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RumPowered Research™ aboard the Turks & Caicos Explorer II

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Explorer Ventures and the Turks and Caicos Explorer II crew joined forces with the Turks & Caicos Reef Fund (TCRF) for a truly unique expedition out to East Caicos in the Turks & Caicos Islands (TCI).

 

#TurksandCaicos, November 13, 2021 – On October 2nd, 2021, RumPowered Research™ became a reality when the yacht crew and TCRF volunteer divers departed for 6 days at sea conducting surveys across the reefs of the Atlantic/Caribbean’s largest uninhabited island and one of its largest anthropogenically unaffected reefs. During the week-long trip researchers and volunteers revisited reefs previously surveyed around East Caicos in 2018, serendipitously monitored shortly before the arrival of Stony Coral Tissue Loss Disease (SCTLD) in the TCI. The opportunity presented here, having already collected this comprehensive baseline data, was to see what, if any, are the differences in how SCTLD spreads across these unvisited, comparably healthy reefs. How impactful is the human element in the spread and veracity of this disease? This was a primary output of our expedition. We re-surveyed 10 of 16 sites from 2018, choosing the ones that had the densest coral cover to quantify the impacts of SCTLD on those reefs.

Alongside the re-visits, TCRF’s Alizee Zimmermann and TCI Government (TCIG) Fisheries’ Richard Archer trained and certified 7 new volunteers in Atlantic Gulf Rapid Reef Assessment (AGRRA) methodologies, increasing the nations capacity for conservation and monitoring. TCRF are ever thankful to TCIG Fisheries and Richard for working together for the greater good. Of course, without the volunteers willing to donate their time (and dime) to learning and helping the cause, none of this would be possible. A huge thank you and congratulations to our new AGRRA certified Fish and Benthic surveyors! Additionally, a huge, heartfelt thank you to the team at AGRRA. They operate on a platform of open-sourced information and education and continue to support our efforts in the TCI both through data analysis and training materials but also through consistent scientific advice

If that weren’t enough work for the week, TCRF chose to use the opportunity afforded by our Scientific Research Permit to treat large, reproductive colonies being afflicted by SCTLD. How could we come all the way out to the Wild, wild East and not try to save as many colonies and genotypes as possible? In between the data collection and training we were able to treat individual colonies and tag them for future monitoring.

In 6 days:

  • 80+ reproductive, large, priority colonies were treated across 3 dive sites at Drum Point, East Caicos.
  • 20+ SCTLD roving diver surveys conducted
  • 18 dives across 6 key areas on the northern and eastern reefs of East Caicos
  • 11 volunteer divers + 6 incredible crew worked together to protect, preserve, & learn
  • 10 sites from 2018 research trip were re-visited for comparative analysis.
  • 4 volunteer divers were trained in AGRRA Fish surveys
  • 3 volunteer divers were trained in AGRRA Benthic surveys (one of which was a crew member who joined the classes last minute and balanced work & training to blast the exam out of the water with a high score!)
  • 2 evening presentation sessions. 1 on coral disease and 1 on sargassum
  • 1 incredible expedition, 1 team, 1 boat
  • RumPowered Research filed as a trademarked name
  • Explorer Ventures & TC Reef Fund begin discussions on future expeditions and the creation of ‘meaningful tourism’ itineraries.

All of this was made possible by the incredible sponsors and volunteers. 2021 marks the inaugural RumPowered Research trip and this year’s sponsors were; Woody Creek Distillers, Bambarra Rum, and Mount Gay Rum. We would also like to thank a local micro greens company called Fresh Products TCI for their sponsorship of one of our volunteer spots as well as to those who donated but wish to remain anonymous. Thanks to all of you this expedition was possible!

AGRRA and Ocean Alchemists ltd. Sponsored us through help with training and donation of treatment base as well as sponsoring one of our volunteer spots and data analyses capabilities.

Last but not least, Explorer Ventures, thank you. Thank you for believing in the project and sponsoring a large portion of this research trip. TCRF are looking forward to continuing to develop itineraries alongside them. “This was an exceptional opportunity to collect tangible quantitative data on the reefs of one of the regions most secluded and largest reef tracts. The T&C Explorer crew were phenomenal and we’re very excited about the idea of creating meaningful tourism itineraries that will be open to the general public” Said TCRF’s Executive Director, Alizee Zimmermann

It was great to have Operations Manager Nelson Riollano join the expedition. “Explorer Ventures tries to always operate in a responsible manner when it comes to the environment while still providing a service and experience that is safe and enjoyable to our customers. That is why we are always looking to work with the TCI Reef fund to protect environment in the Turks and Caicos. The RumPowered Research™ charter created the opportunity to collectively discuss ways to work together on future projects. It also allowed our crew to learn more about the survey process and the efforts being made to protect the reefs.  This valuable knowledge and experience will be shared with our guests week after week.”

