Group knocks condom give away

AN umbrella organisation comprising religious groups has called for the Ministry of Education to ensure that Advocates for Youth Sexual and Reproductive Health Rights (AYSRHR) are not allowed to continue distributing condoms at any schools in TT.

It has also appealed for the Ministry of National Security to monitor the situation so there is no precedent that will lead to other activities at schools which may be illegal “for example, the promotion of illegal drugs and guns.” In a media release yesterday, Life is for Everyone (LIFE) which includes the Inter-Religious Organisation, the Christian Council of Churches, Council of Evangelical Churches, Imam E-Zamana Mission condemned the action of the youth group. Last Wednesday AYSRHR reportedly handed out condoms to students of Woodbrook Secondary School. “It is our understanding that most of these students were from the lower forms of the school.”

LIFE said the distribution of condoms undermined the authority of parents, teachers and the Education Ministry. “The group’s action sought to impose on the children sexual values and practices which are at variance with those of their parents and of their religious traditions.” It called for AYSRHR to immediately stop distributing condoms and literature of a sexual content in any of TT’s schools. LIFE urged all parents, teachers, guardians to counsel their children and students for their own safety, “that they should not, for their own safety, be lured into accepting supposedly ‘free’ gifts presented to them.”

One in five men will get prostate cancer

Men who experience difficulty urinating should have their prostate checked as this can be an indicator of more serious health problems.

Urologist Dr Lall Sawh yesterday said men should have their prostate checked when the urine stream is affected (when there is stoppage, a stop and start stream, or incontinence). He referred specifically to men who missed the toilet bowl and wet the bathroom floor. Speaking on “Men’s Health” at Kappa Drugs Education Seminar at St Mary’s College Urologist Dr Sawh said there are many myths about the prostate, among them that ‘prostate cancer can’t happen to me’,  Statistics show otherwise as one in five men over 65 years in TT will get prostate cancer. This cancer is also the most common in men over 45 years superseding lung, gastrointestinal and other cancers. He said some men think they are too young to get this disease but he knew of men ages 41 and 42 who did have cancer. “You’re never too young to get cancer, statistically your chances get worse the older you become.”

Sawh said if men ignore the symptoms, cancer can spread to the bones resulting in pain, weakness and anemia. Bone fractures, becoming bed ridden and death are consequences. He said the only function of the prostate is to provide fluid to maintain longevity of the sperm. As men age, the size of the prostate increases. At 20 years the prostate is about 20 grams, at 45 years it increases to 45 grams. It can increase to 300-400 grams in some men. Growth rate is faster in men of African descent because they have a higher testosterone level. This may be regarded as good for sexual prowess, but is bad for the prostate due to increased  risk of cancer.

An enlarged prostate affects a man’s ability to urinate with ease. Sexual history does not make the risk of prostate cancer greater, however there is a risk as men with multiple partners can get the Human Papilloma Virus which increase the chances of cancer. Surgery, medicine, radiation (external and internal) are available for treating the disease. Dr Sawh said the treatment recommended by a doctor would depend on the “state at which the doctor caught the disease.” He said prostate cancer is a curable cancer if it is caught early. A diet high in red meats (beef, goat, sheep), can be a predisposing factor for cancer, while soy products and coloured vegetables (pumpkin, cooked tomatoes, fruit, legumes) have protective benefits.

Khan says more than $20M for roads this year

Government will spend $20.75 million this year on road repairs and $3 million for the bridges under its bridges’ programme.

Works and Transport Minister Franklyn Khan last Friday provided a breakdown of the amount of money being spent for road repairs through the Road Improvement Fund (RIF). He said an estimated $1.6 million will be spent on roads in St George West, $2.3 million for St George East, $1.68 million for  St Andrew/St David, $2.34 million in Caroni, $3.2 million for Victoria (East) and $2.80 million in Victoria West. Work on roads in Nariva/Mayaro will cost $1.45 million and $1.13 million million for St Patrick. Khan said a further $4.17 million has been allocated for plant and equipment for head office.

