Tag Archives: caribbean

St. Kitts & Nevis, India Ambassadors to UNESCO confer in Paris

PARIS — The Federation’s permanent delegate to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), Ambassador H.E. David Doyle, conferred this week with his counterpart, H.E. Ambassador Vishal V. Sharma, representing the Republic of India, in an exchange of views on UNESCO activities of mutual interest.

Discussions focused on India’s quest to secure a seat on the influential UNESCO World Heritage Committee, a body on which St. Kitts and Nevis sat for the past four years, and now enjoys the privilege of being the only Small Island Developing States (SIDS) member.

Both envoys agreed that India’s accession to this committee would strengthen the Commonwealth presence on the committee, currently comprising Uganda, Australia, South Africa, and the Federation.

India, a member of UNESCO since 1946, “has much to offer the UNESCO heritage community,” noted Ambassador Doyle, with such world-renowned sites as the Taj Mahal, Agra Fort, and Jantar Mantar (Jaipur), making up its 28 world heritage monuments and sites.

The envoys discussed the latest information technology (IT) techniques pioneered by India in creating virtual museums tracing important historical events in the country’s past. Given St. Kitts and Nevis’ work in reconstructing its own historical legacy, and updating its federal world heritage tentative list, it was felt that certain best practices employed in India could be meaningfully used in the Federation.

Ambassador Sharma, who was accredited as India’s permanent delegate to UNESCO in October 2020, had previously worked as part of the Project Team implementing the Museum on Prime Ministers at Teen Murti Bhawan, New Delhi, under the Ministry of Culture.

Underlining the importance of both countries being a member of the Commonwealth, Ambassador Doyle noted “the renewed interest with India’s presence at UNESCO to strengthen the Commonwealth Group to UNESCO”, a dedicated UNESCO committee comprising permanent delegates of the 54 UNESCO member states making up the Commonwealth. A large proportion of this Group is small island developing states seeking to have their voice heard at UNESCO, and at other important international organizations, and representing 20 percent of the UN membership.

The envoys agreed to work together in re-energizing the Commonwealth Group to UNESCO.

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New Vision: Hon. Hamilton says Social Security Board has been strengthened

CHARLESTOWN, Nevis — The St. Christopher and Nevis Social Security Board is celebrating its 43rd anniversary as one of the strongest organisations that has united the people of the two islands, but with time is facing challenges which call for a new vision.

Hon Eugene Hamilton, Federal Minister with responsibility for Social Security, said the institution has helped provide incomes for retired persons over the age of 62 and without income is paying out more than it is receiving in collections. To remedy the situation the minister has strengthened the institution’s board by appointing persons with strong financial skills who will ensure that its income is greater than its expenditure.

“Social Security has its challenges, and it calls for a new vision,” said Hon. Hamilton on February 7. “When this institution started in 1978, the first year it operated, there were $3.3 million dollars in collections. Only $174,000 was paid in benefits.”

In contrast, the Social Security Board received $99.6 million as collections in 2019, but the benefits paid were $101.4 million.

“What does that say to us?” said Hamilton. “That says to us that we have to take a closer look at the way the institution is heading and cut a path that brings this institution to the point where income is greater than expenditure. That basically is what it calls for us to do if we are to ensure that some of you young ones who are paying social security now get a benefit when you get to age 62.”

The Hon. Hamilton, who is also the Federal Minister of Human Settlement, National Health Insurance, Ecclesiastical Affairs, Social Development and Gender Affairs, made the remarks at a thanksgiving service held at the Shiloh Baptist Church in Charlestown, Nevis, in celebration of Social Security’s 43rd anniversary.

Prime Minister Harris and Minister Hamilton pose for a photo after the church service with Social Security Board members, management, and staff.

The service was also attended by Prime Minister Dr. the Hon Timothy Harris, who is also the Federal Minister of Finance.

“It is why I have strengthened the organization’s board with people with important financial skills to help us to get on that road, so that again, we can see the organisation lengthening its life,” explained Hamilton. “That is the mission.”

The Social Security Board was represented at the service by Chairman Ernest Pistana, with members, Frank Farrell, Faron Lawrence, Dorita Rowland, Jennifer Williams, Candice Dickenson-Caines, and Mr Carl Claxton.

Management and staff were represented by Director of Social Security, Antonio Maynard, and Deputy Director of Social Security Nevis Branch Vernel Powell, and Management and Staff in the Nevis branch office. The sermon was delivered by Pastor Wayne Maynard who dwelt on the building of a secure future based on teaching from Psalm 78. Deputy Director Powell presented a monetary donation, on behalf of the Social Security Board, to Pastor Maynard.

