Tag Archives: caribbean

Haiti: Pandemic, Violence Feeds Massive Child Hunger

Even without a global pandemic, Haiti’s children faced a hunger crisis. Now it’s getting worse.

COVID-19, an economy already in free fall, droughts and intense tropical storms, gang violence and chronic instability are not only raising levels of hunger in Haiti but leading to increased levels of severe child malnutrition, the head of the United Nations’ leading child advocacy group in the Caribbean nation has warned.

The number of children suffering from “severe acute” childhood malnutrition has more than doubled, increasing from 41,000 last year to an estimated 86,000 children this year, said Bruno Maes, UNICEF’s representative in Haiti,

“There are now 217,000 Haitian children ages 6 to 59 months who now suffer from acute malnutrition,” Maes said, citing a U.N. survey.

Malnutrition in Haiti, he said, is related to several factors, including the drought-driven crisis in the 1990s and 2000s, and the 2010 earthquake. All of which have affected nearly 5 million people in Haiti “and caused economic damage,” he said.

UNICEF’s estimates come as the agency launches an emergency appeal for $3 million to purchase meals for the next six months, and to support Haiti’s Ministry of Health in protective measures like identifying children who need assistance and getting them help. The funding is urgently needed, UNICEF said, because in the next few weeks it will run out of life-saving, ready-to-use therapeutic food.

“It puts 86,000 children affected by severe acute malnutrition [risking] the worst complications, unless additional funding is provided,” Maes said. “Without these funds, thousands of children will no longer receive this critical and life-saving support.

“It’s a critical investment because investing at the very beginning of a child’s life is the best investment a country can make,” he added. “Well-nourished and healthy children get better grades and become productive adults who can help build Haiti’s future.”

Haiti has long suffered from high levels of food insecurity. A U.N. food analysis estimated that more than 4.4 million Haitians, or 40 percent of the population, will need food assistance this year as a result of the reduced purchasing power Haitians suffered last year amid the COVID-19 pandemic, tropical storm Laura and a sociopolitical crisis.

Haiti still remains the only country in the Western Hemisphere that has yet to administer vaccines to its population. Meanwhile COVID-19 infections and deaths are spiking. The country has lost in recent days several well-known personalities including a Catholic monsignor and the rector and vice rector of the Episcopal University. As of June 6, the most recent available data from the Ministry of Health, Haiti registered 16,079 confirmed COVID-19 infections and 346 deaths. A month earlier, on May 6, it reported 13,245 COVID-19 cases and 268 deaths coronavirus-related deaths.

Meanwhile, the latest round of violent gang clashes has forced thousands of Haitians, including children, to flee their homes in the Martissant neighborhood. Some have sought refuge in nearby Carrefour in a gymnasium, or in public plazas in other communities. Others have left the capital altogether for the rural countryside. The Martissant neighborhood, which is largely controlled by armed gangs, is located not far from the National Palace.

During a visit Tuesday to the area where some of the displaced have sought refuge, Maes lamented the situation, especially for children who had lost days of schooling and were being exposed to diseases. UNICEF and partners, he said, are providing assistance to the displaced, “but more aid is urgently needed.”

UNICEF transported via helicopter 200 hygiene kits with a number of items including soap, water chlorination tablets and tooth-brushes. It also provided 10,000 masks, 250 mattresses and tarps, and organized a mobile clinic to care for children suffering from malnutrition.

In a visit to South Florida on Thursday, Haitian Bishop Oge Beauvoir, who runs Coconut Creek-based charity Food for the Poor in Haiti, said he’s lived in Haiti 45 years out of his 65 years and “what we are experiencing today, I haven’t seen that before.” The country is “facing very tough challenges,” he added.

Speaking of those who have been displaced, he said, “in the streets of Port-au-Prince, you meet them everywhere, they are like people going nowhere with their children.”

“Many people cannot eat these days,” he said, noting that rising food prices and the devaluation of the local currency are creating added challenges. “People used to be able to feed their families. They cannot afford to do it anymore. And people who are working are coming to us to request food.”

A U.N. humanitarian-needs assessment found that as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic and other challenges, some Haiti households saw their income drop by more than 60%. Access to healthcare and water, hygiene and sanitation services have also been affected, leading to a drop in immunizations. That has led to an increase in diarrheal diseases, the main cause of malnutrition among children under age 5.

“In the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, there were drops in child immunization, ranging from 28% for some vaccine antigens, to 44% for others,” Maes said, stressing that essential healthcare for children and access to quality healthcare need to be expanded.

The immunization drops are especially worrying. A UNICEF equity analyzer shows that nearly 10% of Haiti’s children have not been vaccinated, while 58% are not fully vaccinated, meaning they did not complete all of their required vaccines.

