Macmillan Education Caribbean Announces New Social Campaign – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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Macmillan Education Caribbean has announced the launch of their Level up Literacycampaign, designed to refresh teachers as they return to schools and support them as theywork with different literacy levels in their new classrooms.

This campaign, which is set to run from 12-29 September, will offer teachers and educatorsthe chance to boost their literacy knowledge and skills in a series of online webinars.

A supporting social media campaign will provide further activities and learnings that can beapplied in the classrooms, in addition to free Teacher’s Guides which come with enrichedplanning, support, and visual resources such as wall charts.

Based on the Macmillan Education popular literacy titles, Grammar Rules! and SpellingRules!, this social campaign is a chance for teachers to inject fun and established literacypedagogy into teaching the most essential skills of communication and comprehension.

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The series of webinars, hosted by Literacy expert Charlotte Rance, cover a range of topics –from making grammar education fun, to assessing and supporting students of a range ofabilities in the classroom.

Each webinar lasts one hour, and teachers will receive a certificate of participation on attending.

This campaign compounds Macmillan Education Caribbean’s promise of making educationaccessible, as all webinars will be available on demand – so that teachers who are busy with the demands of the new school year will be able to access the content whenever it suits them.

Follow Level Up Literacy across Macmillan Education Caribbean’s social media channels orvisit their website for more information.

SOURCE: Macmillan Education Caribbean

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Inversor que predijo la crisis hipotecaria de 2008 advierte que el colapso del mercado ya ha empezado

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

Michael Burry, inversor estadounidense conocido por predecir la crisis hipotecaria de 2008, publicó a principios de esta semana un preocupante mensaje en su cuenta de Twitter, que ha hecho saltar todas las alarmas.

El economista compartió una captura de pantalla de un gráfico del índice bursátil S&P 500, en el que se muestra una caída del 18 % desde su máximo de diciembre, pese a que también aparecieron pequeños repuntes durante el año. 

“Y, sin embargo, me siguen preguntando ‘¿cuándo nos estrellaremos?’”, escribió Burry en el tuit con faltas de ortografía deliberadas, presumiblemente como burla al nivel educativo de algunos de sus seguidores. Poco después, el inversor lo eliminó, como suele hacer con todas sus declaraciones en Twitter.

#michaelburry @michaeljburry صاحب ال #bigshort

و اللي باع كل اسهمه سابقا …

شكله شايف ان في سواااد قادم pic.twitter.com/c6HvS1NAyp

— Crypto World بالعربي (@just0Think) August 31, 2022

El verano pasado, Burry advirtió sobre la “burbuja especulativa más grande de todos los tiempos”, y les aseguró a los inversionistas, que compraban acciones de forma compulsiva, que se dirigían a la “madre de todos los desplomes”.

Hace apenas dos semanas, se supo que Burry había vendido sus participaciones en 11 empresas durante el segundo trimestre de este año, prescindiendo de las tendencias alcistas en importantes compañías como Alphabet, la matriz de Google; Meta; Bristol Myers Squibb y Nexstar Media Group, para apostar por el operador de cárceles privadas Geo Group, con sede en Florida.

El reciente tuit parece corroborar su opinión de que el colapso del mercado bursátil ya estaba en camino.

[embedded content]

Noticia original de RT en Español

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Mount Gay prices to increase in 2023 Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

From next year it could cost consumers of Mount Gay rum more to indulge in their products.

While unable to say just how much of a hike rum lovers can expect, Managing Director of Mount Gay Distilleries Ltd Rapha?l Grisoni explained that with the rising costs of inputs, price increases could be anticipated on local, regional and international rum products sometime in 2023.

“Mount Gay is not acting in isolation, we are just part of a trend. So, other brands of all kinds of products will also increase,” Grisoni said to local media after a tour of the distillery’s new sugar mill in St Lucy on Wednesday, August 31.

He went on to explain that a number of logistical challenges impacted the distillery, especially considering that a vast number of inputs for production had to be imported. However, Grisoni did state that the company would try to absorb “the maximum” but some increases would have to be passed onto consumers.

At the time of the press interview, the Mount Gay head could not provide specifics regarding the price hike consumers can expect but confirmed that it will eventually take effect.

“I don’t have any figures right now, but what we do is try to absorb the maximum, but you can be sure that with the trend we are observing right now that next year we will have to increase our prices for sure. There is no doubt about that,” he stated.

