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  • Ministry of Education invites public to TVET showcase 2026

    Ministry of Education invites public to TVET showcase 2026

    Ahead of its launch next week, Malaysia’s Ministry of Education, Human Resource Planning, Vocational Training and National Excellence has issued a public call for widespread attendance at the 2026 TVET Showcase, an event crafted to reshape public understanding of technical and vocational education and training (TVET) across the country.

    Scheduled for June 5, 2026, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on the ground floor of Government Headquarters, this year’s gathering centers on the transformative theme: “TVET for Excellence: Showcasing Skills, Breaking Stigmas, Building Futures.” Unlike generic education fairs, the showcase is intentionally designed to center the tangible achievements of TVET students, putting their on-the-job competencies, creative problem-solving, and innovative projects front and center for community visitors.

    According to an official press release from the ministry, attendees will be able to explore a wide array of interactive displays spanning key vocational sectors. These include hands-on exhibits from agricultural technology, commercial garment production, culinary arts and food nutrition, custom woodworking, and dozens of other specialized technical disciplines. Each showcase is structured to highlight the real-world, actionable knowledge and skills that students gain through structured TVET programming — skills that directly align with in-demand jobs across Malaysia’s evolving economy.

    Beyond displaying student work, the event carries a broader policy and social goal: to underscore the critical role that TVET plays in preparing people for successful careers. For many years, vocational education has carried unfair social stigma that frames it as a “second choice” for students who cannot pursue university degrees. The showcase aims to counter that myth by demonstrating that TVET equips learners with the specialized tools they need to secure stable employment, launch their own small businesses, and build sustainable long-term professional and personal growth.

    The ministry has extended a targeted invitation to a broad cross-section of the public, including current TVET students, prospective learners, parents, K-12 and post-secondary teachers, and all community members. Organizers note that public attendance not only supports student participants but also reinforces national efforts to nurture a culture of skills development, innovation, and excellence in vocational training — a key pillar of Malaysia’s workforce development strategy for coming years.

  • Police seek help in locating person of interest

    Police seek help in locating person of interest

    Law enforcement authorities in Barbados are turning to the public for critical help in tracking down an individual wanted for questioning in a high-priority serious criminal investigation. \n\nThe Barbados Police Service (TBPS) confirmed that the ongoing probe centers on a violent incident that unfolded on Valentine’s Day, February 14, at the Waterhall Land location in the neighborhood of Eagle Hall, parish of St. Michael. While details of the incident itself remain undisclosed as the investigation progresses, investigators have emphasized that cooperation from community members will be key to moving the case forward. \n\nPolice officials are issuing a public appeal to all residents and visitors who may hold any information related to the person of interest’s current location. Any tip, no matter how small it may seem, could provide the breakthrough investigators need to advance the inquiry. \n\nMultiple channels have been set up for members of the public to submit information confidentially. Tipsters can reach out directly to Criminal Investigation Department (CID) officers assigned to the Black Rock Police Station via the dedicated phone lines 417-7500 and 417-7501. For urgent reports, the national police emergency line at 211 remains open 24/7. Those who prefer to share information anonymously can contact the independent Crime Stoppers hotline at 1 800-8477, or visit any local police station across the island to speak with an officer in person. \n\nIn addition to the appeal for information, TBPS has issued a clear public reminder about the legal consequences of aiding wanted individuals. Under Barbadian law, deliberately sheltering, hiding, or providing any form of assistance to a person that is wanted by law enforcement is classified as a serious criminal offense. Authorities have stressed that anyone found to have committed this offense will face prosecution and full legal penalties. The reminder is intended to discourage any individuals from interfering with the ongoing investigation.”,

  • AT&LU Pays Tribute to Cheryl Mary-Clare Hurst

    AT&LU Pays Tribute to Cheryl Mary-Clare Hurst

    Dated June 1, 2026, a formal tribute released by the President of the Antigua & Barbuda Trades and Labour Union (AT&LU) honors the life and legacy of the late comrade Cheryl Mary-Clare Hurst, extending heartfelt condolences to her family and loved ones.

