Tag Archives: caribbean

Bermuda Not Happy with13th Place Conde Nast Rating

Bermuda ranked thirteenth out of 20 Caribbean destinations in a recent visitor satisfaction survey.

But tourism chiefs pointed out that the survey, conducted by Conde Nast Traveler magazine, was done in April and May, when the island was under strict health restrictions because of the coronavirus.

Bermuda received a satisfaction rating of 91.16 in the poll.

St Barts topped the list with a score of 94.29, and Nevis, Anguilla, and Jamaica placed second, third and fourth respectively.

Antigua, the Cayman Islands, Aruba and Puerto Rico all finished ahead of Bermuda, as did St Lucia, the US Virgin Islands, British Virgin Islands and Turks & Caicos.

A spokeswoman for the Bermuda Tourism Authority insisted that Bermuda’s appearance on the list was a positive, despite its poor showing.

She said: “We’re delighted to be recognised among the top 15 of the CN Traveler’s Caribbean feature, as well as in the Travel & Leisure world’s best islands in the Caribbean.

“Being included in these surveys elevates our visibility and has directly translated to visitors expressing their desire to visit Bermuda.

“With the world of travel opening up slowly and navigating cautiously, Bermuda is welcoming guests who applaud the island’s robust protocols and how the Government handles the pandemic management. These surveys create excitement, and making the list is as important as the ranking.”

The spokeswoman added: “Visitors to our island have consistently acknowledged their positive on-island experiences in exit surveys, with most noting that the friendliness of the locals exceeded their expectations.

“Our team continues to offer the certified tourism ambassador programme for industry service providers, and to develop memorable, authentically Bermudian experiences through our experience investment programme.”

She said the BTA was “proud of our partnerships” in support of customer service development through a recent “learn to earn” programme.

The spokeswoman added: “The BTA tourism standards and training team has engaged industry stakeholders in the safe travels programme codifying Covid health and safety protocols for the industry – a process that has earned the island the World Travel and Tourism seal of approval.

“And we look forward to measuring the impact of our expansion into new markets and unveiling the research gleaned from our current brand study.”

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Will Anti-Vaxxers Make Digital Vaccination Cards a Sure Thing?

As more countries set up requirements to see proof of vaccination for entry, persons who chose not to get vaccinated are getting creative to beat the system. A booming business has sprung up on the internet, where people can purchase fake vaccination cards for between US$25 and $200.

On Tuesday of this week, Guyana’s Health Minister, Dr Frank Anthony said that the government is currently investigating around 12 to 15 cases of forged vaccine cards in the country.

In Jamaica, Minister of Health, Dr. Christopher Tufton, said this week that they, “have seen cases of persons allegedly having fake vaccine cards and that [it] is increasingly becoming a challenge.”

Jamaica has now fully committed to implementing a digital COVID-19 vaccination card, which the government said would be available by December. Guyana has also indicated in the past they are willing to go the route of a digital vaccination passport as well, to “get back to normalcy.”

It is no secret that other Caribbean countries are harboring the thought of having digital vaccination cards, to help with forgery and to stay on top of requirements imposed by larger countries.

Barbados was one of the first countries to implement a digital platform to show proof of covid testing.

CARICOM Agreed on Vaccination Passports

At the 42nd regular meeting of the conference of the Heads of Government of CARICOM in July, leaders “agreed to consider the use of a Vaccination Passport for vaccinated persons travelling by air and sea, supported by a Digital Vaccination Database, possibly based on the Barbados model in the first instance.”

There are also reports that the British Virgin Islands (BVI) was unveiling a digital vaccination database that “will be internationally recognized to meet the strict proof-of-vaccination requirements of other countries.”  BVI’s Chief Medical Officer Dr. Ronald George, said: “That the territory’s official vaccination database will ensure that unscrupulous persons will be unable to produce counterfeit copies of them.”

Not Everyone is Onboard With Vaccination Passport

Not everyone seemed to be on board with the digital vaccination, however. In March, Jamaica’s tourism minister, Edmund Bartlett cautioned global leaders about the use of digital passport for travel purposes. Speaking in his capacity as Chair of the Organization of American States (OAS), Inter-American Committee on Tourism (CITUR) Working Group 4 he said: “There can hardly be a harmonized position for digital passports and other bio-sanitary protocols when some countries and regions lag dramatically behind in their health response systems, including the vaccination process. If we remain committed to leaving no one behind, we are best positioned to move farther ahead,” said the Minister. The tourism minister went on to add that: “Any requirement for proof of vaccination for travel which does not take into account this reality could very well be considered discriminatory,”

Mr. Bartlett is not alone in his assertion. Last month, according to US News, the World Health Organization said that vaccination passport would “fuel discrimination” at this stage of the pandemic. WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a press conference that vaccine passports should not be used at this time, particularly not as a prerequisite for travel “because of lack of vaccine equity.”  He said however, that “for the future, when vaccine coverage increases globally, it can be considered.”

