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  • Minister Archer calls for greater role for small states in global development

    Minister Archer calls for greater role for small states in global development

    At the 2026 Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) Youth Forum held at United Nations Headquarters in New York, Senator Shane Archer, Barbados’ Minister of State in the Prime Minister’s Office with oversight for Youth and Culture, has delivered a rousing call to reorient global sustainable development around the unique perspectives and needs of small and developing nations. Archer challenged the long-held assumption that smaller states must merely adapt to outdated development frameworks designed by larger, more industrialized economies, arguing instead that these nations deserve a central, defining role in building new, more inclusive models for industry, innovation, and infrastructure aligned with the UN Sustainable Development Goal 9 (SDG 9).

    In his address to the annual forum, which brings together young leaders, UN member states, global institutions, and partner organizations to advance youth participation in the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda, Archer laid out a reimagined vision for SDG 9. He emphasized that true progress cannot be measured by the quantity of infrastructure or industrial output alone, but by how development tangibly improves people’s daily lives. “When youth, culture, technology and resilience come together, SDG 9 stops being a target on paper and starts becoming a platform for transformation,” Archer stated, delivering the official position of the Caribbean island nation.

    Archer broke down his tailored vision for how core development pillars must adapt to the realities of Small Island Developing States (SIDS). For SIDS like Barbados, he argued, industry must go beyond manufacturing goods to create new pathways for economic participation. Innovation should not just be a flashy achievement for wealthy nations, but a tool to solve the specific on-the-ground challenges that smaller states face. And infrastructure, he added, must do more than stand as a physical structure – it needs to connect marginalized and remote communities to opportunity, build climate resilience, and uphold human dignity.

    Central to Archer’s proposal is a commitment to equitable access that levels the global playing field for emerging creators and entrepreneurs. He outlined a future where global development frameworks prioritize digital connectivity, universal clean energy access, and modern public systems that empower small businesses and creative workers from Bridgetown, Barbados’ capital, to compete on equal terms with counterparts from large, industrialized economies.

    He rejected the longstanding framing of innovation as an exclusive privilege of powerful large nations, asserting that it is a universal right for any country willing to pursue bold thinking, strategic governance, and purpose-driven action. Furthermore, Archer called for a broader definition of industry, one that values the intellectual, cultural, and creative talent of a nation’s people as much as traditional output from assembly lines. “This is where Barbados has something real to say,” he noted, highlighting the unique perspective small island nations bring to global development conversations.

    The annual ECOSOC Youth Forum was created specifically to elevate youth voices in UN policy debates, giving young leaders a global platform to share collective ideas, showcase problem-solving innovations, and deepen cross-stakeholder collaboration to speed progress on all 17 SDGs. The 2026 iteration centered its agenda on driving transformative, fair, creative, and coordinated collective action to advance the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, making Archer’s intervention on behalf of small states a timely addition to the forum’s core discussions.

  • Familie Ramdat Misier verontwaardigd over diefstal borstbeeld en vraagt om snel ingrijpen

    Familie Ramdat Misier verontwaardigd over diefstal borstbeeld en vraagt om snel ingrijpen

    Paramaribo, Suriname – The family of Lachmipersad Frederik “Fred” Ramdat Misier, the former head of state of Suriname who passed away, has voiced intense outrage over the theft of his bronze bust from its public pedestal along Grote Combéweg. In an official letter addressed to current Surinamese President Jennifer Simons, the family is calling for immediate, decisive intervention from national law enforcement and governmental authorities to resolve the case.

    Crafted by renowned local artist Erwin de Vries, the bust was forcibly ripped from its mounted base and stolen sometime between the evening of April 11 and the morning of April 12, according to initial official reports. Local law enforcement has already launched a full criminal investigation into the incident, though no suspects have been named publicly as of yet.