    Widely remembered as a dedicated daughter of Antigua and Barbuda, Hurst devoted her entire public life to advancing the national labor movement. Across every role she held across decades of public service – from General Secretary of the Antigua Barbuda Labour Party (ABLP), to Senator, Minister of State, and even her work as a choir member within the party – she consistently embedded the core principles and values of the AT&LU into every aspect of her work. Her unwavering passion for protecting the rights of working people extended to every community across both islands of the nation, earning her widespread respect from union members and workers across the country.

    For the AT&LU, Hurst was far more than an ally; the union was a core part of her identity and lifelong mission. Bernard de Nully, AT&LU President, emphasized in the tribute that the entire union community remains eternally indebted to Hurst for her relentless dedication, consistent support, and unshakable loyalty to both the national trade labor movement and the broader working class.

    Drawing on spiritual comfort to guide mourning, the tribute invokes the biblical verse from John 16:22, which reminds those grieving that present sorrow will ultimately give way to unshakable joy. De Nully closed the tribute with a prayer that the Holy Spirit will guide Hurst’s journey to the afterlife, and that the Almighty will grant enduring comfort to the Hurst family during this period of bereavement. The union’s statement ends with a final wish that the soul of Cheryl Mary-Clare Hurst may rest in eternal peace.

  • Minister Fernandez Pays Tribute To Tourism Pioneer Theodore “Ted” Isaac, CM

    Minister Fernandez Pays Tribute To Tourism Pioneer Theodore “Ted” Isaac, CM

    In a moving ceremony that brought together tourism industry leaders, former colleagues, and family members, a senior government minister has paid public homage to one of the Caribbean’s most influential tourism trailblazers, Theodore “Ted” Isaac, who held the national honor of Companion of the Order of the Medjidie (CM).

    Minister of Tourism, Randall Fernandez, delivered a heartfelt address highlighting Isaac’s decades-long work transforming the region’s tourism sector from a nascent, undervalued industry into the cornerstone of the local economy that it is today. Decades ago, when the Caribbean was still largely overlooked by major international travel operators, Isaac emerged as a visionary advocate, pushing for strategic infrastructure investment, targeted international marketing, and community-centered tourism development that prioritized local employment and cultural preservation.

    Fernandez recalled that Isaac’s early initiatives paved the way for the expansion of world-class resorts, the growth of eco-tourism, and the rise of the cruise ship industry in the region, bringing millions of visitors and billions in revenue to local communities. Beyond his professional achievements, Isaac was also remembered as a mentor to generations of tourism professionals, who often highlighted his commitment to lifting up emerging leaders from marginalized communities. His work also emphasized sustainable tourism practices long before climate action and environmental preservation became core global priorities for the travel industry.

    “Ted Isaac did not just build hotels or attract visitors—he built a legacy that continues to sustain our people and our economy,” Fernandez stated during the tribute. “His vision saw what the rest of the world would only recognize decades later: that our natural beauty, our vibrant culture, and our warm hospitality are our greatest assets, and that when we invest in tourism that works for everyone, we invest in a better future for generations.”

    Industry leaders echoed Fernandez’s remarks, noting that Isaac’s policy recommendations still shape regional tourism strategy today, particularly as the sector works to recover from the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and adapt to the demands of a changing global climate. A new annual tourism leadership scholarship has been announced in Isaac’s name, to support young professionals pursuing careers in sustainable tourism development across the region.

  • Desiree Zachariah Represents the Ministry of ICTs at a Workshop on Strengthening Digital Resilience in the Caribbean in Belize

    Desiree Zachariah Represents the Ministry of ICTs at a Workshop on Strengthening Digital Resilience in the Caribbean in Belize

    Against a backdrop of growing global climate and geopolitical uncertainty, small island developing states across the Caribbean are increasingly prioritizing the protection of critical digital infrastructure. This week, a two-day regional workshop focused on boosting Caribbean digital resilience kicked off in Belize, hosted by the UN Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (UN ECLAC), with official representation from Antigua and Barbuda’s Ministry of Information Communication Technologies, Utilities and Energy.

    Desiree Zachariah, who leads the Business and Data Analytics Unit within the ministry’s eGovernment Department, emphasized that Antigua and Barbuda has long acknowledged the non-negotiable need for robust, secure digital systems to support national operations. For the small island nation, which faces unique vulnerabilities to natural disasters that can cripple local infrastructure, this Belize-based gathering (held June 2–3) offers a rare collaborative platform to engage with cross-regional stakeholders and chart a path forward for rolling out data embassies.

