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Survivors of the 1990 attempted coup, reiterated calls for a national day of commemoration

Procurement amendments were approved

And Jack Warner returned to politics
Transcript
00:00 (dramatic music)
00:02 - Good evening and welcome to the past seven days on six.
00:20 I am Manasa Khatang,
00:21 as what made the news this past week.
00:24 Survivors of the 1990 attempted coup
00:27 reiterated calls for a national day of commemoration.
00:31 Procurement amendments were approved
00:34 and Jack Warner returned to politics.
00:37 As per usual, if it was happening, it was on six.
00:40 Let's get right into it.
00:42 Last week, survivors of the 1990 attempted coup
00:47 turned out to commemorate the 33rd anniversary
00:50 of the tragic and bloody event
00:52 when terrorists threatened our democracy.
00:55 Outside the Red House last week,
00:57 coup survivor Wendell Eversley again called
00:59 for a national day of commemoration,
01:01 a mid-word that high office holders
01:03 were holding a private ceremony.
01:05 It's been 33 years since the traumatic events of 1990,
01:13 which claimed the lives of 24 persons.
01:17 Yet today, on this, the 33rd anniversary
01:20 of that historic occasion,
01:22 survivors lament the entire ordeal
01:24 has become but a distant memory.
01:27 - They should be recognized.
01:31 Why is this Keith Rowley,
01:32 who is the head of the executive,
01:34 do not want to have official weekly ceremony?
01:38 The families are hurting.
01:40 The hostages are hurting.
01:43 - At 6 p.m. this afternoon,
01:44 the government of Trinidad and Tobago was overthrown.
01:51 It's undoubtedly one, if not the single most traumatic event
01:55 in our nation's history.
01:57 Yet 33 years later, the survivors are still reiterating
02:01 a call for a national day of commemoration.
02:05 - I was used as a human shield going from room to room
02:09 to let terrorists enter our parliament.
02:10 That one time I got licks on my ear.
02:13 It's a mark that will remain with me.
02:15 I cried through the Friday night.
02:18 I cried through the, this is something,
02:20 and nobody more so than for a thing.
02:22 If you all read the commission of inquiry,
02:25 we talk of we should treat with the hostages
02:27 in TTT parliament and with the Trinidad.
02:29 I don't let them get treatment.
02:31 I never get treatment, Dr. Teddy.
02:33 Never.
02:36 July, Monday's been the most hardest month for me.
02:38 - Compensation is another unfulfilled recommendation.
02:44 Oficia Caballero was but two years old
02:46 when her mother was murdered in the Red House.
02:49 She tells us those events changed the course of her life.
02:53 - I was a mere two years old when my mother passed,
02:56 so much memory of her is either here nor there.
02:59 Over the years, it has been trying.
03:05 As Mr. Everson mentioned,
03:07 he assisted me in burying my grandmother and my father.
03:10 I didn't plan to cry today
03:15 because I thought I was getting over it, but no.
03:19 And I still live in that church, unfortunately.
03:22 - Corey Joseph, who witnessed the bloodshed firsthand,
03:26 still remembers July 27th, 1990, vividly.
03:31 - When Duke Arun came in to negotiate the amnesty
03:34 with Canon Clark, I was asked to bring out Leo DeVeans.
03:38 He got shot on his leg,
03:40 and there was a hole in his leg, actually.
03:43 And I think that was the darkest time of my life.
03:46 - Corruption and the inefficiencies of the justice system
03:50 play a major role in the events of 1990
03:52 and our current state of affairs,
03:55 according to one former Senate president.
03:58 - Those who looked at TV saw the Muslim men there
04:02 on the cameras.
04:03 I went to, you know, you went to them and you saw these.
04:06 You said, "But we saw them.
04:08 We know they were guilty."
04:10 And yet they get off.
04:12 And so I think that did something
04:14 to the psyche of the criminal,
04:16 who believed, well, you can commit crime.
04:19 You can commit it in your face, as it were,
04:23 and there's no justice that come.
04:25 - But the prime minister expressed concern
04:29 that recognizing the day
04:31 could be seen as glorifying miscreants.
04:34 - The prime minister says the entire event
04:37 was a complete shock.
04:39 Speaking during a sit-down interview
04:41 on the TV6 Morning Edition,
04:43 Dr. Rowley shared how it impacted him.
