Lankan celebrates captaincy

COLOMBO: Hashan Tillakaratne celebrated his promotion to the Sri Lankan Test cricket captaincy with an unbeaten century yesterday before heavy rain halted the fourth day’s play and pushed the series opener against New Zealand toward a draw.

Tillakaratne was unbeaten on 126 after sharing a brisk century partnership with Romesh Kaluwitharana, who smashed a rapid 76 on return to Test cricket after a two-year layoff, to lift Sri Lanka to 424 for six when rain washed out play 50 minutes before the scheduled tea interval. The unexpected showers robbed 48 overs of play yesterday. With Sri Lanka still 91 runs adrift of New Zealand’s first-innings total of 515 for seven declared there seems little chance of a result. Kumar Dharmasena was unbeaten on 19, while Tillakaratne remained not out after registering his 11th Test century.

The left-handed Tillakaratne was appointed skipper after opener Sanath Jayasuriya quit earlier this month. He had deputised as the Sri Lankan captain in a 1999 Test against Pakistan when the then skipper Arjuna Ranatunga was injured. The captain said there was still a lot to play in this match, even if chances of a result were remote. “It’s not about me scoring a century, but we’re looking to overhaul New Zealand’s score,” Tillakaratne said. “Taking a first innings lead tomorrow will boost our confidence for the Second Test,” he said. “I’m glad to have got the runs when Sri Lanka needed it. It was a good batting track and we should not have been under any pressure.”

Resuming at the overnight total of 267 for four, Sri Lanka lost Mahela Jayawardena (58) without addition to the total when he was caught behind off medium-pacer Jacob Oram. A member of Sri Lanka’s 1996 World Cup winning side, Kaluwitharana went to the crease and made his attacking intentions evident by hitting two boundaries each off speedster Shane Bond and Oram. Most of his 13 boundaries were from cuts and square drives and he dominated the partnership with Tillakaratne, who only contributed 26 to the 107-run stand. Kaluwitharana’s 90-ball knock culminated when he skied offspinner Paul Wiseman to present Mathew Sinclair an easy catch at mid-wicket. Tillakaratne and Kaluwitharana combined to take Sri Lanka past the day’s first target of avoiding the follow-on, which loomed large the previous afternoon. Tillakaratne has so far hit 21 boundaries from 294 deliveries in 408 minutes, while Dharmasena has batted for 98 minutes to compile 19 from 65 balls.

Wasim accused of stealing friend’s jeep

KARACHI: Pakistani police said yesterday they had registered a criminal case against leading cricketer Wasim Akram after he was accused of failing to pay for a jeep he had purchased from a former friend.

Police registered a case against the fast bowler after a complaint from his estranged friend Saadat Hayat, police inspector Hanif Qadri told Reuters. Qadri said Wasim had been accused of taking the jeep on the pretext of purchasing it, but had not paid for it. Wasim’s wife, Huma,denied the allegation and said the jeep was given as a gift. “There is no cheating involved,” she said by telephone from Lahore. “This happened three years ago. We wanted to return the vehicle a long time ago, but he refused to take it back and instead demanded an exorbitant sum against it.”

Wasim, Pakistan’s highest wicket-taker in Test matches and the world’s highest wicket-taker in limited over cricket, is in England playing for Hampshire after being dropped from the national team because of his poor World Cup performance. The vehicle is now in the possession of police, Huma said. Police said the case was registered under Section 406, which deals with misappropriation and breach of trust. Lawyers said anyone found guilty under this law can face up to three years in prison.

Volvo golf offers record $$

WENTWORTH: Prize money for this year’s Volvo PGA championship will total a record 3.5 million euros (US $3.86 million), making it the third richest event on European soil, the European Tour announced yesterday.