Though the data is from 2017, Maes said UNICEF is still “very concerned.” Further disconcerting is that, of those who are not fully vaccinated or haven’t been vaccinated, one out of two live in the metropolitan Port-au-Prince area as well as in Gonaives and St. Marc, just north of the capital, where access to essential services for children is lacking.

“In some of these places, children are also mostly affected by the violence that is ongoing in some [sections] of these metropolitan areas,” he said

Read more here: https://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation-world/world/americas/haiti/article252052773.html#storylink=cpy

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T&T’s US Embassy Mocked for Paltry 400 Dose Vaccine Donation.

The US Embassy to Trinidad and Tobago has attracted online mockery after announcing that it has donated 80 vials of COVID-19 vaccine to the island nation of 1.4 million people.

In a tweet posted late Sunday local time, the US embassy in Port of Spain, the country’s capital, announced the donation, saying that “every vaccine counts.”

“The government of the United States of America has made a donation of COVID-19 vaccines to the government of Trinidad and Tobago. The donation includes 80 vials of Pfizer vaccines. The United States is committed to assisting the Government of Trinidad and Tobago with its vaccination efforts. We believe that every vaccine counts,” the tweet read.

A single vial of Pfizer vaccine can produce five doses, and is administered in two shots 21 days apart, meaning that the gift is likely to yield some 400 shots and could vaccinate 200 people.

The tweet has been widely shared, with many comments expressing surprise at the size of the gift compared to Trinidad and Tobago’s population of 1.4 million. Many mocked the gift, with some users sharing memes about the donation.

The embassy’s original tweet has been quote-tweeted more than 1,800 times at time of writing, and garnered over 400 replies.

Trinidad and Tobago’s National Security Minister Fitzgerald Hinds told local newspaper the Trinidad Daily Express that the vials were going to be given to the National Security Ministry.

“This has nothing to do with any large donation that we expect is being considered by the United States Government,” Hinds told the paper.

“This is just a small number for the Ministry of National Security as a gift which we are happy to accept.”

Trinidad and Tobago has seen 670 deaths and nearly 29,000 cases of the virus. The country had a steep rise in cases and deaths in May this year, having escaped with a much lower number of cases in the global pandemic’s first surge.

During May’s surge, the US donated two field hospitals, comprising 80 beds in total to Trinidad and Tobago, the embassy announced.

The embassy website also announces President Joe Biden’s commitment to deliver 500 million vaccines to low-income nations via COVAX, but Trinidad and Tobago does not qualify under that scheme.

The coronavirus pande

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Mexico Says COVID-19 Affected a Fourth of Population, 1.1K Daily Deaths in Brazil, World Stats

People wearing face masks wait at a traffic junction as Mexico City's authorities announce a full reopening of the city come Monday, the first time since the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, Mexico June 4, 2021. REUTERS/Edgard Garrido

People wearing face masks wait at a traffic junction as Mexico City’s authorities announce a full reopening of the city come Monday, the first time since the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, Mexico June 4, 2021. REUTERS/Edgard Garrido

About a quarter of Mexico’s 126 million people are estimated to have been infected with the coronavirus, the health ministry said on Friday, far more than the country’s confirmed infections.

The 2020 National Health and Nutrition Survey (Ensanut) showed that about 31.1 million people have had the virus, the ministry said in a statement, citing Tonatiuh Barrientos, an official at the National Institute of Public Health.

The estimate was given as the country recorded 3,282 new cases and 243 more fatalities, taking its total number of confirmed infections to 2,448,820 and the death toll to 229,823.

The government has said previously the real number of cases was likely to be significantly higher.

According to Barrientos, not all of the people in the survey’s estimate necessarily showed symptoms. The survey was based on interviews with people at 13,910 households between Aug. 17 and Nov. 14 last year, and confirmed preliminary results released in December. read more

Separate data published in March suggested Mexico’s actual death toll was at least 60% above the confirmed figure. read more

======================================================Hea

Brazil reports 1,129 new COVID-19 deaths, nearly 40,000 cases

1/2

A cleaning worker prepares to disinfect an Emergency Mobile Care Service (SAMU) ambulance after taking a suspected COVID-19 patient, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in the Moacyr do Carmo hospital in Duque de Caxias near Rio de Janeiro, Brazil May 20, 2021. REUTERS/Pilar Olivares

Brazil reported 1,129 COVID-19 deaths and 37,948 new coronavirus cases, the Health Ministry said on Sunday.

Nearly 490,000 people in the country have died from the virus during the pandemic, with 17.4 million people infected, the data show.

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

WORLD STATS

Coronavirus Cases:

176,751,423

Deaths:

3,820,288

Recovered:

160,802,596
Highlighted in green
= all cases have recovered from the infection

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Caribbean, S.A. Nations Welcoming Back US Tourists

From CNN

Anguilla

US visitors will once again have access to the tropical waters of Anguilla.

