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HAITI: Caribbean Unites Behind Recovery Plans
By Peter Richards
ROSEAU, Dominica - As he travels back to his headquarters in Washington, World Bank president Robert Zoellick must be painfully aware that Caribbean Community (CARICOM) countries have very strong feelings on the redevelopment of Haiti following the Jan. 12 earthquake.
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LATIN AMERICA: Abortion - Still Illegal, Still Killing, Despite Growing Awareness
By Estrella Gutiérrez
CARACAS - Although most of the governments in Latin America today are described as progressive, abortion is only legal in one country, while in five countries it is banned under all circumstances, even when the mother's life is at risk.
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HAITI: The Camp That Vanished
By Ansel Herz*
PORT-AU-PRINCE - Perched near the top of a steep hill, the fractured pink walls of Villa Manrese overlook the rest of the capital city. Both ends of the three-story compound have collapsed, spilling into mounds of rubble. The first floor was pulverised into a layer of dust. There are still bodies inside.
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RIGHTS-CUBA: Hunger Striker Refuses to Go into Exile
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - The state news media in Cuba reported Monday on the case of dissident Guillermo Fariñas, who has been on a hunger strike for 13 days and refuses to go into exile in Spain.
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HAITI: U.S. Acts Quickly on Debt Relief Ahead of Preval Visit
By Jim Lobe*
WASHINGTON - With U.S. President Barack Obama preparing to host Haitian President Rene Preval at the White House Wednesday, Congress is moving quickly to show support for far-reaching debt relief and additional aid for the earthquake-stricken Caribbean nation.
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TRINIDAD: Women Demand a Real Gender Policy
By Peter Richards
PORT OF SPAIN - A few days after she created history by becoming the first woman to be elected as opposition leader and the leader of a major political party in Trinidad and Tobago, Kamla Persad Bissessar was kicking mad at the "misunderstanding" of the role of women and their contribution to society.
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HAITI: Experts Urge Sea Change in "Culture of Aid"
By William Fisher
NEW YORK - A delegation of human rights experts is preparing to visit Haiti to assess the human rights and aid situation in the earthquake-crippled nation and to urge the international community to follow a series of guidelines they have prepared to help donors' to "overcome the mistakes of the past."
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LATIN AMERICA: Women's Rights Laws - Where's the Enforcement?
By Humberto Márquez *
CARACAS - Advanced new legislation and constitutional reforms on women's rights are paving the way for equal opportunities for women in Latin America and the Caribbean. But application and enforcement remain a distant goal.
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CUBA: A Good Old Age in Old Havana
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - In the centre of Old Havana, historic buildings are being restored without neglecting the occupants who are their heart and soul. The priority is to care for elderly residents with programmes that could become a model for the rest of Cuba, whose population is ageing fast.
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CLIMATE: The Thirsty Caribbean
By Peter Richards*
PORT OF SPAIN - Caribbean countries are considering options like desalination plants and cloud seeding to confront a drought that threatens the regional economy and which experts warned about years ago.
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LATIN AMERICA: Subdued Response to Cuban Dissident's Death
By Humberto Márquez
CARACAS - The deafening silence of Latin American governments has fallen like another shovelful of earth on the grave of Cuban dissident Orlando Zapata, a bricklayer who died Feb. 23 after nearly three months on hunger strike in prison on the Caribbean island.
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CARIBBEAN: A New Era of South-Oriented Geopolitics?
By Peter Richards
PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad - As chair of the 15-member regional integration movement, Dominica's Prime Minister Roosevelt Skerrit insists that the decision by Caribbean Community countries to be part of a new Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CLACS) is not intended to sideline longtime hemispheric alliances such as the Organisation of American States.
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HAITI: Earthquake Epicentre Copes with Aftermath
By Garry Pierre-Pierre*
LEOGANE - Marie Saintus sat regally on a wicker chair in the narrow alley by her makeshift home at the Anacaona Stadium, in the middle of this once bucolic city, as she teased her neighbours.
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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
CULTURE: Poor Patronage Killing Arab Cinema
MALAYSIA: Creation of Commercial Hospital Wings a Mistake -Critics
MEXICO: Music and Dance Classes Foster Tolerance, Self-Esteem
MIDEAST: Israel Lands in Public Relations Nightmare
THAILAND: In Convoys of Red, Rural Masses Stage Historic Protest
RIGHTS-MALAWI: Country Not Safe for Homosexuals
US-ISRAEL: Tiff or Tipping Point?
RIGHTS-GUATEMALA: 'Our Lives Are Cut Short at a Stroke'
ENVIRONMENT-INDIA: Law on Forest Rights Fails to Deliver
HEALTH: U.S. AIDS Fund Flat-Lining, Groups Complain
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