04:47 - I was as deeply traumatized by it,
04:50 even though I was in the United States
04:52 when the full effect of it, you know, was felt.
04:56 - When asked if he would consider a national day
05:00 to honor the victims,
05:01 the prime minister had this to say.
05:04 - That cannot hurt.
05:05 I mean, if that comes to pass,
05:06 I mean, if that is what is required
05:08 to help the society to properly grasp it,
05:14 but you have to also be careful that, you know,
05:17 the way criminality is being lionized in this country,
05:20 that you don't make heroes of miscreants.
05:22 - In 1990, the insurrectionists held hostages,
05:26 including then prime minister A.N.R. Robinson
05:29 and other government officials at the Red House
05:32 and state-owned national television, TTT,
05:35 for over six days.
05:37 Nicole M. Romany, TV6 News.
05:41 In other news, a significant reduction in the gas supply
05:45 was reported last week,
05:47 after one major gas supplier experienced, quote,
05:50 "an unplanned technical issue."
05:52 - In a media release on Friday,
05:56 the energy ministry said one of the major upstream
05:58 natural gas suppliers in Trinidad and Tobago
06:01 has had to shut its gas production
06:04 as it deals with an unplanned technical issue.
06:06 In the energy business, an upstream company is one
06:09 that conducts exploration activity
06:11 for oil and natural gas.
06:13 TV6 News has been informed that the upstream
06:16 of the energy ministry referred to is not BPTT,
06:20 the local operations of the UK-based multinational BP.
06:24 The energy ministry said this unfortunate and untimely issue
06:28 with regard to the upstream has led to a significant
06:31 reduction in current gas supply,
06:33 which in turn has affected the end users of gas.
06:37 While the energy ministry did not explain what it meant
06:39 by end users of gas, in this instance,
06:42 it could most likely mean the downstream plants
06:45 at the Point Lysas Industrial Estate,
06:47 which produce products for export such as ammonia,
06:50 methanol and urea, as well as the Atlantic LNG plant
06:53 in Point 14.
06:54 The energy ministry said that this unforeseen event
06:57 is being given the priority urgent attention
07:00 that is necessary by the upstream entity,
07:03 and that it is hoped that the situation will be resolved
07:06 in the shortest possible time frame.
07:08 This new development adds to the challenge
07:10 the government says it has been working to eliminate
07:12 with the supply of natural gas is concerned.
07:15 During the TV6 Morning Edition program on Thursday,
07:18 Prime Minister Dr Kifu Auli spoke about the issue
07:20 of natural gas supply in the context of Trinidad
07:22 and Tobago's relationships with Guyana and Suriname.
07:25 - We have only just a few weeks ago,
07:28 signed a memorandum of understanding with Suriname on gas,
07:34 because even as we fight internationally
07:37 to sustain the gas business
07:38 and to defend the gas business as the clean energy,
07:42 the supply of gas from a high income country
07:45 is of importance to us,
07:46 because you know Guyana, they found a lot of oil,
07:49 in Suriname they're finding a lot of gas.
07:51 So Trinidad and Tobago's relationship
07:53 with these two countries, the commerce between us,
07:56 would be based on our resources
07:58 and how we mutually participate and develop it.
08:02 - Opposition Chief Whip David Lee
08:04 issued a statement on Friday,
08:05 calling on the Energy Minister to state
08:07 if there's a looming gas crisis
08:09 at the Point D'Souza Industrial Estate yet again,
08:12 as reports have emerged that four critical downstream plants
08:15 have shut down in the last few weeks
08:18 due to a lack of natural gas.
08:20 Jewel Brown, TV6 News.
08:22 - We had a quick break.
08:26 We'll have more news when we return.
08:27 (dramatic music)
08:34 - Thanks for staying with us.
08:36 Former KIPPA Vice President Jack Warner
08:38 announced his return to politics
08:41 on a UNC platform last week.
08:43 He revealed that he will be disbanding his own party
08:47 so that its members can reintegrate into the UNC.
08:51 - On the TV6 Morning Edition program on Tuesday,
08:54 Dr. Fouad Khan, a former member of the cabinet
08:57 during the 2010 to 2015 UNC-led
09:00 People's Partnership Administration,
09:02 spoke about being inspired by the return
09:04 to a UNC platform on Monday night
09:06 of another former cabinet member
09:08 in that partnership administration, Jack Warner.
