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  • LETTER: It’s Time We Kiss “Town” Goodbye

    LETTER: It’s Time We Kiss “Town” Goodbye

    Decades after serving as the functional capital of Antigua, St. John’s has fallen into a state of such severe disrepair that local observers argue it can no longer meet the basic standards expected of a national capital. What was once a thriving urban center has decayed into a maze of accessibility barriers, outdated infrastructure, and unaddressed maintenance failures that harm both long-term residents and visiting tourists alike.

    For pedestrians, navigating downtown St. John’s has become a grueling, obstacle-filled experience rather than a routine task. Outside the limited, upgraded area of Heritage Quay, continuous, even sidewalks are almost impossible to find. Crumbling pavement, inconsistent step heights, and unmarked hazards force pedestrians to constantly weave and adjust their path to avoid injury. This is far more than an inconvenience: it creates a fundamentally exclusionary environment for people with mobility impairments.

    The scope of this accessibility failure was laid bare in a recent firsthand observation: a visitor attempting to navigate the streets with a loved one in a wheelchair faced constant, insurmountable barriers. Onlookers described the scene as painful to watch, noting that any visitor experiencing these barriers would likely abandon their exploration of the city and return immediately to their cruise ship, cutting off potential revenue for local businesses. The incident makes clear that meaningful accessibility for disabled people is simply non-existent in St. John’s today.

    Mobility issues are not the only pressing problem. Persistent, unpleasant odors permeate multiple neighborhoods throughout the city, traced back to open drainage systems and aging, overcapacity trash receptacles. What were once functional, practical infrastructure solutions for a smaller city have long been outdated by growing population and tourism volumes, leaving them to become public nuisance that requires urgent replacement.

    The broader built environment of St. John’s tells the same story of neglect. Commercial and residential buildings show clear signs of structural deterioration, while many retail storefronts make little to no effort to create welcoming, appealing spaces for customers. Basic merchandising planning that draws in foot traffic is often an afterthought, if it is considered at all, further eroding the city’s ability to support local commerce.

    Parking management adds another layer of frustration for anyone trying to visit or do business in the capital. Informal parking space claiming, enforced by traffic cones from business owners, local organizations, and individual operators including car wash services, has locked out the general public from most convenient spots. This unregulated system sends a clear message: visitor convenience is not a priority for stakeholders in the city. For potential customers considering a trip into the capital to shop or support local businesses, this barrier alone is often enough to discourage them from coming at all.

    Even when municipal repairs are initiated, they often leave the city in worse shape for months. When the Antigua Public Utilities Authority completes road excavation work for utility upgrades, the excavated sections are regularly left unrepaired for extended periods of time, leaving roads partially or fully impassable. Community members argue these delays are entirely unreasonable and avoidable with proper project planning.

    At its core, the crisis facing St. John’s boils down to a simple, unavoidable truth: no city can maintain itself without consistent investment, strategic planning, and regular reinvestment in infrastructure. Just as ongoing care is required to maintain any valuable asset, St. John’s has been starved of the consistent attention it needs to function, and the visible decline across the city makes that neglect impossible to ignore.

    This critique is not an attack on St. John’s rich historic identity. Supporters of change emphasize that acknowledging the capital’s current collapse is not about dismissing the city’s past, but about being honest about its future. The current state of St. John’s is not sustainable, and continuing to pretend otherwise does a profound disservice to residents who rely on capital services, business owners who depend on visitor traffic, and tourists who come to the island expecting a functional, welcoming capital.

    For proponents of dramatic change, the conclusion is unavoidable: St. John’s has deteriorated past the point of cost-effective rehabilitation. To give residents, businesses, and visitors the functional, comfortable urban environment they need, core commercial and government activity must be relocated to a new, properly planned urban center.

  • Antigua and Barbuda High Commission Welcomes Participants of The King’s Foundation Building Craft Programme

    Antigua and Barbuda High Commission Welcomes Participants of The King’s Foundation Building Craft Programme

    LONDON, April 13, 2026 – A milestone moment for skills development and heritage preservation in Antigua and Barbuda unfolded this week, as the nation’s High Commission in London opened its doors to welcome the first group of local participants taking part in the transformative King’s Foundation Building Craft Programme.

    The innovative training initiative is the product of years of collaborative planning between three key partners: The King’s Foundation, the Antigua and Barbuda High Commission in London, and the Antigua and Barbuda Centre for Advanced Studies. Over the course of the programme, participating craft professionals will gain immersive, specialized instruction in both time-honored traditional construction methods and modern sustainable building practices, with a particular focus on heritage site restoration and conservation.

