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  • 7-year old child murdered, pensioner injured

    7-year old child murdered, pensioner injured

    A brutal early-morning attack has left a 7-year-old boy dead and a 72-year-old female pensioner hospitalised in the Essequibo region of Guyana, with local law enforcement launching a full criminal investigation into the alleged murder and attempted murder.

    The incident unfolded at approximately 4:45 a.m. on Friday, 5 June 2026, at a residence in Phase 3 of the Zeelugt New Housing Scheme, located along the East Bank Essequibo. Both victims reside at the same address, authorities confirmed.

    According to initial investigative details, the young victim, identified as Adriel Aftab Mohamed, lived at the property with extended family members. Roughly 20 minutes after the alleged attack, a relative arrived at the home and made the grim discovery: the 72-year-old woman suffering from visible injuries, and the young boy unresponsive inside the property.

    Emergency responders quickly transported the injured pensioner to the De Kinderen Regional Hospital for urgent care. As of the latest update, her condition has been classified as stable, and she remains admitted for ongoing treatment.

    Members of the Guyana Police Force’s Regional Division #3 responded promptly to the scene, launching a forensic sweep to collect evidence. Investigators documented visible injuries on the child’s body, and recovered a bladed weapon suspected to be the weapon used in the attack, which has been taken into police custody as evidence.

    The child’s body was transferred to the De Kinderen Regional Hospital, where a duty doctor officially pronounced him dead on arrival. It has since been moved to Ezekiel Funeral Home, where it will remain until a post-mortem examination is conducted to determine the official cause of death.

    As part of the ongoing investigation, law enforcement has interviewed multiple persons of interest connected to the case. Investigators have also confirmed that closed-circuit television cameras are operational in the area surrounding the attack site, and footage from these devices is currently being reviewed to identify potential leads. Police are currently working to track down the suspect responsible for the violence, with the investigation still active and evolving.

  • UWP Senator calls for national reflection on raising boys

    UWP Senator calls for national reflection on raising boys

    In the wake of the fatal killing of local woman Joy St Omer, a senior opposition politician in Saint Lucia has sparked urgent public debate, arguing that outdated and inadequate socialization practices for boys and young men are a root contributor to the nation’s ongoing crisis of femicide and gender-based violence.

    United Workers Party Senator Elisha Norbert, a former educator with a Christian upbringing, laid out his perspective on the drivers of violence against women in an exclusive interview with local outlet St Lucia Times. Drawing on decades of both personal experience and professional observation working with young people, Norbert connected patterns of male violence against women to systemic gaps in how boys are taught to process emotion, cope with setbacks, and respect women.

    Raised in a devout Christian household, Norbert noted his upbringing instilled a core value of care and protection for women. “The Bible teaches us to care for women like fine china,” he explained, adding that women’s innate tendencies toward love, forgiveness, and compassion are too often twisted and exploited by emotionally stunted men in abusive relationships. It is a devastating sight, he said, to watch women continue extending kindness and support to partners even as they endure repeated harm.

    Drawing on his years as a classroom teacher, Norbert pointed to shifting parenting norms that shield boys from the healthy, age-appropriate experience of failure. He cited a common modern example: parents pushing back against coaches for raising their voices at young players during football matches, depriving children of the chance to process disappointment on the field.

    Too many boys today grow up never learning that setbacks are a normal part of life, he argued. They never get the opportunity to lose a game, sit with their frustration, and be guided to process that emotion in a healthy way—learning that it is okay to not win every contest. Over time, this lack of emotional practice leaves men without the regulation skills to handle rejection, conflict, or unmet expectations in adulthood.

    “Honestly, I believe society is raising weak men,” Norbert said. “We’ve lost a lot in the way we raise our men, and I think we’re reaping the rewards of that. It’s detrimental to the stability of a man’s emotional regulation, and they lash out with their might and their strength and their rage that has never been controlled.”

    To reverse this trend, Norbert is calling for a broad, nationwide conversation in Saint Lucia focused on rethinking how boys are raised and educated. The core priority, he says, must be redirecting greater investment and attention to building boys’ emotional intelligence from an early age, equipping them to handle life’s challenges without turning to violence.

