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  • Nieuwe leden Tuchtcolleges beëdigd; behandeling tuchtzaken kan worden hervat

    Nieuwe leden Tuchtcolleges beëdigd; behandeling tuchtzaken kan worden hervat

    After weeks of halted proceedings that left dozens of complaints against legal professionals unaddressed, Suriname has marked a key milestone for judicial integrity with the formal swearing-in of new members to two of the country’s most important legal oversight bodies: the Disciplinary Board for Notaries and the Disciplinary Board for Lawyers. The ceremony, held Friday at the Presidential Palace, was presided over by Suriname President Jennifer Simons, officially closing a period of gridlock that threatened the continuity of disciplinary oversight.

    The backlog emerged when scheduled swearing-in proceedings for the new boards were delayed, forcing the suspension of all active complaint procedures against members of the two professions. With the inauguration of the new board members, the Suriname government confirmed this Friday that the continuity of disciplinary adjudication and ongoing efforts to strengthen the rule of law in the country are now secured.

    In her opening remarks at the ceremony, President Simons emphasized the non-negotiable role these two disciplinary bodies play in upholding professional integrity across Suriname’s legal sector. Tasked with investigating public and private complaints against working lawyers and notaries, the boards hold the authority to impose a full range of disciplinary sanctions when professional misconduct is confirmed, from formal written warnings to permanent removal from professional practice.

    “Surinamese citizens place enormous trust in their lawyers and notaries to protect their most critical personal and financial interests,” Simons told the newly inaugurated board members. “As independent disciplinary bodies, you are tasked with strictly enforcing standards of professionalism, quality, and integrity. I have full expectation that you will carry out this weighty responsibility with honor and conscience, as we work collectively to strengthen our country’s rule of law.”

    Speaking on behalf of the Disciplinary Board for Lawyers, board member Nailah van Dijk expressed gratitude for the public trust placed in the new cohort of members. She framed disciplinary law as an indispensable tool, designed not only to protect the rights of citizens interacting with the legal system but also to safeguard the reputation of the legal profession itself and the integrity of the broader judicial process. Van Dijk noted that the board’s work requires unwavering independence, rigorous and careful assessment of all facts presented, and the courage to take firm action when established professional norms are violated.

    Siegline Wijnhard, the newly appointed chair of the Disciplinary Board for Notaries, echoed the call for unwavering independence and impartiality in processing all complaints. She emphasized that the role of the board carries enormous responsibility, requiring careful balancing of broader public interests against the rights of individual notaries who are the subject of complaints. Wijnhard confirmed that the new board would maintain the independent course charted by previous iterations of the body, prioritizing fair and unbiased adjudication above all other considerations.

    The newly formed Disciplinary Board for Notaries will serve a four-year term running from June 1, 2025, to June 1, 2029. Wijnhard will lead the body as chair, with Maytrie Kuldip Singh appointed as deputy chair. Sitting members of the board include experienced jurists Jane Jensen and G. Blom, while Sandra Nanhoe-Gangadin and Kitty Astwood-Olff have been named alternate members.

    For the Disciplinary Board for Lawyers, Robert Praag will serve as the new chair, with Alida Johanns stepping into the role of deputy chair and M. Wesenhagen taking up the position of board secretary. Van Dijk and mr. Lilawati Punwasi-Raghoebier will serve as sitting members representing the legal profession, with mr. Benito Pick and Sardha Sitaram appointed as alternate members.

  • Venezuela hekelt Trinidad en Tobago om olielek: milieu- en economische schade dreigt

    Venezuela hekelt Trinidad en Tobago om olielek: milieu- en economische schade dreigt

    A new cross-border oil leak originating from waters near Trinidad and Tobago has reached Venezuela’s coastline, triggering a formal environmental and diplomatic alert from Caracas that risks pushing already frayed bilateral relations to a breaking point.

