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  • Police Recover Stolen TVs and Tools After Attempted Break-In on Lower All Saints Road

    Police Recover Stolen TVs and Tools After Attempted Break-In on Lower All Saints Road

    In the early hours of Friday, May 29, 2026, the Royal Police Force of Antigua and Barbuda launched a rapid response to an urgent report of an ongoing break-in at a commercial store on Lower All Saints Road, Saint John’s. The official media release, issued the following day by the force’s Office of Strategic Communications, detailed the sequence of events that unfolded after officers arrived at the scene.

    When law enforcement personnel reached the location just after 3:00 a.m., they spotted three male suspects, all clad in dark clothing, emerging from the targeted building. Descriptions released to the public note two of the men are roughly six feet tall, while the third stands approximately five feet eight inches tall. Upon seeing police, the trio split up and fled the area in different directions, managing to temporarily evade immediate capture.

    According to investigators, the suspects had looted a range of electronics and power equipment from the business premises, including eleven 43-inch JVC televisions, one 32-inch Royal brand television, two handheld drills, a complete tool kit, and one powered vacuum cleaner. In a breakthrough for responding officers, all of the stolen property was recovered intact in the immediate area outside the targeted building shortly after the suspects fled.

    The case remains open and active, with the Criminal Investigations Department continuing to pursue leads to identify and apprehend the three at-large suspects. Law enforcement is issuing a public call for assistance from anyone who may have been in the Lower All Saints Road area in the early hours of May 29, or anyone who holds additional information that could advance the investigation. Members of the public with relevant details can contact the Criminal Investigations Department directly at 462-3913 or 462-3914, or submit anonymous tips through the Crimestoppers hotline at 800-TIPS (8477).

  • SIDS urged to strengthen institutions to withstand global shocks

    SIDS urged to strengthen institutions to withstand global shocks

    Against a backdrop of cascading global disruptions ranging from rapid technological change to intensifying climate risk, a top Barbadian government official has outlined a bold new vision for Small Island Developing States (SIDS): abandon siloed, outdated development models and invest in proactive institutional capacity to withstand systemic shocks. The call to action came from Claudette Hope-Greenidge, Permanent Secretary of Barbados’ Ministry of Innovation, Industry, Science and Technology (MIST), during her opening welcome address at the first-ever Possibility Summit, a landmark multidisciplinary forum convened to align scientific advancement with national resilience goals. The high-profile opening assembly drew a roster of key stakeholders, including Barbadian Prime Minister Mia Mottley, sitting Cabinet ministers, and representatives from global diplomatic and scientific networks, underscoring the international relevance of the summit’s mission. Hope-Greenidge opened her remarks by stressing that fragmented, discipline-isolated approaches to governance and progress have become obsolete in the 21st century. “Today’s defining global challenges and untapped opportunities simply cannot be addressed through the lens of single academic disciplines or rigid, traditional institutional boundaries,” she told attendees. “Across every continent, nations and communities are navigating unprecedented, interconnected shifts: exponential leaps in digital technology, growing climate-related pressures, rapidly shifting geopolitical alignments, and a sweeping restructuring of the global economic order.” For small island nations like Barbados, Hope-Greenidge emphasized that adapting to these interconnected shifts is not a long-term policy option—it is an urgent immediate priority. She pushed back against the common narrative that small island states are inherently constrained by their geographic size and limited natural resource endowments, noting that Barbados’ historical progress has always stemmed not from physical assets, but from the strength of its foundational national systems. “Our national advancement has always depended on four core pillars: the quality of our public institutions, the depth of our human capital investment, a clear shared national vision, and the ability to plan ahead with strategic foresight,” she explained. That very commitment to proactive, forward-thinking development is what drove the creation of the Possibility Summit, she added. The forum was intentionally structured to close the persistent gap between ambitious national policy goals and on-the-ground implementation in the fields of scientific advancement and national preparedness for global shocks. A core priority of MIST, Hope-Greenidge said, is to reposition research and development (R&D) as a central pillar of Barbados’ national economic planning, rather than sidelining it as a peripheral, non-essential activity. “Our ministry firmly holds that R&D is not a marginal academic exercise—it is a critical building block of national economic strategy, modern governance, and most importantly, the national resilience that will keep us competitive amid global change,” she stated. With leading international experts in attendance—including Professor John Schellnhuber, Director General of the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis—Hope-Greenidge called for long-term, cross-sector collaboration spanning public agencies, academic institutions, and civil society organizations to lock in Barbados’ long-term competitive edge as a small island leader in adaptive development. The inaugural summit marks a formal step forward for Barbados’ strategy to position SIDS as proactive actors in global transformation, rather than passive victims of systemic change, by centering interdisciplinary cooperation and institutional investment as the foundation for sustained prosperity.

