Colors: Blue Color

The United States is providing high-quality seeds to wheat farmers in northeast Syria to help feed people during the global food security crisis.

Northeast Syria experienced one of its worst harvests on record in 2021. To prevent a recurrence, the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) answered local Syrians’ requests for assistance and provided nearly 3,000 metric tons of high-quality wheat seeds in time for the 2021 winter planting season.

The University of Magdalena’s Hotel Management Technology and Tourism and Hotel Business Administration programs have been working for several years on a project based on strengthening tourism training in the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta. This project was published by one of the most rigorous international portals on tourism issues, called Tourism and Society Think Tank, it seeks to reflect and offer contributions that allow us to anticipate and trace tourism trends in the world and their impact on communities, in this occasion the strengthening of this sector in the mountainous massif was pondered.

Brown’s Town and Windsor communities in Jamaica’s St Ann parish have just seen the launch of free public Wi-Fi under the Universal Service Fund (USF) Community Wi-Fi Initiative.

The secure Internet connectivity has a range of 800-feet and can allow up to 200 residents to simultaneously log on with their smartphones or tablet devices.

The United States and the Philippines are working together to expand access to clean energy and find solutions to the climate crisis. On August 6, the U.S. Trade and Development Agency (USTDA) announced a grant to the Philippines’ Aboitiz Renewables, Inc. supporting development of offshore wind projects that could produce up to 3 gigawatts of clean energy, enough to power more than 2 million homes in that country.

The MarineMax service team while attending their National Service Managers meeting collaborated and worked as a team to build bikes for the Florida Department of Children and Families (DCF). Seven deserving families in the community received the finished bikes. 

Andy Rishovd, National Service and Parts Manager, said: “This years’ service meeting was a great experience for everyone involved, we got to help the community, meet new faces and collaborate with one another.

The Caribbean tourism community was saddened last week upon learning of the sudden passing of regional tourism leader Warren Solomon. 

The Caribbean Tourism Organisation (CTO) extended condolences to the family and friends of Solomon, a long-time friend of the organization and champion of tourism across the Caribbean.

The United States and Africa must “work together as equal partners,” to tackle some of the world’s most pressing problems, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said August 8.

Blinken highlighted those challenges in a major speech delivered at the University of Pretoria in South Africa, while outlining a new U.S. strategy to advance shared goals with African nations.

Jamaica’s Minister of Tourism, Edmund Bartlett, has hailed former Minister of State in the ministry Dr Henry ‘Marco’ Brown, calling him “a tourism trailblazer, who helped to lay the foundations of the sector on which we continue to build.”

Expressing his condolences to the family of the former state minister, in a statement Bartlett added: “Marco was truly a committed family man and lover of life."

The world-famous alpine resort, Banff Sunshine Village, will host its first Indigenous Days on August 27th and 28th and again on September 3rd, 4th, and 5th.

Banff National Park resides within the present-day territories of treaties 6, 7, and 8 lands, as well as the metis homeland.

Even as a recently proclaimed national monument spans thousands of hectares of sacred Native American heritage sites, tribal leaders are shaping the future of public lands and national parks across the United States.

U.S. Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, the first Native American to serve as a Cabinet secretary, manages the National Park Service and the Bureau of Land Management, among other bureaus, which protect America’s public lands and the infrastructure for parks and monuments.

Germany’s annual Oktoberfest festival is finally on again for this fall, following a two-year hiatus due to the coronavirus pandemic.

The Oktoberfest, first held in 1810 in honor of the marriage of Crown Prince Ludwig of Bavaria to Princess Therese, has been canceled dozens of times during its more than 200-year history due to wars and pandemics.