    For the Ramdat Misier family, the theft extends far beyond the loss of a single piece of public art. They frame the act as a deliberate insult to the dignity not only of the former president, but of the entire Republic of Suriname. The bust has long stood as a central public symbol of the nation’s commitment to constitutional governance, the rule of law, and unbroken national continuity, carrying deep cultural and political meaning for Surinamese society.

    Beyond this specific incident, the family has also raised alarm over what they identify as a growing pattern of targeted thefts of national monuments across Paramaribo’s historic city center. These repeated thefts, they argue, systematically erode Suriname’s irreplaceable cultural heritage and erode the collective historical memory that binds the nation together.

    In their formal appeal to the Simons administration, the family is demanding that authorities deploy all available resources to three core priorities: recover the stolen bust as quickly as possible, return it to its original public pedestal, and track down all individuals responsible for the theft to hold them accountable through the national judicial system.

    The family closed their letter by stating they hold an expectation that law enforcement and government leaders will treat this high-profile case as a top law enforcement and cultural priority for the nation.

  • MSMEs urged to strengthen structure and planning for survival

    MSMEs urged to strengthen structure and planning for survival

    Across global markets, micro, small and medium-sized enterprises (MSMEs) serve as the backbone of local economies, driving job creation and community growth. But industry leaders gathering for a new business support initiative in Barbados have highlighted a common, underdiscussed flaw that pushes many small ventures to close long before they can reach sustainable success: a fundamental lack of intentional organizational structure and long-term strategic planning.

    Hosted at the Lloyd Erskine Sandiford Centre, the inaugural Pathway to Profit initiative brought together local entrepreneurs and seasoned industry experts to share actionable guidance for building long-lasting, profitable businesses. The event, sponsored by Payce Digital, The Barbados Trust Fund Ltd, the Small Business Association and FundAccess, focused on upskilling small business owners in core operational areas including accounting, risk mitigation, insurance coverage and business continuity planning.

    Ashley Phillips-Kinch, co-coordinator of the initiative and owner of local creative firm Bijou Media, acknowledged that limited access to capital and ongoing financial strain are widely recognized as top challenges for new and emerging entrepreneurs. But she emphasized that many MSME failures trace back to a self-imposed issue: small business owners often frame their ventures as “small” in structure as well as size, choosing to operate informally rather than building the formal systems that power larger, enduring corporations.

    “As small business owners, we throw around the word ‘small’ so casually that we let it define how we run our companies, when we should actually be operating with the same intentional structure as any large corporate entity,” Phillips-Kinch explained. “We need clear systems for every part of our operations, knowing what tasks to prioritize, when to complete them, and how to organize our work. Instead, most of us think about structure last, if we think about it at all. We assume because it’s just me or my family running the business, formal structure isn’t necessary. We know we need funding and we know we need marketing, but structure is the critical missing piece for most of us.”

    Rochelle Walrond-Cox, fellow co-coordinator and CEO of two local digital firms Digital IRC and Envoici, echoed Phillips-Kinch’s remarks, noting that intentional organizational structure is non-negotiable for building long-term business success that outlasts the founder. She pointed to the high rate of small business collapse within the first few years of operation, noting that many founders fail to plan for long-term growth, exit strategies or intergenerational succession—all outcomes that depend on a solid structural foundation.

    “Structure is what allows you to build a lasting legacy for your business,” Walrond-Cox told local outlet Barbados TODAY. “We’ve seen so many micro and small businesses shut down after just a few years. If you don’t have structure, you can’t answer the critical questions: What legacy do you want to leave? What’s your exit plan? How will you scale your business so it can continue to operate, whether you pass it to the next generation or sell it down the line?”

    Walrond-Cox added that many small business owners also face gaps in operational knowledge that hold back growth, particularly when it comes to technological investment. Many founders struggle to identify which digital tools will actually move the needle for their business, leaving them unable to leverage technology to scale effectively.

