Tag Archives: caribbean

Calls for Proposals – Small Grants Programme

BASSETERRE. St.Kitts — Officials from the Small Grants Programme, St. Kitts and Nevis, encourage civil society organizations, Non-Government Organizations, community groups and associations to apply for grant funding to undertake projects that contribute to biodiversity conservation and preservation while providing livelihood opportunities for local communities.

Applications should be received no later than Friday, April 30.

To request additional information on the application process, please email il*********@**dp.org or il********@***ps.org.

Information can also be requested by calling or sending a WhatsApp message to 1-869-662-3135.

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Small Grants Programme National Steering Committee

BASSETERRE, St. Kitts — The GEF Small Grants Programme St. Kitts and Nevis wishes to invite suitably qualified persons from non-governmental and community-based organizations to apply to serve on its National Steering Committee for a three-year term.

The position is 100 percent voluntary, which means members are not paid to serve on the committee.

Interested persons are asked to submit a one-page document outlining their skills and competencies to meet the requirements of the position. The deadline for receipt of applications is Saturday, March 20.

For more information please contact Illis Watts, National Coordinator at 869-662-3135 or email il*********@**dp.org or il********@***ps.org.

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Variety magazine features in-depth story about Nevis tourism

CHARLESTOWN, Nevis — Variety, an industry-leading magazine, and standard-bearer for all things related to entertainment has featured Nevis’ groundbreaking agreement with MSR Media to shoot six films on the island.

Senior Variety Editor Anna Marie de la Fuente, interviewed Nevis Tourism Authority Chief Executive Officer Jadine Yarde and MSR Media Producer Philippe Martinez for the in-depth story, and quoted from a statement issued by the Hon. Premier Mark Brantley on the government’s desire to partner with filmmakers to develop a film industry on Nevis.
See: https://variety.com/2021/film/spotlight/msr-nevis-1234920722-1234920722/

The article describes the stringent health and safety protocols developed and implemented by the government of the Federation of St. Kitts and Nevis to protect both visitors and citizens. It noted there have been very few COVID-19 cases and no deaths. It said Nevis is one of the safest places in the world. Producer Philippe Martinez acknowledged that Nevis ticked all the boxes for health and safety protocols that would make the film production possible.

The Nevis Tourism Authority assisted in facilitating the movement of the production crews to the island. Its efforts included negotiating preferential hotel rates and access to multiple locations across the island. Filming of the romantic comedy titled “One Year Off” directed by Brad Weston and co-written by Kate Wood, Martinez and Stewart Thompson has already started on island.

According to the Yarde, the production will generate at least 150 jobs, and inject US $1 million dollars into the economy. More importantly, it will increase everyone’s morale as tourism has been halved due to the pandemic.

Additionally, MSR Media has announced the creation of an education program to train local people in a variety of on-set roles in an effort to boost the island’s production infrastructure. They will be hiring at least 30 local actors who will be given acting classes by a Shakespearean actor who has been living in Nevis for the past 20 years.

Variety is the most authoritative and trusted source of entertainment business news, reaching an audience of affluent influencers. For 115 years, influential producers, executives and talent in entertainment have turned to Variety for expert film, TV, digital, music, and theatre business analysis and insights.

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180 Parliaments, Legislatures celebrate Commonwealth Day 2021

LONDON –- The Commonwealth Parliamentary Association (CPA) is celebrating Commonwealth Day 2021 across the CPA’s nine Regions and over 180 Parliaments and Legislatures. The 2021 Commonwealth Day theme focuses on ‘Delivering a Common Future: Connecting, Innovating, Transforming,’ which offers opportunities for the people, Parliaments, governments and institutions of the Commonwealth to connect and work together at many levels through far-reaching and deep-rooted networks of friendship and goodwill.

Commonwealth Day is celebrated annually on the second Monday of March. Although Commonwealth Day celebrations may be limited this year due the current global pandemic, the CPA and its CPA Branches are still hosting a series of online and virtual events.

Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, Head of the Commonwealth and Patron of the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association, released her Commonwealth Day message in which she spoke of the diversity of the people and countries that make up the Commonwealth and its ability to deliver a common future for all.

The traditional Westminster Abbey Service for Commonwealth Day was cancelled this year due to COVID-19 restrictions.

“Whilst experiences of the last year have been different across the Commonwealth, stirring examples of courage, commitment and selfless dedication to duty have been demonstrated in every Commonwealth nation and territory, notably by those working on the front line who have been delivering health care and other public services in their communities,” said the message from HM Queen Elizabeth II.

“We have also taken encouragement from remarkable advances in developing new vaccines and treatments. The testing times experienced by so many have led to a deeper appreciation of the mutual support and spiritual sustenance we enjoy by being connected to others. The need to maintain greater physical distance, or to live and work largely in isolation, has, for many people across the Commonwealth, been an unusual experience.

“In our everyday lives, we have had to become more accustomed to connecting and communicating via innovative technology -which has been new to some of us -with conversations and communal gatherings, including Commonwealth meetings, conducted online, enabling people to stay in touch with friends, family, colleagues, and counterparts who they have not been able to meet in person.

“Increasingly, we have found ourselves able to enjoy such communication, as it offers an immediacy that transcends boundaries or division, helping any sense of distance to disappear.

“We have all continued to appreciate the support, breadth of experiences and knowledge that working together brings, and I hope we shall maintain this renewed sense of closeness and community.

“Looking forward, relationships with others across the Commonwealth will remain important as we strive to deliver a common future that is sustainable and more secure, so that the nations and neighbourhoods in which we live, wherever they are located, become healthier and happier places for us all,” concluded Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II.

Hon. Emilia Monjowa Lifaka, MP, Chairperson of the CPA International Executive Committee and Deputy Speaker of the National Assembly of Cameroon.

Hon. Emilia Monjowa Lifaka, MP, Chairperson of the CPA International Executive Committee and Deputy Speaker of the National Assembly of Cameroon released a Commonwealth Day message on behalf of the CPA and said:

“The COVID-19 pandemic may have physically separated many of us this year, but the bond that connects the various peoples of the Commonwealth remains strong. Now more than ever, we must remain united and act collectively in order to deliver a common future. With our membership of over 17,000 Parliamentarians and parliamentary staff spread across more than 180 Parliaments and Legislatures, the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association (CPA) continues to promote the importance of parliamentary democracy and its value within our societies and our global community.”

To view the CPA Chairperson’s message go to: www.cpahq.org/cpahq/youtube.

“I am pleased to celebrate Commonwealth Day 2021 – my first as the CPA’s Secretary-General,” said Stephen Twigg. “Today, we have an opportunity to reflect on the diversity of the Commonwealth. In particular, as it is also International Women’s Day, I pay tribute to the hard work of women Parliamentarians across the Commonwealth. Additionally, I am delighted to highlight the importance of engaging young people and the relaunch of CPA’s Youth Engagement Pack. As we look to the future, the Commonwealth has a responsibility to listen to diverse voices including women and young people.”

The CPA Headquarters Secretariat has updated and re-launched its Commonwealth Day Youth Engagement Pack in advance of Commonwealth Day. The pack was first launched in 2020 to support parliamentary outreach activities on Commonwealth Day. It has been updated with ideas and resources that provide options for virtual activities in recognition of the lockdowns currently in place in many Commonwealth jurisdictions due to COVID-19. The pack features:
• A handbook outlining potential activities for Commonwealth Day;
• A series of tools to use on Commonwealth Day, such as a quiz, factsheet and activity cards; and
• A leaflet with further information on this year’s Commonwealth Day theme.

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Social media personal jingle contest to encourage COVID-19 vaccinations

CHARLESTOWN, Nevis — Hon. Mark Brantley, Premier of Nevis and Senior Minister of Health in the Nevis Island Administration (NIA) has launched a social media jingle contest to encourage people on Nevis to be vaccinated against COVID-19.