About: Explorer Ventures Liveaboard Diving Fleet

The Explorer Ventures Liveaboard Diving Fleet offers 7 destinations including the Red Sea, Maldives, Northeastern Caribbean (Saba/St. Kitts), Turks & Caicos Islands, Galapagos Islands and Indonesia. The M/V Turks & Caicos Explorer II also spends 10 weeks in the winter/spring offering snorkelling with Humpback Whales on the Silver Bank, Dominican Republic, under charter to Aquatic Adventures. Explorer Ventures has committed to enhancing sustainable operations and encouraging conservation worldwide through an environmental management policy called Dive Green.

 About Turks & Caicos Reef Fund

Founded in 2010, the Turks & Caicos Reef Fund is the only active environmental advocacy organization in the TCI.  It is an all volunteer-run organization that provides funding for education, research and conservation programs to individuals, organizations and agencies that help to preserve and protect the environment of the Turks & Caicos Islands.  Our goal is to have at least 85% of all funds raised through voluntary contributions from divers and snorkelers visiting the Turks & Caicos Islands directed to the Fund’s programs.  Anyone wishing to donate or assist the TCRF in any way can contact them through their website, www.TCReef.org.

 

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Beaches Turks and Caicos Showcases and Supports Local Creativity

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September 12, 2025                                                                                

 

PROVIDENCIALES, Turks & Caicos Islands – The Turks and Caicos Islands are home to a wealth of creativity, from artisans and craft vendors to musicians and performers. Beaches Turks and Caicos, the Caribbean’s leading all-inclusive family resort, has pledged its continued support for these individuals by providing meaningful platforms for them to share their skills and stories with guests from around the world.

The resort’s commitment is most evident in its weekly Cultural Night showcase, where visitors are immersed in the vibrant traditions of the islands. Guests enjoy live performances which feature local music genres such as ripsaw, while artisans display and sell handmade creations. This event not only enriches the guest experience but also strengthens economic opportunities for local entrepreneurs.

Entertainment Division Manager Garett Bailey emphasized the significance of Cultural Night, “we want to showcase everything the Turks and Caicos Islands culture has to offer. Our goal is for guests to leave with a deeper appreciation of the island’s art, music and traditions, while giving local talent the opportunity to share their creativity with visitors from across the globe.”

Beyond Cultural Night, Beaches Turks and Caicos also welcomes local craft vendors onto the resort every Wednesday and Friday where they are offered a direct space to market their goods. Guests have easy access to the Turks and Caicos Cultural Marketplace, where they can purchase authentic local arts and crafts.

Managing Director, James McAnally, highlighted how these initiatives reflect the resort’s broader mission, “we are committed to celebrating and sharing the vibrant culture of these islands with our guests. By showcasing local artistry and music, we not only provide entertainment but also help sustain and grow the creative industries of the Turks and Caicos Islands. From our cultural showcases to nightly live music, we are proud to create authentic connections between our guests and the people of these islands.”

Local musician Keon Hall, who frequently performs at the resort, expressed gratitude for the ongoing partnership, “being able to share my music with Beaches’ guests has created lasting relationships. Some visitors return year after year and request songs from previous performances. This partnership continues to celebrate what we do and strengthens the bond between local artists and the resort.”

The resort’s support of local artisans and entertainers extends beyond business opportunity; it is about preserving heritage and sharing stories. Guests take home more than souvenirs; they leave with experiences that deepen their understanding of Turks and Caicos’ culture and history.

Public Relations Manager, Orville Morgan, noted the importance of this commitment, “for many visitors, these interactions represent their first genuine connection to the Turks and Caicos Islands. From artisans and musicians to farmers and transport operators, our local talent helps shape every guest experience. At Beaches, we are proud to give them the stage to share their stories and their heritage.”

Beaches Turks & Caicos remains dedicated to developing cultural connections and supporting the artisans, musicians and entrepreneurs whose creativity makes the Turks and Caicos Islands unique. Each guest experience is an opportunity to celebrate and sustain the spirit of the islands.