    The Pathway to Profit initiative was developed to address exactly these gaps, giving local MSME owners direct access to expert insight that can help them move from informal, unstable operations to structured, profitable ventures that contribute to long-term economic growth in Barbados.

  • US firm mulling over boosting Guyana’s pork production, int’l standards compliance

    US firm mulling over boosting Guyana’s pork production, int’l standards compliance

    A major U.S. food conglomerate is conducting a deep-dive feasibility assessment to build a commercial, standards-compliant pork industry in Guyana, with long-term plans to position the country as a regional supplier aligned with CARICOM’s food import reduction goals.

    Seaboard Corporation, the third-largest pork producer in the United States, was invited by the Guyana government to explore the opportunity through its local subsidiary, National Milling Company (NAMILCO). The firm subsequently contracted France-based agricultural consultancy GIRA Food to conduct on-the-ground research and produce a formal assessment that will guide Seaboard’s next steps: either pitch the project to stakeholders, abandon the initiative if it proves unviable, or move forward with full industry development.

    NAMILCO General Manager Scott Mitchell outlined in an interview with Demerara Waves Online News that GIRA’s assessment will address every core component of a successful commercial swine sector, including appropriate livestock genetics, high-quality feed formulations, certified processing infrastructure, workforce training, and opportunities for value-added product development such as hams, bacon and sausages.

    A critical gap GIRA’s report will highlight is the absence of a dedicated, certified swine slaughterhouse in Guyana. Currently, most small-scale pig producers slaughter animals on-farm, often in non-sanitary conditions that erode consumer trust and block access to formal local and export markets. Mitchell explained that a certified centralized abattoir would solve this issue, enabling regulated quality control, official quality grading, and flexible operations to process both certified and non-certified meat with full facility sanitization between runs.

    Over the course of their assessment, GIRA experts have held consultations with a full spectrum of local stakeholders, including the Guyana Livestock Development Agency (GLDA), senior government ministers, small-scale pig rearers, major feed producers including Bounty Farms, hotels, restaurant chains, retail operators, local butchers, and farmer associations to map existing barriers and opportunities.

    Beyond meeting Guyana’s growing domestic demand, the project aims to position Guyana as a pork exporter to the 11-million consumer CARICOM single market, advancing the regional bloc’s goal of cutting reliance on extra-regional food imports. To make the local industry competitive, Mitchell noted that Seaboard will push for targeted Common External Tariff protections against low-cost, mass-produced pork imports from the United States, whose large-scale production efficiencies create an unlevel playing field for smaller regional producers. Mitchell emphasized that the project will prioritize domestic commercial viability first, with regional expansion rolled out in phases only after a sustainable local market is established.

    Mitchell explained that the Guyana government turned to Seaboard for this initiative due to the company’s extensive global experience in the pork sector: Seaboard processes between 15,000 and 20,000 hogs daily, raises 8 million hogs annually, and handles 24 million processed hogs per year across its operations, with its closest regional facility located in Colombia where it maintains an 800,000-sow breeding herd for genetic development.

    Demand drivers for pork in Guyana are compelling, Mitchell argued. Per capita annual protein consumption in Guyana sits at around 55 kilograms, far below the 120-kilogram average in the United States, and historical trends show that protein demand – including for pork – rises consistently as incomes grow in emerging economies. Shifting demographics also boost demand: Guyana hosts a large immigrant population from pork-consuming markets including Venezuela, Cuba, Brazil and China, and offshore oil sector vessels operating in Guyana’s waters report pork is their most consumed protein. Currently, Guyana cannot supply this offshore demand because the sector lacks required ISO Food Safety System Certification.

    Still, multiple challenges remain to building a viable industry. Key barriers include building consumer trust in local pork products, upholding international quality standards, and convincing smallholder farmers to invest in higher-quality feed formulated with added amino acids and protein. Mitchell noted that improved feed alone can increase average slaughter weight from 180 pounds to 250 pounds per animal, drastically improving farmer revenues. He also emphasized the need for farmer specialization: with improved genetics and better feed management, annual piglet output per sow could rise from the current 6 to 10 head to 12 head, still below the global standard of 35, but a major improvement for local producers.