Addressing a question posed about how the distillery was combatting the many challenges against the backdrop of rising oil prices and global supply-chain disruptions, Grisoni hailed the company for its adaptability and excellence in forecasting.

“Our secret thus far has been the agility of our staff and our forecasting but unfortunately, consumers are going to be impacted at the end of the day [because of] inflation of all raw materials [and] inflation on the logistics cost which is tremendous. We are supporting it and we are trying as much as we can when we are exporting to our key markets [not] to pass on this price increase,” he stated.

However, should there be a dip in local consumption, the rum manufacturer stood poised to fall back on its exports as it was “diversifying” its risk by attempting to export to many countries so the “risk is diluted in that way”.

“You need to buy your necessary goods like food, effectively [affecting] the share allocated to what is not necessary, and if rum is not necessary in your life, probably it will have an impact in terms of consumption. It is why export is so important and diversification of the countries to where we are exporting,” Grisoni stated.

The managing director fielded questions following a tour of a new sugar mill and rum aging bond which were being constructed at the St Lucy distillery. The tour was attended by Minister of Industry, Innovation, Science and Technology Davidson Ishmael, Minister of Tourism Senator Lisa Cummins and Parliamentary Representative for St Lucy Peter Philips.

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CPL: Mayers leads from the front to guide Barbados Royals to victory Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

The Barbados Royals claimed victory in their opening fixture of the 2022 Hero Caribbean Premier League (CPL) against the St Kitts & Nevis Patriots with a dominant performance in all three facets of the game.

The Royals won the toss and opted to field first and it proved to be a wise decision as Andre Fletcher’s sparkling 81 aside they were able to take regular wickets to restrict the Patriots to 149/8.

In reply Rahkeem Cornwall and Kyle Mayers raced to a 64-run partnership to set the platform for a straightforward win.

With Mayers batting through the majority of the innings the chase was always a formality as his 73 from 46 balls put the result beyond doubt.

The Patriots were handed a blow prior to the match with the injury-enforced absence of Evin Lewis but the new opening pair of Andre Fletcher and Joshua Da Silva ensured that the Patriots had a firm foundation reaching 43/0 at the end of the PowerPlay.

Fletcher was in imperious form as he raced into the 40s and although he slowed down somewhat as he approached his 50, once that landmark was reached he pressed on the accelerator once again eventually being dismissed for a brilliant 81 from 55 balls.

However, that was the only knock of substance in the Patriots’ innings as no other batter was able to stick with Fletcher long enough to help set a more challenging total.

The Barbados Royals were excellent in the field, and this was no more typified than Corbin Bosch’s five catches in the outfield, a Hero CPL record.

If the Patriots were going to defend their total, they had to match the Royals’ excellence in the field, but drops in the field released the pressure on the Royals

Mayers was to be the biggest beneficiary of the chances that went begging as he survived three drops to guide the Royals to the cusp of victory before Azam Khan and David Miller saw them over the line with plenty of balls to spare.

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Update: Police appeal for public assistance to identify murder victim Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

Police investigating St Philip shooting Loop Barbados

Multiple gunshots heard near Castle Heights, St Philip; driver found dead

Loop News

2 hrs ago

NEWYou can now listen to Loop News articles!

A man was found dead, slumped in a vehicle on Thursday night at the junction of Castle Heights and Eastbourne Main Road, St Philip.

Around 9:50 pm, lawmen responded to reports that a number of loud gunshots were heard before a motorcar ran off the road striking some shrubbery in a garden in front of a house.

At the scene, police found the man’s body in the driver’s seat of the vehicle. He was pronounced dead by a medical doctor.

Investigations are ongoing.

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Danielle becomes first hurricane of Atlantic Season Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

The US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has said the first hurricane of the Atlantic Hurricane Season has formed.

In an update today, the NOAA’s National Hurricane Center said as of 3pm GMT, Hurricane Danielle was located about 885 miles (1425 km) west of the Azores (near latitude 37.9 North, longitude 43.3 West).

The NHC said Danielle is moving toward the west near one mile per hour (two kilometres per hour).

The agency said the hurricane is forecast to meander over the open Atlantic during the next couple of days, then slowly turn toward the northeast early next week.

The NHC said maximum sustained winds have increased to near 75 miles per hour (120 kilometres per hour) with higher gusts.

The NHC said some additional strengthening is forecast during the next couple of days.

