Friday, July 23, 2021

Pastor's fatality





Bullet Tree in mourning after pastor's stabbing death

Friday, July 23, 2021

BULLET TREE, Westmoreland – The quiet community of Bullet Tree, near Petersfield in Westmoreland, is now in mourning after a well-known clergy man was stabbed to death and his 17-year-old son taken into police custody in relation to the incident.

The deceased, Garnet Foster, was the head of the Petersfield Mountain Assembly Church of God.

“[Of] every death weh happen inna Bullet Tree, dis a di worse one; a di best man,” shouted a distraught Cassandra Denham who said Foster was her daughter's godfather.

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According to OBSERVER ONLINE sources from the community, Foster and his son were involved in an altercation. Shortly after, the father was seen walking down the lane soaked in blood, clutching his neck.

The slain man's mother, Verona Foster told OBSERVER ONLINE that she was awakened by her grandson banging on her door and saying his father was hurt. She quickly got dressed and rushed to her son's side.

“When me see him, mi hold him up and he said to me, him want a taxi [to go seek medical attention]. Lord Jesus, Garnet is everything to me,” she cried as she clutched her chest.

Christopher Jones, a popular taxi man, said he was the one who transported the pastor to the hospital.

“About 5:38 am his mother called me and asked weh mi deh,” he recounted. His car full of passengers, he put the wounded man in the trunk of the vehicle.

“The condition weh me did really see him inna, mi a tell you the truth it did difficult for him to mek it,” shared a depressed Jones. He said the passengers tried to use disposable wipes to staunch the bleeding, but the blood was just too much.

Members of the Petersfield Mountain Assembly Church of God are among those reeling from Foster's sudden and tragic death.

“It's a really awful situation, especially to hear how he died,” said church member Lascelles Ruddock.

Gospel music could be heard blasting throughout the community Friday afternoon, an attempt to provide comfort after what residents described as a horror story.

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Thursday, July 22, 2021

Text To Speech-Software


 



Spechelo is a great software based on text to speech technology. Using SpeecHelo, you can convert any text to speech without time. Voice over and text to speech techniques are essential for all modern and social.

Also, it will be helpful for your business. But even in 2021, most people are still not aware of the harsh utility that text-to-speech software can offer them.Although many software is created for this purpose, SpeechoL contestants fail according to the user’s experiences and flexibility.

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SpeecHelo is accepted in a satisfactory way by its users, and is one of the most notable accuracy for speech software in text.This will help you to convert any type of text into a speech of good quality. You can easily complete any professional work using it.

So if you want to remove all the power of high quality voice over or text to speech technology, then you have to get this software.

Videos without a good Voiceover will not convert, will not get you clicks, leads, traffic, or any sales. We as humans, are used to HEARING stories,Since the dawns of humanity people would gather around the fire and listen to stories.

Only in the last 100 years, we are used to watching stories at the cinema, TV and later on YouTube.

That’s why a VIDEO is not efficient Without A GOOD VOICEOVER That Tells The Actual Story.

You Can’t Create A Good Sales Video, Training Video,Educational Video or any type of video without a good voiceover The Problem is that not all of us have a nice radio-sounding voice.

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OUTSOURCE — Spend countless hours finding the right voiceover artist, spend hundreds of dollars and HOPE you will like the end result -

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Use ROBOTIC voices — There is nothing that scares your viewers faster than a creepy robotic voice

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Option : 3

Speechelo — 3 clicks and you have a BREATH-TAKING voiceover.

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The only A.I. Text-To-Speech that is created especially for Video Creators.

All the other text-to-speech services are mainly used by Telephone Centrals and there is absolutely no problem that they sound Robotic.

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Generate & Download

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After that all it is left to do is to DOWNLOAD your brand new voiceover and use it for your projects.

