Tag Archives: caribbean

More Haiti Protests Against Pres. Moise

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) — Hundreds of people marched through Haiti’s capital in another protest demanding the resignation of President Jovenel Moïse.

The crowd clashed with police, and one woman was shot in the arm but was expected to recover. Several people also were wounded by rubber bullets.

Opposition leaders organizing the protests are pushing for Moïse to step down in early February as Haiti’s economic and social woes deepen. Moïse, meanwhile, has said his term ends in February 2022, though his administration has said he remains open to dialogue with the opposition.

A handful of opposition leaders reached the U.S. Embassy in Tabarre on Wednesday and called on the administration of new U.S. President Joe Biden to improve conditions in Haiti and demand that legislative and presidential elections be held earlier than those scheduled for late 2022.

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Jamaica Seeks Closer Ties With USA

The Government of Jamaica has signalled an intention to deepen its ties with the United States following the inauguration of a new Administration yesterday.

In extending congratulations to the 46th President of the United States Joseph R Biden Jr and Vice-President Kamala Harris on their formal assumption of duties , Minister of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade Kamina Johnson Smith said: The Government and people of Jamaica look forward to the further deepening of this strong and active partnership, under the Biden-Harris Administration.

Today’s (yesterday) inauguration reaffirms the strong democratic foundation on which the United States of America is built and for which it has had a long and distinguished tradition. The occasion is special and historic,” said Johnson Smith in a release.

“Even as we renew engagement with President Biden, previously a vice-president, we also look forward to building new relations with the vice-president. Indeed, it is of special significance to Jamaica that Vice-President Harris is the first female vice-president of the United States of America, a woman of colour and the child of Jamaican and Indian immigrants.

“We, therefore, join in acknowledging this important milestone and note with pride her own inspiring assertion that while she is the first, she expects that many more will follow her,” added Johnson Smith.

She said Jamaica values its close friendship with the US which is a key ally and a major development partner.

“It is a relationship that has been shaped by mutually beneficial cooperation, deep historical and cultural ties, mutual respect for the rule of law and human rights, as well as the large Jamaican Diaspora in the United States.

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Pres. Biden in Record Setting First Day in Office

US President Joe Biden has begun to undo some of Donald Trump’s key policies, hours after being sworn in.

In his initial acts as the 46th US president, he signed 15 executive orders – the first to boost the federal response to the coronavirus crisis.

Other orders reversed the Trump administration’s stance on climate change and immigration.

President Biden set to work at the Oval Office having been sworn in earlier on Wednesday at the US Capitol.

The inauguration was unlike any other due to coronavirus restrictions, with few present to witness the oaths and ceremonies.

Donald Trump – who has still not formally conceded the presidency to Mr Biden – snubbed the event in a departure from longstanding precedent.

What orders has Biden signed?

“There is no time to waste when it comes to tackling the crises we face,” President Biden tweeted as he headed to the White House following his inauguration.

President Biden “will take action – not just to reverse the gravest damages of the Trump administration – but also to start moving our country forward,” a statement detailing his executive orders said.

A graphic comparing Joe Biden's use of executive power with his predecessors
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On coronavirus, a series of measures will be enacted to tackle the pandemic which has claimed more than 400,000 lives in the US.

There will be a mandate to wear masks and practise social distancing on all federal government property.

A new office will be set up to co-ordinate the response to the pandemic and the US will halt the process – begun by the Trump administration – of withdrawing from the World Health Organization (WHO).

Vaccine is administered at the Louisville Urban League on January 20, 2021 in Louisville, Kentuckyimage copyrightGetty Images
image captionMr Biden wants to inoculate 100 million Americans within his first 100 days in office

The move to re-engage with the WHO was welcomed by UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres who said it was “absolutely critical” for a more co-ordinated global response, his spokesman Stéphane Dujarric said.

Mr Biden has also pledged to make the fight against climate change a top priority of his administration.

He signed an executive order beginning the process of rejoining the 2015 Paris climate agreement, from which Mr Trump formally withdrew the US last year.

Mr Biden’s climate envoy, former US Secretary of State John Kerry, tweeted that the commitment set “a floor, not a ceiling” for America’s climate leadership and urged international co-operation ahead of the UN Climate Change Conference (Cop26) in Glasgow in November.

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter
White space

Mr Biden has also revoked the presidential permit granted to the controversial Keystone XL Pipeline, which environmentalists and Native American groups have fought for more than a decade.

