Tag Archives: caribbean

Peru Swears in New Prime Minister Mirtha Vasquez to Calm Political Instability

LIMA, Oct 6 (Reuters) – Peru’s President Pedro Castillo swore in Mirtha Vasquez, a left-wing former head of Congress, as prime minister on Wednesday, replacing her predecessor who resigned after two months in the job, as the administration grapples with political instability.

The move keeps Castillo, a member of a Marxist-Leninist party, on the left of the political spectrum. But it moderates his cabinet overall. Castillo kept center-left Economy Minister Pedro Francke in the role, and named a new energy & mines minister, Eduardo Gonzalez Toro.

Mining is a key industry for Peru, which is the world’s second-biggest copper producer after neighboring Chile. Castillo has said he wants to increase tax revenue from the sector to fund social programs.

Former Prime Minister Guido Bellido was little-known before taking the role, but his brash style rattled the opposition-led Congress as investors fretted about the leftist administration.

Vasquez, the new prime minister, served as head of Congress between 2020 and 2021. She is a lawyer and defended Maxima Acuna, a peasant farmer, in a prominent case against Newmont Mining Corp’s (NEM.N) Yanacocha gold mine that drew headlines around the world.

Bellido tweeted after the announcement of his resignation that he would fight back and posted a picture of fighting from the movie “Gladiator”, a hint at challenges to Castillo ahead.

Like Castillo, Bellido is a member of the Marxist-Leninist Free Peru party, although he was seen as particularly far-left compared with the more pragmatic Castillo.

Vasquez is not a member of Free Peru and belongs to the left-wing Broad Front, which has made environmental concerns a key issue.

Financial markets are widely expected to react to the news on Thursday. Bellido’s appointment in late July triggered a widening in bond spreads and weakened the local currency. The sol lost close to 7% through last quarter and on Wednesday ended near its record low against the U.S. dollar.

President of Congress Maria del Carmen Alva, a member of right-wing Accion Popular, said on Twitter she supported Castillo’s decision to replace Bellido.

In recent weeks, Bellido had talked openly of nationalizing Peru’s natural gas resources, operated by a consortium led by Argentina’s Pluspetrol.

He also defended his labor minister, Iver Maravi, who had been questioned by Congress in a formal hearing for allegedly having been a part of a Maoist insurgency in his youth.

Bellido said he would put the entire cabinet up for a confidence vote if Congress tried to censure Maravi.

Reporting by Marcelo Rochabrun and Marco Aquino; Additional reporting by Rodrigo Campos in New York; Editing by Richard Pullin and Christopher Cushing

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Rare Chilean Trees Key to New COVID Vaccine and Other Medical Treatments

CASABLANCA, Chile, Oct 6 (Reuters) – Down a dusty farm track in Chilean wine country, behind a wooden gate wrapped in chains, forestry experts are nursing a plantation of saplings whose bark holds the promise of potent vaccines.

Quillay trees, technically known as Quillaja saponaria, are rare evergreens native to Chile that have long been used by the indigenous Mapuche people to make soap and medicine. In recent years, they have also been used to make a highly successful vaccine against shingles and the world’s first malaria vaccine, as well as foaming agents for products in the food, beverage and mining industries.

Now two saponin molecules, made from the bark of branches pruned from older trees in Chile’s forests, are being used for a COVID-19 vaccine developed by drugmaker Novavax Inc (NVAX.O). The chemicals are used to make adjuvant, a substance that boosts the immune system.

Over the next two years, Maryland-based Novavax (NVAX.O) plans to produce billions of doses of the vaccine, mostly for low- and middle-income countries, which would make it one of the largest COVID-19 vaccine suppliers in the world.

With no reliable data on how many healthy quillay trees are left in Chile, experts and industry officials are divided on how quickly the supply of older trees will be depleted by rising demand. But nearly everyone agrees that industries relying on quillay extracts will at some point need to switch to plantation-grown trees or a lab-grown alternative.

A Reuters analysis of export data from trade data provider ImportGenius shows that the supply of older trees is under increasing pressure. Exports of quillay products more than tripled to more than 3,600 tonnes per year in the decade before the pandemic.

Ricardo San Martin, who developed the pruning and extraction process that created the modern quillay industry, said producers must immediately work toward making quillay products from younger, plantation-grown trees.

“My estimate four years ago was that we were heading towards the sustainability limit,” he said.

San Martin said he has toiled through the COVID-19 pandemic in the basement of his oceanfront cabin in Sea Ranch, California, to refine a process that could help produce saponins from leaves and twigs in order to maximize the yield.

“I am working as though this needs to be done yesterday,” said San Martin, who is also sponsoring a project in which drones would count quillay trees in remote and hard-to-access forests, to determine how many are left.

Quillay producers and their customers say the harvest can continue for now without decimating the supply of older trees.

