Tag Archives: caribbean

15-Year-Old Swimmer Representing Guyana at the Olympics

by

Gabriella Chapman

Fifteen year old Guyanese swimmer, Aleka Persaud was selected by the world governing swimming body, Fédération Internationale De Natation (FINA) to represent her country at the Tokyo Olympics in the coming weeks.

This came as shocking but exciting news to the junior swimmer, since she did not have her eyes on this year’s Olympics, but rather, that of 2022.

In fact, it was previously reported that senior swimmer, Jamila Sanmoogan will be representing Guyana. However, Persaud holds the record of the fastest Guyanese swimmer and FINA’s adjusted rules state that the fastest swimmers must represent their country.

Persaud’s coach, Sean Baksh explained to Loop Caribbean that in previous years, in order to participate in the Olympics, swimmers must compete in the World Championships the year prior.

In 2019, he said, although Persaud recorded a faster time than Sanmoogan at the CARIFTA games, she was too young to compete in the World Championships. Sanmoogan however, who was the senior champion swimmer for Guyana at the CARIFTA games, competed in the World Championships, which got her on the list to compete at the 2020 Olympics.

 

The post 15-Year-Old Swimmer Representing Guyana at the Olympics appeared first on The St Kitts Nevis Observer.

Closed for 16 Months,Trinidad and Tobago Reopens Border

Trinidad and Tobago on Saturday reopened its borders after a 16-month closure due to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.

Prime Minister Dr. Keith Rowley, speaking at the weekly news conference, said that he had received reports that on the very first flight to have arrived, some passengers were seeking to beat the system.

“This is a huge step we are taking, but we are taking it knowing that we are still under threat but we are also operating with significant cautions, and you were told before what are the conditions for entry.

“Unfortunately I can tell you that in the first shipment of people into the country, the very first one, we had an instance of people not wanting to cooperate with restriction. I want to make it clear again that we are not giving any passes to people who believe that they are smarter than the rest of us,” Prime Minister Rowley said.

The authorities, prior to the reopening of the airport, had outlined a series of measures, including the need for a PCR test prior to arrival. They also warned that unvaccinated non-nationals would not be allowed into the country. In addition, the Parliament approved fines in excess of TT$300,000 for persons who contravene the measures on arrival.

Rowley said, notwithstanding the situation on Saturday at the airport “I expect that it will go smoothly and that would include law enforcement as well”.

Minister in the Prime Minister’s Office, Stuart Young, told reporters that so far only the state-owned Caribbean Airlines (CAL) has regular scheduled flights operating from the Piarco International Airport and that the other airlines would soon be making their schedules available when they are ready.

Prime Minister Rowley also announced that as of Monday, another aspect of the re-opening of the economy will take place with food establishments being allowed to conduct businesses but only on a takeout and drive-through basis.

But he warned the population to ensure that they have to adhere to the protocols including wearing masks, social distancing and washing hands frequently and that there is to be no in-house dining or consumption on the premises.

He said based on the success of the reopening, the government would be looking at further openings to take effect by the end of the month.

The government is also hoping that with its ramped-up national vaccination program, by mid-August, the economy should be well on to being fully re-opened and with the authorities being able to announce plans for the reopening of schools.

Rowley said that he is also hoping that discussions with the United States would bear fruit soon and that Port of Spain is anticipating that Washington would be providing the Pfizer vaccine, which has been approved by the World Health Organisation (WHO) for children 12 years and over.

He said if those vaccines become available, they will be used only for children of High School age so as to ensure that that segment of the population is also vaccinated against the virus.

CMC

The post Closed for 16 Months,Trinidad and Tobago Reopens Border appeared first on The St Kitts Nevis Observer.

Amazon’s Bezos Scores Successful Space Flight Aboard New Shepard Rocket

By Paul Rincon
Science editor, BBC News website

Billionaire Jeff Bezos blasted into space on Tuesday, in the first crewed flight of his rocket ship, New Shepard.

He was accompanied by Mark Bezos, his brother, Wally Funk, an 82-year-old pioneer of the space race, and an 18-year-old student.

They travelled in a capsule with the biggest windows flown in space, offering stunning views of the Earth.

New Shepard, built by Bezos’ company Blue Origin, is designed to serve the burgeoning market for space tourism.

