St. Vincent & The Grenadines
Fire victim, bereaved father appeals for materials to rebuild home

Childless, almost homeless but not hopeless.
Brian Anthony Cyrus has seen a series of unfortunate events but hopes that assistance can be given in getting him back on his feet.
The 58-year-old New Montrose resident had a rough 2022 when he lost his home in a fire in January, and his only child was killed in a gun-related incident in July.
Cyrus spoke to SEARCHLIGHT on the shell of his former home where he made a public appeal for materials to rebuild his house and return to the place which he called home for over five decades.

Some of the building materials Cyrus was able to secure
The labourer explained that he has been working and trying to accumulate materials, but it has been a slow and painstaking process.
“I have a load of Rabacca [aggregate] behind there and a load of sand. If I can get another load of sand and two sling of cement I could start and do something at least. Just a two bedroom thing I would like to get just to be comfortable.”
He recounted the night of January 25,2022 when disaster struck. He said the fire started in the kitchen after he fell asleep watching a documentary. When he awoke the ceiling was already engulfed in flames and he tried, in vain, to get it under control.
“I had to run and try with a little thing to try out the fire and after a time cause when I watch the fire, my mind just close off. When I reach in Bottom Town a man stop me and ask me what I doing down here, that I barefoot and all kinda thing. Cause is like I lose my mind and all thing.”
He lost the two-bedroom home he shared with his 28-year-old son, Zimron Richards. He said he and his son had set their minds on plans to expand the home and also establish a shop. After the fire, Zimron had renewed focus to rebuilding the home, and had started selling drinks from an icebox to raise funds. However, the father-son hope of putting a roof back over their heads dissolved when Zimron, believed to be the unintended target, was gunned down on July 14, 2022 while on Block 2000 (Old Montrose).
Cyrus admitted that his zeal for life diminished significantly after his son’s killing. To add salt to an open wound, the assistance he had been receiving from the Ministry of National Mobilization to cover rent, expired in August last year as it was only expected to be temporary.
“Right now I have nowhere to go. I still by [landlord] but I don’t know when he will throw me out because the seven months done gone. I would like some help to come back home and finish it [house].
Cyrus said living on the edge of homelessness is difficult, adding that he is physically capable of doing the work but needs help securing the building materials.
Persons seeking to help can contact Brian Cyrus at 1-784-530-4878.
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St. Vincent & The Grenadines
London School of Economics renames building after St Lucia’s Sir Arthur Lewis

LSE names building in honour of St Lucia’s first Nobel Prize winner
One of the buildings at London School of Economics (LSE) has been officially renamed after Sir William Arthur Lewis (1915–1991), who was the School’s first black academic and the winner of the Nobel Prize in economics. He studied, taught, and did research at the School.
The Sir Arthur Lewis Building (SAL), which used to be called 32 Lincoln’s Inn Fields (32L), is now home to several LSE departments, such as the Centre for Economic Performance (CEP), the International Growth Centre (IGC), the Department of Economics, the Centre for Macroeconomics, and the Suntory and Toyota International Centres for Economics and Related Disciplines (STICERD).
On Thursday, March 23, 2023, Sir Arthur Lewis’s daughter and granddaughter, as well as the High Commissioner for St. Lucia, attended a ceremony to reveal the new name of the building.
LSE President and Vice Chancellor Minouche Shafik gave a speech at the event that talked about Sir Arthur Lewis’ ongoing legacy at LSE and the lasting contributions he has made to development economics.
Lewis was born in St. Lucia in 1915. He won a government scholarship to study in Britain and moved there in 1933 to get his B.Com. He got a First-Class degree in 1937, and he was given a scholarship to help him get his PhD in Industrial Economics.
Lewis learned from John Hicks, Arnold Plant, Lionel Robbins, and Friedrich Hayek while he was at LSE. He was a member of staff from 1938 to 1948 and became a School Reader in Colonial Economics in 1947. He was the first black academic at the LSE. He was called “one of our best teachers.”
Lewis became a full professor at Manchester University in 1948. He left in 1957 to help the government of Ghana, which had just become independent. He was the head of University College of the West Indies before becoming the university’s first Vice Chancellor.
In 1963, he was made a knight, and from 1963 to 1983, he taught at Princeton University. He also headed up the Caribbean Development Bank.
Lewis won the Nobel Prize in economics in 1979 for “pioneering research on economic development, with a focus on the problems of developing countries.” In 1991, he died in Bridgetown, Barbados.
LSE President and Vice Chancellor Minouche Shafik said this about the renaming: “Sir Arthur Lewis was a pioneer in the field of development economics and an excellent student, teacher, and researcher at LSE. We are delighted to rename one of our buildings after him in recognition of his exemplary career and enduring legacy, both at LSE and beyond.”
Professor Sir Tim Besley from the Department of Economics added, “Nobody who studies development issues can fail to appreciate Arthur Lewis’s legacy and how he framed development challenges as a process of structural change. We honour that legacy at LSE to this day with a dedicated cadre of economists who study development and growth issues. And we have many students from all over the world who come to the LSE study and research in development following in Arthur Lewis’s footsteps.”