“We continue to monitor the situation in Chile, in close collaboration with our supplier, but at this time we are confident in our supply,” Novavax said in a statement to Reuters. The company also said it was confident that uses such as “life-saving vaccines will be prioritized.”

The desert-plant extract company Desert King International Ltd, which runs the Casablanca plantation, is Novavax’s sole supplier of quillay extracts and Chile’s largest quillay exporter by far.

The company’s manager in Chile, Andres Gonzalez, told Reuters it is set to produce enough quillay extract from older trees to make up to 4.4 billion vaccine doses in 2022. With new supplies from privately owned native forests, they have enough raw material to meet demand for the rest of this year and part of next, he said.

Gonzalez said the company, where San Martin is a consultant, has built a new production plant and has the capacity to supply other interested pharmaceutical firms – all without harming the forests.

He acknowledged, however, that “at some point these native forests will come to an end.”

“We want to start having very productive plantations, and we are working on that,” he said.

A relatively small volume of quillay extract is required to make vaccines – just under one milligram per dose – but the supply is stretched by the demand from other industries. Quillay products are used, for instance, as a natural additive in animal feed, a biopesticide and an agent to reduce pollution in mining.

Individual quillay trees grow outside of Chile, but Chile is the only country where mature quillay is harvested from forests in large quantities.

AN ELUSIVE INGREDIENT

Novavax’s adjuvant, known as Matrix-M, contains two key saponin molecules. One of those, called QS-21, is more difficult to access because it is found mainly in trees that are at least 10 years old.

Among major pharmaceutical companies, only GlaxoSmithKline PLC (GSK.L) and Novavax have bet heavily on QS-21, a relatively new pharmaceutical ingredient.

GSK’s highly successful vaccine against shingles, Shingrix, and several other promising experimental vaccines contain QS-21 supplied by Desert King. In a statement, GSK said it has “no specific challenges relating to sustainable supply” of QS-21.

The quillay-based adjuvant used in Shingrix is also part of the world’s first malaria vaccine, Mosquirix. Despite low efficacy, it was approved by European regulators in 2015 and recommended for pilot introduction by the WHO in 2016 because of dire need.

No other COVID-19 vaccine manufacturers are relying on quillay bark extracts. Some drugmakers are developing synthetic alternatives, but these could be years from regulatory approval. Switching out the ingredients in any existing vaccine would require new clinical studies to prove the product is safe and effective.

The Massachusetts-based pharmaceutical company Agenus stopped selling bark-derived QS-21 several years ago to focus full-time on trying to grow it from quillay plant cells in a laboratory.

“The shortage of QS-21 has been an issue for a while,” said Jason Paragas, Agenus vice president of strategic initiatives and growth exploration. “We saw it before COVID, and we made the hard decision that we had to change.”

Paragas said it is too soon to say when an alternative could be ready.Entrepreneur Gaston Salinas said his Davis, California-based startup Botanical Solution Inc can already produce QS-21 from quillay tissue starting with seeds in the lab, and aims to eventually produce the chemical on a large scale to supply pharmaceutical companies.

“You cannot afford to over-exploit the native Chilean forest because of a desire to develop modern vaccines. You need to find other ways to develop your products, even if it’s something so important, ” he said.

AN EYE TOWARD THE FUTURE

Inside the gate of the carefully guarded Desert King plantation, gardeners carefully tend to the young trees using fertilizers and bountiful supplies of water. They were cloned from full-grown cousins whose dusty gray bark was especially rich in saponins.

If all goes well, the plantation could be producing for one customer in two to three years, according to Desert King’s business development manager Damian Hiley. He declined to name the company.

Desert King has its eye on future vaccines, some already in the works.

In early 2020, for instance, GSK licensed an experimental tuberculosis vaccine that contains GSK’s QS-21-based adjuvant to the Bill and Melinda Gates Medical Research Institute. It showed promising results in a mid-stage trial.

And in April, researchers at Oxford University announced that a new malaria vaccine containing Novavax’s Matrix-M adjuvant appeared to be highly effective in a trial involving 450 children in Burkina Faso.

Gustavo Cruz, a researcher at the University of Chile who worked with San Martin to industrialize production of quillay, said he generally trusts quillay producers to manage supply and demand. He is more worried about other threats – specifically drought and fire.

“The trees do eventually regrow,” he said, “but there comes a time when they don’t anymore.”

Aislinn Laing reported from Casablanca; Allison Martell from Toronto. Additional reporting by Nivedita Balu in Bangalore. Editing by Caroline Humer, Peter Henderson and Julie Marquis

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Gingerland Musician Curtley Maynard Honored by Nevis

NIA CHARLESTOWN NEVIS (October 06, 2021) — Curtley Maynard, a musician from Gingerland, is another Nevisian who was honoured during the 38th Anniversary of the Independence of St. Christopher and Nevis. 

