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  • Charged for Attempted Murder

    Charged for Attempted Murder

    A shocking daytime shooting in Belize, the nation’s former capital, has resulted in formal attempted murder charges against a 21-year-old suspect, law enforcement officials confirmed Thursday. Jadon Young is now facing two criminal counts: attempted murder and use of deadly means of harm, in connection with the shooting of 25-year-old Maleek Sutherland earlier this week.

    According to initial police accounts, the attack unfolded as Sutherland, a resident of Bermudian Landing Village, traveled to his regular workplace. As he moved through the area, an unmarked SUV pulled alongside him, and a person identified as a passenger in the vehicle opened fire multiple times. Sutherland was struck by gunfire during the assault and was quickly rushed by emergency responders to a local medical facility for urgent treatment. As of the latest update, no further details on Sutherland’s current condition have been released by authorities.

    Assistant Superintendent of Police Stacy Smith noted that investigative teams are actively working to map out a clear motive for the brazen public shooting. Smith added that sensitive case details will only be released to the public at a time when it does not jeopardize ongoing investigative work, declining to share additional information on potential connections between the suspect and victim or any gang or personal links that may be under review.

    The case marks the latest high-profile violent incident to draw public attention to violent crime in the former capital region, with local law enforcement continuing to advance the court process following Young’s charging.

  • Former Turks and Caicos Premier jailed for corruption

    Former Turks and Caicos Premier jailed for corruption

    On Friday, 29 May 2026, a historic corruption prosecution in the Turks and Caicos Islands reached its conclusion when former premier Michael Misick received an effective custodial sentence of four years and 26 days, closing a years-long legal process that has reshaped public expectations of political accountability in the territory.

    Misick’s conviction dates back to 4 February 2026, when Supreme Court Justice Rajendra Narine found him guilty on three separate counts of bribery tied to fraudulent government land and development deals. The sentencing hearing was held in a packed Supreme Court courtroom, drawing widespread public attention as the most high-profile political corruption case in the territory’s history.

    In his remarks from the bench, Justice Narine emphasized that corrupt conduct by elected public officials constitutes a profound violation of the public trust granted by citizens. He ruled that the public interest demands custodial sentences to both hold wrongdoers accountable and send a clear deterrent message to other public officials who might consider similar illegal activity. The justice rejected repeated arguments from Misick’s defense team that the former premier should receive a suspended sentence, noting that even the defense had implicitly acknowledged the severity of the offenses crossed the threshold requiring jail time.

    Narine classified Misick’s crimes as falling into the highest category of corruption severity, citing three core aggravating factors: the massive illegal financial gains tied to the schemes, the deliberate abuse of the highest public office in the territory, and the sophisticated, carefully constructed systems the defendants used to execute and hide their criminal activity. He initially set an eight-year prison term for each of the three bribery convictions before reviewing both aggravating and mitigating circumstances presented during the sentencing phase.

    The court ultimately reduced the combined sentence by five years after accounting for a series of mitigating factors. These included the multi-year delay in bringing the case to trial, a violation of Misick’s constitutional right to a trial within a reasonable timeframe, the 339 days he already spent in pre-extradition custody in Brazil, and personal circumstances submitted by the defense. Narine also factored in Misick’s lack of prior criminal convictions, his decades of prior public service to the territory, his family situation, and medical evidence submitted during the hearing.

    After adjustments, the court handed down three-year sentences for counts one and three, and a five-year sentence for count two. Further credit was granted for the pre-trial custody Misick served in Brazil during extradition proceedings, reducing those sentences to two years and 16 days for counts one and three, and four years and 26 days for count two. All sentences will run concurrently, resulting in the final effective term of four years and 26 days.

    Misick was not the only defendant convicted in the case: former Cabinet minister McAllister Hanchell was found guilty on two bribery counts, and local attorney Thomas “Chal” Misick was convicted on four counts of money laundering connected to the same scheme. Prosecutors allege the illegal land and development deals generated millions of dollars in unlawful, off-the-books payments for the co-conspirators.

    In his February ruling upholding the conviction, Narine reiterated a core principle of democratic governance, stating that public office “is not a licence for personal enrichment.” He found that Misick had repeatedly violated the baseline standards of honesty and integrity that the public is entitled to expect from all elected officials.

