Unique Room Categories in the Caribbean – TravelPulse

A vacation to one of the Caribbean islands usually comes with several perks. Often times people choose to stay at a luxurious all-inclusive resort that offers gourmet meals, endless activities and hours of pool and beach time.

In addition to these things, many travelers choose to explore the island theyre staying on through various tours and excursions in order to visit with locals, learn about the history and culture of the destination and take in all the beautiful flora and fauna they might not see back home.

While touring the destination is wonderful and spending time on the beach could last for hours, its always nice to have a comfortable room to relax in when you need some downtime throughout the vacation.

Sandals Resorts provides vacationers with several properties throughout the Caribbean, and each one is especially designed for two people in love. The resorts offer several room categories to choose from, so each couple is able to find something that caters to their needs.

Couples celebrating a special occasion such as a honeymoon, anniversary or babymoon may choose to splurge during their trip, and an upgraded room category is a great way to do so. Although, its always a good idea to treat yourself to something specialvacations only come around once in a while after all.

Sandals Resorts has you covered if youre in search of a unique room category in the Caribbean.

Sandals Grande St. Lucians Beachfront Grande Rondoval Butler Suite with Private Pool Sanctuary rooms are in the Love Next category and are conveniently located steps from the beach.

In addition to having a great location, guests staying in these rooms are spoiled with a hammock, outdoor shower, jacuzzi and private plunge pool, among other luxuries.

If stunning views are at the top of your qualification list, the Italian Oceanview SkyPool Butler Suite with Balcony Tranquility Soaking Tub room at Sandals Grenada was meant for you.

Guests in this room can feel right at home with a dining table, plush sofa and fully-stocked wet bar. Out on the balcony, the infinity-edge sky-high plunge pool allows guests to enjoy a soak while taking in the islands beauty.

Moving over to the island of Jamaica, Sandals South Coast offers Over the Water Butler Honeymoon Bungalows. These luxurious rooms each have a private patio equipped with a soaking tub, over the water hammock, outdoor shower, bistro set and sun loungers. With a butler and 24-hour room service, youll never have to leave.

While its essential to have a comfortable room to retreat to throughout vacation, its also exciting to indulge in something unique and one of a kind. These are only a few of the many room categories offered by Sandals Resorts.

Contact a travel advisor or visit http://www.sandals.com to learn more.

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Unique Room Categories in the Caribbean - TravelPulse

A&B named among the top three fastest growing economies in the Caribbean in 2019 – Antigua Observer

The three fastest growing economies for 2019were Dominica (9.0 percent), Anguilla (6.3 percent) and Antigua and Barbuda(6.2 percent), the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbeans(ECLACs) Preliminary Overview of Latin America and the Caribbean for 2019stated.

At the launch of the Preliminary Overview ofLatin America and the Caribbean, Sheldon McLean, the Coordinator of EconomicDevelopment Unit of ECLAC, Port of Spain, reviewed the macroeconomicperformance of the Caribbean economies in 2019 and outlined projections for2020.

His presentation summary stated that, somestrong growth increases as growth strengthened in the hurricane ravagedeconomies of Dominica and Antigua and Barbuda as reconstruction effortsintensified, foreign direct investments strengthened and the tourism industryrecovered with public sector investment support.

However, economic growth was subdued in 2019across most Caribbean economies due to the impact of fiscal austerity measuresin some countries and lack of investor confidence. The weighted average realgrowth in the region remained unchanged at 1.4 percent in 2019 relative to2018. Among the goods-producing economies, GDP growth is expected to be 1.2percent in 2019 (up from 0.8 percent in 2018), while the service-producingeconomies declined marginally to 1.7 percent (down from 1.8 percent in 2018).

With that being said, ECLAC declared that the 2014-2020 period will mark the lowest growth in the last seven decades for Latin American and Caribbean Economies.

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A&B named among the top three fastest growing economies in the Caribbean in 2019 - Antigua Observer

Joanna Lumley To Uncover The Hidden Caribbean In Her Latest Adventure For ITV – Deadline

Joanna Lumley, the Paddington 2 actress and BAFTA Film Awards host, is to embark on her latest adventure for ITV this time seeking to get under the skin of the Caribbean.

ITV has commissioned Burning Bright Productions to make two-part Joanna Lumleys Hidden Caribbean: Havana To Haiti, in which she will aim to showcase the history and secrets of different Caribbean islands on a 1,500-mile trip.

The miniseries will air in spring next year and follows similar documentaries Lumley has made for ITV with Burning Bright, including Joanna Lumleys India and her Trans-Siberian Adventure.

Clive Tulloh is the executive producer, while ITV factual controller Jo Clinton-Davis commissioned the series. Ewen Thomson is the director.

Joannas enthusiasm for and curiosity about the countries and cultures she explores always adds a layer of interest and excitement for viewers, Clinton-Davis said.

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Joanna Lumley To Uncover The Hidden Caribbean In Her Latest Adventure For ITV - Deadline

Caribbean excavation offers intimate look at the lives of enslaved Africans – Science Magazine

This pewter spoon was found beneath the ruins of the home of enslaved Africans at Estate Little Princess on St. Croix in the U.S. Virgin Islands.

By Lizzie WadeNov. 7, 2019 , 2:00 PM

ESTATE LITTLE PRINCESS ON ST. CROIX, U.S. VIRGIN ISLANDSJustin Dunnavant crouches in the earth beside the crumbling stone wall, carefully scraping at a shallow, 2-meter-long rectangular pit with his trowel. The sides of the pit need to be perfectly straight before the arrival of his excavation crew: nineteen middle and high school students from the Caribbean Center for Boys & Girls of the Virgin Islands in Christiansted. When the pit meets Dunnavant's standards, he sweeps the loose dirt into a plastic bucket and gently sifts it through a rectangle of wire mesh to separate any artifacts. Then he stands back, ready for the teenagers to take over the exacting work of excavating what was once a small house.

To many people, the artifacts that have emerged from the excavation wouldn't look like much: fish and pig bones from centuries-old meals, buttons that fell off of clothing, bits of coarse local pottery along with shards of smooth, painted porcelain. But to Dunnavant, an archaeologist at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, they are treasures that offer an intimate look into some of the most enigmatic lives in modern history: those of the enslaved Africans who once lived here.

Enslaved Africans lived and worked on Estate Little Princess starting from the plantation's founding in 1749 until slavery was abolished on St. Croix in 1848. At the plantation's peak in 1772, documents record 141 enslaved people living there. They were forced to carry out the punishing labor of planting and harvesting sugarcane and crushing and boiling it to make sugar and rum. Their grueling work generated vast fortunes for the estate's white planters and their home country of Denmark, which ruled the island from 1672 to 1917.

The written histories of this plantation and more than 1000 others like it throughout the Caribbean note facts such as the number of enslaved people who lived there, their genders and ages, and their places of origin. But the records reveal almost nothing about their daily lives. Here, enslaved Africans married, had children, made friends, and built families under the threat of being killed or sold away. They grew their own food, collected water, shaped and fired new styles of pottery out of local clay, raised livestock, and likely fished and trapped wild game. Enslaved Africans sold their surplus crops and crafts at markets they organized, using their earnings to buy items for themselves and their homes.

To glimpse those lives, archaeology is required. "One of the very few ways to get at the experiences of enslaved Africans is to look at [what] they left behind," Dunnavant says. That's why he and archaeologist Ayana Omilade Flewellen of the University of California (UC), Berkeley, spent 4 weeks directing excavations here this summer, the third of five planned dig seasons. The team is part of a wave of archaeologists around the Caribbean focused on studying not only the institution of slavery, but also the daily lives of enslaved Africans in all the intimacy and texture left out of history. Seen through Dunnavant's and Flewellen's eyes, the lost buttons, cooked bones, and shards of pots and porcelain are vital clues to how enslaved Africans maintained their individuality and humanity within a system designed to strip them of both. And by studying the vegetation, water systems, and other environmental features of plantations, these archaeologists are also documenting how slavery literally reshaped the islandsand the world.

Archaeologist Justin Dunnavant co-leads excavations on St. Croixs Estate Little Princess.