  • BTIA President Efrén Pérez Ratified for Second Term Atop Regional Tourism Federation

    BTIA President Efrén Pérez Ratified for Second Term Atop Regional Tourism Federation

    In a significant development for Central America and the Caribbean tourism sector, Efrén Pérez, current president of the Belize Tourism Industry Association, has secured unanimous approval to serve a second consecutive term as president of the Federation of Tourism Chambers of Central America and the Dominican Republic (FEDECATUR). The official ratification was announced during the III Ibero-American Forum on Sustainable Tourism, Innovation, and Development, a high-profile industry gathering hosted in San Pedro Sula, Honduras that drew hundreds of stakeholders including tourism leaders, public sector representatives, global intergovernmental body delegates, and private sector executives from across the Ibero-American region.

    FEDECATUR’s Board of Directors highlighted the key achievements of Pérez’s first term to justify their unanimous decision to re-appoint him. During his initial mandate, Pérez spearheaded meaningful progress in institutional strengthening for the regional federation, and advanced a cohesive regional policy agenda focused on three core pillars: cross-market tourism integration, environmentally sustainable tourism practices, and industry innovation through new technologies and business models.

    Speaking after the confirmation, Pérez framed the renewed mandate as a collective vote of confidence in the shared vision of a more connected, competitive, and fully integrated tourism economy across Central America and the Dominican Republic. “Our ongoing commitment remains centered on amplifying the voice of the private tourism sector across the region, and building a strategic, constructive partnership with regional governments,” Pérez stated. “Together, our goal is to drive inclusive economic growth, expand quality job opportunities, and deliver long-term prosperity for local communities that depend on tourism.”

    For his second term, FEDECATUR has already laid out a clear policy roadmap. Key priorities include expanding and deepening public-private sector dialogue on regional tourism challenges, upgrading air and land transportation connectivity across member states, lowering regulatory barriers that hinder cross-border visitor mobility, and embedding sustainable development as a non-negotiable core pillar of all regional tourism policy. The federation also plans to strengthen collaborative ties with international tourism bodies and multilateral institutions to access funding, technical expertise, and global market opportunities for member stakeholders.

    As the leading representative body for the organized private tourism sector across eight nations, FEDECATUR counts Belize, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama, and the Dominican Republic among its core membership. The organization works to align industry priorities, advocate for policy reforms that benefit regional tourism, and position Central America and the Dominican Republic as a cohesive, competitive global tourism destination.

  • Doctors Benjamin and Mansoor Appointed to Lead Sir Lester Bird Medical Centre Board

    Doctors Benjamin and Mansoor Appointed to Lead Sir Lester Bird Medical Centre Board

    Following its recent weekly policy meeting, the Cabinet of Antigua and Barbuda has given formal approval to a slate of leadership appointments for statutory and advisory bodies falling under the Ministry of Health, Wellness, Environment and Civil Service Affairs. The changes mark a key step in the government’s ongoing institutional renewal agenda, launched in the wake of the general election held on April 30 this year.

    The most high-profile of the confirmed appointments is the new leadership team for the board of the Sir Lester Bird Medical Centre, the country’s leading public healthcare facility. Dr. Philmore Benjamin will take on the role of executive chairman, with Dr. Edward Mansoor stepping into the position of deputy chairman. Completing the 10-member board are Martin Camacho, who will serve as board secretary, alongside regular members Dr. Karen Josiah, Randy Agrippa, Kasmin Green, Akeem Edwards, and Kiva Dean. Two senior public health officials will hold ex officio seats on the board: Kevin Silston from the national Medical Benefits Scheme, and Chief Medical Officer Dr. Kamara De Castro.

    The Cabinet’s approvals extended beyond the hospital’s governing board to two other critical public institutions under the health ministry portfolio. Veteran nurse Margaret Smith was named as the new chair of the Antigua and Barbuda Nursing Council, the statutory body tasked with upholding professional training and practice standards for the country’s nursing workforce, and guaranteeing consistent high-quality care for patients across all healthcare settings. Dan Lee Phillip was also appointed as chairman of the board for the National Solid Waste Management Authority, the agency responsible for public waste collection, disposal and environmental sanitation across the nation.