While Messrs. Bartlett and Ghebreyesus have a genuine point regarding equity, their position is untenable due to the increasing use of mandates to encourage more vaccination. Yes, there is inequity in the procurement and distribution of the vaccine. Yes, there are instance in which it may be discriminative, but the overall health of the world and its economic survival is at stake.

caribbean vaccination ratesAccording to the latest figures from ourworldindata.org, only 46 percent of the world population has received at least one dose of covid-19 vaccine. In low-income countries a meagre 2.3 percent of persons have received the first dose. In the Caribbean, only six countries out of 22 have gone past the 50 percent mark of being fully vaccinated. Cayman Island tops the numbers with 83 percent being fully vaccinated, while anguishing at the bottom of the table are Jamaica and Haiti, two of the most populous Caribbean nations.

Challenges for Caribbean Countries

The conundrum for Caribbean countries is multifold. They all depend on tourism to sustain their economies. To provide tourism services they must ensure that their employees are free from covid. These employees mix with the wider population mostly not inoculated and therefore presents a risk of spreading the virus. These countries have low vaccination rates because they do not have access or funding to procure vaccines, and of course there is the strong resistance from members of their populations. Having a low vaccinated population, risk being placed on travel ban lists, which discourages travelers from coming to their shores. At the same time, the main tourist-supplier nations are increasingly mandating vaccination cards and require proof of vaccination.

Benefits of Vaccination Passport

While the vaccination passports will not solve all the social and economic problems brought on by the pandemic, it does solve headaches associated with administering a sound recovery policy. Firstly, you eliminate or reduce the instances of counterfeit vaccination proofs. Secondly, you ensure that your people can travel to and do business with countries requiring secure proof of vaccination. Thirdly, by blocking the loopholes it may encourage more people to get vaccinated, mitigating the spread of the virus. This includes medical, social, and financial burden. Lastly, with everything going digital now, the passport could also be a replacement for the old yellow booklet used internationally as proof of vaccination against hepatitis, yellow fever, cholera, rabies, and other viral diseases. This will add security to the process and potential savings.

Already some countries are requiring proof to get services. Every Caribbean country in some way has established preferential treatment for vaccinated tourists. As this requirement of ‘proof for service’ spread around the world, it would be more convenient to show proof on you phone, rather than sifting through loads of paper in your purse or wallet.

In the end its virtually a sure bet that vaccination passport will become inevitable.

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Caribbean Nations, Except Haiti and DR, Open for Travel to UK

Haiti and the Dominican Republic are among seven countries that will remain on the United Kingdom’s Red List. The other countries are Panama, Colombia, Peru, Venezuela and Ecuador.
Forty-seven countries, including Trinidad and Tobago, Cuba, Guyana and Suriname, will be removed from the Red List from Monday, October 11, the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office announced.
UPDATE: From Monday (11th Oct) 📅 I’ll be cutting 47 destinations from our red list – including South Africa, with just 7 countries and territories remaining ⚠️ – all others will be included in the “rest of world” category 🌐 [1/3]
They will join the rest of the Caribbean on the Rest of the World List. Fully vaccinated travellers to and from those countries will now be able to enter the UK without quarantine. Vaccines that are recognised by the UK are Oxford/AstraZeneca, Pfizer BioNTech, Moderna and Janssen.
Other passengers who are not fully vaccinated with an authorised vaccine returning from a non-red destination must still take a pre-departure test, a day two and day eight test and complete 10 days self-isolation, with the option of Test to Release on day five.
Trinidad & Tobago is off the Red list as of 11 October. Great news for all our tourists, families, students and both our economies! ✈️ https://t.co/PUQDuhm8eY
The new travel rules come as the UK simplifies its controversial Traffic Lights system to screen travellers from countries the UK Government considers high-risk for COVID-19.
Arrivals from Red List countries are required to pay for 10 days of hotel quarantine and take two PCR tests.

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New Initiatives to Tackle Sargassum on Mexico’s Beautiful Caribbean Beaches

 

Guest blog by: Champi Alvarez

Happy Eco

Mexico’s beautiful Caribbean beaches with their turquoise waters and endless white sand have been experiencing a phenomenon that started last decade which pollutes many beaches around the Riviera: the sargassum blooms.

Sargassum is a brown marine macroalgae of the genus Sargassum and can be seen floating on the surface of the ocean. In marine areas, sargassum forms essential ecosystems for the health of the oceans and provides environmental goods and services for human activities. However, when these algae reach coastal areas they have negative effects on nature and the environment, communities and sectors such as fishing and tourism.

Photography: Smart Travel

The warming of the oceans increases the presence of this algae on the beaches of the Riviera Maya, affecting many industries that depend on these destinations and ecosystems. When on the beach, sargassum forms brown spots up to 150 linear meters and gives off an unpleasant rotten smell, strong enough to keep tourists away.