  • Police Alert Public to Rise in Jewelry Snatching Reports

    Police Alert Public to Rise in Jewelry Snatching Reports

    Law enforcement officials in Antigua and Barbuda are calling on local residents to boost their personal safety awareness and adopt extra protective measures after a spike in jewelry snatchings targeting unsuspecting community members. The official public warning was issued by the Royal Police Force of Antigua and Barbuda’s Office of Strategic Communications on Saturday, May 30, 2026, one day after two distinct armed-free robbery cases were logged by the force’s Criminal Investigations Department (CID).

    The first incident unfolded just after 1:00 p.m. on Friday along Campbell Road in the Ottos neighborhood. According to official reports, a female victim was out walking when an unidentified male suspect approached her abruptly, seized her wrist, and ripped off two gold wristbands estimated to be worth a combined 4,000 Eastern Caribbean dollars. The attacker immediately fled the scene on foot. Investigators have released a description of the suspect: he is light-skinned, has a slim frame, and was wearing a black hat at the time of the robbery.

    Roughly two hours later, a second jewelry theft took place in the Sutherlands area. In this case, a male victim had just stepped out of his residence and was walking toward his parked car when two unknown male suspects stole a 14-karat gold chain valued at around 5,000 Eastern Caribbean dollars from his neck before running away. Investigators have shared detailed descriptions for both suspects in this case. The first is approximately 5 feet 11 inches tall, brown-skinned, of medium build, and has short, low-cut hair. The second stands around 5 feet 7 inches, has a dark complexion, weighs roughly 170 pounds, and was dressed in a black T-shirt and multicolored shorts at the time of the incident.

    Beyond urging everyday residents to stay alert, the police force has issued a targeted advisory for local business owners that handle precious metals. Store operators and managers at jewelry outlets, pawn shops, and other precious metal buying and selling enterprises are told to maintain a high state of vigilance for any attempted sales of potentially stolen gold. They are instructed to vet all transactions for gold jewelry carefully and contact law enforcement immediately if any suspicious activity is flagged.

    For members of the public who own valuable jewelry, the police offered a series of practical safety tips: avoid wearing high-value pieces in crowded public areas when possible, keep constant awareness of people and movement around you, refrain from openly displaying expensive jewelry unnecessarily, and contact emergency services right away if any unusual or suspicious behavior is observed.

    Law enforcement is asking any resident who may have information relevant to either of the two active investigations to come forward with details. Tips can be submitted directly to the CID at 462-3913 or 462-3914, sent anonymously via the Crimestoppers hotline at 800-TIPS (8477), or reported through a direct call to 911 emergency services. In closing the official advisory, the Royal Police Force of Antigua and Barbuda’s administration expressed gratitude for the ongoing public cooperation and support that helps the force fight crime and hold offenders accountable under the law.