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Caribbean News

“Barbecue” is Cooked! US Turns Over 11 Million Haitians into Potential Informants with $5 Million Bounty

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August 12, 2025

The United States just set fire to the underworld in Haiti — and this time, the smoke might finally flush out the man many call the most feared in the Caribbean.

On Tuesday, the U.S. government slapped a $5 million bounty on the head of Jimmy “Barbecue” Chérizier, the ex-police officer turned gang boss accused of orchestrating massacres, torching neighborhoods, and strangling Haiti’s capital into chaos. This isn’t just a headline — it’s a full-blown game-changer.

That kind of cash — offered under the State Department’s Transnational Organized Crime Rewards Program — is enough to turn the country’s entire population, more than 11 million people, into potential informants overnight. Add the millions in the Haitian diaspora, and Chérizier isn’t just wanted. He’s surrounded.

The Number That Changes Everything

Five million U.S. dollars today equals about 655 million Haitian Gourdes. In a country where many scrape by on less than $5 a day, that’s not just life-changing — it’s life-defining. It’s enough to rebuild homes, put generations through school, or buy a one-way ticket far from the gunfire.

In a place where trust is scarce and survival is everything, that figure is more than tempting — it’s irresistible. For Chérizier, it means every friend could be a future informant, and every loyalist might be calculating the cost of staying loyal.

‘We Will Find Them’ — Jeanine Pirro, U.S. Attorney

Jeanine “Judge Jeanine” Pirro, the U.S. Attorney, set the tone with fire in her voice.                                                                                                                                          “This indictment is the first of its kind,” she announced. “Jimmy Chérizier, also known as ‘Barbecue,’ is a notorious gang leader from Haiti who has orchestrated and committed various acts of violence against Haitians, including the 2018 La Saline attack in which approximately 71 people were killed. He both planned and participated in that massacre.

“Anyone who is giving money to ‘Barbecue’ cannot say, ‘I didn’t know.’ They will be prosecuted, and we will find them. They are supporting an individual who is committing human rights abuses, and we will not look the other way.”

Pirro wasn’t just going after Chérizier. She was sending a warning to the Haitian diaspora accused of feeding his war chest from abroad: the days of claiming ignorance are over.

‘No Safe Haven’ — Darren Cox, FBI

Then came Darren Cox, Deputy Assistant Director of the FBI, delivering the muscle of America’s most powerful investigative force.                                                                                                                                                                                                                “There is no safe haven for Chérizier and his network,” Cox declared. “We are closing every link, every cell.”                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   Since January, he said, the FBI has arrested three Top Ten fugitives, taken more than 19,000 criminals off the streets, and seized thousands of tons of narcotics — enough to save millions of lives across the U.S.

The FBI’s Miami and Houston offices have already bagged one of Chérizier’s Viv Ansanm associates inside the United States without firing a shot. “These efforts are a deliberate and coordinated plan,” Cox said, “to protect our communities and confront escalating threats from terrorist organizations like Viv Ansanm.”

‘Three-Year Investigation’ — Ivan Arvelo, HSI

Ivan Arvelo, Assistant Director of Homeland Security Investigations, brought the receipts.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    “This is the result of a three-year investigation into Chérizier’s procurement networks, cash pipelines, and operational financing that violates sanctions,” he explained.                                                                                                                                                     Arvelo described 400 structures destroyed, entire communities erased, and a gang exploiting U.S. dollars, technology, and immigration loopholes to keep its killing machine running. “We tracked how Americans unwittingly bankrolled brutality,” he said — proof that the net is tightening both inside Haiti and abroad.

‘The Worst of the Worst’ — Chris Lambert, State Department

Chris Lambert, representing the State Department’s International Affairs division, gave the political bottom line.

“Mass violence in Haiti must end,” Lambert said. “The instability resulting from Chérizier’s actions fuels illegal migration, regional instability, and transnational crime. We will continue to apply every tool available — including our rewards programs — to stop the spread of unchecked violence, especially to target the worst of the worst criminal leaders threatening the people of our hemisphere.”

Lambert confirmed what many have long known: Chérizier is not just a gang leader. He commands Viv Ansanm, officially designated in May as a Foreign Terrorist Organization. In the eyes of the U.S., that makes him not just Haiti’s problem — but everyone’s.

