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Antiguan Film Pioneers Receive Regional Award

RTD HAMA Award -2017

Antiguan Film Pioneers Receive Regional Award for their work on HIV/AIDS Campaign.

The Antigua & Barbuda filmmaking team of Howard and Mitzi Allen have received the LIVE UP: Loyalty and Support Award for their work to help reduce stigma and discrimination for people living with HIV/AIDS across the Caribbean.
The couple, who lead HAMA Films, a film and television production company, were in Barbados to celebrate the 10th anniversary of Regional Testing Day (RTD). RTD has been organised by LIVE UP: The Caribbean Media Alliance for the last ten years, with the support of strategic partners Scotiabank, PANCAP, Ministries and Departments of Health and National AIDS Programmes (NAPs).
RTD aims to test 100,000 people in the Caribbean this year. In 2016, over 20,000 were tested in 20 countries at over 300 testing sites.
Mitzi Allen accepted the award on behalf of the company at the ceremony held May 26th, 2017 at the Hilton Barbados Resort. Mitzi, who also hosted of LIVE UP: The Show for five years said they were very honoured to receive the award, as it was given to the people who work behind the scenes of RTD. TV Antilles, AcuteVision along with HAMA received loyalty awards.
Since the inception of the media alliance HIV/AIDS campaign, HAMA has been involved in the training of over 30 young media professionals from across the Caribbean region to produce and deliver news reports and Public Service Announcements (PSAs) about HIV.
Howard Allen said they have seen a drastic change in how stories on HIV/AIDS are told. “When we began, the general storyline showed people with HIV and AIDS as victims. Our role was to teach these young journalists and producers, new and creative ways to capture images and deliver content in a way that the person is seen in a more human way and not as a victim. It was also important that they reach young people with social messages, which were also entertaining.
“Initially it was very difficult to get someone to say they have HIV, now you can find people who will come on camera and share their story,” noted the film director.
Dr. Allyson Leacock, Director of the LIVE UP: Caribbean Media Alliance said at the ceremony
“Howard and Mitzi Allen are an unassuming husband and wife team that works quietly but their work shouts loudly about their depth and professionalism. Their commitment to LIVE UP has been evident from the start and they are part of that impressive Antigua Team. We are happy they could be here for us to thank them for their decade of loyalty and support.”
Programme Manager Delcora Williams of the Antigua National AIDS Secretariat accepted the Teamwork Award for being the first OECS country to host the Regional launch of RTD. Lorraine Perry of Scotiabank Antigua was a recipient of the Scotiabank Leadership Award for her attention to detail and support of the annual RTD events.
Back in 2011, HAMA Productions won a Kaiser Family Foundation grant, which allowed them to produce a 13-part drama series Paradise View, which included characters living with HIV.
Both Howard and Mitzi agree that media professionals must put aside their own perceptions of what a person with HIV looks like and how they contracted the virus, move beyond cultural biases and be informed in order to tell stories with compassion.
Learn more about the work of HAMA at www.hamafilms.com .

Major OECS Climate Change Initiative launched in Grenada

Climate Change Initiative

The official launch of the iLAND Resilience awareness initiative was held in Grenada amidst a week of events organised by the OECS Commission to advance sustainable development and climate change priorities.

iLand Resilience is the brand for the OECS Commission’s Climate Change Adaptation and Sustainable Land Management Project.  The project is managed under the OECS Environmental Sustainability portfolio and financed by the European Union’s Global Climate Change Alliance (GCCA).
Head of the OECS GCCA Project, Mr. Chamberlain Emmanuel, highlighted that through the iLAND Resilience initiative, OECS Member States can demonstrate their capacity to deal with the threats and opportunities that come with climate change.

“The project, which started in 2014, has strategically identified the needs of the Member States (MSs) through a Gap Analysis and identified suitable interventions to address the problems faced.
“Several interventions are being undertaken throughout the nine participating Member States to address key challenges faced due to the effects of climate change. Examples of these projects include coastal protection initiatives in the British Virgin Islands and in Nevis; and water security through rainwater harvesting in Grenada and Montserrat,” Mr. Emmanuel said.

