BERMUDA-WEATHER-Hurricane Imelda moving away from Bermuda

Hurricane Imelda is moving quickly away from Bermuda on Thursday and is expected to become extra tropical later during the day, the Miami-based National Hurricane Center (NHC) said Thursday.

It said that the storm, with maximum sustained winds of 85 miles per hour (mph) was about 170 miles east north east of the British Overseas Territory and that it is moving towards the the east-northeast near 30 mph.

The Meteorological Service of Bermuda has changed the Hurricane Warning for Bermuda to a Tropical Storm Warning, meaning that tropical storm conditions are expected during the next few hours.

Bermudian authorities are reporting that the worst of Hurricane Imelda has passed, but hurricane-force winds and gusts abound and residents are advised to stay indoors until the Emergency Measures Organisation (EMO) has given the green light.

The NHC said that Hurricane Imelda is expected to continue on a northeastward motion on Friday and Saturday and that ‘the core of Imelda will move farther away from Bermuda during the next several hours.

‘Maximum sustained winds are near 85 mph with higher gusts. Imelda is expected to become an extratropical low later today, with gradual weakening forecast for the next several days.’

It said that swells generated by Imelda are affecting the Bahamas, Bermuda, and much of the U.S. East Coast.

‘Swells from Imelda will spread toward the Greater Antilles and northern Leeward Islands on Friday and continue through the weekend. These swells are likely to cause ife-threatening surf and rip current conditions,’ the NHC warned.

GUYANA-ENERGY-Government wants to market its own crude oil

The Guyana government Thursday said that it will be moving towards selling its own crude oil and that it would actively support the local private sector in building the technical and human resource capacity needed to effectively participate in that business.

‘I will be working with the local, private sector and international partners to ensure that we develop our capability and capacity in crude oil trading. We must be able to trade our crude oil from Guyana with the infrastructure, with the human President Irfaan Ali told the Georgetown Chamber of Commerce and Industry (GCCI) breakfast forum on ‘Energy Insights’.

‘The real wealth of Guyana will not only flow from beneath the sea, but from creativity, from the creativity of our people on land. And this is why the business community must ask itself: ‘will we be mere suppliers to an oil industry? Or will we be creators of industries of our own?’,’ he told members of the business community gathered at the event.

‘We have to get those who have already done it for other countries to work with us in transferring the knowledge.maybe to enter a partnership for the next three, four, five years until we get the experience to do it on our own. These are the bold decisions that we must embrace. These are the bold ideas that will take us from where we are to where we want to be,’ Ali told the private sector grouping.

Ali said crude oil trading would create ‘enormous opportunities’ for Guyana, and so in order to get into the business in the shortest possible time, an experienced crude oil trader would be contracted to do so and share its expertise.

Through a competitive bidding system, Guyana hires a crude marketing firm for its 50 per cent share of the profit oil from the Stabroek Block. British firms BB Energy Trading Limited and JE Energy have been contracted by the Guyana Government to market crude oil from the Liza Unity, Prosperity, and Destiny FPSOs.

Both companies had previously marketed Guyana’s oil in 2023-2024 and President Ali said Ali, these services can be provided by the local private sector.

ExxonMobil and its partners are producing approximately 650,000 barrels of oil per day from the Stabroek Block offshore Guyana. With the recent successful startup of a fourth FPSO, the ONE GUYANA, the company anticipates growing production to more than 900,000 barrels of oil per day by the end of the year.

President Ali’s announcement followed a statement by ExxonMobil Guyana’s Production Manager, Huzefa Ali, who told the breakfast that the Floating Production Storage and Offloading (FPSO) vessel, One Guyana, which is pumping oil from Yellowtail, would reach name-plate capacity of 250,000 barrels per day in another month. That vessel began production in August.

The ExxonMobil official said that efforts were underway to bring the eight project, Longtail, on board and bearing a significant natural gas deposit, ExxonMobil said Longtail could potentially supply that hydrocarbon for a second power plant, an alumina plant, a fertiliser plant and a data center in Berbice.

‘I will highlight project number eight, which we expect to be Longtail is also well progressed in terms of regulatory reviews and discussions for further discussion,’ Ali said, adding that ExxonMobil was advancing plans to determine the actual amount of gas that is deposited in Longtail.

‘We are well on our way to appraise those resources and then also take that to the next step, which is consider what is the most valuable development concept that brings the highest value for the people of Guyana, for the Government of Guyana, and for the other stakeholders,’ he said.

Meanwhile, President Ali has underscored the importance of establishing a modern stock exchange as part of broader efforts to modernise the country’s financial sector.

‘The creation of a modern stock exchange and options for capital mobilisation. Many people are speaking about diaspora bonds and all of this. All of these options will be examined,’ he said, adding that the government is also exploring the establishment of a junior stock exchange, which is a type of stock market specifically designed for smaller or emerging companies to raise capital, often under less stringent regulatory requirements than those of a main or senior stock exchange.