"These stories are not going to be lost," says Alicia Odewale, an African diaspora archaeologist at the University of Tulsa in Oklahoma who works on Estate Little Princess with Dunnavant and Flewellen. "They are going to be remembered."

Estate Little Princessand its island, St. Croix, were once at the center of the world economy. For more than 300 years, thousands of European ships sailed to the Caribbean carrying enslaved Africans and sailed away full of the sugar, coffee, and other cash crops their labor produced. "Slavery drove the world economy, and it permeated all corners of the globe. And the weight of it was solidly in the Caribbean," says Jillian Galle, director of the Digital Archaeological Archive of Comparative Slavery (DAACS) at the Monticello plantation in Charlottesville, Virginia.

"Almost every ship operating during the slavery era was in one way or another involved in the slave trade," Dunnavant says.

Between 1500 and 1875, about 4.8 million enslaved Africans were brought to the Caribbean, compared with about 389,000 brought to the United States. Perhaps another million people died on the way to those destinations.

Dunnavant and Flewellen plan to eventually document every step in the lives of the enslaved Africans who lived here, beginning with the ships that brought them to the port of Christiansted. Archaeologists from the U.S. National Park Service have already identified artifacts from shipwrecks near a small island off of the coast, which could be from documented wrecks of ships carrying enslaved Africans.

For centuries, ships carried enslaved people from Africa to the Caribbean, where many were forced to work on coffee and sugar plantations. Their labor transformed the islands' ecology as well as the world economy, creating vast wealth for European colonial planters.

(GRAPHIC) N. DESAI AND X. LIU/SCIENCE; (DATA) SLAVEVOYAGES.ORG

Once on St. Croix, enslaved Africans were sold to estates around the island, including Estate Little Princess, which is on the coast 3 kilometers northwest of Christiansted and is now a preserve owned by the Nature Conservancy. A census documented 38 houses in the estate's village, but many have been demolished. The team found the ruins of only five in the form of still-standing walls made of stone and chunks of coral harvested from the island's many reefs. To find out how far the village once extended, archaeologists worked with the conservancy staff this season to cut trails through the tangle of vegetation around the ruins. They dug test pits every 10 meters, searching for clusters of artifacts that could indicate that people once lived nearby.

Then, the team zeroed in on one of the best preserved houses. The roof is long vanished, but the walls are high enough to show the outlines of some of its doors and windows. Because of the cramped, 6-by-3-meter quarters, the residents likely cooked outside. That's why the excavation pit Dunnavant cleaned up for the middle and high schoolers is outside the house, right up against its highest standing wall. They dig and sift for artifacts with guidance from archaeologist Alexandra Jones, founder of the educational nonprofit Archaeology in the Community in Washington, D.C.

Just on the other side of the same wall, undergraduate students from historically black colleges and universities dig a 1-square-meter pit inside the house. This field school is the first experience with archaeology for most, but they quickly become an efficient team. As two students scrape thin layers of earth into buckets, others sift it through the wire screens and keep a sharp eye out for artifacts. Because the plantation is much too recent for radiocarbon dating, the archaeologists will create a timeline by tracing the changing styles of artifacts, including ceramics and buttons. Missing even one tiny object could mean losing a world of priceless information.

It's a lot of trust to place in students, but Dunnavant and Flewellen, co-founders of the Society of Black Archaeologists, have made those twin training programs a priority. Less than 1% of U.S. archaeologists identify as black, something Dunnavant and Flewellen want to change. "Since the late 1970s, archaeologists have been asking questions about black culture and identity formation in the African diaspora," largely through research on plantations, Flewellen says. But, "There hasn't been a rise in actually training people of African descent to ask those questions themselves."

To sort their finds, the students sit at folding tables in front of buildings that were once the planters' mansions, emptying bags of artifacts onto plastic trays. "No one has touched these artifacts for 200 years, so it's really important what happens to them next," Odewale says. She helps the students sort objects by type: glass, bone, metal, ceramic, and the local pottery made from coarse clay and fired in pits covered with brush, called Afro-Crucian ware.

Archaeologist Ayana Omilade Flewellen (center) helps college students sift for artifacts from Estate Little Princess.

All those artifacts will eventually be entered into DAACS, the digital archive of artifacts from sites of slavery, which includes material from 53 U.S. sites and 24 across six Caribbean islands. The Estate Little Princess finds will be a valuable addition because the archaeologists here have already turned up a stunningly diverse collection of artifacts, says Khadene Harris, an archaeologist at Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio, and a former postdoc at DAACS. "They've got almost everything" you could imagine on a Caribbean plantation: glass bottles for storing water or medicine, locally made pottery, animal bones, buttons and hook-and-eye fasteners for clothes, nails, fragments of pipe stems, and even expensive imports such as porcelainand, as of this summer, a single pewter spoon, likely from Europe. "St. Croix is a really well-connected island," Harris says.

The planters didn't buy those items, contrary to a once-common assumption. When researchers first began to excavate on plantations in the 1970s, they thought all the objects in enslaved laborers' houses were provided to them by the planter class, says Theresa Singleton, an archaeologist at Syracuse University in New York. But further research in archives and the field revealed that enslaved Africans in both the Caribbean and the southeastern United States bought their possessions. On St. Croix and other Caribbean islands, enslaved Africansalongside free people of color, traveling traders, and poor and middleclass white residentsshopped at markets often run by free and enslaved black women. There, enslaved people sold surplus crops or crafts and bought items, including porcelain and tobacco pipes.

Enslaved Africans' level of economic access varied by island and historical period and could be severely restricted. On a 19th century plantation in Cuba where Singleton has excavated, enslaved workers had few possessions. Their village was surrounded by a wall, a stark symbol of how planters controlled their movements. Singleton thinks that tight control was a reaction to an 1825 rebellion and ongoing raids by those who had escaped.

Even on St. Croix, where enslaved Africans had some purchasing power, excavated objects are often small and unassumingbut they have tales to tell. For example, Flewellen studies the buttons, beads, and other items of personal adornment found here. The team found several finished bone buttons, but no larger flat pieces of bone from which the buttons would have been carved. That means the enslaved people on the estate were likely buying or trading for buttons, not making them. Each one, therefore, is a relic of an economic and stylistic choice an enslaved person made about how to spend their money and express their identity within the constraints of a brutal system.

"When we ask questions about the human experience of enslavement, how people moved their bodies around this landscape, how they dressed their bodies we're trying to figure out, what were their interior lives?" Flewellen says.

Back at the sorting table, one student holds up an unusual artifact, wondering which pile to put it in. It's a small, perfectly round ball, about the size of a chickpea. Odewale rushes over to examine it. The ball is heavy in her palm and looks to have a dark hue beneath the dusting of dirt on its surface. She gasps. "That's a musket ball!"

But then she gently scrubs its surface with a toothbrush. As the dirt falls away, what emerges isn't the black surface of a lead bullet, but rather the tan of local clay. The ball is a solid clay marble, perhaps evidence of children playing or adults gambling. But it may also have been functional. Odewale knows from oral histories that enslaved Africans dropped spare clay marbles into opaque ceramic water vessels. When the marbles started to clink against the sides of the pot, it was a signal that the water level was getting low.

"Innovation!" she cries. "I'm telling you, geniuses were out here at work. All we have to do is try and listen."

The experiencesof enslaved Africans aren't preserved only in the objects they once owned; they are also visible in the landscape of Estate Little Princess itself. Sugarcane required an exceptional amount of hard labor to cultivate and process, and planters chased sky-high profits in a newly globalized market by keeping expenses as low as possible. "Sugar and enslaved labor go hand in hand," says Douglas Armstrong, a Syracuse University archaeologist who studies plantations on Barbados.

On many islands, enslaved Africans were forced to clearcut extensive forests to make way for cane fields. Sugarcane is a notoriously thirsty crop, so the enslaved dug irrigation ditches and changed the course of rivers to feed the new fields. They cut more trees to fire the boilers used to cook the cane, which burned day and night. "There is something especially perverse about coercing enslaved laborers into destroying the environment that they rely on," Harris says.