09:12 - So when it is that we do see you return to politics,
09:17 is the vehicle that is going to be used,
09:20 is it going to be the United National Congress?
09:22 - It's going to be the vehicle that I feel
09:26 would make a difference in making this country
09:28 a better place, and with people who can
09:31 be innovative enough, like the People's Partnership,
09:35 who we were innovative.
09:37 It may be the PNM, it may be the UNC,
09:39 it may be a vehicle that if it brings about people
09:43 of a certain ilk that could be innovative in this country,
09:46 that we could get something going.
09:49 - However, Dr. Khan declared--
09:51 - The only way that you could have a chance
09:54 against the well-oiled machine,
09:57 and as they say, political machine of the PNM,
10:00 is that one party has to go up against the PNM,
10:05 not a scattered set of parties.
10:09 - Former FIFA Vice President
10:10 and former National Security Minister Warner,
10:12 who is fighting extradition to the United States,
10:14 is calling on all parties opposed to the PNM to unite.
10:19 - I am here by choice,
10:21 because I believe that it's time we accept
10:28 the wish and the advice of our political leader,
10:33 Kamala Poussaint Bissessa,
10:35 (crowd cheering)
10:38 and come together, come together to fight the common enemy.
10:43 - Some 10 years after he formed his political party,
10:47 Mr. Warner said he has to, quote,
10:50 "Earn the right," unquote, to wear the UNC logo again.
10:54 - When I do earn my dues,
10:57 I will then convene an emergency meeting of the ILB
11:01 and disband it,
11:03 because the ILB, the ILP,
11:07 the ILP has to be formally reintegrated with the UNC.
11:15 We are one family.
11:16 - Mr. Warner and I only wish for better lives for you all.
11:21 Whatever differences there were, those have been sorted.
11:26 As I said, Mr. Warner and I, we not tooting.
11:31 We just voting.
11:33 - Monday night's event saw a reunion
11:34 of Mrs. Poussaint Bissessa, Mr. Warner,
11:37 and former commissioner of police, Gary Griffith,
11:39 who are all part of the People's Partnership Administration.
11:42 Jewel Brown, TV6 News.
11:45 - Amendments to the Public Procurement Act
11:49 were approved last week after a fiery debate.
11:52 Our reporter, Oveshita Wari Rupnirine, had the details.
11:57 - With a vote of 19-4-8 against amendments
12:02 to the Public Procurement and Disposal of Property Act
12:05 are passed as the bill makes a second appearance
12:08 in the lower house.
12:10 Opposition MP, Saddam Hussein,
12:12 who was the first to point out
12:14 that Finance Minister, Kom Inbert, breached the act
12:17 with a carry-com and judiciary order,
12:20 says the opposition is still opposed to amending
12:23 the act from negative to affirmative resolution.
12:27 - If the OPR says no to the minister and he does not agree,
12:32 will it then grind government services to a halt?
12:37 Because that's why we're here,
12:39 to prevent the government from grinding to a halt.
12:42 So why not just leave it to affirmative resolution?
12:47 In fact, why you didn't just put it
12:49 to affirmative resolution of the house?
12:52 - In the end, the opposition,
12:54 who has been in the house for a long time,
12:56 says the OPR is not going to change its mind.
12:59 - The OPR, as he says, finds it easier
13:02 to convince the office of the procurement regulator
13:05 to approve an exemption,
13:06 rather than bringing it to the house.
13:10 - Madam Speaker, is it that we will now have a government
13:15 having to apply to a court for judicial review action
13:20 and saying no, what recourse does the minister have?
13:23 - According to the member of parliament
13:24 for San Juan Barataria,
13:26 the amendments interfere with transparency.
13:29 - Now you're adding an extra layer of bureaucracy
13:32 on this entire thing,
13:34 when all we are saying is that just come to the parliament,
13:37 come in the full public glare of the citizens
13:40 of Trinidad and Tobago and exempt what you have to exempt.
13:43 Let the country see what you're doing.
13:45 - Despite his pleadings,
13:46 the 25 minute sitting ended with the motion
13:50 on the amendments being carried.
13:52 - Honorable members on the division,
13:54 with 19 members voting for,
13:57 eight members voting against, and no abstentions,
14:01 the motion for the amendments are carried.
