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KADUNA, Nigeria (AP) A chlorine gas leak led 300 people to fall ill in northern Nigeria after a welder cut into a tank of the noxious gas, Nigerian environmental officials said yesterday.

John Odey, minister of Nigeria's Environmental Ministry, said the leak started Saturday afternoon in Kaduna. He said people became ill and passed out after breathing in the gas.

Odey said emergency services controlled the leak Yesterday morning after soaking the tank in water.

Industrial disasters occur regularly in oil-rich Nigeria, Africa's most populous nation, either from carelessness, failing pipelines or theft. In 2008, an oil pipeline explosion in Lagos killed 100 people, while more than 400 people died in two similar explosions in the city in 2006.

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Gary Spaulding, Senior Gleaner Writer

LONG-SERVING members of the Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) have admitted that the extradition request for Christopher 'Dudus' Coke, the Manatt, Phelps & Phillips affair and the *lo**y attempt to arrest the alleged drug kingpin are proving to be a political nightmare.

"This is the most stressful period in my 40-odd years of association with politics," Karl Samuda, JLP general secretary and a seasoned political campaigner, told The Gleaner.

Samuda is one of the old guards of the JLP who have been involved in many political battles since the 1970s.

But none of the battles have ever included a former JLP leader snipping at the present leader.

Former Prime Minister Edward Seaga's call last week for the resignation of the current JLP leader and prime minister, Bruce Golding, has obviously rocked the party even though the old warriors have refused to speak to the matter on the record.

Some of these seasoned political warriors in the JLP survived detention in the state of emergency in the politically tumultuous days of the 1970s.

They have come through untold political violence and major internal upheavals that have ripped the party apart over the past 20 years.

Now, the signs of numbness and battle weariness seem to be setting in.

"Whatever may be right or wrong - and nothing is absolute - nothing is totally right and nothing is totally wrong, the experience graphically highlights the existence of the two Jamaicas," said Olivia 'Babsy' Grange who cut her political teeth in west Kingston.

Another veteran Pearnel Charles who never recoils from speaking his mind but, like his colleagues, is having a tough time dealing with reports that many innocent persons may have died last week in Tivoli Gardens.

"If there is any truth to what I am hearing about people being killed innocently by members of the security forces, this is the darkest period in our history," declared Charles.

Both Grange and Charles were detained in the 1976 state of emergency.

Samuda was a member of the so-called 'Gang of Five' - a breakaway faction of the JLP - along with Charles in the early 1990s.

He has been engaged in some fierce political combats in the past, his passion and drive always near the surface.

By his own admission, Samuda's experience, when he was booted from the JLP in 1991, went to court to challenge the decision and lost, pales into comparison to the way he now feels.

"This whole episode emanating from the operation in Tivoli Gardens and the death of (businessman) Keith Clarke (East Kirkland Heights, St Andrew) have taken a great personal toll on my emotion," Samuda declared.

"I hope that we will remain strong, that we will be able to come through this in a manner that will assist in healing those wounds," Samuda added.

Grange agreed. "It is painful to see innocent lives being lost and this does not mean that I am supporting criminality," she declared.

Charles spent nine months in detention and three months under house arrest in 1976. In the early 1990s, he too was numbered among the 'Gang of Five'.

The outspoken politician highlighted the tumultuous period of the 1970s when he was locked away and assaulted repeatedly as a trade unionist and political activist, as a time of personal challenge.

But like Grange, Charles was disinclined to make definitive comparisons.

"If we start to dissect the challenges into personal issues, we have lost the war," he declared. "We have never had anything like this before where elements have taken on the state."

According to Charles, these are great challenges that can bring great opportunities.

Film posters showing Lindsay Lohan in her new film role as Deep Throat porn star Linda Lovelace have been revealed.

One provocative pose shows Lindsay with curled dark hair, sitting on a bed in her bra with a client unbuckling his belt in the background. Another poster shows her lying on her back in her underwear.

The film, named Inferno, is directed by Matthew Wilder and produced by Chris Hanley. Lovelace was best known for her 1972 movie Deep Throat, which played to mainstream audiences and is perhaps the world's best-known porn movie. She later forged a role as an anti-porn activist before dying in a car accident in 2002. But from the look of the new posters, the film will focus on her years in the porn industry.

The attorneys for Christopher Dudus Coke are today expected to challenge the legality of the operations of the security forces into west Kingston to arrest their client when they return to the Supreme Court.

An earlier motion filed by Coke challenging the extradition proceedings against him is set to resume later today.


The matter was first heard in chambers by Chief Justice Zaila McCalla on May 21.


Mr. Coke is seeking a stay of the warrant of arrest and is applying for leave to go to the Judicial Review Court to challenge the justice ministers decision to sign the authority to go ahead with the extradition proceedings.


Coke, 41, is wanted in the United States to face charges of conspiracy to distribute cocaine and marijuana and illegal trafficking of firearms.


When the
application was first heard, the case was adjourned, as the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP), Paula Llewellyn who is a defendant, was not served with the court documents.

The justice minister is the other defendant.


Chief Justice McCalla ordered Cokes attorneys to serve the DPP with the necessary documents and that Ms Llewellyn be given time to respond.


At the time the chief justice also ruled that the status quo should remain, which meant that the arrest warrant was still in effect for Coke.


However, Don Foote, the lead attorney for Mr. Coke does not believe the security forces acted on the ruling of the chief justice when they entered Tivoli Gardens to arrest his client last week Monday.


In the meantime, Mr. Foote has declined to divulge the whereabouts of his client or to say whether his client will be taking the advice of Public Defender, Earl Witter to turn himself in.

Security personnel in Kirkland Heights shooting taken off front line duties

THE security personnel involved in the early morning operation in KirkLand Heights, St Andrew, which resulted in the death of a civilian, have been removed from front line duties.The police high command said today that the Bureau of Special Investigations (BSI) is investigating the incident, and that the investigation is going well.

Keith Clarke, brother of former government minister Claude Clarke, was killed in the incident. Reports are that a joint police/military operation went to Kirkland Heights in search of wanted man Christopher Dudus Coke, when Clarke was killed. Four soldiers were also reportedly injured.

Head of the BSI, ACP Granville Gause is leading the investigation.

The heads of the security forces express deep regret at the loss of lives since the commencement of the operation aimed at capturing fugitive Christopher Coke and to repel orchestrated criminal attacks against the security forces, a police high command release today said.

The police high command wishes to assure, the family, relatives, friends and colleagues of Mr Clarke, and the entire nation, that a swift, thorough and professional investigation will be conducted into the matter, so that the truth will be exposed and appropriate action taken.

Jamaica violence: Former prime minister fears indefinite martial law

Edward Seaga says Prime Minister Bruce Golding has lost control of Jamaica's security forces seeking to capture alleged gang leader Christopher 'Dudus' Coke.

May 29, 2010|By Chris Kraul, Los Angeles Times

Reporting from Kingston, Jamaica

 

Former Prime Minister Edward Seaga fears Jamaica could fall under indefinite martial law in the aftermath of a week of violence during which, he says, soldiers and police indiscriminately killed dozens of innocent people.

In a telephone interview, Seaga, who was prime minister from 1980 to '89, said Prime Minister Bruce Golding has lost control of the nation's security forces seeking to capture alleged gang leader and drug trafficker Christopher "Dudus" Coke. The suspect, who has been indicted in New York federal court on drug and arms-trafficking charges, is still at large.

Much of the violence has occurred in and around Coke's power base in Kingston's Tivoli Gardens neighborhood. Since May 23, the Jamaican police force and army have conducted several sweeps in which at least 73 people have been killed and 700 arrested. Two police officers and one solider have also been killed in shootouts.

Repeating his call for Golding to resign, Seaga, who represented Tivoli Gardens in Parliament before Golding took over the district, said the prime minister is "vacillating, bumbling and heads a corrupt government."

"I don't want to be guilty of spreading the bad news, but it's time that what is happening is opened up before the world," said Seaga, 80, who has been active in Jamaican politics since independence in 1962. He and Golding are longtime political rivals within the Jamaica Labor Party.

Seaga said at least 100 people had died in the sweeps, and none of them were gangsters.

"The criminals are not the people who have been killed, just innocent people leaving their houses. The armed forces shot every man they could find. This has made me very distraught," said Seaga, adding that Tivoli Gardens is a "crime-free area."

The government said Saturday that all but six of hundreds being held at the National Arena have been released.

Asked to respond to Seaga's charges, officials at a government information center referred to a news conference conducted Friday by Jamaica Police Commissioner Owen Ellington. The commissioner had said that the operations were mounted in response to gangs' "coordinated criminal attacks against security forces" after the government served notice that it was going to arrest Coke.

Dancehall artiste Busy Signal displays another side of his musical artistry with the release of the song, Let Peace Reign. The acoustic recording features Ranoy Gordon on guitar and Nikki Burt on harmonies

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The song is a plea for peace and an end to the crime and violence that has taken over not just Jamaica but other parts of the world.

"The inspiration for the song came as a result of things I see happening around me. The economy, the system, the fight and the struggle," Busy Signal said in an interview on the set of the video shoot.

The video which was directed by Melissa Llewellyn was shot in the rehearsal studio at the Big Yard label on Westminster Road in Kingston.

According to Busy Signal, the song wasn't recorded based on the recent series of events that took place in the island. "The song was recorded about three months ago but it is relevant to what happened in West Kingston', said Busy.

Let Peace Reign was produced by Shane Brown for Juke Boxx Productions. It is the first single from the dancehall artiste's upcoming album, DOB, which is due out on July 13 via VP Records.

Asked whether he has lost a close friend or family member due to gun violence, Busy replied,"I have lost people who were close to me and it's always a tragic moment."

Quizzed if the gun violence that he sang about on the recording mirrored a personal experience, Signal was quite cautious in his response. "Once when I was young in my teens ... but mi get pass that. There are different negatives out there but it doesn't justify for anyone to get involved in crime and violence. But at the same time its not every youth who is able to stay strong and remain focused."