US visitors will once again have access to the tropical waters of Anguilla.
Courtesy Belmond Cap Juluca
This upscale British island in the Eastern Caribbean reopened on May 25. Testing and quarantine requirements are in place. Details and updates: US Embassy | Anguilla International Travelers.

Antigua and Barbuda

This independent nation in the eastern Caribbean, known for sheltered bays and historical sites, is open. Testing and quarantine requirements are in place. Details and updates: US Embassy | Antigua and Barbuda government website.

Aruba

Scroll down to the Dutch Caribbean entry below for information on Aruba and other islands in this group.

The Bahamas

Off the coast of Florida, this large chain of islands is loved for its many beaches. Testing required; exemptions for the fully vaccinated. No quarantine in place. Details and updates: US Embassy | Bahamas travel website | Bahamas Travel Health Visa

Barbados

Why do people come to Barbados? For starters, places such as Bottom Bay.

Why do people come to Barbados? For starters, places such as Bottom Bay.
istockphoto
This British island, the most easterly one in the Caribbean, is set to become an independent republic later in 2021. Testing and quarantine requirements are in place. Details and updates: US Embassy | Visit Barbados website | Rules for vaccinated and unvaccinated travelers | BIMSafe travel app

Belize

English is spoken in this Central American nation filled with wildlife spotting opportunities and stunning barrier reefs. Testing required; fully vaccinated exempt. No quarantine in place. Details and updates: US Embassy | Belize Tourism Board.

Bermuda

This island in the mid-Atlantic is renowned for its pink beaches and British flair. Testing and quarantine requirement are in place. Details and updates: US Embassy | Bermuda Tourism Authority | Specific instructions for immunized travelers.

Bolivia

This landlocked South American country offers surreal landscapes from Andean to jungle. Testing and quarantine requirements in place. Details and updates: US Embassy.

Brazil

South America’s largest country has the lure of Rio’s party atmosphere and the Amazon River’s mystique. It also has a very high daily number of Covid-19 cases. Testing required; quarantines are not. Details and updates: US Embassy | health declaration

British Virgin Islands

This pretty island group lies just to the east of the US Virgin Islands in the Caribbean. Testing and quarantine requirements are in place. Details and updates: US Embassy | BVI government website | BVI Gateway website

Bulgaria

Historic towns and natural landscapes are Bulgaria’s calling cards. Testing required; exemptions for fully vaccinated or recovered from Covid-19 infection. No quarantine. Details and updates: US Embassy

Colombia

Downtown Medellin is a great place to take a stroll and soak up urban Colombian atmosphere.

Downtown Medellin is a great place to take a stroll and soak up urban Colombian atmosphere.
Shutterstock
Colombia offers Medellin, “the city of eternal spring,” and lush landscapes throughout. Testing and quarantine requirements are in place. Details and updates: US Embassy | Colombia’s travel website

Costa Rica

Costa Rica’s rich wildlife and beautiful landscapes draw visitors. No testing or quarantines are required. Details and updates: US Embassy | Visit Costa Rica website | Health pass form | Costa Rica health insurance

Dominica

This rugged Eastern Caribbean island with deep valleys and 365 rivers has testing and quarantine requirements. Details and updates: US Embassy | Discover Dominica | Online registration portal

Dominican Republic

This Caribbean nation, popular for its resorts and beaches, doesn’t require tests or quarantines. Random health screenings upon arrival. Details and updates: US Embassy | GoDominicanRepublic.com | Electronic entry and exit form

Ecuador

A Galapagos marine iguana (Amblyrhynchus cristatus) at the Tortuga Bay beach on the Santa Cruz Island in Galapagos, Ecuador, on January 20, 2018.

NEW: Starting June 9, fully vaccinated US leisure travelers will be allowed to enter France. Testing required. Details and updates: US Embassy | France Diplomacy Twitter

Grenada

This Caribbean island with lush rainforests is welcoming US visitors. Testing and quarantine requirements are in place. Details and updates: US Embassy | Grenada’s Ministry of Health | Travel authorization application

Guatemala

This Central American country offers historical sites and stunning volcano landscapes. Testing required; exceptions for the fully vaccinated or those fully recovered from Covid-19. No quarantine. Details and updates: US Embassy | Online health pass

Honduras

Honduras has epic diving off Roatan Island and other locations. Testing required. Conditional quarantine in some circumstances. Details and updates: US Embassy | Online precheck form

Jamaica

Jamaica’s music, laid-back vibe, beaches and food draw visitors. Testing and quarantine requirements are in place. Details and updates: US Embassy in Jamaica | Visit Jamaica website | Online travel authorization form

Mexico

The land border between the US and Mexico remains closed through at least June 21, but US travelers can still fly there. No testing or quarantine requirements are in place. The US State Department lists numerous states to avoid because of crime. Details and updates: US Embassy.

Panama

Soak up pirate history and a whole lot more in Portobelo.

