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  • Minister Michael Joseph Signs Seven Landmark Healthcare Agreements in China to Strengthen Antigua and Barbuda’s Health System

    Minister Michael Joseph Signs Seven Landmark Healthcare Agreements in China to Strengthen Antigua and Barbuda’s Health System

    In a historic step that promises to transform the Caribbean nation’s public health landscape, Minister of Health, Wellness and the Environment of Antigua and Barbuda Michael Joseph has formalized seven landmark healthcare cooperation agreements with Chinese partners during an official diplomatic working session in Beijing.

    The multi-faceted partnerships cover a wide range of critical health priorities, from upgrading under-resourced rural and urban medical facilities across Antigua and Barbuda to expanding access to specialized medical training for local clinical staff. The agreements also pave the way for joint research into regional public health challenges, enhanced supply chain stability for essential pharmaceuticals and medical equipment, and the development of digital health systems to streamline patient care delivery.

    During the signing ceremony, Minister Joseph emphasized that the agreements represent a cornerstone of Antigua and Barbuda’s long-term national health strategy, addressing long-standing gaps in service delivery that have disproportionately affected marginalized communities in the island nation. He noted that the cooperation aligns with shared development goals between the two countries, built on decades of mutual respect and collaborative partnership that has prioritized the needs of small island developing states.

    Chinese diplomatic representatives reaffirmed the country’s commitment to supporting global health equity, particularly for small island nations that face unique structural and resource challenges in building resilient health systems. The partnerships, which are scheduled to roll out implementation over the next five years, are expected to create dozens of new healthcare jobs and reduce the need for Antigua and Barbuda residents to seek specialized medical treatment abroad, cutting healthcare costs for thousands of households.

    Health policy analysts note that the agreement marks a deepening of bilateral ties between China and Antigua and Barbuda, while delivering tangible, people-centered benefits that will strengthen the Caribbean country’s ability to respond to future public health emergencies and improve long-term population health outcomes.

