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Daily Archives: June 18, 2017
NYT’s Ross Douthat Lays a Soft-Spoken Smackdown Upon His Liberal Media Colleagues – NewsBusters (press release) (blog)
Posted: June 18, 2017 at 11:34 am
NewsBusters (press release) (blog) | NYT's Ross Douthat Lays a Soft-Spoken Smackdown Upon His Liberal Media Colleagues NewsBusters (press release) (blog) New York Times columnist Ross Douthat, one of now two slightly right-leaning voices on the paper's resolutely smugly liberal opinion page, penned Notes on a Politcal Shooting in the Sunday Review on the assassination attempt on House Republican ... |
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NYTimes downplays role of liberal politics in baseball shooter’s motive but emphasizes ‘anti-Muslim’ Portland stabber – TheBlaze.com
Posted: at 11:34 am
The New York Times was criticized over the weekend after running a story where the paper seemingly tried to rewrite the motives of James Hodgkinson, the lone gunman who is responsible for the ambush shooting on congressional Republicans last week.
While the motive behind the attack will likely never be known, most believe hyper-partisan politics are to blame. After all, Hodgkinson only attacked Republicans and House Majority Whip Steve Scalise (R-La.) continues to fight for his life in the hospital after being gravely injured from a bullet fired by Hodgkinson.
Indeed, when authorities confirmed last Wednesday that Hodgkinson was the shooter, the 66-year-olds social media postings began to be heavily scrutinized because they painted a clear picture: Hodgkinson was a stalwart supporter of socialist politics and had a deep hatred for President Donald Trump and Republicans.
Despite the wealth of evidence that supports the motive being partisan hatred, the Times on Saturday attempted to paint a much different picture: that Hodgkinson attacked the congressmen because he was an unstable man and it had nothing to do with politics.
The storys headline emphasizes that idea: Before the Gunfire in Virginia, a Volatile Home Life in Illinois.
The story said:
No one can truly know what motivates a man to drive halfway across the country, live out of his car as Mr. Hodgkinson apparently did and attempt a mass killing of members of Congress. In the days since the shooting, much has been made of Mr. Hodgkinsons strong political views he was an ardent supporter of Senator Bernie Sanderss bid for the 2016 presidential nomination, and he railed against President Trump and Republicans in Washington on his Facebook page and in letters to the editor of the local newspaper.
But another aspect of his personality may have also presaged the shooting: his troubled home life.
The story goes on to say that Hodgkinson likely suffered from some sort of mental illness and his political beliefs had little to do with his desire to target only congressional Republicans, even quoting a local Democratic staffer who categorically denied that Hodgkinson ever volunteered for them.
The paper then went on to describe in detail Hodgkinsons life as a foster parent and detailed the much darker moments of his life like one instance of domestic abuse and the decision of one foster child to commit suicide.
And while it is helpful for investigators to know Hodgkinsons background in order to develop a better understanding of who the shooter was, the Times story seemingly ignores what most others dont, including one of Hodgkinsons Illinois neighbors, who told the paper that while life moved on for other people following the 2016 election, the election never ended for Hodgkinson.
People voiced their criticisms of the paper on Twitter:
One person even tweeted to one of the storys authors that the Times is playing to its base with the story:
The author then said the story was just journalism, before being accused of trying to cover up the shooters actual motive:
But, of course, the Times doesnt always try to whitewash the ideological beliefs of people who commit atrocities.
Last month, when a racist man killed two people on a Portland commuter train, the Times emphasized the fact that the perpetrator was racist and had anti-Muslim views.
One story read: Three Men Stood Up to Anti-Muslim Attack. Two Paid With Their Lives.
Another was headlined: Oregon Man Accused of Deadly Anti-Muslim Tirade Continues Rant in Court.
And even another: Two Killed in Portland While Trying to Stop Anti-Muslim Rant, Police Say.
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Liberal Democrats leadership contest: Jo Swinson favourite to replace Tim Farron if she joins race – The Independent
Posted: at 11:34 am
In the very earliest days of the general election campaign, senior Lib Dem figures pushed hard enough over what would constitute a success would whisper the number 30.
