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  • Canadian Woman Accused of Importing EC$536K in Cannabis Has Charges Dropped on Medical Grounds

    Canadian Woman Accused of Importing EC$536K in Cannabis Has Charges Dropped on Medical Grounds

    In a surprising development from Antigua’s V.C. Bird International Airport, all drug trafficking charges against a Canadian woman caught with 67 pounds of cannabis have been formally withdrawn by legal authorities, with the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) citing unspecified medical factors as the core reason for the decision. The case, which drew attention due to the unusually large seizure of controlled substance, has come to an abrupt end following the DPP’s formal instruction to prosecuting teams to discontinue all legal action against the defendant, identified only as Crisostomo.

    Crisostomo had arrived at the Caribbean island’s main international gateway on an Air Canada flight originating from Toronto, and had previously signaled her intent to enter a guilty plea to the charges brought against her. Given the substantial volume of cannabis recovered by law enforcement, legal officials had initially scheduled the matter for expedited committal proceedings, designed to move high-stakes drug cases quickly through the court system.

    Law enforcement estimates placed the total street value of the seized cannabis at approximately 536,000 Eastern Caribbean dollars, marking one of the larger drug seizures processed through the airport’s customs and policing units in recent months. No additional details about the specific medical circumstances that prompted the DPP’s decision have been released to the public, leaving court observers and local law enforcement stakeholders with little additional context for the abrupt end to the prosecution.

  • Wanted man now in police custody

    Wanted man now in police custody

    A man who had been flagged by police as a wanted suspect connected to severe criminal allegations is no longer at large, after turning himself in to authorities over the weekend. Shane Anthony Greene became the target of an official police wanted notice distributed to the public on Saturday, as law enforcement launched a push to locate and question him in relation to a series of serious criminal matters. The situation took a swift turn the very next day, when Greene presented himself at the Oistins Police Station. He was not alone during the surrender: a practicing attorney-at-law accompanied him to the station to support his voluntary handover to police. As of the latest updates, the suspect remains in police custody and is actively cooperating with investigators, who are continuing their work to untangle the details of the criminal case he is linked to.

  • Statement from the Vice-Chancellor of The UWI Professor Sir Hilary Beckles on the passing of Sir Aziz Hadeed

    Statement from the Vice-Chancellor of The UWI Professor Sir Hilary Beckles on the passing of Sir Aziz Hadeed

    KINGSTON, Jamaica – May 27, 2026 – The University of the West Indies (The UWI) has announced the passing of one of its most dedicated regional leaders, Sir Aziz Hadeed, KCMG, CBE, who served as Chairman of The UWI Five Islands Campus Council. In an official statement released from The UWI Regional Headquarters on Wednesday, Vice-Chancellor Professor Sir Hilary Beckles paid tribute to the legacy of the late campus governance leader.

    Though Sir Aziz’s tenure at the helm of the Five Islands Campus Council covered only a few graduation cycles, his imprint on the institution’s presence in Antigua and Barbuda and across the wider Caribbean region will endure for decades. From the moment he assumed the chairmanship, he prioritized building robust operational frameworks that have allowed the campus’s governing body to carry out its core responsibilities with consistency and efficiency.

    As the campus’s senior governance leader, Sir Aziz brought sharp, strategic focus to every decision and initiative the council undertook. Beyond his structural contributions, he leaves behind a legacy of dignified leadership that has shaped how the council approaches its work today.

    Professor Beckles, alongside Pro Vice-Chancellor and Campus Principal Professor C. Justin Robinson, developed deep respect for Sir Aziz over the course of their collaboration, remembering him first as a devoted advocate for education who took immense joy from nurturing the academic growth of young Caribbean people. Beyond academia, those who worked with him admired his unwavering commitment to advancing social justice and his lifelong dedication to philanthropic work that lifted up vulnerable communities across the region.

    Sir Aziz’s influence extended far beyond formal council meetings, leaving a profound mark on the broader institutional culture of The UWI. Every member of the university community had the opportunity to benefit from his sharp wisdom and warm friendship. His thoughtful perspective and calm, steadying presence will be deeply missed by all who knew him.

    On behalf of the entire global UWI family, Vice-Chancellor Beckles extended heartfelt condolences to Sir Aziz’s loved ones, friends, and colleagues. The university community will come together in the coming days to honor his extraordinary life and the lasting contributions he made to higher education in the Caribbean. May his soul rest in eternal peace.

  • Teen girl missing after leaving QEH

    Teen girl missing after leaving QEH

    Law enforcement authorities in Barbados are intensifying efforts to locate a missing 14-year-old teen, Tia Gittens, who vanished more than a week after walking out of the Queen Elizabeth Hospital against medical protocol. Gittens, who is currently under the legal care of the island’s Child Care Board, has not been spotted by friends, family or officials since May 22. According to official descriptions released by the police, the missing teenager stands approximately 5 feet 4 inches tall, has a slim build and a brown complexion. The last confirmed sighting of Gittens found she was dressed in casual loungewear: a pair of loose-fitting long grey sweatpants, a solid black sweater, and simple house slippers. With no significant leads developed in the case so far, local police have issued a wide-ranging public appeal for community assistance to help bring the teen home safely. Any member of the public who has encountered Gittens since May 22, or holds any information that could hint at her current location, is urged to reach out to law enforcement immediately. Tips can be submitted to the Central Police Station directly, the 24/7 police emergency hotline at 211, the anonymous Crime Stoppers tip line at 1-800-8477, or any local police district office closest to the informant. Investigators have emphasized that even small, seemingly insignificant pieces of information could prove critical to resolving the case quickly.