Prime Minister of Grenada, Dr. the Right Hon. Keith Mitchell, while addressing the gathering at the opening ceremony of the 4th Meeting of the Council of Ministers of Environment Sustainability said “small islands are too vulnerable to be careless in issues that affect their resistance to natural and other disasters.” Dr. Mitchell stressed that by working together collectively small island states can lead in the area of sustainability.

BEEEP a new innovative travel APP

Beeep

BEEEP the new and innovative travel app that will change the way tourists travel with one push. The app will allow tourists to request Jamaica Tourist Board certified taxi and tour operators in real time to their location and start the experience of connecting them to the authenticity of the country. Travelers will be able to experience local culture, music, food, and various lifestyles which allows us to embrace each other differences.
BEEEP will feature some of the best hidden local attractions which includes but not limited to: bars, restaurants and shops as well as popular tourist attractions. We also will provide private excursion such as dining and cooking with one the best chef on the island, dance class or lunch with Maroon Tribe.
The app will officially be launched May 15, 2017 in Jamaica and we will expand to accommodate other well sought after tourist areas.
Our mission
To connect travelers to experience local culture, music, food and various lifestyles.
Our goal
To eliminate cultural stereotypes that prevent tourists from experiencing the “real” culture of the country.
Our vision
To change the way people, experience travel, and disrupt travel norms. The taboo of staying on the resort and hotel property to experience a country will become undesirable more people will leave properties causing resorts to re- innovate the “all-inclusive” package. The native of the land will be empowered and experience growth and opportunities that benefit their families.
Our values
Integrity, Professionalism, Authenticity Community and Growth
Our Approach
Diversity, Education, and People. We believe in supporting local/native businesses and communities. We have partnered with local individuals, businesses, events organizers and tour companies to promote local growth. We strive to maintain the authenticity and integrity of Beeep by serving the people first.
Beeep also bring great benefit to local economies
Employment and Entrepreneurships
Increased spending in Local communities
Diversification
Infrastructure the addition revenue that comes into the community also benefits the local council or government, more tax dollar for public projects to be launched or developed
Social advantages
With our GOGREEN incentives we will be able to proudly support entrepreneurial women seeking to grow or start their own businesses.
Look out for the official Bus Party where you will be able to join local artists, djs, meet the team and win gift prizes.
For more info about Beeep please contact press@gobeeep.com or admin@gobeeep.com or visit: http://gobeeep.com
More press releases from Jamaica

Agriculture stakeholders discuss regional food safety

Food Safety

In an effort to enhance the quality of agricultural produce in the region, food safety stakeholders convened in Barbados from April 25-26, 2017 to discuss the improvement of plant health in the region.

The two-day consultations, conducted by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Services Services (APHIS), and the Greater Caribbean Safeguarding Initiative (GCIS), discussed the implementation of programmes to safeguard the region from the introduction and spread of pests and invasive species.

A primary objective of the gathering was to foster synergies among partners and formulate plans for the upcoming year. The meeting also sought to develop the draft agenda for 10th Annual Caribbean Plant Health Directors’ (CPHD) Forum Meeting, scheduled to be held in the Dominican Republic in July, 2017.
Stakeholders discussed and identified strategies to achieve more defined outcomes from the CPHD Meetings and reviewed options for Technical Working Groups (TWGs) in emergency response, communications, palm pest, fruit fly, mollusk and safeguarding initiatives.
The meeting also received presentations from partner organisations and reviewed work programmes, achievements and challenges with a view to developing improved programmes, and enhancing collaboration with the Caribbean Plant Health Directors (CPHD). Various Technical Working Groups (TWGs) also presented annual reports which were reviewed by stakeholders and work plans for the next twelve months were elaborated.
Details on the Regional Plant Quarantine Training course, to be hosted by the St Augustine campus of the University of the West Indies in August 2017, were also discussed.
The meeting was conducted in collaboration with the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Secretariat, Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations (FAO), the Inter-American Institute for Co-operation on Agriculture (IICA), the Organisation of the Eastern Caribbean States (OECS), the Caribbean Plant Health Directors (CPHD), the Caribbean Agricultural Research and Development Institute (CARDI), the Caribbean Agriculture Health and Food Safety Agency (CAHFSA) and the Center for Agriculture Biosciences International (CABI).

Ambassador to CARICOM reaffirms country’s commitment

Saint Lucia’s new Ambassador to CARICOM - Elma Gene Isaac

Saint Lucia’s new Ambassador to CARICOM reaffirms country’s commitment to regional integration agenda.

