Connect with us

News

NEMA’s tips and advisories on floods and tornadoes

Published

on

NASSAU, The Bahamas – The National Emergency Management Agency has issued safety tips and advisories to educate residents on how to protect themselves in the event floods or tornadoes happen in their communities.It only takes a few minutes for rising water to become a flood. Hence, family members are being encouraged work together to develop a family plan so that the adults and the children know what to do.

This entails knowing how you are going to leave your house, where you going to, who you are going to and what items you are going to take with you.

When a watch is issued, residents must be ready to take action. When a flood warning is given, flooding has been reported and residents should take necessary precautions and actions at once.

Here are the following safety tips:

  • Learn the safest route from your home or business to higher ground, if you have to leave in a hurry.
  • Identify meeting place should you become separated.
  • Have itemized list of valuables and important documents in a safe place.
  • Plan to keep your pets in a safe environment.
  • Find out whether you are in a flood-prone area so as to determine whether you have to evacuate prior to the weather system.
  • Keep sandbags, plywood, plastic sheeting and lumber handy for emergency waterproofing.

Residents are also cautioned that during the flood, to monitor the weather advisories issued by NEMA through the local radio and TV stations. Also, be aware of where emergency shelters are located. Disconnect electrical supplies and do not touch if wet or if standing in water.

Should residents have to move about, travel with care and do not attempt to sightsee, or drive over a flooded road. Do not underestimate the destructive path of fast-moving water.

After the flood, continue to listen to the radio or TV stations for instructions from NEMA. And upon entering your property, do not turn on electrical appliances until an electrician has checked the system and appliances. Also, throw away all food or medicines that have come into contact with floodwaters. Additionally, water is to be tested and boiled before drinking.

Untitled-1

Waterlogged Nassau inundated with rain; schools closed and vacations soggy

TORNADOES

According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), which NEMA subscribes to, basements and interior rooms are the safest places to be during a tornado.

A tornado watch is issued when conditions are favourable for producing one. Look for dark often-greenish sky, a wall cloud and large hail may appear.

Also look and listen for:

  • Strong winds. Frequent and intense lightning, and aloud roar like a jet or train.
  • A bulge like a circular motion at the base of the thunderstorm cloud.

Choose rooms on the northern and east sides of your shelter or home if no interior rooms are available. Take shelter within the bathtub.

Residents are to always wear shoes to protect their feet. Protect head and chest and crouch face to floor with hands behind their heads.

Other protective measures are to hide under study furniture. At schools, a shelter should be designated in interior rooms or hallways on the ground floor or lowest floor. In shopping malls, avoid large open rooms and seek smaller interior shops on the ground floor.

If residents are outside, seek shelter in a substantial structure, ditch or gutter.

Magnetic Media is a Telly Award winning multi-media company specializing in creating compelling and socially uplifting TV and Radio broadcast programming as a means for advertising and public relations exposure for its clients.

Continue Reading

News

Attorney takes us inside the Land Repossession case of Gilbert Selver

Published

on

Dana Malcolm 

Staff Writer 

 

George Missick

#TurksandCaicos, May 8, 2024 – Not only did TCIG completely ignore the ruling of the Supreme Court by not complying with court-ordered actions in the Gilbert Selver land case, but they responded with a late appeal outside of the usually acceptable time frame, in preparation to go after other landowners, according to George Missick, lawyer for Selver, as he revealed to Magnetic Media what led to the recent Court of Appeal decision to strip the businessman of his land.

We learned the initial Supreme Court case had been initiated by Selver after years of applying for the vouchers, promised to him in a 2008 offer, to pay for his freehold titles and being given the runaround, and he won.

Missick clarified the facts of that case including that Selver had never been squatting on the land.

“He had permission to be there, the government knew he was there, he had planning permission to put up buildings. He was never a squatter. This case was not about squatting but about whether he was entitled to possession.”

Missick maintained that they have the documentation to prove it.

So why did the government decide to apply for an appeal after missing the requisite period? The answer was shared by TCIGs lawyers, Missick told us.

“They actually filed this appeal late and had to go to the court and ask for permission to appeal ‘out of time’ and one of the things they said in their affidavit when they filed that request was that they wanted to pursue this matter because there were a lot of other people; they’re coming after people’s land.”

Missick explained that the Supreme Court judge held that:

  • The contract offered by TCIG has not expired and Selver was entitled to the land at freehold purchase price.
  • Selver should have been offered the vouchers to pay the fee for his freehold and TCIG should have paid his legal fees.
  • It would have been inequitable to strip him of the land because of the expenditure Selver had already incurred by investing in the land with government knowledge.

The government complied with none of that, Missick confirmed to us.

“How are you upholding rule of law and when the Supreme Court judge made the ruling you’ve ignored it? A declaration was made that Mr. Selver should get the vouchers to pay for his land. We wrote for those vouchers but we never got them. They ignored the judgment, they didn’t pay,” Missick said.

Gilbert Selver

Eventually, despite the late appeal by TCIG, the Court of Appeal overturned the initial Supreme Court ruling.  Missick revealed that as of Thursday, May 2, on behalf of Gilbert Selver, he had begun the process to take the case to the Privy Council and shared why they thought it would succeed.

“We think the decision was wrong in particular as a legal point— One of the fundamental principles that’s been held up before, that only in really extreme or rare cases should the Court of Appeal interfere with findings of fact of a judge below and substitute its own decision for that judge,” Missick said.