There are records of the presence of sargassum in the Atlantic from the 15th century with the discovery of the Sargassum Sea, but since 2011 the presence and amount of this algae in the Caribbean Sea have been higher than normal. Since 2014 sargassum has become the uncomfortable guest on the beaches and coasts of Quintana Roo, in the South of Mexico, before then the quantities were not a big of a problem.

Wang Graphic: Sargassum levels

An immense and thick brown tide of algae that due to climate change and the acidification of the oceans, proliferates in the water and reaches the coasts of several Caribbean countries. Every year the problem of sargassum blurs the beauty of the sun and beaches offered by some of the most visited destinations in Mexico and affects not only tourism; scientific studies have shown that its decomposition impacts ecosystems, prevents light from filtering into the water and it contains a remarkable amount of heavy metals and dangerous bacteria.

By 2018, NASA observed 20 million tons on the Caribbean coast, which is equivalent to all the garbage that is generated in Mexico City in 4 years, an extremely high volume and sufficient to generate environmental, social and economic problems that must be addressed urgently. Several universities have studied this phenomenon, such as the University of South Florida and UNAM, and it was determined in May of 2021 that the algae would reach the ecosystems of Quintana Roo in greater quantities than in 2019, a record-breaking year, when only from May to July they were 38,892 tons of seaweed collected, according to the Secretary of the Navy.

Photography: López Doriga

“Sargassum is an example of what climate change can do to the planet by not taking care of wastewater treatment, injecting so many pollutants into the sea and emitting so many greenhouse gases,” says UNAM researcher Rosa Elisa Rodríguez, a coral specialist.

Sargassum season, when the majority of seaweed arrives in the Mexican Caribbean, runs from April to August, and during these time the current Mexican government entrusted the task of collecting sargassum to the Navy and the Monitoring System for Collected Sargassum (Simsar), an entity which was created in order to tackle the problem. Currently, the government strategy has 289 elements that are in charge of cleaning tasks, 12 sargassum boats and 4.2 kilometers of barriers to prevent sargassum from reaching some of the emblematic beaches, such as Tulum or Playa del Carmen. The measure seeks to systematize the information and improve the use of the algae once it is collected, but researchers are not so optimistic and they have been calling for increased resources not only to remove the algae, but to process it properly and prevent it from contaminating the soil when it is disposed of. Unfortunately, even though it has become a national problem, the government has only helped with very few resources.

Photography: Detroit News

Another problem is that in Mexico there are few or no regulations or permits to market sargassum. But even though there are a lot of limitations, many initiatives have been coming up throughout the years once this issue started.

People and groups near the affected area have come up with creative ideas on how to use this algae in order to have an impact on changing the landscape that is so dreaded during the summer months and coming up with products that not only are sustainable but that might help with the algae blooms.

One example is the Mexican company ‘Sargánico, which creates sustainable products with sargassum as their main ingredient. They create notebooks, folders, cup holders, menu holders and business cards among other products.

Photography: Sargánico

Victoria Morfín, its creator, following her creative and entrepreneurial instinct, had the idea of turning sargassum into raw material to process and transform it into practical, useful and aesthetic products. The purpose of making this type of materials is to offer products that help to have a lesser impact on the environment, giving its customers the confidence that their products are one of the best alternatives there are in order to have a sustainable life and tackle this issue that hits so close to home.

Sargánico combines sargassum with recycled materials to make its products and has become a great alternative for a more sustainable life around Quintana Roo.

Another initiative is a company with the name of C-Combinator, which with innovative bio-manufacturing they turn the Mexican Caribbean coast’ sargassum into solutions that not only help restore the planet but also look for solutions to a transition without oil in the near future.

Photography: C-Combinator

Sargassum is a type of brown algae that is very hard to work with and it’s too often overlook, and that is exactly why C-Combinator have turned towards it to center their business strategy on. They have come up with a circular economy design to convert this sargassum that has affected many into a line of sustainable products.

By doing this they are addressing the environmental, social and economic impacts while generating jobs in an economy based in biofuels and bioproducts, by working with local people and undertaking a local problem.

C-Combinator creates an array of products derived from the local sargassum that arrives to the Caribbean waters every year. They create bio stimulants and bio fertilizers that increase the health and the performance of the soil for agriculture, replacing soil degradant fertilizers that only destroy the health of the soil. They are also centering their production towards making textiles and packaging, cosmetics, bio-medical, and tissue-engineering products derived from the seaweed that is collected.

