Daily Archives: February 26, 2017

Lee powers Pacific Oceania to title win – Saipan Tribune

Posted: February 26, 2017 at 11:39 pm

The CNMIs Carol Lee showed poise in her toughest singles match in the 2017 Junior Fed Cup Asia Oceania Pre-Qualifying Zone to lift Pacific Oceania to the title win against Sri Lanka last Saturday at the R.K Khanna Tennis Stadium in New Delhi, India.

Lee eked out a 7-6 (5) victory over Anika Seneviratne in the first set of Singles 1 play and the Commonwealth player rode on the momentum of her close win in the second to ease past her Sri Lankan opponent, 6-2. Lees triumph sealed the deal for Pacific Oceania, as Tahitis Naia Guitton earlier posted a similar hard-earned win over Savini Jayasuriya in the Singles 2 match, 7-5, 6-3. Had the 15-year-old Lee dropped her singles game, she and Guitton would have been forced to play in the deciding doubles match over Seneviratne and Sathi Siyara Silva Mirissage just a few hours after the second singles tiff.

The match against Seneviratne was Lees longest as it finished after nearly two hours (1:42). It was also Lees first singles match that went over an hour and the Sri Lankan top singles player was the first to score three points against the CNMI bet.

Lee, in pool play, shut down the Philippines Gennifer Lysandra Pagente (6-0, 6-0) and Vietnams Ngoc Minh Phuong Nguyen (3-0), and then also blanked Singapores Joelle Goh in the semis before getting a scare from Seneviratne in the first set. The world ranked No. 352 also played against Tajikistans Anastasiya Tursunova and although Lee cruised to a 6-0 win in the first set, the latter gave the CNMI bet a good fight in the second set (3-6) as their singles match took a little over an hour to wrap up.

Lee credited her success in the pre-qualifying tournament to her training in Fiji and the series of tournaments she had been through in New Zealand.

I think I have improved my play since the training and my ITF tournaments in New Zealand. I was confident about myself, knowing that I could win all my singles matches no matter how strong my opponents are, said Lee, who will return to Lautoka to resume her training and prepare for the 2017 Junior Fed Cup Asia Oceania Final Qualifying Zone.

The final qualifier will also be held in India in April with Lee and company joining New Zealand, Australia, Sri Lanka, and 12 other countries from Asia in the battle for the three slots to the world competition.

Im going back to Fiji to train until the main qualifying comes again in India. There will be a lot more good players there so and Im excited to play against them, said Lee, who will be playing in the final qualifier for the second straight year.

Meanwhile, in the Junior Davis Cup pre-qualifier, the Philippines won over Singapore, while Lebanon and Vietnam completed the Top 4. The CNMIs Robbie Schorr and his teammates Clement Mainguy of Vanuatu and Jeremy Guines of Tahiti topped their pool (battle for No. 9 to 14 finishers) after prevailing against Tajikistan, Sri Lanka, and Bangladesh.

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Caribbean cruises, Cancun and London are popular vacation destinations for Americans – NRToday.com

Posted: at 11:38 pm

Caribbean cruises and Cancun are the top two international vacation destinations for Americans in 2017 just as they were last year, but with the value of the U.S. Dollar at near record highs, London moves up a notch to number three in a new survey of travel professionals.

As part of its annual Travel Trends Survey, Travel Leaders Group polled 1,689 of its U.S.-based travel agency owners, managers and frontline agents about the international destinations theyve booked for 2017.

A Caribbean cruise is the number one international destination for 2017, as cited by 37.6 percent of respondents. Caribbean cruises are followed by (2) Cancun, Mexico, 31.2 percent; (3) London, 26.9 percent; (4) European river cruises, 21.8 percent; (5) Rome, 20.5 percent; (6) Punta Cana, Dominican Republic, 17.3 percent; (7) Paris, 15.4 percent; (8) Mediterranean cruises, 15.1%; (9) Montego Bay, Jamaica, 14.4%; and (10) Playa del Carmen/Riviera Maya, Mexico, 12.5%.