The deejay is confident that the song will hit the right notes and connect with persons who want to see a change. He pointed out that those in authority who are able to make a change should first start making the change within themselves.

"Some people love to point the finger but they need to look within themselves because crime and violence is a worldwide problem. Yes, Jamaica needs some fixing up and I am making a start to that recovery process by contributing this song."

Let Peace Reign is also the first single from an upcoming acoustic album featuring various artistes. The project is being produced by Shane Brown

Scotia profits down 11%

May 31, 2010
Started By jubalson1 Comments

SCOTIA Group Jamaica posted net profits of $2.5 billion for the second quarter ending April 30, 2010, an 11 per cent decline from the corresponding period the year prior.

During the period, earnings per share (EPS) was $0.82, compared to $0.90 last year.

Total Revenue, comprising net interest revenue and other income, was $15.8 billion -- an increase of 6.8 per cent from the prior year -- over the period, which included two months of lower yields on securities due to the impact of the Jamaica Debt Exchange (JDX) which was finalised in February 2010.

Interest income was down 17 per cent to $8.5 billion. But net interest income was $12 billion, up $238 million when compared to last year, which the firm said was due to strong growth in earning assets, as interest margins have contracted due to significantly lower market interest rates subsequent to Government's debt swap.

In a press release on Thursday, Scotia president and CEO Bruce Bowen said, "The performance of the Group during this time of unprecedented change and challenge within the economy should reassure all our stakeholders of the continued strength of Scotia Group. Our specific strategies employed to aggressively grow earning assets volumes resulted in another successful quarter, despite the significant reduction in yields on our investment portfolio this quarter."

Non-performing Loans at April 30, 2010 totalled $3.9 billion, up $335 million over April 30, 2009, and $242 million above the previous quarter ended January 31, 2010. The year-over-year increase, Scotia said, reflects the financial difficulties being faced by borrowers, especially retail loan customers. But the firm added that the Group is applying strong credit risk management measures, in an effort to minimise the growth in non-performing loans. Scotia Group's non-performing loans now represent 3.99 per cent of total gross loans and 1.21 per cent of total assets compared to 3.8 per cent and 1.16 per cent respectively one year ago.

Total assets increased year over year by $17 billion or 5.5 per cent to $324 billion as at April 30, 2010. The Group's loan portfolio totalled $94 billion, up $1.6 billion over the previous year, with growth reflected mainly in the commercial loan portfolio. Investments and pledged assets also increased by $14.9 billion. Customer liabilities (deposits, repurchase liabilities and policyholder's funds) grew to $254 billion, up $5 billion from the previous year, which the firm said reflects confidence in Scotiabank despite challenging market conditions.

The board of directors last week approved a second interim dividend of 37 cents per stock unit payable on July 8, 2010, to stockholders on record at June 16, 2010.

THE police yesterday detained eight persons, some described as extremely close to Christopher 'Dudus' Coke, as they shifted their focus to the more affluent communities of St Andrew in an effort to apprehend the man whom United States authorities have described as one of the world's most dangerous drug kingpins.

Coke is wanted in the US on drug and gun-running charges.

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Five men and three women were early yesterday afternoon carted away by a joint police/military team that raided the house in the upscale community of Sterling Glades in Kirkland Heights, just hours before.

The men, all wearing white T-shirts or tank tops, were placed on the verandah, their hands bound behind them, as members of the security forces searched the sprawling house.

Inspector Steve Brown of the Constabulary Communication Network said that the police had gone to the premises based upon information that Coke had taken refuge there since fleeing Tivoli Gardens last week during an incursion by the military that resulted in the deaths of 73 civilians and a soldier.

All those detained were of West Kingston addresses and at least one of the men had been detained during last week's raid on Coke's former stronghold.

"We got information that the subject was in the area and came here. But the subject is not here. Two of the persons [here] are very close to the subject and are of keen interest to us," Brown said.

A Honda motor car and several documents were seized from the house, Brown said.

An elderly person and four children were also in the house, which is not owned by Coke, Brown said.

Residents must have been startled when they woke up yesterday morning to see the large contingent of security personnel, who came in a Jamaica Defence Force truck, three sports utility vehicles, a jeep and a pick-up van.

Some could be seen gazing through their half opened doors while others watched from their balconies. At one point, one of the women who was detained got involved in a shouting match with security personnel.

A policeman could be seen using a camera phone to photograph the tattoos of some of the men in the group.

"You see where they are moving into now?" Brown asked rhetorically, before answering, "in the wealthy communities where people mind their own business."

Just last week an operation by the joint police/military forces to apprehend Coke, not far from Sterling Glades, resulted in the fatal shooting of accountant Keith Clarke, the brother of former People's National Party minister Claude Clarke and an in-law of children's advocate Mary Clarke.

The cops involved in that operation have been taken off front-line duty.

 

 

Blair: I met with (Dudus) Coke

May 31, 2010
Started By jubalson0 Comments

CONTRARY to a widespread claim that alleged drug lord Christopher 'Dudus' Coke wanted to make a deal with United States (US) authorities, Political Ombudsman Bishop Herro Blair yesterday disclosed that the alleged don was more interested in taking his chances with a local court instead.

Blair, who also chairs the Peace Management Initiative, told his congregation at the Faith Cathedral Deliverance Centre in Kingston yesterday that he had met with the reputed gang leader twice, prior to last Tuesday's visit to Tivoli Gardens with Public Defender Earl Witter.

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The first visit was the Wednesday before, during which time he spent two hours speaking to Coke, whom the US Government had indicted on arms and drug-trafficking charges last August.

"If I go back to Wednesday, two weeks ago, I received a call and I went to Jamaica House. I was requested by the government to go into Tivoli Gardens to see if I could negotiate the surrender of Mr Coke," he said, adding that he later met with the Opposition People's National Party to get their approval, as well.

The ombudsman said that following the approval from both parties, he waited until he was given permission by 'a contact' to go in to see Coke.

"I spent two hours with him. I came out, thank God, safely; I can't tell you what I saw, but just imagine what I saw," he said.

"At that time the place was already fortified and the officers were preparing to go in I begged of them, please if you go in remember there are innocent lives that must be saved," Bishop Blair said.

It was the following day that a group of Coke loyalists, mostly women dressed in white, took to the streets to voice their support for the man who many said was 'next to God'. During the melee, they took to blocking roads in sections of Tivoli Gardens and Denham Town, setting up huge barricades as the security forces seemed to watch helplessly from the sidelines.

But, according to Blair, he had still been in dialogue with Coke, up to that point.

"The negotiations went on until Saturday. I got a call from the security forces who gave me the permission to go back to Mr Coke, with an offer from the United States Government that he turn in himself in," he said.

"He (Coke) feels, or he felt at that time, that his best bet was to wait on the rulings of the court because he felt that the Jamaican courts would treat him better than the American courts, and that's where it ended up until Saturday evening when the security forces decided to go into Tivoli Gardens," the pastor told his congregation which sat quietly listening to his account.

But instead of turning himself in, Coke evaded the security forces which by Monday were engaged in a shootout with a group of Coke's supporters, some of whom it has since been revealed were paid up to $100,000 per day to defend his turf. Military personnel have since revealed that they suspected Coke had fled Tivoli Gardens as early as 4:00 pm, while the operations in the area were going on.

Police said that 73 civilians and three members of the security forces died during last week's civil unrest, which quickly spread to other sections of West Kingston and halted commercial activities in some sections of the Corporate Area.

On Saturday, Public Defender Earl Witter issued a public appeal for Coke to turn himself over to the authorities in the interest of the people. Witter said that he and Blair stood ready to facilitate the process.

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-- Edited by jubalson on Monday 31st of May 2010 09:34:32 AM
50 Cent

50 Cent caused one collective jaw drop with the startling photos of himself weighing a slender 160 pounds. In an exclusive interview with Rap-Up.com, the rapper-turned-actor explains how he lost 54 pounds to play a cancer-stricken football player in his upcoming film Things Fall Apart, how actor Christian Bale inspired his drastic transformation, how much he weighs now, and whether fans will be able to recognize him on his Invitation tour, which kicks off tomorrow night in Detroit.

For those who still cant believe it, can you confirm the authenticity of those photos?
Yeah, theyre absolutely real. I shot the first half of the film for eight days and then I left for my international tour, and I spent that time training to lose weight. I had a week and a half after coming back to really intensely train to get down to 160 for the last half of the film project, Things Fall Apart. Its myself, Mario Van Peebles, Lynn Whitfield, and Ray Liotta starring in the project. Its directed by Mario Van Peebles.

We barely recognized you.
Yeah, it was a lot for me to actually get there. After the second week, it was crazy. They say it takes 30 days to make a habit, but man I was on the Internet and I was looking at Christian Bale, while The Machinist was out, he almost killed himself. I was feeling like maybe Im overdoing it and Im dropping 54 pounds, but I was in such a good physical state prior to me deciding to go down on the weight.

What motivated you?
I just trained to get as big as I physically could be for the first half. It felt like I had a lot of muscle on me still and I was trying to lose as much as possible to be authentic to what I saw in my experience, because my motivation for the project was my best friend, Charles Pringle. He lived across the street from me; he actually died of cancer. Its a serious topic. One out of eight people in the world die of cancer. It tops HIV, tuberculosis, and malaria together. If youre not actually gonna die of cancer, chances are someone youre active with in your life is.

Have you put on weight since then?
Right now I weigh 198 pounds. Im trying to get back to 200 and then Ill start weight training again to get my body back together.

So will your fans still be able to recognize you onstage?
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Ill never go out looking crazy like I just smoked something [laughs]. Im trying to get myself back together immediately.

Jamaica's violence part of American plot to kill black people, says Jamaican columnist...


