Opener outstanding in KFC cricket

Opener Kareem Mohammed was voted the “Most Valuable Player” for champions Colonel Saunders South at the KFC Under-13 prize-giving function at the National Cricket Centre, Balmain on Monday. Mohammed from Bronte Village was in prolific form in the four-match series to help his team retain the title they has held since 2001. He scored 44 against North, 50 not out versus South East and an unbeaten 26 against North East. The right hander also snared three wickets with his off-spin. Tanya Dickie, Marketing assistant at Prestige Holdings addressed the youths and gave the company’s continued commitment to the development of the youngsters of the country. Prestige have also extended their youth programmes beyond cricket to involve other sports such as football, game fishing, windball cricket and powerboat racing. President of the Trinidad and Tobago Cricket Board of Control (TTCBC), Alloy Lequay said the youngsters were very lucky to get help from KFC and urged them to continue to take the opportunities and develop their skills to a different level every time they play. Central Crunchers came in second in the series and their most valuable player was Richard Ramlal.


KFC CRICKET AWARDS
South MVP: Akeem Mohammed.
Central MVP: Richard Ramlal.
South East MVP: Kevin Lewis.
North East MVP: Yanick Carriah.
North MVP: Kjorn Ottley.
SOUTH PERFORMANCES IN THE SERIES
South 130 lost to Central 131/9 — By 1 wkt.
South 143/6 def North 112 — By 31 runs.
South East 89 lost to South 92/1 — By 9 wkts.
North East 71 vs South 72/2 — By 8 wkts.

Evergreen still unbeaten in Savannah windball

ACTION reached fever-pitch in the Motor and General Insurance-sponsored Savannah Boys Windball Cricket League. Evergreen kept their unbeaten record intact but only just, when they eked out a seven-run victory over Ah Cricket Side. Having first knock, Gregory Webb scored 62 to lead Evergreen to 144 for four wickets in their 15 overs. But with tight bowling and brilliant fielding, they managed to restrict Ah Cricket Side to 137 for eight. In another nail-biter, Dundee United beat Auto Village Dollar Touch with two balls to spare. The Dollar Touch lads reached 121 in their 15 overs and saw Dundee United ease past their total — 125 for nine wickets — on the fourth ball of the final over with two wickets standing. Sprangers led by an even 50 by Imran Khan and 54 from Roshan Ramcharan had no trouble overhauling Magic Savannah Boys’ 144, reaching 146 for five wickets off just 11 overs.

Summarised scores: AUTO VILLAGE DOLLAR TOUCH 121 — Nizam Mohammed 33, Casini Moreno 4/10, Ryan Valentine 3/13 vs DUNDEE UNITED 125/9 — (14.4 overs) — Carl Rankin 18, Keith Valentine 27, Saherisdan Alfred 19 not out, Leroy Derrick 3/23, Bertram Percival 2/33;  MAGIC SAVANNAH BOYS 144 — Kishan Persad 25, Suresh Heera 25, Vickram Boodram 20, Mohan Baboolal 4/17, Roshan Ramcharan 3/28 vs SPRANGERS 146/5 — I. Khan 50, R. Ramcharan 54, Vishal Kallicharan 2/29; EVERGREEN 144/4 — G. Webb 62, Christopher Holder 26, Bryan Parris 21, David Jaggernath 2/7 vs AH CRICKET SIDE 137/8 (15 overs) —- Aneil Mannah 56, Wayne Burgess 2/34, Newlin Paul 2/31; SAMBA BOYS 130/5 — Parish David 27 not out, Imtiaz Ali 24 not out, Shean de Silva 22, Shurlan Soogrim 3/22, Ronnie Mahabir 2/8 vs BUSTIN LOOSE 124/8 (15 overs) — R Mahabir 16, Antonio Samlal 18, Ashick Ali 3/14, Leroy Lewis 3/22.