    Venezuela’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs issued a public statement Friday warning that the unregulated spill poses severe risks to the region’s sensitive coastal marine ecosystems, local artisanal and commercial fishing industries, and small coastal communities that depend on marine resources for their livelihoods. The statement formally demands that the government of Trinidad and Tobago accept full accountability for the incident, take immediate emergency action to stop the spread of the leak and prevent further contamination events, and provide complete public transparency on the leak’s root cause, the total volume of oil released, and the full scope of potential environmental damage.

    In response to Caracas’ allegations, authorities in Port of Spain have launched a full investigation into the suspected spill. Energy Minister Roodal Moonilal confirmed to Reuters that the country’s air guard and coast guard have been deployed to conduct on-site marine surveys, supplemented by drone monitoring to map the extent of any pollution and confirm the facts of the incident. Trinidad and Tobago’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs has also reached out to the Venezuelan embassy in Port of Spain to request additional details and coordinate preliminary information sharing.

    While Venezuelan officials have not yet released a detailed list of specific affected coastal areas, independent satellite imagery has confirmed the presence of an active oil slick moving toward the Venezuelan coastline. The close geographic proximity of the two countries – their maritime territories lie just 10 kilometers apart at the closest point – means any pollution event originating near Trinidad and Tobago spreads rapidly to Venezuelan waters, explaining the immediate impact reported by Caracas.

    Bilateral relations between the two neighboring Caribbean nations have remained tense since Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar took office in 2022. Persad-Bissessar’s administration has implemented strict restrictive migration policies targeting Venezuelan refugees fleeing the country’s ongoing political and economic crisis, and has significantly deepened diplomatic and economic ties with the United States. Tensions escalated further earlier this year following the controversial 2024 arrest of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro in an international incident that split regional diplomacy.

    This latest spill echoes a nearly identical incident just five months prior, in February 2024, when an oil tanker sank in Trinidad and Tobago’s territorial waters. The resulting oil slick drifted north into Venezuelan territorial waters, triggering a similar diplomatic row between the two governments that left long-running environmental damage along Venezuela’s southern coast.

    International observers tracking Caribbean regional relations warn that this new set of mutual accusations over the oil leak could push the already fragile bilateral relationship into a deeper crisis, with both environmental damage and economic harm to local communities hanging in the balance. Regional diplomatic bodies have called for urgent, transparent collaborative action between the two governments to contain the spill, mitigate environmental harm, and prevent further diplomatic escalation that would undermine efforts to address the crisis.

  • BiMPay goes live: Barbados launches instant digital payments system

    BiMPay goes live: Barbados launches instant digital payments system

    Barbados has marked a major milestone in its digital economic evolution with the official launch of BiMPay, the country’s first national instant payment infrastructure, which now enables round-the-clock, real-time money transfers for individuals, private businesses and public sector agencies across the island nation.

    The launch ceremony, held as an informal “Go-Live Pyjama Party” on Friday evening, saw Prime Minister Mia Mottley complete the system’s first public live transaction: purchasing a burger from a local small business owner. In her remarks shortly after the transaction, Mottley emphasized that in an always-connected global economy, a country that restricts financial transactions to standard business hours cedes critical economic opportunity.

    Calling the launch a source of national pride, the Prime Minister noted that BiMPay is just the latest in a string of new digital public and private services rolled out across Barbados in recent weeks, with more initiatives planned to fully integrate the island into a comprehensive digital national framework in the coming months.

    Mottley pointed to other ongoing digital transformation projects already delivering results for Barbados, including telemedicine partnerships that have cut through a critical backlog of diagnostic reads at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital. Through a collaboration with medical specialists in India, the country has leveraged cross-border digital connectivity to significantly reduce wait times for X-ray and CT scan reviews, addressing gaps created by a persistent domestic skills shortage.

    “Addressing our national skills deficit is my top ongoing priority,” Mottley explained. “We do not have enough skilled workers locally to meet all our needs, so we are turning to technology to augment our capacity and keep our economy moving. Beyond closing skills gaps, digital infrastructure like BiMPay makes it possible to do business at any time, breaking down the old barriers of clock and calendar.”

