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Media Fact Sheet for 2017 Flow CARIFTA Games – Curacao

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Turks and Caicos, March 28, 2017 – Providenciales

  • Flow has signed a three-year partnership with the North American, Central American and Caribbean Athletics Association (NACAC) to be the exclusive broadcast partner and sponsor of the CARIFTA Games.
  • The event is now known as the Flow CARIFTA Games.
  • Curacao will host the 46th CARIFTA Games on Easter Weekend between April 15th and 17th; more than 650 athletes and officials have confirmed their participation; this is the first time that Curacao will host the CARIFTA Games.
  • Flow Sports will broadcast the 46th CARIFTA Games in High Definition (HD) across its network in the Caribbean on its premium sports channel, Flow Sports Premier
  • Coverage will feature commentary from veteran Caribbean journalists from across the region, including Nadine Liverpool, internationally renowned sports broadcaster and host of Flow Sports Premier Weekly, and Dalton Myers, Director of Sports at the University of the West Indies. Also newly added to this year’s line-up are well-known OECS Sports journalist, Terry Finesterre from St. Lucia and former Caymanian star athlete, Kareem Streete-Thompson, an Austin Sealy Trophy holder and CARIFTA record-holder in the long jump.
  • Flow, which was also the region’s exclusive broadcast partner for the Rio 2016 Olympic Games, will present more than twenty hours of live coverage during the three-day event in Curacao. NACAC has commissioned 6 Gear to do the production of the event.
  • The Flow CARIFTA Games will be shown in ten (10) countries around the Caribbean on Flow Sports Premier; Flow will once again broadcast the Games live in HD across the region, offering customers the best-possible viewing experience of one of the region’s most important home-grown sporting events.
  • Sports fans can access the Flow Sports Channel in Antigua, Barbados, The Bahamas, Cayman Islands, Curaçao, Grenada, Jamaica, St. Vincent, St. Lucia and in Trinidad.
  • Flow is once again raising the bar for sports viewership by providing fans with anytime, anywhere access with the new Flow Sports App; simply download the Flow Sports app on Android or iOS smart devices, or visit the online microsite at flowsports.co from any lap top or tablet device.
  • Flow’s sponsorship and broadcast of the Flow CARIFTA Games is another way for the Company to further demonstrate its support for up-and-coming Caribbean athletes, as well as solidify Flow Sports’ commitment to become the ‘home of sports’ in the Caribbean.
  • More than 35 collegiate coaches from North America are likely to be in attendance at the 2017 Flow CARIFTA Games to scout and recruit some of the region’s best young athletes.
  • The Flow CARIFTA Games adds to an ever-growing line-up of exciting sport partnerships Flow has signed over the past year including the CONCACAF 2018 World Cup Qualifiers, Rio 2016 Olympic Games and the hugely popular English Premier League football.
  • Flow also has an expanding list of Olympian brand ambassadors including Rio 2016 gold medalist Elaine Thompson (100m & 200m – Jamaica) & Silver Medalist Kirani James (400m – Grenada), Gold Medalist Shaunae Miller (400m –Bahamas) , Machel Cedenio (400m – Triidad & Tobago), Ashley Kelly (400m – BVI) Delano Williams (200m – Great Britain), Lavern Spencer (High Jump – St. Lucia), Khalifa St. Fort (100m – Trinidad & Tobago), Darian King (Tennis – Barbados) and Jason Wilson (Triathlon – Barbados).
  • Flow believes that the heightened exposure of the Flow CARIFTA Games will ultimately raise the bar for these significant regional championships, from which many Caribbean athletic champions have already emerged.
  • Flow invites you the “Watch the Future” as the Caribbean’s best and brightest Junior athletes take center stage. The Flow Carifta Games have been the launching pad for the careers of some of the Region’s brightest athletic stars.
  • Flow is also the headline sponsor of the Boys and Girls ‘CHAMPS’ in Jamaica, the largest high school athletics championships in the Caribbean.
  • Tweet us @MyFlow using the hashtag #FlowCarifta

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Trinidad & Tobago Emancipation Day Marked with Major Events Attended by Prime Minister and other Dignitaries

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#TrinidadandTobago, August 11, 2023 – Prime Minister Dr the Hon Keith Rowley and Mrs Sharon Rowley attended the Distinguished Open Lecture by His Royal Majesty Otumfuo Osei Tutu II, The Asantehene at The University of the West Indies, St. Augustine Campus last evening (Thursday 3rd August, 2023).

The Asantehene is the Guest of Honour in commemoration of this country’s 2023 Emancipation celebrations.

Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives and Member of Parliament for Tunapuna, the Hon. Esmond Forde, Minister of Foreign and CARICOM Affairs, Senator the Hon. Dr. Amery Browne, Minister of Housing and Urban Development, the Hon. Camille Robinson-Regis, Minister of Education, Dr. the Hon. Nyan Gadsby-Dolly, Minister in the Ministry of Education, the Hon. Lisa Morris-Julian, Pro Vice-Chancellor and Principal of The University of the West Indies, St Augustine Campus Professor Rose-Marie Belle Antoine, Dean of the Faculty of Food and Agriculture, Professor Mark Wuddivira and Lecturer Department of History, Dr. Debbie Mc Collin were also in attendance at yesterday’s lecture.

Prime Minister Dr the Hon Keith Rowley and Mrs Sharon Rowley also visited the Desperadoes Pan Theatre at George Street, Port of Spain last evening (Wednesday 2nd August, 2023).