MINT CARS LIMITED 129/9 —Akeel Marcus 40, Tony Reece 4/23 vs STAG RENEGADES 124/8 (15 overs) — Robert Self 40, Ricky Sieuchan 2/12, Darren Ali 2/26, A Marcus 2/30; SAVANNAH BOYS (TUNAPUNA) 132/8 —- Anthony Parmessar 35, Jimmy Parmessar 34, Kevin Seetahal 2/22, Keron Garib 2/26 vs UNITED PROGRESSORS 96/4 —- Anthony Pachotte 27 not out, Desmond Patrick 19; NATIONAL FLOUR MILLS 102/5 —- Goodwin George 123, Coklin Britto 21, Anthony Phillip 2/13 vs LAS LOMAS 100/7 (15 overs)  Esau Billy 18, C Branche 18, Andrew Lewis 2/20, Andy Jangoo 2/17; P&B COMBIONE 139/8 —- Leon Pollard 42, Riock Nicholas 18, Russell Douglas 19, Daryl Diaz 3/17, Steve Donatien 3/30 vs HIT AND RUN 75 —- Joseph Renee 3/19, L Pollard 2/23.

Disgraceful teachers

THE NATION’S parents will be pleased with the candour of Mr Trevor Oliver, President of the Trinidad and Tobago Unified Teachers Association, when he addressed the opening ceremony of the 63rd annual Tobago Teachers Get Together at the Tobago Hilton last Thursday. The TTUTA President did not mince his words in criticising the conduct of certain teachers whom he regarded as “a disgrace to the profession.”

Mr Oliver said: “While most of our teachers operate professionally, there are quite a few who are bringing the service into disrepute.” He added: “Teachers cannot expect students to be punctual if they are habitual latecomers, teachers cannot expect students to gain maximum benefits from poorly planned lessons. Most staff representatives carry themselves in a dignified and professional manner, but some of them are a disgrace to the profession.”

The TTUTA President’s outspoken condemnation of the performance and deportment of some teachers is welcome, even if long in coming. It depicts a situation which concerns many parents who expect the teachers of their children to be not only dedicated and effective educators but also good exemplars and role models. Many parents, however, have been dismayed by the reports they receive about the poor and indifferent attitude of teachers and the slovenly way in which they carry themselves. Over the years, this newspaper has received several complaints from disturbed parents about this problem, especially the high level of absenteeism among certain teachers which results in classes left to idle and students not being able to keep up with the curriculum in certain subjects.

Our view is that these delinquent teachers, although they may be a minority, are not just a disgrace but a menace to the profession. On the one hand, they are depriving many of our children of the quality education to which they are entitled and, on the other, they are also setting the worst possible examples by their sloppy and cavalier conduct. Some of them, in fact, may well be contributing to the indiscipline and disrespect we see today in the behaviour of so many of the country’s young people. Mr Oliver has seen the need to publicly condemn these offending teachers but, unfortunately, he has not disclosed what is TTUTA’s approach to the problem or what possible prescription could be applied to resolve it. The difficulty of dealing with unfit or lackadaisical teachers is nothing new, it has always troubled the service just as the burden of crooked or non-performing policemen has affected the image and effectiveness of the Police Service.

While they may be pleased with Mr Oliver’s forthright recognition of the problem, we believe that parents would hardly be satisfied with just the airing of it. The damage being done by bad teachers in a society such as ours, plagued by growing amorality and lawlessness among our young people, is too severe to be tolerated as a traditional or unavoidable weakness. A more decisive method of solving this dilemma has to be found by the stakeholders in the education system. TTUTA must recognise a responsibility to assist in the solution. The Ministry must look at the present system of disciplining and dismissing delinquent teachers and devise a more effective way. If, as it appears, the Service Commission has become outdated, its disciplinary rigmarole providing undue protection for inept teachers, then a more suitable or relevant process must be instituted. Every child must be assured of having good teachers.

AFRICA: THE TRUTH!


The Emancipation Support Committee and other like groups should urge on the University of the West Indies the need for it to conduct research into the history of Africa, its level of industrial growth, including manufacturing industries such as cotton manufacture, garment manufacture, food processing, its mining industries including the smelting of iron ore, and its trading before the colonisers came.

The young people in the Caribbean of African descent must be rescued from the bondage of mind conditioning, induced by the deliberate falsifying of African history by Europeans, who because of their superior military power, including the possession and use of gunpowder, were able to seize large parts of Africa and control the continent’s raw materials and trade. The Emancipation Support Committee should insist that African History should be taught, not simply at the level of Form Four or thereabouts in secondary school, but from the Forms One, as well as, initially, at the primary school level.