Saint Lucia’s new Ambassador to CARICOM HE Elma Gene Isaac presented her Letter of Accreditation on Tuesday 2 May and reaffirmed her countries commitment to advancing its obligations under the Single Market and the broader regional integration agenda, the Paris Agreement and the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
CARICOM Secretary-General Ambassador Irwin LaRocque, in welcoming Ambassador Isaacs during the Accreditation Ceremony at the Headquarters of the CARICOM Secretariat in Georgetown, Guyana, apprised her of the key role of the CARICOM Committee of Ambassadors into which she has been drafted. The establishment of the body, he noted, was a part of the Reform Process, given its functions to provide strategic advice and support to the Community Council and the Office of the Secretary-General.
Members of the Committee, he added, played a critical role in linking national and regional agendas and in facilitating the change process at the national level. They are responsible for identifying challenges to the implementation of decisions and making recommendations for resolutions. The Committee of Ambassadors was also important in implementing the CARICOM Strategic Plan for the period 2015-2019.
As the Secretary-General welcomed the new Ambassador, he lauded the contribution of her predecessor, Ambassador June Soomer, whose vast working experience within the Region, he said, enabled her to become the first female Secretary-General of the Association of Caribbean States (ACS).
Ambassador LaRocque commended Saint Lucia’s leadership in discharging its responsibility for Sustainable Development within the CARICOM Quasi-Cabinet.  This leadership, he said,  helped the Community’s efforts in achieving, in the Paris Agreement, coordinated, balanced and integrated actions regarding the concerns of Small-Island Developing and low-lying coastal States (SIDS).
Within this context Ambassador Isaacs said:
“The Government of Saint Lucia will act expeditiously in order to meet the targets outlined in our Nationally Determined Contribution including significant reductions in greenhouse gas emissions through a transition to renewable energy, increased energy efficiency and a shift to cleaner transport.”
She noted that it was imperative that the Region continued to work in concert to secure the gains achievable from the Paris Agreement and to promote attainment of the goals of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
Regarding the CARICOM Single Market she said, “It bears no repeating that the Single Market is critical for our Member States.” Acknowledging Saint Lucia’s appreciation for a recent CSME review, she signalled her country’s readiness to address outstanding areas for action.
Against this backdrop, she said the issue of security must be addressed, even as mechanisms were engineered for the successful implementation of a single CARICOM space. The need to address “enhanced vulnerability which accompanies integration,” she said, remained a critical response to threats posed to national and regional security.
“Insularity, intolerance, violence, fear and brutality are not and ought never to become the way of life of our CARICOM people.  There is no doubt that we must enhance our surveillance and intelligence capability; that we must create supportive partnerships with extra-regional states; that we must close ranks against perpetrators of terrorist activities,” Ambassador Isaacs stated.
She added:
“I urge, simultaneously, that we engage churches, societal groups, clubs and associations in our response and that we embrace and reaffirm, particularly in our young people and vulnerable members of society such core values as respect, equality, peace, justice and the right to life itself.”
There was an agreement, during the discussions between the Secretary-General and Ms Isaacs after the accreditation ceremony, that there was the need for a regional response to crime, commensurate with the new challenges to security within the Region.

Governor General lays out plan for “Building a New Saint Lucia”

St. Lucia's Governor General

As a new parliamentary year opened Governor General Her Excellency Dame Calliopa Pearlette Louisy on Tuesday April 25th 2017 laid out the Government’s plans to build a new Saint Lucia stressing on a more people-centric approach to government which takes into account the development of every citizen irrespective of social status, economic endowment or political orientation.
Stated the Governor General: “My Government’s vision for building a new Saint Lucia is based on the need to lift our beloved country out of the quagmire of economic stagnation and social apathy and to arrest the moral decline that confronts us at present.  With this mission in mind, my Government will introduce novel programmes in education, health, the social sector, climate change, energy and justice reform.”
The following are some of the highlights this year’s Throne Speech:
EDUCATION

