President Assents to Legislation: Children (Amendment) Act, 2020 and Defence (Amendment) Act, 2020 – Office of the President of the Republic of…

19 May 2020 | Legal Affairs

President Danny Faure has today assented to two Acts which were passed by the National Assembly last week, and which were received today for his assent.

The Children (Amendment) Act 2020 was passed by the National Assembly on Tuesday 12th May. This Act provides for the further protection of children, for the abolition of corporal punishment against children, and for giving effect to the requirements of international conventions on childrens rights.

The Defence (Amendment) Act 2020 was passed by the National Assembly on Wednesday 13th May. Under the Act, the Seychelles Coast Guard will serve as a military service organisation of the Seychelles Defence Force, and will contribute to the defence of the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Seychelles, particularly in relation to the maritime zones of Seychelles. The Coast Guard will also have the necessary powers for law enforcement relating to any crimes within the Seychelles maritime zones.

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President Assents to Legislation: Children (Amendment) Act, 2020 and Defence (Amendment) Act, 2020 - Office of the President of the Republic of...

Cabinet Business- Thursday 21st May 2020 – News – Office of the President of the Republic of Seychelles

21 May 2020 | Cabinet Business

President Danny Faure chaired a scheduled meeting of the Cabinet yesterday, Wednesday 20thMay at which a number of legal and policy memoranda were considered.

Cabinet was briefed on the next phase of the easing of restrictions implemented as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. These measures concerned re-opening of the airport as from June 2020.

Cabinet approved employment strategies to address the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the labour market.

Cabinet was apprised of the trend in welfare applications and spending levels over the last three months with February 2020 as the baseline.

Cabinet was also presented with the quarter 3, 2019 Multidimensional Poverty Index survey results.

Cabinet approved an additional 6 products to be added to the list of essential commodities, specifically for hygiene and sanitary purposes.

Cabinet approved for the drafting of regulation for the implementation of per second billing by licensed mobile service providers.

Cabinet approved for the signing of the Agreement between the Government of the United States of American and the Government of the Republic of Seychelles concerning Counter Illicit Transnational Maritime Activity Operation.

Cabinet also approved for the ratification of the third Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child on the communications procedure.

Cabinet approved Seychelles initial country report on the implementation of the African Charter on the right and Welfare of the child.

Cabinet approved the National Climate Change Policy.

Cabinet also approved the Seychelles National Sports Policy 2020-2024.

Cabinet approved revision to the Sale of State land and Land Bank Policy.

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Cabinet Business- Thursday 21st May 2020 - News - Office of the President of the Republic of Seychelles

President Faure chairs meeting to address maritime security matters – Office of the President of the Republic of Seychelles

19 May 2020 | Defence

President Danny Faure chaired a meeting this morning to address maritime security matters, together with relevant ministries and agencies. The meeting follows on from measures announced by the President in response to the threat of COVID-19. It was held with the aim of reviewing the existing system in place and maintain effective maritime monitoring.

President Faure was briefed on the existing situation and measures currently in place in line with the Public Health Regulations, including the restriction of entry and exit into and from Seychelles via sea. The officials in attendance also detailed the limitations that need to be addressed in order to maintain the safety of Seychelles maritime space. Officials present committed to reviewing existing regulations and proposing amendments where necessary in order to guarantee stringent protection of maritime security. It was also agreed that coordination between key ministries and agencies involved would be strengthened.

The President reiterated his commitment to keeping the Seychellois community safe from the threat of COVID-19, and the urgent need to ensure the integrity of Seychelles Economic Exclusive Zone, particularly given its primary role as the countrys source of economic opportunities. He also emphasised the need to keep citizens informed of the measures in place on a regular basis.

Present at the meeting this morning was the Designated Minister, Mrs Macsuzy Mondon, the Minister for Fisheries and Agriculture, Mr Charles Bastienne, the Chief of Defence Forces, Colonel Clifford Roseline, Commissioner of Police, Mr Kishnan Labonte, Director General of the Seychelles Intelligence Service, Mr Benediste Hoareau, Principal Secretary in the Office of the Vice President, Ms Rebecca Loustau Lalanne, Principal Secretary in the Office of the Designated Minister, Ms Sheryl Vengadasamy, CEO of the Seychelles Maritime Safety Authority (SMSA), Captain Joachim Valmont, Deputy Commissioner of Police, Mr Romano Songor, the interim Chief Executive Officer of the Seychelles Fishing Authority (SFA), Mr Cyril Bonnelame, Commander of the Seychelles Coast Guard, Col Simon Dine and the Director for National Information Sharing and Coordination Centre (NISCC), Lieutenant Colonel Leslie Benoiton.

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President Faure chairs meeting to address maritime security matters - Office of the President of the Republic of Seychelles

Nature Is Our Best Antiviral – The Asean Post

The Seychelles, a string of 115 verdant, rocky islands in the Indian Ocean, recently announced in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic that it would protect 30 percent of its glittering turquoise waters from commercial use.

Safeguarding some 410,000 square kilometres (158,000 square miles) of the sea will benefit wildlife on the shore and in the water, including 100,000 giant tortoises and some of the worlds last pristine coral reefs. But, beyond helping such species, establishing the new Marine Protected Areas which was made possible through an innovative debt-swap deal will also bolster the health, wellbeing, and prosperity of the Seychellois, who number under 100,000 but cater to more than 350,000 visitors each year.

Currently hosting a handful of tourists stranded by the pandemic, the country is under a lockdown aimed at preventing the further spread of the virus. President Danny Faures decision to press ahead with this protection effort, even as his country deals with a public-health emergency, serves as a powerful reminder of the importance of nature to peoples physical and economic wellbeing and not just in the Seychelles.

The human, economic, and social consequences of the rapid and devastating global spread of the coronavirus will last for years to come. And with the pandemic still unfolding, the most urgent priority is to support those directly affected by the virus and its associated hardships.

But this pandemic has also provided us with unprecedented and compelling proof of how closely our fate is linked with the health of the natural world. And right now, our relationship with nature is broken. We have cut down forests, overgrazed grasslands, built ports and roads, and expanded our cities at a rapid rate, destroying countless natural habitats. At the same time, we trade wildlife globally, moving common and endangered species alike across the world as if they were inanimate commodities.

All of this is bringing us into closer and more frequent contact with viruses that can spread from animals to people, including the COVID-19 coronavirus and dozens of other deadly and debilitating illnesses, from HIV to Ebola. Likewise, our degradation of marine ecosystems causes blooms of pathogens that can cause potentially fatal diseases such as cholera.

The good news is that far-sighted political leaders and the United Nations (UN) are already formulating nature-focused action plans that could help to stop the next pandemic before it starts. These strategies include conserving ecosystems and wildernessthat are still untouched by human activity, clamping down on wildlife trade (including by educating people about the risks of consuming wildlife), and restoring and protecting significant areas of land and ocean.

The world already safeguards 15 percent of its land and seven percent of the ocean. But, for the sake of our health and prosperity, we must do more. Indeed, there is increasing agreement among countries that we need to return half the planet to nature and use the other half responsibly, and that we should start by protecting at least 30 percent of it by 2030.

Both nature and people would benefit. Research shows that abundant animals, plants, insects, and microbes living in complex, mature ecosystems can limit the spread of disease from animals to people.

But natural places do much more than provide a safety net against illness. They also shield us from the destructive power of extreme weather, safeguard us from our own pollution, and supply us with food, medicine, and leisure opportunities.

The Seychellois depend on the land and sea for their incomes and food. Fishing employs 17 percent of the countrys workforce and provides the population with a low-cost, sustainable source of protein. Tourism, which is concentrated along the Seychelles coastlines and is driven by the countrys natural beauty on land and underwater, employs some 25 percent.

Safeguarding 30 percent of the countrys waters will end harmful activities within the fully protected areas while bolstering sustainable fishing around them. And keeping the countrys natural places pristine including, in addition to its seas, its mangrove forests, seagrass beds, and salt marshes can help to ensure that the Seychelles remains the natural paradise that draws responsible visitors.

When the worst of the pandemic has passed and the world embarks on the hard work of nursing its people, societies, and economies back to health, we must not overlook the need to care for nature and let nature care for us. A healthy environment is our best antiviral, and protecting more of it will help us to rebound from this pandemic and stop the next one before it starts.

Many countries are already demonstrating how we can build stronger bonds between nature, our economy, and our health. And the Seychelles recent marine-protection initiative offers hope that if every country, no matter how small, does its part, the planet can be safer and more prosperous for all of us just as nature promises.

