in Florida history in a wrongful death lawsuit filed by an individual, according to the woman’s legal team.

Cynthia Robinson, of Pen-

sacola, sued the cigarette maker, whose brands in-clude Camel, in 2008 over the death of her husband, Michael Johnson.

Johnson smoked up to 60 cigarettes a day for more 20 years and died of lung cancer in 1996 aged 36.

“He couldn’t quit. He was smoking the day he died,” lawyer Chris Chestnut told the Reuters news agen-cy on Saturday.

After four weeks of hearings and 15 hours of jury

deliberations, the jury said that the tobacco company was negligent in informing Robinson’s husband that smoking causes lung cancer and that nicotine is highly ad-dictive.

Compensatory damag-es of $7.3m were awarded to the widow and the cou-ple’s child, and $9.6m to Johnson’s son from a previ-ous relationship.

The jury also awarded Robinson $23.6bn in puni-tive damages, according to the verdict forms.

‘Runaway verdict’Jeffery Raborn, the

vice-president and assis-tant general counsel for

RJ Reynolds, said in a statement quoted by the New York Times that the company planned to challenge “this runaway verdict”.

“This verdict goes far beyond the realm of reasonable-ness and fairness and is completely incon-sistent with the evi-dence presented,” he said.

Such industry appeals are often suc-cessful. A $28bn rul-ing against the tobac-co firm Philip Morris in 2002 was reduced on appeal to $28m.

A passenger train has crashed into a school bus in southern India, killing at least 11 children, with fears the

death toll could rise further, officials say.

A senior police officer said “11 students and the bus driver were killed”, while a railway official said he feared as many as 25 children were dead after Thursday’s collision in new-ly formed Telangana state.

Ravi Nallamala, a local police offi-cer, said at least 16 children aged 7 to 14 had been injured and hospitalised in Medak district.

The area is nearly 1,500km south of New Delhi.

K Samba Siva Rao, a spokes-man for South Central Railway, said the train hit the bus at an un-manned railway crossing in the vil-lage of Masaipet, about 62km from Hyderabad in Telangana, which this year was carved out of Andhra Pradesh state.

The bus was dragged several hundred metres down the tracks, according to local media reports.

The train was travelling from the city of Nanded in Maharash-tra state to Hyderabad. No one on the train was killed, officials said.

“So far 11 children and one school bus driver died. Sixteen children are injured and have been

shifted to hospitals,” N Sury-anaarayana, local police depu-ty inspector general, said.

“The cause of the acci-dent and whose mistake it is we are investigating.”

Rao said the school bus was carrying up to 38 chil-dren from the Kakatiya Techno School in the town of Toopran.

Accidents are common on India’s railroad network, one of the world’s largest with 20 million people riding daily on about 11,000 passenger trains.

Most accidents are blamed on poor maintenance and human error.

Children killed in rail accident in India

Police say 11 children dead after train crashes into school bus at unmanned railway crossing in Telangana state

Stripped of economic, political, territorial and security authority, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas lost favour with Israel after the signing of a national consensus agree-ment with Hamas last April.

Abbas also has to contend with mounting calls to redraw the Palestinian government’s national liberation strategy along more popular lines. His administration faced unprecedented criticism over the Palestinian Authority’s (PA) full cooperation with Israel during its brutal crackdown in the West Bank last month.

The Palestinian unity pact saw Hamas ceding power to a government viewed as being loyal to its political rival, Fa-tah. On the ground however, the Ramallah based PA, which has denounced Hamas for firing rockets, has as little lever-age as ever over the movement’s internal decision-making process.

Khaled el-Gindy, former adviser to the Palestinian Leadership in Ramallah, says that Hamas and Fatah may be forced to cooperate on implementing some terms of a fu-ture truce, but at this moment, the PA has no role in dealing with the ongoing crisis.”It’s completely irrelevant. It cannot influence the United States, it cannot influence Israel, it can-not influence Hamas, it cannot influence Egypt,” he stated.

IS THE PALESTINIAN AUTHORITY STILL RELEVANT?

Analysis: The PA struggles to stay relevant amid regional and international efforts to

secure Gaza ceasefire

Jury says tobacco firm RJ Reynolds did not inform woman’s chain-smoking husband of risks before he died of lung cancer.

Page 22: Belize Times July 27, 2014

THE BELIZE TIMES 27 JUL2014 22

Spread awarenes, not disease (Image: Erika Santelices/AFP/Getty Images)

SCIENCE & TECHBELIZE TIMES WEEKLY

R E V I E W

threatwatch: Chikungunya virus hits the us and europe

23 July 2014 by Debora MacKen-zie

Threatwatch is your early warning system for global dangers, from nucle-ar peril to deadly viral outbreaks. Debo-ra MacKenzie highlights the threats to civilisation – and suggests solutions

Chikungunya is on the move. Locally acquired cases of the mosqui-to-borne virus, native to central Africa, have been identified in the US for the first time, and virologists are warning it could spread to Europe. At the same time, the virus is rampaging across the Caribbean, which has seen a 24 per cent increase in cases in the last week alone.