Responding to questions from Opposition Member of Parliament for Fyzabad, Chandresh Sharma about the RIF, Khan said revenue collected under the RIF for 2002 totalled $63,980,095.46. However, for this year $50 million in revenue is expected. Asked about the decline in revenue, Khan said the the amount budgeted for 2003 was a draft estimate and would “very likely” be increased by the end of the year. This amount, he said,  would serve as the basis for a more accurate forecast for a next year’s RIF. Outlining how revenue collected under the RIF is distributed Khan said 47.5 percent went to Ministry of Works and Transport, 47.5 percent to the Ministry of Local Government and five percent to the Tobago House of Assembly.

Manohar: PNM killing local govt

Opposition MP for Chaguanas, Manohar Ramsaran, accused the Government of giving a raw deal to local government, CEPEP workers, and Indo-Trinidadians seeking employment in these programmes.

He was addressing the House of Representatives on Friday evening during debate on the Bill to validate the Fourth Report of the Elections and Boundaries Commission on the Local Government Act. He accused the Government of presiding over the death of local government. Ramsaran stormed: “The Prime Minister should get up and say ‘I have abandoned local government’. We have one or two gangs in each corporation with five members — you go and investigate that! We are short-staffed and nobody can be hired and I don’t know why. Look at today’s headlines ‘URP goes CEPEP — this is another indication that the (Prime) Minister is presiding over the death of local government. “If he has any decency he can offer his resignation and make way for Christine Sahadeo rather than sending Maniedeo Persad out of the Senate. There is much more than meets the eye on the firing of Maniedeo Persad and we will talk about that more. This is causing the social problems in our society. “When you come to validate this bill five months later it shows the disregard, the contempt with which we treat local government in this country.”

He accused the PNM of racial discrimination which extended even into its own party ranks, saying:  “I have spoken to one or two senior members of the PNM — we still talk you know, don’t feel we don’t talk — and when people are discussing the problems facing Trinidad and Tobago, they treated the presence of the Indo-Trinidadians within the PNM as if they were not existing at all.” Ramsaran then said that while CEPEP contractors had been awarded large contracts, ordinary workers on the programme were earning just $1,400 per month. He asked: “What could they do with $1,400 per month? CEPEP is undermining local government. Who are the union representatives for CEPEP workers? Are they protected under any law? They could be fired any minute. You have them on hand to mouth.” Ramsaran concluded: “The Gov-ernment’s destruction of local government is destroying the whole social fabric of the country.”

Caribbean leaders urge world to focus on peace and rebuild Iraq now

KINGSTOWN, St Vincent: Hurt by a tourism slump that began after Sept 11 and dragged on through the recent US-led war with Iraq, Caribbean leaders wrapped up a two-day summit pleading with the world to focus on peace and urging Cuba to exercise caution in the human rights arena.

The 15-member Caribbean Commu-nity, otherwise known as Caricom, concluded its meeting of foreign ministers on Friday in St Vincent and the Grenadines. Issues discussed were the future of Iraq, the new role of the United Nations, regional trade, Cuba and the Caribbean’s long-awaited Caribbean Court of Justice. Leaders said the new court should be ready to handle cases ranging from civil disputes to murder in November. The court will replace Britain’s Privy Council as the final appeals court for many former British colonies.

Confronted with high crime, Caribbean nations have been frustrated with the Privy Council’s long-standing pattern of overturning death sentences in appeals. The new court will be able to uphold death sentences. The process of establishing the Trinidad-based court is “well-advanced,” said Secretary General Edwin Carrington of the Guyana-based Caribbean Community who said it would likely be inaugurated in November.

Some human rights groups have criticised the court as a “hanging court.” But Caribbean leaders have defended it, saying the British Council should no longer hold sway over proceedings in independent countries. The court will have jurisdiction in most of the community’s member states. Besides crime, Caribbean nations have been challenged by a tourism slump spurred by fears of travelling after the September 11 terror attacks and cemented by uncertainty in the lead-up to the US-led war with Iraq.

Ministers at the summit said it was time to rebuild Iraq and emphasised the “urgent” need to heal the rifts in international relations triggered by the Iraq crisis. Leaders also called upon all nations to rely on the power of diplomacy to reconcile differences without “rancour or retribution,” according to a Caricom statement issued Friday. The ministers also urged Cuba to exercise greater caution in human rights. Leaders met for three hours on Thursday with a Cuban delegation led by Trade Minister Ricardo Cabrisas. On April 11, Cuba executed three men convicted of terrorism after they tried to commandeer a ferry with passengers to the United States. Cuba also faces criticism for sending 75 dissidents to prison on charges of collaborating with US diplomats to destabilise the socialist government.