Dunnavant calls that work terraforming, and on St. Croix, "It created a whole new environment"the deforested island of today. He's trying to understand the details of that environment, including where Estate Little Princess got its freshwater and what crops enslaved Africans cultivated. St. Croix and other colonial islands required plantations to have provision groundsgardens where enslaved Africans grew their own food, another place where they managed to exercise some personal agency.

Estate Little Princess is now a nature preserve, where the crumbling walls of what may have been an overseers house still stand.

On a plantation called Morne Patate on Dominica, Mark Hauser, an archaeologist at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, discovered a provision ground buried under a field that is still cultivated. There, he and archaeologist Sarah Oas of Arizona State University in Tempe found seeds and other plant remains from all over the world: maize from the Americas, guava from the Caribbean, barley from Europe, and millet and sorghum, which were staples in Africa. That experimentation with diverse crops led to the creation of a new Caribbean cuisine, guided by the decisions and tastes of enslaved Africans. The researchers even found traces of coffee, a cash crop grown on the plantation, in enslaved laborers' homesperhaps a sign they were growing surpluses and selling them in local markets.

Dunnavant hopes to survey the whole of Estate Little Princess next year, including around the ruins of a mill and a rum factory. That's an important next step, says Kenneth Kelly, an archaeologist at the University of South Carolina in Columbia who studies plantations on Guadeloupe and Martinique. "Enslaved people were using a lot of the landscape," he says, sometimes in ways they tried to keep hidden. On the Trents plantation on Barbados, for example, Armstrong slid down a steep gully and found a cave full of animal bones, charred wood from fires, and pieces of iron, including blades. Perhaps enslaved Africans were planning an escape or rebellion, or perhaps it was a shrine where they could practice rituals brought from West Africa, where iron had religious significance. "No matter how you look at it, it's a form of resistance," Armstrong says.

Even after slavery was abolished on St. Croix in 1848 and the island became a U.S. territory in 1917, this estate produced sugaruntil the 1960s. Documents record that many of the newly freed stayed on the estate and continued to work as paid laborers, as they did on plantations all over the island. Although some houses in the village were demolished in the 20th century to drive out squatters, the homes that still stand were inhabited until the 1960s or even later; the archaeologists unearthed batteries and fragments of a boom box.

"For us in the 21st century, we would think that we would want to leave right away [after emancipation]. But the question is, to where?" says William White, an archaeologist at UC Berkeley who works here. "Starting over is a huge risk," especially because slavery wasn't abolished in the Caribbean until Cuba became the last island to outlaw it in 1886.

Archaeologist William White helps excavate a house where enslaved Africans once lived.

Still, the newly freed were eager to escape the constant surveillance of the planter class, Harris says. When slavery was abolished on Dominica in 1834, many laborers stayed on a plantation Harris studies called Bois Cotlette. But they moved out of the old village and built new houses in the middle of the fields where they worked, farther from the planters' houses. She has found the remains of raised platforms made of stone and earth, on top of which the newly freed built homes. Such homes could be quickly disassembled and rebuilt elsewhere when occupants wanted to move or were evicted. "I interpret that as free people wanting more autonomy and more space," Harris says.

Back on Estate Little Princess, the students finish excavating for the day, sieving the last buckets of dirt for the unassuming treasures they contain. The cleaned and sorted artifacts are put into carefully labeled plastic bags; they'll be stored at Odewale's lab in Oklahoma until a secure facility can be built on St. Croix. Safe storage here is a challenge, as hurricanes Irma and Maria showed in 2017. Those storms hit St. Croix hard, leaving still-visible scars and damaged buildings. The hurricane winds felled the once-abundant mango trees, and papaya trees have sprung up in their place, changing the estate's ecology once again.

One way to tell St. Croix's story is tragedy after tragedy. But the archaeologists see it differently: an island and its people equally defined by resilienceand survival.

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UN spotlights ‘explosive’ obesity rates, hunger in Latin America and Caribbean – UN News

ThePanorama of Food and Nutritional Security 2019,jointly published by a group of UN health agencies,urgedcountries totake swiftaction to address the malnutritionissueacrossthe region.

"The explosive increase in obesity,which affects 24 percent of the regional population, about 105 million people -almost double the global level of 13.2 percent- not only has huge economic costs, but also threatens the lives of hundreds of thousands", said JulioBerdegu, Regional Representative for the UNs Food and Agriculture Organization(FAO).

Spotlighting the importance of promoting healthier food environments, the report suggested using taxation and otherincentives that favor healthy food, social protection systems, school feedingprogrammesand the regulation of food advertising and marketing.

Improving food labeling, ensuring safety and quality of food sold on the street and reformulating ingredients of certain products to ensure nutritional value can also aid the growing problem.

The fastest growing trendin the regions food sector is that ofultra-processed food products,increasing thepopulation's exposure to excessive amounts of sugar, sodium and fat,according to the report.

Every year, 600,000 people in the region diefromdiet-related diseases, such a diabetes,hypertension and cardiovascular illnesses, while inadequate diets are threatening future generations, as the rates of both childhood and adolescent obesity tripled between 1990 and 2016.

As food processing industries dominate the regions food environment, ultra-processed products are more readily available in expanding supermarket chains, andaffordability is outweighingmorenutritious options, with thepoorthe hardest hit.

At least 13 countries in the region have taken measures that seek to favor adequate food, and eight have improved advertisingregulations, and four have implemented food labeling laws.

"We must act now to reverse this trend and prevent children from suffering the consequences of poor diets on their health and their future quality of life," said Carissa Etienne, Director of the Pan American Health Organization(PAHO), which is also WHOs Regional Office.

She added that "we need the commitment of the whole society and public policies that regulate unhealthy food products, create environments conducive to physical activity and promote healthy eating at school and at the family table."

Tuesdays report stresses that need for social protection programs among other measures that promote food safety and quality essential to improve nutrition.

Today, social protectionprogrammes supply more than 200 million people in Latin America and the Caribbean, roughly a third of the regional population, with breakfast, snacks and lunch,including 85 million schoolchildren.

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UN spotlights 'explosive' obesity rates, hunger in Latin America and Caribbean - UN News

Weaving systems for impact investing in Central America and the Caribbean – ImpactAlpha

ImpactAlpha, Nov. 12 Agents of Impact from around Central America and the world arrive in Antigua, Guatemala this week for the fifth Foro Latinoamericano de Inversin de Impacto Centroamrica y El Caribe.

Thespinoff of the annual FLII in Mrida, Mexico, aimsto advance solutions on issues from gender equality and economic inequality to migration and climate change

Pomona Impact, for example, is raising a $35 million second fund to deploy into high-growth enterprises in Central America, in agriculture, as well as basic services including health, education, water and renewable energy.

Weaving systems, the conference theme, puts an emphasis on collaborating across sectors. Its also a nod to the regions competitive agriculture and creative economies.

With debt as well as equity, Pomona is demonstrating impact investing in Central America (video)

As urgency around such issues has risen, so too has interest in businesses and projects that seek to address them, says Daniel Buchbinder, founder of Alterna, the conference host. Global trends and current events, he says, are driving a greater interest in impact investing.

In the four years since the first FLII Central America and the Caribbean, Buchbinder told ImpactAlpha, the logic and the investment impact and value proposal have grown. The range of impact investing instruments, he says, is growing to meet the social environmental challenges of the region.

Representatives of more than 60 fund managers, angel investors, corporate investors, NGOs and regional and international banks are expected among the 600 participants.

Bamboo Capital picked to manage $17 million renewable energy fund in Haiti

The more than 250 early-stage companies include recycling monetization firm Ecoins in Costa Rica, El Salvadors MASSHI, which trains and employs deaf women to produce handicrafts, and Guatemalan firms Ethikos Global and Mai. The turnout is an indication of how the Caribbean and Central American market has evolved in these years, said Buchbinder.

>>Follow ImpactAlphas Latin America coverage.

On the agenda: the future of agriculture and cooperatives, reproductive rights, impact tech, the creative economy and climate change. In a mainstage fireside chat, Ral Pomares of Sonen Capital and Richard Aitkenhead of IDC Group Advisor will discuss Central Americas unique inflection point (see Pomaress SOCAP interview with Rodrigo Villar of Mexico City-based New Ventures).