Lee Yan LaSur
Lee Yan is a journalist based in Cebu, Philippines. For the past 10 years, he has worked in the media and writes part-time for the St. Vincent Times.
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St. Vincent & The Grenadines
St Vincent’s (SVG) Governing Party to launch its ‘Political Education Arm’

ULP to launch Caribbean and Latin American Institute of Government and Politics
St. Vincent’s governing Unity Labour Party, headed by Dr. Ralph Gonsalves, will soon launch its political education arm.
Gonsalves, speaking at his party’s 22nd anniversary celebration, said one of the weaknesses of the Unity Labour Party is that they haven’t made enough effort to carry out the deep political education which is necessary.
“We have spent a lot of time in government dealing with problems but not enough with the political education of the people”.
“Tonight I’m announcing, and we will launch it formally, that we are launching a Caribbean and Latin American Institute of Government and Politics as the principal educational arm of the Unity Labour Party.”
The leader of the ULP said he would become the board’s chairman, and Augustine Ferdinand will be the organization’s director.
Gonsalves said the political education would be done island-wide.
“We will be carrying out political education all over St. Vincent and the Grenadines and on all the various media platforms so that you will have a greater understanding of how things are happening, how we are evolving, and how better days are ahead,” he said.
In the fields of education and political science, the term “political education” is often seen as a part of “political socialization.” It is a key part of building and strengthening democratic societies, and it is also a tool that political parties need to get things done.
In the area of education, according to Kenneth Prewitt, the Carnegie Professor of Public Affairs and Vice President for Global Centers at Columbia University, programs of political education serve as the foundation for instilling the values appropriate for citizens.
On the other hand, political scientists call it a framework of the government’s activities that aim to mobilize the tasks of nation-building and public inclusion. The political parties’ activities that is to say, political education influences and shapes people as active members of a social and political system.

Ernesto Cooke
Ernesto is a senior journalist with the St. Vincent Times. Having worked in the media for 16 years, he focuses on local and international issues. He has written for the New York Times and reported for the BBC during the La Soufriere eruptions of 2021.
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DISCLAIMER:
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St. Vincent & The Grenadines
The top exporter of seabob shrimp globally is Guyana

