Essential Afro-Latino/ Caribbean Current Events

Yehuda

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Haiti - Economy : All about trade flows between Haiti and DR

13/11/2016 07:49:43

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Over the past 15 years, Haiti has experienced a large deficit in its trade balance with the Dominican Republic, estimated in 2014: agricultural / agri-food products amount to $520 million (37%), textile / clothing products amount to $442 million (31%) and various products or $461 million (32%) for a total of $1,419 billion.

The 82-page report of the Center for Investment Facilitation (CFI), presented last September and released this week entitled "Trade Flows between Haiti and the Dominican Republic" presents the possibilities of rebalancing this deficit either by Import substitution or export development. Haiti has the potential to produce many of the products currently imported from DR, thus contributing to the creation of jobs and wealth in the country. At the same time, imports of DR goods in 2014 are valued at more than $17 billion, which is a huge market to exploit by Haiti.

Download the CFI study (PDF) :http://www.haitilibre.com/docs/flux.pdf

HL/ HaïtiLibre

Haiti - Economy : All about trade flows between Haiti and DR
 

BigMan

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Third Time is a Charm for Jamaican Scholarship Fund

Kingston, Jamaica – On Saturday, July 9th 2016 The Grace Scholarship Fund held their 3rd annual Scholarship Reception Ceremony at the Spanish Court Hotel in Kingston, Jamaica.

The Fund was started three years ago by Executive Director and Jamaican-American Charissa Lawrence as a means to help support the financial needs of Jamaican students attending colleges, universities and trade programs.

Ms. Lawrence was born in New York City to Jamaican parents but always kept a close connection with the island as she has been to Jamaica numerous times each year since birth.

“I’ve worked as an investment banker on Wall Street. I’ve led business units at Fortune 500 Companies in Europe and the Americas. I’ve designed and deployed strategies for start up technologies. It’s all been an amazing experience that I couldn’t have done without the foundation of a good education. I want others to have the same opportunity – this is my way of doing that.”, Ms. Lawrence stated when asked about what compelled her to start the Fund.

A Harvard University graduate herself, Ms. Lawrence’s efforts have proven to be successful as evidenced by the fact that 17 deserving students have received scholarships from The Grace Scholarship Fund over the years.

On July 7 students from across the island received financial gifts ranging from $500 – $1,500 USD each. The students represented several parishes – St. Andrew, Portland, Westmoreland and others.

This year’s 7 Scholarship winners were: Densil Irving (Mannings, Bethlehem Moravian College), Jacqueline James (Paul Bogle, UTech), Andene Bailey (Immaculate, UWI), Janay Duncan (Immaculate / UWI), Roxroy Roach (Mannings, Sam Sharpe Teachers’ College), Damani Campbell (St. Elizabeth Technical, Bethlehem Moravian College), Shackela Harris (Titchfield, UWI).

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“It was such a delight to witness the deserving young people receive these financial gifts. They are studying to become future doctors, public servants, dentists and business leaders. I’m just so happy to have been a part of their special day” said Mrs. Grace Lawrence, for whom the fund is named after.

To make the day even more special, the occasion featured guest speakers Dr. Mark Nicely (Secretary General, Jamaica Teachers’ Association) and Dr. Michelle Charles (Dental Surgeon, Business Owner). They both made passionate addresses on the importance of planning for success and keeping God at the center of all endeavors.

Both guest speakers offered to remain in touch and provide mentoring for the students.

“I’m already looking forward to next year’s scholarship ceremony. This is absolutely a community effort so right now I’m focused on fundraising both in Jamaica and abroad so that we can offer additional scholarships next year. You don’t need to make a large donation. Small donations are pooled together to form scholarships so every single dollar donated is effective.” said Ms. Lawrence.

When asked what she would change about the fund or her efforts, Ms. Lawrence replied, “Well…everyone always thinks the fund is affiliated with Grace Kennedy. The name was actually chosen in honor of my Grand Aunt, Grace Lawrence. She is the quintessential icon of what it means to be a public servant and promoter of education. She taught at Immaculate Conception High for over 35 years and still teaches from her veranda at the age of 91.

