GOVERNMENT & POLICE NEWS

Homicide Data 2012

A chronological log of the homicides recorded in 2012, with statistics broken down by island. The Source does…

Audio Galleries

The V.I. Police Department has a theme song, "Don't Run, Don't Hide," written by local musicians Fusion Band for use in the government television channel documentary, "V.I. Cops."

 
Currently:Click for Saint Thomas, Virgin Islands Forecast

Source Picks

V.I. Small Business Week Honors Small Businesses

The Virgin Islands Small Business Development Center (VI SBDC) and the U.S. Small Business Administration will honor small businesses during Virgin Islands Small Business Week, which is scheduled to take place May 28-June 2.

READ ENTIRE ARTICLE
2012-05-17 18:31:51
Christensen CFO Bill Gets Committee Hearing

Delegate Donna Christensen's CFO legislation will be heard before a federal House subcommittee on Thursday.

READ ENTIRE ARTICLE
2012-05-17 01:14:48
VITEMA Holds 2012 All Hazards Preparedness Expo Territorywide

In a continuing effort to heighten awareness about the importance of being prepared, the Virgin Islands Territorial Emergency Management Agency will host the 2012 Annual All Hazards Preparedness Expoterritorywide, May 24 - 27.

READ ENTIRE ARTICLE
2012-05-17 00:55:42
Local news — St. Thomas
Delegate Christensen Arrested During Peaceful Protest

June 6, 2006--Delegate to Congress Donna M. Christensen joined her Congressional Black Caucus colleagues in a peaceful protest on Tuesday in front of the Sudanese embassy to put pressure on that government to end the genocide in Darfur. Area police arrested Christensen and another colleague, Congressman Danny K. Davis of Illinois, when they refused to move off the steps of the embassy. This was the second protest staged by the CBC in recent weeks. Other CBC members were arrested in similar protests, according to the delegate.
Christensen said the CBC has been working on a number of ways to bring attention to the situation in Darfur, where millions of Sudanese have died. Christensen said the issue runs the risk of being put on the "back burner" so the lawmakers organized some peaceful protests.
"We staged press conferences where we refuse to move off the embassy steps and are arrested," the delegate said, adding that it was an "old civil rights tactic."
"Yes I was cuffed," Christensen said. "We were put in a police wagon, taken to a precinct and put in a cell while being processed. We were fingerprinted, paid our fine and released."
In a press release issued from her D.C. office, Christensen said, "As people of conscience, we cannot stand by and allow yet another genocide to occur without raising our voices as loudly as we possibly can in opposition to the atrocities that have been committed."

Advertising (skip)

The release further explained the situation in Darfur, saying that "to date, an estimated 450,000 Sudanese have died since the beginning of the hostilities in 2003. More than 2.5 million Sudanese have been displaced from their homes and 3.5 million are currently in need of humanitarian assistance as a result of the crisis that is said to have been orchestrated by the government of Sudan and its allied Janjaweed militias."
According to the release, the CBC was the first to highlight the crisis in Darfur and on June 24, 2004, introduced H. Con. Res. 467 declaring genocide in the region.
Since then, the Congress, the State Department and the President have declared the activities in Darfur genocide and called on the government to create a just and lasting peace in the region.
Darfur is located in the Sudan region of Northern Africa, bordering the Red Sea, between Egypt and Eritrea.

Back Talk


Share your reaction to this news with other Source readers. Please include headline, your name and city and state/country or island where you reside.

Read more stories in Local news»»