    Unlike traditional data storage solutions, data embassies are purpose-built, off-site secure storage facilities designed to help countries safeguard critical national data from catastrophic loss. In the event of a national crisis—whether a hurricane, cyberattack, or infrastructure failure—data embassies ensure that core government services and digital operations can continue uninterrupted, eliminating the risk of total service disruption. A functional data ecosystem also relies on strong supporting legislative foundations, including clearly defined hosting agreements between partner nations, targeted investments in advanced cybersecurity infrastructure, and reliable high-speed network connectivity to keep systems accessible.

    Over the course of the workshop, participating delegates and stakeholders will dive into layered discussions evaluating the short-term, medium-term, and long-term advantages of deploying data embassies across the region. Attendees will also explore opportunities for public-private partnerships to fund, build, and maintain these critical facilities, with the ultimate goal of fostering coordinated, cross-sector collaboration between governments, private tech firms, and regional institutions. The workshop’s core mission is to build a holistic, region-wide approach to digital resilience that addresses the unique vulnerabilities of Caribbean nations and creates more secure digital futures for all participating states.

  • Analytical Services Director Attends Regional Food Safety Meeting in Barbados

    Analytical Services Director Attends Regional Food Safety Meeting in Barbados

    A critical regional gathering focused on elevating food safety infrastructure across the Caribbean region wrapped up in Bridgetown, Barbados late last month, drawing technical leaders and laboratory stakeholders from 15 CARIFORUM member states. Among the high-level delegates was Dr. Linroy Christian, Director of the Department of Analytical Services of Antigua and Barbuda, who joined the conversation to align national efforts with broader regional development goals.

    Hosted from May 26 to 27, the two-day convening was officially titled the Review Meeting of the Laboratory Rationalisation Strategy and Implementation Plan, and it operates under the umbrella of the European Union’s flagship Food Security Programme for the Caribbean. The initiative was designed to address longstanding gaps in regional testing capacity that have hampered safe agricultural trade and public health protection across small island developing states in the region.

    The core agenda of the meeting centered on collaborative assessment of ongoing work to upgrade testing services for three key sectors: agriculture, fisheries, and consumer food safety. Delegates and technical experts delved into actionable solutions to longstanding challenges, from inconsistent testing protocols across borders to uneven quality assurance standards that create barriers to regional and international trade.

    Key discussion topics included pathways to deepen cross-institutional collaboration between national laboratories, mechanisms to standardize testing methodologies across all CARIFORUM nations, strategies to reinforce robust quality assurance frameworks, and targeted reforms to boost the overall efficiency of testing services. All conversations were anchored in the overarching goal of enabling safe, sustainable food and agricultural trade that benefits both producers and consumers across the Caribbean.

    In a post-meeting statement, Antigua and Barbuda’s Department of Analytical Services emphasized that Dr. Christian’s attendance is part of the nation’s longstanding commitment to coordinated regional action. The participation aligns with ongoing collective efforts to build resilient laboratory capacity, champion evidence-based scientific practice, and advance shared food safety and public health outcomes across the Caribbean bloc.

    For Antigua and Barbuda, the Department of Analytical Services serves as the national lead on a range of critical testing and analysis functions, including routine food safety screening, environmental quality monitoring, and technical support for public health initiatives across the twin-island nation.

  • When good intentions do harm: Why we must donate responsibly

    When good intentions do harm: Why we must donate responsibly

    The Caribbean region has long benefited from global goodwill in the wake of climate-driven disasters, but decades of on-the-ground experience have revealed a hidden cost of unregulated generosity: uncoordinated, unsolicited donations are turning good intentions into secondary crises that slow life-saving response when every minute counts.

    After major storm, flood or volcanic events, local disaster management systems are routinely overwhelmed by inappropriate donations that clog critical port and warehouse infrastructure. Winter coats shipped to tropical zones, expired food supplies, unsorted mixed boxes of goods, and flimsy tarpaulins that cannot withstand heavy rain are just a few common examples. These unnecessary items drain already stretched resources: they consume valuable staff time, limited storage space, and critical funding that could otherwise be directed to meeting the urgent needs of vulnerable communities. Data collected by the Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency (CDEMA) shows that as much as 60% of unsolicited donated goods end up unused, discarded as waste that adds additional environmental strain to small island nations already at the forefront of climate change.

