Author: arroyolarue@gmail.com

Storm watch for TD 13 in effect for Antigua and Barbuda, St. Maarten, and St. Kitts and Nevis

TD 13 expected to develop into Tropical Storm Laura

A tropical storm watch is in effect for Tropical Depression 13 (TD 13) on some Caribbean islands, according to the latest advisory of the National Hurricane Center (NHC) of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

These are the countries of Saba and St. Eustatius, St. Maarten, Antigua and Barbuda, St. Kitts and Nevis, and Anguilla.

A tropical storm watch is placed when ideal conditions of a tropical storm are possible within an area, generally within 48 hours.

The Virgin Islands, as well as Puerto Rico are also advised to monitor the track of TD 13 in the coming days.

TD 13 expected to develop into Tropical Storm Laura during the day Thursday. It is also expected to move along a fairly quick west-northwest track over the next several days, approaching the southeastern Bahamas during the weekend.

“Regardless of development, gusty wind conditions and heavy rainfall are expected over parts of the local area from late Friday,” the Meteorological Department of St. Maarten said in its latest forecast.

Tropical Depression 13 has formed over the tropical central Atlantic. Here are the 11 pm AST Key Messages. For more information, visit https://t.co/tW4KeGdBFb pic.twitter.com/ek7Nd1a2X4

— National Hurricane Center (@NHC_Atlantic) August 20, 2020

The NHC has also issued an advisory on Tropical Depression 14 this morning, which is over the central Caribbean and moving west.

In light of this, the government of Honduras has issued a tropical storm watch from the Honduras/Nicaragua border westward to Punta Castilla and for the Bay Ilslands of Honduras.

It will be a race to see which tropical depression may reach tropical storm strength first with 39 mph winds. The next names on the 2020 hurricane list are Laura, Marco and Nana.

Record-breaker storm for 2020?

In a report by Palm Beach Post, should the weather system turn into Tropical Storm Laura in the next few days, “it would likely break another record for the 2020 hurricane season.”

“The current record holder is major Hurricane Luis, which formed on Aug. 29, 1995. If Laura beats out Luis, it would be the ninth storm this season to break a record for earliest formation,” the report said.

In a separate report of Sun Sentinel, hurricane experts at Colorado State University said in their latest forecast that they expect 24 named storms, 12 hurricanes, and five major hurricanes for 2020. “That’s up from its July 8 forecast, in which they predicted 19 to 20 named storms,” it stated.

If accurate, the 2020 Atlantic hurricane season will be the second-busiest on record, trailing behind the 2005 season, which hold spawned 28 storms in total, including Hurricanes Katrina and Wilma.

The post Storm watch for TD 13 in effect for Antigua and Barbuda, St. Maarten, and St. Kitts and Nevis appeared first on Caribbean News Now!.

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Is there a me-too moment for racial economic equity and justice in the Caribbean?

Soon after George Floyd, an African American was killed during an encounter with members of the Minneapolis, Minnesota, police department; a global social consciousness emerged with immense demonstration some of which turned violent calling for a broad reversal of laws and practices that many deemed socially and economically devastated local communities of colour for decades.

This global reckoning on race relations and deep nationalized discriminatory business practices have seen sea changes despite previous resistance. Aunt Jemima, Uncle Ben’s Rice and Mrs Butterworth brand decided to change its logo from 130 years that many argued were a racial stereotype of blacks.  The domino effect has also seen other businesses once benefited from discriminatory practices dated back to the slave ships have accepted symbolic gestures to confront its past.

Though the Caribbean islands received its hints from the international media and struck courage, it was a step in the precise direction. However, it is more complex than good feeling to eradicate 400-years of the colonial chain, laws and mental debris for equity that has been hitting these disadvantaged communities like a destructive hurricane recklessly causing administrative, economic, and social barriers to upward mobility.

Based on historians; the Caribbean islands fell under the ruling of a European nation; British, Dutch, and French. Additionally, Denmark, Portugal, and Sweden formerly occupied territories in the Caribbean.