The passengers included the oldest person who has been to space – Ms Funk – and the youngest, student Oliver Daemen.

The spacecraft lifted off at 14:12 BST (09:12 EDT) from a private launch site near Van Horn, Texas. They parachuted back down to the West Texas desert 11 minutes later.t

After the capsule touched down, Bezos said: “Astronaut Bezos [his callsign]: Best day ever!”

From left: Mark Bezos, Jeff Bezos, Oliver Daemen, Wally Funkimage copyrightBlue Origin
image captionFrom left: Mark Bezos, Jeff Bezos, Oliver Daemen, Wally Funk

Two minutes into the flight, the capsule separated from its rocket and continued upwards towards the Karman Line – the most widely recognised boundary of space, 100km up.

The passengers experienced about four minutes of weightlessness, and were able to unstrap from their seats to float around and enjoy the views of our planet far below.

The astronauts could be heard cheering in the capsule as it passed the Karman Line.

The moment the capsule touched down in the West Texas desertimage copyrightBlue Origin
image captionThe moment the capsule touched down in the West Texas desert

“Oh my word, look at the world,” Ms Funk said as she marvelled at the views.

Before the flight, she had said she was looking forward to performing somersaults and tumbles in microgravity.

In the 1960s, Ms Funk was one member of a group of women called the Mercury 13. They underwent the same screening tests as male astronauts, but never got to fly into space.

Infographic
Presentational white space

Mr Bezos said: “Wally can outrun all of us. During the Mercury 13, she was better than all the men and I can guarantee that’s still true today.”

After the capsule reached a maximum altitude of around 106km (350,000ft), it began its descent, parachuting down to a soft landing in the desert.

After touching down, Mark Bezos said: “I am unbelievably good.”

Bezos recently resigned as chief executive of Amazon, the e-commerce giant he founded, in order to concentrate on his other ventures, including Blue Origin.

His brother Mark, 53, is a senior vice president at Robin Hood, a New York-based charity.

The fourth passenger is the son of financier Joes Daemen, who founded Dutch private equity firm Somerset Capital Partners. Oliver had originally secured a seat on the second flight, but was drafted in to replaced the anonymous winner of a public auction.

This unnamed winner, who paid $28m (£20m) to join Bezos on New Shepard’s first crewed flight, had to pull out “due to scheduling conflicts”.

New Shepard rocket - annotated image
Presentational white space

Bezos and Branson have been criticised on social media, with users arguing the money for space could be put to better use – such as tackling climate change or helping the world recover from the pandemic.

Sir Richard has addressed the criticism, saying: “I can understand it, but I think maybe they’re not fully educated to what space does for Earth.”

He explained that satellites were monitoring “the degradation of the rainforests, monitoring food distribution – even things like climate change,” adding: “We need more spaceships going up to space, we don’t need less.”

The post Amazon’s Bezos Scores Successful Space Flight Aboard New Shepard Rocket appeared first on The St Kitts Nevis Observer.

Cuba: U.S. Expected to Take Initial Steps Soon to ReEvaluate Its Policy for the Island

WASHINGTON, July 19 (Reuters) – The United States is expected to soon announce initial steps as part of the Biden administration’s review of Cuba policy and in response to Havana’s crackdown on the biggest street protests in decades, State Department officials said on Monday.

The senior officials’ comments further signaled that President Joe Biden was not ready to soften the U.S. approach after his predecessor, Donald Trump, rolled back a historic Obama-era détente with Havana, and that the latest Cuban unrest would have a significant impact on any policy moves.

The officials, speaking to Reuters on condition of anonymity, also made clear that the Biden administration is still seeking ways to ease the humanitarian plight of the Cuban people while keeping pressure on the Communist-led government in Havana.

Biden said last week he was not prepared to loosen restrictions for now on remittances, or payments that Americans can make to their families on the island, because of concern that the Cuban government would seize a large part of the funds.

But Washington is looking closely at crafting a possible work-around to restore the flow of remittances, which were shut down under Trump, in a way that does not put money in the hands of the Cuban government, one of the State Department officials said.

The official declined to elaborate but suggested it would take time to develop such a mechanism, saying: “I wouldn’t anticipate a short-term loosening.”