David Paulin

What was the real cause of Jamaica's recent violence -- the firebombing of police stations by drug thugs and pitched battles with security forces attempting to serve a U.S. extradition warrant on alleged drug lord Christopher "Dudus" Coke?
It was all part of an American-hatched plot to kill black people!
That's according to a newspaper columnist writing in today's Jamaica Observer, a popular left-leaning daily newspaper in Kingston, the capital. Jamaica-born columnist Mervin Stoddart, a Florida resident, claims that Dudus "is a fall guy and the media hype surrounding his story is a smokescreen."
The self-proclaimed minister explains:
For some 6000 years, earth's evil Caucasians have been decimating people of color. Their drug war, terror war and killings of Iraqis, Afghans, and practically all predominantly black nationals on earth are key pieces of their population reduction plan, as exposed by Jim Marrs in The Fourth Reich. Their endgame is in place whereby globalists are ready to decimate their own race to get rid of people who do not share their racist, globalist, satanic views. Some people, like Jamaicans, reject this evil globalism because it offends their faith in God, but many branches of Christianity are leaders in this march to the white supremacist one-world government. Jamaicans must use the spirit of discernment to identify those churches that are Satan's servants, especially churches headquartered in Euro-America.
He concludes:
Every Jamaican at home and abroad must analyze the Dudus tragedy and work for deliverance, but no one should excuse the real enemies of Jamaica.

The Jamaica Observer, incidentally, is owned by Gordon "Butch Stewart (click here for photo) who owns the all-inclusive Sandals and Beaches resorts that are popular among well-to-do white Americans. Most Jamaicans are of African heritage, but Stewart is one of a handful of Jamaicans who is known to his countrymen as a "white Jamaican."
On occasion, the politically well-connected businessman hosts prominent Democrats from the U.S., including New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin. The wacky major spent what one newspaper called a "little post-Katrina rest and relaxation" at Stewart's villa in Negril. There was no word in that article as to whether Stewart's columnist, Mervin Stoddart, joined in the fun.
FOR EXAMPLE:

Percival Noel James Patterson, (born 10 April 1935) was the sixth Prime Minister of Jamaica from 1992 to 2006. Until February 2006 he was the leader of the Jamaican People's National Party (PNP). The new PNP leader, Portia Simpson-Miller, took over as Prime Minister on 30 March 2006. Patterson was Jamaica's longest-serving Prime Minister, serving exactly 14 years..

PJ WAS IN OFFICE FOR 14 YEARS AND IT DIDNT CHANGE ONE BIT.

I FEEL JAMAICA NEED TO HAVE A GOVERNMENT SYSTEM LIKE THE U.S.A. WHERE IT GIVES THE LEADERS A CERTAIN AMOUNT OF YEARS TO RUN..

Jamaica gained their independency in August 1962
thats 48 years ago and the country only had EIGHT Leaders...

Give your thoughts....

ST GEORGE'S, Grenada (CMC) -- Grenada says it is willing to send troops to help fellow Caribbean Community (Caricom) member country, Jamaica, deal with the violence caused by criminal gangs trying to prevent the arrest of a reputed gang leader.

Prime Minister Tillman Thomas told the Caribbean Media Corporation (CMC) that he is prepared to send in troops to assist law enforcement officials to Jamaica if a request is made.

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At least 44 people have been killed in clashes between the security forces and criminal gangs in the volatile west Kingston constituency of Jamaica, since the authorities moved to execute a warrant for the arrest of reputed Tivoli Gardens don Christopher 'Dudus' Coke.

He is wanted in the United States on drug and gun-running charges and criminals have vowed to prevent his arrest.

Thomas said that the situation in Jamaica is worrying for the region and that the Caribbean should consider helping to restore order to that country.

"That's a source of great concern to us in the region... I've always championed the cause of good governance and the rule of law and we have to really build and strengthen democratic institutions.

"We cannot permit a situation where we have gangsters and thugs controlling society. We have to find ways and means to bring this under some form of control. If it calls for assistance from the region or wherever else, we have to maintain our democratic tradition within the rule of law.

"We cannot permit, encourage or promote lawlessness in the region," Thomas told CMC, suggesting also that the US government provide some form of assistance to get the volatile situation under control.

"Just as how America came to assist us here in 1983, I think where you have a situation where lives are being threatened, and democratic institutions are being threatened, those who are concerned about the freedom of man... ought to come to rescue those who are in difficulty," he added.

The Jamaican government has declared a limited state of emergency in Kingston and St Andrew.

Jamaica prime minister OKs extradition of alleged drug king pin Christopher (Dudus) Coke

Sunday, May 30th 2010, 4:00 AM

Police gain control of Tivoli Gardens neighborhood after gun battles broke out during the hunt for Christopher (Dudus) Coke.
Abd/AP
Police gain control of Tivoli Gardens neighborhood after gun battles broke out during the hunt for Christopher (Dudus) Coke.
Alleged drug king pin Christopher (Dudus) Coke.
AP
Alleged drug king pin Christopher (Dudus) Coke.

After years of opposition and recent pressure from the Obama administrationJamaica Prime Minister Bruce Golding last week reversed his stance and okayed the extradition of alleged drug king pin Christopher (Dudus) Coke to stand trial in New York.

The failed attempt to take Coke into custody resulted in a state of emergency, gun battles and scores of deaths, as of late last week.

Coke was indicted in Manhattan in 2007 for operating a drug ring and running guns between New York and Jamaica.

Late last week, a top official reported that police regained control of Coke's Tivoli Gardens neighborhood, where his supporters battled with Jamaican Army personnel and police.

But the damage has already been done - to the neighborhood and the reputation of the Golding administration.

The prime minister may have to deal with a political backlash from constituents loyal to Coke. Golding, who heads the ruling Jamaica Labor Party, also admitted he used a U.S. law firm to lobby Washington, to drop the call for Coke's extradition.

And there remains a possibility the opposition People's National Party will step into the discourse against the Golding administration. So far, PNP and JLP leaders have praised the efforts of law enforcement and called for calm in the midst of the violence.



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OUND DEAD IN TG APPERNTLY KILLES BY POLICE AND SOLIDERS...........DAAAAAMMMMNNN



-- Edited by MZJ on Tuesday 25th of May 2010 03:07:03 PM

MINISTER of Information Daryl Vaz says that he's trying to help organise media access to sections of Tivoli Gardens and Denham Town in West Kingston. However, he added that such a decision would remain "not a policy decision but an operational one."

Vaz is to update journalists shortly at a press conference this afternoon.

On previous occasions his governing Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) has been accused of obstructing security force operations in Tivoli, which up to now was their strongest garrison constituency.

However, days after the assault began on Sunday the Jamaica Defence Force is still refusing access to media telling journalists that the area remains 'restricted' until their operation is complete, which has made it impossible to corroborate allegations of human rights abuses.

While soldiers allowed drivers through a checkpoint on Marcus Garvey Drive close to Tivoli, the Observer was specifically told by the JDF personnel that as media personnel we would be allowed no further.

Political Ombudsman Bishop Herro Blair and Public Defender Earl Witter were sent into the community by Prime Minister Bruce Golding yesterday and returned largely satisfactory findings and no reports of human rights abuses.

Witter said that the majority of the 44 persons who were fatally shot by security forces are males under 30.

Today our news team could get no further than Charles Street inside Denham Town where we witnessed 15 young men, who appeared to be detainees, being forced to clear a roadblock on Charles Street inside Denham Town.

When finished they were then forced marched elsewhere inside the community under guard by police and soldier.

Security forces are currently holding 261 detainees in the area.

Two lawyers with strong West Kingston connections, George Soutar and Tom Tavares-Finson, were allowed access to the detainees today.

The pair expressed satisfaction that the detainees basic needs were being addressed, but expressed concern that there were 17 juveniles among them and that some of the detainees are either injured or in need of medical assistance.

LIFE began returning to the capital, Kingston, yesterday as Jamaicans breathed a sigh of relief that the security forces had repelled the criminal backers of Tivoli Gardens strongman Christopher Coke.

The eerie ghost-town haze that hung over much of the metropolitan area since Monday lifted dramatically, transforming the streets of Kingston into a buzz of activity, amid clear signs that the security forces had prevailed against fugitive Coke's shooters who had thrown up booby-trapped barricades around the Tivoli enclave, and launched a frightening offensive against police stations.

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Information Minister Daryl Vaz confidently invited city dwellers to resume normal business starting today and to put behind them the three-day lockdown as a result of heavy gun-fighting, triggered by the resistance to the effort to arrest Coke who is wanted by the United States for alleged trafficking in drugs and guns.

"The security forces, as of this afternoon, are advising members of the public living and working in downtown Kingston, especially operators of businesses in the area, that they can now return to work and conduct their normal business safely," Vaz said at the press conference at the Hilton Hotel in Kingston.

"The security forces will facilitate the free movement of citizens who wish to go about their lawful business and have assured that all measures will be put in place to ensure the safety of the public," the information minister assured.

All ministries, departments and agencies of Government located within the business district of the capital will also be opened, said Vaz, who noted that Kingston schools would remain closed.

"...Normalcy is fast returning to areas of downtown Kingston," he told journalists, while the president of the Private Sector Organisation of Jamaica, Joseph Matalon, and Milton Samuda, who heads the Jamaica Chamber of Commerce, looked on. Vaz said there would be ample security presence in the area.

The state-run Jamaica Urban Transit Company will also resume full service to downtown and the Justice Ministry announced that the Supreme Court in downtown Kingston and the Spanish Town Resident Magistrate's Court in St Catherine would resume regular court sessions today, with the caveat "barring any unforeseen circumstances".

The signs of a return to normality could be seen as early as yesterday morning as scores of residents ventured out in the business district to shop for food from the throng of vendors who came out after it was clear that the security forces were in control of the situation.

"Over the last three days I could not come out of my house. Things look as if it slowly returning," said one vendor who was seen yesterday selling food items near the Heywood Street vending area.

"Bwoy, it look as if light is slowly returning," agreed a female vendor who identified herself only as Merl.

Shoppers shared the same sentiment.

