Caribbean Report 21-04-1995

In Saint Lucia there continues to be concerns over the missing UN funds but there have been no calls for government resignations. The tenth meeting of the Executive Committee of the Caribbean Association of Indigenous Banks (CAIB) opened in St. Lucia. Caribbean students are having a hard time coping in the American education system according to the Caribbean Research Center. Head of the Center, Dr. George Irish comments on some of the problems facing Caribbean students. CARICOM Secretary-General, Dr. Edwin Carrington has called for more private sector involvement in regional decision making. Caribbean Association of Industry and Commerce (CAIC), Chief Executive Pat Thompson states that the onus was on CARICOM governments to invite the private sector to key conferences. A German importer of bananas from Latin America has lodged a complaint with the German Constitutional Court against the EU's import rules. Twenty- five years after the black power movement, Trinidad and Tobago reflects on the quest for black power and what has been achieved in the intervening years. Dr. Gordon Rohlehr and Selwyn Ryan comment on the need for black consciousness.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: The British Broadcasting Corporation, Rowe, Yvette (anchor), Ninvalle, Pete (correspondent), Hinkson, Chester (interviewee), Benjamin, John (interviewee), Richards, Ken (correspondent), Irish, George (interviewee), Carrington, Edwin (interviewee), Ransome, Debbie (correspondent), Thompson, Pat (interviewee), Fraser, Tony (correspondent), Stewart, Taimoon (interviewee), Rohlehr, Gordon (interviewee), Ryan, Selwyn (interviewee)
Other Authors: The University of the West Indies
Format: Recording, oral biblioteca
Language:English
Published: The British Broadcasting Corporation 1995-04-21
Subjects:Saint Lucia, > Politics and government, Political corruption, > Saint Lucia, Scandals, > Saint Lucia, Banks and banking, > Caribbean Area, Economic development, > Caribbean Area, Financial institutions, > Caribbean Area, Immigrants, > Education, > United States, West Indians, > Education, > United States, Academic achievement, > Caribbean Area, Public-private sector cooperation, > Caribbean Area, Decision making, > Caribbean Area, Banana trade, Competition, Unfair, > European Union countries, Germany, > Foreign economic relations, Restraint of trade, > European Union countries, Black power, > Trinidad and Tobago, Blacks, > Trinidad and Tobago, Trinidad and Tobago, > Race relations, Caribbean Community, Caribbean Association of Industry and Commerce,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2139/14265
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Summary:In Saint Lucia there continues to be concerns over the missing UN funds but there have been no calls for government resignations. The tenth meeting of the Executive Committee of the Caribbean Association of Indigenous Banks (CAIB) opened in St. Lucia. Caribbean students are having a hard time coping in the American education system according to the Caribbean Research Center. Head of the Center, Dr. George Irish comments on some of the problems facing Caribbean students. CARICOM Secretary-General, Dr. Edwin Carrington has called for more private sector involvement in regional decision making. Caribbean Association of Industry and Commerce (CAIC), Chief Executive Pat Thompson states that the onus was on CARICOM governments to invite the private sector to key conferences. A German importer of bananas from Latin America has lodged a complaint with the German Constitutional Court against the EU's import rules. Twenty- five years after the black power movement, Trinidad and Tobago reflects on the quest for black power and what has been achieved in the intervening years. Dr. Gordon Rohlehr and Selwyn Ryan comment on the need for black consciousness.