Guyana is the leading exporter of seabob shrimp globally
Guyana is the world’s largest exporter of seabob shrimp, and the government is working to make the fishery product more productive and competitive.
The plan is to make Guyana a bigger exporter of Atlantic seabob shrimp while making sure the stock is stable in the long run and making people richer in the growing tourism and oil and gas industries.
This fits with the PPP/C Government’s plan for food security, as it continues to lead efforts to cut the high cost of food imports in the Caribbean by 25% by 2025.
Among the strengths are a well-run, regulated export industry led by three vertically integrated businesses that have earned marine stewardship council (MSC) accreditation as a sign of their commitment to sustainable business practices, highly effective procedures (from catch to freezing in 20 minutes), a sufficient supply of both skilled and unskilled labor for future growth, and an average annual employment generation of about 800 people, with nearly half of them being women (almost 50 per cent of employees have been with the company for more than ten years).
The Seabob value chain in Guyana January 2023 summary report brought this up.
Guyana is one of the two Caribbean countries and one of the 12 ACP countries chosen for the “FISH4ACP” program.
One of the strengths of the industrial channel for seabob is that the three industrial companies work together from capture to export. This makes it possible to meet MSC regulations in a coordinated way.
From 2015 to 2020, about 98% of the average annual catch of seabobs will come from the industrial channel, and 93% of that amount will be exported, mostly to the US market, where demand is still high.
Between 2015 and 2020, three industrial seabob businesses in Guyana made about 7,600 tonnes of peeled seabob, which is the same as 17,000 tonnes of fresh seabob. About 93% of the peeled seabob went to markets in the US and the European Union (EU), and 7% went to supermarkets, hotels, and restaurants in the region.
In 2019, the Guyana seabob fishery got conditional approval from the MSC.
About 87% of all fishing is done by the 76 licensed trawlers owned by the three largest industrial companies and the 11 trawlers owned by other people that they hire.
To keep their certification, these companies have shown they are committed to making their fishing methods more sustainable by following MSC and fisheries department (FD) rules. This includes a no-trawl zone near the coast, requirements for all industrial trawl nets to have bycatch reduction devices (BRDs) and turtle excluder devices (TEDs), the use of onboard electronic monitoring by closed circuit television and vessel monitoring systems (VMS), and adherence to harvest control rules (HCRs), which limit the number of days at sea to 225 per year.
A recent review of the Seabob Fisheries Management Plan 2015-2020 found that industrial participants have followed fisheries management rules for the most part (Fisheries Department, 2020).
Even though the artisanal channel only caught 1% of all seabob between 2015 and 2020, it created jobs in fishing and in processing and selling seabob for the domestic market. This is on top of what the more than 300 Chinese seine fishing boats, which catch seabobs and other fish that can be sold, do for food security.
Key opportunities include a strong domestic demand for fresh, minimally processed or peeled seabob that meets food safety and quality standards and can be sold to restaurants and supermarkets to meet demand from the tourism and oil and gas sectors.
These chances will happen if stock problems are fixed and bigger shrimp are caught.
Strong demand from the US and EU for more high-value seabob is another chance for Guyana, as the US and EU remain its top and second export markets. Another chance is the chance to improve the sustainability brand.
The report stressed that there is a very high demand for seabobs in the United States. According to a consumer survey, three-quarters of the families asked eat seabob, and each family eats an average of 5.4 kg per year. This makes Guyana one of the countries in the Caribbean Community and Common Market that eats the most seafood at home.
The following vision statement was made with the help of stakeholders. It was based on the SWOT analysis, the sustainability evaluations, the VC map, and the interests of stakeholders as they were expressed during consultations.
“By 2032, Guyana will have strengthened its position as a leading exporter of seabob shrimp around the world by ensuring a sustainable and resilient value chain for seabob across the industrial and artisanal channels that is well-regulated and supported by data, with better infrastructure for artisanal fishers and the empowerment of women in both channels.”
There are specific and measurable goals for the economy, the environment, and society by the year 2032.
By making sure that fisheries and aquaculture in Guyana are sustainable from an economic, social, and environmental point of view, this will help to improve food and nutrition security, economic success, and the creation of jobs.
Guyana gets about 20,000 tons of seabob each year, which is worth about $50 million.
The Organization of African, Caribbean, and Pacific States (OACPS) started the FISH4ACP program to help fisheries and aquaculture grow in a way that is good for the environment. With money from the EU and the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) is running the five-year Value Chain (VC) Development Initiative (2020–2025).

Lee Yan LaSur
Lee Yan is a journalist based in Cebu, Philippines. For the past 10 years, he has worked in the media and writes part-time for the St. Vincent Times.
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DISCLAIMER:
Underneath Part 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for “honest use” for functions akin to criticism, remark, information reporting, instructing, scholarship, and analysis. Honest use is a use permitted by copyright statute that may in any other case be infringing.”
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