A new beginner-level Mandarin Chinese training course has officially kicked off in Suriname, designed as a targeted initiative to strengthen the longstanding cooperative partnership between the South American nation and China. Running through July 15, the program is co-hosted by the local Confucius Institute and the Suriname Diplomat Institute (SDI), bringing together roughly 30 government officials from multiple public sector agencies.
Beyond just building basic Mandarin language proficiency, the course centers its curriculum on boosting intercultural awareness between the two countries. Organizers frame the training as a core component of broader national efforts to equip Suriname’s public sector professionals with the skills needed to thrive in an increasingly interconnected, globalized working environment.
At the opening ceremony of the program, Chinese Ambassador to Suriname Lin Ji emphasized that Mandarin language learning acts as a vital people-to-people bridge connecting the two nations. “Mastering Mandarin delivers far more than practical professional advantages,” Ambassador Lin noted during his remarks. “It lays the groundwork for stronger bilateral ties and deeper mutual understanding between our peoples.”
Jenny Maikoe, SDI’s program coordinator, echoed this perspective, highlighting language’s unique power to connect communities and nations. Maikoe explained that the training directly supports public sector capacity building, giving participating officials the tools to engage more effectively in cross-border communication and international diplomatic settings.
According to event organizers, the benefits of Mandarin proficiency extend past institutional cooperation, opening new pathways for both personal development and professional advancement for participants. For this reason, the course is widely viewed as a meaningful milestone in the ongoing work to deepen the positive bilateral relationship between Suriname and China.
博客
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Mandarijncursus moet samenwerking tussen Suriname en China verdiepen
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Retired teacher jailed for sex crimes on 11-y-o boy
A 65-year-old retired educator from St. Vincent and the Grenadines has received a total prison sentence of two years, seven months and 17 days after being convicted on four separate counts of indecent assault involving a 13-year-old minor boy. The sentencing ruling was issued by a sitting magistrate during a closed court hearing for defendant John Clyde Fitzpatrick, who resides in the Sion Hill area of the country.
Under local rules for cases involving child victims, legal proceedings for this type of sensitive matter are held in camera, meaning the public and press are barred from observing hearings to protect the safety and privacy of the underage victim. As a result, iWitness News, the local media outlet first reporting on the case, has only been able to confirm the official sentence handed down in the matter, with no additional details from the court proceedings available for public release.
Court and law enforcement records confirm the criminal offences Fitzpatrick was convicted of took place between September 2024 and January 2025, per an official February 2025 statement published by local police. In that statement, law enforcement noted that the sensitive nature of the case and mandatory legal protections for the minor victim’s identity mean no further specific details about the offences or the investigation can be shared with the public at this stage of the legal process.
Even with limited public disclosures, police confirmed that all required legal protocols have been strictly followed throughout the investigation and prosecution to guarantee that justice is delivered for the young victim. Fitzpatrick was charged and convicted under Section 127(1)(a) of the Criminal Code, CAP 171 of the 2009 Revised Edition of the Laws of St. Vincent and the Grenadines. This statute explicitly outlines that any act of indecent assault against a child under the age of 15 carries a maximum penalty of 10 years of imprisonment. A supplementary clause in the legislation, Subsection 2, also reinforces a key legal protection for minors: under local law, a child under the age of 15 cannot legally provide consent that would excuse an indecent act or reclassify it as not amounting to assault.
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ULP gov’t paid contractors full amounts but houses not built
When the newly elected New Democratic Party (NDP) government took power in St. Vincent and the Grenadines this past November, it inherited a tangled mess of uncompleted disaster recovery projects, and housing minister Andrew John has laid bare the full extent of the financial mismanagement that is derailing current reconstruction efforts. Speaking before the national Parliament on Tuesday, John detailed that he has brought forward evidence of widespread irregularities to National Security Minister St. Clair Leaock, centered on contracts awarded by the former Unity Labour Party (ULP) administration that were paid in full but never delivered.