That Tim Farrons sudden realisation that his lifelong political views and lifelong religious faith are perhaps not compatible should have occurred almost at the very moment that the number in question turned out to be 12,is an unfortunate coincidence.
But it means that the Lib Dem fightback really does have to start now, and it will begin with a party leadership contest that may or may not have concluded before the start of the Tory one.
Who are the contenders to replace Tim Farron as leader of the Lib Dems?
Within the party, it is widely considered to be either a one- or a three-horse race, depending on whether the one horse decides to run.
Jo Swinsonnewly returned to East Dunbartonshire after a two-year absence is the overwhelming favourite, but it is far from overwhelmingly clear whether she wants the job.
Sir Vince Cable has told The Independent he is not ruling anything out.Norman Lamb admitted on BBC Question Time that he is thinking about it.Insofar as maneouvres are possible among a 12-person parliamentary party up to a third of which are on maneouvreEd Davey is also said to be on maneouvres.
Party sources say that the nominations will formally open in a couple of weeks and will remain open for a couple of weeks.Liberal Democrat rules state that candidates require nominations from 10per cent of the parliamentary partywhich, given candidates can nominate themselves, has been rounded up from 1.2 to 2, rather than down to 1. They also require 200 nominations from party members, spread across 20constituencies. Theres no whittling down of the candidates. All go before the membership, who rank them in order to elect a winner under the Single Transferable Vote system.
If the contest makes it all the way to a real campaign, there is broad agreement within the party that the result is unpredictable.
"If Jo stands, she wins,"a senior party figure said. The appetite in the party is for a younger, fresher, female voice. Jo has charisma and energy. I think she would clean up, but Im not sure if she wants to.
She is young, 37, and she has a young family. Her majority in East Dunbartonshire is not unshakeable. If you are a Liberal Democrat, leading the party is the pinnacle of your career. She may decide she does not want to reach that pinnacle yet.
If she doesntthen stand, it becomes quite an interesting contest. It will be between Sir Vince, Ed and Norman. The party has changed phenomenally in the last two years. 70 per cent of the membership has joined since 2015. Its young, its metropolitan, its very Remainy. We have not yet taken the political temperature of this new membership. It might surprise us.
Sean Kemp, a former Lib Dem special adviserwho worked in Downing Street during the coalition, agrees that the contest is Jo Swinsons to win or lose, but the candidates will have to provide answers to difficult questions. It is not just the Lib Dem membership that has fundamentally changed since 2015;the whole political pasture has and the new Liberal Democrat leader will have to clearly articulate where the Lib Dems stand in a world in which the main parties continue their rush to the margins.
There is no great ideological gulf between any of the candidates, but they will all have to have a clear idea on how to position the party on some very big questions. How do we position ourselves on Brexit? Do we still go for this hardcore uber-Remainy approach?Mr Kemp said.
We will have to work out your attitude towards the Labour party. Should we try and work closely with Labour? Working closely with, say, Ed Milibands Labour is not the same as working closely with Corbyns Labour.
Do we need to make it plain we are anti-Tory and anti-Brexit? I just dont know. It is not going to be about policy issues. Its about, How you will keep the Lib Dems alive and relevant? How do you win seats? And what is our approach to the other two main parties when you cant see with any confidence any party winning a majority, and an election could well be imminent?.
Whoever runs, whoever wins, the central question of howthe Lib Dems start to get their votes and their seats back is not an easy one to answer.
Things have changed, but the big issue now is still the same as in 2015.Who is in the best position to help the party recover from the obliteration of 2015? What hurt us in this election just gone was not being able to get the Labour voters back who left us over [going into] coalition. It will not be easy to get them back, whoever is leader.
James Holt, who was Deputy Director of Communications for the Liberal Democrats when the party was in government, is another who really rates MsSwinson, who, he says, deserved a cabinet position back then. Despite Labours unexpected success at the election, he thinks their confusion over Brexit is an opportunity the next leader can capitalise on.
Where we failed primarily in the campaignwas with all the issues that Tim had with his faith. That supped a lot of oxygen from the campaign in the early stages, stopping us reaching out to pro-European young voters. They were in step with us with Europe, but out of step with what Tim was saying.
