(Trinidad Guardian) Not even foreign spouses or children of T&T nationals will be allowed into the country while the ban on non-nationals entering the country is in place, says National Security Minister Stuart Young.
(Trinidad Express) The Ministry of Health, Trinidad and Tobago, advises the population of two additional confirmed cases of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19).
(Jamaica Observer) As the world continues to grapple with the blow of the novel coronavirus disease (COVID- 19) outbreak, Reggae Girlz defender Sashana “Pete” Campbell fears being trapped in Israel, as her window of opportunity to flee the Middle Eastern country is rapidly closing.
(Jamaica Observer) Family members of the 79-year-old man that the Government yesterday said died from complications related to the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) are threatening legal action, arguing instead that their loved one died from pneumonia.
(Jamaica Gleaner) Plunging arrivals out of the United Kingdom and Canadian markets as a result of COVID-19 have forced at least four Spanish hotels and several attraction operators to close their doors.
(Jamaica Star) The Government is intent on having discussions with Cuba to get more information about its antiviral drug, Interferon Alpha 2B, which is among medications being tried in the fight against the coronavirus (COVID-19).
(Jamaica Gleaner) Jamaica has reported its first death from COVID-19.
The 79-year-old male patient, who is from Lionel Town, Clarendon and recently returned from New York, died at an isolation facility at Mandeville Regional Hospital this afternoon.
(Trinidad Express) The Trinidad and Tobago nationals who returned home after being stranded on a cruise ship with passengers who tested positive for the COVID-19 virus, have been taken from the Piarco International Airport to a quarantine location in Toco.
(Jamaica Gleaner) The police have identified a man as a person of interest in the case of missing University of the West Indies, Mona student Jasmine Deen.
(Jamaica Star) “I would come back to Jamaica if I could,” said a terrified Janet, who left the country in search of a better life in the United Kingdom in 2018.
(Jamaica Star) Commercial sex workers who ply their trade on the popular ‘Back Road,’ in Portmore, St Catherine, say the area has become almost a ghost town since COVID-19 emerged in Jamaica.
(Jamaica Gleaner) Though issued a strict warning on the weekend that their licences could be confiscated, some taxi operators have continued to deny nurses their services.
(Trinidad Guardian) The two latest novel coronavirus (COVID-19) cases announced by the Ministry of Health on Tuesday night were two Trinidadian women who were aboard the Costa Favolosa cruise ship that was anchored off Martinique for several days.
(Trinidad Guardian) Republic Bank managing director Nigel Baptiste says the Finance Committee announced by the Prime Minister has met and had healthy discussions.