The following comment inspired the blogmaster to expand the focus on data collection and discussion about the COVID 19 pandemic. Thanks to @Lyall@Amit

Blogmaster


David; re. your 4:41 am post;

You are correct but I have indeed considered that cohort of the population.

The reason that the US experts are beating the drum for testing, testing and more testing is to get a handle on what proportion of the general public has been compromised by the virus in any way and has left its signatures in body fluids including blood in the population. The virus is shed from the infected body as the disease is brought under control. When it is controlled it has been found that it takes around 7 days for all particles to be shed from the body. Infected persons are released back into the community when they test negative twice over a period of 2 days.

Barbados, like all of our island neighbours, did or does not have access to large numbers of tests and had to use what we had very sparingly. Thus, the only measure that we had for gauging the incidence of the virus in the population (and a very imperfect one, at that) might be by comparing the evidence of infection levels hinted at by a comparison of the graphs of the progress of the various Covid-19 outbreaks in our Islands.

Most of the world was in the same position as the Caribbean and used the data obtained by the minimal testing of infected people and their contacts and their contacts to produce the graphs we see on such sites as WHO and Worldometer etc. All these graphs give an imperfect picture and significant underestimation of infection levels in the county or country in which the tests are carried out, but, since they are carried out in the same way in each country they might provide some rationale for guesstimating the comparative levels of the infection in various groups of countries.

The data shows that, starting out at essentially the same levels, there was some divergence in relation to the rate of infection and therefore progress of the various outbreaks in various countries. The graphs for Barbados showed low and declining levels of infection from the beginning, peaking at the level of 13 positive cases per day and thereafter showing a slowly declining trend. The individuals who would have contributed to the declining trend would have been primarily from the contact testing but should also have included other individuals referred by Health professionals or who presented themselves to Government institutions because of concern that their symptoms might point to untimely death due to the dread Covid-19.

Amit, in an earlier post on this blog, reported on his initiative of graphing Covid-19 incidence over weekly periods throughout the epidemic, in several Caribbean Islands. If David thinks it is appropriate and Amit agrees I can post a subset of graphs clipped from his data for 6 Caribbean territories which I think could illustrate some of what I have presented above.


Covid 19

There was 1 more positive case announced today as well as 1 death. A slight uptick of the daily cases line is indicated in the graph by the blue line. The total cumulative number of positive cases from the tests carried out yesterday is 76 – Llyall Small

COVID 19

Attached is the updated C-19 graph for 2020-04-23. There were no additional positive cases from yesterday’s tests and therefore cumulative positive cases remain at 76 – Lyall Small

covid10

covid12

Two new positive cases were identified from yesterday’s tests. There are now 5 cases of contacts with a previously identified individual. The 5 cases are workers from a Government Institution. Tests are ongoing today (25 April 2020)Lyall Small

Covid11

Updated graph for 26 April 2020. No new +ve cases were found. Cumulative count is still 79 – Lyall Small

covid13

There was one additional +ve case identified today (27 April 2020) from the last tranche of NAB workers moving the cumulative total cases to 80. The graph is still essentially trending downwards – Lyallsmall

Covid-Cumulative 1
Graphing Covid-19 incidence in several Caribbean Islands – Source data: caribbeansignal.com

3,454 responses to “COVID 19 UPDATES”


  1. As for the USA alert not surprising
    Look at the source from which govt keeps referring as getting advice
    None other than WHO
    Trump.has already shown his distrust of WHO after WHO failed to put out fast and relevant info about China
    So his distrust might have travelled to other small island nations who depends on WHO for COVID information
    Last week govt also had a PR display of receiving supplies from WHO
    All this might now add up as too close for comfort in the eyes of Trump


  2. Also the optics coming from govt handling of COVID came across as weak and misleading
    Numbers which did not give comprehensive data which should have applied to at least more than half of the pop.tested
    Numbers that reflect a some what feel good experience relating to govt doing a good job


  3. Now if I were a conspiracy theorist, I would say that the US advisory is an attempt to put doubts in the minds of those Americans thinking about welcome stamps and living in paradise for 12 months.