Labour is very muddled on Europe we have seen that clearly. They are happy to go along with Brexit plans. Because of the absence of Brexit from the General Election debate, what we need now is a good, vocal pro-European message. Its not going to lead us into Government, but a lot of the younger voters, mobilised by Corbyn,may start to realise that he doesnt have their interests at heart. That he is not going to deliver it. You need someone to create that story, and that energy.
Mr Holt clearly hopes MsSwinson will run, and moreover, he thinks she should.
You can never choose the time. These opportunities come up and youve got to take them. Just look at what has happened with the Labour leadership.
William Hague likes to say of his time as Conservative leader that "someone had to do the night shift".Evidently, this Lib Dem leadership contest will turn on whether MsSwinson decides there is another night shift to put in, or if she thinks she can switch on the lights.
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New poll shows the liberal Trump ‘obstruction’ narrative is having a shocking result on Americans – TheBlaze.com
Posted: at 11:34 am
Since President Donald Trump defeated Hillary Clinton in last years presidential election, the overwhelming Democratic narrative has been that Trump committed some wrongdoing in his victory.
First, Democrats alleged that Trump and members of his campaign colluded with Russian operatives during the election to undermine Clintons campaign and win the White House. No concrete evidence to suggest collusion has surfaced. The FBI has only publicly confirmed an intelligence investigation into Trumps campaign.
But in recent weeks, the main narrative has been that Trump committed obstruction of justice when he exercised his constitutional right to fire FBI Director James Comey. Critics argued Comeys dismissal amounted to obstruction because the FBI was in the midst of their investigation into Trumps campaign.
And it appears that narrative is resonating with Americans.
According to a new poll from the Associated Press and the University of Chicagos NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, 61 percent of Americans surveyed believe Trump has tried to impede or obstruct the FBIs investigation into his campaign, while just 37 percent said they believe Trump hasnt tried to impede or obstruct the investigation.
The poll also found there is a growing concern over the possibility that Trumps campaign colluded with Russian operatives during last years election. When asked, 48 percent said they are extremely or very concerned about the possibility, up from 44 percent in March, while just 30 percent said they arent very concerned or not concerned at all, down from 36 percent in March.
An overwhelming majority, 52 percent, also said they disapproved of Trumps decision to fire Comey, while 22 percent said they approved of the decision and 24 percent said they were indifferent.
In addition, the poll found that not many Americans believe special prosecutor Robert Mueller will carry out a fair and impartial investigation. Only 26 percent said they were extremely confident in Muellers ability, while 36 percent each said they were moderately confident or not confident at all.
The survey was conducted between June 8-11 and polled 1,068 respondents, with 46 percent being Democrats, 33 percent being Republican and 21 percent being independents. It has a margin of error of 4.1 percent.
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PTI govt believes in press freedom: CM – The News International
Posted: at 11:33 am
Hands over allotment letters of 10-marla plots to journalists
NOWSHERA: Chief Minister Pervez Khattak said on Saturday that the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI)-led Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government believed in the freedom of the press.
Chief Minister Pervez Khattak was speaking at a ceremony at the Nowshera Press Club, where he distributed among the journalists the allotment letters of 10-marla plots at the Media Colony in Nowshera.
Pervez Khattak said that media was the fourth pillar of the state and it played an important role in bridging the gap between the government and people.
The PTI government attaches great value to media for continuity of democracy and rule of law, he added.
He said his government supported the press clubs across the province.
The chief minister said it was the top priorities of the government to provide relief to the common man. We have taken several steps to make the province financially self-reliant, he maintained.
Pervez Khattak said that his government believed in carrying out uplift projects across the province.
He said the government was spending Rs15 billion on the construction of embankments in Peshawar, Charsadda and Nowshera districts.
He said that work on flood prevention projects in Malakand, Hazara and Abbottabad would be launched shortly.
We have launched various projects to protect the flood-prone areas from floods, he added.
He said the provincial government had recommended to the federal government to include in its Annual Development Programme (ADP) the construction of Peshawar-Attock-Khairabad bridge and reconstruction of Nowshera-Mardan Grand Trunk Road.