At the age of eight his love for music was evident since he started making his own guitars. By the age of 13, however, recognising his interest, his mother bought him his first box guitar and he and his gift became inseparable.

He learned to play by looking at other guitarists around his village including the Mighty Gero and Donald Hendrickson, and later attended Lanny Dore’s music school to study a more theoretical approach to music.

Young Maynard’s first performance at the age of 16 at a Christmas programme, at the Prospect Primary School was with Lanny Dore’s Band.

Though young, he was a notably talented budding musician and as such was often asked to play with other groups as well as in church throughout his teenage years.

Maynard was later sought by  Mansfield Nisbett and played with Nisbett’s Eclipse Band in the 1980s, an opportunity for which he remains grateful, which afforded him the opportunity to perform on stage along with older musicians.

His excitement at this accomplishment led him to do something he had always dreamt of doing and in 1987 at the age of 20, he began his own band called “Kasanova.”

The band members included two of his younger brothers, Carlisle and Andy Maynard along with Sylvester Percival. Vaughn Walters was the band’s manager.

 Kasanova grew to become a much-loved home-grown band from Gingerland then which produced many albums with hit songs including “Big Bamboo”, “Poor Man’s Cry”, “Rock the House”, and “Long Jam” an infectious tune which pioneered the idea of revellers jamming from Gingerland to Charlestown. The “long jam” as it is popularly known today was started by Curtley’s band in 1989, and has become a permanent fixture of the Culturama Emancipation J’ouvert jump up.

 His band has done hundreds of live performances locally and has also performed overseas. Maynard is also a song writer and arranger, his music is featured on radio stations locally, regionally and internationally and it can be accessed on YouTube.

At present, the renowned Gingerland musician is a guitarist for the All Star Calypso Band, local singer “Garlic”; the Upper Level Band and the Kasanova Band.

His expertise with his guitar has helped to shape and perfect the sounds of many local songs. He is and will always be remembered as a true Nevis musician for his contribution to the development of music on Nevis for his inspiration and innovation.

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NTA Launches New Destination Website, Free Holiday Contest

 

NIA CHARLESTOWN NEVIS  — Nevis Tourism welcomes visitors to its revamped website, which spotlights the luxe Caribbean island’s offerings alongside stunning imagery of its famed sandy beaches and lush green mountains.

The new site also houses an exciting vacation giveaway for visitors at an elegant hideaway in the heart of the Caribbean. The new destination website is lively, dynamic and practical, offering a modernized design and easy navigation, sure to inspire travel to Nevis.

“We’re happy to welcome back visitors to Nevis and hope our new website gives an enticing first taste of our special island. The new layout combines a sleek design with rich content and updated photography, illustrating a true reflection of our destination, our history and our unique tourism offering,” says Jadine Yarde, CEO of the Nevis Tourism Authority.

The website features optimized travel information about Nevis, including accommodations, attractions, restaurants and bars, island events, and history and culture. A streamlined navigation allows visitors to easily explore, search, and plan their next trip to Nevis, based on their individual interests and desires.

During the pandemic, whilst keeping the people of the island safe has been the priority, the Nevis Tourism Authority has taken time to elevate the island’s tourism products and introduce exciting new activities for the return of international travellers.

“This new site is a culmination of our hard work over the past 18 months for visitors to return to a Nevis that is back and better than ever. Showcasing these updates to consumers and travel agents online is paramount to continue attracting tourism to the island,” added Yarde.

To encourage consumers to explore the new website, the Nevis Tourism Authority is giving away a Nevis vacation for one lucky traveler via its Mango Mania competition. All visitors need to do is locate the Nevis Mango Emoji on one of the website pages, click on the emoji, and complete their entry details on the competition page to enter the giveaway. The mango emoji is a nod to the island’s status as home to over 40 varieties of the tropical fruit.

The competition prize includes four nights’ accommodation at Montpelier Plantation & Beach for two. Competition closes on November 05, 2021, and terms and conditions apply. Visitors can enter at https://nevisisland.com/.

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Ivermectin: Has False Science Created a Phoney Covid ‘Miracle Drug?’, Anti-Vaxxers Could Harm Children

By Rachel Schraer & Jack Goodman
BBC Reality Check

BBC- Ivermectin has been called a Covid “miracle” drug, championed by vaccine opponents, and recommended by health authorities in some countries. But the BBC can reveal there are serious errors in a number of key studies that the drug’s promoters rely on.

For some years ivermectin has been a vital anti-parasitic medicine used to treat humans and animals.

But during the pandemic there has been a clamour from some proponents for using the drug for something else – to fight Covid and prevent deaths.

The health authorities in the US, UK and EU have found there is insufficient evidence for using the drug against Covid, but thousands of supporters, many of them anti-vaccine activists, have continued to vigorously campaign for its use.

