Microplastics Are New Homes for Microbes in the Caribbean – Lab Manager Magazine

The different plastic types in jars, cut into micro-sized pieces before deployment in the ocean.

Kassandra Dudek

With 5 trillion pieces of plastic in the oceans, the dynamics of marine environments are shifting in ways that are yet to be discovered. Over time discarded plastics, such as sandwich bags and flip-flops, have degraded into small particles, called microplastics, which are less than 5 mm long. Kassandra Dudek, a former Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI) fellow and doctoral student at Arizona State University, looked at how marine microbial communities colonize microplastics in Panama.

She took the six common plastic types found in most household items, such as water bottles or milk cartons, and cut them into tiny pieces before submerging them in the tropical waters of Almirante Bay, at STRI's Bocas del Toro Research Station. Since Panama acts as a catch basin for marine debris in the Caribbean due to its geography and interaction with oceanic currents, it is a prime location for the study of plastic pollution.

"The major goal of the study was to assess differences among plastic types, and I wanted to ensure these plastics were also environmentally relevant," Dudek said. "Consumer items found in everyday households are the plastics polluting our beaches and oceans. It is estimated that roughly 4.8-12.7 million tons of plastic enter the marine environment annually."

After a month and a half, she noted that marine bacteria were not picky about the surfaces where they chose to settle. They formed biofilmsbuildups of bacteriaon all plastic types, using them as artificial reefs and creating 'plastispheres,' a type of ecosystem found on human-made plastic environments.

The research platform at the Bocas STRI station, where the microplastics were deployed.

Kassandra Dudek

However, some diatoms, which are photosynthetic microalgae, did exhibit a preference for plastic type. Research has shown that hydrocarbon-degrading bacteria, or bacteria that may be capable of degrading plastics, can be associated with diatoms. This dynamic may ultimately prove convenient, as it could potentially promote the degradation of microplastics.

"I wish to further explore this diatom-hydrocarbon degrading bacteria relationship and assess if diatoms help to recruit hydrocarbon degrading bacteria to a plastics' surface," Dudek said.

Dudek speculated that microplastics could also serve as a vehicle for toxic and disease-causing organisms. These contaminated microplastics could potentially be dragged from the coasts to the open oceans via currents, to be swallowed by fish or sink and affect the benthic communities on the ocean floor, but much research remains to be done regarding the role microplastics play in the transportation of pathogens.

"Only about one percent of marine plastic debris is recovered at the ocean's surface, meaning the other 99 percent likely either sinks or is consumed by marine organisms," Dudek said. "I am currently exploring the role microplastic biofilms have in a microplastic's degradation and sinking capacity in different marine environments."

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Microplastics Are New Homes for Microbes in the Caribbean - Lab Manager Magazine

Costa Rica’s Caribbean Region, Exotic and Full of Fun Waiting for You to Visit – The Costa Rica News

The Caribbean region of Costa Rica is probably one of the most beautiful and least known areas of Costa Rica. With a warm and rainy climate, this is a place where you will find tropical nature with amazing wildlife, fantastic adventures, exciting cultural events, incredible beaches and comfortable and varied accommodations for your enjoyment.

The Caribbean region of Costa Rica is located in the province of Limn, which goes from the southern border with Panama to the San Juan River that divides Costa Rica from Nicaragua. Its three main areas are the north, Puerto Limn and the south that reaches the border of Panama.

North Caribbean, Colorado:

The Barra Del Colorado is a 92,000-hectare refuge composed of tropical rainforest and wetlands that host a great diversity of flora and fauna. Traditionally Colorado has been very popular among fishermen.

Tortuguero National Park.

To the north, a small but impressive labyrinth of canals in the middle of lush rainforest, full of exotic wildlife, Tortuguero is a paradise for nature lovers and a national symbol for its stunning landscapes. It is also well known for giant sea turtles that reach the 22km long coast, especially from July to September to dig their nests in the sand and lay their eggs.

Puerto Limn.

This is the main town of the province; it has a port where thousands of cruise ships arrive constantly during the fall and winter months. Thus it is always full of incredible activities that can be enjoyed without enduring large crowds.

Getting there.

If you want to go to the Caribbean region by air, you can use the routes available from San Jos airport. There are three main airports on the Caribbean coast of Costa Rica. Colorado, Tortuguero, and Lemon. To the south, in Costa Rica, you will not find any commercial airport or airfields. In Bocas Del Toro there is an international airport. The distance from San Jos to Tortuguero is 130km. To get to Tortuguero and Colorado by land, you have to take route 32 or the road through the town of Turrialba.

History.

Although Christopher Columbus visited these lands in 1502, Costa Rica was originally colonized only on the Pacific side. The dense exuberance of the rainforests of the Caribbean coast and the harsh conditions of the mountain landscape in addition to the very brave indigenous resistance at that time made it impossible for the Spanish to enter on this site. The fact that our land had very little gold compared to other American lands such as Peru or Mexico also discouraged early colonization.

In the colonial years, there were some attempts to grow cocoa in the region but the continuous invasions of English privateers and pirates who raided the Caribbean coast eventually turned it into an isolated and uninhabited place with what remained of the indigenous populations to live in the mountains.

The climate.

The Caribbean side of the country has a hot and humid climate throughout the year; its average temperature is 30 degrees celsius, however on a hot September day it can go all the way up to 40. The sunny season occurs in March-April and then again in September-October, although sometimes it happens that the sun season begins in January or February and only gets rainy if there is a strong cold front coming from the north. And even in the rainiest part of the season, there are long periods of sunny days with sudden storms and downpours.

We encourage you to pack your bathing suit, shorts and sandals, the Caribbean region of our country will be waiting for you with its arms open.

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Costa Rica's Caribbean Region, Exotic and Full of Fun Waiting for You to Visit - The Costa Rica News

How the USVI Is Rebranding St Croix – Caribbean Journal

St Croix, the US Virgin Islands largest island, is getting a new tourism identity.

USVI tourism officials have launched a full-fledged rebranding of St Croix, with a new push aimed at educating travelers on the unique features of the island.

The USVI is calling it St Croix: A Vibe Like No Other, and, more importantly, its a new approach for the USVI giving each of the islands in the territory a unique brand.

We believe that St. Croix is going to be the big new attraction for tourism in the Caribbean, said United States Virgin Islands Commissioner of Tourism Joseph Boschulte, who said the people, cuisine, history and culture of the destination, coupled with its laid-back vibe, will help position St. Croix as a go-to Caribbean destination throughout a new marketing campaign.

Through the eyes, art and expertise of Crucians we can present the breadth and depth of experiences the island has to offer. Through chefs, mixologists, musicians, tour guides, artisans and other professionals we will explore the Crucian vibe, Boschulte. I am excited to roll out our marketing strategy to position St Croix as a destination with its own identity and one whose tourism potential is limitless.

The rebranding comes as St Croix is in the midst of a tourism renaissance, from new hotels like The Fred in Frederiksted to reimagined historic properties like Company House in Christiansted and what is one of the hottest culinary scenes in the Caribbean.

Indeed, St Croix saw a 7.9 percent increase in tourist arrivals in 2019 compared to the previous year, the commissioner said.

This year the island is poised for more growth, with two of its major resorts set to reopen for the first time since Hurricane Maria.

That includes the all-inclusive Divi Carina Bay and the Renaissance St Croix Carambola Beach Resort (which is opening this year, according to Marriott).

After the hurricanes of 2017, impacted islands saw major dips in arrivals with reduced accommodations inventory, said Boschulte, who was speaking at a briefing at the recent CHTA Caribbean Travel Marketplace conference in Nassau. However, two years later, airline capacity on St. Croix is actually ahead of pre-storm levels; with continued hard work and focus, we expect that trend to continue.

That includes a third American Airlines daily flight set to launch from Miami in June.

The news also comes as St Croix was recently named the number one destination to visit in the Caribbean in 2020 in Caribbean Journal.

We like what St Croix has to offer, Boschulte said.