Dr Rowley welcomed His Royal Majesty Otumfuo Osei Tutu II, The Asantehene and his delegation to the pan theatre where His Majesty was treated to various aspects of Trinidad and Tobago’s Carnival which culminated in a performance by the Desperadoes Steel Orchestra and a demonstration on the playing of the national instrument for the Asantehene.

“They now see Africa, not through European eyes, as a dark continent, but as the cradle of human civilisation, citing the discoveries of its great empires. They talk of it glowingly, as the world’s fastest developing economic region in the 21st century, having just overtaken Asia, and of its six of the 10 fastest growing economies in the world and of its minerals, critical and indispensable to the technologies of the 21st century green economies.

Today, recognising the pain of the Middle Passage, and the centuries of colonial brutality, I salute the African community, a people, who through grit and determination, is on the march, striving for further discovery and self-realisation, searching, and transforming themselves for the challenges of the 21st century.

Let us all reflect and educate ourselves as we celebrate African Emancipation Day 2023.”

 

Dr the Honourable Keith Rowley

Prime Minister of The Republic of Trinidad and Tobago

on the occasion of Emancipation Day 2023

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Roadmap to Int’l Intervention in Haiti spelled out by Feinstein, US Official for Caribbean Affairs

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Dana Malcolm 

Staff Writer 

 

 

August 11, 2023 – There are several steps to complete, but it’s looking more and more likely that there will be international boots on the ground in Haiti in the very near future.

The revelation came from Barbara A. Feinstein, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Caribbean Affairs and Haiti, in a press briefing on August 04.  It followed a whirlwind of activity prompted by Kenya’s recent announcement that they would consider leading any multinational force deployed to the beleaguered country.

She explained the process to get soldiers into the country.

“The next steps for the Kenyan Government are to perform an assessment on the ground in Haiti, which we expect to take place in the coming weeks; to engage with a wide variety of stakeholders on the ground in Haiti and New York at the United Nations.  Provided the Kenyans are able to secure approval from their own government, they would then work with the United Nations to secure UN authorization of such a force,” said Feinstein in a press conference covered by Caribbean media firms.

Feinstein said the US is prepared to support by introducing a resolution authorizing the force, and they are fairly confident it will pass, with the Deputy describing the Government as ‘optimistic.’

“I would note that in the recent unanimous renewal of the authorization to extend the UN mission on the ground in Haiti, we [also] saw unanimous support for language that did endorse the idea of a multinational force and called for a report to lay out options,” she said.

That report will be tabled by August 15 and will help shape the multinational force.  As for how this multi-national force would operate, once it gets into Haiti, that depends on the findings of the Kenyan assessment.  What is certain is that it won’t be on the front lines.

Instead, it will: “Jumpstart the process of improving security in Haiti by sending thousands of additional personnel to secure critical infrastructure sites and thereby allow the Haitian national police to increase their focus on battling gangs.”

Haitian gangs have repeatedly taken control of important infrastructure relating to oil and electricity especially, forcing police to split their efforts to try and reclaim them while engaging in front-line battles with the gangs.

The US maintains it is committed to having Haiti lead on the response.

The Bahamas and Jamaica are among the countries which have also committed troops for the international mission should it be approved.

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Jamaica Prepared to Deploy Troops to Haiti

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#Kingston, August 11, 2023 – Jamaica is prepared to deploy troops to Haiti as part of a multinational response to deteriorating security conditions in the French-speaking island.

Prime Minister, the Most Hon. Andrew Holness, gave the commitment while responding to questions during the quarterly press conference at the Office of the Prime Minister on August 3.

Prime Minister Holness said that Jamaica remains devoted to playing its part in restoring peace and stability in Haiti.

He noted that Jamaica was the first country to “step out to say that we would be prepared to offer assistance to Haiti in terms of security and humanitarian assistance”.

We analysed the situation to the point where we thought indirect assistance would not be enough; there would have to be a security force support for the people of Haiti,” he pointed out.

“Clearly, Jamaica could not take the lead on this. We don’t have the resources even though we have the support, the ambition, the will and we stand as always in solidarity with the people of Haiti,” the Prime Minister noted.

Mr. Holness said that Jamaica is using its good offices and is working through the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) to ensure that the stakeholders in Haiti continue to speak to and lobby the international community for support.

The Government of Kenya has offered to send 1,000 police officers to Haiti and lead a multinational force to support the efforts of the police in quelling escalating violence caused by armed gangs.

United Nations Secretary-General, Antonio Guterres, has welcomed Kenya’s readiness to help and has encouraged other countries, particularly within the Caribbean, to join the effort.

“The question is, are we sending troops to Haiti? Yes, but an important caveat is that we just can’t, on our own, as I have said, get up and send troops.

“We just don’t have the resources but even so, even if we did, you want to have an international imprimatur and our commitment has always been with the appropriate jurisdictional arrangement, meaning a [United Nations] Security Council resolution. It is the same for Kenya and when I spoke with President Kagame, it was the same requirement for him as well,” Prime Minister Holness said.

Meanwhile, the Prime Minister pointed out that the deployment of Jamaican troops to the CARICOM Member State would not negatively impact the security response capability locally.

“We certainly can’t go up to the 1,000 troops that has been suggested in the media for the Kenyans, but we will give what we can.

“Whatever we do cannot impact in a negative way our own security challenges here. But as a sovereign nation we look at all threats to our stability and security and we act preemptively and strategically to ensure that we have capabilities to deal with those threats,” he noted.

 

Contact: Chris Patterson

Release: JIS

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