    The Prime Minister also outlined two key public benefits of the new instant payment system: it will reduce opportunities for financial-related crime by cutting reliance on unrecorded cash transactions, and it will build a formal digital transaction history for micro-enterprises and informal workers who have historically struggled to access formal credit from financial institutions. From neighborhood shopkeepers and auto mechanics to itinerant coconut vendors, Mottley emphasized that BiMPay was designed to serve marginalized groups that have long been excluded from formal financial infrastructure.

    Dr. Kevin Greenidge, Governor of the Central Bank of Barbados, added that BiMPay has been two years in development, with plans for ongoing expansion to eventually fully integrate all government agencies into the system. Currently, six commercial banks, three credit unions, the Barbados Stock Exchange and the Accountant General’s Office have already connected to the new infrastructure.

    Greenidge noted that a modern, competitive economy cannot thrive on outdated payment infrastructure. “Whether it is a family sending funds to a child studying abroad, a small vendor waiting for payment to restock inventory, or a business needing immediate access to working capital, people and enterprises can no longer afford to wait days for transactions to clear,” he said. “Beyond improving daily financial activity, BiMPay creates the foundational infrastructure we need to grow a dynamic, competitive fintech sector that will drive future economic growth for Barbados.”

  • President geeft ambassadeurs duidelijke opdracht: Surinaams belang voorop

    President geeft ambassadeurs duidelijke opdracht: Surinaams belang voorop

    On Friday, a formal swearing-in ceremony for four newly appointed Surinamese ambassadors was held at the country’s presidential palace, where President Jennifer Simons administered the oath of office and issued clear guidance for the diplomats’ upcoming missions. The core mandate given to all four envoys, Simons emphasized, is to advance and protect Suriname’s national interests in all diplomatic activities, while working to deepen the nation’s international partnerships, unlock new economic opportunities, and strengthen Suriname’s global standing.

    The four appointees received distinct postings aligned with Suriname’s diplomatic strategy. Gilbêrt Antoine van Lierop will serve as Suriname’s ambassador to the Kingdom of Morocco. Aashna Kanhai has been appointed ambassador to the Swiss Confederation, while also taking on the role of permanent representative to the United Nations Office at Geneva. Stephanus Meye and Stevanus Noordzee will serve as non-resident ambassadors to Israel and Argentina, respectively.

    Addressing the new ambassadors, President Simons stressed that in an increasingly shifting global landscape, Suriname must continue investing in robust bilateral relations and proactive representation at multilateral international platforms. To advance the nation’s core priorities and long-term ambitions, she explained, the country requires skilled, committed diplomatic representatives who can effectively advocate for Suriname’s interests on the global stage.

    “Your first and foremost loyalty must be to Suriname; this is your starting point: protecting Suriname’s national interest,” President Simons told the envoys, according to official statements from the Suriname Communication Service. She added that Suriname’s diplomatic work should extend beyond traditional political and administrative cooperation, placing equal focus on economic diplomacy, attracting foreign investment, expanding bilateral trade, and elevating Suriname’s international profile.

    Simons also outlined targeted priorities for each ambassador’s specific region of responsibility. For the posting to Morocco, key areas for expanded cooperation include education, energy, agriculture, tourism, and trade. At the UN Geneva office, Kanhai will center her work on advancing multilateral cooperation, upholding international law, and advocating for a fair global trading system. For the bilateral relationship with Israel, collaboration will be deepened in agriculture, water management, technological innovation, and healthcare. For Argentina, Suriname will prioritize exploring new trade opportunities, building institutional capacity, and improving cross-border connectivity between the two nations.

    Speaking on behalf of all four newly sworn-in ambassadors, van Lierop framed his appointment not as a ceremonial honor, but as a profound responsibility to serve Suriname and represent the nation’s interests globally. He noted that Suriname holds unique strengths and untapped opportunities that deserve greater global recognition, highlighting that the nation’s power and potential extend far beyond its natural resources, rooted instead in its people and its future trajectory. “The strength and potential of Suriname lie not only in what we have, but above all in who we are and who we will become,” van Lierop said.