He said that PTI didnt compromise on the rights of the province and increased the net hydel profit from Rs6 billion to Rs18 billion. He said Rs18 billion loans had been paid back to the federal government borrowed by the previous governments.
He said the provincial government had earmarked Rs126 billion for its Annual Development Programme.
He said his government had presented a balanced budget of Rs603 billion for the fiscal 2017-18, adding it increased the education budget by 18 percent compared to the previous budget allocations for this sector and earmarked Rs27.91 billion for education.
He said that Rs49.27 billion were allocated for health, Rs4.35 billion for agriculture and Rs720 million were earmarked for sports, culture and tourism.
Chief Minister Pervez Khattak said that reasonable allocations had been made for environment, forest, information and communications, public housing schemes and allowances for employees of government departments.
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PTI govt believes in press freedom: CM - The News International
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Will there be layoffs? We answer this and other questions about Riverside County’s $5.5 billion budget – Press-Enterprise
Posted: at 11:33 am
Riverside County supervisors Monday, June 19, will go over the countys budget for the new fiscal year, which starts July 1.
Rather than read 847 pages full of numbers and accounting terms, you can get answers about the budget here.
Q: How big is it?
A: The fiscal 2017/18 budget calls for $5.5 billion in spending, down 2.2 percent from the current budget.
Its a lot, but keep in mind that Riverside County is geographically about the size of New Jersey. And it has more than 2 million people, making it one of the 10 most populated counties in America.
County government is one of the areas largest employers with about 20,000 workers. Its also counted on to provide police, firefighters and social services, run a hospital, prosecute crimes, run five jails, provide lawyers for indigent criminal defendants and a host of other duties, from code enforcement to managing airports and maintaining parks.
The five elected supervisors have direct control over only about $756 million, or roughly 14 percent, of the total budget. The rest is money primarily from Sacramento and Washington, D.C., designated for specific programs.
Q: Hows the county doing financially?
A: Its under pressure. Revenues are growing, but its not enough to keep up with a series of new, ongoing and inflexible costs.
Q: Like what?
A: In 2012, supervisors gave pay raises to unionized workers, who agreed to pay more toward their pensions and accept a lower tier of retirement benefits for new hires. That caused a ripple effect that boosted the pay of non-union employees.
Also, a lawsuit settlement requires the county to spend millions of dollars a year more on health
care for jail inmates. Staffing costs for the John J. Benoit Detention Center in Indio, which opens next year, could be $50 million annually.
The county dodged a bullet when Gov. Jerry Brown last month put more state dollars into In-Home Supportive Services, a program that pays for in-home care for indigent adults in need.
In January, state officials asked counties to shoulder a greater share of the programs costs. That led Riverside County to impose a 6.5 percent across-the-board budget cut and prompted talk of layoffs.
Q: About layoffs are there any in the new budget?
A: More than 30 county employees, mostly in code enforcement, received layoff notices in late May. No other layoffs are planned, said county spokesman Ray Smith.
The departments are using other cost-saving measures to achieve their budget targets, he said. In addition, it helps that the states IHSS decision had less of an effect than originally presented.
Q: If not layoffs, whats the county doing to save money?
A: The 6.5 percent cut stays in place, and officials want to keep a tight lid on future costs. Thats led to friction between the county and unions in ongoing collective bargaining talks.
Also, a private consulting firm, KPMG, is getting more than $20 million to transform county government. Besides finding ways to be more efficient, KPMG is tasked with changing the mindset of county leaders to embrace a performance-driven model that uses data to make decisions.
Q: Hows that going?
A: Among other findings, KPMG said $40 million can be saved by changing how the county buys goods and services, and replacing an old human resources computer system can save $30 million.
So far at least publicly the Board of Supervisors and District Attorney Mike Hestrin are on board with KPMGs plan. But Sheriff Stan Sniff is more skeptical.
Q: Why does the sheriffs opinion matter?
A: Unlike other department heads, Sniff and Hestrin are elected by voters. That means they cant be fired, and they can run their departments as they see fit, and they have the freedom to openly disagree with the Board of Supervisors, which holds the purse strings.
If Sniff and Hestrin say the budget hurts public safety, it puts the supervisors in a tough spot. They promised in their campaigns to protect the public, but theyve been warned that unchecked county spending is unsustainable and theres nothing left to cut from non-public safety areas.
