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  • Grenadians leave their mark at 2026 NCAA Division I Championships

    Grenadians leave their mark at 2026 NCAA Division I Championships

    Three standout track and field athletes from the Caribbean nation of Grenada have etched their names into collegiate sports history, earning prestigious All-American honors at the 2026 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships, hosted at Oregon’s iconic Hayward Field between June 10 and 13.

    All-American distinctions, awarded annually by the U.S. Track and Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA), rank among the most sought-after accolades in U.S. collegiate track and field. To earn First-Team status, an athlete must secure a top-eight finish in their event final, while Second-Team honors go to competitors who place between 9th and 16th overall. With more than 20,000 student-athletes competing across NCAA Division I programs nationwide, landing a spot in the top 16 of any discipline cements an athlete’s place among the elite of collegiate track and field. All three Grenadian athletes earned their places at the national championships after navigating grueling regional preliminary rounds that narrowed the national final field to just 24 top competitors per event.

    Nazzio John, who competes for Ohio State University, was the only male Grenadian athlete to qualify for the 2026 championships, participating in both relay and individual sprint events. In the men’s 4×100-meter relay, John joined teammates Dominic Calhoun, Kyler Brown, and Braxton Brann to lead the Ohio State Buckeyes to a third-place podium finish with a final time of 38.44 seconds, trailing only the teams from the University of Tennessee and Louisiana State University. This podium placement earned the entire relay team First-Team All-American honors.

    In his individual event, John competed in the men’s 200-meter dash, where he faced off against some of the fastest young sprinters in the country. The Grenadian national senior record holder crossed the finish line in 20.40 seconds, good for 10th overall in the semifinal rounds. Though he narrowly missed advancing to the nine-athlete final, his top-16 national ranking earned him individual Second-Team All-American honors.

    Two more Grenadian national record holders, both competing in women’s field events, closed out their 2026 collegiate seasons with Second-Team All-American placements of their own. Jamora Alves, representing St. John’s University, competed in the women’s discus throw final, recording a top throw of 54.95 meters on her second attempt to finish 14th overall, closing out her collegiate career with the Red Storm on a high note. Kelsie Murrel-Ross, competing for the University of Georgia in the women’s shot put final, notched a best throw of 17.02 meters to secure 11th place overall.

    The results from Eugene cap off the 2026 domestic collegiate season for Grenada’s top emerging track and field talents competing at U.S. colleges. All three athletes will now shift their focus to upcoming international competitions, including the 2026 Central American and Caribbean (CAC) Games and Commonwealth Games, both scheduled to take place in August 2026.

  • Derde helft WK 2026: Dag 5, Strijd om punten en verrassingen op het veld

    Derde helft WK 2026: Dag 5, Strijd om punten en verrassingen op het veld

    As the 2026 FIFA World Cup group stage continues its cross-United States tour, Monday, June 15 brings four highly anticipated matches spanning Groups G and H, with teams vying for crucial points to advance to the knockout rounds. From Atlantic coast to West Coast, host cities Atlanta, Seattle, Miami and Los Angeles will welcome football fans for a full day of world-class action.

    The opening kickoff of the day comes at 1:00 PM local time in Atlanta, where European powerhouse Spain faces World Cup debutant Cape Verde in Group H. Spain enters the fixture as the overwhelming favorite, but Cape Verde’s underdog status leaves room for a potential historic upset – a reminder that only one African nation, Nigeria, has ever beaten Spain at a World Cup tournament, a 3-2 group stage win dating back to 1998.

    Next up at 4:00 PM in Seattle, Group G’s second match of the day pits Belgium against Egypt in what is projected to be a tight, one-goal affair. Belgium enters the clash as slight favorites, but the squad carries significant pressure after a disastrous 2022 World Cup campaign that saw them exit in the group stage, a far cry from their third-place finish in Russia 2018. With both sides boasting balanced talent, a single mistake or moment of brilliance could decide the three points.

