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  • Blokkade Straat van Hormuz remt Iran-VS gesprekken

    Blokkade Straat van Hormuz remt Iran-VS gesprekken

    Tensions between Iran and the United States have reached a new boiling point in the Middle East, with Tehran issuing a non-negotiable precondition for the next round of planned peace talks set to take place in Islamabad, multiple informed sources have confirmed. Iran will only participate in the negotiations if Washington immediately lifts its ongoing naval blockade of Iranian ports, a position that has been formally backed by both a senior insider source speaking to Al Jazeera and Iran’s ambassador to Pakistan.

    Pakistan, which is facilitating the proposed talks, has launched intensive diplomatic outreach to push for Iran’s participation: both the country’s prime minister and foreign minister have held direct talks with Iran’s president and foreign minister to persuade Tehran to join the dialogue, while Iran’s Supreme National Security Council convened a special meeting to deliberate on the decision. Despite these diplomatic efforts, deep skepticism persists across Tehran’s leadership. Iranian officials and insiders warn that the talks could drag on indefinitely without any concrete progress on two core demands: the full lifting of crippling Western sanctions and the unfreezing of billions of dollars in Iranian assets held overseas. Additional distrust stems from past negotiation rounds, which were ultimately followed by joint US-Israeli military conflict, leading Iranian sources to frame the current talks proposal as a potential strategic distraction rather than a genuine path to peace. Official Iranian state media has further underscored this position, with the state news agency IRIB confirming that Tehran currently has no plans to attend the next round of talks, while other local outlets point to the ongoing blockade and what they call Washington’s “unreasonable and unrealistic demands” as major barriers to any productive dialogue.

    The diplomatic standoff has been compounded by a recent military escalation, announced by former US President Donald Trump: US forces seized an Iranian cargo vessel, the Touska, as it attempted to pass through the US blockade near the Strait of Hormuz. According to Trump, the vessel’s crew ignored repeated warnings from a US guided-missile destroyer operating in the Gulf of Oman, prompting US forces to damage the ship’s engine room before US Marines boarded and seized the vessel.

    In response to what Tehran calls “armed piracy” by the US, Iran’s military has issued a formal warning of imminent retaliation. A spokesperson for the Khatam Al-Anbiya military command told Iranian news agency ISNA that the Islamic Republic of Iran will respond soon and carry out retribution for the US military action.

    The escalating tensions have already sent shockwaves through global energy markets, driving a sharp spike in international crude oil prices. On Monday, the US benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) jumped 7.5% to settle at $90.17 per barrel, while the global benchmark Brent crude rose 6.5% to hit $96.27 per barrel. Data from shipping analytics firm Kpler shows that more than 20 vessels passed through the Strait of Hormuz on Saturday, the highest daily volume since March 1, including five vessels carrying Iranian cargoes such as oil products and metals.

    The ongoing crisis carries sweeping global economic consequences, as the Strait of Hormuz remains one of the world’s most critical chokepoints for global energy trade. Before the current blockade was imposed, roughly 20% of the world’s daily oil supply passed through the waterway. The recent escalation-driven jump in oil prices is already fueling broader inflationary pressures, pushing up costs for consumers across every continent. Higher fuel prices trigger a cascading effect across global supply chains, raising operating costs for transportation and manufacturing sectors that are core to global economic growth, a dynamic that many economists warn could slow overall global expansion. Oil-importing developing nations are disproportionately vulnerable to these price spikes, with the potential to exacerbate existing domestic political and social unrest. Global markets and businesses are already reacting to the heightened uncertainty, with persistent price increases putting additional pressure on household budgets and pushing up costs for nearly all goods and services. For central banks around the world, this creates a difficult policy balancing act between supporting stagnant economic growth and taming persistent rising prices.