Ali said that the private sector must play a crucial role in ensuring that wealth, opportunity and commerce flow into the economy and that the government will create a favourable environment by adopting effective policy frameworks, infrastructure, and financial sector modernisation.

‘Someone asked me recently if Guyanese businesses are ready for the oil economy. I told them, well, we are ready in spirit. But readiness is more than dreams. It is about skills, partnerships, and wealth creation. Otherwise, the opportunities will come and pass us by. We must prepare, not just dream,’ Ali said, adding that by 2030, Guyana should have a diversified economy, powered by modern infrastructure, technology, knowledge, and innovation, not just oil.

Oil is temporary. But sustainability is forever. You must use oil to build for the future, not deny the future to spend oil,’ he said

ST. VINCENT-POLITICS-Opposition party outlines priorities should it win next general election

The main opposition New Democratic Party (NDP) is promising to double public assistance, reduce the 16 per cent value added tax (VAT) on ‘everyday goods’ and residential electricity while also paying a bonus salary to public servants.

In addition, he NDP, is promising that within 60 days of being elected to office, it will reinstate public sector workers who were fired under the COVID-19 vaccine mandate.

General elections are constitutionally due in February next year, but there are indications that Prime Minister Dr. Ralph Gonsalves, whose Unity Labour Party (ULP) is seeking an historic sixth consecutive term in office, may call the polls in November.

NDP leader Dr. Godwin Friday, told a news conference that the party is launching a series of proposals ‘spelling out not only what we are planning to do, but when we aim to do it.

‘That is, within 60 days of a New Democratic Party government, we will deliver real progress for everyone in this country,’ he said, adding that the NDP is attaching timelines to its commitments because it believes in delivery and accountability.

‘You heard me talk about accountability before, in the context of this present government,’ Friday said, adding that an NDP government will ensure mechanisms are in place for the people to hold it accountable.

‘This present government has failed on that.This election, the upcoming general elections, we’re going to have many grand promises from the ULP. They’ve done it in the past, but what we have noted about them is that most of these promises were not fulfilled,’ Friday told reporters, saying ‘the NDP will tell it like it is, setting out what we’re going to do and when we will do it’.

Friday said the election will be about what will be delivered to the people and who delivers it and that the vote is also about who has a plan for the development of the economy and who can be trusted to deliver that plan.

‘As we ramp up to the election, there will be a lot of noise and fanfare, so I want to take a moment now to make my personal pledge and to state, or I should say, restate, before the noise gets too loud, the NDP’s commitment to the voters.’

Friday, who has been representing the Northern Grenadines since 2001 and who became opposition leader in 2017, said voters are aware he does not make ‘ idle promises nor do I seek to take advantage of people by misleading them. I tell it like it is’.

He said the NDP will place the economy at the centre of everything it does ‘because we understand that we must have robust economic growth to deliver more and better-paid jobs as we have promised, to tackle the high cost of living, to create opportunities for young people, to invest in reliable health care and to rebuild and expand the roads and infrastructure in the country.’

‘These are things that are real and practical,’ Friday said.

‘So we are pledging to immediately make people’s lives better within 60 days of being elected,’ he said noting that an NDP government will ‘slash prices by cutting VAT on everyday goods and on residential electricity, your VINLEC bill;

‘Two, we will provide salary bonuses to all public servants. This is to help to deal with the cost-of-living crisis. And, three, double Poor Relief from EC$250 to EC$500 (One EC dollar=US$0.37 cents). Who can make ends meet and EC$250?’ Friday said.

The NDP had promised since 2020 to reduce the VAT from 16 to 13 per cent if elected to office and Friday said that the fourth pledge is to reinstate jobs and benefits lost under the ULP government’s ‘draconian vaccine mandate’.

Hundreds of public sector workers lost their jobs in November 2021 when the government passed a law mandating that they either take a COVID-19 jab or be deemed to have abandoned their jobs.

Friday said that the NDP intends to act on those four things within 60 days, adding, ‘this is not the whole five-year term of an NDP government.

‘So these are practical measures, immediate measures, that will bring relief and a greater sense of prosperity to our people. We have to tackle the high cost of living. Too many families are being increasingly crushed and crippled under the yoke of ever-increasing prices.’

The Opposition Leader said he does his own shopping and has seen how prices have increased.

‘So I experience it on a daily basis, and the government has done nothing to address it,’ he said, adding ‘I’m talking about staples here; ordinary folk have to buy these things.

‘I ain’t talking about cream cheese and fancy items,’ Friday said, adding, ‘and as you know, the cost of utilities has also gone up.

‘This is crushing many families throughout St. Vincent and the Grenadines. And everywhere I go, it is the number one thing on people’s list of things they want to see government to help them with.’

He said the ULP government has failed completely to deal with the cost-of-living crisis.