    Director General of Communications Maurice Merchant publicly confirmed the full list of appointments during a post-Cabinet media briefing held on Friday. He clarified that all nominations for the roles were first submitted to Cabinet for review by Health Minister Sir Molwyn Joseph, before receiving final formal approval. Merchant emphasized that the appointments are not isolated personnel changes, but an integrated part of the new administration’s broader plan to strengthen core public sector institutions after taking office following the general election.

  • Antigua and Barbuda to Establish Dedicated Night Court for Traffic Offences

    Antigua and Barbuda to Establish Dedicated Night Court for Traffic Offences

    A landmark policy shift aimed at tackling mounting delays in traffic case processing and worsening road safety risks is moving forward, after the national Cabinet gave formal approval to launch a dedicated after-hours court for traffic offenses.

    Under the new plan, individuals accused of traffic violations will no longer need to wait for standard weekday court hours to have their cases adjudicated. The approval of this specialized court comes after a recommendation from Attorney General Sir Steadroy Benjamin, which the full Cabinet accepted as a targeted solution to two growing crises: a crippling backlog of unresolved traffic cases and persistent public anxiety over road safety, Communications Director General Maurice Merchant confirmed in a public announcement Friday.

    Merchant noted that the decision came after weeks of extensive deliberations among Cabinet members, who reviewed recent data showing steady increases in both reported traffic offenses and road accidents across the country. Alongside these rising incident numbers, officials also examined the ballooning inventory of traffic cases that have been stuck in the traditional court system, waiting months or longer for resolution.

    Cabinet members have repeatedly raised alarms about the growing frequency of traffic violations and crashes, highlighting their devastating toll on public safety, private and public property, and the efficiency of the national justice system. After reviewing all available data, members reached a consensus that the traditional court structure was no longer adequate to handle the volume of traffic matters, and that a more focused, expedited approach was critical to eliminate unnecessary delays in resolving these cases.

    Beyond clearing existing backlogs, the new night court initiative is designed to strengthen overall compliance with traffic laws. By ensuring that offenders are held accountable quickly rather than facing months of delay before their cases are heard, officials expect the court system will act as a stronger deterrent to dangerous driving behavior, ultimately reducing the number of accidents and violations across the country. Work is now expected to begin on implementing the new court structure, with further details on operational timelines to be released in coming weeks.

  • Company Partners with Antigua and Barbuda to Export Scrap Metal From Cook’s Landfill

    Company Partners with Antigua and Barbuda to Export Scrap Metal From Cook’s Landfill

    In a decisive move to tackle long-standing environmental and public safety issues, the Cabinet of Antigua and Barbuda has formally approved an agreement with Atlantic Ship Breakers Antigua Limited that will see the firm remove, process, and export accumulated scrap metal across the nation, including the overcrowded, hazardous Cook’s Land site.

    Maurice Merchant, the country’s Director General of Communications, confirmed the approval during a public briefing on Friday, outlining that the initiative sits at the core of the government’s broader agenda to upgrade environmental conditions, strengthen community safety, and reclaim unused, blighted lands currently choked by abandoned scrap metal and derelict debris.

    A standout feature of the public-private arrangement is that the entire project will be carried out with no direct financial burden on the Antigua and Barbuda government. Per the terms of the deal, all operational responsibilities fall to Atlantic Ship Breakers Antigua Limited, which will deploy its own heavy equipment, skilled work crews, and logistical resources to complete every phase of the cleanup. This covers everything from identifying and extracting target scrap materials to on-site processing, compacting, and pre-loading for transport.

    To ensure regulatory compliance and full transparency, the agreement mandates that the company maintain certified, auditable weighing systems and detailed record-keeping protocols for all materials removed. All transportation and export activities must also strictly align with local and international environmental and trade laws governing scrap metal movement.

