Tag Archives: caribbean

Kite making workshop kicks off

By Monique Washington

 

More than a dozen children, from Nevis, began learning the traditional art form of making kites, an experience the Junior Minister of Education  Troy Liburd said, he hopes they will be able to pass on to others in the future.

On Monday the Ministry of Education hosted the opening ceremony for its first three-day kite making workshop at the Elizabeth Pemberton Primary School. The workshop is being facilitated by Author “Cabbage” Farrell,  Keshawn Merchant, Keshawn Reid.

Junior Minister Liburd said that the art of kite making has been a tradition on the island of Nevis. Liburd who has been participating in kite flying competition said that it is now part of his DNA and he wants it to become a part of the participants DNA as well.

“Kite flying is part of my DNA and hopefully after this experience, it would be a part of the DNA of the youngsters that will be a part of the workshop over the next three days. I hope that your experience over the next three days will be an enjoyable experience.

“I hope that the things that you learn you will take with you and you would share them with your other classmates and friends and family members. And In the future you will be the one teaching and carrying on the tradition for those that come after you,” he said.

Liburd also took the opportunity to thank the sponsors of the event, Hamilton Reserve Bank.

“Let me say a big thank you to Hamilton Reserve Bank for coming forward to provide the finances so that we can facilitate this workshop ….to teach some of our young people’s on the island of Nevis the art of kite making,” he said.

 

 

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Tourism to A & B Is Skyrocketing COVID-19

Officials contend the problem isn’t resort-goers. But locals aren’t so sure. 

Pre-pandemic, Gregory estimates his taxi brought in $1,110 a month, shuttling visitors from resorts to restaurants and beaches during peak tourist season on the Caribbean island. Now, with few of those visitors in sight, he’s barely averaging $110.

In the twin-island nation of Antigua and Barbuda, tourism is responsible for up to 60% of the GDP, making Gregory one of many locals living on a fraction of their typical income. According to Prime Minister Gaston Browne, the pandemic resulted in an 18% loss to the country’s GDP in 2020, and sent unemployment from single digits to more than 30%.

And while Browne reopened international borders in June, it took until the end of 2020—when a rash of bookings offered the first meaningful glimpse of tourism recovery—for the consequences to crystallize.

St. John's, Antigua and Barbuda
Redcliffe Quay, in St. John’s, Antigua and Barbuda.
Photographer: Sean Pavone/iStockphoto

Throughout 2020, Antigua and Barbuda’s population of 100,000 saw just 159 confirmed cases of Covid-19 and five related deaths, giving the islands of 365 beaches the appearance of a save haven. Those numbers meant that only 1 out of every 629 residents ever developed the infection in 2020; during the peak of the second wave in July, it would have taken Miami just three days to achieve roughly the same levels of virality across its population of six million.

As a result, nearly 15,000 travelers flew or boated to Antigua and Barbuda in December, more than doubling numbers from the month before. (Antigua is a convenient haven for east coast Americans, many of whom can get there via direct flights.) That began a wave of sustained tourism larger than any other throughout the pandemic.

But as more visitors arrived, so did the cases of Covid-19. Confirmed positives multiplied nearly sevenfold in 2021, reaching 1,103 as of March 25. Deaths rose to 28. As a result, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention increased its risk assessment for the country from Level 2 (moderate) to Level 4 (very high) at the beginning of March.

That’s forced Browne and his government to reckon with how closely connected international travel has been to the public health crisis—and to uncover that not all forms of travel are equally problematic.  Their findings could take on new urgency as travel professionals are recommending Caribbean trips to clients—newly vaccinated and otherwise—not just for the remainder of the spring season, but even into the typically low-season summer months.

A Tale of Two Policies

relates to Tourism in Antigua and Barbuda Is Sending Covid Skyrocketing
Jumby Bay, a bubble-like private island resort off the coast of Antigua.
Source: Oetker Collection

When foreign travelers arrive in Antigua and Barbuda, they’re allowed a certain level of “controlled flexibility.” All visitors must present a negative PCR test taken within seven days of arrival, wear masks, social distance, and obey a curfew currently set from 8 p.m. to 5 a.m.

Snorkeling with sting rays and exploring offshore islands is allowed, but only via certified, Covid-compliant vendors. Even hotels must be on a Covid-compliant list, like the luxury private island Jumby Bay or Auberge’s Malliouhana, where extensive public health protocol are followed to the letter.