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How the USVI Is Rebranding St Croix - Caribbean Journal

Greening Finance: Averting the climate crisis existential threat to the Caribbean – South Florida Caribbean News

By Meegan Scott

TORONTO, Canada At the Toronto Centres climate finance talks in Ottawa, Timothy Antoine, Governor of the Eastern Caribbean Central Bank (ECCB) said theclimate crisis is an existential threat to the Caribbean.

With climate risk emerging as thehot and urgent issuefacing theglobal financial sector,leaders and citizens of the region have good reason to be on edge.

Antoine and fellow panelists Nezha Hayat, Chairperson and CEO of the Moroccan Capital Market Authority (AMMC) and Anthony Nyong, Director of Climate Change and Green Growth at the African Development Bank (AfDB) recently called for thespeeding up of efforts to green financewithin Caribbean and African countries in order to ward of the catastrophic threats posed to the regions by global warming and the resulting climate crisis.

Antoine cited the case of Dominica where tropical storm Erika wiped out 90% of GDP in 2015; fast on its heels in 2017 hurricane Maria caused damage totaling 226% of its GDP.

Monster storms, now devastate across countries instead of sections of them. Those typical 100-year phenomena have not only intensified, they now occur in two-year periods. Next to no time is being left for financial or ecological recovery.

He further pointed out that some Caribbean islands would be under water by the 2100s, if financial resources were not rechanneled to provide more and new climate finance to the region.

The panel of financial regulators pressed home the need for developed countries including top emitters like Canada to live up to their moral obligations to reduce their investments in the brown economy. That is economic development or brown growth that relies on the use, production of and trade in fossil fuels such as coal, oil, gas and related activities that dramatically increases carbon emissions and are environmentally damaging.

The speakers expressed gratitude to Canada for its significant contribution in helping them to tackle the challenges posed by climate change, but were steadfast in their call for Canada to do more.

Each panelist highlighted the work that their region is carrying out to combat the crisis including greening finance.

They stressed their need for help with developing strategy guidelines, roadmaps, legal infrastructure, financial risk assessment, awareness creation within their financial sectors, and general how-to, in addition to finance in order to deliver the needed and desired results that could save their countries.

High on their wish list was more capacity building support from the Toronto Centre for Global Leadership in Financial Supervision (Toronto Centre). They were speaking at the fireside chat Greening Finance: Climate Change and its Impact on the Worlds Financial System.

The event was hosted by the Toronto Centre in celebration of International Development Week (IDW) which was observed between February 2-8, 2020.

This year marks the 30thedition of the celebrations which are convened by Global Affairs Canada. The theme of this Years celebration isGo for the Goals.

Greening finance requires the alignment and direction of financial flows towards sustainable low-carbon industries and the climate change targetsincluding the UN Sustainable Development Goals. The need to better manage environmental and social risks, take up opportunities that delivers both a decent rate of return and environmental benefit as well as greater accountabilityis a fundamental part of the process (United Nations Environmental Programme, UNEP).

Delivering SDG 8,decent work and economic growth and upholding the duty of fair share inbenefits and burdens necessary to win against the dangers of climate change presents a sustainability and growth dilemma for developed and developing countries.

Case in point is Canada, relies heavily on the brown economy for its growth. Figures presented by theCanadian Energy Research Institute (CERI, July 2019), shows that while Canada champions combating climate change it invests heavily in oil sands development which is expected to contribute over $1.0 trillion to the Canadian economy from 2019 2029. The investments are also expected to generate growth from 332,847 jobs in 2018 to 532,673 jobs in 2029. Government will use taxes from these activities to finance healthcare, education and public infrastructure (CERI).

All disastrous outcomes which are neither farfetched nor in the distant horizon.

Last November, Canada made headlines on the reputational risk front when The Riksbank, became the worlds first to exit public debt because of climate exposure, when it sold sub-sovereign notes from Queensland, Western Australia and Alberta, Canada as a result of their high levels for carbon emissions.

Ignoring the call of developing countries to reduce emissions could present sudden existential threats to developed countries.

In last months report the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), warned that A future climate disaster orgreen swaneventcould bring down the global financial system a sentiment echoed during the discussions by Babak Abbaszadeh, President and CEO of the Toronto Centre. Like the monsters storms in the Caribbean the green swan event comes like a violent thief in the night.

Despite the herculean challenge Caribbean and African countries made it clear that they were not about playing a blame game in the battle against climate change, even though they are carrying 80% of the burden while contribution under 4% of emissions.

Nyong, says Africa is a solutions provider, 54 African countries have signed their commitments to reduce emissions. They have established knowledge sharing hubs, legal support for matters relating to climate change, and disaster reduction strategies.

The Caribbean now has the Caribbean Catastrophe Risk Insurance Facility (CCRIF) which payouts in 14 days after a disaster; and disaster linked hurricane clauses which provide a loan repayment holiday after a disaster; they are also pursuing geo-thermal energy market development as part of owning their responsibilities.

Besides Jamaica the pursuit of catastrophe bonds (cat bonds) have not been successful, Antoine wants to see more citizens investing in the Eastern Caribbean Stock Exchange for wealth and capturing the opportunities presented by cat bonds.

Antoine cited further barriers such as the use of income per capita as a measure for financing which does not work for the region. He illustrated, when hurricane Katrina hit the USA the cost was 4% of GDP, but the monster storms in Dominica and another country cost more than 200 % of GDP. An entire island gets destroyed. He argues for change and was unapologetic in stating that the US $100 bn commitment made by 197 countries at21stConference of Parties (CoP21)in 2015 was not enough.

Nezha Hayat and Christine Hogan, moderator and Deputy Minister of Environment and Climate Change, Government of Canada, made case of SDG 5 (Gender equality). Hayat has delivered remarkable results in that regard, but she points out the importance of political commitment and the changes implement under King, Mohammad VI with the 2004 family code in making the changes possible. Hogan says, the business case for gender equality is there but challenges exist.

The bottom line: developed countries must reduce emissions, developing country and developed country leaders in the financial sector, citizens and the private sector can no longer ignore the risks posed by climate change to the financial sector and their economies.

The Toronto Centre is funded by Global Affairs Canada, The Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (SIDA), The IMF and World Bank.

About the author: Meegan Scott, B.Sc. Hons, MBA, ATM-B, CL, PMP., is Jamaica-born Strategic Management Consultant, at Magate Wildhorse Consulting in Toronto & New York. This is a syndicated article.

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Greening Finance: Averting the climate crisis existential threat to the Caribbean - South Florida Caribbean News

Turks and Caicos Is Getting Its First Dream Hotel – Caribbean Journal

Turks and Caicos Is Getting Its First Dream Hotel

New York-based Dream Hotel Group is planning a big expansion in the Caribbean, and that will now include a hotel in Providenciales, Turks and Caicos.

The company will be opening The Bight by Dream Hotel Group in Provo, with plans to debut in 2022.

The by Dream Hotel Group moniker is a new brand for the company, which has a collection of marques from Time to Unsripted to Chatwal, among others.

The Bight will actually be one of two new By Dream Hotel Group projects in the region, along with a recently-announced hotel in the pipeline in Playa del Carmen, Mexico. (Indeed, Dream Hotel Group is planning an even broader expansion in the Caribbean across several of its brands, including Unscripted Hotels.)

The residential resort will be set in West Grace Bay, the brainchild of Turks and Caicos EA Group.

EA Groups roots are based in the Turks and Caicos. They have an intimate knowledge of the culture, as well as extensive expertise and understanding of the market. They are innovators with a vision to bring something new, fresh and authentic to the region, saidDream Hotel Group CEO Jay Stein.

The residential resort will have 66 units across six levels, with custom interiors and elevated views over Turks and Caicos most iconic beach.

It will be a hip, fresh alternative in Provo, with everything from a vegetable garden to a gym to an event space called The Barn.

Ryan Jones, director of EA Group, said the hotel was designed to be an authentic, experiential project.

For our key feeder markets, especially New York City, this is a powerful push not just in terms of the hospitality factor but also the desirability of the real estate product, said Joe Zahm, president of Turks and Caicos Sothebys International Realty, which is handling the real estate component of the property.

Caribbean Journal first reported the launch of The Bight last year.