The move will be discussed when Mr Biden makes his first phone call to a foreign leader – Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau – on Friday, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said.

Activists disrupt business at a Chase Bank branch in Seattle on May 8, 2017image copyrightGetty Images
image captionThe Keystone XL Pipeline project has led to years of protests

The privately financed pipeline – estimated to cost about $8bn (£5.8bn) – would carry about 830,000 barrels of heavy crude a day from the oil sands of Alberta, in Canada, to Nebraska.

Barack Obama vetoed a bill approving construction of the pipeline in 2015 but the decision was overturned by President Trump.

On immigration Mr Biden has revoked the Trump administration’s emergency declaration that helped fund the building of a wall along the Mexican border and also ended a travel ban on some majority-Muslim countries.

Other orders cover race and gender equality.

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Analysis box by Anthony Zurcher, North America reporter

This is the (relatively) easy part

Joe Biden and his presidential team have had nearly three months to plan out his first actions upon taking the oath of office. Donald Trump had used his executive authority broadly, to advance large swaths of his political agenda, so how – and when – Biden would begin undoing those actions would have particular importance.

It didn’t take long for the newly inaugurated president to show his hand. He targeted, in particular, some of the most controversial portions of Trump’s agenda. The Biden administration also will freeze all of Trump’s last-minute regulations pending further review.

Executive action is the (relatively) easy part, however. For Biden to make lasting change – policies that can’t be undone by future presidents – he will have to work with Congress to pass legislation on issues like pandemic relief, citizenship for undocumented migrants, healthcare reform and voting-rights protections.

He also declined, for now, to take other executive actions, like cancelling student loan debt, lifting Mr Trump’s trade restrictions or enacting new criminal justice measures.

With Democrats in control in the House of Representatives and Senate, Biden has a window for accomplishments, although it will require surmounting Republican procedural obstacles and keeping his party in line. The president’s decades of experience as a legislator could come in useful.

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At the first news conference of the Biden presidency, press secretary Jen Psaki was asked if her priority was to promote the interests of President Biden, or provide “the unvarnished truth”.

She said she had “deep respect for the role of a free independent press” and that she would join the president in bringing “transparency and truth back to government”.

President Trump – and his press secretaries – often had a combative relationship with the media.

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki speaks after the inauguration of Joe Biden, January 20, 2021image copyrightReuters
image captionThe White House has a new press secretary – Jen Psaki

What happened at the inauguration?

“Democracy has prevailed,” President Biden said after taking the oath of office with Chief Justice John Roberts on stage in front of the US Capitol.

Delivering a message of unity after the turbulent Trump years, he promised to be a president “for all Americans” – including those who voted against him.

Three of his predecessors attended the ceremony: Barack Obama – under whom Mr Biden served for eight years as vice-president – Bill Clinton and George W Bush, as well as Mr Trump’s vice-president, Mike Pence.

Kamala Harris was sworn in as vice-president ahead of Mr Biden. She is the first woman – and the first black and Asian-American person – to serve in the role.

There was extra-tight security for the ceremony after the US Capitol was stormed by violent pro-Trump protesters on 6 January.

Mr Biden and First Lady Jill Biden, together with Ms Harris and her husband Doug Emhoff, then walked down Pennsylvania Avenue to the White House, greeting friends and supporters.

US President Joe Biden and First Lady Jill Biden walk along Pennsylvania Avenue in front of the White House, in Washington, DC, 20 January 2021image copyrightEPA
image captionPresident Joe Biden and First Lady Jill Biden walked part of Pennsylvania Avenue to the White House

The inauguration ceremony included musical performances by Lady Gaga – who sang the national anthem – as well as Jennifer Lopez and Garth Brooks.

Amanda Gorman, America’s first-ever National Youth Poet Laureate, recited her work The Hill We Climb.

A 90-minute televised evening concert entitled “Celebrating America” was staged at the Lincoln Memorial in the city. Hosted by Tom Hanks, it featured Bruce Springsteen, John Legend, Jon Bon Jovi, Justin Timberlake, and Demi Lovato and culminated in a spectacular fireworks display.

Fireworks burst over the Washington Monument during the "Celebrating America" event in Washington, DC., January 20, 2021image copyrightReuters

What about Donald Trump?

Mr Trump was the first president not to attend his successor’s inauguration since 1869. He left the White House early on Wednesday, and flew to the nearby Andrews Air Force base.