While many have suggested that I change the name to avoid confusion with Grace Kennedy, that likely won’t happen for sentimental reasons. But maybe it’s something I should consider…”.

The Fund graciously accepts all donations. Many of the scholarships could not have been made without the pledges of under $500USD. Donors who exceed that amount are named ‘Gold Donors’. This year’s Gold Donors included: Dr. Keith Williams (Florida), Andy & Coleen Rowe (New York), Dr. Brian Hamilton (Florida), Sydonie Neysmith (Florida), Dr. Peter Charles (Jamaica) , Bernard Lawrence (Jamaica), Joanne Michaels (Florida) and Charissa Lawrence.

Ms. Lawrence covers all the operational costs associated with the fund so 100% of donations made go directly to future scholarship recipients.

The next annual scholarship reception ceremony is scheduled for the fall of 2017.

To learn more about the fund or make a welcomed donation for the students of Jamaica visit www.gracefund.org

Submitted by: www.writethiswritethat.com
 
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Yehuda

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Colombia signs new peace deal with FARC

11/13/16 12:21 PM
By Sam Stecklow

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After weeks of negotiations in Havana, the Colombian government and the FARC (Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia) armed rebel group signed a new peace treaty after the stunning defeat of a public referendum on a previous peace deal just last month. The new deal will be put to a vote in Colombia’s Congress, rather than another public referendum.

“We have reached a new final agreement to end the armed conflict, which incorporates changes, clarifications and some new contributions from various social groups,” the government and FARC said in a joint statement.

“This accord is better insofar as it resolves many criticisms and dissatisfactions,” Humberto de la Calle, the government’s chief negotiator, told the Financial Times. “Like the first one, it will not have unanimous acceptance, but we hope it will have more solid support.”

Some of the changes involve, according to the New York Times, an apparent withdrawal of the guarantee of Congressional seats for FARC as a political party, which was a major sticking point for the opposition during the public referendum. (The Financial Times disputes that the political aspect has been removed.) It also includes provisions that FARC must “exhaustively” catalogue its involvement in the drug trade. The previous peace deal was overwhelmingly approved by Afro-Colombian areas most affected by the FARC rebels, but they were outvoted by more affluent urban areas.

The State Department, which was involved in both rounds of negotiations, put out a celebratory statement, saying, “This agreement constitutes an important step forward on Colombia’s path to a just and durable peace.” However, Sen. Álvaro Uribe, the main establishment force behind the opposition, called for the new deal to “not be definitive” until the opposition had time to read it.

Colombia Signs New Peace Deal With FARC
 
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newworldafro

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In the Silver Lining
When they can’t beat you, they can always resort to the sell-out negro: São Paulo elects black city councilor who is as against black cause as any white conservative

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“When white folks can’t defeat you they’ll always find some Negro—some boot-licking, butt-licking, buck-dancing, bamboozled, half-baked, half-fried, sissified, punkified, pasteurized, homogenized ******—that they can trot out in front of you” – Khalid Muhammad, 1993

Note from BW of Brazil: Could the legendary African-American Muslim activist Khalid Muhammad have known about elections in the city that is considered Brazil’s economic engine in 2016? Well of course he couldn’t have known about this specific case, but as the situation and this particular type of character has been seen in the history of black politics, the above comment can be applied to any and all that fit the bill.

With all of the racial turmoil going on the United States, many African-Americans would probably point to the controversial Milwaukee County sheriff David Clarke as a figure in current times who Muhammad’s words could be applied to. The Republican National Convention speaker’s comments on guns and the Black Lives Matter movement have infuriated hundreds of thousands, if not millions of African-Americans who have labeled him everything from an Uncle Tom, to a sell out, c00n and sambo, all derogatory terms directed at at blacks who are seen as representing the interests of a power structure that is repressive to black rights and black lives.

Over the course of the past few centuries, Brazil has also had its fair share of black men or women who seem to vehemently oppose the struggle for black ascension or simply don’t position themselves on matters that deal with the race issue. In Brazil, these types are often labeled a Pai João, a negro de alma branca (black with a white soul) or, in recent years, a “capitão de mato” (captain of the forest). In Brazil’s slavery era, the main task of the black capitão do mato was to hunt down, capture and return fugitive slaves to captivity. In the modern context, it’s equal to calling someone a “sell-out” or “house negroe”. The Ficha Corrida blog defined these sorts of characters as “the black that does not protest against the measures, the institutions and processes that cause inequality and marginalization of black.” And over the years, the black Brazilian struggle has seen a long line of futebol players, actors, singers, politicians, etc. who could fit this description. But recently, one controversial figure’s name keeps popping up when the discussion is the modern day “capitão de mato”. His name is Fernando Holiday.