  • CARICOM leaders promise action as households feel cost-of-living pressure

    CARICOM leaders promise action as households feel cost-of-living pressure

    As household budgets across the Caribbean continue to buckle under the weight of soaring cost-of-living pressures, regional leaders and private sector stakeholders have struck a landmark agreement on a comprehensive package of policy and infrastructure measures designed to cut import expenses, strengthen cross-border connectivity, eliminate internal trade barriers, and expand access to affordable essential goods for ordinary consumers. The sweeping commitments were finalized during the second High-Level Breakfast Dialogue, a high-stakes gathering that brought together CARICOM Heads of Government, the CARICOM Private Sector Organisation (CPSO), and the OECS Business Council (OBC) in Saint Lucia. The event ran alongside the 51st Regular Meeting of the Conference of CARICOM Heads of Government, held under the central theme “Meeting the Affordability Challenge: Toward a Proactive Agenda for Member States and the Private Sector.” Held on July 6, the dialogue drew more than 120 senior attendees, spanning private sector leadership, heads of state from 13 CARICOM member nations, organized labor representatives, international development partners, and senior officials from leading regional institutions. Throughout the day-long discussions, participants zeroed in on actionable, practical solutions to reverse the trend of rising consumer costs, with priorities including cuts to transportation and logistics overhead, expanded import diversification, increased intra-regional investment, and tighter integration between the Caribbean’s key tourism sector and local production industries. One of the most high-priority outcomes of the dialogue was a consensus around advancing cross-regional movement, with leaders voting to move forward with plans for a private-sector-led regional ferry service that will cut travel and shipping costs across member states. Attendees agreed to a September 2026 deadline to put in place the full regulatory framework required for mutual recognition of insurance, operating licenses, and road taxes — a set of regulatory changes widely seen as a non-negotiable prerequisite to launching the ferry service. In the near term, leaders have committed to advancing interim operational arrangements to get the private-sector-run service up and running ahead of the full regulatory rollout. The dialogue also marked a milestone for regional air cargo connectivity, with attendees formally welcoming the launch of operations by Executive Air Cargo, a new carrier that has already begun moving agri-food products across CARICOM member states, opening new markets for small regional producers and cutting supply chain delays. Turning to long-standing barriers that have stifled intra-regional trade, participants agreed to adopt a targeted “pairwise” approach to address the 57 non-tariff barriers that local businesses have repeatedly identified as major restrictions on cross-border commerce. Under the new framework, the country imposing a trade barrier will work directly with the affected trading partner, supported by private sector stakeholders and relevant government agencies, to develop binding, time-bound solutions that remove unnecessary restrictions. Discussions also outlined major potential cost savings through import diversification, with analysis showing that the region could cut annual expenses by roughly $2 billion by shifting a portion of non-fuel imports to regional suppliers instead of relying on overseas sources. Participants also noted that additional long-term savings will come as Caribbean nations accelerate their transition to renewable energy, reducing their heavy dependence on costly imported fossil fuels. In addition to long-term structural reforms, attendees also debated immediate, short-term measures to ease cost pressures on working households. Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley put forward a bold call for a formal tripartite compact bringing together national governments, the private sector, and organized labor, focused on capping and lowering prices for a core basket of essential consumer goods. According to the official statement from the meeting, Mottley also urged private businesses to accept narrower profit margins on essential products to help ease the financial strain on consumers across the CARICOM region. The dialogue also prioritized unlocking regional capital for strategic infrastructure investment, with a focus on high-impact sectors including renewable energy generation, seawater desalination, utility-scale battery storage, and port modernization. Participants agreed that all open regional investment opportunities should be published on a single unified regional platform to improve access for local and international investors, with agriculture singled out as a key sector requiring targeted investment and attention. Attendees also reaffirmed their long-standing commitment to completing the Tourism Linkages Project, an initiative designed to strengthen economic connections between the Caribbean’s $59 billion tourism industry and regional agriculture, manufacturing, and service sectors, ensuring more tourism revenue stays within local communities. On climate policy, private sector representatives reaffirmed their broad support for ambitious global climate action, but raised urgent concerns about the potential negative economic impact of the International Maritime Organization’s Net-Zero Framework on Caribbean consumers, small island developing economies, and the regional tourism sector, which relies heavily on affordable maritime shipping for goods and visitor arrivals. To ensure all agreed commitments are implemented on schedule, participants approved the establishment of dedicated working groups with clear timelines and measurable performance targets to track progress and hold stakeholders accountable. The CPSO will partner with the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME) Prime Ministerial Sub-Committee to lead the implementation of the full agreed policy agenda. The dialogue concluded with a unified public commitment from governments, the private sector, and organized labor to prioritize the delivery of practical, people-centered measures that will deliver tangible, meaningful improvements in quality of life for all residents of the CARICOM community.

  • CARICOM leaders promise action as households feel cost-of-living pressure

    CARICOM leaders promise action as households feel cost-of-living pressure

    Against a backdrop of widespread household financial strain driven by skyrocketing living costs across the Caribbean, regional government leaders and private sector stakeholders have finalized a coordinated package of actionable measures designed to cut import expenses, upgrade cross-border transportation connectivity, eliminate unnecessary trade restrictions, and make basic consumer goods more accessible to vulnerable populations.

    The landmark agreements were reached during the second High-Level Breakfast Dialogue, a gathering that brought together CARICOM Heads of Government, the CARICOM Private Sector Organisation (CPSO), and the OECS Business Council (OBC). The event was hosted in Saint Lucia alongside the 51st Regular Meeting of the Conference of CARICOM Heads of Government, held July 6 under the overarching theme “Meeting the Affordability Challenge: Toward a Proactive Agenda for Member States and the Private Sector.” More than 120 senior stakeholders, including private sector executives, leaders from 13 CARICOM member nations, organized labor representatives, development partners, and officials from regional institutional bodies, took part in the day’s discussions.