“This is a period when we have to pay attention to what COVID has done to us,” advised Hamilton. “In January, 2020 total wages in the Federation were about $85.7 million, by October when it went down to $58.1 million.

“One shock from COVID reduced the revenue base in the entire country from $85 million to $58 million, so we have to be thrifty in our approach,” he said. “This is why I have charged the board with the responsibility to pay attention, and to make sure that this institution remains as strong as we go through the 2020s, providing benefits to those who need benefits.”

Prime Minister Harris and Minister Hamilton pose for a photo after the church service with Social Security Board members, management, and staff.

In spite of the challenges, Hamilton assured that the St. Christopher and Nevis Social Security Board remained the most prolific contributor during the period of COVID, as it paid out over $8,500 to people from a stimulus package during that period. It paid $22,739,441.94 in stimulus packages in April, May, June, and September.

“Today as we celebrate 43 years, we celebrate an institution that despite all of the challenges is the strongest in the region, $1.6 billion in assets,” said Hamilton. “There is no other Social Security institution in the region that can compare with the one that we have in St. Kitts and Nevis. I applaud all those, over the many years from the first board to today that have contributed to the strength and to the development of Social Security.”

He also thanked members of the staff who have worked hard to put the Social Security Board in a position in which it is stronger than the rest in the region.

“We are not taking it lightly because my first principle is thrift, even when the going is good, because there are some days when it is going to get bad,” concluded Hamilton. “So I am asking, those who administer Social Security to recognise that and exercise thrift. I am asking you in your homes to also exercise thrift.”

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India: Race to Find Dam Collapse Survivors

Rescuers in India’s northern state of Uttarakhand are racing to find more than 100 people missing after a glacier collapsed on Sunday, and sent a wall of water and debris rushing down the mountain.

More than a dozen people lost their lives in the disaster when a portion of the Nanda Devi glacier calved off, sending water smashing through a dam, then surging downstream, damaging another dam project and taking out buildings and trees.

Most of the missing are workers on the two dam projects. Rescuers said they were focusing on saving more than 30 workers stuck inside a tunnel at one of the affected hydropower plants who had been out of contact since the flooding.

Scientists raised concerns that the glacier collapse in the middle of winter could be linked to climate change and a team of experts were expected at the site on Monday to investigate.

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Trump Senate Trial Will Consume US Capitol

Former President Trump’s second impeachment will consume Washington this week, putting the Trump era on trial and GOP divisions on full display.

Trump, who has been nearly invisible since leaving office and getting booted from social media platforms, will once again be the biggest story in the country.

The former president will not testify at his trial, but the hearings will draw the spotlight on an ugly few weeks in American history that culminated with the deadly siege of the Capitol by a mob of Trump supporters.

Many Republicans are deeply ashamed of that episode and believe Trump was at least partly responsible for whipping the crowd into a frenzy around his unsupported claims that the election was stolen from him.

However, Senate Republicans are expected to acquit Trump for a second time, arguing that it is unconstitutional to impeach a former president and that the bar for establishing incitement is high.

Still, the trial will expose the deep rift inside a Republican Party that is struggling to find its way in the post-Trump era.

The GOP is torn between a conservative base that is loyal to Trump and the traditional wing that sees Trumpism as a political death spiral.

“No one has any idea about what the Republican Party will look like in the future,” said Mark Braden, the former chief counsel for the Republican National Committee. “Will it be a conspiratorial party of a tiny fringe of black helicopter people? A populist party? Will it be a more traditional business conservative party that it was in the past? I have no idea where things will end up.”

The impeachment trial will focus narrowly on Trump’s role in the mayhem that overtook the Capitol on Jan. 6. Ten House Republicans joined all Democrats to impeach Trump last month for “incitement of insurrection against the Republic he swore to protect.”

Trump’s legal team is expected to file a trial brief by 10 a.m. on Monday morning outlining the arguments they’ll make in his defense.

In a brief last week, Trump’s lawyers said it is unconstitutional to impeach someone once they’ve left office.

They argued that Trump did not directly call on the mob to storm the Capitol and pointed to police reports that some of the rioters were planning the siege before Trump’s address.

The attorneys, David Schoen and Bruce Castor, also made a First Amendment case, arguing that conviction would severely curb political speech and make all politicians liable for the actions of the worst actors in their party.

Trump’s allies view the proceedings as an explicitly political effort aimed at ensuring Trump can never run for office again.

Forty-five out of 50 Senate Republicans have already voted to advance a motion to dismiss the trial on the grounds that it is unconstitutional, making it extremely unlikely that 17 Republicans will join Democrats this week to convict.