  • Chattabox responds to concerns in the public

    Chattabox responds to concerns in the public

    In recent weeks, mounting questions and worries from the general public have pushed AI chatbot startup Chattabox into the spotlight, prompting company leaders to step forward and issue a formal response to the community it serves. The concerns raised span multiple critical areas that have become common flashpoints for public scrutiny of generative AI tools: data privacy risks, potential misinformation spread, and the accessibility of harmful content through the platform’s conversational interface.

    Chattabox’s leadership team acknowledged that many of the concerns raised by users and advocacy groups alike are valid, reflecting broader industry-wide conversations about responsible AI development. In a public statement released earlier this week, the company outlined immediate and long-term measures it plans to implement to address each area of worry. For data privacy, Chattabox announced it will roll out enhanced end-to-end encryption for all user conversations by the end of the quarter, alongside a new opt-in mechanism for data collection that gives users full control over whether their interactions are used to train the company’s AI models.

    On the issue of misinformation, the company said it is updating its content moderation algorithms to flag unsubstantiated claims during conversations, and will partner with independent third-party fact-checking organizations to verify high-stakes information shared through the platform. Chattabox also added that it is expanding its trust and safety team by 40% over the next six months, adding dedicated staff to monitor for harmful content and respond to user reports within 24 hours.

    Industry analysts note that Chattabox’s response comes at a time when regulatory scrutiny of AI tools is intensifying across multiple global markets, with many governments working to finalize new rules for generative AI development and deployment. By proactively addressing public concerns, Chattabox is positioning itself as a transparent player in a crowded market, though advocates say that tangible progress will depend on how effectively the company implements its announced changes. In closing its statement, Chattabox committed to ongoing public updates about its safety and privacy initiatives, and invited continued feedback from users and stakeholders to shape the platform’s future development.

  • June start for $5m faith-based fund

    June start for $5m faith-based fund

    A new $5 million government grant initiative tailored for faith-based organizations is set to open its first application round in early June, Third Sector Minister Colin Jordan has confirmed, following formal approval from the Barbadian Cabinet. First pledged as part of the Barbados Labour Party’s election manifesto, the program centers on empowering faith-based groups to launch youth-focused projects that drive inclusive social development and deeper community engagement across the island.

    Jordan laid out the program’s broad priorities during a post-Cabinet media briefing, noting that supported projects will span a range of critical areas affecting young Barbadians. These include public health and wellness outreach, youth crime prevention, targeted youth engagement activities, life skills training, and expanded access to employment, poverty reduction support, educational opportunities, anti-discrimination initiatives, disability integration, food security, and environmental action. All funded projects are designed to boost young people’s active participation in national social and economic life, with faith-based groups recognized as key long-standing partners in youth development across Barbados.

    To ensure transparency and accountability for public funds, the program has clear eligibility requirements outlined by Jordan. Only registered faith-based organizations and their affiliated institutions – including churches, mosques, synagogues, temples, and faith-linked charities – are eligible to apply. Organizations must be registered as charities, not-for-profit companies, or third-sector entities with the Ministry of Labour, Social Security and the Third Sector, maintain a permanent physical presence in Barbados, and have a minimum three years of formal registration history to demonstrate operational longevity. Jordan added that the framework is intentionally flexible, however: a dedicated oversight committee will have the authority to grant exceptions to the three-year rule for promising emerging groups.

    All funded activities must be based in Barbados and serve the island’s youth, in line with the program’s public funding mandate. For joint applications submitted by multiple collaborating organizations, a formal memorandum of understanding is required to clearly outline each group’s roles and responsibilities, a measure put in place to uphold strict accountability standards.

    Eligible project types include structured training sessions, skills workshops, academic seminars, stakeholder conferences, and broader institutional capacity-building initiatives. Individual scholarships, private sponsorships, and standalone one-off public events do not qualify for funding. A key requirement for all approved projects is non-discrimination: programs must be open to all young participants regardless of religious identity, though targeted programming for specific demographic groups (such as initiatives focused exclusively on young men or young women) is permitted when justified by project goals.

    The government plans to roll out four open funding calls annually, with the first call for proposals scheduled to launch at the start of June. Jordan emphasized that the rapid rollout of the program reflects its priority status for the new administration, which took office in February. Administrative structures are already in place, and the government will soon launch public advertising to invite applications, with dedicated support available to help less experienced organizations draft strong formal proposals, as many small community groups lack prior experience with competitive grant applications.