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German artist Rugendas, traveling in Brazil from 1822-1825, portrayed a black ‘capitão-de-mato’, on horseback and pulling a captive (also black) with a rope.

Holiday’s first came up on this blog in a post from April of last year when Anna Beatriz Anjos spoke to a couple of scholars on black issues in Brazil about Holiday’s rhetoricthat was gaining popularity due to his frequent tirades on a number of videos posted on YouTube. This rhetoric recently paid off as Holiday was recently elected to the city council of São Paulo, Brazil’s largest city and the center of the country’s economic activity. This is big news because, as we’ve shown in past posts, Afro-Brazilians who attempt to enter the political arena always have difficulty garnering important party and financial support and this is infinitely more difficult for blacks who stand specifically for black issues.

Rejection of the social and economic ascension of the black and poor classes over the past decade has been an issue that has been lurking in the shadows of the recent political turmoil that recently led to the ouster of Brazil’s first female president, Dilma Rousseff. Rousseff’s party, the Workers’ Party (or PT), implemented numerous policies over the past 14 years that offered more opportunities to these classes than any other administration in the nation’s history. And with the Rousseff’s ouster, her replacement and former vice-president, Michel Temer, has seemingly been on a path to undo all of those advancements and take Brazil back to the stone age with massive cuts in health and education spending. The controversial Proposal 241 that is making its way through Congress, is a constitutional amendment that would cap public spending for the next 20 years.

So, in this political environment, in which white male politicians are still favored, what does it tell us when a 20-year old black man who is vehemently opposed to social policies in favor of the black population can rise to city council in the country’s most economically important city? The fact that many in social networks are comparing Holiday to the Stephen character portrayed by actor Samuel L. Jackson in the 2012 film Django Unchained should give you an idea of how many people are feeling about him. Below are just a few pieces for our readers to get an idea of how Holiday is seen in black social and political circles.

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Pro-impeachment movement adopts a black man who hates blacks

Connected to the organizers of pro-impeachment actions, Fernando Holiday may be a puppet in the hands of the movement or acting on his own convictions. Whether one or the other, it’s sad to see a black teenager calling the fight for affirmative action a “discourse of vagrancy” and playing the role of capitão do mato (captain of the forest/sell out). All that remains is hoping that one day he frees himself of this psychological misery.

By Marcos Sacramento

What leads a black guy to scream on camera against the introduction of racial quotas in universities and in public competitions? I was in doubt after seeing the video of one Fernando Holiday, in which he criticizes the actions of black militants during a class at USP (University of São Paulo).

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“Holiday, the black man that calls black quota students ‘worms'”

“We blacks and poor can succeed in life through merit, we don’t need to be like worms, like true parasites through the state, wanting to erode more and more with this discourse of shyt, with this discourse of trash. You make of blacks true pigs in the sty that are digging through the mud after the rest that the state has to offer. The poor from the suburbs, blacks from the periphery, don’t submit yourselves to this discourse,” he thunders.

I felt some discomfort during the just over five minute speech, in which he acted as the worst of racists when comparing blacks with worms. If calling someone a monkey is execrable, and dehumanizes the victim, what about worms, beings of an even lower scale of the evolutionary chain?

I do not know where from such bitterness comes from, but it can only be this bitterness that makes him ignore the historical context and research that demonstrate the need for racial quotas in universities. According to a study from the State University of Rio de Janeiro (UERJ), “in higher education, the disproportion between the presence of thepreto e parda (black and brown) population and the branca (white) population tripled between 1976 and 2006. If in 1976 5% of whites over 30 years of age had a college degree, compared to 0.7% of blacks, in 2006, whites had a higher education degree amounted to 18% of the population, compared to only 5% of blacks. Despite a substantial expansion of the offer of places in higher education in this period, the racial gap was not reduced. This reality began to change only after the adoption of affirmative action policies in the early 2000s.”