The British Open, with a prize fund of 5.478 million euros, and the Dunhill Links Championship, with a fund of 4.528 million euros, are the only tournaments in Europe which will offer more money for the players this season. The Volvo PGA championship, scheduled to take place at Wentworth Club from May 22 to 25, is the flagship event on the European Tour and will benefit this year from an increase of 327,720 euros over the 2002 prize fund. “This is another significant chapter in the tour’s special relationship with Volvo,” European Tour executive director Ken Schofield said in a statement.

“The extension of the contract with Volvo through to the 50th playing of this great championship in 2004, with a prize fund worth 3,500,000 euros for 2003, will further enhance the status of the championship as the tour’s flagship event.” Denmark’s Anders Hansen won last year’s Volvo PGA championship by five strokes, closing with a two-under-par 70 in spite of torrential showers to clinch his debut victory in the professional ranks. All four majors and the four annual World Golf Championship events appear on both the European and US Tour schedules.

Fortunate Flag flies with topweight

FORTUNATE FLAG who was noted putting in his best work at the end of a Starter Allowance event won by Song Of Freedom earlier this month, was handed the top impost of 56.5 kilos.

This is for the Imported Three-year-old Maiden event on the Arima Race Club Day 13 card at Santa Rosa Park, Arima on Saturday. The lightly raced son of Fortunate Prospect is being asked to hand out three kilos to the more experienced  Ring Dang Do and 12 to first time starter Saratone in the 1300 metres contest, expected to share spotlight with a Starter Allowance event. In the extended sprint the temperemental Lovely Honoree will tote 52.5 kilos, Kalyan 52, and Pattie’s No Angel 44.5.

Weights were also allotted to runners for four other handicaps framed for the ARC Day 13 card. Mir On Fire who has been running consistently well since joining Bertram Dookeran’s barn was assigned the topweight of 56.5 kilos for the sole handicap on the turf. In this event to be run over 1300 metres, weights were also allotted for the main course, a measure taken should the extended sprint be shifted. Honor Bound has been asked to tote the biggest weight on Saturday. The Kenny De Silva Jnr inmate was burdened with 57.5 kilos for the Restricted Handicap.

Also listed to head the weights with 56.5 kilos are Cash Reward and Hillside Symphony. Cash Reward, who has been a model of consistency lately, will face off against 12 West Indian-bred maidens and those of a similar age-group to have raced at the bottom level and  have not earned $1,500 since February last year. Hillside Symphony has been asked to carry 56.5 and match stride against six runners over 1250 metres.

TT boxers return with 18 medals

TRINIDAD and Tobago’s boxers returned home early yesterday with a haul of 18 medals from the Caribbean Amateur Boxing Championships in Nassau, Bahamas.

The fighters matched their record of the previous year when each member of the contingent earned a medal in the highly competitive annual regional box-off. Despite their stellar performances, TT had to settle for second place behind hosts Bahamas but ahead of Barbados. Cecil Forde, vice-president of the Amateur Boxing Association said yesterday he was pleased with the overall results as the core of the national team was made up of junior boxers who gave an exemplary account of themselves. “Of the six men who won gold, three were juniors while the women, fighting at this level for the first time, created history also returning with gold,” said an elated Forde yesterday.

The juniors coming out on top of the region were lightweight Kurt Blackwell, featherweight junior Aaron Hassette and junior welterweight Andrew Fermin. The seniors joining the ranks were Terrance Lokai, Revival’s Boxing Gym’s flyweight; Devon Jones (lightweight) and Tobagonian Kerston Manswell, a super heavyweight who earned silver at the Commonwealth Games in Manchester, England and the Central American Games in El Salvador, both staged last year. Tiana Saney, light welterweight and Liana Boodram, a light flyweight, defied the critics to make their mark when females were admitted to CABA for the first time last week.

Forde said the TT success can be attributed to the intensive training the boxers were subjected to in a live-in camp at the Cosmic Gym, Marabella prior to their trip to the Bahamas. He expressed gratitude to the many sponsors who assisted the team, including the groceries which provided foodstuffs on a daily basis to keep the fighters nourished as they prepared for the CABA. Also giving invaluable support to the venture was female boxing official Molly Boxhill, who personally visited business-places pleading for assistance for the boxers.