    A seven-member evaluation and monitoring committee will oversee the entire application, assessment, and post-funding monitoring process. Chaired by the Permanent Secretary for Religious Affairs, the committee includes representatives from community development, social work, youth advocacy, and the faith-based sector itself. Applications will be evaluated based on six core criteria: the applicant’s operational capacity, project relevance to national youth needs, expected effectiveness, long-term sustainability, potential for scaling impact, and budget realism. Following approval, funded organizations will be required to submit both mid-term and final progress reports, with the committee overseeing all reporting and payment scheduling.

    Jordan concluded that beyond supporting direct youth development, the program is designed to strengthen the institutional capacity of faith-based organizations, helping these trusted community groups expand the impactful local work they have carried out for decades.

  • Joseph, James help Windies women win big over Ireland

    Joseph, James help Windies women win big over Ireland

    The opening match of the women’s Tri-Nation T20I Series kicked off at Dublin’s Clontarf Cricket Club on Thursday, May 28, with a dominant eight-wicket victory for the West Indies over host nation Ireland, powered by standout bowling performances from two Saint Lucian spinners. The cross-continental tournament, which also features Pakistan as a competing side, set a thrilling tone for the series with this opening clash.

    After West Indies captain Hayley Matthews won the pre-match coin toss, the Barbadian leader opted to put Ireland into bat first – a call that would pay immediate dividends for her side. Twenty-one-year-old left-arm spinner Zaida James got the West Indies off to a blistering start, removing both of Ireland’s opening batters within the first four overs. By the fifth over, Jahzara Claxton chipped in to claim another wicket, leaving the Irish reeling at 3 wickets down for just 23 runs on the board.

    Ireland’s batting lineup fought hard to rebuild the innings, climbing to 100 for 7 by the conclusion of the 16th over. But 25-year-old left-arm spinner Qiana Joseph, the second of the West Indies’ Saint Lucian star bowlers, broke the host’s momentum. Joseph lured Ireland’s key batter Alice Tector out of her crease, resulting in a stumping that shifted the game firmly in the West Indies’ favor. The spinner went on to claim the final three wickets of the Irish innings, finishing her two-over spell with an outstanding figures of 3 wickets for just 8 runs. James rounded out her own strong performance with 2 wickets for 10 runs across her two overs.

    The Irish side was bowled out for 103 runs with a full 18 overs’ worth of deliveries still remaining, leaving the West Indies with a modest target to chase. It did not take the Caribbean side long to secure the win, with captain Matthews leading the charge from the opening of the innings. Matthews and star all-rounder Deandra Dottin put together an opening 23-run partnership before Dottin fell for 8 runs, and Joseph was soon dismissed for 6 runs shortly after. That brought an end to any minor early wobbles, as Matthews put on an unmatched batting masterclass. The 28-year-old scored her 20th career T20I half-century, finishing undefeated on 82 runs from just 44 deliveries – a knock that included 11 boundaries and three sixes. By the 11.3 over, the West Indies had crossed the finish line, wrapping up a commanding opening win to kick off their Tri-Nation Series campaign.

  • LIAT (2020) Limited and Air Caraïbes Sign Interline Agreement to Expand Caribbean Travel Connectivity

    LIAT (2020) Limited and Air Caraïbes Sign Interline Agreement to Expand Caribbean Travel Connectivity

    Two leading Caribbean-focused aviation players, LIAT (2020) Limited and Air Caraïbes, have announced a landmark interline agreement that is set to reshape travel connectivity across one of the world’s most popular tourism regions. This strategic partnership marks a key milestone in efforts to untangle the fragmented travel network that has long hindered movement between the Caribbean’s hundreds of island nations and territories.

    Under the terms of the agreement, the two carriers will coordinate ticketing, baggage handling, and flight scheduling to create a far more seamless travel experience for both leisure and business passengers. Travelers will now be able to book a single combined ticket for itineraries that include flights operated by both airlines, eliminating the hassle of separate bookings, re-checking luggage, and navigating disconnected airport procedures when transferring between carriers. Baggage will be checked through to a passenger’s final destination, a major upgrade from the previous process that required travelers to collect and recheck their bags during transfers.

