Nevis, West Indies. ?A Non-Tourist-Trap? Blog About Nevis.

October 31st, 2009

Happy Halloween From NevisBlog.com

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Halloween Pumpkin

A Brief History of Halloween

Oualie Beach Resort Hotel
Nevis, West Indies
October 31, 2009

Halloween (also written Hallowe’en, literally “holy evening”), also known as All Hallows’ Eve or All Saints’ Eve, is an annual holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic festival of Samhain and gets its name from being the evening (e’en) before the Western Christian holy day of All Saints (the Eastern Orthodox celebrate All Saints’ Day in June). It is largely a secular celebration but some have expressed strong feelings about perceived religious overtones.

The colours black and orange have become associated with the celebrations, perhaps because of the darkness of night and the colour of fire or of pumpkins, and maybe because of the vivid contrast this presents for merchandising. Another association is with the jack-o’-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes and attending costume parties, ghost tours, bonfires, visiting haunted attractions, pranks, telling scary stories, and watching horror films.

Historian Nicholas Rogers, exploring the origins of Halloween, notes that while “some folklorists have detected its origins in the Roman feast of Pomona, the goddess of fruits and seeds, or in the festival of the dead called Parentalia, [it is] more typically linked to the Celtic festival of Samhain or Samuin (pronounced sow-an or sow-in)”.The name is derived from Old Irish and means roughly “summer’s end”. A similar festival was held by the ancient Britons and is known as Calan Gaeaf (pronounced kalan-geyf).
 
Snap-Apple Night by Daniel Maclise showing a Halloween party in Blarney, Ireland, in 1832. The young children on the right bob for apples. A couple in the center play a variant, which involves retrieving an apple hanging from a string. The couples at left play divination games.The festival of Samhain celebrates the end of the “lighter half” of the year and beginning of the “darker half”, and is sometimes regarded as the “Celtic New Year”.

The celebration has some elements of a festival of the dead. The ancient Celts believed that the border between this world and the Otherworld became thin on Samhain, allowing spirits (both harmless and harmful) to pass through. The family’s ancestors were honoured and invited home whilst harmful spirits were warded off. It is believed that the need to ward off harmful spirits led to the wearing of costumes and masks. Their purpose was to disguise oneself as a harmful spirit and thus avoid harm. In Scotland the spirits were impersonated by young men dressed in white with masked, veiled or blackened faces. Samhain was also a time to take stock of food supplies and slaughter livestock for winter stores. Bonfires played a large part in the festivities. All other fires were doused and each home lit their hearth from the bonfire. The bones of slaughtered livestock were cast into its flames. Sometimes two bonfires would be built side-by-side, and people and their livestock would walk between them as a cleansing ritual.


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October 30th, 2009

St. Kitts - Nevis Hosts Narcotics and Illegal Arms Seminar

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Some Of The Illegal Drugs Seized This Year

Some Of The Illegal Drugs Seized This Year

Basseterre, St. Kitts - Nevis
October 30, 2009 (CUOPM)

Efforts continue in St. Kitts and Nevis next week to grapple with the problem of trafficking in arms and drugs in the Caribbean.

Director of Plans, Intelligence and Law Enforcement at the RSS Headquarters in Barbados, Mr. Ian Queeley said law enforcement officers from the member states of the Regional Security System (RSS) will focus on arms, narcotics and human trafficking during a seminar at the St. Kitts Marriott Resort and Royal Beach Casino from November 1 to 7.

He disclosed that St. Kitts and Nevis Prime Minister and Minister of National Security and the current Chair of the Regional Security System (RSS), Hon. Dr. Denzil L. Douglas will deliver the Feature Address at the opening ceremony on Monday morning.

Mr. Queeley said twenty-five police and customs officers will focus on cooperative solutions to combat these types of trafficking.

“The seminar will also address the health implications of narcotics and human trafficking,” said Mr. Queeley, the Assistant Commisioner of Police in the Royal St. Christopher and Nevis Police Force and who is on secondment to the Barbados-based RSS.