    Government officials advising the Cabinet emphasized that the cleanup project will deliver far-reaching benefits beyond just the clearing of the Cook’s Land site. By eliminating the accumulation of hazardous scrap metal that has posed risks to nearby communities for years, the initiative will boost ongoing national environmental cleanup work and materially improve living and safety conditions for residents in all affected areas.

    The approved deal marks a resolution to years of public concern over the neglected Cook’s Land site, where unregulated stockpiling of scrap created fire risks, attracted pests, and degraded surrounding natural habitats. With the private firm set to begin operations in the near future, the government expects the site to be fully rehabilitated and prepared for future productive use once the project concludes.

  • Government to Take Over Sir Luther Wynter Pre-School as Early Childhood Education Network Expands

    Government to Take Over Sir Luther Wynter Pre-School as Early Childhood Education Network Expands

    In a significant push to strengthen the island nation’s early childhood education infrastructure, the Jamaican government has announced plans to take over operations of the Sir Luther Wynter Pre-School, a move that forms a core part of its broader national initiative to expand access to high-quality early learning opportunities across the country.

    The takeover, confirmed by senior education officials in recent statements, marks a key milestone in the government’s multi-year strategy to formalize and upgrade early childhood education services, which have long been identified as a critical foundation for long-term educational success and national development. Currently, many small community-run pre-services across Jamaica operate with limited public funding, inadequate facilities, and uneven teaching standards, gaps the government aims to address through a gradual integration of independent and community pre-schools into the national public education network.

    Sir Luther Wynter Pre-School, located in the Kingston and St. Andrew region, has served local working-class families for decades, providing early care and learning for children aged three to five. Under the new arrangement, the facility will be fully incorporated into the public early childhood education system, bringing increased government funding, facility upgrades, standardized teacher training, and regulated curriculum alignment with national education standards. Education ministry representatives note that the transition will be completed in a phased manner to minimize disruption to current students and their families, with existing teaching staff invited to undergo certification to retain their positions under the new public structure.

    This expansion of the early childhood education network aligns with the government’s broader education reform agenda, which prioritizes closing achievement gaps by investing in the earliest stages of learning. Research from global education bodies consistently shows that access to quality early childhood education improves long-term academic outcomes, reduces high school dropout rates, and supports better social and economic mobility for marginalized communities. Jamaican education officials say the takeover of Sir Luther Wynter Pre-School is just the first of several planned integrations of community pre-schools into the public network over the next two years, with a target of bringing 90% of all early childhood learners into regulated, publicly supported facilities by 2027.

    Local parents and education advocates have broadly welcomed the move, noting that the acquisition will bring more affordable, reliable early learning options for families in the area. While some have raised questions about transition timelines and staffing changes, officials have committed to ongoing community engagement to address concerns throughout the handover process.

  • Government Takes Charge of Fort James Redevelopment Plan

    Government Takes Charge of Fort James Redevelopment Plan

    After months of stalled negotiations and public pressure over the underused historic Fort James site, local government officials announced this week that they are stepping in to take full ownership of the long-delayed redevelopment plan for the property.

    The 42-acre riverfront site, which housed a decommissioned 19th-century military fort and later a closed paper manufacturing plant, has sat largely unused for nearly 15 years. Previous private development partnerships fell apart over financing gaps, conflicting zoning demands, and disagreements over how to preserve the site’s historic artifacts while delivering public amenities.

    Under the new government-led framework, the project will prioritize mixed-income housing, public green space, a heritage center celebrating the fort’s military and industrial history, and new small business commercial spaces. Officials project the redevelopment will unlock an estimated $250 million in local economic activity, create more than 1,200 construction jobs, and deliver more than 800 permanent positions once completed.

    Local community leaders have largely welcomed the move, noting that public control will ensure the project serves broad public needs rather than just private profit. Government planners have announced a 60-day public comment period to gather input from local residents on final design and amenity plans before breaking ground, which is scheduled for the second quarter of next year.