Soak up pirate history and a whole lot more in Portobelo.
AMillar
Wildlife, beaches, mountain towns and a canal are Panama’s calling cards. Testing required; quarantine is not. Details and updates: US Embassy | Visit Panama | Online health affidavit

Peru

Peru offers up Incan history, mind-blowing scenery and delicious food. Testing required; quarantine is conditional. Details and updates: US Embassy | Lima airport protocols | Affidavit of health

St. Kitts and Nevis

This Caribbean escape allows only fully vaccinated tourists to visit. Exemptions are in place for children 17 and younger traveling with vaccinated parents. Details and updates: US Embassy | St. Kitts Tourism | Travel authorization form

St. Lucia

Home of the steep and towering Pitons, waterfalls and volcanic beaches, the independent Caribbean nation of St. Lucia is open. Testing and quarantine requirements are in place. Details and updates: US Embassy | St. Lucia travel website

St. Vincent and the Grenadines

The aftermath of recent eruptions at La Soufrière volcano on St. Vincent could make travel to that island difficult. Testing and quarantine requirements are in place. Details and updates: US Embassy | Covid-19 protocol documents | Official prearrival form

Turks and Caicos

This British overseas territory northeast of Cuba and southeast of the Bahamas is known for it coral reefs, ripsaw music and low-key vibe. Testing is required; quarantine is not. Details and updates: US Embassy | Visit Turks and Caicos | Travel authorization form

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Texas Governor Vows to Build Border Wall

The governor of Texas has vowed to build a wall on its border with Mexico, amid a surge in illegal migration.

Republican Greg Abbott said he had allocated $1bn (£706m) in state funds to uphold border security.

“While securing the border is the federal government’s responsibility, Texas will not sit idly by as this crisis grows,” Mr Abbott said.

One of President Joe Biden’s first acts in office was to end border wall construction.

In February, the Democrat rolled back the emergency order used to fund his predecessor Donald Trump’s Mexico border wall – a key symbol of the former president’s agenda – and said no further tax dollars would be spent on it.

It’s not clear if Mr Abbott has the authority to order a wall in Texas independently.

“It will help all of us to work on ways to stem the flow of unlawful immigration and to stem the flow of illegal contraband,” the governor told a press conference on Thursday.

But the plan is likely to face legal challenges.

The American Civil Liberties Union of Texas called it “an attempt to distract from his governing failures while targeting vulnerable immigrants”.

Migrant surge hits 20-year high

US Customs and Border Protection said it had apprehended 180,034 migrants, mostly single adults, in May – the highest monthly total since April 2000. The majority are fleeing poverty and violence in Central American countries like Guatemala.

Migrants detained at the US border

A pandemic emergency rule known as Title 42 allows border agents to turn away most single adults and many families.

However, it does not apply to unaccompanied children. Thousands have crossed the border and are being held in US immigration detention facilities.

Tensions have been mounting between the Biden administration and Mr Abbott, whose state is an epicentre of illegal crossings.

Justice Department officials threatened to sue Texas after the governor ordered child-care regulators to cancel the licences of centres that shelter immigrant children.

On Thursday, Mr Abbott blamed the rise in migrant crossings on Mr Biden’s policies, saying he hoped to give more details about the wall next week.

“Some of these border barriers will be built immediately,” he added.

A Trump legacy

Building a southern border wall was a signature pledge of Mr Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign. He initially insisted Mexico would pay for the wall – which it declined to do. By the time Mr Trump left office, the US had spent about $15bn (£11bn) on the project.

According to the New York Times, the Trump administration built more than 450 miles of new wall, most of it in areas which had older barriers already. Much of this was in Arizona rather than Texas, where some landowners took legal action to resist construction on their properties.

media captionRisking everything for an American dream

Mr Biden promised a more humane immigration agenda, declaring in a presidential debate that the separation of children from their parents under the Trump administration’s zero-tolerance policy was “criminal”.

He has launched a task force to reunite separated migrant families, and repealed Mr Trump’s “Remain in Mexico” policy, which required US asylum seekers to wait in Mexico while their applications were processed.

Republicans have blamed Mr Biden’s policies for the border surge, however – as has Guatemala’s President Alejandro Giammattei.

Before meeting US Vice-President Kamala Harris this week, he told CBS News that after Mr Biden took office, “the very next day the coyotes were here organising groups of children to take them to the United States”.

During her visit, designed to address the root causes of immigration, Ms Harris told illegal immigrants thinking of making the trek to America: “Do not come.”

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Copa America or Covid America?….Brazil Beats Venezuela in Opener

Coronavirus ravaged hosts Brazil began the defence of its Copa America title with a comfortable victory over a Covid-affected Venezuela in the tournament’s opening match.

Talisman Neymar scored one and assisted another, adding a second for Tite’s side with a second-half penalty before setting up Gabriel Barbosa late on.