Another study, of the IBGE, found that from 2001 to 2011 the percentage of blacks in higher education increased from 10.2% to 35.8%, a result in part of affirmative action that began to be implemented starting in 2003. Despite the increase the percentage is still below the 50.7% of blacks in the population, showing the urgent need to consolidate the quota policies.

Really perplexing, on principle I considered the video adolescent foolishness of which Holiday would be ashamed after learning more about the statistics on the black population, but I changed my mind when searching his page on Facebook.

The fan page obeys the reactionary playbook and has hate posts against leftists, feminists, Dilma, and calls for the next demonstration against the government.

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:dead: Cousin Ruckusao
 

Yehuda

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#NotMyPrince Hashtag Uses Prince Harry's Upcoming Caribbean Visit to Resist ‘Colonisation of the Mind’

Posted 16 November 2016

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HRH Prince Harry at an announcement for the 2014 Invictus Games. Photo by Defence Images. Photographer: Sergeant Steve Blake RLC. CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

Despite the fact that most Caribbean territories have been independent from Great Britain for decades — some of them for more than half a century — the mother country continues to wield a curious influence over its former colonies.

Most regional territories, still members of the Commonwealth, follow the United Kingdom's political and judicial systems, for instance. Cricket is a hugely popular sport. People drive on the left side of the road, attach value to speaking “the Queen's English” and in many cases are captivated by all things royal, so there is some measure of excitement surrounding Prince Harry's impending visit to the Caribbean — except when it comes to a popular hashtag.

On Twitter, #NotMyPrince describes itself as an “anti-colonial welcoming committee for Prince Harry […] resisting against the colonization of the Caribbean mind”. The aim, according to the project's Tumblr, lies in “breaking the bonds of empire”.

The prince's tour is scheduled to start in Antigua on November 20, 2016. Over the course of two weeks, he will also visit St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Grenada, Guyana and Barbados, where he is due to meet Barbados-born superstar Rihanna.

One of #NotMyPrince's content creators, Nalini Mohabir, finds the whole thing ironic. She posted several tweets with the hashtag in order to bring other social media users into the discussion surrounding colonialism and Caribbean identity:



In 2009, a video emerged of Prince Harry joking around with his Sandhurst collegaues, one of whom he referred to as “our little Paki friend”. There was outrage at his use of the derogatory term, even though the prince may not have intended it as an insult.

In 2015, Barbados’ prime minister, Freundel Stuart, announced that by November 2016, he wanted to make “little England” — the country has long been viewed as the most colonial in the archipelago — a republic, replacing the Queen with a ceremonial president as head of state. Mohabir may have been referring to this when she asked:



While Prime Minister Stuart has been using decolonisation rhetoric, it appears the country has come no closer to installing a president over the queen, prompting #NotMyPrince to tweet about the subject.



The conversation soon accelerated, with British online magazine Consented tweeting:



The UK has refused to entertain any dialogue about paying reparations to the region for its part in the transatlantic slave trade.

By quoting several accomplished West Indians — from former presidents to writers — #NotMyPrince was keen on making the point that this is not a new storyline; that Caribbean people have been singing the same song for decades:







Prince Harry has recently made headlines for dating mixed race actress Meghan Markle. In an unprecedented move, Kensington Palace released an official statement which warned the paparazzi that “a line has been crossed” and criticised the media's treatment of the prince's new girlfriend.

#NotMyPrince cleverly used the actress’ own words to make its case:



It seems that the identity many Caribbean citizens want for themselves no longer includes the British Crown.
 