The virus, which causes rash, fever and severe joint pain, has explod-ed in Central America and the Carib-bean since its arrival in the western hemisphere last December. As of 18 July, the number of cases identified across the Caribbean and parts of the surrounding mainland this year is 442,000 – a 24 per cent rise on last week’s figure.

The Dominican Republic is espe-cially hard hit, with more than 250,000 sick. So too are Haiti, Guadeloupe and Martinique, which have each identified between 50,000 and 63,000 cases. The virus is also spreading in El Salva-dor, Costa Rica, Venezuela, Guyana, French Guiana and Suriname on the mainland. The virus is rarely lethal, but 26 people have died in the epidemic so far. Many survivors have lasting pain.

Viral souvenirsVisitors to these countries risk

spreading the virus to areas where the two species of mosquito that transmit it are found. That includes the US: one of the mosquito species is found in 14 states, while the other is present in 32.

To date, 234 cases of chikungunya are thought to have been “imported” into the US, but that figure might be ten times higher because many cases are missed or misdiagnosed, warned Harold Noel of the French Institute for Public Health Surveillance (INVS) in an editorial published last week.

More worryingly, last week health authorities also confirmed the first two locally acquired cases of chikungun-ya in Florida, where both species of mosquito live.

When a virus first affects a popula-tion, no one will have developed immu-nity. “We’re seeing an epidemic ripping through a naive population, with a

very large number of cases in the Dominican Republic and elsewhere,” says Peter Hotez of Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas. “There is every reason to believe we could see similar epidemics along the US Gulf Coast maybe later this summer or starting next year.”

Set to spreadEuropean countries are

also at risk. Health authorities in France have confirmed 475 imported cases of chikungunya so far this year, up from 17 in 2012. Of these, 126 were identified in regions that have

aLCoHoL imProVes Your sense oF smeLL – in moderation

the mosquitoes.Researchers at the INVS have warned

that as mosquito populations climb this summer, and travellers return from French Caribbean islands, conditions are ripe for

the virus to spread in southern France.At the same time, Spanish health

authorities have diagnosed 10 import-ed cases of the virus since April. Five of these were in regions known to

have mosquitoes that transmit the virus.

No treatmentCurrently, there is no specific

treatment available for chikunyunga. Drugs and vaccines are in develop-ment, but are only in the early stag-es of testing, write Anthony Fauci and David Morens of the National Institutes for Allergy and Infectious Disease in the US.

“Licensure is not imminent for any vaccine,” the pair warn. Even when vaccines are available, it will be hard to devise a vaccination strategy, since flare-ups of the virus in endemic regions are unpredict-able. The best bet for tackling the disease, they say, will be mosquito control. In that case, chikungunya’s advance seems likely to continue in the impoverished mainland of South America and poor districts of the US.

22 July 2014 by helen ThomsonHow do you smell after a

drink? Quite well, it turns out. A modest amount of alcohol boosts your sense of smell.

It is well known that we can improve our sense of smell through practice. But a few peo-ple have also experienced a boost after drug use or brain damage. This suggests our sensitivity to smell may be damped by some sort of inhibition in the brain, which can be lifted under some circumstances, says Yaara Ende-velt of the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel.

To explore this notion, Ende-velt and her colleagues investi-gated whether drinking alcohol – known to lower inhibitory signals in the brain – affected the sense of smell.

In one odour-discrimination test, 20 volunteers were asked to smell three different liquids. Two were a mixture of the same six odours, the third contained a similar mixture with one odour

replaced. Each volunteer was giv-en 2 seconds to smell each of the liquids and say which was the odd one out. The test was repeated six times with each of three trios of liq-uids. They were then given a drink that consisted of 35 millilitres of vodka and sweetened grape juice, or the juice alone, before repeating the experiment with the same set of liquids.

One too manyIn a second experiment with a

similar drinking structure, the same volunteers were asked which of three liquids had a rose-like odour. The researchers increased the con-

centration of the odour until the volunteers got the right answer three times in a row.

Endevelt’s team then test-ed the senses of people in pubs around the cities of Rehovot and Herzliya. Forty-five volun-teers were asked to perform a scratch-and-sniff test, in which they had to identify which one of three odour compounds was different from the other two.

Across all three experi-ments, the team found a cor-relation between a person’s blood-alcohol level and score on tests of odour detection and discrimination. But while low levels of alcohol improved performance, too much – about two units within an hour for women and three for men – led to a significant reduction in sense of smell.

Endevelt hopes to use brain scans to identify the mechanisms underlying this ef-fect. “If we knew more about the mechanisms that caused this inhibition, then it might shed light on why some people lose their sense of smell and may be helpful for some kinds of olfactory loss,” she says.

Page 23: Belize Times July 27, 2014

THE BELIZE TIMES27 JUL 2014 23

delusional Sedi!

