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POLITICS-CUBA: Wanted - Socialist System that Meets Real Needs
Analysis by Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Cuba's communist government is being challenged to move toward a more participative and inclusive socialist system, one that offers real economic well-being and responds to the social and political demands that have built up and been expressed in different ways in recent years.
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HAITI: Calls Mount to Free Lavalas Activist
By Wadner Pierre and Jeb Sprague
PORT-AU-PRINCE - Government authorities in Haiti face recent criticism over allegations that they continue to jail political dissidents.
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HAITI: Export Workers Await Overdue Wage Increase
By Silvestre Fils Dorcilus and Elizabeth Eames Roebling
PORT-AU-PRINCE - Following the recommendation of President Rene Preval, the lower house of the Haitian Parliament voted Tuesday to raise the minimum wage in the assembly sector from 1.29 dollars (70 gourde) to only 3.20 dollars (125 gourde) per day, rather than the 5.12 dollars (200 gourde) which had been demanded and passed.
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CARIBBEAN: Britain Suspends Constitution of Turks and Caicos Islands
By Peter Richards
PROVIDENCIALES, Turks and Caicos Islands - The British government Friday suspended the constitution of the Turks and Caicos Islands (TCI) in a move that the outgoing head of government Galmo Williams referred to as a "coup" by London.
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CUBA: Leaving the Hurricane Behind
By Dalia Acosta
HOLGUÍN - Debris of houses, roofless buildings and fallen trees are still routine sights along the 740-km drive from the Cuban capital to Holguín, one of the regions most heavily affected by Hurricane Ike in early September, 2008.
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TRINIDAD: Critics Accuse Govt of Wanting to Curb Press Freedom
By Peter Richards
PORT OF SPAIN - The Trinidad and Tobago government is finding itself against the wall amid allegations that it is attempting to curb press freedoms in this oil rich twin island republic.
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CUBA: Compulsory Rural Boarding School on the Way Out
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Without fanfare or major explanations, the Cuban government has begun to dismantle the system of mandatory rural boarding school for students in the last three years of high school – one of various reforms aimed at improving the quality of education that will start to be implemented at the start of the next school year in September.
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CUBA: Fullest Possible Social Inclusion for the Disabled
By Patricia Grogg
SANTIAGO DE CUBA - Arnoldo Ramón Virgilio’s legs are of little use to him, but he has a way with words that more than makes up for any physical limitations. He’s one of the outpatients at the "América Labadí Arce" Medical and Education Centre, which provides health care and rehabilitation for the disabled in this city in eastern Cuba.
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GUYANA: Govt Complicity With Drug Ring Aired in New York
Analysis by Bert Wilkinson
GEORGETOWN, Guyana - This small English-speaking nation, home to the Caribbean trade bloc (CARICOM), has been in the news recently due to allegations in a New York court that the government here willingly and knowingly gave surveillance equipment to a private death squad so that it could hunt down and execute more than 200 criminal suspects and opposition activists it wanted off the scene - as far back as 2002.
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CARIBBEAN: Returning to the IMF, on Their Own Terms
By Peter Richards
PORT OF SPAIN - In 1995, then Jamaican Prime Minister PJ Patterson had a few choice words for the International Monetary Fund (IMF). "Goodbye, ta-ta, au revoir," he said.
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HAITI: Aid Flowing, But Food Crisis Drags On
By Sonali Salgado
UNITED NATIONS - Though beleaguered with their own financial problems, donor countries say they are not planning to withdraw financial support for cash-strapped Haiti.
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DEVELOPMENT-CUBA: Water Scarce at the 'Singing Frog'
By Dalia Acosta
BÁGUANOS, Cuba - Canta Rana, which somewhat ironically translates as "Singing Frog", is more than just a neighbourhood in this town in the drought-stricken eastern Cuban province of Holguín. Here, at the highest point in the area, which provides a view of the entire town and the sugar mill tower, there is a huge tank marked by rust, the passage of time and the scarcity of water.
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ECONOMY-CUBA: New Budget Cuts in Store
By Dalia Acosta and Patricia Grogg
HOLGUÍN, Cuba - The impact of the global financial crisis on the economy in Cuba was a major focus of a speech Sunday by President Raúl Castro, who confirmed that further "adjustments" will be made to this year's budget.
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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
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INDIA: ‘Glacier Man’ Vows to Build More Artificial Glaciers
US-INDIA: State Visit by Singh Could Smooth Bumpy Relations
PERU: Fighting Hunger with Native Crops
RIGHTS-CHAGOS: 'My Navel is Buried There'
GENDER-AFRICA: Some Progress Amidst Continuing Challenges
AFGHANISTAN: Insurgents Infiltrate Security Forces
LEBANON: Migrant Women Dying on the Job
POLITICS: U.N. in Final Push for 2015 Development Goals
CLIMATE CHANGE: Health at Risk
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