In his farewell address at the base, he highlighted what he regarded as the successes of his presidency. “What we’ve done has been amazing by any standard,” Mr Trump said.

The 74-year-old then left for his Mar-a-Lago golf club in Florida, where he arrived later in the morning.

In his last hours as president, Mr Trump granted clemency to more than 140 people, including his former adviser Steve Bannon, who had been facing fraud charges.

The political drama surrounding Mr Trump is far from over. The US Senate is expected to put him on trial soon, following his record second impeachment by the House of Representatives for allegedly inciting the Capitol riot.

On Tuesday, the Senate’s Republican leader, Mitch McConnell, said the mob had been provoked by Mr Trump and fed lies.

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US VP Harris’ Uncle: ‘You’ve Been Doing Fine, Keep it Up’

 

Hours before Kamala Harris’s historic inauguration as US Vice President, her ancestral village in Tamil Nadu celebrated with firecrackers, sweets and customized calendars of their most famous face.

Kamala Harris’s uncle, an academic who lives in Delhi, had advice for her.

“There’s no message I can give, I didn’t help her become Vice President. She did all on her own. All that I’ll tell her is ‘do whatever Shyamala (Kamala Harris’ mother) taught you. You’ve been doing fine so far, keep it up.’ It’s all I can say,” G Balachandran told news agency ANI.

Mr Balachandran had also spoken to Kamala Harris, his sister’s daughter, after Joe Biden won the presidential race in November.

Kamala Harris’s maternal grandfather was born over a century ago in Thulasendrapuram, a village about 320 km from Chennai.

Kamala Harris’s uncle G. Balachandran is an academic who lives in Delhi

Kamala Harris was born to an Indian mother, Shyamala Gopalan, and a Jamaican father, both of whom immigrated to the United States to study. She visited Thulasendrapuram when she was five and has recalled walks with her grandfather on the beach at Chennai.

Later tonight, she becomes the first woman, first Black American and first Asian American to win the second highest US office.

Newsbeep

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US States Slow to Promote Getting Corona Vaccination

By Steve Miller, RealClearInvestigations

HUNTSVILLE, Ala. — On Interstate 59, a neon billboard used by the Alabama Department of Public Health advises motorists to get their flu and pneumonia vaccines. Placards placed atop gas pumps around the state also promote the flu vaccine.

The state of Alabama’s pitch on vaccination … but for the flu, not covid.

But the vaccine that will quell COVID-19, a virus that has killed 400,000 nationwide, crippled businesses and prompted governments to force onerous restrictions the public, gets no mention.

Karen Landers, a spokeswoman for the Alabama Department of Health, said the state has “no specific marketing campaign going on” because “the vaccine supply is less than the demand, here and nationwide.”

Alabama, though, has plenty of medicine and many residents wondering how to get it.  Records show that the state has received 444,000 doses of the vaccine as of Friday, and has vaccinated 100,000 people, using around 23% of its allotted doses.

Across the U.S., 31 million doses of the COVID vaccine have been distributed as of Friday, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, while states have administered 12 million, around 38%.  The vaccine produced by pharma giants Moderna and Pfizer are two-dose treatments that provide up to 95% protection.

The failure of Alabama and other states around the country to launch vaccine advertising campaigns – touting the medicine’s efficacy and informing people how and where they can receive it – is creating potentially life-threatening confusion.

President-elect Joe Biden has pledged to spend more money on vaccinations, allocating $400 billion in a plan that includes using local pharmacies (a feature borrowed from the Trump administration) and mass vaccination centers.  Biden said the push will include a public awareness campaign aimed at promoting the importance of getting inoculated.

But for now the lack of advertising is striking because local and federal government agencies routinely spend large sums on public health campaigns – including warning people how to behave in response to COVID-19.

The Obama administration spent $684 million driving awareness of the Affordable Care Act starting in 2013, although it was dogged by the rollout of a federal web portal widely viewed as disastrous. The pharmaceutical industry spent $9.5 billion on digital advertising alone in 2020, according to researcher eMarketer.

Hard-to-Reach Audiences

One of the challenges of the covid vaccine, as with Obamacare, is connecting with people who are hard to reach, including those without Internet service or who aren’t avid news followers.

Yet while the vaccine is in the early stages of distribution, information on what it does and how to get it can only be found at the websites of state and county health departments.