    For LIAT (2020) Limited, the reborn successor to the original Leeward Islands Air Transport that collapsed into insolvency in 2020, the partnership opens access to Air Caraïbes’ broader network of routes connecting the Caribbean to European hubs including Paris. It also strengthens the regional carrier’s position as a key player in intra-Caribbean travel, extending its reach to destinations it does not currently serve directly. For Air Caraïbes, which operates long-haul flights from France to multiple Caribbean islands, the agreement gives its passengers easy access to dozens of smaller regional destinations that would otherwise be difficult and time-consuming to reach.

    Industry analysts note that the partnership comes at a critical time for Caribbean tourism, which is still working to fully recover from the deep disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. Improved connectivity is widely seen as one of the most impactful drivers of tourism growth in the region, as it makes multi-destination island vacations more accessible and encourages more business travel between regional economies. This interline agreement is also expected to create ripple benefits for local hotels, tour operators, restaurants, and other small businesses that rely on tourism revenue by bringing more visitors to smaller, less accessible islands across the region.

    Both carriers have indicated that they plan to review the partnership in the coming years and may expand the scope of their cooperation if the agreement delivers the expected benefits for passengers and stakeholders. The new connected services are expected to roll out to booking systems within the coming months, giving travelers the opportunity to book integrated itineraries for travel starting in the second half of the year.

  • AUB students begin QEH rotations after 13-year wait

    AUB students begin QEH rotations after 13-year wait

    After 13 years of operating in Barbados, the American University of Barbados (AUB) has reached a historic milestone in its medical education program: for the first time, its students are completing required clinical rotations at local medical institutions, led by the island nation’s flagship Queen Elizabeth Hospital (QEH).

    Clinical training is a core, non-negotiable component of modern medical education. Unlike the foundational classroom learning that introduces students to anatomy, pharmacology and disease pathology, clinical rotations place trainees directly in hospital and clinic departments, where they work alongside licensed physicians to engage with real patients, practice diagnostic skills and develop hands-on care experience over dedicated rotation blocks. Prior to this new partnership, AUB students were forced to travel abroad to countries including the United States and Guyana to complete this mandatory training requirement.

    The first cohort of trainees began their local rotations on a historic Friday earlier this year: 10 students started placements at QEH, while an additional three began their training at the island’s Psychiatric Hospital. To mark the occasion and embed core values of service from the start of clinical training, AUB organized its annual community outreach initiative, distributing 500 pre-packed fruit bags to patients across all departments at QEH.

    Dr. Carlos Chase, Director of Medical Services at QEH, confirmed that the hospital has already integrated AUB trainees into its systems, with interns from the university arriving for placements approximately two months before the first rotation cohort of medical students. He framed the new partnership as a confirmation of the hospital’s growing regional role as a leading medical training hub for undergraduate and postgraduate trainees from institutions across the hemisphere.

    “We have upgraded and expanded our training capacity to accommodate students from multiple universities, which will only strengthen our position as a regional center of excellence for medical education,” Chase explained. “There is often negative discourse around this hospital, but we have many outstanding, unrecognized achievements. Our long-standing training program in partnership with the University of the West Indies has long been one of this institution’s greatest beacons of success, and this new partnership expands that legacy.”

    For AUB’s leadership, the launch of local rotations is the realization of a goal the institution has held since it first opened its doors in Barbados 13 years ago. “This was our dream from the day we founded this school,” shared Anita Bhat, Chief Executive Officer of AUB, in an address to media on the launch day. “This is a truly historic moment for all of us, and we could not be more excited.”

    Bhat emphasized that the partnership extends far beyond benefits for AUB and its student body, delivering tangible advantages to the entire Barbadian community. “This is a win for the school, for our students, and for the wider Barbadian public,” she noted. “Our institution brings economic activity to the island, and we already carry out extensive volunteer work across the country through our long-standing partnerships.” She pointed to AUB’s existing free community clinic, and ongoing collaborations with churches, schools, and leading local health organizations including the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Barbados, the Barbados Cancer Society, and the Barbados Diabetes Foundation.

    Meesam Ali Khan, president and director of AUB, joined the announcement remotely from India, where the university’s parent institution is headquartered. Khan explained that AUB’s core mission is to expand accessible, high-quality medical training opportunities for students across global regions, and the QEH partnership directly advances that goal.

