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:
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.
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UN News – Marking World Humanitarian Day, top UN officials are honouring humanitarian workers who are overcoming “huge challenges” to save and improve the lives of millions of women, men and children, hit hard by crises and the COVID-19 pandemic.
“These real-life heroes are doing extraordinary things in extraordinary times to help women, men and children whose lives are upended by crises,” said the UN chief.
‘Unsung heroes’ of the pandemic response
“They are responding to the global crisis of COVID-19, and with it the massive increase in humanitarian needs from the fallout of the pandemic,” Mr. Guterres continued, adding that the loss of jobs, education, food, water and safety is pushing millions more to the brink.
Since the outbreak of the global pandemic, communities, civil society and local organizations are having to take the responsibilities of the first responders as movement restrictions and lockdowns are imposed to slow the spread of coronavirus.
People who are often in need themselves – like refugees helping host communities or local health workers caring for the sick – are supporting others.
“They are the unsung heroes of the pandemic response – and they all too often risk their own lives to save the lives of others,” highlighted the Secretary-General.
“Today, join me in renewing our appreciation and support for the brave humanitarians, health workers and first responders who show solidarity and humanity in this time of unprecedented need,” he concluded.
Sacrifice on the front line
Marked annually on 19 August, the day commemorates humanitarians killed and injured in the course of their work, and honours all aid and health workers who, despite the odds, continue to provide life-saving support and protection to people most in need.
It was designated in memory of the 19 August 2003 bomb attack on the Canal Hotel in Baghdad, Iraq, killing 22 people, including the Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Iraq, Sergio Vieira de Mello. In 2009, the UN General Assembly formalized the day as World Humanitarian Day.
Photo Gallery: Humanitarian ‘heroes’ on front line of COVID pandemic
‘The first to respond and the last to leave’
Tijjani Muhammad-Bande, the President of the UN General Assembly, drew attention to the hurdles humanitarian workers face as they bring support to vulnerable populations.
“They are ‘the first to respond and the last to leave’ accepting the risks of being threatened, injured, kidnapped and killed,” he said in a separate message, noting also that limited resources are adding to the list of challenges.
“In 2020, despite the largest-ever funding shortfall, humanitarian workers have contended with COVID-19, as well as a massive spike in humanitarian needs in 63 countries,” added the Assembly President.
The recent tragedy in Lebanon is an example of the ever-increasing need for humanitarian assistance and support, especially to the most vulnerable. The horrific images from Beirut are a constant reminder that humanitarian assistance must remain at the core of our global response mechanisms, said Mr. Muhammad-Bande.
Protecting humanitarians ‘paramount’
Thanking humanitarian workers everywhere for their important and courageous work, Mark Lowcock, the UN Emergency Relief Coordinator, affirmed that the best way to pay tribute to them is by funding their work and ensuring their safety.
“You are saving lives every day, and as new challenges and crises are piling on to existing ones, your perseverance is an inspiration,” he told humanitarians.
“Your protection is paramount to making sure we can deliver to people most in need,” stressed Mr. Lowcock.
Deadly attacks against humanitarians
This comes against the backdrop of rising violence against aid and health workers around the globe. In recent weeks, relief workers lost their lives in attacks in Niger and Cameroon, and since the onset of the pandemic, scores of health workers have come under attack across the world, said the UN Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in a news release on Wednesday.
Major attacks against relief workers in 2019 surpassed all previous years on record. A total of 483 relief workers were attacked, 125 killed, 234 wounded and 124 kidnapped in 277 separate incidents, according to the Aid Worker Security Database. This was an 18 per cent increase in the number of victims compared to 2018.
Most attacks occurred in Syria, followed by South Sudan, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Afghanistan and the Central African Republic.
In addition, a surge in attacks against health workers was recorded in 2019, including strikes against medics in Syria and shootings of Ebola workers in the DRC. According to the UN World Health Organization (WHO), there were 1,009 attacks against health-care workers and facilities, which claimed 199 lives and left another 628 wounded.
UN News – “All indications” suggest that the extreme temperature reading of 54.4 degrees Celsius recorded in California’s Death Valley on Sunday, is legitimate, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said on Tuesday.
“The weather station at Furnace Creek in Death Valley, California, reported a temperature of 54.4C, which is 130F, on Sunday 16 August,” said Clare Nullis, WMO spokesperson. “If validated, it would be the highest temperature on Earth since 1931, and the third-hottest temperature ever recorded on the planet.”
WMO committee of experts will verify temperature reading of 54.4°C (130°F), recorded at Death Valley on 16 August amid an intense and extensive #heatwave. Details of the extreme heat in USA, Japan and Europe at https://t.co/hYuGXm3yfhpic.twitter.com/Rj2E1PgMNB
Speaking in Geneva, Ms. Nullis told journalists that WMO had tasked a panel of international experts to verify the reading by examining the observation, the equipment used, how it was calibrated and how it compared to data gathered at surrounding stations.
According to WMO’s Weather and Climate Extremes archive, the hottest temperature ever recorded was in Furnace Creek, Death Valley, California, reaching 56.7C (134.06F) on 10 July 1913. The next highest temperature was set in July 1931 in Kebili, Tunisia, reaching 55C (131F).
Other high temperature records include 54C (129.2F) in Mitribah, Kuwait, on 21 July 2016.
Preliminary findings indicate that the equipment at Furnace Creek meteorological station was in proper working condition at the time of Sunday’s observation, Ms. Nullis noted.
A ‘legitimate observation’
Although the full verification process will likely take many months, she said that the UN agency’s weather and climate extremes rapporteur, Randall Cerveny, had already said “all the indications so far are that this is a legitimate observation”.
The scorching conditions have coincided with a heatwave on the U.S. west coast. The US National Weather Service has issued numerous heat warnings indicating that the intense and extreme temperatures will continue this week.
“The National Weather Service in Las Vegas which covers the Death Valley area tweeted, ‘we are in the midst of a long-duration extreme heat event. Another run at 130F-plus temperatures in Death Valley remains possible,’” Ms. Nullis added.
The development follows repeated warnings from the UN weather agency about extreme high temperatures which are having an impact on sea ice melt, also causing extensive wildfires in places such as the Arctic.
Western and Central Europe witnessed another heatwave last week, Ms. Nullis explained, with a number of new weather station records being set.
Arctic alarm
On 17 August, Japan registered 41.1C (105.98F) at Hamamatsu, tying its national record.
Siberia, meanwhile, has experienced a prolonged heatwave, with a recorded temperature of 38C (100.4F) on 20 June in the Russian town of Verkhoyansk.
WMO is now examining this reading, which if verified, would be the highest temperature ever recorded in the Arctic Circle.
“July was the hottest July on record for the northern hemisphere and the Arctic sea ice was the lowest on record,” Ms. Nullis said. “The January to July period – the seven-month period – was the second-warmest such period on record.”