The Premier posted the jingle challenge on his Facebook page on March 7. Hon. Brantley said he was inspired to come up with a fun and creative way to spread the positive word about being vaccinated against the virus.

“As we fight COVID-19 together we have to ensure that our people get vaccinated,” said Brantley. “I am inviting people to post their jingles to my page encouraging them to get the COVID-19 vaccine.”

The rules of the contest are: competitors must reside on Nevis; jingles must be in English; and competitors must post their jingle and a photo of their vaccination card showing they have taken the first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine.

Those under 18-years-old must post their jingle and a photo of at least one of their parents or guardians’ vaccination card showing they have taken the first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine.

The jingles can be any genre of music; no profanity is allowed.

The winner will be determined by the most real ‘likes’ generated.

The Premier is offering a cash prize of EC $2,000 for the winner, EC $1,250 for second place, EC $750 for third place and EC $50 for those who enter but do not place.

Brantley said the contest will run until March 31, and the winner will be announced on April 2.

“Post your jingle to my page and get all your friends and everyone else to ‘like’ and win some money,” said Brantley. “Please note that no public funds are being expended for this contest.”

The NIA rolled out its COVID-19 vaccination program on the island on February 24, beginning with Premier Brantley and other Cabinet members, in addition to senior health officials.

As of March 5, 927 persons on Nevis had taken their first dose of the Oxford-AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine.

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NEVLEC issues schedule for planned power outages from March 9-11

CHARLESTOWN, Nevis — The following is a scheduled from the Nevis Electricity Company Limited (NEVLEC) of planned power outages from March 7 to 11 to facilitate its maintenance programme:

Tuesday March 9

NEVLEC wishes to advise customers in Jessups, in the area of the Jessups New Testament Church and areas in close proximity that there will be an outage from 9:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. to facilitate vegetation management.

Wednesday March 10

NEVLEC wishes to advise customers from Paradise to Fern Hill and areas in close proximity, that there will be an outage from 9:00 a.m. to12:00 p.m. to facilitate High Voltage line maintenance.

Wednesday March 10

NEVLEC wishes to advise customers in Colquhoun, in the vicinity of the Cotton Ground Police Station, that there will be an outage from 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. to facilitate upgrade of Low Voltage lines.

Thursday March 11

NEVLEC wishes to advise customers from Liburd Hill – Barnaby, that there will be an outage from 9:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. to facilitate transfer of Low Voltage lines to new poles.

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NIA Gender Affairs Minister Brandy-Williams delivers International Women’s Day Address

CHARLESTOWN, Nevis — The following is an address by Hon. Hazel Brandy Williams, Junior Minister of Health and Gender Affairs in the Nevis Island Administration (NIA) on the occasion of International Women’s Day 2021 observed on March 8.

“As Minister of Gender Affairs in the Nevis Island Administration, and as a woman, I look forward each year with pride and great anticipation to the month of March, as March 8th is celebrated around the globe as International Women’s Day,” said Hon. Brandy. “It is a day marked especially to laude and herald the achievements of women, internationally, regionally, and locally; across every level of society and in all sectors of community development.

“The United Nation’s theme for International Women’s Day 2021 is, “Women in Leadership: Achieving an Equal Future in a COVID-19 World.” Strikingly, this theme not only highlights our responsibility to the wellbeing and security of women and girls throughout the extent of this pandemic, but it underscores the crucial role that women and girls must be allowed to play in holistic contributing solutions to this international problem.

“The Department of Gender Affairs has grown over the years to celebrate International Women’s Day with various engaging and highly anticipated activities throughout the month of March. However, as we live currently in a COVID-19 world, this year’s activities will be scaled back yet we will endeavour to have them equally as effective in spreading the message of equality as we have done in the past.

“One of the highlights of this year’s celebrations will be the awarding of women who have been on the front-line of our country’s fight against COVID-19: nurses, police officers, supermarket attendants, hotel employees, bankers, response team volunteers, and others. We are eager to recognize their selflessness as they courageously did their part in keeping us safe.

