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ICE conducts removal flights to Jamaica and Cuba

WASHINGTON (CMC): The United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency, says it is continuing to facilitate removal flights of single adults, family units to Jamaica and Cuba. ICE said the most recent removal flights, which took place...

Jason Statham to lead in a new action thriller by Baltasar Kormákur

The British action star Jason Statham will play the lead in a new action thriller directed by the Icelandic director Baltasar Kormákur. No name has been given for the movie yet, but it is produced by Black Bear.
mbl.is - News in English

Jason Statham to lead in a new action thriller by Baltasar Kormákur

The British action star Jason Statham will play the lead in a new action thriller directed by the Icelandic director Baltasar Kormákur. No name has been given for the movie yet, but it is produced by Black Bear.

Fat men offered up to £400 to lose weight and given daily texts urging them to 'avoid the kebab shop' in NHS's 'Game of Stones' trial

The trial involves men being texted daily tips including 'walk a different route home to avoid the kebab shop' and 'don't treat your body like a skip'. It could now be rolled out across the NHS.
News | Mail Online

Fat men offered up to £400 to lose weight and given daily texts urging them to 'avoid the kebab shop' in NHS's 'Game of Stones' trial

The trial involves men being texted daily tips including 'walk a different route home to avoid the kebab shop' and 'don't treat your body like a skip'. It could now be rolled out across the NHS.

Cannes Film Festival: Léa Seydoux is stunning in sequins as she joins glamorous Heidi Klum, Eva Green, Greta Gerwig and Meryl Streep at the star-studded launch of her new film Second Act on the first day of the 77th annual event

The actress, who takes a starring role in the new release, was supported by a host of stars as the worlds of film, music and fashion descended on the resort town for two weeks of red carpet celebrations.
News | Mail Online

Cannes Film Festival: Léa Seydoux is stunning in sequins as she joins glamorous Heidi Klum, Eva Green, Greta Gerwig and Meryl Streep at the star-studded launch of her new film Second Act on the first day of the 77th annual event

The actress, who takes a starring role in the new release, was supported by a host of stars as the worlds of film, music and fashion descended on the resort town for two weeks of red carpet celebrations.

Graduates in Baidoa make money through livestock sales

A group of 30 mainly educated men in Baidoa, southern Somalia, are making a successful living buying up livestock in poor condition and selling them on for a profit after fattening them up.
Hiiraan Online

Graduates in Baidoa make money through livestock sales

A group of 30 mainly educated men in Baidoa, southern Somalia, are making a successful living buying up livestock in poor condition and selling them on for a profit after fattening them up.

Bangladesh ship crew Abducted By Somali pirates return home

Nearly two dozen Bangladeshi cargo ship crew taken hostage by Somali pirates returned home Tuesday to a rapturous welcome from family members after weeks in captivity.
Hiiraan Online

Bangladesh ship crew Abducted By Somali pirates return home

Nearly two dozen Bangladeshi cargo ship crew taken hostage by Somali pirates returned home Tuesday to a rapturous welcome from family members after weeks in captivity.

Former UNSOM envoy James Swan returns as acting special representative for Somalia

Mogadishu (HOL) - United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres has appointed James Swan as the Acting Special Representative for Somalia and Head of the United Nations Assistance Mission in Somalia (UNSOM).
Hiiraan Online

Former UNSOM envoy James Swan returns as acting special representative for Somalia

Mogadishu (HOL) - United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres has appointed James Swan as the Acting Special Representative for Somalia and Head of the United Nations Assistance Mission in Somalia (UNSOM).

Study - Environmental determinants of health, including those caused by climate change - 15-05-2024

This in-depth analysis (IDA) examines the environmental determinants of health and their consequences, especially on the health of disadvantaged communities. It also assesses the impacts of European Union (EU) policies on the environment insofar as they affec
Documents - Think Tank - European Parliament

Study - Environmental determinants of health, including those caused by climate change - 15-05-2024

This in-depth analysis (IDA) examines the environmental determinants of health and their consequences, especially on the health of disadvantaged communities. It also assesses the impacts of European Union (EU) policies on the environment insofar as they affect human health, and provides recommendations on how the One Health and the Health in All Policies approaches can be better implemented in EU policy-making. This document was provided by the Policy Department for Economic, Scientific and Quality of Life Policies at the request of the Subcommittee on Public Health (SANT). Source : © European Union, 2024 - EP

Great-grandfather, 84, took own life after 'losing hope' in receiving prompt treatment for chronic pain after NHS knee operation

Great-grandfather Julian Pryer, 84, was in constant agony after the procedure and was desperate to alleviate the pain.
News | Mail Online

Great-grandfather, 84, took own life after 'losing hope' in receiving prompt treatment for chronic pain after NHS knee operation

Great-grandfather Julian Pryer, 84, was in constant agony after the procedure and was desperate to alleviate the pain.