By contrast, when the virus emerged last spring, local governments quickly took to the airwaves with ads urging people to “stay home, stay safe,” collectively spending millions of dollars on multi-platform announcements, including government-produced signage distributed to businesses notifying  patrons that masks were required for entry.

A lucky recipient at the Louisville, Ky., Walgreens that found itself sitting on vaccine ready to expire. A lack of information about vaccine availability is contributing to supply and demand mismatches.

The lack of comparable information about the vaccine is contributing to supply and demand mismatches.

When a Walgreens in Louisville, Ky., found itself sitting on vaccine ready to expire, it made a public announcement that anyone could get the vaccine. The store was subsequently overwhelmed.

For that last-minute move, the store was criticized by Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear, who said the vaccine needed to be held for people who deserve it in accordance with CDC guidelines.

In Michigan, under some of the most onerous shutdowns in the U.S. ordered by Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, the lack of an information campaign has confused the public.

“No one here even knows that there is a vaccine available,” said Joel Fragomeni, a Detroit-based comedian who volunteered for AstraZeneca’s clinical trial of its COVID vaccine, which is expected to be approved in the spring. “People are still mostly locked down waiting for the weekly cases report to see what can be opened and closed.”

States were presented in October with a 57-page guide to prepare distribute the vaccine, including two pages devoted to how to drive awareness among the public.

Among the suggestions: “Keep the public, public health partners, and healthcare providers well-informed about COVID-19 vaccine(s) development, recommendations, and public health’s efforts.”

It is not clear why the states or the federal government have been slow to advertise availability. Some experts say the unprecedented speed with which the medicine was developed may have caught authorities unprepared as they were preoccupied with other aspects of the pandemic.

In addition, broad confusion over who should get the first available doses has made messaging difficult.

Scant Spending on Vaccine Awareness

In Illinois, Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s office in August signed off on a $5 million ad campaign to promote masking. But the governor’s website homepage makes no mention of the vaccine, listing only new positive case rates.  The state is sitting on 43% of the 1 million vaccine doses it has received and has yet to spend anything on vaccine awareness.

New York City in April launched a $10 million campaign advising residents how to behave as the virus spread. The state launched an additional campaign in July urging residents to wear masks.

New York has used less than half the vaccine it has been given, as people seek information on how and where to sign up to receive a dose.

Dearth of public information: Waiting in vain for vaccine this week in Paterson, N.J.

California spent millions on billboards, social media and broadcast spots in July telling people to wear masks and keep away from each other, promoting the campaign in a press release on Gov. Gavin Newsom’s home page.

Newsom’s office last issued a statement on the vaccine in late December, noting that California would partner with CVS and Walgreens to inoculate residents of long-term care facilities. Since then, information has been so scarce that residents have begun to crowdsource details.

The Ad Council and the CDC continue to run 60-second announcements on CNN’s Headline News urging people to stay home, avoid businesses like restaurants and bars and distance from each other.

National television spots urging viewers to get a vaccine for shingles – which kills roughly 100 people a year — are in full rotation in places like the Weather Channel.

The Ad Council, a consortium of private firms started during World War II that produces ads for the public good, has co-produced ads since the beginning of the pandemic advising people to stay home, keep away from each other and wear masks. In November it promised a $50 million campaign to drive awareness of the vaccine.

Last week, the council announced it had not yet met that goal, although it promised a campaign was forthcoming.

In an email, Ad Council spokesman Ben Dorf said that “even while many Americans have already started the vaccination process – we recognize that there is currently a lack of confidence and credible resources for people to go to, leading to mass hesitation, fear, misinformation and complacency.”

Polls contend many Americans are reluctant to take a vaccine, with the perhaps most politically opportunistic naysayer being Vice President-elect Kamala Harris, who in October said she wouldn’t take it if President Trump were telling her to. She was vaccinated in December.

Dorf promised advertising in the future, although he specified no time.

“This is the biggest issue of our lifetime and it requires an effort like never before, in terms of size, scale, speed and urgency,” he wrote.

Emails to the CDC were referred to the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, which did not respond.

Pfizer, Moderna, Walgreens and CVS did not respond to calls and emails requesting information on marketing plans for the vaccine.

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Singer Robbie Williams Gets COVID Holidaying at St. Barts

“He’s confined to the villa where he is staying with his family. He will have to remain in quarantine for up to 14 days.”

