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  • Briceño Convenes Special Cabinet Meeting on Procurement Amid Heightened Scrutiny

    Briceño Convenes Special Cabinet Meeting on Procurement Amid Heightened Scrutiny

    Amid growing public and political scrutiny over questionable procurement procedures linked to the Ministries of Home Affairs and Defence, Belize Prime Minister John Briceño has convened an extraordinary gathering of the full Cabinet and all government chief executive officers to address systemic gaps in the country’s public procurement system.

    The one-of-a-kind strategic session was not a routine procedural check-in: it was crafted as a targeted intervention to deep-dive into three core pillars of public procurement: globally recognized best practices, binding legislative obligations, and persistent vulnerabilities that have repeatedly been flagged in official government audits. Unlike standard cabinet discussions that focus on policy approval, this meeting centered on reflection and course correction, bringing together the nation’s top fiscal oversight bodies to lay out clear findings for senior leadership.

    Three top oversight officials led the substantive presentations: the Financial Secretary, the Contractor General, and the Auditor General. Together, they covered critical topics spanning from the central fiscal role that transparent, well-managed procurement plays in protecting public funds to the most common irregularities that creep into public contracting processes. They also unpacked the core principle of value-for-money, which ensures taxpayer investments deliver maximum public benefit, and walked attendees through recurring audit results that paint a consistent picture of weak internal controls across nearly all levels of government entities. No department was singled out as an exception in the broader overview of systemic challenges.

    Central to the day’s deliberations was a detailed review of Belize’s existing regulatory framework for procurement, including the landmark Finance and Audit Reform Act (FARA), formal Stores Orders, and all associated subsidiary regulations. Meeting participants collaboratively explored actionable adjustments to boost compliance across all government agencies, cut unnecessary red tape that slows down project delivery, and eliminate bureaucratic bottlenecks that often drive unexpected cost overruns or create openings for accidental or intentional procedural violations.

    By the close of the session, the gathering produced two immediate, tangible outcomes to move reform forward. First, Prime Minister Briceño issued a formal directive ordering the Ministries of Finance and Public Service to partner with the independent Offices of the Contractor General and Auditor General to build and roll out a mandatory, ongoing professional development program. This training will be required not just for frontline procurement staff, but also for cabinet ministers, chief executive officers, and senior financial officers, ensuring that even the highest levels of government leadership understand and follow proper procurement protocols.

    Second, the full Cabinet signed off on the creation of a dedicated technical working group, which will be tasked with conducting a comprehensive review of Belize’s entire body of procurement legislation. The group’s core mandate will be to draft targeted amendments that strengthen the country’s legal framework, closing loopholes that currently enable corrupt or improper procurement practices and making enforcement clearer and more robust.

    In a formal statement issued after the meeting, the Prime Minister’s Office emphasized that this special session is not a one-off fix. Moving forward, similar high-level oversight and review sessions will be held on a regular basis across the entire public service. The overarching goal of these ongoing efforts is to foster more informed, responsible decision-making, drive continuous institutional improvement across government, and ultimately deliver more efficient, accountable public services to the people of Belize.

  • BCCI to GOB: BCCI to GOB: Why Wait? Why Wait? Strengthen Strengthen Controls Now

    BCCI to GOB: BCCI to GOB: Why Wait? Why Wait? Strengthen Strengthen Controls Now

    Belize’s leading business advocacy group is pushing the national government to move without delay to tighten financial oversight of public procurement, arguing that critical systemic upgrades can be rolled out long before ongoing misconduct probes and broader legislative reviews are completed.

    In an official correspondence addressed to Prime Minister John Briceño dated June 29, BCCI President Giacomo Sanchez framed recently uncovered irregularities in procurement workflows and payment processing as a critical wake-up call, rather than just a case of individual misbehavior. The business chamber welcomed the administration’s decision to launch a formal inquiry into the existing irregularities, but emphasized that its priority is stopping systemic failures from recurring, rather than focusing solely on holding bad actors accountable.