Paris St-Germain defender Marquinhos bundled in a 23rd-minute opener after Venezuela failed to clear a corner.

Nine-time winners Brazil won a first Copa America title in 12 years in 2019.

Twelve of Venezuela’s players and coaching staff tested positive for Covid-19 a day before their opening match in Group A, which also includes Colombia, Ecuador and Peru.

Colombia won their opener against Ecuador 1-0, with Edwin Cardona scoring the only goal of the game minutes before half-time from a cleverly-worked free-kick.

The goal was initially ruled out for offside but the video assistant referee (VAR) overturned the decision.

Everton forward Richarlison had a first-half goal disallowed for offside and Neymar missed from close range as Brazil initially struggled to make their dominance count.

Neymar scored his 67th international goal after Yohan Cumana fouled Danilo, but he missed another great chance to move closer to Pele’s national record of 77, shooting wide after breaking through the Venezuela defence in the closing stages.

The PSG forward then rounded goalkeeper Joel Graterol before squaring to substitute Barbosa for a tap-in.

The 47th edition of the Copa America – delayed a year because of the coronavirus outbreak – is taking place in Brazil, after Colombia and Argentina were stripped of the tournament.

The South American Football Confederation (Conmebol) removed Colombia as co-hosts in May amid anti-government protests and Argentina were later replaced because of rising Covid-19 cases in the country.

The BBC is broadcasting all 28 games from the 2021 Copa America, which runs until 10 July and features the 10 Conmebol nations.

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Nicaraguan Democracy: Five More Opposition Figures Detained Before Election

Police in Nicaragua have detained five more prominent opposition figures, in what critics say is a crackdown on opponents of the country’s president.

Several former allies of long-time President Daniel Ortega were among those arrested on Sunday.

Police accused them of inciting foreign interference in Nicaragua’s affairs, among other crimes.

About 12 opposition figures, including four hopefuls in November’s election, have been arrested in recent days.

Mr Ortega, 75, is expected to seek a fourth consecutive term in November’s presidential election. But opinion polls suggest his popularity has plummeted after a violent crackdown on anti-government protests in 2018 in which hundreds of people were killed.

In power since 2007, Mr Ortega has been accused of suppressing dissent and political opposition to his rule ahead of the poll.

The police said those held on Sunday were all members of Unamos, an opposition party that is largely made up of dissidents who split from President Ortega’s ruling party, the Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN).

The FSLN was a socialist revolutionary movement that swept to power in the Central American nation in 1979.

Among those detained were former Sandinista Health Minister Dora Tellez and retired General Hugo Torres, who fought with Mr Ortega against dictator Anastasio Somoza in the 1970s.

Mr Torres said the opposition would keep fighting against Mr Ortega.

“These are desperate moves by a regime that feels it is moribund, that has no legal standing, that has no justification… to remain in power beyond November of this year when free and supervised elections should be held,” Mr Torres said.

Julie Chung, the top US diplomat for Latin America, called the arrests “arbitrary” and denounced Mr Ortega’s “campaign of terror” in a tweet.

What are they accused of?

Nearly all of those detained have been accused of plotting against Nicaragua’s sovereignty and independence and of organising terrorist acts with financial help from foreign powers.

They have been held under a controversial treason law passed in December by Nicaragua’s National Assembly, which is dominated by government allies.

Under the law, the government has the power to ban candidates from running for office if they are deemed to be traitors to Nicaragua. Anyone designated a traitor can be sent to prison for up to 15 years.

The government says the law aims to protect “the independence, the sovereignty and self-determination” of Nicaragua. It says the country is under threat from imperialist powers in the US and “coup-mongers” within Nicaragua who are determined to overthrow President Ortega.

But critics say the law is designed to stop opposition politicians from standing in the election. The US, the UK and the EU have imposed sanctions on Nicaraguan officials, whom they accuse of undermining democracy.

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G7 Leaders Pledge 1B Vaccine Doses to Poor Nations, Green Agenda

By Joseph Lee & Becky Morton
BBC News

Leaders of the major industrial nations have pledged one billion Covid vaccine doses to poor countries as a “big step towards vaccinating the world”, Boris Johnson has said.

At the end of the G7 summit in Cornwall, the PM said countries were rejecting “nationalistic approaches”.

He said vaccinating the world would show the benefits of the G7’s democratic values.

There was also a pledge to wipe out their contribution to climate change.

After the first meeting of world leaders in two years, Mr Johnson said “the world was looking to us to reject some of the selfish, nationalistic approaches that marred the initial global response to the pandemic and to channel all our diplomatic, economic and scientific might to defeating Covid for good”.

He said the G7 leaders had pledged to supply the vaccines to poor countries either directly or through the World Health Organization’s Covax scheme – including 100 million from the UK.