As one of the most sought after and naturally beautiful destinations in the world, the Turks and Caicos Islands have proven year over year to be the market leaders for hotel tourism and real estate sales in the Caribbean, addedJeff Donnelly, Vice President of Development, Dream Hotel Group. The Bight by Dream Hotel Group is an exciting collaboration between some of the best minds in hospitality, and Im thrilled to bring this partnership forward.

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Turks and Caicos Is Getting Its First Dream Hotel - Caribbean Journal

UN Official: Virus Will Cause Supply Shortages in Caribbean – The St. Kitts-Nevis Observer

BRIDGETOWN, Barbados (CMC) A senior official of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) says Latin America and Caribbean countries (LAC) will suffer disruptions to their supply chains as Chinese production of goods has come as a result of the coronavirus (2019-nCoV) outbreak that has killed more than 1,000 people in the Asian country.

Notably, today the Chinese government announced that it will delay reporting its January trade data. Commodity prices will also likely be impacted by a slowdown of the Chinese economy. Chinese oil demand, for example, is already being reported to have dropped by 20 per cent by some news outlets, said Luis F Lopez-Calva, the UNDP Regional Director for Latin America and the Caribbean.

Lopez-Calva, who is also the UN Assistant Secretary-General, said that resilience is one of the main pillars of UNDPs regional and Caribbean narrative and key foundation to promoting sustainable development in the region.

History demonstrates that in the region volatility is the norm and not the exception, and that the development trajectories of countries are not monotonic. Resilience is the ability to return to a predetermined path of development in the shortest possible time after suffering from an adverse shock.

He said that a new source of potential volatility has emerged and while it is too early to fully grasp its impact, a recent threat to the macroeconomic stability of the region is the 2019-nCoV.

How strong will the impact of the virus be on Chinese growth, how it will translate to a slowdown in the region, and how prepared is the region to weather these impacts, are all questions to be determined, he said, noting that what we know so far is that the coronavirus is spreading at a rapid pace and has resulted in a halt of economic activity in China, as the government limits the mobility in and out of the country.

He said while more than 31,000 have been infected, over 600 casualties and cases reported in 28 countries, it is very likely that the impact of the virus on Chinese growth and commodity prices will represent a shock to the region.

Lopez-Calva said Latin America and the Caribbean is significantly exposed to China, as economic relations between the two have soared in the past decades, particularly through trade and FDI and lending.

He said trade between China and LAC increased from US$12 billion in 2000 to US$306 billion in 2018 and is indeed Latin Americas second-largest trading partner.

He said three years ago China represented already nine per cent of Latin Americas total exports and 18.4 per cent of total imports.

Similarly, foreign direct investment (FDI) and lending from China have surged in Latin America and the Caribbean over the past decade.

Between 2005 and 2017, Chinas investment in the region represented five per cent of total FDI, more than US$90 billion.

According to Inter-American Dialogue, China has positioned over US$141 billion in loans into the region since 2005, which represents more than the World Bank, the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) and the CAF Development Bank of Latin America combined.

The full extent of the impact of the coronavirus will ultimately depend on how well the outbreak is contained, but it is expected that Chinese growth in the first quarter of the year to fall sharply and rebound later in the year, Lopez-Calva said.

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UN Official: Virus Will Cause Supply Shortages in Caribbean - The St. Kitts-Nevis Observer

Digital Nomad: Poker players of the Caribbean – Daily Maverick

Image by Pixabay

La vida loca baby. The crazy life.

Here on Caye Caulker, the little island off Belize where Im living. (My intended stay of two days has stretched into three weeks. Its hard to leave paradise.)

Wake up at 6.30. Have a smoke on the balcony and check out the tequila sunrise splotching the sky. Theres always a lone great white egret standing Masai-like on one leg in the sea. It hangs around the same spot all day, and I wonder what its story is.

Waiting for its long-lost mate? Scrounging fish from the nearby boats? Nothing better to do and nowhere better to go?

Whatever the story, I guess it lives with no egrets. (Ahem)

Then I walk down to Beans and Ice and order a large dark with milk. Gaze at the Caribbean Sea, flick glances at the young women swaying in hammocks attached to palm trees, finish my cup of jolt and walk through the mangrove swamps to South Pointe at the far end of town.

Turn around at the end of the dirt track and head back to Lenas, the ramshackle clapboard turquoise structure that I call home.

By now its 9am and time to work. Subediting for Daily Maverick, which involves wrestling with issues of great import.

Is our style SONA or Sona? Should this which not be a that? Square brackets or curved? eSwatini or Eswatini? Subeditor or sub-editor?

Interestingly, the authorities are divided on the last question, with the Oxford Dictionary and Collins Dictionary favouring subeditor, and the Cambridge Dictionary sub-editor. The Guardian and Observer Style Guide has it as subeditor, and in the section under that heading notes:

WP Crozier said of CP Scott: As a subeditor he got rid of the redundant and the turgid with the conscientiousness of a machine that presses the superfluous moisture out of yarn. The man who passed seaward journey to the great metropolis, and when the copy came back to him found written in firm blue pencil voyage to London, knew what sort of English CP liked.

At 3pm (11pm South African time) works over, and its time to head to the Barrier Reef Sports Bar for lunch and a beer. Or two. Happily, its Happy Hour (3pm-6pm) and a draught Belikin beer costs only four Belizean dollars about R30.

Theres always a colourful crowd of regulars at the bar, many of them Canadian swallows who come here during the brutal northern winter. Its minus 30 degrees Celsius at home today, theyll gleefully tell you, beads of sweat rolling down their face and globules of condensation sliding down their beer glass.

Theres a couple of women knocking back tequila shots, they stagger or wend their wobbly way home on bicycles at four in the afternoon; theres Mandingo, a giant dreadlocked man who wears knee-length striped socks, shorts and an Ancient Greek-looking helmet made of palm fronds. They say Mandingo is the village shaman, and for sure, he has the otherworldly look of a man who communes with the spirits. Or smokes heaps of ganja.

Boozers, losers, assholes, angels, rogues, renegades, seekers, speakers, thinkers, doers, jokers, smokers, wannabes and has-beens everyone here has a story, theyre all interesting for at least five minutes. Some for a lot longer than that, and Ive made a couple of friends at this bar.

One of them, former Rifleman Gary Rifle of the Queens Own Rifles of Canada, introduced me to the poker game thats played here. Its Texas Hold-Em, tournament-style, with a 50 Belizean dollar buy-in. Tournament-style means that the blinds the compulsory bets posted by the two players to the left of the dealer go up every half hour, so that if you havent amassed a sizeable stack of chips midway through the game, you can no longer afford to play and have to take outrageous risks in a last-ditch bid to remain.

A lot like life, come to think of it.

Unlike life though, in poker you are expected to dissemble, to misrepresent, to beguile, bamboozle and deceive, to hoodwink, dupe, delude, mislead and entrap. In other words, you gotta get real.

However, its also expected that you win graciously and lose gracefully. Theres no place at the table for blowhards and sulkers, but you can get away with a short-lived grin of triumph or a brief moment of petulance. If you really must.

The players at the game on Caye Caulker are a mixture of Canadians, Americans, and locals: Tommy, who deals in real estate and is one of the islands renowned musicians, singing his heart and lungs out at jam sessions and Karaoke Evening. Angie, his wife, blonde and buxom. Chris with the corkscrew curls and impish sense of humour. Dirty, a loud American, who seems to bluster his way through the game and then traps you with a move straight out of David Slanskys Hold Em Poker for Advanced Players .

The locals, most of them young and lean: Baby, Daniel, Major, Norman. Then theres Harry, an old guy who plays an unorthodox but strangely effective game that seems to rely on intuition and precognition. The young men call him Mr Harold.

We play upstairs at Tappers Sports Bar theres a wall camera focused on the table, and they can watch us in the bar downstairs. When one of us wants a fresh drink he waves his glass or bottle at the camera, and pretty soon a fresh libation arrives a bottle of Belikin beer with a slice of lemon squeezed in its neck, rum punch, Cuba Libre, mojito, whatever

Someone once said, The man who invented poker was smart, but whoever invented chips was a genius. He was right. Our chips are weapons that conduct exploratory feints, instruments of war that frighten and pulverise; they are questions that demand answers; swaggering braggarts that kick sand in your face.