BigMan

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If you can read Spanish
https://www.aporrea.org/movil/tiburon/a237119.html
Por Atilio Borón

Lunes, 14/11/2016 02:06 PM



La hermosa isla de Curaçao se encuentra localizada en una posición estratégica del Mar Caribe. A escasos 80 kilómetros de la salida del Golfo de Maracaibo, en Venezuela, forma junto con Aruba y Bonaire la tríada de islas que el Reino de Holanda retiene en una condición neocolonial en el Caribe meridional. Aparte de estas Holanda tiene otras posesiones (las Antillas Neerlandesas) más alejadas de esa zona y entre las cuales sobresale la isla de Saint Marteens. Como puede observarse en cualquier mapa, Aruba se encuentra todavía más cerca de la desembocadura del lago de Maracaibo, la puerta de salida de las exportaciones del crudo procedente de los viejos campos petroleros venezolanos. Los nuevos, ubicados en el Oriente de ese país, en la Faja del Orinoco, son más lejanos, pero en todo caso la ruta de los buques cisterna conteniendo el crudo que se exporta hacia los mercados asiáticos, así como el norteamericano, deben recorrer la costa venezolana para penetrar en el Mar Caribe buscando sea la salida hacia el Pacífico, vía el Canal de Panamá, sea la ruta hacia el norte para arribar a Houston.

Bajo cualquiera de estas dos alternativas, esos navíos transitan bajo la atenta vigilancia de las bases que Estados Unidos tienen en todo el Mar Caribe (por lo menos cuarenta, aunque se sospecha que hay algunas más), y muy especialmente en Aruba y Curaçao, las más próximas a la tierra de Bolívar y Chávez. Estas instalaciones militares, que los norteamericanos no quieren que se las llame “bases” sino que usan el neologismo de “FOLs” (por “forward operating locations”) para abandonar el término “base” tan desprestigiado por los crímenes y vejámenes que sus tropas hicieron en todo el mundo, no sólo en los países de la periferia sino también en Japón están allí por algo, sobre todo las que vigilan muy de cerca los movimientos del país con las mayores reservas probadas de petróleo del mundo, Venezuela.

La base que Estados Unidos tiene en Curaçao tuvo un protagonismo excepcional en la incursión aérea que el ejército colombiano junto a tropas de Estados Unidos realizaron el 1º de Marzo del 2008 en la región de Sucumbíos, Ecuador, y que resultara en la muerte del “Canciller” de las FARC, Raúl Reyes, y dieciséis guerrilleros más. Fue de la base Hato, a pocos kilómetros del Aeropuerto Internacional de Curaçao, de donde partió el avión que lanzó las bombas que abrieron paso a la operación luego completada por las fuerzas colombianas. Esta escandalosa información se filtró a la prensa holandesa al día siguiente de conducida la operación, y hay registros exactos de la ruta seguida por el avión yankee para cumplir su criminal misión.

Pero esa noticia fue inmediatamente silenciada y nunca más se habló de ella. La oligarquía mediática es dócil sierva de los poderes imperiales y blindó totalmente la noticia. Pero lo cierto es que esa base, como todas las que tiene el imperio (unas mil alrededor de todo el mundo, según el especialista norteamericano Chalmers Johnson) pueden ser “células terroristas dormidas” pero aunque parezcan sumidas en la pasividad, o dedicadas a “labores humanitarias”, a “investigaciones científicas” o a combatir al narcotráfico (cuando lo que hacen es organizarlo y canalizarlo) pueden pasar rápidamente a la acción y llevar a cabo acciones mortales como las que perpetraran en Ecuador.

Curaçao es una isla que tuvo un papel muy importante en la lucha por la independencia de las naciones sudamericanas a comienzos del siglo diecinueve. Simón Bolívar llegó a Curaçao el 1º de Septiembre de 1812 y permaneció largos meses en esa isla, para luego pasar a Jamaica. En su estancia reclutó para su lucha a dos ilustres curazaleños: uno de ellos un brillante marino llamado Luis Brión, quien derrotaría a los españoles en la crucial Batalla Naval de Los Frailes el 2 de Mayo de 1816 y quien, por esa razón, fuera designado por el Libertador como Almirante de la armada venezolana, el primero en la historia de esa institución naval; y el otro fue Manuel Piar, ascendido a General en Jefe del ejército de Bolívar por haber disputado 24 batallas y haberlas ganado todas. Los dos lucharon codo a codo con el Libertador y adoptaron la ciudadanía venezolana. Los dos son símbolos venerables de la gran contribución de Curaçao a la independencia sudamericana.

Por muchas razones –históricas, de cercanía geográfica, de orden cultural y económico- la vinculación entre Curaçao y Venezuela es muy estrecha.

