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13th May 2000:

St. Lucians open their hearts to Jazz 2000

Geest citicises WIBDECO; gov't promises intervention

Convictions for possession of marijuana and cocaine

Craig Barnard: 'I do not have to fight this battle'

Man partly loses eyesight after alleged police beating

The Star to appear on Wednesdays

Abortion: 'No one has a right to choose to do wrong'

Hotels suffer higher rates but less water

Committee to review status former heads of state

OECS Telecommunications Authority established

PM to visit factories in Vieux Fort

Esther Lee in Miss Commonwealth contest

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THIS WEEK'S HEADLINES

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Quotes:

"Not for her the frumpy outfits that once were regular cocktail party uniform. Not for her the stupid hats and silly face veils. ... She is the attractive icing that dresses up our political bakes. The Iman makeup on our parliamentary carbuncles".
Rick Wayne on Governor-General Dame Pearlette Louisy (The Star 13th May). 

"The way I see it Jazz in general is expensive noise"
Jah T, songwriter, asked to comment on Jazz on the Square (One Caribbean 13th May).

"Before I divulge the contents of this synopsis on youth and religion, let me laud this Herculean effort which has precipitated into St. Lucia's very first youth policy. This only begotten son can be dignified with such accolades as: bold, rudimentary and progressive. I comply with previous reverberations by my revered colleague parliamentarians, and raise the voice of support by a few decibels. ... The recommendations stated on youth and religion in this oracle of youth development, can serve as the intended extremonition [sic] for the many chronic maladies bedevilling our youth today. ...
The teachers would welcome prayer in schools to onctionise [sic] the thousands of students who grace their various cavities of academic instruction, after they have been assaulted with the rancid decay of American society on television".
Nintus Magre, youth MP for Micoud South, during the fourth session of the Youth Parliament at the St. Lucia House of Assembly, 28th April. Magre is commended for "displaying good technique as a wordsmith in the mould of Alva Baptiste and Velon John" (Thursday Voice 11 May; The Crusader 13th May).

"John, Mackie, Mackie and I (sounds like an Irish Rasta law firm headed by the Home Affairs Minister) chilled out and let others figure how to loosen up on their own".
Jason Sifflet describing his visit with friends to Jazz at Balenbouche (The Mirror 12th May).

"Someone claiming to be calling from the Ministry telephoned me and told me that 'a decision was taken not to talk to you - to ignore you and say nothing until the issue dies and goes away'."
D.S. Dabreo, for the second consecutive week asking questions about a letter allegedly sent by the ministry of Works to C.O. Williams Construction, in which the firm is asked to provide an estimate for executing certain roadworks, and for which the exact amounts of funds available are disclosed (One Caribbean 13th May).

"Sand, sea and sun the visitors can get anywhere else in the tropical countries. Even sex tourism, now a growing business in some countries and elsewhere, including St. Lucia, is more glamorous overseas in places like Latin America and the Far East".
(One Caribbean 13th May).

"As a child, when you had a tummy ache, mother would rub it gently. As an adult, the ache comes because of complicated love affairs. Rub your solar plexus (near the navel) for quick release"
Weekly horoscope for capricorn (The Voice 13th May).

"13. If a car is travelling at 30mph, you are covering 44 feet a second. If driving at 70mph, you are covering 103 feet every second. It takes one second to blink one eye. This is called blind driving". ...
"15. Motorists should not injure or kill animals on the road because they were there before cars".
List with 33 rules for safety on the roads, provided by the National Association of Driving Schools (The Voice 13th May).

"[T]he play uses certain similarities between Jesus Christ and six deceased black men to tell a story of the plight of black and other dissident people throughout the world ... The six men, Maurice Bishop, Martin Luther King Jr, Stephen Biko, Malcolm X, Medger Evers and Bob Marley, all died violently in their 30s and according to the  group had some resemblance to Christ in terms of having a 'full head of hair at some point and wearing facial hair'."
Press release on Club St. Lucia Staff Association's writing and staging of the play 'Jesus of Ethiopia' (The Star 13th May).