Forde said yesterday, TT had made a successful bid for the Caribbean Championships next year and much will depend on the assistance of Government if the competition is to be staged here. He said the programme for the local boxers will be ongoing as Aaron Cumberbatch, silver medallist at CABA is slated to represent TT at the upcoming World Under-17 (Cadet) Championships in Romania. Also, Manswell has already qualified for the Pan American Games this August in Santo Domingo and all focus will be on their preparation. “The boxers will not be afforded any rest. They will immediately go into action this week in the Point Fortin Borough Week card,” said Forde. “We have to get our house in order and start the ball rolling in anticipation of next year’s CABA when we will be able to field a full team and sweep the honours at home,” Forde promised.


RESULTS
Gold: (Seniors) Terrance Lokai, flyweight; Devon Jones, lightweight; Kerston Manswell, super- heavyweight; (Juniors) Kurt Blackwell, lightweight; Andrew Fermin, junior weltwerweight; Aaron Hassette, featherweight; (Women) Tiana Saney, lightweight; Liana Boodram, light-flyweight.
Silver: (Seniors) Faiyum Mohammed, featherweight; Michael Springer, light weltwerweight; Simeon Prince, middleweight; (Juniors) David Olivierre, bantamweight; Aaron Cumberbatch, light flyweight; (Women) Chickaree Valentine, featherweight.
Bronze: (Seniors) Joseph Straker, welterweight; Miki Richards, heavyweight; (Open) Clevon Denoon, bantamweight; (Juniors) Ricard Straker, middleweight.

‘Sexy’ captures Guardian General golf

Carlos “Sexy” Baynes held off a determined second day challenge from Dion Gonsalves to win the first ever Guardian General Invitational Golf Tournament.

This was held at the Tobago Plantations Golf Course, Lowlands over the weekend and featured the talents of 118 of the nation’s top golfers. National player Ray Roberts captured the Seniors title, 11 shots clear of second placed Anthony Wight and 13 better than third placed Barry Ferdinand. Diana Torry took home the women’s championship with an equally dominant 14-shot finish ahead of former world junior champion Maria Nunes. Kevin Williams won the Juniors Division with scores of 80 on both days. Guardian General’s Senior Vice-President John Gonsalves said at the presentation of prizes function, that his company was so impressed by the player turnout and the quality of play that he intends to ensure the tournament becomes “The Masters” of the local golfing calendar in future.

RESULTS
Open Gross: 1 Carlos Baynes 71, 74 (145); 2 Dion Gonsalves 72, 74 (146); 3 Simon Merry 74, 74 (148); 4 Fitzroy Collins 78, 74 (154); 5 Jesse Jattan Sr 78, 76 (154)
Open Net: 1 Raymond Craig 69, 69 (138); 2 Jesse Jattan Sr. 72, 70 (142); 3 Stephan Bhaggan 76, 67 (143); 4 Fitzroy Collins 74, 71 (145) and 5 Carlos Baynes 71, 74 (145).
Seniors Gross: 1 Ray Roberts 72, 71 (143); 2 Anthony Wight 80, 74 (154); 3 Barry Ferdinand 78, 78 (156); 4 Aziz Mohammed 79, 80 (159); 5 Rolly Davis 82, 78 (160).
Seniors Net: 1 Aziz Mohammed 68, 69 (137); 2 Ray Roberts 71, 70 (141); 3 Monty Chapman 70, 71 (141); 4 Anthony Romain 65, 77 (142) and 5 Rolly Davis 75, 71 (146).
Women’s Gross: 1 Diana Torry 69, 82 (151); 2 Maria Nunes 81, 84 (165); 3 Pauline Raynor 88, 88 (176); 4 Amoy Chang Fong 98, 91 (189); 5 Synthia Nelson 105, 96 (201).
Women’s Net: 1 Diana Torry 65, 78 (143); 2 Maria Nunes 77, 80 (157); 3 Pauline Raynor 80, 80 (160); 4 Dai Pontiflex 83, 83 (166); 5 Amoy Chang Fong 89, 82 (171).
Juniors Gross: 1 Kevin Williams 80, 80 (160); 2 Kerville Cowie 83, 85 (168); 3 Mikhel Roberts 89, 87 (176); 4 Darnell Isaac 90, 97 (187); 5 Nikeisha Trim 108, 98 (206); 6 Nikola Trim 112, 100 (212).
Juniors Net: 1 Kerville Cowie 63, 65 (128); 2 Kevin Williams 66, 66 (132); 3 Mikhel Roberts 69, 67 (136); 4 Darnell Isaac 74, 81 (158); 5 Nikola Trim 91, 79 (170).