A Covid patient in a wheelchair is greeted by an doctor at the entrance to A&E in PeruIvermectin was approved for Covid treatment in Peru in May 2020

Members of social media groups swap tips on getting hold of the drug, even advocating the versions used for animals.

The hype around ivermectin – based on the strength of belief in the research – has driven large numbers of people around the world to use it.

Campaigners for the drug point to a number of scientific studies and often claim this evidence is being ignored or covered up. But a review by a group of independent scientists has cast serious doubt on that body of research.

The BBC can reveal that more than a third of 26 major trials of the drug for use on Covid have serious errors or signs of potential fraud. None of the rest show convincing evidence of ivermectin’s effectiveness.

Dr Kyle Sheldrick, one of the group investigating the studies, said they had not found “a single clinical trial” claiming to show that ivermectin prevented Covid deaths that did not contain “either obvious signs of fabrication or errors so critical they invalidate the study”.

Major problems included:

  • The same patient data being used multiple times for supposedly different people
  • Evidence that selection of patients for test groups was not random
  • Numbers unlikely to occur naturally
  • Percentages calculated incorrectly
  • Local health bodies unaware of the studies

The scientists in the group – Dr Gideon Meyerowitz-Katz, Dr James Heathers, Dr Nick Brown and Dr Sheldrick – each have a track record of exposing dodgy science. They’ve been working together remotely on an informal and voluntary basis during the pandemic.

They formed a group looking deeper into ivermectin studies after biomedical student Jack Lawrence spotted problems with an influential study from Egypt. Among other issues, it contained patients who turned out to have died before the trial started. It has now been retracted by the journal that published it.

The group of independent scientists examined virtually every randomised controlled trial (RCT) on ivermectin and Covid – in theory the highest quality evidence – including all the key studies regularly cited by the drug’s promoters.

RCTs involve people being randomly chosen to receive either the drug which is being tested or a placebo – a dummy drug with no active properties.

Participants protest during the Legalise Ivermectin to fight COVID-19 demonstration on January 11, 2021Some South Africans took to the streets to demand that the authorities allow ivermectin to be used

The team also looked at six particularly influential observational trials. This type of trial looks at what happens to people who are taking the drug anyway, so can be biased by the types of people who choose to take the treatment.

Out of a total of 26 studies examined, there was evidence in five that the data may have been faked – for example they contained virtually impossible numbers or rows of identical patients copied and pasted.

In a further five there were major red flags – for example, numbers didn’t add up, percentages were calculated incorrectly or local health bodies weren’t aware they had taken place.

On top of these flawed trials, there were 14 authors of studies who failed to send data back. The independent scientists have flagged this as a possible indicator of fraud.

The sample of research papers examined by the independent group also contains some high-quality studies from around the world. But the major problems were all in the studies making big claims for ivermectin – in fact, the bigger the claim in terms of lives saved or infections prevented, the greater the concerns suggesting it might be faked or invalid, the researchers discovered.

While it’s extremely difficult to rule out human error in these trials, Dr Sheldrick, a medical doctor and researcher at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, believes it is highly likely at least some of them may have been knowingly manipulated.

A recent study in Lebanon was found to have blocks of details of 11 patients that had been copied and pasted repeatedly – suggesting many of the trial’s apparent patients didn’t really exist.

The study’s authors told the BBC that the “original set of data was rigged, sabotaged or mistakenly entered in the final file” and that they have submitted a retraction to the scientific journal which published it.

Covid patient wheeled out of hospital in PeruImage source, Getty Images

Another study from Iran seemed to show that ivermectin prevented people dying from Covid.

But the scientists who investigated it found issues. The records of how much iron was in patients’ blood contained numbers in a sequence that was unlikely to come up naturally.

And the patients given the placebo turned out to have had much lower levels of oxygen in their blood before the trial started than those given ivermectin. So they were already sicker and statistically more likely to die.

But this pattern was repeated across a wide range of different measurements. The people with “bad” measurements ended up in the placebo group, the ones with “good” measurements in the ivermectin group.

The likelihood of this happening randomly across all these different measurements was vanishingly small, Dr Sheldrick said.

Dr Morteza Niaee, who led the Iran study, defended the results and the methodology and disagreed with problems pointed out to him, adding that it was “very normal to see such randomisation” when lots of different factors were considered and not all of them had any bearing on participants’ Covid risk.

But the Lebanon and Iran trials were excluded from a paper for Cochrane – the international experts in reviewing scientific evidence – because they were “such poorly reported studies”. The review concluded there was no evidence of benefit for ivermectin when it comes to Covid.

The largest and highest quality ivermectin study published so far is the Together trial at the McMasters University in Canada. It found no benefit for the drug when it comes to Covid.