“The truth is that while great strides have been made over the years as it relates to women empowerment, there is still quite a way to go before we realize true gender equality. The pandemic has highlighted this as it has been said that many international decision-making bodies charged with countering the coronavirus had little to no female representation. I am most pleased to say that in St. Kitts and Nevis we suffered no such plight.

“Being ahead of the international scene in this regard, our federal and local COVID-19 task forces benefited from the commendable leadership and insights of women such as Dr. Hazel Laws and Dr. Judy Nisbett, respectively.

“When women are afforded an equal opportunity to contribute to every sphere of society no one gets left behind.

“To all our men I say, as we mark International Women’s Day do your part in supporting women in leadership, speak out against Gender-based violence, celebrate those women around you and encourage your daughters to dream big and to achieve more. We are in this together so both men and women must play their part.

“As we consider women and leadership, we must not think of it as an endeavour for women to ‘take over’, but as a bid for women to lead, alongside our male counterparts, thus making valuable contributions by way of our unique perspectives, insights and skillsets.

“I feel it important for me to also point out that women, just as in the case of men, women, should seek to be leaders for the right reason – to serve others. Not for fame, or power, or self-aggrandizement but to serve others. This is the only way we will be able to impact lives for the better and help our nation, communities and families.

“I wish to say to each woman and girl that there is not only a leader in you but there is a leader in you that the world is waiting on. However, the only way for you to grow into a leader that positively impacts the world and unlock the hidden leaders in others is to begin cultivating leadership qualities such as honesty, selflessness, dependability, and respect.

“It would have been these same qualities that propelled to prominence outstanding regional leaders such as Dame Mary Eugenia Charles, female Prime Minister of Dominica, who stood head and shoulder among her male counterparts making solid and lasting decisions at a time when female leadership at that level was even more scarce than today.

“Here in St. Kitts and Nevis we have had trail blazers such as Dame Constance Mitcham, first female Member of Parliament (MP); and Jacinth Henry-Martin, MP and diplomat, as well as Nurse Gene Harris; and Nurse Patsy Hanley pioneering the way right here on Nevis.

“But leadership need not be thought of as merely political. The contributions of women in every sphere of our nation’s life is crucial for our collective success. Many of us have witnessed other outstanding woman community leaders such as Mrs. Olvis Dyer, female generals of faith such as the Rev. Eunice Griffin, outstanding farmers such as Emontine Liburd and sporting champions such as Mrs. Jeanette Grell-Hull. This International Women’s Day we honour and salute them and the thousands of women who lead us, at home, at school, at the market, in business or on the street corner, into greater heights of success and well-being.

“This International Women’s Day let us remember that women, realizing their full potential is key to the overall development and recovery of our society and our beloved country where peace abounds.

“We encourage, recognize and celebrate women and girls as they take their place and leave their mark as trailblazers. Happy International Women’s day 2021,” concluded Brandy.

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Equatorial Guinea: 20 Dead, 600 Injured in Armory Explosion

A series of explosions at a military barracks in Equatorial Guinea killed at least 20 people and wounded more than 600 others on Sunday, authorities said.

President Teodoro Obiang Nguema said the explosion at 4pm local time was due to the “negligent handling of dynamite” in the military barracks located in the neighbourhood of Mondong Nkuantoma in Bata.

“The impact of the explosion caused damage in almost all the houses and buildings in Bata,” the president said in a statement, which was in Spanish.

The defence ministry released a statement late Sunday saying that a fire at a weapons depot in the barracks caused the explosion of high-calibre ammunition. It said the provisional toll was 20 dead and 600 injured, adding that the cause of the explosions will be fully investigated.

The country’s president said the fire may have been due to residents burning the fields surrounding the barracks.

State television showed a huge plume of smoke rising above the explosion site as crowds fled, with many people crying out “we don’t know what happened, but it is all destroyed.”

Images on local media seen by The Associated Press show people screaming and crying running through the streets amid debris and smoke. Roofs of houses were ripped off and wounded people were being carried into a hospital.