Fans of Caribbean cruises will have more options in 2017, with several new ships setting sail from South Florida including Royal Caribbeans Harmony of the Seas, the worlds largest cruise ship. Highlights include 20 dining options, a full-service spa, seven iconic neighborhoods to stroll through, a kids water park and the tallest slide at sea.

Pristine beaches make Cancun one of Mexicos top tourist destinations. But theres plenty of entertainment to go with the sand and sun.

The Brexit decision by British voters to leave the European Union has sent the pound plummeting, making a London vacation significantly less expensive than its been in years. Among the years must-see events will be a tribute to Princess Diana on the 20th anniversary of her death.

Kensington Palace opens Diana: Her Fashion Story opened last week, with some of her most iconic outfits on display.

European river cruises continue to find exciting ways to tempt travelers.

Avalon Waterways is offering a new 9-day trip along the Danube from Linz, Austria, to Budapest, Hungary. The journey includes excursions for passengers who want to maintain an active pace, from a running tour of Vienna to canoeing, hiking and biking.

The city of Rome celebrates its birthday on April 21, and the Natale di Roma is a fun time to be in the Italian capital, with street performers, historic reenactments, parades and live music spread out across the city. Therell be special events in the week leading up to the celebration, too.

Travelers seeking relief from the winters cold will find a haven in sunny Punta Cana, in the Dominican Republic. A highlight is the Punta Cana Carnival on the second Saturday in March, featuring a parade of dancers and musicians that offers a showcase for the countrys rich culture.

More Americans are booking trips to Paris in 2017, as the City of Light moves up to 7th place in the survey, from 11th in 2016. Iconic attractions like the Eiffel Tower and Notre Dame will be joined by a new museum dedicated to designer Yves Saint Laurent.

To plan a vacation anywhere in the world, contact Travel Leaders/Fly Away Travel 541-672-5701.

Reporter Dan Bain can be reached at 541-957-4221 or e-mail at dbain@nrtoday.com.

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Rekindling the Caribbean Renaissance…70 years on – Jamaica Observer

Posted: at 11:38 pm

I offer support for the objectives of Black History Month by placing on its agenda the need for an urgent Caribbean dialogue on the development challenges facing our people. Where we have reached in our historic flight to freedom as a community needs to be assessed, and the depth of our dedication to promoting popular democracy should to be reviewed at this time.

We are gingerly entering the second, potentially seismic, phase of regional nation-building. This, in 2017, cries out for reflection. Already it presents itself as a significant marker in our regional affairs and a disruptor of global systems and sensibilities. But critically, it is the 70th anniversary of that seminal sequestering of Caribbean political and civil rights leaders at Montego Bay, Jamaica, in 1947, where they outlined the road map for regional development.

The 1947 summit, following the publication of the Moyne Report into the workers democracy wars of the 1930s in our Caribbean region, set the course with manifesto-style declarations that framed the first phase of the regional development agenda. Political and labour leaders were never clearer in their representation of the will of the people. They were morally courageous, fiscally sound, and financially futuristic. It was the regions first collective rising of its political leadership.

The moment and movements were clearly defined and the political leadership was hell-bent on justice, freedom, and dignified democratic development. From Montego Bay, the Caribbean Renaissance was launched.

On its 70th anniversary, there is a growing feeling of flux in Caribbean fellowship, and the 1947 declarations for development seem fractured by fiscal stress. Policy priorities are less people-centred and more consistent with our external financial circumstances. The top public priority is global alignment for economic growth. But economic alignment options are demonstrating that they can be socially damaging to the governance fabric of society. This is not an easy enterprise.

Communist China, our fastest-emerging partner, is now the avid advocate of free trade and open borders, while quintessentially capitalist America the ancient opportunity provider is evangelical about trade protectionism and building borders. Britain, always crisp and clear on which side its bread is buttered, has moved to abandon the European Single Market and Economy, and is reckoning on returning its gaze to the recently relegated Commonwealth.

Within these global goings-on, we are seeking to determine our domestic direction and destiny. There is intense internal anxiety. At the heart of it is the growing realisation that economic growth has been persistently elusive while social growth is now rejected as too expensive.