  • Backlash, debate follow viral photo of woman posing on V.C. Bird monument

    Backlash, debate follow viral photo of woman posing on V.C. Bird monument

    A photograph showing a female tourist reclining in a suggestive pose on a national monument honoring Antigua and Barbuda’s founding father has exploded across social media platforms, igniting a fierce, divided public conversation over cultural respect, public reaction, and the protection of heritage sites. The monument stands as a tribute to Sir Vere Cornwall Bird, a towering figure in the Caribbean nation’s modern history who guided Antigua and Barbuda to full independence from colonial rule in 1981. Widely celebrated as the country’s “Father of the Nation,” Bird’s legacy is a core source of national collective pride, imbuing the site with profound historical and cultural meaning that makes the viral photo all the more controversial.

    In the wake of the image’s widespread circulation, thousands of online commenters have voiced sharp condemnation of the tourist’s actions, labeling them disrespectful, offensive, and deeply inappropriate for a site of such national significance. Many argue that sacred national landmarks demand universal reverence from all visitors, regardless of their origin. Some have gone further, demanding formal consequences for the woman, ranging from financial fines to deportation, while others have raised pointed questions about site management, asking how such a photo could be taken without intervention from on-site staff.

    A consistent thread among critical voices emphasizes the responsibility of international travelers: all guests should take the time to research local cultural norms and sensitivities before visiting important heritage sites, especially those honoring revered national figures. This perspective argues that ignorance of local customs is not an excuse for behavior that insults a nation’s shared history.

    However, a growing contingent of online users has pushed back against the widespread outrage, arguing that the response to the incident has been disproportionate. Supporters of this view note that the tourist herself has already taken accountability: she voluntarily removed the original image from her social media and issued a public expression of regret after seeing the scale of the negative reaction. Many argue that the woman’s willingness to correct her mistake should de-escalate the situation, and that the continued mass sharing of the photograph is actually what amplifies the disrespect to Bird’s legacy, rather than addressing it.

    One social media user summed up this position, writing, “She’s a tourist taking a picture by a statue… she was respectful enough to remove the picture after she saw comments.” Multiple commenters have also criticized users who continue to repost the viral image, arguing that the ongoing circulation unnecessarily drags out the controversy and amplifies division for clout. Others have called for a more measured, constructive approach, framing the incident as a learning opportunity to educate travelers on cultural sensitivity rather than a moment for blanket condemnation.

    Some members of the public have even downplayed the entire incident, describing it as either a harmless misstep or a lighthearted mistake that has been blown far out of proportion. This group also points to far more pressing systemic issues facing Antigua and Barbuda that deserve far more public attention and resources than a tourist’s bad photo op.

    Beyond the immediate debate over the tourist’s actions, the incident has prompted broader institutional questions: it has forced policymakers and heritage site managers to reexamine how public monuments are protected, and whether clearer on-site signage, formal visitor guidelines, or enhanced staff training are needed to prevent similar missteps from happening in the future.

  • ABLP to Launch Manifesto Today as Campaign Enters Final Phase

    ABLP to Launch Manifesto Today as Campaign Enters Final Phase

    As the Caribbean nation of Antigua and Barbuda heads toward its upcoming general election, the ruling Antigua and Barbuda Labour Party (ABLP) is set to take a major step in its campaign on Monday, April 20, with the official launch of its election manifesto at the American University of Antigua. This confirmation came directly from Gaston Browne, the nation’s current Prime Minister and ABLP leader, during an appearance on Pointe FM’s popular Browne and Browne Show.

    During the live broadcast, Browne framed the manifesto rollout as a cornerstone of the party’s final campaign push, designed to crystalize the party’s policy agenda for voters ahead of polling day. Beyond confirming the logistics of the launch, the Prime Minister issued a public call to action for all registered voters, urging them to complete pre-election preparations well in advance to ensure they can cast their ballots without issue. Specifically, he reminded residents to check the validity of their voter identification cards, a critical step for participating in the general vote.

    Browne also emphasized that the ruling party has seen a steady uptick in grassroots support across the country in recent weeks, positioning the manifesto launch as a strategic move to build on this growing momentum as the campaign enters its final stretch. This optimistic assessment of the party’s standing was echoed by other contributors to the broadcast, who pointed to tangible indicators of ABLP’s strong organizational capacity heading into the vote.

