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  • Trinidad’s PM escalates feud with Caribbean neighbours

    Trinidad’s PM escalates feud with Caribbean neighbours

    Diplomatic rifts within the 15-member Caribbean Community (CARICOM) have exploded into open conflict, as a long-simmering disagreement between Trinidad and Tobago and its regional neighbors over United States policy toward Venezuela and international drug trafficking erupted into a full verbal confrontation on Friday. At the center of the new clash is Trinidad Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar’s demand that CARICOM Secretary-General Carla Barnett leave her post when her five-year term expires this coming August.

    Regional friction first flared late last year, when a majority of CARICOM member states openly condemned growing United States military activity in the South Caribbean. Tensions rose further as Washington deployed an atypically large American military contingent near Venezuela’s borders, as part of a 2025 operation aimed at capturing then-Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.

    For years, CARICOM member states have collectively endorsed the vision of the Caribbean as an official “zone of peace,” a principle designed to keep major power rivalries out of the regional bloc. But since winning Trinidad’s general election one year ago, Persad-Bissessar has rejected that framing as nothing more than “zone of peace fakery.” She has openly aligned her administration with U.S. military actions in the region and thrown her full support behind the Trump administration’s broader campaign targeting transnational drug trafficking and organized crime.

    The prime minister has waged a months-long public campaign to oust Barnett ahead of any potential reappointment vote, leaning on Trinidad’s outsized financial contribution to the bloc to back her demands. Trinidad covers roughly 22 percent of CARICOM’s total annual operating budget, a sum equal to around $20 million, a point Persad-Bissessar has repeatedly highlighted to regional leaders to press for Barnett’s removal.

    Persad-Bissessar has made no secret of her deep frustration with the bloc’s current direction, stating publicly that she cannot understand why most regional leaders have aligned with Venezuela and Maduro instead of backing the U.S. position. In a statement released in late 2025, as the U.S. finalized preparations for its anti-Maduro military operation and regional governments raised alarms about the legality of fatal U.S. boat strikes in Caribbean waters, she doubled down: “Caricom has chosen to support the Maduro narco-government through the fake zone of peace narrative.”

    Persad-Bissessar’s relentless pressure ultimately forced CARICOM leadership to convene an emergency closed-door meeting on Friday to address the question of Barnett’s reappointment, marking one of the deepest crises the regional trade bloc has faced in recent years.

  • SVG missed out on US$1b from CBI under ULP — PM

    SVG missed out on US$1b from CBI under ULP — PM

    A decades-long policy rejection of citizenship-by-investment (CBI) has left St. Vincent and the Grenadines (SVG) with up to US$1 billion in unrealized revenue over the past 10 years, according to newly elected Prime Minister Godwin Friday. In a candid interview aired on Hot 97 FM last Friday, the leader of the New Democratic Party (NDP) — which won general elections in November 2024 after ousting the 25-year incumbent Unity Labour Party (ULP) — opened up about the economic costs of the previous administration’s hardline opposition to CBI programs, noting that fellow Caribbean leaders have repeatedly questioned SVG’s refusal to adopt the popular economic development tool.

    During the interview, radio host Luke Boyea shared a striking comment from a senior St. Lucia Labour Party official — a ideological ally of the SVG ULP — who claimed that SVG’s refusal to launch CBI under former Prime Minister Ralph Gonsalves had turned the country into a regional laughing stock. Boyea noted that while the ULP made bold public claims about SVG’s economic standing, the absence of CBI revenue left clear gaps in the country’s development progress that were obvious to regional observers.

    CBI programs grant foreign nationals full citizenship and a valid national passport in exchange for a substantial contribution to the host country’s economy, usually targeted at infrastructure, social programs, or other public projects. SVG is currently the only one of the five independent member states of the Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS) that does not operate a CBI program. The NDP made the introduction of CBI a core campaign promise during its 2024 election run, and Friday confirmed that the new government remains on track to launch the program within 2025 despite minor delays to some campaign pledges.