TT UNIVERSITY: 2004

Trinidad and Tobago will have its own University next year, separate from the University of the West Indies. It is an idea that goes back as many as 47 years when the first Prime Minister, Dr Eric Williams, advised of Government’s intention to establish a University of Trinidad and Tobago.

The idea had not been heard of again until the Manning administration indicated recently that it intended to create a University of Trinidad and Tobago. Last Thursday, Minister of Science and Technology, Senator Danny Montano, announced that Government had formally endorsed the establishment of the University, which would focus, initially, on science, engineering and the environment. Dr Williams’ surprise announcement in November of 1957 at the Shipping Association’s Annual Dinner had triggered concern and adverse comment by many, who felt that the Trinidad and Tobago Government should have concentrated instead on an expansion of the University of West Indies (UWI).

Interestingly, while this country apparently shelved the idea of a State created and funded University, which would be independent of UWI, Guyana (then British Guiana) went ahead in 1962, five years after Williams’ announcement, and set up the University of Guyana. It would be followed later by Jamaica’s establishment of the University of Technology. And not unlike Jamaica’s, a Trinidad and Tobago concern in deciding on the University, was the cost of accessing University education at UWI. The annual cost per student, pursuing at the University of the West Indies the discipline afforded at Jamaica’s University of Technology, is TT$61,000. At the Jamaican University the annual cost per student is TT$23,000.

This is comparable with the cost — TT$20,000 —at Trinidad and Tobago’s Institute of Technology which (the Institute) will form part of the planned University of TT. Montano’s argument that the setting up of the TT University was considered to be cheaper than that of expanding UWI is important. In turn, he has provided figures which demonstrated that the University of the West Indies was physically incapable of coping with today’s demand for entrance. Applications for programmes in science, medical science, engineering and agriculture at UWI for the 2003/2004 Academic year totalled some 2,400, but only 1,226 were registered. This represents both a shortfall of approximately 50 percent, and the continuing increasing demand by young Caricom citizens for the accessing of University education.

The demand has to be met. Government recognises that the cost factor — University fees, accommodation and other expenses — would make it difficult for many young Trinidadians and Tobagonians to seek tertiary education overseas in the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom. Its decision to establish the University of Trinidad and Tobago will result, in large part, in the meeting of the demand for studies in science, engineering and the environment, and with it the understandable and commendable desire of citizens to upgrade their efficiency. There will be benefits both nationally and regionally, but we hope that those planning the programmes will take into account the real needs of the community and be conscious of the achievement of practical and realistic goals where the development of people is at the centre of everything.

Gas, chemicals, bombs: Britain has used them all before in Iraq

NO one, least of all the British, should be surprised at the state of anarchy in Iraq. We have been here before. We know the territory, its long and miasmic history, the all-but-impossible diplomatic balance to be struck between the cultures and ambitions of Arabs, Kurds, Shia and Sunni, of Assyrians, Turks, Americans, French, Russians and of our own desire to keep an economic and strategic presence there.

