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...And the budget beat goes on! That is until it is ratified by the House of Assembly at the end of the month. I won't bore you with the details but this little tit bit caught my eye regarding a certain 'Hustle Truck.' The locals are up in arms about it and the fact there is no $$$ for it in the budget, so it sparked my interest.
Well, after some googling it appears that it is indeed a real shame that this is being cut, along with many other charities' budgets. Introduced by the previous Labour Minister in 2007, the Hustle Truck was billed as the answer to "one of Bermuda's most enduring social problems of wall-sitting." H.U.S.T.L.E stands for Helping Unemployed Sustain Themselves Limited Employment. The truck picks people up willing to work but unable to get jobs for various reasons, e.g. criminal records, illiteracy or age discrimination etc., in the morning and takes them to work sites to perform casual landscaping, cleaning and general manual labour. Some days as many as 100 people hustled onto the two tonne trucks for a chance to earn up to $550 a week. Tasks completed over the years include a Boaz Island Youth Centre, removing rubbish at Gulf Stream in Soutside and removing graffiti from school grounds. Seems like a win-win to me and sad that it's losing out.

Also, wasn't I only saying in the last post how rising gun crime was one of the island's biggest issues? Well, someone give me a parliamentary seat as sadly last week saw the second shooing fatality of 2011. A 26 year old guy, who's girlfriend was expecting their baby - a true tragedy. A 29 year man was also fatally shot on February 4. A court case running at the moment on a murder that took place last year has heard that the gun in that shooting has been linked to February murder, along with others. This confirms Police suspicions of a small number of guns being recycled within gangs as the tit-for-tat killings go on. It will be interesting to see if the huge Police budget cuts are still passed at the end of the month.
Continuing this stormy waters theme, we move onto art. It is expected that the "Tempest" exhibition from Bermudian artist, Rebecca Hanson, will create "a storm of interest" (nice pun www.bernews.com!). Inspired by the three most destructive recent hurricanes, the show is named after the Shakespeare play that it is claimed is based on the real-life ship wreck of the Sea Venture in 1609 leading to the settling of Bermuda. Yep, you heard it right fact finders, another claim to fame for this little island.
So that's earth (landscaping), wind (hurricane art) and now fire! Bernews is reporting a large-scale fire at Riddell's Bay Golf Course this evening. The extent of the damage is at this stage is unknown but I doubt it risks Bermuda's reputation as home to more golf courses per square mile than anywhere in the entire world. And another claim to fame... they just keep on coming!!
As the world looked on and cheered as 33 Chilean miners were freed after more than two months trapped down a gold and copper shaft this week, Bermuda's very own virtual captives were brought to the forefront once more. Yes, the island's four resident Chinese Uyghers, and one-time international celebrities, were once again in the spotlight albeit at a more localised level this time.
The quartet made international headlines last year when the Premier Ewart Brown did a deal to accept the former Guantanamo Bay detainees onto Bermudian soil. All had gone quiet on this story for a while, that was until it was revealed on Monday that they were made redundant from their positions at Port Royal Golf Course but were found work in the private sector within days of the story breaking.
This was met with anger from community, as an estimated 1,600 remain unemployed as a result of the economic downturn. This is a truly tragic story though, I fail to see how anyone can claim to feel hard done by the situation of the Uyghurs. The men were held for seven years in Guantanamo Bay WITHOUT CHARGE. They had fled their home country to Afghanistan through fear of political persecution, when they were captured by Pakistani bounty hunters following a U.S. assault on an Al Quaeda mountain stronghold.
They were accepted through the gates of paradise but it's no fairytale ending. Due to the political complexities of the case, they Uyghurs cannot leave this 24-mile island as they haven't been granted national status by the U.K. Government. Paradise must seen less like a good thing when you are not free to leave of your own accord.
When the Premier gave them refuge, he called it a "humanitarian" act but now that his term is ending, what happens now as the Uyghurs are reliant on the Government for work and the "humanitarian" act appeared to be a very personal one as the U.K. government were not informed?!
Meanwhile in other tales of captivity, this week the Premier imparted part of the blame for the cost of constructing a pier to receive ginormous cruise ships on the western tip of the island, Royal Naval Dockyards, skyrocketing from an estimated $35 million to $60 million, on some knocked up dolphins. I kid you not. In a open forum media roundtable to mark the end of the Premier's tenure, he said they should have been sent back to Chicago as the pregnant dolphins cost an extra $3.7 million to protect. Only in Bermuda!!