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Nature Is Our Best Antiviral - The Asean Post

COVID-19 Situation update for the WHO African Region, External Situation Report 12 (19 May 2020) – South Africa – ReliefWeb

The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) outbreak continues to advance in the WHO African Region since thefirst case was reported on 25 February 2020 in Algeria. Confirmed cases of COVID-19 have now been recordedin all the 47 Member States in the WHO African Region. While there are variations among countries, the overallnumbers of reported cases and deaths have been increasing exponentially in recent weeks and more than half ofthe countries in the region are experiencing community transmission. There are also increasing incidents of crossborder transmission of COVID-19 between countries in the continent, mainly through long-distance truck driversand illegal movement through porous borders. Notably, in most countries, the disease is still localized to largeurban centres, with most rural communities relatively unaffected.

Since our last situation report on 13 May 2020 (External Situation Report 11), an additional 16 435 confirmedCOVID-19 cases (a 34% increase) were reported from 42 countries.During this period, a sharp rise in the numberof confirmed COVID-19 cases was observed in nine countries: Mauritania 1538% (from 8 to 131), CentralAfrican Republic 90% (from 130 to 411), Uganda 106% (from 126 to 260), Zambia 75% (from 441 to 772),Gabon 74% (from 863 to 1502), Equatorial Guinea 71% (from 522 to 890), Togo 70% (from 199 to 338),Madagascar 70% (from 192 to 326) and South Sudan 62% (from 174 to 282). Similarly, five countries, Namibia,Seychelles, Eritrea, Mauritius and United Republic of Tanzania have reported zero new confirmed COVID-19cases in the past 44, 42, 32, 22 and 12 days, respectively.

From 13 to 19 May 2020, 339 new deaths (25% increase) were reported from 27 countries: South Africa (106),Algeria (46), Nigeria (34), Chad (16), Cameroon (15), Kenya (14), Mali (13), Sierra Leone (13), Senegal (11),Democratic Republic of the Congo (10), Ghana (9), Niger (8), Cte d'Ivoire (7), Congo (4), Gabon (4), SouthSudan (4), Guinea-Bissau (3), Liberia (3), Mauritania (3), Sao Tome and Principe (3), Madagascar (2), Angola(1), Burkina Faso (1), Cabo Verde (1), Equatorial Guinea (1) and Togo (1).

As of 19 May 2020, a cumulative total of 64 388 COVID-19 cases, including 64 091 confirmed and 297 probablecases have been reported across the 47 countries in the region. A total of 1 827 deaths have been reported, givingan overall case fatality ratio (CFR) of 2.8%. The current status in the region represents only 1.4% of confirmedCOVID-19 cases and 0.6% of deaths reported worldwide. Table 1 shows the list of affected countries and theirrespective number of cases and deaths. The daily and weekly distribution of cases by date and week of reportingare presented in Figures 1, 2 and 3, respectively. In the same reporting period, the region recorded its highestdaily case count since the beginning of the outbreak, with more than 2 000 new cases reported each day in thepast 14 days. Of the 47 countries, 11 have registered a cumulative total of more than 1 000 confirmed COVID19 cases: South Africa (17 200), Algeria (7 377), Nigeria (6 401), Ghana (6 096), Cameroon (3 529), Guinea (2863), Senegal (2 617), Cte dIvoire (2 153), Democratic Republic of the Congo (1 731), Gabon (1 502) andGuinea-Bissau (1 038). Two more countries, Gabon and Guinea-Bissau are the newest to cross the 1 000-casemark. Together, these 11 most-affected countries account for 82% of all reported cases in the region.The highest case load has been observed in the West African region, 40% (24 836, CFR 2.2%), followed by theSouthern African region, 27% (17 450, CFR 1.8%), the North African, 8.5% (7 377, CFR7.6%), Central African,15% (9 331, CFR 3.2%) and East African region, 7% (4 506, CFR 2.4%).

Of the 64 388 confirmed COVID-19 cases reported, 26 075 (41%) have recovered,documented from 46 countriesin the region, with 100% of cases in Eritrea (39) and Seychelles (11) recorded as recovered.

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COVID-19 Situation update for the WHO African Region, External Situation Report 12 (19 May 2020) - South Africa - ReliefWeb

Hotels In Seychelles Try To Cope With Loss Of Income – Eurasia Review

BySalifa Karapetyan

Travel restrictions in Seychelles and globally due to theCOVID-19pandemic has resulted in a steep drop in revenue in the local tourism industry, affecting both owners and the staff they employ.

SNA spoke to some hotel owners to find out how they are coping with the sudden downturn, which comes after several years of strong tourism growth, including many new international flights, in the island nation.

The owner ofLes Lauriers Eco Hotel, Sybille Cardon, told SNA that the situation is dire for her as she had just completed construction works on the hotel and was expected to do the official opening on April 1.

For me, this is a catastrophe as we do not have any cash flow and I have invested all that I had in the establishment. Even if the bank has frozen the loan for six months, I dont know how the situation will be in six months. The government will be helping me to pay the staff otherwise I would have had redundancies, said Cardon.

She added that before the government came forward with the financial aid, she had already spoken to the staff and they understood the situation.

Following the governments decision to grant leave to parents with children under 15 years of age, only 10 percent of staff are working to maintain the establishment.

Le Duc de Praslin Hotel & Villas, a Seychellois-owned establishment located on Seychelles second-largest island, Praslin, closed March 23. The marketing director of the establishment, Derek Savy, said the situation will be reassessed toward mid-April to decide on the re-opening date.

From the 100 staff that the hotel employ, we have retained 40 who are working to maintain the hotel. Every effort is being made to keep the costs at a minimum and taking all precautions to ensure that all safety standards are adhered to, said Savy.

Most recently the hotel opened a new complex of 20 deluxe rooms. Though these rooms are in top shape, staff are concentrating on the back of the house maintenance such as full equipment maintenance of chillers, freezers, airconditioners among others.

Talking about safety measures, he said that, to avoid overcrowding in the canteen during meals, special timings have been designated for staff. Sanitisation spots have been installed around the hotel to ensure good hygiene is maintained at all times.

We are also taking the opportunity to modernise some of our older rooms and have recently reopened our villas for clients who are still in Seychelles seeking accommodation. Keeping the gardens and grounds clean as well as improving on our landscaping is an ongoing process in this downtime which will ensure that upon reopening the hotel will be welcoming back its guests with a new face, said Savy.

The general manager ofHilton Seychelles Labriz Resort and Spa, Andre Borg, told SNA that the 30 percent of employees still on duty are there to maintain infrastructures of the resort on Silhouette.

At the moment we are maintaining the power plants, we supply the water and we also maintain the boat, the transportation between Mahe and Silhouette. This is what the hotel is responsible for. Right now, there are no guests and the last visitor left around March 27, said Borg.

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Hotels In Seychelles Try To Cope With Loss Of Income - Eurasia Review

COVID-19: The Economic and Social Impact on Ocean Islands – The New Dawn Liberia

Understandingly, it has become important to analyze the spread of coronavirus and its impact on the economy of small islands especially Cape Verde, Mauritius, Maldives, Seychelles, Vanuatu and the Union of Comoros. These islands, which are favorite tourist posts and foreign investors, have also closely diverse geopolitical relationship with the world.

It comes into spectacular focus for this research study, although in general, the islands seem to have the lowest cases of the pandemic, and efforts taken in preparedness against the disease, and the possible effects on their economies and sociocultural lives of the population. Part of the research and monitoring is presented here in three headings as follows: (i) The Islands and Coronavirus: An Overview, (ii) Economic Impact of Coronavirus on these Islands and (iii) Current Scenarios and Lessons for the Future.

The Islands and Coronavirus: An OverviewThe coronavirus disease appeared first in 2019 in Wuhan city in China. The disease was, first identified in Wuhan and Hubei, both in China early December 2019. The original cause still unknown but its symptoms include high body temperature with persistent dry cough and acute respiratory syndrome. Some medical researchers say it is a pneumonia-related disease.

Late December 2019, Chinese officials notified the World Health Organization (WHO) about the outbreak of the disease in the city of Wuhan in China. Since then, cases of the novel coronavirus named COVID-19 by the WHO have spread around the world. WHO declared the outbreak to be an international health concern only on 30 January, and then recognized it as a pandemic on 11 March 2020.

The basic transmission mechanisms of the coronavirus are the same worldwide. But the speed and pattern of spread definitely varies from country to country, urban to rural and place to place. It depends on cultural practices, traditional customs and social lifestyles. A densely populated township can have a different trajectory to a middle-class suburb or a village. The epidemic can spread differently and among nomadic peoples.

There have been claims that this coronavirus may not likely survive in hot countries due to the tropical climate in these regions, yet cases of this virus are already confirmed in these tropical countries. There are officially confirmed coronavirus cases on the islands of Cape Verde, Mauritius, Maldives and Seychelles.

On the Cape Verde, about 300 miles (483 kilometers) off the west coast of Senegal, consists of 10 islands and five islets, all but three of which are mountainous. The island has a total of 55 reported cases among its half a million population, according to the Cape Verdes Public Health National Institute.