Finding balance between these equally important agendas can no longer be taken lightly. The 2016 Human Capital Report of the World Economic Forum, for example, states clearly that investing in social growth, in the human resource, goes beyond the importance of the economic growth imperatives. It states: A nations human capital endowment the knowledge and skills embodied in individuals that enable them to create economic value can be more important determinants of long-term success than virtually any other resource.

The strategic reasons that informed the Montego Bay declarations were clear enough:

that the imperial oppression of our people was over, dead and awaiting burial;

that the West Indies was one social community awaiting formal political integration and economic rationalisation;

that regional institutions, like the West Indies Cricket Board which was forged exactly 20 years earlier, would be created to mobilise the best of our collective abilities for practical regional action;

that greater social growth, in addition to economic growth, was urgently needed to end majority social exclusion, historical structural inequality, and entrenched racial and class bigotry; and

that our English-speaking subregion should breach imperial barriers and reach across the blue aisle to pursue greater trade and investment with the wider Caribbean.

Where have we reached with respect to implementing the 1947 Montego Bay Manifesto? Clearly there have been many significant successes. Victories arising from the vision are everywhere discernible. Equally true is that some vanquished efforts are etched deeper in our consciousness, largely because they were bruising and bloody.

From Montego Bay we took off with dazzling speed in 1948. For four decades a transformation trail was blazed within the region. With the decade, for example, the political federation project was implemented but soon gave way to a plurality of singular nation states. The fragmented configuration has not produced a better life. The colonial carcass was only partially buried, and in a shallow grave to boot.

The social growth agenda was respected at the outset. Launched in 1948 in spectacular fashion was The University of the West Indies missile, which when nationalised in 1963, and recharged by Sir Arthur Lewis as an indigenous engine, dedicated itself to regional economic transformation, ethnic equality and social justice, and to popularising the principle of mass political participation.

Beyond the boundary of formal politics, George Headley, born in Panama to a black Bajan father and a Jamaican mother, ended six decades of leadership apartheid in the regional cricket culture in 1948, when in the Test against England at Kensington Oval he became the first player from the poor classes to captain the West Indies team. In this Test Series the three Ws Everton Weekes, Clyde Walcott and Frank Worrell made their international debut. With Sonny Ramadhin our first phenomenal innovator of Indian origin, they boldly launched our first West Indian bid for a world title in 1951. Indeed, 1948 was the greatest of modern Caribbean years.

Today, gaining ground as a research hypothesis is that the 1947 regional development framework has been largely defeated and set aside. It is purported that a less ideologically bold and more functionalist regional leadership has revised the agenda and invested it with considerably reduced idealism, increased insularity, and greater programmatic pragmatism.

A conclusion drawn is that our region is off track in respect of sustainable development, having effectively distanced itself from the 1947 beacon. Within this narrative, the community is defined as manifesting many of the classic symptoms of intellectual fatigue and exhaustion. Citizens are said to be riddled with self-doubt, and primed for a race to further fragmentation.

Finally, and tragically, it is suggested that as a community we now see the primary opposition to our indigenous ideas and ideals as residing within. As a consequence, we have turned inward our vexation, violently unleashing rage upon ourselves.

The current United Nations Development Report for the region tells the bleak picture: that deep-seated social inequalities and injustices reside at the core of our fractures and failures, and are the main root of shortfalls in economic growth expectations. Our region, for example, sits at the bottom of the hemispheric ladder in respect of youth (18-30 years) enrolment in higher education, professional development, and technical training. Within the wider Caribbean family context, our English-speaking sub-community occupies the basement.

Equally disturbing is the inference within the report that our social capital that is, the cognitive and technical skills set, both in quality and quantity of our citizens is inadequate for the attainment of the level of economic growth pursued. It has been known for decades that a shortage of critical skills, more so than capital, holds back our development. Nearly 60 per cent of our citizens, for example, continue to reside in shockingly shabby material and institutional environments to which we have become far too tolerant. Abject poverty is on the increase. Rising crime rates and general social insecurity in many communities seem unresponsive to the attainment of baseline economic growth.