Thousands of Cubans staged spontaneous anti-government protests a week ago to demonstrate against an economic crisis that has seen shortages of basic goods and power outages. They were also protesting the government’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic and curbs on civil liberties. Scores of activists were detained.

The Cuban government has blamed the protests mostly on U.S.-financed “counter-revolutionaries” exploiting economic hardship caused by U.S. sanctions.

‘A TOP PRIORITY’

The unrest appears to have injected a new sense of urgency in the Cuba policy review, which began shortly after Biden took office in January but until now had not been treated as a top agenda item while the administration dealt with the economic recovery and coronavirus pandemic at home and challenges such as China, Russia and Iran abroad.

“There will definitely be policy implications as a result of the events over the course of the last week. … I’d expect in fairly short order there will be a senior U.S. government communication as to initial steps,” one official said while declining to provide specifics.

Cuba, the official said, is now a “top priority.” “It’s a historic moment in Cuba given that the protesters showed up to more than 58 locations throughout the island numbering tens of thousands, making demands of their government for change,” the official said.

Under consideration as part of the review – even before the protests occurred – is whether to lift the U.S. designation of Cuba as a “state sponsor of terrorism,” a label Trump gave to Havana just days before leaving office.

But the State Department official said there was no timeline for a decision on the issue.

Also figuring into the over-arching Cuba policy review is Cuba’s continued support for Venezuela’s Socialist president, Nicolas Maduro, whose government is also under sanction by the United States, the State Department official said. Maduro has retained power with the support not only of his military and Cuban allies but of Russia, China and Iran.

Biden, a Democrat, had vowed during his presidential campaign to ease some of the sanctions on Cuba tightened by Trump, a Republican.

But analysts say the protests have complicated Biden’s political leeway to do so, especially after he made a poorer-than-expected showing with voters in south Florida’s anti-communist Cuban-American community, which backed Trump’s tough policies toward Havana and Caracas and helped him win the battleground state.

Many analysts say Biden may have to tread carefully on Cuba policy ahead of the 2022 congressional elections.

Reporting by Matt Spetalnick, Daphne Psaledakis and Simon Lewis; Editing by Peter Cooney

The post Cuba: U.S. Expected to Take Initial Steps Soon to ReEvaluate Its Policy for the Island appeared first on The St Kitts Nevis Observer.

Brazil: People Smugglers Moving Haitian Immigrants Towards US

Government officials in Brazil say smugglers are moving Haitian migrants across the country’s border with Peru, as many of them take a first step in the perilous journey north toward the United States.

The surge has led Brazil’s national police to launch two operations to stop the smuggling of people in the region. The latest operation, which took place in early July, saw police execute five search and seizures warrants in four homes and a business in the northwestern border state of Acre.

The operation comes several months after Haitians – many of whom had spent years in Brazil – amassed near the Brazilian border. Many were leaving the country due to the pandemic-induced economic slowdown and rising anti-migrant sentiment, the BBC reported.

In February, the first operation took place amid mounting national media coverage about the migration crisis at the Acre border. That month, hundreds of mostly Haitian migrants tried to rush across the Brazil-Peru Integration Bridge, only to be forcibly turned back by Peruvian soldiers.

Brazilian authorities blamed smugglers for “contributing to the worsening” of the occupation of the bridge, according to a news release.

Frequent border closures to stop the spread of COVID-19, which has ravaged South America, have also pushed migrants to seek out smugglers, with migrants paying large sums of money to be transported across the Acre River by boat or smuggled into Peru via Bolivia.

InSight Crime Analysis

Amid accelerating economic decline in Brazil due to the pandemic, Haitians who previously went to Brazil to find work are now heading north – and smugglers are profiting from the reversal of this migration flow.

From 2010 and 2018, the vast majority of the nearly 130,000 Haitians that entered Brazil flew south from the Dominican Republic to Panama, Ecuador or Guyana. They then entered Brazil by land or air.

The 2010 earthquake that devastated Haiti had led Brazil, in need of low-wage workers, to initially offer many of them humanitarian visas. They later began to enter the country illegally.

The northwestern state of Acre was a major illegal entry point, with between 40 and 60 Haitian migrants crossing from Peru every day at peak times. Migrants paid up to $4,000 to coyotes and corrupt police officers for safe passage.