‘We in the NDP have proposed ideas such as support payments in school and the cutting of VAT to help struggling families, but the government simply has not been listening, as they live in a bubble, they’re not experiencing what ordinary folk, ordinary people in this country are experiencing.’

He told reporters that an NDP government will establish a well-regulated citizenship by investment (CBI) programme, under which foreign investors are granted citizenship of the country in return for making a substantial investment in the socio-economic development of the island..

‘It will also generate tax-free and interest-free, loan-free revenue to the government to implement these programmes,’ Friday said, adding ‘importantly, as well, we will tackle waste and increase efficiency in government services and the delivery of government projects and return those savings to finance growth and development.’

BELIZE-CRIME-Opposition leader questions sincerity behind investigation into abduction of Belizean national

Opposition Leader, Tracy Taegar-Panton, is questioning the sincerity behind the government’s decision to have an independent investigation into the alleged kidnapping of a Belizean and his surrender to Guatemalan authorities in August.

‘If it is that Cabinet is not now discussing how they are going to put in the right regulatory framework for this to occur, we know this is all just hogwash,’ she told reporters after the John Briceno government said earlier this week it had received a report into the alleged kidnapping.

Tracy Taegar-Panton

In addition, the government said that Police Commissioner, Dr Richard Rosado, who had been sent on 45 days’ leave ‘in the first instance’ would return ‘to active duty effective immediately’.

A government statement said that the report into the abduction of Ryan Joseph Budna had been received from the lead investigator, Assistant Commissioner of Police Suzette Anderson.

It said that based on the high level of public interest in this case, the report made two recommendations, which were accepted by the Cabinet.

‘The recommendation moving forward is that an Independent Investigation be conducted in relation to this incident,’ and ‘that none of the police officers assigned to this Inquiry be allowed to make any statement to the media or within the public domain, in order to safeguard the integrity of the said Inquiry in the event that the matter is addressed in a court of law’.

But Taegar-Panton is questioning what else did the initial report by the police contain and why is the Cabinet acting like judge and jury behind closed doors.

‘The report also says, according to the prime minister that, or recommends that we should restrict, we’re going to put a gag order on officers from speaking to the independent media. If these two recommendations alone made it into this preliminary summary, this preliminary report, what else is being hidden?

‘As I said, there are a lot more questions than answers. As Belizeans, we deserve the entire report, not selective snippets filtered through Cabinet. It seems that Cabinet is acting as its own kangaroo court, reviewing evidence in secret, deciding who is implicate and who may not be implicated and worse, seeking to protect its own,’ the Opposition Leader said.

The opposition contends that Prime Minister Briceno and his cabinet have ‘clearly overstepped their authority.

‘Our laws provide clear mechanisms for oversight. Any serious criminal matter, and make no mistake, this is a criminal investigation involving security forces, must go to the office of the Director of Public Prosecutions.

‘The question is, why has this not been done? Why is the case file, the preliminary report, the surveillance videos, have not been handed over, and why is it that the cabinet insists on violating the very fundamental principle of our democracy that deals with the separation of powers, between the executive, the legislature and the judiciary?

‘And then, there’s this issue of selective disclosure. Unacceptable. The government has admitted that the inquiry report exists. According to PM Briceno, this preliminary report was discussed in his cabinet briefing yesterday. The report, as the prime minister has indicated, calls for a quote-unquote independent investigation. Now let me say, there’s no such thing as an independent investigation in this country and there is no such legislative framework to facilitate this notion of an independent investigation,’ the Opposition Leader added.

The government statement said that Cabinet had also agreed to refer the recommendations to the Attorney General for legal guidance on how best to give full effect to this recommendation.

Last month, Prime Minister John Briceño said he had instructed the country’s police commissioner to proceed on 45 days’ leave ‘in the first instance’ after he had earlier asked his Home Affairs Minister, Kareem Musa, to provide an update over the controversial ‘abduction’ of Budna.

On August 24, the Belize Police Department said it had officially launched an investigation into an incident involving Budna, which occurred on August 22.

‘The Policia National Civil (PNC) of Guatemala has confirmed that Mr Ryan Joseph Budna is in their custody pursuant to an arrest warrant; however, they have not disclosed the details surrounding his apprehension,’ the police said, adding that its own investigation was initiated based on an official report filed by a witness to the event.

‘The witness reported observing a confrontation involving several individuals, one of whom matched the description of Mr Budna, who was subsequently placed into a dark-coloured SUV bearing a Belize City license plate,’ the police added.

’More children are being subjected to trafficking, exploitation and forced recruitment by the gangs’

The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Volker Trk, Thursday warned that the human rights situation in Haiti has reached a boiling point and that violence and human rights violations and abuses have escalated and intensified since his last visit to the French-speaking Caribbean Community (CARICOM) country.