“If the Senate had been able to vote on this in early January, there may have been some appetite to convict,” said John Pudner, a former adviser to one of Sen. Mitt Romney’s (R-Utah) presidential campaigns. “But now it all looks political, with Democrats wanting to be remembered for making this case against Trump and every Republican thinking about their next primary challenge.”

Democrats plan to draw a direct line between Trump’s speech and the rioters, many of whom attacked the Capitol in an effort to stop the Electoral College vote count because they believed Trump’s claims that the election had been stolen.

Democrats will also make an emotional case that includes video of the deadly riots and personal stories about the dangers they encountered as they fled for safety.

The White House is signaling it has little interest in being involved in the spectacle.

President Biden this week will meet with the Defense secretary at the Pentagon, visit the National Institutes of Health and hold a virtual tour of a vaccination center as he aims to keep his focus on the coronavirus, the economy and national security.

But Democrats say the impeachment trial is something that must be done to ensure that democracy is never again threatened by a mob seeking to overturn the outcome of an election.

“President Trump’s conduct must be declared unacceptable in the clearest and most unequivocal terms,” the House impeachment managers wrote in a legal brief. “This is not a partisan matter. His actions directly threatened the very foundation on which all other political debates and disagreements unfold. They also threatened the constitutional system that protects the fundamental freedoms we cherish.”

This will be the second consecutive week that internal GOP politics will dominate on Capitol Hill, pushing Biden’s first 100 days agenda to the backburner.

Republicans slugged it out last week over the future roles of two members with different worldviews, Reps. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) and Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.).

Trump’s allies sought to have Cheney, the No. 3 Republican in the House, ousted from her leadership post for voting to impeach Trump.

Democrats stripped Greene of her committee assignments over a series of controversial remarks embracing various conspiracies, and they were joined by nearly a dozen Republicans.

Greene then gave a defiant speech reiterating her loyalty to Trump. “The party is his,” Taylor Greene said. “It doesn’t belong to anyone else.”

Meanwhile, Sen. Ben Sasse (R-Neb.), who was censured by his state party for criticizing Trump, said the GOP is at a crossroads. “We’re going to have to choose between conservatism and madness,” Sasse said.

There is anxiety among Republicans heading into the midterm election season over the extent of Trump’s grip on the party.

Trump brought to the forefront several issues Republicans believe to be winners; and he undeniably energizes large swaths of the party — Republicans gained seats in the House in the 2020 elections.

At the same time, Trump’s rhetoric and style are a huge turnoff to moderates, independents and suburban-dwellers, who propelled Biden to the White House and Democrats to majorities in the House and Senate.

“The way forward is to steal Trump’s ideas while kicking him out of the party,” said Keith Naughton, a veteran Republican strategist. “It’s simple to say but a tough thing to do.”

Former President Trump’s second impeachment will consume Washington this week, putting the Trump era on trial and GOP divisions on full display.

Trump, who has been nearly invisible since leaving office and getting booted from social media platforms, will once again be the biggest story in the country.

The former president will not testify at his trial, but the hearings will draw the spotlight on an ugly few weeks in American history that culminated with the deadly siege of the Capitol by a mob of Trump supporters.

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Many Republicans are deeply ashamed of that episode and believe Trump was at least partly responsible for whipping the crowd into a frenzy around his unsupported claims that the election was stolen from him.

However, Senate Republicans are expected to acquit Trump for a second time, arguing that it is unconstitutional to impeach a former president and that the bar for establishing incitement is high.

Still, the trial will expose the deep rift inside a Republican Party that is struggling to find its way in the post-Trump era.

The GOP is torn between a conservative base that is loyal to Trump and the traditional wing that sees Trumpism as a political death spiral.

“No one has any idea about what the Republican Party will look like in the future,” said Mark Braden, the former chief counsel for the Republican National Committee. “Will it be a conspiratorial party of a tiny fringe of black helicopter people? A populist party? Will it be a more traditional business conservative party that it was in the past? I have no idea where things will end up.”

The impeachment trial will focus narrowly on Trump’s role in the mayhem that overtook the Capitol on Jan. 6. Ten House Republicans joined all Democrats to impeach Trump last month for “incitement of insurrection against the Republic he swore to protect.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Trump’s legal team is expected to file a trial brief by 10 a.m. on Monday morning outlining the arguments they’ll make in his defense.

In a brief last week, Trump’s lawyers said it is unconstitutional to impeach someone once they’ve left office.

They argued that Trump did not directly call on the mob to storm the Capitol and pointed to police reports that some of the rioters were planning the siege before Trump’s address.