Business operations in downtown had been waning since last week Monday when Prime Minister Bruce Golding announced in a national broadcast that he had instructed Justice Minister Dorothy Lightbourne to authorise the commencement of extradition proceedings against Coke after stonewalling the process for the past nine months.

A steep downturn in business was brought on by news the following day that a warrant had been issued for Coke's arrest. Nervous shoppers avoided the downtown business district and men loyal to Coke barricaded Tivoli Gardens in anticipation of a move by the security forces to apprehend Coke.

On Sunday the gunmen burnt the Hannah Town Police Station and engaged lawmen in open gun battles in the streets. The Darling Street Police Station was also set ablaze by gunmen on Monday.

Things came to a head at noon on Monday when the Government declared a limited State of Public Emergency and sent in the security forces to Tivoli to restore law and order and effect the warrant on Coke.

Police yesterday said that more than 40 civilians were killed and 25 injured during the failed attempt to capture Coke. Vaz said yesterday that the nation would soon be updated on the fatalities, while confirming that more than 500 persons were detained for questioning by the authorities.

Up to yesterday, areas of Beckford and Darling Streets were still heavily manned by a large contingent of soldiers and police. Over in Tivoli Gardens sounds of sporadic gunfire could still be heard, as security forces carried out mopping-up activities.

Apparently taking no chances, businesses along sections of Orange Street remained shuttered throughout the day.

On Charles Street inside Denham Town men could be seen clearing several roadblocks on the instruction of the soldiers from the Jamaica Defence Force. Members of the army were also observed using heavy machinery to clear roadblocks and debris to the north-west side of Coronation Market.

All entrances into Denham Town and Tivoli Gardens remained heavily guarded by soldiers.



1.STUDENTS IN THE AREA WILL BE AFFECTED BY THE VIOLENCE MENTALLY AND ALSO THEY MAY MISS OUT ON THEIR EXAMS

2.IMPORTANT EVENTS WILL BE CANCELLED......CAUSING LOSSES FOR PROMOTERS.......AND OVERSEAS VISITORS

3. VENDORS IN DOWNTOWN KINGSTON-NO MONEY CYAAH MEK...AND THE PERSONS SELLING THEM GOODS WILL FEEL THE BITE

4.SHORTENING OF IMPORTS-WE ARE A COUNTRY THAT RELIES HEAVILY ON IMPORTS IN THE PORT....DUE TO THE VIOLENCE, IT WILL DELAY THINGS

5.THIS WILL AFFECT TOURISM BIG TIME-THIS HAS GIVEN THE COUNTRY A VERY BAD REPUTATION

6.NEGATIVE CRITICISM FROM OVERSEAS MEDIA

7. MAY AFFECT TIES WITH OTHER COUNTRIES, HOW WILL THE CARICOM GROUPS SEE US

8.ARTIST AND PRODUCERS WILL FEEL THE BITE OF IT........DUBS, INCOMING PROJECTS, STAGE SHOWS............NO MONEY NAAH GUH RUN

9.OTHER PARISHES WHO DEPEND ON KINGSTON WILL BE DELAYED  CAUSING LOSSES

10. TAXI AND BUS OPERATORS WILL SUFFER LOSSES.....DUE TO ROADBLOCKS...WHAT WILL HAPPEN TO THE PPL WHO LOAD BUSES...VENDORS AT BUS STOPS...EVEN THE MAN WEH A WASH CAR GLASS


IS ONE PERSON REALLY THAT IMPORTANT?? SO U PREFER TO SACRIFICE THE "HAVE LITTLE" AND RESULT IN HAVE NOTHING...........WE NEED FI WISE UP AND STOP POINTING FINGERS AND ACTUALLY DO SOMETHING BOUT THIS
January 28, 2008. Why can't we all just get along. According to one of MediaTakeOut.com faithful readers, Fantasia Barrino was talking sideways about fellow R&B singer Keyshia Cole.

Here's what happened - in the words of our faithful reader:
I saw Fantasia on Saturday at the Oak Hollow Mall in North Carolina. She was really friendly and signed autographs for me and my little sister.

But something strange happened. After my sister got the autograph, [my sister's] told Fantasia that she and Keyshia Cole were [my sister's] favorite singers. Fantasia looked a little upset and just broke into song and sang a verse I've never heard before. I can't lie it sounded real good too.

Then Fantasia said, "Could Keyshia Cole do that." My sister was like "No." And Fantasia said, "She wishes she could do that."

To me it was kind of tacky for Fantasia to say that. But I like Fantasia better so - oh well.
Dang 'Tasia. Why do you gotta go telling the truth out in public....

zoners...are you pnp or jlp???

May 19, 2010
Started By RHYTAH10 Comments
im a pnp...what u say

THE National Water Commission (NWC) says that areas of Trelawny and St James are experiencing disrupted supplies due to torrential rainfall.

Heavy rains have impacted NWC operations at the Martha Brae and Queen of Spain #3 & #4 Deep Wells in Trelawny and the Great River Treatment Plant in St James has been severely affected. As a result, customers served by the aforementioned facilities will experience a disruption in their regular water supply.

Areas in Trelawny that are affected include: Bounty Hall, Falmouth, Granville, Green Park, Schawfield, Silver Sands, Duncans Bay, Carey Park, Stewart Castle, Salt Marsh, Davis Pen, Wiltshire, Hague, Hague Housing Scheme, Hammersmith and Retreat Heights.

Areas in St James that are affected include: Greenwood, Lilliput, Rose Hall, Torado Heights, Coral Gardens, Ironshore, Salt Spring, Brandon Hill, Rosemount, Rosemount Gardens, Cornwall Courts, Rose Heights, Farm Heights, Sun Valley Road, Rectory Drive, Catherine Mount, Mt. Salem, Albion, Felicity, Mango Walk, Glendevon, Paradise, Norwood Housing Scheme and Hendon Norwood.

Customers can call the NWC toll free at: 1 888 CALL (1 888 2255)

50 Cent has lost a shocking amount of weight for his upcoming movie 'Things Fall Apart,' in which he plays a cancer-ridden football player.

According to ThisIs50.com, he dropped from 214 pounds to 160 over the course of just nine weeks with a liquid diet and working out three hours a day.

50 is co-producing the film with Randall Emmett, his partner in Cheetah Vision Films. Pictures of his dramatic transformation are below (scroll down for before photo).

PHOTOS:
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Before:
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Tivoli Gardens is a manipulation 
To create the outrageous situation 
For a 'legitimate' American invasion

Sugarcane, bauxite, tourism - all locked up tight
Deep, deep oil - now seeing the light
Poverty and oppression - things still not right
Freedom from Babylon - bubbling into sight

Politicians in power - caught in a trap
Reaching for gold - can't give it back
Jamaica's new wealth - Babylon wants to tap
Satellite blackmail - no stopping that

Heart of the people - under attack
600 years - it's time to end that
One Love's in play - Bob's watching fast
Soul of Jamaica - Freedom at last


...Nyahbinghi Guard Dog
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As the Dudus saga plays itself out in Kingston, two of the questions that remain unanswered are 'why is the United States pushing so hard?' and 'why now?'.  The world is full of dons and drug lords, not to mention the fact that the American plate is full with wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and a billion Muslims who are being encouraged to attack anywhere at anytime.  You would think that they had more immediate things to concentrate on.

Yet they continued to poke and push, treating every Jamaican that went through U.S. customs like a criminal, openly questioned the personal honesty of the the Prime Minister Bruce Golding and even suggested that the Jamaican Labor Party were in violation of their mandate to govern Jamaica.  In fact, the Americans haven't even got an Ambassador to Jamaica anymore.  Obama has left the position open, a serious diplomatic slap in the face.  All of this tension is for the Don of Tivoli Gardens?  Something isn't right.  Dudus just isn't that big of a problem.

The idea that outside interests have manipulated the situation for a long time begins to form when you question the truth of what we are being told.  For two years now Dudus has had an excellent run, controlling the docks in Kingston (on Tivoli Gardens turf, and the true value of the constituency) with his buddies running the government.  He has grown more powerful than ever before, with so much money that he doesn't have to rely on politicians for anything.  In the old days back in the 1970's, when the street gangs were first created by the political parties, they had to get their weapons and cash from the JLP or the PNP, but since the cocaine business showed up, that relationship has slowly turned full circle.  Now the politicians need the gangs to control the vote, but the gangs don't need the politicians for support.  They have become an independent power.

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The outside control in this is that the international cocaine business is not run by Jamaicans.  Nobody manufactures coke on the island, it all comes in from South America, mostly Colombia.  Somebody else determines how much of their product is moved through Jamaica, which in turn determines how much money ends up in the hands of the gangs.  Dudus is more powerful than ever before because whoever is controlling The Business decided that he would make him powerful.  In fact, it looks like they wanted him to become a 'threat to national security', and be such a handful that outside military assistance might be necessary.

Since the Iran-Contra hearings in the United States in the early 1980's, the world has known that the biggest player in the illegal drug business is the U.S. military.  The enormous wealth involved is enough to weaponize entire armies of 'insurgents', which are then used to destabilize any country they choose.  They have the best killers, the best weapons and the best intelligence, and it's all in cash.  No records.  There are American military troops on the ground in Colombia and Afghanistan, by far the largest producers of cocaine and heroine respectively.  This is no accident.

So it isn't a stretch to consider the idea that growing Dudus into a serious problem was a manipulation that was within the control of U.S. interests.  By why flare it up now, and why so hard?  They could have cranked up the tension any time they wanted during the past year.  What is America up to that they are forcing a dangerous situation, totally ignoring the fact that by doing so, there is a very good chance that war will erupt all over Jamaica, and innocent people will be killed?

Why would the United States want Jamaica to descend into chaos now?
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One idea that comes to mind is oil.  Try this one on for size - although Jamaica has never produced a single drop of oil, has no wells, no rigs, no infrastructure, the Minister of Mining and Energy, James Robertson, spent March, 2010 in England, and  April, 2010 in the United States, presenting 'Jamaica's Second Formal Licensing Round 2010', billed as 'New Prospects, New Opportunities', to the Geological Society of England and the American Association of Petroleum Geologists.  The agendas for these meetings are on the Petroleum Corporation of Jamaica's website.

