The Bahamas Development Bank and IICA Partner to Boost Economic Development in Family Islands

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Caribbean News Service

In continuation of the partnership between The Bahamas Development Bank (The Bank or BDB) and the Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture (IICA), both organizations have signed an official Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to provide technical cooperation, innovation, and specialized knowledge to aid in the competitive and sustainable development of agriculture in The Commonwealth of The Bahamas.

The Bank is mandated under the 1974 BDB Act, to promote industrial, agricultural, and commercial development through financing and investing in approved enterprises; and IICA is a specialized agricultural agency that provides support to its 34 member states to promote and encourage agricultural development and economic growth. As such, this ongoing partnership meets both The Bank’s mandate and IICA’s mission.

Recently, BDB has been meeting with IICA to discuss opportunities for financing agri-tourism, climate resilience, and Family Island development, and this MOU is the result of those meetings. The Bank and IICA have a long history of collaboration, having worked together previously on several initiatives including the Apiary Project in Grand Bahama which trained and provided financing for young beekeepers; this newest project will provide technical capacity building to increase the agriculture sector and aid in economic growth and sustainable development.

Previously, The Bahamas Development Bank has cooperated with IICA to support the development of the recently launched “Integrated Landscape Management for Addressing Land Degradation, Food Security and Climate Resilience Challenges in The Bahamas Project”. This project is sponsored by The Bahamas Government (led through the Department of Environmental Planning & Protection (DEPP)) in collaboration with United Nations Environment Program (UNEP), and the Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture (IICA), with funding from the Global Environmental Facility (GEF). The ILM project is a $20M initiative which will result in improved livelihoods, well-being, and global environmental benefits through improvements in the sustainability, productivity, health and resilience of productive ecosystems across seven islands. BDB will continue to support this project throughout its upcoming phases as a member of the project’s steering committee.

“Family Island development is integral to The Bank’s mission, especially as it relates to agriculture,” noted Quinton Lightbourne, BDB Chairman. “Currently, The Bank has a slate of projects targeted toward sustainable development in the chain of family islands, and this MOU is an integral step toward that development. This partnership with IICA will increase the technical capacity of farmers throughout The Bahamas, and allow them to increase their output, leading toward a decrease in food importation, which is a big goal for the current administration.”

“Family Island development is also fundamental to IICA’s core mission,” echoed IICA Representative Mari Dunleavy. “At IICA, we firmly believe in and support our family island farmers and rural development, which are bedrocks of economic growth and food security. IICA’s partnership with BDB is a natural alliance and I’m excited for the potential our relationship holds for the Family Islands.”

As a part of the MOU, BDB and IICA agree to cooperate and work together for the expansion and enhancement of agriculture and rural development throughout The Bahamas and to share resources in the conduct of programs and projects intended to achieve the above purpose. The MOU also contains several areas of cooperation, including joint programs, sourcing of funding for agricultural projects in the Family Islands, and other forms of cooperation as agreed on by both parties, including meetings on a regular basis.

Both organizations are committed to supporting agricultural growth and sustainable development throughout The Bahamas, and this MOU is evidence of their cooperation to achieve the above.

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The U.S. Blockade of Cuba Hurts Medical Patients in Both Countries

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Caribbean News Service

By Natalia Marques

Scientists in Cuba believe that the breakthroughs they have made in the health care and technology sectors should be used to save and improve lives beyond the country’s borders. This is why the island nation has developed important scientific and medical partnerships with organizations and governments across the globe, including with those in Mexico, Palestine, Angola, Colombia, Iran, and Brazil. However, such collaborations are difficult due to the blockade imposed on Cuba by the United States, which has now been in place for the last six decades.

In a conference, “Building Our Future,” held in Havana in November 2022, which brought together youth from Cuba and the United States, scientists at the Cuban Center of Molecular Immunology (CIM) stated during a presentation that the blockade hurts the people of the United States, too. By lifting the sanctions against Cuba, the scientists argued, the people of the United States could have access to life-saving treatments being developed in Cuba, especially against diseases such as diabetes, which ravage working-class communities each year.

A Cure for Diabetes

Cuban scientists have developed both a lung cancer vaccine and a groundbreaking diabetes treatment. The new diabetes treatment, Heberprot-P, developed by the Cuban Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (CIGB), can reduce leg amputations of people with diabetic foot ulcers by more than four times. The medication contains a recombinant human epidermal growth factor that, when injected into a foot ulcer, accelerates its healing process, thereby, reducing diabetes-related amputations. And yet, despite the fact that the medication has been registered in Cuba since 2006, and has been registered in several other countries since, people in the United States are unable to get access to Heberprot-P.