Por parte de su padre el actual presidente de la República Bolivariana tiene ancestros en la isla, y el apellido Maduro es común en esa isla. Esa misma vinculación es la que el imperio quiero controlar en provecho propio, de ahí la estratégica importancia de esa base, y la de Aruba, porque mediante ellas se puede ejercer un decisivo monitoreo de todas las rutas comerciales que pasan por el Caribe meridional en dirección hacia el Canal de Panamá. Si Estados Unidos decidiera escalar el conflicto con la República Bolivariana esas dos islas, pertenecientes al Reino de Holanda, serían insuperables plataformas de control y agresión.

Los patriotas curazaleños ambicionan la independencia de esta pequeña isla de 444 kilómetros cuadrados y de poco más de 150.000 habitantes. El 10 de Octubre del 2010 La Haya finalmente le concedió una cierta autonomía (más formal que real) y Curaçao se convirtió en un “país autónomo dentro del Reino de Holanda”, autonomía que según los propios curazaleños es apenas una fachada que mal llega a disimular la condición neocolonial de la isla. Ninguna ley aprobada por el Parlamento (de 21 miembros) de Curaçao entra en efecto hasta que no reciba el visto bueno de la metrópolis, y la elección del Primer Ministro requiere asimismo la aprobación de La Haya. De todos modos es un pueblo que ha mantenido su identidad, su lengua (el papiamento), su cultura, su gastronomía, su música y su hermandad con la comunidad de pueblos del Caribe.

Esa tradición fue la que los llevó a organizar el reciente curso de invierno y a promover la creación del LACIGS, el Instituto de América Latina y el Caribe de Estudios Geopolíticos. De las intensas deliberaciones que tuvieron lugar la semana pasada surgió con fuerza la preocupación de que una región -América Latina y el Caribe- declaradamente orgullosa de ser una “zona de paz” (en realidad, la única en el mundo habida las guerras en curso en Europa, Medio Oriente, Asia Meridional y África) pueda, ante los “acontecimientos en pleno desarrollo” como diría Walter Martínez, hacer que esas formidables bases norteamericanas que pululan como hambrientos tiburones en toda esa maravillosa geografía del Gran Caribe pasen a la acción dejando una estela de muerte y destrucción a su paso.

Por eso es imperativo que, tal como se hiciera en relación al ALCA, se organice una campaña continental exigiendo el retiro de todas las bases militares extranjeras (en su abrumadora mayoría norteamericanas) instaladas en la región. Es que el imperio es consciente de que su declinación ha comenzado y que la misma es irreversible; a la luz de esta perspectiva esta tercera frontera imperial que es el Gran Caribe, para usar la expresión de don Juan Bosch, es tanto o más importante que la que divide México de Estados Unidos y no habrá que ahorrar esfuerzos para impedir que Washington se arroje con saña contra ella. Decisivo será entonces promover el acercamiento y la integración entre América Latina y el fascinante y exuberante mundo del Caribe: el anglófono, el hispanoparlante, el francófono, el holandés y las más pequeñas islas que aún conservan sus lenguas originarias.

Esa fue una de las más brillantes iniciativas del Comandante Hugo Chávez, sabedor como pocos que la unión de los países latinoamericanos y caribeños sería la única garantía para resistir las exacciones y tropelías del imperio, no importa el color de la piel o el género del ocupante de la Casa Blanca, o sus intenciones. Donald Trump ha sido erigido como nuevo emperador, y hará lo que sea necesario para detener, o al menos dilatar, la irremediable decadencia del imperio.

Nada podemos esperar de él, como tampoco nada podíamos esperar de Hillary Clinton. Nuestra emancipación, nuestra independencia dependerá de nosotros -decía Chávez con razón- y no de lo que ellos, los imperialistas, quieran hacer. Curaçao será, como supo serlo hace dos siglos atrás, un actor estratégico en esa batalla por nuestra Segunda y Definitiva Independencia. Y ayer como hoy debemos darle las gracias por su patriotismo caribeño y latinoamericanista y, sobre todo, no dejarla sola en caso de que Estados Unidos decida apoderarse de ella para, desde allí, atacar a la República Bolivariana de Venezuela.
 

