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Cuban president Raúl Castro met US president Barack Obama Monday morning in Havana. (Al Diaz/Miami Herald)

It’s not just voters in Spain, Ireland and Greece who are weary of austerity economics.

Voters in Jamaica last month narrowly ejected their prime minister, Portia Simpson-Miller, giving opposition leader Andrew Holness and the nominally center-right Jamaica Labour Party a razor-thin 32-31 majority in the House of Representatives. Though Jamaican politics has been famous since the 1970s for its polarization, Holness will govern with the narrowest margin in the House since 1949.

What he does with his mandate could matter not only for Jamaica, but the entire Caribbean.

Simpson-Miller, who took power in 2012 and yet another IMF bailout in 2013 for the debt-plagued island, marked some success in bringing the country’s debt-to-GDP ratio down from 140% to around 125%. For now, Holness is IMF officials, but he won election after pledging to spend more revenues on health care, education and stimulating the economy, part of a generous and populist 10-point plan that will be difficult for him to enact under current fiscal restraints.

The Caribbean’s self-cannibalizing debt crisis

Holness will find himself in a trap in the 21st century Caribbean, where manufacturing, tourism and, in some cases, modest oil production, have not been sufficient to boost economies and incomes. Without higher GDP growth, Holness will face two difficult options. If his government spends too much, he’ll unwind the careful work of his predecessor and send Jamaican debt levels spiraling upwards again. If Holness spends too little, he will alienate the electorate that gave him a majority and that, like Americans and Europeans, are weary of roller-coaster economic uncertainty and a widening inequality gap.

It’s a story that is increasingly familiar across the region and, today, it’s not just Jamaica that is falling into the debt trap. Barbados and Grenada have both marked 60% increases in their debt/GDP ratios in the last 15 years, and the Bahamas, Bermuda and other countries, not typically associated with imprudence, are also struggling with rising debt. Islands like Martinique and Guadeloupe thrive as fossils of France’s colonial empire, thriving due to hefty subsidies from Paris. Trinidad and Tobago, only recently flush with the promise of offshore oil drilling, has watched its expectations plummet with global oil prices. Puerto Rico, a commonwealth of the United States, endures a amid prolonged economic misery with that legislative action can fix its economy. Despite years of advanced warning, neither Democrats nor Republicans have the inclination or ability to provide relief from Capitol Hill.

Taken together, the spiraling debt and economic stagnation of the Caribbean represents an overlooked security challenge in the years ahead that China, Russia or even the Middle East might exploit.

Cuba, Cuba, Cuba

Jamaica’s election didn’t generate the same excitement in the American media as U.S. President Barack Obama’s historic trip this week to Havana, the first since Calvin Coolidge in 1928. But it’s only the third time that Obama himself has traveled to the Caribbean at all – he visited Jamaica in April 2015, and he went to Trinidad and Tobago in 2009, when it hosted the 5th Summit of the Americas.

Though Obama lamented recently that Latin America and Africa both far more attention, it’s a sentiment nearly every modern U.S. president has expressed; a joint policy agenda shared by two conservative presidents, Republican George W. Bush and Mexican conservative Vicente Fox, both elected in 2000, virtually disappeared from view shortly after the September 2001 terrorist attacks. Bush’s sole trip to the Caribbean was to Cartagena, on the Colombian coast. Bill Clinton, over his eight-year presidency, visited only Cartagena, Haiti and Barbados. If Latin America is the forgotten stepchild of U.S. foreign policy, the Caribbean is its abandoned love child.

With one exception.

For decades, understandably, Havana has played an oversized role in the American political and cultural imagination. Though the particular terms of the Obama administration’s engagement with Raúl Castro are controversial, the dysfunctional bilateral relationship had long become a thorn in advancing other U.S. priorities in Latin America. For the foreseeable future, Cuba’s economic opening, if not necessarily its political liberalization, will captivate and engage Americans, as American businesses gorge on Cuba after a half-century of pent-up demand for investment and as tourists enjoy once-forbidden fruits.

But that shouldn’t mask other priorities.

U.S. aid to the Caribbean falls far short of other regions

The Caribbean’s island nations alone comprise over 42 million people (3.5 million of them in Puerto Rico), a population that amounts to over 10% of the U.S. population. If a bipartisan consensus now generally agrees that the U.S. embargo against Cuba has endured far too long, propping up the Castro brothers’ autocratic socialism far longer than it would have otherwise survived, that same bipartisan consensus risks forgetting why the embargo began.

It’s hard to believe today, so far removed from the Cold War, that another country could install nuclear weapons on any Caribbean island. But it’s still the case that the Caribbean represents the soft underbelly of American regional security, and there’s no reason that Russia in the 2020s or China in the 2040s could exploit it to pressure the United States just a few hundred miles from its coastline. While businessman Donald Trump marches to the Republican nomination by promising to build a security wall along the southern border of the United States, there’s virtually no talk of greater economic or security coordination in the Caribbean, which could reap far greater long-term benefits. An economically prosperous and political stable Caribbean makes the region far less susceptible to hijinks within an increasingly multipolar world.