  4. If you are reading this, please read to the end.

    We have discussed a number of issues. We may have our own ranking system but to me the most important issues we touche on was the US advisory to its citizens.

    Why?

    Tourism is a fickle mistress. One moment it is nothing blue skies and the next moment it is COVID-19. We struggled, survived and tried to restart our tourism dependent economy, but quickly saw that different governments can issue alerts and warnings that will hurt our revival.

    There are too many factors that are out of our control for us to be so heavily dependent on tourism. If US/Europe/Canada sneeze, then we in the Caribbean will catch a cold. With our sea, sand and sunshine, tourism was a low hanging fruit.

    Our limited resources and size make it extremely difficult to replace tourism, but can we continue with the haphazard possibilities of feast or famine? Our governments must do better.


  5. David; re your 11:10 am comment
    Why is Grenada still a flat line?

    I suspect that this is a function of numbers of returning citizens, size of economy, size of tourist product, extent and amount of Covid 19 particle loads; efficiency and funding of testing and contact tracing operations, luck; etc.

    One of the other factors is how the incidence of covid-19 or indeed other pandemic diseases are reported. There is no effort made globally to segregate positive cases based on their origins. For example Barbados may have 32 active cases under official quarantine control. If the quarantine is run efficiently there is very little likelihood of spread into the Bajan community. There should be a distinct globally agreed and recognizable statistic of community spread cases as disctinct from cases where the infections originated from outside the country. The stats, as they are developed and circulated at present, does not separate those cohorts. The separation is not particularly important for large countries but is immensely important for all of the Caribbean countries whose economies are largely dependent on tourism. This is because if Barbados’ current number of infected C19 cases are 28, for example, these cases are all under official control and there are therefore 0 cases in the community that can theoretically affect the random citizen or tourist here. A similar argument is probably relevant for most of the other Eastern Caribbean Countries,

    I think the Authorities should recognize this fact and seek to gather the relevant data and get the WHO on board to accept such data as being acceptable for small island states dependent on tourism.


  6. Comment was re. David’s of 8th August 8th.


  7. @Lyall

    Thanks, makes sense. It does not make sense that our COVID-19 infections have come about because of proactive screening and we have some white people in the USA issuing a silly advisory which equally sill Bajans are postinall ive social media.

    >


  8. Once again, you have missed the point.
    Some are trying to start a discussion of how the advisory of the US or any of the source countries will affect our economy.
    If you don’t have it today, you will have it tomorrow.
    But I guess, one idea at a time is the best we can hope for.
    ——————xx————————————-
    There was a time when Trinidad was blaming ‘arrivals’ for new cases of COVID. Then along came cases, they could not explain away. I will end there.


  9. It is shocking how many Redlegs from the USA and UK disregard Barbadian Corona rules. No masks at all. Wow. No wonder London, NYC and Florida are in a mess!

    Government should advise all white, mask-wearing foreigners in Barbados from the Netherlands, Switzerland, Norway or Germany to wear an armband with their national flag so that Barbadians do not confuse them with Americans and British and run away screaming.

  10. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    Well cue the victory parade 🙂 POTUS via his acolyte Putin has found his cov19 vaccine prior to election day!

    Let’s get some tests in US for review and if this thing works then the political spin is a sure winner like: …

    After these years of this woeful political hoax the Dems talk of evil Russia has been shattered. Due to the wondrous relationship between the Presidents of the US and Russia, Pres Trump has negotiated a special patent to produce the successful vaccine in US by a US company and begin mass deliveries by Election Day. This is a stupendous example of draining the swamp of negativity and working closely with so called adversaries… Trump is the Leader we need now and until 2024. Hail America … hail our friends Russia. Onward to life, liberty and great friendships.

    Drum roll….Maybe!!!! We laugh at our peril.


  11. They are willing to distribute a vaccine that the results of the trials are not known or was made available for peer review?


  12. @TheOgazerts August 9, 2020 12:52 PM “But with the “reopening” of the country we seem to be hurtling towards numbers that we never imagined.”

