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  • Derde helft WK 2026: Op dag 10 – Nederland favoriet tegen Zweden

    Derde helft WK 2026: Op dag 10 – Nederland favoriet tegen Zweden

    As the 2026 FIFA World Cup enters its tenth matchday, four high-stakes group stage encounters are set to take center stage across North America, while off-pitch developments and early knockout qualification have already begun to shape the narrative of the expanded 48-team tournament.

    The headline fixture of the day will see European heavyweights Netherlands and Sweden face off in Houston, Texas, kicking off at 14:00 local time. The two sides have met 20 times previously, most recently in 2017 World Cup qualifying, where the Dutch secured a 2-0 win. Sweden has only claimed one victory in its last seven matches against the Netherlands, and despite an opening-round win over Tunisia, the Oranje enter the clash as clear favorites.

    Following the Houston clash, Germany will take on Ivory Coast in Toronto, Canada, at 17:00 local time. The two nations have only met once before, a 2-2 friendly draw back in 2009. Germany boasts a strong historical record against African sides at World Cup finals, having lost just once in eight previous meetings. While the four-time champions are favorites to claim three points, Ivory Coast is chasing history, aiming to secure its second ever World Cup victory at a single tournament.

    The evening fixture will see Ecuador face CONCACAF side Curaçao in Kansas City at 21:00 local time, in what will be the first ever meeting between the two nations. Ecuador heads into the match unbeaten in its last 13 encounters against CONCACAF opponents, with seven wins and six draws, making them the heavy favorites. Even so, the tournament has already delivered a string of unexpected results, leaving the underdog Curaçao side with reason to believe they can pull off an upset. The final match of matchday 10 will kick off at 01:00 on June 21 in Monterrey, as Tunisia takes on Asian side Japan.

    Japan has dominated the head-to-head record against Tunisia, claiming five wins in six previous encounters, with Tunisia’s only win coming in a 2022 friendly match. Based on Japan’s strong performances through the opening round of group matches, the Blue Samurai are widely expected to claim all three points. Ahead of the crucial clash, Tunisia manager Hervé Renard, appointed after a 5-1 opening-round defeat to Sweden, has urged his side to draw inspiration from Cape Verde’s surprise draw against Spain, noting that underdogs can compete if they stay organized and disciplined. Tunisia must avoid defeat to keep their knockout qualification hopes alive.

    Off the pitch, a number of major developments have already emerged from the tournament in recent days. On Wednesday, the United States men’s national team secured a 2-0 victory over Australia, booking their place in the knockout stage even without star captain Christian Pulisic, who missed the match with a calf injury. Paraguay’s later win over Turkey also confirmed the United States finished top of Group D. The result highlighted the growing depth of the US squad, who comfortably qualified despite being without their leading attacking threat. That result also saw Turkey and Haiti become the first teams eliminated from the expanded 48-team tournament.

    In other Group E action, Brazil moved one step closer to knockout qualification with a dominant 3-0 win over Haiti. Matheus Cunha scored a brace, while Vinicius Junior contributed a goal and an assist to seal the win. Haiti’s defeat ended their qualification hopes, and Brazil manager Carlo Ancelotti confirmed that star forward Neymar is on track to recover from injury in time for the side’s final group stage match against Scotland.

    Controversy has emerged following Algeria’s 3-0 defeat to Argentina, with Algerian officials confirming they have filed an official complaint to FIFA over multiple controversial refereeing decisions in the match. The complaint centers on an early incident where Lionel Messi appeared to catch Algerian captain Aissa Mandi on the calf from behind, but received no card or punishment, before Messi went on to score a hattrick. Algeria also raised concerns over an unpunished foul on one of their players by Argentina midfielder Alexis Mac Allister in the second half.

    A separate political controversy emerged when the U.S. Department of Homeland Security linked the USMNT’s knockout qualification to an immigration policy message. Ahead of the Australia match, DHS shared a social media graphic featuring three American players with the slogan “Defend the homeland. One nation. One team.” After the win, the department shared a second image of the team in front of a border fence captioned “Build the wall.” The posts drew widespread attention, as nearly half of the 26 players in the US 2026 World Cup squad are first-generation Americans or have close family ties abroad, and six players were born outside of the United States.