Unsurprisingly it is human activity that is radically altering the sargassum blooms and algae blooms around the oceans and changes need to be made before the problem inevitably gets worse in the future. Seaweed is one of the most fastest growing plants in the world and they survive very harsh environments by being adaptable and regenerative while absorbing carbon dioxide around them. They have become key for the health of the ocean in many parts around the world with different initiatives and projects centered around the benefits of working with their different types. An example outside of Mexico of such initiatives are AlgiKnit, a biomaterials research group located in New York City, comprising a team of scientists and designers that have joined forces to launch a new class of sustainable materials for a cleaner fashion industry based on seaweed and Evoware, a social enterprise in Indonesia that promotes sustainability by providing plastic-free alternatives such as seaweed based packaging.

The demand for these products will only increase, and the cost of production will decrease, making it a real sustainable alternative to other products. Especially companies such as C-Combinator that are offering products that might even help break the process of sargassum blooms by decreasing them while using soil products that do not contribute to making conditions better for the algae blooms but on the contrary, healing the soil and not directing chemicals into the oceans that make sargassum grow more each year.

Photography: Caleb Kastein

The process of turning the algae into products helps to restore soils and oceans, remove microplastic residues, and contribute to carbon neutrality. Our oceans are out of balance and this sort of algae pollution, even though it comes from natural sources is heating up our planet. This projects are making a stand and giving a voice to a much needed issue that we all need to be aware of.

Thanks to this first steps of people, communities and businesses, more will eventually follow. The Mexican Caribbean Coast has seen an influx on projects that wish to work with the sargassum blooms and help the community with it and it definitely has become a national environmental catastrophe and together we can help with innovative ways of transforming a hazard into an opportunity of restoring our precious ecosystems that need it so much.

Sargánico IG @sargánico

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Haiti: US Envoy Who Recently Quit Says PM Henry Not Credible

The former US envoy on Haiti who resigned in protest last month testified Thursday that the United States made a mistake by backing Prime Minister Ariel Henry, saying he had no credibility.

Asked at a congressional hearing if Henry’s government could stay in power without US support, Daniel Foote replied: “I do not believe they would survive for a minute.”

Henry was appointed just two days before the July 7 assassination of president Jovenel Moise, who had been ruling by decree, ushering in a new crisis in a nation already battered by rampant violence and natural disasters.

Under a deal reached later in July, a new government was tasked with working toward holding elections. Henry became the favorite after the US, French and other ambassadors in Port-au-Prince in a joint statement threw their support behind him.

Foote said he had no personal grudge against Henry but believed the “consensus is nearly unanimous” among the public that the prime minister belonged to a ruling party that was to blame for Haiti’s problems.

Haiti’s Prime Minister Ariel Henry attends the signing ceremony of the “Political Agreement for a peaceful and effective governance of the interim period” with the opposition, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. September 11, 2021. REUTERS/Ralph Tedy Erol

“Haitians see that as meddling and are not happy and do not see the current interim government as credible,” Foote told the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

Foote said that officials in President Joe Biden’s administration had “almost blindly” supported Henry as they felt “nervous” about too much change in government in the troubled country.

Foote, a veteran diplomat who served only two months in his role, said that the row contributed to his resignation.

Representative Andy Levin told Foote he was “furious” that the United States missed what he called a historic chance to involve civil society and instead blessed an appointee of Moise, who had led a “kleptocracy, a gangsterization” of Haiti.

The Democratic lawmaker urged the Biden administration to encourage a “real and not just for-show transition back to democratic rule.”

“I believe our current policy disrespects and fails to see the Haitian people, something our country has done over and over again,” Levin said.

In a letter last month, Foote said that he could not support mass deportations being carried out under Biden amid widespread outrage at scenes of horseback border guards’ harsh rounding up of Haitians.

Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman replied that his explanation was disingenuous and that he had lost a policy debate by calling for a US military involvement in Haiti.

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U.S., Mexico Prepare New Security Deal to Replace Merida Initiative

MEXICO CITY, Oct 7 (Reuters) – The United States and Mexico are hashing out a security arrangement to replace the Merida Initiative that will focus on exchanging information and the root causes of violence, in a bid to soothe bilateral friction, Mexican government sources and U.S. officials said.

Key elements of the new agreement will be up for negotiation on Friday during U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s visit to Mexico City, where the Biden administration will hold its first U.S.-Mexico High-Level Security Dialogue.

Security cooperation between the neighbors suffered a major blow last October, when U.S. anti-narcotics agents arrested former Mexican defense minister Salvador Cienfuegos, infuriating the Mexican government. Cienfuegos was released but the arrest strained ties and cut down security cooperation.

Two Mexican government officials said the new agreement will replace the multibillion-dollar Merida Initiative, a plan that was launched in 2007 and initially gave U.S. military aid to Mexico in the fight against drug cartels.

“The Merida Initiative is dead,” said one of the Mexican officials, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The officials noted the new accord would signal that the two neighbors had moved past the diplomatic storm unleashed by Cienfuegos’ arrest on drugs charges at Los Angeles International Airport.

Washington is calling the new initiative the U.S.-Mexico Bicentennial Framework for Security, Public Health and Safe Communities, according to senior Biden administration officials, who briefed reporters on condition of anonymity.

