Friday, May 21, 2021

Guyana developer cut protected mangroves (May 21, 2021)

 The developer of a Guyana oil and gas shore base cut a large swathe of protected mangroves in preparation for construction. But the clearing by Tristar Incorporated at Malgre Tout/Versailles, West Bank Demerara, has exceeded the terms under which it was granted permission to begin work to construct a shore base facility, reports Stabroek News.

Mangroves are a protected species here and concerns have been expressed previously that the oil and gas industry will pose a threat to large acreages. Conservation groups have emphasized that mangroves protect the coastline and riverbanks in Guyana, connecting saltwater from the  ocean to the freshwater produced by rivers.  Further, mangroves play an important role in supporting Guyana’s rich biodiversity, as they feature complex ecosystems where aquatic wildlife, coastal birds and  other animals thrive.

It is still unclear what measures should be taken if mangroves are on private land and what commitments the owners of those lands are tied to. (Stabroek News)

The company appears to have violated regulations that grant the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) the right to conduct an environmental impact assessment and grant an environmental permit, reports Stabroek News.

Government has since stated that more mangroves would be removed from the West Bank of the Demerara River for oil and gas-related infrastructure because there is no more land space available on the East Bank of that waterway. 

In light of the controversy, WWF-Guianas called for a full environmental and social assessment of the growing oil and gas sector, granted that the strategic decision has been made regarding its development. “We call for such an assessment at a time when some developers in the oil and gas industry are  demonstrating low interest in keeping to their promises and acting in good faith at the very least,  and at times, even flouting the nation’s laws,” the organisation said. (Demerara Waves)

Climate Justice and Energy
  • Guyana's Environmental Protection Agency recently revised the Liza Phase One Environmental Permit to include a provision by which  ExxonMobil could be required to pay for unauthorized flaring. The agency said the measure is being implemented in accordance with the Polluter Pays Principle. But the interpretation is incorrect, according to international Lawyer Melinda Janki, who said the principle requires the company to pay "to remove the greenhouse gases and other pollutants emitted by unauthorised flaring.” (Kaieteur News)
  • U.S. lawmaker Jim McGovern criticized Colombia's crisis management in San Andrés, which was largely destroyed by Hurricane Iota last year, and called on the U.S. government to review aid allocated to the island's reconstruction. (Infobae)
Democracy
  • Non-sovereign island territories in the Caribbean receive significant benefits from former colonial powers -- including passports, geopolitical clout, and financial aid. But to many, these arrangements feel paternalistic, and there is mounting frustration on some islands with the strings that come attached to funding, reports the Economist.
  • Former Puerto Rico Gov. Ricardo Rosselló appears poised to return to public life as an elected lobbyist for Puerto Rican statehood in Washington, D.C., just two years after massive protests forced him to resign from office. Last Sunday's vote to elect six special delegates to push for Puerto Rican statehood in Congress has drawn widespread criticism from advocates who oppose making the island a state, reports the Miami Herald. Two of the elected lobbyists will operate at the Senate level, while the other four will advocate for the island’s annexation in the House of Representatives.
  • Haiti's long-running political crisis is hitting a boiling point: The latest concern is President Jovenel Moïse’s call for a controversial constitutional referendum, scheduled for June 27. Haitian legal experts and critics call it illegal and few have confidence the vote can be pulled off democratically, writes Monique Clesca in Americas Quarterly.
  • A growing chorus of Guyanese civil society groups, many representing the Afro-Guyanese community, have condemned an announced electoral reform project to be spearheaded by the International Republican Institute (IRI). The Guyana Human Rights Association (GHRA) has come out strongly against the reform. (Stabroek NewsStabroek NewsStabroek News)