    My response: Not hurtling. We are managing the risk because we have to. WE HAVE TO EAT. We know that we will all die eventually, but we don’t want to die just now. So we are managing the risk between widespread COVID19 and widespread hunger. The devil and the deep blue sea. A tightrope. If you are a praying man, pray that we continue to act wisely.

    @TheOgazerts August 9, 2020 12:52 PM “The track record that we established has been demolished to the extent that the USA is now publishing warnings against visiting Barbados.”

    Not really as the U.S. Embassy at Bridgetown has clarified. The U.S. routinely issues travel warnings in an attempt to protect their own citizens living or traveling abroad. But the U.S. State Department is well aware that at present U.S. citizens are also at risk at home. But since the State Department is essentially the U.S. government’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, they will only issue a travel warnings for countries outside of the U.S. because that is what Ministries of Foreign Affairs do. Within the U.S. various local and state governments are responsible for warning U.S. citizens about problems at home, and they have mostly been doing so but the messaging has been spotty, but that is not the State Department’s fault or responsibility.

    Is the US warning a a blessing of a curse?

    My response: Neither (See above)


  13. @DPD
    Russia attaches so much importance to this development that they named it Sputnik V a reference to the Space race when the Russians beat the Americans at getting the first man into Space. If the POTUS has embraced this, the man as we used to say back in the village “he got more guts than sense” because this is the same individual who said the US drug companies were working at “warp speed” to get a vaccine ready for the public so is he now conceding that Russia is superior to the US when it comes to development of world changing medicine.

    The man is grabbing at everything including hydroxychloroquine and bleach, perhaps he is hoping that this latest elixir is the cure for his reelection malady.


  14. @Mariposa August 9, 2020 1:19 PM “As for the USA alert not surprising Look at the source from which govt keeps referring as getting advice None other than WHO Trump.has already shown his distrust of WHO after WHO failed to put out fast and relevant info about China”

    On 20 January 2020, the first known case of COVID-19 was confirmed in the Pacific Northwest state of Washington in a man who had returned from Wuhan on 15 January.

    On 30 January 2020, the Director-General of the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the outbreak of COVID-19 to be a PUBLIC HEALTH EMERGENCY OF INTERNATIONAL CONCERN and issued a set of Temporary Recommendations.

    WHO announced COVID-19 outbreak as a pandemic on 11 March 2020.

    According to the Guardian [a British newspaper] of April 7 “Donald Trump was warned at the end of January by one of his top White House advisers that coronavirus had the potential to kill hundreds of thousands of Americans and derail the US economy, unless tough action were taken immediately, new memos have revealed. The memos were written by Trump’s economic adviser, Peter Navarro, and circulated via the National Security Council widely around the White House and federal agencies.They show that even within the Trump administration ALARM BELLS WERE RINGING BY LATE JANUARY AT A TIME WHEN THE PRESIDENT WAS CONSISTENTLY DOWNPLAYING THE THREAT OF COVID19.

    It is my honest belief that the U.S. President did not understand the science, and that furthermore he refused to be guided by the scientists. It would be interesting to see what science the president studied in high school and university and to see what his grades were.

    He lobbied for the world to see Obama’s birth certificate. He should insist now that his own high school and university transcripts be released. It may well be that the U.S. President knows less science that the average bright 4th former [9th grader]


  15. I know how young people, busy being full time students and part time workers, busy with their social lives, so on January 26, four days BEFORE the World Health Organization declared COVID19 a public health emergency of international concern I warned my youngsters in the north as follows “wash your hands regularly and carefully these days, especially before eating. Soap and water is best, but hand sanitizer will work if no soap and water is available.” And I followed up with phone calls to reinforce the message.

    I am only a simpleton.

    What was the U.S. president saying to his people on January 26, 2020?


  16. re It is my honest belief that the U.S. President did not understand the science
    HOW MANY OF WUNNA UNDERSTAND THE SCIENCE?
    EVEN FALSY AND BURP DONT UNDERSTAND THE SCIENCE
    WE STILL HAVE PHARMACOLOGY ILLITERATES ON BU DENIGRATING HYDROXYCHLOROQUINE WHICH HAS BEEN SHOWN TO BE EFFICACIOUS ALL ABOUT THE PLACE!