    For the small Caribbean nation, the programme carries far-reaching long-term benefits beyond individual professional growth. It is designed to bolster domestic technical expertise, create a framework for protecting Antigua and Barbuda’s unique cultural and architectural heritage, and equip a rising generation of skilled local workers to lead future restoration projects and national development initiatives across the islands.

    Addressing gathered participants and partners at the reception, Antigua and Barbuda High Commissioner Karen-Mae Hill encouraged the cohort to seize the once-in-a-lifetime learning opportunity, joking lightly about the group’s likely adjustment to Britain’s cooler spring temperatures. Hill reflected on her own early involvement in building the programme, recalling a trip to Dumfries House in Scotland to meet with The King’s Foundation team during the conceptual development phase.

    “This is a truly unique opportunity for learning, cross-cultural exchange, and professional advancement,” Hill told the group. “I urge every one of you to embrace this experience with discipline, open minds, and creative thinking. As you build new skills, consider not only how this will advance your own careers – but how you can bring this expertise home to lift up our entire nation.”

    Jeremy Cross, Director of International Engagement for The King’s Foundation, also spoke at the event, expressing his organization’s enthusiasm for the new partnership. “We are delighted to welcome these exceptionally talented individuals to our training sites, as they hone their craft in heritage building and climate-resilient construction,” Cross said. “We are looking forward to working alongside each participant throughout the programme, and to the mutual exchange of knowledge and approaches that this collaboration will bring.”

    In closing, the High Commission recognized the behind-the-scenes work that made the welcome event and participant arrangements possible, singling out Brent Scotland, Second Secretary, and Caleb Gardiner, Third Secretary, for their instrumental coordination efforts that brought the initiative to its official launch.

  • ‘We Are Exercising That Right for You’: MOHW Defends Contraceptive Enforcement Policy

    ‘We Are Exercising That Right for You’: MOHW Defends Contraceptive Enforcement Policy

    A public controversy over contraceptive access has erupted in Belize after the Ministry of Health and Wellness (MOHW) moved to enforce a long-dormant prescription requirement for birth control products, spurring widespread confusion and pushback from communities across the country, particularly in underserved rural regions.

    During a public press briefing held on the morning of April 13, 2026, Dr. Melissa Diaz Musa, Director of Public Health and Wellness, pushed back against growing criticism, framing the policy as a measure that protects rather than infringes on women’s reproductive rights. She emphasized that the government has not implemented any new laws or regulatory changes related to contraceptive access – the prescription requirement is already outlined in existing national drug policy, and the recent enforcement action has only reignited long-unapplied rules.

    Dr. Musa addressed widespread misinformation that spread across social media over the past week, where many critics framed the new enforcement as a direct attack on women’s bodily autonomy. “I am uncertain where the many views on social media over the last week regarding women’s rights have surfaced from, and why there is a perception that asking for a prescription equates to the violation of a woman’s right,” she stated.

    In her defense of the policy, Dr. Musa argued that mandatory pre-purchase consultations with doctors or nurses actually strengthen reproductive autonomy by ensuring women make fully informed decisions about their birth control. “The request for a prescription for contraceptives after having a proper doctor’s or nurse’s consultation ensures that your rights have been fully exercised as you have determined the safest, the most effective, and the best birth control method for you,” she explained. “You are now an informed and consenting woman. We are exercising that right for you.”

    She did, however, acknowledge critical missteps in the rollout of the enforcement: public outreach and education fell far short of what was needed to help communities understand the change, and distinguish between over-the-counter and prescription-only medications. Dr. Musa admitted that MOHW failed to pair its discussions with retail pharmacy operators and the Belize Pharmacy Association with a large-scale public health sensitization campaign that could have prevented much of the current confusion.

    She also noted that the updated national drug list actually expands access to a range of other medications, and that contraceptives remain widely accessible through multiple existing channels, including free public healthcare services, repeat prescription programs, and rural health clinics.

    Despite the ministry’s reassurances, critics of the enforcement warn that the on-the-ground reality for many women will create new, unnecessary barriers to reproductive care. For people living in remote rural regions of Belize, obtaining a prescription requires additional time, costly travel to urban or central clinics, and often out-of-pocket fees for medical appointments that did not exist when contraceptives were available over the counter, leading to delayed or denied access for low-income and geographically isolated women.