Returning nationals—any citizen living abroad returning to Antigua and Barbuda—and other visitors not planning to stay at certified accommodations have it harder. They must quarantine for 14 days at a government-designated facility, such as the three-star Jolly Beach Resort, on their own dime.

For some locals, the double-standard is perceived as disproportionately affecting citizens, while allowing high-paying tourists to run free. And after videos and photos spread across social media in February showing people drinking, socializing, and dancing in close proximity at a resort on Valentine’s Day—allegedly including American celebrities—that debate kicked into fourth gear. (The links to the videos were quickly taken down, making them difficult to verify.)

relates to Tourism in Antigua and Barbuda Is Sending Covid Skyrocketing
Malliouhana, an Auberge resort in Antigua.
Source: Auberge  Resorts Collection

On radio shows and across social media, locals have also voiced frustration that they get fined for breaking rules, but bad behaving tourists barely get a slap on the wrist; one Antiguan who broke curfew, for instance, was fined $500. That growing resentment feeds the suspicion among some Antiguans and Barbudans that party-going Americans and other tourists may be to blame for their growing public health crisis.

Browne and members of his government disagree and point to returning nationals as the problem.

“Tourists are managed from the time they leave the plane to the time they [get back on the] plane,” says Minister of Tourism Charles Fernandez, adding that every person  a tourist comes in contact with—from taxi driver to tour operator—is trained in safety protocols. He says fewer than 10 people traveling solely as tourists have tested positive since the U.S. and U.K. mandated PCR testing before re-entry in January, and there’s no evidence of transmission in the hotel industry.

Both Fernandez and Browne say it was 1,500 expats who returned for the holidays—making up 7% of inbound arrivals throughout the festive season—that were flouting the rules when they briefly extended an opportunity for at-home quarantines. Compliance was so bad, the country at one point considered mandating ankle monitors. But it instead nixed at-home quarantine options in mid-January, sending Covid-19 cases back down.

This evidence has “proven conclusively that the problem is not tourists,” says Browne, though complaints of foreigners’ behavior are still circling social media.

A Caribbean Dilemma

Multi colored wood cottages and tourist souvenir shops, Long Bay Beach, Antigua
Souvenir shops typically frequented by cruisers in Long Bay Beach, Antigua.
Photographer: Roberto Moiola / Sysaworld/Moment RF

Antigua and Barbuda isn’t the only Caribbean island struggling to bring tourism back safely amid the pandemic.

Barbados recorded 400 cases in all of 2020—only to see 3,071 positives in the past three months, following a year-end tourism spike. Expats returning to Cuba, and the ensuing family reunions, were behind the country’s ballooning cases in early 2021, according to Cuban head of epidemiology Francisco Duran. (Cases in February 2021 accounted for roughly one-third of the 70,000 total Covid positives the country has recorded throughout the pandemic.) And in Jamaica, a seven-day average high of 176 daily cases in September 2020 has more than tripled into 618 daily cases as of March 23, triggering the government to tighten its window for mandatory PCR testing from 10 days pre-arrival to three.

Caribbean islands with the strictest travel protocols—or the smallest tourism footprints—are faring better.

Father and child in sea cave, Two Foot Bay, Barbuda, Caribbean
Two Foot Bay cave in Barbuda.
Photographer: Roberto Moiola / Sysaworld/Moment RF

“Basically life seems normal in Anguilla,” says Haydn Hughes, tourism minister for the island of over 18,000, where only 21 cases have been reported since the pandemic’s start. Locals there interact without masks or distancing, but all visitors must be pre-approved for travel thorough a registration process, get tested on arrival, and provide proof of a negative test between three to five days of their trip, after which they can only participate in certified activities like snorkeling and spelunking while following protocols. Returning nationals to Anguilla are constantly monitored during a 14-day quarantine. Unlike Antigua and Barbuda, it has not relaxed how quarantine periods for returning nationals are handled.

Barbuda, with a population of about 1,500 and only three hotels, has recorded only seven cases and no deaths, according to resident doctor Jeremy Deazle, who credits a strict and early adherence to Covid protocols.

But restricting tourism further in Antigua would lead to more economic loss, says Fernadez. Instead, the island has shut down bars, extended the curfew, and curtailed indoor dining.

“Our Prime Minister is very realistic,” says Eli Fuller, owner of the boat tour company Adventure Antigua, who briefly considered shutting down operations again as cases rose in February. “If we don’t have tourism here, we’re going to starve,” he explains.