    At the core of the BCCI’s policy proposal is an immediate upgrade to the government’s existing Smart Stream accounting platform. If a full overhaul is not immediately feasible, the group recommends adding a standalone automated monitoring and compliance system that operates alongside the current tool. The key shift this would create is moving from a post-payment audit model to a pre-transaction risk detection framework that blocks irregular activity before funds are disbursed.

    In a clear departure from calls to wait for institutional processes to play out, the BCCI stressed that none of these upgrades need to be delayed until the current investigation concludes or the Cabinet finishes its comprehensive review of national procurement legislation. Many of the proposed changes can be implemented immediately, the group argued, and rapid action would send a clear signal that the government is serious about systemic reform, complementing any enforcement actions that come out of the ongoing probe.

    The BCCI laid out a detailed list of specific technical and procedural changes to strengthen financial controls. These include system-imposed limits on multiple invoices from a single vendor within a set time frame, automated flagging of anomalous transaction patterns, verification protocols to catch duplicate or altered invoice numbers, built-in duplicate payment detection, strict functional separation between staff who initiate payments and those who approve them, mandatory dual authorization for high-value transactions, tamper-proof audit trails, role-restricted system access, real-time alerting for unusual activity, and regular independent technical audits of the accounting platform itself.

    Beyond technological upgrades, the business chamber also called for stronger institutional oversight frameworks. It recommends boosting the capacity of the government’s internal audit function by requiring timely publication of audit reports, setting binding deadlines for implementing audit recommendations, and establishing accountability mechanisms for agencies that ignore or unnecessarily delay mandated changes. The BCCI also proposed making independent third-party assessments of government financial management systems a regular requirement, to evaluate system configuration, access controls, and the overall effectiveness of internal safeguards.

    These latest recommendations align with the BCCI’s published Good Governance Agenda for 2025–2030, which prioritizes modernizing public procurement systems, strengthening conflict of interest and public integrity rules, increasing transparency around public spending, and boosting independent institutional oversight.

    Closing his letter, Sanchez noted that strong public governance depends not just on new legislation, but on resilient institutional structures, secure financial management systems, and a widespread culture of accountability across the entire public service. He reaffirmed the BCCI’s readiness to collaborate with the Briceño administration to advance these critical reforms.

  • CHOGM Security Exercise Successfully Concluded

    CHOGM Security Exercise Successfully Concluded

    Authorities in Antigua and Barbuda have enacted temporary movement restrictions across multiple districts of the nation’s capital, St John’s, as part of stepped-up security preparations ahead of the 2026 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM).

    The large-scale security simulation launched at 6:00 a.m. local time on Friday, and is scheduled to wrap up by noon the same day. Within the formally designated ‘red zone,’ strict limits have been placed on both vehicle and pedestrian movement throughout the exercise window.

    A number of critical government facilities and adjacent compounds are closed to all entry for the duration of the drill. These include major public institutions: the Antigua Public Utilities Authority (APUA), Medical Benefits Scheme, Social Security Administration, Treasury Department, Civil Registry, Statistics Department, PDV Caribe, and Government House. Additionally, all vehicle traffic has been banned from the eastern stretch of Corn Alley for the length of the simulation.

    Local law enforcement has issued public advisories noting that all affected sites will remain closed to staff, visitors, and members of the general public until the exercise concludes at midday. Police have also urged all travelers to steer clear of the restricted zone and plan alternate travel routes to avoid unnecessary delays or conflicts with security personnel.

    Officials confirmed the drill is designed to test the full spectrum of the country’s security frameworks, evaluating operational readiness, emergency response protocols, and inter-agency coordination ahead of the high-profile summit, which will bring dozens of Commonwealth heads of state and hundreds of official delegates to Antigua and Barbuda in 2026.