  17. I do understand the science. Was instructed in science by some of the best.

    Putting all politics aside do you honestly think that Trump understands the science?


  18. President Trump twice received intelligence briefings on the coronavirus in January, according to a White House official. The official tells NPR the briefings occurred on Jan. 23 and Jan. 28.

    “The president was told that the coronavirus was potentially going to ‘spread globally,’ ” the official said of the first briefing, which came two days after the first case of the virus was reported in the United States. “But the ‘good news’ was that it was not deadly for most people,” the official said the president was told.

    Five days after that initial briefing, the president was briefed again, according to the official. This time, he was told the virus “was spreading outside of China, but that deaths from the disease were happening only in China,” the official said. “He was also told that China was withholding data.”

    Source: National Public Radio 2 May, 2020

  19. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @David, you know full well that Putin will CERTAINLY distribute the vaccines regardless of the peer review standard process… as for POTUS, who the hell knows what that man will do to be reelected.

    You know, as all political gadflies do, that citizen Trump will be PROSECUTED in NY for his financial infelicities prior to the WH; we all ALSO know that any Dem victory will expose the awful level of perfidy by the current admin re 1.Inspectator Generals firings, 2 the rampant politicization at the National Intel office and across its agencies, 3.the surely corrupt evisceration and likely illegal acts at EPA, Dept of Ed (re student loan forgiveness and more), Dept of Housing (re suburban house ownership and more)…

    In sum an election loss could be serious pain for the Trump brand…. thus, he will do ANYTHING TO WIN.

    @Sargent re he hopes that this “latest elixir is the cure for his reelection malady”….

    This Putin vaccine is a freaking amazing point of note… Putin absolutely wants props for being first…. Trump did too but POTUS will find a way to share glory if it gets him to victory .

    When we consider that this man is almost demanding that colleges play football in order to create a sense of normalcy when several colleges have had athlete positives during their training startups and that the professional baseballers are also suffering infections in their revised season, its clear he is focused on his election not his nation’s well being.

    He would easily bend to Russia if it benefits him.


  20. Ghana has recorded a total of 54 malaria deaths between January and March 2020, the Ghana Health Service has said.

    Dr Patrick Kuma-Aboagye, the Director General of the Ghana Health Service, has called on the public to take charge of their health and that of their families by observing the precautionary protocols of malaria just as they do for COVID


  21. COVID19 in Donald Trump’s OWN words

    Dec. 31: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention learn of a cluster of cases in China.

    Jan. 22: Trump makes his first comments about the coronavirus, saying he is not concerned about a pandemic: “No. Not at all. And we have it totally under control. … It’s going to be just fine.”

    Jan. 30: Trump says of the threat: “We think it’s going to have a very good ending for it. So that I can assure you.”

    Feb. 10: Trump says, “I think the virus is going to be — it’s going to be fine.”

    Feb. 19: Trump says: “I think it’s going to work out fine. I think when we get into April, in the warmer weather, that has a very negative effect on that and that type of a virus. So let’s see what happens, but I think it’s going to work out fine.”

    Feb. 24: Trump says: “The Coronavirus is very much under control in the USA. … Stock Market starting to look very good to me!”

    Feb. 26: Trump says, “When you have 15 people — and the 15 within a couple of days is going to be down to close to zero — that’s a pretty good job we’ve done.”

    Feb. 28: Trump says: “It’s going to disappear. One day, it’s like a miracle, it will disappear.”

    March 10: Trump says: “Just stay calm. It will go away.”

    March 11: Trump says, “I think we’re going to get through it very well.”

    March 16: Trump for the first time publicly reflects on the gravity of he situation. Asked about his repeated comments saying the situation was “under control,” he says: “If you’re talking about the virus, no, that’s not under control for any place in the world. … I was talking about what we’re doing is under control, but I’m not talking about the virus.”