The attorneys, David Schoen and Bruce Castor, also made a First Amendment case, arguing that conviction would severely curb political speech and make all politicians liable for the actions of the worst actors in their party.

Trump’s allies view the proceedings as an explicitly political effort aimed at ensuring Trump can never run for office again.

Forty-five out of 50 Senate Republicans have already voted to advance a motion to dismiss the trial on the grounds that it is unconstitutional, making it extremely unlikely that 17 Republicans will join Democrats this week to convict.

“If the Senate had been able to vote on this in early January, there may have been some appetite to convict,” said John Pudner, a former adviser to one of Sen. Mitt Romney’s (R-Utah) presidential campaigns. “But now it all looks political, with Democrats wanting to be remembered for making this case against Trump and every Republican thinking about their next primary challenge.”

Democrats plan to draw a direct line between Trump’s speech and the rioters, many of whom attacked the Capitol in an effort to stop the Electoral College vote count because they believed Trump’s claims that the election had been stolen.

Democrats will also make an emotional case that includes video of the deadly riots and personal stories about the dangers they encountered as they fled for safety.

The White House is signaling it has little interest in being involved in the spectacle.

President Biden this week will meet with the Defense secretary at the Pentagon, visit the National Institutes of Health and hold a virtual tour of a vaccination center as he aims to keep his focus on the coronavirus, the economy and national security.

But Democrats say the impeachment trial is something that must be done to ensure that democracy is never again threatened by a mob seeking to overturn the outcome of an election.

ADVERTISEMENT

“President Trump’s conduct must be declared unacceptable in the clearest and most unequivocal terms,” the House impeachment managers wrote in a legal brief. “This is not a partisan matter. His actions directly threatened the very foundation on which all other political debates and disagreements unfold. They also threatened the constitutional system that protects the fundamental freedoms we cherish.”

This will be the second consecutive week that internal GOP politics will dominate on Capitol Hill, pushing Biden’s first 100 days agenda to the backburner.

Republicans slugged it out last week over the future roles of two members with different worldviews, Reps. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) and Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.).

Trump’s allies sought to have Cheney, the No. 3 Republican in the House, ousted from her leadership post for voting to impeach Trump.

Democrats stripped Greene of her committee assignments over a series of controversial remarks embracing various conspiracies, and they were joined by nearly a dozen Republicans.

Greene then gave a defiant speech reiterating her loyalty to Trump. “The party is his,” Taylor Greene said. “It doesn’t belong to anyone else.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Meanwhile, Sen. Ben Sasse (R-Neb.), who was censured by his state party for criticizing Trump, said the GOP is at a crossroads. “We’re going to have to choose between conservatism and madness,” Sasse said.

There is anxiety among Republicans heading into the midterm election season over the extent of Trump’s grip on the party.

Trump brought to the forefront several issues Republicans believe to be winners; and he undeniably energizes large swaths of the party — Republicans gained seats in the House in the 2020 elections.

At the same time, Trump’s rhetoric and style are a huge turnoff to moderates, independents and suburban-dwellers, who propelled Biden to the White House and Democrats to majorities in the House and Senate.

“The way forward is to steal Trump’s ideas while kicking him out of the party,” said Keith Naughton, a veteran Republican strategist. “It’s simple to say but a tough thing to do.”

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Nevis Disaster Management Department changes operating hours

CHARLESTOWN, Nevis — The public has been advised by the Nevis Disaster Management Department that it will changes its operating hours and delivery services to the quarantine facilities at Oualie Beach Hotel and Potworks.

Effective Monday, February 15, the following hours apply:

Monday to Friday, Operating hours, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Departure time, 12 noon and 4 p.m.

Saturday and Sundays: Operating hours, 10 a.m. to 12 noon; Departure time, 12 noon.

Public Holidays: Operating hours, 10 a.m. to 12 noon; Departure time, 12 noon.

Everyone is encouraged to adhere to these changes as Disaster Management continues to provide these essential services.

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Nevis Water Department plans changes in 2021 to serve public

CHARLESTOWN, Nevis — The Nevis Water Department (NWD) will undergo changes in its operations throughout 2021, in an effort to improve on deficient areas which were brought to the fore by the COVID-19 pandemic.

NWD Manager, Ms. Tonya Bartlette, made the disclosure while delivering remarks at a retreat for staff recently, at the Nevis Performing Arts Centre.

“In 2021, there will be a few rollouts, the launching our E-payment portal where customers can pay bills online and a NWD website,” said Ms. Bartlette. “These initiatives are long overdue, we are almost there.

“We will also launch updated e-billing software in an effort to conserve paper,” she said. “This will save paper, reduce costs and decrease our carbon footprint.