    Other offbeat news from the tournament includes the viral rise of Osito, an eight-year-old Mexican rescue dog who has captured fans’ hearts across social media. Dressed in a Mexico national team shirt and sunglasses, Osito went viral after he was spotted arriving at the tournament’s opening match in the basket of his owner’s cargo bike. Norwegian fans have also drawn attention for their traditional Viking chants, which have been echoing through New York’s Times Square as the country celebrates its first World Cup appearance in 28 years. And in a historic moment for tournament rules, Paraguay midfielder Miguel Almirón became the first player to receive a red card under the tournament’s new new mouth-covering rule, after covering his mouth during an altercation with Turkey’s Mert Muldur in first-half stoppage time. The VAR team confirmed the referee’s decision to issue the straight red card.

    With ten days of play completed, the race for knockout spots continues to intensify, with matchday 10 set to deliver more decisive results in the expanded 2026 World Cup.

  • 115 Apply to Represent PUP in 2027 Municipal Elections

    115 Apply to Represent PUP in 2027 Municipal Elections

    Belize’s main political organization, the People’s United Party (PUP), has wrapped up its candidate application period for the upcoming 2027 national municipal elections, closing nominations to all contenders as the party moves to the next phase of candidate selection. Scheduled to take place on March 3, 2027, the municipal elections will fill leadership and council seats across all nine of Belize’s local municipal jurisdictions, and PUP’s call for potential candidates drew widespread interest from communities across the country.

    According to official statements released by the party, a total of 115 Belizeans submitted completed applications to run under the PUP banner in next year’s local elections. The breakdown of applications shows that 15 prospective candidates put their names forward for the highly contested mayoral positions, while the remaining 100 applications came from individuals aiming to secure seats on local town and city councils spread across the nation’s nine municipalities.

    With the application window now formally closed, the process of selecting the party’s official slate will shift to PUP’s internal governing bodies. First up, the party’s National Campaign Committee will launch a comprehensive vetting process to screen all 115 applicants, reviewing their qualifications, community standing, alignment with party platforms, and eligibility to run for public office. Once the vetting period concludes and the committee produces its shortlist of recommended candidates, PUP’s National Executive will convene for formal deliberations before making the final decisions on which candidates will advance to appear on the PUP ticket in the March 2027 polls.

  • OPINION: Breaking the Deadlock

    OPINION: Breaking the Deadlock

    Collective bargaining stands as a foundational legal process governing negotiations between employers and labor unions, the recognized representative bodies that advocate on behalf of worker interests. Rooted in international labor standards, the International Labour Organization’s Convention No. 98 enshrines workers’ right to collectively negotiate core employment terms including compensation, working hours and employment conditions – a right that governments are legally and ethically obligated to protect and uphold.

    By design, collective bargaining is built on the principle of mutual good faith: both parties enter discussions with the shared goal of reaching a mutually acceptable compromise, rather than forcing through outcomes dictated by just one side. Despite this norm, unilateral action remains a common go-to for governments when they act as the employer for public sector workers. Typically, this approach is justified by claims that negotiations have reached an unbreakable deadlock – a stalemate in which neither side is willing to make further concessions to bridge gaps over compensation, bringing all discussions to a complete halt.

    Historical patterns of government involvement in these negotiations reveal a repeated tendency toward heavy-handed, top-down resolution. When deadlocks are declared, governments often bring the dispute to national parliament for a vote, where ruling-majority lawmakers vote to impose the government’s preferred compensation terms. Many modern labor rights observers characterize this approach as little more than a bullying tactic, raising fundamental ethical and legal questions about the legitimacy of this method for breaking negotiation deadlocks.

    Critics argue that forcing one party’s will onto the other irreparably damages the foundational trust required for productive collective bargaining. In the private sector, the standard practice for resolving deadlocked negotiations is to bring in an independent third-party mediator to facilitate compromise – a solution that is rarely pursued for public sector wage disputes, despite its proven track record.