Mauritius is a very small island far away from China and yet greatly affected by the coronavirus. Mauritius is a country reliant on tourism. The sector accounts for roughly a quarter of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP). Since the first three case investigated and confirmed on 18 March, Mauritius now has 324, including 65 recoveries and 9 death, according to the Health Ministry.

On 15 April 2020, no new cases were reported, three patients who recovered from the coronavirus agreed to donate their blood through Plasmapheresis, according to the official coronavirus website of the Health Ministry.

Maldives, officially referred to as the Republic of Maldives, is a small island in South Asia, located in the Arabian Sea of the Indian Ocean. Its population, one of the most geographically dispersed, is nearly 400,000 and the island attracts many foreign tourists throughout the year.

The disease got to Maldives on 7 March 2020 from an Italian tourist who had returned to Italy after spending holidays in Kuredu Resort & Spa. Thereafter, the Health Protection Agency of the Maldives confirmed two more cases in the Maldives, both employees of the resort. Following this, the hotel was closed down, several tourists stranded on the island.

On 27 March, the government announced the first confirmed case of a Maldivian citizen with COVID-19, a passenger who had returned from the United Kingdom. And that brought the total number of confirmed cases in the country to 16; there are other 15 foreign citizens. Thus, in April the figured climbed to 28 cases.

Seychelles, located in the Indian Ocean, reported its first two cases on 14 March. The two cases were people who were in contact with someone in Italy who tested positive. On 15 March, a third case arriving from The Netherlands was confirmed, and the next day, there were four confirmed cases, visitors from The Netherlands. As at 20 April, there are only 11 confirmed cases and two patients quickly recovered and have been released.

Vanuatu is a Pacific island country located in the South Pacific Ocean. It is east of northern Australia, nearer to New Guinea, Solomon and Fiji islands. Vanuatu has a population of approximately 250,000. All these islands mainstays of the economy are agriculture and tourism. They attract tourists throughout the year. As of 3 April 2020, it has no coronavirus but still vulnerable, if strict measures are not adopted. It, however, continues its surveillance.

There are five public hospitals, and one private hospital with 27 health centers located across the islands and more than 200 aid posts in more remote areas. The two major referral hospitals are located in Port Vila and Luganville in the country.

The Union of Comoros, an island nation to the east is Mozambique and northwest is Madagascar in the Indian Ocean, gained independence from France on 6 July 1975. In mid-2017, Comoros joined the Southern African Development Community (SADC) with 15 other regional member states. The Comoros share mostly African-Arab origins. It economic activities are the same as other ocean islands.

On 17 April, Chief Epidemiologist, Dr. Izzy Gerstenbluth, indicated that 269 people have been tested so far, 106 men and 163 women. The number of confirmed cases is still at 14 as the official counted figure. One has died, one is still in the hospital, 10 are safe and three are active. 18 are being actively monitored and 12 are still in quarantine because they returned to the island after the measures were announced

The Medical & Health Affairs Department (G &Gz) of the Ministry of Health, Environment and Nature (GMN) keeps a close eye on how the new coronavirus spreads and behaves worldwide. The G &Gz team is in direct contact with Curaao Airport Partners (CAP), Curaao Tourist Board (CTB), Curaao Hospitality and Tourism Association (CHATA), the Analytical Diagnostic Center (ADC), Curaao Medical Center (CMC) and Department of Immigration.

Here are the aforementioned coronavirus figures: Cape Verde (55), Mauritius (324), Maldives (28), Seychelles (11), Vanuatu (0) and the Union of Comoros (14), it would be erroneous to attribute tourism as the key reason for comparatively high numbers of cases in Mauritius. Of course, more Chinese are attracted there so as South Africans. There is propensity that the figures may not rise as the island governments have also taken strict control measures.

Economic Impact of Coronavirus on these IslandsThe already weak capacity of health care system on these four islands Cape Verde, Mauritius, Maldives, Seychelles, Vanuatu and the Union of Comoros is likely to exacerbate the pandemic and its impact on their economies. These islands coronavirus disease burden is not so different from each other. But in each case, the key factor is the economic models and what these mean for this circumstance.

As an example, Maldives took an admirable step in the health sector. The Maldivian government turned the resort island of Villivaru in the Kaafu Atoll into a quarantine facility, described as the worlds first coronavirus resort, where patients would enjoy a luxurious stay and free medical care. According to Minister of Tourism, Ali Waheed, the Maldives had 2,288 beds available for quarantine as of late March 2020.

Obviously, other economic implications of the coronavirus are detrimental not only to public health systems but to trade and travel industry. On all the islands, small-scale agriculture that includes fishing, local industries as well as retail markets are largely affected. More than 80% of people in rural areas depend on subsistence farming for survival; however, restrictions on market activities would limit market access.

It is worth to say that both agriculture and fishing in these islands are conducted at subsistence level and for small-scale exports. Seafood is very popular and resultantly export of seafood is curtailed. The Maldives economy is dependent on tourism, which dropped severely due to travel restrictions amid the pandemic. Experts warned of an economic contraction and possible difficulties paying back foreign debt, especially to China.

Specifically, it is estimated that the shutdown implemented to control the pandemic costs the Mauritian economy about 5% of the countrys GDP for the full 15-day lockdown announced by government on 20 March. Later, there was sanitary curfew started on 23 March and was extended up to 15 April 2020. Now, the lockdown was again extended till 4 May to further contain the spread of the COVID-19 in Mauritius.

As already known, Cape Verde, Mauritius, Maldives, Seychelles, Vanuatu and the Union of Comoros depend mostly on the travel industry. Due to the outbreak of this coronavirus, all these governments have imposed restrictions on travel to the islands that have the best climate and attractive beaches. Travel restriction imposed, thus paralyzing tourism industry in all the four islands.

The Government of Maldives and the Tourism Ministry of the Maldives with the guidance of the Health Protection Agency of the Maldives (HPA) placed a temporary travel restriction for the following countries to control new cases. Since then, there are no passengers (traffic) originating from, transiting to or with a travel history of said country/province is to be permitted into the Maldives. Maldivians and spouses of Maldivians who are foreign nationals are allowed in, but subject to observe quarantine measures.

The Cape Verdean authorities have closed all sea borders and stopped internal flights between the islands. Travelers are required to comply with any additional screening measures put in place by the authorities. As a further step, the government has declared a state of emergency for the whole country until 17 April, the details of which can be found here (in Portuguese). This has activated a series of measures including significant restrictions on movement nationally and internationally.

However, all citizens have been instructed to remain at home unless they needed to carry out the following activities. These are: (i) to buy food or other essential items, (ii) to go to work if unable to work from home, (iii) to go to hospital or health centers, (iv) to carry out caring or similar duties or in case of real need, and (v) to walk pets. Cape Verdes Public Health National Institute pledged to help in cases of emergency.

Since the beginning of March, the Mauritian authorities have been conducting Contact Tracing: people who have been in contact with infected patients have been placed under quarantine, including doctors, nurses and police officers.

Seychelles banned any person from Seychelles from travelling to China, South Korea, Italy and Iran. These countries have high cases. An exception is made for returning residents, under similar rules taken by Cape Verde, Mauritius and Vanuatu.

The most significant remittances to Cape Verde, Mauritius, Maldives, Seychelles, Vanuatu and the Union of Comoros as a source of financial stability come from the islanders who work as temporary laborers around the world, disappeared. The Union of Comoros depends heavily on remittances. For instance, there are between 200,000 and 350,000 Comorians in France. Official statistics are hard to find especially most of the government sources and international organizations become inaccessible for required information.

There have been a steady development or facelift in the cities over the past years. A substantial process of urbanization is still unfolding in Cape Verde, especially to the cities of Praia and Mindelo. The same trend city;mso-bidi-font-weight:bold>s development and expansion in Mauritius, Maldives, Seychelles, Vanuatu and the Union of Comoros.

Beyond all the points raised above, Dr Antipas Massawe, a former lecturer from the Department of Chemical and Mining Engineering, University of Dar-es-Salaam in Tanzania, East Africa, strongly insisted that the scale of the challenges facing the health sector is tremendous, it requires extensive investment of resources and governments have to direct focus on the sustainable solutions.

Charles Prempeh, a lecturer in Africana Studies at the African University College of Communications (AUCC), and a doctoral candidate at University of Cambridge, also explains in an email that there are deficiencies ranging from poor health policies through inadequate funding of health infrastructure to training and research that have characterized the health sector in Africa. Ocean islands have similar pitfalls or problems.

Amid the fast spreading coronavirus in some regions, it is simply providential that the African continent has not recorded high numbers, compared to the so-called western countries. But it is also true that even with the relatively smaller number of cases that most countries in Africa have recorded, there are deep-seated doubts that the health system can match squarely with the debilitating effect of the virus, as they have come under disproportionate strain, according to him.