    Among those contributors was Comrade Donna Shire, who highlighted that campaign activity has been robust and well-coordinated across every electoral constituency. Shire specifically noted that the party’s events have drawn high levels of visible, energetic participation from young voters, a trend that has boosted the campaign’s overall energy and expanded its reach to new demographics. High turnout at recent ABLP rallies and public events was also cited as further evidence of the party’s growing traction with the electorate.

    The manifesto launch arrives at a time when all political parties in Antigua and Barbuda are ramping up their outreach efforts to win over undecided voters. All competing parties are expected to center their electoral platforms on three core policy areas: economic growth strategy, expanded social welfare programs, and large-scale infrastructure development projects. While Browne stopped short of revealing specific policy pledges from the ABLP manifesto during his radio appearance, he confirmed that the document will lay out the party’s comprehensive roadmap for continuing national development and stable governance if the ABLP retains power after the election.

  • WATCH: PM Browne Says New CMC Complex Will Cut Food Imports, Lower Prices

    WATCH: PM Browne Says New CMC Complex Will Cut Food Imports, Lower Prices

    In a recent interview on Pointe FM’s popular Browne and Browne Show, Prime Minister Browne of Antigua and Barbuda outlined an ambitious government-led initiative to transform the country’s existing food distribution network through the development of a new Central Marketing Corporation (CMC) complex, a project he says will cut national food import volumes, stabilize consumer prices and strengthen long-term food security.\n\nBrowne emphasized that the core goal of the overhaul is to expand domestic food production and processing capacity, while making consistent, high-quality, affordable staples and animal products accessible to all households across the nation. “We have to prepare ourselves to make sure that we can sustain ourselves, and at the same time to make sure that we can produce good quality and affordable produce and meats,” he told listeners.\n\nAt the heart of the initiative is the conversion of the CMC into a fully integrated, one-stop “food emporium” that connects local smallholder farmers, independent food vendors and end consumers through a centralized distribution and processing hub. To accommodate this major expansion, the Antigua and Barbuda government has already invested $9 million to acquire the 5.5-acre former Kennedy’s Club property in Cassada Gardens, which will serve as the site for the main complex. “We have already bought the facility, it’s on five and a half acres,” Browne confirmed.\n\nThe new campus will host a full range of food-focused infrastructure, including a public supermarket, open-air farmers’ market, temperature-controlled cold storage, dry storage for non-perishable goods, and dedicated agro-processing units built exclusively to handle locally grown produce and harvested livestock. With these new facilities in place, Browne explained, local producers will be able to bring their goods directly from farm to market, cutting out unnecessary middleman markup that raises costs for consumers.\n\nA critical pillar of the plan to expand domestic meat production is the construction of new chicken and pork abattoirs in Piers, work on which is already progressing. Browne noted that these modern facilities will be capable of processing livestock into consumer-ready cuts, including fresh split chicken portions, and will be open for use by small-scale local livestock farmers who currently lack access to professional processing infrastructure.\n\nTo further reduce production costs for local meat producers, the government also plans to build a dedicated domestic feed mill. This facility will cut the sector’s reliance on expensive imported animal feed, bringing down input costs and making locally raised meat far more price-competitive with imported alternatives. “We also will be establishing a feed mill to drive down the costs,” Browne said.\n\nWhile long-term expansion of domestic production is the core focus, Browne outlined immediate short-term measures to deliver price relief to consumers: the CMC has already partnered with a United Kingdom-based supplier to import lower-cost staple food products, with the first shipments scheduled to arrive within a few months. “That should start within a matter of months,” he confirmed.\n\nBrowne argued that this dual strategy—ramping up local food output while securing more affordable imported goods in the near term—will stabilize domestic food prices and shield consumers from volatile global price shocks, including the impact of rising tariffs in major international export markets. He warned that without developing competitive local food alternatives, the country would remain vulnerable to worsening external price pressures as import volumes continue to climb. “Imports continue to increase, and you never can tell,” he said.\n\nBeyond immediate price relief, the expanded CMC network is designed to cut the country’s total food import bill, improve strained foreign exchange balances, and build a more resilient, reliable national food supply chain. To illustrate the untapped potential of scaling local production, Browne pointed to his own private agricultural operation, which currently produces roughly 150 pigs per year raised to modern food safety standards.\n\n“This is just going to be quite a beautiful food emporium to accommodate our farmers and to have CMC import more produce and meats at an affordable price,” Browne said, adding that the CMC overhaul forms one part of a wider government agenda to modernize Antigua and Barbuda’s agricultural sector, support small and medium local food businesses, and raise overall living standards for residents across both islands.