Vaccine Access

Curtain Bluff Beach at Sunset
Sunset at Curtain Bluff resort, a luxury hotel in southern Antigua.
Photographer: nik wheeler/Corbis Documentary RF

In Antigua, the cruise ship terminal, usually bustling with activity, has been empty since April, absent of the more than 600,000 cruise ship passengers who arrived  from March 2019 to February 2020. That may soon change, as major cruise lines begin plotting their return to the Caribbean starting in June. Only inoculated adults will be welcome on the ships.

But Antiguans and Barbudans themselves have no clear timeline as to when they, too, will join the double-jabbed masses. Herd immunity could be achieved across the Caribbean with just 300,000 to 400,000 doses, says Browne, but vaccines have been difficult for island nations to procure, with wealthy nations buying up the supply.

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Amidst the Chaos, Haitians Fear Their Democracy is Dying

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PORT-AU-PRINCE (Reuters) – Haiti emerged from the brutal and dynastic Duvalier dictatorship to democracy 35 years ago. Now, many Haitians fear a return to autocracy as President Jovenel Moise has been steadily amassing power.

The banana exporter-turned-politician has been governing by decree for more than a year since the Caribbean nation failed to hold elections in late 2019 due to political gridlock and violent unrest.

In this time, Moise has passed dozens of decrees, some of which implemented reforms considered long overdue, like an update to the penal code. Others, though, are deeply controversial – including an order designating certain types of street protests as terrorism, and the creation of an intelligence agency accountable only to the president.

“I don’t see how there is anyone, after God, who has more power than me in the country,” Moise said in a speech last year.

Now Moise hopes a referendum in June will approve a new constitution that would strengthen the power of the executive.

Moise says he wants to end the political instability that has plagued Haiti, hampering development in the poorest country in the Americas. He has vowed not to benefit from the changes, and says he will not stand for a second term at presidential elections set for September.

But the opposition, rights experts and many Haitians say they fear Moise is paving the way for his political camp – the Tet Kale party and its allies – to retain power indefinitely.

Thousands have been taking to the streets nationwide in a new wave of anti-government protests, chanting ‘No to dictatorship! and calling for Moise’s immediate resignation and a transition government.

The protests have shut down schools and businesses, exacerbating a humanitarian crisis in a country where two-thirds of the population make less than $2 per day and gang violence has surged lately.

“This country cannot live any more in dictatorship, murders and repression,” said Kelly Bastien, a former opposition senator, taking part in a protest. “Respect for the constitution! Down with dictatorship! Down with decrees!”

Moise’s critics say his administration are using gangs to intimidate citizens, pointing to massacres in opposition-dominated neighborhoods.

Moise denies those charges. His supporters emphasize that he was democratically elected and accuse the opposition of deliberately stirring up unrest and using gang violence themselves to create chaos.

Neighboring countries have warned the situation could worsen as the referendum and presidential election approach, threatening the stability of the Caribbean.

The Dominican Republic, which shares the island of Hispaniola with Haiti but has a gross domestic product per capita six times greater, said last month it would build a wall to keep out trouble.

And, with Haitian Americans making up a large diaspora in the United States and Haiti just 700 miles (1,125 km) off Florida, the issue is attracting scrutiny in Washington.

“It’s something that we are very actively looking at,” Secretary of State Antony Blinken told a congressional hearing this month, adding that he shared concerns over “some of the authoritarian and undemocratic actions that we’ve seen.”

DEMOCRATIC MANDATE

Haiti became the first independent state of Latin America and the Caribbean in the early 19th century and first Black-led Republic when it threw off French colonial rule. It should be a beacon of freedom, historians say.

Instead, the toll of the war for independence and successive foreign interventions, as well as natural catastrophes like a major 2010 earthquake have contributed to instability, weak institutions and a blighted economy dependent on aid.

Nearly half of Haitians will need emergency humanitarian assistance this year, similar to the needs in war-torn African countries, according to the United Nations.

Fresh political turmoil erupted last month with a dispute over when Moise’s term ended that resulted in the president denouncing a coup attempt and replacing three Supreme Court judges.

Moise told the UN Security council that the opposition’s “policy of chaos” had forced the government to “take off the gloves.”

The United Nations has denounced the erosion of the separation of powers under Moise. The UN, Haiti’s Western donors, and Caribbean neighbors have urged Moise to fulfill his promise of holding legislative and presidential elections this year.

The opposition in Haiti accuses the United States – Haiti’s top foreign donor – of being lenient towards Moise, given his support for its foreign policy. His administration broke ranks with the Caribbean community (Caricom) to oppose Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro.