    Attendees centered their talks on concrete, implementable solutions to the region’s rising cost pressures, with priorities ranging from cutting transportation and logistics overhead to diversifying import sources, stimulating intra-regional investment, and forging stronger connections between the Caribbean’s dominant tourism sector and local domestic industries.

    One of the most significant outcomes of the dialogue was a renewed focus on improving regional mobility and connectivity. Leaders formally committed to advancing development of a private-sector-led regional ferry service, a project expected to cut cross-border transportation costs dramatically. A September 2026 deadline was set to finalize the full regulatory framework required for the initiative, including rules for mutual recognition of insurance coverage, operating licenses, and road taxes—all critical preconditions to launching the service. In the near term, stakeholders have agreed to move forward with interim operational arrangements to get the service up and running ahead of full regulatory completion.

    The dialogue also marked a milestone for regional air cargo connectivity, with attendees welcoming the launch of Executive Air Cargo, a new service that already began moving agri-food products between CARICOM member states, helping reduce food waste and cut delivery times for local producers.

    On trade barriers, participants agreed to adopt a targeted “pairwise” approach to address the 57 non-tariff barriers that private sector businesses have identified as major obstacles to intra-regional commerce. Under this framework, the countries maintaining each restrictive policy will work directly with the affected trading nations, supported by private sector groups and relevant government agencies, to develop time-bound plans for elimination or reform.

    Import diversification emerged as another key strategy to cut long-term costs, with analysis showing the region could save approximately $2 billion USD by shifting a portion of non-fuel imports to regional suppliers instead of relying solely on foreign sources. Additional savings are projected as Caribbean nations accelerate their transition to renewable energy, reducing their heavy dependence on costly imported fossil fuels.

    Short-term relief for consumers was also a core topic of discussion. Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley put forward a formal call for a tripartite compact bringing together governments, the private sector, and organized labor, focused on stabilizing prices for a basket of essential consumer products. Mottley also urged businesses to accept reduced profit margins on essential goods to ease the financial burden being carried by Caribbean households.

    Dialogue participants also prioritized mobilizing regional capital for strategic infrastructure investment, identifying renewable energy projects, desalination facilities, battery storage systems, and port upgrades as key priority areas. Attendees agreed that all regional investment opportunities should be published on a shared regional platform to improve accessibility for local investors, with agriculture highlighted as a sector that needs increased targeted investment.

    The gathering also reaffirmed broad support for completing the ongoing Tourism Linkages Project, an initiative designed to strengthen connections between the Caribbean’s $50 billion tourism industry and regional agriculture, manufacturing, and service sectors, ensuring more tourism revenue stays within local economies.

    On climate policy, private sector representatives reaffirmed their commitment to supporting regional climate action, but raised urgent concerns about the potential economic impact of the International Maritime Organisation’s Net-Zero Framework. Stakeholders warned the policy could drive up shipping costs, placing additional strain on consumers, small island economies, and the tourism sector that forms the backbone of most CARICOM nations’ economies.

    To ensure all agreed commitments are delivered on, participants approved the establishment of dedicated working groups with clear timelines and measurable performance targets to track implementation progress. The CPSO will partner with the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME) Prime Ministerial Sub-Committee to lead coordination of the agenda moving forward.

    The dialogue closed with a unified commitment from all three sectors—government, private business, and organized labor—to advance the agreed practical measures, with the shared goal of delivering tangible, meaningful improvements to the quality of life for all people across the CARICOM community.

  • Airport Authority undertakes crucial vegetation management exercise this weekend as Airfield Upgrade enters final phase

    Airport Authority undertakes crucial vegetation management exercise this weekend as Airfield Upgrade enters final phase

    The Antigua and Barbuda Airport Authority (ABAA) is set to oversee the removal of three mature mahogany trees along Sir George Walter Highway this Sunday, a decision reached after months of cross-stakeholder consultation and rigorous safety assessments tied to the final phase of the island’s $50 million VC Bird International Airport runway rehabilitation project.