    Contrary to concerns that small family pig operations would be displaced by large-scale commercial development, Mitchell said all consultations to date show widespread enthusiasm among local producers for the project. Farmers are eager to expand production and secure reliable formal markets for their output, with no reports of fear of displacement from the supply chain.

    In closing, Seaboard extended formal thanks to the Ministry of Agriculture, GLDA leadership, Bounty Farms, the local Swine Association, hoteliers, and all participating farmers for their collaboration during GIRA’s assessment. The company noted that the shared commitment to food safety, quality, and national food security demonstrated through this collaboration strengthens institutional partnerships and supports long-term growth for Guyana’s agro-processing and manufacturing sectors.

  • Randy Baltimore denies debate planned with Alex Browne

    Randy Baltimore denies debate planned with Alex Browne

    A circulating promotional flyer claiming an upcoming political event featuring Antigua and Barbuda Labour Party candidate Randy Baltimore has been exposed as an unauthorized piece of misinformation, with the candidate issuing a formal denial and calling for an immediate end to the deceptive campaign. In an official statement, Baltimore emphasized that he has never given consent to the event described in the flyer, nor has he received any confirmation from any organizing body about such an engagement. The false advertising extends beyond the candidate himself: neither Baltimore’s personal campaign team nor leadership from the Antigua and Barbuda Labour Party have been contacted with any official communication regarding the purported gathering. Further investigations into the flyer’s claims, which list the Glanvilles Polyclinic as the event venue, found that even clinic management and on-site staff had no knowledge of any such event being booked for the date and time advertised on the distributed materials. These omissions and inconsistencies have sparked deep concerns over the source and underlying motives of the flyer, which experts and campaign officials suggest is deliberately crafted to spread misinformation and disinformation, sowing unnecessary political confusion among voters in the local constituency. In response to the fabricated event notice, Baltimore has issued a direct call to action, demanding that the individuals or groups responsible for creating and circulating the flyer immediately halt their deceptive tactics, which are designed to mislead members of the public and stoke political division ahead of upcoming political activities. Reaffirming the party’s core values, the Antigua and Barbuda Labour Party restated its long-standing commitment to engaging with citizens through open, honest and respectful dialogue, centered on a policy platform focused on advancing national development, maintaining long-term social and economic stability, and driving inclusive progress for all communities across Antigua and Barbuda.

  • Newmont stelt invoering nieuw werkrooster tijdelijk uit na overleg met overheid

    Newmont stelt invoering nieuw werkrooster tijdelijk uit na overleg met overheid

    In a recent announcement published on April 19, gold mining firm Newmont Suriname has confirmed that it will temporarily suspend the planned implementation of its new Fatigue Management Work Schedule, a decision reached following constructive consultations with key government stakeholders.

    The temporary pause in rolling out the adjusted scheduling system has been framed as an intentional step to create sufficient space for additional comprehensive evaluation of the policy, aligned with the company’s structured approach to organizational change. Newmont Suriname emphasized that its commitment to rolling out the modified work roster ultimately remains unchanged, even amid the current hold.

    Designed to address occupational health and safety risks in the mining sector, the new system was developed to better manage worker fatigue, improve overall site safety standards, and cut down on hazards linked to extended night shift rotations. Mining operations rely on round-the-clock staffing, making shift-related fatigue a critical industry-wide concern for employee well-being and operational continuity.

    Company representatives reiterated that the safety, physical health, and overall welfare of their workforce continue to stand as the firm’s top priorities. This commitment, they noted, runs parallel to their core goal of maintaining consistent, stable, and secure mining operations that meet both operational and regulatory requirements.