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🇮🇳 Indian English: Mirai(Female)
🇪🇸 Spanish: Priscilla(Female)
🇪🇸 Spanish Albano(Male)
🇲🇽 Spanish Mexican: Lalita(Female)
🇲🇽 Spanish Mexican: Leticia
🇪🇸 Spanish US: Fiore(Female)
🇪🇸 Spanish: Olimpia(Female)
🇪🇸 Spanish: Fiore(Female)
🇫🇷 French: Thiery(Male)
🇫🇷 French: Magalie(Female)
🇫🇮 Finnish: Lotta(Female)
🇵🇹 Portuguese: Júlia(Female)
🇵🇹 Portuguese: Catarina(Female)
🇧🇷 Portuguese Brazil Leila(Female)
🇧🇷 Portuguese Brazil: Rafinha
🇩🇪 German: Anke(Female)
🇩🇪 German: Lina(Female)
🇩🇪 German: Martin(Male)
🇮🇹 Italian: Roberto(Male)
🇮🇹 Italian: Delinda(Female)
🇮🇹 Italian: Valentina(Female)
🇬🇷 Greek: Georgios (Male)
🇮🇱 Hebrew: Omar(Male)
🇮🇳 Hindi: Viti(Female)
🇮🇳 Tamil: Gurnam(Male)
🇮🇳 Telugu: Laban(Male)
🇹🇭 Thani: Chinda(Female)
🇮🇩 Indonesian: Arief(Male)
🇭🇺 Hungarian: Lajos (Male)
🇯🇵 Japanese: Takewaki(Female)
🇰🇵 Korean: Yebin(Female)
🇳🇴 Norwegian: Erle(Female)
🇳🇴 Norwegian: Nora(Female)
🇲🇾 Malaysia: Soleh(Male)
🇵🇱 Polish: Marzena(Female)
🇵🇱 Polish: Zuzanna(Female)
🇷🇴 Romanian: Dana(Female)
🇦🇪 Arabic: Mirah(Female)
🇦🇪 Saudi Arabia: Ayasha (Female)
🇨🇳 Mandarin: Genji(Female)
🇹🇷 Turkish: Miray(Female)
🇹🇷 Turkish: Hande(Female)
🇷🇺 Russian: Pimen(Male)
🇷🇺 Russian: Svetlana(Female)
🇸🇰 Slovak: Peter(Male)
🇸🇮 Slovenia: Vincenc(Male)
🇮🇸 Icelandic: Esjar(Male)
🇩🇰 Danish: Simonsen(Male)
🇸🇪 Swedish: Rakel(Female)
🇳🇱 Dutch: Carola(Female)
🇧🇬 Bulgarian: Grozdan(Male)
🇨🇳 Cantonese: Xinyou (Female)
🇨🇳 Mandarin: WangJing (Female)
🇨🇳 Taiwanese: Tíngtíng(Female)
🇻🇳 Vietnamese: Thong(Male)
🇭🇷 Croatian: Marko(Male)
🇨🇿 Czech: Jan(Male)
🇩🇰 Danish: Norma(Female)


None of our voices sound Robotic. 98% of the people hearing a voiceover generated with Speechelo can’t tell it’s not a real human voice. All our voices have elements that make a voice sound real and have all the expressions that needed to make people more engaged in your content and sound professional.

content and sound professional.

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Major Key Features of Speechelo:

  • 50+ Voices : The most amazing collection of natural voices.
  • Online Text Editor - Our A.I. engine will check your text and will add all the punctuation marks needed to make the speech sound natural.
  • Breathing & Pauses - You can add breathing sounds, longer pauses after each phrase. (or you can leave our A.I. engine decided when to add breathing sounds or pauses).
  • 23 Languages - Arabic, Mandarin, Danish, Dutch, English, French,
  • German, Icelandic, Italian, Japanese, Korean,Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish, Welsh.
  • Voice Tones - Sometimes you need a serious tone other times you need a more joyful tone for your voiceovers, with Speechelo you can do that.
  • Change Speed & Pitch - You full customization control in Speechelo
  • Cloud based app which allows you to type in or paste in your text
  • Say goodbye to expensive voiceover artists and unreliable freelancers
  • Works with any video creation software: Camtasia, Adobe Premier, iMovie, Audacity, etc.