"I would challenge anyone to take a short trip to Micoud Street and its environs and observe that the majority of people there with their trays are women. Now take a short walk by Constitution Park and you will observe the majority of persons there are men with nothing to do. Does this trigger something in our finite minds?"
Egbert Blanchard on 'The plight of women in an ever-changing society' (The Voice 13th May).

"Even more laughable is the fact that if my article was in any way libellous, the Editors of both the Voice and the Mirror would both have been guilty of publishing that libel and, by extension, making their respective newspapers - not me! - subject to demands for retraction and apology and liable to face legal action".
Government press secretary Earl Bousquet writing to the editor of The Voice on why he does not owe Voice journalist Micah George an apology for alleged libel (The Voice 13 May).

 

Budget 2000 speeches

Casino Survey Report

Full Text of  Blom-Cooper inquiry report

Photo Gallery: "The Wrath of Hurricane  Lenny"

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St. Lucians open their hearts to Jazz 2000

    With Jazz 2000 coming to an expected climax this weekend at Pigeon Island, the festival has already elicited wide acclaim for being the biggest and the best ever held in St. Lucia. In the media this week, the festival is being compared with Christmas, Carnival and Jounen Kweyol. Undoubtedly, Jazz 2000 will be most fondly remembered as the festival that saw Governor-General Dame Pearlette Louisy take to the stage at the invitation of the legendary singer Lou Rawls. "After several minutes of harmonizing with the American vocalist, the Governor-General returned to her seat, but not before the singer had planted a peck on her cheek. Naturally the crowd gave Pearlette and Lou a standing ovation for their rendition of 'You're Gonna Miss my Lovin', a Lou Rawls classic that evidently is a favorite of the Governor-General", writes The Star. The newspaper carries a full-page colour photograph on its cover of a beaming Dame Pearlette Louisy with Lou Rawls.
    [
    http://www.stluciastar.com/images/may13pic.jpg]
    Now in its ninth year, the St. Lucia Jazz festival has become an island-wide affair, supported by old and young, rich and poor, city- and countryfolk, jazz-, calypso- and country & western-fans alike. "The real tourism and commercial Jazzfest may be all hotels, Cultural Centre and Pigeon Island, but by spreading out over the island and reaching out to people, the Jazz Festival has achieved social and cultural significance that its organizers weren't aiming for when it first started", Jason Sifflet observes in The Mirror. The paper's editorial concurs with that view, writing: "Jazz is in the air. And the whole island seems to take on a different vibe - more relaxed, together, fun-loving but intellectually stimulating, musically intoxicating and at the same time, more aware of ourselves and the rest of the world. When the Jazz Festival first started, it had hardly anything to do with St. Lucians at all. It was seen as a tourism development tool which blew millions of tax-payer dollars on inviting a bunch of foreign artistes to play at high-priced gigs, for rich visitors. Over the last few years, the Jazz Festival has recognized, to a certain extent, that its primary audience is St. Lucian. The Festival's organizers have appealed to the St. Lucian public with the phenomenally successful outreach programmes like Jazz on the Square and Jazz in the South. ... [T]he Jazz Festival, one of the newest St. Lucian cultural phenomena, has proven that culture has a dramatic impact, not just on tourism, but on national development and consciousness".
    Besides The Star and Mirror, One Caribbean and The Crusader also report extensively on Jazz 2000, agreeing that it was "a brilliant week of music, music, music" (The Crusader).

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Geest citicises WIBDECO; gov't promises intervention