Cuba, which doesn’t belong to the Caribbean Community, has defended the measures as necessary to halt a brewing migration crisis and counter subversive activities by the US government and Cuban exiles. Despite their concern over the severity of the recent punishments, Caribbean leaders said for Cuba to change, dialogue had to remain open. Foreign ministers also discussed how to proceed with negotiations to join the 34-nation Free Trade Area of the Americas, which is to take effect in 2005. Some suggested the deadline be pushed back to allow countries to benefit.

Crime going on… Who you gonna call?… CRIMESTOPPERS!

WITH criminal elements waging a seemingly relentless assault upon the population of Trinidad and Tobago, there seems to be no one to whom the ordinary citizen can trust or turn to for help. However within this bitter strife, a band of brave soldiers have been doing their part to turn back the tide of crime and transform the country into a place “where the ordinary citizen regains confidence in the nation’s collective ability to combat and rid the scourge of crime”. This is the vision of CrimeStoppers Trinidad and Tobago (CSTT).

CSTT general manager Devrol Dupigny told Sunday Newsday the group is part of the CrimeStoppers International organisation which was born out of a 1976 shooting incident in Alberquerque, New Mexico. Information relayed to police by CrimeStoppers led to the arrest and conviction of two persons in connection with that crime. Today CrimeStoppers International has over 1,000 groups which operate within 18 countries. Dupigny indicated that CrimeStoppers was first launched in Trinidad and Tobago in 1999 in response to the Government’s belief that something needed to be done to deal with crime in the country. However the CSTT general manager stressed that since its inception, the organisation has always been “a registered non-profit organisation” and has steered clear of any involvement with the political directorate of the day. He said while National Security Minister Howard Chin Lee was present at CrimeStoppers’ re-launching on March 12, 2002, the only form of government interaction the group has is with the Police Service, in its capacity as an agency under Chin Lee’s portfolio. “I am not interested in profit. We are not interested in that,” Dupigny declared.

What the organisation is interested in, Dupigny continued, is finding meaningful ways to take the bite out of crime. To achieve this goal, CrimeStoppers has launched a four-pronged attack against crime. The first element involves the business community, upon which the organisation relies heavily for its financing in terms of operational aspects and providing reward money to tipsters’ whose information leads to the arrest and conviction of persons involved in criminal activities. The second involves the media, which Dupigny revealed is an area which CrimeStoppers intends to place greater emphasis upon within the near and distant future. He said that while CrimeStoppers has been operating in Trinidad and Tobago for the last four years, there are many people in the society who are unaware about the organisation, how it functions and how they can get involved in helping CSTT achieve its vision.

The police provide the third link in CrimeStoppers’ chain of command and ASP Wayne Richards is the group’s liaison with the Police Service. Dupigny said that Richards’ role is vital as he is able to sift out the legitmate calls from the prank ones. The final piece of the puzzle is the community and Dupigny admits that CrimeStoppers has had some difficulty convincing some sections of the population that any information they give will be confidential and their indentities would remain anonymous. Dupigny explained that calls from members of the public are received at CSTT’s centre by tele-operators who work 24 hours daily, seven days a week, 365 days a year. He said their job is to instil a level of confidence in the callers that the information they provide will be kept in the strictest of confidence. Dupigny stated that the tele-operators never ask the callers for their names or locations and have no means whereby they can trace the origin of the call.

Once persons call CrimeStoppers, they are given a control number and are asked to call back within 21 days. Dupigny said that if the caller’s information proves helpful, the caller is instructed to go into a ScotiaBank branch of his or her choice on a specific date and time. The maximum reward persons supplying helpful information is $10,000. The CSTT general manager said Richards makes all the arrangements with the respective bank operations manager and there is no breach of security when the reward is paid.

How successful has CrimeStoppers been since its phones starting ringing in 1999? Dupigny revealed that to date some 3,500 calls have been received by the organisation which have led to the seizure of $2.85 million worth of illegal narcotics, $40,000 worth of recovered property, the destruction of 15,000 marijuana trees, 180 persons arrested and 900 criminal cases cleared and solved.  The CSTT general manager said a look at the statistics, reveals that drugs, firearms and ammunition, larceny, fraud, sexual offences, murder and attempted murder are the major crimes which are called in to CrimeStoppers. Dupigny said the organisation has received calls concerning kidnapping and in one case, information received exclusively by CrimeStoppers proved crucial in the arrest and conviction of those involved. Asked how frequent calls about kidnapping were received, Dupigny replied that their frequency was much lower than the other categories of crime which are called into CrimeStoppers’ 800-TIPS and 800-STOP lines.