After Friday’s talks, Washington would develop an action plan by Dec. 1 and then expects to have a three-year bilateral framework and plan agreed by Jan. 30 next year, the officials said.

Mexico’s foreign ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

State Department spokesperson Ned Price, asked in a media briefing on Thursday whether Merida was dead, said Washington believed security cooperation was “due for an updated look.”

“The Merida Initiative helped Mexico strengthen rule of law and counter-narcotics capacity,” Price said. “We want to see to it that those gains are preserved, (and) that that cooperation is deepened.”

CAUSES OF VIOLENCE

Worked out over the last few months, the new deal did not foresee Mexico receiving military equipment or funds, and was instead focused on information exchange, inter-agency cooperation and training of personnel, the Mexican official said.

Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador sees the Merida Initiative as tainted by its association with previous governments, and for financing security equipment in the 2000s. In recent years, the program supported justice reform, immigration infrastructure and drug demand reduction.

The new accord would make clear that Mexico and Washington shared responsibility for addressing chronic cross-border problems such as illicit arms trafficking and the demand for illegal drugs in the United States, said the official.

That would be a win for Mexico, but it means the agreement also implied Mexico was accepting that the United States’ security concerns were its own concerns, the official said.

The new accord’s goals in tackling violent crime and arms trafficking were likely to be announced gradually, not on Friday, the official said. For now, the two sides would focus on explaining how they would work together under it.

A second government source, who is a senior Mexican security official, confirmed the Merida agreement has been “stopped,” and said a key component of the new agreement will be programs that tackle the “root causes” of violence in Mexico.

Cienfuegos’ capture took the Lopez Obrador administration by surprise, and gave fuel to Mexico’s long-standing concerns about U.S. anti-narcotics agents impinging on its sovereignty. It prompted Mexico’s Congress to pass legislation to make it harder for U.S. agents to work on Mexican soil.

U.S. officials have complained that efforts to battle powerful cartels were obstructed because of the fraying in relations, and the inability of U.S. agents to move freely around Mexico.

The senior Mexican security official said while there was room for negotiation, the U.S. agents would not be able to operate in the same manner as before Cienfuegos’ arrest and the passing of the new legislation.

“That’s out … because the president really believes in sovereignty,” he said.

Reporting by Dave Graham and Drazen Jorgic; Additional reporting by Simon Lewis in Palo Alto, California, and Daphne Psaledakis in Washington; Editing by Sandra Maler and Bill Berkrot

 

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World View: US Debt Deal, Nobel Peace Prizes, Israel-Arab Body Diplomacy, China Tensions, More

Oct 08, 2021

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The Associated Press

The Rundown

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate has dodged a U.S. debt disaster, voting to extend the government’s borrowing authority into December and temporarily avert an unprecedented federal default that experts warned would devastate the economy and harm millions…Read More

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OSLO (AP) — The Nobel Peace Prize has been awarded to journalists Maria Ressa of the Philippines and Dmitry Muratov of Russia. They were citing for their fight for freedom of expression….Read More

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AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Abortions quickly resumed in at least six Texas clinics after a federal judge halted the most restrictive abortion law in the U.S., but other physicians remained hesitant, afraid the court order would not stand for long and thru…Read More

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ABU DIS, West Bank (AP) — More than a year after his son was killed by Israeli forces under disputed circumstances in the occupied West Bank, Mustafa Erekat is still seeking his remains. It is one of dozens of cases in which Israel is holding the rem…Read More

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Nearly all Americans agree that the rampant spread of misinformation is a problem. Most also think social media companies, and the people that use them, bear a good deal of blame for the situation. …Read More

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NONTHABURI, Thailand (AP) — A flood-hit riverside restaurant in Thailand has become an unlikely dining hotspot after fun-loving foodies began flocking to its water-logg…Read More

BEIJING (AP) — In a relationship as fraught as America’s and China’s, just an agreement that talks were productive was a sign of progress. Nine months into Joe Biden’s …Read More

FOUNTAIN VALLEY, Calif. (AP) — A man suspected of robbing a Southern California bank was arrested when he returned to try and rob the same branch the following day, pol…Read More

ISLAMABAD (AP) — United States and Pakistani officials are meeting Friday amid a worsening relationship between the two countries as each nation searches for a way forw…Read More

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Fight to Save Hawaii Sign Language from Extinction

Honolulu, Hawaii (CNN)  Linda Yuen Lambrecht stands in front of a webcam, with her head to her hips — her signing space — perfectly centered in the frame; a white plumeria fastened above her left ear. On-screen, three women look back at her.