    While infighting in the island's banana industry continues, with reports in this week's papers of a Geest official spouting heavy criticism of Bernard Cornibert, chief of the Windward Islands Banana Development and Exporting Company (WIBDECO), minister of Agriculture Cass Elias has announced that the government will "to some extent" finally get involved in regulating the island's main agricultural income-earning sector. Elias' statement was the result of a meeting held last Tuesday between prime minister Dr Kenny Anthony and several government officials, and the directors of three banana companies: the St. Lucia Banana Corporation (SLBC), Tropical Quality Fruit Company (TQFC) and the Banana Salvation Marketing Company (BSMC).
    Since the privatisation of the banana industry, confusion has reigned within the sector, with the various banana companies wrangling with each other and with WIBDECO over price agreements, pest control, boxing provisions and marketing arrangements. The disputes have all been set against a backdrop of continuing restrictions being imposed on the Windward islands' traditional banana export market in Europe as a result of the enforcement of World Trade Organization agreements lobbied for by the United States of America.
    WIBDECO comes under fire this week from the head of Geest, who, in a letter to SLBC chief Patrick Joseph, allegedly apologises for WIBDECO's "intransigence" with respect to the signing of an agreement between the SLBC, WIBDECO and Geest. According to an article in The Tuesday Voice and Crusader, the Geest official (who remains unnamed throughout) wrote to SLBC's Patrick Joseph that: "Like you, I want to see increased production, improved quality, and improved returns to the farmer - all of which would be helped by the implementation of this agreement. The industry is only being damaged by WIBDECO's intransigence".
    The Geest official allegedly also states to the SLBC chairman that at WIBDECO, "they keep raising new difficulties and their latest proposals are clearly unacceptable".
    In related news, One Caribbean, The Crusader and Mirror all carry a press release reporting on last Tuesday's meeting between the PM, minister Elias and the banana companies' chief officers. According to the press release, topics discussed at the meeting, , were regulation incentives, crop protection, a pension scheme for farmers, a levelling of the playing field among companies, the future of WIBDECO and a production recovery plan for the industry. The release promises that last Tuesday's meeting will become "a permanent structure for regular dialogue among the various major players in the banana industry".
    The Voice and Crusader both carry a more revealing article on last Tuesday's meeting, written by Robertson Henry, in which minister Elias is quoted at some length. Elias repeated an earlier statement made by the prime minister to the effect that the government had hoped and expected that, following privatisation of the industry, the banana companies would have "settled their differences amongst themselves". However, says Elias, "It is obvious that working together by the banana companies has not happened and [this] is beginning to cause some concern to government. ... Perhaps it gives some legitimacy to the idea that to some extent the banana trading business should be regulated in the sense that the conditions for establishing a banana marketing company or banana export company would have to be looked at to prevent that type of start-up operational hiccups from happening. ... Now that there appear to be calls by the banana companies themselves for some kind of structure to be put in place to ensure orderliness in the export activities of the marketing organisations, we need to respond to it with their consent". At the same time, however, Elias reiterated the PM's earlier statement. "We are opposed to a monopolistic situation, and we are opposed to interfering with the fundamental rights and freedom of persons who may wish to trade", Elias said. "The government has no intention to return to the old days of the BGA's [Banana Growers' Associations] or the taking over of the industry. We have absolutely no intention to take over the banana industry once more and bring it to the old days of strife and discord. The government's role is to facilitate the orderly transformation of the industry".
    Meanwhile, the Caribbean Banana Exporters Association (CBEA), which represents banana growers in Jamaica, the Windward Islands (including St. Lucia), Belize and Suriname, at its annual general meeting held in Miami on 1st May, called for the implementation of a quota for Caribbean bananas in the world market, not exceeding 3.4 million tonnes. "The current damagingly low level of market prices underlines the serious threat that any higher volume would pose", CBEA officials said. The CBEA also recommends that a tariff import quota regime for bananas based on traditional export flows be maintained for at least another ten years, "to provide adequate time for the radical adjustments that must be made to the economies of the Caribbean countries concerned, and to the Caribbean banana industry, to enable them to cope with a greater degree of liberalization thereafter". This is reported in the Crusader.

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Convictions for possession of marijuana and cocaine

    A total of 15,800 marijuana plants were uprooted on Mount Gimie two weeks ago, when members of the drug Strike Force raided the farm of a Fond St. Jacques farmer. This is reported in this week's Tuesday Voice. The farmer and three of his sons were arrested and charged with illegal possession of marijuana. After hearing the case, magistrate Mooto released the three sons but fined the farmer $75,000 to be paid within six months, or else he faces three years in prison. In a separate incident on 2nd May, a Jamaican national was arrested and charged with illegal possession of cocaine after he disembarked from a flight at Hewanorra airport. The man was found to be carrying 1.5 kilograms of the illicit drug. He pleaded guilty in court and was fined $50,000 to be paid immediately, or else face three years in prison. This is also reported in the Tuesday Voice.