South Africa: Xenophobic Narratives Surge Ahead of South Africa's Elections

[allAfrica] As South Africa's general elections on May 29th draw near, anti-immigrant rhetoric is intensifying across social media platforms, according to a new report from the Centre for Analytics and Behavioural Change (CABC).
AllAfrica News: Latest

South Africa: Xenophobic Narratives Surge Ahead of South Africa's Elections

[allAfrica] As South Africa's general elections on May 29th draw near, anti-immigrant rhetoric is intensifying across social media platforms, according to a new report from the Centre for Analytics and Behavioural Change (CABC).

Trump’s private Boeing hits another jet at Florida airport – Reuters

A private jet belonging to ex-US President Donald Trump struck another jet with its wing after landing at Palm Beach International Airport Read Full Article at RT.com
RT - Daily news

Trump’s private Boeing hits another jet at Florida airport – Reuters

A private jet belonging to ex-US President Donald Trump struck another jet with its wing after landing at Palm Beach International Airport Read Full Article at RT.com

How deadly prison van attack unfolded: Masked gunmen ambush convoy in France before freeing 'narco boss' dubbed 'The Fly' and shooting dead two guards

The terrifying attack, at a motorway toll station in north-west France , sparked a massive manhunt. Dramatic footage showed the moments the prison van was rammed by a SUV.
News | Mail Online

How deadly prison van attack unfolded: Masked gunmen ambush convoy in France before freeing 'narco boss' dubbed 'The Fly' and shooting dead two guards

The terrifying attack, at a motorway toll station in north-west France , sparked a massive manhunt. Dramatic footage showed the moments the prison van was rammed by a SUV.

Kate Moss links arms with a male companion as she leaves the Gucci Cruise show after pals revealed her romance with Nikolai von Bismarck is 'on and off'

Kate Moss linked arms with a male companion as she headed home from the Gucci Cruise 2025 show on Monday.
News | Mail Online

Kate Moss links arms with a male companion as she leaves the Gucci Cruise show after pals revealed her romance with Nikolai von Bismarck is 'on and off'

Kate Moss linked arms with a male companion as she headed home from the Gucci Cruise 2025 show on Monday.

Lok Sabha elections: Kharge, Sonia Gandhi, Rahul, Priyanka Congress star campaigners for 7th phase in UP

Congress Parliamentary Party Chairperson Sonia Gandhi, party president Mallikarjun Kharge, MP Rahul Gandhi and Priyanka Gandhi are among the star campaigners named by the party for the Lok Sabha poll campaigning in Uttar Pradesh. The other prominent leaders o
India News, Latest News Headlines & Live Updates from India: TOI

Lok Sabha elections: Kharge, Sonia Gandhi, Rahul, Priyanka Congress star campaigners for 7th phase in UP

Congress Parliamentary Party Chairperson Sonia Gandhi, party president Mallikarjun Kharge, MP Rahul Gandhi and Priyanka Gandhi are among the star campaigners named by the party for the Lok Sabha poll campaigning in Uttar Pradesh. The other prominent leaders on the list include Salman Khurshid, former chief ministers Ashok Gehlot, Bhupesh Baghel, and Congress working committee member Sachin Pilot.

DIRECT. Violences en Nouvelle-Calédonie : trois blessés, un mort victime de tir à balle réelle selon le haut-commissaire

Encore une nuit d'affrontements et d'incendies à Nouméa et dans le Grand Nouméa. Les blocages et pillages ont continué dans la nuit du 14 au 15 mai. De grandes enseignes du territoire ont pris feu. 130 personnes ont été interpellées. C'est le troisièm
polynésie

DIRECT. Violences en Nouvelle-Calédonie : trois blessés, un mort victime de tir à balle réelle selon le haut-commissaire

Encore une nuit d'affrontements et d'incendies à Nouméa et dans le Grand Nouméa. Les blocages et pillages ont continué dans la nuit du 14 au 15 mai. De grandes enseignes du territoire ont pris feu. 130 personnes ont été interpellées. C'est le troisième jour de violences en Nouvelle-Calédonie. Trois blessés, un mort victime de tir à balle réelle annonce le haut-commissaire de la Nouvelle-Calédonie. Suivez le direct de Nouvelle-Calédonie la 1ère.

