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Successes outweigh challenges in family counselling

BASSETERRE, St. Kitts –- Despite the challenges posed by family counselling, the Counselling Unit has witnessed successes in how families have benefited from its Family Matters Programme according to officials from the Counselling Unit within the Ministry of Social Development.

The Counselling Unit is piloting the Families Matters Programme, an evidence-based, parent-focused intervention programme funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). This programme has been adapted and implemented in countries throughout the world and is designed to promote positive parenting and improve parent-child communication.

“Our first year was the most challenging year because it was a new approach,” explained Family Counsellor Alicia Collins, a member of the Counselling Unit. “No service provider (Counselling Unit staff) was entering into any home because families were sceptical of their new methods and did not trust their motives.”

“The training received from the USAID allowed staff members to change their perspectives on these challenges,” said Counselling Unit Director, Michele de la Coudray-Blake. “It enabled them to take steps in the right direction toward achieving their overall goal of reducing risk factors within the family so as to better protect children.”

As a result, families were more accepting of the message and welcomed counsellors into their space. The family counsellors interacted with the families, engaging in positive reinforcement of parenting skills.

“Children have seen parents who may not have spoken to each other for years, come together and work while developing a different relationship,” said Mrs. Coudray-Blake.

Another success highlighted was that of parents changing their strategy of discipline as “they moved it away from that punitive way to having more conversations that then yield results.”

“We’ve seen young children step up to the plate and be engaged in the household and what’s going on there as well,” said Mrs. Coudray-Blake. “These successes were a direct result of engagement through the Families Matters Programme.”

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US Capitol Police Chief Resigning in Wake of Deadly Riot

Capitol Police Chief Steven Sund said Thursday that he will resign later this month after his police force failed to contain mobs who tried to prevent Congress from ratifying President-elect Joe Biden‘s victory.

His resignation letter came hours after Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) called for him to step down.

Sund will have only been on the job for about seven months when he resigns effective Jan. 16. He made no mention in the letter of Wednesday’s riots in the Capitol, but noted he will transition into a “sick leave status” starting Jan. 17 until he uses up his available sick leave balance of about 440 hours.

“It has been a pleasure and true honor to serve the United States Capitol Police Board and the Congressional community alongside the men and women of the United States Capitol Police,” Sund wrote to the other members of the Capitol Police Board.

Other members of the Capitol Police Board are also resigning or are under pressure to follow suit.

Pelosi announced Thursday that the House sergeant at arms, Paul Irving, had tendered his resignation. Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) also said Thursday that he would fire the Senate sergeant-at-arms, Michael Stenger, when Democrats take over the majority later this month.

Irving has served in his role since 2012.

“I think we have to have a full review,” Pelosi told reporters in the Capitol earlier Thursday. “What was underestimated? That the president of the United States would not be as inciteful? Perhaps somebody thought for a moment that he would be patriotic before he leaves office for just this once.

A 35-year-old woman participating in the violent riots was shot by a Capitol Police officer as she tried to force her way toward the House chamber. Glass panels adorning the Speaker’s Lobby — where she was trying to enter — are now cracked and broken due to the mob.

Sund said in a statement Thursday that the officer involved has been placed on administrative leave and is under investigation.

Sund also said that more than 50 Capitol Police and Metropolitan Police officers were injured, including several who were hospitalized with serious injuries.

Most of the insurrectionists were not wearing masks despite the COVID-19 pandemic and attacked police officers with metal pipes and chemical irritants.

The Capitol Police said earlier this week that it would have additional personnel on duty Wednesday in anticipation of demonstrations over Congress meeting in a joint session to formally certify the Electoral College votes.

But the Capitol Police were vastly overwhelmed by the raging mob. The D.C., Virginia and Maryland National Guard and state troopers were all called in to help contain the terror attack and it took about four hours to clear the Capitol complex.

Sund said in the earlier statement Thursday that the Capitol Police is conducting a “thorough review” of Wednesday’s security planning and procedures but defended his force’s actions.