  • Global Institutions: Crisis Easing; Not Yet Over

    Global Institutions: Crisis Easing; Not Yet Over

    Four of the world’s most influential multilateral institutions covering energy, finance, development and global trade have issued a rare joint assessment, noting that the immediate market turbulence triggered by the ongoing Middle East conflict has softened, but ongoing vulnerabilities across the global economy demand that national governments stay vigilant against potential new disruptions.

    Following a high-level coordination gathering held July 7, the chief executives of the International Energy Agency (IEA), International Monetary Fund (IMF), World Bank Group and World Trade Organization (WTO) released a public statement highlighting that the global economy has so far displayed unexpected resilience in the face of the conflict. Still, the leaders emphasized that macroeconomic uncertainty remains elevated, and ripple effects from the hostilities are likely to persist for the foreseeable future.

    This working group was first convened in April, created specifically to align a unified institutional response to the war’s spillover effects on global energy markets, cross-border trade flows and overall economic stability. In their latest update, the group confirmed that while global prices for fuel and agricultural fertilizer have pulled back from peaks recorded ahead of their June coordination meeting, the underlying crisis sparked by the conflict has not been fully resolved.

    The institutions added that the conflict’s economic impacts have been deeply uneven across different national economies. It has disrupted critical energy supply chains, threatened global food security, roiled commodity markets and dampened overall economic activity, dragging down growth projections and pushing up inflation rates in many vulnerable economies around the world.

    In the statement, the four bodies called for sustained international diplomatic efforts to end the conflict and reopen unimpeded access to the Strait of Hormuz, the world’s most strategically critical maritime chokepoint, through which roughly a fifth of global oil supplies and large volumes of other traded goods pass every day. They also urged national governments to uphold the principle of freedom of navigation, invest in strengthening collective energy and food security, upgrade port infrastructure and streamline trade facilitation processes, and build broader systemic resilience to absorb future economic shocks.

    This joint statement makes clear that the world’s leading multilateral economic and energy institutions still view the Middle East conflict as a major persistent threat to global economic stability, even as near-term market conditions have improved in recent weeks.

    For small import-dependent economies like Belize, prolonged regional instability could continue to put upward pressure on fuel costs, international shipping rates, fertilizer prices and broader inflation, even as the recent pullback in global energy prices has delivered some temporary relief to vulnerable households and businesses.

    The four institutions concluded by confirming they will maintain close, continuous monitoring of global developments tied to the conflict. They also reaffirmed their commitment to expanding targeted support to member nations if economic conditions worsen again, standing ready to adjust their assistance programs to meet evolving needs.

  • Chicken Prices Increase Again

    Chicken Prices Increase Again

    Consumers across Belize are facing higher grocery bills starting this week, after the Belize Poultry Association (BPA) announced an immediate across-the-board price increase for all poultry products. The country’s leading poultry industry group confirmed in an official press statement that whole chicken will see a 12-cent per pound price jump effective immediately, with proportional price adjustments rolling out for all other poultry goods – including specialty cuts and processed poultry products – that vary by item.

    Industry leaders clarified that the price adjustment is not a discretionary increase, but a necessary response to months of escalating production costs that have squeezed profit margins for local poultry farmers and producers. The BPA’s statement notes that key input costs required for raising and processing chicken have climbed steadily over the past year, leaving producers with no viable option but to pass a portion of these extra costs onto consumers.

    According to senior industry officials, the most dramatic cost surges have hit core production inputs: feed staples corn and soybeans, production fuel, and nutritional premixes added to poultry feed. These steadily rising overhead costs have placed persistent financial strain on small and large poultry operations across Belize for months, prompting the second industry-wide price adjustment of 2026.

    The 12-cent per pound increase marks the second whole chicken price hike this year. Back in March 2026, the BPA approved a more modest 6-cent per pound increase. Combined with the latest adjustment, total whole chicken prices have risen by a full 18 cents per pound in 2026 alone.