La communauté calédonienne de Polynésie bouleversée par les événements sur le Cailloux

La situation en Nouvelle-Calédonie ne s’est pas améliorée, bien au contraire. Après la deuxième nuit d’émeutes, le bilan officiel à la mi-journée faisait état de 130 interpellations et une soixantaine de blessés parmi les forces de l’ordre. U
polynésie

La communauté calédonienne de Polynésie bouleversée par les événements sur le Cailloux

La situation en Nouvelle-Calédonie ne s’est pas améliorée, bien au contraire. Après la deuxième nuit d’émeutes, le bilan officiel à la mi-journée faisait état de 130 interpellations et une soixantaine de blessés parmi les forces de l’ordre. Un climat de guerre civile, avec plus d’une soixantaine de commerces et d’entreprises incendiés. La communauté calédonienne du fenua ainsi que les politiques suivent avec attention les évènements.

EU Fact Sheets - Energy efficiency - 14-05-2024

Energy efficiency measures aim to achieve a sustainable energy supply, reduce greenhouse gas emissions, improve security of supply, lower import bills, and promote European competitiveness. In 2023, the co-legislators decided to decrease EU final energy cons
Documents - Think Tank - European Parliament

EU Fact Sheets - Energy efficiency - 14-05-2024

Energy efficiency measures aim to achieve a sustainable energy supply, reduce greenhouse gas emissions, improve security of supply, lower import bills, and promote European competitiveness. In 2023, the co-legislators decided to decrease EU final energy consumption by at least 11.7% by 2030, compared to projections made in 2020. Source : © European Union, 2024 - EP

EU Fact Sheets - Culture - 14-05-2024

The European Union’s action in the field of culture supplements the cultural policy of the Member States in various areas, such as the preservation of European cultural heritage, cooperation between various countries’ cultural institutions and the promoti
Documents - Think Tank - European Parliament

EU Fact Sheets - Culture - 14-05-2024

The European Union’s action in the field of culture supplements the cultural policy of the Member States in various areas, such as the preservation of European cultural heritage, cooperation between various countries’ cultural institutions and the promotion of mobility among creative workers. The cultural sector is also affected by provisions of the Treaties that do not explicitly pertain to culture. Source : © European Union, 2024 - EP

EU Fact Sheets - Renewable energy - 14-05-2024

Renewable energy sources such as wind, solar and hydroelectric power, ocean and geothermal energy, biomass and biofuels offer cleaner alternatives to fossil fuels. They reduce pollution, broaden our energy options and decrease our dependence on volatile fossi
Documents - Think Tank - European Parliament

EU Fact Sheets - Renewable energy - 14-05-2024

Renewable energy sources such as wind, solar and hydroelectric power, ocean and geothermal energy, biomass and biofuels offer cleaner alternatives to fossil fuels. They reduce pollution, broaden our energy options and decrease our dependence on volatile fossil fuel prices. In 2022, renewable energy accounted for 23% of the European Union’s energy consumption. In 2023, lawmakers increased the Union’s target for the share of renewable sources of energy in gross energy consumption from 32% to 42.5% by 2030, aiming for 45%. Source : © European Union, 2024 - EP

Man charged in female security guard’s murder offered bail, son remanded

WESTERN BUREAU: The St James Parish Court has granted bail in the sum of $600,000 to a St James man accused of the March 17 shooting death of security officer Nastacia Smith, while his son has been remanded until June 12, when the case will be...
News

Man charged in female security guard’s murder offered bail, son remanded

WESTERN BUREAU: The St James Parish Court has granted bail in the sum of $600,000 to a St James man accused of the March 17 shooting death of security officer Nastacia Smith, while his son has been remanded until June 12, when the case will be...

Bogue lands saga will end soon – Vernon

WESTERN BUREAU: Montego Bay Mayor Richard Vernon is confident that the long-standing Bogue lands saga will soon end, with the timeline for that resolution now dependent on how swiftly the current Public Investment Appraisal Branch [PIAB] process...
News

Bogue lands saga will end soon – Vernon

WESTERN BUREAU: Montego Bay Mayor Richard Vernon is confident that the long-standing Bogue lands saga will soon end, with the timeline for that resolution now dependent on how swiftly the current Public Investment Appraisal Branch [PIAB] process...