The CSTT general manager noted the recent formation of the Guardian Angels’ group by Barataria/San Juan MP Dr Fuad Khan. While he steered clear about the reasons for that group’s creation, Dupigny said: “CrimeStoppers has certain mechanisms which have worked locally and internationally and there is no merit in one group trying to outdo one another.” Asked what were CrimeStoppers’ future plans, Dupigny disclosed that in March, a strategic plan outlining the organisation’s plans from 2003 to 2007 was developed. The cost to implement the objectives for this year is $7.7 million and Dupigny sees this figure slowing decreasing over time as more organisations come on board. He stated that approaches are being made individually and collectively to the business community to sell the basic tenets of the plan and thus far, the feedback has been positive. Some aspects of the plan include the creation of a Junior CrimeStoppers group to educate young people and address the problem of petty crimes in the nation’s secondary schools and the formation of corporate support group programmes.

Dupigny  said CSTT is also looking at developing partnerships which businesses such as fast food outlets and gas stations, whose employees could serve as eyes and ears for possible criminal activities in the areas they operate in. The CSTT manager also disclosed that while “there is a move afoot” to obtain more funding from the Government, the organisation would never compromise itself by allowing Government direct involvement in its daily operations. Dupigny reiterated that while CrimeStoppers’ mechanisms have been successful to date, the organisation is always striving to build upon them and so fulfil its vision and stated mission “to combat crime by creating the premier flagship private sector mechanism through which every citizen can participate anonymously and successfully”. He expressed special praise for to the Trinidad and Tobago Chamber of Industry and Commerce, ScotiaBank, BWIA and Caribbean Home for the invaluable support they have provided to CrimeStoppers over the years.

mother to HIV kids

IT’S heart-wrenching for a mother to watch her loved one die in her arms; “only five years old, that child is innocent, has done nothing with his life and it’s just wasted away”. That youngster died of AIDS.

Such was Jacqueline John’s experience when one of the children she had nurtured and cared for passed away at the Cyril Ross Centre of the St Vincent De Paul society in El Dorado. “Before he reached the hospital he died. It’s something I will never forget. When they die I always feel my stomach turning like an ice-cream pail turning. It’s sad,” said Jacqueline a supervisor at the centre. She  has been with the centre for nine years in the ten years of its existence and has grown to love each of the children as her own. Jacqueline is a single parent mother of three children — Keston, 22, Keisha, 17 and Stefon 14. She leaves her Pinto Road, Arima, home for work at ten on mornings and doesn’t sign out until her work is done, that may mean at 7 or 8 at nights. “I don’t have a time to leave, it’s when I finish my duty. Sometimes a child might take in and we have to take them to the hospital,” said Jacqueline, which equates longer hours in anticipation of a positive outcome.

Jacqueline always had a desire to help others and this was manifested when she joined the team at the Finbar Ryan Geriatric Home and later the Home for the Aged. Now at the Cyril Ross Centre, Jacqueline’s duties are not entirely different. Though supervisor, she functions in the capacity of feeding, bathing, cleaning and taking care of the children. “I love my job. I have no regrets. It gives me a different meaning to life. You don’t take things for granted. I’ve been taught to be more loving, more understanding and how to react better,” she said. The centre houses 34 children (17 boys and 17 girls), all of whom are HIV carriers, “most of whom do not have parents, others who never knew their parents, and some are born to parents who abused drugs,” Jacqueline informed.

Out of a staff of 19, there are four supervisors, one teacher, a volunteer doctor and nurse. “We try to implement health care and we work a three-shift system so the children are well taken care of.” It’s a heart-warming sight to observe the youngsters interact with “Mummy Jackie” as they fondly call her. She pointed to one of the boys, a pre-schooler, whom she sighted as reason enough to remain put in her job. “He follows me around all the time, he’s a loving child,” she said. The average age of the children at the centre range from nine months to 18 years. Unfortunately, “there’s no more room at the centre to take in any more children that’s why we have a Cyril Ross Outpatient Clinic. We have at least 20 children in that clinic.”