Laid waste, a chaotic post-invasion Iraq may now well be policed by old and new imperial masters promising liberty, democracy and unwanted exiled leaders, in return for oil, trade and submission. Only the last of these promises is certain. The peoples of Iraq, even those who have cheered passing troops, have every reason to mistrust foreign invaders. They have been lied to far too often, bombed and slaughtered promiscuously. Iraq is the product of a lying empire. The British carved it duplicitously from ancient history, thwarted Arab hopes, Ottoman loss, the dunes of Mesopotamia and the mountains of Kurdistan at the end of the first world war. Unsurprisingly, anarchy and insurrection were there from the start.

The British responded with gas attacks by the army in the south, bombing by the fledgling RAF in both north and south. When Iraqi tribes stood up for themselves, we unleashed the flying dogs of war to “police” them. Terror bombing, night bombing, heavy bombers, delayed action bombs (particularly lethal against children) were all developed during raids on mud, stone and reed villages during Britain’s League of Nations’ mandate. The mandate ended in 1932; the semi-colonial monarchy in 1958. But during the period of direct British rule, Iraq proved a useful testing ground for newly forged weapons of both limited and mass destruction, as well as new techniques for controlling imperial outposts and vassal states.

The RAF was first ordered to Iraq to quell Arab and Kurdish and Arab uprisings, to protect recently discovered oil reserves, to guard Jewish settlers in Palestine and to keep Turkey at bay. Some mission, yet it had already proved itself an effective imperial police force in both Afghanistan and Somaliland (today’s Somalia) in 1919-20. British and US forces have been back regularly to bomb these hubs of recalcitrance ever since. Winston Churchill, secretary of state for war and air, estimated that without the RAF, somewhere between 25,000 British and 80,000 Indian troops would be needed to control Iraq. Reliance on the airforce promised to cut these numbers to just 4,000 and 10,000. Churchill’s confidence was soon repaid.

An uprising of more than 100,000 armed tribesmen against the British occupation swept through Iraq in the summer of 1920. In went the RAF. It flew missions totalling 4,008 hours, dropped 97 tons of bombs and fired 183,861 rounds for the loss of nine men killed, seven wounded and 11 aircraft destroyed behind rebel lines. The rebellion was thwarted, with nearly 9,000 Iraqis killed. Even so, concern was expressed in Westminster: the operation had cost more than the entire British-funded Arab rising against the Ottoman Empire in 1917-18.

The RAF was vindicated as British military expenditure in Iraq fell from 23m pounds sterling in 1921 to less than 4m pounds sterling five years later. This was despite the fact that the number of bombing raids increased after 1923 when Squadron Leader Arthur Harris — the future hammer of Hamburg and Dresden, whose statue stands in Fleet Street in London today — took command of 45 Squadron. Adding bomb-racks to Vickers Vernon troop car riers, Harris more or less invented the heavy bomber as well as night “terror” raids. Harris did not use gas himself — though the RAF had employed mustard gas against Bolshevik troops in 1919, while the army had gassed Iraqi rebels in 1920 “with excellent moral effect”.

Churchill was particularly keen on chemical weapons, suggesting they be used “against recalcitrant Arabs as an experiment”. He dismissed objections as “unreasonable”. “I am strongly in favour of using poisoned gas against uncivilised tribes —(to) spread a lively terror —” In today’s terms, “the Arab” needed to be shocked and awed. A good gassing might well do the job. Conventional raids, however, proved to be an effective deterrent. They brought Sheikh Mahmoud, the most persistent of Kurdish rebels, to heel, at little cost. Writing in 1921, Wing Commander J A Chamier suggested that the best way to demoralise local people was to concentrate bombing on the “most inaccessible village of the most prominent tribe which it is desired to punish. All available aircraft must be collected, the attack with bombs and machine guns must be relentless and unremitting and carried on continuously by day and night, on houses, inhabitants, crops and cattle.”