“We will also make structural changes to the reporting lines,” said Ms. Bartlette. “The Nevis Water Department is a small business. It should have an organizational structure that reflects better serving internal and external customers.”

NWD will also focus on documenting its Standard Operating Procedures in the entire department. Ms. Bartlette said work to improve operations is ongoing with minor adjustments made to ensure efficiency.

She said date collection will come under sharp focus, since the world is now data-driven.

“This is the direction NWD is heading,” said Ms. Bartlette. “Decisions must be made based on data as this will avoid making blind or uninformed decisions.

“Information collected will drive us to make decisions, not because we want to do something, but because we should take steps to enhance our product,” she said. “Data will serve as a means for future generations to continue to build the Nevis we love on the solid foundation that we have laid.”

Ms. Bartlette said NWD will also continue to collaborate with other departments and organisations.

“At present, we are collaborating with the Nevis Fire Department in mapping out island-wide fire hydrant locations to improve our fire-hydrant network.

“We are collaborating with the Geographical Information Unit, Public Works Department, and the Information Technology Department with other mapping projects. This will enable us to produce maps of our system to enhance our planning capabilities,” she said.

Ms. Bartlette underscored the need for staff training. She explained NWD is making provisions to provide online staff training.

“The Caribbean Water and Sewage Association, is hosting a full year of training sessions, which cover the entire department,” said Ms. Bartlette. “These will be delivered virtually as COVUD-19 has restricted travel and interactive face-to-face learning.

“With this in mind and in an effort to have this knowledge-sharing experience, a conference/training room will be established to accommodate all NWD staff,” concluded Ms. Bartlette. “Team members will be notified of the designated dates and times for this training.”

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H.E. Ian McDonald Liburd presents credentials to U.N. Secretary General

NEW YORK, New York — On February 3, Ambassador/Plenipotentiary and Extraordinary H.E. Ian Liburd, Permanent Representative of St. Kitts-Nevis to the United Nations, presented his credentials to the United Nations Secretary General H.E. Antonio Guterres in a formal ceremony at the United Nations Headquarters.

Ambassador Liburd brought greetings from the Prime Minister, Dr. the Hon Timothy Sylvester Harris. The ambassador reassured the Secretary General of St. Kitts-Nevis’ full support for his strong leadership in these unprecedented times.

Secretary General H.E. Guterres spoke of his personal commitment to St. Kitts-Nevis, the Caribbean and Small Island Developing States. Throughout the ceremony, Ambassador Liburd discussed a number of matters of great importance to St. Kitts and Nevis with H.E. Guterres and presented the foreign policy objectives of the Federation.

H.E. Guterres and H.E. Liburd discussed the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, the effects of Climate Change on the Federation, rebuilding the economy and building resilience in tourism, health, education and infrastructure.

H.E. Guterres said that St. Kitts-Nevis can count on his solidarity to defend the interests of St. Kitts and Nevis, and to make its voice heard in the international arena. They also discussed the efforts St. Kitts-Nevis and the United Nations have been doing to advance access to the COVID-19 vaccine as a global public good.

In addition to Ambassador Liburd, five other ambassadors also presented credentials in formal ceremonies. These included; Bolivia, Benin, Sri Lanka, Guinea and South Africa. The ceremony concluded with a photo opportunity.

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Superbowl: Brady Led Bucks Rout Chiefs 31-9

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers, led by ageless Tom Brady, hoisted the Lombardi Trophy last night, dominating the Kansas City Chiefs 31-9 in Super Bowl LV.

While the victory further cemented quarterback Tom Brady’s Hall of Fame credentials, the story of the night was Tampa Bay’s tenacious defense, which held the dynamic Chiefs offense to just three field goals. For Kansas City’s star quarterback Patrick Mahomes, it was the first time since high school that a team he led failed to score a touchdown.

Brady threw for just over 200 yards and three touchdowns, en route to his record-breaking fifth Super Bowl MVP. The win marks Brady’s seventh title and his first in Tampa, after leaving the New England Patriots last year. Before acquiring Brady, the Buccaneers went 7-9 last season, while the Patriots fell to 7-9 this season after his departure. For Tampa Bay, it’s their second title in franchise history and the first since 2002.

The city of Tampa has had an exceptional sports year—the Devil Rays made the World Series in October while the Lightning won the Stanley Cup in September.

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COVID Latest: Cuba’s Socialist Vaccine Program: For People, Not Profit

 

by W.T. Whitne

Cuba’s socialist approach to developing vaccines against COVID-19 differs strikingly from that of capitalist nations of the world. Cuba’s production of four vaccines is grounded in science and dedicated to saving the lives of all Cubans, and to international solidarity.