    While negotiations can certainly grow contentious, many deadlocks are avoidable when parties avoid rigid, inflexible stances. Outcomes are far more likely to be fair and sustainable when both sides center shared goals, rely on objective, data-backed criteria, and remain open to targeted concessions. Formal legal definitions characterize a true deadlock as an irreconcilable standoff, often when opposing blocs are equally divided and unable to take any action – a scenario that is rarely invoked as a legitimate outcome in good-faith bargaining.

    Labor unions have well-documented, strong objections to the use of unilateral legislation to settle wage negotiations, for a host of compelling reasons. First, this approach directly undermines the entire framework of collective bargaining and erodes unions’ ability to secure fair compensation for their members. One-size-fits-all legislation eliminates the flexibility needed to adjust compensation to match rising inflation and address unique needs of different public sectors, while also sidelining workers’ demands and stripping away their right to strike for improved working terms.

    Beyond weakening worker power, this unilateral approach also inflicts lasting harm on democratic engagement in the workplace. By removing workers’ voices from the negotiation process and imposing a top-down outcome, the government effectively denies workers a fundamental human right enshrined in international labor standards. This analysis comes from Dennis De Peiza, a Labour Relations and Employment Relations Consultant attached to Regional Management Services Inc.

  • Louisy re-elected SLHTA president, pledges stronger focus on tourism growth

    Louisy re-elected SLHTA president, pledges stronger focus on tourism growth

    The Saint Lucia Hospitality and Tourism Association (SLHTA) has confirmed that Erwin Louisy, Managing Director of destination management company Barefoot Holidays DMC, has won an uncontested second term as the organization’s president, set to serve through 2028. The announcement was made during the association’s 62nd Annual General Meeting, which convened Wednesday at Saint Lucia’s Harbor Club, where vice presidential candidate Karolin Troubetzkoy, representing the Anse Chastanet and Jade Mountain resorts, was also re-elected without opposition.

    In remarks following her confirmation, Louisy opened by expressing heartfelt gratitude to members of the association, the sitting Board of Directors, industry allies and public sector partners for the continued trust placed in her leadership. Recounting her early career crossroads, she shared that she ultimately chose tourism over paths in arts and fashion, a decision she has never regretted.

    Louisy laid out a clear policy agenda for her new term, centered on strengthening SLHTA’s internal operations, elevating the quality of services delivered to member businesses, and securing the organization’s long-term financial and institutional sustainability. Key priorities under her leadership will include identifying and developing new streams of revenue for the association, conducting a comprehensive review of the current membership structure, and expanding the tangible value that membership delivers to stakeholders across Saint Lucia’s tourism sector.

    Beyond internal reforms, Louisy emphasized that SLHTA will remain a leading advocacy voice for the Caribbean nation’s tourism private sector. The association will push for deeper cross-sector collaboration between private and public stakeholders, stronger interconnected economic linkages across the tourism ecosystem, and elevated industry-wide service standards. It will also advocate for policy frameworks that boost the sector’s global competitiveness, covering critical areas from expanded international airlift access and accelerated renewable energy adoption to targeted destination marketing, streamlined business regulations and enhanced public safety.

    Institutional upgrades to key tourism-aligned public and private entities will also feature on SLHTA’s agenda, Louisy confirmed, including improvements to the Saint Lucia Hyperbaric Chamber and the Tourism Enhancement Fund. “The year ahead will require intentional focus, coordinated collaboration and decisive action to move our sector forward,” Louisy told attendees. “SLHTA must stay rooted as a platform for collective progress and a catalyst for inclusive growth, working to ensure that tourism expansion delivers tangible benefits to our members, local communities and Saint Lucia’s entire national economy.”

    This year’s AGM carried the overarching theme “Powering the Growth of Tourism – Utilities: Essential for Saint Lucia’s Future”, hosted by presenting sponsor Liberty Business with additional support from gold sponsor Saint Lucia Electricity Services Limited (LUCELEC) and bronze sponsor the Saint Lucia Tourism Authority (SLTA). The gathering brought together a cross-section of tourism industry stakeholders, senior government representatives and private sector partners to deliberate on the most pressing barriers to sustained growth and competitiveness for Saint Lucia’s core economic sector.

    deliberations centered on high-priority infrastructure and utility needs, from long-term water security and resilient energy systems to reliable telecommunications coverage, industry-wide advocacy priorities and broader infrastructure upgrades. Attendees universally emphasized the critical need to build robust, modern systems across these areas to support the pipeline of anticipated tourism development and expansion projects across the island.