“No American Sign Language [ASL],” Lambrecht reminds them with her hands, as the virtual class begins. “This is Hawaii Sign Language [HSL].”
More than 100 students have received the same reminder from Lambrecht. Since 2018, she’s offered HSL classes to the public; first in-person and, since the Covid-19 pandemic began, on Zoom.
Lambrecht isn’t just teaching. She’s fighting erasure, globalization and the cruelty of time to keep an endangered sign language — and with it, generations of history, heritage and wisdom — alive.
But experts estimate that fluent HSL users number in the single digits. Time is running out.

The race against time to save HSL

Meet the woman keeping Hawaii Sign Language alive
Lambrecht was born profoundly deaf in 1944 to a family of Chinese laborers in Honolulu. She was exposed to HSL from birth through two older deaf brothers, who had learned to sign from their deaf classmates.
This was rare at the time. Most deaf children were born to hearing parents and had no access to any language, let alone HSL, until they started school.
Lambrecht and her brothers attended what is today called the Hawaii School for the Deaf and the Blind (HSDB). When it first opened in 1914, it was named The School for the Defectives.
The school had adopted a teaching style called oralism, which aimed to “assimilate” deaf people into wider society by suppressing sign language use. Children could only use HSL to communicate with each other when teachers’ backs were turned — they were expected to speak English and to lipread.
“Parents and professionals said that sign language was ugly, and that if kids knew sign language, they would never learn to speak,” Lambrecht says. “[But] I could catch maybe one or two words.”
By the time Ami Tsuji-Jones enrolled at the deaf school in the 1960s, oralism was seen by critics as a failure. Teachers from the mainland were now using ASL instead.
“They were haole [white]. They saw our language and said: ‘What is that? I don’t understand your sign. That’s wrong. No, no, no. Let me teach you ASL. No, no, no. You’re signing that all wrong,’” Tsuji-Jones says, her hands moving emphatically and incisively. “We were constantly being criticized … you know, we’re the children. They’re the authority figures.”
Then her signing shifts, and her hands slow down.
“It’s like they were trying to take away who we are.”
There’s evidence deaf Hawaiians had been communicating with a homegrown sign language for generations, predating the arrival of missionaries, sugar plantations and the Americans who would overthrow the Hawaiian Kingdom in 1893.
But linguists didn’t officially document the language until 2013, when research by the University of Hawaii found HSL to be a language isolate: born and bred on the Hawaiian Islands with no outside influence. More than 80 percent of its vocabulary bears no similarity to ASL.
The findings launched a three-year project to document what remained of HSL, led by Lambrecht and linguistics professor James “Woody” Woodward, who has spent the last 30 years studying and documenting sign languages throughout Asia.
By 2016, the team had built a video archive and developed a manuscript for an introductory HSL handbook and dictionary, featuring illustrations of Lambrecht demonstrating signs. But then, time was up: their grant from the Endangered Languages Documentation Programme had run its course.
Woodward knows the research project isn’t enough to keep HSL alive.
“It’s going to help linguists analyze the language, but it’s not going to help preserve the language, unless somehow more people get to learn it,” he says. “And the way more people get to learn it is when it’s used naturally in the home and people pick it up, or you teach it as a second language very early to children.”
Lina Hou agrees that preserving a language is a vast undertaking, especially for linguists who are not members of that language community. “It’s very ambitious to think that one person, or a small group of people, could rescue a hundred years of oppression or change the language shift that has led to language endangerment in a short period of time,” says the linguistics professor at the University of California, Santa Barbara.
Hou, who has worked on sign language documentation in Mexico, adds: “Saving a language [with a three- to five-year grant], I don’t think that’s possible.”
It’s also not easy to get more people to use a language that’s been forgotten — or erased — and is associated with traumatic memories of being perceived as inferior.
As a child, Tsuji-Jones picked up some HSL vocabulary from kuli kupuna (deaf seniors) while they played volleyball together near the deaf school. She says: “I noticed sometimes the kupuna would be a little embarrassed, and they would say, ‘Oh, I’ve got to try to use ASL, because HSL is not good. ASL is better.’”
82-year-old Kimiyo Nakamiyo went to school with Lambrecht, and while she respects her friend’s work, she doesn’t think HSL is worth revitalizing.
“HSL is like broken English,” she says. “I think ASL is more proper and more along the lines of formalized English.”
Emily Jo Noschese, a PhD candidate in linguistics at the University of Hawaii, says she’s often encountered this sentiment while interviewing HSL users. But it’s a misconception that sign languages are tactile versions of spoken or written languages. HSL has no linguistic relationship to Hawaiian, just as ASL and English are distinct and separate.
Noschese, who is in the fourth generation of her family to be born deaf, says she’s disappointed, but not surprised, that many of those who are most strongly opposed to preserving HSL are deaf former HSL users themselves.
“There might be trauma associated with their memories of HSL use,” she says. “It may be hard for them. They may want to forget it.”
So, why carry on?
“There’s always hope,” Woodward says. “It’s part of what linguists do.”
For Nikki Kepo’o, preserving HSL means more than saving a language. It means safeguarding a cultural identity for her younger child Caleb La’aikeakua, 9, who was born severely deaf.
Kepo’o has always wanted her two kids to be grounded in their native Hawaiian roots. When Caleb was born, his older sister was already enrolled in a Hawaiian language immersion school. Kepo’o studied the language, too, and mother and daughter now speak Hawaiian at home.
“I would love for that to be the same for my son,” Kepo’o says. “He’ll know that he is a Hawaiian and a deaf person, and there’s nothing wrong with either one.”
Caleb is a student at HSDB, attending classes in ASL and English in the very spaces that were once filled with children secretly teaching each other HSL. Kepo’o dreams of sending Caleb to an HSL immersion school one day. She’s been speaking with a teacher at her daughter’s school who would like to develop an HSL immersion curriculum.
“But as the generations get older, and as we have more of the American influence, I’m not too sure how many deaf Hawaiians actually are available to create the materials we need to train our children,” Kepo’o says. “It scares me a lot, actually.”
Lambrecht feels the urgency, too. Because of the pandemic, she hasn’t been able to make progress on her goal of getting HSL classes into schools. But she hopes to do so next spring.
In the meantime, she’s been filming herself telling children’s stories in HSL. She’d like to record more stories — “not American stories; Hawaiian stories” — like the legend of the demigod Māui, who used his magical fishhook to pull up the islands of Hawaii from the ocean.
Hawaii means everything to her, Lambrecht says. Its culture, communities and ancestral knowledge form a core part of her identity, and a vital piece of what she wants to pass on to the coming generations through HSL, just as her brothers did for her.
“I lived in the U.S. for about five years,” Lambrecht says. “After I came back, I cried and I cried … I got on my knees. I kissed the ground. I was home.”