The communique issued by the summit pledges to “end the pandemic and prepare for the future by driving an intensified international effort, starting immediately, to vaccinate the world by getting as many safe vaccines to as many people as possible as fast as possible”.

It also includes steps to tackle climate change, with leaders re-committing to the target of reaching net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 at the latest and pledging to eliminate most coal power.

Mr Johnson rejected suggestions the vaccines pledge was a moral failure by the G7 as it was not enough to cover the needs of poorer countries.

He referred to the the UK’s involvement in the development of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine.

“Already of the 1.5 billion vaccines that have been distributed around the world, I think that people in this country should be very proud that half a billion of them are as a result of the actions taken by the UK government in doing that deal with the Oxford scientists and AstraZeneca to distribute it at cost,” he said.

He added that “we are going flat out and we are producing vaccines as fast as we can, and distributing them as fast as we can”.

The target to vaccinate the world by the end of next year would be met “very largely thanks to the efforts of the countries who have come here today”, Mr Johnson said.

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Analysis box by Adam Fleming, Chief political correspondent

The leaders slightly exceeded their target of donating a billion Covid vaccines to poorer countries within the next year, if funding for future doses is included alongside individual jabs.

There was also a commitment to build the frameworks to prevent and fight future pandemics. Elsewhere in the 25-page communique, there were several references to China, which President Biden said was a change from previous meetings of the world’s advanced economies.

Pledges made this time included working together to respond to China’s impact on world trade.

On the recovery from Covid there was even a reference to Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s trademark domestic policy – the need to reduce inequalities by “levelling up”.

Charities and campaigners issued statements calling out vague promises and missed opportunities, but Mr Johnson will feel that post-Brexit Britain has staged a diplomatic show that was both competent and confident.

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Mr Johnson also dismissed the suggestion that patents for vaccines should be waived in order to boost global supply, something which the US backed last month.

He said he wanted to protect “incentives for innovation” while building up manufacturing capacity, especially in Africa.

Elsewhere in their communique, G7 leaders also pledged to:

  • improve early warning systems to prepare for future health crises
  • phase out coal-fired power stations without carbon capture technology and raise $100bn (£70bn) to help poorer countries cut emissions
  • support a green revolution that creates jobs, cuts emissions and seeks to limit the rise in global temperatures to 1.5 degrees
  • reinvigorate their economies “with plans that create jobs, invest in infrastructure, drive innovation, support people, and level up so that no place or person, irrespective of age, ethnicity or gender is left behind”
  • “build back better” by establishing a clean, green growth fund for infrastructure developments in developing countries
  • respond to China’s impact on world trade and challenge practices which “undermine the fair and transparent operation of the global economy”
  • call on China to respect human rights, especially in relation to Xinjiang, where it has been accused of abuses against Uyghur Muslims
  • get 40 million more girls into education by 2026
A woman being vaccinated in Gurugram, Indiaimage copyrightGetty Images

The communique calls for a “timely, transparent, expert-led, and science-based WHO-convened” investigation into the origins of Covid-19.

US President Joe Biden has previously said the US intelligence community is split on whether coronavirus came from human contact with an infected animal or from a lab accident – a theory rejected by China.

Mr Johnson said “the advice that we’ve had is it doesn’t look as though this particular disease of zoonotic origin came from a lab”, but he added: “Clearly anybody sensible would want to keep an open mind about that”.

French President Emmanuel Macron said the international community needed clarity about the origins of the virus but said it was up to the WHO to investigate.

‘Missed opportunity’

With G7 countries accounting for 20% of carbon emissions, Mr Johnson said: “We were clear this weekend that action needs to start with us.”

But pressed on the lack of binding agreements and timetables, the prime minister says he will not “pretend our work is done” and he will be “on everybody’s case” to make further progress ahead of the COP26 summit in Scotland later this year.

Kirsty McNeill from Crack the Crises, a coalition of charities and NGOs including Save the Children and Oxfam, said the G7 summit was a “historic missed opportunity” on Covid-19 and climate change.

Leaders arrived “with good intentions but without their cheque books”, she said.

Joanna Rea, from Unicef UK, said the G7 pledge on vaccines was “the beginning of the action required to end this pandemic” but called for a “rapid acceleration of dose sharing in the next three months to ensure millions of vaccines get to the people in countries who need them the most”.

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Concerns Grow in St Ives, Cornwall over Covid Cases Linked to G7 Summit

At least five hospitality venues close as two police officers and Extinction Rebellion camp report cases of virus
Police on patrol in St Ives during G7 summit
Police officers patrol along the route Joe Biden’s motorcade took through St Ives on Sunday. Photograph: Jon Super/AP
Guardian

Concerns are growing that St Ives may face a spike in Covid cases as the G7 summit winds up with hospitality venues, police officers and a protest camp all reporting cases of the virus.

At least five venues in St Ives, the town closest to the main venue summit, Carbis Bay, have closed or are limiting their operations because of cases.