  • Last-Minute Sprint Steals the Show in Junior Cycling Race

    Last-Minute Sprint Steals the Show in Junior Cycling Race

    On a race day that delivered high drama and unexpected twists, the 25th edition of the BEL Junior Cross Country Cycling Classic concluded Sunday with two new champions crowned: Keith Enwright Junior pulled off a stunning upset in the men’s division, while Irani Baki defended her title in an unchallenged women’s performance.

    The 30-rider men’s field, which featured five international competitors — two from Mexico, two from Guatemala, and one from the Cayman Islands — departed the Succotz Ferry in Belize’s Cayo District early Sunday morning, kicking off a long-distance race that would shift dramatically across its route. By the 35-mile mark, the race kicked into high gear when young rider Amaad Cherington made a bold solo breakaway, pulling ahead of the peloton by an approximately three-minute gap. Cherington held his lead alone for more than 12 miles, but a small chase group of four riders reeled him in just 12 miles out from the finish line in Belize City. The final lead group that entered the city limits included three riders from G Flow, Griga Cycling’s Jamaal Tablada, and international competitor Ryan Thompson of the Cayman Islands.

    As the race entered its closing stretch, Cherington continued to set the pace at the front of the lead group, but Enwright Jr. launched a sudden, powerful surge from the back of the pack in the final meters, crossing the line first to claim the unexpected win. Thompson crossed second, while Tablada rounded out the top three. Even after his victory, Enwright Jr. said he never expected to take the top spot heading into the final sprint. “I had no faith in myself… I am not a sprinter,” he told reporters after the race. “But when I saw the rider from Cayman coming, I knew I could not let him win.”

    “To be honest, I just feel shocked. I don’t understand how I did that,” he added.

    In the women’s junior race, 17-year-old defending champion Irani Baki dominated the route from Roaring Creek to Belize City, never facing a serious challenge from the field as she successfully retained her 2025 title. Despite her win, Baki expressed disappointment over the lack of close competition Sunday, noting that she rode alone for nearly the entire race and had hoped for a more competitive contest. The young cyclist is coming off a competing in the open Women’s Cross Country race two weeks prior, and is currently gearing up for an upcoming training trip to Paris.

    Full highlights of the race will be broadcast this evening on News 5 Live at 6 p.m.

  • Court Hears $9M Fairtrade Premium Dispute Between BSCFA and Tate & Lyle

    Court Hears $9M Fairtrade Premium Dispute Between BSCFA and Tate & Lyle

    A high-stakes legal battle over $9 million in unpaid Fairtrade sugar premiums moved to the Belize Court of Appeal on April 13, 2026, pitting the Belize Sugar Cane Farmers Association (BSCFA) against global sugar processing giant Tate & Lyle Sugars Limited (TLS). The dispute, which has already stretched more than two years through lower courts, centers on conflicting claims over eligibility for premium payments for two sugar crop cycles: 2021/2022 and 2022/2023.

    Tuesday’s appellate hearing stretched nearly four hours, with legal teams for both sides laying out their core arguments in front of the court. The appeal itself was filed by TLS, which is challenging a 2025 Belize High Court ruling that rejected the firm’s bid to dismiss the BSCFA’s original claim entirely. The BSCFA first launched its lawsuit in March 2024, naming both Belize Sugar Industries (BSI) — the local processor that holds a long-term contract to supply Fairtrade-certified sugar to TLS — and TLS as defendants.

    Per the BSCFA’s core argument, the association’s farmer members grew and supplied fully Fairtrade-certified sugar cane throughout the two disputed crop years. Because those harvests were sold to TLS as Fairtrade-eligible product, the farmers are legally entitled to collect the corresponding Fairtrade premiums, which are added payments intended to support community development and producer welfare under Fairtrade labeling rules. The association is seeking the full $9 million in unpaid premiums, plus accumulated interest, and is also pressing claims of damages for alleged unlawful conspiracy and violation of global Fairtrade operating standards.

    TLS, for its part, has pushed back on every element of the BSCFA’s claim. The company maintains that payment of Fairtrade premiums is only required when the producer association signs a formal Letter of Enhancement (LOE), a binding document that outlines the terms of premium distribution and dispute resolution. According to TLS, no valid LOE was signed by the BSCFA for the two crop years in question, disqualifying the farmers from collecting the premiums.

    Additionally, TLS has argued that the 2021 LOE — which was in place for the 2020/2021 crop cycle — included a binding arbitration clause requiring all related disputes to be heard in London, not in domestic Belizean courts. The firm has repeatedly called for the dispute to be moved to international arbitration rather than adjudicated locally.