Diplomacy
  • The combined effects of a new government, the COVID-19 pandemic, and various other obstacles have thus far largely prevented China from realizing the majority of the commitments that it made in exchange for the Dominican Republic’s diplomatic recognition of the PRC in May 2018. But China’s vaccine diplomacy, and the government’s ambiguity regarding Huawei’s role in the Dominican 5G system, highlights the vulnerability of the Dominican government to Chinese pressure, according to Evan Ellis in Global Americans.
Regional
  • The Persaud Commission's dual track regional integration proposal "offers a way out of the present implementation impasse," argues David Jessop. (Caribbean Council, and see April 2's Updates.)
Public Security
  • Haiti’s ambassador to the US Brochit Edmond claimed Haitians deported to Haiti because of criminal convictions in the U.S. have become a big part of Haiti’s rampant violent crime problem. (St. Kitts Nevis Observer)
  • The anti-kidnapping unit of Colombia's national police hopes to help Haiti tackle its epidemic of abductions for ransom, reports Reuters.
  • Street lamps are being pilfered rapidly in Jamaica, hampering government efforts to illuminate crime-ridden areas, reports InSight Crime. Officials speculate that criminals are seeking to destroy the street lights – which have been shown to reduce violence in other countries.
Corruption
  • A high-level investigation has been launched into claims of corruption and fraud in Barbados-based Caribbean Development Bank, reports Barbados Today.
  • United Kingdom government listed Barbados as a high-risk third country with respect to money laundering and the financing of terrorism. Barbados was placed on the list, even as UK officials acknowledged that the country's authoritieshave made efforts over the past few years to strengthen anti-money laundering and combating the financing of terrorism regimes. (Loop, see Jan. 28's Updates for critiques of tax haven blacklists.)
Covid-19
  • The Trinidad and Tobago government declared a State of Emergency and an eight hour curfew to deal with a rising number of deaths and infections from the coronavirus pandemic. (CMC)
  • Haiti has authorized the use of the AstraZeneca vaccine as COVID-19 cases surge following months of delays in getting jabs, reports the Miami Herald.
Culture
  • Katerina Gonzalez Seligmann’s Writing the Caribbean in Magazine Time examines literary magazines generated during the 1940s that catapulted Caribbean literature into greater international circulation and contributed significantly to social, political, and aesthetic frameworks for decolonization, including Pan-Caribbean discourse -- Repeating Islands.
  • Is Caribbean history the key to understanding the modern world? -- History Today
  • Esendom interviews  Repeating Islands blog editors Lisa Paravisini-Gebert and Ivette Romero: "As scholars, curators, editors, journalists, translators, bloggers and digital archivists, Paravisini-Gebert and Romero bring an interdisciplinary approach to their ongoing work at Repeating Islands where they capture the wide array of sounds, smells and colors that make the Americas."
We welcome comments and critiques on the Caribbean News Updates, which is still a work in progress. You can see the Updates on our website, as well as receive it directly through the mailing list. Thank you for reading.

Thursday, May 13, 2021

"Who Polices the Police? The Role of Independent Agencies in Criminal Investigations of State Agents." (May 13, 2021)

"Who Polices the Police? The Role of Independent Agencies in Criminal Investigations of State Agents," explores examples of how different countries in the Caribbean, Africa, South and North America, and Eastern and Western Europe are building agencies separate from the police to conduct and prosecute allegations of serious crimes by police or other state agents. 

The new report by the Open Society Justice Initiative on independent investigative agencies, includes the cases of Jamaica's Independent Commission of Investigations (INDECOM) and Trinidad and Tobago's Police Complaints Authority (PCA).