Two police officers have had positive tests and one protester at an Extinction Rebellion camp is also isolating.

Andrew George, who speaks for the Liberal Democrats in Cornwall on health, said he was concerned about the cases.

He said he did not believe the leaders were “vectors” for Covid. “But other people associated with G7 – security staff, police, media have been intermixing.

Ahead of the event, George had called for the UK government to publish advice on the possibility of the summit leading to a Covid spike but said it had refused on security grounds. “We won’t know the full consequences of what has been going on possibly for a fortnight.”

Among the venues that have shut or restricted their business are the Pedn Olva hotel and the Lifeboat Inn. The Porthgwidden Beach Cafe said it had decided to close its doors “due to the uncertainty over local Covid-19 cases”.

The bar at the Western Hotel was closed and another harbourside hotel had a note pinned to its window saying: “Closed until further notice.” Staff at nearby venues said it too was closed because of Covid.

Sarah Green, a theatre director who also runs an online business training the NHS, said: “It’s getting really worrying.”

She said it was difficult to know how much the G7 was to blame as there were also many tourists in the town. “But there has been a massive influx of support workers into town from major cities,” she said.

There has also been a case at the Extinction Rebellion campsite. It said: “Prior to this gathering a full Covid-safe risk assessment had been performed by Extinction Rebellion. Full liaison with Devon and Cornwall police up to the level of gold commander was carried out. The main Extinction Rebellion campsite has been organised in a Covid-safe manner.

Extinction Rebellion demonstrators protest on the beach in St Ives during the G7 summit in Cornwall
Extinction Rebellion demonstrators protest on the beach in St Ives during the G7 summit in Cornwall. Photograph: Tom Nicholson/Reuters

“An isolated suspected case of Covid was reported to us by an individual. Lateral flow tests were performed and were positive. This person subsequently left the site. Contact tracing has been performed and all identified contacts have had negative lateral flows and are now self-isolating.”

Meanwhile, an organiser of a food bank in St Ives said he expected life to get tougher for poorer local people because the focus on the town was likely to lead to house prices rising.

‘We’ve had Biden’s security and US marines here’: Cornwall crowds enjoy G7 circus

The Rev Chris Wallis said the food bank provided more than 100,000 meals for local people last year. “The G7 showcases Cornwall, but it will make the poverty worse,” he said. “House prices are already up because people are leaving the cities for the countryside. As more people move here it will be harder for local people to find homes.”

The property website Rightmove reported that searches for Carbis Bay doubled as the summit opened and last week a single parking space sold for £45,000.

Two of the St Ives food bank users are living in a caravan after their private landlord moved them out. Wallis said he also faces losing his home because his landlord believes he can get more rent for it.

It has not helped that the distribution centre for the food bank is at a chapel within the G7 ring of steel, which means that two weeks of food had to be issued to people before the summit began.

Wallis said: “It’s good they are meeting to discuss climate change and recovery from the pandemic, but holding the summit in Cornwall is probably going to make things worse here.”

The post Concerns Grow in St Ives, Cornwall over Covid Cases Linked to G7 Summit appeared first on The St Kitts Nevis Observer.

Statement by Prime Minister of St. Kitts and Nevis Dr. the Honourable Timothy Harris Friday, June 11th, 20

 

 

As Prepared for Delivery

My fellow citizens and residents:

Over the past few weeks, our beloved Country has been faced with an outbreak of a cluster of cases brought on by the coronavirus or COVID-19 pandemic, which has caused so much havoc across the world.  As a result of this outbreak, certain restrictions had been introduced in our Federation to curtail the transmission of the virus, such as a limited curfew and regulations governing public transport.

Our Ministry of Health and the Medical Team, made up of Nurses and Doctors here in St. Kitts and Nevis, have worked very hard to bring it under control. Our Health Professionals have worked around the clock to combat this outbreak and had taken aggressive action to identify, through contact tracing, robust testing and diagnosis, quarantine and isolation procedures, those who would have come into contact with, or who had actually been infected with, the disease. The virus continues to spread in our communities, for the numbers of new cases have not peaked and they continue to persist.

Yesterday, Thursday, June 10th, 2021, at an emergency meeting of the Federal Cabinet, the Chief Medical Officer, Dr. Hazel Laws, informed us that the number of positive cases continue to grow. It was reported that there were eleven (11) positive cases on Wednesday and that on Thursday we have recorded another twenty-five (25) positive cases. This brings the total number of cases to one hundred and fifty-five (155), an increase of one hundred and eleven (111) cases in a few short weeks.

This is of deep concern to me and my Government. Our number one priority in this fight against COVID-19 is, and has always been, to keep our people safe and we will do whatever it takes to protect our people.  Thankfully, sixty-one (61) of these cases are fully recovered while ninety-four (94) remain active, with four (4) hospitalized and one (1) being very ill.