  • Foul play ruled out in Hippolyte’s death, police confirm suicide

    Foul play ruled out in Hippolyte’s death, police confirm suicide

    Authorities in St. Lucia have closed the door on speculation surrounding the 34-year-old’s death, confirming after a full forensic post-mortem examination that Talia Norma Hippolyte died by suicide, with no evidence of outside involvement. The case first drew public attention on May 4, when Hippolyte’s decomposing remains were discovered in the Pomme, Augier region, prompting initial investigators to label her passing a suspected death by suicide. Four days after the body was recovered, a full post-mortem was carried out, which formally ruled the official cause of death as death by complete hanging. In an official interview with local outlet St Lucia Times, Superintendent of Police Stephen Victorin, the lead officer overseeing operations for the Southern Division, confirmed that the exhaustive investigative process uncovered no indication that any other person played a role in Hippolyte’s death. “There were no signs of sexual or other physical violence perpetrated against the body of Talia Norma Hippolyte,” Victorin clarified. His official statement comes in direct response to growing unease among segments of the local public after the body was found, with many community members raising questions about alternative explanations for the young woman’s unexpected death. Victorin emphasized that law enforcement took these public concerns seriously from the outset of the probe, integrating them into the scope of a full, systematic investigation carried out jointly by uniformed investigators and the regional police Forensics Unit. Per the senior law enforcement official, the entire inquiry was structured around two core goals: unpacking the full circumstances surrounding Hippolyte’s passing, and directly addressing unconfirmed public claims that foul play may have occurred, putting lingering community speculation to rest.

  • Leaders urged to reject ‘small-island limits’ at Possibility Summit

    Leaders urged to reject ‘small-island limits’ at Possibility Summit

    Against a backdrop of escalating global uncertainty and overlapping cross-border crises, Barbadian Prime Minister Mia Mottley has delivered a bold call to action for the small island nation: shed outdated psychological limitations tied to geographic size and rebrand itself as a world-leading testing ground for cutting-edge innovation, arguing that incremental economic progress will never be enough to shield the country from mounting global volatility.

    Mottley’s remarks came during a candid, informal fireside-style dialogue with Minister of Innovation Senator Jonathan Reid, which served as the centerpiece of the national Possibility Summit. The event convened a high-profile global cohort of technology executives, United Nations officials and leading international scientists to collaboratively map out a sustainable, technology-powered development path for the Caribbean region.

    Opening the discussion, Reid turned to the foundational governance philosophy that has defined Mottley’s tenure, recalling a defining moment on the eve of her first electoral victory. At that time, Reid shared that he had considered leaving Barbados to pursue world-class professional opportunities abroad. In response, Mottley challenged him: “Why can’t you do world-class work in Barbados? Why don’t you come with me, let’s do some world-class work.” That exchange, Reid noted, has set the tone for the administration’s work over the past eight years. Reid then pressed Mottley on what fuels her relentless, often round-the-clock work ethic that sees her pushing forward with policy work as late as 3 a.m.

    Tracing her motivation back to her upbringing in a newly independent Barbados, where she was surrounded by dedicated early public servants and national icons like cricket legend Sir Garfield Sobers, Mottley explained her drive grows from an unshakable belief in Caribbean potential and a deep rejection of systemic inequity. “God has blessed me with the ability to love this country beyond anything else and to believe that we are special,” she said. “The fact that I am a young person going into public life never crossed my mind that I was young. The fact that I was a woman going into public life, it never crossed my mind… I feel passionate about the Caribbean civilization, and that is the purpose of my life.”

    The conversation soon shifted from personal conviction to tangible national development strategy. Reid noted that while Barbados has notched an extraordinary milestone of 20 straight quarters of economic expansion and cut its debt-to-GDP ratio substantially, there is a clear gap between short-term macroeconomic stability and long-term transformative change, asking Mottley to outline her long-term vision for the nation.

    Mottley stressed firmly that incremental, traditional economic gains are not enough to insulate the island from coming global disruptions. “Comfort does not give us sufficient buffer to withstand the gale force winds that are coming at us individually as a small state but collectively as a planet,” she warned. “The country has had on average 2.5 per cent growth… that’s not enough for us to do the transformation.”

    For Mottley, building genuine long-term economic resilience requires three core shifts: boosting national productivity, strengthening inclusive social capital, and restructuring the economy to deliver widespread citizen ownership of assets. She issued a blunt challenge to the local private sector over its approach to workforce treatment, stating: “If you tell me you can’t make money by treating your workers right, get out of the wrong business, shut shop and go home. Fundamental to any enterprise is in fact the workers… I feel that Barbados can continue to lead the world in showing what dignified labor producing at high levels can look like, creating opportunities for ownership.”