And the story with chips is, you gotta speculate to accumulate. You dont play, you cant win.

The game itself, as the late, great Norman Best an old warrior and former diplomat I played poker with back in Cape Town once said, is a microcosm of the macrocosm. He meant that it mirrors life, with its highs and lows, its waves of fortune and ill-fortune, the feelings of joy and despair that it engenders.

They play poker just about every day and most nights on Caye Caulker, and soon the days took on a well-defined shape. Sunrise, coffee, walk, work, lunch, beer(s), swim, nap, poker.

At some stage, I realised that I was down a few hundred dollars in the game, and that it was time to leave paradise.

Former Rifleman Gary Rifle hired a 44, and we headed for San Ignacio, a little town in the jungle. Its famed for its weekly farmers market and as the gateway to a number of natural attractions.

Next morning we drove for a couple of hours along jungle dirt roads and headed for the Mountain Pine Ridge Forest Reserve. Where the film director Francis Ford Coppola has an upmarket lodge, and we stopped there for a couple of beers.

The place was reminiscent of a movie set, and we could have been actors in a Coppola film, but, alas, not the leading men. Perhaps two renegades, battle-crazed and war-weary, styling it up in some south-east Asian jungle lodged appropriated from a heroin-addled Frenchman. Or a couple of old Mafia consiglieres hiding from the young capos who wanted to make us swim with the fishes.

Then we headed for Rio On, a place of little waterfalls and beautiful river pools. There were many young women there, basking in their bathing costumes, laughing, flicking their long hair, sirens if ever there were.

I knew they were sirens when they called me, their beautiful voices floating on the wind like wisps of smoke:

Sugar Daddy Sugar Daddy Sugar Daddy, they said.

I gave a wry grin, and advanced no further. I knew from reading the Odyssey and watching the movie Oh Brother, Where Art Thou? what would happen if I did:

Them si-reens will kill you, boy. ML

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Digital Nomad: Poker players of the Caribbean - Daily Maverick

Weather warnings in place in parts of Ireland ahead of Storm Dennis – IrishCentral

Snow in the West Wicklow hills on February 11, 2020.RollingNews.ie

Storm Dennis is set to hit Ireland from February 15 to February 17

As Storm Dennis nears Ireland, Met ireann has issued weather warnings for several counties across the country.

Read More: More weather warnings for Ireland in the wake of Storm Ciara

On Tuesday, Met ireann, Irelands meteorological service, issued a Status Yellow warning for several counties:

Status Yellow - Snow/Ice warning for Connacht, Cavan, Monaghan, Donegal, Dublin, Louth, and Wicklow

Icy in parts tonight with wintry outbreaks. Some snow accumulations possible before morning, mainly across the north and on higher ground elsewhere.

Valid: 8 pm Wednesday, February 12 to 10 am Thursday, February 13

Issued: 8 pm Tuesday, February 11; Updated: 12:29 pm Wednesday, February 12.

Additionally, Met ireann issued two marine warnings:

Status Yellow - Gale Warning

Cyclonic variable winds will reach gale or strong gale force 9 tonight on all Irish coastal waters and on the Irish Sea.

Status Yellow - Small Craft Warning

Westerly veering southwesterly will reach force 6 at times today on all Irish coastal waters.

Read More: Met ireann issues weather warnings ahead of Storm Ciara

The warnings come as Storm Dennis is set to descend upon Ireland from Saturday, February 15 through Monday, February 17.

Met ireann shared this visual of Storm Dennis' predicted path:

Our Atlantic chart shows precipitation and pressure forecast in 6 hour intervals for the next 7 days.https://t.co/9Giuj4CR5mThe national forecast and the national outlook for the coming days can be found here.https://t.co/9gKN6SVok4 pic.twitter.com/Mi9ayqXON4

Met ireann's meteorologists said: Storm Dennis is forecast to track to the north of Ireland and the UK over the weekend. It will likely bring periods of very wet and windy weather, with some stormy conditions possible, particularly later Sunday into Monday.

The Meteorological Situation: Cold air is forecast to exit Canada and enter the North Atlantic Ocean over the next few days, creating a sharp temperature gradient in the atmosphere. This will result in an intensification of the jet stream, shown in the graphics below, which will direct low-pressure systems towards Ireland.

Gales are likely in coastal areas on Saturday with fresh to strong winds inland. Winds could increase further on Sunday, possibly becoming stormy, particularly along western coasts. It will be very gusty too over the weekend, with some damaging gusts possible.

Flooding issues: We are entering into a period of transition between Spring (High) Tides and Neap (Low) Tides. This means there will not be a large variation between high and low tides. The combination of high seas and strong winds or perhaps stormy conditions, may increase the possibility of coastal flooding, especially along western and southern coasts due to wave transformation.

Storm Dennis may also bring very wet conditions with localized flooding possible. River levels are elevated across much of the midlands so any heavy rainfall would cause issues here.

Storm Naming: Storm Dennis is the fourth named storm of the season. The naming convention now also includes the Dutch meteorological service, KNMI as well as our existing partner UKMO. Storms are named to aid the communication of approaching severe weather, helping the public to be better placed to keep themselves, their property and businesses safe.

Read More: It snowed in Ireland, which means this Irish word started trending on Twitter

Snow in the West Wicklow hills on February 11, 2020.RollingNews.ie

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Weather warnings in place in parts of Ireland ahead of Storm Dennis - IrishCentral

Virus Shuts North Koreas Best Route Around Trump Sanctions – Yahoo Finance

(Bloomberg) -- North Koreas decision to shut the border with China to avoid the coronavirus will set back its nascent economic recovery, renewing pressure on Kim Jong Un to return to nuclear negotiations with Donald Trump.

A jump in fuel prices, a dip in port activity and the suspension of train and air links show the early impact as reports emerge of the first virus case in North Korea. In recent days, Seoul-based NK News reported a 36% jump in diesel prices and diminished activity at the port of Nampho, along with new quarantine procedures.

The closed borders will cut off foreign tourism that provides the cash-starved state with hard currency and further limit the trickle of trade it has with the outside world. The economic blow -- if sustained -- might make it tougher for Kim to keep pushing back against Trumps demands.

Before the virus complicated matters, things had been looking up: Reforms, a bumper harvest and sanctions-dodging were helping North Korea claw back some of the lost growth triggered by tougher United Nations trade restrictions and a drought.

The UN Conference on Trade and Development estimated that the economy expanded by 1.8% last year, following its biggest slump in decades in 2018. That view tallied with a surge in Chinas imports that suggested an increase in economic activity and trade.

Global sanctions piled on North Korea in 2017 for its nuclear and missiles tests have slammed its trade and access to vital resources such as oil. That hasnt stopped Kim from building his nuclear arsenal and finding ways to evade the economic restrictions, such as the illegal trading of commodities via high-seas transfers between ships, the U.S. and others have said.

North Korea stepped up its illegal exports of coal last year, with most of those deliveries headed for China, according to a confidential UN report reviewed Monday by Bloomberg News. Pyongyang raked in $370 million of shipments from January through August alone, a panel monitoring the enforcement of sanctions on North Korea said in the report to the Security Council, citing evidence provided by an unidentified member state.

The Kim regime also managed to import luxury vehicles and other sanctioned items including alcohol and robotic machinery, the report showed. While these activities could be affected by the border closure, other illicit activity highlighted in the report wont, such as the countrys acquisition of virtual currencies and cyber-attacks against global banks to evade financial sanctions.

Prior to the virus lockdown, Kim had been pushing back against Trumps pressure. In a speech to ruling party leaders on Dec. 31 -- the same day reports of the new virus first emerged in China -- Kim denounced the U.S.s gangster-like acts and said he was no longer bound by a two-year freeze on tests of nuclear weapons and long-range missiles.

A resumption of major tests would undercut Trumps claim that his unprecedented decision to meet with Kim in June 2018 made the U.S. safer, just as he gears up for a tough re-election fight. Still, Kim has so far refrained from provocations that could blow up his relationship with Trump.