Diabetic farmer needs help after toe amputations

Farmer Andrew Martin of Coolshade district near Linstead, St Catherine, has fallen on hard times since he lost two of his toes to diabetes. He says he used to plant cassava, plantain and banana to make a living but, because of his illness, he...
News

Diabetic farmer needs help after toe amputations

Farmer Andrew Martin of Coolshade district near Linstead, St Catherine, has fallen on hard times since he lost two of his toes to diabetes. He says he used to plant cassava, plantain and banana to make a living but, because of his illness, he...

US essay winner welcomes opportunity to immerse herself in Jamaican culture

CARLEIGH FRANKLIN was beside herself when her name was called as the grand prize winner of a trip for two to Jamaica in the Union of Jamaican Alumni Associations (UJAA) essay competition last year while a student at The Westminster Schools in...
News

US essay winner welcomes opportunity to immerse herself in Jamaican culture

CARLEIGH FRANKLIN was beside herself when her name was called as the grand prize winner of a trip for two to Jamaica in the Union of Jamaican Alumni Associations (UJAA) essay competition last year while a student at The Westminster Schools in...

Jevaughn Graham making BCIC, MYF and UDC proud

MANY YOUNG people learn from their own mistakes, but it takes a particular youngster to recognise the destructive behaviours of others and avoid following their examples. This is even more challenging in an underserved, crime-prone community like...
News

Jevaughn Graham making BCIC, MYF and UDC proud

MANY YOUNG people learn from their own mistakes, but it takes a particular youngster to recognise the destructive behaviours of others and avoid following their examples. This is even more challenging in an underserved, crime-prone community like...

Blinken vows US will back Ukraine till security 'guaranteed'

The United States will back Ukraine until its security is «guaranteed», US Secretary of State Antony Blinken vowed on a trip to Kyiv on Tuesday, after Russian forces claimed further advances in the northeastern Kharkiv region. Blinken's visit cam
Seychelles News Agency

Blinken vows US will back Ukraine till security 'guaranteed'

The United States will back Ukraine until its security is «guaranteed», US Secretary of State Antony Blinken vowed on a trip to Kyiv on Tuesday, after Russian forces claimed further advances in the northeastern Kharkiv region. Blinken's visit came just weeks after the US Congress finally approved a $61-billion financial aid package for Ukraine following months of political wrangling, unlocking much-needed arms for the country's outgunned troops. «We're with you today. And we will stay by your side, until Ukraine's security, sovereignty, and ability to choose its own path is guaranteed,» Blinken said in a speech. «The assistance is now on its way. Some of it has already arrived. More will be arriving,» he had told Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky during a meeting earlier. «That's going to make a real difference against the ongoing Russian aggression on the battlefield,» he said. Zelensky thanked Washington for the aid, which he said was «crucial» -- but stressed it was «important to get it as quickly as possible». «We need a noticeable acceleration of supplies. Now too much time passes between the announcement of packages and the actual appearance of weapons on the frontline,» he said in an evening address. Zelensky said air defence was the «biggest problem» for Ukraine and requested two Patriot batteries for the Kharkiv region, where Russian forces have been advancing and pounding villages along the border since Friday. Blinken was on his fourth visit to Kyiv since Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022. After meeting Zelensky, he met Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba in Veterano, a pizzeria set up by a military veteran in the city centre. Driving his point home at a visit to an underground Kyiv bar, the Barman Dictat, later on Tuesday, Blinken picked up a guitar and sang the Neil Young classic «Rockin' in the Free World», accompanied by Ukrainian musicians. - 'Minimal human losses' - Russia's surprise ground offensive in the Kharkiv region has forced thousands to evacuate and pushed Kyiv to mobilise troop reinforcements. Ukraine said several civilians have been killed by Russian fire in the region, including on Tuesday two people aged 80 and 83. Officials in the region's main municipality, also called Kharkiv -- Ukraine's second-biggest city -- said Russian strikes hit the centre, injuring 20 people. One civilian, a 47-year-old man, was also reported killed in the city of Nikopol in southern Ukraine. Russia's defence ministry meanwhile said its forces had captured another village in the Kharkiv region. «Units of the North group of troops liberated the village of Bugruvatka in the Kharkiv region and advanced deep into the enemy defences,» the ministry said. The advance is the latest in a string of tactical successes for Russia on the battlefield this year after initial setbacks in a conflict that Moscow hoped would be wrapped up in days. Russia's incoming defence minister, economist Andrei Belousov, said the priority was to secure victory on the battlefield while minimising human losses. «The key task, of course, remains achieving victory and ensuring the military-political goals of the special military operation, set by the president, are achieved,» Belousov told a session of the Russian parliament on Tuesday. «In this respect, I want to especially emphasise 'with minimal human losses'.» - 'Firing on everything' - The Ukrainian army has acknowledged Russian successes in Kharkiv but Zelensky has stressed that reinforcements have been sent there and Ukrainian «counterattacks are ongoing». At a checkpoint outside the city of Kharkiv, a Ukrainian official said Russian forces had entered Ukraine through «villages on the very border that were complicated for us to defend». Russian forces «are on high ground and are shelling us from there», added Volodymyr Usov, head of the Kharkiv district military administration. The head of Ukraine's security council, Oleksandr Lytvynenko, said Moscow had massively upped its troop deployment for the new offensive in the Kharkiv region. In an interview this week with AFP, he said Russia had sent more than 30,000 troops over the border, but insisted there was no threat of an assault on Kharkiv city. Usov, the Kharkiv district head, estimated there were still around 300 residents left in Lyptsi, a border village under Russian bombardment. «They are shelling the villages, firing on everything they can,» Sergiy Kryvetchenko, deputy head of the Ukrainian military administration in Lyptsi, told AFP. State power operator Ukrenergo said it was forced to introduce emergency blackouts in all regions of the country on Tuesday after weeks of Russian strikes on power plants left the country unable to meet demand during a cold snap. © Agence France-Presse

