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LATIN AMERICA: IPS and UNDP Launch Second Journalism Prize on MDGs
By Diego Cevallos
MEXICO CITY - Next year will be a tough time for the countries of Latin America and the Caribbean, which means it will be more than ever necessary to avoid backsliding in the efforts to reach the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), and journalists have an important role to play in that task, UNDP regional director Rebeca Grynspan said Wednesday.
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CUBA-CHINA: Strengthening Friendly Ties
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Cuba and China strengthened their political and economic alliance this week, at a time when the EU and Cuba have formally restored relations and the government of Raśl Castro is forging closer ties with the rest of Latin America and with Moscow.
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HAITI-DOMINICAN REPUBLIC: Media Unites to Fight Stereotypes
By Elizabeth Eames Roebling
PEDERNALES, Dominican Republic - The contrast between Haiti and the Dominican Republic, which share the island of Hispaniola, is nowhere so stark as on its common border.
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GUYANA: U.S. "Mercy Mission" Viewed With Scepticism
By Bert Wilkinson
BRIDGETOWN - Earlier this week, a U.S. assault ship on the final leg of a mission to five Latin American and Caribbean countries anchored off Guyana's northeastern coast in what the Pentagon says is a humanitarian mission.
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ENVIRONMENT: Haiti Can't Face More Defeats
By Stephen Leahy*
UXBRIDGE, Canada - The worst natural disaster that Haiti has suffered requires far-reaching solutions in order to reduce this Caribbean country's environmental fragility, say officials and humanitarian workers.
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CUBA: No Choice but to Adapt to Storms
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Three hurricanes have caused a total of 10 billion dollars in damages in Cuba in less than three months, according to the latest official estimates, while highlighting the vulnerability of Cuban housing to storms.
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TRINIDAD: PM's Visit to Radio Station Irks Journalists
By Peter Richards
PORT OF SPAIN - When he "dropped in" on the Power 102 radio station last weekend to complain about the "unprofessional conduct" of two local broadcasters, Prime Minister Patrick Manning insisted that he was exercising his right as an ordinary citizen.
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DOMINICAN REPUBLIC: Prejudice Against Haitians Boils Over - Again
By Valeria Vilardo
SANTO DOMINGO - "A group of Dominicans armed with pistols, machetes and knives came to take revenge on us. I broke my leg trying to escape from my house, which was on fire. It's not fair that all Haitians should have to pay for the crime of one," Elena Piti, a Haitian mother of seven who lives in the Dominican Republic, told IPS.
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CUBA-US: Obama Awakens Hopes for a Thaw
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - U.S. President-elect Barack Obama has a positive image among most Cubans, who are hopeful regarding his promises of loosening some restrictions towards the island, although the government-controlled media here have refrained from commenting on the future of relations between the two countries.
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DOMINICAN REPUBLIC-US: Exorcising the Ghosts of Slavery
By Elizabeth Eames Roebling
SANTO DOMINGO - On the island where the African slave trade was first introduced to the western hemisphere in 1520, the United States embassy in Santo Domingo hosted more than 1,000 people to view the possible election of the son of an African to the U.S. presidency.
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CARIBBEAN: Region Sees Sympathetic Ally in Obama
By Peter Richards
PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad - They sat glued to their television sets as the new president-elect of the United States, Barack Obama, during his acceptance speech in the early hours of Wednesday, made reference to those listening "in far off places" around the world.
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POLITICS: Civil Society Demands Voice at Americas Summit
By Peter Richards
PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad - Caribbean civil society groups say they want to have direct input at the Fifth Summit of the Americas to be held in Trinidad and Tobago next April, and are urging hemispheric governments to begin implementing some of the 600 recommendations that have been agreed upon at previous summits dating back to 1994.
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HAITI: Activists Urge World Bank to Erase Crippling Debt
By Nergui Manalsuren
UNITED NATIONS - On a recent visit to the hurricane-ravaged island of Haiti, World Bank President Robert Zoellick declared that 500 million dollars of Haiti's 1.7-billion-dollar foreign debt had been cancelled, and the rest would be soon be written off as well.
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News in RSS
They are prized by visitors for their gleaming white beaches and four-star hotels. But despite billions in tourist dollars, the islands of the Caribbean are marked by a profound gap between rich and poor that threatens to derail global efforts to eradicate extreme poverty.

While it is often lumped in with mainland South and Central America, the Caribbean region faces its own unique cultural, political and economic challenges. These include the situation in Haiti, which is supposed to hold elections at the end of 2005 but remains mired in violence and instability, a surging HIV/AIDS rate second only to sub-Saharan Africa, and the perils posed by climate change and rising sea levels.

Seeking strength in numbers, Caribbean nations are pressing forward this year with key regional integration initiatives like the Caribbean Single Market and Economy and the Caribbean Court of Justice, and the negotiation of a free trade pact between the 15-member Caribbean Community and the South American bloc Mercosur.

IPS reporters across the region bring you the latest news with the service's trademark global perspective and analysis.

Haiti - Which Way Forward?

News in RSS
POLITICS-ETHIOPIA: Disappointed But Not Defeated
RIGHTS-CAMBODIA: Khmer Rouge Through Blinkered Eyes
MEDIA-SRI LANKA: Under Fire Journos Learn Survival Skills
U.S.: Obama Urged to Strengthen Ties with U.N.
LATIN AMERICA: IPS and UNDP Launch Second Journalism Prize on MDGs
DEVELOPMENT: U.N. Looks to Doha Summit for Answers
CUBA-CHINA: Strengthening Friendly Ties
HEALTH-AFRICA: Research and Policies Lack Civil Society Input
CLIMATE CHANGE: World Willing to Pay More for Green Energy
U.S.-MEXICO: Fence to Carve Up Fragile Border Preserve
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