    The BSCFA has directly refuted this position, countering that the 2021 LOE was explicitly written to cover only the 2020/2021 harvest, and expired fully before the start of the 2021/2022 crop cycle. With no new LOE agreed upon for the disputed period, the expired agreement’s arbitration clause cannot apply to the current conflict, the association’s legal team argues. The BSCFA further alleges that TLS and BSI intentionally withheld the new LOE for the 2021/2022 and 2022/2023 cycles specifically to cut farmers off from the millions in premium payments they were owed.

    All three parties presented senior legal counsel for the appellate hearing: Magali Marin-Young and Allister Jenkins argued on behalf of the BSCFA, while Eamon Courtenay and Iliana Swift represented TLS. Though BSI is not an official party to the appeal, the court granted the firm permission to submit its own arguments, delivered by Senior Counsel Godfrey Smith, Hector Guerra, and Edgar Lord. Both TLS and BSI have denied all allegations of wrongdoing, asserting that global Fairtrade rules explicitly require a signed contractual agreement between buyers and producer associations before premium payments can be issued.

    The appellate hearing marks a key turning point in a dispute that has major implications for Fairtrade labeling practices, smallholder farmer rights, and contract enforcement in global agricultural commodity supply chains, with a ruling expected to set a precedent for future premium disputes in the region.

  • President Vs. Pope

    President Vs. Pope

    A high-stakes public confrontation has erupted between sitting United States President Donald Trump and Pope Leo XIV, the first American-born leader of the global Catholic Church, with escalating sharp verbal exchanges centered on the ongoing Iran conflict. Tensions flared after the pope used a high-profile CNN interview to push for an immediate diplomatic off-ramp to de-escalate tensions and end the conflict, a call that built on a series of peace advocacy efforts the pontiff led during the recent Holy Week and Easter observances.

  • DHTA AGM 2026 underscores innovation and strategic vision for Dominica’s tourism future

    DHTA AGM 2026 underscores innovation and strategic vision for Dominica’s tourism future

    On April 9, 2026, key players across Dominica’s booming tourism sector gathered for the Dominica Hotel & Tourism Association (DHTA) Annual General Meeting, an event designed to reflect on 12 months of progress and lay out a bold strategic roadmap for the industry’s future. Held under the theme “Innovation & Impact Driven Tourism – Shaping the Future of the Industry,” the meeting featured opening remarks from two senior tourism leaders, as outlined in an official media release published by the DHTA following the event.

    Claudius Lestrade, Permanent Secretary for Dominica’s Ministry of Tourism, International Transport and Maritime Initiatives, and Marva Williams, CEO and Director of Tourism at the Discover Dominica Authority, both took the stage to address attendees. In their addresses, the pair drew attention to the consistent, steady expansion Dominica’s tourism sector has recorded in recent years, while underlining that sustained growth and transformative innovation can only be achieved through deeper, more intentional cooperation between government and private industry stakeholders.

    DHTA President Kitwani Ferreira delivered a comprehensive year-in-review address, walking attendees through the association’s key accomplishments and member support initiatives rolled out over the previous 12 months. Ferreira also laid out the organization’s formal strategic agenda for the 2026–2027 term, centering five core priorities: building a clear, purpose-driven framework for balanced tourism development, deepening productive public-private sector partnerships, securing long-term sustainable financing for tourism projects, addressing critical energy infrastructure needs to support industry operations, and boosting the global competitiveness of Dominica as a premium travel destination.

    One of the most anticipated moments of the gathering was the official introduction of the DHTA’s newly seated Board of Directors for the 2026–2027 term. The full leadership roster includes returning President Kitwani Ferreira, Vice President Gregor Nassief, Director of Accommodation Avril Coipel, Director of Finance & Fundraising Delwin James, Director of Membership Hubert Winston, Director of Public Relations Jael Joseph, Director of Tourism Services Michael Eugene, Director of Related Services Alice James, and ex-officio board member Marva Williams, who serves concurrently as CEO and Director of Tourism at the Discover Dominica Authority.

    Closing out the meeting, the DHTA reaffirmed its long-standing core commitment to building a tourism ecosystem that is resilient to external shocks, rooted in innovative practices, and aligned with global sustainable development standards. The association emphasized that its ultimate goal is to ensure the tourism sector delivers tangible, widespread economic benefits and meaningful social progress across the island nation of Dominica.