    Source: Washington Post, April 21, 2020

    As of today, 5,125,050 American residents infected with COVID19
    As of today 164,329 American residents dead of COVID19.


  22. RE I do understand the science. Was instructed in science by some of the best.

    WELL EXPLAIN THE CELL BIOLOGY THE BIOCHEMISTRY THE VIROLOGY THE PHYSIOLOGY AND THE PATHOLOGY INVOLVED
    I AM LISTENING


  23. Q are THEY willing to distribute a vaccine that the results of the trials are not known or was made available for peer review?

    A SINCE WHEN ARE THE CLINICAL TRIALS OF VACCINES OR ANY THERAPEUTIC AGENT MADE KNOWN TO THE VIROLOGICAL ILLITERATES IN THE PUBLIC? WHAT DOES PEER REVIEW REALLY MEAN? WHO ARE THE PEERS? HOW RELIABLE OR HONEST AND UNBIASED ARE THEY?

    THE PUBLIC KNOWS LITTLE UNTIL DRUGS ARE RECALLED………OFTEN FOR STUPID REASONS

    WHAT DOES THE PUBLIC KNOW ABOUT THE CLINICAL TRIALS CONCERNING MANY OF THE EFFECTIVE VACCINES AND THERAPEUTICS ON THE MARKET?

    IT IS NICE TO CITE THE JARGON WHAT DOES IT MEAN.

    EVERYONE KNOWS THAT THE CDC, WHO, FDA ARE UNRELIABLE AND CORRUPT., AND VERY SUBJECT TO GRAFT


  24. And everybody knows that if the CDC, WHO and FDA would give Trump a cut of the graft money he would be all in!

    Cuhdear Bajan,

    Trump said his uncle was a major scientist. That is the only qualification in science he is willing to expose to scrutiny.


  25. @GP August 11, 2020 5:29 PM “EVERYONE KNOWS THAT THE CDC, WHO, FDA ARE UNRELIABLE AND CORRUPT., AND VERY SUBJECT TO GRAFT.”

    Really?

    Wow!

    I certainly didn’t know this.

    So you meant billions of people, except me?


  26. How long can we allow flights from the UK and America to continue? This is unsustainable.


  27. EVERYONE THAT MATTERS KNOWS THAT THE CDC, WHO, FDA ARE UNRELIABLE AND CORRUPT., AND VERY SUBJECT TO GRAFT.”

    I certainly didn’t know this. NOW YOU KNOW

    So you meant billions of people, except me? IT DOES NOT MATTER IF YOU KNOW OR NOT. BUT THIS HAS BEEN WELL KNOWN FOR DECADES- NOT JUST NOW


  28. In other words to break it down ABC, has Russia shared the data regarding the vaccine (reported) with US authorities.

    Concerns over Russia’s okay of virus vaccine
    MOSCOW – President Vladimir Putin said yesterday that Russia had become the first country to grant regulatory approval to a COVID-19 vaccine after less than two months of human testing, a move Moscow likened to its success in the Cold War-era space race.
    The World Health Organisation (WHO), said, however, it has not received enough information on the Russian COVID-19 vaccine to evaluate it.
    Asked about plans to produce the potential vaccine in Brazil, WHO’s assistant director of its regional branch, the Pan American Health Organisation, Jarbas Barbosa, said that should not be done until Phase 2 and 3 trials were completed to guarantee its safety and effectiveness.
    “Any vaccine producer has to follow this procedure that guarantees it is safe and has the WHO’s recommendation,” he said in a virtual briefing from Washington. The vaccine, which will be called “Sputnik V” in homage to the world’s first satellite launched by the Soviet Union, has however not yet completed its final trials. Moscow’s decision to grant approval before then has raised concerns among some experts. Only about ten per cent of clinical trials are successful and some scientists fear Moscow may be putting national prestige before safety.
    Putin and other officials have said it is completely safe. The president said one of his daughters had taken it as a volunteer and felt good afterwards.
    “I know that it works quite effectively, forms strong immunity, and I repeat, it has passed all the necessary checks,” Putin told a government meeting.
    The Russian business conglomerate Sistema has said it expects to put the vaccine, developed by Moscow’s Gamaleya Institute, into mass production by the end of the year.
    Government officials have said it will be administered to medical personnel, and then to teachers, on a voluntary basis at the end of this month or in early September. Mass roll-out in Russia
    is expected to start in October.
    The vaccine is administered in two doses and consists of two serotypes of a human adenovirus, each carrying an S-antigen of the new coronavirus, which enter human cells and produce an immune response.
    The platform used for the vaccine was developed by Russian scientists over two decades and had formed the basis for several vaccines in the past, including those against Ebola.
    (Reuters)


