The world’s biggest celebration of football is finally here. On June 11, 2026, the iconic Estadio Azteca in Mexico City will open the 2026 FIFA World Cup, the largest edition of the tournament in history, with a opening match between co-host nation Mexico and South Africa, kicking off a month of global competition that will write new chapters of football history. For fans across the world, this moment carries extra weight: Estadio Azteca is set to become the first stadium in history to host World Cup matches across three different editions of the tournament, capping a decades-long legacy that has shaped some of the most iconic moments the sport has ever seen.
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Harris Paints unveils new tinting technology with roots in Caribbean innovation
A groundbreaking new development in decorative paint technology is putting Caribbean innovation on the global map, with Barbados-founded paint manufacturer Harris Paints rolling out what it calls the world’s first advanced decorative paint tinting system. The newly launched Quantum Dry system, which debuted at the company’s Barbados headquarters, marks a historic first for the global coatings industry: it is the first product to deliver tinted decorative paint using cutting-edge dry pigment pearls through an integrated single-base color framework, according to the company’s official press announcement.
This new platform builds on the success of Harris Paints’ earlier Quantum i12 system, a color innovation first introduced to the market four years ago. That original platform is already fully operational across all Harris Paints locations throughout the Caribbean region, laying the groundwork for the next-generation Quantum Dry upgrade. The strong commercial and technical performance of the initial Quantum platform even spurred the creation of a standalone spinoff, Quantum Corporation, which has since added an artificial intelligence-powered color matching tool to its product suite and secured international licensing deals for its technology. Today, coatings made with this Caribbean-developed innovation are already on store shelves in markets as far-flung as Italy and Bangladesh.
Unlike conventional paint tinting processes, which depend entirely on liquid colorants to create custom shades, the Quantum Dry system leverages solid pigment pearls to deliver measurable improvements in color quality and consistency. Antonio Vasconcellos, co-CEO of Quantum Corporation, explained that the new system cuts down on unnecessary chemical additives, reduces the overall environmental footprint of paint production, and achieves far more precise color reproduction than traditional tinting methods can deliver. For consumers and contractors, this means more consistent color matching from batch to batch and a lower-impact product compared to standard options on the market.
For its initial rollout, Quantum Dry will be available exclusively at Harris Paints’ Wildey retail outlet in Barbados, before the company scales distribution to additional product lines and expands access across regional Caribbean markets. Dominica is already confirmed as one of the first Caribbean markets set to benefit from the new technology once regional rollout begins. Company leadership frames the launch as more than just a new product release: it is a major milestone for homegrown innovation from the Caribbean, showcasing that cutting-edge global technology can emerge from and scale out of regional markets.
Harris Paints has deep roots in Barbados, first founded in Bridgetown all the way back in 1972. The company began its operations by repackaging pre-manufactured paint products, but just one year after its founding, it transitioned into full local manufacturing, building out the expertise that has led to today’s global innovation.
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Consultant defends Roseau sand ESIA, says main risk is to fisheries
At a community gathering hosted by North Leeward Member of Parliament Kishore Shallow as part of his “North Leeward Matters” public engagement series, environmental consultant Reynold Murray has addressed long-simmering community tensions over a state-run sand and aggregate extraction project in Roseau, North Leeward, pushing back against claims of procedural recklessness while openly acknowledging gaps in the mandated environmental and social impact assessment (ESIA) he completed for project proponent BRAGSA, a state-owned national development enterprise.
Murray, who was contracted by BRAGSA to carry out the ESIA for the proposed harvesting operation, opened his remarks by reframing public debate around the project’s environmental risks, arguing that the most critical threat to local interests is not the widely cited harms of deforestation or soil erosion, but potential irreversible disruption to nearshore fisheries that support local livelihoods. He pushed back against growing comparisons between the Roseau project and the divisive, controversial Rayneau quarry operation at nearby Richmond, where residents have long accused developers and regulators of cutting corners on environmental protections. Instead, he centered local fishing communities as the key stakeholder group that must be centered in all future project planning.
During the question-and-answer portion of the meeting, North Leeward Preservation Front representative Jill Edwards pressed Murray on whether his team completed foundational baseline ecological surveys, including a full inventory of native plant species in the project area. Murray openly conceded that this work was outside the formal scope of his mandate, which prioritized analyzing the composition of the material to be extracted and potential downstream environmental impacts. Edwards countered that baseline biodiversity surveys are the foundational first step of any rigorous ESIA, describing a complete species inventory as basic industry protocol that cannot be omitted.
Murray also addressed widespread public pushback over a contentious claim in the draft ESIA that no active agricultural cultivation was taking place in the Roseau Valley following the April 2021 eruption of the La Soufriere volcano. Local activists have refuted this claim with on-the-ground videos and first-hand testimony showing farmers continue to grow peppers and tomatoes in the area. Murray explained that the conclusion was drawn from testimony delivered by a local farmer at an earlier 70-person public consultation, where the farmer stated all producers had relocated from the area after the eruption, and no other attendees objected to that claim. Acknowledging that the finding may now be inaccurate, Murray emphasized that the ESIA is not a static, unchangeable document, and that the error would be corrected to reflect ongoing cultivation if new evidence confirms it.
