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  • Antiguan Joella Charles Graduates From Harvard With Second Master’s Degree

    Antiguan Joella Charles Graduates From Harvard With Second Master’s Degree

    In a milestone achievement that spotlights academic grit and Caribbean ambition, Antiguan professional Joella Charles has capped years of rigorous graduate study by collecting her second master’s degree from one of the world’s most prestigious higher education institutions, Harvard University. Her new graduate credential specializes in the high-demand fields of legal compliance, strategic leadership, and corporate finance.

    Charles crossed the Harvard commencement stage this past Thursday, joining thousands of graduating students hailing from every corner of the globe to mark the end of her program. The latest degree adds another world-renowned academic honor to her portfolio, which already includes a graduate degree from another Ivy League institution, Columbia University.

    During her time at Harvard, Charles designed her course of study to center on two high-impact areas: cross-border financial legal strategy and global executive leadership. The specialized training has positioned her to launch a full-time career in business consulting based in Manhattan, New York, where she will collaborate with some of the world’s largest asset management organizations.

    To celebrate her years of hard work, Charles was joined in Cambridge, Boston, by loved ones who traveled from near and far to cheer her on during the commencement ceremony. Back in her home country of Antigua, her accomplishment is already being held up as a powerful example of what targeted perseverance and clear ambition can achieve. For her part, Charles says she hopes her journey will encourage young Antiguans from the next generation to chase ambitious goals and pursue excellence in their own academic and professional pursuits.

  • Onderwijsbonden en regering bereiken akkoord; morgen school

    Onderwijsbonden en regering bereiken akkoord; morgen school

    A weeks-long standoff between Suriname’s national government and combined education unions has come to a peaceful resolution, after intensive multi-party negotiations produced a comprehensive agreement to improve working conditions for educators and clear the way for an immediate resumption of regular classes across the country. The national work stoppage, which launched earlier that week, will formally end with the imminent signing of the agreement, which currently only awaits final technical edits before being formalized by all stakeholders.

    Negotiations brought together representatives from the cabinet, the unified education unions, and a specially convened presidential commission to hash out concessions on core demands that triggered the industrial action. The final principle agreement addresses pressing grievances including unpaid back wages, long-overdue benefit adjustments, unpaid overtime, and the establishment of a permanent framework for future dialogue between the two sides.

    Under the terms of the deal, education union leadership will immediately advise all their members to return to full regular teaching duties. Both sides have also committed to protecting the continuity of education going forward, and agreed to resolve future disputes through structured negotiation rather than industrial action wherever possible.

    Among the most concrete commitments is a pledge to clear the backlog of administrative and legal status updates within the Ministry of Education, Science and Culture by a set timeline. The agreement also mandates that all unpaid overtime owed to part-time educators must be paid in full no later than the end of June. Additional concrete terms include new provisions for 20-year service gratifications, guaranteed standard payroll processing for union representatives, and the formal launch of a permanent consultation platform between union leadership and the education ministry.

    A series of substantial benefit increases for active and retired educators make up the centerpiece of the agreement. The annual eyeglass allowance for educators will jump from SRD 2,000 to SRD 7,000 starting June 1, 2026, with a further increase to SRD 9,000 scheduled to take effect on January 1, 2027. Retired educators will also be eligible for this adjusted benefit. The monthly distance education allowance will rise from SRD 350 to SRD 850, while a new 14% of base salary allowance for continuing professional development has been introduced. Starting this August, educators will also receive an annual clothing allowance of SRD 5,000. For instructors teaching in the bachelor’s programs at the Teacher Training Institute (IOL), all future overtime will be compensated in line with the standardized MO-B salary scheme.

    Both sides have acknowledged that this round of negotiations did not resolve every single demand raised by the unions. Remaining outstanding issues will be added to the agenda for future negotiation sessions to prevent renewed disruption to classes. The agreement marks a clear breakthrough in a conflict that had sparked widespread industrial action across the country in the days before the deal. Union leaders had previously stated they would only end the national strike once binding, concrete commitments were put in writing, a condition met by the finalized agreement.

  • VN waarschuwt: minder fondsen bedreigen hulp aan Rohingya-vluchtelingen in Bangladesh

    VN waarschuwt: minder fondsen bedreigen hulp aan Rohingya-vluchtelingen in Bangladesh

    Almost nine years after hundreds of thousands of Rohingya fled systematic violence in Myanmar, the United Nations has issued an urgent warning: shrinking global humanitarian funding could send the living conditions of the 1.2 million Rohingya refugees sheltering in Bangladesh into catastrophic decline.