In an address to the Human Rights Council on the situation in Haiti, Trk, said he welcomed the decision of the United Nations Security Council to strengthen the Kenya-led Multinational Security Support (MSS) mission by transitioning to the Gang Suppression Force (GSF) saying ‘this is a strong signal of international support for the Haitian people.

‘International commitment and backing for this are urgent. Without them, the worst may be yet to come for Haiti and the broader region. More than 16,000 people have been killed and some 7,000 people injured in armed violence since 1 January 2022, when we began our monitoring on gang related violence,’ Trk told the Council.

GUYANA-POLITICS-PNCR still has confidence in Norton

The opposition People’s National Congress Reform (PNCR) has reaffirmed its ‘complete confidence’ in its leader, Aubrey Norton, despite the party’s devastating performance in the September 1 general and regional elections.

The PNCR, which headed the coalition, A Partnership for National Unity (APNU) received 77,000 votes and 12 seats in the National Assembly, losing its status as the main opposition in the legislative chambers to the newly formed We Invest In Nationhood (WIN) political party that won 16 seats.

Aubrey Norton

The elections were won by the ruing People’s Progressive Party/Civic (PPP/C) that won a second consecutive victory at the polls and now controls 36 of the 65 seats in the Parliament.

In a statement, the PNCR said that its Central Executive Committee (CEC) met on Wednesday for ‘its first full meeting’ since the elections ‘to review, among other matters, the Party’s strategic direction and immediate courses of action.

‘During the meeting, the CEC addressed a series of recent developments, including, but not limited to, the resignation of certain CEC members, and therefore confirmed the elevation of two new members to the CEC.’

The statement said that the ‘CEC reaffirmed its complete confidence in the leadership of Aubrey C. Norton and supports his continued role as the Leader of the PNCR during the rebuilding process’.

The statement said that the CEC emphasised ‘that its Leader can only be removed at a duly convened Party Congress, in accordance with the Party’s constitution.

‘In this connection, the CEC rejects any notion that there is trouble within the PNCR’s camp and assures the Party’s membership that public grievances by a few persons will not defeat the Party’s reactivation of political will and resilience.

‘The PNCR remains committed to strengthening its organisational structure, engaging in community outreach to strengthen its membership, in pursuit of its fearless aspiration for the growth of the Guyanese people,’ the statement added.

TRINIDAD-ENERGY-PM prepared to lead talks in Venezuela on Dragon gas deal

Prime Minister Kamla Persad Bissessar says she remains confident that an agreement could be reached with regards to the Dragon gas deal involving Venezuela and that she was prepared to lead the local delegation to Caracas for the discussions.

‘The project benefits Venezuela, they benefit the United states and they benefit Trinidad and Tobago,’ Prime Minister Persad Bissessar told reporters on her return here from the United States where she addressed the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) and held talks with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

‘I am confident we will be able to work it out.it may take a few more days.but I am confident that together all partners in this.Venezuela, Trinidad and Tobago, the United States will all benefit.So we look forward,’ she told reporters.

A statement issued following the talks with Rubio, on Tuesday said that Washington had ‘outlined US support for the government’s Dragon gas proposal and steps to ensure it will not provide significant benefit to the Maduro regime’

But former prime minister Stuart Young Wednesday described the new development as an ‘irony’ recalling the announcement by Prime Minister Persad Bissessar, soon after being sworn into office that the Dragon gas deal was dead.

He said ‘she announced to the world at large that Dragon was dead with glee and that they would pursue gas in Grenada, Guyana, Suriname and .we find ourselves right back here today’.

Young said it is obvious that the government will mislead the public on the project going forward , saying the Dragon gas field is completely within the maritime borders of Venezuela.

‘The Dragon gas field is completely owned by the people of Venezuela and it is the PNM (People’s National Movement) government that negotiated through very difficult and trying times and managed in December 2023 .to obtain a 30 years exploration, production and export of gas from the Dragon field to Trinidad and Tobago waters’.

In April, the United States government revoked the OFAC license granted to Trinidad and Tobago to allow Shell, the National Gas Company (NGC), and contractors to explore, produce, and export natural gas from the Venezuelan Dragon Gas Field.

The license was valid until October 31, 2025, and enabled Trinidad and Tobago to pay for gas in various currencies and through humanitarian measures. On December 21, 2023, Trinidad and Tobago also secured a 30-year exploration and production license from the government of Venezuela for the Dragon gas field.

Washington had also revoked the Cocuina-Manakin license granted to Port of Spain on May 31, 2024.

Port of Spain had been planning to request an extension from Washington for a license granted to Shell and the NGC to develop the Dragon gas project in Venezuela.

The license, issued in early 2023, allows the companies to plan the project. The project aims to supply gas to Trinidad by 2027. The Dragon Field is located in Venezuelan waters near the maritime border with Trinidad.