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Craig Barnard: 'I do not have to fight this battle'

    As anticipated, Craig Barnard this week stepped down as chairman of the St. Lucia Tourist Board, just one week after having been appointed to the post by Tourism minister Menissa Rambally. Barnard resigned following a debate in the media regarding a perceived conflict of interest between his activities as chairman of the Tourist Board and his ownership of three hotels (two in St. Lucia) and a tour representative company [see last week's news]. The argument ran that as chairman of the Tourist Board, Barnard would be privy to information which could be used for personal gain in his business ventures. Even if he did not abuse this privilege, the argument goes, then the potential for this nevertheless exists, and a perception of conflict of interest is as damning as is its actual perpetration. Barnard, in this week's Mirror, dismisses the claim of conflict of interest, saying that every board member's behaviour is transparent and can be seen. "So it would be exceedingly difficult for anyone to try to press any agenda of their own, even if there was an opportunity to do so". Nevertheless, Barnard told the press, when the debate regarding his appointment started, he was quick to withdraw his acceptance of the post. "The minute you put in the public domain that I might use that position for personal gain, then that would be the end of it for me. I am not a politician. I do not have to fight this battle. I will not compromise my integrity. The minute you say that to me anywhere, I will walk away. Perception is as important as reality. The fact of the matter is that there are a lot of St. Lucians out there now who consider that I might, would, or could take advantage of this position and I do not sit comfortably, I do not sleep comfortably". Barnard is quoted in The Mirror.

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Man partly loses eyesight after alleged police beating

    Yet another case of alleged police brutality is reported in The Crusader this week, with anticipation mounting as to what approach the new deputy police commissioner, Canadian Neil Parker, will take with respect to the problem. The victim in this latest alleged incident is a 23-year-old man from Maynard Hill, Castries, who claims to have been severely beaten by members of the Special Services Unit (SSU) and Vieux Fort police officers after a fight broke out in a dancehall, on 23rd April. The victim claims that he was trying to get away from the fight by leaping onto the stage, when two plain-clothed policemen allegedly grabbed him by the neck, slapped his face and hit the back of his head with the barrel of a gun. "I fell backwards off the stage and landed on the concrete. They began punching at my eyes, full in the face. Blood was pouring from my eyes and nose. Suddenly I was surrounded by 10 to 15 SSU officers, Another police officer ... who had been at the dance drinking, suddenly butted me over the head with a beer bottle. While I was still on the floor this officer started kicking me in the stomach". The man claims he was subsequently taken to the Vieux Fort police station and placed in a cell. According to the Crusader: "His right to make a phonecall was denied. His right to see a doctor was denied". Although he claims to have asked for a doctor several times, the man says he was not attended to. He could not see out of one eye and both eyes allegedly were extremely painful. The man stated that he was finally released on Monday, with no charges laid against him. An eye specialist, four days after the beating, confirmed in a written statement that: "Examination revealed a sub conjunctiva hemorrage; he has a traumatic invitis which is causing a lot of pain and discomfort". According to the Maynard Hill resident, "I can't see properly out of this left eye. My sight is very different from what it was". Complaints made to the police so far have elicited little response. A reporter for The Crusader, in a commentary, writes: "To my knowledge no police officer or SSU officer has ever at the very least been suspended from duties while investigations of police brutality take place. To my knowledge no police officer or SSU officer has been found guilty of grievous bodily harm, attempted murder or brutality. To my knowledge no police officer or SSU officer has ever done time for such horrendous crimes".

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The Star to appear on Wednesdays

    As of June 14th, The Star newspaper promises to become a bi-weekly publication, with issues on Saturdays and Wednesdays. This would make The Star the second-most regular newspaper on the island, after The Voice which has a Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday edition. With the introduction of The Star's Wednesday edition, at least one newspaper will appear every day of the week, with the exception of Mondays and Sundays.

