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 Vol. 30, Issue 23  BROOKLYN EDITION June 7–13, 2019 
 Antiguan Mona V. Wyre Manigo receives proclamation from New York City Comptroller  
 Scott Stringer.  Photo by Nelson A. King 
 By Nelson A. King 
 New York City Comptroller  
 Scott M. Stringer Tuesday  
 evening honored two Caribbean  
 entities in New York City  
 and a Caribbean personality  
 during his annual tribute to  
 Caribbean nationals  in  recognition  
 of Caribbean American  
 Heritage Month in June.  
 Stringer honored the Manhattan 
 based  Carib  News  
 newspaper,  the  Brooklynbased  
 Sesame  Flyers  International, 
  Inc., and Mona V. Wyre  
 Manigo,  the  Antiguan-born  
 president of the Harlem-based  
 Antigua and Barbuda Progressive  
 Society. 
 The elegant ceremony took  
 place at the auditorium in the  
 T-Building at the sprawling  
 NYC Health + Hospitals/Kings  
 Country,  commonly  known  
 as Kings Country Hospital, in  
 the  heart  of  the  Caribbean  
 community in Brooklyn. 
 “Today,  we  know  that  
 immigrants make us stronger,  
 Continued on Page 12 
 By Bert Wilkinson 
 The four remaining Caribbean  
 Community  countries,  
 which are still brave enough to  
 continue producing sugar are  
 demanding political and economic  
 protection from regional  
 governments  saying  tax  free  
 imported sugar from outside  
 the bloc is undermining their  
 efforts to remain in the industry 
 .T 
 he umbrella Sugar Association  
 of the Caribbean (SAC)  
 which met recently in Belize  
 complained  to  anyone  who  
 would listen that up to 70 percent  
 of all sugar consumed in  
 the 15-nation grouping comes  
 “from extra regional sources  
 duty  free,  displacing  market  
 opportunity  for  more  than  
 200,000  metric  tonnes  of  Caribbean  
 sugar.” Only Guyana,  
 Belize, Jamaica and Barbados  
 are still in the business that  
 dates back to the trans Atlantic  
 slave  era.  Others  like  Trinidad  
 and St. Kitts have in the past  
 15 years dropped out of the  
 sector  altogether,  saying  that  
 their product had become so  
 un-competitive that it no longer  
 made sense to continue operating  
 factories and maintaining  
 estates.  It  is  simply  cheaper  to  
 import. 
 Continued on Page 18 
 Stringer honors Caribbean Americans 
 SUGAR  
 CARTEL  
 PROTEST 
 Caribbean sugar producers  
 rail against imported crystals 
 
				
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