Robbie Williams has contracted Covid-19 while on holiday in the Caribbean. The English singer has been on holiday in St. Bart’s since December with his wife and kids. He reportedly contracted the virus while over there and is currently in quarantine.

The ‘Angels’ singer has apparently had a rough dose of Covid with one source close to the Robbie saying he’s “been fairly sick” with it. There’s no word on how he got the virus or if any of his family have it too.

The source told The Sun: “He’s confined to the villa where he is staying with his family. He will have to remain in quarantine for up to 14 days.”

This is Robbie’s second Covid-19 scare. Last year he thought he may have had the virus when he returned back to LA from Australia.

The 46 year old self-isolated from his family at the time, “when I landed back in LA it was unusually cloudy and grey, and what with everything going on it did feel very apocalyptic,” he said.

“I was in quarantine in an Airbnb down the road from my family and started worrying about food, about my medication running out, about Beau and my family, and was just very fearful for a couple of days.”

He was reunited with his family after he was sure he was clear from Covid-19. His wife, Ayda, shared the video at the time which showed the kids running up to their dad with excitement.

Robbie has been pretty quiet on social media lately so no word on how he’s feeling, but we wish him a speedy recovery.

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COVID Latest: UK with Daily Record 1,820 Deaths, US-415,800 Total Deaths as Biden Acts

Prime Minister Boris Johnson has warned “there will be more to come” as the UK recorded its highest number of coronavirus deaths in a single day, 1,820.

The number of new cases rose sharply to 38,905, after a fall earlier in the week which inspired optimism that lockdown restrictions were working, The Guardian reported.

For the second day in a row, the UK recorded the biggest increase in COVID-19 deaths within 28 days of testing positive, up on Tuesday’s high of 1,610. The number of new coronavirus cases within 24 hours dropped to 33,355 on Tuesday.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the record daily death toll was “appalling” and warned “there will be more to come”.

The prime minister added, “These figures are appalling, and of course we think of the suffering that each one of those deaths represents to their families and to their friends. I’ve got to tell you … there will be more to come”.

He stated that the new variant was now in virtually all parts of the UK.

“It’s true that it looks as though the rates of infection in the country overall may now be peaking or flattening but they’re not flattening very fast and it’s clear that we must keep a grip on this. We must maintain discipline, formation, keep observing the lockdown,” he noted.

Upon news of the latest death figures, palliative care doctor Rachel Clarke tweeted, “Another 1,820 UK COVID deaths. This figure makes me want to weep, scream, punch a wall, smash furniture. As if the deaths alone weren’t devastating, knowing many were avoidable crushes me. These are mass casualties caused by the failure of government. Heartbreaking.”

The Home Secretary, Priti Patel, was asked on Good Morning Britain about why the UK had the worst death rate in the world from coronavirus. She replied that it “has to be put into context” and she did not think there was one simple “factor or cause as to why so many people have died in the UK”.

Separate figures published by the UK’s statistics agencies for deaths where COVID-19 has been mentioned on the death certificate, together with additional data on deaths that have occurred in recent days, show there have been 110,000 deaths involving COVID-19 in the UK.

Government data up to January 19 shows that of the 5,070,365 vaccinations that have been given in the UK so far, 4,609,740 were first doses – a rise of 343,163 on the previous day’s figures – while 460,625 were second doses, an increase of 3,759 on figures released the previous day.

The seven-day rolling average of first doses given in the UK is now 281,490. Based on the latest figures, an average of 399,625 first doses of vaccine would be needed each day in order to meet the government’s target of 15mln first doses by February 15.

As few as 20% of staff in some care homes have received a coronavirus vaccine, the NHS national clinical director for older people has announced.

Dr. Adrian Hayter noted those involved in the vaccination programme must do “better and more” to ensure care home staff got a jab as soon as possible.

While some care homes have seen 70-80% of their staff vaccinated, which he called “fantastic”, others have rates as low as 20%. Overall 45% of care home staff had received a jab, he continued.

Hayter acknowledged there had been delays and that some care homes had found the process difficult.

The latest figures bring the total number of cases in the UK to 3,505,754.

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President Biden to use the Defense Production Act in COVID Fight

President Biden will issue an executive order Thursday directing agencies to use the Defense Production Act (DPA) and other powers to speed up the manufacturing of testing and vaccine supplies and other items needed to fight COVID-19.

Biden administration officials signaled they would be more aggressive than the previous administration in invoking the DPA, which allows the federal government to force companies to increase production of critical supplies during national emergencies.