He reviewed the new seismic data just before the first coffee break at 10:00 am, and the bid procedures info around 11:30, just before the lunch break, and in between talked about the investment climate in Jamaica.  He was in New Orleans during the second week of April, and was in Texas at the end of the month. 

By May 22nd, just three weeks after showing all of this data to the oil executives in the States, Jamaica found itself suddenly on the verge of crisis, and American military personnel were seen landing at Manley International in Kingston.  The next day, May 23rd, the Prime Minister of Jamaica, Bruce Golding, went on national television to declare a state of emergency.

Add to this the fact that the Government of Jamaica signed a new $1.27 billion US '27 Month Standby Agreement' with the International Monetary Fund for balance of payment support in February, 2010, and a different set of motivators enter the picture.  Less than a month later the Jamaican Minister of Mining and Energy is out pimping a non-existent oil industry to England (controls the IMF) and the United States (controls the World Bank).

The per capita debt burden of Jamaica is the 4th highest in the world.  Over 50% of the Capital Expense Budget goes to servicing the debt.  PM Golding has an impossible situation on his hands - he has to somehow find a way to impose financial discipline enough to keep up with the payments, but he has no way to build economy with what he has now.  A Jamaican oil industry would help him out big time.
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However, the real trick is going to be the fine print of that IMF restructuring agreement.  This same ploy was used on Argentina to force them to sell off State owned assets to raise the cash to pay the debt, which ended up with a Spanish oil company, Resopl YPF (odd in the fact that Spain has no oil, but is really a front for BP), owning all of the rights to Argentina's oil.  Later is was discovered that there are reserves of around 500 billion barrels just off the coast of the Falkland Islands.  Argentina does not own it's oil because of IMF debt restructuring rules.

So in February Jamaica signs a new IMF debt restructuring package, and in March the Mining and Energy Minister is in England presenting new seismic data and bidding instructions on an industry that doesn't exist, and in April he's doing the same thing in the United States, which is about the time the Deep Horizon oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico exploded.  Three weeks into May, Kingston has been transformed into a war zone by unrelenting and unexplained American pressure, which includes American military on the ground.

Hmmm.  Three weeks after showing the data to the Americans, there are armed U.S. troops on the ground in the capital city.

The Deep Horizon might have something to do with that.  One of the facts that CNN doesn't talk about much is that BP was drilling way, way deeper than anybody knew.  The deepest working oil well on earth is around 20,000 feet, but six months ago the Deep Horizon drilling tapped 35,000 feet when they had some sort of 'catastrophic event', which ended when they sealed it up and left things alone.  They were drilling again at 30,000 feet when the explosion happened.  Outside of the rule breaking, they proved that the technology exists to go almost twice as deep as any working well, which means that they can now access oil that was once thought to be unattainable, in places that have never produced oil before.

In October, 2008, Cuba announced to the world that they had new seismic data which doubled the size of their offshore reserves to 20 billion barrels of oil.  That's as much as the United States has with 3.5 million square miles of territory.  Cuba is around 42,000 square miles.  Whatever oil they found, it's a deep, deep reservoir. 

In 2007, Cupet (Cuba) and PdVSA (Venezuela) signed an agreement to jointly explore Cuba's offshore areas.  A consortium of Resopl YPF (Spanish BP 40% and operator), Norsk Hyrdro (Norway 30%) and ONCG Videsh (India 30%) announced that they would begin to drill an offshore exploratory well in 2010, and in 2009, Cuba signed exploration agreements with Zarubzhnieft (Russia), and Petrobras (Brazil) completed seismic work on Block 37.

At the end of 2008, Cuba announced to the world that it was sitting on 20 billion barrels of oil, the 12th largest deposits among countries, and that it was involved in developing it with Venezuela, Russia, Spain, Norway and India.  Cuba is about 70 miles from Jamaica.

If you stand on the top of the Blue Mountains and look north, you can see the lights in Cuba.  If they have oil that deep, you can bet that Jamaica has oil that deep, and Haiti, and the Domincan Republic.  That earthquake in Haiti last January was suspicious from the start, but the 'over the top' response from the United States might now make sense.  The American military controls Haiti.  The foreign assistance was an army of occupation.  This week they landed in Jamaica.

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The bidding process for the contracts to develop these new Jamaican oil fields are in play right now.  An armed foreign military in the middle of your capital city is a very powerful negotiating tool, and that brand new $1.27 billion IMF loan restructuring came with some nasty conditions, and that runaway well is pumping out an enormous amount of oil, which is going to raise a few questions about just how much oil is down that deep and when can the rest of the world start drilling for it?

Jamaica needs an oil industry before it can sell it to the Americans to pay off the debt.  That's why the IMF and the World bank were created to begin with, to manipulate poor countries into such an enormous debt load that they would have to sell off their natural resources and utilities to pay it.  This is the plan in action.

The cat jumped out of the bag before the deal was done when that well exploded, but now it's living proof of the size of the discovery, which is apparently big enough to destroy all life on the planet if BP can't figure a way to shut it down.  That's a lot of oil.  America wants to wrap this one up fast.  For 600 years they've taken all of the wealth from sugarcane and fruit.  For the past 70 years they've taken all of the wealth from bauxite and alumina.  For the past 40 years they've taken all of the wealth from tourism.  Jamaicans live in poverty because vampires from Babylon have been sucking it dry since Chrisopher Columbus sailed by on his way to discovering America.  Imagine the palace that Jamaica could have become if all of that wealth had stayed on the island.

Now more money is in play than all of that combined.  Black Gold.  Texas Tea.  The Devil's *lo**. One of the largest oil deposits ever discovered.  This whole Dudus soap opera is really just a manipulation to create a situation where America can get their hands on Jamaican oil, which most Jamaicans don't even know about.  Bablyon has come calling because it wants something, not because it cares about saving Jamaican lives or locking up a bad man.  This is the same country that thought up slavery, and then did it for 400 years because it made them rich.

If America is involved, you know it's about money.
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The only solution is probably impossible.  Every single Jamaican has to ask themselves if they love Jamaica enough to make peace with each other.  This attack is on Jamaica, not Jamaicans.  They are just the victims, but the oil the Americans want is as much a part of the island as the snow white sand, the swaying palm trees, the spectacular ganja or the incredible reggae.

This trick works only if Jamaicans battle with each other.  If America can somehow manage this flare up to get a military presence on the island, they will control the oil.  The only path out is for each person to raise his spiritual consciousness to the point where they are prepared to forgive and make peace with their brothers and sisters.  Only Jamaicans can do what is necessary.  They are the living, breathing soul of Jamaica, and it is up to them to stand as one and shout out 'No More!'.  If they don't then Babylon will crush them down like never before.

This isn't about JLP, and PNP, and Posse's, and Matthew's Lane, or Rema, or Tivoli Gardens, or Dudus, or running the docks, or selling cocaine.  It's about manipulating all of that so Jamaicans see each other as the enemy, and keep warring.  It's about Babylon stealing the Big Money while Jamaicans fight like dogs over the Little Money.  There are at least 50 Garrisons in Jamaica, with 16 in Spanish Town alone.  There are around 20 Posse's affiliated with the JLP, maybe 30 affiliated with the PNP, and at least 30 Posse's that are 'unaligned' and can be hired when needed.  It's an unstable combination that is designed to break down and destroy.

Dudus and the others like him have been played like a piano.  They are the perfect excuse for American military intervention, 'one of the world's most powerful drug lords', according to CNN ...over and over and over again.  The reality is that the DEA estimates the total cocaine volume through Jamaica each year at 100 metric tonnes, which is worth $25,000 per kilo if it's sold in North America.  About $2.5 billion US.  The estimated world total consumption of illegal drugs is $400 billion a year.  The cocaine going through Jamaica is worth about half of one percent of the market.  Nobody in Jamaica is in the top 200, let alone one of the most powerful.

The oil deal can alleviate all of the debt, all of the poverty, all of the illiteracy, all of the hunger, for every Jamaican on the island ...forever.  The palace that Jamaica was intended to be can be built, but Bablyon knows it, and has no interest in seeing the island become strong and independent.  Then Jamaica might turn into a Dudus themselves, powerful enough to stand up and say 'No More!  What's ours is ours, and we're keeping it this time.'

The only way out of this trap is peace.  How's that for a Babylon trick?
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This could also be the work of Jah, forcing the right kind of threat into action so that the spiritual consciousness of every Jamaican shakes itself awake and realizes that they are blessed to be born at this time, that they are warriors who have been forced to endure the humiliations of poverty and oppression so that when the time came they had a voice and were aware, and would raise their game to the level required to finally free themselves of Babylon.

Right now might be the most pivotal time in the entire history of Jamaica.  Not 1834 and the end of slavery, not 1962 and Independence, not 1981 with the death of the Prophet Robert Marley, but 2010 and the discovery of oil, the point in time the future generations of Jamaican children will always remember as either the greatest of achievements or the worst of failures, when their parents and grandparents faced the demon straight on and decided what the future of Jamaica would be.  Simply put, are Jamaicans strong enough to forgive each other the past, in return for a better future?  If they can, they win BIG.  More wealth than anyone ever thought possible.  If they can't, then their children, and their children, and their children, will be doomed to the same vicious cycle of poverty, violence and oppression.  Are Jamaicans strong enough to fix this?  Do they love their children enough to accept the responsibility to give up their claim to vengeance, so that their children can live free of the burden?

It's all on the line right now.  That's why America is pushing so hard. 

On May 25th, a Jamaican born Congresswoman in the United States, Yvetee Clark, was on the front pages in both countries, saying that she was going to seek the help of the U.S. State Department to restore peace and stability in Jamaica.  A State of Emergency had been declared for less than 48 hours and already 'Jamaica's best friend in the U.S. Congress' was calling for the release of American soldiers on Jamaican soil to kill Jamaicans.  Nice.