Member of a pro-ivermectin Facebook group asks for advice on how to buy ivermectin online from India

Ivermectin is generally considered a safe drug, though there have been some reports of side effects.

Calls over suspected ivermectin poisonings in the US have increased a lot but from a very small base (435 to 1,143 this year) and most of these cases were not serious. Patients have had vomiting, diarrhoea, hallucinations, confusion, drowsiness and tremors.

But indirect harm can come from giving people a false sense of security, especially if they choose ivermectin instead of seeking hospital treatment for Covid, or getting vaccinated in the first place.

Dr Patricia Garcia, a public health expert in Peru, said at one stage she estimated that 14 out of every 15 patients she saw in hospital had been taking ivermectin and by the time they came in they were “really, really sick”.

Large pro-ivermectin Facebook groups have turned into forums for people to find advice on where to buy it, including preparations meant for animals.

Some groups regularly contain posts about conspiracy theories of ivermectin cover-ups, as well as pushing anti-vaccine sentiment or encouraging patients to leave hospital if they aren’t getting the drug.

The groups often provide a gateway to more fringe communities on the encrypted app Telegram.

Facebook post complains that a hospital won't treat a very ill patient with ivermectin despite the drug being safe and effective and the patient asking for it.

These channels have co-ordinated harassment of doctors who fail to prescribe ivermectin and abuse has been aimed at scientists. Prof Andrew Hill, from the University of Liverpool, wrote an influential positive review of ivermectin, originally saying the world should “get prepared, get supplies, get ready to approve [the drug]”.

Now he says the studies don’t stand up to scrutiny – but after he changed his view, based on new evidence emerging, he received vicious abuse.

A small number of qualified doctors have had an exaggerated influence on the ivermectin debate. Noted proponent Dr Pierre Kory’s views have not changed despite the major questions over the trials. He criticised “superficial interpretations of emerging trials data”.

Dr Tess Lawrie – a medical doctor who specialises in pregnancy and childbirth – founded the British Ivermectin Recommendation Development (Bird) Group.

She has called for a pause to the Covid-19 vaccination programme and has made unsubstantiated claims implying the Covid vaccine had led to a large number of deaths based on a common misreading of safety data.

woman at antivax protest holding sign reading medical freedom for allImage source, Getty Images

When asked during an online panel what evidence might persuade her ivermectin didn’t work she replied: “Ivermectin works. There’s nothing that will persuade me.” She told the BBC: “The only issues with the evidence base are the relentless efforts to undermine it.”

Around the world it was originally not opposition to vaccines but a lack of them that led to people to ivermectin.

The drug has at various points been approved, recommended or prescribed for Covid in India, South Africa, Peru and much of the rest of Latin America, as well as in Slovakia.

Health authorities in Peru and India have stopped recommending ivermectin in treatment guidelines.

In February, Merck – one of the companies that makes the drug – said there was “no scientific basis for a potential therapeutic effect against Covid-19”.

In South Africa, the drug has become a battleground – doctors point out the lack of evidence but many patients desperately want access as the vaccine rollout has been patchy and problematic. One GP in the country described a relative, a registered nurse, who didn’t book a coronavirus vaccine she was eligible for and then caught the virus.

“When she started getting worse, instead of getting proper assessment and treatment, she treated herself with ivermectin,” she said.

“Instead of consulting a doctor, she continued with the ivermectin and got home oxygen. By the time I heard how low her oxygen saturation levels were (66%), I begged her daughter to take her to casualty.

“At first they were reluctant, but I convinced them to go. She passed away a few hours later.”

Additional reporting by Shruti Menon

Anti-Vaxxers Could Fuel Spike in Childhood Diseases

A recent gathering in a Quality Inn ballroom in rural Bradley, Illinois, offered a glimpse—terrifying to most epidemiologists, thrilling to longtime vaccine “safety” activists—of America’s growing political divide over vaccinations and its implications for the nation’s health.

Ostensibly, the meeting was a community forum about employer mandates for COVID vaccines that the organizer expected to draw 80 people in this overwhelmingly Republican exurb of Chicago.

Instead, more than 300 people piled in, mostly to complain about the notion that anyone—a boss, a school, a government—could force them to take any vaccines at all. As one Libertarian county commissioner told the crowd: “I will fight for your right to believe in whatever god, medicine or way of life you choose.”

The event is being replicated in some form or another in cities and towns across America, emblematic of a growing grassroots movement of people who believe that vaccine mandates—for COVID, yes, but increasingly for other diseases as well—are an affront to their personal freedom.

That represents a marked shift from pre-pandemic times, when vaccine opponents typically based their reasoning on medical concerns and were largely comprised of a few religious sects and a small number of left-leaning activists seeking explanations for rising rates of autism.