  • DAIC urges stronger preparedness as hurricane season begins

    DAIC urges stronger preparedness as hurricane season begins

    As the 2026 Atlantic Hurricane Season officially kicked off on June 1, the Dominica Association of Industry and Commerce (DAIC) has launched a urgent call to action for businesses, government bodies, public institutions, and all national stakeholders to ramp up disaster preparedness measures and build greater capacity to withstand the full range of climate and operational threats facing the Caribbean island nation.

    In an official press statement, the leading private sector trade group emphasized that while hurricanes remain the most high-profile natural hazard for the region, modern businesses now face a rapidly expanding list of risks that extend far beyond tropical storm systems. These growing threats include widespread flooding, record-breaking extreme heat events, accelerating coastal erosion and storm surge damage, catastrophic landslides, chronic water scarcity, extended power and telecommunications outages, unexpected supply chain disruptions, macroeconomic instability, and a host of other operational challenges that can bring business activity to a halt. Against this backdrop, DAIC stressed that traditional preparedness focused solely on hurricane response is no longer sufficient to protect the private sector and national economy.

    The organization noted that this expanded planning requirement applies to every segment of Dominica’s business ecosystem, from small micro-enterprises and local small businesses to large national corporations and critical infrastructure industries. All business types are urged to take intentional, proactive steps to boost their readiness for potential disruptive events, regardless of their scale or operating sector.

    DAIC also underlined the central role that the private sector plays in sustaining national progress, supporting widespread employment, attracting foreign and domestic investment, maintaining critical supply chains, and leading effective post-disaster recovery. The group warned that unprepared businesses do not only face individual losses – disruptions to private sector activity ripple outward to harm local communities, undermine household livelihoods, and drag down the performance of the entire national economy.

    Under the new leadership of recently elected President Olive Strachan MBE and DAIC’s newly seated Board of Directors, strengthening business resilience and long-term sustainability has been positioned as a top core strategic priority for the organization. To advance this goal, DAIC maintains ongoing collaborative partnerships with a network of regional and international disaster risk reduction bodies, including the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction, the Caribbean Chambers of Commerce network, and the ARISE (Private Sector Alliance for Disaster Resilient Societies) Network. DAIC serves as the official ARISE national focal point for Dominica, working to expand private sector engagement in Multi-Hazard Early Warning Systems (MHEWS) and other cross-cutting disaster resilience initiatives across the country.

    Through these strategic partnerships, DAIC is actively contributing to regional policy discussions focused on improving public and private risk communication, supporting the development of robust business continuity plans, strengthening cross-sector coordination mechanisms, and ensuring the private sector is formally integrated into national and regional resilience governance frameworks.

    Speaking on the organization’s new priority focus, DAIC President Olive Strachan MBE emphasized: “Preparedness is no longer optional for our business community. Today’s enterprises must plan for multiple hazards that can disrupt daily operations, harm employee safety, break critical supply chains, and slow decades of national development. The private sector has an irreplaceable critical role to play at every stage of disaster management – before, during, and after a hazard event. Every business, no matter how large or small, contributes to building a more resilient Dominica. DAIC is fully committed to strengthening business resilience and sustainability through cross-sector partnerships, targeted advocacy, public awareness campaigns, and hands-on practical support for private enterprises across the country.”

    Strachan and DAIC have also called on all national stakeholders to continue making incremental improvements to cross-sector coordination, public communication systems, critical infrastructure resilience, and integrated preparedness planning. The organization stressed that building effective, country-wide disaster resilience cannot be achieved by a single group – it requires sustained, aligned cooperation between government agencies, the private sector, civil society organizations, and regional partner bodies.

    As part of its formal recommendations for the 2026 hurricane season, DAIC has outlined concrete actions for both businesses and households: review and update existing emergency response and business continuity plans, refresh internal and external communication and contact systems, secure critical operational data and physical infrastructure, conduct full audits of supply chain vulnerabilities, deliver disaster preparedness training to all staff, run regular preparedness simulation exercises, maintain consistent engagement with official information channels and early warning systems, and plan for a full spectrum of hazards rather than focusing exclusively on hurricanes.

    To support businesses in implementing these steps, DAIC announced that it will make a full suite of practical preparedness and business continuity planning resources available to private sector stakeholders throughout the 2026 hurricane season. All DAIC member organizations and local businesses are invited to contact the DAIC Secretariat to access these free planning materials.