Commitment to wealth creation, however, must be firm and unwavering. Research and innovation and dynamic entrepreneurship are inseparable. But economic growth must not be seen mechanically as a precondition for social growth. Low productivity is as much socially caused as it is economically impactful. It is no coincidence that our regional economy has shown the most sluggish recovery in the hemisphere from the 2008 global financial and trade recession. Inevitably linked to this chain of causality is our possession of the lowest levels of formal research, higher education enrolment and skills, and professional training. It is drastically narrowing broad-based economic participation and engagement. It is impaling the peoples innovation impulse, endangering entrepreneurial flair and creativity, leading inexorably to diminished competitiveness and less wealth creation.

The rhetorical reference in the region to the vital role of small and medium-sized businesses in economic growth strategies points to the ultimate importance of the social growth agenda, and urgently awaits actualisation.

The social economy, then, is equally important in viewing and measuring what we have attained and where we are today. In the Test cricket arena, for example, our fall from global awesomeness to local awfulness tells the surreal story of rising economic growth and falling social growth. We are the only competing Test nation in which senior players effectively reject national representation. By snubbing national selection in favour of personal marginal enrichment, they are preventing us from deploying our best and finest in the international arena. We are crippled by our inability to be cohesive.

What is important here is that citizens are casting aside community needs and placing self above state as a post-International Monetary Fund sensibility. The idea that the state has cut adrift vulnerable citizens as a conditionality of its own survival has engendered this social backlash. It has bred a political culture that will soon be entrenched with the potential to ultimately subvert the sustainability of sovereignty. This is but one example.

Our collective victories and successes since 1947 constitute the Caribbean Enlightenment and Renaissance. It is necessary to rekindle the fire of 1947. This 70th anniversary presents a lens through which we can enlarge our comprehension of the 1947 moment. It is now time to review the mission and movement since Montego Bay.

A 21st century review of the Montego Bay Manifesto, therefore, is required in order to grasp the relatively greater opportunities that only a regional approach can garner. The New World Group that constituted our finest intellectual and public advocacy intervention should be revisited and brought back fit and equipped for purpose. New World 2 for the 21st century is a good beginning.

Achieving greater social equality and mobility for the masses of citizens is as valuable as the fiscal empowerment of entrepreneurs for wealth creation. The legal right of indigenous African and Asian-descendant peoples in the Caribbean to reparatory justice for crimes committed against their communities under slavery and colonialism is as important to nurturing social growth as sensible monetary measures are to encouraging investment. We in academia and in industry, along with the State and civil society, must move swiftly towards consensus to push forward our societies and economies with innovation and technology within the context of regionalism.

The return to self-confidence to promote self-determination will not be without sacrifices. We must resolve to share this burden equitably within our regional community. This is the only way to avoid a future of further fragmentation and mutually assured deterioration. It is one way to rebuild trust in Caribbean fellowship and citizenship that is the hallmark of sustainable growth. Marcus Garvey preached this philosophy across our region before 1947, and Frank Worrell proved it thereafter.

A balanced approach to social growth and economic transformation can produce the political consciousness and corporate sensibility necessary to make many of the difficult public choices. This is the core of what we idealise as the Nordic Model. It is also the enduring feature of the Social Partners Protocol that continues after two decades to provide hope for the people of Barbados.

It is the decline in social growth in recent decades, for example, that has frustrated general support for important initiatives such as public sector reform and indeed land reform. It has also inhibited the pace of economic diversification of the traditional economic sectors.

Repurposing the passion of 1947 for regional action is entirely necessary and possible. It is a precondition for upsizing development on multiple fronts while we imagine the state of our sovereignty in 2047. Let us, then, begin a refined reflection in this year. Our precious Caribbeanness is the prime asset to be centred, cared for and celebrated as we stir our collective energy.

This is also a prime time for the academic community to move to the fore, once again, and give of its best. It must intellectually stimulate rather than frustrate the higher aspects of our collective Caribbean consciousness. Fancy fiscal footwork will not by itself generate the context for the greater growth needed.