    Gonsalves, who now serves as leader of the opposition, has maintained his long-standing opposition to CBI, repeatedly framing the program as little more than selling passports. Last year, his public comments labeling CBI an inherently corrupt model drew sharp pushback from Antigua and Barbuda Prime Minister Gaston Browne, whose country operates one of the region’s most successful CBI programs.

    Friday acknowledged that the new administration has delivered on some of its 60-day campaign pledges, while other initiatives have been pushed back to later in the year. He cited ongoing global economic uncertainty stemming from regional conflicts as a key factor that requires responsible policy timing, noting that it would be reckless for the small island nation to ignore shifting global conditions when rolling out new programs.

    “It would be irresponsible to simply disregard what’s happening in the world and simply do whatever you like,” Friday said. “As a responsible government, we will consider these global factors as we advance our agenda, but our core strategic objective remains unchanged: we will manage public finances to keep our debt sustainable, meet the basic needs of all Vincentians, and expand investment opportunities to bring renewed prosperity to St. Vincent and the Grenadines.”

    Alongside CBI, Friday confirmed that repairs to the derelict Ottley Hall Marina and Shipyard — a flagship project of the last NDP administration that held office from 1984 to 2001, which was left to fall into ruin under the ULP’s 2001–2024 tenure — will move forward this year, with multiple serious investors already expressing interest in the high-potential site. The prime minister also noted that new hotel investment projects are in the pipeline for the island nation, which relies heavily on tourism as a core economic driver.

    Responding to criticism of CBI from opposition figures, Friday emphasized that the program offers a unique path to raise government revenue without taking on new debt or increasing domestic taxes. “You’re not borrowing it and you’re not taxing people to get it,” he said, framing the previous administration’s rejection of CBI as a reckless decision that carried massive opportunity costs for the country.

    Now that he holds office, Friday said regular conversations with regional peer leaders who operate successful CBI programs have underscored the scale of the missed opportunity. “They’re looking at us like say, ‘Boy, what an opportunity you guys missed,’” he told listeners.

    When asked why the ULP spent decades framing CBI as a harmful, unethical practice that the country should avoid, Friday said the media host had correctly identified the core issue: a small group of loud political opponents convinced the public of the narrative, leaving the entire country to bear the economic cost.

    As an example of what CBI revenue can fund, Friday pointed to Dominica’s new international airport, a major infrastructure project that has been largely financed by CBI proceeds. Friday’s own estimate places SVG’s cumulative missed revenue over 10 years at up to US$1 billion, a figure that lines up with informal estimates from a fellow regional prime minister, who pegged potential annual revenue at EC$200 million (roughly US$74 million), even the lower projection amounts to substantial unborrowed, untaxed revenue that the country could have used for development.

    Friday specifically noted that the US$78 million hospital currently under construction at Arnos Vale, for which the previous ULP government borrowed US$100 million from Taiwan, could have been fully paid for with CBI revenue had the program been adopted years earlier.

  • US and Iran Hold Direct Peace Talks in Pakistan, CNN Reports

    US and Iran Hold Direct Peace Talks in Pakistan, CNN Reports

    On April 11, 2026, a long-awaited diplomatic breakthrough got underway as senior official delegations from the United States and Iran convened for the highest-level direct face-to-face talks between the two nations in decades, CNN reported. Hosted in Pakistan’s capital Islamabad, the negotiations operate as trilateral discussions with Pakistani officials serving as neutral mediators, ending a years-long stretch of almost exclusively indirect dialogue between Washington and Tehran.

    The U.S. delegation is headed by Vice President JD Vance, and counts among its members special envoy Steve Witkoff, Jared Kushner, and a cohort of senior national security and regional policy advisers. A White House official confirmed to CNN that alongside the in-person negotiating team, Washington has deployed a full group of subject-matter experts, with additional backup support operating out of U.S. capital to back the talks. On Iran’s side, state media cited by CNN confirms the delegation totals 71 people, including lead negotiators, technical specialists, media liaisons, and security detail to cover all aspects of the complex discussions.