Haitian immigrants and supporters rally to reject DHS Decision to terminate TPS for Haitians, at the Manhattan borough in New York, U.S., November 21, 2017. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz

 

Now smugglers are welcoming the Haitian exodus from Brazil, which has become swift and sizeable, with thousands leaving the country to travel north through South and Central America to the US-Mexico border.

Why is this happening? Experts argue that migration routes may quickly reverse as socio-economic opportunities change within host countries. This may be particularly true for Haitian migrants.

“[F]or Haitian migrants, the destination is not always fixed, hence the circulatory nature of Haitian migration…Therefore, today’s destination country can easily become tomorrow’s transit point,” a 2020 report by the Migration for Development and Equality Project, a global academic study that researches migration corridors in the Global South, noted.

Political changes in the United States may also be providing an unwitting incentive for Haitians to head north. In January 2021, the number of Haitian migrants apprehended by US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) more than tripled when compared to the same month in 2020, the BBC reported.

“Since the transition to…the government of [US President] Joe Biden, there are expectations by migrants about a reform to the United States’ migration laws…it is possible these migrants living in Brazil are also being encouraged to leave Brazilian territory,” Leticia Mamed, a migration specialist at the Federal University of Acre, told the BBC.

The post Brazil: People Smugglers Moving Haitian Immigrants Towards US appeared first on The St Kitts Nevis Observer.

World View: India Covid Death 10X Official Figures, US Burning, Olympics to Start, More

Jul 20, 2021

Alternate text

The Associated Press

The Rundown

I'm an image

NEW DELHI (AP) — India’s excess deaths during the pandemic could be a staggering 10 times the official COVID-19 toll, likely making it modern India’s worst human tragedy, according to the most comprehensive research yet on the ravages of the virus in…Read More

Learn more about RevenueStripe...
I'm an image

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — The threat of thunderstorms and lightning has prompted officials in fire-ravaged Oregon to ask for help from outside the Pacific Northwest to prepare for additional blazes as many resources are already devoted to a massive fire …Read More

Learn more about RevenueStripe...
I'm an image

FUKUSHIMA, Japan (AP) — Skippy the yellow kangaroo with green paws was affixed to the first base dugout railing, watching the Australia Spirit become the first team to work out at Fukushima Azuma Baseball Stadium, seven weeks after they became first …Read More

Learn more about RevenueStripe...
I'm an image

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden said his infrastructure and families agenda must be passed to sustain the economic momentum of his first six months in office, aiming to set the tone for a crucial week of congressional negotiations on the two bi…Read More

Learn more about RevenueStripe...
I'm an image

AHRWEILER, Germany (AP) — The Rev. Joerg Meyrer steels himself before making his way through the stinking piles of mud-caked debris that permeate this once-beautiful town in Germany’s wine-growing Ahr valley. …Read More

OTHER TOP STORIES

VAN HORN, Texas (AP) — Jeff Bezos is about to soar on his space travel company’s first flight with people on board. The founder of Blue Origin as well as Amazon on Tuesda…Read More

CAIRO (AP) — Muslims around the world were observing Tuesday yet another major Islamic holiday in the shadow of the pandemic and amid growing concerns about the highly in…Read More

NEW YORK (AP) — Prince Harry is writing what his publisher is calling an “intimate and heartfelt memoir.” Random House expects to release the book, currently untitled, l…Read More

Here’s a collection curated by The Associated Press’ entertainment journalists of what’s arriving on TV, streaming services and music platforms this week. MOVIES — It’s t…Read More

The post World View: India Covid Death 10X Official Figures, US Burning, Olympics to Start, More appeared first on The St Kitts Nevis Observer.

Haiti: Acting PM To Step Down after Power Struggle

Port-au-Prince, Haiti (CNN) After a lengthy power struggle that has pitched Haiti’s political landscape into uncertainty, the country’s acting Prime Minister Claude Joseph has agreed to step down and hand power to his rival Ariel Henry, according to a top government official.

The deal brings to a close days of negotiations between the two men over who would lead the Caribbean nation. Joseph has led the country since the shocking assassination of president Jovenel Moise on July 7, emphasizing a need for stability in the Caribbean nation. Henry, who had been nominated to the premiership days before Moise’s death but never took office, disputed Joseph’s claim.