  • Light & Power at 115 toasts staff

    Light & Power at 115 toasts staff

    On a celebratory Friday at the University of the West Indies Cave Hill Campus’ Errol Barrow Centre for Creative Imagination, Barbados’ sole electricity utility, Barbados Light & Power Company (BL&P), capped off 115 years of continuous service to the island nation with a dual milestone celebration: its second annual Luminosity Awards honoring standout staff, and the announcement of a newly completed collective bargaining agreement with its employee union.

    Gathering under the event theme “Blueprints of Excellence”, the ceremony centered the people who have kept BL&P running reliably for more than a century, moving beyond corporate milestone speeches to lift up the individual and team contributions that underpin the island’s critical energy infrastructure. BL&P Managing Director Roger Blackman opened the event by tying the two major developments together, noting that the successful conclusion of union negotiations fell on the exact date of the utility’s 115th birthday.

    “This week, as we mark our 115th anniversary, we also reached another important milestone—the successful conclusion of our union negotiations actually on our birthday,” Blackman told the assembled crowd of staff, guests, and leadership. “It is a reminder that progress is built not only through infrastructure and investment, but through dialogue, partnership, and respect.”

    Blackman emphasized that BL&P’s 11-decade track record of service is no accident, but the product of consistent, deliberate effort from every member of the organization. “Excellence at Light & Power is not accidental. It is reflected in our commitment to safety and the discipline required to maintain our electricity system. Today is about recognition, but it is also about reinforcement—reinforcing the culture we value, reinforcing the standards we expect, and reinforcing the excellence we will need as we continue to build our future.”

    Regional communications strategist Aprille Thomas delivered the event’s keynote address, shining a light on the often-unrecognized work of frontline and behind-the-scenes energy workers. Thomas pointed out that essential services like electricity only draw public attention when failures occur, making intentional internal recognition all the more critical. “When everything is working perfectly, nobody notices,” Thomas observed. “But the minute something goes wrong, everybody remembers your name, where you work, and where you live. Building on the idea that success is often silent, I think days like today are so important because it is a moment in time that you take to just recognise yourselves and the work that you have done. Your success may be silent, but your impact is not.”

    Thomas also shared thoughtful messages written by current BL&P employees to their successors who will hold the same roles 50 years in the future, with recurring themes of prioritizing workplace safety, embracing evolving energy technology, and centering people as the organization’s greatest asset. Echoing one submission, she noted: “The infrastructure we build, the technology we deploy… are important, but they will never be more important than the people who choose every day to be here, to contribute and to care.”

    Following a musical performance by eight-year-old Arturo Tappin III, the son of renowned Barbadian jazz saxophonist Arturo Tappin, the ceremony moved to the presentation of awards across 10 categories honoring individual and team excellence. Top honors went to a slate of standout employees: Communications Advisor Cassandra Crawford took home the Leadership Award, while Network Administrator Barrington Clarke claimed the Innovation Award. Digital Experience Administrator Tamara Browne and Integration Architect Richelle Bowen shared the Customer Service Excellence Award, AMI Operator Dian Brathwaite received the Health & Wellness Award, and Geographical Information Systems Assistant Charles Blenman was honored with the Outstanding Safety Award for a quick intervention that prevented a potentially fatal accident during a joint excavation project with the Barbados Water Authority, where he identified a buried live cable before work proceeded. The Team Spirit Award went to the Operations Generation team, made up of Liu Ross, Rodney Fagan, Damon Straughan, Shamar Atkinson, Kerwyn Price, and Shaquan Jones, for their outstanding collaborative coordination on core projects.

    In addition to competitive awards, the ceremony also honored long-tenured staff, inducting 11 employees into BL&P’s 25-Year Club, with special recognition for workers who have hit 30 and 35 years of uninterrupted service with the utility.