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Abortion: 'No one has a right to choose to do wrong'

    A public call made by Sickle Cell Association president Paula Calderon two weeks ago, and supported by former attorney general Lorraine Williams last week, to the effect that the debate on abortion ought to be opened up in St. Lucia, received a response in this week's newspapers with an article by Fr. Linus Clovis, published in The Star and Mirror newspapers, and a separate article in The Voice. Both articles are implicitly or explicitly critical of abortion.
    Calderon's plea was that legislation be put in place which makes it clear whether or not abortion is permissible in cases where there is a physical deformity or other serious physical condition present in an unborn child, such as sickle cell disease. Lorraine Williams, in a weekly commentary on DBS and in The Star, endorsed that call [see last week's news], saying: "I am not here recommending or endorsing abortion. ... I am not demanding that the church change its attitude to abortion. ... If your faith denies you the option of abortion, then that's a matter for you and your church and your God. ... There are several arguments, all reasonable, that might be made of abortion in certain circumstances, as many as there are against the unnatural termination of pregnancy. ... All I ask is that the authorities abandon the counterproductive pretense that the abortion question can continue to be ignored without heavy cost to the country".
    This week, Fr. Clovis takes up Lorraine Williams' gauntlet, drawing a parallel between the issues of abortion and slavery. In 1857, nine learned justices of the Supreme Court of the United States of America voted 7 to 2 "that the Negro was not a legal person. Therefore, he can be bought, sold, beaten, worked, used and killed as any other animal. Some people objected to this grave miscarriage of justice but were told, 'You have a right to your opinion and we respect your right. No one is forcing you to own slaves so do not force your opinion on us. The Constitution allows us to own, to buy and to sell Negroes. The Supreme Court has spoken. Slavery is legal".
    Clovis then compares this to another USA Supreme Court ruling, this one dating back to 1973, where it was voted 7 to 2 that "the infant in its mother's womb was not a legal person according to the US Constitution. They did not say that the baby is not human, or that it is not a human being, but just that it is not a person. Therefore he or she had no rights and could be killed at the whim of its mother".
    Clovis goes on to describe in graphical terms the numerous ways in which the life of an unborn child can be medically terminated. "Abortion", Clovis concludes, "is the punishment of an unborn human being whose only crime is to be less than perfect, whose only offence is to be Down's Syndromed or Sickle Celled or challenged in some way, whose only fault is failure to qualify for membership to the master race".
    With respect to the social and economic context which may make certain pregnancies unwanted to the women or girls who bear the child - conditions which Lorraine Williams indicated as poverty, lack of education and medication, and rape -  Clovis writes: "In St. Lucia we undoubtedly face some serious social problems but what ought to be discussed, in open forum, are ways in which our womenfolk can be liberated from the predatory and irresponsible lifestyle of so many men, and ways in which men and woman can be freed from the slavery of the tyrannical hedonism that is destroying so much of what is good in our society. Do we really need to travel down the American road and make their mistakes our own?"
    In rounding up his argument, Clovis holds supreme the rights of the unborn child over any reason or motivation that might prevail in the mind of the mother. "No one has a right to choose to do wrong. ... Our hour has come in St. Lucia, we must choose between the right constitution or constitutional rights, that is, between life and death for the innocent and most defenceless members of our society, and it's a choice that we will ultimately make for ourselves".
    Meanwhile, The Voice carries an article with several photographs of unborn babies at 11-, 14-, 18- and 19-weeks old, one of whom has survived birth. One caption reads: "This beautiful unborn baby is 18 weeks old, just one week younger than Kenya was when she was born. Inside the mother, this baby could have been legally killed. However, outside of the mother the baby would be fully protected by law". The newspaper also carries an article on research done in the United States among women who have had abortions. "The findings clearly contradict the claim that most women who have an abortion will regret it". In the same breath, however, the article notes that 12% of women were unsure about their abortions and that another 19% said they would not make the same decision again. The article ends on a note reminiscent of arguments presented by Paula Calderon and Lorraine Williams, namely that "realistic and affirming solutions exist which provide mothers with tangible assistance and alternatives to abortion. Practical pregnancy assistance in the form of prenatal care, baby items, friendly counseling and short-term housing protects life and provides women with real choices".
    It could even be argued that ultimately, Calderon, Williams and Fr. Clovis all call for a focus on eradicating the reasons and conditions which may make women consider having an abortion, such as a lack of support systems, socio-economic disadvantages and sexual violence.