In this regard, the entire regional university sector can and must do more. It has to step up its strategies many notches and engage both the social and economic growth paradigms with greater aggression and alacrity. This Black History Month in 2017 is as good a time as ever to begin rekindling the Caribbean Renaissance.

Professor Sir Hilary Beckles is Vice Chancellor of The University of the West Indies and chairman of the Caricom Reparations Commission.

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5 Budget All Inclusive Holidays in the Caribbean – Caribbean Journal

Posted: at 11:38 pm

Youre sitting on the beach, reaching for another ice-coldpia colada, looking up at a spectacular Caribbean sky.

There are great beach getawaysfor every kind of traveler, but theres a misconception that al all inclusive holiday is always overly expensive.

Thats not the case.

You see, going all-in doesnt have to mean going all out when it comes to the budget; yes, there are all-inclusive holidaysthat offer dreamy beaches, modern amenities and serious bang for your buck all over the Caribbean.

From chic Barbados to the beach-filled Bahamas, weve selected five of the Caribbeans best budget all-inclusive hotels, where you can add up the savings as you soak up the sun. CJ Travel Editor Sarah Greaves-Gabbadon offers up five all-inclusive holidaysfrom around the islands.

RIU Republica, Dominican Republic Adults in search of sun, sea, and sand with premium booze, plentiful dining options and free WI-FI on the side can find it all at this 1,000-room resort thats possibly the best bargain in Punta Cana.

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Employee Poaching a Growing Concern for Caribbean Hoteliers … – TravelPulse

Posted: at 11:38 pm

PHOTO: Sandals Negril, Jamaica. (Photo via Flickr/Gail Frederick)

As foreign hotel developments surge in the Caribbean, a growing number of local hoteliers are faced with the prospect of losing talented, long-standing employees. The employees are being approached by the newer, international properties with the promise of better money and benefits.

I dont like what I am seeing, in some instances where a new property is being built in the Caribbean and there are not enough skilled workers to man the operations, we just seem to be stealing each others staff, said Karolin Troubetzkoy, president of the Caribbean Hotel and Tourism Association (CHTA) in an interview with the Caribbean Media Corporation (CMC).

Troubetzkoy, who is also an hotelier, said the practice could ultimately lead to a lower customer satisfaction rate across the region.

For his part, St. Lucias prime minister, also the nations former tourism minister has said, It is a free market and labour is free to move wherever it wants to be able to move.

However, he also added that it was bad planning on the part of new hotels to not implement their own training programs in advance of opening.

At issue is that many of the locally owned hotels and brand spend significant time and money on employee training programs, only to have those employees lured away by international properties. Attracted by the higher wages, the employees leave, but then often find themselves in career situations that offer no further advancement.

The CHTA president has said that personnel development is at the forefront of the associations agenda for the year, and the CHTA will be amping up training programs region-wide.

Sandals Resorts International, a Caribbean-owned and operated company, has said it does not condone employee poaching, a practice it calls unethical and fragmenting. But, says the resort company, it is also a reminder that hoteliers should invest in high-quality training programs for their employees, which can go a long way in helping guard against such activities.

Sandals offers training and certification programs for employees at all levels, including scholarship programs for secondary education up to doctorate degrees. In Saint Lucia alone, Sandals has provided training for more than a thousand employees in the past few years, at no cost to the employee.

It is clear that some of the larger, foreign brands simply do not have the capacity to train, nor do they care to invest in training, which has led to the concern expressed by the CHTA about them enticing workers away from established organisations that have invested in building the tourism sector over many years, said Sandals Resorts International in a statement. Many of these workers may find themselves in an environment that does not offer opportunities for further development like Sandals provides with the SCU which means that their personal growth may be stunted unless they take money out of their own pockets to invest in training and development.

We must find a way of training everybody and having more skilled workers available, not just in customer service but in culinary arts, and the technical side such as in IT technology maintenance, there are lots of job opportunities in the tourism sector, said Troubetzkoy to the CMC.