    These challenges extend far beyond operational logistical headaches. When disaster response systems are bogged down processing unusable donations, communities waiting for life-saving essentials such as clean water, food, emergency shelter materials and medical supplies are forced to wait longer for support, putting lives at unnecessary risk.

    The urgency of addressing this longstanding problem has grown sharply in recent years. Between 2020 and 2025, more than 2.6 million people across 13 English and Dutch-speaking Caribbean countries were impacted by floods, tropical storms, and volcanic activity. These repeated climate disasters have caused widespread destruction, displaced communities, and put unrelenting pressure on regional social systems and national economies, underscoring the region’s growing exposure to overlapping, complex climate hazards.

    As the 2026 Atlantic hurricane season gets underway, and tropical storms continue to grow in intensity due to climate change, targeted preparedness to fix this donation gap is more urgent than ever. CDEMA and response stakeholders emphasize that disaster preparedness cannot be limited to building physical infrastructure or boosting frontline response capacity; it also requires building robust, coordinated public systems that can channel incoming support effectively, so generosity strengthens response efforts rather than overwhelming them.

    To address this gap and raise global and regional public awareness of the issue, CDEMA and the International Organisation for Migration (IOM), working alongside a network of regional and international partners, have launched a groundbreaking regional Donate Responsibly Campaign. The initiative, funded by EU Humanitarian Aid, is rooted in a simple but transformative principle: all disaster donations must be needs-based, centrally coordinated, and aligned with national disaster response systems.

    CDEMA has already laid critical groundwork for this shift through its Comprehensive Relief and Logistics Management Programme, which supports participating Caribbean states to strengthen their national aid management frameworks. This work includes developing customized national logistics plans, establishing formal policies for unsolicited donations, mapping priority community needs, streamlining supply chain infrastructure, and improving coordination through National Emergency Operations Centres. Digital tools such as real-time logistics tracking systems are already helping response teams direct aid based on actual on-the-ground needs rather than global assumptions about what communities require.

    Working alongside the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC), CDEMA also supports countries to strengthen legal and regulatory frameworks through the International Disaster Response Law (IDRL) initiative. These frameworks both facilitate and regulate incoming international aid, ensuring all support is coordinated, accountable, and aligned with local needs. Key improvements include streamlining customs and border clearance processes for essential relief, and upholding consistent quality and accountability standards for incoming donations. Complementing these national frameworks, regional coordination mechanisms co-led by IOM, CDEMA and IFRC—including the Emergency Shelter and Non-Food Items Technical Working Group and the Relief and Logistics Thematic Working Group—align all participating partners around shared standards and common response priorities.

    The campaign outlines three core guidelines that all potential donors should follow before sending support to disaster-affected communities in the Caribbean. First, cash donations are almost always the most effective option. Financial contributions allow local responders and national governments to procure exactly what is needed, when and where it is needed, while also supporting local economies in affected countries. Second, coordination is non-negotiable: before donating, all givers should follow official guidance from national disaster management offices and CDEMA, work through recognized response partners, and align donations with published priority needs lists and established quality standards. Third, supporting national and regional response systems is just as critical: all donations must align with existing plans rather than bypassing formal local systems.

    Campaign organizers stress that responsible donating is designed to support long-term community recovery, not create new burdens for frontline states. Donations should address confirmed needs, avoid creating unnecessary waste and additional environmental harm, and prevent adding extra financial strain to small island developing states that are already bearing the brunt of climate change. Context also matters: the Caribbean is a diverse region of 13 nations with varying cultural and climate needs, so donations must be culturally appropriate, climate-relevant, and fit for local conditions. A donation that helps communities in one disaster context may be ineffective or even harmful in another.

    As the campaign emphasizes: how we give is just as important as what we give. Every potential donor is encouraged to ask two critical questions before giving: is this donation actually needed by affected communities, and is it being sent through coordinated official channels?