    Group H action continues at 7:00 PM in Miami, where Saudi Arabia faces Uruguay. The two sides have a shared World Cup history: Uruguay claimed victory in their only previous World Cup meeting in 2018, and are favored to repeat that result on Monday. The pair also played a friendly match in Saudi Arabia in 2014, which ended in a 1-1 draw. Notably, Uruguay’s preparation has been disrupted by unexpected travel trouble: charter flight issues departing Mexico forced the team to delay their arrival, meaning they will only land in the U.S. one day before kickoff.

    The day’s final match kicks off at 10:00 PM in Los Angeles, where Group G rivals Iran and New Zealand face off in their first ever official competitive meeting. Pre-match predictions give Iran a 53.8% chance of claiming victory, and the two sides have only met twice before in friendly fixtures. Their first encounter in New Zealand back in 1973 ended in a scoreless draw, while a 2003 friendly in Tehran saw Iran run out 3-0 winners, with Ali Karimi bagging a brace and Hossein Kaebi adding the third.

    Beyond the on-pitch action, off-field developments are drawing attention across the tournament. Japanese fans have once again upheld their longstanding World Cup tradition of cleaning up stadium waste after matches, a practice that began in 1998, following the team’s thrilling 2-2 draw with the Netherlands on Day 4. In Los Angeles, home of Monday’s Iran-New Zealand clash, the local Iranian-American community is divided over support for the Iranian national team: some activists are planning public protests against the side, while other community members have called for leaving politics out of the sporting event.

    Looking back at Day 4 of the tournament, Sunday June 14 delivered exactly the mix of talent, experience and surprise that makes the World Cup football’s most watched event, as group stage tension continues to build with every fixture. Australia got their campaign off to a winning start with a 2-0 victory over Turkey in a hard-fought contest that saw both sides create clear chances, with Australia’s resilience ultimately tipping the scale. Germany lived up to their favorite billing with a dominant 7-1 thrashing of World Cup first-timers Curaçao, controlling the match from start to finish to send an early warning to other title contenders. The Netherlands and Japan played out a dynamic, end-to-end 2-2 draw that kept fans on the edge of their seats until the final whistle. In Group E, Ivory Coast snatched a late 1-0 win over Ecuador in a tactical battle between two young squads, securing three massive points early in their campaign. Sweden rounded out the day’s action with a solid 5-1 victory over Tunisia, putting themselves in a strong early position in their group.

  • Grenada’s electoral system: Integrity, transparency and accountability

    Grenada’s electoral system: Integrity, transparency and accountability

    As the Caribbean island nation of Grenada gears up for its upcoming general election, long-simmering concerns over the integrity of the country’s electoral management framework have come to a head, laid out in a detailed public statement by longtime civil society observer Sandra Ferguson, writing in her personal capacity.

    Ferguson’s critique grows out of years of engagement between a local civil society organization (CSO) collective and Grenada’s Parliamentary Elections Office (PEO) and Supervisor of Elections between the 2018 and 2022 general elections, during which the group repeatedly raised red flags and pushed for public information that was never fully provided.

    One of the core points of contention is the undisclosed awarding of an IT support contract for the PEO’s national voter registration system to local Grenadian firm AZITS Solutions (A-Z Info Tech Solutions), registered in Pearls, St. Andrew. The CSO collective only learned of the contract in January 2020 during a PEO press conference addressing expired voter registration cards, revealing the firm had been providing services to the electoral office since 2015–2016. The arrangement was never disclosed during pre-referendum stakeholder consultations in 2016, when the CSO collective received briefings on the system’s security and anti-duplication features.

    Prior to AZITS’s appointment, the voter registration system had been designed, installed, and maintained for five years by 3M Canada, a contract awarded through a fully transparent, stakeholder-inclusive process following a 2010 consultation where 3M representatives presented the system’s advanced security features to participants. Following the 2020 revelation, the CSO collective sent a formal letter to the PEO requesting details on the tender process, company ownership, and scope of services provided by AZITS, but never received a response. Independent public research found AZITS’s founder was a former Deputy Permanent Secretary in Grenada’s Ministry of Finance between April 2018 and July 2020, raising unanswered questions about potential conflicts of interest, as well as whether the firm had any ties to the country’s citizenship-by-investment program.