  • Cancer charity stresses no discrimination in services

    Cancer charity stresses no discrimination in services

    Three decades after opening its doors to people impacted by a cancer diagnosis, the Caribbean non-profit Cancer Support Services is celebrating its milestone anniversary while reaffirming its core commitment to inclusive, non-discriminatory support for all patients, regardless of gender identity.

    Organization chairman Carlyle Best made the pledge during a special 30th anniversary commemoration service held Sunday at St James Parish Church in Holetown, St James. In remarks to attendees, Best emphasized that the charity extends its full range of support to every person who reaches out for help, rejecting any gender-based restrictions on access to care. “We do not turn anyone away based on gender,” Best explained. “Whether you identify as male, female, or any other gender, if you have received a cancer diagnosis and come to us for support, we will stand with you every step of the way.”

    Best credited the organization’s 30 years of sustained impact and success to the decades-long dedication of its members, volunteers, and community donors, and issued a public call for new support to help the charity expand its reach. He noted that anyone who has navigated a cancer journey, either personally or alongside a loved one, understands the critical gap the organization fills in patient care. “As your local canon observed, recovery is never truly complete without the holistic assistance that this charity provides,” Best added. Alongside practical and emotional support, Best encouraged people living with cancer to draw spiritual strength from their faith during treatment and recovery, urging patients to trust in the guidance of their medical teams and place their trust in God’s plan.

    To mark its 30th anniversary, the organization has planned two major public celebratory events open to the community. The first is a concert titled *Inspire*, scheduled for May 3 at the Frank Collymore Hall. The second will be held on Mother’s Day, May 10, at the Covenant Life Teaching Centre, where attendees will be invited to share beloved phrases and lessons passed down to them from their mothers.

    During the service’s sermon, Reverend Stevenson Sobers addressed the congregation on the meaning of loving God, reminding attendees that faith calls for recognizing God’s absolute sovereignty over all aspects of life. He reflected on the common human impulse to try to control every outcome of our journeys, noting that many people unconsciously push God aside to try to take charge of their own fates. “Often, we want to ask God to just move out of the way and let me be God sometimes,” Sobers observed. “But our love for God flows from an understanding of His absolute holiness, infinite power and perfect wisdom, and that is a love rooted in awe and reverence.” He added that this foundational love must be demonstrated through consistent obedience and devotion to God’s leading.

  • Antigua and Barbuda faces economic collapse with UPP promises, PM warns

    Antigua and Barbuda faces economic collapse with UPP promises, PM warns

    As Antigua and Barbuda approaches a general election, sitting Prime Minister Gaston Browne has sounded a sharp alarm over the opposition United Progressive Party (UPP)’s flagship campaign pledges, arguing the unfunded policy slate threatens to collapse the nation’s public finances and trigger widespread economic disruption.

    Speaking during an appearance on the popular local Pointe FM’s Browne and Browne Show, Browne broke down the full cost of the opposition’s commitments, which combine targeted tax cuts and expansive public sector pay hikes to a staggering total of $250 million. The critical flaw, he emphasized, is the UPP’s complete failure to outline any matching revenue-generating measures to offset these massive expenditures.

    “Not a single revenue-raising initiative has been put forward by the UPP to cover these giveaways,” Browne told listeners. “If there’s no compensatory revenue stream, how can any government justify handing out even one cent in tax cuts or pay increases?”

    Two of the opposition’s most high-profile proposals sit at the center of Browne’s criticism: a broad cut to vehicle taxes, which he estimates would cost the public purse $50 million annually, and a pledged across-the-board salary increase for public servants that would add more than $100 million to annual government spending. Combined with other smaller commitments, the total hits the $250 million mark – a sum Browne says would blow a massive hole in the country’s existing fiscal balance sheet, worsening the current deficit far beyond sustainable levels.