Hurricane-force winds extend outward up to 15 miles (30 kilometres) from the centre and tropical-storm-force winds extend outward up to 115 miles (185 kilometres).

For more information, please visit: www.hurricanes.gov/Danielle

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TRINIDAD-LABOUR-Government maintains four per cent wage offer to public servants

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cana News Business

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Nadal’s nose bloodied by own racket at US Open in victory Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

NEW YORK (AP) — Rafael Nadal cut himself on the bridge of his nose with his own racket when it ricocheted off the court on the follow-through from a shot, leaving himself bloodied and dizzy during his second-round victory at the U.S. Open.

Play was delayed for about five minutes during a medical timeout in the fourth set of what would become a 2-6, 6-4, 6-2, 6-1 win against Fabio Fognini at Arthur Ashe Stadium in a match that began Thursday night and finished after midnight on Friday.

It made for a bizarre, and briefly scary, scene, as Nadal immediately grimaced, dropped his racket, put a palm to his face and then placed both hands on his head. He said at his post-match news conference he thought right away that he might have broken his nose, which kept swelling.

He said it was a “shock” when it happened and he felt “a little bit out of the world.”

Still, Nadal managed to joke about it all. Asked during his on-court interview whether he’d ever had that happen before, he mustered a chuckle and replied: “With a golf club but not with a tennis racket.”

How was he feeling?

“Well, just a little bit dizzy at the beginning,” said Nadal, who has won four of his 22 Grand Slam titles at the U.S. Open, most recently in 2019, the last time he entered the hard-court tournament. “A little bit painful.”

The episode came on the first point of the game with Nadal leading 3-0 in the fourth set and clearly in command after ceding the opening set for the second match in a row this week.

The 36-year-old from Spain was moving to his right when he hit a backhand. After making contact with the ball, his racket deflected off the ground and smacked him on the nose.

He went over to the sideline and layed down, waiting for the trainer, and Fognini went over to check on Nadal.

“He told me everything was OK,” Fognini said later. “I hope it’s nothing serious.”

After having a bandage put on his nose, Nadal resumed play. He would lose that game, but not another, improving to 21-0 in Grand Slam matches in 2022.

Nadal won the Australian Open in January and the French Open in June for his 14th title there, then made it to the Wimbledon semifinals in July before the abdominal issue forced him to withdraw (which does not go into the books as a loss).

The match against Fognini, who beat him at the 2015 U.S. Open, did not begin auspiciously for Nadal. His shots were off and he quickly fell behind.

“For more than one hour and a half, I was not competing,” Nadal said. “One of the worst starts, probably, ever.”

The second set was hardly a thing of beauty for either man, filled with poor play by both: They combined for 39 unforced errors and merely nine winners, seven service breaks and only three holds.

“I was lucky, honestly, that Fabio made some mistakes in that second set,” Nadal acknowledged.

When Nadal dumped a backhand into the net, Fognini broke to lead 3-2, then went ahead 4-2. But from there, it was Fognini who faltered, missing four shots in a row to get broken at love as part of a four-game run by Nadal to make it a set apiece.

“With Nadal, you can’t mess around,” Fognini said. “I let him back in the match and he kept getting better from there.”

In the third, Nadal came up with one particularly perfect shot — a forehand on the run that redirected an overhead by Fognini and sent it down the line for a winner to break for 4-2. Nadal’s momentum carried him right to the edge of the stands, where thousands were on their feet, and he punched the air and yelled, “Vamos!”

Not long after, that set belong to Nadal, too, and he would collect 16 of the last 19 games.

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Caribbean Matters: Remembering Hurricane Irma, five years later

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

The first Category 5 storm of the 2017 season was Hurricane Irma, which formed on Aug. 30, 2017 and dissipated on Sept. 13. For those of you who are meteorology-minded, here is a portion of the National Hurricane Center’s “Tropical Cyclone Report” on Hurricane Irma, as applicable to the Caribbean.

By early on 4 September, Irma’s eye was growing in size and becoming better defined, and deep convection around the eye was gaining symmetry. Irma was on a strengthening trend once again, likely due to the completion of an eyewall replacement cycle, and it was headed toward the northern Leeward Islands. Irma turned west-northwestward, due to the erosion of the western side of the mid-level ridge (Fig 5b), and went through another round of rapid intensification. The hurricane reached its maximum intensity of 155 kt around 1800 UTC 5 September, when it was located about 70 n mi east-southeast of Barbuda. As a category 5 hurricane, Irma made landfall on Barbuda around 0545 UTC 6 September with maximum winds of 155 kt and a minimum pressure of 914 mb (Fig. 6a).