“Maintaining public safety in an open environment – specifically for First Amendment activities – has long been a challenge. The USCP had a robust plan established to address anticipated First Amendment activities. But make no mistake – these mass riots were not First Amendment activities; they were criminal riotous behavior. The actions of the USCP officers were heroic given the situation they faced, and I continue to have tremendous respect in the professionalism and dedication of the women and men of the United States Capitol Police,” Sund said.

Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-Calif.), who chairs the House Administration Committee, said that she had been misled about the state of preparedness in a briefing with Sund and House Sergeant at Arms Paul Irving earlier in the week.

“We were told that was all in place and there was no doubt completely able to keep us secure in the Capitol,”  she said, specifying that she had been told that the coordination with the National Guard was ready to go.

“Well that was not correct. Not only were they not prepared, what they told me about the National Guard was just not true. The guard was not even activated,” she said.

Lofgren also indicated that President Trump was slow to react to requests to mobilize the National Guard, an issue that normally falls to governors, but rests on the commander-in-chief when it comes to the District of Columbia.

A call from Congress’s bipartisan leaders, she said, was necessary to get the Defense Department to mobilize the National Guard.

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BA Still Selling Caribbean Holidays During UK Virus Lockdown

British Airways Holidays is still selling Caribbean breaks despite the fact the UK is in coronavirus lockdown. Barbados, Costa Rica, Antigua and St Lucia are all on sale. St. Kitts and Nevis has temporarily suspended BA flights from the UK.

The Gov.uk website clearly states: “You should not travel abroad unless it is permitted. This means you must not go on holiday.”

This week Tui, Jet2 and Virgin Holidays cancelled operations until mid-February because of the tighter rules.

A quick look across the BA Holidays website reveals breaks are also available for a departure on Sunday to the Maldives, Thailand and Qatar.

British Airways Holidays told the BBC earlier this week it is still selling breaks because business people use their holiday packages to aid their travel arrangements.

On Friday, the firm said: “We advise customers to check the latest UK Government travel advice at Gov.uk to ensure they are permitted to travel.”

The statement added: “We are contacting all affected British Airways Holidays customers following the announcement of new national lockdown restrictions. Customers due to depart by 12 February 2021 will be offered a refund for their holiday. Our teams continue to monitor the situation and update our policy accordingly.”

Enterprise (Miami) Beach, Christ Church, Barbados
image captionThe holiday marketing industry says the sun’s never gone for long in Barbados

International travel in the last few months has flatlined, with tough border restrictions in place for entry into many destinations. This has meant many people have chosen to stay at home and demand has collapsed.

Last year was the toughest on record for the aviation industry, with airlines and airports reporting some of their worst results in their history. Tens of thousands of jobs have been lost.

Sophie Griffiths, editor of The Travel Trade Gazette, said the last ten months has been devastating for the sector.

“Most travel companies have reacted swiftly and fairly to the new lockdown rules, suspending their programmes and offering refunds or credit notes at a time when the UK travel industry continues to face immense challenges.

“The last ten months has been devastating for this industry, with companies rightly returning thousands of pounds in refunds but at the same time getting next to no money back in.”

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AP: Caribbean & Latin America in Review

Latin America & Caribbean in Review

January 05, 2021
Latin America & Caribbean in Review

This monthly gallery features some of the top photojournalism made by Associated Press photographers documenting Latin America and the Caribbean during the month of December.


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Florida COVID Test Site Converted to Vaccination Location

Cars line up for COVID-19 testing, Tuesday, Jan. 5, 2021, outside Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Fla. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) — Florida began converting the Hard Rock Stadium, one of its major testing locations, into a vaccination site.

Gov. Ron DeSantis called Wednesday’s press conference a “soft opening” that will last a few days until the site opens to the regular public. DeSantis also announced that residents over 65 should be soon able to receive a shot at other large-scale venues, churches, and even some grocery stores around the state.

More than 329,000 people have been vaccinated in Florida — or about 1.5% of the population — almost all of them either health care workers, residents in care homes, or people over the age of 65.

“We believe putting seniors first is the right policy as a matter of public health,” DeSantis said.

