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U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary for two-day visit to Guyana
Mar 24, 2022 News - Source - Kaieteur News Online -- https://www.kaieteurnewsonline...day-visit-to-guyana/
β meeting planned with govt., opposition, civil society
Kaieteur News β The United States Deputy Assistant Secretary (DAS) for Caribbean Affairs and Haiti, Barbara A. Feinstein will visit Guyana on March 24-26.
The United States Deputy Assistant Secretary (DAS) for Caribbean Affairs and Haiti, Barbara A. Feinstein
According to a US Embassy press release, Ms Feinstein is scheduled to meet with the government, opposition and civil society. The US Embassy also said that Ms Feinsteineβs visit underscores the continued importance the United States places on the U.S./Guyanese partnership. Ms Feinstein will meet with Vice President, Bharrat Jagdeo, members of the opposition, CARICOM, the private sector, and civil society.
Feinstein, a career member of the Senior Executive Service, is the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Caribbean Affairs and Haiti. Ms. Feinstein most recently served as Deputy Assistant Administrator for Caribbean Affairs, Haiti, Cuba, Mexico, and Central America with the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). She has held various leadership positions with USAID, including its Senior Deputy Assistant Administrator for Legislative Affairs; Deputy Chief of Staff to Administrator Rajiv Shah, Chief of Staff and Senior Policy Advisor to Acting Administrator Alonzo Fulgham and Special Assistant to Administrator Henrietta Fore. Other assignments include service with the U.S. Departments of State and Defense.
Ms. Feinstein has served on the professional staff of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on State and Foreign Operations and the House International Relations Committee of the United States Congress. She holds a Masterβs degree in International and Public Affairs from Princeton University and a Bachelor of Arts in Latin American Studies, Spanish and Portuguese from the University of California-Berkeley. Ms. Feinstein speaks Spanish and Portuguese.
Covid-19 pandemic: US Govt ready to help Guyana on road to recovery
Guyana is set to benefit from US$1.5 million in βUrgent COVID-19 Assistanceβ provided by the United States government to support some Caribbean Countries in their vaccination campaigns.
This was announced by Deputy Assistant Secretary for Caribbean Affairs and Haiti, Barbara Feinstein, during her visit to Guyana on Thursday when she met with Acting President Mark Phillips.
She disclosed that this assistance is being made through the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) for countries in the Eastern Caribbean region, including The Bahamas, Guyana, Suriname, and Trinidad and Tobago.
According to a missive from the United States Embassy in Georgetown, this assistance will be focused on helping countries with vaccine deployment and readiness, and includes efforts to address vaccine hesitancy and combat vaccine mis- and dis-information.
It noted that the additional support will assist with community vaccination campaigns and engagement activities, strengthen the cold chain environment, train healthcare workers, and develop regional and country specific campaigns to increase vaccine uptake.
Activities will be implemented through local, regional, and international organisations such as the local Ministries of Health, local non-governmental organizations, the Caribbean Public Health Agency (CARPHA), the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), UNICEF, and the USAID Country Health Information Systems and Data Use (CHISU) project implemented by JSI Research and Training Institute, Inc.
US Ambassador to Guyana, Sarah-Ann Lynch, remarked that βThe United States Government is committed to assisting the government and people of Guyana on the road to recovery after the devastation of COVID-19.β
Meanwhile, USAID Regional Representative for the Eastern and Southern Caribbean, Clinton. D. White, further added that, βThe funding will fill key gaps to accelerate COVID-19 vaccine uptake, and strengthen countriesβ preparedness for future pandemic threats.β
USAID has provided nearly $63 million in COVID-19 assistance to the Caribbean since the beginning of the pandemic to address health, humanitarian, and economic impacts. This includes over $7million for partner countries in the Eastern and Southern Caribbean region.
In addition to the over 300,000 vaccine doses from the U.S. Government to Guyana, USAIDβs partnership with the Ministry of Health, Guyana has included prevention and vaccination messaging reaching nearly 70 per cent of the population, distribution of critical hygiene and prevention supplies in indigenous communities, and tents to support mobile vaccination clinics in rural areas to increase vaccine accessibility and availability.
According to the US Embassy, diseases know no borders. The missive further detailed that the United States Government is committed to partnering with its Caribbean neighbours, partners, and friends to end the COVID-19 pandemic, save lives, and stop the threat of dangerous new variants.
Guyana rolled out its COVID-19 vaccination exercise just over a year ago on February 11, 2021.
Latest figures show that so far, more than 437,630 or 85.3 per cent of adults have taken a first dose and of that amount, some 335,691 or 65.4 per cent of persons 18 years and over are fully vaccinated.
For adolescents between the ages of 12 and 17, approximately 34,234 or 46.2 per cent of them have received their first dose, while some 24,896 or 34.1 per cent of them are fully immunised.
Meanwhile, in excess of 57,071 persons have returned for their booster shots thus far.
Deputy Assistant Secretary Feinstein is currently in Guyana on a three-day visit during which she will meet with various government officials, the Opposition, CARICOM and civil society stakeholders.
On Thursday, she met with Peopleβs National Congress Reform (PNCR) β the leading party in the APNU/AFC Opposition β leader Aubrey Norton and other party members. They discussed the priorities for Guyana with respect to governance, security and prosperity.
Meanwhile, later that evening, Ambassador Lynch hosted a dinner reception in honour of the visiting Deputy Assistant Secretary. Prime Minister Phillips, who is performing the functions of President, attended the event along with several other ministers of government including
Parliamentary Affairs and Governance Gail Teixeira; Health Minister Dr Frank Anthony and Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation Minister Hugh Todd.
Visiting US official meets Article 13 members
US Ambassador Sarah-Ann Lynch and visiting US Deputy Assistant Secretary for Caribbean Affairs and Haiti, Barbara Feinstein today met with members of civil society group Article 13 to "discuss increasing engagement with the government to achieve sustainable livelihoods for all Guyanese", a brief statement on the US Embassy Facebook page said.
Article 13 is one of the civil society groups that have recently come under attack from government officials and their supporters in what has been seen as an attempt to squelch independent voices.
Feinstein has met with members of the government, opposition and civil society.
(US Embassy photo)
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@cain posted:Is nuff nuff ugly people in this here thread.
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Dem nuff nuff ugly people are in the first set of photos on the thread?