The Europeans — Portuguese, Spaniards, British, French, Dutch, Germans and what have you — would enslave large areas and millions of people of Africa. Having done this they sought to justify slavery with utterly absurd conclusions of racial superiority. C A Bayley would state in a review published in the Times Literary Supplement of August 8, 1997 “What Language Hath Joined”, that a French anthropologist, Paul Topinard, had in the 1880s, categorised human noses “from the heroically straight European Aryan nose, through the weak and stunted East Indian nose, to the scarcely human ‘Negro’ snub nose”. Bayley went further and told the story of an English Census official in India, H H Risley, working with the Indian Civil Service, who had sent out census enumerators through every part of India, measuring Brahmin noses, Rajput skulls, along with the length of arms of tribal folk, to create what he (Risley) believed was a racialist ladder of human evolution. James Anthony Froude, an exceptional 19th century British Imperialist, offered clearly laughable ‘craniological’ measurements as ‘proof’ that blacks were inferior to whites. “The history of this aberration —racism justified by the empirical objectivity of occidental science — is well known”, Richard Waswo would state in his “The Founding Legend of Western Civilisation”, published in 1997 (Page 229).

It is instructive that the African, who is dismissed by the European as unproductive in an effort to justify his continuing exploitation, produced substantial surpluses for trade, including maize, beans, sesame seeds and rice. So great were the exports of rice from Tanganyika to Zanzibar that the Rufigi river valley was referred to as Calcutta Mdogo or “Little Calcutta”. (Helge Kjekshus: Ecology Control and Economic Development in East African History: The Case of Tanganyika 1850-1950 — Page 32). The Mahenge tribe, further down the Rufiji, and members of the same tribe, this time along the Ulanga/Kilombero river, in 1900 produced surpluses, Kjekshus pointed out, amounting to almost 4,000,000 kilograms. Again, the same writer would stress that thousands of tons of foodstuffs, iron, salt, tobacco and grain were routed through the (indigenous) trading networks of East Africa.

Cotton weaving is estimated to have been around East Africa from between the 10th and the 14th centuries, brought by the Persians, and stone spindles, which were excavated at Kilwa, have been dated to the age between the 10th and 16th centuries, and demonstrated “great development in the manufacture of cloth, probably cotton”. (N Chittick. “Kilwa: A Preliminary Report”). Cotton weaving had been of tremendous importance to the indigenous economies in many parts of East Africa. Indeed, in the 1850s, it was said to be the only important handicraft in Zanzibar, Kjekshus wrote in Page 10 of his book, from which I quoted earlier. About the same time as the initial European contacts with West Africa, Africans, even by the standards of the late 1990s, were relatively advanced in agricultural productivity, But it was much more than that Jack P Greene, in a feature article, “The Englishing of America”, in the Times Literary Supplement of December 12, 1997 (Page 12), would cite John Thornton: “Africans had well developed mining and metal-working, sufficient trade and waterborne transport to sustain a class of professional merchants and to permit considerable agricultural specialisation, and a significant manufacturing sector that supplied tools and clothing needs….”

The producers and/or traders of West Africa, much as those in East Africa, had a tendency toward long distance, as well as specialised trade. A G Hopkins in his benchmark “An Economic History of West Africa” (Pages 58-59), quoted by the late Trinidad and Tobago Economist, Max B Ifill, in his 1986 “The African Diaspora” (Page 71), would have a great deal to say on this: “….the pastoralists of the Sahara-savanna border traded livestock, dairy produce and salt with the cultivators of the savanna in return for millet and cloth. In turn the savanna region traded livestock, salt, dried fish, potato and cloth with the peoples of the forest, from whom they received….kola nuts, ivory, ironware and cloth. Finally, producers in the forest sold various foodstuffs and manufactures to coastal settlements in exchange for fish and sea salt.”  In the early days of their trade with West Africa, Europeans were content to purchase cloth throughout the coastal areas for resale. John Thornton, in his book “Africa and Africans in the Making of the Atlantic World: 1400-1800”, published in 1992, pointed out that Mauretania, Senegambia, Ivory Coast, Benin, Yorubaland and what have you exported cloth to other areas of Africa through European middlemen, and that Congo (formerly Zaire) has been described as “among the major textile-producing centres of the world”.