    Encouragingly, young leaders across the Caribbean are already driving demand for smarter, more sustainable approaches to disaster response, and their message is clear: responsible giving is informed, coordinated, and environmentally sustainable.

    To the Caribbean diaspora, private sector partners, national governments, and global supporters, the campaign reminds stakeholders: generosity has the power to save lives, but only when it meets actual on-the-ground needs. The call to action is simple: support trusted response organizations, use official donation channels, give cash whenever possible, and make your generosity count.

    The campaign’s core message rings clear as hurricane season begins: Donate responsibly. Support smarter response. Build stronger regional resilience.

  • Solar lighting to be installed at refurbished Edinboro Hardcourt

    Solar lighting to be installed at refurbished Edinboro Hardcourt

    A major community sports infrastructure milestone was achieved in St. Vincent and the Grenadines (SVG) this week, as India formally handed over the fully refurbished Edinboro Hardcourt to the SVG government during an official on-site ceremony on Monday.

    The handover was led by Subhash Prasad Gupta, India’s High Commissioner to SVG, and was attended by a cross-section of senior SVG government officials, including West Kingstown Member of Parliament Daniel Cummings, Foreign Minister Dwight Fitzgerald Bradle, Sports Coordinator Roxell John, and Sports Minister Kaschaka Cupid. This upgraded facility is one of five grassroots community projects delivered under the Quick Impact Project Agreement, a bilateral development partnership between India and SVG.

    In remarks following the handover, Sports Minister Cupid outlined the SVG government’s plans to further improve the venue for local users. Upgrades will include the installation of solar-powered lighting, which will extend usable hours for the hardcourt and support community activities after sunset. Cupid emphasized that the government is committed to ongoing proper maintenance of the facility to ensure it delivers long-term benefits to the local community.

    MP Cummings, representing the local constituency, highlighted the transformative positive impact the upgraded hardcourt is expected to have on young people living in the Edinboro area. He praised the Building and Road Construction Agency (BRAGSA) for its diligent oversight of the refurbishment works, and stressed that ongoing community stewardship will be key to protecting the facility and keeping its surrounding environment well cared for.

    In an official press release, SVG’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Foreign Trade, Foreign Investment and Diaspora Affairs extended sincere appreciation to the government of the Republic of India for its generous support through the Quick Impact Projects initiative. The ministry also thanked all local stakeholders, from construction teams to community representatives, whose collaborative efforts brought the project to completion. The statement reaffirmed SVG’s commitment to continuing to deepen the longstanding positive bilateral relationship between the two nations.

  • Nieuwe escalaties VS-Iran conflict: Aanval op luchthaven Koeweit en wederzijdse raketaanvallen

    Nieuwe escalaties VS-Iran conflict: Aanval op luchthaven Koeweit en wederzijdse raketaanvallen