As the anti-vaxx mandate movement gains political traction, particularly on the right, medical experts fear it could not only cripple efforts to eradicate COVID but could also lead to a surge in long-conquered diseases, from mumps to whooping cough to smallpox.

“Those [more established] vaccines have had a long history of use, so there’s certainly data that suggests that they’re relatively safe. But it always has to be a choice of individuals. You can’t have government forcing that on us” – Conservative group Action 4 Liberty president Jake Duesenberg
“There are some more conservative states where we are likely to see other non-COVID vaccine mandates under attack, and it is very worrisome,” says Marcus Plescia, chief medical officer of the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials. “If we have some of these pediatric infectious diseases come back, it will be horrific.”

Even before President Joe Biden’s September 9 announcement of a litany of aggressive COVID vaccine mandates—covering an estimated 100 million Americans, including federal health workers and companies with more than 100 employees—evidence of changes in policy and sentiment toward such rules was cropping up, led by the right.

This summer the Tennessee Department of Health, reportedly pushed by GOP lawmakers, directed its staffers to stop conducting “proactive outreach regarding routine vaccinations,” including those for childhood diseases, HPV and influenza.

Larry Elder, the top Republican vote-getter in the failed recall effort against California’s Democratic Governor Gavin Newsom, told the Los Angeles Times editorial board in August, “I don’t believe that the state should tell a parent whether or not a child should be vaccinated. That’s an intrusion of state power.”

In Minnesota this month, the conservative group Action 4 Liberty, which boasts an email list of more than 100,000 recipients, began hammering a leading Republican candidate for governor for refusing to sign the group’s “Stop Vaccine Mandates” pledge.

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24-Hour Quarantine the New Vaccination Benefit

The quarantine period for fully vaccinated travellers entering St. Kitts has been reduced to 24 hours once said passenger has tested negative for COVID-19 on arrival and 72 hours prior to arriving in the Federation.

This was announced Wednesday in the Federation’s new Statutory Rules and Orders, No. 38 of 2021.

 The SR&O said, “Notwithstanding the provisions of the COVID-19 (Prevention and Control) Act, all arriving travellers who are fully vaccinated against the COVID-19 virus (a) shall remain in a government-approved COVID-19 Hotel or quarantine facility for a period of twenty-four hours and a COVID-19 test sample would be taken within that period; or (b) may quarantine at a private residence certified by the National COVID-19 Taskforce, with the written permission of the Chief Medical Officer in consultation with the Commissioner of police and shall remain in quarantine for a period of twenty-four hours and a COVID-19 test sample would be taken within that period; and (c) shall only be released from quarantine upon receiving a negative RT-PCR test.”

It also says that, all travellers shall be required to submit official proof of a negative RT-PCR test taken 72 hours prior to entry into Saint Christopher and Nevis and that all travellers shall be required to submit official proof of their vaccination status against the COVID-19 virus, prior to entry into Saint Christopher and Nevis.

Not fully vaccinated passengers would have to quarantine for 14 days at a pre-approved or government facility at their own cost

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Phillips intoxicate Guinness in Constituency Number Seven Domino League thriller

Phillips intoxicate Guinness in Constituency Number Seven Domino League thriller

BASSETERRE, ST. KITTS, October 6, 2021 (MMS-SKN) — Shock and disappointment characterised the third segment of play in the 26th edition of Constituency Number Seven Dr the Hon Timothy Harris Domino League held on Tuesday October 5 at four venues, as teams clamoured for victory.

At the Edgar Gilbert Sporting Complex pavilion in Molineux, Phillips Domino Club opened on a sour note having lost the opening game to their opponents Guinness Domino Club, but what happened after that left the beer-themed club reeling not knowing what would have hit them.

At the old Lodge Community Centre in Lodge Project, Rackelle Herbert of Christ Church Domino Club is in action as his team beat former champion team, Lodge Domino Club 13-9.

Phillips’ captain Allington ‘Leggy’ Berridge playing alongside Tyke Isaac on table one won eight straight games, and their colleagues Desroy Tate and Sheldon Augustus won five straight games to clinch a 13-1 win at 9:00 p.m., destroying their opponents in less than two hours.

The second game played at the Edgar Gilbert Sporting Complex pavilion in Molineux, though not as dramatic, also sent shock waves as front runners Sylvers Domino Club ended up losing a game that was theirs for the taking.

Wife and husband team of Captain Octavia Huggins-Sewell and Shaquille Sewell were in their elements as the propelled their team to a 9-2 lead after they won back to back two games where their opponents scored not a single point, which earned them two bonus games.

But things drastically changed when Molineux Domino Club players slammed brakes on Sylvers players with Captain Ericson ‘Wixie’ Wescott and his opposite player Cuthbert Sharry winning game after game only allowing Sylvers two games in the bargain. They went ahead to seal their win with three bonus games courtesy of their achieving 100 points before their opponents earned a single point on three occasions, to carry the day with a 13-11 win.