European greed would surface. The Portuguese intervened, militarily, in West African trade along the Upper Guinea coast, as early as the 15th century, and as the late Guyanese Socialist, Walter Rodney, wrote in his classic, “How Europe Underdeveloped Africa” (Page 121), the Portuguese interfered in the transfers of indigo dye from one African community to another. They commandeered the trade in salt throughout the coast of Angola, in cowries in the Congo, and that of high quality palm oil between northern and southern Angola. The Portuguese forcibly interrupted the flourishing canoe trade in textiles between the Ivory Coast (then Cape Lahou) and Ghana (the Gold Coast), by constructing a fort at Axim. (Rodney: How Europe Underdeveloped Africa). When the Dutch seized Axim in 1637, they found the coastal trade still thriving. They attempted, without success, to end the canoe trade, but were well enough armed to force the traders to carry Dutch goods, and for the people of the Ivory Coast to purchase a determined amount of Dutch goods. Rodney would state: “Partly by establishing a stranglehold on the distribution of cloth around the shores of Africa, and partly by swamping African products by importing in bulk, European traders succeeded in putting an end to the expansion of cloth manufacture.”

I ask the reader to forgive me for quoting Walter Rodney once again, when he stressed that by the time Africa entered the age of colonisation (by the Europeans), West Africa had been ‘persuaded’ to shift to the export of raw cotton cloth and the import of manufactured cotton cloth. It has been established through radiocarbon readings (see J H H Speke’s “What led to the Discovery of the Source of the Nile”) that East Africa had been producing iron since 500 BC The iron produced in Usangi, in Central Tanganyika, for example, was said to have been “as famed as Swedish steel”, and there was a thriving trade. Kjekshus cites a German officer as stating that 150,000 market hoes were sold annually in a market town in East Africa.
But by early in the last century foreign imports, imposed on East African nations by their colonial masters, began to hobble the iron-smelting industry there, and several blacksmiths, with the drop in business, abandoned their craft to become porters etc. (G Lechaptois in Aux Rives du Tanganyika). Alvin Toffler, quoted in his book “The Third Wave”, published in 1981 by Bantam, New York, the following: “The commercial policy applied by all the colonising countries was to open as much as possible the markets of their colonies to metropolitan products….even in the case of independent countries commercial treaties were concluded by agreements or by force.” Having subjugated large parts of Africa, crippled African industries by denying the colonies concerned the right to impose protective tariff barriers against cheaply produced European goods; enslaved the people because of superior fire power and the cynical application of a divide and rule policy, Europeans would parrot obscene phrases about so-called African inferiority.

Unions aligning with political parties

THE EDITOR: The appeals for local labour unity must emanate from the rank and file of the trade unions and working class organisations. Union members cannot continue to blindly follow myopic leaders who lack the vision and ignore the importance of a united working class movement. The general membership of unions should not be submissive and limit their roles to paying monthly or weekly dues and hope that collective bargaining will ensure their continued welfare.

Obviously, union leaders are of the firm opinion that utmost priority should be given to their financial perks and preserving their position as President, rather than fostering working class unity. Neither the size of a union nor its longevity entitles it to represent the country’s working class. There is a dire need for one body or organisation to represent the voice of labour in Trinidad and Tobago. If past activists and leaders of the 1930s were alive today, they would be terribly disappointed to witness the serious schisms plaguing the labour movement. Labour leaders and activists such as CLR James, TUB Butler, Elma Francois, Jim Barrette, Albert Gomes and Quintin O’Connor would have surely intervened to heal the crippling rift between the two umbrella bodies which claim to represent labour. During the past few months, major upheavals occurred which affected the lives of thousands. Once again, Caroni Limited has become a political football in which the fate of sugar workers is determined by men who have little or no interest in the working class or agriculture. It’s extremely strange that the government could not assist Caroni, but quickly found money to bail out BWIA.

It seems that there is an attempt to victimise certain unions, a segment of the population or companies that are not supporters of the government. The impasse involving doctors is yet another incident of pathetic leadership. Once again, the country wonders why the doctors did not receive their demand for a salary increase but money was easily found for the much maligned CEPEP programme in which workers are apparently exploited. Other unions must ask themselves, if teachers decide to strike, would teachers be imported from another country to fill vacancies? Or if civil servants decide to protest, would they be replaced by foreign workers? Unions must not be oblivious to the strategy of the ruling political party to offer senatorial posts or positions of authority in an attempt to win the support of a certain union. This “divide and rule” policy has been successfully utilised to rip into the heart of the country’s labour movement.