  • Antigua and Barbuda Government Moves to Secure $150M to Ramp-up Housing Loans for Public Servants

    Antigua and Barbuda Government Moves to Secure $150M to Ramp-up Housing Loans for Public Servants

    Prime Minister Gaston Browne of Antigua and Barbuda has announced that the national government is pursuing up to $150 million in climate-focused international financing to dramatically expand a subsidized housing loan initiative targeting public servants and low-income households struggling with unsafe, deteriorating homes.

    In comments shared during an interview with local outlet Pointe FM, Browne confirmed that formal funding requests have already been submitted to two major global climate bodies: the Global Environmental Fund and the United Nations Loss and Damage Fund. The administration is targeting roughly $135 million from these international sources, with the government committing to inject an additional $15 million in domestic matching funds during the initiative’s first year of operation to get the programme off the ground.

    Unlike traditional mortgage and home repair lending that requires strict credit qualifications, the expanded programme will offer low-interest loans directly to individual borrowers who are locked out of standard banking financing. Concessional rates will sit between 2% and 3% annual interest, with extended repayment terms stretching up to 30 years to keep monthly payments accessible for low-income households. “We’ll be giving loans directly to individuals who ordinarily would not qualify for bank loans… and make it really affordable,” Browne explained in his interview.

    The new initiative is designed to scale up a smaller existing housing programme run through the government’s SURF Fund, which has already distributed approximately $17 million in targeted housing loans to eligible residents. This injection of new capital will allow the government to extend the programme’s reach across every region of the country, moving beyond pilot projects in urban centers to address widespread dilapidated housing in rural and coastal communities that have long been overlooked.

    Browne framed the housing programme as a critical climate resilience measure, making the case that substandard, aging housing leaves local communities far more vulnerable to the extreme weather events—including Category 5 hurricanes—that increasingly threaten small island developing states like Antigua and Barbuda. “If you have people living in substandard homes… and we have a Category 5 storm, the houses can’t stand up,” he noted, adding that ongoing talks with international funding partners have been productive and that he remains confident the government will secure the requested financing.

    A key structural feature of the programme is its design as a revolving fund: monthly repayments from existing borrowers will be cycled back into the pool of capital to issue new loans to additional eligible households, creating a self-sustaining initiative that can grow gradually over time without relying on repeated government infusions.

    Beyond climate resilience, Browne positioned the programme as a centerpiece of the administration’s broader national agenda to boost living standards and modernize Antigua and Barbuda’s national housing stock. He also issued a challenge to political critics, noting that the government has publicly outlined a clear, concrete funding stream for the initiative and called on opponents to detail their own plans for addressing the country’s substandard housing crisis. “We are telling you precisely where the money is going to come from,” he said.

  • UPP candidates are broke and seeking office for a job, ABLP leader says

    UPP candidates are broke and seeking office for a job, ABLP leader says

    As the election season heats up in Antigua and Barbuda, incumbent Prime Minister and head of the Antigua and Barbuda Labour Party (ABLP) Gaston Browne has launched a sharp pre-election critique of the rival United Progressive Party (UPP), claiming the long-out-of-power opposition bloc is financially broken and would impose harmful economic policies if voted into office.

    Speaking during his regular segment on local radio station Pointe FM’s Browne and Browne Show, Browne laid out his core allegation: many opposition candidates are running for public office not out of a commitment to public service, but as a desperate source of personal income after a decade-long stretch out of government. “When entities have been out of government for a long time… many of them, they have no income,” Browne told listeners.