    The opening of the talks comes against a backdrop of soaring regional instability and a fragile, temporary ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran. Even as negotiators sit down in Islamabad, multiple connected flashpoints continue to test the fragile diplomatic push. Most notably, U.S. President Donald Trump announced that his administration has launched a process to “clear out” the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most vital global oil and shipping chokepoints. As of the latest reports, however, the specific scope and actions involved in this process remain undisclosed. Ship tracking data analyzed by CNN shows that a number of commercial vessels, led by Chinese-owned tankers and bulk carriers, have continued regular transits through the strait even amid escalating tensions in the area.

    The ongoing unrest has already sent ripples through global commodity markets, most sharply hitting the global fertilizer trade. Since late February, global urea prices have skyrocketed by more than 50%, triggering widespread alarm among U.S. agricultural organizations that warn the spike could cascade into broader disruptions across the international food supply chain. In response, President Trump has issued a warning against price gouging and confirmed that his administration is maintaining close, continuous oversight of fertilizer price movements to mitigate consumer and producer impacts.

    Another major sticking point for the broader negotiations sits on the Israel-Lebanon front. In recent days, the Israeli military has continued its large-scale offensive strikes against Hezbollah targets positioned inside Lebanese territory. Israeli defense officials confirmed that the force carried out strikes on more than 200 Hezbollah sites in a single 24-hour period. Tehran has made its position clear: any comprehensive, lasting ceasefire agreement that emerges from the Islamabad talks must include a binding commitment to end all Israeli strikes across Lebanon.

    While Israeli officials have so far rejected calls for direct ceasefire negotiations with Hezbollah, they have confirmed that Israel will launch formal peace negotiation talks with the Lebanese government next week, per CNN’s reporting. For his part, Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam has chosen to postpone a planned official trip to Washington D.C. and the United Nations Headquarters in New York, saying he needs to remain in Beirut to coordinate closely with the country’s leadership amid the fast-moving regional developments.

  • ‘You want to replace Good Friday with J’ouvert Friday?’ — Leacock

    ‘You want to replace Good Friday with J’ouvert Friday?’ — Leacock

    Across St. Vincent and the Grenadines, a long-simmering shift in cultural and religious traditions has sparked a heated public debate over what role, if any, entertainment events should play on Good Friday – one of Christianity’s most sacred solemn holidays, marking the crucifixion of Jesus Christ. Deputy Prime Minister and National Security Minister St. Clair Leacock recently brought the discussion to the forefront during an interview on local outlet Boom FM, tying the growing presence of secular entertainment over Holy Week and Easter weekend to broader concerns about shifting social values in the majority-Christian nation.

    Leacock explained that he first encountered the conversation while listening to a separate radio program en route to his own interview. During that segment, event promoters who had suffered significant financial losses on their Easter weekend events argued that the Ministry of Tourism should provide greater financial support to boost future event turnout. Most strikingly, Leacock noted, the program concluded that hosting a raucous J’ouvert street celebration on Good Friday night was entirely appropriate.

    The comment did not sit well with Leacock, who warned that this framing represents a worrying erosion of the religious significance of the Easter period for Vincentians. “Easter is Easter, and Easter is a special day or week in the Christian calendar,” he said, questioning what message the normalization of secular large-scale parties on Good Friday sends to the public and what it means for the country’s collective social fabric. He added that declining reverence for the holy period is not a new, creeping trend – it is already deeply entrenched in SVG, where most residents identify as Christian but many openly disregard core tenets of the faith.

    His comments drew an immediate response during the same broadcast from Pastor Cecil Richards of Kingstown Baptist Church, who offered a counter perspective rooted in the country’s democratic principles. Richards, who lives near Good Friday event venues and personally witnessed the noise and activity, said he shared the shock of many religious residents, but also acknowledged that non-believers hold equal rights to live according to their own values in a pluralistic democracy.

    “Inasmuch as Christians and Bible-believing people have rights, there are people who don’t have that spectrum and base of belief, and they have freedoms too, and they have rights,” Richards explained. He argued that all groups must negotiate and respect differing value systems: while Christian congregations deserve full access to hold their solemn Easter worship services, secular residents have the right to host parties and celebrations if they so choose.