“Where we can produce more, we will. Where we need to use the Defense Production Act to help more be made, we’ll do that too,” said Tim Manning, Biden’s COVID-19 supply coordinator, in a call with reporters Wednesday.

Manning said his team has identified 12 immediate supply shortfalls, including for n95 masks, isolation gowns, gloves and swabs needed for tests.

The administration will also use the DPA to accelerate production of syringes, raw materials used in vaccines, and other items needed to quickly get shots in arms, officials said.

“The team will work with the states and the manufacturers to ensure that we’re using the DPA as aggressively as needed to accelerate the supply of the vaccine,” said Bechara Choucair, Biden’s COVID-19 vaccine coordinator.

While the Trump administration used the DPA to increase the supply of ventilators, masks and other supplies, critics argued he was not being aggressive enough to close shortages.

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Coronavirus Cases:

97,381,947

Deaths:

2,085,494

Recovered:

69,943,019
Highlighted in green
= all cases have recovered from the infection
Highlighted in grey
= all cases have had an outcome (there are no active cases)

[back to top ↑]

Latest News

January 21 (GMT)

Updates

  • 7,152 new cases and 419 new deaths in Poland [source]
  • 169 new cases and 1 new death in Oman [source]
  • 21,887 new cases and 612 new deaths in Russia [source]
  • 20,548 new cases and 1,539 new deaths in Mexico [source]

 

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Levon ‘Mackie’ Tross calls for greater respect, education for Nevis farmers

CHARLESTOWN, Nevis — McLevon ‘Mackie’ Tross, one of the island’s leading farmers in the use of greenhouse technology on Nevis, has underscored the need for farmers on the island to be treated with greater respect.

Tross, the featured speaker at the Ministry of Agriculture’s Agenda 2021 forum at the St. Paul’s Anglican Church Hall on January 19, spoke on the issue while delivering the feature address before stakeholders in the agriculture sector on Nevis.

“The landscape of our farmers is changing,” said Tross. “Farmers are entrepreneurs, yes, business people who are responsible for feeding our nation and must be treated with dignity and respect.”

“There is also a need to educate farmers to better position them to achieve greater yields and returns on their investments,” said Tross, the owner and manager of A-1Farms at Gingerland. “There is a need to educate our farmers on the use of proper record and bookkeeping; crop yield estimation, cost of production and return on investment calculations.

“This can be achieved through the Small Enterprise Development Unit (SEDU) and the Department of Agriculture,” he continued. “We must utilize our allied agencies the Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture (IICA), the Caribbean Agricultural Research and Development Institute (CARDI) and the Taiwanese if we do not have the skill set in house.”

Tross expressed the need for greater knowledge on the importance of agriculture, not only for farmers but the entire nation including every preschooler.

He also said technology is significant in the agriculture sector. He acknowledged that opportunities to enhance productivity can be found in new and emerging technologies which can help farmers adapt to an ever-changing environment.

“Technology can provide the agricultural industry with tools and information to make more informed decisions and improve productivity.” explained Tross. “Technology includes Digital Agriculture, Green House Production, Hydroponic practices, and exploring tissue culture.

“Digital Agriculture,” explained Tross “is the use of digital technology to integrate agricultural production from the farm to the consumer.

“Digital technologies have the potential to provide farmers with the information and ability to meet these challenges and seize opportunities for growth,” he said. “It also enables improved traceability of agricultural products, providing peace of mind for consumers and increased value for farmers.”

The forum was the third in a series hosted by the Ministry of Agriculture for stakeholders in the agriculture sector to enable the ministry to report on the past year and to chart the course for the ensuing year.

Among those present at the forum were: Hon. Mark Brantley, Premier of Nevis; Hon. Alexis Jeffers, Deputy Premier and Minister of Agriculture; Randy Elliott, Director of the Department of Agriculture; Floyd Liburd, Deputy Director; Steve Reid, Chief Extension Officer; Ron Dublin Collins, Federal Permanent Secretary in Ministry of Agriculture; Sharon Jones, IICA Representative; and Kistian Flemming, CARDI representative.

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Alexandra Hospital surgical team praised for saving shark attack victim

Dr. Cardell Rawlins, Chief of Staff at the Alexandra Hospital on Nevis.