Agent of Impact (and author of the book Leapfrog) Nathalie Molina Nio of BRAVA Investments,Leticia Gasca of Skill Agility Lab, and Toniics Emilie Cortes will deliver keynotes.

Jeff Furman, one of Ben & Jerrys first employees and an emeritus board member, will dish on the success of one of the worlds most iconic social enterprises, and its acquisition by Unilever.

Buchinder had attended the Latin American Impact Investment Forum in Mexico since it was created and has a good relationship with New Ventures, the Mexico-based organizer. He was convinced of the need for such a fresh, diverse and inclusive connection place in the center of the American continent.

Central America and the Caribbean needed to connect with the rest of the world, and with each other, he says. Now, investors from around the world attend the FLII Central America and the Caribbean.

Incofin helps launch climate resilience insurance for Nicaraguas farmers

All social issues, human rights, migration, extreme climate events all these challenges are also incredible opportunities to invest and reverse thanks to impact investment, says Buchinder.

The Central America region is an ideal place to pilot schemes and understand if a financial instrument works or not, in the fastest way possible.

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Weaving systems for impact investing in Central America and the Caribbean - ImpactAlpha

Viceroy to Open Caribbean Overwater Bungalow Resort in 2021 – Caribbean Journal

Viceroy is planning a 2021 debut for its highly-anticipated overwater bungalow resort on the Caribbean coast of Panama.

The Viceroy Bocas del Toro Panama will be opening its doors in 2021, according to Viceroys Web site.

The long-awaited resort, which would be one of just a few overwater resorts in the wider Caribbean region, was first announced back in 2016.

The resort, set in the spectacular archipelago of Bocas del Toro, will include 42 private overwater villas, the pinnacle of what makes this destination truly extraordinary, according to the company.

In all, the new Viceroy will span 457 acres, with a total of 186 rooms and residences.

The Viceroy Bocas del Toro Panama will also include eight eateries and lounges, a number of pools, a spa, meditation space and a fitness center.

This the Viceroy vibe, with a tropical twist, the company said on its Web site.

Once completed, the resort would join a select group of overwater resorts in the region, most notably those run by Sandals Resorts International, which has been steadily growing its collection of overwater accommodations in recent years.

The property is being designed by Zurcher Arquitectos in Costa Rica, with interiors by Wimberly Interiors.

The Viceroy would join a handful of boutique overwater resorts in Panama like the popular Punta Caracol Acqua Lodge, also set in Bocas del Toro.

The move also marks what seems to be a growing trend of development in the Western Caribbean, from the continued boom in hotel development in Belize to this summers announcement by Kimpton that it would be opening a resort in Roatan, Honduras.

Viceroys Caribbean portfolio includes a resort in the Riviera Maya.

Last year, the company opened a new hotel in Mexico, the Viceroy Los Cabos.

For more, visit Viceroy Panama.

CJ

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Viceroy to Open Caribbean Overwater Bungalow Resort in 2021 - Caribbean Journal

Panorama of Food and Nutritional Security in Latin America and the Caribbean – World – ReliefWeb

November 12, 2019, Santiago de Chile - The prevalence of adult obesity in Latin America and the Caribbean has tripled since 1975, affecting one in four adults in a region where hunger has grown once again, reaching 42.5 million people, according to a new United Nations report issued today, the Panorama of Food and Nutritional Security 2019.

The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), the Pan American Health Organization / World Health Organization (PAHO / WHO), the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) and the World Food Program (WFP), called for countries in the region to develop urgent actions to address the increase in malnutrition.

The document highlights the need to promote healthier food environments through taxes and incentives that favor healthy food, social protection systems, school feeding programs and the regulation of food advertising and marketing. The agencies also stress the importance of improving food labeling with frontal nutritional warning systems, ensuring the safety and quality of food sold on the street, and reformulating the composition of certain products to ensure their nutritional contribution.

According to the Panorama report, the most significant increase in adult obesity in the region was observed in the Caribbean, where the percentage quadrupled, rising from 6 percent in 1975 to 25 percent, an increase in absolute terms from 760,000 to 6.6 million people.

The explosive increase in obesity which affects 24 percent of the regional population, about 105 million people, almost double the global level of 13.2 percent not only has huge economic costs, but also threatens the lives of hundreds of thousands, explained the FAOs Regional Representative, Julio Berdegu.

According to the Panorama, every year 600,000 people die in Latin America and the Caribbean due to diseases related to poor diets, such as diabetes, hypertension and cardiovascular diseases. Inadequate diets are associated with more deaths than any other risk factor, something that threatens our future generations, since the rates of both childhood and adolescent obesity have tripled between 1990 and 2016.

We must act now to reverse this trend and prevent children from suffering the consequences of poor diets on their health and their future quality of life, said PAHO/WHO Director Carissa F. Etienne. To achieve this, we need the commitment of the whole society and public policies that regulate unhealthy food products, create environments conducive to physical activity and promote healthy eating at school and at the family table, he added.

The publication highlights that the region is worse than the rest of the world in the majority of malnutrition indicators related to excessive calorie intake: overweight has doubled since the 1970s, and today affects 59.5 percent of adults in the region, 262 million people, while globally the rate is 20 percentage points lower: 39.1 percent

In contrast, the region has lower undernourishment rates than the world (6.5 percent for the region versus 10.8 worldwide), stunting (9 percent versus 21.9), and much lower rates of wasting (1.3 percent, versus 7.3for the world). However, the agencies warn of the worrying increase in hunger, which has grown again by 4.5 million people since 2014 an increase of 11 percent reaching 42.5 million in 2018, its highest point of the last decade.

Changes in the food environment

The Panorama makes a detailed analysis of how the food environment of the region has changed, understood as the space of interaction between people and the physical, economic, political and socio-cultural conditions that influence the way they acquire, prepare and consume food.

Sales of ultra-processed food products are the fastest growing in Latin America and they increase the population's exposure to excessive amounts of sugar, sodium and fat. Between 2000 and 2013, the consumption of ultra-processed products grew by more than 25 percent, and fast food consumption grew almost 40 percent.

In Latin America and the Caribbean, too many children eat too little healthy food and too much processed food, said Bernt Aasen, UNICEF Regional Director (a.i.) for Latin America and the Caribbean. Almost 1 in 5 children under 5 are malnourished or overweight, which prevents them from growing well. It is everyone's task to ensure healthy food is available and affordable for all families, especially the most vulnerable.

The expansion of supermarket chains and the preponderance of large food processing industries is another major change in the regional food environment, one which has made ultra-processed products available everywhere, and at lower prices than nutritious food. Poor people have been hardest hit by these changes, since for this population group it is often easier and cheaper to access unhealthy rather than healthy food.

Regional responses to promote healthier food environments

The region has reacted to the rise in malnutrition through a series of public policies. Countries such as Chile, Ecuador, Peru and Uruguay have implemented food labeling laws, which allow consumers to make better decisions.

Brazil, Chile, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Mexico, Peru, Panama and Uruguay have improved regulation on food advertising, and at least 13 countries in the region have adopted fiscal and social measures that seek to favor adequate food. The Panorama report stresses that social protection and school feeding programs, public food supply and marketing systems and policies that promote food safety and quality are essential to improve nutrition.

"If we expand social protection programs in our region, we would better face the double burden that hunger and obesity represent for communities and families," said WFP Regional Director Miguel Barreto. "These are the two faces of malnutrition." Social protection programs today cover more than 200 million people in Latin America and the Caribbean, including 85 million schoolchildren who receive breakfast, snacks or lunch.