We have listened carefully to the Health professionals and have been guided by the science. That is precisely why we took tough measures early to contain the virus.

After a thorough evaluation of the situation on the ground, the Cabinet has agreed that we needed to restrict the movement of people, to contain the movement of the virus. We will therefore place the Country under lockdown as of Saturday, 12th June from 6:00pm for fourteen (14) days to Saturday, 26th June in the first instance.

Under this lockdown, the Cabinet has determined that people should stay at home over the next two weeks. There shall be a curfew daily from 6:00pm to 5:00am.

It is anticipated that this will break the virus transmission cycle and cause the cases to fall. It should also give our health care workers and contact tracers time to get ahead of the virus and control its spread.

Our approach to lockdown takes into account our experiences of the past year and the reality that we have one of the best vaccination rollout programmes so far in the region.  As of yesterday, we had sixty-five (65) percent of the target population having received their first shot and twenty-nine (29) percent of our target population fully vaccinated. These significant results must be consolidated and expanded.

We understand the challenges of a lockdown, including its impact on people’s lives and livelihoods – in particular on the self-employed, on persons working in the entertainment and hospitality sectors, and within other areas of the private sector.

A lockdown may result in lost earnings, early business closures and in consequential psychosocial implications.  These are some of the things we intend to mitigate as we seek to balance the consequences of these measures against the imperative of “life first.” Our response has always been and will continue to be a “Life First Strategy.”

The new measures will give us respite that should allow for effective control in containing and restricting the spread of the virus.

The alternative to not tightening up, not restricting movement, would result in more infections, more stress on our health system, on our people, on our overall economy, and the greater likelihood of deaths.

The following measures will be implemented to contain the spread of COVID-19 within our communities.  The measures become effective from Saturday, June 12th, 2021.

  1. All essential businesses and offices may continue their business operations by allowing their employees to work remotely from home, utilizing virtual means, unless those employees are permitted to work under special exemption or are designated as being essential workers.  Where a business is unable to continue its business operations by its employees working remotely from home, the business shall cease its operations for the next two weeks in the first instance.  All persons employed within the Public Service, a Statutory Body, a State-owned Enterprise or the Courts shall work remotely from home, except as may otherwise be directed by the Cabinet Secretary.
  2. All gaming establishments will be closed.
  3. Absolutely no mass events.
  4. Beaches are to be used for the purpose of exercise only during this period.
  5. No street vending for the next fourteen (14) days in the first instance.  Vending will only be allowed at the public market with controlled spaces, where strict adherence to COVID-19 protocols must be observed.
  6. There will be no in-person dining at Restaurants and Bars. However, take-out and delivery will be permitted.
  7. Security officers will be enforcing protocols with respect to social distancing and mask wearing.  Persons not in compliance will be penalized.
  8. Ferry service operations will be subject to heightened restrictions to curtail non-essential inter-island travel.
The details of all measures will be formalized in the Statutory Rules and Orders.

These are deliberate measures to contain the spread of the virus.

I appreciate that these measures may cause some inconvenience, but the alternative may well be many more infections, serious illness and, God forbid, maybe even death to a member of our family, a friend or a loved one.  This is not an alternative we would want to experience.

We have a chance to contain the spread of the virus, and we will do just that working together.

As we seek to contain COVID-19, we all have a role to play.

That role is to comply with the non-pharmaceutical protocols and be vaccinated.

The World Health Organization has said this about COVID-19 vaccination, and I quote:

“…There is a reduced risk of developing the illness and its consequences. This immunity helps you fight the virus if exposed. Getting vaccinated may also protect people around you, because if you are protected from getting infected and from disease, you are less likely to infect someone else. This is particularly important to protect people at increased risk…”(end of quote)

Persons with increased risks include our elderly, children under the age of 18, and persons with underlying health conditions.  They are relying on us to protect them – and we must not disappoint them.

Immunization continues to be our path out of COVID’s shadow.

Unfortunately, there are still some in our Country who want to cast doubt on the validity of our Country’s Immunization Programme.

While some persons have genuine concerns, there are others who – for their own selfish and political gain – have been discouraging persons from taking the vaccine, knowing full well that the experience everywhere in the world is that mass vaccination is the most effective way to protect yourself and get countries back to normalcy and out of the shadow of the pandemic.

I urge you to actively support vaccinations, actively support the Federation’s vaccination programme and encourage your family, friends, and loved ones who should be vaccinated to do so now. Tomorrow, Saturday, vaccination sessions will continue at our Health Centres. Please take advantage of this opportunity to be vaccinated.

This outbreak shows that, in the fight against COVID-19, you cannot be complacent.

I pledge that we will continue to do all that is necessary to protect your health and that of your family and loved ones.

May God bless and protect the people of St. Kitts and Nevis.

I thank you.

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