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Juvo and Cable & Wireless to drive financial inclusion across Caribbean

17 hours ago | 929 views | 0
Source: Juvo

Juvo, the pioneer in mobile Identity Scoring, today announced its partnership with Cable & Wireless Communications (C&W) to boost access to mobile credit services and drive financial inclusion across 15 Caribbean markets.

The Flow Lend app, driven by Juvo’s Identity Scoring technology, allows prepaid users to request credit extensions for immediate usage, dramatically improving customer experience and satisfaction. C&W is already delivering credit extensions to 10 percent of the smartphone market in the Caribbean, and Flow Lend customers are, on average, consuming 10 percent more of the company’s products and services and 50 percent more loyal.

The Flow Lend mobile application, created by Juvo, uses data science and game mechanics to build real-time subscriber personas allowing C&W to personalize lending criteria and provide immediate credit extensions. By re-imagining the prepaid experience, the app initially enables Flow prepaid customers to request credit advances for airtime and data, reducing zero balance days and progressively increasing access to services.

“Juvo has been a great partner,” said James McElvanna, VP Products, C&W. “From user-acceptance testing, to in-market customization and advanced data science methodologies - the overall experience has been very positive.
“Initially, we had concerns about some of the risks involved, including potential bad debt, but Identity Scoring has helped to mitigate these risks and our 12-month goal of US$1,000,000 in credit extensions was reached in less than four months, surpassing expectations” said McElvanna.

Explaining the key success of Flow Lend Steve Polsky, CEO and founder of Juvo, explained: “By putting a ‘face’ on what is typically an anonymous SIM, an identity-based relationship develops between C&W and each prepaid user, creating a better mobile experience and access to essential financial services.”
“We’ve been delighted by the open and innovative approach the C&W team has taken in getting Flow Lend to market,” continued Polsky.

Identity Scoring is part of Juvo's proprietary Identity Stack, which combines consumer internet know-how, sophisticated data science, and game mechanics to more readily target and engage prepaid users in real-time, based on their own unique preferences. The Identity Stack includes intelligence and reporting tools that offer mobile operators actionable analytics and insights to drive user engagement and growth.

The Caribbean market has been quick to respond to the new Flow Lend app with thousands of positive mentions and reviews from users. This one demonstrates the competitive differentiation Flow Lend is driving:
September 12, 2016: “I love it [Flow Lend]- I just topped up and I had until 3 October to repay with no interest. Bye-bye Digicel, I’m not gonna cry.”
Flow Lend is available in Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Saint Lucia, Dominica, Anguilla, Cayman Islands, Grenada, Jamaica, Montserrat, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Turks and Caicos Islands, and the British Virgin Islands. It will soon be launched in Panama and the Bahamas.

Juvo and Cable & Wireless to drive financial inclusion across Caribbean
 

Yehuda

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Bahamas fishing deal to help Chinese spy agency: Expert

BY KATHLEEN WALTER FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18TH 2016

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DELRAY BEACH (CBS12) — Thousands of Florida residents and corporations are at risk if a reported deal granting China fishing rights in Bahamian waters—miles off the coast of Florida-- becomes a reality.

Lisa Ruth spent more than a dozen years as an intelligence analyst for the CIA. She worries about a report that Chinese and Bahamian governments are in talks to split fishing rights in waters east of Florida.

she says Chinese fishing boats are already spying on the us.

"They're already doing it. No question about it. But it’s like we’re handing them a blank check in some ways. This makes it so much easier,and they can pick up so much more."

The proposed deal--so close to the Sunshine State--makes Florida businesses and even residents particularly vulnerable to Chinese intelligence agencies.

Ruth said, "Their fishing boats are equipped with equipment—a lot of extra equipment the Chinese government puts on. We already know they put these on fishing boats. They record everything they hear, and they send it back."

Everything from phone calls to electronic signals from computers with state secrets, business secrets, and personal secrets. Each year, the U-S loses half a trillion in industrial espionage mostly to China’s intelligence agency, meaning the deal could make a bad situation even worse.

Ruth said, "They want to know what their competitors are doing--anything that they can possibly gain from it."