    The prime minister went further, naming specific individual opposition figures and accusing them of lacking basic financial stability. He claimed some have not even kept up with their own pension contributions, questioning whether such candidates are fit or prepared to take on national leadership roles. Browne argued that these financial strains would shape governing decisions if the UPP wins, warning that officeholders facing personal financial precarity could govern out of self-interest or even act out of long-held vindictiveness toward their political rivals.

    Browne tied these personal allegations to broader concerns about the opposition’s uncosted policy platform, pointing out that UPP candidates have yet to explain how they will pay for the campaign promises they have laid out to voters. “Notice they never said that they’re not going to increase taxes up to this point,” he noted.

    He spelled out the specific risks he says voters and public sector workers face: to fund their campaign pledges, a UPP administration would be forced to implement broad tax increases and cut public spending. Among the possible changes Browne cited were the return of a personal income tax, general tax hikes across the board, and mass layoffs of public sector workers – a warning he directed straight at civil servants.

    “Public servants better understand… if you think that… you can make the mistake and elect them and see what happens,” Browne said, adding that after years in opposition, the UPP could target public sector workers for political retaliation.

    In contrast, Browne highlighted his own administration’s track record on public sector employment, emphasizing that ABLP has committed to protecting public sector jobs regardless of workers’ political affiliation. “Not one person will be sent home… notwithstanding your political persuasion,” he said, though he acknowledged one rare exception that came from a ministerial decision outside the government’s official policy.

    As of press time, the United Progressive Party has not issued any public response to Browne’s allegations made during the radio broadcast.

  • LISTEN: Antigua negotiating deal to transship thousands of Japanese cars through expanded port

    LISTEN: Antigua negotiating deal to transship thousands of Japanese cars through expanded port

    Prime Minister Gaston Browne, leader of the Antigua and Barbuda Labour Party, has disclosed that the island nation’s government is currently holding negotiations with a Japanese automobile dealership to establish Antigua and Barbuda as a transshipment hub for thousands of vehicles. This initiative forms the opening phase of a far-reaching infrastructure project designed to expand the country’s primary port and elevate its status as a central logistics and trade node for the Caribbean region.

    Speaking during an appearance on Pointe FM’s *Browne and Browne Show*, Browne explained that the proposed transshipment agreement hinges on creating sufficient storage capacity to house thousands of incoming vehicles before they are routed to their final destinations. The entire port modernization and expansion initiative is structured in multiple sequential phases, with the vehicle transshipment project marking the first step of the multi-year transformation, he confirmed. Currently, the project remains in its early developmental stages, with planning and preliminary negotiations ongoing.

    One of the most controversial components of the expansion plan is the proposed clearing of Rat Island, a small landmass near the existing port, to reclaim additional space for expanded cargo storage and logistics operations. Browne confirmed that the island will be leveled to create the flat, usable land required to accommodate the growing volume of goods and vehicles passing through the port. Beyond expanding cargo and vehicle storage, the development blueprint also includes the construction of multiple new marinas positioned between Fort James and Judge Bay, as well as on the eastern edge of Fort James. These marinas are intended to boost the island’s thriving yachting tourism sector and increase overall vessel berthing capacity.

    The expansion project does not stop at vehicle transshipment and yachting infrastructure. The Antigua and Barbuda government is actively pursuing a suite of additional partnerships to cement the country’s role as a full-service regional shipping hub. Browne noted that a fully developed transshipment gateway will deliver tangible benefits to local businesses, allowing them to source imported goods from South American and European markets at lower overall costs, reducing the price of consumer and industrial goods across the island.

    Another key revenue-driving component of the plan is the installation of dedicated liquefied natural gas (LNG) and conventional fuel storage tanks, which will enable the port to offer bunkering services to passing commercial and leisure vessels. Browne explained that this new service will create a standalone profit center for both the port authority and the West Indies Oil Company (WIOC), generating consistent new revenue for the country.

    To accommodate the projected growth in transshipment activity, the redeveloped port will be redesigned to allow cargo ship berthing on both sides of the St. John’s harbour, effectively doubling available berthing space to handle increased shipping volumes. Browne emphasized that this structural upgrade is a critical requirement to support the higher traffic that will come with the country’s new role as a transshipment hub.