Q: Whats Sniff saying about the budget?
A: In the past, hes asked for more than the county executive office the day-to-day administrator of county government wants to give him.
Sniff argues his costs go up because of raises the board gave to his deputies and staff. Sheriffs officials have said theyve lost a lot of people through attrition, causing a drop in deputies patrolling the countys unincorporated communities.
Reading the budget document, theres a $57 million gap between what the sheriff is asking for $712.3 million and what the executive office recommends $654.6 million.
Q: What happens this week?
A: On Monday, supervisors will hold a daylong series of hearings with department heads to get budget feedback. Sniff and Hestrin will be given the opportunity to speak.
The board is expected to approve the budget this week; theres a June 30 deadline. Later this year, supervisors will give final approval when theres a better idea of what moneys coming in.
The Riverside County Board of Supervisors have a special meeting to discuss the fiscal 2017-18 budget.
When: 8:30 a.m.,Monday, June 19.
Where: First-floor board hearing room, County Administrative Center, 4080 Lemon St. in Riverside.
The meeting is open to the public and there will be an opportunity for public comment, although it might not come until the afternoon.
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Caribbean chronicles – The Hindu
Posted: at 11:29 am
Caribbean chronicles The Hindu It's a short tour, five one-day internationals and one Twenty20, with stopovers in just three of the cricket-playing Caribbean's many magnificent islands, Trinidad, Antigua and Jamaica. The West Indies team is a yet-more-pale shadow of its old fiery ... |
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Cuba’s wave of tourism seen lifting all Caribbean boats – Reading Eagle
Posted: at 11:29 am
You might think other Caribbean tourism destinations would be ready to flip their sandals as Cuba's tourism numbers continue to climb.
International visitors to Cuba last year rose by 13.9 percent to a record of just over 4 million, second only to the Dominican Republic (5.96 million). Meanwhile, international tourist arrivals in the Caribbean region as a whole increased 4.2 percent in 2016, according to provisional data from the Caribbean Tourism Organization. Cuban tourism officials are expecting another record year in 2017.
But some Caribbean leaders say they view the Cuban tourism juggernaut not so much as competition, but as a way to raise the profile of the entire Caribbean tourism industry.
"Cuba opening up is a fantastic thing for the Caribbean," said St. Lucia Prime Minister Allen M. Chastanet. "It only strengthens the brand of the Caribbean. It's more important for all of us to be strong partners. The more Jamaica grows, the more potential clients there are for St. Lucia. It's the same with Cuba."
During the first four months of 2017, Cuba received 2 million international visitors, putting it on track to smash last year's record. But Jamaica also was breaking tourism records during the same period. The Gleaner newspaper reported Jamaica had a record winter season, pulling in $1 billion in tourism earnings. Overnight visitors and cruise passengers combined were up 13.6 percent compared with the 2016 winter season.
"Cuba is huge into Latin America, Europe and Canada and now even the United States of America," Chastanet said. "There are a lot of people who haven't come to the Caribbean, and now maybe coming to Cuba will give them the appetite to come to the rest of the Caribbean islands."
A new International Monetary Fund study on the potential impact on the rest of the Caribbean if tourism from the United States to Cuba eventually opens up concludes that one destination's gain isn't necessarily another's loss.
Currently, the United States allows U.S. travelers who fall into 12 categories, such as those making family visits to the island, on people-to-people tours or on religious or humanitarian missions, to visit Cuba. But U.S. regulations still don't allow American travelers to make conventional tourism trips where they just lounge on the beach.
If those travel restrictions are lifted, the IMF paper says, it could result in 3 million to 5.6 million U.S. arrivals in Cuba - with most of the boost coming from new tourists to the Caribbean. Last year, visits by Cuban Americans and other U.S. travelers to Cuba totaled 614,433, a 34 percent increase.
Another recent analysis by The Boston Consulting Group estimated that even with current U.S. restrictions on travel to Cuba, as many as 2 million American travelers could visit Cuba annually by 2025. Even without the recent influx of American travelers, Cuba would still rank as the No. 2 destination in the Caribbean.