    Reid then turned to the balancing act of modern leadership for small island states, recalling the overlapping crises of the COVID-19 pandemic and the 2021 ash fall from the La Soufrière volcano that strained national capacity. He asked how Barbados can preserve its laid-back, distinctive cultural identity while embracing the urgency needed to capture global economic opportunities.

    Mottley acknowledged that constant uncertainty is now a permanent feature of the global order, pointing to the ongoing “polycrisis” that combines accelerating environmental degradation and intensifying geopolitical tensions. She voiced particular alarm over the rapid unregulated deployment of artificial intelligence without a coordinated global governance framework, as well as the growing fragmentation of global action to address climate change.

    Rather than giving in to pessimism, Mottley argued that pragmatic, science-backed diplomatic action is still achievable, highlighting global methane reduction efforts as a critical, actionable starting point. She emphasized that Caribbean nations cannot afford to remain passive consumers of foreign technology or collateral victims of global policy decisions made by larger powers. Instead, she argued, the region must step into a new role as the testing ground for the innovative solutions that the entire world urgently needs to build a more sustainable and resilient future.

  • ECCAA Pays Tribute to Veteran Aviation Official Simon Lewis

    ECCAA Pays Tribute to Veteran Aviation Official Simon Lewis

    On a Thursday marked by both celebration and sorrow, the Eastern Caribbean Civil Aviation Authority (ECCAA) found itself balancing two monumental moments: the official opening of its expanded headquarters at Antigua and Barbuda’s V.C. Bird International Airport, and the somber announcement of the passing of one of the region’s most respected aviation professionals, Simon Lewis.

    The opening ceremony, which brought together senior government officials, key aviation industry stakeholders, and regional diplomatic representatives, was paused to honor Lewis’ decades of service to Caribbean aviation. In a quiet act of collective remembrance, all ECCAA staff in attendance pinned gold and black ribbons to their clothing, and the entire room bowed their heads for a minute of silence to celebrate his life and legacy.

    Lewis, who most recently held the role of operations officer for aerodromes at ECCAA, passed away in the early hours of that same Thursday, bringing to a close a career in civil aviation that stretched across more than 50 years. ECCAA Director General Anthony Whittier delivered the official tribute during the opening event, sharing that the entire organization was grieving the loss of a beloved colleague and foundational leader.

    “It is with profound sadness and heavy hearts that we mourn the passing of our colleague, Mr. Simon Peter Lewis, who served the Eastern Caribbean aviation community with unwavering dedication and distinction,” Whittaker told the assembled crowd.

    Lewis’ journey in aviation began in 1971, when he started his career working dual roles as an air traffic controller and a meteorological officer. Over the course of his early career, he worked his way up to leadership, eventually taking on the position of air traffic department manager at Grenada’s Maurice Bishop International Airport. It was in this role that he first earned widespread recognition across the region for his steady leadership and unmatched technical expertise.

    His impact extended far beyond Grenada’s national borders, as he took on key regional and international roles to advance Caribbean aviation. From 2001 to 2006, he served as chairman of the International Civil Aviation Organization’s Eastern Caribbean Working Group, where he played an instrumental role in building cross-border cooperation, aligning regional safety standards, and expanding air connectivity across the Eastern Caribbean.

    Even after officially retiring from full-time public service, Lewis continued to contribute to the industry he loved. He joined the ECCAA team on July 1, 2012, where he supported aviation development initiatives across all of the authority’s 10 member states. Whittier emphasized that Lewis remained actively involved in on-the-ground assignments right up until his death, noting that Lewis had completed an official ECCAA inspection and outreach mission to Dominica as recently as last month.

    “He generously shared his vast knowledge and experience, providing comprehensive guidance and support that significantly contributed to the improvement of civil aviation across our member states,” Whittier added.