  • Pringle Promises Year-Round Barrel Concessions as Part of Cost-of-Living Plan

    Pringle Promises Year-Round Barrel Concessions as Part of Cost-of-Living Plan

    ST JOHN’S, Antigua — With less than two months to go until Antigua and Barbuda’s April 30 general election, cost-of-living pressures have taken center stage as a key voting issue, prompting the main opposition United Progressive Party (UPP) to roll out a sweeping package of household affordability measures led by an expansion of existing barrel concessions.

    Speaking to supporters at the party’s official campaign launch on Sunday evening, UPP leader Jamale Pringle laid out the full slate of policy proposals, framing the plan as a direct response to the growing financial strain that working families across the twin-island nation are facing amid soaring prices for basic necessities. Pringle emphasized that the current restricted barrel concession program, which allows reduced duties on goods shipped to residents in barrels, would be broadened to deliver ongoing, meaningful relief to households grappling with steady food price inflation.

    Beyond the expanded barrel concessions, Pringle announced a new targeted Water Tanks and Accessories Relief Program, designed to address longstanding inconsistent water access across the country. Under the proposal, all taxes on critical water storage and delivery equipment—including holding tanks, pressure tanks, and water pumps—would be eliminated entirely. Pringle clarified that the tax removal would act as an interim solution for households until the UPP, if elected, can implement a permanent fix to deliver consistent, daily piped water service to all communities.

    The opposition leader also put forward major changes to vehicle import policy to cut transportation costs for residents, promising to fully remove import duties on personal passenger vehicles. The move would bring down the upfront cost of vehicle ownership, making private transportation far more accessible for working families that rely on cars for daily commutes, school runs, and essential travel.

    Pringle tied all the party’s proposals directly to what he framed as failing cost management under the current sitting administration, arguing that everyday Antiguans and Barbudans have seen unchecked increases in prices and public fees over the current government’s term. He outlined the UPP’s core governing promise as delivering tangible improvements to daily quality of life: accessible food that families can afford, well-maintained safe roads, vehicles that do not force households into debt, reliable running water, and accessible healthcare when people need it.

    For Pringle, the package of relief measures is far more than a campaign platform—it is a binding commitment to the electorate. “This is not a wish. This is a contract with the people of Antigua and Barbuda,” he told supporters.

    As the election campaign intensifies, cost-of-living issues have emerged as the central battleground between the country’s two major political parties, with both the governing party and the UPP working to convince voters that their respective policy agendas offer the most effective path to reducing household financial strain and delivering long-term economic stability.

  • HAPPENING NOW: UPP Leader and Candidates Begin Nomination Process

    HAPPENING NOW: UPP Leader and Candidates Begin Nomination Process

    As election season gains momentum, the United Progressive Party (UPP) has entered a critical new phase this week, with party leader and all endorsed candidates officially launching their nomination process at party headquarters across multiple regional constituencies.

    The nomination period, a mandatory procedural step required by the national electoral commission, marks the formal start of candidates’ qualification for the upcoming general election, scheduled to take place in six weeks. Party officials confirmed that the UPP leader was the first to file their nomination papers early Monday morning, accompanied by senior party members, before proceeding to meet with grassroots supporters outside the commission’s local office.

    Representatives from the electoral commission have stated that all nomination materials submitted so far by UPP candidates appear to meet all regulatory requirements, with preliminary reviews expected to be completed within three business days. The process, which requires candidates to submit valid voter signatures, registration documents, and financial disclosure forms, is a foundational step that all aspiring elected officials must complete to appear on the final ballot.

    In a brief press statement following the submission of his nomination, the UPP leader emphasized that the party’s slate of candidates reflects a broad cross-section of national society, including first-time political candidates, community organizers, and incumbent representatives with proven legislative records. “This nomination process is not just a bureaucratic step—it is a commitment to the voters that we are ready to deliver on the promises we have laid out for economic growth, healthcare reform, and expanded educational opportunity,” the leader told assembled reporters.

    Grassroots supporters gathered outside the nomination venue to cheer on the UPP team, holding campaign signs and chanting party slogans, in a display of early enthusiasm for the party’s election bid. Political analysts note that the early launch of the nomination process gives the UPP a strategic advantage, allowing candidates extra time to campaign in key swing constituencies before early voting begins next month.

    Opposition parties have also begun their own nomination processes this week, with all candidates required to complete their submissions by the end of the two-week nomination window set by the electoral commission. The finalized list of all qualified candidates will be published by the commission one week after the nomination period closes, clearing the way for the official campaign period to begin in full.