But Haitian officials and several Western diplomats told Reuters the situation was complex.

Moise won his mandate with 56% of the vote in 2016.

Members of the fractured opposition knew they could not win elections so sought to weaponize civil society discontent and foment unrest to gain power, they said. Opposition leaders have refused dialogue unless Moise offers to resign.

Fears of a return to dictatorship were overblown, the diplomats said.

“He’s made some worrying moves but there’s still freedom of press, with people accusing Moise of all sorts on the airwaves, and dozens of political parties with different views,” said one diplomat.

HOW TO FIX HAITI?

Haitians across the political spectrum agree the country needs an overhaul, including an update of the 1987 constitution that many say contains too many checks and balances in reaction to the Duvalier dictatorship.

Moise’s reform would allow the president to serve two consecutive terms, eliminate the role of prime minister and the senate, lower the age limit for electoral office, streamline the election cycle and allow the large diaspora to vote.

Western diplomats said these changes would help improve governability and broaden political participation.

Critics, including opposition and civil society leaders who say they were not consulted by the government, argue that the reform goes too far and is being conducted without broad input.

“A constitution is too important to be changed in the middle of a crisis by a criticized government,” said activist Emmanuela Douyon of the Nou Pap Domi (We Aren’t Sleeping) anti-corruption civil society group.

She said the legitimacy of the referendum was threatened by a patchy roll-out of new biometric ID cards, needed for voting, and the ongoing insecurity, which could hamper turnout.

Elections Minister Mathias Pierre said the opposition had a habit of trying to delegitimize elections and the more democratic way forward would be to engage in the process.

Pierre said Moise was taking measures to ensure elections could be held safely, like declaring a state of emergency in the most gang-ridden neighborhoods, and had invited the Organization of American States to send electoral observers.

While the political battle rages, ordinary Haitians are struggling to survive. Mimose, 42, who declined to give her last name for fear of retaliation, is one of many street vendors whose work has been disrupted by the unrest.

“The authorities need to unite to allow the population to survive,” said the mother-of-four. “As long as we are in this crisis, nothing will work.”

Reporting by Andre Paultre in Port-au-Prince and Sarah Marsh in Havana; Editing by Daniel Flynn and Rosalba O’Brien

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Italian Mobster Caught Lying Low for 7 Years in DR

A suspected Italian gangster has been caught in the Dominican Republic after seven years on the run, thanks to law-enforcement officers recognizing his tattoos on a YouTube cooking channel he and his wife started, the BBC reported.
Marc Feren Claude Biart, 53, went on the lam in 2014 when he was accused of trafficking cocaine into the Netherlands on behalf of the Cacciola clan of the ‘Ndrangheta mafia, according to Agence France-Presse.
The ‘Ndrangheta is described by AFP as Italy’s biggest mafia organization, which controls most of the cocaine entering Europe.
The police said they caught Biart after recognizing him in Italian cooking videos he and his wife had posted to YouTube. Though Biart never showed his face, his tattoos were visible, and police were able to identify him that way, the BBC reported.
Officials said Biart was laying low in the Dominican Republic when he and his wife started making the videos. He was taken into custody by Interpol agents in the Caribbean country on March 24.
Biart was arrested on March 24 and extradited back to Italy.
According to Calabria News, Biart initially fled to Costa Rica when an arrest warrant was issued in 2014, but eventually settled in Boca Chica, in the Dominican Republic, where there is a large Italian expat community.
La Repubblica reported that Biart lived humbly, so as to avoid attention.
Biart’s arrest is part of a new Interpol initiative aimed at taking down the ‘Ndrangheta mafia, called I-CAN — Interpol Cooperation Against ‘Ndrangheta, according to Calabria News. Italian police forces are working with 10 countries around the world to help combat the mafia.

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PAHO Warns About Lowering COVID Safeguards

PAN American Health Organization (PAHO) director Dr Carissa Etienne is urging member countries to maintain coronavirus (COVID-19) protocols and safeguards, even as vaccinations get under way in a number of territories.

Speaking during PAHO’s recent COVID-19 digital briefing, Dr Etienne said that maintaining the measures is imperative, particularly against the background of increases in infections and deaths in several countries and especially in light of the upcoming Easter holidays, traditionally marked by heightened activities.

 

While acknowledging that cases were plateauing and declining in some regional states, Dr Etienne voiced concern that they were spiralling in others.