    In closing, DAIC reaffirmed its long-term commitment to supporting Dominica’s private sector through targeted advocacy, public awareness initiatives, open information sharing, cross-sector engagement, and expanded access to regional resilience programs and planning tools. The organization stated that it will remain a consistent partner for the Dominican business community, standing alongside enterprises through all stages of emergency and disaster events.

  • Health ministry monitoring Ebola situation

    Health ministry monitoring Ebola situation

    As the ongoing Ebola outbreak in Central Africa, which has been categorized as a Public Health Emergency of International Concern by the World Health Organization (WHO), continues to spread, public health institutions across the Caribbean are ramping up surveillance and preparedness measures, even though regional health bodies have assessed the overall risk of the virus reaching the bloc as low.

    On May 17, the WHO formally designated the outbreak currently impacting the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and neighboring Uganda as a PHEIC, the highest level of global public health alert. The outbreak, which is concentrated in eastern regions of the DRC and multiple areas of Uganda including its capital Kampala, is linked to the Bundibugyo strain of the Ebola virus—a variant for which no commercially licensed vaccines or targeted, proven antiviral treatments currently exist. As of May 27, official data tallies 1,018 confirmed and probable cases across the two affected nations, with 234 registered deaths; the overwhelming share of both cases and fatalities have been recorded in the DRC.

    In an official public statement released Monday, Dr. Sharon Belmar-George, Chief Medical Officer for the Ministry of Health, Wellness and Nutrition, emphasized that to date, no confirmed cases of Ebola have been detected anywhere in the Caribbean. She echoed the assessment of the Caribbean Public Health Agency, which has concluded the current risk of the virus establishing a presence in the region remains low. Even so, public health officials have stressed that vigilance cannot be relaxed, noting the virus could still be introduced to the Caribbean via unregulated or undetected international travel from affected regions.

    “While the outbreak has not been classified as a pandemic at this stage, coordinated cross-border and global action remains critical to containing its spread,” Dr. Belmar-George explained. To strengthen regional and national readiness, the ministry has rolled out a series of proactive measures: enhanced entry screening at all ports of entry, including systematic checks of traveler history from high-risk areas; a full review of existing national outbreak response plans; upgrades to infection prevention and control protocols across all healthcare facilities; inventory assessments of personal protective equipment (PPE) stockpiles; and targeted training and awareness building for frontline healthcare workers.

    Notably, Ebola testing capacity is not currently available within any Caribbean nation. To address this gap, the ministry is working closely with regional public health agencies to establish standardized protocols for sample collection and secure transport to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) headquarters in Atlanta should testing be required for any suspected case. Officials are also scheduling cross-sector coordination meetings with stakeholders from the health, tourism, education, and business sectors to align preparedness efforts across all parts of regional society.

    The ministry’s Health Education and Communication Unit is also developing a comprehensive public risk communication plan, designed to deliver clear, evidence-based information to the general public. This initiative will cover key topics including how to recognize early Ebola symptoms and how to comply with national public health safety guidelines.

    Ebola is an acute viral illness that is often fatal if left untreated. It spreads through direct contact with the blood or other bodily fluids of an infected person, contact with materials contaminated by the virus, or exposure to infected wild animal populations. Common early symptoms include fever, intense headache, muscle soreness, general weakness and fatigue, sore throat, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain, and unusual bleeding or bruising. The ministry confirmed it will continue to monitor the evolution of the African outbreak closely and issue regular public updates as new information becomes available.

  • Antigua and Barbuda Riders Secure Multiple Podium Finishes at OECS Championships

    Antigua and Barbuda Riders Secure Multiple Podium Finishes at OECS Championships

    The 2026 ABWU Invitational and Organization of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS) Cycling Championships wrapped up on a high note of regional athletic competition last week, with cyclists from seven Caribbean territories converging on Antigua to battle for podium honors across 10 distinct age and skill divisions. Hosted on a challenging 19.046-kilometer circuit that tested riders’ endurance and tactical skill, the two-day event culminated in a standout victory for Grenada’s Red Walters, who secured the OECS Elite Men’s Championship with a dominant performance that set him apart from the regional field.

    Walters crossed the finish line after five grueling laps with an official time of 2 hours, 21 minutes and 40.790 seconds, notching the fastest individual lap speed of the entire day at 44.29 kilometers per hour. The podium for the elite men’s title was rounded out by local favorite Jyme Bridges of Antigua and Barbuda, who claimed second place, and Tahje Browne, who secured third. Kohath Baron of Dominica delivered a close final push, finishing less than one second behind Browne to narrowly miss out on a podium spot.