How easy is Speechelo to use?

All you need to do is:
  • Log into the cloud based Speechelo App. 
  • Paste in your text
  • Select a voice
  • Click generate and save.


Spechelo is a brand new text to speech software that actually sounds like real people with poses, tones, inflections - so much so that it's hard to tell you that it's not a real person. With just a few clicks you can watch voice over for your video. It is available at an unbelievably low price if you are in a hurry. For action in the sales video, just listen to the app.


Wednesday, July 21, 2021

7-y-o Tianna Russell

 


7-y-o Tianna Russell died from blunt force trauma, autopsy shows


Wednesday, July 21, 2021

LINSTEAD, St Catherine – An autopsy has revealed that seven-year-old Tianna Russell died from blunt-force trauma, family members inform Observer Online.  

Observer Online understands that the Jamaica Constabulary Force (JCF) is now mulling additional charges based on the findings of the post mortem that was done on Tuesday at Tranquillity Funeral Home in Kingston.

Police report that about 1:30 am on June 28, Tianna’s father Rohan Russell took her to Linstead Public Hospital, claiming that he heard her struggling to breathe. The child was pronounced dead shortly after.

According to the JCF, its officers, who were summoned to the medical facility, saw “several marks” on Tianna’s body. The marks were suggestive of abuse, the police said.

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Ahead of the post mortem, detectives charged Tianna's 39-year-old father and her 27-year-old stepmother Lorraine Fletcher with child abuse. They appeared in court on July 7 and were offered bail in the sum of $300,000 each. 

Tianna's biological mother, Claudia Francis died four years ago after a battle with illness. Since then, the child had been living with her father and stepmother at New Works in the Linstead area of St Catherine.

One of the child's maternal aunts, Verona Francis, told Observer Online that both sides of Tianna's family showed up in Kingston on Tuesday to observe the post-mortem.

"It's really heart-rending," she said.

She added that she has had to seek counselling for Tianna's teenage brother who lives with her.

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Tuesday, July 20, 2021

Boy beating




Boy, dies after alleged whipping by stepfather


Tuesday, July 20, 2021


CHILDREN'S Advocate Diahann Gordon Harrison yesterday urged Jamaicans to embrace alternative methods of disciplining children following the death, Sunday, of four-year-old Nashawn Brown, who was allegedly beaten with a stick by his stepfather in Willowdene, St Catherine.


The Jamaica Observer understands that the child's mother was also beaten badly after she attempted to stop the attack on the boy. She was admitted to hospital and was yesterday receiving treatment for injuries sustained.

The accused, whose name is being withheld, has been taken into police custody and it is expected that criminal charges will be laid against him.

“The matter came to my attention and it raises so many factors. We do not have all the surrounding circumstances but the very base of the allegations would seem to suggest there was a beating which would have led to him losing his life. That is grave cause for concern and it puts back on the table the methods that we use to discipline children,” said Gordon Harrison.

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“It also brings back on the table the level of frustration some parents apparently feel in their personal spaces with all the pressures that come with parenting. The initial allegations point to an absence of conflict-resolution skills without resorting to physical aggression. This example brings sharply into focus conflict resolution at the community level and in our homes,” the children's advocate said yesterday.

Around 7:00 pm Sunday, according to a police report, Nashawn was at home in Willowdene with his mother, the accused, and his (the accused's) teenage twin brothers.

Nashawn was not feeling well and was eating slowly, angering his stepfather, who allegedly broke a piece of stick, which he used to beat the child repeatedly, causing severe bruising and swelling to the boy's upper and lower limbs.

The mother reportedly attemped to reprimanded the stepfather over the attack on the boy and he allegedly used the same stick to hit her in the head, following which he reportedly used a metal broom to beat her all over her body, leading to swelling, bruises and her bleeding from a wound that was inflicted to her left arm.

The Observer learnt that after the incident, the boy went to the bathroom at which point the stepfather allegedly volunteered to give him a bath. Shortly after, the boy began exhibiting breathing problems and became unresponsive. He was rushed to Spanish Town Hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

A blood sample, broken pieces of stick, and a metal broom were all found at the scene and secured by police investigators as evidence.