    Additional inconsistencies emerged around conflicting official voter registration guidance across PEO-managed digital platforms. In late 2020, the CSO collective discovered a national e-voter registration portal hosted on the main government website that invited citizens to complete registration online, upload supporting documents including digital fingerprints, passport photos, and identification, and listed the Prime Minister’s Office as the point of contact. This directly contradicted guidance on the official PEO portal, which explicitly stated voter registration could only be completed in-person at constituency offices, matching the requirements laid out in Grenada’s Representation of the People Act.

    Further irregularity was found in the fact that the PEO’s own official standalone website had not been updated since the appointment of an acting Supervisor of Elections in March 2019, with all digital electoral content instead managed centrally by the ICT team under the Ministry of National Security. Ferguson also notes that a local licensed citizenship-by-investment escrow agent, Infinity (Grenada) Inc., published voter registration guidance on its website matching the unlawful online registration process posted to the government portal, raising additional unaddressed questions about the involvement of non-electoral entities in the registration process.

    After the CSO collective formally raised these concerns to the Supervisor of Elections in November 2020, a response finally came 8 months later in July 2021. The PEO responded that it was not responsible for content published on third-party digital platforms, maintained that all registration follows the requirements of the Representation of the People Act, and dismissed allegations of improper online registration as inconsistent with official processes. Ferguson argues this response deliberately evaded all critical questions, deflected attention from the fact that the unauthorized online registration portal was hosted on the official government website, and directly threatened the integrity of the entire voter registration process.

    The CSO collective followed up with a second letter in November 2021 reiterating its concerns, and a third letter summarizing all outstanding issues was sent to the PEO and shared with the Organization of American States (OAS) Election Observer Mission (EOM) ahead of the June 2022 general election. No resolution was ever provided.

    Ferguson’s own personal experience on election day, June 23, 2022, underscored her concerns. Despite her lack of confidence in the system, she chose to cast a deliberate spoiled ballot to protest shortcomings in electoral management, only to discover when the PEO published full official results months later that her polling station (K09, South-east St George, where she has voted in four consecutive elections) recorded zero rejected and zero spoiled ballots out of 216 total votes cast, with a minor unexplained discrepancy in the overall vote breakdown. Ferguson sent a formal letter to the PEO in November 2022 asking for an explanation of the missing spoiled ballot, but never received even an acknowledgment of her correspondence.

    At two post-2022 election stakeholder meetings convened by the PEO – one in July 2023 and a second in April 2024 attended primarily by election officials – Ferguson raised the unaddressed issue of her missing spoiled ballot. She said she was shocked to hear senior PEO officials state that their policy is to minimize spoiled votes by reallocating questionable ballots to candidate vote tallies rather than categorizing them as rejected or spoiled, a revelation that directly contradicts standard electoral counting rules. This aligns with an observation in the preliminary statement from the CARICOM Election Observer Mission, which noted that while different counting approaches were observed across polling stations, all were deemed compliant with overarching electoral guidelines – leaving unanswered questions about what standards govern the classification of spoiled ballots.

    Both the OAS and CARICOM deployed observer missions to monitor the 2022 Grenada general election, but to date, the final reports of both missions have never been published publicly, even though preliminary reports were released shortly after the vote. At the July 2023 stakeholder meeting, PEO officials framed planned reforms to the voter registration system around recommendations from the CARICOM EOM, with the Supervisor of Elections noting that recommendations to overhaul the legislative framework and create an independent electoral commission require full constitutional and electoral reform. A senior PEO official also told attendees the current 12-year-old voter registration system is outdated, that the original designer retains full control over the system, that critical security certificates have expired with no internal documentation to address the issue, and that a new system is needed to integrate voter data with other government departments, enable advanced data disaggregation and analysis, and generate data to support national economic development.

    Stakeholders at the meeting raised a host of unanswered questions about the proposed new system, including its total cost, funding sources, whether the PEO intends to generate revenue by selling voter data, whether the office has the legal mandate to engage in such activity, and whether individual voter privacy would be compromised under the expanded data use framework, even with the country’s new Data Protection Act in place. Stakeholders also called for broad national public consultation ahead of any reform, but the PEO has yet to deliver on a commitment made at the meeting to share the full CARICOM EOM report with attendees – no copy was provided to the five civil society representatives present, and the report has never been posted online.

