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Bajan PM: Gun violence has to stop US trade battle creates Chinese opportunit­y for Jamaican seafood

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(Barbados Nation) It has to stop! This is Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley’s clear message about the lawless behaviour and gun violence in society.

Mottley made her thoughts known on Sunday evening when she sat down with veteran journalist David Ellis for a wide-ranging 90-miniute interview. According to her, there is a conversati­on that she, Minister of Youth and Community Empowermen­t, Adrian Forde, and the Minister of Home Affairs, Edmund Hinkson, must have with the country.

“In order for us to do that [stop gun violence], we have to put in the time and go and engage. This is not a case of being able to use the heavy arm of the law on people.

“This is a case of sitting down and talking with people and putting structures in place. The Ministry of Youth has to put back in place substantiv­e programmes for young people . . . . Unless you have young people in structured activity, the devil is going to find work for idle hands,” she contended.

Mottley said the Minister of Youth and Community Empowermen­t had “an extremely good rapport with young people” and had been able to assist many of them in becoming entreprene­urs.

On the point of the creation of a Ministry of People Empowermen­t and Elder Affairs, the Prime Minister noted that Barbados had an ageing population and persons were being neglected and abandoned at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital. She proffered the view that citizens must come to terms with how they took care of the elderly in this country and maintained that it must be done in a dignified way.

“We are about to create a population commission because Barbados needs to ask itself and come to grips [with], is our population large enough to sustain the quality of life that we have? . . . So, the Ministry of Health has been asked to bring a paper so that we can determine what is the appropriat­e size for our population in the next 50 years if we are to sustain our quality of life in Barbados,” she disclosed.

During the interview, Mottley said the integrity legislatio­n, which was recently debated in Parliament, was still open because Government wanted the public to have a say. She explained that a joint select committee of both Houses would be created so people could write or, in some instances, go and give oral evidence.

In addition, she pointed out that Government Ministers have had to declare their assets, the details of which would be sealed and placed in a special safe. She noted that this process was currently being done and she expected it to be completed before the end of this month.

The Prime Minister stressed that a Cabinet of Barbados never declared their assets to anyone in the past. She insisted, however: “We feel fundamenta­lly this is an important step for us to make as a country.” (BGIS) (Jamaica Observer) Chinese seafood merchants have already begun buying lobster and fish from other countries as tariffs make American seafood too expensive, according to a recent article out of Beijing, China.

President of the United States Donald Trump last week imposed a 25 per cent tariff on US$34 billion worth of Chinese imports for the country’s “dirty trade tactics”. The Trump Administra­tion has claimed that China forces foreign companies to spill American technology secrets in order to do business with China.

China immediatel­y retaliated by imposing its own tariffs of the same weight.

The ongoing trade dispute with China is expected to escalate, with Trump threatenin­g to add tariffs to US$200 billion worth of Chinese goods. The proposed 10 per cent tariff would hit a number of Chinese products, including fish, vegetables, coal and handbags, but is subject to a public hearing from August 20 to August 23.

Media visits to Beijing’s largest wholesale seafood market found scant American fish or crustacean­s for sale. Seafood distributo­rs argue that the recent 25 per cent tariff has made American lobster unaffordab­le, forcing merchants to buy lobster and fish from other countries.

Rainforest Seafoods business developmen­t manager, Max Jardim reckons that Jamaica could capitalise on the ongoing trade war between US and China, noting that while it is very early days the tariffs implemente­d are prohibitiv­e.

“Other lobster-producing countries will stand to benefit, including Jamaica, if we can capitalise. Our challenge in Jamaica is that the current regulation­s do not facilitate the export of live lobster,” Jardim told the Jamaica Observer.

In 2015 Rainforest announced plans to export live Jamaican lobsters to Asian markets including China, Japan and South Korea, but to date has not been able to capitalise on the initiative that is expected to threefold increase product demand.

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 ??  ?? Mia Mottley
Mia Mottley
 ??  ?? Max Jardim
Max Jardim

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