  • Greater emphasis will be placed on Early Childhood Education covering all children from 0-8 years.
  • An Education for Democratic Citizenship programme focusing on the soft skills and on National Pride, will be introduced into the curricula of primary and secondary schools at the beginning of the new academic year in September 2017. Modules have already been developed and the training of teachers in that regard is ongoing.
  • First Generation Initiative to provide pathways for at least one child from a low income household to access tertiary education.
  • Government also intends to expand educational opportunities by placing greater emphasis on e-learning. Ensure ICT Centres and facilities are accessible to all communities for education, innovation and entrepreneurship. We propose, further, to introduce technology integration and innovation into the curriculum to prepare our students for the technology-driven world.
  • Through the National Skills Development Centre (NSDC), a number of our citizens have already acquired skills that enhance their employability and entrepreneurship. My Government applauds the efforts of the NSDC and will continue to promote its programmes, with the support of the private sector.  Technical Vocational Education and Training will be enhanced through the award of the Caribbean Vocational Qualification (CVQ) to artisans, tradesmen and technicians to boost their competitiveness in the local as well as the regional job market.
  • Develop a National Policy on Special Needs, which will provide, among other things, for the establishment of a Special Needs School and Transition Centre.
  • Advance the transition of the Sir Arthur Lewis Community College (SALCC) to a University College. While continuing to provide the current tertiary level offerings, the University College will seek to specialize in Hospitality and Culinary Arts, as well as Nursing, to attract persons from the region and further afield.
  • Accreditation Bill and the Caribbean Accreditation Authority for Medicine and other Health Professions Bill will be enacted very early in this new Parliamentary Session.

 HEALTH

  • With the support of the European Union, we are designing a strategy that would embrace the concepts of fund pooling and strategic purchasing. The strategy will examine very carefully the development of a national health insurance model for financing health care. This is essential for the sustainability of the health sector.  The strategy will address the issues of funding, the package of services and cost, purchasing and contracting, consumer choice, administration and regulation.
  • Establish robust community mental health teams that integrate communities, families, patients, public and private stakeholders in a mutually supportive environment.
  • Our country will therefore have a single mental health service that integrates the National Mental Wellness Center, the general hospitals, the polyclinic and health centers and community mental health teams. The objective is to create optimal mental health and to reduce institutionalization of patients who have mental health problems.

SOCIAL SAFETY NETS

  • Government will reform and rationalize the Public Assistance programme, so that we have a leaner, more efficient, targeted and structured package of support, administered at the household level. No longer will support be automatic.
  • It will be based on the specific needs of the individual household member, and the continuation of that support will be conditional upon the commitment of these individuals to embrace new practices and patterns of behavior.

CLIMATE CHANGE

  • Government will work toward meeting the targets outlined in Saint Lucia’s Nationally Determined Contribution under the 2015 Paris Agreement. These targets include significant reductions in greenhouse gas emissions through a transition to renewable energy and increased energy efficiency.
  • Place particular emphasis on securing climate financing from various sources.

 INITIATIVES IN ENERGY

  • Multi-pronged Strategy which will address, among others, acceleration of demand for renewable energy and energy efficiency services, investment promotion, education and awareness-building, innovation and the creation of an enabling policy environment.

 ECONOMIC AND INVESTMENT INITIATIVES

  • Government is committed to revitalizing the priority sectors of Tourism, Agriculture, Housing, Industry and Commerce in partnership with the Saint Lucia Development Bank (SLDB).
  • Government will enact the Sovereign Wealth Fund of Saint Lucia Bill. This Bill will provide for the establishment of the fund, which will make secure investments, help maintain the long-term economic and social development objectives of my Government and sustain fiscal or macroeconomic stabilization.

Tourism

  • Government is seeking to establish the Saint Lucia Tourism Authority by enactment of the Saint Lucia Tourism Bill. The Authority will operate to advance and facilitate the efficient growth and development of the tourism industry, to implement suitable marketing strategies for the effective promotion of the destination and to encourage the establishment and enhancement of appropriate amenities, facilities and destination services. The Authority will also facilitate linkages between tourism and other sectors of the economy.

Tourism and Construction

  • Government is committed to directing a significant amount of revenue to this sector with projects to be implemented in 2017.
  • Government has been working on the Pearl of the Caribbean Project, as well as on a number of other private sector projects across the island, which are expected to be implemented from this year onwards.