Florida followed federal recommendations in starting vaccinations first for front-line medical workers plus residents and staff of nursing homes in mid-December. However, instead of putting essential workers and people over 75 next in line, as those recommendations suggested, or fully completing the first group of recipients, DeSantis moved in late December to open up vaccinations more broadly for people 65 and over.

The rollouts have been very uneven across the state’s counties, but have been met with huge demand, with some people camping out in cars overnight to be in line for the limited supply. DeSantis said public drive-through sites like the one opening in Miami would be ramped up in coming days.

Meanwhile, questions were being raised about whether rich or well-connected people were unfairly getting access to the vaccine earlier than others. Florida has launched an investigation into an upscale nursing home amid reports that it administered coronavirus vaccines to wealthy donors and members of a country club along with its residents and employees.

The Washington Post and New York Post both reported that MorseLife Health System, a nonprofit that operates a nursing home and assisted living facility in West Palm Beach, has given vaccinations to donors and members of the Palm Beach Country Club, whose foundation has donated at least $75,000 to MorseLife since 2015, tax records show.

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Spencer reported from Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

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All Passengers to UK Will Need Negative COVID Test

All the passengers travelling to the UK, including the citizens of the UK, will have to present a negative result of a COVID-19 test done within 72 hours before the trip when entering the country as from next week.

Those who will not comply and will not present the test result will be fined £500. The measure is aimed at protecting the country from new coronavirus strains, like those detected in Denmark and South Africa, IPN reports, quoting a press release of the Government of the UK.

All the passengers arriving from countries that are not on the list of travel corridors of the British Government will have to self-isolate for ten days, regardless of the test result. The Republic of Moldova is not on the list of countries with a low infection risk and the Moldovans will thus have to self-isolate for ten days, regardless of the test result. When entering the country, the persons will be further asked to fill in a passenger locator form and to comply with the national quarantine restrictions.

Exceptions are in place for road carriers and children younger than 11 and for those who travel from countries that do not have the infrastructure needed to do the tests.

The National Extraordinary Public Health Commission decided that the regular and charter passenger flights to the UK will be resumed on January 8, starting at 00:00. On December 23, 2020, Moldova, alongside other European countries, suspended all the flights to and from the UK following reports that a new coronavirus strain was identified in the South of England.

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CARICOM Chief Calls US Riot a ‘Gross Affront to Democracy’

GEORGETOWN, Guyana (CMC) — Chairman of the 15-member Caribbean Community (Caricom), Dr Keith Rowley, the prime minister of Trinidad and Tobago, says the regional body is “deeply saddened and concerned at the unprecedented scenes that unfolded at the Capitol Building in Washington DC, during the certification of the votes of the presidential elections by the US Congress”.

In a statement yesterday, Rowley said that the storming of the US Congress was “a gross affront to democracy and the rule of law in a country which has been viewed as a leading light of representative governance the world over”.

 

“Caricom looks forward to the restoration of order and the continuation of the process of transfer of power in a peaceful manner.”

 

The Jamaican Government also expressed concern following the incident.

 

Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade Minister Kamina Johnson Smith, in a post on social media, said the Andrew Holness-led Administration is deeply concerned over “developments in Washington” which saw the storming of the US Capitol.

 

“We note with deep concern today’s developments in Washington DC,” Johnson Smith tweeted on Wednesday.

 

“We continue to follow the events and trust that there will be a prompt return to normalcy in this important neighbour and #democracy in the Western Hemisphere,” she said.

 

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CBI: Americans Can Become SKN Citizens in 2 Months

LONDON, Jan. 7, 2021 /PRNewswire/ — As political unrest reaches a breaking point in the United States, American nationals could be pleased to know that there is a lucrative investment opportunity in the dual-island nation of St Kitts and Nevis that culminates in the receival of second citizenship.

Since 1984, the Federation of St Kitts and Nevis has been offering wealthy investors a safe and secure route to dual citizenship under its Citizenship by Investment (CBI) Programme once making an economic contribution to its Sustainable Growth Fund (SGF).