    As the major infrastructure upgrade nears completion, the full length of the refurbished runway will soon open for regular aircraft operations. However, survey teams identified the three mahogany trees as a critical barrier to unobstructed line-of-sight between the Air Traffic Control (ATC) Tower and the western end of the airfield – a non-negotiable requirement for safe air navigation, per International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) standards.

    For years, ABAA attempted to manage the risk through regular pruning and ongoing maintenance. Airport officials explored every feasible alternative before settling on removal as the only remaining solution to eliminate the hazard. Joseph Samuel, ABAA’s Director of Operations, explained that the trees prevent air traffic controllers from carrying out full, effective visual surveillance of all aircraft movements along the runway. “Unobstructed visibility is essential for the safe and efficient management of aircraft operations on and around the runway,” Samuel noted.

    Eugene Silcott, Acting Chief of Air Traffic Services, emphasized that even minor reductions in visibility create a severe safety risk that can raise the likelihood of aircraft incidents or accidents. “One of the primary responsibilities of an air traffic controller is to prevent collisions between aircraft and other aircraft, vehicles, personnel, or obstacles on the maneuvering area,” Silcott said. Beyond tracking aircraft movements, controllers also rely on a clear view of the entire airfield to spot wildlife incursions, which pose another major threat to flight safety. Early detection of these hazards before clearing aircraft for landing or takeoff is foundational to a secure operating environment, he added. “Safety remains, and must always remain, our highest priority.”

    ABAA officials acknowledged that mahogany trees hold deep sentimental value for many residents of Antigua and Barbuda, and stress that the decision to remove the three specimens was not made hastily. Before finalizing the plan, the authority brought in key partners including the Forestry Unit under the Ministry of Agriculture and the national Environment Division to conduct a comprehensive ecological and structural assessment.

    The assessment, confirmed by Senior Forestry Officer Adriel Thibou, found clear evidence of termite infestation and widespread structural deterioration that has severely weakened the trees, making them far more likely to topple during storm events. Beyond the aviation visibility issue, the assessment determined that the trees’ location, height, and wide canopy encroach on protected aviation safety zones, creating unacceptable risk for aircraft operations, highway users, airport staff, and traveling passengers. That risk is amplified by the trees’ position just meters from the highway, where a falling tree could cause catastrophic road accidents during severe weather.

    “ Their removal is necessary to eliminate unacceptable hazards, protect human life, and preserve the operational integrity of VC Bird International Airport,” the assessment report concluded. “This approach aligns with both international aviation safety standards and local forestry best practices, reflecting a precautionary principle that prioritizes safety, visibility, and unobstructed airspace.”

    In a nod to the trees’ cultural and ecological value, ABAA has partnered with the Forestry Unit and Environment Division to offset the removal. The authority will fund the replanting of several new trees in pre-vetted, environmentally appropriate locations across the country. Additionally, the wood harvested from the removed mahogany trees will be repurposed into functional and commemorative public features that preserve the trees’ connection to the airport site’s natural history.

    Samuel emphasized that the compensatory measures reflect ABAA’s long-standing commitment to environmental stewardship, even as aviation safety takes top priority. “While aviation safety is foremost, we also must ensure that our operations are guided by sustainable and proper environmental practices,” he said.

    To minimize disruption to road traffic during Sunday’s removal operation, ABAA has coordinated with the Police Traffic Department, which will be on site from 6:30 a.m. to oversee traffic flow and avoid major delays along Sir George Walter Highway.

  • DLP demands urgent action over ‘hazardous’ St Peter highway flooding

    DLP demands urgent action over ‘hazardous’ St Peter highway flooding

    As Barbados enters the high-risk Atlantic hurricane season, the country’s opposition Democratic Labour Party (DLP) is sounding the alarm over persistent, dangerous flooding on a key thoroughfare in St Peter, pushing for immediate government intervention to address the growing public safety threat.