    These long-running issues are reinforced by findings from the OAS EOM’s 2022 preliminary report, which noted the existing voter ID system had operated for over a decade without substantial upgrades, most hardware is obsolete, and the system lacks national-level tools to prevent cross-constituency duplicate registrations. The OAS recommended a full system redesign to add national identity verification, eliminate duplicate registrations, and add voter photos to the official voters list to improve transparency and identity verification. The OAS also committed to releasing a full final report to the OAS Permanent Council and sharing it with Grenadian stakeholders, but the document has never been made public, leading Ferguson to question whether the current administration has blocked publication of the report for unstated reasons.

    Notably, the original 2010 contract with 3M Canada for the current digital system was awarded following repeated OAS observer recommendation for reform dating back to 2003 and 2008. The 3M system was specifically designed with anti-duplication fingerprinting, advanced security features to prevent counterfeiting, and activity tracking for all changes to voter data – all features the OAS now says are missing from the current system, raising questions about why required system upgrades and maintenance were never carried out over the past 15 years.

    In May 2024, the PEO announced a national series of public consultations to educate voters on the proposed new voter registration system, planned for installation before the 2027 constitutionally mandated general election. Shortly after consultations launched, a new Supervisor of Elections was appointed, and the consultations were suspended and never resumed. Earlier in 2025, the PEO issued a brief public statement announcing a major server failure that disrupted voter registration had been resolved, but provided no additional context about the status of the planned new system or broader reform efforts. Ferguson notes that a lack of accessible, transparent information has become the norm for the PEO.

    In closing, Ferguson emphasizes that voters are the core stakeholders in any democratic electoral process, and that full integrity, transparency, and accountability from election management bodies is non-negotiable. “We the people deserve integrity, transparency and accountability of our electoral system!! We must demand integrity, transparency and accountability of the parliamentary elections office!!” she writes.

  • Massiah and Marshall Sworn In as Ambassadors-at-Large

    Massiah and Marshall Sworn In as Ambassadors-at-Large

    In a formal inauguration ceremony held Monday at Government House, two former Antigua and Barbuda government ministers, Samantha Marshall and Joanne Messiah, officially took office as Ambassadors-at-Large, receiving immediate diplomatic assignments to represent the small Caribbean nation on the international stage.

    The appointments are legally grounded in Section 101 of Antigua and Barbuda’s Constitution, and the process was formalized when Sir Clare Roberts, Deputy to the Governor General, administered three core oaths: the Oath of Allegiance, the Oath of Office, and the Oath of Secrecy.

    Speaking at the event, Sir Roberts highlighted the unique qualifications that both appointees bring to their new roles. He noted that Marshall and Messiah have accumulated decades of deep experience across public administration, legal practice, and national governance, making them exceptionally well-suited to advance Antigua and Barbuda’s strategic interests across global forums. Sir Roberts also underscored the current government’s explicit priority: strengthening diplomatic and economic ties with Latin America and the broader Global South, a goal the new ambassadors will help advance.

    E.P. Chet Greene, the country’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, echoed that praise, framing the appointments as a formal recognition of the pair’s decades of professional excellence and unwavering commitment to public service. “These appointments recognize your long-standing dedication to national development,” Greene stated, adding that the ambassadors-at-large will be tapped for a range of targeted special assignments on behalf of the government, as needs arise.

    Greene also revealed the first diplomatic missions for both new envoys. Later this month, Marshall will travel to the Dominican Republic to represent Antigua and Barbuda at a high-stakes meeting between the European Union and the Cariforum trade bloc. Meanwhile, Messiah will head to Panama to take part in scheduled meetings of two key regional hemispheric bodies: the Organization of American States and the Association of Caribbean States.

    Unlike traditional resident ambassadors, who are permanently assigned to a single host country or international organization, Ambassadors-at-Large are flexible diplomatic assets deployed on an as-needed basis. They represent Antigua and Barbuda across a wide spectrum of issues, including bilateral diplomacy, trade and economic promotion, and multilateral negotiations.