It may appear to some as a drastic move from taking care of the elderly to children who are HIV positive. Jacqueline responded: “We have had a lot of negativity in the past. People come in here and ask if they need to put on gloves to play with the children, but the public needs to be educated on how to deal with the virus. My children grew up playing here. Thanks to doctors Everest Nosa and David John for giving us the knowledge about the medication and the virus so we could work with the children. “I treat them the same way I treat my children. I try to be a good listener, patient, more understanding and I try to show them not because they are HIV positive they should give up on life. They are no different from any other. I even spoil them,” said Jacqueline. “I teach them ethics, values, morals, goals, to aim high, to not get discouraged and don’t let anybody bring you down. It’s nice to see them grow up from a baby.”

Discipline, too is essential. “It depends on the child’s age, the younger ones would get time out, five minutes to sit down and cool off and the big ones would get no television and will have to take up a book.” The children love “Mummy Jackie”. “They like to make fun of my weight. They would say things like ‘ah thought yuh say yuh losing weight and yuh drinking Chubby’. They love music. If you put it on the radio everybody would get up and dance.” Rare cases arise when the virus becomes full blown (progressing to Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome — AIDS). “You see them lose weight in front of you, they lose their hair. It’s not something I want to experience again, but thanks to the anti-retro viral treatment…,” Jacqueline said.

The AIDS victim is placed in the isolation room “for peace and tranquillity”. In most cases the children are unaware of what’s happening to them. “At five years you just know you sick and something is wrong with you… Sometimes they will ask for all types of things to eat like KFC and pizza but they can’t eat it, but I try to please them so we buy it and they will keep it there for the whole day. It’s sad. I know it’s wrong but I buy everything they ask for.” Although five years is about the longest any child has stayed there, the loss of any child, newcomer or not is still “a great blow” to Jacqueline and her colleagues. “We would sit together and picture the child, how he or she was. Sometimes we catch ourselves crying and laughing at the same time… “I wouldn’t say it isn’t a tough job but it makes me more loving and appreciative of life. I always say it has its reward, not monetary, but there’s contentment, you just feel good about what you do. My future is here, I don’t see myself working somewhere else. I choose to be here…”

Six sons, ten grandsons are pundits

In all her majestic glory, she sits like the queen Khausilya of the Ramayan in a palace that was built over a period of 50 years. Chandrawtie Prasad, the mother of six sons and one daughter, today boasts of having six successful sons all of whom are UWI graduates and practising pundits and spiritual leaders in different communities in the country. All of her grandsons are also pundits. Her only daughter, Binamatee, died of cancer a couple years ago. 

Chandrawtie is called “mother of the village” in Aranguez. Her fifth son, Pundit Manideo Prasad is a Government senator and is tipped to be the next High Commissioner to India. Seated on her front porch of her beautiful home wearing a simple cotton dress, Moya as she is fondly called, carries a look that is distinctly royal but religious. When she puts in an appearance at any of the various temples where her sons are spiritual leaders, devotees are often moved to tears. But she refuses to sit up front or go before any cameras. Instead she prefers the simple life, filled with devotion and love for her husband and children. Moya and Pundit Hari Prasad have been married for the past 58 years. Their youngest son Pundit Parmanand Prasad, who is the spiritual leader of the popular Sukh Shanti Mandir of St Augustine, lives with them.

Moya said that having been born in the house of Vyas Pundit of Charlieville, she was brought up in a highly religious surrounding where prayer was the order of the day and the principles of the Ramayan were kept by her parents. At age 14 she was asked to prepare herself for marriage. She did not see the man who was chosen by her father but she trusted her parents’ judgment of choosing her husband. After the marriage ceremony she did not see her husband until four days later and became afraid for he was a boxer with bulging muscles and a big chest. “I didn’t like him at all, she said laughing.” She was young and immature and it was days after, when her husband started to talk to her, then, she realised what a brilliant and gentle human being he was. It was then she actually fell in love with him. As a young girl in the then rural village of Aranguez, Moya set about doing her household chores and duty as wife of a pundit.