The current situation is serious setback, both academics acknowledged. But further suggested that small island governments draw a long term development plan, make consistent efforts at mobilizing resources for realizing support for education, health and employment generating sectors, the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

Current Scenarios and Lessons for the FutureIt is time for solidarity, to fight the end the global health mess. The key lessons for epidemic response are to act fast but act locally. That is exactly what Cape Verde, Mauritius, Maldives, Seychelles, Vanuatu and the Union of Comoros are focusing on now.

But as the international response gains momentum, some financial assistance may be extended to these islands. The islands hospitals need testing kits, basic materials for hygiene, personal protective equipment for the professional health workers, and equipment for assisted breathing. There is a global shortage of all of these and a shameful scramble among developed countries to get their own supplies relegating Cape Verde, Mauritius, Maldives, Seychelles, Vanuatu and the Union of Comoros to the backyard.

The islands absolutely have no pharmaceutical companies to produce the needed medicaments. The medical supplies, equipment and whatever have to be imported from the United States and Canada, Europe, Asian countries such China and India.

Media reports said Mauritius and Seychelles had received a few tons of medicine including thousands of hydroxychloroquine tablets from India to help in their fight against COVID-19. Hydroxychloroquine is an anti-malarial drug being used by some doctors to treat COVID-19 patients, though its efficacy is still being tested. Mauritius and Seychelles are favorite tourist posts, and have long-time close geopolitical relationship with India.

The COVID-19 epidemic is currently forcing governments to cut agricultural expenses and prioritize health-related expenditures. This will heavily affect the economy in the future if the restrictions continue, and further expected to bring additional economic hardship in the nearest future to these poor ocean islands. More than 80% of people in rural areas depend on subsistence farming for survival, restrictions on market activities would limit market access.

Repeat: Most of these people derive their livelihoods from the informal economy, small-scale farming, open market trading, livestock keeping and fishing. Workers in the formal sector have low incomes. Only a few of them have social security, and some may not even have saving accounts. This means with the lockdown, they are likely and adversely affected.

The above scenarios complicate the situation for poor people, who have little resources or insurance to cushion the social and economic impact of the pandemic. These small islands are, indeed, in a quagmire both, at the state level and the individual. While much depends on post-pandemic internal policies directed at transforming the economy, strategies to expand practical collaboration with foreign partners, the islands still have to keep good diplomatic relationship with the world. Nevertheless, global leaders have called for a comprehensive approach to mobilizing support for least developed countries, and so it is time to show absolute solidarity with Cape Verde, Mauritius, Maldives, Seychelles, Vanuatu and the Union of Comoros.

*KesterKennKlomegah is Special Representative of the Russian Trade and Economic Development Council on interaction with Africa. He is also an independent research writer on African affairs in the EurAsian region and former Soviet republics.By KesterKennKlomegah*

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COVID-19: The Economic and Social Impact on Ocean Islands - The New Dawn Liberia

An opportunity not seen since the Garden of Eden – The Highland County Press

By Jim ThompsonHCP columnist

With the near worldwide shutdown of economies, we are in a monumental epoch not existent at any time since Adam and Eve were thrown out of the Garden of Eden. For you evolutionists, let me state it another way, we are in a monumental epoch not existent since the first blob magically crawled out of the primordial soup.

Never, ever, in the entire recorded or pre-recorded history, has nearly the whole planet been economically brought to a standstill. For all intents and purposes, the world has stopped. Again, this has never happened before.

Now, due to assets, infrastructure, intellectual property and so forth, all countries are not equally at zero. Latent assets can be turned back on quickly just like a light switch brings power to bulbs-in-waiting. However, in this respect, countries can be thought of as strata on the potential economic ladder. For instance, China, Germany, South Korea, Japan and the United States might be one layer. Australia, Canada, England and France might be another layer. Then Madagascar, the Seychelles, Aruba and the Canary Islands might be a layer. These are all just examples for illustrative purposes.

On the restart, think of horse racing. Think of the Triple Crown, perhaps. In their last race, sticking with my examples, Madagascar, the Seychelles, Aruba and the Canary Islands stopped in a certain economic order. Now, during this lull, they can think about what they were doing right, what they were doing wrong, when it comes to the ways they were running their economies.

If their intellectual energy is high enough during this current time, when they come out of the gate at the new start, their economic rankings as compared to each other could be rearranged in a permanent way going forward.

Secretariat, his jockey and his trainers did not idly rest between the races of the Triple Crown. Look at his Belmont finish if you want to see a stunning performance 25 lengths ahead. I see this happening throughout the strata of comparable world economies.

There may be a new order environmentally, too. There has been much discussion of what the slowdown in economic activity has done to air pollution in New Delhi, the newfound cleanliness of the Ganges, the sudden ability to view the top of Mount Everest in Nepal and on and on.

This is the first chance ever for countries to start at a universally simultaneously paused position in their quest for progress (whatever progress is, a concept beyond the scope of this one little column).

The unintended consequences as a result of this pause are implausible. I predict in three to five years we will look back in amazement at what this event initiated throughout the world.

It is impossible to begin to predict the coming changes. We have some hints from the past.

World War I, which started with the assassination of a pompous royal, a diminutive figure on the world stage, was the fuse that lit dramatic changes for the entire 20th century worldwide. Yet, at the height of World War I, only a small fraction of the worlds human population was actually engaged in its bloody execution.

We have no idea where, right now, unknown people of extraordinary leadership ability are planning to make their moves when the economies rejuvenate. A young Hitler or a young Gandhi, or many clones of each, may be planning to make their move at the right time in the near future. The world is ripe for this.

One can say without hyperbole, this is a time like no other ever experienced. It wont be over when the pandemic is over.

Jim Thompson, formerly of Marshall, is a graduate of Hillsboro High School and the University of Cincinnati. He resides in Duluth, Ga. and is a columnist for The Highland County Press. He may be reached at jthompson@taii.com.

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An opportunity not seen since the Garden of Eden - The Highland County Press

Over 3000 foreigners held up in Croatia and in no rush to leave – Croatia Week

Dubrovnik

25 April 2020 A number of foreigners have been held up in Croatia due to the coronavirus pandemic. Currently, more than 3,000 are in the country.

With the government extending permits and visas for an extra 30 days due to the crisis, all of them are able to stay in the country. If they want to return, their embassies will enable them. However, there are those who currently prefer Croatia over their own home country and are in no rush to leave.

Although deserted, you can still bump into foreign tourists in Dubrovnik. Amanda has been in town for two months, and so far, she doesnt want to return home to the US.

The Secretariat of State offered us air travel, but it was a very expensive option. And I dont want to go home, its safer here than in the US. The owners of the apartment offered me to stay at half price. This is now a special place for being alone, I mean without tourists, it is amazing, Amanda told Dnevnik.hr.

Coronavirus also left Corina and Stephan in Dubrovnik as well, they have a family home there, so they have extended their vacation. People stick to the rules here, and its certainly a lot nicer to stay at home here than to sit in an apartment in Germany. We have a view and are having a great time here, Stephan said.

3383 foreigns currently in Croatia

According to data from the e-visitor system, there were 3,383 foreignersin Croatia as of Thursday, Dnevnik.hr reports. More than 50 percent are staying in commercial accommodation, with the majority of foreigners in Zagreb, Split, Umag, Vir, and Dubrovnik.

A small cruiser, without passengers, of course, sailed into the port of Gruz in Dubrovnik from Seychelles this week with only a crew of about sixty members, including several Croats. They will wait there until they can get home or wait for the cruise season to continue.

Samir and Mario from the cruiser say it was better in Seychelles.

There are no people there, they immediately canceled flights. It was great for us, we were able to swim and enjoy, they said, adding that they will not be able to get off the cruiser at all now.

The Dubrovnik Port Authority is providing the cruiser with food, water, and oil.

Although they have been unmanned for almost a month and have not sailed anywhere on land, they still have a prescribed 14-day self-insulation upon entering our border waters. Croatian staff have the option of exiting while the rest are practically quarantined and cannot leave the ship until the situation is normalised or borders are opened, explained Blaz Pezo, Director of the Port Authority of Dubrovnik.

All foreign nationals can ask their embassies to return home but it seems that a good part of them are satisfied with staying in Croatia.

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Over 3000 foreigners held up in Croatia and in no rush to leave - Croatia Week

FEATURED PHOTOGRAPHER | JOE DANIELS – DIVE Magazine

Featured Photographer | Joe Daniels

Joe is an award-winning underwater photographer and author. His passion for underwater photography developed through his love for the marine world which began from a very young age in Suffolk in the UK. In 2007 Joe volunteered on a marine conservation project in Seychelles. He then spent more than three years in New Zealand and Australia, a year of this was working with manta rays and whale sharks on the Ningaloo Reef off Western Australia. Joe returned to Seychelles as an intern on the Marine Conservation Society Seychelles (MCSS)Whale Shark Monitoring Project. After completing his dive instructor course in South Africa he thencontinued on in Seychelles as dive officer for Global Vision International, a marine conservation NGO.