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The Bahamas’ famous swimming pigs found dead on Big Major Cay … – Stuff.co.nz

Posted: at 11:37 pm

Last updated12:00, February 27 2017

WIKICOMMONS

Seven of The Bahamas' famous swimming pigs have been found dead.

Celebrities love to take selfies with The Bahamas' famous swimming pigs but it might just be the death of them.

Seven pigs have mysteriously died on Big Major Cay, which has been dubbed "Pig Beach" for the number of stray animals found there.

Wayde Nixon, who claims he created the colony 30 years ago, says tourists feeding the animals are to blame for the deaths.

WIKICOMMONS

There are reportedly up to 15 pigs still alive on the uninhabited island.

"Right now it's blowing out of proportion with people, anybody bringing food there, anybody doing what they [want to] do," he told The Nassau Guardian.

Read more: *Rangers reveal the stupidest things tourists do in national parks *Australian man who stood on turtle says he loves animals *Yellowstone tourists kidnap a bison calf because they thought it was 'cold'

"We have people coming there giving the pigs beer, rum, riding on top of them, all kind of stuff.That never happened, but lately [it has] because it's so big, and we are never really there all the time."

There are still 15 pigs left on the beach,an uninhabited island about 80 nautical miles from Nassau.

The Bahamas Humane Society said investigations are underwayafter the pigs carcasses were reportedly found floating in the sea.

"It could just be a horrible accident where they ate something poisonous,"society president Kim Aranha toldTribune 242.

"It could be malicious, but I don't really see why someone would go out of their way to hurt those lovely animals."

The island has become a major tourist attraction for people visiting The Bahamas after celebrities started sharing photos from the beach.

Donald Trump Jr visitedwith his family in 2016and comedian Amy Schumerposted a photo from the island just three days ago.

But how did the pigs get to the island in the first place? Nixon says he brought four sows and boar there in the late 1990s in preparation for Y2K, according to The Today Show.

-Stuff

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AG warning about ‘Bahamas Grandkids Scam’ | Artesia Daily Press – Artesia Daily Press

Posted: at 11:37 pm

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Attorney General Hector Balderas has issued a second Scam Alert this week, this time warning senior citizens to protect themselves against the Bahamas Grandkids Scam hitting New Mexico.

Scammers are calling New Mexico senior citizens from Ontario, Canada, and Maryland telephone numbers claiming their grandchild is in jail for drunk driving in another country, namely the Bahamas. The scammers tell elaborate stories, including details of a destination wedding the grandchild traveled to, then explain that after the wedding, the grandchild was arrested.

The scammer does not let the grandparent speak to the grandchild because they are in court, but they do urge them to call a second number to post bail. When the grandparent calls the second number, they are informed of a deal if they obtain a prepaid debit card from Wal-Mart, the bail will be $2,000 instead of $3,000. They are then asked for that prepaid card number.

Im asking all of our families to be on guard for this scam as it preys directly on the love, trust and kindness of our New Mexico grandparents, Balderas said. If someone calls to tell you a family member is in jail in another country and wants money from you, please verify this information with other family members before you consider taking any action. These scammers want to scare you into giving them information and money, but do not let their lies intimidate you.

Recent numbers associated with this scam are Maryland number 1-443-687-8088 and Ontario, Canada, number 1-437-344-0996, but this scam originates from other numbers, as well. This is an old scam with a new twist and can include a variety of different lies to trick people.

The Office of the Attorney General was alerted to this new version by an 83-year-old grandmother and retired law enforcement officer who went all the way through the scam, without giving any money, and wanted to warn the public about the details.

Anyone believing they have received such calls is asked to report them to the Office of the Attorney General by calling toll-free, 1-844-255-9210.

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Bahamas face US in fifth place playoff after beating Trinidad | The … – Bahamas Tribune

Posted: at 11:37 pm

By BRENT STUBBS

Senior Sports Reporter

bstubbs@tribunemedia.net

DESPITE being outsized and eventually outmanned on the pitch on Saturday, the Bahamas men's team held off Trinidad & Tobago 5-2, highlighted by two impressive goals from captain Gavin Christie and one each from tournament leading scorer Lesly St Fleur and Gary Joseph, in the CONCACAF Beach Soccer Championship.