    On June 3, fresh waves of coordinated attacks and rapidly escalating hostilities have thrown the already volatile Middle East into heightened crisis, spreading conflict across multiple states from the Persian Gulf to the Eastern Mediterranean. The most recent major incident unfolded Wednesday, when Kuwait’s international airport came under a simultaneous drone and missile assault that left at least one person dead and 63 others injured. The attack forced immediate authorities to shut down the air hub temporarily and reroute all incoming and outgoing commercial flights. Notably, this assault occurred just hours after a fresh exchange of missile strikes between Iran and the United States that ratcheted up bilateral tensions in the Gulf region.\n\nIn the wake of that cross-fire between Iran and the U.S., American military officials confirmed they had intercepted multiple Iranian ballistic missiles and drones launched toward their positions, before carrying out their own retaliatory air strikes on targets on Qeshm Island, located adjacent to the strategically critical Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly 20% of global oil supplies pass daily. For its part, Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps claimed it had successfully carried out an attack targeting the U.S. Fifth Fleet and an American naval vessel. Amid this back-and-forth, Kuwait has moved swiftly to distance itself from the conflict: the Kuwaiti government issued a firm denial that it had allowed any foreign power to use its territory or airspace to launch attacks against Iran, and ordered two Iranian embassy staff members to leave the country within a 24-hour window.\n\nParallel to the Gulf escalation, political tensions around U.S.-Iran nuclear diplomacy remain tangled. U.S. President Donald Trump stated that diplomatic discussions with Iran are ongoing, and claimed Iran has agreed to abandon its pursuit of a nuclear weapon. Even as talks proceed, however, the Trump administration imposed new economic sanctions on Iran’s Persian Gulf Strait Authority, the body Tehran has tasked with overseeing shipping traffic through the Strait of Hormuz.\n\nThe attack on Kuwait’s main airport drew widespread international condemnation. The Indian government confirmed that one of its citizens was killed in the assault, with several other Indian nationals sustaining injuries, and issued a call for all regional actors to immediately halt all provocative attacks.\n\nTensions have also spiked dramatically along the Israel-Lebanon border, adding another layer of instability to the region. Israeli air strikes across southern Lebanon have left at least nine people dead, the Lebanese side confirmed, including two paramedics responding to earlier incidents. Additional strikes were carried out near the Lebanese capital Beirut. The Israeli military announced it intercepted an “enemy aircraft” over northern Israel, while the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah claimed responsibility for a series of rocket attacks targeting Israeli military positions in the country’s north. These latest exchanges of fire came just after direct peace negotiations between the Israeli government and Lebanese officials got underway in Washington, a meeting that Hezbollah has publicly rejected.\n\nIsraeli officials issued a stark warning: if Hezbollah continues to launch rocket attacks on Israeli communities in northern Israel, the Israeli military will launch full-scale strikes on the southern suburbs of Beirut. Israeli officials added that this position has the full backing of the U.S. government in Washington. Even further inland in Iraq, regional instability is disrupting critical global energy supplies. Iraqi Prime Minister Ali al-Zaidi has ordered a resumption of oil production in Iraq’s Kurdish region, after multiple private energy companies suspended production amid repeated drone attacks on local oil fields. Those production halts have already worsened energy supply disruptions across the Middle East, with knock-on effects for global energy markets.

  • Students to compete in 15th Kwéyòl Spelling Bee Competition

    Students to compete in 15th Kwéyòl Spelling Bee Competition

    As a cornerstone initiative to safeguard Dominica’s Indigenous Creole language, the 15th iteration of the national Kwéyòl Spelling Bee Competition is set to kick off on June 4, 2026, in a collaborative effort between the country’s Ministry of Education, Human Resource Planning, Vocational Training and National Excellence and the Konmité pou Etid Kwéyòl (KEK), a local organization dedicated to Kwéyòl research and preservation.

    Held at the Alliance Française in the capital city of Roseau, this year’s competition will bring together top young spellers from four primary schools across the island: Bense Primary School, Paix Bouche Primary School, Penville Primary School and St. Luke’s Primary School. These student competitors will test their mastery of the Kwéyòl language, vying for top honors while celebrating the cultural knowledge that is intrinsically tied to the indigenous tongue.

    Long before the first spellers take the stage, organizers have planned an opening program featuring opening remarks from official representatives of both partnering institutions. This pre-competition segment is designed to highlight the longstanding importance of Kwéyòl preservation in Dominica’s national education and cultural strategy.

    First launched in 2010, the Kwéyòl Spelling Bee was founded with a clear mission: to embed the Kwéyòl language more deeply in Dominica’s primary education system and inspire younger generations to build fluency and confidence in the language. Over its 15-year history, the annual competition has grown from a small educational pilot into one of the country’s most prominent cultural and educational events, according to an official press release from the Ministry of Education.

    Education officials emphasize that the competition fills a critical role in ongoing national efforts to encourage daily use of Kwéyòl among young Dominicans, while cultivating broader public appreciation for the language within the country’s education framework. For organizers, the initiative is far more than a spelling contest: it serves as a key platform to connect younger Dominicans to their unique linguistic and cultural roots, building intergenerational continuity for a language that forms the core of the country’s national identity.

    For participants, the event offers more than just competition. It creates structured opportunities to refine their command of Kwéyòl, while deepening their understanding of the traditions, history and heritage that make up the tapestry of Dominican culture. Organizers have extended an open invitation to all members of the local public to attend and support the event, expressing confidence that this year’s edition will once again highlight the impressive skill of young participants, growing cultural awareness across the island, and excellence in Kwéyòl language proficiency. The competition is scheduled to get underway at 10:00 a.m. local time on the day of the event.