Young said following the revocation of the licence, Rubio held talks with him and in a statement made it clear ‘he will work with us on our energy security and our energy deals and in the world of diplomacy and diplomatic language that is what we were talking about’.

Young said that the present government has been making pre-mature statements ‘that they have obtained something is completely false’.

In recent weeks, Trinidad and Tobago and Venezuela had been engaged in a war of words after Port of Spain voiced its support for Washington’s war on drugs that saw it sending military warships into the Caribbean Sea with the intent of preventing drug dealers from illegally carrying out their trade.

Persad Bissessar praised the US military strike on an alleged drug-carrying vessel in the southern Caribbean, saying she had ‘no sympathy for traffickers’ and that the US military should ‘kill them all violently

Venezuela has since responded to what it termed the threat posed by the United States and has itself marshalled its troops along its borders.

Persad Bissessar told reporters that she is prepared to lead the negotiations in Venezuela indicating also that her administration had been working to breathe life into the Dragon gas project after it won the April 28 general election.

She said that Foreign and CARICOM Affairs Minister, Sean Sobers, and Energy Minister Dr Roodal Moonilal could lead alsolead the delegation to Caracas and that she was also available.

‘Of course, you have me,’ she reminded reporters adding that Moonilal and Sobers had been in contact with their counterparts in the Venezuelan government with respect to Dragon gas project.

She remained confidence that Venezuela would negotiate with Trinidad and Tobago despite Port of Spain’s support for the US military deployment in the southern Caribbean Sea, outside of Venezuelan territorial waters.

‘We have always maintained solidarity with the people of Venezuela,’ she said, adding that there had been no discussions about regime change in Caracas.

‘Our concern has always been .to deal with the criminals, narco traffickers .human traffickers, gun runners.that is my concern and that is what we want.

‘We cant do things the same way every day.we can’t continue to look backwards and not go forward.we have done that for years and Trinidad has become number six in the world.most murderous country.

‘I think this partnership with the US is not about regime change for us here in Trinidad and Tobago..it is about securing the safety and security,’ she added.

UNITED STATES- POLITICS – Caribbean-American legislators blame Trump, Republicans for US federal government shutdown

American Democratic leaders on Wednesday blamed President Donald Trump and Republicans for the United States federal government shutdown.

‘From the moment Donald Trump took office, he and his administration have been on a relentless crusade to make this nation less affordable, less equitable, and less like the America we love with all our hearts,’ Congresswoman Yvette D. Clarke, the daughter of Jamaican immigrants, told the Caribbean Media Corporation (CMC). ‘This ongoing government shutdown is simply the culmination of those efforts so far.

‘The American people are not fools,’ added the representative for the 9th Congressional District in Brooklyn, New York. ‘They see that Republicans control the House, the Senate, and the White House, and they know the responsibility to fund the government is on the majority’s shoulders. If Republicans cannot keep the government open without Democratic votes, they should have a meaningful dialogue with our leaders rather than insult them with crude, racist caricatures for applause on social media.

‘The Democrats started this fight united against Republicans’ cruelty, and we will remain united until that cruelty is defeated,’ continued Clarke, who also chairs the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC). ‘We will not accept any outcome that allows countless Americans to lose their healthcare, and we will not accept any outcome where working people pay more so billionaires can pay less.

‘We are facing a healthcare crisis manufactured by the Republican Party – marked by the largest proposed cuts to Medicaid and Medicare in our nation’s history,’ she said. ‘Once again, it is Black communities who stand to suffer the most.’

Clarke said the CBC will not support any spending bill that strips healthcare from millions, slashes federal jobs, and drives up the cost of living for working families.

‘And to our Republican colleagues, let me be clear: Enough is enough,’ she said. ‘Work with us on a bipartisan solution that protects the people – not one that causes maximum harm to the very communities that have long sustained this country.

‘Today, our country is facing a crisis entirely of the Republican Party’s making and, unfortunately, Black communities will be forced to bear the brunt of their political games,’ the congresswoman added. ‘Make no mistake: President Trump and the Republican majority in Congress own this shutdown. Instead of coming to the negotiating table to find a bipartisan solution to prevent Americans from losing life-saving healthcare, they left town.

‘Instead of negotiating in good faith with Democratic leadership, President Trump cowardly posted racist deepfakes on the Internet. This behavior shows the American people exactly who the Republicans are and where their priorities lie,’ she continued. ‘The GOP spending proposal includes the most aggressive attack on healthcare in modern history, slashing Medicaid and Medicare at unprecedented levels. These cuts are not abstract – they are life-or-death decisions for millions of Americans, especially the 1 in 5 Medicaid enrollees who are Black.’

Across America, Clarke said hospitals, nursing homes, and clinics that serve Black and minority communities are already closing their doors.

‘The Republicans’ refusal to extend ACA premium tax credits is driving up costs and pushing coverage out of reach for many in our communities,’ she said. ‘And if that weren’t bad enough, they are gutting medical research on diseases that disproportionately impact Black Americans, like heart disease and diabetes.