Curiously, U.S. policymakers spend more time today strategizing about Taiwan, in China’s geopolitical backyard, or about Ukraine, in Russia’s, than about the dozen or so countries that comprise the Caribbean (not including Mexico, Central America and South America), only one of which happens to be named “Cuba.” The proportional amount of U.S. military and economic aid to the Caribbean reflects the same level of disengagement.

As of FY 2013, the United States on military aid to Ukraine – and even to Mongolia – than to the entire Caribbean region (again, not including Mexico, Central America or South America).

Economic assistance to the Caribbean is nearly as lopsided. As of 2013, USAID around $57.9 million in the Dominican Republic, a country of just over 10 million people, while it spent $155.1 million in Georgia, a former Soviet republic of under 4 million. USAID spent $31.5 million in Jamaica, a country of just 3 million people, but it spent $56.7 million in Armenia, which has roughly the same population. Haiti, a country of around 11 million, and the poorest state in the Western hemisphere, that is still recovering from a devastating earthquake in January 2010, received $378.8 million from USAID, though the agency spent nearly as much, $367.2 million, in Somalia, which also has roughly, the same population.

For now, the ability of Puerto Ricans to move to the U.S. mainland is a crucial financial safety valve. But after years of economic malaise, in part due to American policies that skewed market incentives away from agriculture, then special tax treatment for Puerto Rico, it’s arguable that Washington’s interference has done more to impoverish than enrich the

How to Defend against Crypto Locker malware :-

Crypto Locker hit the headlines recently. An example of ransomware ( a particularly unpleasant form of malware ) ,

When your PC has been infected with crypto ransomware, all your documents, videos, images and other personal files are encrypted. This encryption prevents you from opening them, whether they are on your pc, connected drive or business network. You see a message stating you need to pay a certain amount of money (the ransom fee) to gain access to your personal files again. Payment typically has to be done via Bitcoins or prepaid cards from MoneyPak or Ukash.

it’s look like below image.

Today I am going to show you How to defend against Crypto Locker malware criminal activity .

1. Update your OS and Antivirus Regularly :-

Ransomware works by installing itself on your PC, so be careful what you download, don’t click any dubious links and don’t open suspicious email attachments. Make sure you have Good anti-virus software installed, and be sure it’s running and up to date to minimize the risk of infection.

2. Keep Backup :-

When a ransom demand appears, it’s too late  Your file are encrypted. Even removing the ransomware can’t save your data, so regular back-ups are essential.  helps these in advanced.

EASEUS Todo Backup Home is a full-featured backup solution that can create copies of your for files, partitions, disks or even the whole system and recover them in the event of a system crash or infection.

The interface is clean and well-organized, providing easy access to all the features. The ‘Home’ tab is where you can find all the backup and recovery options or clone disks and partitions.

Creating a backup job is very easy, even if you are not an experienced user. Depending on what you want to backup, the process takes longer or less time. For instance, during the tests, the system backup was over after approximately 13 minutes.

After the backup process is complete, you can run an integrity check on the resulting backup image. All the backup tasks can be managed easily within the ‘Management’ section, which means you can modify a plan and apply the changes instantly, remove image files or run previously created tasks.

3. Use Cloud Storage :-

Personally i am using the DropBox cloud Storage to store my files.  With Cloud storage, you are not going to bind own-self with one PC. There are lots of Cloud storgae services  like DropBox , mega.co. nz , google drive and Skdrive etc.. that are really providing really nice solutions to keep your files safe in cloud.

5. Use CryptoPrevent utility :-

CryptoPrevent is a tiny utility to lock down any Windows OS (XP, Vista, 7, 8, and 8.1) to prevent infection by the Cryptolocker malware or ‘ransomware’, which encrypts personal files and then offers decryption for a paid ransom.

Incidentally, due to the way that CryptoPrevent works, it actually protects against a wide variety of malware, not just Cryptolocker!

7. Use Hitman pro utility :-

HitmanPro’s CryptoGuard is a universal solution against crypto ransomware. This type of ransomware encrypts your personal files and demands a ransom fee to be paid in order to regain access to your files.

HitmanPro.Alert’s CryptoGuard technology does not try to detect the malware based on its static properties, but it detects crypto-ransomware based on its file system behavior. If suspicious behavior is detected, it is then blocked (the encryption of the files) and the malware is neutralized, without the need for any user intervention.

What do you see when your files are under attack?

On workstations, when CryptoGuard intercepts an attack on your personal files, it displays an Alert message as shown below:-

The following video illustrates a CryptoLocker ransomware attack on a workstation and how CryptoGuard can protect your files.

8. Use Bitdefender Anti-CryptoLocker :- 

There are numerous types of malware that can infect your computer and the damages some of these can do to your PC can only be removed by reinstalling Windows. Alternatively, you can prevent your computer from getting infected in the first place by installing a dedicated app such as Bitdefender Anti-CryptoLocker.

The application was developed especially to block the damages made by the ransomware CryptoLocker.

This custom type of malware gets installed on your computer and starts encrypting files on your local drives, as well as network shares, then asks you to make a payment in order to decrypt them. The payment is typically processed via a service that is very hard to track (such as Bitcoin) so you have no chance of recovering your money.

Enjoy your PC without Crypto Locker.

Hope you like my post.How to Defend against Crypto Locker malware. Please Share with others.

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