14:04 (gavel bangs)
14:07 - Orvisheet Tewari, Rup Narayan, TV6 News.
14:09 - On the crime front,
14:12 Prime Minister Dr. Keith Rowley weighed in
14:14 on the crime and criminality,
14:16 saying it's an era of criminal business
14:19 with a motto of power, profit, and prestige.
14:23 He said, while the police are doing their utmost best,
14:27 the criminal elements are doing the same.
14:30 - As the numbers increase,
14:32 the workload of the police increase exponentially.
14:37 So when you get to 600 murders, just picture it.
14:40 It might be eight or 10 or 12 persons doing that killing,
14:44 but the workload of the police to find,
14:47 investigate each one, just increases to the point where
14:52 there's a constant stream of requirement
14:55 to find out who has done that, extract that person,
14:59 and then you get to a place of law where,
15:02 if an eye is in the wrong place,
15:05 a tee is crossed in the wrong angle,
15:07 then they back out on the streets.
15:09 - He said, crime in this country is too often politicized,
15:13 and referred to a document from CARICOM's
15:15 Agency for Crime and Security, 2013,
15:19 that showed the problem is nothing new.
15:21 - The criminals are supported by the facilitators,
15:27 which consist of unscrupulous and corrupt professionals
15:32 within key sectors of the economy.
15:36 - The Prime Minister further notes
15:38 the prevalence of gun crimes and the flow of firearms
15:41 from the US into Trinidad and Tobago.
15:44 - I don't know if you're aware that there's a legal push
15:47 in the United States to export small arms and ammunition.
15:52 That is what we are fighting.
15:56 A manufacturer with a huge business like the United States,
15:59 changing its arrangement so as to export
16:03 more of these things.
16:04 - Dr. Rowley notes that there are currently
16:07 investigations taking place and reports done
16:10 on the firearms unit of the TTPS,
16:13 that according to him, will make your hair stand.
16:16 - The very people who were supposed to be
16:20 guarding us from this outcome
16:23 have been and are facilitators of it.
16:27 That is the frightening thing,
16:28 a breakdown of the institutional protection.
16:31 - Nicole M. Romany, TV6 News.
16:34 - For some time now, drones have been dropping contraband
16:38 into the maximum security prison.
16:40 The Acting Prisons Commissioner has deemed it
16:43 a national security threat,
16:45 as prison's officers have been forced to shoot down
16:48 some of the drones in the past.
16:50 TV6 News obtained recent videos of drones
16:53 making these illegal drops.
16:55 Mark Bassant had the story.
16:57 - A contraband package captured on the cell phone
17:00 of an inmate being dropped off
17:02 at the maximum security prison
17:04 on a night that we do not have a date for,
17:06 but we're told it was within the last few months.
17:09 These daily drops at the prison in Aruka
17:11 pose a major threat to national security
17:14 according to well-placed intelligence sources.
17:17 A prison source told TV6 News
17:19 that at least seven drones fly day and night into the prison,
17:23 transporting from cigarettes to cell phones
17:25 and other unspecified items that could be detrimental
17:29 to the security of the prison.
17:31 A senior intelligence source with first-hand information
17:34 about this situation said this drone situation
17:37 has been going on for more than two years
17:40 and hinted it was difficult to shut down these drops
17:44 and clean up the prison's system due to rogue elements.
17:48 In one of the clips, an inmate reacts
17:49 to the covert drop as he films.
17:51 - You not paying?
17:55 - You not paying?
17:56 - You not putting it in the room?
17:59 - I'm the baddest man collector right now, buddy.
18:09 - Prison sources revealed that the drones hover above
18:12 and the bags are hooked and strung beneath the drone,
18:15 which then delivers the contraband
18:17 to various windows of prison cells
18:19 that are grabbed up by the inmates.
18:21 Deir Pesad Ramoutar, Acting Commissioner of Prisons,
18:24 told TV6 News, quote,
18:26 "The absolute solution is a technological one.
18:29 "Local techniques, including routine searches,
18:31 "have been used and prisoners are sometimes
18:33 "not allowed to leave their cells," unquote.
18:36 Ramoutar could not elaborate on what he meant
18:38 about technological solutions,
18:40 but said they were aware of the increased prevalence
18:42 of drones at the prison.
18:44 In some instances, Ramoutar says
18:46 they have had to shoot down drones.
