Essential Afro-Latino/ Caribbean Current Events

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Colloquially Barbadians refer to their home island as "Bim" or other nicknames associated with Barbados includes "Bimshire". The origin is uncertain but several theories exist. The National Cultural Foundationof Barbados says that "Bim" was a word commonly used by slaves and that it derives from the Igbo term bém from bé mụ́ meaning 'my home, kindred, kind',[20] the Igbo phoneme /e/ in the Igbo orthography is very close to [ ɪ ].[21] The name could have arisen due to the relatively large percentage of enslaved Igbo people from modern-day southeastern Nigeria arriving in Barbados in the 18th century.[22][23]
@Diasporan Royalty @The Odum of Ala Igbo @The Wave @.0.ggggggod.* :ehh:

Thats interesting, a little igbo, old-english etymology
Alot of the influences are still there though, Especially the food.

I was talking to one of my co-workers who is from St. Lucia (non-black), and she had a crazy knowledge of Igbo and Yoruba culture.
Even knew a few Yoruba words :dwillhuh:
 
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BigMan

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Thats interesting, a little igbo, old-english etymology
Alot of the influences are still there though, Especially the food.

I was talking to one of my co-workers who is from St. Lucia (non-black), and she had a crazy knowledge of Igbo and Yoruba culture.
Even knew a few Yoruba words :dwillhuh:
St. Lucia has Yoruba influence too. They have heir own version on Yoruba religion too

The eastern Caribbean is very interesting as they are overlooked because of their size but they have an interesting history of English, french, Iberian, African and indigenous influence.
I didn’t know until last year that they spoke french Creole on St. Lucia and Dominica in addition to English
Jamaica, Barbados, and Antigua are the most English/North American influenced
Trinidad and Guyana are unique because of their diversity
The rest of the eastern Caribbean has that french Creole influence
Although I’m not sure about St Vincent. That’s one place I’ve never met anyone from although years ago I remember there was a Canadian poster that has Vincentian ancestry. She got ran off tho

But yeah Nigerian influence and ancestry all across the diaspora. In Jamaica we got “unu” and obeah from Igbos
 

Yehuda

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Advertising executive creates platform that lists companies that include black people in their campaigns

by Redação RPA

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Photo by Tolu Bamwo

According to Ricardo Meirelles' Instituto Locomotiva, by the end of 2017, the black Brazilian community will have moved approximately R$ 1,62 trillion, according to the website. With the purpose of showing companies that are interested in practicing diversity and including black people in their ads, advertising executive Fábio Amarante of Zaion Criações created the Compro ou Não Compro platform, the first site focused on analysing the black community's consumption in Brazil.

"I want to show our decision-making and purchase intent power. The platform aims to organize our demands in three areas, which are advertising, equity within companies at the executive level and measurement of content in TV channels," details Amarante.

The media can and should work for the inclusion of black people in advertising campaigns, without using stereotypes linked to blackness, such as when the inclusion is there, but the roles are marked by characteristics of exclusion and inequality — factors that reinforce prejudices.

"We want to expand to show our level of satisfaction with everything that impacts us. We need to exchange information about our consumption power and consume in a conscious manner and also teach companies in the community that they have to have a nice space. We need to circulate all this monetary volume that we move anually", concludes the adman.

Initiatives such as this contribute to the public's recognition of companies that invest in the black community, which we agree is nothing more than the obligation.

Advertising executive creates platform that lists companies that include black people in their campaigns
 

Yehuda

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Caribbean Leaders to Create World's First Climate Smart Zone

Published 13 December 2017

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Session of the One Planet Summit at the Seine Musicale venue in Boulogne-Billancourt, near Paris, France December 12, 2017. | Photo: Reuters

With the right domestic and international reforms, the world can take climate change by the reins.

The Caribbean will be home to the world’s first “climate start zone”, an initiative dedicated to the discovering new ways to break through the systemic obstacles that stall the flow of finances to climate-conscious investments.

RELATED: Caribbean Urges 'Developed World' To Do More on Climate Change

The announcement at the One Planet Summit in Paris Tuesday when the international assembly was called to discuss progress made since the signing of the Paris Agreement two years ago.

The ambitious strategy centres around the belief that with the right domestic and international reforms, the world and the Caribbean can be weaned off its dependency on fossil fuels to adopt renewable sources.

The plan will set the foundation for a US$8 billion investment plan to strengthen the Caribbean infrastructure for long-term resilience and transform 100 percent of the 3.2 million homes across the region to energy efficient households.

“This is a great first step. Now we need to turn this possibility into a set of realities that benefit all our people,” said Grenada Prime Minister and CARICOM chair Keith Mitchell.

“We all need to work together to change the rules of the game to accelerate climate-smart financial flows for the Caribbean and other small island developing states. Together we can build thriving economies fuelled by clean energy, nature-based resilient design and innovation. The time for action is now,” he said.

Dominica’s Prime Minister Roosevelt Skerrit told the international delegation that, through September’s hurricanes wrought immeasurable suffering to the Caribbean, its residents will not become passive victims of climate change.

“Rather, they want to be active participants in designing and implementing solutions, and for their Caribbean region to serve as a beacon of hope for island nations all over the world,” Skerrit said.

RELATED: Dominica: Families Benefit From Emergency Cash Aid Program

“Ultimately, we will only win the battle on climate change when investments in climate action and broader resilience become the economically sensible decision to make every time,” said Allen Chastanet, prime minister of Saint Lucia.