  • Derde helft WK 2026: Amerika walst met 4-1 over Paraguay

    Derde helft WK 2026: Amerika walst met 4-1 over Paraguay

    On June 13, co-hosting nation the United States delivered a commanding 4-1 win over Paraguay in a Copa America group stage fixture held at Los Angeles’ iconic stadium, capping off a one-sided display of attacking dominance from the opening whistle. From the first kick of the match, the US seized total control of possession and territorial advantage, pushing Paraguay’s entire squad deep into their own half of the pitch. A relentless wave of attacking pressure left Paraguay’s backline scrambling to contain wave after wave of American forward runs, and it did not take long for the deadlock to be broken.

    Just eight minutes into the contest, an own goal from Paraguay defender Damián Bobadilla opened the scoring for the hosts. A whipped cross from Weston McKennie bounced off Bobadilla and into the back of the net, putting the US ahead 1-0. The American side never looked back from that early breakthrough, doubling their advantage in the 29th minute. Folarin Balogun, starting as the US’ lead striker, converted a pinpoint cross from captain Christian Pulisic to stretch the lead to 2-0.

    On the stroke of halftime, Balogun struck once more to put the result virtually beyond doubt. A perfectly weighted long through ball from Malik Tillman caught Paraguay’s offside trap flat-footed, allowing Balogun to outpace the retreating defenders and slip a calm finish past Paraguay goalkeeper Orlando Gil, sending the US into the halftime break with a comfortable 3-0 lead.

    After the interval, Paraguay launched a full-scale fightback, throwing numbers forward in search of a way back into the match. Their efforts finally paid off in the 73rd minute, when forward Maurício found the back of the net to pull one goal back for the South American side, making the score 3-1. Just 60 seconds later, Tillman had a golden chance to restore the US’ three-goal advantage but wasted the opportunity with a poor, underpowered effort that failed to test the Paraguay defense.

    Paraguay continued to push forward in the final 15 minutes in search of a second consolation goal, but the US retained calm control of the tempo of the match, creating several more good scoring opportunities of their own. After late substitutions that saw both Tillman and Balogun withdrawn from the action, the US attack was unable to convert further chances until stoppage time. In the final minute of regulation, substitute Giovanni Reyna put the icing on the cake with a well-taken late strike to seal the final 4-1 scoreline, securing a statement opening win for the co-hosts.

  • Schenking US$ 3 miljoen Caribisch Ontwikkelingsbank bestemd voor ontwikkelingsprojecten

    Schenking US$ 3 miljoen Caribisch Ontwikkelingsbank bestemd voor ontwikkelingsprojecten

    The Caribbean Development Bank (CDB) has greenlit a $3 million grant for Suriname as part of the 11th cycle of its long-running anti-poverty initiative, the Basic Needs Trust Fund (BNTF 11). The full non-lending funding package totals more than $3.42 million, with the Surinamese government contributing a matching $422,245 to support five targeted development projects focused on education, water access, community growth, and economic empowerment for Indigenous populations across the country. Details of the approved projects are outlined in Suriname’s Ministry of Finance and Planning 2026 budget documentation.

    The first of the five initiatives aims to strengthen ICT knowledge within Suriname’s vocational education sector. As regional and national labor markets face growing demand for workers with technical and digital skills, the project is designed to better align young job seekers’ competencies with employer needs. The second project will deliver comprehensive renovations to five public primary schools; while specific site locations have not yet been released, the upgrade is expected to dramatically improve learning conditions for thousands of students.

    One of the most unique projects approved is an initiative to expand stingless bee cultivation among Indigenous communities in southern Suriname. Regarded globally as a sustainable livelihood activity, the apiculture project not only creates new income streams for marginalized groups but also supports regional biodiversity conservation and natural ecosystem protection. Fourth, a new footpath connecting multiple schools in the Brokopondo district will be constructed, addressing a longstanding barrier to education access for remote inland villages that currently struggle with limited transportation connectivity. The final project will upgrade water infrastructure for the Wayana Indigenous community in Lensidede, with the core goal of expanding reliable access to safe drinking water for residents.