Investigations by the Observer led to a premises in Waterhouse, St Andrew, yesterday where the twin boys lived up to recently.

Based on information from the father of the accused, his mother recently rented premises in St Catherine for him and his twin brothers. He said it was a wise move because he and the accused have not been living on good terms as, in his opinion, he was not displaying behaviour that would make a father proud of his son. He added that he was, however, disappointed that his twin boys were also at the location in St Catherine, particularly because they were with him (father of the accused) “and all of a sudden instructions came from their mother to move out”.

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The father of the accused said that anything could have happened to his twins and used the opportunity to underscore the importance of parents communicating with each other about their children.

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Monday, July 19, 2021

Duppy Story


Return of Rose Hall's 'Haunted Night Tour' heralds further opening of tourism industry


Monday, July 19, 2021


FOR an unbroken decade, the 'Haunted Night Tour' at the storied Rose Hall Great House in St James drew delightful shrieks from visitors and locals alike until the deadly novel coronavirus pandemic crashed the party last year, bringing the curtains down.


Now, however, the popular production, directed by top-notch director Douglas Prout, is about to revive its ghoulish fun that raked in big bucks and brought alive the story of the fabled Annie Palmer, the “White Witch of Rose Hall”.

More importantly, the return of Haunted Night Tour is another clear sign that the tourism industry is reopening after a year and half in the doldrums when the resorts looked like virtual ghost towns.

Jamaica Hotel and Tourist Association (JHTA) President Clifton Reader said that, with the reopening of borders and resumption of flights to and from the island by many airlines, a large number of our hotels have reopened and now attractions are following suit.

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“We are proceeding cautiously, taking care to observe the health and safety protocols established by the authorities, to help contain and reduce the spread of the virus here,” Reader told the Jamaica Observer yesterday.

“We have been encouraged by the success of the resilient corridor and expect that by ensuring everyone — our teams and guests — adhere to health and safety guidelines, including testing negative for COVID-19, the wearing of masks, sanitising, etc, we will move closer to a full reopening of the sector.”

Prout, who is shortly to leave his Canadian haunt to reassemble the cast of 20 actors for the August 12 restart, also believes that the return of the Haunted Night Tour could be interpreted as “reason for cautious optimism that tourism is slowly creeping back after the near decimation occasioned by the [novel coronavirus] pandemic”.

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“Other clearer indicators are there. Many of the larger all-inclusives are currently at 70 per cent occupancy, but the off-property excursions and attractions are not yet doing well because of the reluctance of most guests to leave the bubble of their resorts. It's far from business as usual, but all is not lost,” said the multi-award -winning Prout.

Speaking of the haunted tour, he described it as “the only one of its kind in Jamaica! Deep South USA and maybe Cuba may boast haunted houses, but there is none like this that has its own legendary resident witch who actually lived in the house”.

Rose Hall Developments, owners of the Rose Hall Great House, said that on reopening, the tour would initially operate three nights per week, on Thursday, Friday and Saturdays, and only by reservations.

COVID-19 protocols will be adhered to at all times and the great house is fully compliant, the company said, noting that the cost for general admission is US$30 and the cost to registered contracted tour operators is US$20 per adult and US$12 per child.

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With roots from Montego Bay, Prout emerged from Schools' Drama Festival of Jamaica with a love for the dramatic arts that would serve him well in the years to come. After a few Shakespearean productions at Cornwall College, he went on to direct his first piece while pursuing tertiary education.

His career took a decisive turn when he met the late theatre guru Paul Methuen, “Mr Shakespeare” himself, who was to become a lifetime friend and mentor, and who first directed Prout as the juvenile lead in Errol Hill's West Indian classic folk drama Man Better Man in 1976.

Prout, now a seasoned professional, has first-hand experience of most facets of modern theatre, radio and television, and has performed on most Jamaican stages, in Cayman, Canada, in numerous US cities, and in a number of venues across Britain. He has an impressive array of over 50 successful commercial productions under his belt.