‘The Congressional Black Caucus made clear that we will not support a partisan, extremist spending bill that slashes healthcare, guts federal jobs, and raises costs for hardworking Americans,’ she added. ‘We are calling on our Republican colleagues to return to Washington and negotiate in good faith on a bipartisan path forward to protect healthcare and reopen the government.’

Congressman Adriano Espaillat, the first Dominican Republic-American to serve in the US House of Representatives, representing New York’s 13th Congressional District, condemned Trump’s efforts to freeze funding for New York City transit and infrastructure, including vital support for the Gateway Project and Second Avenue Subway expansion to East Harlem and New York’s 13th congressional district amid the federal government shutdown.

‘The White House’s decision to threaten the Gateway Project and Second Avenue Subway, our nation’s most critical infrastructure projects, is another exhibit of the reckless partisanship and bad governance that triggered this Republican government shutdown,’ said Espaillat, whose district comprises Harlem, East Harlem, West Harlem, Hamilton Heights, Washington Heights, Inwood, Marble Hill and the north-west Bronx.

‘Shame on Russell Vought (the White House budget director) and the Trump administration for harming our national security and punishing New Yorkers with this DC political gamesmanship and negatively impacting the tens of thousands of East Harlem residents who have suffered without transportation access for decades,’ Espaillat added.

New York State Assemblywoman Rodneyse Bichotte Hermelyn, the daughter of Haitian immigrants, noted that, for the first time in six years, the federal government has entered a shutdown, ‘due to disagreement in President Trump proposal to cut back on severe funding.

‘While these decisions are made in Washington, they have real consequences for families and communities here in New York,’ said Bichotte Hermelyn, chair of the Brooklyn Democratic Party, who represents the 42nd Assembly District in Brooklyn.

She said the impact of the shutdown may include federal employees and contractors working without pay until funding is restored; SNAP and WIC benefits could be disrupted, placing added strain on families who depend on these programs for food assistance; housing and rental assistance programmes funded through HUD may see delays in processing, impacting families who rely on this support.

She said small businesses applying for federal loans or grants may face delays, limiting access to capital; travel and safety services such as TSA screenings and air traffic control will continue but may be strained due to staffing shortages; community organizations that depend on federal funding will face uncertainty in sustaining their programs; and Veterans Affairs will cease providing transition programme assistance and career counseling.

Bichotte Hermelyn said the shutdown may also defund police, affect healthcare by delaying Medicare claims, and cause closure of national parks and public facing federal offices.

‘President Trump and Washington Republicans are once again putting politics over people with this reckless shutdown,’ she told CMC. ‘Here in Brooklyn, where so many families are already struggling, and now millions shall stand to lose food assistance, health care, and housing support.

‘These cuts would be devastating to women, children, immigrants, New Yorkers who rely on SNAP and working families,’ she added.

US House of Representatives Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries, who represents New York’s 8th Congressional District, encompassing parts of Brooklyn and Queens, told a press conference in Washington on Wednesday that, at midnight on Tuesday, ‘Donald Trump and Republicans shut the federal government down because they don’t want to provide healthcare to working-class Americans.’

He said he and US Senate Democratic Leader Charles ‘Chuck’ Schumer met with President Trump and legislative leaders on Monday.

‘We had a conversation that was designed to avoid a painful government shutdown and address the Republican healthcare crisis,’ Jeffries said. ‘Subsequent to that meeting, we heard nothing from any of the legislative leaders on the Republican side, and the President has been engaging in irresponsible and unserious behavior, demonstrating that, all along, Republicans wanted to shut the government down.

‘That’s no surprise, because, for decades, Republicans have consistently shut the government down as part of their efforts to try to extract and jam their extreme right-wing agenda down the throats of the American people,’ he added.

‘Democrats have repeatedly made clear we are ready to sit down with anyone, at any time and at any place in order now to reopen the government, to enact a spending agreement that meets the needs of the American people and to address the devastating Republican healthcare crisis that has caused extraordinary harm on people all across the country, in rural America, working-class America, urban America, small town America, the heartland of America and Black and brown communities throughout America,’ he continued.

‘The Republican healthcare crisis is devastating, the likes of which no one has ever seen – largest cut to Medicaid in American history, a possible US$536 billion cut to Medicare because of the One Big Ugly Bill if Congress doesn’t act by the end of the year,’ Jeffries said.

He warned that ‘tens of millions of Americans are about to experience dramatically increased premiums, co-pays and deductibles because of the Republican unwillingness to extend the Affordable Care Act tax credits.

‘Hospitals, nursing homes and community-based health clinics are closing all across the country, including in rural America, because of what Republicans have done and the healthcare crisis they have triggered through their cruel actions throughout this year,’ he added. ‘Republicans have even canceled medical research in the United States of America, even as it relates to children who are battling cancer.