We are looking at the beginning of an American military occupation of Jamaica.  Once they get control of the oil and begin to invest billions to develop it, the term 'Strategic Resource' will apply, which also means 'vital to U.S. national security interests', which will require U.S. military bases to protect it.  Think Iraq.

This is part of the militarization of the Caribbean.  It started in Haiti after the earthquake in January and it has reached Jamaica by May.  With WWIII looming in the Middle East, America is going to need new sources of oil, and with the Russians, Spanish, Venezuelans, Norwegians and India already active off of the coast of Cuba, they are playing catch up in Jamaica.  What is at stake is enormous - a change in the balance of power among the nations of the world.  Done right, Jamaica will rise up.  Done wrong, Jamaica will drop to it's knees and beg forever.

With that much money in play the corruption of politicians will be child's play.  This gambit is for the sovereignty of the country.  It has little or nothing to do with gangs, cocaine, ganja, guns, violence or even Dudus.  It is all about oil, soldiers and America taking it all ...again.

Babylon is back on the island, and the only thing that will make it leave is love.  One Love. Remember the Prophet.  He saw this coming 30 years ago and drove himself to death to make sure that when the time came, Jamaicans would have the tools necessary to finally defeat the bastards in Babylon.  Now is that time.  One Love.  I and I.

Free yourselves.  Free Jamaica.  Stop the fighting.  Don't give them the excuse they want.  One Love wins this war, once and for all.  Freedom is 35,000 feet straight down, and all you need is love.  Stop the fighting. 

Why is America pushing so hard?  You know. Look at the timeline.

1) October 2008 - Cuba announces reserves are now double previous estimates.
2) January 2010 - Haiti earthquake.  American military build up in Caribbean.
3) February 2010 - Jamaica signs $1.27 billion debt restructuring agreement with IMF.
4) March 2010 - Jamaican Minister of Mining and Energy presents 'Second Formal Licensing Round 2010' seminars in London, England, new seismic data and bid procedures to Geological Society of England.
5) April 2010 - Jamaican Minister of Mining and Energy presents 'Second Formal Licensing Round 2010' seminars in New Orleans and Houston, new seismic data and bid procedures to the American Association of Petroleum Geologists.
6) April 20, 2010 - Gulf of Mexico oil rig explosion.
7) April 2010 - American pressure on Jamaican government over extradition of Dudus escalates to red zone.
8) May 22, 2010 - American military personnel seen landing at Manley International in Kingston.
9) May 23, 2010 - State of Emergency declared by Prime Minister of Jamaica.
10) May 25, 2010 - American Congresswoman born in Jamaica calls for U.S. State Department intervention to stop the violence in Kingston.

In just over a year from Cuba announcing to the world that there are huge oil reserves deep under the Caribbean, events unfold that result in an American military build up on Haiti, the island closest to Cuba.

In less than 30 days since signing the IMF debt restructuring agreement, Jamaica has to present their 'non-existent yet' oil industry to the people who control the IMF and World Bank, and offer a bid process.

In less than 30 days after presenting this data in the United States, the Dudus extradition conflict is escalated and Jamaica is destabilized.  

You do the math.  What do you think? 

Is Dudus just a pawn, nurtured to become the perfect excuse to provide the necessary conditions for the presence of heavily armed American soldiers, on the ground in the capital city at the same time as the most important contracts in the history of Jamaica are open for bidding, immediately after the government restructures a $1.27 billion US debt package with the IMF, who has always used that situation to strip away a country's control of it's own natural resources and utilities, just as the United States is mobilizing to engage in a war with the Middle East and will need to guarantee themselves some new supplies of oil?

Does that sound possible?

Every Jamaican involved in this conflict has to stop fighting if they are going to save their oil wealth.  The gangs, the leaders, the constables, the military, the politicians, the people.  They need to begin a process of reasoning to avoid the trap set by Babylon.

America is good at this.  They've done it before.  

Stop the fighting.  Save your oil.  Change your world.  This time, Jamaicans can control Babylon.

Click on Rasta Iston to Return to Main Page
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Miami bred rapper Rick Ross may be facing another don in court, this time it's not a DJ but the real Rick Ross who says that the rapper is using his name illegally.
According to sources, drug king pin Rick Ross (the real one) is planning to file a lawsuit against Rick Ross the rapper and his label home Def Jam Records, claiming the rapper stole his identity.
The case originally started in 2006 when Ross sent a cease-and-desist letter to Def Jam regarding the issue which Ross alleges were ignored. Upon the real Rick Ross's release from prison in 2009, he made it clear that the rapper was using not only his name, but his entire image as a drug dealer to sell records.
Ross claims that Miami rapper Rick Ross (William Leonard Roberts II) signed a multimillion dollar deal in 2006, based on his image and likeness as a drug dealer.
The real Rick Ross controlled thousands of workers at the height of his power in the mid-1980's, who dealt millions of dollars worth of cocaine each day.
In 1996, Ross was sentenced to life in prison for attempting to purchase over 100 kilograms of cocaine, but the verdict was over turned after a series of explosive articles appeared in the San Jose Mercury News, which exposed the C.I.A.'s role in distributing cocaine to Black communities to fund Contra fighters in Nicaragua.
The real Rick Ross and his legal team have dubbed their lawsuit as The War Against the 4 (Def Jam, Universal, Roberts and more), The Thriller of the Dealers, and The Real' vs. the Rap' Deal.
This summer promises to give us exciting times in the rap music business as Rick Ross fights the power for control of his name in commerce by any means necessary.
The real Rick Ross has been actively touring urban America spreading his message, and motivational speaking to at-risk youth, the hood, ex-offenders, and recovering addicts, about the powers of redemption, and he spoke at the annual Savior's Day as a guest of Minister Louis Farrakhan.
A movie about his life, written by producer Nick Cassavettes, is slated for release next year.
The rapper Rick Ross (William Leonard Roberts II) is preparing to release his fourth album Teflon Don this summer.

A man police said is a detainee from the Tivoli Gardens community is now threatening to jump from the roof of a building at the Mobile Reserve headquarters in Kingston.

The man is currently lying down on the roof of what appears to be a shed on the compound, attracting attention from passers-by on South Camp Road. He has been there for the past two hours.

Persons on the scene said fire-fighters earlier attempted to talk the man out of it, but he would not budge.

He is being counselled by someone on the ground, but persons on the scene are telling him to jump.

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Porn star actress Pinky, Internet sensation and a hip-hop favorite for her booty clapping videos and past interview quoting 50 Cent as a rapper she would like to do a porn video with, among other things, may be pregnant and guess who may be the babys daddy? Rapper Twista?! Yes, the Chicago rapper is rumored to have gotten Pinky, a California native, impregnated.

Pinky, known for her pink hair, curvaceous body and figure, big butt, and infamous lesbian scenes full of toy action posted all across the Internet was supposedly involved in some type of personal relationship with the rapper which, through an alleged sexual encounter, led to a possible pregnancy.

Rumors has it that the porn star actress was crying at a recent Core DJs Retreat which sources close to Pinky revealed, and this may have had something to do with rapper Twista.

As of yet, there has been no comment or official statement from Pinky nor Twista regarding the rumors of her pregnancy and/or her relationship with Twista.

In other news, rapper Twista is prepping for the release of his eighth studio album Category F5 slated for release on June 16, 2009 featuring the rappers first single Wetter.

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DJ Popcaan, whose Clarks combination hit, is the number one song in the island, is recuperating at home after sustaining minor injuries in a car crash along Mannings Hill Road, yesterday.

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"Mi alright still, mi just a feel some pain right now, ah luu ting dawg," Popcaan told a one876 reporter.


THE police have issued a new photograph of Tivoli Gardens strongman Christopher 'Dudus' Coke, who was is wanted for extradition to the United States on drug and gun trafficking charges.

The photograph was found on the floor of his Presidential Click office on Tivoli Gardens in West Kingston following the assault by security forces on the community, which begun on Sunday.

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"It is being strongly suggested that he has since shaved his head and face," said a statement issued today.

The Jamaica Constabulary Force (JCF) yesterday named Coke and his brother Leighton, also called Livety, among 13 alleged gang leaders who they are asking to turn themselves in.

Hours before dawn yesterday, police went to a premises in the upscale community of Kirkland Heights in upper St Andrew after they gained intelligence that Coke was hiding out there.

The cops did not get Coke, but instead fatally shot Keith Clarke, the brother of former People's National Party member of Parliament Claude Clarke. Four Jamaica Defence Force soldiers were injured.

The Bureau of Special Investigations is probing the incident.

The police have also asked Arnett Gardens area leader George Phang to turn himself him.

The police also said they wanted Donovan Ainsworth, otherwise called 'Pepsi', and Delano Walker, also called 'Fidel' of the Central Kingston community known as 'Tel Aviv'; Anthony Harding, also called 'Prince Pow' of the POW Crew; Earl Brown, also called 'Chun' of Top Road; Jermaine Layne, also called 'Cutter' of Bryden Street; Everton Douglas, also called 'Fuba', and Troy Ricketts, also called 'Okra', of Jacques Road; Michael Ewan, also called 'Mikey One Two', of Goodwich Lane; Michael Murray, also called 'Bizzy', and Andrew Salmon, also called 'Alcapone', of Hypolite Road in Rockfort, East Kingston.

Yesterday, 11 wanted men turned themselves in to the police after they were named among 23 most wanted persons. A police source at the St Andrew North Police Division said members of the Common gang appeared shaky when they turned up at the Constant Spring Police Station.

Of that number, 12 most wanted men remain at large.

POLICE this morning pleaded with Christopher 'Dudus' Coke's business partner Justin O'Gilvie to turn himself in.

Ogilivie, otherwise called 'Stingy', is a member of the Presidential Click business and one of three alleged Shower Posse members the cops have targeted.