With the win in the playoff round at the Malcolm Park Beach Soccer Facility at the foot of the Sir Sidney Poitier Bridge, the Bahamas clinched a match against the United States at 6.45pm on Sunday in their final game of the week-long tournament for fifth and sixth places in the standings in the field of 16 nations.

The US - who won the title in Nassau in 2013 - enjoyed a 6-1 rout of Jamaica, who will play Trinidad & Tobago in the seventh place playoff game.

Bahamas Coach Alexandre Soares, assisted by Stephen Bellot, said the team is coming into its own and performing at the level that he expects them to, going into the FIFA World Cup in Nassau in April as the host of the 16 nations coming in.

"Every day, every game is important for the ranking," Soares said. "Every game we win, it's important for us as we prepare for the World Cup."

Soares said they face a very competitive team on Sunday in the US, who they defeated during a trip to Europe when they prepared for this tournament, but he admitted that they will have to perform at their best if they intend to come out on top again.

The game with Trinidad & Tobago started as a defensive battle as neither team was able to capitalise on numerous attempts to score in the scoreless first period. Just before the break, the Bahamas received a scare when Dwayne Forbes was clipped on his head by Trinidad & Tobago's Lemuel Lyons and he needed medical attention after he came off the field by team physician Eugenia Patton.

Three and a half minutes into the second period, Joseph's shot hit the outside of the right post. With the goalkeeper pulled out of position midway through the period, Joseph tried to get a quick pass into Christie, but the keeper managed to get back in time to prevent the Bahamas from scoring.

However, with 5min 45sec remaining in the period, Joseph broke away from his defender and fired in the first goal and the celebrations began. Shortly after, the crowd went wild as St Fleur broke away from his defender, got a pass into Forbes and with Christie anxiously waiting in front of the post, he slipped a shot into the corner of the net to make it 2-0.

Forbes came back to start the final period and just over four minutes in, Christie powered past a defender and after drawing the goalkeeper out, was able to boot in his second goal to push the Bahamas lead to 3-0. However, in the build up, Forbes got another head injury and had to leave the game.

The game got physical halfway through the third period when goalkeeper Torin Ferguson attempted to snatch the ball from Trinidad & Tobago's pesky David McDougall. He got a little roughed up and Nesly Jean came to his rescue, but both received a yellow card from the referee.

A minute later, Ferguson sent a long pass to St Fleur, who found the back of the net on a reverse kick to make it 4-0. It was St Fleur's tenth goal of the tournament, the most by any player.

Trinidad & Tobago eventually got on the scoreboard thanks to Jesse Bailey's shot up the middle against Bahamas' number two keeper Ferguson, who was given the start over Ivan Rolle.

With 1min 38sec left, Lyons fired a free kick up the middle to make it 4-2 as Ferguson was unable to stop the shot.

As the game started to wind down, one of Trinidad & Tobago's coaches was ejected for arguing the calls.

Then with 50 seconds left, Williams was ejected after Trinidad & Tobago's Lyons was awarded a free kick. Williams had attempted to defend what he felt was an aggressive foul on Jean. The Bahamas ended up with just three players on the field of play. With 33 seconds left, Forbes was fouled and had to leave the game as Joseph came in and from the free throw, he drilled the ball past Trinidad & Tobago's goalkeeper, completing a 5-2 win.

Mexico and Panama will contest the final on Sunday night. Defending champions Mexico saw off Guadeloupe, who had beaten the Bahamas in the quarter-final on Friday night, 3-0 while Panama turned the tables on El Salvador, winning on penalties after a 2-2 draw. In the group stage, El Salvador had beaten Panama on penalties after a 4-4 tie.