18:49 A prison source familiar with the situation said
18:51 on June 28th of this year,
18:53 Aruka police officers confiscated a drone
18:56 with a cartoon of cigarettes
18:57 and two and a half packs of wrapping paper.
19:00 Mark Besant, TV6 News.
19:03 This is the past seven days on six.
19:05 We'll be right back.
19:07 (dramatic music)
19:09 - Welcome back.
19:15 Effective this year, ECC teachers are obliged
19:19 to report to school during the July-August vacation,
19:23 although schools are officially closed.
19:25 Tutors staged a demonstration last week
19:28 to protest the educators' terms
19:30 and conditions of employment.
19:32 The education minister offered some insight.
19:35 - The teachers are on vacation
19:37 in the primary and secondary sector
19:40 when their students are on vacation.
19:42 However, the Ministry of Education is asking these teachers
19:46 to report for duties at the centers during this vacation.
19:50 To do what?
19:51 We are asking, what good is this?
19:54 - It's the burning question which remains unanswered,
19:57 but TV6 News understands that the issue lies
20:00 in the terms and conditions of employment for ECC teachers
20:05 when not appointed by the Teaching Service Commission.
20:08 Education Minister Dr. Nyan Gadsby-Dawley explains
20:12 that as per their current contract,
20:14 ECC teachers are allowed 20 days vacation.
20:19 As such, legislative changes are being pursued.
20:23 - At this time, what is being discussed with the CPU
20:25 is the specifying of the vacation period
20:28 within the school holiday period,
20:31 because it cannot be that the ECCE teachers benefit
20:35 from the school holidays
20:37 and still have 20 days vacation leave outside of that,
20:41 because that really was issued at 20 Industrial Court
20:45 where the teachers were given the school holidays,
20:48 and yet some were still trying to apply
20:50 for these outside of that.
20:52 And the Industrial Court ruled that they were entitled
20:54 to their terms and conditions,
20:56 which is 20 days vacation leave.
20:59 So at this time, unless and until that discussion
21:02 is finalized with the CPU,
21:04 that's exactly what the ECCE teachers are entitled to.
21:08 - While Twitter did not make specific mention
21:10 of what was outlined by the minister,
21:13 it did say it is seeking changes to the terms
21:15 and conditions of ECCE teachers,
21:18 with better tenure being a top priority.
21:21 - Abolish the contracts for these teachers,
21:24 because the contracts are proving to be
21:27 within a number of issues at this time.
21:30 We look back at when the contract needed to be renewed,
21:33 and the teachers who have been on these contracts
21:36 for a number of years, a number of contracts,
21:38 were asked to reapply and to be subjected to interviews.
21:43 - Twitter is set to meet with the permanent secretary
21:48 on Wednesday, following which it will decide
21:51 on its next course of action.
21:54 Some Venezuelans in state custody have been served
21:57 deportation orders.
21:58 This was confirmed last week by Quantum Legal's
22:01 Kristen J. Williams.
22:03 - The claims made on Wednesday, July 19th,
22:06 that a mass deportation of Venezuelans
22:08 that was planned for the following day
22:10 were never confirmed by the authorities.
22:12 It also didn't come to fruition.
22:14 That's an admission coming from Quantum Legal,
22:17 who is representing some of its clients
22:19 being detained at the heliport.
22:22 Attorney Kristen J. Williams suspects Venezuelans
22:25 not consenting to be repatriated
22:27 or not signing deportation orders
22:29 might have had something to do with that outcome.
22:32 However, he tells TV6 News,
22:34 deportation orders were served on Monday.
22:38 - The exact number of our clients
22:40 that were served deportation orders, I do not know,
22:42 but we are in receipt of four deportation orders
22:46 of our clients.
22:47 - But those orders remain unsigned.
22:50 If signed, the signatory would lose rights
22:52 to be granted a refugee or asylum status.
22:56 Williams says it's a serious matter
22:58 if any of the deportation orders were issued
23:00 to anyone with a UNHCR card.
23:04 - I dare say that isn't a positive action
23:07 towards refoulement, which is against international law.
23:11 - Quantum Legal claims that it requested
23:13 to see an additional 15 of its clients on Monday,
23:17 but that request was denied.
23:19 Lo Fum hopes that the visit would be facilitated on Tuesday.