Contact

FAOBenjamn Labatut+56 229 232 174benjamin.labatut@fao.org

PAHO / WHOSebastin OlielT. +1 202 974 3459M. +1 (202) 316 5679oliels@paho.org

UNICEFMara Alejandra BerroternT. +507 62972099M. +507 3017482maberroteran@unicef.org

WFPElio RujanoT. +507 317 3900M. +507 6677 0608elio.rujano@wfp.org

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Panorama of Food and Nutritional Security in Latin America and the Caribbean - World - ReliefWeb

Unearthing slavery in the Caribbean, and the Catholic Church’s influence on modern psychology – Science Magazine

Meagan Cantwell

Most historical accounts of slavery were written by colonists and planters. Researchers are now using the tools of archaeology to learn more about the day-to-day lives of enslaved Africanshow they survived the conditions of slavery, how they participated in local economies, and how they maintained their own agency. Host Sarah Crespi talks with Contributing Correspondent Lizzie Wade about a Caribbean archaeology project based on St. Croix in the U.S. Virgin Islands and launched by the founders of the Society for Black Archaeologists that aims to unearth these details. Watch a related video here.

Sarah also talks with Jonathan Schulz, a professor in the Department of Economics at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia, about a role for the medieval Roman Catholic Church in so-called WEIRD psychologywestern, educated, industrialized, rich, democratic. The bulk of psychology experiments have used participants that could be described as WEIRD, and according to many psychological measures, WEIRD subjects tend to have some extreme traits, like a stronger tendency toward individuality and more friendliness with strangers. Schulz and colleagues used historical maps and measures of kinship structure to tie these traits to strict marriage rules enforced by the medieval Catholic Church in Western Europe. Readrelated commentary.

This weeks episode was edited by Podigy.

Ads on this weeks show: Bayer; KiwiCo

Download a transcript (PDF)

Listen to previous podcasts.

About the Science Podcast

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Unearthing slavery in the Caribbean, and the Catholic Church's influence on modern psychology - Science Magazine

Opinion: Is Venezuela becoming the Libya of the Caribbean? | In English – EL PAIS

In 2011 Libya cracked into a thousand pieces. With United Nations authorization, a broad coalition attacked Libya, a mob murdered Muammar Gaddafi, his bloodthirsty regime collapsed, and the country fragmented. Eventually, two governments were formed, one based in Tripoli and another in Tobruk. Each has its own leader, armed forces, government bureaucracy and even a Central Bank that prints its own money. Whats more, each government has powerful nations backing it. The one in Tripoli has the recognition of the UN, while the one in Tobruk is supported by Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, and Russia, among others.

Control over Libyas rich oil fields has set off fierce fighting but, so far, neither government has been able to defeat the other. To top it all off, an unknowable number of militias, tribes, and terrorist groups including Al Qaeda and the Islamic State (ISIS) operate freely within Libya, as well as criminal syndicates that traffic drugs, people, and, most dangerously, arms, freely available to the highest bidder.

As in Libya, Venezuela has two centers of power, neither of which seems quite able to do away with the other

The prolonged collapse of the country has become a problem for Europe. Tripoli is only 186 miles from Lampedusa, the tiny Italian island that has become an epicenter of the Mediterraneans migration crisis. Tens of thousands of African refugees from all over the continent fully aware of the chaos and corruption gripping in Libya are passing through the country on their way to Europe, creating a lucrative market in human cargo that the local authorities are unable, or unwilling, to stop.

None of this was anticipated by the foreign powers that intervened in 2011. Their priority was to end the Gaddafi regime and prevent the lunatic leader from perpetrating a genocide. The plan was that once Gaddafi was overthrown, a transitional government would call for elections and begin Libyas transition to democracy. The nations huge oil reserves would finance Libyas rebirth. Eight years on, this day after scenario seems entirely illusory.

Today, Venezuela is in danger of becoming the Libya of the Caribbean. Of course, the two are very different countries and their circumstances differ in all sorts of ways. But the similarities are surprising.

As in Libya, Venezuela has two centers of power, neither of which seems quite able to do away with the other. Juan Guaid is one president and his constitutional legitimacy is recognized by more than 60 countries, including the main democracies around the world. Nicols Maduro came to power via a fraudulent election and has usurped power with the support of the armed forces and paramilitary groups. He is backed by Cuba, Russia, China, Iran, Turkey, and Syria, among others.

In Libya there are large criminal syndicates that traffic people. In Venezuela there are powerful syndicates that traffic drugs and minerals such as gold and coltan

Both Libya and Venezuela are failed states whose governments are unable to perform basic governing functions. Neither government controls the entire national territory, and that void has been filled by a plethora of bad actors. Al Qaeda and ISIS operate in Libya, while the ELN and the FARC, Colombias leftist guerillas who are heavily involved in drug trafficking, operate in Venezuela. Regional strong men, militias, and criminal gangs also control large territories and cities, or pieces of them.

In Libya there are large criminal syndicates that traffic people. In Venezuela there are powerful syndicates that traffic drugs and minerals such as gold and coltan. Libya is a great arms bazaar. Venezuela too. Anarchy and criminality reign in both countries. And both have become the focus of serious regional crises. African immigrants arriving from Libya have destabilized Europes politics, while millions of Venezuelan refugees are destabilizing politics in Colombia and other countries. Another similarity is that both are major oil producers that are increasingly unable to produce, export and benefit from their vast oil reserves. Both nations are currently subject to international sanctions, and both are under the watchful eye of the Kremlin. Putin cleverly turned Russia into a major player in the Syrian conflict. Now he is trying to do the same with Libya and Venezuela.

International mediators have promoted dialogues and negotiations between the two governments. In both countries all these attempts have failed

International mediators have promoted dialogues and negotiations between the two governments. In both countries all these attempts have failed.

Another common feature of the crises in Libya and Venezuela is that compassion fatigue is increasingly evident. A long drawn-out crisis with few prospects for a simple solution ceases to be a priority for an international community that is already overwhelmed by other conflicts and humanitarian emergencies. Kurds, the Rohingya, and refugees from Yemen, Syria, Turkey, and Central America all compete for the attention and resources of the international community.

Unfortunately, governments, international organizations, and the news media are already tiring of the Venezuela crisis. If there are no changes in the status quo in the coming months, the inertia and the more-of-the-same mentality will prevail. This must be avoided at all costs.

Twitter @moisesnaim

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Opinion: Is Venezuela becoming the Libya of the Caribbean? | In English - EL PAIS

Former Middletown fire truck finishes its long journey to serve Caribbean island – Hamilton Journal News

MIDDLETOWN

A retired Middletown fire engine has arrived and is back in service in a new community in the Caribbean.

The retired 1997 Luverne fire engine could have been sold for scrap, but the Middletown Division of Fire worked with Cincinnati firefighter Walter Cook, who facilitates donations of retired fire apparatus and equipment to nations in the Caribbean and in South America.

Cook said the Middletown fire engine was placed on a flatbed truck, arrived in New Jersey on Sept. 18 and was shipped to St. Vincent and the Grenadines. The fire engine arrived in Kingstown, that nations capital city and chief port, on Oct. 17 and cleared customs.

MORE: This retired Middletown fire engine will again help fight fires, but this time in the Caribbean

Howie Prince, consulate general of St. Vincent and The Grenadines to the U.S., accepted the Middletown fire engine during a formal transfer ceremony in August.

Prince told the Journal-News that the fire engine has been properly received and will be properly used.

Its our policy to put these vehicles into service as soon as possible after arrival, he said.

In August, Prince said the donated fire engine, which has a 1,000-gallon water tank, would be used in the rural areas to improve the current firefighting equipment.

In some places in the rural areas of that nation, a fire truck is actually a small water tank with a small hose in the back of a pickup truck bed, according to Middletown Fire Chief Paul Lolli.

MORE: Retired Middletown fire engine being transferred to the Caribbean

At the transfer ceremony, Prince said if the fire engine can be used on the island for another five years, there is no telling how many lives it would have saved and one life that is saved is enough for it to be in existence.

City officials said Middletowns fire department also donated old hand tools and that fire departments in Russellville, Ohio, and Shelby County, Ky., gave other fire gear as part of this donation. Middletown was also donating self-contained breathing apparatus that is out of date for use in the U.S.

MORE: Middletown donating retired fire engine to Caribbean nation to replace pickup truck

The Division of Fire has made other donations of old firefighting gear and breathing equipment on several occasions in the past to the Dominican Republic and other nations firefighting and police services. The equipment and gear no longer met National Fire Protection Association standards and, therefore, could not be used in the United States, officials said.