    In an official statement issued Saturday, DLP’s spokesperson for Housing, Transport and Works Ian Griffith laid out the severity of the issue: even moderate rainfall is enough to submerge the KNR Husbands Highway at the Heywoods Road intersection under multiple inches of standing water. What makes the situation more alarming, Griffith noted, is that the flooding problem has worsened dramatically since construction kicked off on a neighboring tourism development project.

    Griffith emphasized that the chronic flooding is far more than an inconvenience for motorists and local residents—it is a direct hazard to public safety. Standing water pooled across a major highway raises the likelihood of traffic accidents, causes gradual but costly damage to passing vehicles, and can even block critical access routes for emergency responders responding to crises.

    While Griffith explicitly acknowledged that no definitive causal link has been proven between the adjacent tourism construction and the worsening flooding, he argued that urgent transparency and scrutiny are needed around the project’s planning and regulatory approval process. Key unanswered questions remain, he said: did planners and regulators properly evaluate the capacity of the highway’s existing drainage infrastructure to handle altered stormwater patterns before greenlighting the development? Were sufficient stormwater management controls required as a condition of the project’s approval?

    With the Atlantic hurricane season bringing elevated risks of heavy rainfall and extreme weather to Barbados, the DLP warned that putting off repairs and investigations creates an unacceptable danger for local residents, business owners, and daily commuters. The opposition party is calling on the Ministry of Transport and Works to immediately launch a full engineering assessment of the highway’s drainage network, as well as a formal investigation into whether the tourism development has changed natural stormwater flow patterns in the area.

    “Preventative action is always more effective and less costly than responding after flooding has caused damage or injury,” Griffith said, pushing back against any delay in addressing the issue. He added that the public should not be forced to wait for a severe tropical storm or hurricane to expose critical flaws in the country’s infrastructure before decision-makers take corrective steps.

    The DLP has confirmed it will continue closely monitoring the flooding situation and is urging national authorities to prioritize the issue as a top public safety matter.

  • ECCB Approves Additional EC$25 Million to Boost Regional Food Security

    ECCB Approves Additional EC$25 Million to Boost Regional Food Security

    During its 113th regular meeting hosted in Dominica on July 10, 2026, the Monetary Council of the Eastern Caribbean Central Bank (ECCB) has greenlit an additional EC$25 million grant dedicated to advancing food and nutrition security across the Eastern Caribbean Currency Union (ECCU). This new injection of funding brings the central bank’s total pledged investment for this critical regional initiative to EC$50 million, doubling its original commitment.

    The latest allocation builds on an initial EC$25 million grant approved by the Council back in February 2025, and anchors food and nutrition security as a core pillar of the ECCB’s signature “Big Push” development strategy. The overarching agenda, which centers on accelerating structural economic transformation through coordinated regional collaboration, identifies seven key strategic priorities for the bloc. Beyond food security, these priorities include expanding human capital development, bolstering energy resilience, driving digital transformation, advancing universal financial inclusion and wealth building, growing the sustainable tourism sector, and upgrading regional trade logistics and cross-border connectivity.

    In its official communiqué released following the gathering, the Council emphasized that the expanded funding package is targeted at cutting the ECCU’s heavy reliance on imported food staples, while strengthening the overall shock resilience of the bloc’s national economies. Eastern Caribbean nations have long faced elevated exposure to global food price volatility and supply chain disruptions, risks that have been amplified by recent global crises and climate-related shocks to domestic production.

    “Recognising the strategic importance of food and nutrition security to The Big Push, the Monetary Council approved an additional grant of EC$25 million to support member governments’ ongoing efforts in this strategic priority area,” the communiqué read. The Council further noted that this sustained, increasing investment underscores the institution’s unwavering commitment to building long-term economic resilience across the region, and directly addresses the systemic vulnerability the bloc faces from disruptions to cross-border food supply chains.

    Regional policy leaders frame the investment as a critical step toward advancing food sovereignty, lowering household food costs, and creating more stable, self-sufficient local agricultural sectors across the ECCU’s member states.