Bahamas fishing deal to help Chinese spy agency: Expert

:mjlol:
 

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2016 Documentary that focuses on Candombe culture in Montevideo Uruguay.

Sorry guys only in Spanish

 

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2016 Documentary that focuses on Candombe culture in Montevideo Uruguay.

Sorry guys only in Spanish



Just finished watching it. I watched this one from '94 a few months ago they've been complaining about the shyt being too commercialized for years.
 

frush11

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Just finished watching it. I watched this one from '94 a few months ago they've been complaining about the shyt being too commercialized for years.


Yep, but it's been that way for a while. To the point where they have separate events, one with mostly white comprasas for the mainstream crowd. And they will have their separate thing for themselves
 

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Saint Lucia to host Caribbean Carnival Championships

NOVEMBER 22ND, 2016

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Minister for Local Government and Culture, Sen. Hon. Fortuna Belrose, met recently with Director of the Caribbean Carnival Commission, Dr. Vijay Ramlal-Rai to discuss Saint Lucia’s hosting of the first ever Caribbean Carnival Championships and Caribbean Festival Conference to be held in 2017.

The two-day event will bring together delegates from over twenty -seven countries, and will improve regional unity, Dr. Ramlal-Rai said.

“We have had presentations, discussions, ideas, and have threshed out proposals. By the end of the meetings there should be a motion passed to establish the first Caribbean Carnival Championship, which, in a nutshell, will comprise of winners of all Caribbean competitions in different islands coming to Saint Lucia for the championships. So the winner of calypso in Saint Vincent, or panorama in Trinidad, will represent their country in Saint Lucia for the first Caribbean Carnival Championships.”

Dr. Ramlal-Rai said the Caribbean Festival Conference and the Caribbean Carnival Championships will also help foster Caribbean patriotism.

The events are being held in collaboration with the Association of Caribbean States and the University of the West Indies.

Saint Lucia to host Caribbean Carnival Championships
 

Yehuda

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Guyana’s First Black Business Chamber Hopes to Create Opportunities and Achieve Surety of Economic Inclusion

By Lena D
November 17, 2016

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FLASH BACK: Attendees at the opening of Cuffy250’s Fourth Annual State of the African Guyanese Forum

Guyana is set to have its first Black business chamber aimed at promoting and sustaining the development of enterprises owned by Guyanese of African descent, the organization said in a statement.

“Part of its goal is to strengthen efforts at national development and achieving surety of economic inclusion through support for the growth of private businesses owned by Guyanese of African descent,” the chamber, formally known as the African Business Roundtable (ABR), said.

The Black business chamber hopes to become “an organized conduit to government and other stakeholders in society” on behalf of Afro-Guyanese businesses with the aim of promoting the interests of those enterprises. President David Granger in August, 2016 urged the mobilization of Afro-Guyanese to achieve measurable targets in keeping with the United Nations-designated International Decade for People of African Descent.
ABR will be launched 5-7 p.m. Friday, Nov. 18, 2016, at the Marriott Hotel, Kingston, Georgetown.

It is being launched under the auspices of the African Cultural Development Association (ACDA), which has been hosting a series of planning meetings in recent months to prepare for the launch of the grouping. The ABR was formed in part out of a need to strengthen the economy of Guyana and by the urgings in the United Nations General Assembly resolutions A/Res/68/237 and A/Res/69/16 dealing with the International Decade for People of African Descent and the program of action associated with it.

“Part of its goal is to strengthen efforts at national development and achieving surety of economic inclusion through support for the growth of private businesses owned by Guyanese of African descent,” the organization said.

The chamber hopes to create opportunities for self-development and the transformation of villages into viable economic centers. The ABR also will seek to create training opportunities for members and collect, compile, analyze, disseminate and publish reliable statistical data for business decision making.

“Toward these ends, the ABR will work with all persons, organizations and institutions that seek to achieve the objectives of economic and social inclusion of people of African descent in the full enjoyment of Guyana’s patrimony in recognition of their uncompensated contribution to the development of Guyana, and in accordance with the objectives of the two UN resolutions in reference and the relevant provisions of the Guyana Constitution,” the chamber said.

Read more here

Guyana's First Black Business Chamber Hopes to Create Opportunities and Achieve Surety of Economic Inclusion
 

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