 

She described the latter scenario as an “active public health emergency” which indicates that “the COVID-19 virus is not receding, nor is the pandemic starting to go away”.

 

The director said that while the deployment of vaccines through the World Health Organization (WHO) COVID-19 Vaccine Global Access (COVAX) facility is under way, and all participating countries in Latin America and the Caribbean are expected to receive their first shipments by early April, those allocations are not adequate to protect the vulnerable groups being initially targeted.

 

“Some countries… have received zero doses of vaccines through COVAX, thus far [while] other countries are getting enough to vaccinate a mere 20 per cent of their populations,” the director pointed out.

 

As such, Dr Etienne said the region remains “a very long way” from achieving the 70 per cent of countries’ populations being targeted for vaccination to control transmissions and attain herd immunity.

 

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“Until we get more than 70 per cent of our populations vaccinated, we must endeavour to continue and practise the smart, effective and targeted public health measures and do what works … like the wearing of masks, frequent handwashing and sanitising, avoiding crowded places, physical distancing, and covering of our sneeze or coughs,” she emphasised.

 

The director urged member countries’ governments to ensure that these measures are effected and to be “cautious about lifting restrictions” as this could spur new increases and hospitalisations.

 

“Vaccines are coming, but they are still several months away for most people in our region. Until they arrive, we need to continue the course, not let our guards down, and follow the guidance of [our] local health authorities,” Dr Etienne added.

 

 

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Child Trafficking at Haitian-Dominican Border

BY KATYA BLESZYNSKA
Children from Haiti are being trafficked to the Dominican Republic in large numbers, with girls mainly exploited for sex and boys forced to work, according to media reports.

On March 24, a Haitian national accused of trafficking and sexually abusing teenage girls was arrested in the Dominican beach town of Puerto Plata, a popular tourist destination, El Nuevo Diario reported. The 40-year-old man had a warrant out for his arrest in Haiti for recruiting girls and forcing them into prostitution. Two of the victims – ages 13 and 16 – said that they were taken against their will and forced to have sex with foreigners.

Spanish news outlet El País also recently detailed how Haitian children are smuggled across the border and then forced to work, shining shoes, cleaning car windows, and begging in the streets — only to have their proceeds taken from them. In illegal gambling rings, young boys are pitted against each other in dangerous street fights, El País reported.

According to Haitian child protection legislation, anyone below the age of 18 can be considered a victim of child trafficking.

“There is no migration control, no possibility or intention to combat child trafficking or any form of trafficking,” said Sylvestre Fils, director of the Observatory of Migration and Transfrontier Trafficking, a non-governmental organization based in the Haitian border city of Ouanaminthe.

Dominican troops at border crossings accept bribes of 500 to 2,000 pesos (about $9 to $35) to turn a blind eye to the smuggling of contraband and people, he told El País.

In an attempt to crack down on illicit cross-border activity, including human smuggling, Dominican Republic President Luis Abinader announced that the country will begin building a 400-kilometer wall across the entirety of its shared border with Haiti later this year. It will be equipped with facial recognition camera and radars, he said.

Though child trafficking from Haiti to the Dominican Republic has long been an issue, trafficking rings appear to be taking advantage of the coronavirus pandemic, which has worsened poverty and hunger in Haiti, to target more children.

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Associated Press WorldView: Biden Warns, Pence Hopes, Geo. Floyd, Suez Blockage, More

March 30, 2021

Alternate text

 

President Joe Biden and a top health official have warned that too many Americans are declaring victory over the coronavirus too soon.

At the trial of an ex-police officer charged in the death of George Floyd, an onlooker described seeing Floyd “slowly fade away.” The AP also explains the key role video will play in the trial.

And authorities are asking what went wrong on the giant ship that got stuck in the Suez Canal.

Also this morning:

  • Around the world, garbage scavengers struggle to get COVID shots.
  • Spain’s capital has turned into a party hot spot amid European lockdowns.
  • Singaporeans give migrant workers tickets to ride giant Ferris wheel.