While it's still unclear what the administration may do on Cuba travel policy, last month the Freedom to Travel to Cuba Act was reintroduced in the Senate with the support of 55 senators. It would eliminate all travel restrictions for Americans.
Former President Barack Obama lifted some travel restrictions with Cuba and allowed the first regularly scheduled commercial flights between the United States and Cuba and the first cruises in more than a half-century to go forward under his rapprochement policy.
But it's unclear what U.S. policy toward Cuba might be under President Donald Trump.
Trump, who has been critical of Cuba's human rights record and political system, has said Cuba didn't offer any concessions to the U.S. and that he wants a better deal for this country in its relationship with the island. The president has ordered a review of all of Obama's executive orders on Cuba, and Florida Republican Sen. Marco Rubio said he expects changes in U.S.-Cuba policy at its conclusion.
More than 40 U.S. travel companies and organizations, including the American Society of Travel Agents, the National Tour Association and the United States Tour Operators Association sent a letter to Trump recently urging him not to roll back travel to Cuba. "U.S. travelers to Cuba are the best ambassadors of American society," the letter writers said.
The recent surge in U.S. travel to Cuba, they said, has increased their revenue and allowed them to hire more American workers as well as benefited Cuba's private sector. "We encourage your administration to take note of the wide-ranging U.S. economic benefits and prioritize economic growth and job creation in the review of U.S. policy toward Cuba," the letter said.
U.S. hotel companies also have made it clear they are interested in Cuba as a destination, but their involvement is dependent on U.S. policy going forward. Marriott International, Hyatt, Choice Hotels and Wyndham Hotel Group were among "platinum sponsors" - the highest level of sponsorship - at the recent Latin American Hotel and Tourism Investment Conference in Havana.
And just before Obama's 2016 visit to Cuba, Starwood Hotels & Resorts, which has since merged with Marriott International, signed a management agreement to operate two Havana hotels, making it the first U.S. hospitality company in more than a century to crack the Cuban market.
The former Hotel Quinta Avenida hotel in Havana's Miramar section was rebranded a Four Points by Sheraton and has been open since last year. After undergoing renovations, the Hotel Inglaterra was scheduled to open as part of Starwood's Luxury Collection last July, but the transition has been delayed.
U.S. policy currently allows American hotel companies to sign management contracts with Cuban tourism entities but they must obtain licenses from the Treasury's U.S. Office of Foreign Assets Control.
If the United States does at some point allow tourist travel to Cuba, the Caribbean tourism industry's apprehensiveness is "likely unwarranted," the IMF concluded. "The history of tourism in the region has shown that it is possible for all destinations to grow despite large changes in market shares."
But the IMF did note that some destinations are more at risk than others if the United States were to allow unrestricted tourism travel to Cuba because so many of their current visitors come from the United States. The U.S. Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, Turks and Caicos, The Bahamas and Cayman Islands, for example, receive more than 70 percent of their tourists from the United States.
In some ways, the U.S. restriction on tourism to Cuba may have hurt the Miami market, the IMF said. In the interim, Cuba has developed bargain-priced beach resorts that attract large numbers of Canadians.
"One could argue that the U.S. travel restrictions to Cuba have in some ways punished the Miami tourism industry by making Cuba artificially cheap for Canadian tourists (who) would have otherwise vacationed in Miami," said the report. "Hence, a reversal in U.S. policy toward Cuba could potentially be a windfall to Miami." As more Americans visit Cuba, the IMF said, prices there would be expected to rise.
Over the past 20 years, with the exception of the Bahamas, tourist arrivals throughout the Caribbean have grown, despite rapid expansion in destinations such as Cancun, the Dominican Republic and Cuba, the IMF report said.
"I don't see Cuba as a threat, and I don't believe the region as a whole sees Cuba as a threat," said Grenada Prime Minister Keith Mitchell. "It's true Cuba has been growing phenomenally in the last year or so. But what has happened in Grenada is that we also have been growing."
Last year, Grenada - known as the Spice Island because of its exports of nutmeg, cinnamon and other spices - welcomed 144, 333 tourists, a 2.6 percent increase, and in January, tourist arrivals were up 2.7 percent over January 2016, according to the Caribbean Tourism Organization.