    In comments after the swearing-in ceremony, Messiah said she felt deeply humbled and grateful for the chance to continue contributing to her country’s growth. She pledged to carry out her duties with unwavering excellence and integrity, upholding the nation’s reputation across global venues. Marshall similarly expressed enthusiasm for the new role, noting she was encouraged by the widespread support she received ahead of taking office.

    “I continue to make a contribution to overall national development,” Marshall said. “I recognize the very level of importance of this post, and I hope to carry it out with fairness, transparency and, of course, with a lot of pride for the people of Antigua and Barbuda.”

    The ceremony was well-attended by a cross-section of guests, including senior domestic government officials, foreign diplomats based in Antigua and Barbuda, and the family members and personal supporters of both Marshall and Messiah.

  • Nominations open for 2026 CARICOM Agriculture Awards

    Nominations open for 2026 CARICOM Agriculture Awards

    The Caribbean Community (CARICOM) has officially launched the nomination period for its highly anticipated 2026 annual agricultural honors: the CARICOM Farmer of the Year Award and the complementary Ministers of Agriculture Young Farmer of the Year Award.

    First introduced during the 16th Caribbean Week of Agriculture in October 2021, these dual awards were created to center the critical work of Caribbean farmers and agricultural enterprises that underpin regional food security and food sovereignty. Beyond formal recognition, the flagship Farmer of the Year Award serves two key strategic goals: elevating the public profile of farming careers across the region and positioning Caribbean agriculture as a compelling sector for new investment. It specifically spotlights individuals and entities that have shown outstanding leadership, long-term commitment, and transformative contributions to building a more resilient regional agricultural sector.

    Since the award’s launch, the Caribbean community has celebrated a diverse roster of honorees. Deles Warrington of Dominica made history as the award’s first recipient in the inaugural year. Subsequent winners have included Jamaica’s Peter McConnell, representing Trade Winds Citrus Limited, in 2023; Alicia Bogues of Caribbean Broilers Jamaica Group in 2024; and Dave Fairman of The Best Dressed Chicken, a subsidiary of Jamaica Broilers Group, in 2025.

    The complementary Young Farmer of the Year Award was developed to nurture the next generation of agricultural leaders, with a mandate to encourage, support, and highlight emerging young agri-preneurs who have already achieved notable success in the regional agri-food space. This award prioritizes forward-thinking traits including innovative problem-solving, creative business models, strong operational management, and a commitment to sustainable growing practices, while working to counter the trend of aging farming populations by making agricultural careers more appealing to younger Caribbean residents.

    Like its senior counterpart, the young farmer award has already showcased standout talent across the region. Citerina Atkins of Jamaica claimed the inaugural young farmer honor, followed by fellow Jamaican Diandra Rowe in 2023, Kevorn Vidal of Dominica in 2024, and Michael Joseph of Antigua and Barbuda in 2025.

    Per CARICOM’s official press announcement, all nominations must be submitted through the relevant Ministry of Agriculture in each CARICOM Member State or Associate Member by the close of June 2026. To complete their nomination, candidates are required to submit two key materials: a short biography outlining their production type, operational scale, and key achievements, plus a two-minute video that offers a visual walkthrough of their farm operations and highlights how they integrate technology into their work.

    The formal selection process will get underway in early July, following the close of the nomination window. The names of the 2026 award winners will be publicly revealed during the opening ceremony of the 20th Caribbean Week of Agriculture, which is scheduled to take place on September 27, 2026, hosted in Jamaica.

  • LISTEN: Owners to Pay as Derelict Property Demolition Bill Reaches $700,000 in Point/Villa Alone

    LISTEN: Owners to Pay as Derelict Property Demolition Bill Reaches $700,000 in Point/Villa Alone