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Sunday, July 18, 2021

Vaccine development and the Caribbean

 



Sunday, July 18, 2021


OVER the past year and a half 'vaccine' has become a buzzword. This is not because the term is new to us, but it has become somewhat of a lifeboat as the world continues to grapple with the novel coronavirus pandemic.


At the onset of the pandemic, the word vaccine was on everyone's lips as scientists raced to develop an effective jab. Today, it is being uttered in relation to access, equity, hoarding, and hesitancy.

As developing countries, like Jamaica, scurry to get COVID-19 vaccines for their citizens, despite the existence of the COVAX facility, the J amaica Observer — through its Your Health Your Wealth publication — decided to explore whether more countries in the Caribbean should explore vaccine development, like our neighbours in Cuba.

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Today, at 5:00 pm, four panellists will tackle the question in a webinar moderated by Professor of Public Health and Health Technology Dr Winston Davidson, which will be streamed live on the Jamaica Observer's social media platforms and be available for playback on the newspaper's website. The four panellists are Dr Jose Armando Arronte Villamarin, national coordinator of the Cuban Medical Brigade in Jamaica; Dr Peter Figueroa, professor of public health, epidemiology and HIV/AIDS, The University of the West Indies; Dr Adella Campbell, associate professor and head of the Caribbean School of Nursing, University of Technology, Jamaica; and Dr Yohann White, immunologist at the University Hospital of the West Indies.

It will be the first of three webinars exploring some of the glaring issues that have come to the fore amid the pandemic so far and strategies for moving forward.

With Jamaica having vaccinated only nine per cent of the population as at last Friday, July 16, according the Ministry of Health and Wellness's COVID-19 Vaccination Tracker, there is still a far way to go before the country gets to herd immunity.

Speaking with Your Health Your Wealth ahead of today's webinar, Professor Davidson said the present global system has overemphasised the commercialisation and the commercial competitiveness of the COVID-19 vaccine.

“That has undermined our capacity to get vaccines and that is why the Jamaican population and the Caribbean population must now take centre stage to demand solutions that can be applied to us,” he said.

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As such, the professor of public health and health technology said today's webinar is timely.

“The topic of discussion is extremely important because, notwithstanding Jamaica's best practice attempt at controlling this pandemic, it is necessary to do what Jamaica has done so far, but it is not sufficient. It is necessary because this will achieve the objective of keeping the impact of the pandemic at bay, preventing people from getting the disease and, especially those vulnerable, from dying from the disease,” Professor Davidson said. “We are doing well so far, but we cannot continue without taking the vaccine, which is the final, definite preventive method to control the disease.

“If we have no vaccines, it may take another three to four years to really control the disease,” he said.

The public health specialist emphasised that getting the COVID-19 vaccine is important.

“If we get the vaccines this year, we can get herd immunity by next year and so, therefore, strategies to getting the appropriate vaccines are of vital importance as the next step,” he told Your Health Your Wealth.

Today's Your Health Your Wealth webinar is, therefore, very important, Professor Davidson said, “for us to explore where is it we are going to get the vaccine and how we are going to combine our resources as a Caribbean people to ensure that we in the Caribbean are able to control this disease and to recover and to build our economy as early as possible”.

For those who might be of the view that Jamaica has more pressing problems than focusing on vaccine development, the public health specialist said people's very existence is dependent on it.

“Because, without the control of the pandemic you will not be able to get economic recovery, and if you can't get economic recovery, people will suffer, people will die, people will be thrown into the poverty line. And so this is what we refer to as an existential exercise… Every Jamaican must be interested because it is has to do with their survival,” he said.

Be sure to tune in later today as the panellists share their views on the topic and chart the way forward.

Also, pay keen attention as there will be a giveaway courtesy of one of our sponsors, Guardian Group. The question will be based on the discussion, and the first person to submit the correct answer to us via e-mail to HealthandWealth@jamaicaobserver.com will be our winner.

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