The others are Harry Mcleod, also called 'Harry Dog'; Prince Bucket, also called 'Tugman'; and Paul KirkPatrick, otherwise called 'Teddy Paul'.

Also, four members of the notorious Spanish Town-based Klansman gang Tesha Miller, Jermaine Morrison also called 'Speedy', Nevardo Hodges and Michael Maragh have been asked to contact the police.

Michael Pasley also called 'Tony' and Calvin Harris popularly known as 'Collie' from the Rat Bat gang are also wanted.

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ONEIL EDWARDS IS DEAD

May 26, 2010
Started By nuff money34 Comments
The entertainment industry is in mourning today as Oneil Edwards, a member of Voicemail, passed away today. He reportedly died a few minutes ago. One876 sends condolences to his friends and family at this most difficult time.

Tivoli Speaks

May 29, 2010
Started By steppz2 Comments
crycrycrycrycrynono

SECURITY forces have distributed photographs of what they say are explosive devices found in Tivoli Gardens following their assault on the community, which began Sunday.

So far 73 people have been confirmed dead in the operation with residents accusing security forces of atrocities, including the use of 'bombs'. The media was allowed limited access inside the community, insufficient to corroborate such claims.

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"The explosives have been disabled by Jamaica Defence Forces Engineer Regiment and secured as evidence of the  atrocities created against members of the security forces," said a statement from police today.
is one big mystery that a stone that weighs more or less like a man can move on its own. This has become quite a puzzle for the past decade. The mysterious sailing stones of Death Valley have been discovered to slide over valleys that people do not live in. These valleys are filled with dry cracking muddy ground during summer and ice during winter. Many geologists have gone to all the places in Racetrack Playa and its surrounding.

sailing stones 1

sailing stones 2

sailing stones 3

sailing stones 4

sailing stones 5

The mysterious sailing stones of Death Valley slide on very smooth ground and leave a trail behind. Some geologists came up with the conclusion that the mysterious sailing stones of death valley move through the smooth ground when the mud is wet and the stones have little ice droplets on them with the help of the wind. This is however not entirely true because the stones move during the summer when the temperature is too high and even dries the stones themselves.The mysterious sailing stones of Death Valley not only slide on smooth ground but dig and leave shallow track in their wake.

sailing stones 7

sailing stones 6

 

sailing stones 8

sailing stones 9

The mysterious sailing stones of Death Valley are a magnificent phenomenon in the sense that they can take different turns around each other. This is mind challenging because the mysterious sailing stones of Death Valleystart moving in a parallel direction.

sailing stones 10

sailing stones 11

sailing stones 12

sailing stones 13

sailing stones 14

sailing stones 15

As the years proceed, each stone takes its own different path. Some stones make linear turns others make oval turns while others create a wavy shape on their tracks. No one has ever seen them move and nobody knows the speed they move with. The mysterious sailing stones of Death Valley turn while they are sliding through the flat leveled valley and this leaves different tracks behind them. Some stones move further than others over two to five years.

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I DUZ WANDA IF DIS LIKKLE GIRL KNOW SAY HIM LEG  FLEX LIKE ONE A DEM BROWN COOLIE PLUM DEH... AND HE LOVES TO TAKE PICS OF IT IN FEMALES MOUTH hmm

RESIDENTS of Tivoli Gardens wept openly, chided some members of the security forces and threw verbal blows at their member of parliament, Prime Minister Bruce Golding, when some of them got their first chance to vent their anger during a media tour of the troubled inner-city community yesterday.

With the smell of rotting flesh permeating the air at sections of the community, soldiers and police escorts took media personnel through selected places, most of the time having to endure verbal onslaughts by residents.

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Bullet-riddled buildings were a feature of the ageing, dilapidated structures, which were further devalued by uncollected garbage.

Melissa Walker, aged 16, a 10th grade student at Dunoon Park Technical High School in East Kingston, said that she was traumatised by the series of activities that has left over 70 people dead by police records.

"The whole thing is affecting me badly. I just want them to come out," she said, pointing to security personnel. "I want them to leave. We can't take it anymore. They fire shots in my house, kicked off my door and say that we have guns inside. They even say they will box up my cousin," she said, pointing to a girl of about age five.

"I felt afraid when I heard the shots firing. I want it to end," she said.

Middle-aged Marcia White, who told the Observer that her brother, Joseph White, and nephew Christopher Gaynor were missing, said that she feared the worst.

"I don't know what happen to them. I can't hear anything," she said.

A woman who said that she was O'Neil 'Doe Doe' Williams' mother, said that she had not seen her son since the shooting started on Monday.

"Murder, murder, murder," she chanted as she fell to the ground. "Me want go see me son. Dem tek way me son, murder, me want see me son."

A golden ager in her rocking chair looked out and remarked:

"Jesus, my God. What is this my God. Almighty God, have mercy. A can't take what is going on."

Along the route that looked more like an army base than a community that is regarded as the stronghold of alleged drug lord and weapons dealer Christopher 'Dudus' Coke, the citizens continued their verbal broadsides at the security forces in general, but mainly the police.

There were still some who saw Coke as a messiah, one who did nothing to warrant the kind of violent transformation that the community had seen since the start of the week and left it having to conform to the rigidity of the limited State of Public Emergency imposed on Kingston adn St Andrew, the Jamaican capital which sits more than 100 miles east of the tourist resort city of Montego Bay.

Coke, 42, who is wanted by police to face a court hearing that could eventually see him extradited to the United States to answer charges related to drug-trafficking and arms dealing, remained at large up to last night, although rumour after rumour connected him to hiding places in almost every parish in Jamaica.

He is regarded as having run an alternative government within West Kingston and is said to have his own militia, which has mounted several challenges to security forces over the last four days.

"Freedom, deliverance. The soldier dem don't bad, but the police dem a wicked, them a evil," some Tivoli residents shouted as media personnel walked close to military and police escorts.

The media were not allowed to go into individual apartments in the community of high-rise buildings, as soldiers manned the entrances.

The residents, mainly women, nonetheless shouted from the entrances, some of them in a desperate bid to get external attention.

"Oonu can't come inna de house? Oonu come in nuh. Me want oonu fe hear wey me a say," one woman beseeched, pushing her head adjacent to a soldier's rifle.

Another group of mainly women across the building shouted: "Come, come, come ya so nuh."

But there was one woman who was not too happy to see the media.

"You are all hypocrites," the woman clad in white fumed.

"They mash up the people's houses, the children are devastated. They can't eat. I can't even get to go out to work. I am a contractor/cleaner at Coronation Market and can't get to work. I paid for my son's CXC exams and he can't get to take it," she said.

Even dogs seem angry at the security forces. Their consistent barks whenever the men with legal guns got close, appeared to be another view that they were not welcome there.

From some buildings people waved at journalists and shouted their displeasure at the security exercise.

"We are traumatised," one said.

"We not doing so good, we wish we coulda do whey you a do, walk pon road. We hungry," shouted another.

Few men ventured outdoor. A Rastafarian nodded and shouted "Yes I" as media personnel passed his gate.

One man, who said that he had been deported from the United States, attracted an audience as he vented his anger, before being told by a soldier to stay on the sidewalk.

"They want to destroy our country. It's not right. I suffered a lot of gunshot wounds in America and then they deport me back to Jamaica," he said, raising his T-shirt to show several scars.

"What happen to our prime minister?" he asked.

An elderly woman wept as she rocked on a chair at her ground floor home. Her relatives said that she had been crying since the stand-off started.

Another close by said that shortage of food was her main problem. She had missed the delivery of food arranged by Political Ombudsman Bishop Herro Blair the previous day.

Children joining in a chorus around the corner got something off their chests. "We don't get to go to school. We want to go to school," they said.

A woman from the Lizard Town section of the community, close to the Coronation Market, echoed one of the prevailing views: "We no want no Bruce," she said in reference to MP and Prime Minister Golding, whom she and others before said had not visited them in their time of need.

"No Bruce Golding, no voting. Bruce gwaan. All when we dead we no want you," said another woman.

"We no want Bruce round ya. We no want him round ya. Bruce Golding go back to NDM," a third woman blurted out.

Apart from complaints about the behaviour of security personnel, the whereabouts of loved ones and friends was a major concern of the citizens.

Among a group of women gathered on a corner one said: "Me have mi two son and no know what happen to them. Them take way mi phone and me can't mek no call."

Said another: "The soldier dem nice to wi, but a di police dem a ha**** we," prompting spontaneous chants of "We want soljie, we want soljie, we no want no police".

One soldier, who accompanied the media, said that his colleagues have always acted professionally: "We treat them good, man. We try to be nice to them," the private said.

Tour leader, Major Richard Blackwood, the JDF's information officer, declined to directly address the citizens' claim of abuse by some security personnel.

"We are allowing the media to come in to view the area. Residents are not restricted in any way, shape or form, in terms of what they want to say or want to express. They are free to express themselves as citizens of the country," Major Blackwood said.

Police spokesman Steve Brown opted not to comment.

And there were unanswered questions about reports that women and children had been killed by security personnel.

"A lot of women dead. What them do with the women them," asked a teenaged girl. "We can't find some women and children. Some of the soldiers force the pickney them to pick up the bodies off the streets and when them refuse, them beat them. A policeman come to me and say him a go thump me inna me mouth fi no reason."

The stories continued along the journey:

"Them kill two man inna mi house along Block C.

"Them tek us out and put we inna another house and then them shoot the two man them. Them even kill a man inna that man house," said one woman, pointing to a man next to her.

"Them search my house and mash up mi furniture. Mi just buy a new fan for $5,000 last week and them mash up that too," another said.

Along Bustamante Highway, the first shop that was open appeared to be doing fair business.

A handful of citizens who got the chance to venture out, bought basic items from the One Stop at Tiny 'Delli' along the roadway.

"Business no bad, because them (security forces) a let people out fi come and buy," the proprietor said in-between glances at security personnel.