The Legend of the Demigod Māui

Linda Yuen Lambrecht signs the legend of Maui in HSL

Linda Yuen Lambrecht signs the legend of Maui in HSL 03:21

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Hon. Hazel Brandy-Williams’ Address to Mark Breast Cancer Awareness Month 2021

NIA CHARLESTOWN NEVIS (October 07, 2021) — The following is an address by Hon. Hazel Brandy-Williams, Junior Minister of Health in the Nevis Island Administration (NIA) on the occasion of Breast Cancer Awareness Month 2021:

“Since 1985 the Month of October is being observed as Breast Cancer Awareness Month, and each year at this time we make a special effort to highlight the devastating impact Breast Cancer has on millions of women throughout the globe

During this month all efforts are being made to raise awareness about Breast Cancer, the inherent risks, and early signs and symptoms of breast health.

In 2020 2.30 million women were diagnosed with Breast Cancer and approximately 685,000 deaths. This cancer is the most common cancer in women and the second leading cause of deaths in women.

Here in the Federation of St. Kitts and Nevis the incidence of Breast Cancer continues to increase, and younger and younger women are becoming affected. Data shows that in 2019 there were 25 new cases of Breast Cancer and 16 new cases recorded in 2020 ranging from age 30 to 90 years old.

Studies have shown that Breast Cancer can be detected early and treated effectively. It has also shown that breast self-examination and mammograms have led to early diagnosis and effective treatment, and it is also evident that early interventions have led to a reduction in premature deaths associated with breast cancer.

The Ministry over the years has supported women by helping them to access education, screening and the support they need.

The Ministry of Health and Gender Affairs encourages you to join with us as we RISE together to help women in need. Help us to raise awareness about Breast Cancer and support women to reduce their Breast Cancer risks.

Let us encourage all women of child bearing age or who have a family history of Breast Cancer to be screened annually, but most importantly to check their breast regularly for signs of any changes.

This year Breast Cancer Awareness Month has been dubbed Pinktober.  Our activities include the lighting of the Ministry of Tourism #NevisNice sign in pink. A podcast on Breast Cancer: Sexuality and Intimacy, with special guests Dr. Merisa Grant Tate and Mrs. Camara Lee-Prentice. There will also be a Workplace Lump Detection session with Dr. Essien and this will be conducted at selected business places.​

It is time to RISE! We rise with the courageous women and men who have been diagnosed with Breast Cancer and are fighting this dreaded disease daily. We rise and continue fighting for a cure but most importantly let us rise and continue to fight for access to universal quality health care for all.”

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Biden Pressure: Moderna Plans to Build Vaccine Plant in Africa for Lower-Income Nations

Biotechnology company Moderna, under intense pressure to send more of its coronavirus vaccine to lower-income countries, announced Thursday it would build a manufacturing plant in Africa capable of producing 500 million doses of messenger RNA vaccines a year.

The announcement follows tensions between the Biden administration and Moderna that boiled over in the last week, including at a contentious meeting Friday, as the U.S. government urges the biotechnology company to send more coronavirus vaccines to lower-income countries, according to multiple people familiar with the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity to disclose private conversations.