23:24 Williams maintains that based on a 2021 High Court case
23:28 ruling by Justice Devendra Rampersad,
23:31 it is illegal to deport people who have applied
23:34 for a minister's permit or UNHCR status
23:37 until their matters have been concluded.
23:40 - So my next immediate step is to send further correspondence
23:44 to the Ministry of National Security,
23:46 as well as the chief immigration officer
23:48 with the active chief immigration officer, Ms. Posada,
23:51 informing them to please follow the dictator
23:54 in Louisiana, Hernandez, and others,
23:56 and release our client.
23:58 - A deportation order does not have to be signed
24:00 by the person that is to be deported
24:02 in order to be acted upon.
24:04 Williams is hoping that the matter does not result
24:07 in costly litigation between his law firm and the state.
24:11 - Should it be, however, that our information is
24:14 that a deportation is actually scheduled,
24:17 then we will be forced, we shall be forced
24:20 to seek redress from the High Court,
24:24 no matter what time of day, night, or morning it is, actually.
24:28 I'll go to court at 11 p.m., it doesn't matter.
24:30 - Alessia Bouger, TV6 News.
24:33 - Sport is up next, keep it here.
24:35 In sport, West Indies fans finally had cause
24:45 to celebrate again, as the West Indies pulled off
24:49 a six-wicked win over India at Kensington Oval.
24:52 Captain Shea Hope and Casey Carty,
24:55 putting on a 91-run stand to take the Windies to victory,
25:00 chasing 182 to even the three-match series one-all.
25:04 The decision by the West Indies to bull fizz
25:08 looked to have backfired, with India making a solid start.
25:11 Ishan Kishan and Shubhman Gill started cautiously
25:13 before finally accelerating.
25:15 The pair looked good for a massive partnership,
25:18 despite a few tough chances.
25:20 But the Windies would eventually find some success,
25:22 Gudakesh Moti getting Gill to sky a catch.
25:24 - Not properly struck.
25:26 - And that would create an opening
25:29 for the Caribbean man Romario Shepard,
25:31 widening that opening with a pair of wickets.
25:34 From 90 without loss, India would have a wobble,
25:39 losing five wickets for just 23 runs.
25:42 Jaden Seals and Yannick Carrier playing their part,
25:45 getting Hardik Pandya and Sanju Samson cheaply.
25:48 The weather would intervene with the Tourist 113 for five,
25:51 as Syoya Kumar Yadav and Ravindra Jadeja
25:54 would look to repair the Indian innings.
25:56 However, Moti and Shepard would get another pair of wickets
25:59 to leave India floundering at 148 for seven.
26:02 The Caribbean man would put on a professional display
26:05 with the ball, not allowing India to recover.
26:07 - Could be another brilliant catch, magnificent.
26:10 - Alzari, Joseph and Moti would grab the final three wickets
26:14 to bundle India off 181 inside 41 overs.
26:19 But chasing 182 is no guarantee
26:22 for the Windies based on recent history.
26:25 However, they would get an assuring half century stand
26:27 from their openers.
26:28 - Times without much success.
26:31 - But in the space of two deliveries,
26:33 Shadul Thakur would have both Brandon King and Kyle Mayers
26:36 back in the stands and losing Alec Atanas
26:39 and Shemron Hetmaya cheaply
26:41 with Mount the pressure on Captain Shea Hoop.
26:44 But he would get a valuable partner
26:45 in the less experienced Casey Carty.
26:47 - What a shot, powerfully drilled.
26:49 - Hoop would get to his half century here.
26:53 - That's a half century for Shea Hoop.
26:57 - As Carty would show his quality as his confidence grew.
27:02 - Nice glance.
27:03 - The equation favored the Windies
27:06 as the pair would put on 91 runs.
27:09 - Struck a six would have given Carty his half century,
27:13 but the winning run would do as he finished on 48
27:16 and Hoop on 63 as the Windies won by six wickets
27:19 to even the series 1-1.
27:22 Terence Clark, TV6 Sport.
27:23 - And that's a wrap on the past seven days on six.
27:29 I am Vanessa Cutting.
27:31 If you didn't catch this segment in its entirety,
27:34 you can find it on our website, www.tv6tnt.com.
27:39 The TV6 weekend news comes up next, so stay tuned.
27:43 (upbeat music)
27:46 (dramatic music)
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