    Richards warned that restricting the rights of secular groups on religious grounds sets a dangerous precedent that could one day be turned against religious communities. “What is good for the goose is good for the gander,” he said. “Today, you might want to restrict those who are doing that but tomorrow, the very same principle can apply, where, instead of that group being subdued, it could very well be that the very laws and rules and regulations that you might put in place to restrict and subdue the freedoms of that group, it might turn around and bite you.” He drew a parallel to the broader debate over COVID-19 vaccine mandates, which centered on the same core question: how far can a state go to impose collective values on individual residents’ personal choices.

    Leacock pushed back on the framing that any restriction on Good Friday entertainment amounts to an undemocratic overreach. He argued sarcastically that open sales of strong rum and wet fetes on the holiday are not inherent democratic rights, noting that all functioning democracies build their laws around shared social parameters. “I don’t think democracy ever anticipated that society is to be sent to the point where you do what you like,” he said. “That’s why we have law and order and we have limitation, and we have consent of what we do, when we do, and where we do certain things.”

    The deputy prime minister added that most modern state legal frameworks are ultimately rooted in traditional religious moral templates, and growing deviation from those norms has led to widespread social turmoil and confusion across the country. He acknowledged that residents hold democratic rights protected by the SVG constitution, but argued that there remains a widely accepted set of normative social behaviors that the public has a right to defend when those norms are crossed.

    Closing the debate, Leacock appealed to faith leaders like Richards for collective action, noting that the problem of eroding social norms is a shared responsibility between government, law enforcement, and the Christian community. “It will be so helpful to me and to the police force if people like yourself, who I recognise as influencers in society, are on board and say that we are on this thing together,” he said.

  • VS en Suriname versterken samenwerking met medische missie en militaire training

    VS en Suriname versterken samenwerking met medische missie en militaire training

    Starting April 13, the South American nation of Suriname and the United States will kick off the long-planned LAMAT 2026 initiative, a combined public-practice exercise that merges joint medical outreach and military capacity building, scheduled to run through April 23. The mission, which will deliver care across two host communities Nieuw Nickerie and Brownsweg, brings together U.S. military medical personnel and local Surinamese healthcare providers to deliver free, accessible care to underserved local populations, with an estimated 800 patients expected to receive treatment over the course of the initiative.

    The scope of medical work will cover core public health and clinical areas, including primary care, general dentistry, and emergency medical response. Beyond direct patient care, a core pillar of the mission is structured knowledge sharing between the two teams, designed to strengthen long-term local healthcare capacity and improve regional readiness for public health emergencies.

    According to a statement from the U.S. Embassy in Suriname, the LAMAT 2026 mission underscores the decades of steady collaborative ties between the two countries, and reflects their shared commitment to building a more robust, resilient national healthcare system in Suriname.

    Running parallel to the medical outreach program is a separate joint military training exercise conducted alongside the South Dakota National Guard, which has maintained a formal partnership with Suriname since 2006. Roughly 70 military personnel from both sides will participate in tactical and skills-based training, with coursework focused on critical skills including jungle operations, field navigation, and coordinated response in high-challenge operating environments.

    Overall, the combined mission is backed by more than $600,000 in U.S. funding, highlighting the breadth of deepening cooperation between Suriname and the United States across three core domains: public healthcare advancement, regional security, and long-term institutional capacity building.

  • Cayo Sweeps Farmer of the Year Awards

    Cayo Sweeps Farmer of the Year Awards

    In a historic clean sweep that has cemented Cayo District’s reputation as a powerhouse of Belizean agriculture, three local producers have taken home every top prize in the 2026 National Farmer of the Year Competition, claiming all three available award categories. The official results of the prestigious annual contest were publicly announced by the National Agriculture and Trade Show (NATS) Organizing Committee this Thursday.