"Cuba being the giant that it's going to be now can help us if we integrate our efforts in the region much more than we have done at this point," Mitchell said. The Caribbean, he said, needs to work together to improve transportation links to the region and to join forces in marketing.
"I think it's more important than ever that we have a Caribbean brand that we're out promoting," Chastanet said. "The fact is that the Caribbean is only 1.5 percent of the global tourism market."
To confront increased competition from Cuba, the IMF also recommends that Caribbean nations diversify their marketing strategies to attract more visitors from emerging markets in Latin America and says that improving quality and reducing costs, as well as building partnerships, would be helpful.
For years, Caribbean countries have been talking about jointly marketing the region, but egos and rivalries have marred the effort and little has come of it.
"Fundamentally it's an old problem," Mitchell said. "We must stop thinking of our countries individually. We must think of the Caribbean as a whole."
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Cuba's wave of tourism seen lifting all Caribbean boats - Reading Eagle
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Money rules worry Caribbean – Nation News
Posted: at 11:29 am
Ian De Souza, CEO and managing director of Republic Bank Barbados (FILE)
SOME INDIVIDUALS and businesses spurned by banks have been forced to fly suitcases stuffed with United States dollars across the Caribbean.
It may sound like something out of the movies but a top Caribbean banker based in Barbados said it was part of the fallout from de-risking the controversial issue of mainly United States-based banks cutting off financial institutions in the region from access to their services because of fears that they could face billions of dollars in fines under anti-money laundering and financing of terrorism (AML/CTF) regulations.
The drastic action has resulted from commercial banks in Barbados and the region rejecting business because of laundering concerns.
AML/CTF regulations have also been attributed to the physical movement of United States cash between countries in the Caribbean and the use of alternative, technology-based payment systems for international and inter-personal transactions, said Ian De Souza, the CEO and managing director of Republic Bank Barbados and an executive member of the Caribbean Association of Banks, in confirming the cash movement across borders. (GE)
Please read the full story in today's Sunday Sun, or in the eNATION edition.
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City’s digital kiosks celebrate Caribbean heritage – Caribbean Life
Posted: at 11:29 am
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A digital way to honor the leaders.
In commemoration of June as Caribbean-American Heritage month, all of the citys digital WiFi kiosks LinkNYC, are displaying images of Caribbean-American icons all month. The project was created by Caribbeing, a Flatbush-based cultural center, in partnership with LinkNYC. The display intends to familiarize passersby with the influential people of West Indian background, and honor their contributions to American history, according to the projects creator.
We hope New Yorkers will learn more about the tremendous contributions of Caribbean Americans to New York City and beyond, National Caribbean American Heritage Month celebration, and about the work Caribbeing is doing to illuminate the Caribbean experience through culture + art + digital media technologies, said executive director of Caribbeing, Shelley Worrell.
With Links rapidly popping up around many parts of the city, it is the perfect chance to highlight the notable and historic icons, among other day-to-day information, she added.
The icons will appear on Links every minute or so, interspersed with other LinkNYC house content such as weather updates, and advertising content, said Worrell.
The kiosks are currently highlighting 10 Caribbean-Americans, from writers, musicians, activists, actors, and dancers. They include Marcus Garvey, Celia Cruz, Harry Belafonte, DJ Kool Herc, Arturo Schomburg, Junot Diaz, Notorious B.I.G., Edwidge Danticat, Geoffrey Holder, and Claude McKay, according to Worrell. And more figures may be added to the billboards before the campaign is over.
Worrell says she pushed for a campaign to acknowledge the history of Caribbean people connected to the citys history, after seeing other following the success of similar campaigns during black history month and womens history month. With June being the month spotlighting Caribbean Heritage, it is the perfect time to honor that on a growing digital platform such as Links, she said.
We are proud to be able to partner with LinkNYC to honor Caribbean American icons past and present, said Worrell. Despite the fact that the Caribbean is so close to the United States, few people are aware of the many American leaders, creators, and visionaries who happen to be of Caribbean descent.
Posted 12:00 am, June 18, 2017
2017 Community News Group
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City's digital kiosks celebrate Caribbean heritage - Caribbean Life
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