JPS engineers worked through the night to restore power after an unprecedented blackout plunged the entire island into darkness. Share Jamaica was plunged into darkness on Friday night after a major system failure within the Jamaica Public Service (JPS) network triggered a rare island‑wide blackout, cutting electricity to homes, businesses and essential services across all 14 parishes. The outage, which began shortly after 8pm, spread rapidly across the national grid and exposed once again the fragility of the country’s energy infrastructure. Energy Minister Daryl Vaz confirmed the nationwide collapse, calling it “unacceptable” and ordering a full investigation into what went wrong. J PS said the failure originated deep within the system and activated emergency protocols as engineers worked through the night to stabilise the grid. A phased restoration began with the careful restart of generating units to avoid further instability. While the exact cau...
As the UK protects the right to practise religion openly, dangerous individuals are slipping through cracks never meant for them.
The murder of Henry Nowak by Vickrum Digwa, now serving life with a minimum of 21 years, has reignited a fierce national debate about the systems Britain has built in the name of tolerance. Digwa used a large ceremonial‑style blade, similar to a kirpan, though Sikh groups were quick to stress it was not a true kirpan and should never be associated with their faith. Yet the case has forced the country to confront an uncomfortable truth: when the law bends to protect freedom of belief, it can also create cracks wide enough for the wrong people to slip through.
The treatment of Henry Nowak exposes a painful truth about modern policing and the cost of forgetting the person behind the “suspect” label. Britain must decide what kind of justice it stands for.. READ MORE
For years, the UK has prided itself on being a place where migrants and asylum seekers can openly practise their faith, express their identity, and live without fear of persecution. That principle is noble, but the execution has become chaotic. Immigration tribunals have reported rising cases of individuals pretending to be gay to avoid deportation, or claiming to follow a religion they do not practise because it strengthens an asylum application. These aren’t the people fleeing war or oppression. These are the people exploiting a system built to protect the vulnerable, and they are the ones the public is referring to when they say “enough”.
The Digwa case has become a lightning rod because it sits at the intersection of everything Britain is struggling with: rising migration numbers, overwhelmed systems, and laws that were written for a different era. When a man can carry a ceremonial‑style blade without immediate scrutiny, or when identity claims are accepted with minimal verification, the public begins to question whether compassion has overtaken common sense. The UK’s commitment to freedom of belief should never be a shield for those who twist it into an excuse for harm.
Vickrum Digwa, a 21‑year‑old Manchester man charged with the murder of Henry Nowak. He has been sentenced to life in prison with a minimum term of 21 years. He stabbed Henry with a large Sikh ceremonial knife...READ MORE
This is not a call to shut the door on those who genuinely need Britain’s protection. It is a call to close the loopholes that allow dangerous individuals to hide behind identities they do not live, faiths they do not follow, and protections they do not deserve. The British public is not asking for cruelty, they are asking for clarity, for control, and for a system that distinguishes between the vulnerable and the opportunistic. Cases like Digwa’s remind us that when the law is too easily manipulated, it is the innocent — like Henry Nowak — who pay the price.