    Colleagues across the region remembered Lewis not just for his professional contributions, but for the personal qualities that made him a beloved mentor and friend. Working remotely from his home in Grenada, Lewis was known as a consistently responsive, supportive colleague who was always willing to drop his own work to help a teammate facing a challenge. Professionally, he was widely described as dedicated, dependable, meticulous, punctual, and hardworking in every project he took on.

    Beyond his work ethic, Lewis will be remembered for his warm, approachable personality. “Simon was known by his colleagues as dedicated, dependable, punctual, hardworking, and meticulous in all of the work that he undertook,” Whittier said, adding that he was also “jovial, approachable, and warm.”

    In a statement following the tribute, ECCAA leadership confirmed that Lewis’ decades of work have left an indelible mark on every corner of Eastern Caribbean civil aviation. His legacy, the organization noted, will live on through the hundreds of aviation professionals he mentored, the regional cooperation frameworks he helped build, and the improved safety standards that will benefit the region for decades to come.

  • Wadadli Aquatic Racers Shine at The 34th Annual Sonia O’Neal Memorial International Invitational Swim Meet in Barbados

    Wadadli Aquatic Racers Shine at The 34th Annual Sonia O’Neal Memorial International Invitational Swim Meet in Barbados

    Antigua and Barbuda’s competitive swimming club, the Wadadli Aquatic Racers (WAR), closed out the recent Sonia O’Neal Swim Meet with a landmark showing, turning in a display of consistent excellence that saw multiple athletes hit key qualifying benchmarks for upcoming regional and global tournaments.

    Heading the club’s impressive cohort of competitors was rising teenage swimming talent Isabel Nicholas, who claimed the event’s Age Group High Point Trophy after a string of blistering races. Every one of Nicholas’ results at the meet met AA qualifying standards for the CARIFTA Championships, the flagship regional age-group swimming competition, and her times in four core events — the 50m freestyle, 100m freestyle, 200m freestyle, and 50m butterfly — came within touching distance of the more stringent AAA standard, marking her out as a serious contender for podium finishes at next year’s tournament. This latest performance builds on Nicholas’ already formidable regional reputation, following standout results at the ASATT Invitational and the Republic Bank National Age Group Championships (RHAC) that have already cemented her status as one of the Caribbean’s top age-group swimmers.

    In the boys’ 13–14 age division, Christopher Walter turned heads with his breakthrough showing, not only locking in AA CARIFTA qualifying times but also breaking his own existing personal best record in the 100m breaststroke. The result underscores the steady progress Walter has made in recent years and reinforces his position as one of WAR’s most promising elite competitors.

    Tristan Nicholas also notched a major career milestone at the meet, recording his first ever AA CARIFTA qualifying time. He came agonizingly close to securing a second qualifying standard, missing out by just 0.04 seconds — a narrow margin that does nothing to undermine the clear rapid improvement and bright long-term potential his performance revealed.

    Espriit Shaw turned in arguably the most well-rounded result of any WAR competitor at the event, showing unwavering consistency and strength across a full schedule of races. Shaw not only slashed time off multiple personal bests, but also secured both AA and AAA qualifying times for both the CARIFTA Championships and the Pan American Games, while also setting a new Age Group Record in the 400m Individual Medley. When ranked by World Aquatics points, his results confirm his status as one of the top contenders for a spot on Antigua and Barbuda’s international competition teams.

    Two other young WAR athletes, Elianna Spencer and Jadon Green, also turned in encouraging results, hitting A qualifying times in multiple events to signal their own upward trajectories. Even the club’s developing emerging swimmers showed clear momentum, with Kaia Belle turning in major improvements to most of her personal best times while gaining invaluable high-level experience racing in a long course meters international environment — a critical step forward in her athletic development.

    Taken as a whole, the WAR team’s performance at the Sonia O’Neal Swim Meet makes clear that the club’s development program is moving from strength to strength, fueled by a deep pool of natural talent, rigorous discipline, and a clear structured pathway to regional and international competitive success. With multiple swimmers already having locked in qualifying standards or moving close to meeting them, the future looks exceptionally bright for the Antigua and Barbuda-based club as it builds toward the 2027 CARIFTA season and future international competitions.