At the old Lodge Community Centre in Lodge Project, Christ Church Domino Club captained by Zeyn Pencheon showed scant respect to former champions Lodge Domino Club whom they beat 13-9. In the second game at the same venue, Small Corner Bar Domino Club beat Mansion Domino Club 13-11.

Defending champions Tabernacle Domino Club who lost in their last outing proved that the loss to Sylvers Domino Club was a mere misadventure by bringing down a former champion team, Unity Domino Club, 13-9 in a game played at Cuban Bar in Lodge Project.

Another former champion team, Parsons Domino Club beat Ottley’s Domino Club 13-7 in a game held at the Tabernacle Community Centre. Also at the same venue, in the second game, Saddlers Domino Club beat Unstoppable Domino Club 13-9.

Meantime, Molineux Domino Club beat Saddlers Domino Club 13-12 in their rescheduled game that was played at the Edgar Gilbert Sporting Complex pavilion in Molineux on Sunday October 3.

At the end of the third segment of play in the 26th edition of Constituency Number Seven Dr the Hon Timothy Harris Domino League, preliminary point standings have it that Saddlers leads with 13 points, followed by five clubs each with 12 points – defending champion team Tabernacle, Parsons, Christ Church, Sylvers, and Unity.

Others, in order, are Phillips 11 points, Molineux 10, Mansion 8, Lodge 7, Small Corner Bar 5, Guinness 5, Unstoppable 0, and Ottley’s 0.

Constituency Number Seven Dr the Hon Timothy Harris Domino League is sponsored by Prime Minister of the Federation of St. Kitts and Nevis, and Area Parliamentary Representative for St. Christopher Seven, Dr the Hon Timothy Harris.

Fourth segment of play in this only round of play in the 26th edition of Constituency Number Seven Dr the Hon Timothy Harris Domino League will be on Thursday October 7 at the same four venues with all games starting at 7:00 p.m.

Tabernacle Community Centre will host the games between defending champion team Tabernacle and Phillips, and Parsons and Christ Church. The Edgar Gilbert Sporting Complex pavilion in Molineux will host games between Mansion and Molineux, and Ottley’s and Saddlers.

The old Lodge Community Centre in Lodge Project will be the venue for the Lodge vs. Unstoppable, and Unity vs. Sylvers games, while the final game between Small Corner Bar and Guinness will be held at Cuban Bar in Lodge Project.

On Sunday October 3 Molineux Domino Club and Saddlers Domino Club met at the Edgar Gilbert Sporting Complex pavilion in Molineux, where Molineux’s Captain Ericson ‘Wixie’ Wescott is seen in action as they beat Saddlers 13-12.

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Juvenile in Custody Assisting with Investigation into Fatal Shooting

Basseterre, St. Kitts, October 06, 2021 (RSCNPF): A juvenile is in custody assisting with the investigation into an incident in which Kishaun Ritchen of Newtown was fatally shot. 

An autopsy was performed on the body of 34-year-old Ritchen on September 29, 2021, by Resident Pathologist, Dr. Adrian Nuñez. Dr. Nuñez concluded that death was a result of severe head injury due to a single gunshot wound to the head.  

Investigations into the matter are ongoing. 

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UN Told of Haiti’s Most Fraught Period as Chaos Reigns

CNW- The United Nations Security Council was told Monday that Haiti is currently undergoing “one of the most fraught periods of its recent history”.

The head of the UN office in Haiti, Helen La Lime, told the Security Council that “long-awaited” national and local elections have now been further postponed while “insecurity has become rampant in Port-au-Prince, as kidnappings are once again on the rise and gangs have extended their control over large swaths of the city”.

Haiti is still reeling from the assassination of President Jovenel Moïse, on 7 July, the country was crippled on August 14 by a deadly 7.2 magnitude earthquake that affected over 800,000 people in its southwestern peninsula.

La Lime, the Special Representative and head of the UN Integrated Office in Haiti (BINUH) said the recent forced return of thousands of Haitian migrants from the US-Mexico border, many of whom had simply “sought better living conditions in neighboring countries” was also another factor confronting the country.

While the country’s seemingly never-ending crises have pushed the resilience of the Haitian people to the brink, there is some good news, said La Lime.

But in a positive step towards reviving democratic institutions, politicians from across the spectrum, including former opposition and ruling coalition groups, reached an agreement on 11 September, to form a new Provisional Electoral Council, with a view to holding elections no later than the second half of 2022.

And a large national consensus wishes to reform the 1987 Haitian constitution, a charter widely viewed as contributing to the recurrent political and institutional instability.

“One can only hope that Haitian political and civil society leaders will continue to work together to find common ground around a common project that will contribute to fostering a more appeased climate in which decisive action can be taken and essential reforms enacted”, said the BINUH chief.