  29. Driver heard Aluko’s frustration

    THE DRIVER of ZR 72, on which former Juventus women’s footballer Eniola Aluko was a passenger, says he believes it was frustration that made the English visitor leave quarantine at the Courtyard by Marriott.

    “I don’t know if other people get back their results before her or not, but she was kinda frustrated and she say she can’t let nobody ruin her holiday because she was waiting on the call, she ask and nobody was replying to her,” the driver said.

    The 33-year-old British broadcaster shot to public fame on Friday night after Jason King posted on Facebookthat a British woman got off in Keizer Hill, Christ Church, to go to a hotel but had been overheard complaining that her COVID-19 test results had been taking too long and she was not going to ruin her holiday waiting on results. The driver, who only gave his name as “Scrucial”, and who declined to have his photograph taken, said Aluko had been in another van, but got off at the wrong stop.

    ‘Another van’

    “I only picked her up from below Welches [Christ Church] by the window to the sea, but is another van she tell she was going to Little Arches. I drive past her, but a gentleman in the van tell me a woman put out her hand,” he explained.

    But it was only as the ZR approached Massy Oistins, that he became aware of the issue.

    “If she didn’t talk, nobody wouldn’t know nothing. She say that she was waiting on her results, nobody ain’t call and tell her nothing. She say she was there waiting and her 24 hours up and she ain’t hear no results or nothing. I put on some speed cuz I say ‘Wait, she brek quarantine’ so I start to drive lil’ faster,” he said.

    Scrucial said he was not eavesdropping on her conversation, but Aluko, who sat behind him, and another man she recognised from the airport were engaged in conversation.

    “She ask the gentleman if he do quarantine too because they meet at the airport or something like that. I tell myself that very strange, though, but even when she said so he was still talking with her and wasn’t frighten nor nothing so,” he said.

    He added that she alighted in Keizer Hill, and later that afternoon he got a call. But he made it clear that she was only in the van for about ten minutes and wore her mask the entire time.

    “I wasn’t scared. I can’t be frighten. When she got out, I use my hand sanitiser. I didn’t know who was upset from who wasn’t. People didn’t quarrel, they didn’t say nothing. And when they got out, I sanitise the

    van. If she didn’t say anything, nobody would know,” Scrucial said.

    Aluko appeared before Magistrate Douglas Frederick in the District “A” Magistrates’ Court on Saturday, where she was reprimanded and discharged with a warning.

    She has since taken to Twitter where she said it was all a misunderstanding.

    While she noted it was her second trip to the island, she said it would be her last, and she only wanted to be left in peace to enjoy the rest of her vacation.

    Aluko leaves the island today.

    Source: Nation Newspaper


  30. @Hants

    Imported- the screening is working so far.


  31. What Is The Ideal COVID-19 Response? These 3 Countries Got It Right

    Research by Michael Barber, a former adviser to UK Prime Minister Tony Blair, and Idris Jala, who did a similar job for Malaysia’s Najib Razak, has looked at how different countries have handled the global pandemic in an effort to help others to learn from the most successful.

    World(c) 2020 BloombergRobert Hutton, BloombergUpdated: August 07, 2020 2:24 pm IST
    What Is The Ideal COVID-19 Response? These 3 Countries Got It Right

    South Korea’s contact-tracing program is far more invasive than many populations would accept.