Diabetes was the eighth leading cause of death in the United States in 2020, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, killing more than 100,000 patients in that year. “Foot ulcers are among the most common complications of patients who have diabetes,” which can escalate into lower limb amputations, according to a report in the National Center for Biotechnology Information. Each year, around 73,000 “non-traumatic lower extremity amputations” are performed on people who have diabetes in the U.S. These amputations occur at a disproportionate rate depending on the race of a patient, being far more prevalent among Black and Brown people suffering from diabetes. Many point to racial economic disparities and systemic medical racism as the reason for this.

“If you go into low-income African American neighborhoods, it is a war zone… You see people wheeling themselves around in wheelchairs,” Dr. Dean Schillinger, a medical professor at the University of California-San Francisco, told KHN. According to the KHN article, “Amputations are considered a ‘mega-disparity’ and dwarf nearly every other health disparity by race and ethnicity.”

The life expectancy of a patient with post-diabetic lower limb amputation is significantly reduced, according to various reports. “[P]atients with diabetes-related amputations have a high risk of mortality, with a five-year survival rate of 40-48 percent regardless of the etiology of the amputation.” Heberprot-P could help tens of thousands of patients avoid such amputations, however, due to the blockade, U.S. patients cannot access this treatment. People in the U.S. have a vested interest in dismantling the U.S. blockade of Cuba.

“So after five years [post-amputation], that’s the most you can live, and we are preventing that from happening,” said Rydell Alvarez Arzola, a researcher at CIM, in a presentation given to the U.S. and Cuban youth during the conference in Havana. “And that also is something that could bring both of our peoples [in Cuba and the U.S.] together to fight… to eliminate [the blockade].”

Cuban Health Care Under Blockade

Perhaps one of Cuba’s proudest achievements is a world-renowned health care system that has thrived despite economic devastation and a 60-year-long blockade.

After the fall of Cuba’s primary trading partner, the Soviet Union, in 1991, the island saw a GDP decrease of 35 percent over three years, blackouts, and a nosedive in caloric intake. Yet, despite these overwhelming challenges, Cuba never wavered in its commitment to providing universal health care. Universal health care, or access to free and quality health care for all, is a long-standing demand of people’s movements in the United States that has never been implemented largely due to the for-profit model of the health care industry and enormous corporate interests in the sector.

As other nations were enacting neoliberal austerity measures, which drastically cut social services in the 1980s and 1990s, Cuba’s public health care spending increased by 13 percent from 1990 to 1994. Cuba successfully raised its doctor-to-patient ratio to one doctor for every 202 Cubans in the mid-1990s, a far better statistic than the United States’ ratio of one doctor for every 300 people, according to a 2004 census.

As the blockade begins its seventh decade, Cuba is not only upholding universal health care but also continues to be at the forefront of scientific developments globally.

This was evident during the COVID-19 crisis. Cuba, faced with the inability to purchase vaccines developed by U.S. pharmaceutical companies due to the U.S. blockade, developed five vaccines. The nation not only achieved its goal of creating one of the most effective COVID-19 vaccines but also launched the first mass COVID-19 vaccination campaign for children from two to 18 years old in September 2021.

To Share Knowledge Without Restrictions

Despite its achievements, Cuban health care still faces serious, life-threatening limitations due to the economic blockade. CIM, for example, has struggled to find international companies willing to carry out vital services for them. Claudia Plasencia, a CIM researcher, explained during the conference that CIM had signed a contract with a German gene synthesis company which later backed out because it had signed a new contract with a U.S. company. “They could not keep processing our samples, they could not keep doing business with Cuba,” Plasencia said.

Arzola explained how it is virtually impossible to purchase top-of-the-line equipment due to trade restrictions. “A flow cytometer is a machine that costs a quarter-million dollars… even if my lab has the money, I cannot buy the best machine in the world, which is from the U.S., everyone knows that,” he said. Even if CIM were to buy such a machine from a third party, it cannot utilize the repair services from the United States. “I cannot buy these machines even if I have the money, because I would not be able to fix them. You cannot spend a quarter-million dollars every six months [buying a new machine]… even though you know that this [machine] is the best for your patients.”

I spoke to Marianniz Diaz, a young woman scientist at CIM. When asked what we in the U.S. could do to help CIM’s scientists, her answer was straightforward: “The principal thing you can do is eliminate the blockade.”

“I would like us to have an interaction without restrictions, so we [Cuba and the U.S.] can share our science, our products, [and] our knowledge,” she said.

This article was produced in partnership by Peoples Dispatch and Globetrotter.

Natalia Marques is a writer at Peoples Dispatch, an organizer, and a graphic designer based in New York City.

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