Join ACSONI at Belfast Culture Night on 21st September, 2018! It’s an #AfriCaribe One Love Fete! St. Anne’s Cathedral Parking Lot. “Let’s get together and feel alright!”

The Cathedral Quarter in Belfast comes alive on Sunday 19th, August 2018 with the vibrant sounds of the Caribbean. The African & Caribbean Support Organisation (ACSONI) in partnership with Belfast Summer of Music and Destination Cathedral Quarter Bid presents Caribbean Social from 12 noon to 3:00pm.
The event will be opened by Carolyn Stewart of U105. On offer will be the tingling sounds of steel band music performed by Tropical Heatwave from Nottinghill via Trinidad & Tobago. There will be a variety of live performances including: Reggae, Soca and Calypso music, Dance, Story Telling, Live DJ and lots more.
“We are delighted to host Caribbean Social as a part of ACSONI’s annual Caribbean Diversity Week which has been running for the past decade. It has been a rewarding experience working along with our partners at Belfast City Council & Destination CQ as well as connecting with the wider programmes throughout the city.” – Joseph Ricketts (Manager, ACSONI)
Gareth Neill of Destination Cathedral Quarter Bid says: “Destination CQ are really excited to support ACSONI (African & Caribbean Support NI) and partners in bringing this event into the city centre. We look forward to offering an alternative and vibrant Sunday activity for residents and visitors.”
Caribbean Social is part of the Belfast Summer of Music season and is free to the public. There will be a tempting array of Caribbean cuisine and local eats available for purchase.
Media & Communication: Nattassa Latcham
Email: nattassa@acsoni.org
Website: www.belfastcity.gov.uk/events
https://destinationcq.com/event-directory/
The Cathedral Quarter in Belfast comes alive on Sunday 19th, August 2018 with the vibrant sounds of the Caribbean. The African & Caribbean Support Organisation (ACSONI) in partnership with Belfast Summer of Music and Destination Cathedral Quarter Bid presents Caribbean Socialfrom 12 noon to 3:00pm.
The event will be opened by Carolyn Stewart of U105. On offer will be the tingling sounds of steel band music performed by Tropical Heatwave from Nottinghill via Trinidad & Tobago. There will be a variety of live performances including: Reggae, Soca and Calypso music, Dance, Story Telling, Live DJ and lots more.
“We are delighted to host Caribbean Social as a part of ACSONI’s annual Caribbean Diversity Week which has been running for the past decade. It has been a rewarding experience working along with our partners at Belfast City Council & Destination CQ as well as connecting with the wider programmes throughout the city.” – Joseph Ricketts (Manager, ACSONI)
Gareth Neill of Destination Cathedral Quarter Bid says: “Destination CQ are really excited to support ACSONI (African & Caribbean Support NI) and partners in bringing this event into the city centre. We look forward to offering an alternative and vibrant Sunday activity for residents and visitors.”
Caribbean Social is part of the Belfast Summer of Music season and is free to the public. There will be a tempting array of Caribbean cuisine and local eats available for purchase.
Media & Communication: Nattassa Latcham
Website: www.belfastcity.gov.uk/events
This report debates the human rights implications around the negative usage of images and narratives of Africa and Africans. It recommends a consideration of the various factors influencing the composition of campaign images and literature and the nature of the responses they elicit in audiences, as well as the impact it has on people of African descent. It engages with academic literature where the topics of media images and representation have been discussed at length, documenting the arguments.
The two main organisations involved in framing the discussion on human rights in the context of this
research are the European Convention on Human Rights and Committee on the
Elimination of Racial Discrimination. The Convention and its
members are committed to the elimination of racial discrimination and the promotion of
understanding among all races. It also compels its parties to outlaw hate speech and
criminalise membership in racist organisations.
The official discourses relating to Africans and those of African descent in the wider
socio-political context of Northern Ireland must be considered given that it provides a
context for how race and human rights are provided for more generally in the region and
how this is informing how new communities are portrayed. The Race Relations (NI)
Order 1997 (RRO) echoed the provisions of the 1976 Race Relations Act in Great
Britain. It outlaws discrimination on grounds of colour, race, nationality or ethnic or
national origin.
This places the rights for individuals and groups to be free from discrimination which
may be viewed as being exacerbated by campaigns which essentialises and
reduces the identities of individuals to a point where they are only recognised in terms
of the ethos underlying a specific cause or campaign. This may be considered as
discriminatory as it denies differentiation for individuals/groups/regions and contributes
to a culture of stereotyping.
Important details about the event: – Main Hall, Stranmillis University College, Stranmillis Rd, BT9 5DY, Belfast – Saturday 17th June 2017 – Hour: 2PM – 5PM For more information contact us. Register in the event -> https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/world-sickle-cell-day-2017-commemoration-tickets-34915833197
Important details about the event: – Auditorium, McClay Library, Queen’s University – Saturday, 17 June 2017
For more information contact us.
Have a look at what ACSONI has been involved with since our last newsletter issue.