Why Haitians May Not Resist

In Haiti, money talks — loudly. And when you put 655 million Gourdes on the table, it shouts.

That’s the kind of figure that turns casual acquaintances into informants and makes even the most hardened loyalist wonder if the payout is worth more than the risk. It’s not a matter of “if” word gets out, it’s a matter of “who will be first to collect.”

For grieving families, it’s a chance at justice. For the desperate, it’s a chance at survival. For Haiti as a whole, it’s hope — wrapped in the most dangerous of temptations.

An Answer to Prayers

For years, Haiti’s headlines have been a scroll of horrors — kidnappings, executions, burned neighborhoods, bodies in the streets. Chérizier’s name has been attached to too many of them.

This move by the U.S. isn’t just strategy. It’s personal. It’s a signal to every Haitian — at home or abroad — that the days of impunity could be ending.

I’ll admit it: when I heard the news, I danced, I sang, and I nearly cried. Not because $5 million is a lot of money, but because of what it means — the possibility, at last, of stopping the man accused of helping turn Haiti into hell on earth.

Four officials, four angles, one mission: Pirro’s fire, Cox’s grit, Arvelo’s precision, Lambert’s conviction. Together, they’ve put the heat on “Barbecue” like never before.

BBQ is cooked. The only question now is: which one of over 11 million potential informants will serve him up?

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Africa

What If Caribbean Dollars Flowed to Africa? A Trade Revolution Within Reach

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By Deandrea Hamilton | Editor

 

What would happen if the Caribbean started spending more with Africa?

That question is no longer hypothetical. It’s the vision behind a growing movement that sees the Caribbean not just as a neighbor of the Americas, but as a key partner in the rise of a “Global Africa.” With shared history, deep cultural ties, and emerging trade frameworks, experts say the potential is enormous—if the will to act finally matches the passion of the speeches.

Billions on the Table

Today, trade between Africa and the Caribbean sits at just over US $729 million annually. But the International Trade Centre (ITC) and Afreximbank project that number could balloon to US $1.8 billion per year by 2028—more than doubling in just a few years.

This boost is expected to come not just from commodities, but increasingly from services, particularly in transport, travel, food exports, and creative industries. Two-thirds of that growth, according to analysts, could come from services alone—sectors where the Caribbean is eager to expand. (afreximbank.com).

Meanwhile, Africa’s consumer and business spending is forecasted to skyrocket to US $6.66 trillion by 2030, driven by a population boom and rising middle class.

The Case for a New Trade Axis

The Caribbean imports 80% of its food, but many of those goods can be sourced from African markets. What we offer in return? World-class logistics, tourism know-how, financial services, and proximity to the U.S. market. It’s a natural fit—one that is currently underdeveloped.

The recent call by Grenadian Prime Minister Dickon Mitchell for a “Global Africa Commission” underscores this urgency. He urged stakeholders at the Afreximbank Trade Expo to stop the cycle of empty talk and get to work: building shipping routes, finalizing trade agreements, and boosting knowledge of what each region actually has to offer.

“We will not leave here with another communiqué,” Mitchell continued. “We will leave here with a commitment to act, to build together, to trade together, to succeed together and rise together.”                                                                                                                                                                                                   The statement underscored a central theme of the summit — that both Africa and the Caribbean can no longer afford to admire the idea of unity; they must operationalize it.Pilot platforms like the Pan-African Payment and Settlement System (PAPSS) are already simplifying how cross-border payments work between African countries—and could extend to Caribbean partners. The system removes the need for U.S. dollars in trade between African nations, creating space for sovereign empowerment.

What’s the Hold-Up?

Let’s be blunt: political will, slow bureaucracies, and lack of coordination are stalling real action. Despite a decade of “Africa–Caribbean unity” talk, less than 3% of CARICOM trade currently involves the African continent. That fact continues to undermine these brave speeches and ambitious notions.

Where Caribbean Consumers Fit In

Caribbean consumers—especially the younger, tech-savvy generation—are already looking for affordable, ethical, and culturally relevant goods. African markets offer exactly that. Redirecting even a fraction of spending toward African-made clothing, beauty products, tech tools, or agro-processed foods could start a real trade revolution.

Bottom Line

If the political leaders won’t build the bridge fast enough, maybe Caribbean consumers will. The money is there. The interest is rising. Now it’s time to turn the “Global Africa” vision into a real economic shift—one shopping cart at a time.

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