In this country, unions appear to be supporting or aligning themselves to one of the two major political parties. The disunity in the labour movement is further complicated by religious bickering and racial polarisation between Indo-Trinidadians and Afro-Trinidadians. Interestingly, at the first anniversary of the riots in 1938, Butler’s message was addressed to “Afro-West Indian and East Indian workers of Trinidad and Tobago”. If we are ever to rise from a Third World status we must ignore the ranting and pathetic outpourings of divisive political and union leaders. Only when there is genuine unity within the working class can the slogan “Let those who labour hold the reins” be realised.


JEROME TEELUCKSINGH
Chaguanas

Government has failed our border patrol

THE EDITOR: Prime Minister Manning should stand up and face the music. It is a cheap shot to put the blame on Hugo Chavez for opening the flood gate of guns to pour in to TT. But common sense would have meant that every island provide perimeter security or border patrol to prevent infiltration of unwanted elements. Given the current budget of $20 billion, I would imagine that PM Manning would have allotted a substantial amount of funds to protect and safeguard his citizens.

He failed. Prior to the elections, he had promised crime would not be tolerated nor would it be permitted to escalate nor would he affiliate himself with the Muslimeen. This all appeared to be “election ole talk”, for he has said there is no major crime issue but only collateral damage while the lives of innocent citizens are snuffed out. In New York practically every Trini knows that the capital of crime is on the hill. Laventille has earned its rightful place in the criminal archives. One could safely say that the police are incapable of making arrests as quickly as the crimes are committed. In an island of 1.3 million people approximately, the police has demonstrated their ineffectiveness to deal with the current criminal crisis. The common denominator is money and while money is not evenly distributed in the form of jobs and shelter, criminals who don’t engage in gainful employment will have no alternative but to continue the drug and kidnapping trade.

For the cocaine and cannabis trade, PM Manning would probably blame Columbia for the influx of drugs into TT, and so he would probably blame Libya for supplying guns and ammunition to the terrorist group that is part and parcel of the gang wars on the hill. I wouldn’t be surprised if he blames the US, Canada and the UK for criminal deportees dumping into TT. If this malignant cancer was dormant for a while, PM Manning would have pointed his finger at the UNC. Obviously during the UNC term in office crime was down considerably and was under control. In the final analysis it is the weighing of two elements alleged corruption and genocide. To lose a member of your family would definitely bring a devastating blow incorporated with long lasting pain and suffering. If he is a saint let him cast the first stone. PM Manning, you know for a fact that the blame reflects on the Commander in Chief, and who is the chief?


JAY R RAKHAR
New York

Faye for Miss World pageant

THE EDITOR: Faye Alibocus is currently riding a much-deserved wave of glory. Her superb showing at the Miss Universe Pageant, followed by modelling opportunities and an admirable performance at the Divas concert are only a few recent examples of her multi-talented and winning persona, not to mention her stunning good looks. As a result, we should look no further for a representative to the Miss World Pageant in December. Moreover, wouldn’t it be more prudent to stage the Miss TT for Miss World show earlier in the year so as to allow the winner more time to prepare, to acquire the polish and finesse required to bring home the crown again?

In 1989, Miss Holland won the Miss Universe title having entered the Miss World Competition the year before, where she was overlooked by the judges. It was the reverse scenario for Miss Nigeria who was crowned Miss World 2001 having not impressed the judges at the Miss Universe pageant earlier that year. We’ll never know if 2003 is our year unless Faye is invited to represent TT at Miss World. At least, we already know that a good showing is guaranteed. Initially, the Miss TT for Miss World franchise holders may find this suggestion absurd as it would mean having no show for this year. But I am hopeful that once a holistic and open-minded approach is adopted, the sagacity of the proposal would override the negatives, allowing good sense to prevail. So folks, what do you say? Faye is currently well prepared — let’s give her a second shot.


DEXTER J RIGSBY
Mt Lambert

Nothing for Government pensioners

THE EDITOR: Please, publish the following in my favourite tabloid, Newsday. I refer to an article published in the Newsday on page 11 by one Samuel Doodnath: “Put Pensioners in the Gas Chamber.”