Equatorial Guinea, an African country of 1.3 million people located south of Cameroon, was a colony of Spain until it gained its independence in 1968. Bata has roughly 175,000 inhabitants.

Earlier, the Health Ministry had tweeted that 17 were killed and the president’s statement mentioned 15 dead.

The Health Ministry made a call for blood donors and volunteer health workers to go to the Regional Hospital de Bata, one of three hospitals treating the wounded.

The ministry said its health workers were treating the injured at the site of the tragedy and in medical facilities but feared people were still missing under the rubble.

The blasts were a shock for the oil-rich Central African nation. Foreign Minister Simeón Oyono Esono Angue met with foreign ambassadors and asked for aid.

“It is important for us to ask our brother countries for their assistance in this lamentable situation since we have a health emergency (due to COVID-19) and the tragedy in Bata,” he said.

A doctor calling into TVGE, who went by his first name, Florentino, said the situation was a “moment of crisis” and that the hospitals were overcrowded. He said a sports centre set up for COVID-19 patients would be used to receive minor cases.

The radio station, Radio Macuto, said on Twitter that people were being evacuated within four kilometres of the city because the fumes might be harmful.

Following the blast, the Spanish Embassy in Equatorial Guinea recommended on Twitter that “Spanish nationals stay in their homes.”

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Jamaica: 8 Dead in Weekend Killing Outrage

MONTEGO BAY, St James ( Jamaica Observer)— A 16-year-old student was among eight persons fatally shot while at least three others, including a 13-year-old boy, were left nursing gunshot wounds as criminals went on the rampage across the western parishes of St James and Westmoreland over the weekend.

The dead student has been identified as Omarion Campbell of Peace View, St James.

According to police reports, about 5:00 pm on Saturday the two teenage boys went to a shop in their community when men armed with handguns and rifles entered and opened fire, hitting both of them.They were taken to hospital where Campbell was pronounced dead and the 13-year-old admitted in a serious condition.

When the Jamaica Observer went to the community yesterday residents refused to speak, but a three-minute video making the rounds on social media showed a group of heavily armed men alighting from two motor cars before rushing in to a building identified as the shop where the two teenagers were shot.

The gun-toting men were later seen returning to the two vehicles, which sped from the scene.

In other incidents in St James on Saturday, 41-year-old farmer Bryan Coote, 35-year-old painter Jermaine Brown, and 33-year-old data entry clerk Daryl Richards of Salt Spring were killed in separate incidents.

The police report that at 8:30 pm on Saturday, Brown, who was visiting a female friend in the area known as Hopeton, was fatally shot by a man with whom he had an altercation. It is believed the man fathered a child with the woman who Brown was visiting.

In another incident, residents of Bump and Scott Lane in Salt Spring reported hearing loud explosions and summoned the police. When they arrived the police found Richards lying on the roadway in a pool of blood. He was taken to hospital where he was pronounced dead.

In the third incident the police were called to Spring Gardens where Coote’s body was found with multiple gunshot wounds.

In Westmoreland, Arceno Samms, 28 and Devon Mosely, 34, both of Groveland Mountain, Negril; and 59-year-old labourer Winston Williams, of a Grange Hill address, and an unidentified man were the victims of gunmen on Saturday.

Reports from the Grange Hill Police are that about 7:30 pm, Williams and another man were standing outside a shop in their community when men drove up on a motorcycle and opened gunfire, hitting both of them.

The police were summoned and both men were taken to hospital where Williams was pronounced dead and the other man admitted.

Details of the other incidents were not available up to late last night.

 

 

 

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COVID Impoverishing Millions in Latin America

ASUNCIÓN/LIMA (Reuters) – Sandra Contreras, camped outside Lima’s Villa el Salvador hospital, is running out of funds to pay for her mother’s COVID-19 treatment, a sign of thin welfare systems around Latin America that are dragging many into debt and poverty.

