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By Sir Ronald Sanders, Thursday, March 11, 2010
It’s the high seas equivalent of shooting yourself in the foot. Several Caribbean governments are harpooning their own sustainable tourism industry by supporting Japan’s ruthless campaign to continue killing whales.
A group of International Whaling Commission (IWC) nations meeting from March 2 to 4 in Florida is reported to have considered recommending to the full membership that Japan, Iceland and Norway be allowed to hunt whales despite a 1986 moratorium on commercial whaling. Japan, in particular, would no longer have to pretend that, in killing thousands of whales every year, it is doing so for “scientific” purposes.
- Region in drought: the thirsty Caribbean
- Disasters need more than prayers
- To OAS or not to OAS: That is the question
- Op-Ed: Religion has no place in legislation
- Professor Rex Nettleford is dead
- Caribbean islands prepare to take in Haitian refugees
- Powerful 7.3 earthquake and aftershocks hit Haiti, tsunami watch issued
- Dominican Prime Minister Roosevelt Skerrit assumes chairmanship of CARICOM
- Jamaica reshapes tax package after public outcry
- Report says region’s GDP will fall with no climate deal
- Jamaica closer to IMF deal
- Beyond Kyoto: The importance of the Copenhagen Summit on Climate Change
- Caribbean hoping demands will be met at climate change conference
- On World AIDS Day 2009, sexual minorities are still criminals in the Caribbean
- Constitutional reform referendum defeated in St. Vincent & the Grenadines
- Referendum day on monarchy, constitutional reform in St. Vincent & the Grenadines
- IMF to Jamaica: “There will be pain”
- Déjà vu? Jamaica’s Return to the IMF, is this the 1970s all over again?
- Should Barbadians fear a multicultural society?
- Illiteracy linked to crime, poverty in Guyana
- Guyana’s high emigration due to hopelessness, says union boss
- Jamaica introduces $5,000 note, worth US$55
- Jamaica: Subdued tax protests ahead of Opposition’s budget reply
- Jamaican finance Minister Shaw presents Government’s budget
- Sustaining satisfaction: Tourism in a time of trouble
- Plane Hijacked in Montego Bay, Jamaica
- While Latin American leaders bite, Obama keeps his cool at Fifth Summit
- Cuba, Chavez-Obama showdown shaping Summit headlines on opening day
- A Young Spin on an Old Tale: Youth and HIV/AIDS
- Castro: Easing of Cuba Restrictions ‘Positive’, But Not Nearly Enough
- 5th Summit of the Americas: New leaders, fresh hopes and the question of Cuba
- US: White House confirms change in Cuban policy but trade embargo remains
- Regional: Trinis, fearing currency devaluation, hoard US dollars
- Regional: Trinidadians unimpressed with Summit of Americas $500m bill
- Regional: Abuse of young women fuelling HIV epidemic in Jamaica
- Remembering Sam Lord’s Castle: the tragic fairytale of Barbados’ best hotel
- Constitutional reform referendum defeated in St. Vincent & the Grenadines
- Words hurt: is it time for hate speech legislation in Barbados?
- Are Barbados’ child support and paternity laws skewed against men?
- On World AIDS Day 2009, sexual minorities are still criminals in the Caribbean
- Barbados school boys allegedly beaten by teacher, caught on tape
- Barbados signs visa waiver with European Union
- Barbados announces amnesty for illegal CARICOM immigrants
- Sustaining satisfaction: Tourism in a time of trouble
- Regional: Trinidadians unimpressed with Summit of Americas $500m bill
- Full summary of the Government of Barbados’ 2009/10 budget
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