Henry will now become prime minister and Joseph will retain his original role as Haiti’s foreign minister, current Elections Minister Mathias Pierre told CNN on Monday.

“Negotiations about the composition of the rest of government are still in course, there is no official announcement as of now,” Pierre said.

A ministers’ council will be held on Monday afternoon to make final decisions about the new government, Pierre also said. Henry is expected to be installed and the rest of his government announced on Tuesday.

Henry, a neurologist by training, was named prime minister on July 5 by Moise, but was never officially sworn in. He has been largely silent as the investigation into Moise’s death unfolds. But late on Sunday night, Henry released an audio statement addressing Haitian citizens and promising a new coalition government.

“My fellow Haitians in Haiti and in the diaspora, it is an honor for me to address you as your prime minister. I am calling for all of us to unite and to work together to stop the nation from descending into the abyss,” Henry said.

“Today, it is our responsibility as leaders to work together to faces our challenges. I know some people are scared and have questions about who is leading the country. We weren’t ready for recent events, but I can assure you that in a very short period of time I will unveil a new coalition government. This government will lead the country for a short period of time until we can hold better elections.”

Immediately after Moise’s death, Joseph vowed to lead the country until the presidential and legislative elections this fall. But on Saturday, the Core Group — a collection of foreign ambassadors and special representatives based in Haiti which includes the US — called for Henry to be the one to lead.

Henry should form a new government and organize presidential elections “as quickly as possible,” the group said in a press statement published by the United Nations Integrated Office in Haiti (BINUH).

According to Pierre, the elections minister, elections are likely to be held 120 days after Henry is sworn in as prime minister.

A conference of activists and civil society groups also met over the weekend with the aim of releasing a plan to create a transitional governmental council that would lead the country. They argue that Haiti, which is riven with gang violence and infrastructural issues, will not be capable of holding free and fair elections this fall.

The post Haiti: Acting PM To Step Down after Power Struggle appeared first on The St Kitts Nevis Observer.

Finally! Pedro Castillo Declared President-Elect of Peru

Pedro Castillo has been declared president-elect of Peru, weeks after winning the popular vote in a tightly-contested run-off election.

The country’s election authority announced its verdict after reviewing claims of electoral fraud by his right-wing rival, Keiko Fujimori.

Mr Castillo, a 51-year-old former school teacher and union leader, secured just over 50% of the votes.

He will now be sworn in as Peru’s president on 28 July.

After the jury announced its verdict, Mr Castillo gave a speech in the capital, Lima.

“We are going to work together and bring this country together,” said Mr Castillo, according to news outlet RPP. “We are going to reject anything that goes against democracy.”

In a tweet, Peru’s current President Francisco Sagasti said he welcomed the announcement.

“May this be the beginning of a new stage of reconciliation, consensus and unity,” he added.

Mr Castillo burst onto the national scene four years ago when he led thousands of teachers on successful strike over pay.

During his presidential campaign, Mr Castillo pledged to nationalise Peru’s lucrative mining and hydrocarbon sectors, and said he would aim to create a million new jobs in a year.

He also proposed re-introducing the death penalty to help tackle crime.

Mr Castillo won last month’s election by a margin of only 44,000 votes – beating Ms Fujimori in her third bid for the presidency.

He has previously claimed victory, but a series of legal challenges by Ms Fujimori delayed an official verdict from election officials.

Ms Fujimori had provided little evidence of her claims of election fraud, and Castillo’s Free Peru party has rejected the accusations. Electoral observers, including the Organisation of American States, have also said they have found no irregularities.

Ahead of Monday night’s announcement, Ms Fujimori said she would accept the result.

“The truth will come out anyway,” she added. “We are all going to work together to re-establish legitimacy in our country.”

Ms Fujimori is the daughter of former President Alberto Fujimori, who is in jail serving a 25-year sentence for crimes including corruption and human rights abuses.

Ms Fujimori herself is being investigated for alleged corruption and money laundering, claims she says are politically motivated. Her failure to become president means prosecutors can now proceed with the charges against her.

The post Finally! Pedro Castillo Declared President-Elect of Peru appeared first on The St Kitts Nevis Observer.