    If implemented, Browne argued, these unfunded promises would leave the government with no option but to take on massive new levels of national debt to cover operating costs. Over time, that ballooning debt would erode the government’s ability to meet its core payroll obligations, ultimately leading to public sector layoffs even for the workers the UPP claims to support.

    “What you get is a larger deficit, and that means your debt explodes,” Browne said. “If revenues keep falling short of spending, at the end of the day public sector workers could face retrenchment. This isn’t a guess – we’ve seen what happens when UPP puts these unworkable policies in place.”

    Browne drew a direct parallel between the current UPP proposal and the party’s previous time in national office, claiming that tenure resulted in roughly 10,000 lost jobs across the country. “We have seen this movie before,” he said, warning that a repeat of that economic turmoil would follow if voters hand the UPP power again. He dismissed the entire opposition platform as an empty illusion designed only to win votes, with no plan to deliver on its promises long-term. “This is a mirage. You’re chasing something that is not real,” he added.

    In contrast to the opposition’s approach, Browne outlined his own administration’s deliberate, fiscally responsible strategy for raising worker pay centered on a gradual transition from a minimum wage to a full “livable wage” for all public sector employees. The government’s plan targets a minimum monthly earnings floor of roughly $2,200 for public servants, with adjusted roles and reclassified positions seeing pay rise to close to $2,500 per month.

    Browne confirmed that the Ministry of Finance is currently in active negotiations with public sector unions to finalize the size and timeline of these increases, stressing that the phased approach is fully achievable within the country’s current fiscal framework. “We believe that that type of adjustment is doable,” he said.

    Even so, he acknowledged that all wage adjustments require careful fiscal management, noting that any increase to the minimum wage triggers corresponding pay adjustments across every public sector pay scale to maintain internal parity, pushing the total cost well above $100 million. Without dedicated new revenue to cover that cost, Browne argued, even well-intentioned pay hikes become unaffordable and put economic stability at risk.

    Ahead of the upcoming general election, Browne urged voters to carefully evaluate the long-term fiscal impact of every party’s policy proposals, warning that short-term campaign giveaways that lack sustainable funding can ultimately leave the country and its workers far worse off.

  • Singer Patrice Roberts ordered to pay up in dispute with former Canadian management

    Singer Patrice Roberts ordered to pay up in dispute with former Canadian management

    After more than 10 years of legal back-and-forth, Trinidad’s High Court has delivered a final ruling to end a public dispute between internationally recognized soca artist Patrice Roberts and her one-time management firm, Canadian-based Soca Bookings Incorporated. The landmark April 7 decision has pulled back the curtain on the significant legal and financial risks that informal, unwritten business arrangements pose for professionals working across the global entertainment industry.

    The conflict traces its origins to a verbal partnership struck back in February 2015. Under the terms of that loose agreement, Soca Bookings took on core responsibilities for Roberts’ burgeoning career: handling international performance bookings, building her public brand, coordinating studio recording sessions, and leading global promotional outreach. While both parties never disputed that a working arrangement existed, court documents reveal that critical contractual details were never formalized or put in writing. Most notably, there was no clear consensus on when management fees would become due or what percentage of revenue the firm was entitled to collect.

    Presiding over the case, Justice Robin Mohammed ultimately ruled that Soca Bookings was entitled to $35,472 U.S. dollars in compensation for the work the company carried out on Roberts’ behalf between 2015 and 2017, as well as for cash advances the firm extended to support the artist’s career growth. Though the court acknowledged gaps in the company’s formal contractual claim, Justice Mohammed determined that the requested sum was a fair reflection of the tangible services the firm delivered to advance Roberts’ career. The judge sided with Roberts on the debate over management fee structure, noting in his ruling that the parties had agreed fees would only be payable once the partnership turned a profit—a threshold the claimant never proved had been met. Still, he emphasized that Roberts could not legally retain all the benefits of the firm’s work without compensating the company fairly, noting she had been the sole financial beneficiary of the arrangement and owed payment on equitable grounds.