  • Minister Michael Joseph Visits Leading Chinese Cardiac Centre to Advance Chest Pain Centre Initiative for Antigua and Barbuda

    Minister Michael Joseph Visits Leading Chinese Cardiac Centre to Advance Chest Pain Centre Initiative for Antigua and Barbuda

    In a strategic move aimed at upgrading the Caribbean nation’s cardiac healthcare infrastructure, Minister Michael Joseph of Antigua and Barbuda has undertaken an official visit to one of China’s preeminent cardiac care centers. The trip forms part of a broader bilateral collaboration to launch and scale a national Chest Pain Centre Initiative, a program designed to cut response times for acute cardiac events and reduce mortality rates from heart disease across Antigua and Barbuda.

    During the visit, Minister Joseph held in-depth discussions with leading Chinese cardiothoracic surgeons, hospital administrators and public health policy advisors. The delegation from Antigua and Barbuda toured the facility’s state-of-the-art emergency chest pain units, observed cutting-edge interventional cardiology procedures, and studied the center’s standardized protocols for rapid diagnosis and treatment of myocardial infarctions and other life-threatening cardiac conditions.

    According to statements from the ministerial delegation, the initiative addresses a growing public health challenge in Antigua and Barbuda, where cardiovascular disease has emerged as one of the leading causes of death in recent years. Currently, the nation lacks specialized, centralized chest pain care facilities, forcing many patients to seek costly treatment abroad or face extended wait times for emergency care. The new initiative aims to address this gap by building local capacity, training domestic medical staff, and establishing a network of accredited chest pain centers across the country’s main islands.

    Chinese officials at the cardiac center expressed commitment to supporting the project, offering opportunities for joint training exchanges, knowledge sharing of best practices, and technical guidance for facility design and protocol development. Both sides noted that the collaboration builds on existing diplomatic and public health partnerships between China and Antigua and Barbuda, demonstrating how targeted international cooperation can deliver tangible improvements to community health outcomes.

    Minister Joseph emphasized that the visit marks a critical milestone in advancing the initiative, with the next steps focusing on drafting a national implementation plan, securing funding commitments, and launching the first round of medical staff training programs in collaboration with the Chinese center. The project is expected to improve access to life-saving cardiac care for all residents of Antigua and Barbuda, reduce the economic burden of out-of-country medical treatment, and strengthen the nation’s overall public health system.

  • Ali shows off young professionals saying govt backed their high-tech poultry farm

    Ali shows off young professionals saying govt backed their high-tech poultry farm

    On Saturday, 11 July 2026, Guyanese President Irfaan Ali moved to reframe public discourse around ongoing questions about his personal 75-acre farm along the Linden-Soesdyke Highway by showcasing a government-backed high-tech poultry initiative led by young Guyanese entrepreneurs in Region Three (West Demerara-Essequibo Islands).

    In a public Facebook post accompanying a video of the new project, President Ali explained that the cutting-edge tunnel-house poultry farm was developed through a public-private partnership: the cohort of young professionals contributed 10% of the total project cost, with the government providing targeted support and direct guidance from the President himself. The project aligns with the administration’s stated core priorities: empowering youth-led entrepreneurship, bolstering national food security, and expanding inclusive economic opportunity through modernized agricultural practices.

    The project video includes testimonials from two participating entrepreneurs, who described how the President’s encouragement and formal government support made their investment in the innovative farming venture possible. Starting from an initial flock of 20,000 birds, the operation has already begun rapidly scaling its production, with President Ali framing the model as a blueprint for innovative, efficient, and sustainable poultry production across Guyana.

    Even as the President highlights the new youth agriculture initiative, persistent public scrutiny continues to surround his personal private farm at Long Creek on the same Linden-Soesdyke Highway. While Ali has repeatedly denied that his private farm received any preferential treatment or special government exemptions due to his position as head of state, hundreds of commenters on his Saturday Facebook post renewed calls for full transparency around the land acquisition process, financing for the farm’s developed infrastructure, which includes a paved earthen access road and upgraded electricity distribution directly to the property.

