CBC News Barbados

CBC News Barbados

T&T Police: Items are not warheads

PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad, CMC – The Trinidad and Tobago Police Service (TTPS) Tuesday said that several items found by members of the public at Mosquito Creek in Oropouche, south of here, were not suspected military “warheads”. The police said that officers of the Southern, South Western Divisions and Coastal and Air Support Unit, visited the scene on Sunday and discovered several “cylindrical projectiles” amongst the rocks on the banks of the Godineau Rive. “Whilst the items did appear similar to military munitions, a team of specialists from the TTPS Explosive Detection and Disposal Unit, ‘Bomb Squad,’ with the assistance of international partners, further examined the objects and they were positively identified to be parts belonging to Concrete Piercing Tools used in the construction industry,” the police said. “However, a number of major components for the functioning of the items were not present and in the interest of public safety, the items were seized and removed from the site.” The police said that further investigations are being conducted and that the “TTPS would like to thank the members of the public for the information shared and urge everyone to continue to support the organization as we work together to maintain safer neighbourhoods and communities”.

CBC News Barbados

7th Chinese medical team to assist QEH

The seventh medical team from China has arrived on the island to assist at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital. The medical team comprises 13 persons. They were welcomed by a Barbados delegation led by the Minister of State in the Ministry of Health and Wellness, Davidson Ishmael, and China’s Ambassador to Barbados, Yan Xiusheng. Mr. Ishmael thanked the Chinese Ambassador for providing expertise in supporting health and wellness in Barbados. (Photo: J. Bishop/BGIS)

CBC News Barbados

Fuel dock coming to Shallow Draught Marina

Fisherfolk will soon have a fuel dock in the Shallow Draught Marina. This from Minister of Tourism and International Transport Ian Gooding-Edghill. He says with the fuel dock, fisherfolk will not have to travel north to the Port St. Charles area.

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