After crossing Barbuda, Irma continued to exhibit an impressive satellite appearance and made its second landfall on St. Martin at 1115 UTC that day, with the same wind speed and pressure as for its Barbuda landfall. Still moving west-northwestward to the south of a mid-level ridge, Irma made its third landfall on the island of Virgin Gorda in the British Virgin Islands at 1630 UTC 6 September still as a 155-kt category 5 hurricane. Later that day, as Irma moved away from the Virgin Islands, reconnaissance data from the Air Force indicated that the major hurricane had weakened slightly and had a double wind maximum, indicative of concentric eyewalls. The double eyewall structure was also evident in Doppler radar data from San Juan, Puerto Rico (Fig. 7)

Even though Irma was no longer at its peak intensity, it remained a category 5 hurricane with a larger wind field than it had previously (Fig. 4). The eye of Irma tracked about 50 n mi to the north of the northern shore of Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic from 1800 UTC 6 September to 1800 UTC 7 September, with the strongest winds to the north of the center.

The eye of Irma passed just south of the Turks and Caicos Islands around 0000 UTC 8 September, and it made landfall on Little Inagua Island in the Bahamas at 0500 UTC that day at category 4 intensity, with estimated maximum winds of 135 kt and a minimum pressure of 924 mb. This slight weakening ended Irma’s 60-h period of sustained category 5 intensity, which is the second longest such period on record (behind the 1932 Cuba Hurricane of Santa Cruz del Sur). Irma then turned slightly to the left, due to a building subtropical ridge, and moved toward the northern coast of Cuba (Fig. 5c). Reconnaissance and microwave data indicate that the inner core had become better organized, and it is estimated that Irma strengthened to a category 5 hurricane again around 1800 UTC 8 September, only 18 h after weakening below that threshold.

Irma then intensified a little more and made its fifth landfall near Cayo Romano, Cuba, at 0300 UTC 9 September, with estimated maximum winds of 145 kt (Fig. 6b). This marked the first category 5 hurricane landfall in Cuba since Huracan sin Precedentes in 1924. Irma tracked along the Cuban Keys throughout that day, and its interaction with land caused it to weaken significantly, first to a category 4 storm a few hours after landfall in the Cuban Keys and then down to a category 2 hurricane by 1800 UTC that day when the eye was very near Isabela de Sagua. Shortly after that time, the forward speed of Irma slowed, and it began to make a turn to the northwest, which caused the core of the hurricane to move over the Florida Straits early on 10 September.

On Sept 7, 2017, NPR’s Scott Neuman chronicled the damage, going from island to island, tracking Irma’s path.

A string of tiny Caribbean islands have been left stunned and devastated by the destructive force of Hurricane Irma, one of the strongest storms ever to hit the region. Some islands appear to have been spared, but others suffered loss of life and damage on a near-apocalyptic scale.

He started with Antigua and Barbuda.

In Barbuda, communications were severed as Irma made landfall just before midnight on Tuesday. Antigua, 25 miles to the south, dodged the full force of the storm, prompting Prime Minister Gaston Browne at first to declare it a miracle that his nation had been spared.

But as it turned out, Browne had spoken too soon. It was only after communication began to be restored and he was able to visit Barbuda that the damage to the smaller of the two islands became clear. “I journeyed to Barbuda this afternoon and what I saw was heart-wrenching, absolutely devastating,” Browne said on state-owned television Wednesday afternoon. “In fact, I believe that on a per capita basis, the extent of the destruction in Barbuda is unprecedented. And it is unprecedented, based on the type of storm. Hurricane Irma would have been easily the most powerful hurricane to have stormed through the Caribbean, and it is extremely unfortunate that Barbuda was right in its path.”

As noted by Prime Minister Browne below, at least 95% of the island was affected.

One of the most irritating (read: rage-inducing) things about the first reports on Irma were the large number of social media posts from people who mistook Barbuda for Barbados, and posted videos like the one below—videos that were not even hurricane footage.

This post pointed out the geographical distance between the two countries, after a journalist for a Charlotte CBS affiliate made the same error.

On Sept. 11, the BBC reported on damage to St. Martin, St Barts, and Anguilla.