    When fully completed, Browne projected that the expanded port could grow its total economic contribution to as much as 10 percent of Antigua and Barbuda’s overall gross domestic product. The initiative is a core part of the government’s broader strategy to diversify the country’s revenue streams and strengthen long-term economic resilience. Framing the project as a transformative milestone for the nation, Browne described the current period as an exciting moment for Antigua and Barbuda, as the government works to position the small island state as a leading competitor in regional maritime trade and logistics.

  • Column: Onderwijs, de onmisbare bouwsteen voor mens en natie

    Column: Onderwijs, de onmisbare bouwsteen voor mens en natie

    Education is far more than the simple acquisition of literacy, numeracy, and rote facts. It is the foundational catalyst for individual self-development, collective societal advancement and long-term national growth. Through education, people uncover their innate talents, cultivate critical thinking capabilities, and learn to engage meaningfully and actively with their communities. For nations, investing in robust education systems is synonymous with investing in long-term prosperity: a skilled, knowledgeable population drives continuous innovation, fuels sustainable economic expansion, and preserves social cohesion.

    This inherent value of education is deeply understood by millions of parents and children across communities, who hold tight to the belief that education can break down systemic barriers and transform their life trajectories. Indra Toelsie, the author of this commentary, shares a personal reflection on this truth: her own parents, neither of whom completed primary education, sacrificed relentlessly to ensure their children could access secondary and higher education. Rain or shine, her father traveled with her across the region on his old Zundapp motorcycle to the education library, collecting reference materials for school assignments. He helped cut and paste materials for school projects, reached out to colleagues for hard-to-find information, and offered constant guidance. For Toelsie’s parents, education was the most valuable gift they could give their children, and no effort to support their schooling was too great.

    Yet, this clear understanding of education’s importance is alarmingly missing from many current policy making circles, Toelsie argues. Instead of committing to long-term, structural investments in school infrastructure, educator development, and accessible learning resources, a deeply concerning trend has emerged: policy making is increasingly driven by short-term populism. Politicians prioritize flashy, superficial policy measures that win quick public support over the durable, systematic reforms that would actually strengthen education systems from the ground up. As critics have repeatedly highlighted, modern education policy is trapped in a constant cycle of unplanned, half-baked experiments that leave the system adrift. This constant upheaval breeds widespread frustration among both educators and students, leaving the sector with no clear long-term vision or roadmap for where it aims to be decades from now.

    This populist-driven approach to education policy is not just unproductive—it is dangerous and short-sighted, Toelsie warns. By failing to give education the top policy priority it deserves, leaders are eroding the future prospects not only of today’s youth, but of the entire nation. Populist education measures may deliver quick electoral gains for politicians, but they fail to address the root structural challenges holding the sector back. In fact, they exacerbate existing gaps, leading to wider skills deficits and growing social inequality over time.

    The shifting priorities facing the education workforce also demand urgent attention. While countless educators remain deeply committed to their students and their craft, growing financial pressures are increasingly pushing passion for teaching and student development to the background. Many teachers report feeling demoralized and undervalued, leading them to invest less time and energy in their own professional growth and their students’ development than the system requires. The core mission of nurturing young people is increasingly being sidelined by competing priorities.

    Toelsie emphasizes that no child is inherently incapable; every person carries a unique set of talents and skills waiting to be nurtured. Unlocking that potential requires well-designed, functional systemic structures, and that responsibility falls squarely on policy makers. They must craft policies that make learning accessible, enjoyable, and motivating for all students. Meaningful innovation in education is also non-negotiable: learning should not be limited to theoretical instruction, but should expand opportunities for hands-on, practical experience, from structured company site visits to educational trips to cultural institutions like museums.

    Every parent wants the best possible opportunities for their children, greater or equal to what they themselves received. Not every student can afford to study abroad or secure a competitive scholarship; the vast majority of young people must rely on their domestic public education system to build their futures. When that system fails to deliver, leaving both students and teachers discouraged and disempowered, the long-term stability and prosperity of entire societies is put at risk.