AGRICULTURE

  • Ensure Climate Smart Agricultural policies and programs are adopted to meet the related challenges of food security and climate change.
  • The Ministry of Agriculture will therefore adopt a more active role and maintain responsibility for providing the institutional and regulatory framework to meet the essential services requirements of the industry. In this regard, Government has been in discussions with overseas companies to expand our export of bananas to the French market from 2018 onwards.
  • Introduce Policies, Strategies and Programmes to promote the diversification of the agricultural sector. One key component of the strategy will be to allow for the exploration and exploitation of niche markets for non-traditional products.

SECURITY AND JUSTICE SYSTEM

  • Introduce a coordinated border management system which will enhance synergies among the Customs and Excise Department, the Immigration Department, the Marine Unit and the Quarantine Division of the Ministry of Agriculture.
  • Amend the Immigration Act to incorporate the Advance Passenger Information System, with automated electronic data interchange and the screening of advance passenger information by the CARICOM Implementing Agency for Crime and Security (IMPACS).
  • Revamp the office of the Crown Prosecutions Service. A new Director of Public Prosecutions has been appointed and we have seen more than 300 cases disposed of in the Criminal Courts within a space of six months.  It is our intention to provide the requisite resources for addressing the number of cases still pending before the Criminal Courts, while promoting long term systemic and administrative efficiency.
  • Re-opening the Forensic Laboratory, which we intend to make fully operational with minimum delay.
  • Support of the IMPACT JUSTICE Project, financed by the Government of Canada, which provides training for our police, as well as the Attorney General’s Chambers and Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions, in a range of areas. For the police, training will include cybercrime investigation, financial investigation, surveillance and sexual offence investigation.

LEGISLATION

  • The Witness Protection (Special Measures) Bill seeks to protect the identity of witnesses who may be at risk should they testify and their identity be known.
  • The Electronic Monitoring Bill will reduce the number of persons sent to our Correctional facilities on remand, particularly young offenders.
  • The Electronic Crimes Bill aims at preventing criminal activities perpetrated through an electronic system and facilitating the collection of electronic evidence relating to criminal activity.
  • The Child Justice Bill will establish a criminal justice process for children accused of committing offences that aims at protecting the rights of children as provided for in international instruments. It will establish the minimum age of criminal responsibility and establish a procedure for assessment of children, as well as an initial inquiry as compulsory procedures. The Bill will incorporate diversion of cases away from the formal court procedures, ensure that children are tried in a family court and extend sentencing options available in respect of children. Above all, the Bill will entrench the notion of restorative justice in respect of children.

IMPACS: Report of the CARICOM Implementing Agency for Crime and Security (IMPACS) has had adverse consequences for Saint Lucia internally as well as in our relationships with external partners.  Government continues to work assiduously to free ourselves of this albatross and to ensure that identified deficiencies are addressed, the trust and confidence of our people are regained and our international image and reputation restored.

Youths Leaders Call for Comprehensive Sexual Education Across Region

PANCAP

PANCAP youth meeting concludes with call for alignment of age of consent with access to sexual health services.