    The event highlighted the growing depth of competitive cycling talent across the Eastern Caribbean, with top finishers hailing from Grenada, Antigua and Barbuda, Dominica, and St. Vincent and the Grenadines across all divisions. In the ABWU Invitational Elite Men’s race, home-team riders put on an unbeatable display, sweeping all three podium positions. Robert Marsh of the East Side Riders club took first place, with Abbiel following in second and Jaleel Cannonier rounding out the top three.

    Other division winners showcased the range of emerging and established talent across the region. Grenada added another OECS title to its haul when Tristun Viechweg claimed gold in the Junior Men’s Championship, outpacing Anguilla’s Kamari Ruan and Ephraim Hughes-Hodge to take the win. In the Masters A division, Samuel Talbot of the British Virgin Islands secured the top spot, with Desron Bynoe of St. Vincent and the Grenadines taking silver and Antigua and Barbuda’s Jason Adams earning bronze.

    Anguilla dominated the Masters B category, with Craig Emmanuel taking first place and Patrick Niles claiming second; Antigua and Barbuda’s Paul Smith finished third to complete the podium. Grenada earned another victory in the OECS Juvenile Championship, where William Meyerer crossed first ahead of Antigua and Barbuda’s Elite Thomas, who completed all three laps to take second. In the Cadets 11-14 division, Sage Williams of St. Vincent and the Grenadines claimed gold as the only competitor to successfully finish the full two-lap course. The Sports Class category closed out the event with another strong showing from Antigua and Barbuda, as Eldon Farquharson took first and Dexter Simmons finished second, with Anguilla’s Carl Thomas placing third.

    Speaking after the event wrapped, the Antigua and Barbuda Cycling Federation praised the event as a milestone for regional cycling, noting that the high level of competition demonstrated the growing depth of talent across Caribbean nations and the enduring competitive spirit that continues to advance the sport in the region. The federation also extended formal thanks to the Antigua and Barbuda Workers’ Union, corporate sponsors, event officials, volunteer organizers, and all participating national teams for their work in making the 2026 championships a success.

  • Caribbean Food Forum Reinforces Importance of Local Food Systems, ABTA Official Says

    Caribbean Food Forum Reinforces Importance of Local Food Systems, ABTA Official Says

    The 2026 iteration of the annual Caribbean Food Forum has wrapped up, with industry leaders leaving the event with a renewed focus on elevating local food production, deepening cross-regional cooperation, and directing targeted investment into Caribbean coastal and island communities. Donyelle Bird-Browne, an official with the Antigua and Barbuda Tourism Authority, shared key takeaways from the gathering in a post-forum briefing, framing the regional food scene as far more than a collection of iconic dishes. For the Caribbean, she emphasized, local food is a living expression of the region’s shared cultural heritage, collective identity, remarkable community resilience, growing entrepreneurial spirit, and ongoing commitment to environmental sustainability.

    Centered on the 2026 theme “The Future Is Local: Caribbean Food at the Crossroads of Global Impact,” the three-day forum drew a diverse cross-section of food system stakeholders from across the Caribbean and international partners beyond the region. Attendees ranged from independent small-scale farmers and artisanal fishers to award-winning local chefs, small business entrepreneurs, senior tourism industry leaders, university students studying agribusiness and hospitality, and regional policymakers tasked with shaping food security and economic development strategy.

    Across plenary sessions, breakout working groups, and networking events, participants exchanged actionable insights, forged new cross-sector partnerships, and opened sustained dialogue around two core priorities: the long-term evolution of the Caribbean’s food industry, and its outsize role in driving inclusive, sustainable economic growth across the region’s small island developing states. Bird-Browne struck an optimistic tone in her closing remarks, noting “The future is local, and the future of Caribbean food is bright.”

    One of the gathering’s most consistent key messages, Bird-Browne explained, was the urgent need for continued targeted investment in four foundational pillars of Caribbean food: the people who grow, prepare, and sell local food, the one-of-a-kind products they create, the rich cultural stories tied to Caribbean culinary traditions, and the rural and coastal communities that sustain the regional food system. Parallel to that investment push, attendees also highlighted the critical importance of strengthening existing cross-border connections between producers, businesses, and tourism organizations across the Caribbean to unlock shared growth.