The New York Times’s running report on the world’s vaccine programs shows 67 vaccines having advanced to human trials; 20 of them are in the final phase of trials or have completed them. The United States, China, Canada, the United Kingdom, Germany, South Korea, and India have each produced many vaccines; most vaccine-manufacturing countries are offering one or two vaccines.

Cuba is the only vaccine manufacturer in Latin America; there are none in Africa. The only state-owned entities producing the leading vaccines are those of Cuba and Russia.

Cuba’s Finlay Vaccine Institute has produced two COVID-19 vaccines. Trials for one of them, called Sovereign I, focus on protecting people previously infected with COVID-19. The antibody levels of some of them turned out to be low, and the vaccine might provide a boost.

The other vaccine, Sovereign II, is about to enter final human trials. For verifying protection, these trials require tens of thousands of subjects, one half receiving the vaccine and the other half, a placebo vaccine. Cuba’s population is relatively small, 11 million people, too small to yield enough infected people in the short time required to test the vaccine’s protective effect. That’s why Sovereign II will be tested in Iran.

100 million doses of Sovereign II are being prepared, enough to immunize all 11 million Cubans, beginning in March or April. The 70 million remaining doses will go to Vietnam, Iran, Pakistan, India, Venezuela, Bolivia, and Nicaragua. Sovereign II “will be the vaccine of ALBA,” explained Venezuelan Vice President Delcy Rodríguez, referring to the solidarity alliance established in 2004 by Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and Cuba’s Fidel Castro.

Cuba’s strategy in commercializing the vaccine represents a combination of what’s good for humankind and the impact on world health. We are not a multinational where a financial objective comes first,” says Vicente Vérez Bencomo, director of Cuba’s Finlay Vaccine Institute. Income generated by vaccine sales abroad will pay for health care, education, and pensions in Cuba just as happens with exports of medical services and medicines.

Cuba’s Center for Genetic and Biotechnological Engineering is developing two other COVID-19 vaccines; One, named “Mambisa” (signifying a female combatant in wars of liberation from Spain), is administered via the nasal route, just as is Cuba’s hepatitis B vaccine. The other vaccine, named “Abdala” (a character in a Jose Marti poem) is administered intramuscularly. The two vaccines are involved in early trials.

Cuba was ready

Cuban education emphasizes science and technology. In the 1990s, Cuba accounted for 11% of doctorate-level Latin American scientists. Cuban scientists work in the 50 or so biomedical research and production facilities which together make up Cuba’s state-owned BioCubaFarma Corporation, and which produces vaccines, drugs, medical tests, and medical equipment. It makes 60% of medicines used in Cuba, and 8 of 12 vaccines.

Cuba previously produced a pioneering vaccine that prevents life-threatening infection caused by type B meningococcus. Cuba developed a genetically-engineered hepatitis B vaccine and a vaccine offering palliative treatment for lung cancer. A Cuba-developed vaccine offers protection against infection, particularly childhood meningitis, caused by the Hemophilus Influenza type B bacterium.

In fashioning vaccines, Cuban scientists relied on familiar technology.

To provide an immunological extra, the antigen of Cuba’s Sovereign II vaccine is mixed with tetanus toxoid, as was done with Cuba’s Hemophilus influenza vaccine. As with other vaccines, scientists used a segment of the virus’s protein – here the COVID-19 virus – to form an antigen to stimulate protective antibodies. By contrast, the U. S. Pfizer and Moderna vaccines contain the whole viral protein, not a segment. That protein contains “genetic instructions” which enter human cells, causing them “to make spike proteins, which then get released into the body” where they trigger antibodies.

Observers suggest that this innovative U.S. technology may be less safe than the one used in Cuban vaccines. Not requiring extremely cold storage, as do the U.S. vaccines, the Cuban vaccines are suited for areas without adequate refrigeration capabilities.

Cuba’s bio-medical production sector has also created drugs for treating Covid-19 infection. Interferon, an antiviral agent developed in Cuba, produced in China, and used throughout the world, prevents many Covid – infected patients from becoming critically ill. The Cuban anti-inflammatory drug Jusvinza, used for treating auto-immune diseases, and Cuba’s monoclonal antibody Itolizumab, which moderates exaggerated immune responses, are both effective in reducing Covid-19 deaths.

The other way

The U. S. approach to producing and distributing COVID-19 vaccines is based on private enterprise, although the U. S. government did deliver billions of dollars to pharmaceutical companies to produce vaccines free of charge to recipients. The companies have contracted with purchasers abroad.