    Khan praised QEH as an ideal training environment for medical students, highlighting three key strengths: its high volume of patients, the wide diversity of clinical cases it treats, and the depth of experience among its attending medical faculty. “The quality of clinical training depends on three core things: the number of patients you interact with, the range of conditions you see, and the expertise of the physicians guiding you,” Khan said. “QEH has trained University of the West Indies students for decades, so it is already a well-established, proven teaching hospital, which makes it the perfect fit for our program.”

    Beyond the clinical training itself, Khan explained that the fruit distribution outreach was designed to prioritize a core, often overlooked value of medical practice: empathy. “We do not just teach our students medicine and cutting-edge medical technology. We teach them to care for patients as people, and empathy is the foundation of that,” he said. Bhat echoed this commitment, adding: “This celebration of our new clinical rotations also serves a deeper purpose: to instill a permanent spirit of community service in our students, and nurture the empathy they need to care for vulnerable people experiencing illness.”

    Looking ahead, AUB is planning far-reaching additional collaboration to advance Barbados’ healthcare digital transformation. Khan announced that the institution is preparing to donate 100 digital stethoscopes that can transmit real-time heart and lung sounds remotely via a custom mobile application. The university is also exploring partnerships to expand support through clinical software systems, broader digital health innovation, expanded free clinic services, and larger community outreach initiatives. For all parties, Khan said, the new clinical rotation partnership is a clear win-win: “This arrangement creates shared value for AUB, for Queen Elizabeth Hospital, for our students, and for the entire Barbadian community.”

  • APUA Responds to Concerns Over Exposed Seawater Pipeline

    APUA Responds to Concerns Over Exposed Seawater Pipeline

    Officials with the Antigua Public Utilities Authority (APUA) have issued a public statement confirming that a member of the public recently suffered a fall near exposed coastal infrastructure, noting with relief that the incident did not result in any life-threatening or permanent serious injuries.

    The structures in question — exposed underwater pipelines and heavy concrete anchor blocks — are critical pieces of infrastructure for the country’s desalination operations, which convert seawater into safe, drinkable water for communities across Antigua and Barbuda. These marine-laid components serve two key functions: drawing raw seawater into the desalination facility and flushing out concentrated brine, a mandatory byproduct of the desalination process, back into the ocean.

    According to APUA, the visibility of these underwater assets follows consistent seasonal patterns. During extended periods of low tide, when coastal water levels recede further than usual, more of the pipeline and anchor infrastructure rises above the water line, making it far more noticeable to beachgoers and visitors than during high tide cycles.

    To mitigate public safety risks, APUA has repeatedly installed bright buoy markers along the route of these underwater pipelines to clearly mark their location for anyone moving through the area. Regrettably, the authority reports that these safety markers have been repeatedly removed by unauthorized individuals, leaving the infrastructure unmarked during low tide events.

    The statement comes as Antigua and Barbuda grapples with ongoing severe drought conditions that have significantly depleted the nation’s existing surface water reserves. In response to growing water scarcity, desalination has emerged as an increasingly vital pillar of the country’s national water supply network. Because of the nature of the desalination process, critical infrastructure including intake and discharge pipelines must be placed in the marine environment, with no feasible alternative location available for these components.

    APUA officials welcomed the ongoing public discussion about coastal safety and desalination infrastructure, noting that transparency around the process of delivering potable water to thousands of residential and commercial customers across the nation is a key priority for the authority. The statement aimed to provide clear contextual information to help the public understand the purpose and necessity of the coastal infrastructure, as well as the challenges the authority faces in maintaining permanent safety markings.

  • Rebate system needs overhaul, dairy farmers say

    Rebate system needs overhaul, dairy farmers say

    As the Barbados dairy sector marks a major milestone, industry stakeholders are uniting in calls to modernize the country’s agricultural rebate scheme, amid growing worries over declining cattle genetics and fragmented collaboration between producers and industry groups. This week, producers, government regulators, and dairy sector leaders gathered at the Pine Hill Dairy Farmers Engagement Forum, held Thursday at the Radisson Aquatica Resort. Titled “The Next 60 – Shaping the Milk Production Industry in Barbados,” the event coincided with the 60th anniversary of the former state-owned dairy operation, bringing key industry challenges and untapped opportunities into focus.