The Caribbean tragic colonial history that has apprised us today, cannot be eradicated with a rope, stones, or fire as seen elsewhere pulling down historic generals or former slave owners statues; or call for the resignation of local managers who typically operate businesses in the region once benefited from these ships with tweets, high anger, and low action.

Economic and social transformation and as it sits now, me too moment is an uphill to climb for the region. Sadly, some leaders cannot even decide if or where to hold a protest, whom, what structure to move to steer this vessel for critical change.

Me-too is not resettlement, re-distribution of land to the poor owned by elected officials, or the top one percent of the rich, removal of colonial images from a local church window, lower interest rates on predatory loans, reduction in violent crimes or political alliance. Simply put, any reconciliation is not going to be based on skin colour, it is how much pie one can keep for his social class.

Furthermore, if many of today’s buildings, contracts, ports, and manufacturing have long been sold to foreign investors, which will sit at the table me-too may not represent the downtrodden.

Though these islands remain a place to forget your overdue bills and any other issues merely temporarily, the reality is that; some share the identical point of origin, bear a resemblance to you, but until now have the bourgeoisie conscious colonial mentality. And conveniently will yield power, overlook poverty once able to slightly move their necks economically, and considered a success.

Essentially, several wealthy islanders who have obtained an academic opportunity can now pay their way into that upper crowd will feast, dance, have business dealings still struggles to address an institutionalized class and racial system.

Subsequently, where does the Caribbean start for social and economic justice for Afro-Caribbean and ethnic minorities? The lack of a protest does not mean that there is not one brewing internal each day.

The region’s shorelines forever roar with a dark cloud after Europeans decided that they wanted to establish their economy and Africa was the place they went and eagerly snatched people of colour, filled several ships without reservation. And since innocent people of colour did not have a personal reservation, stringent rules and penal laws were created that transcends into systematic institutional racism today.

Today’s global racial equity call is not like recent women’s me-too when they came forward and spoke up about their experience of improper and inappropriate widespread sexual advances, harassment, and rape by powerful men and action was quick.

Colonial occupation has established a legacy where only a new economic reconciliation path for all will establish the first step. Some argued perhaps eliminating several debts for may Caribbean islands, but a mental rehabilitation from slavery despite independence remains a drain.

The debt burden undoubtedly remains a national debate to develop a new economic road map, but can they all afford to protest earnestly for fundamental change; and how do you bite off the nervous hands that are merely sustaining you?

If the Caribbean me too solution is “possible reparation” or a unilateral economic package for better schools, education, adequate healthcare, infrastructure, and new manufacturing.

This approach is an excellent wave, but if local reports still highlighting ongoing corruption even mismanagement of COVID-19 funds, where not everyone can agree on if it is going to rain, generates more questions on how to manage any potential reparation. I scarcely believe will amount a self-governing gesture on paper like the independence doctrine.

And how does one support the casting of a new fishing net, when you have a judiciary system with holes on basic democracy and cultural tolerance for all? One must step back and rigorously evaluate that, “Out of Many One People.”

Recently the Jamaican Supreme Court ruled that a student could not attend classes if she didn’t cut her dreadlocks and the school did not infringe on the child’s constitutional rights. This ruling confirms that Rastafarianism, typically remains a social outcast based old colonial ideal, and this culture should only be practised behind closed doors.

Undoubtedly, the Caribbean continues to anxiously search for its soul, and if one’s hair was no longer acceptable in the local school, what next, Rasta only bathroom, bus, dining area, etc. The styling of one’s culture may explain the abundance of bleaching cream being bought in the region for acceptance by many.

The ruling describes a considerably complex broader story emerged recently of British insignia, a medal that is worn by the heads of state, the governor-general of Jamaica that depicted a Caucasian person on the neck of a black person. Though dehumanizing, how do you draw a balance if laws carry similar weight on its people?

History has gently told us, between 1788 and 1838 workhouses in Jamaica the most significant British West Indian colony was marginalized in conditions encountered by most of its population that impacted local industries, like finance and manufacturing.