North Korean foreign ministry adviser Kim Kye Gwan said last month that Pyongyang would never propose trading a key nuclear facility in exchange for UN sanctions relief, according to state media. He added that it would be stupid to expect ties between Trump and Kim to help restart talks.

Even before the virus, there was a limit to how much Kim could do to shore up the economy without more access to foreign capital. One study after another has suggested that Kim would eventually face a economic crisis if he was unable to secure enough hard currency to sustain a push forward with development.

Kim wants sanctions lifted because he wants high-powered economic growth to underpin his power grip, but he has no reason to risk his survival by giving in to U.S. demands to denuclearize first, said Lee Jong-seok, a former South Korean unification minister. Kim wont budge, no matter the pressure.

(Adds details of sanctions-evading activity cited in confidential report)

--With assistance from David Wainer.

To contact the reporters on this story: Sam Kim in Seoul at skim609@bloomberg.net;Jon Herskovitz in Tokyo at jherskovitz@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Paul Jackson at pjackson53@bloomberg.net, ;Brendan Scott at bscott66@bloomberg.net, Malcolm Scott

For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com

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Virus Shuts North Koreas Best Route Around Trump Sanctions - Yahoo Finance

Future Of Salmon In A Warming World Part 2 – KYUK

In the first of a two-part series, we explored the effects of warming river water on salmon. Now we take a look at the warming ocean, and what that means to the Yukon River king run.

Managers have noticed that in recent years, smaller, younger king salmon are returning to salmon streams. Since these changes are occurring statewide, and the fish spend most of their lives in the ocean, researchers think that this trend has something to do with changes in the marine environment. In the Bering Sea, that includes such factors as the loss of the cold pool of ocean water that once was thought to have helped nurture cod, and the loss of sea ice. Both are major changes in where fish species are located: their habitat.

Thats the same habitat that these Chinook salmon are in during their entire marine life, said Katherine Howard.

Howard is a state fish biologist doing high-seas salmon research. She studies juvenile salmon caught in the fall ocean trawl surveys operated by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association in the Bering Sea.

And the Chinooks that are caught are primarily 2-year-old fish, says Howard. So we are really monitoring a cohort of fish.

Using genetic information from the catch, Howard was able to figure out how many of the fish were Yukon River Chinooks, otherwise known as king salmon. Her team found a direct relationship between the number of juveniles and the number of kings returning to the Yukon three years later. That means that the trawl data can be used to project into the future.

Typically, with salmon forecasts youre only looking at the next season, she said. But were looking three years out, because were looking at juveniles, and these fish are staying in the ocean for an additional three years.

In warmer oceans, biologists are seeing faster growth and theyre seeing younger fish returning earlier. Howard wondered if they would find the same trend of increasing growth in the juvenile kings in her trawl survey.

Sure enough, we see exactly the same thing, Howard said.

Howard says that the trawl data also reveals changes in the diets of the kings. The changes are so fundamental that right now there are more questions than answers.

We dont know what that is going to mean in terms of survival and productivity of these stocks until those fish return to the river, Howard explained.

What she does know is not good news for the Yukon. Based on her data, she expects some small runs ahead, especially in 2022. Howard expects runs similar to those seen in 2012 and 2013.

These werent good years, she noted. These were years when even if no fish were harvested in the river, we would still have struggled to make escapement objectives.

The only good change she sees is in the people fishing on the Yukon. Howard told a room full of scientists that the attitudes of the people along the river have changed. In the past, she said, people were trying to get more fish for themselves. Now, she observes that the conversation has turned to conserving and protecting the Yukon king run.

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Future Of Salmon In A Warming World Part 2 - KYUK

Top things to do in Tampa Bay this weekend: Feb. 14-16 – Tampa Bay Times

OLDE SCHOOL: RENAISSANCE FESTIVAL

Say huzzah to the Bay Area Renaissance Festival, back for the first of seven weekends of time travel. Join kings queens, jugglers, mimes and madrigals for archery contests, jousts and a human chess match in the acreage next to the Museum of Science and Industry. Ren Fest fans are known to dress up in costume, grab a turkey leg and wander the grounds. The festival has themes, starting with this weekends Wine, Romance and Song featuring a chocolate festival with free samples, Cupcake Crusades and a banner and mural competition. Other themed weekends are Highland Fling (Feb. 22-23), Pirates and Pups (Feb. 29-March 1), Barbarian Brew Fest (March 7-8), Shamrocks and Shenanigans (March 14-15), High Seas Adventure (March 21-22) and Wonders of the World (March 28-29). $22.95, $18.95 seniors, $14.95 ages 5-12, 4 and younger free. 11315 N 46th St., Tampa. (813) 983-0111. bayarearenfest.com.

The indoor dirt bike racing championship series known as Monster Energy AMA Supercross roars in. Dirt will be hauled in to create a series of obstacles and jumps for the motocross riders to master. The series is composed of 17 races inside stadiums all over North America, and the Tampa stop is about halfway through the season. Every week, the athletes seek to outperform each other on custom-designed tracks that feature a combination of obstacles such as whoop sections (where riders skim along the tops of multiple bumps), rhythm sections (irregular series of jumps with a variety of combination options) and triple jumps (three jumps in a row cleared in a single leap of 70 feet or more). $15-$95. 6:30 p.m. Saturday. Raymond James Stadium, 4201 N Dale Mabry Highway, Tampa. supercrosslive.com.

Valentines Day weekend might be a good time to take a date to comedian Mark Cordes show, The Spouse Whisperer. The critically acclaimed one-man show is described as a comedic journey of the funny stuff that happens between love at first sight and till death do us part. $34.50. 8 p.m. Friday, 2 and 8 p.m. Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday. David A. Straz Jr. Center for the Performing Arts, 1010 N MacInnes Place, Tampa. (813) 229-7827. strazcenter.org.

Before indulging in tempting eats like the Cheesy Tater Corn Dog at the Florida State Fair, grab some exercise. The inaugural Deep-Fried Dash 5K & Fun Run takes you on a tour through the 116th annual events main attractions through the midway, the assembly of outdoor vendors preparing dreamy fair foods, the agriculture starting and ending at one of the entertainment stages. Fair admission is included with participation. Benefits the Florida State Fair Foundation. $30 and up at bit.ly/deepfrieddash. The fair continues through Monday with the countrys largest midway, animal exhibits and live music. $11-$14, $9 seniors, $6-$8 children; $20-$30 armbands. 9 a.m. daily. Florida State Fairgrounds, 4800 U.S. 301, Tampa.

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Top things to do in Tampa Bay this weekend: Feb. 14-16 - Tampa Bay Times

Saving the Ocean’s Wildlife: Sustainable Food – KCPW

The Hinckley Institute Radio Hour This week on the program, Danny Quintana, president and founder of the Global High Seas Marine Preserve, discusses what must be done to prevent the ecological collapse of the Earths oceans caused by global overfishing and environmental degradation due to pollution and human interference.

The scope and severity of this crisis cannot be overstated. Compared to pre-industrial levels, at least 90 percent of large predator fish have been killed off, half of the oceans wildlife has been lost in the last four decades and, on average, humans kill approximately 200,000 sharks each day. If these trends are to continue, the majority of the Earths fisheries will collapse by 2048, an existential threat to biodiversity and to the billions of people who rely on fisheries as their major or primary food source.

Addressing these significant threats to life in and around our oceans, Danny Quintana lays out the goal of preventing disaster through education, the Sustainable Seafood Cities Campaign and by amending the Law of The Seas Treaty to prohibit certain fishing practices until our oceans can rebound. He also discusses the role landlocked areas like Salt Lake City can play in saving our oceans.

This forum was recorded on January 15, 2020.

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Things to Do: A wild cabaret, ’90s blockbuster film, winter carnival and scaled-down ‘South Pacific’ – Press Herald

The Poetry Brothel: Circus of Love8:30 p.m. Thursday. Portland House of Music, 25 Temple St., Portland, $25 to $60, 21-plus. portlandhouseofmusic.comFor one of the most unique, multi-faceted experiences you could ever hope to enjoy, consider Poetry Brothel: Circus of Love. Its a kaleidoscopic cabaret of poetry, burlesque, live music, aerials, vaudeville, visual art, magic, mysticism and, if youre so inclined, private, one-on-one poetry experiences. Spells will be cast, runes, palms and tarot cards will be read, and the entire evening is shrouded in bewitching mysticism. Masks, costumes and extravagant dress are encouraged.