He said that the target audience for this seminar is senior Operational Commanders (Inspectors to Superintendents of Police or the equivalent in other Law Enforcement Organisations).

The one week seminar is being coordinated with the assistance of the Central Liaison Office (CLO), on behalf of the United States Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS) and the United States Military Liaison Office (USMLO).

Participants are expected from Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Dominica, Grenada, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia and St. Vincent and the Grenadines.


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October 30th, 2009

St. Kitts - Nevis Votes To End Cuba Embargo

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Delano Bart Speaking At The United Nations

Delano Bart Speaking At The United Nations

Basseterre, St. Kitts - Nevis
October 30, 2009 (CUOPM)

St. Kitts and Nevis was among the 187 nations that voted this week for an end to the United States economic and trade embargo against Cuba. The vote recorded was 187 in favour to 3 against and 2 abstentions.

The 192-Member Assembly in its resolution urged the lifting of stiff commercial, financial and economic sanctions that were slapped on Cuba in the aftermath of the cold war.  This marked the eighteenth year the world body had adopted a similar resolution on the issue.

As happened last year, a burst of applause greeted the Assembly’s passage of text that reaffirmed the sovereign equality of States, the non-intervention and non-interference in their affairs, and the freedom of international trade and navigation.  The two-page document again called upon all States to refrain from promulgating and applying laws and measures such as that promulgated in the 1996 “Helms-Burton Act” which carried extraterritorial effects that impacted the sovereignty of other States.

St. Kitts and Nevis Permanent Representative to the United Nations, His Excellency Delano Bart, Q.C. speaking on behalf of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM), reiterated its unequivocal opposition to the United States’ imposition of the economic, commercial and financial embargo against Cuba, which had been opposed by the overwhelming majority of the international community for the past 17 years.

Mr. Bart said that the unilateral imposition of extraterritorial laws on third States was contrary to both the letter and spirit of the United Nations Charter.  The embargo ran counter to the principles of multilateralism, international law, sovereignty and free trade that the body traditionally championed.

He said that the punitive embargo was of particular concern to CARICOM, which maintained close relations with Cuba through wide-ranging cooperative programmes in areas such as trade, health care, infrastructure, human resource development and other areas.

Its future regional development was reliant in many ways on the area’s collective advancement and progress.  The embargo was not just a punitive act against Cuba, but an impediment to the region’s shared development.

He referred to the Secretary-General’s report that showed that the embargo even impacted the manner in which organs and agencies of the United Nations system carried out their work in Cuba.

The embargo’s impacts on the Cuban economy and its humanitarian impacts on the people of that island nation in the areas of health care and food were especially saddening, he said.

Continuing, he said that with the increasing frequency and strengthening of hurricanes wrought by climate change, the embargo’s unacceptable humanitarian impact was even more acute.  It was remarkable that Cuba continued to help other nations in the developing world even as it struggled with a recent string of natural disasters and the impact of the global economic crisis.

Despite the long history of dashed hopes, CARICOM believed that a new beginning was possible in the relationship between the Governments of Cuba and the United States.  But the lifting of the embargo was a prerequisite of any meaningful rapprochement between the two countries, not a negotiated end result.

Even with recent positive indicators of flexibility, CARICOM noted that the United States’ Trading with the Enemy Act, which listed only Cuba as its target, was renewed just last month.

Introducing the resolution on the Cuban trade embargo, Minister for Foreign Affairs of Cuba, Bruno Rodriguez Parrila, called the blockade an “uncultured act of arrogance” that had hampered the development of Cuba’s economy and was also applied to other countries that wanted to carry out business with the Caribbean nation.

He said it was an “absurd policy” that caused suffering and led to shortages of basic necessities.  The embargo was a massive, flagrant and systematic violation of human rights.  In the Geneva Convention of 1948, it was classified as an act of genocide, he added.

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