The hurricane left more than two-thirds of homes on the Dutch side of the island of St Martin uninhabitable, with no electricity, gas or drinking water, and four people confirmed dead. The French government has said its side of St Martin – known as Saint-Martin – has sustained about €1.2bn ($1.44bn; £1.1bn) in damage, with nine deaths across Saint-Martin and St Barts. French Interior Minister Gerard Collomb said there had been “massive destruction” to the islands.

The nearby British overseas territory of Anguilla also had extensive damage, with one person killed.

Then Irma hit close to home, making landfall in the Virgin Islands.

Overhead footage offered just a glimpse of how bad things were.

As Colin Dwyer wrote for NPR on Sept. 14:

Hurricane Irma arrived on the doorstep of the Virgin Islands just over a week ago. A Category 5 storm, historic in its terrible might, Irma shredded homes and hotels into the bare materials that made them, its winds scattering floorboards and roofs and light poles like so many matchsticks.

Within a day, the storm had rendered the islands so unrecognizable, satellites could register the stark change from space. Where once the Virgin Islands — both U.S. and British — gleamed green in their lush vegetation, that vista is buried brown beneath uprooted trees and the debris of broken buildings.

As nightmarish as those hours were, the days since have seemed a lifetime for many residents of the U.S. and British territories.

“While there were some homes that survived — some lost just roofs — there are homes that are totally obliterated right down to the foundation,” David Mapp, executive director of the Virgin Islands Port Authority, tells NPR’s Jason Beaubien. “I mean, all you see is rubble.”

This short PBS video offers a glimpse of life after the destruction to the USVI.

In an in-depth segment called “The Forgotten Americans,” Democracy Now! raised questions about the U.S. media’s coverage—or rather, lack thereof—of the devastation to the U.S. territory.

As the video’s YouTube caption explains:

Hurricane Irma made landfall in the U.S. Virgin Islands as a Category 5 storm just over one week ago, knocking out electricity and running water, and cutting off communications with the outside world. Now, Governor Kenneth Mapp says the islands of Saint John and Saint Thomas are still nearly entirely without power. The hurricane also destroyed schools and the main hospital on Saint Thomas. The devastation was so extensive, it can be seen from space. Earlier this week, a U.S. military amphibious ship arrived on Saint Thomas ladened with equipment and supplies. The islands have also received emergency aid from residents of the nearby island of Puerto Rico, where volunteers banded together to collect supplies and transport them on dozens of ships.

But while Hurricane Irma hit the U.S. Virgin Islands days before it made landfall on the Florida Keys, the Virgin Islands have been largely forgotten in the wall-to-wall U.S. media coverage of the storm. And that omission is even more striking given that the U.S. Virgin Islands are in the midst of celebrating their centennial as U.S. territory. We speak with Saint Thomas native Tiphanie Yanique, award-winning poet and novelist. She’s an associate professor in the English Department at Wesleyan University and the author of the poetry collection “Wife” and the novel “Land of Love and Drowning.”

Meanwhile, on Fox (not) News, Tucker Carlson attacked USVI Gov. Mapp, based on NRA claims that Mapp’s calling up the National Guard to respond to the disaster included “seizing citizens’ guns.”

Mapp is the same governor then-President Trump mistakenly called “the president of the Virgin Islands.” It wasn’t until Oct. 3—about a month after Irma made landfall—that Trump actually met with him.

Many U.S. television viewers got their first introduction to USVI Rep. Stacey Plaskett, who went on to be an House manager during Trump’s first impeachment trial; she’s seen here on MSNBC on Sept. 8, 2017.

Perhaps the most high-profile face to step up rally relief for the USVI was retired NBA star Tim Duncan.

Michael C. Wright reported on Duncan’s “amazing” efforts for ESPN.

SAN ANTONIO — Retired San Antonio Spurs forward Tim Duncan called the response to his plea Friday for donations toward Hurricane Irma relief efforts in the U.S. Virgin Islands “amazing,” adding that thousands of donors, including the Spurs, local grocery store chain H-E-B and the San Antonio Food Bank, have contributed.

“I’m blown away by it,” Duncan said Sunday during a news conference at the San Antonio Food Bank. “In this day and age, it’s a little easier to reach a lot of people, and people have come out from everywhere. I’ve looked down the list of donors, and I’ve recognized some names. I’ve gotten support from the Spurs, H-E-B and the food bank — all across the board. It’s just been an amazing response.”