Corruption
  • Operation Coral, a wide-ranging anti-corruption effort led by the Dominican Republic’s Specialized Office for the Pursuit of Administrative Corruption uncovered a scheme in which millions of dollars in state funds were allegedly laundered through a religious non-profit. Security officials, a pastor and others suspected in the scheme were placed in preventative detention this week, in a case that shows how minimal oversight of these faith groups makes them ideal vehicles for embezzlement, reports InSight Crime. (See April 30's Just Caribbean Updates.)
Climate Justice and Energy
  • The term "resilience" is often used to laud survivors of natural disasters, which "suggests that survival and adaptability are dependent upon the efforts of the individual and not the institutions and systems in place that should make survival achievable," writes Barrise N Griffin in Eyewitness News. But Hurricane Dorian shows the limits of personal resilience in the Bahamas, she argues, calling for long-term disaster risk planning.
  • Guyana's Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has received an application from ExxonMobil subsidiary, Esso Exploration and Production Guyana Limited, to drill up to 55 more oil wells in the Stabroek Block and citizens have been given 28 days to consider the environmental impacts from the project. (Kaieteur News)
  • Tourist operators profit from "provisioning," luring marine creatures with food for photo ops. But conservation biologists have expressed concern in a number of recent published scientific studies about what this food source means for the physical well-being and natural behavior of these animals. (New York Times)
Democracy
  • Very few people in Haiti speak English, but many Haitian protesters are using English to make their demands known, with viral Twitter protest hashtags like #FreeHaiti and protest signs reading “Jovenel is a dictator.” They "are using English not only to draw Western attention to the crisis there, but also to indict the U.S. for its role in creating that crisis," argues Tamanisha John in The Conversation.
  • The UK’s Privy Council has rejected Cruise Port Referendum Cayman’s application for leave to challenge the Cayman Islands Court of Appeal’s decision on people-initiated referendums. (Cayman Compass)
Women and LGBTQI Rights
  • Two murders in Puerto Rico again highlighted the rise in violence against women on the island -- around 20 women and girls have been killed in suspected femicides so far this year. In January Gov. Pedro Pierluisi declared a state of emergency over gender violence and requested $7 million for the training of 911 dispatchers and other public officials. La Junta, a congressional oversight board for the island’s finances, in April tried to limit the expenditure to $200,000. Last week it recanted and offered full funding, reports Axios.
  • Dominique St Vil, an activist promoting the rights of trans people in Haiti, spoke with 76 Crimes about the work of the Organization of Trans People of Haiti (OTRAH).
Migration
  • United Nations human rights experts called on The Bahamas to halt planned demolitions of approximately 600 homes in unregulated settlements on Abaco. The experts cited health and humanitarian concerns that “the community of largely Haitian descendants and migrants numbering up to 2,000 people, including many women and children, are at serious risk of becoming homeless as a result of the clearance expected to take place”. (Eyewitness NewsEyewitness News)
  • The Dominican Republic has already built 23 kilometers of fence on its border with Haiti. The work has been carried out discreetly by the army, and started before President Luis Abinader’s announcement of plans for a frontier-long barrier aimed at controling illegal immigration, cross-border trafficking, reports EFE. (See March 2's briefs.)
Racial Justice
  • In Martinique practitioners of bèlè, an ancestral dance practice, celebrate their African forebears and carve out spaces where they can incite conversations and action around individual and collective identity, expression, and healing through dance -- Repeating Islands.
  • The impact of slavery is relevant 150 years after -- for both the decendents of those who profited and victims -- Blood Legacy.
Finance
  • The World Bank’s catastrophe bond for Jamaica is expected within the coming two months or so, in advance of the peak of the 2021 hurricane season. It’s expected that Jamaica’s catastrophe bond will provide it with insurance or reinsurance like protection against the wind-related impacts of major tropical storms and hurricanes, explains Artemis. Natural disasters have been driving Jamaica’s need for sovereign debt, so by providing layers of financing, contingent on the occurrence of disasters, it’s hoped this liquidity can reduce the need to borrow so much when a major hurricane strikes the island nation.
  • Belize’s bid for its fifth debt restructuring in 15 years is complicated. Holders of the country's so-called ‘Superbond’ want it to agree to an IMF program, which joint unions negotiating over salary cuts, increment freezes, and government policies reject. (ReutersBreaking Belize News)
Covid-19 Impact
  • Cuba started a mass vaccination campaign against COVID-19 this week with the nationally developed Abadala, one of five Cuban vaccine candidates. Late-phase trials for the Abdala, in more than 48,000 volunteers, have concluded but haven't been published yet. Nonetheless, authorities say the advantages of starting mass vaccination outweigh the risks, reports Reuters.
Diplomacy
  • The United States urged nations “to act quickly” in deciding on the composition and date of an Organization of American States mission to Haiti, which is under pressure to hold legislative, local and presidential elections this fall. The U.S.’s plea came during a tension filled meeting in which Haiti’s representative to the hemispheric body accused Antigua and Barbuda Ambassador Sir Ronald Sanders of attempting to destabilize Haiti, reports the Miami Herald.
  • CARICOM selected Belizian Carla Barnett to become the organization's next secretary general. She will be the first woman to hold the post. (Jamaica Gleaner)
  • Saint Lucia  has urged the World Health Organization to allow Taiwan’s participation in the upcoming World Health Assembly. (St. Lucia Times)
Culture
  • Adekeye Adebajo’s The Pan-African Pantheon: Prophets, Poets, Philosophers offers readers a fascinating insight into the intellectual thinking and contributions to Pan-Africanism -- Repeating Islands.
  • UK brand Clarks has been the shoe of choice for Jamaican men for nearly 70 years. The phenomenon is about a lot more than footwear, according to the Guardian, "it tells the story of the relationship between the island and the UK over 100 years."
Events