    Taking home the coveted Male Farmer of the Year crown was Saulo Mesh, while Yoalma Pocasangre earned recognition as the 2026 Female Farmer of the Year. The third award, Junior Farmer of the Year, went to rising agricultural talent Jeshua Tzib. All three winners hail from Cayo District, marking the first time in recent competition history that a single district has claimed all top honors.

    Hosted annually by the NATS Committee, which operates under Belize’s Ministry of Agriculture, Food Security and New Growth Industries, the Farmer of the Year Awards were created to honor producers across the country who demonstrate extraordinary dedication to their craft, implement innovative growing and business practices, and make tangible contributions to the strength and growth of Belize’s national agricultural sector.

    The award announcement comes exactly three weeks ahead of the opening of the 2026 National Agriculture and Trade Show, one of the largest annual gatherings for Belize’s agricultural community. This year’s event will run from April 30 through May 3 at the permanent NATS Grounds in the capital city of Belmopan, held under the forward-looking theme “Advancing Smart Agriculture: Building a Climate-Resilient and Sustainable Belizean Food System.” Industry leaders and attendees expect the show to draw hundreds of producers, agricultural vendors, and community members from across the country to discuss the future of food production in Belize amid shifting climate conditions.

  • Hurricane Risk Lower in 2026, But Threat Still Real

    Hurricane Risk Lower in 2026, But Threat Still Real

    As the 2026 Atlantic hurricane season approaches, new seasonal projections bring a glimmer of cautious optimism to Caribbean nations, while emergency planners and climate researchers continue to stress that extreme weather threats remain far from eliminated. The latest outlook from Colorado State University’s renowned Tropical Meteorology Project, headed by leading tropical climate researcher Philip J. Klotzbach, paints a picture of reduced hurricane risk for the Caribbean this year.

    The team’s analysis estimates just a 35% probability that at least one Category 3 or higher major hurricane will track across the Caribbean region in 2026. This percentage is noticeably lower than the 47% long-term average that has been recorded over decades of storm tracking, pointing to a potentially less active season than the region typically experiences.

    Broader projections for the entire Atlantic basin also point to below-average storm activity overall. The official forecast calls for 13 named storms, six hurricanes, and two major hurricanes for the full season, which formally gets underway on June 1 each year.

    Despite the downward adjustment to risk forecasts, lead forecasters have been quick to push back against any sense of complacency, particularly for small, vulnerable island nations including Antigua and Barbuda. The research team’s report emphasizes a core lesson repeated across hurricane preparedness campaigns: even in a season with low overall projected activity, a single landfalling major hurricane is enough to trigger catastrophic destruction and turn a quiet season into a disaster for affected communities. The report explicitly urges all coastal residents across the Caribbean to maintain constant vigilance and keep emergency plans updated.

    Meteorologists attribute the expected dip in Atlantic storm activity to the anticipated formation of El Niño conditions in the Pacific Ocean. The El Niño climate pattern is well-documented to increase vertical wind shear across the Atlantic basin, a atmospheric condition that disrupts the formation and strengthening of tropical cyclones.

    That said, significant uncertainty still surrounds the ultimate strength of the El Niño pattern during the peak of hurricane season, which runs from August through October. The intensity of this climate pattern will play a decisive role in shaping actual storm activity across the region, meaning final outcomes could still shift from current projections.

    For Caribbean governments and local authorities, the core priority remains unchanged: robust pre-season preparation is non-negotiable. Small island developing states across the region disproportionately bear the risk of hurricane damage, with underdeveloped infrastructure and coastal communities that remain extremely exposed to storm surge, extreme wind, and flooding. Even a moderate storm can trigger widespread disruption and long-term economic damage in these contexts.

    As the countdown to the June 1 start of the 2026 hurricane season continues, regional authorities are moving forward with full readiness efforts, including updating emergency response protocols, restocking emergency supplies, and running public preparedness campaigns to ensure communities are ready if a storm does strike.

  • HAPI Programme Hands Over New Home to Briggins Resident

    HAPI Programme Hands Over New Home to Briggins Resident

    In an emotional ceremony that highlights the human impact of government-led social support initiatives, a Briggins resident has been given the keys to her very own new home through Antigua and Barbuda’s Housing Assistance Programme for Vulnerable Individuals (HAPPI), a scheme designed to lift low-income and vulnerable community members out of inadequate housing.