$2.2b pledged to end deadly planet-heating cooking methods

The International Energy Agency announced on Tuesday that $2.2 billion had been pledged by governments and companies to improve access to less deadly and polluting cooking methods in Africa. More than two billion people cook on basic stoves or over open fire
Seychelles News Agency

$2.2b pledged to end deadly planet-heating cooking methods

The International Energy Agency announced on Tuesday that $2.2 billion had been pledged by governments and companies to improve access to less deadly and polluting cooking methods in Africa. More than two billion people cook on basic stoves or over open fires and exposure to this smoke is a leading cause of early death around the world. These cooking methods also harm the planet, with carbon-absorbing forests stripped for firewood and emissions from burning these dirty fuels a major contributor to global warming. Only around one-third of the money needed to drive the global switch to cleaner cooking methods like LPG or electric stoves is raised every year, according to the IEA. At a world-first summit, representatives from 60 nations and leaders from business and development sectors pledged $2.2 billion to help African households combat the scourge. «This summit has delivered an emphatic commitment to an issue that has been ignored by too many people, for too long,» said IEA executive director Fatih Birol, whose agency co-hosted the Paris gathering with the African Development Bank. «We still have a long way to go,» he added. A little over half of the money pledged came from the private sector, with around 30 percent in the form of favourable loans from public funds and the rest in carbon credits. It is still modest: the IEA says around $8 billion is needed annually to address the problem, half of that in Africa, but only around $2.5 billion is raised worldwide. Progress has been made in Asia but in sub-Saharan Africa, four out of five households still reply on highly polluting cooking fuels like wood, charcoal, coal, animal dung and agricultural waste. Burning these pollute indoor and outdoor air with fine particles that penetrate the lungs and cause respiratory and cardiovascular problems, including cancer and strokes. The threat is particularly acute for women and children, who are also prevented from accessing education or earning a wage as they spend hours looking for fuel. Switching to clean cooking methods would save 1.5 billion tonnes of CO2 a year by 2030 -- roughly the amount emitted by ships and planes last year, according to the IEA. «Successfully advancing the clean cooking agenda in Africa would contribute towards protecting the environment, climate, health, and ensuring gender equality,» said Tanzanian President Samia Suluhu Hassan, who attended the summit. Birol said the IEA would «rigorously track the commitments announced today to make sure they’re met on time and in full». © Agence France-Presse

Nichole Tirant-Gherardi ends term as Ombudsman of Seychelles on a positive note

After seven years in office, the Ombudsman of Seychelles, Nichole Tirant-Gherardi, will end her mandate at the end of May. Prior to her appointment as the Ombudsman, she served as the chief editor for the Today in Seychelles newspaper and was also the secre
Seychelles News Agency