    Many commenters pressed for immediate public disclosure, with local resident Robert Bacchus Bynoe asking, “Sir when can Guyanese see and access all of the ‘Public Information’ about your farm? Tell us where to look?” Another commenter, Patrick Ali, emphasized that the public would not drop the issue, writing: “WE WANT THIS ISSUE .. THE FARM GATE MATTER .. ALL DOCUMENTS REQUIRED TO SHOW HOW ALI OWN THE FARM ? WE WILL NOT TURN OUR BACK ON THIS MATTER.”

    Not all public reaction focused on the controversy, however. A number of commenters offered praise for the new youth poultry project. Rhonda Samuels Benjamin noted, “The idea is great I’m interested in having same. The technology is excellent and a great business venture,” while Fato Sharma commented, “Great to know that His Excellency Dr Mohamed Irfan Ali was always working with young professionals and will continue doing so.”

    The scrutiny of the President’s farm first emerged after opposition leader Azruddin Mohamed publicly revealed details of the property. Two days after his initial revelation, Mohamed visited the neighboring Long Creek community overnight to highlight a stark equity issue: the community adjacent to the President’s farm still lacks access to consistent electricity supply.

    Earlier on the same Saturday that he showcased the youth poultry project, President Ali posted separately about infrastructure development in the Waiakabra community along the Linden-Soesdyke Highway. He highlighted that his administration has directed significant investment to the area, including funding through Guyana’s national Low Carbon Development Strategy (LCDS), to upgrade public infrastructure, improve community facilities, generate local economic opportunity, and raise resident quality of life.

    Mohamed has alleged that developing the President’s private farm — which includes poultry, cattle, sheep, goat and fish operations alongside a personal farmhouse — cost an estimated 2.2 billion Guyanese dollars. President Ali has yet to publicly confirm the development cost, exact acreage of the property, or any additional personal financial details, noting that all required asset disclosures have already been submitted confidentially to the country’s Integrity Commission. Under Guyana’s constitution, the sitting President is protected from civil or criminal legal action during their time in office, a provision that has added to public debate around accountability for the personal property.

  • New top cop outlines vision for modern, accountable police service

    New top cop outlines vision for modern, accountable police service

    At her inaugural ceremonial parade held Friday, newly installed Commissioner of Police Sonia Boyce has laid out an ambitious vision for the Barbados Police Service (TBPS), framing her tenure around a “renewal of purpose” that targets rising sophisticated crime, cracks down on internal officer misconduct, and modernizes the island nation’s law enforcement infrastructure for the 21st century.

    Addressing a crowd of senior government officials, judiciary members, and uniformed officers that included acting President Dr Jeffrey Gibson, Prime Minister Mia Mottley, and former Police Commissioner Richard Boyce, Boyce opened by acknowledging the unprecedented challenges facing modern law enforcement in Barbados. She noted that criminal activity is rapidly evolving, growing more transnational, technically advanced, and violent than ever before, while shifting digital landscapes have rewrote both how offences are committed and how investigators must approach solving them. Compounding these changes, she added, are rising public expectations for transparent, accountable policing — expectations she said the service is ready to meet.

    At the core of Boyce’s agenda is a sweeping crackdown on internal misconduct, paired with a commitment to building a culture of ethical service. She emphasized that the authority carried by a police badge comes with non-negotiable responsibility, making clear that unprofessional or illegal behavior by officers will not be accepted under her leadership. To back this pledge, she announced plans to overhaul internal systems for supervision, performance evaluation, and disciplinary action, building frameworks that are fair, transparent, and timely. Alongside accountability, she also promised a clear system to recognize and reward officers who deliver exemplary service, with the goal of making ethical conduct the default expectation across the force, not an exception.