    Dawn Simon, the beneficiary of this latest handover, broke into tears of joy as representatives of the Social Protection Board, operating under the Ministry of Social and Urban Transformation, officially transferred ownership of the property to her. Officials framed the moment as a key incremental milestone for the ongoing programme, which has steadily expanded its reach across the twin-island nation.

    Mary Baltimore, Operations Manager of the Social Protection Board, emphasized during the ceremony that the handover represented far more than the transfer of a physical building. Speaking directly to a visibly moved Simon, Baltimore noted that the property was more than concrete and timber—it was a stable, secure foundation for the future, a space Simon could truly call her own. “I know that you are happy. I know the tears are tears of joy,” Baltimore said. “It’s not only a home. We want you to know it’s not a building, but it’s a home. And we are happy today to actually hand over that building to you.”

    Sarah Stewart, Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Social and Urban Transformation, reaffirmed the programme’s lasting positive impact on communities across Antigua and Barbuda, noting that successive handovers have transformed the daily lives of hundreds of vulnerable residents. Stewart praised the government’s commitment to closing the country’s affordable housing gap, calling the initiative a landmark achievement for the nation’s social development agenda. She also extended gratitude to the Social Protection Board’s staff and the private sector partners that have supported the programme’s expansion. “The government is really, really, really, really doing something wonderful for the people of Antigua and Barbuda,” Stewart said.

    For her part, Simon offered heartfelt thanks to the government officials, programme administrators, and supporting stakeholders who helped make her dream of homeownership a reality. She singled out senior political leaders and programme staff for their ongoing support, ending her remarks with a call for the work to continue. “I’d like to thank Brigadier Telbert Benjamin, Mrs. Gumbs, also the Honourable State—cutie Benjamin, the Honourable Maria Browne and the staff of HAPPI programme. May God bless you all and y’all keep up the good works,” she said.

    Private sector support extended beyond programme funding, with one local business stepping forward to provide an additional gift to Simon to help her settle into her new home. King’s Casino, a long-time supporter of HAPPI beneficiaries, donated a 50-inch television to Simon, while another major corporate partner, the West Indies Oil Company, contributed other forms of practical assistance to the project.

    This latest handover marks another incremental step forward for the HAPPI programme, which is advancing its core mission: one home at a time, the initiative is working to lift vulnerable residents out of substandard housing and build long-term, stable communities across Antigua and Barbuda.

  • Good governance and the communication question

    Good governance and the communication question

    Five months into the term of St. Vincent and the Grenadines’ new New Democratic Party administration, a rising wave of criticism has flooded social media, print outlets, and radio airwaves, targeting what critics call a deeply flawed government communication strategy marked by mixed messaging, poor visibility, and a lack of clear national direction. In this weekly opinion column for *A View from the Outside*, social commentator and attorney Guevara Leacock pushes back against these widespread critiques, arguing that most current assessments fail to meet basic standards of analytical rigor by ignoring the broader context of governance, the realities of post-election administrative transition, and the tangible policy outcomes the new government has already delivered.

    Leacock argues that the bulk of today’s criticism is rooted in selective observation, premature judgment, and a fundamental misunderstanding of how new administrations function during their early months in office. The core claim that widespread communication breakdown has irreparably damaged the government’s credibility, he notes, relies almost entirely on anecdotal claims of “blunders” and “mixed messages,” with no sustained, verifiable evidence or structured analysis to back up the assertions. Contrary to claims that the administration has gone silent, Leacock points to a steady stream of ongoing public communication: regular ministerial press conferences, the weekly Friday Report, official public notices distributed via the Agency for Public Information, and formal ministerial statements marking major national and international dates, from International Women’s Day to regional observances. Many of these communication practices, he adds, were far less consistent or visible under the previous 25-year administration, despite its self-framing as a progressive governing force.