    Established in 1979, the BNTF is the CDB’s flagship grant program focused on poverty reduction across the Caribbean region. To date, the initiative has reached more than 3 million people across participating member states and supported thousands of local development projects. The 11th funding cycle, BNTF 11, runs from 2025 through the end of 2028, with a total regional allocation of approximately $53.6 million. Of that total, $46 million comes from the CDB’s Special Development Fund, with remaining contributions provided by participating national governments including Suriname.

    The program’s core priorities across all funding cycles align closely with the projects approved for Suriname: expanding access to education and vocational training, improving livelihoods and employment outcomes, upgrading water and sanitation access, building critical basic infrastructure, and supporting vulnerable populations including youth, women, people with disabilities, and Indigenous communities. Suriname has been a long-standing participant in the BNTF program, with the Ministry of Finance and Planning serving as the national implementing partner for all initiatives. Importantly, the funding is not general budget support, nor is it a loan; all resources are earmarked exclusively for on-the-ground projects that directly serve low-income and vulnerable communities across the country, in line with the BNTF’s core mission of reducing poverty and protecting marginalized groups.

  • AFC backs Ambassador Rodrigues-Birkett for UN Secretary General

    AFC backs Ambassador Rodrigues-Birkett for UN Secretary General

    Just three hours after Guyanese President Irfaan Ali formally put forward Ambassador Carolyn Rodrigues-Birkett as the country’s candidate for the next United Nations Secretary-General, the nation’s opposition Alliance For Change (AFC) has thrown its full weight behind the government’s decision.

    In an official statement released hours after the nomination announcement on 12 June 2026, the AFC praised Rodrigues-Birkett as an outstanding Guyanese diplomat whose decades of public service, proven professionalism, and longstanding dedication to multilateral cooperation make her uniquely suited for the UN’s top leadership role. “The AFC is proud to endorse her candidacy and wishes her every success in this historic endeavour,” the statement read.

    The opposition party has also called on the Guyanese government to move quickly to rally international backing for the nomination, urging immediate outreach to blocs and partners including the Caribbean Community (CARICOM), the Commonwealth, the Organization of American States, the Non-Aligned Movement, and other global stakeholders to build broad cross-regional support.

    At 52, Rodrigues-Birkett brings a wealth of high-level diplomatic and international experience to the candidacy. She served as Guyana’s Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation from 2008 to 2015, before taking on a senior leadership role as a Director at the UN Food and Agriculture Organization. In 2022, she was appointed Guyana’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations, and she currently leads the country’s 2024-2025 term as a member of the UN Security Council. She also previously served as President of the 65th Session of the UN General Assembly, a role that put her consensus-building skills across diverse nations on full display.

    The AFC emphasized that Rodrigues-Birkett holds all the core attributes required to steer the UN through a period of unprecedented global strain. “Ambassador Rodrigues-Birkett possesses the experience, diplomatic acumen, integrity, and global perspective required to lead the world’s foremost multilateral institution during a period of unprecedented international challenges,” the statement noted, adding that her decades of work across public service, diplomacy, and global affairs have already earned her widespread respect across the Caribbean, Latin America, and the broader international community.

    The party also highlighted Rodrigues-Birkett’s longstanding commitment to foundational global principles: international law, peaceful resolution of cross-border disputes, sustainable development, and the greater inclusion of small states in global decision-making. At a moment when the world faces overlapping crises – from ongoing armed conflicts and accelerating climate change to rising geopolitical division, growing humanitarian need, and mounting challenges to the rules-based international order – the AFC argues the UN needs principled, inclusive, forward-looking leadership, a standard Rodrigues-Birkett meets fully.

    Beyond her personal qualifications, the AFC noted that her nomination marks a key milestone for both Guyana and small developing nations globally. Her candidacy not only reflects Guyana’s expanding role in global diplomacy, it also creates a critical opportunity to center the perspectives and lived experiences of small developing states at the highest levels of global governance. The party expressed confidence that under her leadership, the United Nations would emerge better equipped to advance shared goals of peace, security, sustainable development, and cross-national cooperation.