    To counter increasingly complex criminal networks operating in and around Barbados, Boyce outlined a major push for digital transformation of the TBPS, calling the upgrade no longer a discretionary improvement but an existential necessity. Key investments will focus on expanding intelligence-led policing operations, rolling out advanced data analysis tools, and updating case management systems to streamline investigations. The service will also redirect regular operational resources to prioritize curbing violent crime and firearms-related offenses, which have emerged as pressing public safety concerns. Upgrades will extend to core forensic capabilities and emergency response infrastructure, ensuring the force is equipped to match the technical sophistication of modern criminal groups.

    Boyce also stressed that sustainable public safety cannot be achieved by police alone, calling for deeper, more consistent engagement between officers and local communities. She explained that public trust — the most valuable asset a police service can hold — is built through small, daily interactions: a patrol officer taking time to listen to resident concerns, a station sergeant treating complainants with patience and respect. That trust, she noted, must be earned through consistent, fair action rather than demanded from the public.

    In a move that prioritizes the well-being of frontline officers, Boyce pledged to be a fierce advocate for rank-and-file personnel, promising expanded support for physical safety, mental health care, and professional development across the force. She argued that a police service that invests in caring for its own members is far better positioned to protect and serve the broader Barbadian public. To formalize this mutual commitment, Boyce proposed a pact of accountability and support between leadership and officers: she expects commitment, professionalism, and accountability from every member of the force, and in return, she will lead with transparency, listen to frontline concerns, advocate for critical resources, and keep officer welfare, safety, and development at the top of her policy agenda.

    Closing her address, Boyce issued a direct appeal to all Barbadian citizens, framing public safety as a shared collective responsibility. “Your safety is our priority, and your trust is our greatest asset,” she said, reaffirming the TBPS’s commitment to earning that trust through consistent, respectful, and fair action across every level of the service.

  • Ezra, Kisha Kay capture Soca Monarch titles

    Ezra, Kisha Kay capture Soca Monarch titles

    On a historic Friday night at the Saint Lucia Athletics Association (SAB) facility in Vigie, the 2026 Soca Monarch competition delivered two landmark victories, breaking long-standing barriers and capping a 12-year comeback journey for two standout performers.

    In the hotly contested Groovy Soca division, Kisha Kay etched her name into the history books as the first woman ever to claim the Groovy Soca Monarch title. She secured the crown in one of the tightest competitions in recent memory, finishing with a total of 388 points — just a single point ahead of first-time contender Deevon, who claimed second place. Imran Nerdy, the defending Groovy Soca Monarch, finished third with 385 points, while veteran competitor Arthur Allain took fourth place with 368 points to round out the top four.

    Along with her historic title, Kisha Kay took home a top prize of EC$40,000 for her win. Second-place finisher Deevon received EC$30,000, with Imran Nerdy collecting EC$20,000 for his third-place finish and Arthur Allain earning EC$15,000 for fourth.

    The drama continued in the Power Soca Monarch division, where Ezra D’Funmachine completed a stunning 12-year comeback to reclaim the title he last won over a decade ago. Like the Groovy division, the Power Soca competition was decided by a razor-thin margin: Ezra notched a winning score of 384 points, edging out runner-up Shemmy J by just one point. Shemmy J finished with 383 points to take second place, while the trio of Tension, Bobo and Samo secured third with 361 points. The collaborative entry from Sedale, HP and Deevon finished fourth with 344 points.

    Ezra matched Kisha Kay’s prize winnings, taking home EC$40,000 for his first-place finish. Shemmy J received EC$30,000 for second, Tension, Bobo and Samo earned EC$20,000 for third, and Sedale, HP and Deevon collected EC$15,000 for their fourth-place showing.

    In a notable upset, the defending Power Soca Monarch duo of Dezral and Jardel failed to crack the top four in their bid to retain the title, missing out on a spot in the winners’ circle after returning to compete.

    Photographs of both new champions were captured by photographer McAllister Hunt, documenting the historic night for Caribbean soca music.