    The ideal governmental response to Covid-19 would combine the testing policy of New Zealand, the schools policy of Denmark, and the communications strategy of Uganda, according to a study of different countries’ responses.

    Research by Michael Barber, a former adviser to U.K. Prime Minister Tony Blair, and Idris Jala, who did a similar job for Malaysia’s Najib Razak, has looked at how different countries have handled the global pandemic in an effort to help others to learn from the most successful.

    Among the examples they pick out are New Zealand’s extensive testing, which has seen more than 7,000 tests for each confirmed case, and South Korea’s contact-tracing, which uses data from security cameras and credit card transactions to follow people’s movements. Uganda’s use of radio call-in shows to engage the public in a country with poor internet access is praised, along with Denmark’s successful reopening of schools.

    But they note that coordination between countries has been poor, especially when compared with the global financial crisis of 2008, when leaders including Britain’s Gordon Brown helped pull together an international response.

    ‘Homework Assignment’

    “For the first time in history, every government on the planet has been set the same homework assignment at the same time,” Barber said in an interview. “That should be a great opportunity for global learning, but there’s surprisingly little going on.”

    This should be addressed as the world prepares to face the next set of challenges around vaccine distribution and economic rescue packages, he said.

    And not every solution works everywhere. South Korea’s contact-tracing program is far more invasive than many populations would accept, for example. Though Barber pointed to a successful workaround in Australia, which passed privacy laws to reassure people their data would not be misused.

    The pair have also attempted to rank every country on how badly it has been affected by Covid-19 and how well it is recovering. Top of the recovery league on Wednesday were Thailand and South Korea. At the bottom were Honduras and the Bahamas. The U.K. was ranked 28th out of 184 countries. The U.S. was at number 131.

    (Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)


  32. @ David,

    More testing opportunities and a huge gamble.

    Barbados’ tourism sector is set for a big boost with the return of a daily flight from Heathrow Airport in the UK.


  33. @Hants

    We have to try to support some level of economic activity to ensure people can eat.

    >


  34. The people have to eat. Most of us are not independently wealthy. Most of us have little or no inherited wealth, except maybe Quaker John.


  35. @ David,

    I guess the risk is worth the economic activity that will primarily benefit the Hotel owners.

    Hopefully some of PLT’s ” invitees ” with their 12 month welcome stamp are on the daily BA flights.


  36. @Hants

    In everything we do in life it is about managing the risk reward. As we go along decisions will be made whether to accept or reduce risk take up.


  37. @ David ?

    Czar gone ? Carter says government to make a statement


  38. @Hants

    It appears he was seconded from the British Embassy.


  39. Another victory for the business elite of Barbados. Mia has abandoned the popular and competent Covid-19 Czar after been pressured by the minority business community. They have been stung by threats that they could be forced to close down their operations if they continue to disregard reasonable Covid-19 protocol working practises.

    I have been impressed with Czar Richard Carter. Prepare for a steep rise in the Covid-19 figures.


  40. @TLSN

    Has he been sacked? It has not been reported in the Nation of Barbados Today, which means it must be true. I agree with what you say above. The president has no original ideas, she does not like details, and her only idea of a successful government is getting from A to B without any social crisis.
    The Social Partnership is an enemy of the state. It must be got rid of.


  41. Nonsense, it was reported and in reply to Hants explained.


  42. Always at the ready with your vituperatives.


  43. @ Hal,
    I would say he has been sacked or walked – probably the latter. He is a man of principle. The writing was on the wall once the Minister, Lisa Cummins, disregarded the Covid-19 protocol and returned to parliament prematurely. I’m leaving the house now. No doubt we will find out later today the outcome of this speculation.


  44. @Hal Austin August 14, 2020 12:33 PM “@TLSN. Has he been sacked? It has not been reported in the Nation of Barbados Today, which means it must be true.”

    For a former newsman you bias astounds me.

    I got up at 6:15 Barbados time today and read in the Nation a big bold front page headline “Czar Gone?” and “more on page 3”

    I haven’t checked Barbados Today yet, but i would bet anything that they have carried the czar news as well.

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