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Jamaicans appointed to act as judges in Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court

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By Shanieka Smith

Staff Writer

 

#Jamaica, November 15, 2022 – Two Jamaicans have been appointed as acting high court judges of the Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court.  They will both serve in the British Virgin Islands starting with Small Davis from November 21 through to December 23.

The newly appointed acting high court judges are Retired Supreme Court judge, Ingrid Mangatal and King’s Counsel, Tan’ania Small Davis.

Mantagal, who will act for a year beginning January 1, 2023, shared her intentions to apply the skills she gained during her 35 years of service in both the public and private sectors. She was appointed as Supreme Court Judge during the period 2003 to 2013 and after being granted early discretionary retirement from the Jamaican judiciary, she served as a judge from 2015 to 2019 in the Cayman Islands Grand Court.

Small Davis, who previously served in the British Virgin Islands as president of the Bar Association also said she plans to do her best.

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SCU AND UWIGC FORGE PARTNERSHIP THROUGH MOU SIGNING ~Using AR, VR and XR to train and develop in the Caribbean ~

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For Immediate Release

April 11, 2024

The Sandals Corporate University (SCU) continues to make significant strides through their multimillion-US dollar project with EON Reality following a recent signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between The University of the West Indies (The UWI) Global Campus (UWIGC) and the SCU.

The two-year agreement will allow both institutions to work together to explore and implement mutually rewarding initiatives focused on the development of extended reality projects, using the EON Reality platform.

The MoU, signed during a ceremony hosted at Sandals Barbados, provides a framework for The UWI Global Campus and the SCU to facilitate further cooperation in education and training initiatives across the Caribbean region. Dr. Luz Longsworth, Senior Corporate Director for the SCU, described the event as a historical one, where two great organizations come together to achieve great things. “Both institutions have much in common which allows us to join forces to impact the sustainability of our region. We focus on the development and education of our people and countries of this beautiful Caribbean. This MoU will create a framework for the SCU and The UWI Global Campus to work towards coordinating digital and technology related projects and initiatives across campuses and across the Sandals group.”

Dr. Longsworth went on to share the major areas the MoU will cover, “The UWI Global Campus will provide technical input and subject matter expertise for the development of 3D assets and 360-degree experiences in the development of hospitality training content specifically relating to rooms, food and beverage, bookings, watersports, and others. In turn, the SCU and Sandals will provide internship programmes for students, faculty, and staff at various levels. The MoU also makes provisions for collaborating with other institutions to foster an appreciation of new and emerging technological opportunities in the hospitality industry and to help in the understanding of how tourism can aid in environmental protection, climate change mitigation and adaptation strategies. Finally, it will facilitate the use of technology, including without limitation, AR, VR, XR and AI to boost corporate social responsibility efforts,” she added.

Dr Francis O. Severin, Pro Vice-Chancellor and Principal of The UWI Global Campus, expressed his gratitude for this revolutionary opportunity to collaborate with the SCU. He shared, “in 2021 The UWI Global Campus made a decision to invest in advanced digital skills for its faculty to help prepare students academically for emerging digital technologies. It is even more important now to introduce and encourage skills to leverage platforms and technologies to generate digitally created goods and services for global audiences. This allows us to eliminate traditional barriers to productive participation like location, gender, and disabilities. These are the values we hold true which opens opportunities to collaborate with likeminded organizations. By harmoniously weaving into the teaching, technological and applied research capacities of the University through XR, AI and other emerging platforms alongside the SCU, we have no doubt we will be better able to support the movement of the Caribbean curriculum.”

He concluded by stating that The UWI Global Campus’ intention is to establish an immersive learning centre for staff, students, and stakeholders to learn, train and perform as efficiently and effectively as possible. “This will be the first of its kind for the region and will usher in a new approach to education and training that engages learners in experiential environments,” he said.

So far, both parties have already begun working on its first of many initiatives, the Digital Immersive Virtual Enhancement (DIVE) Project. Through this project, recorded experiences showcasing coral reefs, dive spots and protected areas will be used to showcase the beauty of underwater experience for tourism purposes but also used to protect the environment through training. It serves as a response to ecological challenges facing our region due to climate change, human impact, and natural disasters.

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Nearly 250,000 meals delivered to displaced Haitians by World Food Programme, UN reports

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Garfield Ekon
Staff Writer

Close to 90,000 people displaced across 87 sites in the Haiti’s capital, Port-au-Prince, are in desperate needs, according to the United Nations (UN) Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

It said more than half of those displaced are women, and a third of them are children, and as the rainy season underway in Haiti, the risk of flooding is another threat to displaced people and those in the most disadvantaged areas. Despite the challenges, the humanitarian response continues.

Yesterday, the World Food Programme (WFP) delivered more than 14,000 hot meals to displaced people in the capital area, as well as 226,000 school lunches across the country.

Meanwhile, the World Food Programme, through logistics partners and the UN Humanitarian Response Depot has facilitated air transport of humanitarian supplies into the country, through Cap-Haïtien, in northern Haiti.

The operation began last Friday, with supplies from the Pan American Health Organization/WHO in Panama, as well as the International Organization for Migration.

Chaos engulfing the country has been bubbling for more than a year, as Haiti’s ability to govern itself continues to grow, particularly after a series of natural disasters and an increasingly dire humanitarian emergency.

Ongoing conflicts and natural disasters have displaced approximately 362,000 people within the country, pushed Haiti’s health system to the brink of collapse, forced the closure of three major hospitals, while armed attacks and shortages of medicine and staff have led to scaling back or the shutdown of many health centers.

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Work Continues for Implementation of Free Movement of Caricom Nationals

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KINGSTON, April 17 (JIS):
Work continues towards the implementation of the free movement of Caribbean Community (CARICOM) nationals in Member countries.
During the 45th regular meeting of CARICOM Heads of Government, the leaders agreed to amend the Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas by March 31, 2024, to guarantee all CARICOM nationals the right to unrestricted travel to live and work in the Member countries of the Community. The free movement applies to member states that are also part of the CARICOM Single Market and Economy.
The new agreement will, among other things, move beyond the free movement of skills to freedom of movement of people.
Providing an update at today’s (April 17) post-Cabinet press briefing at Jamaica House, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade, Senator the Hon. Kamina Johnson Smith, reaffirmed Jamaica’s commitment to the principle of full free movement, noting that a significant amount of technical work continues, to achieve the goal.
“I had signalled that it had always been Jamaica’s assessment that there was a significant amount of technical work that would have to be done in order to achieve this goal. So, while I reaffirm Jamaica’s commitment to the principle of full free movement, we have always said this is the best way for all CARICOM nationals to experience and believe in the region, the fact is, there is still a lot of work to do, and that has been recognised. There is an intergovernmental task force (IGTF); Jamaica is a  part of that,” she said.
“We’re working through matters like the definitions of healthcare at the emergency level and at the primary level, which means different things in different countries and has implications for not only capacity but for cost… .  Similarly for education, we’ve been working on this as well because access to primary and secondary education would be a part of what is considered, and of course, the Ministry of Labour and Social Security and Ministry of Finance we engage with very closely because… there would be the right to work,” she said.
Senator Johnson Smith informed that further updates will be provided prior to, or during the next full regular meeting of Heads, which will be held in July in Grenada.
“So, there will be a transitional period, but work does continue towards the next full regular meeting of Heads… where we will, undoubtedly, have a significant update if we don’t have one before then. But the IGTF continues to work and Jamaica continues to work as well,” she said.
CONTACT: CHRIS PATTERSON

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