    A targeted government-led cleanup initiative tackling abandoned, unsafe buildings in the Point and Villa region has already cleared 45 derelict properties at a public expenditure of roughly $700,000 — but Prime Minister Gaston Browne has made clear that private property owners, not taxpayers, will foot the final bill. Speaking during his weekly public radio broadcast Saturday, Browne framed the ongoing demolition drive as a core piece of the administration’s wider agenda to revitalize local neighborhoods, eliminate structurally hazardous buildings, and upgrade overall environmental quality for residents. He stressed that the public should not be forced to absorb the financial fallout from years of neglect by private landowners. “We actually broke down 45 properties in Point and Villa so far at a cost of about $700,000,” Browne confirmed during the address. Under the policy, when the government is required to step in to remove abandoned and decaying structures that pose a risk to communities, the landowners retain full financial accountability for the work. “We’re not doing it for free,” Browne emphasized. “Ultimately, we’re going to attach a charge to the lands if it costs us $5,000, $10,000 to break down the whole structure.” To ensure the government recoups all operational costs, the total expenses for demolition and site clearance will be formally registered as a legal lien against the affected property. This mechanism creates a formal financial claim that allows public authorities to recover the full amount spent on the remediation work. Browne’s announcement clarifies the government’s long-term approach to addressing blight, holding negligent property owners accountable while protecting public funds from shouldering the cost of clearing privately owned abandoned structures.

  • PM Browne Doubles Down on Criticism of Senator Malaka Parker

    PM Browne Doubles Down on Criticism of Senator Malaka Parker

    A bitter public conflict between Antigua and Barbuda’s Prime Minister Gaston Browne and the opposition United Progressive Party (UPP) has deepened, as Browne launched a fresh attack on UPP Senator Malaka Parker hours after the party rallied to her defense. The escalating war of words has shifted the original focus of an ongoing drug investigation to Parker’s personal connections, turning a routine law enforcement probe into a major partisan standoff.

    The dispute first erupted after Browne made earlier public remarks that appeared to tie Parker to a recent narcotics-related arrest. On Wednesday, the UPP released an official statement rejecting the prime minister’s claims, throwing its full backing behind Parker alongside the party’s Women’s Forum. The opposition forcefully condemned what it called Browne’s “prejudicial words and actions,” noting that no law enforcement agency has ever named Parker as a suspect in the ongoing investigation.

    The UPP argued that Browne’s unsubstantiated hints amounted to a calculated attempt to sway public opinion and systematically destroy Parker’s professional and personal reputation. Beyond the immediate attack on Parker, the opposition also accused the prime minister of glaring double standards in how he handles allegations involving political figures from across the aisle versus those connected to his own administration. “Law-enforcement authorities had not announced any involvement by Senator Parker,” the UPP’s statement read. “Therefore, the prime minister’s actions can be construed only as a deliberate effort to influence the Police and to taint Senator Parker’s character.”

    To back up its claim of hypocrisy, the UPP pointed to Browne’s far more muted responses to past controversies involving individuals linked to his own ruling party, drawing a sharp contrast with his aggressive approach to Parker.

    In his latest counterattack, Browne pivoted the conversation away from the ongoing drug investigation and toward Parker’s personal relationship with her partner and campaign manager, Gould. Browne publicly identified Gould as a previously convicted sex offender and narcotics trafficker, directly questioning Parker’s judgment and personal decision-making in the process.

    Gould was recently taken into custody after law enforcement officials reportedly seized nearly 60 pounds of suspected cannabis from luggage he was bringing into the country on a flight originating from the United States. As of the latest update, the police investigation into the new allegations remains active, and no final conviction has been handed down in connection with this recent case.

    As tensions continue to rise, Parker has not issued any public statement responding to Browne’s latest criticisms as of the time this report went to press.

  • Cannabis Found in Teen’s School Bag After Father Reports Missing Knife

    Cannabis Found in Teen’s School Bag After Father Reports Missing Knife

    An unexpected turn of events unfolded at an Antiguan secondary school this Friday, when a routine backpack inspection triggered by a concerned father’s report of a missing kitchen knife led to the discovery of suspected illegal drugs.

    The incident began when the parent of a 14-year-old student reached out to school administration, reporting that a small kitchen knife had vanished from their family home earlier that week. Worried that his son may have accidentally or intentionally brought the weapon onto school grounds, the father requested that staff immediately search the teenager’s backpack to address any potential safety risks to the school community.

    When school personnel conducted the requested search, no kitchen knife was located inside the bag. However, their search uncovered a hidden, sealed plastic bag that contained a quantity of material suspected to be cannabis, a prohibited controlled substance under Antigua and Barbuda law.