    In closing, Bird-Browne extended formal gratitude to all participants, corporate sponsors, and organizational partners that contributed to what she described as a deeply meaningful and memorable gathering. She made special note of the contributions of keynote speaker Dona Regis-Prosper, Secretary-General and Chief Executive Officer of the Caribbean Tourism Organization, praising Regis-Prosper’s proven regional leadership and insightful input that enriched all forum discussions.

    Looking ahead, the conversations sparked at the 2026 forum will continue through working groups and collaborative initiatives in the months leading up to the next gathering, scheduled for 2027. The Caribbean Food Forum is a core annual event tied to Antigua and Barbuda’s national Culinary Month, with a core mission to promote Caribbean culinary heritage, support local agriculture, boost culinary tourism, and nurture ongoing collaboration between food and tourism stakeholders across the entire region.

  • OP-ED: Public call to Caribbean legal societies

    OP-ED: Public call to Caribbean legal societies

    In a striking appeal rooted in the principle of equal application of international law, a regional legal voice has issued a formal call to Caribbean legal institutions, jurists, and legal professionals across the region to launch a civil legal inquiry into the deaths of more than 100 unarmed Caribbean and Latin American fishermen killed by United States military strikes between 2025 and 2026.

    The appeal, addressed to the Caribbean Bar Associations, the Organization of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS) Bar, the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ), CARICOM jurists and regional attorneys, anchors its argument in the very legal precedent the U.S. recently relied on to indict former Cuban President Raúl Castro for the downing of two unarmed civilian aircraft. The U.S. indictment rests on the core international law principle that state officials can be held personally legally accountable for the unlawful killing of civilians outside the context of active armed conflict. If this principle holds for one nation, the appeal argues, it must apply uniformly to all global actors.

    According to the appeal, credible documentation from the United Nations and leading international human rights organizations confirms that over 100 unarmed fishermen, none of whom were combatants, armed, or involved in any hostilities, were killed in U.S. military strikes carried out in international waters. In at least one documented case, the strike occurred within the territorial waters of St. Vincent and the Grenadines, a sovereign CARICOM member state.

    Under widely accepted international law, customary legal norms, and the long-standing framework of the UN Charter originating from the League of Nations, the intentional killing of unarmed civilians outside armed conflict carries severe legal ramifications: the deaths qualify as extrajudicial killing in violation of Article 6 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), a breach of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), a violation of peremptory (jus cogens) international norms, and could constitute a crime against humanity if proven to be part of a systematic pattern of violence. The strikes also violate the binding duty of CARICOM states to protect their own citizens, the appeal notes.

    The text draws a direct parallel to the U.S. action against the former Cuban leader: if the United States claims legal jurisdiction to indict a foreign sitting or former official for civilian deaths in disputed airspace, Caribbean regional legal institutions hold equal legal standing to investigate and pursue accountability for civilian deaths that occurred within the region’s own maritime boundaries.

    In response to this precedent, the appeal formally calls on Caribbean judicial associations, legal scholars, bar groups and practicing regional attorneys to pursue a non-governmental legal action before the CCJ or another competent regional legal body. The action is grounded in three well-established legal bases for jurisdiction: territorial jurisdiction, as some strikes took place within CARICOM territorial waters; nationality jurisdiction, as the victims included CARICOM nationals; and universal jurisdiction, which applies to the gravest violations of international human rights law.

    The appeal emphasizes that this initiative is not an act of political opposition. Instead, it frames the effort as a binding legal and moral obligation that grows directly from the same principle the United States itself has invoked to justify its own legal action.

    Closing the statement, the appeal reaffirms three core commitments: Caribbean lives carry equal weight under international law, Caribbean sovereignty must be respected under international law, and international law must either be applied equally to all nations, or it effectively applies to none. The call ends with an invitation for all Caribbean legal professionals, scholars, and institutions to join the effort to explore this legal action and map out the appropriate next steps for the process.

  • Officials urge storm readiness despite ‘slow’ forecast

    Officials urge storm readiness despite ‘slow’ forecast

    The 2026 Atlantic hurricane and wet season officially kicked off on June 1, bringing with it a mixed forecast that has regional leaders stressing preparedness over complacency. Meteorologists predict the six-month season, which runs through November 30, will be unusually subdued, driven by the formation of a strong El Niño — a climate pattern historically linked to suppressed hurricane activity in the Atlantic basin. The Caribbean Institute for Meteorology and Hydrology (CIMH) projects just 14 named storms will form over the season, a below-average total that has led many to lower risk expectations.