    Rodrigues-Birkett becomes the fifth official candidate in the race to succeed outgoing Secretary-General António Guterres, whose second term concludes on 31 December 2026. She joins a growing field of contenders that includes four previously announced nominees: Rafael Mariano Grossi of Argentina, nominated in November 2025; Rebeca Grynspan Mayufis of Costa Rica, nominated in March 2026; Macky Sall of Senegal, nominated by Burundi that same month; and Michelle Bachelet Jeria of Chile, whose nomination was backed by Brazil, Chile, and Mexico before Chile withdrew its sponsorship in late March.

  • PSU Leader Alleges Widespread Procurement Abuse Across Multiple Ministries

    PSU Leader Alleges Widespread Procurement Abuse Across Multiple Ministries

    A brewing public spending controversy in Belize has escalated far beyond an initial single case of suspicious payments, with the country’s top public service union leader now calling for a full, cross-government investigation into what he calls deeply rooted, systemic corruption in state procurement processes.

    The scandal first came to public attention when it was revealed that more than $1.7 million in public funds had been disbursed to Jenny Mira, sister of Minister of State Oscar Mira, in contracts awarded through the Ministry of National Defense. While ministry officials have defended the awards and insisted all contracted goods and services were delivered as agreed, public scrutiny has refused to die down, and has now expanded to question procurement practices across the entire government.

    Speaking in an on-the-record interview with local outlet News Five, Public Service Union (PSU) President Dean Flowers argued that the Mira family contracts are just one visible thread of a much broader pattern of abuse. He pointed to a wide web of ongoing business interests tied to the minister and his extended relatives, with family members holding contracts across multiple sectors: from his sister’s vegetable supply contracts, to brothers’ holdings in air conditioning services and construction, to in-law-led firms winning roadwork projects. Flowers questioned how the minister’s family was able to finance the construction of a private gated community, raising implicit questions about the source of their wealth from public sector contracts.

    Francis Usher, Chief Executive Officer of the Ministry of National Defense, pushed back against the allegations, defending the Mira family’s long history as government suppliers. He confirmed the family has provided produce to the Belize Defence Force and Coast Guard dating back to the early 2010s, years before the current administration took office, and emphasized they have been consistent, reliable partners over that time. Usher also rejected claims of payment fraud, stating, “There is nothing that is being paid for that is not being provided,” pushing back against long-running unconfirmed complaints from service members about substandard or insufficient rations.

    On the widely noted practice of splitting large invoices into amounts just under the $10,000 threshold that triggers mandatory additional oversight from the Treasury Department and Ministry of Finance, Usher denied that government officials ever instruct suppliers to split contracts to avoid scrutiny. He suggested suppliers independently adopted the practice because it speeds up payment processing, as lower-value contracts do not require multi-layered approval from additional government bodies.

    Flowers, however, remains unconvinced by the ministry’s denials. Drawing on his decades of experience working in Belize’s public service, he argued that official records frequently do not align with on-the-ground realities, a pattern well-known to the country’s Auditor General. He pointed to a previous confirmed scandal at the Ministry of Transport, where the government paid for high-end air conditioning units but received cheaper, lower-quality models instead, as an example of the kind of fraud that systemic weak oversight enables.

    The PSU president also pushed back against Usher’s claim that all contracted goods have been delivered, questioning how the CEO could personally verify every delivery made across thousands of contracts. He called on Belize’s top independent oversight officials—including Maria Rodriguez, Teresita Miranda, and Maria Arthurs—to launch a full investigation and prove their commitment to protecting public funds and Belizean taxpayers.

    Flowers also expanded the scope of accountability beyond elected ministers, arguing that long-tenured public finance officers are often the enablers of these corrupt practices. He claimed that new politicians and CEOs entering government are frequently introduced to end-runs around oversight rules by career public officers, who then allow the practice to be exploited to redirect public funds into private hands. To advance the investigation, the PSU has already filed formal Freedom of Information requests to obtain full procurement records from the Accountant General, Auditor General, and Contractor General. Flowers stressed that the probe must examine not just political leaders, but the public officials who processed the questionable transactions.

