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HAITI
Scraping by on Mud Cookies
By Wadner Pierre
PORT-AU-PRINCE - At six in the morning in Cite Soleil, the poorest zone of Haiti's capital city, the sun is already up. It's the start of another workday for Lurene Jeanti, making cookies from mud, butter and salt. She's been mixing the ingredients on the side of the road to sell to her neighbours for the past eight years.
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CUBA
Expansion of Self-Employment Poses Challenges for Socialist Model
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - The announcement of a plan to expand the practice of self-employment in Cuba as an alternative for the "excess" workers who are to be slashed from the public workforce presents several challenges to the socialist model that the government is seeking to modernise.
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Caribbean Civil Society Unites to Tap EU Development Funds
By Peter Richards
BRIDGETOWN, Barbados - Roosevelt King, the secretary general of the Barbados Association of Non-Governmental Organisations (BANCO), believes that Caribbean governments have dropped the ball when it comes to their commitment to support the initiatives of civil society.
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Q&A
'Corruption Is an Extraordinary Danger'
Patricia Grogg interviews Cuban political scientist ESTEBAN MORALES
HAVANA - "I still view corruption as an extraordinary danger" to the country, as its "corrosive power" makes it a matter of "national security," said Esteban Morales, who was expelled from the Cuban Communist Party (PCC) after publishing an article warning of its pervasive effects.
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Haitians in DR Reap Far Less than They Sow
By Jon Anderson
BONAO, Monseñor Province, Dominican Republic - Luis Miguel, a soft-spoken and serious 21-year-old from Haiti's Artibonnite Valley, stands on a ridge overlooking the small farm in the Dominican Cibao where he works as the owner's overseer. He adopted his Dominican moniker in order to fit in.
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Commission Takes a Hard Look at Free-for-All Migration
By Peter Richards
PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad - At 35, Daniel James has his mind set on leaving Trinidad and Tobago "for greener pastures".
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CUBA
Government Set to Cut Inflated Payrolls
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Cuban President Raúl Castro announced a series of measures to gradually reduce the "considerably bulky" payrolls in the government sector, with excess estimated at around one-fifth of the economically active population.
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HAITI
Gonaives Girds for Heavy Storm Season
By Wadner Pierre
GONAIVES - Gonaives, the third largest city in Haiti, is rushing to prepare for an expected highly active hurricane season. The city was flooded by three hurricanes in the past six years - Hannah and Ike in 2008, and Jeanne, which killed at least 2,500 people in 2004.
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Haitian Immigrant Street Peddlers Try to Get a Leg Up
By Jon Anderson
SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic - Gaston Dorelus has little education, no vocational training, no extrinsic qualifications to make his way through life any easier.
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CUBA
Village with English Past, Ecological Present
By Patricia Grogg
COCODRILO, Isla de la Juventud, Cuba - Only hurricanes disrupt the tranquility of Cocodrilo, a Cuban coastal village founded by immigrants from the Cayman Islands in the early 20th century.
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Haiti Gears Up for Polls - Again, Sans Lavalas
By Wadner Pierre
PORT-AU-PRINCE - After weeks of delays, Haitian President René Préval confirmed this month that presidential and legislative elections will take place on Nov. 28. The U.N. and Western donor nations are pledging millions of dollars in support of the polls, but with at least 1.5 million people still homeless from the January earthquake, questions loom over how to ensure voter participation.
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MIGRATION-ECUADOR
Cubans Turn to Marriages of Convenience for Citizenship - Part 2
By Gonzalo Ortiz*
QUITO - Cuban nationals can be found every day at the busy corner of Amazonas and Naciones Unidas avenues in the Ecuadorean capital, where the National Civil Registry Office is located.
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MIGRATION-ECUADOR
Cubans Find Door Half Open - Part 1
By Gonzalo Ortiz*
QUITO - Carlos sold his house, Juana got a divorce so she could remarry and obtain resident status, and Pedro bought a "letter of invitation" with 10 years of savings... These sorts of stories are common amongst Cubans anxious to make a new life in Ecuador.
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POLITICS-CUBA
Left Speechless
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - The anniversary of the attack on the Moncada barracks, commemorating Revolution Day, one of the most important dates on Cuba's calendar, found the country caught up in speculation that Fidel Castro might appear on the platform, and raised fresh expectations about changes promised four years ago.
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Q&A
"NGOs Are Here to Stay"
Aprille Muscara interviews SAM WORTHINGTON, president and CEO of InterAction
UNITED NATIONS - InterAction is the largest alliance of U.S.-based NGOs, with over 190 members. Its head, Sam Worthington, spoke recently with IPS about the role of NGOs in Haiti, the U.S. and throughout the world.
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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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U.N. Lagging on Water and Sanitation Development Goals
Environmental Forensics for BP Gulf Spill
Uganda Could Become Regional Rice Exporter say Researchers
ARGENTINA-BRAZIL: Nuclear Safeguards System an Example for the World
RIGHTS-INDIA: Law to Restrict Foreign Funding Alarms NGOs
PHILIPPINES: Criminal Ban, Stigma Drive Unsafe Abortions
SRI LANKA: Anger Rises Over Torture Case, But Solution Unclear
Further Victims Identified in DRC Mass Rapes Case
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