Mr Doodnath is very correct. He declares his pension is $1,600 per month. What a burning shame and disgrace! Mr Doodnath must have given yeoman service. The majority of government pensioners could hardly subsist on what they receive per month. Most do menial jobs to make ends meet. One must not begrudge old age pensioners who now receive $1,000 per month, for government pensioners are also people. They worked their bones out. Their votes are also important. There are now recipients of old age pension who are not qualified for same. They have fat bank accounts and own properties. They have established businesses. Don’t call me a liar. The situation is most disgusting. It’s only gimme, gimme and gimme more; and dollars by the thousands and millions are being flung away. But nothing for government. pensioners. Trade union leaders do something. Help.


RAMDASS HARRYLAL
Tacarigua

The cause of our discord

THE EDITOR: Our country is in a state of convulsion and it seems to be degenerating rapidly. One if the items causing the impending turmoil is the perpetuation of heinous crimes, including murders, kidnapping and abduction.

The nation is awash with other infringements. Some leaders attribute the blame to weaknesses and flaws in the constitution and are shouting for amendments. They are making no headway. In 1962, with the granting of self-government, some laws were introduced in order to make provisions for the administration to implement home rule in a former Crown Colony base. After forty years of prosperous growth and affluence, parties are calling for more adequate changes in our relevant code of laws. I do not think that patching the constitution is the remedy. Perhaps prudent scrutiny of it will go long way in alleviating our problems. I remember in 1962, at Malborough House, when there was a deadlock in the talks, which were headed by Reginald Maudlin, for home rule. The stalemate was intensifying and growing desperate, Rudranath Capildeo conceded the appointment of Prime Minister to Eric Williams, with the understanding that governing of the nation would be by consultation with the opposition. The talks then came to a successful conclusion.

At home, Dr Williams recanted on this agreement and denied the opposition all participation in government. He dashed to the ground all hopes of peace, unity and harmony. This, and continued disregard for the opposition, were the genesis of discord. Since then, consultation was practiced only casually by the successors of Williams and the key to true goodwill was lost. Today the nation is angered and disturbed by the belligerent conduct of our representatives and have taken grievous ways of showing their resentment. Our leaders, with one another, are always in disagreement. This condition is, by no means, exemplary to the nation — particularly the juveniles at ages now searching for adventure. What is seen in Parliament has a radiating effect on the rest of the Nation. We need to amend ourselves with haste… instead of the Constitution It is not too late and I plead with our brothers and sisters and our Representatives to bury the hatchet for the salvation of our land of the “Blessed Trinity” and, in so doing, I am sure that the Almighty will bless us all. If the PNM had conceded and relegated to legacy the bonds of the Malborough Agreement and friendship, the splintering of fellowship would have disappeared. This growing antagonism, which possesses our offspring today, would not have existed. If our politicians would show mutual love to one another, our future will be glowing. Come on Patriots, show your mettle! Our nation is in need.

SALER AMEERALI
Chaguanas

Sans Souci cries for better roads

THE EDITOR: I would be happy if you could print this letter in your newspaper. For the past 25 years, I have witnessed a strange change in our country that makes me wonder what is really happening.

The roads in Sans Souci back in the early seventies even up to the mid-eighties were something to be proud of. Today, they are nothing but a disgrace. People have been complaining over and over and yet nothing is being done. Everyday people have to be using roads that are not even fit for four legged animals. Just imagine, where people could have driven with their cars, vans, trucks etc, today, when we have so much modern equipment to do the work for us, you still have to walk. Just think of it, where you could have driven, you now have to walk three to five miles to reach where you going.

The government just abandoned the roads here in Sans Souci village. The bridge across the river needs repairing. When I think of it, I have to ask one question; like this country have no more pitch again? All these roads need fixing now: Lans Noire Road, Lapper Road, George Street, Basin Road, Woodford Valley Road, Lucy Road and Settlement road. And you know what makes it more interesting? This village is a PNM stronghold. Heaven help us. The people of Sans Souci Village are humans too. There are some of us who even boast about science and technology, but believe me, they make the days of old look far better. All we need is good roads to go about our daily lives, is that too much to ask for?


ROY BAPTISTE
Sans Souci