    Closing the event, BL&P leadership framed the 2025 award winners’ work as a blueprint for the utility’s next chapter, as it transitions to renewable energy sources and modernizes Barbados’ national electric grid.

    BL&P’s history stretches back to 1911, when the first commercial electricity supply was launched from a Garrison power station serving Bridgetown and its surrounding neighborhoods. The company was formally incorporated in 1955, when it took over the assets of the earlier Barbados Electric Supply Corporation, and has grown to become the island’s only electricity provider. Today, BL&P operates as a subsidiary of Canada-based energy firm Emera Inc., following the divestiture of the National Insurance Scheme’s stake during the Frendel Stuart administration.

  • Terrifying CCTV Footage shows the exact moment cyclist was struck down by out of control Vitz

    Terrifying CCTV Footage shows the exact moment cyclist was struck down by out of control Vitz

    Newly released closed-circuit television footage has documented the terrifying seconds leading up to and including a collision between an out-of-control compact sedan and a cyclist traveling through a busy suburban intersection in Queensland, Australia, earlier this week. The 10-second clip, obtained by local law enforcement from a nearby traffic camera, shows the silver Toyota Vitz suddenly veering off its intended lane around 8:15 a.m. during peak morning commuting hours. Witnesses reported the vehicle appeared to suffer a mechanical failure that caused the driver to lose steering control, sending it jumping the curb and striking the cyclist, who was obeying all traffic signals at the time of the incident. Emergency response teams arrived at the scene within six minutes, administering immediate first aid before airlifting the injured cyclist to the nearest major trauma center. As of the latest update, medical officials confirm the cyclist remains in intensive care in critical but stable condition, while the 62-year-old driver of the Vitz escaped with only minor cuts and bruising. Local transportation authorities have launched a full investigation into the incident, focusing on whether mechanical issues, driver error, or poor road maintenance contributed to the crash. The footage has been shared with local road safety organizations, who plan to use anonymized clips in upcoming public awareness campaigns to highlight the vulnerability of cyclists sharing roads with motor vehicles. Community leaders have also called for a review of intersection safety infrastructure in the area, including the potential addition of protected bike lanes to separate two-wheeled commuters from vehicle traffic.

  • Fishers face rising fuel costs as region explores fleet decarbonisation

    Fishers face rising fuel costs as region explores fleet decarbonisation

    Across the Caribbean’s coastal fishing communities, small-scale independent fishers are facing an unprecedented economic squeeze, as surging diesel prices devour their revenue and a region-wide push to decarbonize fishing fleets leaves them grasping for clear support to navigate the transition. For the working fishermen based at Bridgetown’s fisheries complex, daily operations have become a high-stakes gamble: a single voyage out to open water now requires thousands of dollars in upfront fuel investment, with no guarantee of a catch to offset the cost. This crippling expense has pushed livelihoods to the edge, pushing many operators into cycles of debt that force them to raise retail fish prices just to break even.

    The crisis has moved to the top of the regional policy agenda, driven by the Caribbean Regional Fisheries Mechanism (CRFM), which is moving forward with plans to lay the groundwork for a low-carbon future for the sector. The intergovernmental body has launched a search for specialized consultants to carry out decarbonization assessments of the region’s entire fishing fleet, with the end goal of drafting a comprehensive regional strategy and actionable implementation plan. The initiative comes in response to growing global pressure to cut carbon emissions across all maritime industries, a mandate that fishing sector leaders cannot ignore.

    For the fishermen who make their living on the water, the economic case for moving away from costly fossil fuels is already self-evident—even as the practical path forward remains shrouded in uncertainty. Veteran fisher Percy summed up the volatile, constantly rising overheads that have become the industry’s new normal, noting that his annual diesel expenses have remained consistently in the thousands of dollars, shifting between $6,782 and $8,200 in recent years. Another long-time fisherman, Donville “Dox” Brathwaite, echoed this frustration, explaining that he currently carries an outstanding $7,000 diesel bill just to cover his next scheduled voyage. “Fuel costs can eat up as much as 40 percent of a trip’s total revenue,” Brathwaite explained, a burden that leaves little room for profit or reinvestment.