Critics have also charged that pre-construction site clearing began at Roseau before the ESIA was finalized, arguing this follows a pattern of breaking environmental protocols first seen at the Richmond quarry. Murray disputed this characterization, explaining that the local Physical Planning department routinely grants “approval in principle” for preliminary site work that enables surveyors to design project infrastructure, including access ramps and on-site facilities. He clarified that the limited clearing that took place was not unauthorized random tree felling, but the creation of access paths required to complete detailed site surveys, and that full formal approval from planners, followed by official gazettement, will not be granted until the final ESIA is submitted and reviewed.
The meeting also saw tensions flare over public access to the full ESIA document and associated environmental management plans. Local activist Lennox Lampinan argued that all project-related assessments, permits, meeting minutes and approvals should be made public to ensure accountability. Murray stated he supports greater transparency in principle, but noted that under prevailing regulatory practice across the Caribbean, the completed ESIA is the intellectual property of the client that paid for the work – in this case, BRAGSA – rather than the consulting expert. He explained that it falls to the local planning authority, not the consultant, to determine when and how the public can access the document, typically after it has been referenced in the official Government Gazette, pointing to a recent hotel development project he worked on in Grenada where public access required a $800 administrative fee paid to the planning department.
Throughout the meeting, Murray walked a careful line between acknowledging widespread community frustration with past environmental mismanagement, particularly around the Richmond quarry, which many residents label an environmental disaster, and defending the rigor of his team’s work on the Roseau project. He praised activists for their passion and focus on collaborative monitoring of the project, but warned against allowing political or personal interests to distort factual debate around environmental risks, noting that weaponized environmental rhetoric has long divided communities in developing nations and enabled unchecked exploitation of natural resources by bad actors.
Calling for a collaborative path forward, Murray drew on his decades of regional marine management experience, including a 2001 planning project with the Soufriere Marine Management Authority in Saint Lucia, where a multi-stakeholder co-management model brought fishers, tourism operators and other users together to develop a shared plan for the Pitons management area that allowed all groups to benefit from local marine resources. He advocated for applying this same model to Roseau Bay, arguing that the island’s small size means it cannot close the bay entirely to either extraction or fishing, and that a structured partnership between developers, fishers and other local users is the only way to fairly balance competing interests, accurately measure actual losses to fishing livelihoods, and design targeted mitigation measures rather than relying on one-size-fits-all compensation schemes.
In closing, Murray reaffirmed that the draft ESIA will be updated to address confirmed gaps and errors, and that long-term accountability will require building a formal co-management framework with local stakeholders, alongside ongoing work to reform existing laws to improve public access to environmental documentation and strengthen project oversight.
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Spoedeisende Hulp AZP kondigt ‘Code Zwart’ af; Medische Staf in overleg
Paramaribo, Suriname – June 11 – The emergency department (SEH) at the Academisch Ziekenhuis Paramaribo (AZP), Suriname’s leading tertiary care facility, has immediately enacted a rare ‘Code Black’ declaration, triggered by deep-seated staffing and logistical crises that threaten the core of the nation’s acute care system.
According to an internal notice obtained by local outlet Starnieuws, the unprecedented measure comes after the department confirmed it can no longer guarantee consistent, high-quality, and safe acute care for all patients under current operating conditions. AZP’s Medical Council has already convened urgent closed-door discussions to assess the escalating crisis, though no concrete short-term interventions have been announced publicly as of press time.
In a circular addressed to all clinical departments across AZP, SEH management emphasized that the Code Black declaration is a necessary response to overwhelming capacity shortfalls that have pushed the department beyond its functional limits. The declaration brings sweeping changes to acute care access across the facility: under the new protocols, severely ill and clinically unstable patients may not be transferred to the SEH in certain scenarios, and patients requiring constant intensive monitoring cannot be routinely admitted to the emergency department when the hospital’s Intensive Care Unit (ICU) is already operating at full capacity.
Additionally, the SEH has noted that unstable patients referred from smaller regional care facilities across Suriname may be temporarily turned away if the department faces severe understaffing, insufficient shock room capacity, or other constraints that make the delivery of safe acute care impossible. All referrals of high-acuity patients from external providers must now be pre-negotiated and approved by the on-call emergency medicine specialist before transfer is authorized.
SEH leadership stressed that the drastic move is not a refusal to provide care, but a candid acknowledgment of the department’s current inability to deliver fully responsible care across all cases. Beyond addressing immediate operational constraints, the declaration is framed as an urgent wake-up call: systemic, structural changes are desperately needed to safeguard the long-term quality and accessibility of acute healthcare across Suriname.
The crisis is being watched with intense alarm across Suriname’s entire health sector. As the country’s primary tertiary care institution, AZP serves as the central hub for emergency case management for almost the entire nation, meaning disruptions to its emergency department impact patient outcomes from the capital to the most remote regions of Suriname.