    But this calm projection has not eased warnings from disaster management officials across the Caribbean, who warn that even a single landfalling hurricane or weak tropical system can trigger catastrophic damage for small island nations. History bears out this caution: in 1994, the relatively weak Tropical Storm Debby dumped extreme rainfall across the region, triggering widespread flooding that destroyed bridges, damaged residential homes, crippled critical public infrastructure, and destroyed agricultural lands. Total economic damage from the storm topped $103 million, a devastating blow for small regional economies.

    Speaking at an official briefing this week, Elizabeth Riley, Executive Director of the Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency (CDEMA), emphasized that lower projected activity does not equal zero risk. “Even one hurricane making landfall can cause serious damage,” Riley noted in a prepared statement, outlining that the agency’s core mission centers on protecting people, communities, and livelihoods across the region’s participating states. “Every plan we develop, every exercise we conduct, and every partnership that we pursue is directed towards saving lives and reducing losses when hazards occur.”

    Riley added that disaster readiness should not be restricted to the official June-to-November hurricane season window, noting the Caribbean faces a wide range of natural and manmade hazards year-round. Even so, she expressed confidence in the region’s collective ability to respond, pointing to decades of coordinated action and shared solidarity that have strengthened disaster response capacity. “We enter the season with experience, lessons learned, partnerships and a renewed commitment to readiness,” she said, noting that shifting global geopolitics and associated uncertainties make regional cooperation and self-reliance more important than ever. “Our long-standing regional commitment to solidarity is even more important at this time… [preparedness, coordination, and timely action] have continued to shape our commitment to strengthening regional cooperation, regional self-reliance and supporting our participating States in reducing disaster risks, improving readiness and response capacities.”

    The call for urgent preparedness was echoed by St. Lucia Prime Minister Philip J. Pierre, who also chairs the National Emergency Management Advisory Committee (NEMAC). Speaking at Monday’s pre-Cabinet press briefing, Pierre reiterated that even one severe storm is enough to reverse decades of development for small island nations. “The forecast says that because of that weather pattern (El Niño), there may be a little variant in terms of the intensity of the storms. But as you know, we cannot predict that; one storm can create damage that can put the country back one hundred years,” Pierre said, urging all citizens to begin completing necessary preparation steps immediately.

    To support public readiness, the National Emergency Management Organisation (NEMO) is set to launch a targeted community outreach initiative dubbed the “zip-lock” program this week. The campaign will distribute free essential emergency preparedness kits and educate local residents on practical, low-cost steps to protect their homes, families, and property ahead of any storm.

  • Antigua’s US$200 Million Long Bay Zen Resort Unveiled as a ”Quiet Luxury” Icon

    Antigua’s US$200 Million Long Bay Zen Resort Unveiled as a ”Quiet Luxury” Icon

    The Caribbean island nation of Antigua has officially launched one of its most ambitious high-end tourism projects in recent years: the $200 million Long Bay Zen Resort, positioned to redefine the global ‘quiet luxury’ travel experience for discerning vacationers.

    Nestled along the pristine, undeveloped shoreline of Long Bay, the resort draws inspiration from Antigua’s natural tropical landscape and local cultural heritage to craft a low-key, immersive escape that stands in stark contrast to crowded, flashy mass-market all-inclusive resorts. Spanning more than 200 acres of coastal land, the development includes just 80 private pool villas, a 12,000-square-foot wellness center focused on holistic treatments, three farm-to-table restaurants sourcing 70% of their produce from local Antiguan farmers, and a private 1.5-mile beach reserved exclusively for resort guests.

    Project developers note that the resort was built with a strong commitment to environmental sustainability, integrating solar power systems, rainwater harvesting infrastructure, and coral reef restoration projects that protect the region’s fragile marine ecosystem. Unlike many large-scale luxury developments that prioritize rapid volume growth, Long Bay Zen Resort caps annual guest occupancy to preserve the tranquil atmosphere that defines its quiet luxury brand. This intentional small-footprint design has already drawn significant interest from high-net-worth travelers seeking seclusion and authentic cultural connection, with pre-booking rates for villa stays starting at $2,500 per night.

    For Antigua’s tourism-dependent economy, the launch of Long Bay Zen Resort marks a strategic shift toward attracting higher-spending, low-impact visitors. The project is expected to create more than 300 local jobs, boost annual tourism revenue by an estimated $45 million, and position the island as a leading destination for upscale, conscious travel. Government tourism officials have praised the development for aligning with the country’s 10-year sustainable growth strategy, which aims to diversify Antigua’s tourism offerings beyond traditional cruise ship and mass market stays.