    Critics also misjudge the timeline of governance, Leacock argues. Transition from opposition to ruling power is far more than a simple swap of political faces: it requires realigning entire bureaucratic systems, recalibrating long-standing policy priorities, building new institutional workflows, and reorganizing priorities across every branch of the state machinery. What casual critics dismiss as “unpreparedness,” he says, is actually the ordinary friction that comes with any new administration taking up the reins of national power – a normal part of the governing learning curve, not a sign of systemic collapse.

    Leacock also notes that decades of heavily centralized, single-voice public communication under the previous administration have left many Vincentians accustomed to a more performative style of governance, leading them to misread the new government’s quieter, more distributed, deliberative approach to communication. Democracy, he emphasizes, does not always look like constant public command; it often manifests as intentional process, careful coordination, and adaptive adjustment, rather than nonstop rhetoric.

    Claims that the administration lacks clear direction also fall flat upon closer examination, Leacock contends. Governing direction is not measured by daily headlines or constant public spectacle; it is embedded in long-term legislative planning, administrative agendas, and policy pipelines that are often not immediately visible to the general public. In fact, the government’s full policy agenda was clearly laid out in the February 2026 Speech from the Throne delivered by Governor-General Sir Stanley John at the opening of Parliament, a public document that remains widely accessible via the Agency for Public Information’s social media channels – an act of official communication that critics consistently ignore.

    What many critics are actually demanding, Leacock argues, is not just communication, but a specific performative style of communication: constant public visibility, immediate answers to every question, and nonstop rhetorical display. This model prioritizes optics over governing substance, creating a dangerous temptation to confuse theatrical leadership with effective leadership. Government is not a stage performance, it is deliberate work – and that work is already visible across St. Vincent and the Grenadines: ongoing road repairs, the reinstatement of public officers dismissed under the previous administration’s vaccine mandate, the acquisition of new ambulances, and a measurable rise in public economic confidence. These tangible outcomes are not signs of political drift; they are evidence of steady, effective governance.

    Leacock also addresses the common critique that “too little has changed” from the previous administration, noting that continuity in governance is not inherently a failure. Responsible governing requires stability, incremental progress, and intentional continuity rather than constant, disruptive upheaval. Dramatic overnight transformation may satisfy an impatient public, but it risks damaging long-term institutional health and creating lasting national instability. Even with the NDP’s landslide 14-1 electoral mandate secured in November 2025, not every sector of national life can or should be remade overnight: meaningful, lasting change takes time, and serious governing requires patience.

    Critics who dismiss Prime Minister Dr. Godwin Friday’s frequent appearances at schools, community gatherings, and sporting events as trivial, symbolic engagements also reveal a narrow view of modern political leadership, Leacock says. In a small democracy like St. Vincent and the Grenadines, consistent civic presence among constituents is not a trivial distraction from governance – it is a core part of building and humanizing political legitimacy. Leadership is not only expressed through formal cabinet meetings, technical briefings, and official statements; it is also demonstrated through proximity to the people the government serves, a standard Friday is already meeting.

    The most concrete and reasonable critique, Leacock acknowledges, is the call to appoint a professional government communications strategist to improve coordination. On this point, there is room for agreement: most governments benefit from more centralized, coordinated communication, and the current administration has already publicly announced its plan to hire a communications specialist. Even so, Leacock warns against overstating the role of communication in good governance. Communication can never substitute for solid policy or effective delivery, and it is not the primary metric for judging whether a government is performing well. There is a deep risk, he notes, of communication becoming a replacement for substance: a tool to manage public perception rather than address tangible national challenges, a pattern Vincentians saw firsthand under previous administrations that dominated airwaves with rhetoric while national institutions eroded behind the scenes. Talking alone can only achieve so much: communication matters, but it cannot build roads, reform institutions, stabilize public finances, or restore public trust on its own.