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Hotels suffer higher rates but less water

    Berthia Parle, president of the St. Lucia Hotel and Tourism Association (SLHTA), lashed out at WASCO during last Friday's quarterly general meeting of the SLHTA, when she said: "You cannot honour your agreements, we get a trickle of a water supply, and you get a 100 percent increase in rates. I am very sorry, there's something wrong with that equation". According to Parle, the SLHTA has been expressing its concerns to government about the steep increase in water rates since late January but, so far, government has "not deemed it fit to respond". The Mirror writes this. "As the country was about to enter the Jazz season, Mrs. Parle told the meeting, the WASCO booster pump to augment the water supply to the north, where several hotels are located, had not been installed. Added to that, the hotel sector was being alerted to the need for further rationing by WASCO of the already limited water supply".
    On a different note, Parle also warned SLHTA members about the effects of crime against visitors, referring to the dismissal, last week, of charges against two young men who were accused of stabbing and killing a young Canadian visitor [see last week's news]. "The economic risks of this sort of neglect are potentially very severe", Parle told the meeting.

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Committee to review status former heads of state

    A special committee has been appointed which will review the status and privileges of former prime ministers, Governor-Generals and the island's first chief minister, George Charles. The committee is chaired by former cabinet secretary and deputy Governor-General, Victor Girard. The other members are SLP-appointed Joseph Baden-Allain and UWP-appointee, Wilfred St. Clair Daniel. The idea of this committee was announced by prime minister Dr Kenny Anthony during St. Lucia's 21st anniversary of independence, last February. The Thursday Voice and One Caribbean report this.

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OECS Telecommunications Authority established

    The Eastern Caribbean Telecommunications Authority (ECTEL) was born last week when heads of governments of the Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS) met at Grand Beach Resort in Grenada. ECTEL will be based in St. Lucia. It is a regional regulatory body which, according to an OECS press statement, "is expected to play a pivotal role in the soon-to-be expanded, competitive telecommunications sector in the five participating member states. The governments have also agreed to pass required legislation to further the process of reform in the sector". Currently, Cable & Wireless holds a virtual monopoly in the OECS countries but, some time ago, negotiations started under the leadership of St. Lucia's minister Calixte George for the OECS telecommunications market to be opened up. The Star and One Caribbean report this.

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PM to visit factories in Vieux Fort

    Prime Minister Dr Kenny Anthony will be visiting industrial estates of the National Development Corporation (NDC) in the Vieux Fort area on Monday and Tuesday. Dr Anthony and NDC's general manager Elizabeth Charles-Soomer are expected to spend about half an hour at each of nearly twenty businesses, speaking with the various investors. Later this month, the Caribbean's first goods distribution freezone is expected to be formally opened. The freezone complex is situated next to Hewanorra airport in Vieux Fort. The Star and Mirror both report this.

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Esther Lee in Miss Commonwealth contest

    Esther Lee has been selected to represent St. Lucia at the next Miss Commonwealth Pageant show. At a badly-attended show at the National Cultural Centre last Saturday, Esther Lee was chosen over six other contestants: Charmaine Polius, Adlina JnBaptiste, Anesta Richards, Sandy Combie, Sherydan Eleutera and Michelle Antoine. In the first round - that of the promotional speech - at least three contestants failed due to nervousness. The second round involved the parading of "highly conservative but appropriate swimwear" and the third and final round was "the dreaded question and answer segment". Esther Lee finished well ahead of the others with 415 points. First runner-up was Sherydan Eleutera, with 380 points and second runner-up Anesta Richards. Eleutera and Richards won, respectively, the titles Miss Congeniality and Miss Most Photogenic. The Star reports this while The Voice carries a photograph of the winner.

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