In 2013 Joe and his wife Emily moved to Ambon, Indonesia where they managed Maluku Divers, a photography-focused dive resort.

In the clear waters of Australia and Seychelles Joe found free diving as his preferred method, shooting many of his wide-angle images with little other than a mask and fins. Now after his experience in Ambon, Indonesia has brought him to focus more on photography utilising his scuba diving skills in order to spend more time with each subject.

He has co-authored a photographic coffee table book called Underwater Eden - The Marine Life of Seychelles, won numerous awards and has been widely published and has started leading trips for Equator Dive Travel. Now based in the south of France, Joe is able to spend his time exploring the cooler (but no less fascinating) waters of Europe in-between photography trips further afield.

Joe currently shoots with a Canon 5D MKIII in Nauticam housing and Retra Flash strobes.

Anemonefish with eggs- Saddleback anemonefish, Ambon, Indonesia

Haunting hawkfish - Longnose hawkfish, Alor, Indonesia

Jetty residents- Batfish, Alor, Indonesia

Holy Grail frogfish - Psychedelic frogfish, Ambon, Indonesia

Doto drift- Donut nudbranch, Bali, Indonesia

Mother mantis- Peacock mantis shrimp, Lembeh Strait, Indonesia

Alor life - Alor, Indonesia

Another world - Jellyfish lake, East Kalimantan, Indonesia

Coleman shrimp - Ambon, Indonesia

Frogfish fantasy - Freckled frogfish, Alor, Indonesia

Denise's pygmy seahorse- Raja Ampat

Gaudy rhino - Popeyed scorpionfish, Ambon, Indonesia

Oxheart tunicate shrimp - Ambon, Indonesia

Cleaning manta - Reef manta, Nusa Penida, Bali, Indonesia

Sharks and snappers - Misool, Indonesia

Male Anthias - Red Sea

Find Joe on Instagram @joedanielsphotoor find him on his website

If you'd like to see your underwater photography published in these pages and shared across our social media feed and weekly newsletter, why not drop us a line atThis email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

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FEATURED PHOTOGRAPHER | JOE DANIELS - DIVE Magazine

India’s Indian Ocean Diplomacy in the COVID-19 Crisis – The Diplomat

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The outbreak and spread of COVID-19 has created multiple challenges for the entire world. Apart from containing the spread of virus and treating infected patients, there are related political issues such as the blame game between the United States and China, the role of the World Health Organization (WHO), and questions about the future world order.

Amid this entire crisis, India has been playing an important role. Indias role could be considered at both the domestic level the steps taken to tackle the crisis at home and the diplomatic level Indias assistance to other countries, especially in the Indian Ocean Region (IOR), amid the pandemic.

Indias approach, including on the diplomatic front, has been proactive since the outbreak of the crisis. One of the first steps taken by India was to evacuate citizens of different countries along with its own citizens from Wuhan, China, the epicenter of the first COVID-19 outbreak. Those evacuated as compassionate cases included citizens from IOR countries such as Bangladesh, Myanmar, the Maldives, South Africa, and Madagascar. India not only evacuated these people, but also quarantined them in India as a precautionary measure before sending them to their respective countries.

Second, India has emerged as a major supplier of medicines to different countries worldwide in the fight against COVID-19. As part of that effort, India was the first responder to Mauritius and the Seychelles. Prime Minister Narendra Modi had assured all possible help to both these countries to face the challenge of COVID-19. Accordingly India sent a consignment of life-saving drugs, including hydroxychloroquine, to Mauritius and the Seychelles.

Third, COVID-19 has provided India an opportunity to address the irritants in its ties with some countries, most notably Iran and Malaysia. In the past few months Indias relations with both these countries were strained owing to Iran and Malaysias criticisms of India. However, recently India and Iran cooperated with each other in order to evacuate the Indians stranded in Iran. Later Irans President Hassan Rouhani wrote to Modi seeking Indias assistance to deal with COVID-19. Rouhani also reached out to Modi with the expectation that India would stand with Iran against the United States sanctions. Apart from this, India has sent a wheat consignment to Afghanistan through Irans Chabahar port. With respect to Malaysia, India has agreed to supply anti-malarial drugs, indicating improvement in the bilateral relations.

Indias recent actions, which could be termed as humanitarian assistance and disaster relief (HA/DR) operations, build upon its outreach to the IOR, in particular the western Indian Ocean, in the past few years. India has made efforts to reach out to countries like Mauritius and the Seychelles, both of which Modi visited in 2015. In 2018 an agreement between India and the Seychelles was signed to jointly develop a naval base at Assumption Island. Similarly India is engaged in the development of Chabahar port in Iran, which has become operational.

Indias outreach in the IOR and the broader Indo-Pacific Region has been parallel to Chinas outreach by way of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). Indias competition with China could be considered asymmetric owing to differences in the economic and military capabilities of both countries. However, Chinas development projects have resulted in indebtedness for many countries with limited resources. This situation creates an opportunity for India to present its own alternative to countries in the Indian Ocean Region, which would also facilitate increasing Indias footprint in the region.

The COVID-19 crisis presents a similar opportunity for India. This entire crisis has put the focus on China from different quarters. There is a blame game of sorts between the United States and China about the virus, with segments in each claiming that the virus originated from the other. Questions are also being raised about the role of the WHO, with critics saying the global health body was slow to take actions against the pandemic. Moreover, the WHO also defended China when questions were raised about Chinas intentions and failure to control the virus.

In contrast, India started screening international travelers in January. On March 25, India announced a lockdown of 21 days, which was later extended until May 3. This is considered an unprecedented step from India, since its population of more than 1.3 billion makes it the biggest lockdown in the world. Many countries including the United States, Italy and Spain were slow to announce their own lockdowns and as a result are the worst-affected countries, with hundreds of thousands of COVID-19 cases and deaths in the tens of thousands. In comparison, Indias numbers stand at around 20,000 infected and 645 dead as of April 22. India has also received praise from institutions such as the UN, the WHO, and the IMF for the response to this crisis.

The COVID-19 crisis has raised a debate about the future world order. At present, more and more countries in the world have an unfavorable opinion about China. On the other hand, India has been nimble-footed enough to take this opportunity and build up goodwill, which could result in elevated status in the post-COVID-19 period. India has also concentrated most of its efforts in the strategically important Indian Ocean Region, which has given it leverage. Indias diplomacy in the IOR could define its position in the changed world order.

Niranjan Marjani is a political analyst and researcher based in Vadodara, India. Follow him on Twitter: @NiranjanMarjani

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India's Indian Ocean Diplomacy in the COVID-19 Crisis - The Diplomat

This tiny island nation is setting the global standard for ocean conservation – AOL

Seychelles may be tiny, but the work its residents have done to protect its bustling marine life and gorgeous waters has an enormous impact.

The archipelago of 114 islands, located in the Indian Ocean off the coast of East Africa, is home to numerous beaches, coral reefs and rare animals.

Thanks to a new initiative, more than 30 percent of the countrys waters are now protected. The government has placed restrictions on environmentally damaging activities, such as certain types of fishing and human interference.

The protected area around Seychelles stretches about 171,000 square miles a portion of the globe nearly 1,000 times larger than the countrys own landmass.

Credit: Getty Images

Danny Faure, the president of Seychelles, said in a speech that meeting this goal means a lot for the countrys current residents, and for all future generations as well.

According to the Associated Press, he made a global plea for stronger protection of the beating blue heart of our planet.

We have a relationship with nature, and we depend on the ocean, he continued. And achieving this is a very strong message.

Only seven percent of the worlds oceans are currently protected. A few countries have pledged to increase those areas by 10 percent, but experts say its not enough.

Credit: Getty Images

Patricia Scotland, Secretary-General of the Commonwealth, says Seychelles is setting the standard for much larger countries.

Lots of people are saying, So, whats our excuse? Were bigger, we are wealthier. Is it that we lack commitment? And if we lack commitment, how can we change that?' she told the Associated Press. But for some people, theyre saying; We dont lack commitment, we just dont know how to do it.'

Leo Barret and his colleagues from the Marine Conservation Society Seychelles have been working to establish coral nurseries to help restore reefs near the country just one of the many steps Seychelles has taken to restore marine life.

What do you want your grandchildren to see? Do you want them to see a sea full of plastic pollution, full of bottles? he told the Associated Press.

Or [do] you want to be able to show the future generation coral reef, the fish biodiversity, this is something specific from the ocean, specific on the earth? I think we need to preserve that.