MIKE CORDER

The Associated Press

The Hague, Netherlands

The Rundown

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WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden and a top health official warned that too many Americans are declaring virus victory too quickly, appealing for mask requirements and other restrictions to be……Read More

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MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — A man who was among onlookers shouting at a Minneapolis police officer to get off George Floyd last May was to continue testifying Tuesday, a day after he described seeing Floyd……Read More

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CHICAGO (AP) — It’s clear video will be the central focus at the trial that began Monday for a white former Minneapolis police officer charged with killing George Floyd — and not just the widely… …Read More

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WASHINGTON (AP) — When former President Donald Trump was asked to list those he considers the future leaders of the Republican Party, he quickly rattled off a list of names, including Florida Gov…….Read More

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SUEZ, Egypt (AP) — Experts on Tuesday boarded a colossal container ship that had been stuck for nearly a week in the Suez Canal before it was freed as questions swirled about the grounding that… …Read More

OTHER TOP STORIES

NEW DELHI (AP) — The scavengers wait patiently for a dump truck to tip the trash on the summit of the landfill outside New Delhi. Armed with plastic bags, they plunge thei…Read More

BEIJING (AP) — China’s top legislature approved amendments to Hong Kong’s constitution on Tuesday that will give Beijing more control over the make-up of the city’s legisl…Read More

MADRID (AP) — In Madrid, the real party starts at 11 p.m. after the bars close — and curfew kicks in. That’s when young, polyglot groups of revelers from Italy, the Nether…Read More

SINGAPORE (AP) — The capsules of the Ferris wheel in Singapore were peppered with rain. Not great for a bird’s eye view of the city. But the migrant workers riding the Si…Read More

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World Leaders Call for International Pandemic Treaty

(CNN) Global leaders have called for a new treaty to help the world prepare for future pandemics, in a warning against rising vaccine nationalism.

More than 20 national leaders, including France’s Emmanuel Macron, Britain’s Boris Johnson and Germany’s Angela Merkel, wrote a piece published in several media outlets on Tuesday warning that it is a question of “not if, but when” the next health crisis strikes.

The piece calls for greater international co-operation and says countries should avoid isolationism and nationalism.

“There will be other pandemics and other major health emergencies. No single government or multilateral agency can address this threat alone. The question is not if, but when,” the article states.

Coronavirus likely came from animal, not a lab, WHO draft report finds

The stark warning comes as countries and trade blocs continue to clash over vaccine supply. Some of those who signed the letter have been involved in recent sniping over vaccine shipments.

The European Union and the UK are in a long-running war of words over drugmaker AstraZeneca’s contracts to supply its shot, while some EU member states have repeatedly expressed their frustration with the bloc’s stuttering vaccine rollout.

But the group which signed Tuesday’s article struck a markedly different tone, stressing that unity and co-ordination was key for future pandemics.

Among its authors is World Health Organization (WHO) chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, who has previously warned against vaccine nationalism and a “me first’ approach to inoculation.

The world leaders wrote that they are “committed to ensuring universal and equitable access to safe, efficacious and affordable vaccines, medicines and diagnostics for this and future pandemics.”

“We believe that nations should work together towards a new international treaty for pandemic preparedness and response,” they added.

To date, more than 127 million coronavirus cases have been officially recorded worldwide, according to Johns Hopkins University’s tally. The virus has killed more than 2.7 million people and has brought parts of the world to a near standstill over the past year.

The joint article comes as Europe grapples with a third wave of the pandemic and cases surge in Brazil and India.

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Brazil: Under Fire, Bolsonaro Shakes-Up Cabinet as COVID Hits Young People

RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — Amid a slide in his popularity, President Jair Bolsonaro has shaken up the Cabinet, including replacing Brazil’s foreign minister who was widely criticized for an anti-globalism stance and accused by some of aggravating the pandemic by alienating vaccine suppliers.

Bolsonaro tweeted Monday that he was shifting three other Cabinet ministers to new posts — chief of staff, defense minister and attorney general — and naming a new justice and public security minister and a new government secretary.

But the biggest change was moving Ernesto Araújo out as foreign minister. Araújo had most recently been under fire for comments and actions that critics said impeded faster access to coronavirus vaccines as the coronavirus batters Brazil.

It was just the latest Cabinet turmoil for the embattled Bolsonaro. The president in mid-March replaced the health minister, whose tenure coincided with most of Brazil’s 314,000 COVID-19 deaths and became the target of fierce criticism. In February, Bolsonaro tapped a retired army general to take over state-run oil behemoth Petrobras, seeking to appeal to his constituency of truck drivers who had threatened to strike over fuel price increases.

Aráujo was subjected to a nearly five-hour Senate hearing last week to defend his ministry’s actions during the pandemic. Center-right Sen. Tasso Jereissati told the minister that he no longer had the standing to remain in the post and that his exit would end the help end the crisis.

Maurício Santoro, professor of political science and international relations at the University of the State of Rio de Janeiro, said the Senate attacks on Araújo became too overpowering for Bolsonaro to withstand.