Saturday's results

Turks & Caicos Islands 4 US Virgin Islands 1

Belize 6 Barbados 2

Canada 6 Antigua & Barbuda 1

Costa Rica 5 Guyana 2

United States 6 Jamaica 2

Bahamas 5 Trinidad & Tobago 2

Panama 2 El Salvador 2 (Panama win 2-1 on penalties)

Mexico 3 Guadeloupe 0

Sunday's programme

11.15am: Barbados v US Virgin Islands (15th-place playoff)

12.30pm: Belize v Turks & Caicos Islands (13th-place playoff)

1.45pm: Antigua & Barbuda v Guyana (11th-place playoff)

3pm: Canada vs Costa Rica (9th-place playoff)

4.15pm: Jamaica v Trinidad & Tobago (7th-place playoff)

5.30pm: El Salvador v Guadeloupe (3rd-place playoff)

6.45pm: Bahamas v United States (5th-place playoff)

8pm: Mexico v Panama (Championship match)

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Junior golfers fare well at Bahamas tournament – Cayman Compass

Posted: at 11:37 pm

Two of Caymans junior golfers, Andrew Jarvis and James Bould, demonstrated their skill in the inaugural Albany, Bahamas Junior Classic Tournament, hosted by The Hurricane Junior Golf Tour on Feb. 11 and 12.

The event drew competitors from across the U.S. and the Caribbean.

Andrew played in the Boys 16-18 Division, shooting 80-82 on the 6,700-yard course over the two days. He placed fourth in a very competitive field, after Florida golfers Ben Pirro (first) and Callum Brown (second), and Georgia-based Tripp Murphy (third).

James Bould, 11, earned a third-place finish behind Will McGriff of Florida and Colt Ingram of South Carolina. James shot 95-92 on the 5,300-yard course, nailing five pars in a row in round two to land himself a spot in the top three. His top-three finish at this tournament secured James an exemption into a mid-season invitational tournament at Sea Island in Georgia in June.

Up next

The local circuit continues with rounds five and six of the Digicel Junior Golf Series in March and May, and a team will also be preparing for the Junior Caribbean Championships in Trinidad in July.

For full tournament results and more details about CIGA junior and senior events, go to http://www.ciga.ky.

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Junior golfers fare well at Bahamas tournament - Cayman Compass

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Exclusive: Algeria’s Sonatrach in talks to begin offshore drilling – source – Reuters

Posted: at 11:37 pm

By Lamine Chikhi | ALGIERS

ALGIERS Algeria's Sonatrach wants to start offshore oil drilling and has begun discussions with U.S. operators Exxon Mobil Corp (XOM.N) and Anadarko (APC.N) as well as Italy's Eni (ENI.MI), a source at the state energy company told Reuters on Sunday.

The North African OPEC member nation has struggled to attract oil investment in recent years because of tough terms that have made foreign companies wary.

Sonatrach last year began a more flexible approach to bilateral talks with foreign partners.

Low oil prices have also pressured Sonatrach, prompting it to focus on developing production at more mature fields in the southern Sahara and bringing online delayed gas projects. Offshore drilling could offer another area for growth.

"Seismic operations carried out by Sonatrach have shown an interesting potential in the areas including Bejaia and Oran," said the source, who asked not to be identified. Bejaia is an eastern port and Oran is a port city in western Algeria.

Algeria needs the know-how and expertise of major international firms to launch offshore drilling, the source said.

"Foreign partners, including Anadarko, Exxon Mobil and Eni were invited by Sonatrach to provide technical assistance given the experience they acquired in the Gulf of Mexico and deep water in Mozambique," the Sonatrach source said.

"The offshore is complementary to our operations in the south. It will also contribute to boosting our output," the source said.

The source did not give any information on the timing or scale of any offshore projects.

Such details, including when the drilling will start, are expected to be announced soon by Sonatrach's leadership, the source said.

Algeria's earnings from oil and gas fell to $27.5 billion in 2016 from $35.7 billion in 2015 and more than $60 billion in 2014.

Algeria's oil output was previously estimated at 1.1 million barrels per day (bpd) but it has cut production by 50,000 bpd under an agreement between OPEC and non-OPEC producers aimed at raising crude prices.

(Editing by Patrick Markey and Jason Neely)

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Exclusive: Algeria's Sonatrach in talks to begin offshore drilling - source - Reuters

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