For months, the U.S. government has pleaded with Moderna to boost its domestic and international production so it can ramp up donations to low- and middle-income countries. But in two meetings during the last week, Biden administration officials have grown exasperated over the biotechnology company’s refusal to commit to doing so, the people said.

One senior U.S. official, who was not authorized to speak publicly, said the government pushed Moderna to commit to 1 billion doses for low- and middle-income countries by the end of 2022. But Moderna responded with a proposal that did not meet the Biden administration’s expectations, as the company said it does not have the capacity to ramp up production immediately.

The manufacturing facility Moderna pledged on Thursday to build in Africa will not have an immediate impact on the coronavirus pandemic because it will take two to four years to build. The new facility comes after the Biden administration asked Moderna months ago to boost its international production in Africa, the U.S. official said.

The Biden administration’s frustration with Moderna in recent months stems in part from the recognition that the company partnered with the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases to invent its vaccine, and that the U.S. government gave Moderna billions of taxpayer dollars to underwrite research and development of the vaccines, and for purchase of doses.

“We look forward to seeing exactly what they will do,” the senior Biden administration official said. “We are in intense discussions to expand capacity to increase the number of doses they are providing to low- and middle-income countries in the shorter term.”

U.S. officials feel the company has not done enough to boost production to send doses overseas, and instead, prioritized its own profits.

The White House declined to comment.

Moderna did not immediately respond to a request for comment about tensions with the Biden administration.

Just this week, three people associated with Moderna were among the 44 new billionaires on Forbes’s list of the 400 richest Americans. Making their debut on this year’s list: Moderna’s chairman, Noubar Afeyan, one of the U.S. biotech company’s founders; board member Robert S. Langer, also a co-founder; and early investor Timothy A. Springer.

“We played a lot of scenarios over the last couple of months and decided we should do something big in Africa. The only way to do it right, if you take a 5-to-10-year view, was to build our own plant like we’ve done in America, so that’s exactly the model,” Moderna chief executive Stéphane Bancel said in an interview.

Creating manufacturing capabilities in underserved areas of the world has become a major goal for public health advocates amid stark inequities in global access to coronavirus vaccines. A recent Kaiser Family Foundation analysis found that nearly two-thirds of people in wealthy countries have received at least one dose of a vaccine, compared with 2 percent in low-income countries.

The United States has already committed to donating more than 1.1 billion doses of coronavirus vaccine to the world, including two purchases of 500 million doses each of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. Last month, President Biden convened a virtual global summit focused on vaccinating the world’s population. The president called on global leaders to fully vaccinate 70 percent of the world’s population by next September.

“This is an all-hands-on-deck crisis,” Biden said. “And the good news is, we know how to beat this pandemic: vaccines, public health measures and collective action.”

Moving manufacturing into less-wealthy countries is one possible solution to the lack of global supply, but many advocates favor transferring the technology to local companies to ensure that countries have the ability to respond to new threats, and to ensure their doses do not end up exported elsewhere in the world.

“There’s this monopolistic grip of a few countries that really controls the narrative, and the availability and the access of lifesaving medical resources — and there’s enormous global resentment about that,” said Lawrence O. Gostin, a global health law expert at Georgetown Law. “Donations always seem to come too late, and be insufficient. … Opening up manufacturing plants in other countries is certainly a step forward, but it doesn’t really change the dynamic.”

Bancel said the company has not decided where the factory will be, but that the doses made there would remain in Africa, and Moderna would recruit and train a local workforce. He said the factory would manufacture the mRNA that goes into the vaccines and encase it in the protective lipid bubble that delivers the vaccine and keeps it stable. He said details were still being worked out about where the vaccines would go into vials.

Moderna has a large pipeline of mRNA vaccines in development beyond covid-19, including to protect against respiratory viruses, tropical viruses and HIV.

“We really want to get all the know-how and so on in Africa, so they can make vaccines, if there is an Ebola outbreak, they can use the plant for things like that,” Bancel said.

Gostin said building plants in lower-income countries was a step forward but emphasized that local control, ownership and expertise matters. He drew a comparison to China’s “belt and road initiative” in which the Chinese government built infrastructure in other countries.

“It’s helpful to have the shiny hospital or the shiny manufacturing plant or the shiny clinic, but what you really want is to have the infrastructure that belongs to the country, with trained, capable people running that infrastructure,” Gostin said.

Other efforts to create homegrown mRNA vaccines are already taking place.

University of Pennsylvania researcher Drew Weissman, one of the scientists whose work undergirds the coronavirus vaccines, has worked with Thailand to help design a mRNA vaccine.

GreenLight Biosciences, a start-up company that has been making RNA for agricultural applications, is working toward making mRNA vaccines with a different manufacturing process that could be easier to scale up. GreenLight plans to launch a clinical trial in Africa next year.

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