Cuba Now Has Highest Per Capita Rate in Latin America, US Delta Surge

HAVANA, July 19 (Reuters) – Cuba, which kept coronavirus infections low last year, now has the highest rate of contagion per capita in Latin America. That has strained its healthcare sector and helped stoke rare protests that have roiled the Communist-run island.

The Caribbean nation of 11 million people reported nearly 4,000 confirmed cases per million residents over the last week, nine times more than the world average and more than any other country in the Americas for its size.

The outbreak, fueled by the arrival of the more contagious Delta variant first identified in India, has pushed hospitals at the virus epicenter in the province of Matanzas to the brink. State media has shown rare images of patients in beds in corridors and doctors complaining of a lack of oxygen, ventilators and medicines.

Cuba’s handling of the pandemic was one of the issues that propelled thousands to take to the streets nationwide last Sunday in unprecedented anti-government demonstrations in a country where public spaces are tightly controlled. read more Demonstrators also protested shortages of food and medicines and curbs on civil liberties.

Cuba is not alone in struggling under new waves of the pandemic. But the political implications of such a crisis are greater in a country where healthcare is considered one of the pillars of legitimacy of its “revolutionary” one-party system.

Moreover the outbreak and subsequent lockdown and reduction in numbers of flights has taxed an already bankrupt economy where many work in tourism and others rely on travelers to bring in remittances and goods including medicine.

“The government has consistently made the case that one of the main accomplishments of the revolution is its world-class medical sector,” said Cuban American historian Daniel Rodriguez, author of a book on medical politics in post-independence Havana.

Rodriguez said the exacerbation of food and medicine shortages over the past year due to the pandemic-related economic crisis had already broken Cuba’s social pact.

“When the pandemic began spiraling out of control a couple of weeks ago, it appeared increasingly the revolutionary government was no longer able to protect Cuban lives, and the result was an extraordinary repudiation of the revolution itself.”

‘NOT EVEN MEDICINE’

Cuba’s government has blamed the demonstrations on U.S.-financed “counter-revolutionaries” exploiting hardships caused by decades-old U.S. sanctions tightened during the pandemic. Several countries and non-government organizations including Oxfam called on Washington to lift sanctions this week.

On Saturday, authorities organized pro-government rallies across the island attended by thousands.

But many Cubans have aimed their anger at their own government’s handling of the economy and the pandemic.

“We are hungry, there’s nothing at the moment, not even medicine,” said Aylín Sardiña, 33, at a protest in Havana.

Some critics complained that the authorities appeared to have ample transport to deploy security forces to quell protests and bus state workers to rallies, while lacking ambulances.

To be sure, Cuba has had some pandemic successes, notably the development of five vaccine candidates, two of which have proven to have efficacy of more than 90%,according to preliminary Cuban data. read more

Thanks to one of the highest numbers of doctors per capita rates in the world, it was also able to send its “white coat army” to help other countries, and lately to reinforce hospitals in Matanzas.

Moreover cumulative cases per capita are still below the global average, while deaths per capita, though rising, are still just a third of the global average, a fact Cuba credits to its experimental treatments and its free, universal healthcare.

However, with cases now rising fast, a deepening of Cuba’s economic crisis has prevented officials from imposing stricter lockdowns with many Cubans having to stand in lines for hours to get scarce goods.

And so far only some two million people – less than a fifth of the population – are fully vaccinated.

Brazil-based Cuban virologist Amilcar Perez Riverol said that premature triumphal statements from state media about the Cuban vaccine candidates and rallies like Saturday’s may have also led to people lowering their guard, creating a breeding ground for cases to soar.

The country has an ambitious aims to have fully vaccinated 70% of the population by September. But Perez Riverol warned that in the next few weeks COVID-19 deaths would likely continue to rise as they lagged the surge in cases.

“You go out onto the street to buy food and someone says to you: do you know who else died?” said Libia Ortega, 44, a worker in a private cafeteria in Matanzas city closed due to the pandemic and shortages of products.

“The doctors are making a big effort to save lives every day but medicine and supplies are lacking.”