If you enjoyed this story, you may also like reading about how canners are making New York more eco-friendly.

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This tiny island nation is setting the global standard for ocean conservation - AOL

After Trump, Bolsonaro thanks Modi for supply of anti-malarial drug – Livemint

NEW DELHI :India woke up on Thursday to public expressions of thanks from the presidents of the US and Brazil for quick shipments of an anti-malaria drug, which is being tested as a possible treatment for covid-19, as infections from the novel coronavirus inched towards the 1.5-million mark worldwide and the death toll neared 90,000.

The messages from presidents Donald Trump of the US and Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil came as New Delhi prepared to ship consignments of the drug to some other countries badly hit by the pandemic like Britain, Spain, the UK and Germany.

New Delhi is also planning to dispatch medicines to some of its immediate neighbours, and others, such as Mauritius, Seychelles and Bahrain, in Indias extended neighbourhood, a person familiar with the developments said.

Indias supplies of medicines, especially #HCQ (hydroxychloroquine) and #paracetamol to several countries, including USA, Israel, Gulf, neighbours, etc confirm our role as first provider and help in global fight against #COVID19," Sanjay Bhattacharyya, secretary in Indias foreign ministry said in a Twitter post on Thursday.

Analysts said Indias so-called medical diplomacy" by first lifting an exports ban on hydroxychloroquine, or HCQ, in response to requests from several nations will burnish its credentials as a responsible citizen of the world" at a time when China is facing flak over its alleged lack of transparency over the covid-19 outbreak. The disease first surfaced in China in December. The UN Security Council is to meet later Thursday for a special briefing on the pandemic.

Extraordinary times require even closer cooperation between friends. Thank you India and the Indian people for the decision on HCQ. Will not be forgotten! Thank you Prime Minister @NarendraModi for your strong leadership in helping not just India, but humanity, in this fight!" Trump said in a Twitter post late Wednesday.

Bolsonaro, on his part, thanked India for the timely assistance" in an address to the nation made late Wednesday.

As a result of my direct conversation with the Prime Minister of India, we will receive, until Saturday, raw material to continue producing hydroxychloroquine, so that we can treat covid-19 patients, as well as malaria, lupus and arthritis," Bolsonaro said.

I thank Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the Indian people for this very timely assistance to the Brazilian people," he added.

Both leaders had telephonic talks with Modi on Saturday.

Former foreign secretary Lalit Mansingh said Indias quick response to Trumps request of releasing the HCQ would score points in its favour given that US drug companies have been critical of India producing low-cost generic drugs in the past and New Delhi capping costs of critical medicines and equipment manufactured by the multinational firms in the past.

Mansingh noted that India had previously fallen foul of the large pharmaceutical companies for alleged intellectual property rights (IPR) violations as they produced generic drugs to treat HIV-AIDS.

Originally posted here:

After Trump, Bolsonaro thanks Modi for supply of anti-malarial drug - Livemint

Plenty of fish in the Seychelles – Grist

Its Wednesday, April 1, and the Seychelles is protecting a California-sized swath of ocean.

Foreigners may know the tiny island nation of the Seychelles for its glamorous turquoise waters, private islands, and occasional royal honeymooners. As of last week, it can also stake its reputation on protecting 154,000 square miles of ocean, about 30 percent of its waters.

In 2015, the East African island nation agreed to a debt-for-nature deal in which the Nature Conservancy bought $21 million of the Seychelles foreign debt in exchange for a pledge to create serious marine protections. The new marine protected areas (MPAs) will safeguard biodiversity as well as fish stocks, and protect giant tortoises, manatee-like dugongs, several shark species, and coral reefs.

The 13 new MPAs announced last week are a mix of strictly protected waters and regulated areas where certain economic activities may be allowed. Monitoring such extensive areas will be challenging in the latter case in particular, and the nation will likely need additional financing to set up effective monitoring. One idea the government is considering is levying a $10 nature tax on each tourist. Regardless of these challenges, the commitment is a definitive step in the right direction for a country that protected just 0.04 percent of its waters eight years ago.

Sierra Garcia

Need-to-know basis

A joint NPR and PBS investigation found that the plastics industry aggressively promoted recycling starting in the late 1980s, despite knowing that the vast majority of their products could not or would not be recycled. The strategy helped the industry improve its public image, stave off plastic bans, and churn out more and more of its products for decades.

A research station in Antarctica just had its first heat wave on record, Australian climate researchers say. The wave was documented at the Casey Research Station in East Antarctica between January 23 and 26, when maximum temperatures reached 48.6 degrees F, a new record.

Indigenous communities across the country are facing the coronavirus pandemic with limited resources, but the Trump administration just made things harder for a tribe in Massachusetts by revoking its land rights. The Bureau of Indian Affairs notified the Mashpee Wampanoag tribe late last week that it plans to remove its more than 300 acres from federal trust and eliminate its reservation designation.

Zoya Teirstein

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Plenty of fish in the Seychelles - Grist

Seychelles extends protection to marine area twice the size of Great Britain – Mongabay.com

Seychelles, an archipelago in the Indian Ocean famous for its turquoise waters, giant tortoises and wondrous birds, has extended protection to 400,000 square kilometers (154,000 square miles) of its seas, an area twice the size of Great Britain. The move fulfills the countrys long-standing pledge to safeguard 30% of its marine waters.

Seychelles marine ecosystem is the foundation that the economy is built upon, with fisheries and tourism being the primary pillars of our economy, President Danny Faure said on March 26 at the signing of a decree that created 13 new marine protected areas (MPAs). The people of Seychelles have a direct dependence on our ocean resources for food security and livelihoods.

The terrestrial area of the Seychelles 115 islands is only about 460 km2 (180 mi2), about three times the size of Staten Island in New York City, but the countrys exclusive economic zone (EEZ) spans 1.37 million km2 of ocean, twice the size of Texas. The challenge for the country is to prevent the unsustainable exploitation of its biodiversity, which it projects as its biggest selling point to the world.

The declaration of new MPAs was facilitated by a debt-for-nature deal proposed by the U.S.-based NGO The Nature Conservancy (TNC). The scheme came on the back of the 2008 financial crisis, when the Seychelles government was unable to pay back its foreign creditors, defaulting on its sovereign debt. Debt restructuring aims at avoiding default by changing the terms of repayment. The agreement with TNC allowed the country to free up $21.6 million in foreign debt, provided it ramped up protection of its marine resources and took climate adaptation measures.

While debt-for-nature schemes have been used before to protect terrestrial ecosystems, most notably in Latin America and the Caribbean, this is the first for marine areas. Nearly half of Seychelles new MPAs will be no-take zones, where economic activity such as fishing, mining or drilling will not be allowed. In the other half, called Zone 2, economic activities will be allowed, subject to regulation.

The island republics marine biodiversity is threatened by overexploitation, pollution generated inland, habitat degradation because of offshore oil exploration and extraction, as well as rising sea temperatures.

The hope is that the expansion will safeguard the habitats and nesting sites of endangered turtles, the last remaining population of dugongs in the Indian Ocean, preserve coral reefs, and also allow the country to invest in making the fisheries sector more sustainable.

Among the expected beneficiaries of these efforts are shark species. Shark fishing is an ancient practice in Seychelles, where till the 1940s, there were frequent sightings of hammerhead sharks (belonging to the family Sphyrnidae) and tiger sharks (Galeocerdo cuvier)*.

Sharks have a strong cultural importance in Seychelles, and I think that marine protected areas are a critical tool for shark conservation locally, said James Lea, CEO of Save Our Seas Foundation, a Swiss group that works extensively in Seychelles. Lea added that there is indirect evidence to suggest that MPAs help shark species. Aldabra Atoll has been protected since the 1980s and has an abundance of marine life, including sharks. Blacktip reef sharks [Carcharhinus melanopterus] and sicklefin lemon sharks [Negaprion acutidens] in particular are thriving there, he said.

The Aldabra Atoll, the worlds second-largest coral atoll and a UNESCO world heritage site and special reserve, is arguably a success story in terms of conservation. It is home to the largest population of giant tortoises in the world, as well as more than 300 other species of animals and plants. The reserve extends into the sea, 1 km (0.6 mi) from the shore. Its remote location and long history of protection have combined to keep it safe.

A new MPA has now been designated around the atoll, whose boundaries extend to Tanzanias EEZ to the west and Madagascars EEZ to the south. It is one of five MPAs that are no-take zones.

Until 2012, only 0.04% of Seychelles marine territory was part of its MPA network. Under the debt-for-nature deal, reached in 2015, the government announced the first round of expansion in 2018, when 210,000 km2 (81,000 mi2) of marine areas were designated MPAs.