According to forbes.com in November, 2020, ‘If Moderna’s [vaccine] can get FDA approval and can make enough doses, its top line could be nearly $35 billion higher … than … in the last 12 months.” Another report suggests that, “The companies (Pfizer and Moderna) stand to earn billions of dollars in profits from their COVID vaccines this year [and] there will be more profits in later years.” The companies “claim the rights to vast amounts of intellectual property.”

With corporations in charge, distribution of COVID-19 vaccines is skewed. As of Jan. 27, “some 66.83 million doses have been sent out, of which 93 percent were supplied to only 15 countries.” In Latin America, only Brazil, Argentina, Mexico, and Chile have secured purchase contracts adequate for immunizing entire populations. The companies’ contracts with African nations allow for immunization of only 30 percent of Africans in 2021. Meaningful immunization has yet to begin there.

The wealth divide determines distribution. Epidemiologists at Duke University report that, “While high-income countries represent only 16% of the world’s population, they currently hold 60% of the vaccines for COVID-19 that have been purchased so far.” Cuban journalist Randy Alonso reports that only “27 percent of the total population of low and middle income countries can be vaccinated this year.”

The world is on the brink of a catastrophic moral failure – and the price of this failure will be paid with lives and livelihoods in the world’s poorest countries,” declared Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, director of the World Health Organization, on January 18. He warned that, “some countries and companies continue to prioritize bilateral deals, going around COVAX, driving up prices and attempting to jump to the front of the queue.”

The WHO initiated the global vaccine collaboration COVAX to assure access by poor nations to COVID-19 vaccines. The 190 nations that are enrolled agreed to obtain vaccines through COVAX. Rich nations would supply COVAX with funds to enable 90 poor nations to receive no-charge vaccines. COVAX anticipates distributing two billion doses, enough to immunize only 25 % of the populations of poor nations during 2021.

Problems include: wealthy nations order vaccines independent of COVAX; they buy more vaccine than they need; manufacturers set prices; and prices are secret, variable, and very high.

Most other countries producing COVID-19 vaccines are at variance with Cuba through their profiteering and because they are complicit with the U.S. economic blockade of Cuba. Pursuing routine overseas commercial affairs, they all too easily adjust to U.S. regulations by means of which that cruel policy is enforced. More to the point, the U.S. blockade hinders Cuba’s vaccine efforts, and they are silent.

“We don’t have in Cuba all the raw materials and supplies we’ll need for the unprecedented scale of production that vaccinating our whole population requires,” Dagmar García-Rivera, Director of Research at Cuba’s Finlay Vaccine Institute, explained. “They have to be purchased and for this, we need financing. This is made infinitely more difficult by the US embargo … Procuring the necessary reagents for research and the raw materials for production is a challenge we face daily.”

In confronting the pandemic, Cuba exhibits attention to detail suggestive of a level of caring and concern not readily matched elsewhere. For example, Cuba’s government-friendly cubadebate.cu website provides a daily, detailed update of the infection’s impact. Its report on Jan. 27 presents data relating to cities, provinces, the nation, and the world – and the nation’s intensive care units. Readers learn that of 43 patients in intensive care that day, 16 were in critical condition, stable or unstable, and 27 were in “grave” condition.

All 43 cases are reviewed, beginning with: “Cuban citizen, 75 years old, from Alquízar, in Artemisa, already suffering from arterial hypertension and ischemic cardiopathy who is afebrile, on mechanical ventilation, is hemodynamically stable… with acceptable blood gases (oxygen and CO2), is improving radiologically with inflammatory lesions in the right [lung] base – reported as critical but stable.” The cases of four Cubans who died that day are also presented.

Fighting a pandemic in Cuba, it’s understood, is no casual matter. Nor is the health of Cuba’s people.

W.T. Whitney Jr. is a retired pediatrician and political journalist living in Maine.

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Then there are many of the economically poor nations

Giving one’s citizens “the peace of mind” offered by the COVID-19 vaccine, as a Honduran business leader succinctly put it, has become a focal effort for some poorer countries who have gotten tired of waiting to get doses through a United Nations program.

Countries including Honduras, Serbia and Mexico are actively striking out on their own, cutting their own private deals, report Maria Cheng and Aniruddha Ghosal.

Experts are increasingly concerned that these go-it-alone efforts could undermine a U.N.-backed program to get shots to the neediest people worldwide.

In past disease outbreaks, less wealthy countries generally waited for vaccines to be delivered by the U.N. and others. Many are now taking matters into their own hands. Those deals, however,  could leave fewer vaccines for the program known as COVAX.