    Pre-existing price trend data from Belize’s official statistical body backs up the industry’s claims of growing cost pressures. The Statistical Institute of Belize reports that chicken prices were already climbing steadily before the latest BPA announcement. As of May 2026, the national average retail price for whole chicken hit $3.33 per pound, up from $3.22 per pound in May 2025. Retail prices for popular individual cuts including legs and wings have also recorded year-over-year increases over the same 12-month period.

  • Kaiso Cop wins Intercommercial Calypso competition

    Kaiso Cop wins Intercommercial Calypso competition

    On Thursday night, Saint Lucia’s Cultural Centre played host to the annual Intercommercial House Calypso Competition, a celebration of lyrical creativity that drew widespread backing from the island’s business community and general public alike.

    The event brought together performing representatives from a diverse cross-section of Saint Lucian organizations, each bringing their own distinct stylistic flair and unique thematic messages to the main stage. The packed venue buzzed with energy, as colleagues, friends and family of the competitors filled the stands to cheer on their favorites, cultivating a warm, lively atmosphere that carried through every performance.

    When the final scores were tallied, Shaqelle Charlery — performing under the stage name Kaiso Cop and representing the Bordelaise Correctional Facility — claimed the top spot of the night. His moving original work *Bordelaise Sad Stories* resonated deeply with both the panel of judges and the packed audience, blending sharp lyrical storytelling with authentic emotional delivery to secure his first-place win.

    Claiming the runner-up position was Erny Johnny, better known by his stage name Erny J, who represented the Saint Lucia Workers Credit Union. His performance of *One Last Time* earned widespread acclaim for its powerful, well-crafted lyrics and confident stage presence, cementing his status as one of the most memorable acts of the competition. Notably, this is not Erny J’s first time on the competition’s podium: he took home the first-place title at the 2025 event, while third-place finisher Eka Fergus also repeated her 2025 podium placing in 2026.

    Performing under the shortened stage name Eka, Fergus represented the Saint Lucia Social Development Fund and took home third place for her heartfelt track *Matters of the Heart*. The song showcased her strong vocal control and raw emotional range, earning her a warm reception from the crowd.

    Every competitor who took the stage elevated their performances with extra creative touches, from elaborate custom costumes and theatrical acting to immersive visual effects. Their narrative-driven songs covered a wide array of themes, keeping the audience fully engaged from the opening act to the final award announcement. The 2025 competition saw a different podium order: Chocolate, representing the Inland Revenue Department, claimed third place that year, alongside returning podium favorites Erny J in first and Eka in second.

  • Newtown Youth Development Programme to officially launch, expanding decades of community youth work

    Newtown Youth Development Programme to officially launch, expanding decades of community youth work

    After more than 30 years of grassroots youth engagement work, the Newtown Youth Development Program (NYDP) — a newly formalized non-profit organization focused on lifting up underserved young people in Newtown — will mark its official public launch this Friday at the decorated Fatima Church Hall, kicking off a new era of targeted youth empowerment and community growth.

    The launch ceremony, scheduled to begin at 4:00 p.m. on July 10 at the lower hall of Newtown’s Fatima Church Building, will draw a cross-section of key stakeholders, including senior government officials, local community leaders, program supporters, and local residents, all gathering to celebrate the formal establishment of this expanded community initiative.

    While NYDP only completed its official non-profit registration in 2025, its origins stretch back three decades to the founding of the Newtown Juvenile Football Academy in 1993. That early sports-focused effort was followed by the launch of an After-School Football Programme in 2017, and over time, the initiative outgrew its athletic origins to develop a far broader, holistic model of youth development. Today, NYDP’s work spans far beyond sports, encompassing education support, public health outreach, vocational skills training, leadership cultivation, spiritual growth, and personal character building.