24 May
We welcome comments and critiques on the Just Caribbean Updates, which is a work in progress. You can see the Updates on our website, and also sign up there to receive it directly through the mailing list. Thank you for reading and sharing. 

Friday, May 7, 2021

Haiti's state-sanctioned massacres (May 7, 2021)

Haitian state officials and police assisted in gang attacks that left hundreds of people dead, according to a report published by Harvard Law School’s International Human Rights Clinic and the Observatoire Haïtien des Crimes contre l’humanité. The report describes the acts of state-sponsored violence under President Jovenel Moïse as probable “crimes against humanity” when considering their “scale, pattern, and context. (Harvard Crimson)

The researchers lay out Moïse's government allegedly took part in massacres that occurred between 2018-2020 by providing gangs with money, weapons, police uniforms, and government vehicles. These were used in attacks on Port-au-Prince neighborhoods where opposition to Moïse was particularly strong. Former government officials also planned the attacks and off-duty police officers helped carry them out, according to the report’s authors.

The findings that crimes against humanity have likely taken place in Haiti, and that state actors may be liable for the crimes, have important ramifications for accountability, according to the report's authors. The allegations of crimes against humanity could provide justification for international action to address Haiti’s political and human rights crisis, William O’Neill, a human rights lawyer and former UN human rights adviser, told the Haitian Times.

The report’s findings that the killings were orchestrated by state officials underscores how the government’s desire to repress political dissent has bred longstanding ties among police, state officials and criminal leaders in Haiti, according to InSight Crime.