In the early days she lived in a simple house made of board and galvanise. Her husband would tend to the many cows before going out to conduct puja at the various Hindu homes in the central areas. Moya would start her day as early as 4 am when she would prepare breakfast in the chulha. She noted that with the absence of electricity, the atmosphere was sacred as one was able to witness the rising of the sun as the first light and then there was the mantra to be said as the sun comes up in the east. After doing her own devotion to Mother Durga (Hindu goddess of protection), she got her children ready for the morning devotion and then sent them off to school. Later she would spend a lot of time tending the cows, cleaning the pen and planting her vegetable garden.  “In those days it was so different from today. The women would look forward to cleaning and decorating their homes and they would take pride in caring for their children. 
 
“Today they are busy shopping and travelling and feteing that they have very little time for their children,” she said. She said she kept her children close to her because of the fact that boys tend to get out of hand when they are left alone. She would make sure that on reaching home after school the children assisted in the household chore of watering plants and then tending the cows before having their afternoon bath and evening devotion. “Prayer in home is the most important part of the day. If we don’t have the blessing of the gods then how can we live in this world. We must depend totally on them for guidance. We don’t have to beg the children to do devotion. It must come naturally. When as mother you approach the murti of Mother Durga and offer your mantras then the children will learn how to go before the murti without you asking them,” she said.  In the early days Moya had to play the role of both mother and father as her husband would leave the home for long periods when he went out to conduct “seven day” pujas. Sharing a joke with her son Pundit Manideo who was present for this interview, she remembers when disciplining her sons she would use the slang, “I will bury you and then kill you”. It was a joke they shared for years. She did not spare the whip in having them do their duty as children.

“While they were small they could not see the benefit in doing their devotion, and their duties and studying hard. Today they see why it was so important,” she said. Devotion is the key to realising any goal in life, she added. She lived by the philosophy that God is in control of everything and one must consider God first before starting their day’s work.  Her sons are proof that Moya had the formula for success. She has done her family proud in bringing up her children in the perfect settings. She has 16 grandchildren, ten boys who are now pundits and six girls. Her eldest grandson, Omardath Maharaj, 31, is already a recognised pundit in SWAHA organisation.  Moya has travelled to India on 17 occasions visiting religious places, all the beautiful rivers and mountains. Her home is filled with many ornaments from India. She advises women that in order to have successful children they must do their devotion and live an honest and dedicated life and their children would follow in mother’s footsteps. She said that many people look for happiness in the wrong place. “True happiness is doing devotion to God. Not in dressing-up and going out,” she said. 

Warning to truck drivers

THE EDITOR: A very pleasant good day to you all and here’s hoping that you all at the Newsday office are fine.


I am writing here today about the crash with the truck and cars at the Mausica traffic lights. As a truck driver for the past 19 years on the nation’s roads with a clean driving record, as far as I read the problem is the lack of driving with caution, that would allow a driver to stop in time.


As I will recall, some time ago I was driving a truck on the westbound lane and as I approached the traffic light at Bamboo the light was blinking on amber and there was this car in front of me which stopped all of a sudden in front of the truck.


So if I was driving that truck at a speed which I could not control, tell me what would have happened? Anyway, what I do know is that some drivers want to show their boss that they are the best drivers and try to make as many trips as possible.


I recall about seven years ago I was driving a dumper truck for a contractor at Longdenville. There were seven drivers, all were getting a day’s work pay that for $80 a day.


The boss told us that he wanted five loads from Coosal, Maracas to Claxton Bay. I told him that I am driving to suit me. For the whole week the other six drivers made the five loads but I only made four, so the boss told me the six drivers are his best drivers.


One day one of the drivers was approaching Claxton Bay with a loaded truck and the right front tyre blew away and the truck turned over and it was a wreck.


I told the boss that that was one of his best drivers.


I want to let truck drivers know that when you are on the nation’s roads, don’t drive like a fool because you will meet it the very hard way.



SUNIL SINGH
Lamont Street
Longdenville

Lands available to raise cattle, sheep

THE EDITOR: Are close friends of the political elite of both major political parties making a comfortable and prosperous livelihood in keeping he country almost entirely dependent on imported meat and dairy products?


Why does the Ministry of Agriculture apparently shrink from any suggestion of converting thousands of money-losing cane lands into pasture to raise large herds and flocks of cattle, sheep and goats to render this country largely self sufficient in our domestic meat, milk and other dairy requirements?


The question is a very simple one. I wonder why it cannot obtain an answer; can anyone advise.


GEOFF HUDSON
Port-of-Spain