    NYDP Chairman Joffre Faustin explained that the formalization of the organization came as a direct response to rising social and economic barriers facing young Newtown residents. “Our mission is clear: to transform young lives through holistic development,” Faustin stated. “We are committed to tackling the challenges of unemployment, crime, teenage pregnancy, and declining opportunities in sports, while instilling values of discipline, teamwork, respect, service, and patriotism.”

    In the lead-up to this week’s official launch, NYDP has built out a robust governance framework designed to guarantee full transparency and accountability to the community it serves. This structure includes a central executive committee and a formal financial management system, alongside specialized subcommittees that oversee each core program area: sports, education, health, skills development, communications, and spiritual development.

    Even before its formal launch, the initiative has already notched early milestones. It has secured more than EC$16,000 in donated sports gear, educational resources, and health supplies from international partners. Program members have already begun First Aid certification training, and NYDP has established formal collaborative partnerships with a range of local and international supporters. Organizers have specifically highlighted the critical longstanding support of Vivian Rene and the U.S.-based Roy Mason family, whose early contributions were foundational to getting the formal initiative off the ground.

    Looking forward, NYDP has laid out an ambitious long-term vision to create sustainable, intergenerational opportunity for Newtown’s youth. Key planned projects include converting the shuttered former Roseau Boys’ School into a flexible multi-purpose community centre, upgrading local sports facilities with modern amenities, expanding access to local scholarships and international training placements, and strengthening mentorship and spiritual guidance programming through partnerships with local civic and faith-based groups.

    Friday’s official launch ceremony will feature keynote remarks from Chairman Faustin, national Minister for Sports Oscar George, Chekira Lockhart-Hypolite — Parliamentary Representative for the Roseau South Constituency — and Irving “Tosh” Williams, who will represent the program’s international donor community. Members of the press have been formally invited to attend and cover the event.

    Organizers emphasize that the launch represents more than just the introduction of a new non-profit: it is a key milestone in Newtown’s ongoing work to invest in its youngest residents, and build a stronger, more resilient local community through intentional investment in education, leadership, sports, and public service.

  • Urgent Appeal Issued for Blood Donations to Help Leadi Fabian Hunt

    Urgent Appeal Issued for Blood Donations to Help Leadi Fabian Hunt

    Health authorities and family members have issued a pressing public call for urgent blood donations to support Leadi Fabian Hunt, a patient widely known by the nickname “Gravel Stone,” who is currently receiving care at the Sir Lester Bird Medical Centre and requires ongoing life-saving transfusions.

    While the appeal specifically prioritizes donors with B-positive (B+) blood, it also notes that O-negative (O-) donors, whose blood type is universally compatible for most emergency transfusions, are strongly encouraged to donate. Importantly, organizers stress that people with any blood type are welcome to contribute, as every new donation helps replenish the hospital’s strained overall blood inventory, which supports Hunt and other patients in need of transfusions across the facility.

    Members of the public who wish to donate are instructed to travel to the Sir Lester Bird Medical Centre at their earliest convenience, and inform hospital staff that their donation is earmarked specifically for Hunt. For anyone seeking additional details about donation eligibility, hours of operation, or the patient’s status, a dedicated contact line has been set up at 723-6869.

    The appeal emphasizes that time is critical in this case, noting that every passing minute increases the urgency of meeting Hunt’s transfusion needs. Organizers also remind the public that a single, voluntary blood donation carries the power to save an entire life, making even one individual’s contribution meaningful to this emergency effort.

  • Hughes Claims US Dictated Deportee Arrangement, Says Antigua Did Not Negotiate

    Hughes Claims US Dictated Deportee Arrangement, Says Antigua Did Not Negotiate

    A heated political debate has erupted in Antigua and Barbuda over a proposed third-country deportee agreement with the United States, after opposition Senator Chester Hughes launched a scathing attack on the incumbent Gaston Browne administration, accusing leaders of accepting Washington’s terms outright rather than engaging in genuine bilateral negotiations.