    The unfolding scandal has sparked growing public demand for transparency and accountability around the management of public funds in Belize, with the outcome of the requested investigation expected to set a major precedent for government oversight reform going forward.

  • Tributes Pour In for Dr. Krishna Following Sudden Death

    Tributes Pour In for Dr. Krishna Following Sudden Death

    The Medical Association of Antigua and Barbuda Inc. (MAAB) has confirmed the unexpected death of one of the nation’s most beloved long-serving surgical practitioners, Dr. Subbiah Radhakrishnan—known widely to colleagues, patients, and friends as Dr. Krishnan. The announcement was made in an official statement released by MAAB President Dr. Alafea Stevens, shared with the local medical community this week.

    At the time of his passing, Dr. Krishnan remained an actively engaged and deeply committed member of Antigua and Barbuda’s healthcare ecosystem. He continued to deliver critical care to patients at the Sir Lester Bird Medical Centre, while also maintaining an active private practice that served residents across the islands.

    Widely celebrated for his magnetic personality and unparalleled expertise in the operating room, Dr. Krishnan leaves behind a legacy that extends far beyond his thousands of successful procedures. Colleagues remember his surgical skill as a benchmark for excellence, one that motivated and shaped generations of local medical workers. What truly set him apart, however, was his dedication to lifting up other professionals: he served as a generous mentor and trusted confidant to countless new and established clinicians across the country, always willing to share his knowledge and experience to help others grow.

    On behalf of MAAB’s Executive leadership and its full general membership, President Stevens extended the association’s sincerest condolences to Dr. Krishnan’s family, including his wife Dr. Saravana Sabharmathi and their children. “Our collective thoughts and prayers are with his loved ones, his patients, his professional peers, and the entire medical fraternity as we grieve this extraordinary loss,” the statement read. “May his soul rest in eternal peace.”

  • SIF Under Fire: PSU President Claims Rigged Tendering System

    SIF Under Fire: PSU President Claims Rigged Tendering System

    A major public accountability controversy has erupted in Belize, with the head of the nation’s largest public sector labor organization leveling serious allegations of systemic corruption against the country’s high-profile Social Investment Fund (SIF). In a blistering public address released June 12, 2026, Public Service Union (PSU) President Dean Flowers has broken with longstanding unofficial norms of restrained public criticism, directly calling out SIF leadership and the Ministry of Finance for running a rigged competitive bidding process that puts political favoritism ahead of value for taxpayer money.

    Flowers’ allegations go far beyond isolated claims of mismanagement: he asserts that the entire tendering framework is compromised, arguing that publicly advertised competitive bidding is little more than a facade to award contracts to well-connected bidders rather than the most qualified or cost-effective applicants. To back up his claims, he specifically called out inflated pricing for construction materials, noting that SIF is allegedly paying between $70 and $100 per sack of cement – rates far above standard market pricing that would never be accepted in a truly competitive process.

    The PSU president has issued an ultimatum to leadership at both SIF and the Ministry of Finance: hold a public press conference, release five full years of unredacted procurement and tender records, and allow independent public scrutiny of the documents to prove the bidding process is fair. Flowers argues that full transparency is the only possible path to clearing up growing public suspicion and repairing eroded trust in how public funds are managed. He stressed that the controversy is not about a single flawed contract, but about the integrity of the entire public spending system itself, directly calling out Belizean citizens who are aware of alleged misconduct but have failed to speak out, urging them to join demands for accountability.

    In an immediate response to the allegations, senior SIF officials issued a sharp rebuttal pushing back against every claim made by Flowers. The agency denied all accusations of favoritism, improper influence, and corrupt bidding, insisting that all procurement processes – particularly for high-value contracts – follow strict, open competitive bidding rules. SIF emphasized that all bidders undergo rigorous vetting across technical, financial, and legal eligibility standards before any contract is awarded. The agency also warned that Flowers’ unsubstantiated allegations carry serious risks, noting they could erode public trust in the institution and damage confidence among SIF’s domestic and international funding and implementation partners. SIF defended its longstanding reputation for sound management, asserting that its existing procurement systems are robust and fully compliant with national public spending rules.