  • Air Travel Costs Lead Sharp Increase in Antigua and Barbuda Inflation

    Air Travel Costs Lead Sharp Increase in Antigua and Barbuda Inflation

    On May 29, 2026, the Statistics Division under Antigua and Barbuda’s Ministry of Finance and Corporate Governance published the official Consumer Price Index (CPI) data for April 2026, revealing key inflation trends for the small Caribbean nation. Year-over-year, headline inflation reached 3.1% when comparing April 2026 to the same period one year prior. Core inflation, measured by the All-Items Less Food and Energy index, stood at a higher 4.0% over the 12-month period, while food inflation remained muted at just 0.3% overall.

    The marginal overall increase in the Food Index masks stark divergence across different product categories. Five food segments recorded price declines, three saw increases, and the Sugars, Jams, Honey, Chocolate, and Confectionery category held steady. The upward pressure on food prices came almost entirely from sharp gains in two segments: Fish and Seafood prices jumped 11.0% year-over-year, while Vegetable prices rose 8.0%. These gains were almost entirely offset by significant drops in other key food categories: Fruit prices plummeted 12.9%, Milk, Cheese and Eggs fell 6.5%, and Meat and Meat Products declined 5.2%, bringing the overall food inflation rate down to its low 0.3% level.

    Core inflation was driven heavily by skyrocketing costs in the transport services sector, which soared 60.3% year-over-year. The Statistics Division attributed this massive increase to rising regional and international airfares, which have pushed up average transport service costs dramatically over the 12-month period. Other sectors seeing notable annual price gains included Recreation and Culture, which rose 30.2%, Education at 13.3%, and Restaurants and Hotels at 4.5%.

    Looking at month-to-month changes between March 2026 and April 2026, the overall CPI rose a full 1.0% in a single month. The Food and Non-Alcoholic Beverages index outpaced overall inflation with a 2.4% monthly gain, bouncing back from a 1.5% contraction in March. Vegetable prices led the monthly food increase with a 7.5% jump, with Fresh and Chilled Vegetables posting a 13.3% monthly gain – the steepest one-month increase for that segment since a 19.4% rise in November 2024. Fruit prices rose 4.7% month-over-month, while Fish and Seafood increased 3.9%. Non-alcoholic beverages also saw above-average gains at 2.6%, driven by an 8.2% jump in fruit and vegetable juice prices and a 2.9% rise in soft drinks.

    On a monthly basis, the All Items Less Food and Energy index rose 0.9% in April 2026. Transport services again led gains with an 11.7% monthly jump, directly tied to a 14.0% increase in average airfare prices. Recreation and Culture followed with a 14.5% monthly price increase, while the Health index rose 2.4%.

    For context, the CPI is the world’s standard benchmark for measuring overall inflation, tracking the average monthly and annual change in prices of the basket of goods and services purchased by a typical household. The Antigua and Barbuda National Bureau of Statistics collects price data monthly and quarterly from retail outlets and service providers across the country, and updates the basket weights based on regular household expenditure surveys. The current index framework is based on 2006 expenditure patterns, and the full index, including 12 component sub-indices, is published on a monthly basis. For full methodological details, the public can contact the bureau’s senior statistical staff directly.

  • Prime Minister Browne Welcomes INS Sudarshini During Antigua Port Call

    Prime Minister Browne Welcomes INS Sudarshini During Antigua Port Call

    A key moment of diplomatic engagement unfolded this week in the Eastern Caribbean, as Antigua and Barbuda’s Prime Minister Gaston Browne formally hosted the commanding officer of India’s sail training ship INS Sudarshini during the vessel’s scheduled five-day port call to the twin-island nation.

    Per official confirmation from India’s High Commission based in Guyana, Commander Ravikanth Nandoori, the lead officer overseeing the INS Sudarshini mission, held a formal courtesy meeting with Prime Minister Browne between May 27 and May 31, the full duration of the ship’s stay in Antiguan waters.