    Hughes laid out his criticisms during a United Progressive Party (UPP) town hall gathering focused on the government’s recently released White Paper detailing the agreement, pushing back hard against the ruling party’s framing of the process as a collaborative negotiation between the two nations.

    According to Hughes, the Gaston Browne cabinet finalized a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with U.S. authorities months ago but has yet to provide any transparent, detailed explanation of the deal’s terms to Antigua and Barbuda citizens. The senator claimed that the agreement was not negotiated at all, but rather dictated to the local government by U.S. officials. “America did not negotiate with any of these governments. America told them, ‘You’re going to take these persons.’ And that’s it,” Hughes stated during the meeting.

    A core point of Hughes’ criticism centers on the Prime Minister’s shifting public statements about the scope of the agreement, specifically the number of deportees that Antigua and Barbuda will be required to accept. Hughes said the Prime Minister has offered conflicting figures: first claiming the country would take no more than 10 people, then revising that number to 16 in recent remarks, before suggesting the country would accept whatever number of people arrives on any single deportation flight from the U.S. Hughes called these inconsistent claims “fanciful wordplay” meant to confuse the public.

    The senator also highlighted a series of critical unanswered questions about the practical implementation of the deal, most notably where newly arrived deportees will be housed and how they will be integrated or managed once in the country. He questioned whether the government plans to place deportees in existing residential communities, underutilized state-owned housing, or another location entirely, noting that no official guidance has been shared with the public to date.

    Another key grievance raised by Hughes is the administration’s decision to sign the MOU before launching any public consultation process. He emphasized that the White Paper outlining the agreement was only published after the deal was already finalized, meaning citizens had no opportunity to weigh in on a policy that will have significant social and economic impacts on the country.

    Beyond domestic criticism of the Browne administration, Hughes also lashed out at Caribbean leaders more broadly, arguing that regional governments should have negotiated a unified collective position with the United States on the deportee issue, rather than negotiating separate deals individually. He echoed the Prime Minister’s own acknowledgement that regional collective action would have been preferable, but argued that the current crop of regional leaders are too arrogant and self-interested to prioritize the needs of their populations over political expediency.

    Looking ahead, Hughes called on members of Antigua and Barbuda’s Parliament to use the upcoming debate on the government’s White Paper to hold the Browne administration accountable for its handling of the agreement. He urged lawmakers to demand clear, direct answers to outstanding questions on behalf of the Antiguan and Barbudan public, challenging the executive’s opaque approach to the controversial deal.

  • Antigua and Barbuda Officials Take Key Roles at ECVA U20 Beach Volleyball Championship

    Antigua and Barbuda Officials Take Key Roles at ECVA U20 Beach Volleyball Championship

    The 2026 Eastern Caribbean Volleyball Association Under-20 Beach Volleyball Championship has gained significant local expertise from Antigua and Barbuda, with three of the country’s top volleyball officials stepping into critical technical positions for the regional tournament.

    The Antigua and Barbuda Volleyball Association, the governing body for the sport in the twin-island nation, confirmed the appointments this week. Orson James has taken up the post of ECVA VIS Supervisor, responsible for overseeing the tournament’s official information system that tracks results, player statistics and competition logistics. Tori-Ann Browne will lead the championship’s scoring operations as ECVA Head Scorer, while Michael Hamilton joins the event’s officiating team as a certified Continental Referee.

    ABAVA officials emphasized that these appointments mark a new milestone for Antigua and Barbuda’s engagement in regional volleyball, going far beyond the traditional role of fielding competing athletes. The selected officials will play an integral part in every stage of the tournament, working alongside regional counterparts to ensure smooth, fair and successful delivery of the championship.

    The national volleyball association has formally extended its congratulations to the three appointed officials, expressing confidence in their ability to carry out their duties effectively while representing their country on the regional stage. ABAVA added that the selection of three Antiguan and Barbudan officials for these key positions underscores the high level of professional skill and specialized expertise that the nation continues to bring to the development of volleyball across the Eastern Caribbean region.