Titanic8 p.m. Thursday. Cinemagic Stadium Theater, 333 Clarks Pond Parkway, South Portland, $8.75. cinemagicmovies.comTitanic, released in 1997, won the Oscar for best picture and best director (James Cameron), and despite everyone knowing that the ships maiden voyage would end in tragedy, the film was a cultural phenomenon. For one night only, it again sets sail on the big screen. Get there early for trivia and prizes and then buckle up for three and a half hours of high drama on the high seas. To prepare, belt out a few lines of Celine Dions Titanic power ballad My Heart Will Go On.

Winter Carnival10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday. Gilsland Farm, 20 Gilsland Farm Road, Falmouth, $9, 2 and under free. maineaudubon.orgGreat location? Check! Loads of fun indoors and outside for you and your kids? Check! Live music? Check! Food from The Marshmallow Cart and Totally Awesome Vegan Food Truck? Check! Maine Audubons Winter Carnival at Gilsland Farm features tracking activities, a winter wildlife touch table, snow science art, face painting, snowshoeing and sledding with L.L. Beans Discovery School, a performance by Earth Jams Matt Loosigian, visits with L.L. Bear and more.

South Pacific7 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Mayo Street Arts, 10 Mayo St., Portland, $15 in advance, $20 day of show, $22 preferred seating. mayostreetarts.orgIts no small feat to put on a miniature, toy theater show, but Portland has a resident expert with actor/opera singer David Worobec and his Tophat Productions. This version of the musical South Pacific takes place on a stage thats only a few feet tall and is outfitted with detailed props and stage sets. Characters are portrayed by custom-made action figures with Worobec singing every musical number. Some enchanted evening indeed!

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Things to Do: A wild cabaret, '90s blockbuster film, winter carnival and scaled-down 'South Pacific' - Press Herald

Hill and Immonen Plunge into aquatic horror in this exclusive preview – The A.V. Club

DCs Hill House Comics has been churning out exceptional horror comics for the last few months, but the imprints biggest release comes next week with the release of Plunge, a new miniseries bringing legendary artist Stuart Immonen back to monthly comics. Written by Hill House Comics curator, Joe Hill, with colors by Dave Stewart and letters by Deron Bennett, Plunge takes readers onto the high seas as it investigates the return of an oil tanker that mysteriously disappeared 40 years ago. After finishing his run on Amazing Spider-Man in 2018, Immonen took a break from ongoing comics and started working on an Instagram comic with his wife, Kathryn. His superhero work is phenomenal but its especially exciting when he gets to build a concept from the ground up, and Plunge gives him the opportunity to flex some new muscles as he dives deep into the horror genre.

This exclusive preview of next weeks Plunge #1 highlights both the spectacle and claustrophobic tension Immonen brings to Hills story, opening with a stunning shot of massive squid washed up on an island shore. Hill has proven time and again that he understands the mechanics of comics and trusts his artists to carry the storytelling weight, and these pages are full of atmosphere that draws the reader into this creepy aquatic world. The prevalence of brownish green in Stewarts coloring gives the visuals a sickly quality, and his rendering brings a lot of extra texture to Immonens linework, from the overgrown blades of grass to the rusty exterior of a ship emerging from the deep. Theres undeniable beauty in the execution of this horror story, and one of the most intriguing things about Plunge is seeing how this creative team mines terror from the majesty of the open water.

Cover by Jeremy Wilson

Variant by Gary Frank and Brad Anderson

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Hill and Immonen Plunge into aquatic horror in this exclusive preview - The A.V. Club

Govt nod to India-Iceland pact in fisheries sector – Outlook India

New Delhi, Feb 12 (PTI) Targeting sustainable fisheries development, the Union Cabinet on Wednesday approved a pact signed between India and Iceland.

"The Union Cabinet, chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, was apprised of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) signed between India and Iceland in the field of fisheries," an official statement said.

The pact was signed on 10th September, 2019.

"The MoU will strengthen the existing friendly relations between India and Iceland and will enhance consultation and cooperation on Fisheries including consultation on bilateral issues," it added.

The salient features of this MoU are creation of facilities for exchange of scientists and technical experts and their proper placement, especially in areas of estimating total allowable Catches in off shore and deep sea areas.

It also provides for training to fisheries professionals from key fisheries institutions in the various management aspects on areas of modern fisheries management and fish processing.

The MoU provides for exchange of scientific literature research findings and other information as well as exchange of experts/expertise to study the prospects of fishing.

The agreement seeks to promote processing and marketing of products from high seas fisheries for entrepreneurship development. PTI MJH MKJ

Disclaimer :- This story has not been edited by Outlook staff and is auto-generated from news agency feeds. Source: PTI

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Govt nod to India-Iceland pact in fisheries sector - Outlook India

Bishop Kukah: Our hypocrisy and duplicity have caught up with us – Vatican News

The death of a seminarian in Nigeria has laid bare some of the fault lines beneath the surface of Nigerian society. Bishop Matthew Hassan Kukah, of the Diocese of Sokoto, in Northern Nigeria, has led thousands of mourners at the burial of a seminarian, Michael Nnadi.

Paul Samasumo Vatican City

We have gathered around the remains of Michael in supplication but also as solemn witnesses to the penetrating darkness that hovers over our country, Bishop Kukah told mourners.

Bishop Kukah was speaking, in Kaduna, Tuesday at the funeral of 18-year-old Nigerian seminarian, Michael Nnadi who was kidnapped along with three other seminarians on the night of 8 January. Gunmen attacked the Good Shepherd Seminary in Kakau, Kaduna state. While three others were later released, Michael was separated from the others and murdered. A Kaduna-based doctors wife was also killed by the kidnapping gang.

The homily was a blistering and scorching indictment of President Muhammadu Buharis Government and Nigerias governing elite.

Our nation is like a ship stranded on the high seas, rudderless and with broken navigational aids. Today, our years of hypocrisy, duplicity, fabricated integrity, false piety, empty morality, fraud and Pharisaism have caught up with us. Nigeria is on the crossroads, and its future hangs precariously in a balance, Bishop Kukah said in a homily.

This President has displayed the greatest degree of insensitivity in managing our countrys rich diversity. He has subordinated the larger interests of the country to the hegemonic interests of his co-religionists and clansmen and women. The impression created now is that, to hold a key and strategic position in Nigeria today, it is more important to be a northern Muslim than a Nigerian, Bishop Kukah said.

The Bishop then continued, Nigeria needs to pause for a moment and think. No one more than the President of Nigeria, Major General Muhammadu Buhari who was voted for in 2015 on the grounds of his own promises to rout Boko Haram and place the country on an even keel. In an address at the prestigious Policy Think Tank, Chatham House, in London, just before the elections, Major General Buhari told his audience: I, as a retired General and a former Head of State have always known about our soldiers If am elected President; the world will have no reason to worry about Nigeria We will be tough on terrorism and tough on its root causes by initiating a comprehensive economic development and promoting infrastructural developmentwe will always act on time and not allow problems to irresponsibly fester. And I, Muhammadu Buhari, will always lead from the front, Bishop Kukah reminisced.

Bishop Kukah also asserted that neither Islam nor the north can identify any real benefits Despite running the most nepotistic and narcissistic government in known history, there are no answers to the millions of young children on the streets in northern Nigeria, and the north still has the worst indices of poverty, insecurity, stunting, squalor and destitution. His Eminence, the Sultan of Sokoto, and the Emir of Kano are the two most powerful traditional and moral leaders in Islam today. None of them is happy, and they have said so loud and clear, affirmed Bishop Kukah.

Bishop Kukah reminded the faithful: The persecution of Christians in northern Nigeria is as old as the modern Nigerian stateBy denying Christians lands for places of worship across most of the northern states, ignoring the systematic destruction of Churches all these years, denying Christians adequate recruitment, representation and promotions in the State civil services, denying their indigenous children scholarships, marrying Christian women or converting Christians while threatening Muslim women and prospective converts with death, they make building a harmonious community impossible. Nation-building cannot happen without adequate representation and a deliberate effort at creating for all members a sense, a feeling, of belonging, and freedom to make their contributions, he said.