All the misallocated funds were earmarked for a critical mission: rebuilding homes wrecked or leveled by two major natural disasters — the 2021 eruption of the La Soufriere volcano and Hurricane Beryl, which swept across the island chain in July 2024 and destroyed more than 90% of infrastructure on Union Island, part of the Grenadines island group.
The mismanagement of disaster recovery funds has left the new NDP administration scrambling to get stalled housing projects back on track. John explained that the previous government left millions of dollars in unpaid debts to building material suppliers, forcing the new leadership to renegotiate payment terms to secure the materials needed for new construction. One of the largest outstanding debts totals EC$1.6 million owed to East Caribbean Metal Industries Ltd. (EMIL), a local supplier. John added that the government also owes substantial sums to two Jamaican material firms, Tankweld and ARC Manufacturing Limited.
The disclosure came in response to a parliamentary question from Carlos James, a government senator who previously served as tourism minister and North Leeward MP during the ULP’s 25-year tenure that ended with the November 27 election. James had asked for a breakdown of planned housing projects and budget allocations by constituency for the current fiscal year. While John confirmed that his ministry has finalized budget projections, he outlined the crippling financial constraints blocking progress, noting that large portions of the 2026 allocated budget are already tied up in unfulfilled contracts from the prior administration.
“To our amazement, in some constituencies … it was discovered that contracts were paid in full … but there are no houses for these contracts,” John told lawmakers. He added that settling all outstanding inherited debts would drain the entire current housing budget, leaving no funds to start new builds: “Otherwise, it would have taken all the money, and you will not have any need to ask any question, because the answer (number of houses to be built this year) would have been zero.”
Despite the major setbacks, John said negotiations have been productive so far, with local hardware vendors agreeing to new terms and already beginning to deliver materials. His ministry has also opened ongoing talks with EMIL to resolve the EC$1.6 million debt, and John declined to release full sensitive financial details publicly to keep negotiations on track.
The situation is most urgent on Union Island, where John revealed that nearly all pre-delivered reconstruction materials were distributed without any formal accountability. “Not even a nail was left in Union Island. So we basically are starting from scratch in Union Island,” he said. The minister added that the new government has already restarted a local warehouse on the island to support recovery efforts, and the first shipments of new, properly accounted for materials are scheduled to arrive starting next week. Land availability for planned steel-frame housing remains an additional challenge on Union Island and other smaller Grenadine islands, while unpaid debts to independent truckers have also slowed progress, with some payment claims lacking any formal documentation to verify work completed.
John concluded his address by reassuring residents of Union Island that the new administration prioritizes their recovery and is working to resolve the legacy issues inherited from the previous government.
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UK Vincies urged to invest even in small projects in SVG
On a recent Sunday in London, the government of St. Vincent and the Grenadines (SVG) advanced its ongoing outreach to the global Vincentian diaspora, reframing conventional expectations of diaspora investment for the island nation’s development. At the Invest SVG Diaspora Outreach and Investment Programme, Senator Lavern King, Minister of State for Education, Vocational Training, Innovation, Digital Transformation and Information, delivered a clear, inclusive message: investments in SVG do not require the large-scale projects that have long been the focus of diaspora investment conversations.
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Computers at consulate in NY ‘completely wiped’ after ULP loss
The process of handing over leadership at St. Vincent and the Grenadines (SVG)’s global diplomatic outposts has been marked by unforeseen and significant obstacles, the island nation’s top diplomat has confirmed to lawmakers.
Foreign Minister Dwight Fitzgerald Bramble told Parliament Tuesday that while the current Unity Labour Party (ULP) administration has made redefining and restructuring the mandates of SVG’s overseas missions a core governance priority, the handover phase from the previous government has proven far more difficult than anticipated.
Opening up about the frustrations of the transition in response to a question from opposition senator and former foreign minister Keisal Peters, Bramble described the process as deeply disappointing, citing inherited problematic realities that have slowed operational progress at multiple posts.