Convincing fishers and hoteliers

Expanding Seychelles MPA network is a very important and major first step in the conservation of Seychelles biodiversity, but it is only the first step, Rabia Somers and Vanessa Didon, from the Marine Conservation Society Seychelles, said in a statement to Mongabay. The conservation of Seychelles biodiversity ultimately depends on multiple factors, such as enforcement, public-private partnerships, and innovative management models.

The announcement was finalized after consultations, more than 200 of them, over six years to decide which areas will be protected and to what extent. The main challenge for the government and conservation NGOs was to convince people who rely on marine resources that the new protections would benefit them. Buy-in from the fisheries sector, both small-scale and large-scale, and the tourism industry will be crucial for the MPAs to work, experts said.

With its many privately owned island resorts, Seychelles often hosts the rich and famous, and sometimes even royalty. Prince William and Kate Middleton honeymooned on one such retreat on North Island; George Clooney and Amal Clooney also vacationed in Seychelles after their wedding.

The environment is core to the tourism product they offer, Wilna Accouche from the local NGO Green Island Foundation told Mongabay. They have to make sure that that the tourism activities do not damage the environment.

The NGO helped to get the marine area off another private island, Denis Island, designated as a protected area. While convincing hoteliers that they should conserve the most attractive features of their resorts is easy, Accouche said that getting them to recognize that their inland activities affect marine ecosystems is more challenging. This includes the discharge of waste, construction activity, and reclamation projects to create artificial islands.

Fishing communities maintain they are not solely to blame for the loss of marine species. Recreational fishing is common and unregulated in Seychelles. Marine stocks are also affected by rising sea temperatures and water pollution.

According to Accouche, a big problem in the effective management of marine areas is the mistrust between fishing communities and the government. For years, fishers have grappled with restrictions being imposed from the top. The conservation objectives of the new MPAs will only be achieved if fishers believe it is in their best interests to comply with restrictions, she said.

To minimize the new protections impact on fishing communities, some NGOs like Marine Conservation Society Seychelles work with communities to create temporal protected areas (TPAs) that will permit some activity during parts of the year. Seychelles beaches serve as seasonal nesting sites for green turtles (Chelonia mydas) and hawksbill turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata). TPAs restrict certain activities during certain critical time periods and also mitigate threats faced by sea turtles during the nesting and hatching season; poaching of nesting females and disturbance of nests and emerging hatchlings, Somers and Didon from the Marine Conservation Society Seychelles said.

Enforcing the new protections

Regulating activities in Zone 2 of the recently announced MPAs, where activities are allowed but subject to regulation, will be more difficult, experts said.

The National Information Sharing and Coordination Centre (NISCC) in Seychelles, together with other agencies, has been monitoring the countrys EEZ and surveilling MPAs. The agency will implement a five-year marine spatial plan that will be rolled out next year, covering not just the MPAs but the entire EEZ of Seychelles

The five-year plan would include using more innovative methods to monitor MPAs, such as satellites and drones, said Leslie Benoiton, who heads the NISCC. The plan will also focus on developing human resources and capacity for overseeing MPAs and educating and sensitizing communities, he said.

A technology-intensive approach, however, will come at a cost.

The funds secured through the debt-for-nature deal might not be enough to guarantee protection. To effectively manage such an extensive MPA network would require somewhere between $75 and $106 per square kilometer every year, according to an estimate from Seychelles Conservation and Climate Adaptation Trust (SeyCCAT), the entity created to channel the funds freed by the debt deal to the Seychelles government. At the top end of that range, the cost to effectively manage the massive swath of area now under protection would cost about $42 million a year.

Though the Seychelles government also sets aside funds for marine management, it is not nearly enough, so it is seeking grants and loans to secure the MPAs. To ensure effective coordination between the multiple agencies involved in overseeing the now-complete MPA network, the government is establishing a new body, the Seychelles Ocean Authority. It is also considering imposing an environmental levy of $10 on tourists a small price to pay for those seeking solace in a country where you can literally book your own slice of beach.

(Banner Image: One of the small rocky islands that make up the Seychelles archipelago. Image courtesy The Ocean Agency)

Malavika Vyawahare is a staff writer for Mongabay. Find her on Twitter: @MalavikaVy

FEEDBACK: Use this form to send a message to the author of this post. If you want to post a public comment, you can do that at the bottom of the page.

[* Editors note: The article has been updated to clarify the kind of shark species that were sighted off the Seychelles coast.]

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Seychelles extends protection to marine area twice the size of Great Britain - Mongabay.com

The Brief: Small and growing business liquidity and stabilization, Seychelles’ debt-for-conservation swap, development-finance relief, tools for…

Greetings, Agents of Impacts!

Emerging market fund managers scramble to keep enterprises and entrepreneurs afloat. As the global economic slowdown and local lockdowns that come with the COVID pandemic shut down capital flows, thousands of otherwise viable and growing businesses around the world are being forced to pivot, pause, furlough or fire and shutter. A generation of entrepreneurs is worrying they will run out of cash; the ecosystem of emerging market capital providers that has financed their growth is scrambling to help them survive. The advice everyone is getting is shorten your cash-conversion cycle or delay payments to your suppliers. Well, thats easier said than done, saysBrendan Mullenof Secha Capital in South Africa. The real risk is that companies here will not get the funding they need in time, saysAmanda Cottermanof EquaLife Capital in Nairobi. AddsLaurie Spengler, who is working with theCollaborative for Frontier Financeto identify ways to meet needs for revenue substitution, employment retention, supply-chain transactions and other financing, There is growing recognition that small businesses urgently need cash to continue operations.

A rush of liquidity may be crucial to mitigating a broad-based domino effect. Many of these fund managers are investing in exactly the solutions that we need right now and in the future: health, climate, water and sanitation, says Catalyst at LargesSuzanne Biegel. Our main goal is keeping companies teams intact, and helping them position themselves for the bounce-back when this is all over, adds Blue Haven InitiativesLauren Cochran. Even cash flow-positive, pro-social companies positioned to do well in the pandemic have been caught in the global downdraft. In Nigeria, personal-hygiene products companyWemyis struggling to manufacture enough diapers, feminine products and sanitary wipes, which have beenselling out as customers prepared fortwo-week shutdown. Our supply chain has been disrupted massively, says Aruwa Capital ManagementsAdesuwa Okunbo Rhodes, an investor in Wemy. Its definitely a challenging time.

Keep reading, Emerging market fund managers scramble to keep enterprises and entrepreneurs afloat by Jessica Pothering on ImpactAlpha.

Seychelles debt-for-conservation deal paves the way for more blue bonds. Four years ago, the Seychelles government signed a deal withThe Nature Conservancyto refinance sovereign debt at a discount in return for protecting 30% of its oceans. TNC raised grants and loans to pull off the $21.6 million deal. Last week, the Indian Ocean archipelagomade goodon its promise, announcing Marine Protection Areas that will protect 158,000 square miles of water and habitat while allowing for low-impact economic activities like tourism (see,Rising Tides: Debt-for-Nature Swaps Let Impact Investors Finance Climate Resilience).

Vickers Venture Partners raises $200 million for sixth fund.The Singapore-based early stage venture firm istargeting$500 million to invest in global deep tech ventures, including existing portfolio companies. In January, Vickers led an $11 million Series A round for U.K.-basedEmergex, which is working on a COVID-19 vaccine. Other portfolio companies include bio-plastics makerRWDC Industries, regenerative medicine firmSamumed, and geothermal energy producerEavor.

Singapores OB Asset Management debuts SDG fund for retail investors.The United Sustainable Credit Income Fund lets individuals invest in the RobecoSAM SDG Credit Income Fund alongside high-net worth and institutional investors. The fundinvestsin green bonds and companies making progress towards the U.N. Sustainable Development Goals.

Abu Dhabi plans Gulf regions first social impact bond.Abu DhabisMaan Authority for Social Contributionand local real estate developerAldar Propertieswill develop the bond, which will be the first pay-for-success bond among the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council. Aldar will also invest AED 2 million ($545,000). Social impact bonds are a game-changer for how we think about the delivery of social programmes,saidSalama Al Ameemi, the director general of Maan. The backers didnt specify which social challenges the bond will target.

How development finance leaders can help emerging market economies survive the COVID-19 crisis. As the pandemic unfolds in emerging markets, governments facing liquidity challenges and limited abilities to borrow will struggle to respond to the pending economic crisis. Development finance institutions already are taking action. TheInternational Finance Corp.has announced $8 billion in lending to help clients cover banks payment risks, replenish capital to pay bills and wages, and share banks risks in serving small and medium-sized enterprises (see,African Development Bank issues a record $3 billion social bond). More capital will be needed, write DalbergsEdwin Macharia, Jesse Baver, Kusi HornbergerandRachna Saxenain a guest post onImpactAlpha. To ensure financial relief reaches small businesses, workersand the self-employed, the Dalberg team calls on development finance leaders to coordinate liquidity facilities, focus financing on the most vulnerable, and expedite deals.