Today, we are living with a Senate whose entire leadership is in the hands of Muslims. Christians have continued to support them. For how long shall we continue on this road with different ambitions? Christians must rise and defend their faith with all the moral weapons they have. We must become more robust in presenting the values of Christianity, especially our message of love and non-violence to a violent society, the prelate of Sokoto asserted.

Bishop Kukah especially called on Christians in Nigeria not to sustain nor give their support to selfish northern politicians.

We are being told that this situation has nothing to do with Religion. Really? It is what happens when politicians use religion to extend the frontiers of their ambition and power. Are we to believe that simply because Boko Haram kills Muslims too, they wear no religious garb? Are we to deny the evidence before us, of kidnappers separating Muslims from infidels or compelling Christians to convert or die? If your son steals from me, do you solve the problem by saying he also steals from you? wondered Bishop Kukah.

Yet the Bishops homily was also full of hope for Nigeria and for the mourning Christians.

There is hope, my dear friends. Are we angry? Yes, we are. Are we sad? Of course, we are. Are we tempted to vengeance? Indeed, we are. Do we feel betrayed? You bet. Do we know what to do? Definitely. Do we know when to do it? Why not? Do we know how? Absolutely. Are we in a war? Yes. But what would Christ have us do? The only way He has pointed out to us is the non-violent way. It is the road less travelled, but it is the only way, the Bishop consoled the mourners.

Bishop Kukah further wondered what message God had for the country when he chooses Nigerian teenagers such Leah Sharibu and Michael Nnadi to confront evil and became martyrs.

He concluded, We are honoured that our son has been summoned to receive the crown of martyrdom at the infancy of his journey to the priesthood. We are grateful that even before he could ascend the earthly altar, Jesus, the high priest, called Him to stand by His angels. He was a priest by desire, but he is concelebrating the fullness of the priesthood beside His Master.

Michael was buried at the cemetry of Good Shepherd Seminary in Kaduna.

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Bishop Kukah: Our hypocrisy and duplicity have caught up with us - Vatican News

A Desperate bid to Avert Rising Seas Disaster in Californias Bay Area – Government Technology

(TNS) When Jeff Moneda first started working for Foster City, where trails wind along the towns scenic lagoons and the nicest homes perch along its picturesque canals, he received an email from federal emergency officials that jolted him into action.

The first thing in my inbox was a letter from FEMA that said, You need to raise your levee or were going to place the entire city in a flood zone, said Moneda, the city manager. Talk about stress.

For a city of 34,000 that was built on filled-in marshland along San Francisco Bay, the future hinges on the strength of an eight-mile-long levee that for decades has held back the rising sea. But with every tide and storm, the water keeps trying to move back and reclaim the town. Flood maps, even in more moderate scenarios, show much of the city inundated if nothing is done.

The fate of Foster City and the rest of the Bay Area was front and center last week as state lawmakers grappled with the many threats California must confront as the ocean pushes farther inland. A special committee of state lawmakers gathered for the second time in two months after years without meeting to reignite a much-needed discussion on how to better prepare communities up and down the coast from devastating loss.

Homes are flooding and critical roads and infrastructure are already mere feet from toppling into the sea, they said, but cities up and down the coast have been paralyzed by the difficult choices ahead. More than $150 billion in property could be at risk of flooding by 2100 the economic damage far more destructive than from the states worst earthquakes and wildfires.

Failure to act will result in lost opportunities to be proactive and much higher costs, according to scientists, local officials and legislative analysts who spoke before the state Assemblys Select Committee on Sea Level Rise and the California Economy.

Assemblywoman Tasha Boerner Horvath, D-Encinitas, who revived the committee last year, acknowledged just how much is at stake and said the Legislature needs to act fast and figure out what to prioritize.

We are already 10 years late to this issue, she said, and there are options that are slipping away from us as we postpone a very difficult conversation.

These remarks come at a time when more officials across the state are waking up to the social, economic and environmental catastrophe of sea level rise. The Ocean Protection Council, an advisory body tasked with guiding the states coastal policies, is now pushing California to be prepared for at least 3.5 feet of sea level rise by 2050.

Legislative analysts, in an unprecedented report, recently made the case that any action or lack of action within the next 10 years could determine the fate of the California coast.

For those in the Bay Area where millions of people rely on major roads and infrastructure at risk of chronic flooding fighting against the sea has been a costly and overwhelming challenge.

With just 2 feet of flooding around the Bay Area, as many as 90,000 people could be left homeless, one official said. Keeping the island city of Alameda above water could cost almost $1 billion, another said, but would avert $8 billion in damage. Infrastructure engineers made the case for better sea walls to protect the San Francisco and Oakland airports both built on bay fill and barely supported by aging dikes.

In Foster City, property owners ended up agreeing by a more than 80% vote to tax themselves $90 million to raise the levee many feet higher. Officials hope to start construction as early as this summer.

The barrier, mostly earthen, currently curves along the bay for miles. On Saturday, the morning of the annual king tide a period when the sun, moon and Earth are aligned closest together and create a higher-than-high tide water levels rose as high as 9 feet, according to the nearest tide gauge.

Across the bay, groups of people gathered on piers and harbors, beaches and estuaries, to witness the water creeping up bridges and pushing into wetlands and low-lying roads. These extreme tides, coastal scientists say, will eventually become the new normal.

Compounding the problem in this region is groundwater flooding as the ocean moves farther inland what some researchers call the sea beneath us.

As the ocean rises, that pressure pushes freshwater up from beneath our feet, said Kristina Hill, whose research at the University of California, Berkeley focuses on this less-talked-about sea level rise issue. Basements and underground foundations will heave, brackish water could corrode sewer pipes, toxic contaminants buried in the soil could bubble up and spread.

We could spend hundreds of billions of dollars and still have flooding on the inland side of all those levees, Hill told the sea level rise committee, showing a map of areas where the water is already leaking out of the ground. Were very concerned about human health and the health of the bay.

Solutions, experts say, depend on more cities, transportation officials and property owners working together across regions. Too many are still jostling for money and approvals to defend whats theirs rather than seeing the much bigger picture.

Rising tides and former marshes do not heed to city boundaries or property lines, they said, and the action of one jurisdiction may affect another down the coast. There needs to be more coordination, officials agreed, to restore wetlands and rethink critical infrastructure that serves more than any one community.

San Mateo County, for example, recently formed a cross-jurisdictional sea level rise resiliency district that is funded even by its inland communities. Officials say this new flood control approach allows the region to plan for all its shoreline needs in a way that cannot be done on a city-by-city basis.

Still, some last week worried that these new regional efforts could hurt their communities at the cost of protecting those with more political sway and power. Will the city of Millbrae, one official asked, be paying to protect more influential cities while absorbing much of the environmental impact?

Mark Stechbart, a resident of Pacifica, called on state lawmakers to not give up on sea walls. In his town, where bluffs are crumbling and waves often overtop roads, a push by some officials to consider relocating inland has angered many property owners.

Pacifica, he said, should be afforded the same protections as SFO and Google headquarters, which we desperately need; otherwise, very serious amounts of property value are going to go in the water.

Warner Chabot, who heads the San Francisco Estuary Institute, said more pilot projects will help make the case for sharing resources and ideas across boundaries. He has spent years encouraging the Bay Areas many different agencies to think about the shoreline beyond parcel by parcel, town by town.

With more support from the state, he urged lawmakers, Californias coastal communities can be a national model of how urban regions, at the edge of the sea, can provide bold, equitable and inclusive solutions to climate change.

2020 Los Angeles Times

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A Desperate bid to Avert Rising Seas Disaster in Californias Bay Area - Government Technology

A Legless Black Man Comes Into a Windfall in This Biting Satire – The New York Times

Unpublished during McKays lifetime, Romance in Marseille is the second novel by the author to appear recently, following the 2017 publication of Amiable With Big Teeth, a book written in 1941 that remained completely unknown until the scholar Jean-Christophe Cloutier stumbled upon the typescript in an archive a decade ago. Together, the books signal a remarkable revival for a writer who, when he died in 1948, had seen all the work he published during his lifetime, including four poetry volumes, three novels, an autobiography and a major study of black life in Harlem, fall out of print.