Once investing in the SGF, applicants must undergo meticulous vetting procedures that involves a multi-tiered approach utilising both local and international agencies. After successfully passing the necessary security checks, which can take as little as 60 days, investors gain receipt of citizenship and can thus apply for their second passport. Revenue generated from the CBI Programme is then channelled into national development projects ranging from healthcare and education to infrastructure and tourism.

“Established almost 40 years ago, the oldest CBI programme in the world, it implements a strict due diligence process in full compliance with national legislation and international standards. The program also helps fund community-focused projects that drive economic growth for local people and investors and is a major driver of inward investment,” Les Khan, the CEO of St Kitts and Nevis’ CBI Unit, wrote for C-Suite Quarterly.

The benefits that stem from acquiring a dual citizenship includes increased travel mobility to nearly 160 countries and territories, an advantage that much of the western world can no longer enjoy as COVID restrictions lead to another wave of lockdowns across the globe. In addition to travel freedom, investors gain access to alternative business prospects and can also pass down citizenship for generations to come.

Those who become citizens of St Kitts and Nevis enjoy a fruitful business environment in a Caribbean paradise with a priority to maintaining the rule of law. In addition, the dual-island nation reports only 33 confirmed coronavirus cases with zero deaths, demonstrating an ability to implement stringent measures and protect its citizens.

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Moves to Oust Trump, Probe of Capitol Police After Riot

Rioters fight Capitol police Jan.6, 2021

WASHINGTON (AP) — The violent siege of the Capitol by President Donald Trump’s supporters forced painful new questions across government — about his fitness to remain in office for two more weeks, the ability of the police to secure the complex and the future of the Republican Party in a post-Trump era.

The tragedy deepened late Thursday as a Capitol police officer injured in the melee died, the fifth death related to the riot.

The U.S. Capitol Police said in a statement that Officer Brian D. Sicknick died from injuries sustained responding to the riot on Wednesday at the Capitol.

Sicknick was injured “while physically engaging with protesters,” the statement said. He returned to his division office and collapsed. He was taken to a local hospital where he died on Thursday.

The rampage that shocked the world and left the country on edge forced the resignations of three top Capitol security officials over the failure to stop the breach. It led lawmakers to demand a review of operations and an FBI briefing over what they called a “terrorist attack.” And it is prompting a broader reckoning over Trump’s tenure in office and what comes next for a torn nation.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said any remaining day with the president in power could be “a horror show for America.” Likewise, Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said the attack on the Capitol was “an insurrection against the United States, incited by the president,” and Trump must not stay in office “one day” longer.

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Pelosi and Schumer called for invoking the 25th Amendment to the Constitution to force Trump from office before President-elect Joe Biden is inaugurated on Jan. 20. Schumer said he and Pelosi tried to call Vice President Mike Pence early Thursday to discuss that option but were unable to connect with him.

At least one Republican lawmaker joined the effort. The procedure allows for the vice president and a majority of the Cabinet to declare the president unfit for office. The vice president then becomes acting president.

Pelosi said if the president’s Cabinet does not swiftly act, the House may proceed to impeach Trump.

Meanwhile, other Republicans who echoed Trump’s false claims of a fraudulent election, including rising stars and some party leaders, faced angry, unsettled peers — but also those cheering them on.

With tensions high, the Capitol shuttered and lawmakers not scheduled to return until the inauguration, an uneasy feeling of stalemate settled over a main seat of national power as Trump remained holed up at the White House.

The social media giant Facebook banned the president from its platform and Instagram for the duration of Trump’s final days in office, if not indefinitely, citing his intent to stoke unrest. Twitter had silenced him the day before.

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg said “the shocking events of the last 24 hours” make it clear Trump “intends to use his remaining time in office to undermine the peaceful and lawful transition of power.”

U.S. Capitol Police Chief Steven Sund, under pressure from Schumer, Pelosi and other congressional leaders, was forced to resign. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell asked for and received the resignation of the Sergeant at Arms of the Senate, Michael Stenger, effective immediately. Paul Irving, the longtime Sergeant at Arms of the House, also resigned.