    Diplomatic discussions during the gathering centered on the deep, decades-long friendly relations that have existed between the governments and peoples of Antigua and Barbuda and India. Prime Minister Browne opened the meeting by extending warm gratitude for the goodwill visit, emphasizing his appreciation for the consistent development support and collaborative assistance that the Government of India has extended to Antigua and Barbuda over the years. He reiterated that the Caribbean nation openly welcomes Indian naval vessels and deepened bilateral engagement, reinforcing the open and productive partnership between the two states.

    In response, Commander Nandoori extended his own thanks to the Antigua and Barbuda government for the seamless logistical cooperation and warm hospitality extended to the ship and its 100-plus crew members throughout their time on shore.

    This port call is not an isolated journey: it forms a core segment of the INS Sudarshini’s international deployment under the Indian Navy’s flagship Lokayan 2025 initiative, a global maritime diplomacy program designed to expand practical maritime cooperation between India and partner nations across the world, while building people-to-people goodwill across maritime borders.

    As one of the Indian Navy’s premiere purpose-built sail training vessels, the INS Sudarshini has a long track record of participating in long-distance international voyages and public diplomatic outreach missions across every major ocean basin, carrying India’s message of collaborative maritime security and friendship to ports across the globe.

  • Five Major Spending Categories See Prices Fall Despite 3.1% Inflation Rate

    Five Major Spending Categories See Prices Fall Despite 3.1% Inflation Rate

    When the National Bureau of Statistics of Antigua and Barbuda released its latest Consumer Price Index (CPI) data for April 2026, the headline figure of 3.1% annual inflation told only part of the story. Far from a broad-based increase in consumer costs, the new report reveals a deeply split inflation landscape, with nearly half of the nation’s 12 core consumer spending categories actually registering year-over-year price drops, contradicting assumptions of universal cost growth across the economy.

    Digging into the details of the CPI breakdown, two categories posted the steepest annual deflation, with both clothing and footwear, and miscellaneous goods and services recording a 4.4% price decline compared to April 2025. Health care costs followed with a 2.3% drop, while the broad housing, water, electricity and other fuels category saw a 1.3% overall reduction. Even alcoholic beverages, tobacco and narcotics posted a minor 0.2% price decrease over the 12-month period.

    The downward shift in housing-related costs was not a random fluctuation: the trend was fueled in part by an 1.8% drop in electricity prices year-over-year, alongside a 1.4% decrease in actual rental rates for residential properties, bringing tangible relief to households’ largest recurring expense.

    While falling prices in these sectors provided a counterweight to overall inflation, sharp spikes in other categories were large enough to push the aggregate inflation rate above the 1.7% recorded in March 2026, marking the second straight month of accelerating year-on-year price growth. Transportation saw the most dramatic jump among major categories, surging 18.8% annually. This increase was driven almost entirely by a staggering 60.3% rise in transport services, as regional and international airline fares pushed travel costs sharply higher.

    Recreation and culture followed with an even steeper 30.2% annual cost increase, while education costs climbed 13.3% and prices at restaurants and hotels rose 4.5%. For the closely watched food and non-alcoholic beverages category, the overall annual increase clocked in at a modest 1.2%, with core food prices alone rising just 0.3% thanks to falling costs for many staple goods. Consumers saw fruit prices drop 12.9%, milk, cheese and egg products fall 6.5%, and meat products decline 5.2%—offsets that kept overall food inflation muted even as vegetable and seafood prices rose.

    Breaking down the full CPI structure, five of the 12 top-level expenditure categories recorded price decreases, seven posted increases, and at the more granular sub-group level, 12 categories had higher prices, 10 had lower prices, and one held steady from 2025.

    This fragmented inflation landscape means the cost of living impact varies dramatically for different households across Antigua and Barbuda, the statistics office noted. Families that allocate a large share of their monthly budget to travel, leisure activities and education are facing significantly steeper expenses than a year ago, while households whose spending is concentrated on housing, health care and staple food items like fruit and meat have actually seen their cost burdens ease in these key areas.