The 1997 Luverne fire engine, which was housed at the Dixie Highway fire station, was taken out of front line service in 2009 and out of reserve status in July when the city received two new fire engines.

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Former Middletown fire truck finishes its long journey to serve Caribbean island - Hamilton Journal News

8 Must-Visit Caribbean Dive Resorts – Caribbean Journal

Many of the worlds best dive resorts are far longer on experiences than they are on amenities. It makes sense for hard-core divers who are mostly looking for a place to lay their head between dives. Three hundred thread count sheets and gourmet dining are secondary to multiple daily dive trips, day and night.

Not every luxury resort is limited to vanilla resort dives, however, and these Caribbean resorts offer a world-class dive experience alongside the kind of upscale rooms, activities, and service that will make your time out of the water (nearly) as great as the few precious hours you spend below:

St James Club, Antigua

Antigua is the world-class dive destination you may not have thought about. Long a best-kept secret for diving in the Caribbean, the country is filled with terrific dive sites, from Sunken Rock to Tarpon Alley to the famous Pillars of Hercules. While destinations like Bonaire, Cozumel and the Cayman Islands are rightly popular, Antigua is the regions next great diving hotspot. And the epicenter is the islands all-inclusive St Jamess Club and its wonderful Mamora Bay Divers diving center, with programs for everyone from novices to experienced divers and a full PADI instruction program.

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8 Must-Visit Caribbean Dive Resorts - Caribbean Journal

Latin America and Caribbean on the Brink of … – BNamericas English

IRENA release

Lima, Peru, 12 November 2019 -Latin America and the Caribbean could grow their installed solar capacity by a factor of 40 by 2050, a new report by the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) shows. Annual investmens exceeding seven billion would see the region's solar PV capacity rise from 7 gigawatts (GW) today, to more than 280 GW by mid-century. While solar energy remains the highest in Asia, North America and Europe, market growth is set to shift to other regions in the world.

By that time, solar PV would represent the second-largest power source behind wind, generating a quarter of the worlds power, Future of Solar Photovoltaic launched today at Sun World 2019 in Lima finds. In total, global solar power capacity would rise from 480 GW in 2018 to over 8000 GW by 2050, growing by nearly 9 per cent every year.

Solar PV and other renewables sources represent the most effective and ready solution for addressing growing energy demand and limiting carbon emission at the same time, said IRENAs Director-General Francesco La Camera. Renewables are practical, affordable and climate-safe. They are key to sustainable development, enabling energy access, spurring economic growth, creating employment and improving health. Particularly solar energy is set to become one of the most prominent power sources in 2050. Projected growth rates in markets like Latin America showcase that we can extend the energy transition to all countries. Its possible.

If accompanied by sound policies, the transformation driven by renewables such as solar can bring substantial socioeconomic benefits, IRENAs new report finds. The global solar industry has the potential to employ over 18 million people by 2050, four times more than the 4.4 million jobs today.

Similarly, the deployment of rooftop solar PV systems has increased extensively, which today makes solar PV in some markets more attractive than buying electricity from the grid. The competitiveness of distributed solar power is clearly raising deployment in large markets, including Brazil, China, Germany and Mexico.

Statistical highlights:

Read the full report Future of Solar Photovoltaic. Deployment, investment, technology, grid integration and socio-economic aspects.

Excerpt from:

Latin America and Caribbean on the Brink of ... - BNamericas English

Fulfil the Rights of Afro-descendants in Latin America and the Caribbean – IDN InDepthNews | Analysis That Matters

Viewpoint by Natalia Kanem

Following are extensive extracts from the Statement by UNFPA Executive Director Dr. Natalia Kanem at the High-level Meeting on "Accelerating global action for the fulfilment of rights for Afro-descendant people in Latin America and the Caribbean", San Jos, Costa Rica, in October 2019.

NEW YORK (IDN-INPS) Leave no one behind that is the global communitys ambitious pledge. And the Sustainable Development Goals call on us to reach those furthest behind first.

How do we accelerate global action to fulfil the rights of Afro-descendants, who are often among those furthest behind in Latin America and the Caribbean?

How do we combat discrimination, inequalities and the root causes of exclusion?

It is true that we have made important progress. Weve seen gains in poverty reduction. There is greater recognition of the challenges to be overcome. We hear more and stronger voices calling for change. Yet, we still see structural barriers preventing full social and economic inclusion. Its clear much more needs to be done.

One in four Latin Americans identifies as an Afro-descendant. Thats more than 130 million people.

In Latin America and around the world, Afro-descendants have made outstanding contributions throughout history. Even in the face of tremendous adversity, people of African descent are leaders in all walks of life, from art to business, politics to philanthropy, sport to statesmanship, music and literature to the sciences. This is something to be celebrated.

Yet the recognition and appreciation of our heritage and cultures has been very limited.

The International Decade for People of Africa Descent is a chance to redress this. Indeed, the theme for the year is Recognition, Justice and Development.

The international community has recognised that people of African descent represent a distinct group whose human rights must be promoted and protected.

For centuries, Afro-descendants have faced inequalities, discrimination and segregation deeply rooted in colonialism and slavery. And this legacy continues. Despite all we have experienced and learned over the years, racism, structural discrimination, marginalisation, hate speech, and hate crimes remain virulent and widespread.

Migrants and refugees from Africa are among todays most vulnerable people. They face intersecting discrimination based on racial or ethnic origin, social and economic status, and citizenship.

Women and girls of African descent also face multiple, intersecting forms of discrimination and exclusion. Inequalities in access to health, invisibility in data collection, and a disproportionate incidence of violence against them these are just some of the challenges that continue to hamper their empowerment, participation and the full realisation and exercise of their rights.

Today, we stand at the midpoint of the International Decade. Let us use the solid framework it provides to join together and take action in the spirit of recognition, justice and development.

Together, let us seize this opportunity for focused, concerted, accelerated action to fight racism and racial discrimination, and to work towards the full enjoyment of human rights by all.

The statistics illustrate why upholding the rights of Afro-descendants is so important.

In Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Panama, Peru and Uruguay combined, Afro-descendants account for 38% of the total population but represent almost half of those living in extreme poverty. Indeed, they are 2.5 times more likely to live in chronic poverty than people of non-African descent.

Historically, people of African descent have been segregated geographically, relegated to those areas with the lowest levels of development and the least access to public services. They are more likely to live in overcrowded conditions with limited access to education and employment and greater exposure to pollution, crime, violence and natural disasters.

Hardest hit: girls and women.

To accelerate progress, we need to prioritise meeting their needs and upholding their rights.

At UNFPA, we believe that the success of the Sustainable Development Goals depends on the investments we make in todays adolescent girls as they begin their journey to adulthood.

By 2030, todays girls will be young women. How do we change their destiny, particularly the destiny of our Afro-descendant girls? That has to be our goal.

Imagine a 10-year-old girl, on the cusp of adolescence, standing at a fork in the road.

If she is able to stay in school, shes on a path of health and wellbeing throughout her life. Her children will have better health outcomes too. Education, particularly for girls, can break the cycle of poverty.

If, on the other hand, she becomes pregnant while still a child herselfif she is forced to marry and drop out of school she faces a cascade of challenges throughout her life, jeopardising her health and well-being and that of the next generation.

As I speak, somewhere along the coast of this beautiful isthmus bridging South and North, perhaps in Limn or Bluefields or anywhere, really, since it will happen 20,000 times around the world today, a girl sits terrified and alone. For weeks, she has felt tired and mildly nauseous. Now, her cycle is late. Her much older boyfriend a man actually had told her not to worry. That he loved her. Why let a condom get in the way?

Today, she learns why. Shes pregnant . . . shes 15.

In a few months shell likely be tossed out of school. Her prospects of resuming her education, dim. No one will ask questions of the boy. He wont be ejected from school. On the other hand, her opportunities to find decent work and fulfil her potential, diminished. Her future, uncertain. Her boyfriend, nowhere to be found.

Latin America and the Caribbean has the second highest adolescent pregnancy rate in the world, after Africa. The poorest girls and girls from Afro-descendant communities are disproportionately affected.