A well-spoken, mature woman standing on the verandah of her Bustamante Highway apartment chipped in: "I don't know when I am going to get over this. Trust me! I can't get any water to wash, I am sick, oh it's too much to bear."

Two other shops along the road were also doing business, although it appeared that the potential for a major sales blitz remained a remote one.

EDWARD Seaga, former leader of the Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) and Member of Parliament for West Kingston is calling for the resignation of his successor, Prime Minister Bruce Golding.

The man who built the community of Tivoli Gardens, Seaga is accusing Golding of mismanaging the United States extradition request for local area don Christopher 'Dudus' Coke, who is wanted on gun and drug trafficking charges.

"Frankly that is my view because he is showing day by day that he cannot cope," Seaga said in an interview aired on TVJ last night.

He said that Golding should not have intervened in the extradition process and should seek another constituency. During a tour of the community yesterday residents strongly expressed their opposition to their MP whom they accuse of abandoning them to the assault by security forces that began Sunday.

The assault began after gunmen aligned to Coke attacked police. 73 people have been confirmed killed so far amid allegations that the death toll could be much higher. Just four guns have been seized together with more than 7,000 rounds of ammunition.

Seaga has said that an atrocity took place. He is also calling for Coke to surrender himself to authorities.

DESCRIBING Monday's offensive by the security forces as highly successful, Police Commissioner Owen Ellington said wanted fugitive Christopher 'Dudus' Coke is still in Jamaica.

"The latest intelligence we have is that Coke is still in Jamaica," Ellington said during a press briefing at Up Park Camp today, "He is now on the run and we will catch him."

 

Ellington said Jamaica had been affected by transnational crime and Coke was a major player who feels he is an untouchable.

In August last year the United States Government formally requested the extradition of Coke to face gun and drug running charges.

"The difference with Coke is that he and persons loyal to him, believe that he is above the law. He believes that he should not be arrested in Jamaica and he should not face trial in Jamaica for crimes he has committed," Ellington said.

Yesterday police pleaded with Coke and his brother Leighton 'Livety' Coke to turn themselves in.

Oneil Edwards Passes away

May 26, 2010
Started By Glitch22 Comments

Oneil Edwards Passes away


oneil.jpgOneil Edwards of Voicemail, passed away today at Kingston Hospital in Jamaica.  He succumbed to gunshot wounds.  He was shot 2 weeks ago Monday  May 10th while leaving his residence.

Oneil was one of the many talented voices in Reggae/Dancehall, and a great person who will surely be missed.

We send our condolences to his family and friends.

When he sang the words "Mr. Wacky is gone but his dancing lives on...", O'Neil Edwards could never have known that his end would be equally tragic. He was named O'Neil Jason Charles Edwards at birth, an event that took place on May 8, 1974. One of ten siblings, O'Neil's five sisters and four brothers knew that music would be the road he would take from early in their lives.

He was destined to be in the music business, following in the footsteps of his father, well-known Jamaican recording artiste and producer Rupee Edwards. The performance and production of music was a part of O'Neil's early life as he watched his father, heard the sounds, felt the excitement of the music business and decided this was what he wanted to do.

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Even as he was making a decent living as an entrepreneur, the music business called out to O'Neil. Confident of his ability and determined to succeed, he joined with his neighbourhood friends, Jerome 'Craig' Jackson, Kevin Blaire, Robert Manning and Leonardo Grant to form a multi-talented group of singers. It was 1999, and the new century was to bring a round of success for the brand new group Voicemail.

One hit after the other, with popularity rising, Voicemail became highly sought after on the dancehall scene. The group became a trio -- Craig, Kevin and O'Neil. Although O'Neil's deep and distinct baritone was sure to provoke loud screams, the trio was known for their seamlessly interlaced voices. Their mantra was one sound, one distinctive look, a group that moved in unison and sang in harmony.

This complete image, professional demeanour and focused outlook did not happen by accident. The standards were maintained through O'Neil's management style. It was he who administered the group's business. While the other's trained, O'Neil toiled. He made the deals and confirmed the bookings, planned the tours, coordinated the recordings and thought through the promotions. He was the foundation upon which Voicemail was built.

The life of a performing artiste is a challenging one. No one knows this more than O'Neil's life partner, Ingrid Smalling. With every late night, early morning and long, gruelling hours, Ingrid provided the strength and support that O'Neil needed to make it through the labyrinth that the music industry can be. Their daughter, Nehalis Nastacia Edwards provided her father with a month of joy, born five weeks before he passed. "Fun and gregarious, a man of style", that is how O'Neil Edwards' friends and neighbours from the Duhaney Park community describe him.

O'Neil Jason Charles Edwards left Jamaica a message, one last voicemail. The circumstances of his death and the time at which he passed are both significant. O'Neil's last voicemail serves to point Jamaica and the Jamaican recording industry in a new direction. A direction that seeks to help to build a nation, take a nation Higher. His wish would be that everyone in the fraternity would hold up their hands higher, clasp them together in his memory, and move as one to help to heal nation in distress.

Former child TV star Gary Coleman died Friday after doctors took him off life support, Fox News confirms. The "Diff'rent Strokes" star had slipped into a coma and was placed on life support after suffering an intracranial hemorrhage at his home Wednesday. He was 42.

Coleman, was conscious and lucid until midday Thursday, when his condition worsened and he slipped into unconsciousness. Coleman was then placed on life support before doctors took him off.

Coleman has had continuing ill health from a kidney disease he suffered as a child. He had at least two kidney transplants and had ongoing dialysis.

An ambulance was called to Coleman's home Wednesday, and he was initially transported to Mountain View Hospital in Payson, the nearest medical facility, said Dennis Howard, Santaquin's director of public safety.

The family statement says Coleman was later moved to the regional medical center in Provo for additional tests and treatment.

The hospital did not give details on Coleman's condition beyond calling it an intracranial hemorrhage, which is bleeding inside the head.

Dr. Jennifer Majersik, a stroke specialist and assistant professor of neurology at the University of Utah, said intracranial hemorrhages can be broken vessels within the brain itself or next to it. Majersik, who is not involved in Coleman's treatment and is unfamiliar with the case, said the most serious types involve a broken vessel inside the brain.

Hemorrhaging can also occur on the surface of the brain or in the protective layers between the brain and the skull, Majersik said.

Coleman is best known for his stint on "Diff'rent Strokes," which aired from 1978 to 1986.

Coleman moved to Utah in 2005 to star in the movie "Church Ball," a comedy based on basketball leagues formed by members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He met his wife Shannon Price on the movie set and married her in 2007.

Last fall, Coleman had heart surgery complicated by pneumonia, said his Utah attorney Randy Kester.

In February, Coleman also suffered a seizure on the set of "The Insider." Also in February, he pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor criminal mischief charge related to an April 2009 domestic violence incident at his home.

Coleman also had a string of financial and legal problems.

The family acknowledged his struggles in its statement, saying Coleman had had "difficulties not only with health issues, but also with his personal and public life."

"At times it may not have been apparent, but he always had fond memories of being an entertainer and appreciates his fans for all their support over the years," the family said.


Gary Coleman DEAD: 'Diff'rent Strokes' Actor Dies In Utah Hospital

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/05/28/gary-coleman-dead-diffren_n_593120.html

-- Edited by MZJ on Friday 28th of May 2010 01:49:02 PM

AFTER two botched operations to capture wanted Tivoli Gardens strongman Christopher 'Dudus' Coke, the police have resorted to pleading with him to hand himself in.

In a release to the media today, police named Coke and his brother Leighton Coke, also called 'Livety', among 13 gang leaders who they are asking to turn themselves in.

Hours before dawn this morning, police went to a premises in the upscale community of Kirkland Heights in upper St Andrew, after they gained intelligence that Coke was hiding out there.

After about two hours of gunfire, Keith Clarke, the brother of former People's National Party member of parliament Claude Clarke, lay dead, while four Jamaica Defence Force soldiers were injured.

It is not clear if Coke was anywhere near the house as police have been tight-lipped about the incident. The Bureau of Special Investigations is probing the incident.

The police have also asked Arnett Gardens area leader, George Phang, to turn himself him.

Other gang leaders wanted by the police are Donovan Ainsworth otherwise called 'Pepsi' and Delano Walker, also called 'Fidel' of a Central Kingston community known as 'Tel Aviv';Anthony Harding also called 'Prince Pow' of the POW Crew; Earl Brown, also called 'Chun' of Top Road; Jermaine Layne also called 'Cutter' of Bryden Street; Everton Douglas also called 'Fuba' and Troy Ricketts also called 'Okra' of Jacques Road; Michael Ewan also called 'Mikey One Two' of Goodwich Lane; Michael Murray also called 'Bizzy' and Andrew Salmon also called 'Alcapone' of Hypolite Road in Rockfort, East Kingston.

Yesterday 11 wanted men turned themselves in to the police after they were named among 23 most wanted persons. A police source at the St Andrew North Police Division said members of the Common gang appeared shaky and nervous when they turned up at the Constant Spring Police Station.

"They appeared very nervous. It just goes to show that many of these so called gangsters are really cowards and have no guts. The police mean business this time around," the source said.

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-- Edited by jubalson on Friday 28th of May 2010 01:37:18 PM

DUDUS CAPTURE

May 27, 2010
Started By Bellview8 Comments
MI HEAR SEH MIDDAY NEWS TODAY SEH DEM KETCH DUDUS CONFIRM  MI PEEPS PLZZZZZZZZZZZ

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MITZY U SAY 6 YRS NOW N GOING STRANG AND BOLT FIGET FI MENTION U TO LAVA HOW KUMZ?  DI PEOPLE DEM SAY U JUS DASH OUT DEM PICHA YAH  AND LAVA SAY BOLT NEVA MENSHAN MITZAYYYYYYYYYYY.. WE NUH SEE U A DI PARTY DEM SO A WHEY UR PICHO DEM TEK MUM..BETTA YETT WISH HARE?? whis
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