    In a reciprocal ruling, the court ordered Soca Bookings to return $10,367.88 U.S. dollars to Roberts, representing unremitted earnings collected from digital streaming and sales of the artist’s music during the management period. The court permitted both outstanding amounts to be offset against one another, and dismissed an additional $11,600 U.S. claim from the firm related to music video production, after the company failed to produce concrete evidence that the expense had actually been incurred.

    After netting out the offsetting amounts, the court finalized that Roberts is required to pay Soca Bookings a reduced net sum of $25,104.12 U.S. dollars, in addition to covering $26,983.7 Trinidadian dollars in legal costs incurred during the case.

    In closing remarks on the ruling, Justice Mohammed highlighted the broader industry lesson of the decade-long dispute, stressing that unwritten verbal agreements carry inherent avoidable risks, and that formal, clearly defined contracts would have prevented this protracted, costly legal battle entirely. Roberts, a fixture of Caribbean music, has performed at some of the region’s most high-profile festivals, including multiple appearances at Dominica’s World Creole Music Festival, with her most recent set taking place in 2023.

  • Pringle Promises Urgent Action on U.S. Visa Restrictions, Blames Government for Crisis

    Pringle Promises Urgent Action on U.S. Visa Restrictions, Blames Government for Crisis

    As the April 30 general election in Antigua and Barbuda approaches, the nation has been roiled by newly implemented U.S. visa restrictions that target local passport holders, and opposition leader Jamale Pringle has seized on growing public frustration to ramp up criticism of the incumbent Gaston Browne administration. Pringle, who leads the United Progressive Party (UPP), has labeled the new travel rules a full-blown national crisis that touches ordinary families, local business operations, and the overall health of the national economy.

    The newly imposed measures, which include a mandatory surety bond requirement ranging from $5,000 to $15,000 for certain Antiguan and Barbudan travelers seeking U.S. entry, have sparked widespread anxiety across every segment of Antiguan and Barbudan society, Pringle noted in a recent public address. Many ordinary citizens are already trapped in uncertainty by the new rules: for low and middle-income travelers, the required bond is simply out of financial reach, while others have been forced to abandon their travel plans entirely after becoming ineligible to submit visa applications.

    Beyond the disruptions to individual travel, Pringle emphasized that the restrictions are already sending shockwaves through the local business community. Many importers and industry operators warn that the new requirements could block their access to critical goods, specialized equipment, and cross-border business services, creating cascading risks that could damage the national economy if the standoff remains unresolved.

    The opposition leader pinned full blame for the crisis on Prime Minister Gaston Browne’s ruling administration, framing the new visa restrictions as a direct result of the incumbent government’s mismanagement and diplomatic missteps. Pringle argued that the Browne administration created the conditions that prompted Washington to implement the restrictions, and now lacks the credibility and diplomatic capacity to reverse the policy. “Antiguans and Barbudans recognize that the same administration that created this problem can’t be trusted to fix it,” Pringle said, doubling down on criticism of the government’s diplomatic outreach strategy to date.

    If the UPP secures victory at the polls on April 30, Pringle pledged, resolving the visa restriction crisis would be the new government’s top immediate priority. He laid out a concrete timeline for action: on the UPP’s first official working day, May 5, the new administration would open formal diplomatic talks with the U.S. State Department to seek redress for Antiguan and Barbudan passport holders. Pringle also revealed that preliminary outreach has already been completed with members of the Antiguan and Barbudan diaspora based in the United States, who have agreed to lend their support to negotiations and help broker an outcome that serves the interests of both nations.

    Pringle framed a change in ruling party as the only viable path to repairing strained bilateral ties between Antigua and Barbuda and Washington. “Voters have a clear choice: electing the United Progressive Party is the first critical step to restoring positive, mutually respectful relations between our two nations,” he said, wrapping up his address with a direct appeal for voter support ahead of the general election.