They get pregnant earlier in almost all countries in the region with available data and face much higher risk of death in pregnancy and childbirth. They also have less access to modern contraceptives.

Being born to parents of African descent significantly increases the likelihood of a child being poor, giving these girls and boys an unfair start in life. Many never overcome it.

In Brazil, Afro-descendant girls experience a level of poverty around two times higher than their non-Afro-descendant peers. In Ecuador and Peru, its approximately 50 percent higher.

And the legacy of poverty and social exclusion is transmitted from generation to generation, with opportunities for social mobility elusive.

The regions unparalleled levels of inequality are rooted in deep gender disparities, which are especially serious when it comes to adolescent girls, for whom race, gender and poverty conspire to exacerbate their disadvantages.

Yet in spite of these tremendous challenges, Afro-descendant women have led the way in the quest for recognition, justice and equality.

UNFPA has stood and continues to stand with them, working to strengthen networks of Afro-descendant women and young people and supporting their participation in regional and global forums.

We meet at a historic time. Not only is this the midpoint of the International Decade for People of African Descent. 2019 is also the 50th anniversary of UNFPA, the United Nations sexual and reproductive health agency, and the 25th anniversary of the International Conference on Population and Development in Cairo. It was there, in 1994, that world governments declared the right to sexual and reproductive health.

Yet, despite States commitment to universal sexual and reproductive health and the realisation of reproductive rights, as stated in the Sustainable Development Goals, women and girls continue to lack access to services, and their rights continue to be violated. This is particularly true for women and girls of African descent.

We need an ambitious plan to move this agenda forward.

Under the auspices of the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean, with significant support of UNFPA, the Montevideo Consensus on Population and Development, adopted in 2014, calls for actions to address pressing population issues. These include sexual and reproductive health, the equal inclusion of indigenous peoples and Afro-descendants, and the fight against racism and racial discrimination.

The review of implementation last year showed uneven progress in the recognition and protection of the rights of Afro-descendants.

So, too, do the UN Secretary-Generals annual progress reports to the General Assembly on the implementation of the Decades programme of activities.

The 2017 report focused in particular on Afro-descendant women and girls. It documented the stereotyping and inequalities they face from inequalities in access to health, to the disproportionate incidence of violence against them, to their invisibility in data collection.

The experiences of Afro-descendant women often get subsumed under data on women in general. This hides patterns of inequality and may seem to indicate that the situation of all women has improved, when often this is not the case.

UNFPA is passionate about addressing these issues, especially providing support to governments to produce disaggregated data and develop inclusive policies that target the needs of Afro-descendant communities, particularly women and girls.

We are partnering with leading global advocates, including H.E. Epsy Campbell Barr, [Vice President of the Republic of Costa Rica, a prominent Afro-Costan leader and human rights activist on issues related to women and indigenous and Afro-descent people, among others], and with academics, civil society networks, communities, faith-based organisations, and governments to advocate for social justice, equity and the rights of Afro-descendant women and girls, especially their right to sexual and reproductive health.

In this historic year, we are working with our partners to reignite the movement that began in Cairo 25 years ago. The Nairobi Summit on ICPD25 being convened in November by UNFPA, together with the Governments of Kenya and Denmark, is an opportunity to renew the call for rights and choices for all.

It is an opportunity to share lessons learned, forge new partnerships and signal new commitments to bring the promise of Cairo and Montevideo to everyone, leaving no one behind.

I urge all of us to think about the girls growing up in Limn, Costa Rica; in Esmeraldas, Ecuador; in El Carmen, Peru; in Bilwi or Bluefields in Nicaragua; in Salvador Bahia, in the Caribbean, but also in San Jos, in Lima, and in many of the large capitals of the region.

Together with them, lets make this region a more dignified and fairer place to live. Recognition, justice and development for all. Nothing less will do. [IDN-InDepthNews 11 November 2019]

Photo: Afro-Latinos. Source: World Bank.

IDN is flagship agency of theInternational Press Syndicate.

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Fulfil the Rights of Afro-descendants in Latin America and the Caribbean - IDN InDepthNews | Analysis That Matters

New Multi-Million Cruise Pier Opens in the Caribbean – Cruise Hive

The cruise pier at the Port Zante in the eastern Caribbean island nation ofSt Kitts and Nevis has been completed.

Get ready even more cruise ships at St. Kitts and even larger ones as the second cruise pier at Port Zante has now been completed. This now means the port can cater for up to three of the largest cruise ships in the world.

We already posted about the pier being almost complete in October, you can read more about it right here.

The island nation welcomed 1 million cruise visitors in the cruising season and that number is expected to rise now that the new pier has been completed.

The 45 million dollar project was financed via four local sources, of whichUS$5 millioncame from the countrys Citizenship by Investment (CBI) Programme. The Florida-Caribbean Cruise Association (FCCA) visited the twin islands this week to discuss the further development of the cruise sector inSt Kittsand Nevis.

St Kitts and NevisTourism Minister,Lindsey Grant, commented during FCCAs visit:

Our meetings ensure that we understand the needs of the cruise lines and their passengers, receive feedback on our service standards and guest experience and provide insight into cruise industry trends such as new ships and itineraries for upcoming seasons, all of which will help us to remain competitive as a premier cruise destination moving forward.

We can look forward to much larger ships starting to include calls to St. Kitts including the new and future Oasis-class vessel from Royal Caribbean and even the new LNG generation ships from the Carnival Corporation.

Also Read: 20 Things to Do in St. Kitts While on a Cruise

The Caribbean nation has a population of 55,000 and Port Zante is located in the capital Basseterre in the southern part of the St. Kitts island.

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New Multi-Million Cruise Pier Opens in the Caribbean - Cruise Hive

‘You couldn’t do it on your own’: meet the Caribbean soldiers campaigning for their own war memorial – Telegraph.co.uk

When Albert Jarrett moved to Britain in 1943, he was not prepared for the weather. Volunteering for the Royal Air Force at the age of 18, he moved from his native Jamaica to an airbase near Sutton Coldfield, and struggled at first with the biting winter mornings.

There was quite a bit of frost when I looked out in the morning. The ground was white. My first thought was, I wish I could go back home, Jarrett recalls.

76 years later, Jarrett does not struggle to remember any details of his story as he sits with his wife, Shirley, in an Italian cafe in central London. But he is worried thatother British people have forgotten his contribution to the Second World War, as well as that of the hundreds of thousands of other foreign troops who fought for Britain between 1939 and 1945.

And he is not alone in his concern: this year, in the run-up to Remembrance Sunday, the Royal British Legion is campaigning to highlight the contribution of soldiers from all over the world, irrespective of nationality, creed, colour, or race.

During the Battle of Britain, as many as one in five of the RAFs pilots came from abroad, and campaigners worry that many non-British troops have been written out of the national story. Indeed, watch a Sixties cinema classic like The Battle of Britain or Where Eagles Dare, and most of the characters are white, public-school types with cut-glass Queens accents. In more recent years, directors have tried to present more diversity: in 2017, Christopher Nolan was praised for having Churchills We will fight them on the beaches speech read by a working-class Tommy in a northern accent, in his Oscar-winning masterpiece Dunkirk. But some groups, like Caribbeans and east Europeans, still struggle to get a look-in.

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'You couldn't do it on your own': meet the Caribbean soldiers campaigning for their own war memorial - Telegraph.co.uk

The Winners of the Caribbean Rum Awards in St Barth – Caribbean Journal

GUSTAVIA It came down to a rum-off.

For the first time, the most exclusive rums in the Caribbean went head-to-head in a blind tasting competition at Caribbean Journals Caribbean Rum Awards in St Barth, and a team of seven international rum judges finally decided on a winner.

It was a superstar rum field: Ron Del Barrilito Five-Star; Don Q Reserva de la Familia Serralles; Havana Club Maximo; Brugal Papa Andres; El Dorado 25.

And after a round of voting, Puerto Ricos Ron del Barrilito and the Don Q were neck-and neck, with the Don Q Reserva de la Familia Serralles finally emerging victorious in the second round.

