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GRENADA: Libel Case Sends "Chilling Signal", Groups Warn
By Peter Richards
ST GEORGE'S - Grenada Today did not have the staff nor circulation associated with most major Caribbean publications.
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CUBA: Food Security Focus of New UN Programmes
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Three new international cooperation agreements channeled through the United Nations system in Cuba are aimed at strengthening food security, especially in the poorest parts of the country.
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CARIBBEAN: Media Up in Arms over Licensing Plan
By Peter Richards
PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad - Caribbean media groups have drawn a line in the sand, warning regional governments that they will face strenuous opposition to proposed legislation requiring media workers to obtain a license to practice their profession in the 15-member Caribbean Community (Caricom) grouping.
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DOMINICAN REPUBLIC: Protests Surround New Constitution
By Elizabeth Eames Roebling
SANTO DOMINGO - The Dominican Republic passed the 38th version of its constitution Thursday evening, amending more than 40 articles that drew public protests and opposition from civil society groups and many average Dominicans.
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ECONOMY-CUBA: Cutting Subsidies to Balance the Budget
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Cuban President Raúl Castro is willing to risk unpopular measures to free the state from its excessive burden of subsidies and for-free services, as part of a programme to adjust public expenditure to shrunken government revenues and balance the budget.
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CUBA-US: Mixed Messages
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - While the Cuban government has intensified its protests against the U.S. embargo, typically hostile signals between the two nations have been mixed with hints of a more relaxed tone since U.S. President Barack Obama took office.
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CUBA: Raising an Environmentally Conscious Generation
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Every summer in Cuba, the complaint is heard over and over again: "These beaches are filthy!" Empty beer and soft drink bottles, plastic bags and cups, the remains of someone's picnic lunch, and innumerable cigarette butts are strewn on the sand every day, despite the threat of fines and the pleas of ecologists.
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CUBA: Restoring Historic Santiago for Its People
By Patricia Grogg
SANTIAGO DE CUBA - Even with her house practically in ruins, Isabel García wouldn’t dream of living anywhere else. She’d rather stay where she knows that no matter what corner she turns she’ll always be able to gaze out into the blue sea or raise her eyes up to the green mountains that shelter her beloved city of Santiago, in eastern Cuba.
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CUBA: There Are No Tough Guys; It’s Tough To Be a Guy
By Dalia Acosta
HAVANA - It has been three years since he separated from his second wife and realised he did not have a home to return to. Although he has always been able to count on a helping hand from one friend or another, and his children help him out now and then, Humberto Martínez spends most nights sleeping on a park bench in the Cuban capital.
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ENVIRONMENT: Cuba Encourages Ecotourism in Largest Wetland
By Patricia Grogg*
CIÉNAGA DE ZAPATA, Cuba - The Zapata wren (Ferminia cerverai) is known in Cuba as the "soprano of the forest" for its lovely song. But this tiny bird is very timid and, at the slightest sound, will hide in the vegetation in the Cienaga de Zapata - Zapata Swamp - 160 km south of Havana on the island’s south-central coast.
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DOMINICAN REPUBLIC: No More Blackouts In This Village
By Jon Anderson
LOS CALABAZOS, Dominican Republic - Travel through any Dominican town and you are likely to hear someone yell out, "llegó la luz" - the lights are back on! The country is notorious for its faulty and expensive electric service, which is more often dead than live.
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CARIBBEAN: British Jurist Rekindles Debate on Colonial-Era Court
By Peter Richards
PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad - Whether or not his words were meant to rekindle debate on the merits of a Caribbean court, the statement by British jurist Lord Phillips that "in an ideal world" the former Commonwealth countries would stop using the Privy Council and instead set up their own final courts of appeal has done just that.
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GUYANA: Brazil Opens Gateway to Wider Caribbean
By Bert Wilkinson
GEORGETOWN - Earlier this month, Brazilian President Luis Inacio Lula DaSilva flew more than 1,600 kilometres from his base in Brasilia to a remote state on the Guyanese frontier to formally commission a border river bridge with his country's English-speaking neighbour.
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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
MEXICO: Women Package the Sweet Taste of Nostalgia
POLITICS: Thai-Cambodia Diplomatic Row Bares Decades-Long Rift
SRI LANKA: Colombo’s Diplomatic Sparring Games with EU, U.S.
CLIMATE CHANGE-US: Too Little, Too Late for Copenhagen?
HONDURAS: Unilateral "Unity Government" Announced; Deal "Dead"
RIGHTS-NICARAGUA: Mudslinging Match Between Gov't, Activists
MIDEAST: Lessons from the Karine A -Déjà Vu All Over Again
AFRICA: We Are the Government
U.S.: "War Comes Home" with Ft. Hood Shootings
Q&A: Geert Wilders Gets a Big Email Hug
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