CARIBBEAN ROUNDUP 
 Bahamas 
 Former  Bahamas  Prime  Minister,  
 Hubert  Ingraham  has  been  admitted  
 to hospital after testing positive for  
 COVID-19. 
 Ingraham, who first led the Free  
 National Movement (FNM) party to a  
 general election victory in 1992 and  
 followed that up with victories in 1997  
 and 2007, was diagnosed with the virus  
 recently, but was admitted to hospital  
 last week when his  
 symptoms  worsened,  
 said Dr. Duane Sands,  
 a former minister of  
 health. 
 Sands,  said  at  no  
 time was the 73-year-old placed on a  
 ventilator machine. 
 “He is Covid positive and he was  
 being treated at home, but got worse  
 and is now hospitalized. He is in a critical  
 care area at Doctors Hospital being  
 managed by a team of physicians as he  
 convalesces,” Sands said. 
 The former PM’s diagnosis comes as  
 19  people  were  confirmed  to  have  the  
 virus last week, including 13 men and  
 six women. 
 Officials of the Health Ministry are  
 said to be on alert for new COVID- 
 19 variants, particularly ones originating  
 in the United Kingdom and South  
 Africa. 
   
 Barbados 
 After an outbreak of COVID-19 cases,  
 surpassing 360, the island’s lone prison  
 is  now  free  of  the  virus,  according  
 to  Minister  of  Homes  Affairs,  Wilfred  
 Abrahams. 
 He said there were no active cases of  
 COVID-19 at Her Majesty Prisons Dodds  
 within either the staff or inmate population. 
 After two members  
 of  the  prison’s  staff  
 were  tested  positive  
 for COVID-19 on Dec.  
 31, 2020, mass testing was carried out  
 at the prison. The infection number  
 increased to 366 at the peak of the outbreak, 
  comprised of 102 members of  
 staff and 264 prisoners. 
 Adams told a news conference, “this  
 potentially  disastrous  situation  was  
 managed and brought under control  
 through rigid adherence to the protocols  
 set for its control and by constant  
 communication  and  co-operation  by  
 and between all concerned. This included  
 in large measure, the inmate population  
 at the prison as well.” 
 He  told  the media  that  the  protocol  
 for ensuring the timely release of those  
 who had served their entire prison sentence  
 has been working well and those  
 due for release were being allowed to go  
 as scheduled. 
 Adams said the ability to get a handle  
 on the situation at HMP Dodds depended  
 Caribbean L 6     ife, MARCH 5-11, 2021 
 Updated daily at www.caribbeanlifenews.com 
 Former Bahamian Prime Minster Hubert A. Ingraham seen here delivering his speech during the special session on drugs at the  
 United Nations Monday, June 8, 1998.   (Associated Press/Kathy Willens, fi le) 
 on the prison’s “vigilance and discipline  
 with both the prison officers and  
 the inmate population, while we were  
 under this crisis.” 
   
 Guyana 
 The  Guyana  government  will  be  
 reducing the excise tax on gasoline and  
 diesel  to  ease  the  domestic  impact  of  
 the sharp rise in the world market price  
 for fuel. 
 In announcing the  
 cut  in  excise  taxes  
 last week,  senior minister  
 in the Office of  
 the  President  with  
 Responsibility for Finance, Dr. Ashni  
 Singh said over the past few months, oil  
 prices have risen steadily on  the world  
 market, from US$35 a barrel in late  
 October 2020 to over US$60 a barrel at  
 the close of trade a week ago. 
 He  added  that  as  a  result  of  this  
 steady  increase  on  the  world  market,  
 fuel prices have also been rising on the  
 domestic market. 
 In order  to minimize  the  impact on  
 domestic consumers, particularly the  
 traveling public as well as those productive  
 sectors for whom fuel is an important  
 input, Singh announced that the  
 Government will be lowering the excise  
 tax rate on both gasoline and diesel  
 from  50  per  cent  to  35  percent  with  
 immediate effect. 
 As a result of the reduction in the  
 excise tax rates, the price at the pump  
 will  also  be  reduced  with  immediate  
 effect. 
   
 Jamaica 
 Governor of the Bank of Jamaica  
 (BOJ), Richard Byles says the country is  
 beginning to show signs of incremental  
 improvement in economic activity, even  
 amid the COVID-19 pandemic. 
 He  cited  the  relatively  
 buoyant foreign  
 exchange market flows,  
 adequate  reserves,  a  
 sustainable balance of  
 payments position and  
 the containment of inflation within the  
 BOJ’s 4-6 percent target range as evidence  
 of the progress being made. 
 He said based on the latest development  
 “we believe the contraction in  
 the economy is past its worst and the  
 outlook is for continued, albeit more  
 gradual  improvements  in  economic  
 activity.” 
 Speaking at the BOJ’s recently quarterly  
 digital briefing, the BOJ governor  
 noted that the 10.7 percent contraction  
 in  domestic  growth  recorded  in  the  
 September  2020  quarter  represented  
 an improvement on the 18.4 percent  
 decline for April to June 2020, and the  
 bank continues to project that for the  
 full  2020/2021  fiscal  year,  real  gross  
 domestic product (GDP) will contract in  
 the range of 10-12 percent. 
   
 St. Kitts 
 St. Kitts and Nevis Premier, Mark  
 Brantley and other cabinet ministers  
 became the first individuals to receive  
 Continued on Page 18 
 THE NEWS FROM BACK HOME 
 Former Bahamas PM tests Covid positive 
 
				
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