Sund had defended his department’s response to the storming of the Capitol, saying officers had “acted valiantly when faced with thousands of individuals involved in violent riotous actions.”

In his first public comment on the mayhem, Sund said in a statement earlier Thursday that rioters attacked Capitol police and other law enforcement officers with metal pipes, discharged chemical irritants and “took up other weapons against our officers.”

It was “unlike any I have ever experienced in my 30 years in law enforcement here in Washington, D.C.,” said Sund, a former city police officer.

Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser called the police response “a failure.”

Lawmakers from both parties pledged to investigate and questioned whether a lack of preparedness allowed a mob to occupy and vandalize the building. The Pentagon and Justice Department had been rebuffed when they offered assistance.

Black lawmakers, in particular, noted the way the mostly white Trump supporters were treated.

Protesters were urged by Trump during a rally near the White House earlier Wednesday to head to Capitol Hill, where lawmakers were scheduled to confirm Biden’s presidential victory. The mob swiftly broke through police barriers, smashed windows and paraded through the halls, sending lawmakers into hiding.

The protesters ransacked the place, taking over the House area and Senate chamber and waving Trump, American and Confederate flags. Outside, they scaled the walls and balconies.

Newly elected Rep. Cori Bush, D-Mo., said if “we, as Black people did the same things that happened … the reaction would have been different, we would have been laid out on the ground.”

One protester, a white woman, was shot to death by Capitol Police, and there were dozens of arrests. Three other people died after “medical emergencies” related to the breach.

Rep. Val Demings, D-Fla., a former police chief, said it was “painfully obvious” that Capitol police “were not prepared.”

Rep. Tim Ryan, D-Ohio, who is the chairman of a subcommittee that oversees the Capitol police budget, announced the new review and suggested there would be leadership changes on the force.

“This is an embarrassment,” he said.

After the chaos, lawmakers resolved to return from shelter to show the country, and the world, of the nation’s enduring commitment to uphold the will of the voters by finishing the Electoral College tally. Congress confirmed Biden as the election winner, 306-232, before dawn Thursday.

Trump, who had repeatedly refused to concede the election, did so in a late Thursday video from the White House vowing a “seamless transition of power.”

Several lawmakers suggested that Trump be prosecuted for a crime, impeached for a second time or even removed under the Constitution’s 25th Amendment, which seemed unlikely before his term expires. The House impeached Trump in 2019 and the Senate acquitted him in 2020.

While Democrats led the charge to invoke the 25th Amendment, similar conversations among Republicans within the administration had made their way to Capitol Hill.

Republican Rep. Adam Kinzinger of Illinois publicly called on Trump’s Cabinet to invoke the 25th Amendment and remove the president from office.

“The president caused this,” Kinzinger said in a video posted to Twitter. “The president is unwell.”

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., did not join that effort but said Trump’s actions were the “problem” leading to the Capitol violence.

Biden aide Andrew Bates said that the president-elect is focused on the transition “and will leave it to Vice President Pence, the Cabinet and the Congress to act as they see fit.”

The Republicans who led the effort to challenge the Electoral College tally for Biden exposed the extent of the party divisions after four years of Trump’s presidency.

Those two GOP senators, Ted Cruz of Texas and Josh Hawley of Missouri, faced angry peers in the Senate.

Cruz defended his objection to the election results as “the right thing to do” as he tried unsuccessfully to have Congress launch an investigation.

In the House, Republican leaders Rep. Kevin McCarthy of California and Rep. Steve Scalise of Louisiana joined in the failed effort to overturn Biden’s win by objecting to the Electoral College results.

Despite Trump’s repeated claims of voter fraud, election officials and his own former attorney general have said there were no problems on a scale that would change the outcome. All the states have certified their results as fair and accurate, by Republican and Democratic officials alike.

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Associated Press writers Mary Clare Jalonick, Zeke Miller, Alan Fram, Padmananda Rama and Michael Balsamo in Washington contributed to this report.

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