“The vaccine issue was the spark that lit the fire,″ Santoro said. ″The general context is Araújo failed in all the most important tasks he had to do as a minister. Brazil is facing bad political dialogue with its biggest trade partners — China, the U.S., the EU and Argeninta — all for different reasons.

The new foreign minister is Carlos França, who like Araújo is a career diplomat. But unlike Araújo, França isn’t a follower of far-right ideologue Olavo de Carvalho, the newspaper O Globo reported. He is an adviser to Bolsonaro and former ceremonial chief at the presidential palace and is considered to be pragmatic rather than ideological.

Araújo has denied climate change, which he calls a leftist dogma, and he made comments perceived as critical of China, Brazil’s biggest trading partner. In just over two years as foreign minister, he repeatedly dismayed foreign policy veterans by breaking with Brazil’s tradition of multilateralism and adopting policy based on ideology, particularly aligning with the U.S. during the Trump administration.

On Saturday, a group of 300 diplomats published a letter saying Araújo had tarnished Brazil’s image abroad and demanded his removal, according to the newspaper Folha de S.Paulo.

“Don’t let globalism kill your soul in the name of competitiveness,″ Araújo said at his swearing-in ceremony in a speech that was seen as a rallying cry for nationalism. ″Don’t believe globalism when it says having economic efficiency means suffocating the country’s soul and not loving the country.″

Brazil was also one of the last countries in the world to recognize U.S. President Joe Biden’s election victory, and Araújo declined to attend his inauguration. Instead, he took a vacation.

Santoro, the professor, said Araújo’s climate change position was an impediment to Brazil dealing with the U.S. and Europe on curbing Amazon deforestation. That issue has been the focus of European governments and many foreign investors, and Biden has said he intends to prioritize the issue.

Early in the pandemic, Araújo wrote on a personal blog that globalists were seeking to use the coronavirus as a means to subvert liberal democracy and market economics in order to install communism and enslave humans. He made other comments that angered China.

Clamor for the minister’s resignation grew as Brazil’s COVID-19 death toll surged this year and the nation suffered delays in getting active ingredients needed to bottle vaccines, mostly from China. Slow arrival was widely speculated to be political retribution by the Asian power, although both Araújo and Chinese authorities in Brazil claimed technical reasons.

“When the country needed Araújo and the foreign relations ministry to operate to guarantee what we needed to vaccinate people, they kept playing at highly ideological foreign policy,″ said Hussein Kalout, formerly Brazil’s special secretary for strategic affairs and now a research scholar at Harvard University.

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COVID 19 Rising Among Brazil’s Young

Sao Paulo (CNN)  Covid-19 cases are on the rise among Brazil’s younger population, a Brazilian research institute has found, as the country grapples with a deadly resurgence of the virus.

“The country is in a situation of collapse of the health system. At the same time, the pandemic has been gaining new characteristics affecting younger age groups: 30 to 39 years, 40 to 49 years and 50 to 59 years,” reads the report published Friday by Brazil’s Oswaldo Cruz Foundation (Fiocruz).

During the first part of Brazil’s struggle with the coronavirus, it was the elderly who made up the majority of those who were getting sick from Covid-19.

But since the beginning of the country’s second wave of Covid-19 on November 2020, demand has increased for health services by symptomatic young patients in Brazil, Fiocruz researchers said.

The new report analyzed weekly data from the country’s Health Ministry from January 1 to March 13, 2021. It found an increase of more than 500% in infections among people aged 30 to 39. There was a more than 600% increase among people 40 to 49 and more than 500% among people 50 to 59 in the same period.

Meanwhile, the total number of coronavirus cases nationwide among all age groups grew by 319% during that same window of time, the report found.

Although increasing numbers of younger people are becoming infected with the virus, Covid-19 deaths are still more common among older people, the report noted.

Why are more young people getting sick with Covid-19 in Brazil?

The new analysis comes as the country struggles to contain the pandemic, and as local coronavirus variant P.1 rips through the country. On Monday, Brazil’s President Jair Bolsonaro changed six top ministers, including officials charged with defense and foreign affairs, after officially ousting the country’s health minister last week.

More than 12,573,615 cases have been confirmed since the pandemic began, and 313,866 Covid-related deaths have been confirmed.

On Thursday last week, Brazil’s Health Ministry announced that more than 100,000 new Covid-19 cases had been confirmed in that day alone — the country’s highest such figure since the pandemic began.