    Arlie Connolly, Senior Agricultural Assistant at Barbados’ Ministry of Agriculture, laid out the details of the government’s current suite of incentives and rebates for dairy producers, noting that officials are moving forward with plans to boost outreach to ensure farmers know what support is available. “We have a really intensive, well-developed incentive package that most farmers do take advantage of… Earlier this year, Mr. James and I held a full planning meeting to roll out a public awareness campaign to promote these incentives more widely, and that’s still on our agenda. When it’s done, farmers will have a far clearer understanding of how the programme works,” Connolly explained.

    Among the most generous current incentives is a 40% rebate for dairy housing construction and upgrade costs, launched in 2024 as a two-year programme with a maximum rebate cap of $60,000. Despite the significant support on offer, Connolly admitted uptake has been extremely low, with the programme set to expire later this year. The broader scheme includes rebates for a range of critical farm investments, from cattle embryos and imported breeding livestock to milk parlour upgrades alongside the dairy housing support, but many older, underutilized incentives remain largely unclaimed by producers.

    Julia Holder, Dairy Farm Development Manager at Pine Hill Dairy, raised one of the most common pain points for producers: slow rebate disbursement, asking whether officials could introduce faster processing and staged reimbursements to get capital into farmers’ hands more quickly. Connolly explained that while the Ministry of Agriculture handles application reviews, all payments rely on fund releases from the Ministry of Finance, creating unavoidable delays even when applications are approved within a week of submission. Even so, he noted that the approval process has been streamlined in recent months, with a new tiered authorization system cutting down red tape that once required all applications to gain sign-off from the Permanent Secretary, slowing approvals dramatically.

    Local dairy farmer Paul Davis brought forward two key concerns: a lack of transparency and traceability in the current rebate system, leaving producers unable to match deposits in their bank accounts to specific incentive claims. “From where farmers stand, the entire system needs modernization. What we should get is an immediate acknowledgement of our application and a unique case number to track its progress – that’s just not available right now,” Davis said. He also highlighted gaps in the new heifer raising rebate, a programme designed to encourage producers to keep female calves for breeding instead of selling them early. “Several of us submitted applications months ago, and we’ve had no confirmation they were even received, no update on the status, and no timeline for when we might receive payment,” Davis explained, adding that poor communication between the different agencies managing the programme has left widespread confusion among producers.

    Patrick Butcher, Farm Manager at Victoria Farms, noted that the vast majority of dairy operations in the country still rely on manual record-keeping, creating a critical gap in reliable, verifiable farm data that holds the sector back. “With the exception of maybe one or two producers, almost all of our farm records are handwritten. A few of us, like Paul Davis who has used digital software successfully for years, have moved online, but the ministry and vet services have struggled to roll out digital systems across the sector. Right now, most information is passed verbally, and it’s impossible to verify accurately,” Butcher said.

    In a revealing note, Connolly shared that a 50% rebate for digital record-keeping tools and farm computer technology has actually been available to producers for more than two decades, having launched in 2001. The programme covers multi-user software licenses for farmers, requiring just six months of recorded data on farm computers to claim, but to date only Davis has ever taken advantage of the incentive.

    Another producer, McDonald Stevenson, pushed back on the mandatory electronic cattle identification chip requirement, arguing the process is unnecessarily complex and time-consuming, and that traditional physical tagging is still sufficient to identify individual animals. “I can tag my cows myself, any official can come any day and count my 20 heifers and match them to their tag numbers. The old system works just fine,” Stevenson said. Connolly defended the chip mandate, noting that digital identification enables full traceability in cases of theft or slaughter, a benefit traditional tags cannot provide. He did acknowledge that the requirements can be adjusted as the programme evolves, adding that officials have already opened discussions with Ministry of Finance teams to address the most pressing pain points in the wider rebate system.

    The forum comes as Barbados’ dairy sector looks to secure its long-term sustainability over the next 60 years, with widespread agreement that updating the rebate system to meet producer needs is a critical first step to boosting growth and addressing longstanding challenges like declining cattle genetics.

  • Cubaanse  leerlingen op school: ‘Ze doen alleen mee met rekenen’

    Cubaanse leerlingen op school: ‘Ze doen alleen mee met rekenen’

    Since 2020, Suriname has recorded a net inflow of more than 40,000 Cuban migrants, a wave of relocation that has created unforeseen strains on the South American nation’s public education system and social cohesion. Most of these new arrivals lack formal residency documentation, and because official population registration remains incomplete, authorities cannot confirm exactly how many school-aged Cuban children are currently residing in the country. What is clear, local educators say, is that integrating large numbers of Spanish-only speaking migrant children into Suriname’s Dutch-medium education system has emerged as a major unaddressed challenge.