    While most fishermen welcome the prospect of new energy-efficient and alternative fuel technologies that could cut their long-term operational costs, they warn that current policy planning lacks the concrete support structures needed to make the transition a reality for small-scale operators. Unlike large commercial fishing companies, independent small-scale fishers lack the upfront capital required to purchase hybrid engines or adopt low-carbon infrastructure, and they say no clear subsidy programs, training opportunities, or public-private support frameworks have been put in place to close this gap.

    “Right now, the industry is basically on its own,” Brathwaite said, noting that fishers feel abandoned by both government bodies and private sector institutions as they grapple with spiking operating costs. “We don’t just want vague plans for a green future—we need tangible support right now, any support we can get from any source.” Even so, most fishermen remain open to embracing technological change to improve their bottom line. “This is the age of technology,” Brathwaite explained. “If there’s a tool that can cut my costs, make my job easier, and take the pressure off, I’m ready to take it. What we need is help to actually get it.”

    For the CRFM, the biggest test of its upcoming decarbonization strategy will be addressing this gap: crafting a plan that meets global emissions reduction targets while also supporting the small-scale operators that make up the backbone of the Caribbean’s fishing industry. Without targeted investment, subsidies, and capacity building, fishers warn, the green transition could stall before it even leaves the harbor, leaving an already vulnerable industry on the brink of collapse.

  • Police Seize 34 Pounds Of Cannabis During Joint Drug Operation

    Police Seize 34 Pounds Of Cannabis During Joint Drug Operation

    Officials from the Royal Police Force of Antigua and Barbuda and national customs authorities have confiscated a large haul of illegal cannabis following a coordinated anti-drug operation at V.C. Bird International Airport, law enforcement representatives confirmed in an official media statement released June 20, 2026.

    The targeted operation was launched shortly after 3:30 p.m. local time on June 18, carried out by specialized personnel from the police Narcotics Department alongside Customs Enforcement agents at the LIAT Cargo Shed, a key transit point for incoming and outgoing air freight on the island. Forensic processing of the seized contraband confirmed the total weight of the cannabis reached 34 pounds, with law enforcement estimating the haul has a street value of approximately 204,000 Eastern Caribbean dollars.

    As of the latest update, active investigations are continuing to trace the origin of the shipment, identify individuals connected to the alleged trafficking operation, and build a legal case ahead of potential prosecutions. The Royal Police Force emphasized in its release that disrupting cross-border drug networks remains a top priority for local law enforcement, noting the agency is committed to sustaining close collaboration with local, regional, and international partner agencies to counter illicit drug trafficking and other transnational criminal activities that threaten public safety and national security in Antigua and Barbuda.

    Law enforcement officials are calling on members of the public to contribute any information that could advance the ongoing investigation. Members of the community can reach out to the Narcotics Department directly at police headquarters, contact the Criminal Investigations Department via phone at 462-3913 or 462-3914, or submit anonymous tips through the regional Crimestoppers hotline at 800-TIPS (8477).

  • Thieves Cut Fence, Steal Two Horses from Big Creek Farm

    Thieves Cut Fence, Steal Two Horses from Big Creek Farm

    A disturbing theft incident has left a Big Creek farm owner searching for answers and pleading for community help after two horses were taken in an overnight trespassing incident. Chantelle Winter, the property’s owner, told reporters she made the grim discovery on her property Wednesday morning, after intruders cut through a perimeter fence to gain unauthorized access to the pasture where the animals were kept. Beyond the stolen horses, Winter also found an unattended animal trap left on her land, adding another layer of concern to the already alarming incident.

    This is not the first time Winter’s farm has faced equine theft, and that history has amplified fears for the safety of the two missing animals. In previous theft incidents, horses taken from her property were eventually recovered, but they came back with visible injuries, clear signs of mistreatment, and permanent scarring that stayed with them for life. These past experiences have left Winter bracing for the worst and pushing hard for any tips that could bring her horses home safely before harm comes to them.