    It is long past time for policy makers to step up and accept their core responsibility, Toelsie concludes. Education must be restored to its rightful place at the very top of the national policy agenda, recognized as the irreplaceable building block of both individual flourishing and national strength.

  • Crisis bij Canawaima: beschuldigingen van belangenverstrengeling en machtsstrijd

    Crisis bij Canawaima: beschuldigingen van belangenverstrengeling en machtsstrijd

    A simmering power struggle between executive leadership and the newly appointed supervisory board at state-owned Canawaima Management Company (CMC) is on the brink of a major escalation, with the firm’s terminal manager calling for urgent intervention from the national government. In a formal letter addressed to Raymond Landveld, Suriname’s Minister of Transport, Communication and Tourism, terminal manager Lesley Daniël has laid out detailed allegations against the company’s Raad van Commissarissen (RvC, Supervisory Board), accusing the body of systematically overstepping its mandated oversight role and encroaching on day-to-day operational management.

    Internal documents reviewed by local media outlet Starnieuws corroborate Daniël’s claims that the new RvC has been making executive decisions that fall outside the scope of its supervisory mandate. These unauthorized actions include signing off on major investment commitments, approving new staff hires, and signing off on day-to-day operational expenditures, according to the documentation.

    What has sharply intensified the conflict are emerging allegations of widespread conflicts of interest within the RvC, with particular focus falling on Richenel Vrieze, the board’s president commissioner. These claims have been independently confirmed by the trade union representing workers at the state-owned enterprise, led by Dayanand Dwarka. The union has confirmed it is aware of the problematic actions, but has not yet finalized a decision on what collective action it may take. The union’s governing body is scheduled to hold a deliberative vote on the matter this coming Monday.

    Per the reviewed documentation, multiple service contracts have been awarded to firms linked to Vrieze. The companies, which operate in procurement and repair services for CMC, are currently registered under Vrieze’s wife’s name, though public records show Vrieze was the direct owner of the businesses in prior years.

    Further financial irregularities have also been uncovered: procurement records show goods were originally purchased from a third-party firm at a lower cost, but inflated invoices were submitted for reimbursement through Vrieze-linked entities to secure higher payments. Additional documentation also reveals that apartments have been rented to one sitting RvC member from a building owned by the son of another RvC board member, creating another unreported conflict of interest.

    In response to the allegations, the RvC has pushed back against Daniël, pushing for his immediate removal from his position. Board members claim Daniël has failed to deliver sufficient performance for the state-owned firm, which has faced severe long-term financial shortfalls despite generating substantial annual revenue. The RvC accuses Daniël of drawing a high executive salary without meeting performance expectations for the role.

    The combination of toxic institutional power struggles and serious potential integrity violations has created extreme pressure on CMC’s operations and governance. In his formal request to the minister, Daniël is calling for immediate government intervention to address the perceived dysfunction and rule-breaking on the part of the current RvC, requesting targeted measures to correct the board’s overreach and resolve the alleged conflicts of interest.

  • Court to rule on reports from non-experts on mental health patient

    Court to rule on reports from non-experts on mental health patient

    A high-stakes legal challenge to the credibility of mental health fitness assessments in St. Vincent and the Grenadines is set for a ruling Monday at the Serious Offences Court, after three clinicians publicly admitted they lack specialized psychiatric training to evaluate defendants’ competence to stand trial. The case, brought forward by pro bono defense attorney Grant Connell, calls into question long-standing systemic gaps that have potentially put mentally ill defendants at risk of improper conviction and sentencing.

    Connell is representing 32-year-old Kesroy Williams, a Belair resident with a documented schizophrenia diagnosis who faces a second illegal firearms charge in 18 months. Williams was first arrested and jailed in December 2024 after pleading guilty to unlawful possession of a .38 pistol and three rounds of matching ammunition. At the time, he told arresting officers he kept two weapons, “one for a wedding and one for a funeral,” and requested that officers return his gun after he completed his sentence. A Mental Health Rehabilitation Centre (MHC) located in Glen deemed him fit to enter a plea, a finding that went unchallenged — until Connell observed Williams’ second hearing last month.