U.K.-EU Vaccinations: The European Union has chosen a careful route in its vaccine campaign to defeat the pandemic. And as a result, it has seen a slow rollout of shots compared with Britain. Across the channel, the United Kingdom has shown speed and agility in its vaccine strategy. It has announced vaccine deals earlier, authorized shots from different companies more quickly, and experimented with stretching out the time between doses to get more people some protection quicker. The result is that the EU is in the U.K.’s rearview mirror in the vaccination drive. Britain has given at least one vaccine shot to about 15% of its population, compared with some 3% in the EU’s 27 nations, Raf Casert and Masha Macpherson report.

Timeline of virus vaccine deals reveals EU’s lag behind UK.

South Africa Vaccine:The country has suspended plans to inoculate its front-line health care workers with the AstraZeneca vaccine after a small clinical trial suggested that it isn’t effective in preventing mild to moderate illness from the variant dominant in the country. South Africa received its first 1 million doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine last week and was expected to begin giving jabs to health care workers in mid-February. The disappointing early results indicate that an inoculation drive using the AstraZeneca vaccine may not be useful, Andrew Meldrum and Sylvia Hui report.

Burkina Faso Hospitals: The West African country, which at first managed to avoid a catastrophic surge of the coronavirus, is now trying to cope with a much deadlier resurgence. Although Burkina Faso’s virus figures are still relatively small, officials worry that a general lack of understanding and adherence to basic safeguards will end up overwhelming the country’s already strained health system. Complicating matters, Burkina Faso is suffering from a conflict involving Islamic militants, the army and local defense groups that has pushed hundreds of thousands to the brink of starvation and forced the closure of more than 130 health centers in the tiny country, Sam Mednick reports.

Spring Travel: Around the globe, tough new restrictions on travel because of variants of the virus are hitting just when millions of people are normally on the move. That’s more bad news for airlines, restaurants and hotels, which have been struggling mightily for the past year. In late winter and early spring, Chinese factory workers are normally heading home for Lunar New Year, American college students are hitting the beach over spring break, and Germans and Britons are fleeing drab skies for some Mediterranean sun over Easter. But all of that is now canceled or in doubt, Dave McHugh, Casey Smith and Joe McDonald report.

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Jamaica: ‘Canada Travel Ban Will Be a Hard Hit on Caribbean’

Canada’s ban on travel to the Caribbean will deliver a massive blow to Jamaica’s economy, with nearly half a billion dollars in tourism revenue to be lost. This is according to the island’s Minister of Tourism, Edmund Bartlett.

On January 29, Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau moved to suspend all flights to the Caribbean and Mexico as part of a host of new travel restrictions. The suspension of flights began on Sunday, January 31, and will run until April 30.

As one of the major tourist markets for Jamaica, Canada’s ban on travel is expected to further sink the economy of the tourism-dependent island, which has been struggling to stay afloat throughout the pandemic.

In an interview with CBC News, Bartlett said he estimates that the ban will cost Jamaica $350 million US ($449 million Cdn). That estimate is based on what the country would see during a regular peak winter season, when Jamaica welcomes between 175,000 – 200,000 Canadians.

Minister Bartlett said that he is hoping that Canada will be able to relax its measures soon to avoid a complete fallout.

“It is difficult and it is causing us some unintended consequences because I know that Canada has no real intention of hurting Jamaica. What we are doing here is to hope and pray that Canada will get through this very quickly so that we can return to the normal course of our trade relations,” said Bartlett.

In the last two months, Jamaica’s top three tourist markets: the United Kingdom, Canada, and United States have all imposed new travel requirements covertly aimed at limiting international travel.

The UK and the US both require negative COVID-19 tests for entry, but since December, Jamaica has had a UK travel ban in place. Prime Minister Andrew Holness estimated that the COVID-19 pandemic has cut tourism revenue by some 70%. The Jamaica Hotel and Tourist Association states that some 47% of accommodations on the island remain closed, despite the industry reopening in June 2020. Prime Minister Holness says the hotels that are open are reporting some 30% occupancy.

To cater to the tourists that are allowed to travel to the island, the government has had to put new measures in place to meet the new travel requirements.

“All major hotels have testing facilities at the hotel. And for the smaller hotels, we’ve arranged transportation to our testing centers across the island,” explained Minister Bartlett. Testing is also being done at the Norman Manley International Airport in Kingston and the Sangster’s International Airport in Montego Bay.

 

While the government is doing all it can to cater to tourists, Minister Bartlett says the protocols will threaten the viability of tourist attractions and accommodations on the island.

Bartlett’s sentiments have been echoed by the Caribbean Hotel and Tourism Association which has warned that the region’s economic survival is in serious jeopardy because of travel restrictions.

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