It was the culmination of a week of rum celebration: arrival in style via Tradewind Aviation; a rum expo in Gustavia, a Peoples Choice jury; a dinner at Pearl Beach sponsored by WIMCO Villas; a Ti Punch seminar and cocktail afternoon; and a seven-course cocktail-and-food pairing VIP dinner at the Quarter Kitchen and Cocktail Lab on Saturday (helmed by top chef Andrew Zarzosa of Yuzu Miami fame).

2019 marked the arrival of the Caribbean Rum Awards in St Barth, set at the Rhum Room, proprietor Christopher Davis rum Mecca that has more fine rums on its menu than any bar in the Western Hemisphere, including the largest selection of rhum agricole of any bar on earth.

We are so pleased with the reception of the Caribbean Rum Awards in St Barth, said Alexander Britell, editor and publisher of Caribbean Journal. St Barth is one of the most remarkable markets for rum, and our partnership with Christopher Davis and the St Barth Rum Festival is a natural fit. This years competition was filled with outstanding rums from across the Caribbean, and a reminder of the wonderful diversity of Caribbean rum.

In a field marked by broad excellence, rums from Martinique to Guadeloupe to Puerto Rico took home the double golds in seven different categories.

The Don Q Reserva de la Familia Serralles took home the Double Gold in the Ultra-Premium Category, while Ron del Barrilitos Four-Star Rum won Double Gold in the Premium Rum category.

On the Rhum Agricole side, Double Gold medalists included Rhum A1710 for its Renaissance rum in the Rhum Blanc Martinique category, while Rhum Bolognes La Coulisse took home the Double Gold in the Rhum Blanc Guadeloupe category.

Martiniques Rhum HSE won top honors in the XO category, while the Guadeloupe-made R St Barth Authentique won for the Hors dage category.

The partnership of the Saint Barth Rum Festival and the Caribbean Rum Awards inaugural event in Gustavia this year was incredible, Christopher Davis said. The judges, both professional and amateur, experienced some of the finest rhums/rums/rones from the Caribbean, culminating in a seven-course Japanese-inspired tasting menu with rum cocktails during the awards program. As it was our first year, we kept everything intimate, so we could make sure the quality of our event was top notch. We are already having distilleries and other potential partners on island as well as our peoples choice panel enquiring about the second edition next year, which for all of us at the Quarter Kitchen and Cocktail Lab and Rhum Room is the best reward.

The festival also bestowed a special jury prize on Martiniques Gregory Vernant of Rhum Neisson, choosing him as the Caribbean Rum Maker of the Year.

Judges included Martinique chef and restaurateur Guy Ferdinand; Caribbean Journal editor and publisher Alexander Britell; Caribbean Journal EVP and managing editor Guy Britton; New York-based vintner and spirits importer Steven Shaw; Peter Berntsen, operating partner of Casa de Montecristo by Prime Cigar in Miami; Cuba Journal editor-in-chief Simons Chase; and the aforementioned Rhum Room and Quarter Kitchen and Cocktail Lab proprietor Christopher Davis.

Judges on the Peoples Choice panel included Steven Miller, Eddy Maddox; Benoit Lavigne and Ted Houseknect.

St Barth is the natural home for an event that celebrates rum, one of the worlds greatest artisanal, luxury products, Britton said. And we are excited about what the future has in store.

See the full results of the Caribbean Rum Awards 2019 below:

Caribbean Rum Awards Results

Rhum Blanc Agricole (Martinique)

Double Gold: A1710 Renaissance

Gold: La Favorite Riviere Riviere Belair

Silver: Rhum HSE Parcellaire

Bronze: Rhum Neisson LEsprit Bio

Rhum Blanc Agricole (Guadeloupe)

Double Gold: Rhum Bologne La Coulisse

Gold: Rhum Saint Barth Blanc

Silver: Pere Labat 50

Bronze: Karukera LIntense

VSOP Rhum Agricole

Double Gold: Rhum Karukera Black Alligator

Gold: HSE VSOP

Silver: Rhum Bologne VSOP

Bronze: Rhum Clement VSOP

XO Rhum Agricole

Double Gold: Rhum HSE XO

Gold: Rhum Damoiseau XO

Silver: Rhum Depaz XO

Bronze: Rhum Bologne XO

Hors dAge Rhum Agricole

Double Gold: R St Barth Authentique

Gold: Rhum HSE 2003

Silver: La Favorite Privilege Pour Lulu

Bronze: Rhum Depaz 2002

Premium Rum ($450 and under)

Double Gold: Ron del Barrilito Four Star

Gold: Foursquare Zinfandel Cask Blend

Silver: Appleton 21

Bronze: Facundo Paraiso

Ultra-Premium Rum ($450 and above)

Double Gold: Don Q Reserva de la Familia Serralles

Gold: Ron del Barrilito Five-Star

Silver: Havana Club Maximo

Bronze: El Dorado 25

Special Jury Prize: Caribbean Rum Maker of the Year 2019

Gregory Vernant, Rhum Neisson

Caribbean Rum Awards Peoples Choice Results

Best Molasses Rum: Don Q Reserva de la Familia Serralles

Best Rhum Agricole: R St Barth Authentique

Judge accommodations were provided for by Wimco Villas, Les Ilets de la Plage and St Barth Properties.

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The Winners of the Caribbean Rum Awards in St Barth - Caribbean Journal

Energy and infrastructure boost Latin American & Caribbean M&A – JD Supra

Updated: May 25, 2018:

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Energy and infrastructure boost Latin American & Caribbean M&A - JD Supra

10 amazing ways to visit a resurgent Caribbean this winter – Telegraph.co.uk

I get wary when a beach in the Caribbean is described as having pink sand, yet here I am holding a handful of grains and shell fragments that are without doubt roseate.

We never had pink sand before, explains Barbara Petit, the French co-owner of Barbuda Belle, a barefoot luxury beach escape on the north coast of Barbuda, Antiguas flat and arid sister isle. It was a surprise gift from Irma.

In September 2017 the eye of this category five hurricane passed right over the island, causing so much devastation that Barbudas 1,800 residents had to be evacuated for a year. It took the Petit family and their staff eight months to get the resorts chic wooden bungalows back in shape, but now Barbuda Belle is one of the most soul-soothing escapes Ive come across in more than two decades of Caribbean travel. Set beside a remote and deserted beach but with every comfort laid on, Barbuda Belle is the sort of castaway paradise to which Hollywood scriptwriters get banished with a stern instruction finish that movie or else!.

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10 amazing ways to visit a resurgent Caribbean this winter - Telegraph.co.uk

As Lorenzo heads to the Ireland, two disturbances appear in the Caribbean. – Tampa Bay Times

Hurricane Lorenzo is continuing to home in on Ireland and the United Kingdom. The latest forecast advisory suggests that the British Isles could begin seeing impacts from the storm as early as Wednesday night. Furthermore, forecasters dont expect to see a significant reduction in strength in the next 48 hours.

The eye of the storm is slated to cross into the area early Friday morning. Meteorologists from the National Weather Service say the storm has a 70% chance of bringing tropical storm-force winds to the Emerald Isle.

Meanwhile, in the Caribbean, two disturbances have appeared overnight. Forecasters currently put the chance of further development in the next five days at a low 10%.

The system south of Cuba should continue moving towards the Yucatan Peninsula while the system in the western Caribbean is expected to be escorted to the mid-Atlantic by a surface trough.

HURRICANE SEASON IS HERE: Get ready and stay informed at tampabay.com/hurricane

PREPARE YOUR STUFF: Get your documents and your data ready for a storm

BUILD YOUR KIT: The stuff youll need to stay safe and comfortable for the storm

PROTECT YOUR PETS: Your pets cant get ready for a storm. Thats your job

NEED TO KNOW: Click here to find your evacuation zone and shelter

What the Panhandles top emergency officials learned from Michael

Were not going to give up. What a school superintendent learned from Michael

What Tampa Bay school leaders fear most from a storm

Tampa Bays top cops fear for those who stay behind

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As Lorenzo heads to the Ireland, two disturbances appear in the Caribbean. - Tampa Bay Times