
 
        
         
		CARICOM SLAMS  Workers shut down bridges 
 measure is to safeguard the Dominica  
 community and the integrity of the  
 Dominica  Citizenship  by  Investment  
 Program,” the announcement stated. 
 None of the other participating CIP  
 territories has as yet made similarly  
 clear moves as many in the 15-nation  
 bloc  prefer  to  take  collective  action  at  
 the level of CARICOM rather than expose  
 themselves individually. 
 Antigua, which also has a vibrant  
 CIP program has asked the US for a full  
 list of names of people facing sanctions  
 so they could be blocked from applying  
 or participating. The island wants  
 to ensure that it has an accurate list of  
 sanctionable people rather than act with  
 haste. 
 “It is important to appreciate that not  
 all Russian persons and entities have  
 been placed on a sanctions list. These  
 lawful persons and entities continue to  
 be entitled to benefit from services provided  
 by Antigua and Barbuda and other  
 countries.  In  this  regard,  the  relevant  
 agencies in Antigua and Barbuda will  
 be required to follow the international  
 sanctions lists,” said Sir Ronald Sanders,  
 Antigua’s ambassador to the US. 
 Respected regional pollster, Barbadian  
 Peter Wickham had urged Prime  
 Minister Gaston Browne to act accordingly, 
 Caribbean L 12     ife, March 11-17, 2022 
  arguing that there could be a rush  
 of applicants seeking a new refuge in the  
 Caribbean. 
 “It  is  possible  that  as  their  borders  
 close and the situation gets worse,  
 maybe some of them might start to look  
 for citizenship opportunities elsewhere.  
 Hopefully, Antigua and Barbuda will do  
 the due diligence required…I personally  
 think it’s a good idea to exclude such  
 persons,” he told the Observer newspaper 
 .A 
 ntiguan  officials  had  suggested,  
 however, that sanctions imposed against  
 some international banks had already  
 made it difficult for CIP foreign agents  
 to conduct business, meaning that the  
 application process had been severely  
 affected anyway. New applications have  
 been put on hold for the while, officials  
 said. 
 Continued from Page 1  
 legislation (A9037 / S8165) that would  
 let the State’s most vulnerable workers  
 access compensation  if  they  lose a  job  
 or income. 
 The legislation would affect three sets  
 of workers – undocumented workers,  
 documented workers paid off the books  
 at certain employers, and self-employed  
 workers making limited income. 
 These workers currently cannot get  
 access  to  assistance  if  they  lose work,  
 a gap underlined during the pandemic,  
 when hundreds of thousands of New  
 Yorkers were left to fend for themselves  
 after being shut out of stimulus checks  
 and unemployment support. 
 The program is estimated to cost  
 $800 million in its first year, and any  
 surplus would be rolled over to the following  
 year. 
 Laborers Local 79, a union representing  
 more than 10,000 workers in  
 the construction industry, supported  
 the Excluded No More proposal, saying  
 it would help close the gap between  
 union  and  non-union  contractors,  
 while making it easier for construction  
 workers  to  organize  freely  on  the  job  
 without fear of retaliation. 
 Besides Laborers Local 79, organizations  
 supporting  Tuesday’s  march  
 included Make the Road New York,  
 New York Communities for Change,  
 National Day Laborer Organizing Network, 
  Los Deliveristas Unidos, New  
 Immigrant Community Empowerment  
 (NICE), the New York Immigration  
 Coalition, Desis Rising Up and Moving,  
 the Laundry Worker Center, Workers  
 Justice Project, Red de Pueblos Transnacionales, 
  Jahajee Sisters, Churches  
 United for Fair Housing, African Communities  
 Together, Cabrini Immigrant  
 Services, the Don Bosco Workers Center, 
  Community Resource Cente, and  
 Sepa Mujer. 
 “The Excluded Workers Fund is an  
 essential program that has provided  
 life-saving funds to so many hardworking  
 New Yorkers during their time of  
 need, and it absolutely should become  
 permanent,” said NYC Public Advocate  
 Jumaane D. Williams, the son of Grenadian  
 immigrants. 
 “We worked hard to establish the  
 Excluded Workers Fund earlier in the  
 pandemic, and Albany must continue  
 that work by passing the Excluded No  
 More  proposal,”  he  added.  “The  fund  
 has been an essential lifeline to so  
 many during the pandemic, and the  
 state should invest in a permanent  
 program so that all New Yorkers who  
 have lost income but are not eligible  
 for unemployment insurance can feel  
 safe.” 
 Lander  said  “New York City  and  its  
 economy are stronger when all working  
 families get the support they need to  
 weather a crisis with food on the table  
 and a roof over their heads. 
 Continued from Page 1  
 Dominica’s Prime Minister Roosevelt  
 Skerrit.   REUTERS / Eduardo Munoz, File 
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