“I have pawned all my things,” Contreras, 34, told Reuters between tears outside the hospital, where she has set up a hammock as she waits for news of her mother, infected amid a resurgence of coronavirus cases in the Andean nation.

“I said to my siblings: ‘What do I care if we have to sell the house to save my mother? We are going to do it.’”

Latin America, where countries are seeing a mix of reopening and new waves of COVID-19, has been hard hit by the pandemic, with 22 million people pushed into poverty and weak social safety nets, an annual U.N. report said on Thursday.

It said the number in extreme poverty was at a level not seen for 20 years, and it pointed to deep structural inequalities, a sprawling informal labor market and a lack of effective health care coverage – meaning many people end up paying for treatment out of pocket.

In Paraguay, that has sparked a wave of informal fundraising, with bake sales and short-term loans as family members seek to meet the costs of medical care.

Mirta González, a 34-year-old manicurist from a small town in southern Paraguay, took an express loan when her husband Jesús got sick and was transferred to the capital Asuncion. She spent 6.5 million guarani ($985) on medications and supplies.

Family and friends organized raffles and sold pizzas to raise more funds.

“Here without contacts or money you will die,” González told Reuters while waiting to be called by a loudspeaker to deliver medicine to her husband at INERAM, the main COVID-19 treatment center in the country.

In the landlocked country of some seven million people only around one in five have social security and heath cover via their jobs, and only around 7% pay for private cover, government data show. Free state care is open for all but is very limited.

‘ABSOLUTELY NO BEDS

In the Brazilian city of Manaus, where a surge in COVID-19 case in January led to a collapse in public health services, Cintia Melo was forced to look after her 87-year-old mother at home, hiring carers and a ventilator, and renting or buying oxygen cylinders.

“There were absolutely no hospital beds at all,” the freelance video producer said by telephone. She said it was costing about 20,000 reais ($3,553) a month and, even though her mother was now recovering, she would still need care for several more weeks, maybe months.

“The costs haven’t finished yet,” Melo said.

Verónica Serafini, an economic researcher in Paraguay, said health expenses were the main driver pushing people into debt and this would snarl a revival of growth after the pandemic eased, key as the commodities-rich region looks to bounce back.

“Instead of investing in a house, business or education, we are getting into debt for health. And there’s no possibility of growth if people lose assets when they get sick,” she said.

‘A BLOW NO-ONE WAS PREPARED FOR’

The wave of indebtedness comes as millions of Latin American families grieve loved ones who died during the pandemic. The region has recorded more than 687,000 confirmed COVID-19 deaths, a Reuters tally shows, second only to the death toll in Europe.

Renata Granados, 24, and her family in Querétaro, Mexico, were forced to sell the family pick-up truck in a raffle after her sister Paloma got infected and died after 21 days in hospital. The bill was 7 million Mexican pesos (about $330,000).

“The expenses were very large when she was in the hospital and we had to find a way to raise funds,” said Granados, who herself is training to be a doctor. She said her sister had been an inspiration.

“I feel like it was a blow that no one was prepared for.”

The report last week by the U.N.’s Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean said that in addition to rising poverty the pandemic had caused growing social tensions.

But it said things would be worse without measures taken by Latin American governments to transfer emergency income to some 84 million households, or about half the population.

The commission’s executive secretary, Alicia Bárcena, said people were living through heightened uncertainty due to the pandemic and that “it is necessary to build back with equality and sustainability, aiming to create a true welfare state, a task long postponed in the region.”

Back in Peru, 26-year-old Yoselin Marticorena waited outside the Villa el Salvador hospital for news about her father. Her mother and sister also had COVID-19 symptoms and she said there was no one left to help support her.

“I don’t know what to do, I truly sold everything already,” she said amid pitched tents outside the hospital. “I already got into debt. I have no one else to ask for help.”

Reporting by Daniela Desantis in Asuncion, Carlos Valdez in Lima, Carlos Carrillo in Querétaro, Mexico, and Stephen Eisenhammer in Sao Paulo; Editing by Adam Jourdan and Daniel Wallis

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