CA

RTO

ON

godwin Hulse should launch special Passport investigation in taiwan

LIQUOR LICENSE NOTICES

Notice is hereby given that SHENG WANG CHEN is applying for a Convenience Store Liquor License to be operated at “K.C. Shop”, situate at 78 Barrack Road, Belize City, Belize District under the Intoxicating Liquor Licensing Ordinance Revised Edition 1980.

Notice is hereby given that OMAR SILVA is applying for a Bar Li-quor License to be operated at “Jalapeños Taco Bar”, situate at 2820 Raccoon Street, Belize City, Belize District under the Intoxicat-ing Liquor Licensing Ordinance Revised Edition 1980.

Belize City, July 24, 2014Attorney General Sedi Elrington

was playing Simple Simon on Wednes-day night in an interview with UDP station Channel 7 about their Govern-ment’s oppressive and overreaching gun laws which is jailing innocent Be-lizeans.

Dean Barrow’s gun laws have been jailing people left, right and cen-ter. Children, minors, and grannies have all been swept to jail by this law which deems people guilty until proven inno-cent.

Now here comes Simple Simon Sedi. As Attorney General Sedi is the chief legal adviser to the Government. He is responsible for monitoring the laws of the land and advising as to which laws work and make sense, and which ones don’t. As Attorney General Sedi should have listened to the Oppo-sition when they warned that these gun laws, introduced through constitutional amendments in 2008, were draconian and would oppress Belizeans. Instead, Sedi let Barrow change the law and now, six years later, he is bawling that the law has created a “painful situation”.

Sedi even highlighted the arrest of an entire family in his constituency. He said “these are people who really and truly are hard working poor people who really committed no offence”. What Sedi didn’t say was that this inci-dent occurred many months ago, and since then, many more others have been jailed. Yet, Sedi has done NOTH-ING about it!

Sedi appeared totally lost and con-fused. He cried that the crime situation is out of control. He bawled that there are too many guns on the streets. Yet, he was clueless about how to solve the problem. It seemed that Sedi was back to that phase (psychological or medical) where he feels overburdened by his job. “The question is, how do you arrive at the correct balance,” he asked. Sedi has had six years to come up with an answer, yet he has none.

To round up his senseless talking, Sedi concluded that to him the law makes much sense because it is better to jail everyone than for his Government to equip the Police with proper resources to carry out proper investigations before conducting searches and making arrests.

Belize City, July 21, 2014The much-publicised and maligned

Kim Won Hong passport, issued by the Passport Department of the Ministry of Immigration, is a crucial piece of evidence in the ongoing prosecution of corrupt UDP Area Representative Elvin Penner. This is why the UDP Government has acted very slowly to recover the document from Tai-wan. The passport was delivered by an un-known individual to South Korean national Kim Won Hong who was in jail pending ex-tradition on allegations of embezzlement at the time.

The passport was supposed to have been returned by Belize’s Ambassador to Taiwan, Cherie Nisbet, since May of this year. But we are now approaching August, and it is still missing. The passport has been requested by the Director of Public Prosecutions Cheryl Lyn Vidal, and grass-roots organisation, COLA, has demanded that it be returned to assist their private prosecution.

A few weeks ago, Immigration Minis-ter Godwin Hulse warned that if and when the passport is recovered, it will take a long time before it reaches the hands of the DPP. This, he said, is because it must first

be received by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and then the Im-migration department, then the Police department and finally the DPP. It has become extremely clear that the Government is do-ing everything possible to frus-trate the criminal investigation against Penner.

But Mr. Righteous God-win Hulse, we understand, will make things right! In his last interview before departing the country, former Taiwan Ambas-sador David Wu explained that Hulse will be travelling to Tai-wan. How coincidental! Hulse

should find out which correction facility Kim was being held at the time and request and review the prison’s visitors’ list, specifically to identify the persons who visit-

will therefore have a perfect opportunity to investigate crucial aspects of the pass-port scandal.

Firstly, Hulse should find out when and how the passport arrived in Taiwan. Who was this brazen, treason-ous courier? Hulse would have to look through the airlines’ flight manifests which would show which passengers travelled from Belize to Taiwan around the time of the scandal. We already know UDP Coun-cillor Eric Chang, Mayor Darrel Brad-ley and Minister of State Edmond Cas-tro were there, so they are initial sus-pects. Next, Hulse

ed Kim. He should also look through the security camera to see who all stopped by Kim’s cell where they likely slipped the passport to him. Was it Eric Chang, as is alleged?

Once Hulse identifies the treacher-ous courier, Penner won’t be the only one sharing a jail cell. Next in the inves-tigations should be whether the courier received any monies for delivering the passport, since Kim was involved in big money schemes, and also if Penner col-lected for facilitating documents which provided the Korean criminal fugitive with illegal nationality and passport doc-uments.

If Hulse really wants to straighten the Penner matter out, this is his chance.

Belize Rural Central Area Representa-tive Hon. Dolores Balderamos making a

contribution to Mrs. Mary Petillo, member of the Parents Teachers Association of

Hattivielle Government School for a fund-raiser to rehabilitate the computer lab

Page 24: Belize Times July 27, 2014

THE BELIZE TIMES 27 JUL2014 24