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Mexico: Outrage Over Police Murder of Salvadorean Woman

MEXICO CITY (AP) — Outrage grew in Mexico and El Salvador as Mexican authorities said Monday that an autopsy of a Salvadoran woman who died in police custody confirmed that police broke her neck.

President Andrés Manuel López Obrador flatly said that Victoria Esperanza Salazar was murdered by police in the Caribbean resort of Tulum.

Victoria Esperanza Salazar let out a scream Saturday afternoon as a female police officer knelt on her back to cuff her hands behind her. Salazar was face down on the street and barefoot. Her feet flailed. A couple people passed slowly by on a bicycle. There were food stands a few yards away.

Clips of video cobbled together give no sense of how much time elapsed. Then three other officers are seen standing around her motionless body still facedown, chatting casually. Later, three officers lift her still handcuffed body into the back of a police pickup truck and drive away.

Video circulating on social media does not show events before Salazar was face down on the street with the officer on top of her.

An autopsy concluded that Salazar died from a broken neck. The examination found, “a fracture of part of the upper spinal column produced by the rupture of the first and second vertebra which caused the loss of the victim,” Quintana Roo State Prosecutor Oscar Montes de Oca said in a video.

The injuries were “compatible y coincide with submission maneuvers applied to the victim during her detention” and demonstrate a “disproportionate” use of force. He said his office was preparing femicide charges against the four police officers.

Salazar had been living in Mexico for some years on a “humanitarian visa,” El Salvador President Nayib Bukele said. “She was brutally murdered by Tulum police officers in Quintana Roo, Mexico,” the president wrote. He said the government would support Salazar’s two daughters.

“I see thousands of outraged Mexicans, demanding justice for our compatriot,” Bukele said. “They are as outraged as we are. Let us not forget that it was not the Mexican people who committed this crime, but rather some criminals in the Tulum police.”

López Obrador swore Monday that those responsible would be punished.

“She was brutally treated and murdered,” López Obrador said. “It is an event that fills us with pain and shame.”

On Monday, a small potted plant and a couple candles sat outside the convenience store where Salazar was killed. Someone wrote “Here they killed Victoria” in large purple letters on the pavement.

Salazar left Sonsonate, about an hour west of San Salvador, five years ago to look for better opportunities and escape the area’s street violence, said her mother Rosibel Emerita Arriaza. She was a single mother of two daughters.

She left her daughters with her family and made her way to Mexico. In the southern Mexico city of Tapachula, near the Guatemala border, Salazar requested and received refugee status. Mexico’s National Immigration Institute confirmed that Monday.

Once she had legal status she moved to the beach resort town of Tulum on Mexico’s Caribbean coast. A more relaxed alternative to Cancun and Playa del Carmen, Tulum had drawn crowds and was struggling with rapid growth. Salazar found work cleaning in hotels and brought her daughters, ages 16 and 15, to be with her.

On Monday, Arriaza was working with Salvadoran authorities on getting her daughter’s body repatriated. She also planned to travel to Mexico to be reunited with her granddaughters

“I want justice for my daughter, because it isn’t fair what they did to her,” Arriaza said. “She was a woman who wasn’t armed, just for being a woman and I don’t know what happened.”

Following the autopsy results, Quintana Roo state security chief Lucio Hernández Gutiérrez said that in addition to the four police officers involved in the events, Tulum’s police chief was also fired Monday.

He called the video of the killing “shameful and conclusive.”

Tulum Mayor Victor Mas Tah said “I understand and share the outrage and pain of all of society.” He said the former police officers would be jailed in the coming hours.

Manuel Barradas, owner of a small convenience store, said Salazar appeared “off” to him so when she approached his store he barred her entry. Authorities made no mention of Salazar being under the influence of anything in discussing the autopsy. Police detained her a short time later.

Protest marches were scheduled for later Monday in Tulum, Mexico City and San Salvador.

The scenes were reminiscent of the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis in 2020. Floyd was declared dead after a white police officer pressed his knee against the Black man’s neck for about nine minutes, holding his position even after Floyd went limp.

Floyd’s death was captured on widely seen bystander video and sparked sometimes violent protests in Minneapolis and beyond, leading to a nationwide reckoning on race. The trial for that officer began Monday in Minneapolis.

The Quintana Roo prosecutor’s office said four Tulum police officers — three men and one woman — were under investigation for their probable involvement in the Saturday evening incident. They said fingerprints and forensic evidence were being examined in the case.

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