    Law enforcement and Winter have released detailed descriptions to help the public identify the stolen animals. The first is a 16-hand-tall red chestnut male gelding, while the second is a smaller 14-hand chestnut female with a distinctive blonde mane and tail. Winter is reaching out to every group that may encounter the horses—local residents, neighboring farmers, equine enthusiasts, and travelers passing through the Big Creek area—to keep a close watch for any horses matching this description.

    She is urging anyone who spots an animal matching the profile, or who has any information about suspicious activity on or near the farm overnight, to contact the appropriate authorities immediately. Even small, seemingly insignificant pieces of information could be the key to locating the two horses and holding those responsible for the break-in and theft accountable.

  • Boy, 9, undergoes 2 brain surgeries in 8 months since beating by schoolmate

    Boy, 9, undergoes 2 brain surgeries in 8 months since beating by schoolmate

    Six months after a brutal assault at Kingstown Preparatory School (KPS) left a 9-year-old boy requiring life-saving brain surgery, his single mother is opening up about the relentless physical, emotional, and financial toll of the attack, speaking exclusively to iWitness News on condition of anonymity – a request the family first made in 2025 and has reaffirmed for this reporting.

    The unprovoked attack unfolded on October 22, 2025, when an older student at KPS grabbed the young boy by the head, slammed it into a classroom door, then forced his skull onto unforgiving concrete flooring. At the time, the boy’s mother had been working overseas, and she was forced to cut short her employment and rush back to St. Vincent and the Grenadines (SVG) to authorize urgent medical intervention. What followed was far worse than anyone initially expected: after surgeons at Milton Cato Memorial Hospital (MCMH) performed an emergency craniotomy to access the boy’s brain, they discovered a severe case of meningitis that had left 100 milliliters of pus trapped inside his skull, a complication the family had no idea was developing until the procedure began.

    After five months of intensive recovery, the young boy made his first tentative return to classroom learning on March 2, 2026. That small win was cut short, however, when he was required to leave school just three months later on June 8 to undergo a second major procedure: a cranioplasty to replace a bone segment in his right forehead. The four-hour operation was deemed a clinical success, but full recovery is projected to take a full year. Now discharged from the hospital, the boy requires daily at-home wound dressing from his mother, who has been unable to resume her overseas job to prioritize his care.

    The mother described her emotional state as a constant, exhausting whirlwind of anger, frustration, crippling anxiety, and deep-seated fear, with overwhelming fatigue hanging over every day. “This is the second surgery, and it feels like we’re right back to square one,” she shared. “Some days I feel anxious, while some days are normal; but some days, I feel really tired. I don’t even know how to feel most days – I’m just overwhelmed.”

    The long-term health impacts of the assault have already reshaped the boy’s life permanently. Before the attack, he had no history of seizures or vision issues, but now he experiences regular headaches, blurred vision in his right eye, sudden seizure episodes, and recurring fevers that require lifelong antiseizure medication. While he adapted well to his brief return to school and has kept close friendships with his classmates, his mother notes he has grown far quieter than he was before the attack, rarely opening up about the pain he endures.

    What has compounded the family’s hardship, the mother says, is the complete lack of outreach from key parties that should have stepped forward to support them. Only KPS school leadership and the institution’s guidance counselor have checked in consistently with the family and offered ongoing concern. To date, she has received no communication whatsoever from the Ministry of Education, nor from the family of the older student who carried out the attack. “I don’t understand how something like this can happen and I have never heard from the ministry. This is really hard for me at times,” she said.

    As a single mother currently living with her mother and siblings in SVG, she says she has been left without sustained formal support, and the situation often feels deeply depressing. Still, she expressed sincere gratitude to the community members and organizations that have stepped up to fill the gap: businesswoman Karen Veira of Singer and Oxygen Mas, the leadership of Stubbs Primary School, the Calliaqua Methodist Church, KPS administration, and her immediate family, all of whom have provided critical assistance in the months since the attack.

    Looking ahead, the mother says she cannot predict when her son will be able to resume full-time schooling, as his return to the classroom requires formal medical clearance from his treating neurologist. He has already missed scheduled end-of-term exams due to his second surgery, adding another layer of uncertainty to his education. The mother also confirmed that she plans to consult with a legal advisor to pursue next steps in addressing the assault and its catastrophic aftermath.