    Merredith Hoogdorp, a primary school teacher and board member of the Surinamese teachers’ union Wi Sa Strei, explained that the first major obstacle begins with classroom placement. Without official school records or age verification documents to draw from, children are often placed into grades that do not match their actual developmental level. Hoogdorp cited the example of a 15-year-old Cuban boy who was assigned to a fifth-grade class – where all other students are between 9 and 10 years old – because he had no documentation to prove his age or prior education.

    Beyond placement mismatches, many educators report widespread reluctance among Cuban migrant children to learn Dutch, the official language of instruction in Suriname. Hoogdorp described her repeated efforts to teach basic Dutch vocabulary to the 15-year-old student, only to be met with silence and disengagement. To date, the student has been held back a grade, as he only participates in mathematics lessons and cannot engage with other coursework taught in Dutch.

    Not all public schools have adopted a passive approach: some campus in northern Paramaribo have taken it upon themselves to adapt curricula for Spanish-speaking students, translating lesson materials and administering assessments in Spanish to help migrant children keep up. Educators at these schools take on this extra workload voluntarily, but Hoogdorp argues that this ad-hoc solution is unsustainable. She notes that Surinamese teachers already receive inadequate pay, and there is no additional compensation for the extra work of translating materials or learning Spanish to support migrant students. Hoogdorp is calling on the Ministry of Education to implement a formal, coordinated strategy to address the crisis rather than leaving individual teachers to bear the burden.

    In response to the gap in public education support for Spanish-speaking migrant children, a new independent facility, the Educational Center – Reparador de Sueños School, recently opened its doors. The school, accredited by Suriname’s Ministry of Education, Science and Culture, primarily serves primary school-aged children from migrant backgrounds. Director Lyolexis Vázquez confirmed that the largest student cohort comes from Cuba, with additional enrolled students from Venezuela, the Dominican Republic, Colombia and Peru. Currently, nearly 100 children between the ages of 3 and 13 attend the school, which delivers most core instruction in students’ native Spanish.

    The new school also offers mandatory Dutch classes, as well as coursework on Surinamese geography and history, to support gradual integration. Vázquez explained that the school was founded to fill a critical educational vacuum created by the influx of migration: as Dutch is the official language of public education in Suriname, Spanish-speaking children face overwhelming barriers to accessing consistent learning in the public system. “Our model acts as a linguistic bridge, allowing children to continue their academic development in their mother tongue while they gradually acclimate to and integrate into Surinamese society,” Vázquez said.

    The language barrier extends beyond the education system and has contributed to social tensions between long-term Surinamese residents and new Cuban migrants. Many Surinamese have expressed frustration that many Cuban arrivals appear unwilling to learn Dutch or the local creole language Sranantongo. Jose, a young Cuban fruit seller who has lived in Suriname for seven years with his entire family, is an outlier: he speaks fluent Sranantongo and Dutch. A Cuban nail technician in Paramaribo told reporters she is embarrassed by the behavior of many of her compatriots, saying “It is unacceptable to come to Suriname, enter Surinamese people’s homes and workplaces, and refuse to learn their language.”

    Cultural differences, often exacerbated by language barriers and lack of context, have also created friction. One Surinamese business owner noted that many Cuban migrants are accustomed to throwing toilet paper in the trash rather than flushing it, a practice rooted in inadequate sewage and water infrastructure in Cuba that many Surinamers do not understand. This small cultural difference has already led to workplace irritation between colleagues.

    Compounding these social and educational challenges is the absence of clear national policy for Cuban and other migrant groups. As a member of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM), Suriname allows free entry for citizens of other CARICOM member states, and integration courses are not mandatory for new arrivals. The government also lacks a centralized, complete system to track who enters the country, leaving authorities without accurate data on the full scope of migration.

    Similarly, there is no official data on the share of crime in Suriname that can be attributed to Cuban migrants. Recent high-profile headlines have linked Cuban suspects to armed robbery, murder, and human trafficking cases, but the Surinamese Police Corps has not released any aggregated statistics on criminal activity among the Cuban migrant population, leaving public perceptions unmoored from verifiable data. This report was produced with support from the Suriname Journalism Stimulation Fund.