Duncan penned an impassioned plea for donations toward Hurricane Irma relief efforts Friday in The Players’ Tribune, and by Sunday afternoon, he had reached his $1 million goal. Duncan promised that every dollar donated would go directly toward relief efforts on the ground. Duncan kick-started the fundraising effort with a YouCaring account and an immediate $250,000 contribution, and he pledged to match all donations up to the first $1 million.

Post-Irma, Daily Kos Community member Lefty Coaster documented his work helping the USVI rebuild in early 2019, posting at both the beginning and after the conclusion of his three weeks of service.

Tiny Barbuda, which was completely destroyed, is now facing a different set of problems. A “post-hurricane land grab”  has been reported by Alleen Brown for The Intercept, involving billionaire developer (and Patrón Tequila co-founder) John Paul DeJoria and movie star Robert de Niro.

Residents of the tiny Caribbean island of Barbuda say a planned luxury resort co-owned by the billionaire philanthropist and self-proclaimed environmentalist John Paul DeJoria could destroy the islanders’ way of life. DeJoria’s development company would place a golf course and community of seaside vacation homes on top of a wetland protected by an international treaty.

Recognized as vital in a future marked by climate crisis, the lagoon’s mangroves, seagrass beds, and coral reefs support a lobster fishery, endangered hawksbill and leatherback turtles, and the largest nesting colony of magnificent frigatebirds in the Western hemisphere. The vegetation also helps protect land from eroding during increasingly severe storms, such as Hurricane Irma, which destroyed the island in 2017.

Locals, who are citizens of the sovereign nation of Antigua and Barbuda, are also raising concerns that the resort constructed by DeJoria’s company Peace, Love and Happiness is playing a role in upending the island’s collective land ownership system, which has survived since slavery’s abolishment.

[…]

The project is one of two large developments — for tiny Barbuda, at least — to benefit from a series of disaster capitalism-style legal maneuvers advanced in the aftermath of Hurricane Irma, as Barbudans fled wholesale destruction. The other project is being led by actor and hotelier Robert De Niro, who plans to build a tony resort called Nobu Beach Inn on a different stretch of sand. Though the Nobu Beach Inn will not be located on the Codrington Lagoon, locals have decried both projects as part of a “land grab” — enabled by a pro-development government in Antigua that lured the resorts in and rammed through a post-hurricane change in land laws that turned the projects into significantly more attractive investments.

The impact of these new luxuries worries Barbudans.

We’ll keep you posted.

In the meantime, cross your fingers and hope that the Caribbean makes it through this season with no major storms.

Join me in the comments to share your memories of Irma, and for the weekly Caribbean News Roundup.

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Dean Jonas condemns “misogynistic” attack on Samantha Marshall

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

by pointe xpress

The Minister of Gender Affairs, Dean Jonas, has strongly condemned the personal attack on his Cabinet colleague, Samantha Marshall by a United Progressive Party (UPP) candidate which he has described as “an attack on all women”.

On Thursday morning during the Cabinet Press Briefing, Jonas said it was reprehensible that a candidate of a major political party could use the media to launch a chilling personal attack on Marshall.

Jonas was referring to comments made by his political opponent in the St. George’s constituency over the weekend Algernon ‘Serpent’ Watts. The radio personality turned politician used his platform on Observer Radio, of which he is part owner, to launch a personal broadside against Agriculture Minister Marshall.

“As the Minister with responsibility for Gender Affairs, I must join those right-thinking persons who condemn the use of the media – social or traditional – for unproductive, personal attacks against others. “I specifically refer to the recent attack on Member of Parliament, the Honourable Samantha Marshall, by a radio personality who calls himself ‘Serpent’. “I call on all listening and viewing audiences to shun and discourage such behaviour and to distance yourselves from such personalities.

“The disgusting, misogynistic attack on Minister Samantha Marshall by UPP candidate Algernon ‘Serpent’ Watts should not be accepted in our political discourse or disagreements. We should always engage each other on policy and show the wider public that we are better than such crass behaviour. “Women who enter the political arena are frequently subjected to sexist and misogynistic remarks. We must call it out whenever it happens and reject those utterances,” said Jonas, who was deputising for Information Minister, Melford Nicholas, at yesterday’s Cabinet Press Briefing.

The St. George MP said he recently was involved in a debate with Watts in which the UPP hopeful was outclassed. Jonas added that if Watts were to engage Marshall in a similar debate on issues of policy and national importance, he would fare just as dismally against the St. Mary’s South representative

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