Meanwhile, security must be re-established, especially in the Port-au-Prince metropolitan area, as a significant and sudden increase in gang violence has caused the displacement of some 19,000 people from the communes of Cité-Soleil, Croix-des-Bouquets, Delmas and the Port-au-Prince neighborhood of Martissant.

“The control that gangs exercise around strategic entry and exit points of the capital has had a detrimental impact on Haiti’s economy and the movement of people and goods”, said the UN official.

However, an over-stretched, under-resourced police force cannot stem the rise in crime without being strengthened and accompanied by Government services to impoverished neighborhoods.

“The government must implement a more holistic approach to addressing gang violence, within the framework of the national strategy for community violence reduction”, La Lime stated.

Although Haitian citizens have unanimously condemned President Moïse’s assassination and called for a thorough investigation, La Lime flagged that “judicial actors must be allowed to work independently…with reassurance that they will be protected while undertaking the delicate task of identifying and prosecuting the perpetrators”.

The August earthquake added another layer of complexity to an already dire humanitarian situation. Amidst ongoing relief operations, the Special Representative said that early recovery and restoring jobs, must be supported in the affected areas.

“We must ensure that Haiti does not become a forgotten crisis”, said the UN official, urging member states to contribute to the US$187.3 million Flash Appeal launched for those affected by the earthquake and the US$235.6 million 2021-2022 Humanitarian Response Plan.

“It is a race against time to ensure that children can return to school, that farmers do not miss the next planting season, and that people currently living in spontaneous displacement camps return to their homes as quickly as possible”, she said.

La Lime underscored that, “through urgent, determined and concerted action”, Haiti can address its deep structural challenges and governance and development deficits that feed the country’s “instability, insecurity, and ever-growing humanitarian needs.

“Along with the United Nations, the entire international community must continue to steadfastly stand alongside the Haitian people and their Government as they endeavor to forge a path towards stability, security and sustainable development”, she added.

Meanwhile, about 70 percent of all schools in the Southwestern part of the country are still damaged or destroyed, said the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF).

“I am shocked to see how many schools are flattened or damaged due to the earthquake,” said Bruno Maes, UNICEF Representative in Haiti.

Kicking off a back-to-school campaign, about 300,000 students are gradually starting to resume classes in the three earthquake-stricken departments, because “with or without schools, learning and teaching must continue now”, he added.

If classrooms remain closed, UNICEF estimates that more than 230,000 children are at risk of dropping out of school in the Great Southern departments of Haiti.

CMC

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EU lifts Anguilla, Dominica from Tax Haven Blacklist in Controversial Move

Loop News

 

The European Union removed Anguilla, Dominica and Seychelles from its tax haven blacklist Tuesday amid criticism that the trade bloc is letting countries off the hook, particularly in light of the recent Pandora Papers revelations.

Anguilla, Dominica and Seychelles were placed on the list because they did not meet tax transparency criteria. EU finance ministers, meeting in Luxembourg, endorsed a decision to move them to a “grey list” after the three agreed to a review of their tax systems.

The EU blacklist was set up in 2017 to tackle rampant tax evasion and is regularly updated. Nine “jurisdictions” remain listed as “non-cooperative:” American Samoa, Fiji, Guam, Palau, Panama, Samoa, Trinidad and Tobago, the US Virgin Islands and Vanuatu.

Anguilla, Dominica and Seychelles are now listed as places that do not yet comply with all international tax standards but have committed to the principles of good tax governance. Costa Rica, Hong Kong, Malaysia, North Macedonia, Qatar and Uruguay were also added to this “grey list.” Australia, Eswantini and Maldives were removed from it after reforming their tax systems.

The International Consortium of Investigative Journalists and its media partners recently published a massive leak of offshore data dubbed the “Pandora Papers.” The cache of almost 12 million files sheds light on the financial activities of many members of the global elite.

French EU lawmaker Aurore Lalucq, who authored a report on harmful tax practices, said she hopes the disclosures “will finally be a loud enough wake-up call for EU leaders” and the European Commission to urgently reform the bloc’s code of conduct for business taxation.

Some of the world’s most notorious tax havens are not even listed by the EU, Lalucq said in a statement. “Sadly, the countries that remain black-listed do not represent the most important financial flows,” she said.

Chiara Putaturo, the tax expert at charity group Oxfam, described the EU blacklist as “a joke” and said it should “should penalize tax-havens. Instead, it lets them off the hook.” She alleged that Anguilla and Seychelles “are at the heart of the latest tax scandal.”

“While the Pandora Papers investigation blew the lid on how the super-rich continue to use tax havens to avoid paying their taxes, ordinary people are asked to foot the COVID-19 recovery bill,” Putaturo said.

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