Nichole Tirant-Gherardi ends term as Ombudsman of Seychelles on a positive note

After seven years in office, the Ombudsman of Seychelles, Nichole Tirant-Gherardi, will end her mandate at the end of May. Prior to her appointment as the Ombudsman, she served as the chief editor for the Today in Seychelles newspaper and was also the secretary general of the Seychelles Chamber of Commerce and Industry (SCCI) from 1999 to 20101. She is a barrister and attorney-at-law with a diverse experience and background. As she comes to the end of her term as Ombudsman, despite the challenges, Tirant-Gherardi told SNA she can count many accomplishments during her tenure.   SNA: You are leaving your position as Ombudsman, after seven years, how does that feel? NTG: The mandate of an Ombudsman is quite long, it is for seven years. I am now past retirement age, and I don't think I can continue giving the same amount of energy to the job for another seven years. So, I do not want to start something that I will have to quit after two years. Plus, I think it's time for somebody else to come in, with new ideas and bring this work further.   SNA: Tell us about your achievements and challenges as Ombudsman. NTG: What I have done before my departure is to create what I have called a handover report, which I have given a copy to the Constitutional Appointees Authority (CAA). This will help prepare questions for the interviews with my potential successor. I also wish that the report can be published, as I spoke about my work for the past seven years. I also believe that I have improved this institution during my time. This is a very important institution and unfortunately, I think that it has fallen by the wayside. I have gone overseas and also worked a lot locally, to give it the visibility it deserves. There needs to be a lot of education to ensure people understand the role of the Ombudsman and other government institutions, but that is not something I can do on my own.   SNA: Have you made any changes to the office itself? NGT: Yes. I have changed a lot in the Office of the Ombudsman and I feel it will make it easier for whoever comes after me to settle into the job, and look to continue what I started and even improve upon it. We have put a lot of procedures in place concerning how we process reports and how we deal with them. We have also worked to give the office more visibility and for that, I want to thank the media for coming to us and giving us a space to share what we do with the public. I have noticed that every time we appear on the local media, the number of cases we receive go up. The Ombudsman presenting her annual to President Wavel Ramkalawan. (State House) Photo License: CC-BY    SNA: Do you receive a lot of complaints at your office? NGT: We have received over 2,000 complaints here and so we have created a database, called a case management system, which allows us to have quick access to all documents linked to any of the cases we work on. This is something we are really proud of and has made things more effective for us. We have also re-branded the logo and made some small changes to it aimed at making the office more visible to the public. We are also affiliated with two international bodies, and in both of them, I was elected on the executive committee. We also have updated our website, where all information about us can be seen.   SNA: Is there anything you feel you have not achieved or could have done better during your time as Ombudsman? NGT: Well, what I wish we could have done better is to see the office focus more on what we call 'own motions'. This allows the Ombudsman to verify complaints and remove the person from this problem and focus instead on the problem itself, which could be at a particular ministry or multiple ministries, then make a more detailed investigation. When we finish with this type of investigation, we will be able to come out with a report that covers that particular issue in all aspects with recommendations on how to solve such issues. This will allow for the identification of issues within the ministries themselves, which can help reduce the number of grievances reported.   SNA: Now that you are leaving this position can you tell us more about your professional journey? NGT: I have had a long career doing a lot of different things. For me, variety is the spice of life. I have never been happy when I am not learning something new, and I always want to push myself and get to a higher level. I started my career in administration at the Ministry of Agriculture in 1978, after completing my law degree. After that I went back to complete my final year of my law studies and became a lawyer, working with the Attorney General's office for some years. Then I worked for two years at a parastatal law agency, Francis Rachel Law Centre, and then went back to University in France where I specialised in international marketing, which was my first departure from law. In 1994, I returned to Seychelles for good, where I went back to being a lawyer and did not like it as I felt I was not moving forward. I left to become the secretary general of the Seychelles Chamber of Commerce. I spent 11 years there because there was a lot to learn.   Then a bit of political interest brought me to the media world, where I joined Today in Seychelles at its inception, another completely new job for me. But if you ask me, where I enjoyed the most, it was there, although it was also the toughest place I worked. Then, finally, I moved to be Ombudsman. I had always wanted to become a judge, and sent a lot of applications, but that never worked out, and so being an ombudsman was the closest I could get to that dream.   SNA: You said you want to take things a little lighter now, what can we expect from you then? NGT: Yes, I think you might see me somewhere else soon enough. I have done a lot of research and learned a lot of things, and that increased my interest in NGOs that's something that I would like to see myself in and look to bring more awareness to the work of the Ombudsman and also look at ways where I can transmit the things I have learned to the younger generation.   SNA: Is there anything final message that you wish to share? NGT: The only thing I want to add is that I have really enjoyed my time here. Honestly, I never thought I would last the whole seven years, but these seven years went by so fast. I think I got a lot of respect from the Seychellois public and I have really appreciated that. 

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