After severe public backlash negotiations are ongoing between Selver and officials from the government but whatever the outcome Missick says it will be a watershed moment.

“This decision affects not only Mr. Selver but many other Turks and Caicos Islanders who have been offered land from the government, who built properties so I think it does need to be challenged.”

Missick hopes that the government will rectify the areas of the Crown Land Ordinance that would strip islanders of their property.

“It’s a harsh thing to tell someone— where are people supposed to go and live, what are they supposed to go and do?” He mused.

Missick is also advising residents to hold on to their documents and not rely on government copies to support themselves in their burden of proof.

Continue Reading

News

Russian Domain commonality in TCI, Caribbean and India bomb threat hoaxes

Published

on

Dana Malcolm

Staff Writer 

 

#TurksandCaicos, May 8, 2024 – Airports in five different British Overseas Territories, on Monday, shut down following a series of bomb hoaxes issued over 24 hours in what could be a wider hoax ring affecting schools and airports across India and the Caribbean, connected by their origin point, emails coming from a Russian domain.

It was mostly airports that were affected with the exception of the Ona Glinton Primary in Grand Turk, Turks and Caicos, which received a bomb threat before midday Monday, May 6, and quickly evacuated its students. That email, leveling threats at children, is an escalation of a series of airport threats issued in the hours and days prior.

Affected were Anguilla, Bermuda, The British Virgin Islands, Cayman and the Turks and Caicos Islands which are allo British Overseas territories and which all received the “credible threat” emailed between 4 p.m. Sunday May 5th and 11:30 a.m. Monday May 6th.

In a press release at 11:30 a.m. Monday, the Government of Anguilla revealed that a bomb threat had been made against the Clayton J. Lloyd International Airport. Cayman Police also received an email from  melin.vika@mail.ru early Monday, threatening the national carrier Cayman Airways Limited which they determined was a hoax, there were no reports of any shutdowns in Cayman.

The night before, Sunday, May 5th,  the Bermuda Police Service alerted the Public to an emergency at 8:35 p.m. that turned out to be a bomb threat that delayed a British Airways Flight and diverted an American Airways Flight. Just hours earlier, around 6 pm Magnetic Media reporters received reports of a bomb threat at both the JAGS McCartney International Airport in Grand Turk and the Providenciales International Airport in Providenciales. When we arrived on the scene the airport was being evacuated and planes emptied of people as the Royal Turks and Caicos Islands Police Force (RTCIPF) checked for explosives.

That followed a 4 p.m. scare clocked by The Royal Virgin Islands Police Force about a potential bomb threat at Terrance B. International Airport in the British Virgin Islands.

The threats were made by email according to authorities across the various OTs and while most of the countries were new to the menacing communication, the Turks and Caicos has been experiencing the email hoaxes since Friday, April 26 with a total of seven so far.

All of them were made against various airports except the Ona Glinton Primary threat on Monday, that same day thousands of miles away over 40 schools in Ahmedabad India received emails from an address labeled tauheedl@mail.ru which, while different from the one identified in Cayman ended in the same mail.ru that Indian Officials identify as a Russian server; though officials say the server would have easily been masked using a VPN and may not necessarily originate in Russia.

Like the TCI, India has been struggling with the emails for over a week with over 100 schools having been affected in different areas of the country, especially Delhi since May 1.

All the threats have so far turned out to be hoaxes.

Officials are urging calm across the region as they investigate.

Continue Reading

News

Collaborative Effort Secures Forfeiture of ‘Marassa Express’, linked to 2023 West Caicos Illegal Migrant probe

Published

on

#TurksandCaicos, May 11, 2024 – The forfeiture of the vessel Marassa Express, valued at approximately $120,000.00, has been secured following a recent court decision. The vessel’s forfeiture comes as a result of a meticulously coordinated effort involving the Immigration Department, Customs Department, Royal Turks and Caicos Islands, the Office of the Department of Public Prosecution and the legal representation of The Crown by Dr. Angela Brooks.

The case stems from an intelligence-led operation conducted on West Caicos on 5th February 2023, where 90 migrants were encountered. Following the operation, The Crown successfully prosecuted the defendants, Alexis Georgis and Meralien Merlien, in the Magistrate court.

The defendants were convicted of various charges related to unlawful entry and failure to report to the proper officer. Alexis Georgis was fined $9,500 payable in 14 days or 18 months imprisonment, as well as $3,500 payable in 14 days or three months imprisonment. Meralien Merlien was fined $9,000 payable in 14 days or 16 months imprisonment.

The appeal, heard last week and decided on April 30th, 2024, saw the court dismissing the appeal and confirming the sentences imposed on the defendants.

Arlington Musgrove; Minister of Immigration and Border Services stated, “The forfeiture of the Marassa Express is not just a legal victory; it is a powerful statement of our unwavering commitment to safeguarding our borders and ensuring the integrity of our immigration laws. This outcome sends a clear message to those who seek to exploit our borders unlawfully: there will be consequences, and we will pursue justice relentlessly.”

This successful outcome underscores the effective collaboration between various departments within the Turks and Caicos Islands authorities, highlighting their commitment to upholding immigration and customs laws, as well as ensuring the safety and security of the Turks and Caicos Islands.

Continue Reading

FIND US ON FACEBOOK

TRENDING