He shared one striking example from the SVG Consulate General in New York, where newly installed Consul General Roland “Patel” Matthews discovered a critical issue immediately after arriving to take up his role: every piece of data on the consulate’s entire computer system had been erased completely. “No information on anything that happened in the consulate in New York was left there,” Bramble told the legislative body, noting that this was just one of multiple problematic cases the new administration has inherited.
A second contentious case unfolded at SVG’s High Commission in London, Bramble added. Former High Commissioner Cenio Lewis, serving under the previous administration that was voted out of power in November, had set up a charitable trust fund designed to support children back in SVG. Lewis administered the fund alongside a second signatory, whom Bramble did not name, but confirmed is an advisor to the now-former ULP administration.
Since new High Commissioner Brereton Horne took control of the London mission, the remaining co-signatory has refused to transfer access or control of the charitable fund to the new diplomatic leadership. Bramble noted that the new government expected a seamless handover of all official assets and administrative controls following the election, but this has not been the case for the London trust.
The former career diplomat stressed that the SVG public can be confident the government will not leave these irregularities unaddressed. “We will do what we have to do, we will investigate what we have to investigate and we will employ whatever legal and administrative and governmental processes to make sure that that is regularised,” Bramble said, vowing to resolve both issues to restore full functional operations at the troubled overseas missions.
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VS verlengt wapenstilstand met Iran, militaire top over Hormuz
On Wednesday, military planners from over 30 countries convened in London for a two-day summit focused on laying the groundwork for an international mission aimed at reopening and securing the strategically critical Strait of Hormuz, a global chokepoint for maritime oil trade. The UK Ministry of Defense confirmed that more than 12 nations have already committed to joining the operation, which will be led jointly by the United Kingdom and France once operational conditions allow for deployment.
This London conference builds on diplomatic progress achieved just one week prior, during a video call attended by roughly 50 nations spanning Europe, Asia, and the Middle East. That earlier diplomatic push was partly intended to send a clear message to Washington, coming after former U.S. President Donald Trump stated that the U.S. did not require any assistance from allied partners for security efforts in the region.
British Defense Secretary John Healey outlined that the core objective of the London gathering is to translate preliminary diplomatic agreements into tangible military plans. These plans center on guaranteeing unimpeded, free passage for all commercial and civilian vessels through the Strait of Hormuz, while also supporting the establishment of a lasting, durable ceasefire between conflict parties. Delegates are set to discuss a range of critical operational details, including contributing military capabilities, establishing unified command structures, and evaluating potential troop deployments to the region.
In an unexpected twist that reshapes regional diplomatic dynamics just one day ahead of the London summit, President Trump announced Tuesday that he would extend the temporary ceasefire with Iran indefinitely. The ceasefire had been set to expire imminently, and the extension opens space for continued peace negotiations amid rising regional tensions. This decision came only hours after Trump had publicly stated he was unwilling to extend the truce, and had confirmed that U.S. military forces were “ready for action” if the ceasefire lapsed.
Trump, who jointly launched the war against Iran alongside Israel on February 28, explained his reversal by noting that the Iranian government is “seriously divided, which is not unexpected”. His comment references recent U.S. and Israeli assassination strikes that killed multiple senior Iranian leaders, including former Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has since been succeeded by his son.
Negotiations mediated by Pakistan in its capital Islamabad have hit a key stumbling block over the ongoing U.S. blockade of Iranian ports, though a second round of talks is currently being planned. The ceasefire extension came at the formal request of Pakistan, which serves as the neutral mediator for the ongoing peace talks.
Earlier, United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres and other global leaders had condemned Trump’s repeated threats to bomb Iranian energy infrastructure, noting that international humanitarian law explicitly prohibits attacks on civilian populations and critical civilian infrastructure.
In a post on social media, Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif thanked Trump for agreeing to the ceasefire extension request. Sharif expressed hope that both Iran and the U.S.-Israel coalition would uphold the terms of the truce, and that a comprehensive peace deal could be reached during the upcoming second round of negotiations. As of Wednesday, no firm date has been set for the next negotiating session.