The Pan Caribbean Partnership against HIV and AIDS (PANCAP), Meeting of Caribbean Youth Leaders – Sexual and Reproductive Health and HIV/AIDS, concluded with Youth Leaders advocating for a review of the age of consent not being aligned with the age when most youth people are allowed to access sexual and reproductive health services.
This objective echoed similar sentiments by Senator the Hon. Robert T.L.V. Browne, Minister of Health, Wellness and the Environment, St. Vincent and the Grenadines and Chair of the Executive of Board of PANCAP, who delivered the keynote address at the opening ceremony on Friday, April 21.
‘The disparity between the age of consent and access to sexual health services is a shame’ stated Senator Browne during his address, ‘as young people, we must challenge policymakers to review this since it has a direct impact on young people contracting HIV and AIDS’.
During a group activity to create a framework for Youth Advocacy on Sexual and Reproductive Health, youth leaders stated that they were concerned that most young people are allowed to engage in sexual activity before they can legally access sexual and reproductive health services.
According to Ms. Raymoniya Lawrence, a representative of The Caribbean Forum for Liberation and Acceptance of Genders and Sexualities (CariFLAGS), ‘it is unacceptable that a young man or woman can legally engage in sexual activity but not allowed to access critical sexual health services. This has a direct impact on preventing new HIV infections. We need our policymakers to join the conversation on this issue’.
Youth Leaders further agreed to explore opportunities to engage policymakers within their home countries and committed to utilising their advocacy platforms and organisations to furthering the agenda for a change to the age of consent and accessing sexual health services.
Participants also voiced concerns about the lack of comprehensive sexual education programmes in Caribbean schools. In creating a framework for action, youth leaders proposed that policymakers should join in a conversation on the creation of sexual education programmes for schools across the region as a tool to educate youth about sexual health issues and HIV and AIDS.
Mr. Dereck Springer, Director of PANCAP, in his closing remarks committed to seeking opportunities for youth leaders to engage policymakers within the region on the key objectives raised during the meeting. He commended the participants for contributing to the development of a framework which will outline the pivotal concerns of youth regarding sexual and reproductive health and HIV/AIDS and pledged the support of PANCAP in helping the participants to take their concerns to the highest level.
Funded by the Global Fund and PAHO, the meeting forms part of a wider intervention programme created by PANCAP for Youth Advocacy. Youth advocacy training, facilitating youth leaders’ participation in high-level meetings to influence policy decisions affecting youth and the development of a regional youth advocacy network are other interventions slated for implementation with the overarching aim being the creation of a well-informed youth advocacy body that can advance the concerns of young people on sexual and reproductive health services and HIV/AIDS.

OECS Invitational Boxing Championships ready to punch off

OECS Invitational Boxing

Participating teams from seven overseas territories have began to arrive in Saint Lucia for three exciting nights of boxing. The Dominica National Team arrived here Tuesday afternoon and all remaining delegations are set to arrive on Wednesday.

The OECS Invitational Boxing Championships begin this Thursday April 27 and continues from 8pm nightly at the Beausejour Indoor Facility, until Saturday April 29, 2017.
A total of sixty-seven boxers of different gender, weight and classifications are registered to participate.
The official opening ceremony will be held following team march past on Wednesday April 27 from 6:30pm. Several key officials are expected to address the opening ceremony including representatives from the Ministry of Youth Development and Sports, the OECS Secretariat, the Saint Lucia Olympic Committee and the Saint Lucia Boxing Association.
Once formalities have been completed the boxers will square off, in the ring, in what is expected to be a keenly contested tournament.
Saint Lucia`s most decorated boxer Lyndell “The Russian” Marcellin and upcoming star boxer Nathan “The Furious” Ferrari will lead team Saint Lucia in battle. Team 758 has been in intense training over the past four weeks under the watchful eye of coach Conrad Frederick. The thirteen member squad are expected to put on an exuberant showing of talent in front their home crowd.
The Saint Lucia Boxing Association encourages citizens to come out and support the boxing which will also be fused with top quality entertainment from Soca Monarch Islah Man and Road March King Mac 11.
General admission to the tournament is only $10 whiles students pay $5. Patrons can also get up close and enjoy the action from ringside for $25.

Television Talk shows on CARICOM to launch Tuesday

CARICOM TV

Chatting CARICOM, a series of live regional television talk shows will be launched Tuesday 25 April 2017 at 8:00 p.m. with CARICOM Secretary-General, Ambassador Irwin LaRocque as the main guest.
Chatting CARICOM, produced by the Caribbean Media Corporation (CMC) on behalf of the CARICOM Secretariat and the with support from the European Union, will be broadcast monthly on CMC’s regional cable TV channel, Carib Vision, and on a number of national television stations in CARICOM Member States.
The programmes will also be Live Streamed on the CARICOM Facebook page – https://www.facebook.com/caricom.org and on the CARICOM Secretariat’s News Blog CARICOM Today – http://today.caricom.org/
This series, on the Regional Integration process, will include live public interaction via phone and social media.

CXC-CSEC, CAPE timetables available

CXC Governance

See 2018 Time: Click Here
The Educational Evaluation and Assessment Unit (EEAU) of the Department of Education would like to inform all PRIVATE candidates who registered for the CXC-CSEC and CAPE May/June 2017 examinations that timetables are available for pickup. Candidates should collect their timetables at the office where registered: the Department of Education, 3rd Floor, Francis Compton Building, Waterfront, Castries, or the Education Offices in districts six and eight. Please note that candidates should present proper photo identification when collecting the timetables.

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