CHARLESTOWN, Nevis — The surgical team at the Alexandra Hospital is being congratulated for life-saving surgery on a shark attack victim by doctors in the United States of America and the management of the Ross University School of Veterinary Medicine (RUSVM), the health facility will continue to deliver top notch service to locals as well, according to Hon. Hazel Brandy-Williams, Junior Minister of Health in the Nevis Island Administration (NIA)

“We celebrate the accolades from the US doctors and will continue to ensure that our residents receive similar care at our facility,” said Mrs. Brandy-Williams on January 20. “The Ministry of Health and Gender Affairs looks forward to better days ahead for our people as we continue to provide the quality service that they need. Our mantra for 2021 is ‘The Year of Endless Possibilities.’ We endeavour to exceed all expectations by providing professional service.”

Mrs. Brandy-Williams used the opportunity to commend the surgical team at the hospital for its noteworthy efforts to save the RUSVM medical student attacked by a shark while swimming with friends.

“The shark attack on January 9 that threw the Federation into frenzy was quite unfortunate for a Ross University female student,” said Mrs. Brandy-Williams. “I compliment the doctors, nurses and other medical professionals who played a role in making the student’s experience at Alexandra Hospital as pleasant and as successful as possible.

“The surgical team, headed by Dr. Cardell Rawlins, must be commended for their quick and effective response to the situation which could have ended tragically,” she said. “The information shared was that everyone was calm and very efficient.”

During a January 15 virtual meeting with Dr. the Hon. Timothy Harris, Prime Minister of St. Kitts and Nevis, a three-member team of senior RUSVM officials called to express gratitude and offer commendation to the Coast Guard, the Royal St. Christopher and Nevis Police Force and the surgical team at the Alexandra Hospital in Nevis, for their quick response in assisting one of their students who suffered significant injury in a shark attack.

“The officials passed on compliments from the trauma team in the US to the medical team on the island, stating that the surgery was comparable to anything that could have been performed anywhere in the US. It was also said that the quick response obviously prevented the situation from being far worse.”

Hon. Hazel Brandy-Williams, Junior Minister of Health in the Nevis Island Administration.

Dr. Cardell Rawlins, Chief of Staff at the Alexandra Hospital on Nevis.

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‘De Strip‘ Beach nourishment, enhancement project underway at Frigate Bay

The land side of the revitalisation project at Frigate Bay.

BASSETERRE, St. Kitts – A beach nourishment project to enhance the beauty of ‘de strip,’ located in the Frigate Bay area has been embarked upon by the Team Unity Government of St. Kitts and Nevis.

“The beach nourishment project is a project conducted by two local contractors, Rock and Dirt, which is doing the land side of the project, and St. Kitts Marine Works which is doing the seaside of the project,” said Minister of Tourism, the Honourable Lindsay Grant, during the Prime Minister’s Monthly Press Conference on January 14.

“We have actively engaged with Smith-Warner out of Jamaica for the last three years whereby they did the necessary groundwork in determining exactly what the beach nourishment project should be,” explained Hon. Grant. “After Smith-Warner finished their work in terms of the project, we then engaged the marine brothers who are two young marine engineers in St. Kitts to further the project.”

“The project is costing us in the region of $6 million, which involves putting in groynes and breakwaters at the Frigate Bay to make the beach enhanced,” he said.

A groyne is a relatively long and narrow coastal defence structure, orientated at approximately right angles to the shoreline. Groynes control the natural alongshore beach movement of material caused by wave’s action and tidal currents.

A breakwater, however, is defined as a large concrete or stone barrier built from the coast out into the sea to protect the beach or harbour from large waves.

“At this point, we are about three months away from completion,” said Grant. “We met up with a challenge. When we went to the bottom of the ocean there were some reef remains. We had to go back to the drawing board with the marine engineers to determine what to do.”

“Having sorted that out over the holiday period, both on the landside and the seaside contractors are now engaged,” he said. “One of the groynes has been completed and the other groin is expected to begin in the next two weeks. Then that happen we are going to pump sand from an area outside in the sea which we have found back into the Frigate Bay area.”

Eight thousand cubic meters of sand are expected to be pumped during this process.

“The effect with the groynes, the breakwaters and the sand coming in should ensure the beach sand is retained,” explained Grant. “We will have a much wider beach and much more appealing and pleasant. The goal is to see the economics of it returning to the strip owners and bar owners in the Frigate Bay area.

“We hope this will mean that the sand will not be removed again when there are heavy sea movements,” he concluded.

A barge dredges underwater sand.

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