    School administrators moved quickly to notify law enforcement, alerting the national Criminal Investigations Department (CID) to the find shortly before 10 a.m. that same morning. Investigating officers were dispatched to the school site without delay, where they seized the suspected cannabis as evidence and took possession of the student’s backpack for further forensic testing.

    Following the seizure, the 14-year-old student was brought to CID headquarters for formal questioning, with his mother present to accompany him throughout the interview process, as required by local juvenile justice protocols. According to anonymous law enforcement sources, the teenager has claimed he is innocent of any knowledge of the drugs: he told investigators he had left his bag in the care of another person earlier that day when he stepped out to purchase sweets, and had no idea the cannabis had been hidden inside his belongings.

    As of the latest update, CID investigators have not announced any charges against the student or any other individual connected to the incident. The case remains active, with authorities continuing to trace the origin of the suspected cannabis and identify any other people potentially involved in the incident.

  • Hydro-Comp Enterprises Ltd. vacancy: Systems/Support Engineer

    Hydro-Comp Enterprises Ltd. vacancy: Systems/Support Engineer

    Hydro-Comp Enterprises Ltd., a prominent global provider of specialized consulting services and enterprise software solutions tailored for the water utility sector, has announced an opening for a full-time on-site Systems/Support Engineer in Grenada as part of a planned expansion of its Product Services Division, fueled by continued international growth.

    The successful candidate will take on a critical role supporting the implementation and ongoing operation of EDAMS, Hydro-Comp’s flagship enterprise platform built exclusively for water and sanitation utility providers. This integrated platform covers a full suite of core utility operations, including customer billing and customer relationship management, network asset tracking, and end-to-end operations and maintenance workflows.

    Working in direct collaboration with local and international utility clients, the hired engineer will be responsible for ensuring uninterrupted performance of EDAMS installations, guiding new system deployments, and providing day-to-day guidance for end-users navigating the platform.

    To be considered for the position, applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree in Computer Science or a closely related technical field, along with hands-on experience working with Microsoft Windows Server environments. Proficiency in MS SQL Server and a strong working knowledge of structured query language (SQL) is also required. Additional core qualifications include exceptional analytical and problem-solving abilities, proficient written and verbal communication skills in English, and the capacity to work independently in fast-paced, evolving technical settings. Prior experience working with geographic information systems (GIS), Crystal Reports or business dashboards is considered a distinct advantage, and the company prefers candidates with 1 to 3 years of relevant professional experience.

    Key responsibilities outlined for the role include delivering multi-channel technical support to end-users via on-site assistance, phone consultations, and remote access tools; installing, configuring, and performing routine maintenance on EDAMS platform installations; managing and supporting underlying infrastructure including MS SQL Server databases and Crystal Reports tools; assisting clients with resolving operational issues and troubleshooting technical errors; delivering customized training for all tiers of end-users, from operational staff to senior managers and system administrators; and developing and maintaining custom reports and SQL scripts to meet client-specific needs.

    Hydro-Comp offers a competitive remuneration package tied to the successful candidate’s relevant experience, with a 1-year renewable contract structure and clear pathways for long-term career advancement within the organization. The role also provides unique opportunities to gain hands-on experience with cutting-edge international projects and leading industry technologies, alongside access to ongoing professional training and skills development.

    Interested applicants are required to submit their application materials via email to [email protected] no later than June 30, 2026. All submissions must include the subject line: “Grenada – Systems/Support Engineer – [Your Full Name]” to be considered. This job posting is hosted by NOW Grenada, which notes that it is not responsible for the content, opinions or statements shared by contributing organizations. Users may report any abusive content related to the posting directly through the platform’s reporting channel.

  • Derde helft WK-2026: Hoe de miljarden van het WK worden verdeeld

    Derde helft WK-2026: Hoe de miljarden van het WK worden verdeeld

    When a captain lifts the World Cup trophy above their head, global audiences only see the celebration of athletic excellence. Behind the goals, outpourings of emotion and national pride, however, lies a massive, complex financial ecosystem that has turned the FIFA World Cup into one of the world’s most lucrative commercial events, with billions of dollars flowing between FIFA, broadcasters, sponsors, national football associations, clubs and ultimately the players themselves. For millions of football fans across the globe, the core question remains: where does all this money come from, and exactly how is it distributed across the entire industry?