    Williams was arrested again in February this year on charges that he possessed an unlicensed modified .32 caliber firearm and three matching rounds at his home. When Connell arrived at court in March for what was expected to be a routine sentencing hearing, he said alarm bells went off as the unusual facts of the case were read aloud. In addition to Williams’ history of bizarre statements to police, he noted that Williams had approached passing police officers to voluntarily hand over his weapon, only to be ignored before being arrested later. Connell told reporters after Thursday’s preliminary hearing that the situation struck him as immediately off: “Which person tells you they have a firearm, one for a funeral, one for a wedding, gives it to police and asks for it back after their sentence? That is not the behavior of a legally competent person.”

    Suspicious of the MHC’s competency ruling that deemed Williams fit for trial, Connell requested Chief Magistrate Colin John summon the three clinicians who signed off on Williams’ latest assessment to testify under oath about their qualifications and assessment process. When the trio — Dr. Alisa Alvis, Dr. Micheal Stowe, and Dr. Franklyn Joseph — appeared in court Thursday, their testimony exposed systemic under-resourcing that shocks legal and public health advocates.

    Alvis, who heads the country’s Mental Health Services and was called on to sign off on Williams’ report, confirmed she holds a PhD in psychology but is not a licensed clinical physician authorized to prescribe medication, and is not formally specialized in psychiatric assessment for court proceedings. Stowe, a general practitioner, told the court he is still completing a master’s degree in psychiatry, and only completed a two-week psychiatric rotation as part of his basic GP training. Joseph, also a general practitioner, completed only a two-month psychiatric rotation during his own GP training. Most strikingly, Alvis told the court that St. Vincent and the Grenadines currently has no practicing licensed psychiatrists on staff at any public mental health facility.

    Beyond the lack of specialized training, the clinicians admitted they lack basic diagnostic tools required to complete comprehensive competency assessments. The team told the court they do not have access to standardized IQ testing, and cannot complete many of the lab and cognitive tests required to fully evaluate a defendant’s mental capacity. They also acknowledged they could not rule out additional undiagnosed conditions that could impact Williams’ competency.

    Connell’s questioning further probed the red flags around Williams’ ongoing treatment. Williams takes daily risperidone, a powerful antipsychotic medication commonly prescribed to manage schizophrenia symptoms. A well-documented side effect of the drug is 24-hour cognitive impairment, including problems with memory, concentration, and critical thinking. Connell pressed the team: how can a person constantly living with these side effects be expected to follow court proceedings, respond to cross-examination, and assist in their own defense?

    Even more troubling, Connell told the court he discovered that competency reports written by the two different GPs, 40 days apart for separate defendants, are identical word-for-word. He slammed the current assessment process as perfunctory and fundamentally flawed: “All they do is ask a handful of basic questions — do you hear voices? Do you know who the prime minister is? If you’re dressed properly and don’t have an outburst in the office, you’re labeled fit to plead. That’s absolute nonsense. They even admitted that Williams could have an episode mid-trial and strip off his clothes running out of court, but still called him competent.”

    In an interview after Thursday’s hearing, Connell said this systemic failure has gone on for years, putting countless mentally ill defendants at risk. He noted he is not criticizing the individual clinicians, who are working with severely limited resources, but is calling for urgent systemic reform. “You can’t gamble with people’s lives like this. When you lock a mentally ill person who isn’t competent to stand trial in prison, they face abuse from other inmates, improper medication dosing, even death. I already know of one young man who died in prison from a medication overdose because no qualified specialist was overseeing his care,” he revealed.

    Connell is calling on parliament to prioritize urgent legislation to fix the broken system, and push for the government to recruit at least three full-time qualified psychiatrists to oversee MHC’s court assessment services. “Even if you are a prisoner or living with mental illness, you are still a human being who deserves dignity and due process. This isn’t a political issue — this is a human rights issue that demands urgent action,” he said.

    Following Thursday’s testimony, Chief Magistrate Colin John announced he would issue his formal ruling on the challenge to the competency report on Monday. Prosecutor Inspector of Police Renrick Cato said the prosecution will consult with the Director of Public Prosecutions to map out the next steps once the ruling is issued.