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 Vol. 33, Issue 10  QUEENS/LONG ISLAND/BRONX/MANHATTAN March 11-17, 2022 
 CARICOM  
 SLAMS  
 RUSSIA 
 Individual nations begin  
 sanctions against Russian  
 nationals 
 By Bert Wilkinson 
 Caribbean Community governments  
 last week widely condemned  
 Russia’s  invasion  of  
 Ukraine calling for a diplomatic  
 solution  rather  than  war  to  
 end the conflict while leaving  
 any sanctions up to individual  
 nations. 
 That decision was made at  
 the recent leaders meeting in  
 Belize but by the middle of this  
 week, tiny Dominica appeared  
 to have fired the strongest diplomatic  
 salvo, suspending nationals  
 from Russia and Belarus  
 from participating in its much  
 vaunted citizenship by investment  
 program (CIP). 
 Along with St. Kitts, St.  
 Lucia, Grenada and Antigua,  
 the  island  nation  of  about  
 75,000 people has used the program  
 to replace revenue lost  
 from the US-inspired collapse of  
 its banana exports to the European  
 Union in the past decade  
 and import taxes also garnished  
 through tax free trade in the  
 regional single market. 
 Latest figures indicate that the  
 island national-nestled between  
 the French Overseas Territories  
 of Martinique and Guadeloupemade  
 around US$550 million in  
 the past three years from people  
 who participated in the scheme.  
 Some of the money is to be used  
 to build an international airport  
 that could accommodate  
 jet aircraft and help to pay off  
 external debt. 
 A  government  announcement  
 from  Roseau,  said  cabinet  
 had agreed to an immediate  
 suspension of the right of  
 nationals of these two countries  
 to apply to obtain Dominican  
 citizenship and passports once  
 they  can  afford  the  minimum  
 US$100,000  fee,  pass  due  diligence  
 tests, are older than 18  
 years,  in  good  health,  possess  
 no criminal record and could  
 defend their source of funds.  
 English language proficiency is  
 not a requirement. 
 “In light of the ongoing conflict  
 in Ukraine, the government  
 of  Dominica  is  suspending  the  
 process of all new applications  
 from Russians and Belarusians  
 with  immediate  effect.  This  
 Hundreds of excluded workers march for improve benefi ts on Brooklyn Bridge.   Make the  
 Road New York 
 Hundreds of excluded workers shut  
 down Brooklyn, Manhattan bridges 
 By Nelson A. King 
 Hundreds of excluded workers  
 and electeds came together  
 on Tuesday in massive marches  
 over the Brooklyn and Manhattan  
 Bridges to raise the  
 heat for an additional $3 billion  
 for the Excluded Workers  
 Fund in the State budget and  
 a permanent program dubbed  
 “Excluded No More” to provide  
 compensation to workers who  
 have lost a job or income and  
 are ineligible for unemployment  
 insurance. 
 Workers  in  helmets,  vests,  
 cleaning supplies and other  
 work tools linked arms to shut  
 down the bridges as the deadline  
 approaches for the State  
 Senate and Assembly to release  
 their one-house budgets. 
 They were joined by Democratic  
 candidate for Lieutenant  
 Governor of New York Ana  
 María Archila and elected officials  
 including New York City  
 Comptroller Brad Lander and  
 Council  Members  Carmen  de  
 la Rosa, Sandy Nurse and Lincoln  
 Restler. 
 “While  so  many  of  my  
 friends  and  neighbors  were  
 able to access the fund, so  
 many others never got a chance  
 because of how quickly the  
 fund ran out of money,” said  
 Victoria Rivera, a board member  
 at New York Communities  
 for Change. “We marched so  
 that the thousands of workers  
 who didn’t get it can finally get  
 the  relief  they  need. We  need  
 to refund the Excluded Workers  
 Fund and work to create a  
 permanent  solution  by  passing  
 Excluded No More,” 
 Workers  at  the  action  
 demanded  an  additional  $3  
 billion for the Excluded Workers  
 Fund  to  make  funding  
 more  accessible  to  workers  
 who could be eligible for it. 
 Organizers  said more  than  
 130,000  people  across  New  
 York State have had their lives  
 transformed  after  receiving  
 funding  from  the  Excluded  
 Workers Fund. 
 Yet, they said, scores of New  
 Yorkers could still be eligible  
 for funding but didn’t have  
 enough  time  to  qualify  or  
 faced barriers in applying. 
 A  recent  Immigration  
 Research Initiative report estimated  
 that 175,000 New Yorkers  
 would be eligible for funding  
 if the Excluded Workers  
 Fund was expanded. 
 Workers are also calling for  
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