McKay has long been celebrated as one of the most distinguished voices of the Harlem Renaissance his 1922 poetry collection Harlem Shadows is often cited as one of the books that inaugurated the movement but much of his legacy is still underappreciated. Part of the challenge is the sheer breadth of his activity, as a poet, political activist and social critic as well as a novelist.

Although he corresponded and collaborated with some Harlem intellectuals, McKay, who was born in Jamaica, spent most of the 1920s outside New York and moved in much broader circles: He met with George Bernard Shaw and worked for Sylvia Pankhurst in London; he saw Isadora Duncan dance in her studio in Nice; he haunted cafes in Tangier with Paul Bowles and Henri Cartier-Bresson. As W. E. B. Du Bois put it, more than any other black intellectual of the era, McKay invented himself as an international Negro.

From todays vantage point, McKay looks all the more like the harbinger of a global era. Amiable With Big Teeth, which is set in 1935-36 amid efforts by the Harlem intelligentsia to raise money in support of Ethiopia after it had been invaded by Mussolinis Italy, is an unsparing satire of the shenanigans of self-appointed backdoor diplomats and manipulators of public opinion a historical novel with newfound contemporary resonance. Romance in Marseille, like his sprawling 1929 classic Banjo, also set in the south of France, shows McKay presciently grappling with the destinies of those he calls the outcasts and outlaws of civilizations migrants in thriving port cities central to the flow of global commerce and with the violent upheavals and desperate striving that deposited them there.

If McKays two Marseille novels take place during the 1920s era of the high seas black stowaway, as Holcomb and Maxwell note in their introduction, the books more footloose stories of black vagabonds McKays preferred term from around the world washing up together on the shores of Europe forecast the confusion and anguish of what has, nearly a century later, erupted into a global migration crisis. McKays political critique remains biting: In their brutality, his Marseille books insist that, then as now, it is always the poor, the vagabonds, the bums of life who pay the heaviest price for banditry in high places.

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A Legless Black Man Comes Into a Windfall in This Biting Satire - The New York Times

Pirates of the Northern Seas and Scotland’s Oceanic Criminals – Ancient Origins

Pirates, maybe even more than mermaids and sea serpents, are the most fascinating and misunderstood entities of maritime history and while it is known today that mermaids were seals and giant serpents were the washed up carcasses of whales, the realities of piracy on the high seas is still enveloped in myths and legends.

An Attack on a Galleon: illustration of pirates approaching a ship by Howard Pyle (1905) ( Public Domain)

Although Johnny Depp and Pirates of the Caribbean might be the archetypal impression of those swashbuckling oceanic criminals for the younger generation, the older generation may recall with nostalgia Peter Pan orTreasure Island, that populated childhood imaginations of yester year. Stepping beyond these popular depictions of pirates that do not necessarily follow historical fact, one is bound to ask: who were these ocean-bound criminals?

French ship under attack by Barbary pirates, by Aert Anthoniszoon (ca. 1615) National Maritime Museum,England. ( Public Domain ).

17th-19th century books have greatly embellished and romanticized narratives of pirates and Daniel Dafoes A General History of the Pyrates (1724) is today often referred to as a historical reference, but it was in the most part fictional. Literary giant Robert Louis Stevenson, in his classic tale of buccaneers and buried gold also heavily influenced popular perceptions of pirates and Treasure Island included such elements as treasuremaps marked with an X, schooners, tropical Caribbean islands and one-legged seamen. But these fictional rouges with their Devonshire, west country accents, only soften-up the reality of real-world pirates who were often spree killing terrorists.

Historically, pirates preferred narrow channels and shipping lanes so that their prey could be chased along predictable routes, for example: the English Channel, aroundGibraltar and theStrait of Malacca. One must not confusepirates with privateering as these captains operated under state issued licenses and their capture of foreign merchant ships was more of a war-like activity with a semblance of rules and regulations agreed upon between nations before military interaction ensued.

Capture of the pirate, Blackbeard, by Jean Leon Gerome Ferris (1718)Romanticizing the fierce and bloody battle between Blackbeard the Pirate and Lieutenant Maynard in Ocracoke Bay. ( Public Domain )

According to the Online Etymology Dictionary the word pirate is from the Latin term purateivitiameaning sailor, corsair or sea robber from the Greekword ( peirats),literally representing one who attacks ships.

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Ashley Cowie is a Scottish historian, author and documentary filmmaker presenting original perspectives on historical problems, in accessible and exciting ways. His books, articles and television shows explore lost cultures and kingdoms, ancient crafts and artifacts, symbols and architecture, myths and legends telling thought-provoking stories which together offer insights into our shared social history . http://www.ashleycowie.com.

Top Image : Captain Kidd in New York Harbor by Jean Leon Gerome Ferris (1863 1930) ( Public Domain)

By Ashley Cowie

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Pirates of the Northern Seas and Scotland's Oceanic Criminals - Ancient Origins

Advisory Number 4 on the Tropical Cyclone UESI – Vanuatu – ReliefWeb

Iissued by the Vanuatu Meteorology and Geo-Hazards Department, Port Vila at 12:10am VUT Tuesday 11 February 2020.

At 11:00pm local time, the Tropical Cyclone UESI (Cat2) with the central pressure estimated at 976hPa was located at 17.6S 162.4E. The system is positioned at the center of square letter B, number 7 (B,7) of the Vanuatu Tropical Cyclone Tracking map. This is about 560 KM west southwest of Malekula. Winds close to the center of the system are estimated at 90KM/HR (50Knots). In the past 6 hours, tropical cyclone UESI was moving in a southwest direction at 10 KM/HR.

Damaging gale force winds of 75KM/HR with gusting up to 105KM/HR within 100 nautical miles from its center while destructive storm force winds of 90KM/HR gusting to 130KM/HR within 30 nautical miles from its center are expected tonight and tomorrow.

Forecast Positions Date and Time Position Intensity+06 hours (5am, 11 Feb) 18.1S, 162.3E 60 KTS (110 KM/HR)+12 hours (11am, 11 Feb) 18.6S, 162.3E 60 KTS (110 KM/HR)+18 hours (5pm, 11 Feb) 19.1S, 162.3E 70 KTS (130 KM/HR)+24 hours (11pm, 11 Feb) 19.6S, 162.3E 60 KTS (110 KM/HR)+36 hours (11am, 12 Feb) 20.6S, 162.3E 50 KTS (95 KM/HR)+48 hours (11pm, 12 Feb) 21.6S, 162.0E 50 KTS (95 KM/HR)+60 hours (11am, 13 Feb) 22.8S, 161.3E 40 KTS (75 KM/HR)+72 hours (11pm, 13 Feb) 24.0S, 160.3E 40 KTS (75 KM/HR)

Rainfalls will be heavy with flash flood over low lying areas and areas close to river banks, including coastal flooding expected about the islands of the northern and parts of the central provinces. The marine strong wind warning is current for all Vanuatu coastal waters, while High seas warning is current for the central waters.

Very rough to phenomenal seas and heavy to phenomenal swells expected to continue to affect the western parts of the northern and central waters tonight and tomorrow and extending to southern waters thereafter. People, including sea going vessels are strongly advised not to go out to sea until the system has moved out of the area.

The National Disaster Management Office (NDMO) advises that Blue Alert is now imposed for SHEFA and TAFEA province. For actions on these alerts, call NDMO on 22699 or 33366.

The Vanuatu Meteorology and Geo-Hazards Department is closely monitoring the system and will issue the next Advisory at 6:00am or ealier if the situation changes. People throughout Vanuatu are advised to continue to listen to Radio Vanuatu and all other Radio outlets to get an update information on this system.

This Advisory is also available on VMGD's website: wwww.vmgd.gov.vu and VMGD's facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/vmgd.gov.vu.

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Advisory Number 4 on the Tropical Cyclone UESI - Vanuatu - ReliefWeb