New tools to help investors assess and share impact.The Positive Impact Initiative of theU.N. Environment Programme Finance Initiativereleased theCorporate Impact Analysis Toolto help banks and investors understand the impact performance and potential of their clients and investee companies. The initiative also released thePortfolio Impact Analysis Tool for Banksto guide banks through an analysis of their portfolios. Investor networkToniic, in partnership withIMP+ACT Alliance, a sister initiative to theImpact Management Project, launchedTracer, a platform to help Toniic members share and compare information on impact investment goals, performance and outcomes.Share this post.

The World Economic Forumislookingfor a head of impact measurement and managementBlackstoneseeksa vice president ofmeasurement and reportingfor its Strategic Partners Blackstone Impact Asset Management group in New York Beeck CentersLisa Hallishostingthe first of a two-part virtual workshop on impact management tools and frameworks on Thursday, April 9 We Care SolarsLaura Stachelis leading a virtualSkoll World Forum panelon Scaling Clean Energy Solutions for frontline health clinics, with representatives from Sierra Leone, Liberia and Zimbabwe, on Tuesday, March 31 at 12pmET / 5pm London via Zoom (see,Cost-effective response to COVID-19: Light every health clinic in Africa and south Asia).

Thank you for reading.

Mar. 31, 2020

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The Brief: Small and growing business liquidity and stabilization, Seychelles' debt-for-conservation swap, development-finance relief, tools for...

Cabinet Business – 1 April 2020 – News – Office of the President of the Republic of Seychelles

01 April 2020 | Cabinet Business

President Danny Faure today chaired a special meeting of the Cabinet at which the Cabinet was briefed on the status of the national strategy against the COVID-19 pandemic.

Cabinet was briefed on the global situation of the outbreak and updated on the 10 local positive cases as well as the status of the quarantine.

Cabinet was also informed of the new testing strategy being implemented. The plan for use of the isolation and quarantine facilities in the event of an increase in cases was also discussed along with the need for additional equipment.

Cabinet was also briefed on the prevailing maritime security risks especially as it concerned movement of fishing vessels and yachts in our territorial waters. Cabinet discussed the measures in place to protect the elderly in the Homes.

Cabinet was updated on the status of the construction of the new Isolation Centre on "Ile du Swet" in the South East of Mah whichwill be completedthis month.

Cabinet was also briefed on the donations from private individuals and companies as well as logistics to receive incoming cargo from South Africa and Dubai.

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Cabinet Business - 1 April 2020 - News - Office of the President of the Republic of Seychelles

President Faure briefed on security measures in place in response to COVID-19 outbreak – Office of the President of the Republic of Seychelles

31 March 2020 | State House

President Danny Faure visited the Seychelles Coast Guard (SCG) Base and the Seychelles Police Headquarters this afternoon, following the announcement of new security measures and currently being implemented in the country following the COVID-19 outbreak.

The President announced a series of enforcement measures last week on Friday 27 March, focused on strengthening the countrys borders, restricting public gatherings and minimising social contact in an effort to prevent the spread of the coronavirus in the community.

President Faure first visited the Seychelles Coast Guard Base located at Perseverance where he attended a special briefing at the Maritime Operations Centre (MOC). He received an aperu of the Seychelles Peoples Defence Force (SPDF) Joint Operations Set up for COVID-19. He was briefed on the coordination operation and viewed various demonstrations on the Maritime Domain Awareness (MDA) systems and ongoing activities. The session also demonstrated the daily routine and maritime security interventions to secure the countrys borders both by air and sea.

The President also attended a meeting at the Central Police Headquarters in Victoria. Present for the meeting was Seychelles Police Senior Management as well as key members of the COVID-19 Police Operations Centre set up specifically for the public health emergency.

During the meeting the Head of State was briefed of the mode of operation of the command centre, assets and equipment available and the ongoing strategy to ensure the measures announced in light of the COVID-19 situation are being respected by the public. The police reaffirmed their commitment to more effectively discharge their duties and ensure the population follows the new regulations in place.

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President Faure briefed on security measures in place in response to COVID-19 outbreak - Office of the President of the Republic of Seychelles

Seychelles Map / Geography of Seychelles / Map of …

The Republic of Seychelles is an archipelago of 115 islands located in the Indian Ocean, northeast of Madagascar.

Pre-European colonization the islands were known by Arab navigators on trading voyages, but were never inhabited.

Eventually Seychelles was settled by France in the 18th century, but it wasn't long before the British fought for control. A lengthy struggle between France and Great Britain for the islands ended in 1814, when they were ceded to the latter.

Although the new governor to the islands was British, he governed according to French rules, and allowed previous French customs to remain intact. Slavery was completely abolished in 1835, and the island nation subsequently began to decline as exportation decreased.

The anti-slavery stance was taken very seriously by the British government, and conditions started improving when it was realized that coconuts could be grown with less labour.

In the late 19th century, Seychelles became a place to exile troublesome political prisoners, most notably from Zanzibar, Egypt, Cyprus and Palestine.

Independence for the islands came in 1976, after the Seychelles People's United Party was formed and led by France-Albert Rene, campaigning for socialism and freedom from Britain.

Socialism was brought to a close with a new constitution and free elections in 1993. President France-Albert Rene, who had served since 1977, was re-elected in 2001, but stepped down in 2004.

Vice President James Michel took over the presidency and in July 2006 was elected to a new five-year term.

Upon independence in 1976, economic growth has steadily increased, led by the tourism sector and tuna fishing. In the past few years, the government has also created incentives for foreign investments. Per capita, Seychelles is the most indebted country in the world and currently had a population of 90,024.

This page was last updated on April 7, 2017.

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Seychelles Tourism Board CEO: Stay home and travel later – we are all in this together! – eTurboNews | Trends | Travel News

Sherin Francis is one of the hardest working CEOs in the travel and tourism industry, welcoming visitors to her island nation with open arms for many years.

Sherin is the CEO of the Seychelles Tourism Board, a country that is relying on tourism for its people to prosper. Seychelles is also paradise on Earth in a lot of ways, recognized as one of the most beautiful travel destinations and tourism infrastructures in the world. Located in the Indian Ocean, Seychelles is fragile, like any island region. Seychelles is also a country where everyone is a friend, and no one is considered an enemy.

Its important to maintain Seychelles as a beautiful travel destination and to protect its people.

Today Sherin Francis addressed friends of Seychelles and the world with this heartwarming message and advice:

The world as we know has taken a challenging turn on 30 January 2020, when the WHO declared the COVID-19 outbreak a public health emergency of international concern.

We anticipated that we would be affected as a destination but even more so as individuals, we were concerned for our families, friends, acquaintances, business partners all over the world.

In the past few weeks, we have witnessed the spreading of an aggressive virus that has proven difficult for the medical corps around the world to understand and manage. Our thoughts go to everyone around the world as we are all affected by this crisis.

Over the past few weeks, I believe people have realized that the tourism industry is a very fragile one; everything that happens locally and internationally can affects the industry we all depend on as a country.

It is a sad moment for us to see the industry we cherish be brought to its knees; borders closing, airlines and cruise companies shutting their operations, hotel partners announcing the reduction of their activities.

The fast evolution of the situation makes it very difficult at this point for us as the Tourism Board to estimate and analyze the impact and damage to the industry and much less to plan the recovery of our industry. These sad days are fuelling our motivation as a Tourism Board to work harder to make sure that our industry now critically incapacitated shines again when brighter days will come.

We are currently working on various plans to bring Seychelles Tourism to new dawn basing ourselves on a short-term and a long-term plan.

Our short-term plan would be on the assumption that the situation does not deteriorate. If people are required to stay in confinement at home or if there is a countrywide fear, we will have to wait for these to pass before it can be executed.

Since at STB, we believe there are positive things that come out of everything even from crisis as this one, we now have the possibility to shift our marketing efforts locally and provide some supports to partners who are willing to tap into the staycation segment. We are looking forward to this new challenge!!!

On the long run, our recovery plan to get back on our feet as a destination after this crisis will depend on six major things including:

Above all, for our plan to work, we will need your continued support.

I would like to commend all STB staff for their dedication in this time of need. A special thought to the frontline staff at the Seychelles International Airport, at the Praslin Airport, the La Digue Jetty and also all staff stationed in the four corners of the world.

I am grateful to the industry partners, as most of them have responded positively in all instances when contacted by our teams. This has reassured us in showing that they have our industry at heart and are dedicated to its wellbeing.

My message to the industry and our partners is to remain strong in these trying times, encourage travelers to postpone and not cancel their travel. To all of our travelers, I am urging you to postpone your travel, stay home and travel later.

Remember we are all in this together!

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Seychelles Tourism Board CEO: Stay home and travel later - we are all in this together! - eTurboNews | Trends | Travel News