  • Antigua and Barbuda Considers Public Register for Parents Who Ignore Child Support Orders

    Antigua and Barbuda Considers Public Register for Parents Who Ignore Child Support Orders

    The government of Antigua and Barbuda has given formal approval to a transformative digital initiative designed to overhaul the broken system of collecting and distributing court-ordered child maintenance payments, a move crafted to address a years-long crisis that has left thousands of vulnerable children and their caregivers in financial precarity.

    The green light for the project, headlined by the custom-built Main Collect mobile and web application, was announced publicly by Director General of Communications Maurice Merchant during a press briefing held immediately after Friday’s Cabinet meeting. Merchant detailed that the digital platform was built to streamline electronic transactions for child support and bring greater transparency and oversight to legally mandated financial obligations for parents.

    Cabinet members based their decision on a detailed presentation delivered by senior Family Court officials, including Registrar Francis Crown and Crown Counsel Alicia Asker, alongside the local software development team that spent months building the tailored system. The presentation laid bare the deep-rooted administrative and enforcement challenges that have long plagued the island nation’s existing child maintenance framework, leaving court staff struggling to track payments and pursue non-compliant parents.

    Official data shared with the Cabinet put the number of men with active court-ordered child maintenance obligations at between 1,500 and 2,500. Widespread non-payment among this group has created cascading financial hardship for single mothers, legal guardians and the children who rely on these monthly payments to cover basic needs from housing to education and healthcare.

    According to the project timeline, the Main Collect application is on track to launch full operations across Antigua and Barbuda within six months. The platform has already secured formal approval from the Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court, and regional planners have set a long-term goal to roll the system out to all 11 member states of the Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS) to standardize child maintenance processes across the region.

    Unlike the outdated manual processing system currently in place, the new digital tool will allow paying parents to submit child maintenance funds electronically from any smartphone, tablet or computer. Recipients will be able to securely log into the system to track incoming payments, confirm deposits and check for outstanding balances in real time, eliminating the long wait times and information gaps that have been common under the current system. For court and enforcement officials, the platform will provide instant access to up-to-date compliance data, making it far faster to identify and pursue persistent defaulters.

    In a nod to the complexity of the non-payment crisis, Merchant emphasized that Cabinet officials do not see digital modernization as a silver bullet for chronic non-compliance. Alongside approving the new platform, the body held in-depth discussions on complementary enforcement measures that will be paired with the technological upgrade to increase compliance rates.

    Under active consideration are a series of policy changes: targeted legislative amendments that would increase the severity of penalties for parents who consistently refuse to meet their obligations, the creation of a public central register that names persistent delinquent payers, and expanded formal partnerships with local employers to enable automatic salary deductions for non-compliant individuals, cutting through the delays that have long derailed enforcement efforts.

  • Man Hospitalized After Stabbing During Dispute Over Wallet

    Man Hospitalized After Stabbing During Dispute Over Wallet

    A routine moment inside a downtown mobile phone outlet turned into a violent tragedy this week, after a dispute over a misplaced wallet left a young man hospitalized with serious stab wounds on St. Mary’s Street.

    According to initial law enforcement accounts, the victim was waiting inside the store when his wallet slipped from his pocket unnoticed onto the tiled floor. Moments later, another customer entering the retail location spotted the fallen item and picked it up, reportedly claiming it for themselves.

    Tensions flared when the victim noticed his wallet was missing and confronted the other patron, demanding the property be returned. Investigators say the thief refused to hand over the full wallet, instead pulling out the cash inside before attempting to exit the building.

    Refusing to let the suspect leave with his money and identification, the victim followed the individual out onto the public sidewalk. What began as a heated verbal argument quickly escalated into physical violence: during the chaotic confrontation, the suspect pulled a pair of scissors from their belongings and stabbed the young man multiple times. Immediately after the attack, the suspect fled the scene on foot, leaving the injured victim behind.

    First responders were called to the location within minutes and transported the victim to a nearby regional hospital, where he remains in care as of the latest updates. Law enforcement has launched a full investigation into the incident, and is currently reviewing store security footage and interviewing witnesses to identify and locate the fleeing suspect.