“It’s not just about protecting against negative impacts – climate action needs to be about enhancing competitiveness, creating jobs, improving our economies," he added.

The announcement was met with a host of international investors and supporters including the Inter-American Development Bank Group, the World Bank Group, UN Development Program, and the Caribbean Development Bank.

Caribbean Leaders to Create World's First Climate Smart Zone
 

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More than 100 human rights defenders killed in Colombia this year

by Anastasia Moloney | @anastasiabogota | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Wednesday, 20 December 2017 22:01 GMT

BOGOTA, Dec 20 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - More than 100 human rights defenders were killed, many gunned down by hit men, in Colombia this year, the United Nations said on Wednesday, urging more accountability and better protections.

Activists have been particularly at risk in regions that were vacated by rebel fighters under a peace agreement signed last year, leaving a vacuum of power, the U.N.'s human rights office in Colombia said in a statement.

The peace accord signed by the Colombian government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) ended a civil war that had lasted a half century.

More than half of the 105 rights activists and community leaders killed this year were gunned down by hit men, the U.N. said.

By comparison, in 2016, 127 rights defenders and community leaders were killed, up from 59 in 2015 and 45 in 2014, according to U.N. figures.

"The Office notes with deep concern the persistence of cases of killings of human rights defenders in the country," the U.N. human rights office said.

"Cases of killings of male and female leaders and (rights) defenders have occurred in areas from which the FARC has left, and which has created a vacuum of power by the state."

One victim was community leader Luz Jenny Montano, 48, who last month was shot by men riding on motorbikes near her home in the town of Tumaco along Colombia's Pacific coast.

Local groups say community leaders who speak out against rights abuses and activists campaigning for land rights are targeted by organised crime groups who see the activism as a threat to their economic interests.

"The Office has reiterated that the prevention of attacks and aggressions against human rights defenders involves investigation, prosecution and punishment of those responsible," the U.N. human rights office said.

The U.N. refugee agency (UNHCR) has also sounded an alarm about the dangers faced by Colombia's rights defenders.

Last month the UNHCR said it was "more and more worried" about the rise in killings and threats against rights activists along Colombia's Pacific coast.

Most victims belong to Afro-Colombian and indigenous groups, it said.

Earlier this week, Defense Minister Luis Carlos Villegas said authorities are working to bring those responsible to justice.

Across the Americas, rights activists are being increasingly targeted, the U.N. has said.

Last year, three out of four recorded murders of human rights defenders worldwide took place in the Americas, it said.

(Reporting by Anastasia Moloney @anastasiabogota, Editing by Ellen Wulfhorst. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's rights, trafficking, property rights, climate change and resilience. Visit News Home | Thomson Reuters Foundation News)

More than 100 human rights defenders killed in Colombia this year
 

Yehuda

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Jamaica top Caribbean country in Forbes Magazine global report on doing business

CMC, Added 30 December 2017

Jamaica is the highest ranked Caribbean Community (CARICOM) country while the French-speaking island of Haiti is ranked among the worst three countries in the world for doing business, according to the US-based Forbes Magazine.

In its 12th edition of the annual report “Best Countries for Business”, Forbes Magazine has named the United Kingdom as the top of the 153 countries surveyed.

The magazine determines the Best Countries for Business by rating 153 nations on 15 different factors including property rights, innovation, taxes, technology, corruption, infrastructure, market size, political risk, quality of life, workforce, freedom, red tape and investor protection.

It said the data is based on published reports from several reputable organisations including the United Nations, Transparency International, World Bank Group and World Economic Forum.

According to Forbes, Jamaica was ranked at number 72, followed by Trinidad and Tobago at 75 and Belize at 111.

Guyana was listed 113 with Suriname at 135 and Haiti at 151.

The magazine said Haiti is the worst performer among non-African countries, after indicating that African nations populate the worst countries for business with six of the bottom 10.

Most of these countries fare poorly on innovation, trade freedom and investor protection, it noted. (CMC)

Jamaica top Caribbean country in Forbes Magazine global report on doing business
 

BigMan

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def want to visti Colombia, specifically Cali, Cartegena (blackest cities), San Andres (apparently the indigenous are Jamaican descendants) and Medellin
A Colombia, también llegaron pobladores de Jamaica, Barbados, Haití, y Trinidad y Tobago, a principios y mediados del siglo XX, principalmente a el Urabá, Valle del Cauca y Cauca, para trabajar en plantaciones de Banano, y Caña de Azúcar. Aún sus descendientes, hablan su lengua y conservan las costumbres de sus antepasados, tales como la Gastronomía, Música y Lengua.
Jamaican descendants in Colombia:leon:
def gotta make a trip there
 

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Jamaican descendants in Colombia:leon:
def gotta make a trip there

That's interesting I know people from Barbados went to Brazil but they went to work on rubber tree plantations instead of sugar cane.
 

BigMan

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That's interesting I know people from Barbados went to Brazil but they went to work on rubber tree plantations instead of sugar cane.
after emancipation, i knew Jamaicans went to Central/Latin America but i thought they only went to Panama and Cuba. They pretty much when all the way down the Central American coast from Belize to Colombia to work on sugar and banana plantations. Black Ticos are basically Spanish speaking Jamaicans apparently.
 
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