May 9, 2018 issue

In the News

UN Food Relief Agency seeks urgent funds to help Venezuelan migrants
With limited infrastructure, social services and jobs to offer migrants, there are fears of a full-fledged humanitarian crisis in Venezuela.
BOGOTÁ, Colombia – The United Nations emergency food relief agency has issued an urgent appeal for nearly US$46 million to feed some 350,000 impoverished migrants who crossed the border from Venezuela into Colombia, as well as host communities with pre-existing vulnerabilities.
“We urgently need funds so that we can bring vital aid to migrant families who have left their homes behind, and don’t know where their next meal is coming from,” said Miguel Barreto, the Regional Director for Latin America and the Caribbean at the UN World Food Programme (WFP).
“We also need to support host communities, many of them already poor, who have shown great generosity as they bear the brunt of this crisis,” he added, referring to the deepening socio-economic turmoil inside Venezuela.
WFP announced that as part of an eight-month response, it will provide food assistance to migrants – especially women and children – living in temporary shelters; emergency support for school meals; as well as help Venezuelan families trying to integrate.
These efforts are part of a larger integrated response plan, drawn up by UN agencies in Colombia – at the request of the Government – to help address the crisis.
Support will be extended to vulnerable indigenous communities coping with the influx, where in some areas migrants now make up more than half of the population, said WFP.
At present, the UN agency is working with temporary shelters or community kitchens run by religious organizations and other partners, purchasing the food needed to prepare hot meals for newly arrived migrants.
 
Guyanese John Deep Ford appointed Chair of WTO Agriculture Talks – and he’s the first from CARICOM
Guyana’s Ambassador to the WTO John Deep Ford (right)
was selected by WTO members.
WASHINGTON, United States – Guyana’s Ambassador to the World Trade Organization (WTO) John Deep Ford has taken over as chair of that body’s farm trade talks, following his confirmation by members at a recent meeting of the Committee on Agriculture in Special Session. He is the first chair of the agriculture negotiations from a Caribbean Community (CARICOM) nation since talks began in March 2000.
In addition to the ongoing negotiations on agricultural reform, Ford will also facilitate negotiations on cotton.
He replaces Kenya’s Ambassador Stephen Ndung’u Karau, whom he thanked for investing enormous energy and wisdom in guiding members in the agriculture negotiations in the run up to last year’s Buenos Aires Ministerial Conference.
In his remarks to members, Ambassador Ford said the main goal is to put the negotiations on a firmer footing and ensure that substantive progress is made towards reaching results that accommodate the interests of all members.
He noted that despite the lack of an agreement on a future work program for the farm trade talks at last December’s Ministerial Conference in Buenos Aires, there was clear convergence of views on the need to advance negotiations on all three pillars of agriculture: domestic support, market access and export competition.
“I’m confident we’ve all agreed that it cannot be business as usual,” Ford said.
“We need to be creative and innovative and not repeat past mistakes. We need to have frank and constructive discussions going forward bearing in mind the interests of all members. It is clear that compromises have to be made if we are to make progress in these negotiations.”
He said it was his sincere hope that by working collectively and intensively together in the period ahead, “we will be able to address each other’s concerns and eventually reach an agreement that would contribute to the establishment of a fairer and more market-oriented agriculture trading system and enhance the food security of all countries.”
The Ambassador said the results of his initial consultations with delegations over the coming weeks will determine when meetings of the negotiating group would be scheduled, although he said he would convene at least one informal meeting before the summer break to report on his consultations and give members the opportunity to also report on their activities aimed at facilitating progress in the negotiations.
Ford stressed that he was firmly committed to the principles of inclusiveness and transparency and will always listen and respect the views of all delegations – big and small.
“It is a new beginning,” he declared. “My challenge to you is to let us again demonstrate that we can agree in Geneva on rules that contribute to increasing trade and enhancing the welfare of our countries.”
Ambassador Ford has more than 30 years of experience working nationally and globally as an economist in the areas of agricultural trade and food policy. Between 2000 and 2016, he worked at the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), the last four years as FAO Regional Director for the Caribbean. Since September 2016, he has been Guyana’s ambassador to the UN in Geneva, the WTO, and the FAO. In 2017, Ambassador Ford served as chair of the African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) group at the WTO.
 
Grenadian politician charged in connection with drug bust
Politician Basil Williams (left), Brian Charles (top right) and Branford Thomas (bottom right).
GEORGETOWN, Guyana – A 34-year-old politician was one of three men jointly charged with conspiracy to import and trafficking cannabis, after a compressed quantity of the illegal drug was found inside a barrel at the Maurice Bishop International Airport last Friday.
Basil Williams who contested the March 13th general elections in the St George’s North East constituency under the banner of The Progress Party (TPP); 26-year-old disc jockey Brian Charles; and 44-year-old bus driver, Branford Thomas, appeared at the St George’s Magistrate’s Court on Monday in connection with the drugs that were discovered inside a bag of cat food during a search of a barrel, which arrived in Grenada from the United States.
They were each granted EC$15,000 (US$5,550) bail with two sureties and ordered to surrender all travel documents.
In a separate drug bust at the Maurice Bishop International Airport on Saturday, a 70-year-old old Guyanese man was arrested and is begin questioned in connection with the discovery of cocaine.
He was nabbed by police after a search of his motorized wheel chair revealed the drugs hidden under the chair seat.
At the time of the discovery he was waiting to board an Air Canada flight to Toronto.
 

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