Climate Justice and Energy
  • Meteorologists are predicting 17 to 18 named storms during this Atlantic hurricane season, eight hurricanes and three to four major hurricanes. The season runs from June 1 to November 30, but some meteorologists have been lobbying for the season’s start date to be moved up to May 15, reports EyeWitness News.
  • The U.N. has voiced concern over the environmental impacts of the ‘La Soufrière’ volcano's eruption in St. Vincent and the Grenadines; issues include air quality, ash management and related water and soil contamination as well as the excessive use of plastics in shelters and the large amount of waste generated by ongoing relief efforts. (News Americas)
  • The Annual Report on Global Islands 2020 outlines challenges and creative solutions for islands to “build back better” as they recover from Covid-19. The ongoing pandemic provides islands with an opportunity to take stock, recognize policies that may have contributed to vulnerability, and begin a process to become more resilient and sustainable in the face of present and future crises.
  • The U.S. embargo against Cuba has, among other things, hindered the country's adaptation to climate change. (Juventud Técnica)
  • A group of 36 organizations focused on agrifood sustainability and climate justice called on the U.S. to reverse U.S. sanctions towards Cuba, which severely limit the rights of Cuban citizens to food security, climate justice and dignity.
  • Structural machismo in food production elides women's roles in agriculture, reports Juventud Rebelde.
  • The construction of a shore base facility in Guyana's West Demerara, has seen a substantial amount of mangroves being cleared along the shoreline earmarked for the project and residents are now worried that it could leave them vulnerable to flooding. (Stabroek News)
  • The sargassum plaguing Tobago's beaches could be an economic opportunity -- Global Voices
Governance
  • The issue of Puerto Rico's status with the U.S. is a complicated question, that defies easy definitions, reports The New Republic.
Diplomacy
  • The United States has too often viewed its neighbors – Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean islands – as problems to be managed rather than as diplomatic and economic opportunities to embrace, argues Richard Feinberg in Americas Quarterly. An "ambitious and creative [aid] program could offer an historic opportunity to turn the Greater Caribbean Basin into a significant geographic asset for the United States."
  • The Caribbean’s fractured diaspora in the U.S. reinforces a compartmentalized U.S. policy toward the region; while, for the Caribbean, the collective weight of its diaspora has not been sufficiently leveraged to promote the region’s interests both locally and within the U.S., write Georges Fauriol and Wazim Mowla in Global Americans.
  • The New York Times delves into the tangled espionage-love story of dual Cuban and U.S. citizen Alina López Miyares, who is serving a 13-year sentence in a Cuban prison. Supporters hope the U.S. Biden administration will usher in a new detente with Cuba that will permit an opportunity to revisit the case.
Corruption
  • A former Barbadian Minister of Industry and elected member Barbados' Parliament was sentenced in a U.S. federal court  to two years in prison for his role in a scheme to launder bribe payments from a Barbadian insurance company through bank accounts in New York. (Caribbean Life)
  • Former Bahamas Supreme Court Justice Keith Thompson has been appointed the country's first Freedom of Information Commissioner. (The Tribune)
Financial
  • Bequia is primed to become the world’s first fully Bitcoin-enabled community, though the adoption of cryptocurrencies is more of a necessity for small island communities rather than idle curiosity, reports Cryptoslate.
Covid-19 Impact
  • Of the 27 coronavirus vaccines in final stage testing around the world, two are Cuban. The island could become the smallest country in the world to develop its own jab, a testament to the island's top scientists, many trained in the Soviet Union, reports the Guardian.
  • Cuba's advances in developing five separate coronavirus vaccines -- two of which are in advanced trials -- build on a long history of biotechnology investments, reports Al Jazeera. Since the 1980s, Cuban scientists have developed vaccines for a whole range of ailments, including hepatitis, tetanus and the meningococcal meningitis.
  • Haiti still has not completed the necessary steps to receive a single shot, the Pan American Health Organization said this week. PAHO did not provide further details on the holdup. Prior to receiving vaccines, Haiti’s health ministry needs to ensure that all measures are in place, like the training of personnel and logistics including storage and surveillance, as well as authorizing the import of the AstraZeneca vaccine, reports the Miami Herald.
  • A great number of Latin America and the Caribbean countries have included refugees and other displaced people in their vaccination rollouts, but challenges remain in some countries for asylum seekers and those without regular migratory status. -- UNHCR
  • Deeper south-south cooperation, and in particular closer Africa-Caribbean cooperation, appears to be one potential COVID-19 ‘legacy good’, argues Alicia Nicholls in Caribbean Trade Law.
  • "...we don’t know how much time is left. That has always been true. The pandemic didn’t make it truer, so much as it underlined how few choices the poor, the at-risk, and the so called Global South have when confronted with disaster capitalism. The time isn’t now because we’re running out of it." -- Trinidadian poet Shivanee Ramlochan (Global Voices)
Gender
  • Covid-19 economic fallout has resulted in an increase in transactional sex in Jamaica, including numerous startling cases between older men and underage girls, according to a new study out by the Caribbean Policy Research Institute. The Stress Test: The Impact of the Pandemic on Domestic and Community Violence’ is based on research in 47 of the poorest and most violent communities in Jamaica. (Loop News)
  • SiliconCaribe released its First Annual Caribbean Women in Tech Top 50 List.
Culture
  • The British Guiana One-Cent Magenta was created in 1856 and is the most famous and valuable stamp in the world. When it goes to auction in June it is expected to sell for between $10m and $15 million. (Guardian)
Events

11 May
  • Dominican, Haitian, island historical futures: a discussion of emerging, and upcoming research -- University of Oxford
Opportunities
  • FRIDA is looking for passionate and committed young feminist activists to join its Caribbean Advisory Committee  in 2021.
  • Independent Expert on Foreign Debt - OHCHR

Mottley delivered blistering attack at COP27 (Nov. 9, 2022)

Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley delivered a blistering attack on industrialised nations for failing the developing world on the climate ...