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Today's Date: 10 September 2010
Last Updated: 09 September 2010 18:13:56 CIT
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One of the most wanted drug kingpins in the Caribbean is arrested in Puerto Rico.
Local companies are beginning to lose permanent jobs, the latest work permit figures have revealed.
Crime
Two women struck by a hit-and-run driver last week were walking down a section of road that has long been a safety concern in the West Bay community. 
Cayman company registrations fell in 2009, but help may be on the way.
Crime
Local police are warning parents not to use the public library system as a babysitting facility over the summer months.  
An emergency exercise will be conducted by the Cayman Islands Airports Authority on Tuesday, 20 July.The night-time readiness test will be held in the vicinity of the Owen Roberts International Airport, but the exact location and time has not been released.
A suicide bomber has killed at least 43 people and injured 40 more southwest of Baghdad, Iraqi police said Sunday.
LOCALcyclistsLEAD
Glen Inanga, University College of the Cayman Islands lecturer, musician and Cayman Arts Festival director, gave his account of a special charity bike ride.
The Cayman Islands Human Rights Commission launches its new website and seeks feedback from users.
Public consultation on the National Conservation has ended, following a series of public meetings throughout Cayman and a briefing to Chamber of Commerce members.
Several lightning strikes were recorded on Grand Cayman in the overnight hours between Friday and Saturday as strong storms rolled through the island and continued drenching downpours into the evening.  Those storms and the lightning they produced were blamed for major power outages across the island early Saturday.
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BIZtracyLEAD
Tracy Ebanks has been named the new president and general manager of the Cayman Islands Development Bank.
Marking 20 years in the Cayman Islands next year, Junior Achievement will launch its new alumni association on 23 July at Grand Old House.
The Boeing 787 Dreamliner landed at Farnborough on Saturday for its first appearance at an international air show.
The US insurance giant AIG has agreed to pay $725m to settle a long-running fraud case against it.
Ford has announced an expansion of its partnership with Jiangling Motors in China with a new $300m plant.
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SPORTSacademyLEAD
Academy boys footballers did well in a tournament in the US.
Purple Dragon have gone to Trinidad to compete in the world championships.
Sarwan will lead Guyana in the Caribbean T20 cricket competition.
Tamar Lambert is the Jamaica captain, not Chris Gayle, for the Caribbean T20 tournament.
Golden Boy boxing promoters suspended for not paying all the TV owed to boxers.
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WORLDforestLEAD
Great sweeps of Guatemalan rain forest, once the cradle of one of the world’s great civilizations, are being razed to clear land for cattle-ranching drug barons.  Other parts of the Maya Biosphere Reserve, Central America’s largest protected area, have been burned down by small cities of squatters.
Israel must go beyond easing its blockade of Gaza and throw open its long-closed border, EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton has said.
Britain will not follow France by introducing a law banning women from wearing the burka, the immigration minister has ruled.Damian Green said such a move would be “rather un-British” and run contrary to the conventions of a “tolerant and mutually respectful society”.
US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton arrived in Islamabad on Sunday for high-level deliberations with Pakistani leaders, the latest in a series of encounters that the Obama administration hopes will chip away at decades of suspicion between Pakistan and the United States.
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Lifestyles
Back when Henry Ford started making cars, he said people could have his cars in any colour as long as it was black. These days, such a statement would be unthinkable – people want their cars to reflect their personality.
Watersports & Recreation
In 1989 the world watched in horror as the Exxon Valdez disaster dumped thousands of gallons of oil into the Alaskan seas.
Dining & Entertainment
Caribbean cooking relies on spice, whether from Scotch bonnet peppers or hot sauces. Few hot sauces have as strong a following as Pickapeppa sauces. The sauce first made its appearance in Cayman back in the 1950s and since then has become a vital ingredient in Cayman cuisine.
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