    Unlike many major sporting events that rely heavily on ticket sales and stadium revenue, the World Cup’s largest income stream does not come from seats in venues – it is generated in the living rooms of billions of viewers tuning in from around the world. Television and broadcasting rights are by far FIFA’s biggest source of revenue, with global media networks paying record-breaking sums to secure the rights to air tournament matches. Beyond broadcast rights, FIFA also pulls in billions of dollars from corporate sponsorship deals, advertising campaigns, digital content rights, official merchandise sales, premium hospitality packages and match ticket sales. The upcoming expansion of the tournament from 32 to 48 participating nations is set to boost these total revenues even further: more matches mean greater airtime for broadcasters to sell, and in turn higher advertising returns across the board.

    A key component of FIFA’s revenue strategy that often flies under the radar of casual fans is its distribution package model. Instead of negotiating directly with hundreds of individual national broadcasters around the world, FIFA groups large geographic regions or blocs of countries into a single commercial rights package, which it then sells to a specialized distribution partner. That distributor purchases the full regional rights, and then resells sub-licenses to individual national television stations. This system streamlines negotiations for FIFA, eliminating the need to manage hundreds of separate agreements while also guaranteeing the governing body maximizes its total revenue from broadcast rights.

    Long before the opening match of the tournament kicks off, every participating national association already receives a base payout to cover qualification and preparation costs. For the 2026 iteration, each qualified nation already earns upwards of $12 million USD before a single ball is kicked. Additional performance-based prize money is awarded based on how far a team progresses in the tournament. Even teams eliminated in the group stage walk away with multi-million dollar payouts, and prizes rise rapidly as teams advance through the knockout rounds, with the eventual world champions set to take home $50 million USD in prize money. While that figure sounds enormous, it only accounts for a fraction of the total revenue generated by the entire tournament.

    One of the most common misconceptions surrounding World Cup finance is that all this prize money goes directly to the players on the pitch. In reality, FIFA pays all prize funds to national football associations, not individual players. Each association is then free to decide how to allocate its payout across a range of priorities. A portion typically goes to individual player bonuses, technical and coaching staff salaries, and on-tournament medical support. Many associations also allocate large shares of the money to cover operational costs, youth football development programs, coaching education initiatives, and long-term national football infrastructure projects. As a result, individual player bonuses vary wildly from nation to nation: some associations award large, direct bonuses to their squads, while others choose to reinvest most of the payout into growing the sport at the grassroots level.

    Clubs that release players to compete at the World Cup also receive financial compensation from FIFA through the governing body’s Club Benefits Programme. The logic behind the program is straightforward: clubs invest years of time and resources into developing and paying players’ salaries, and face the risk of players suffering tournament injuries that can disrupt club seasons for months. For the 2026 World Cup, FIFA has set aside a record-breaking multi-hundred million dollar fund for this compensation program. The amount a club receives is tied to how far a player’s national team progresses in the tournament, meaning the longer a player stays in the competition, the higher the payout their club receives. Crucially, this system is not limited to elite European giants like Real Madrid, Manchester City and Bayern Munich – smaller clubs that developed and trained world cup players are also eligible to receive a share of these funds.

    The narrative that the World Cup is purely a sporting event only tells half the story. Its entire financial supply chain starts with a single viewer watching a match from home: advertisers pay for commercial airtime, broadcasters pay for the rights to air matches, distributors sell sub-licenses to local stations, FIFA collects the revenue and redistributes it to national associations, clubs, and global development programs. While only one nation leaves the tournament as champions, dozens of different stakeholders across the global football ecosystem financially benefit from the event. The player who scores the winning penalty gets all the post-tournament glory, but the billions of dollars that flow behind that iconic moment remain invisible to most fans.

    It is this unseen economic competition that plays out off the pitch, and it is far larger than the 90 minutes of play that capture global attention. For FIFA, media companies, sponsors and broadcasters, the real final for the World Cup begins long before the opening whistle blows.