“The Arab and Kurd now know”; reported Squadron Leader Harris after several such raids, “what real bombing means within 45 minutes a full-sized village can be practically wiped out, and a third of its inhabitants killed or injured, by four or five machines which offer them no real target, no opportunity for glory as warriors, no effective means of escape.” In his memoir of the crushing of the 1920 Iraqi uprising, Lieutenant-General Sir Aylmer L Haldane, quotes his own orders for the punishment of any Iraqi found in possession of weapons “with the utmost severity”: “The village where he resides will be destroyed — pressure will be brought on the inhabitants by cutting off water power the area being cleared of the necessaries of life”. He added the warning: “Burning a village properly takes a long time, an hour or more according to size”. Punitive British bombing continued throughout the 1920s. An eyewitness account by Saleh ‘Umar al Jabrim describes a raid in February 1923 on a village in southern Iraq, where bedouin were celebrating 12 weddings. After a visit from the RAF, a woman, two boys, a girl and four camels were left dead. There were many wounded. Perhaps to please his British interrogators, Saleh declared: “These casualties are from God and no one is to be blamed.”

One RAF officer, Air Commodore Lionel Charlton, resigned in 1924 when he visited a hospital after such a raid and faced armless and legless civilian victims. Others held less generous views of those under their control. “Woe betide any native (working for the RAF) who was caught in the act of thieving any article of clothing that may be hanging out to dry”, wrote Aircraftsman 2nd class, H Howe, based at RAF Hunaidi, Baghdad. “It was the practice to take the offending native into the squadron gymnasium. Here he would be placed in the boxing ring, used as a punch bag by members of the boxing team, and after he had received severe punishment, and was in a very sorry condition, he would be expelled for good, minus his job.” At the time of the Arab revolt in Palestine in the late 1930s, Air Commodore Harris, as he then was, declared that “the only thing the Arab understands is the heavy hand, and sooner or later it will have to be applied”. As in 1921, so in 2003.

Home invasion — a frightening chapter in criminal activity

THE EDITOR: Please allow me to comment on the new crime of choice “home invasion”. Home invasion is now the crime of choice because it gives the perpetrators the opportunity to kill and destroy at pleasure. The easy going country life is no longer that easy when criminals can attack with impunity.

“At one point, the woman said, one of the men grabbed her grandson and cut him with a knife on his leg. She said the men stripped the boy naked, placed a knife to his genitals and threatened to cut it off, if the family did not say where the money was being kept. She said the bandits told her that they knew she sold her land and had a lot more money.” — Newsday. What kind of animals will do this to a family? In a nation where kidnappings have spiralled out of control, one wonders what Trinis will experience on this menu of hate. These criminals are obviously very professional. They knew how to harass and terrorise innocent citizens. The frightening thing about this is that, knowing the ability of the Trinidad and Tobago police force these criminals may never be caught. They are poised to attack other families and the boldness that they demonstrate will mean a new chapter in criminal activities.


KHEM HARRINARINE
Port-of-Spain

Public servants left to suffer

THE EDITOR: I would be grateful if you would publish this letter on behalf of us public servants who have not received our arrears increment.

Would the Prime Minister, Minister of Finance and the Minister of Public Administration, please tell us, suffering public servants, the truth about the non payment of our long overdue arrears of increment. To attempt to fool the nation, by putting the blame on public service bureaucracy, is to insult our intelligence, when the facts are that the Ministers (or more specifically the Ministry of Public Administration) do not have the funds to pay the money that is due to us.

How else can the Prime Minister (who said that we would have got the arrears since November 2002) justify the fact that many of us, who have applied for our arrears since last year and have met all the criteria for receipt of same, are just being fed all kinds of feeble excuses as to why we have not received what is rightfully ours? Imagine we are in the middle of April and no word yet as to when we can expect our money! Fellow sufferers! Join with me and write letters to the press! Embarrass the Govern-ment into paying us our dues immediately! Deny fix up deyself! Leh dem fix we up too!


JEAN PARRIS
Tunapuna