‘The Republican healthcare crisis is immoral in nature, and Democrats are fighting hard to reverse it,’ Jeffries continued. ‘Cancel the cuts, lower the cost, save healthcare on behalf of the American people.’

CMCFeature-CARIBBEAN-POLITICS-No empty chairs: The case for attending the 2025 Summit of the Americas

The Dominican Republic (DR) is hosting the 2025 Summit of the Americas – a gathering of the Heads of State and Government of 32 countries of the Western Hemisphere.

On September 30, the Government of the DR, publicly stated that Cuba, Nicaragua, and Venezuela will not be invited to the 2025 Summit of the Americas. The Government was careful to explain that its choice is necessary to ‘ensure the widest possible political dialogue’ and to ‘guarantee the success of the Summit.’ It also makes clear that this decision ‘does not interfere with bilateral relations’ with any of the three countries.

This decision is likely to provoke a response similar to that seen at the 2022 Summit in Los Angeles, when the U.S. administration of Joe Biden did not invite the same three governments.

Calls for Heads of Government to stay away followed, and a few did so in protest at the non-invitation of Cuba’s President Miguel Díaz-Canel Bermúdez, Nicaragua’s President Daniel Ortega Saavedra, and Venezuela’s President Nicolás Maduro Moros.

Leaders should think hard before staying away from the 2025 Summit. Global and regional conditions have shifted: wars in the Middle East and Europe cast economic and security shadows across the Americas; within the hemisphere, ideological rifts are reopening. This is precisely the moment for leaders to meet- to manage differences, protect interests, and act in the interest of all the peoples of the Americas.

Attendance is leverage, not endorsement. Leaders who believe that Cuba, Nicaragua, and Venezuela should be invited should say so at the Summit, in direct terms. Refusing to attend neither alters the guest list nor delivers gains for the peoples of the Americas; it only removes strong national voices from the room where decisions and deals are made.

The agenda in Punta Cana in the DR is built around four urgent security pillars: citizen security, energy security, water security, and food security. Across reputable global assessments, Latin America and the Caribbean ranks poorly on all four: the region bears the world’s highest homicide burden; most countries are not water-secure; energy-transition progress and grid reliability lag behind other regions; and the cost of a healthy diet is the highest in the world, alongside elevated food-insecurity rates. They determine whether freedom of speech is preserved; whether hospitals, schools and hotels have electricity; whether water pipes run and crops survive; whether households have access to food at prices they can afford.

The DR government put out the suggested theme for the Summit with these four pillars since February and the first draft of a possible Declaration from the Summit was issued in June. Since September 11, government representatives of the 32 countries have been negotiating the outcome document.

A major initiative at this Summit is the CEO Convocation co-hosted with the Inter-American Development Bank. That platform is designed for public authorities and private capital to assemble the financing and execution capacity that the four pillars require. Public-private partnerships, built transparently and on fair terms, can shorten delivery timelines and spread costs sensibly. The CEO meeting is where those partnerships can be made real.

Another imperative is greater trade and economic integration across Latin America and the Caribbean. Integration scales markets, deepens and de-risks supply chains, and accelerates the spread of knowledge and expertise. Practical steps such as, customs facilitation, reliable sea- and air-links, and competitively priced access to infrastructure inputs, are all matters leaders should use the Summit to agree and advance.

Apart from these general considerations, Caribbean leaders should be at the Summit to focus on particular Caribbean concerns. The recent UN Security Council decision on Haiti must be advanced with practical timelines, resources, and roles. Understanding and progress are also needed on differences over climate change and sustainable development, where positions diverge but impacts converge. The negotiations in the Summit Implementation Review Group (SIRG), made up of all the independent states of the Americas except Cuba, Nicaragua, and Venezuela, began on September 11 and have yet to resolve differences on these points at the technical level. It may take direct consultation by leaders to agree on actions that can be taken.

The last Summit, despite political controversy, still produced outcomes of value, including climate- and energy-cooperation channels that mobilized technical support and investment for Caribbean states. The lesson is straightforward: even when politics creates dissonance, useful progress is possible when leaders are present, prepared, and focused.

There is a wider principle that should be stated; movement toward greater democracy and respect for human, civil, and political rights is necessary for broad-based development and for international financial support.

In Cuba, Nicaragua, and Venezuela, tangible steps in that direction would encourage broader backing across the hemisphere. In Venezuela’s case specifically, military threats against Guyana should give way to a peaceful, lawful path under international law and the process of the International Court of Justice that the UN Secretary-General authorized and CARICOM governments have endorsed.

It is understood that President Trump may not attend for security reasons – a concern that might yet be resolved. Nonetheless, senior U.S. representation is expected; at minimum Secretary of State Marco Rubio or Vice President Vance, or both.