Reporting by Sarah Marsh; Additional reporting by Nelson Acosta; Editing by Adam Jourdan
and Daniel Wallis
======================================================

US: Delta fears grip economy as cases jump across the country

The delta variant of the coronavirus is sweeping through the United States, raising the average number of cases to 30,000-per-day, crowding hospitals in areas with large number of unvaccinated people and spurring questions about the nation’s recovery from the pandemic.

Stocks tanked on Monday, with the Dow Jones Industrial average dropping 725 points after being down more than 900 points at one time.

It was the worst one-day performance in the Dow since last October, and followed losses in markets around the world as investor fears about how the delta virus might slow both the health and economic recovery took hold.

Divide between vaccinated and unvaccinated: ​​Health officials have described the latest stage of the coronavirus as a pandemic of the unvaccinated while emphasizing that those who have had their shots are relatively safe.

Sten Vermund, a professor at the Yale School of Public Health, said he is “not particularly worried” about COVID-19 for himself, because he is fully vaccinated.

“What worries me is my fellow Americans who for a variety of reasons choose not to get vaccinated; they continue to be in harm’s way,” Vermund said.

Cases, deaths on the rise: While the 30,000 cases per day on average is more than double the 13,000 average at the end of June, that rate is still well below highs from last fall and earlier this year.

Still, deaths are also ticking back up, at around 240 per day.

=============================================

Pediatric group recommends masks for students over 2 when schools reopen

The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommended on Monday that all students older than 2 years old wear masks, regardless of their vaccination status, when schools reopen in the fall.

The leading pediatrics organization called for universal masking, noting that most school-aged children are not yet eligible to get the COVID-19 vaccine, and many schools are not planning to track the vaccination status of students and staff.

“There are many children and others who cannot be vaccinated,” Sara Bode, chairperson-elect of the AAP Council on School Health Executive Committee, said in a statement. “This is why it’s important to use every tool in our toolkit to safeguard children from COVID-19.”

Support for reopening: The AAP said, however, it “strongly recommends in-person learning,” adding that children face a higher risk of mental health issues and developmental setbacks if students do not return to classrooms.

The pediatrics group acknowledged that current research indicates reopening schools with safety precautions like masking “does not significantly increase community transmission.” But with variants like the delta strain spreading, the AAP noted transmission could increase.

Overall, the AAP says opening schools with effective safety precautions, including masking, is the right move.

The post Cuba Now Has Highest Per Capita Rate in Latin America, US Delta Surge appeared first on The St Kitts Nevis Observer.

Former Nat. Security Official: Trump, Republican Party Bigger Threat to US Than ISIS

Former Trump administration official Miles Taylor has slammed the Republican Party, arguing that the GOP represents a greater threat to the country than U.S.-designated terrorist groups ISIS and Al Qaeda.

Taylor served as the chief of staff to the secretary of Homeland Security under former President Donald Trump from February 2019 to September 2019 and worked for the Department of Homeland Security in the previous administration for more than two years. However, Taylor went on to publicly condemn Trump and work with conservative groups to campaign against the former president ahead of the 2020 election.

During a Thursday evening interview with MSNBC, Taylor touted his credentials working in national security and said that the present-day Republican Party represents the “number one national security threat” to the country. Notably, Taylor still described himself as a member of the GOP.

“I’m a national security guy. I’ve worked in national security against ISIS and Al Qaeda and Russia,” he said. “And the number one national security threat I’ve ever seen in my life to this country’s democracy is the party that I’m in, the Republican Party.” Taylor reiterated that the GOP “is the number one national security threat to the United States of America.”

Newsweek Newsletter sign-up >Former Trump administration official Miles Taylor called the Republican Party the “number one national security threat to the United States of America.” Pictured, Trump supporters clash with police and security forces as hundreds violently attack the U.S. Capitol Building in Washington, D.C. on Jan. 6. JOSEPH PREZIOSO/AFP via Getty Images

The former Trump administration official cautioned that if Republicans retake the House of Representatives in 2022 that it will “become a haunted house.” He argued that Trump would be the “ghoul and the specter” haunting the legislative chamber. Taylor said that if House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, a California Republican, became Speaker of the House that it would “really be Donald Trump’s hand on the speaker’s gavel.”

 

 

The post Former Nat. Security Official: Trump, Republican Party Bigger Threat to US Than ISIS appeared first on The St Kitts Nevis Observer.