    The most glaring gap in most current criticism, Leacock argues, is the near-total absence of engagement with actual policy substance. There is little serious discussion of the administration’s legislative initiatives, administrative reforms, or economic plans, with passing, offhand references to policy replacing rigorous analysis. A government cannot be judged on messaging alone; it must be evaluated by what it actually does, builds, and reforms. To focus almost exclusively on communication is to present a partial, deeply misleading picture of governing performance.

    Leacock does concede that many Vincentians have legitimate questions and demands for more information: the public has a right to details about the alleged long-term economic mismanagement of the previous administration, and many are waiting for the promised forensic audit of past government practices. That desire for transparency is completely valid, he notes, but forensic audits by their nature require rigorous, time-consuming examination of state records, conducted while the new government continues to carry out its day-to-day governing responsibilities. Patience in this process is not a sign of weakness, it is a requirement for thorough, accurate work.

    In conclusion, Leacock stresses that while questions about communication clarity and coordination are legitimate, the bulk of current criticism is analytically thin and premature, often trading evidence for assertion and rhetoric for balanced analysis. A credible critique of the administration’s communication strategy would situate communication within the broader context of governance, acknowledge the realities of administrative transition, and center policy outcomes over messaging style. Until that kind of rigorous assessment is offered, the repeated calls for the government to “wake up” reveal more about the limitations of the critics than they do about the performance of the young administration.

    This column was published by Guevara Leacock, a barrister of Lincoln’s Inn and practicing attorney in St. Vincent and the Grenadines with a focus on history and political commentary, on Saturday 10 April 2026. The opinions expressed are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect the editorial stance of iWitness News.

  • Officers Destroyed Evidence In Drug Plane Landing? ComPol Says, No!

    Officers Destroyed Evidence In Drug Plane Landing? ComPol Says, No!

    Two back-to-back anti-drug operations in northern Belize’s Corozal District have sparked a growing controversy over evidence handling, with the country’s top law enforcement official pushing back against viral online claims that security agents deliberately destroyed key evidence.

    The first incident unfolded early Friday morning along the Old Northern Highway, when a team of customs patrol officers spotted a suspicious individual acting erratically. When officers moved in to question the person, they fled into nearby brush, prompting a search of the surrounding area. The search led investigators to a remote seafront landing zone in the Bomba region, where a Chevrolet SUV was found stocked with nine large canisters of aviation fuel. Law enforcement detained multiple people at the scene and also recovered an unregistered 9-millimeter pistol from the area. Before officers could secure the vehicle and its contents for forensic processing, the Chevrolet was intentionally set on fire, destroying the fuel and any potential forensic evidence that may have been held on the vehicle itself.

    Hours later that same evening, a large-scale coordinated multi-agency security operation launched in the region scored a major win against transnational drug trafficking. Teams made up of Belizean national police, the Belize Defence Force, and the Belize Coast Guard, backed by aerial support from Mexican security partners, intercepted a small drug plane that had just touched down in the Nuefeld area of Corozal. Operation teams successfully took both pilots into custody and seized an undisclosed amount of cocaine bound for distribution networks. Aviation sources familiar with the plane confirmed it is a Cessna 206, a single-engine aircraft commonly used by drug traffickers for its ability to land on unimproved airstrips and carry cargo loads of up to 900 kilograms.

    In the wake of the two operations, unsubstantiated claims began circulating on social media and local messaging platforms claiming that Belizean law enforcement officers deliberately set fire to the Chevrolet Tahoe to destroy evidence. But Belize’s Commissioner of Police Dr. Richard Rosado has forcefully rejected these allegations, calling them outright misinformation in an exclusive interview with local outlet News 5.

    “Contrary to false reports circulating online, the claim that officers deliberately set the vehicle on fire is entirely untrue. This is another instance of misinformation,” Rosado told reporters. The Commissioner, who was on the ground in Corozal during the operations alongside the national security minister and the ministry’s chief executive officer, declined to immediately name who he believes was responsible for setting the fire, asking for patience from the public and press as investigators complete their internal review.

    “Kindly allow us some time to put together the release. In the fullest of time a full press briefing will be done,” Rosado added, noting that a full, detailed account of the day’s events will be published publicly once investigators have finalized their initial findings.