The Caribbean may have passed its hostility tone since those cultural prohibitions of black settlement in some areas to interracial sex, part of the rampant racial discrimination known as the colour bar that has severely constrained its unique culture and economic growth, but it still reverberates today globally.

Today, dark-skinned experience faces steeper mobility locally subsequently carries forward even in more recent free migration elsewhere.

Slavery divided the region on different plantations that established a protectionist and competitive system subconsciously or not. Today, islanders are free from the sugar canes and coffee fields to travel between islands, but by all accounts, some continue to traditionally see other islands as you over there, and if some could erect a wall they would.

A notable example: since COVID-19 and its impact on sustainable tourism, it only exposes the Caribbean lack of collaboration as these island stances regarding which one has a firmer grip on the pandemic for the next terrorist dollar.  Quite frankly, in my humble option, it will come down to who tells the truth on the number infected, fatality and the actual cause, rather than who, essentially delivered it there.

Most importantly if me-too-fails, the ability to travel to other islands for accurate diagnosis and critical medical care rather than waiting eagerly for weeks on a piece of equipment for surgery or test results that could have saved lives.

And if the arid region conveniently overlooks this pivotal moment for upward mobility and though I maybe sometimes critical of violent crime and local leadership, I am genuinely terrified they all are naturally wearing the official insignia, and me-too represent just a thought.

About the author

R.D. Miller has been a member of the criminal justice field for over 15 years. He holds an MBA and a M.S. in criminal justice and leadership.

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Antigua Hotels and Resorts Where You Can Stay Right Now

 

By Bob Curley

Some of the top hotels and resorts in Antigua and Barbuda are back to welcoming international guests, while others are waiting until the traditionally busier fall season before opening their doors again.

Antigua was one of the first Caribbean destinations to reopen to tourism post-COVID, back in early June. At the time, however, only a handful of hotels were certified to welcome guests.

That list has now grown to 17 by mid-August, with many more hotel openings to come in October and November.

All of the hotels open at this time are located on the island of Antigua.

Resorts that have been certified in compliance with Antigua and Barbuda’s COVID-19 safety and sanitary protocols and currently open include:

antigua barbuda tourism open
The Admiral’s Inn in Antigua.

Admirals Inn – Gunpowder Suites: boutique hotel in historic Nelson’s Dockyard

Antigua Village: condos on Dickenson Bay

Buccaneer Beach Club: small Dickenson Bay resort with villas and cottages

The post Antigua Hotels and Resorts Where You Can Stay Right Now appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

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Delta to Continue Blocking Middle Seats Until January

 

Delta Air Lines will continue blocking middle seats through at least January 2021 as a health and safety precaution, the carrier said this week. 

Delta continues to be the leader among U.S. airlines in this particular safety protocol; others airlines such American Airlines have already terminated the practice. 

For parties of three or more, middle seats will appear as available for booking to allow families and companions to sit together, however. 

“Medical experts, including our own partners at Emory Healthcare, agree – more distance on board makes a difference,” said Bill Lentsch, Chief Customer Experience Officer at Delta. “We believe that taking care of our customers and employees and restoring confidence in the safety of air travel is more important right now than filling up every seat on a plane. We’ll continue taking a thoughtful, layered approach ensuring customers know to expect the highest standard of care as they prepare for their holiday travels.”

Delta continues to “ensure our flights are not filled to capacity,” the company said, including limiting first class to half capacity, blocking one aisle of seats on aircraft without middle seats and limiting the number of customers onboard all aircraft. 

— CJ

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Former DHS official: Trump called Puerto Rico ‘dirty,’ asked to trade it for Greenland

… if we could sell Puerto Rico. Could we swap Puerto Rico for Greenland,” Taylor … expressed “deep animus toward the Puerto Rican people behind the scenes.” 
“These … care of the Puerto Rican people. 
Trump frequently sparred with Puerto Rican politicians amid …

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