The margins of the Summit are well-suited to quiet, candid exchanges with U.S. principals on the effects of U.S. policy across the hemisphere; conversations that can yield practical attention to pressing issues.

This is a meeting to be present, active, and speaking: the DR government has set a constructive path; its non-invitations to Cuba, Nicaragua and Venezuela are framed as a Summit-specific decision, without prejudice to bilateral relations. Leaders should use that path to pursue national interests and advance hemispheric cooperation. Not attending leaves influence at the table in other hands. Attending, and doing the work, serves the people of the Americas.

*Sir Ronald Sanders is the Ambassador of Antigua and Barbuda to the United States and the OAS, and Dean of the OAS Ambassadors accredited to the OAS. Responses and previous commentaries:

CARIBBEAN-TOURISM-Region records decline in tourist arrivvals from Canada, Europe, but an increase from South America

The number of Canadian visitors to the Caribbean fell by nine per cent to 1.67 million, while arrivals from Europe dropped by an estimated five per cent to 2.53 million during the first half of 2025, compared to the same period last year.

Database administrator at the Barbados-based Caribbean Tourism Organization (CTO), Paul Garnes, said that in the case of Canada, this was due to softer demand tied to weaker consumer confidence, higher travel costs and currency events.

Garnes told the 2025 State of the Tourism Industry Conference taking place here through Friday that while Europe remains an important market to Caribbean tourism, demand is under pressure due to economic headwinds and or stronger competition from other destinations.

He said intra-Caribbean travel registered 560,000 arrivals, representing 1.2 per cent growth, adding, ‘this continues to support regional resilience’.

South America was another ‘bright spot’ with arrivals jumping more than 25 per cent, moving from 790,000 to just under one million.

‘And then in other markets, including Asia, Africa, and others, we saw solid double-digit growth, up 12 per cent to nearly 3.8 million arrivals,’ Garnes said, adding that this shows that the Caribbean is diversifying beyond traditional source markets.

Garnes said a closer look at Canada showed Canadian outbound travel took a hit in the first half of 2025, especially as the United States tariffs, trade tensions and broader uncertainty pushed many Canadians towards domestic trips and alternative destinations.

For the Caribbean, about 1.7 million Canadian tourists visited between January and June, down just over nine per cent from last year.

‘And it pulled our recovery rate back from nearly 86 per cent of 2019 levels in 2024 to 78 per cent this year. ‘

From January to March, arrivals dropped sharply, down 12 per cent in January, 15 per cent in February, and 10 per cent in March.

‘These losses were even deeper when compared to 2019, with winter months still 27 per cent to 31 per cent below pre-pandemic levels,’ Garnes said, noting that the downward trend continued in April and May, though the contractions were smaller.

In the month of June, there was a rebound as arrivals grew nearlyseven per cent year-on-year, even as that month was 11 per cent less than 2019 volume.

‘So when we look at Canadian arrivals by destination, the results were very uneven,’ Garnes said, adding that of the 19 CTO reporting destinations, only eight recorded growth in the first half of the year.

‘Increases range from a small two per cent to a strong 36 per cent. Bermuda, Curacao and Aruba were the top-performing destinations for Canadians. Looking further back to 2019, only six destinations have fully recovered their pre-crisis volumes. For the rest, Canadian arrivals are still below 2019 levels.’

Garnes said the European economy showed moderate growth in the first half of 2025, supported by services and manufacturing.

‘Inflation eased, employment held steady, and discretionary spending improved, factors that helped sustain outbound travel,’ he said, noting that long-haul travel from Europe is rebounding, but destination performance still depends heavily on how each market is recovering and where travellers choose to go.

By the end of June, about 2.5 million Europeans had visited the Caribbean, down almost five per cent from last year and 17 per cent below pre-crisis levels.

‘Month by month, arrivals were weak,’ Garnes said, adding that the first quarter saw declines averaging around 7.5 per cent.

‘April was the lone bright spot, with a very slight uptick, but May and June slipped again. Overall, quarter two fell by a smaller margin, about two per cent. Compared to 2019, recovery rates vary widely, from just under 70 per cent in January to nearly 93 per cent in May.’

Garnes said most Caribbean destinations saw declines in arrivals from Europe.

‘Only seven of the 19 reporting destinations grew in the first half, led by Guyana, Anguilla and Antigua and Barbuda. Growth ranged from just under two per cent to about 36 per cent,’ Garnes said.

‘So, looking at recovery since 2019, just six destinations have fully surpassed three pandemic levels, with gains from two to 79 per cent.’

Overall, tourist arrivals to the Caribbean grew by 1.9% during the first half of 2025, despite softening demand from North America.

Garnes said that overall, the region still recorded arrivals 6.1 per cent above 2019 – pre-pandemic – levels.

‘Considering tourist arrivals then, in the first half of the year 2025, the Caribbean tourism industry showed strong resilience, continuing to grow despite external challenges,’ Garnes said.