  • OP-ED: Trade diversification begins at home

    OP-ED: Trade diversification begins at home

    The 2026 Caribbean trade debate has overwhelmingly centered on a single question: which external region should source the Caribbean’s imported goods. But development finance expert Donald O. Charles argues this narrow framing perpetuates the region’s long-standing structural economic dependence — it simply swaps one set of foreign suppliers for another, leaving fundamental vulnerabilities unchanged.

    In his analysis, the only metric that should guide Caribbean trade strategy is the economic multiplier effect: how much of every dollar spent within the regional economy circulates locally before leaving to pay for foreign-produced goods and services. A strong multiplier generates local employment, builds domestic productive capacity, grows tax revenue, and compounds shared regional wealth. Simply shifting import contracts from U.S. suppliers to Colombian or other Latin American providers does nothing to boost this multiplier on its own. By contrast, building a homegrown regional food processing sector that sources raw materials locally, hires Caribbean workers, pays taxes to regional governments, and sells to markets across the Caribbean, diaspora communities, and Latin America delivers exactly the multiplier gains trade policy should prioritize. Ultimately, the source of imports is not the critical variable — it is the productive capacity of domestic Caribbean enterprises that determines how much wealth remains within the region.

    Charles builds his framework on two recent, incisive commentaries from the *Daily Observer*. Sir Ronald Sanders accurately noted that shifting global trade conditions have forced Caribbean nations to diversify away from long-standing reliance on U.S. trade, as old commercial assumptions have become increasingly unreliable. Priscilla Leonce, Head of Country for CIBC Antigua and Barbuda, added a crucial caveat drawing on her 37 years of banking experience: trade diversification cannot survive on ambition alone. The robust financial infrastructure that makes trade with the U.S. predictable and low-risk simply does not exist yet for proposed alternative markets. Charles’ analysis fills a gap in the ongoing conversation by outlining a clear governing framework to distinguish genuine, self-sustaining regional growth from just replacing one foreign dependence with another.

    ### The Persistent Structural Constraint
    Current trade shifts have not altered the decades-old structural reality that underpins Caribbean economics: the United States remains the primary source market for Caribbean tourism. Foreign exchange earned from American visitors supports government budgets, covers national import bills, and sustains the mass employment that Caribbean populations depend on. Any trade policy that puts this core relationship at risk sacrifices the region’s most reliable income source for an unproven alternative.

    Beyond tourism, the U.S. dollar remains the dominant settlement currency for all Caribbean export activity, regardless of destination. The Eastern Caribbean (EC) dollar is backed 96% by U.S. dollar reserves — far above the legal requirement of 60% and prudential guidelines of 70-80%. The foreign exchange that supports this currency peg comes primarily from tourism and goods exports to the U.S. market. Any strategy that erodes these earnings weakens the very foundation of the Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS) monetary system. For this reason, Charles argues, the U.S. should remain a key export market for Caribbean goods when they can compete on price, as it generates the foreign exchange that strengthens Caribbean economic sovereignty. Even if new tariff policies disrupt price competitiveness temporarily, this does not change the structural importance of the U.S. relationship to regional economic stability.

    ### Prioritize Intra-Regional Growth First
    Eastern Caribbean Central Bank (ECCB) Governor Timothy Antoine has already quantified the core barrier holding back regional trade transformation: Caribbean commercial banks hold EC$28 billion in total deposits, but only issued EC$16 billion in loans, leaving a EC$12 billion surplus of undeployed capital. This gap is not caused by a lack of demand for credit. It stems from a systemic bias in the banking sector: the enterprises best positioned to build Caribbean productive capacity — small agricultural producers, domestic manufacturers, food processors, local artisans, and construction materials suppliers — are routinely locked out of conventional lending.

    Charles argues the solution starts with commercial banks, which control the deposits and balance sheet capacity needed to drive growth. Medium- and long-term loans to finance equipment purchases, expand agricultural operations, capitalize food processing facilities, and build the productive infrastructure that trade diversification requires fall squarely within commercial banks’ core mandate. Closing the EC$12 billion gap requires systemic changes: expanded credit guarantee instruments, reformed secured transaction rules, and broader acceptance of both tangible and intangible assets as loan collateral.

    Working capital financing is the critical complement to long-term development lending. Once commercial banks have funded the creation of productive capacity — from processing plants to agricultural supply chains — working capital keeps those operations running at scale. It covers the gap between when a producer ships goods and when payment is received, and bridges the period between securing a large order (for example, from a diaspora grocery chain in Toronto or a hotel purchasing manager in Bridgetown) and building the inventory needed to fulfill it. In short, working capital converts idle productive capacity into consistent, salable output. The intentional sequence Charles outlines is clear: commercial banks first build up regional productive sectors, then working capital financing sustains the steady trade flows those sectors generate.

    The intra-regional market is the logical first destination for Caribbean-produced goods. The CARICOM Single Market and Economy was designed specifically to create the regional demand base that justifies large-scale productive investment in the Caribbean. Shared cultural preferences, existing reliable payment infrastructure, and close geographic proximity give regional producers a competitive advantage over extra-regional suppliers that no trade treaty can match. This advantage has never been fully exploited because the financing needed to guarantee consistent, reliable supply has been out of reach for most domestic producers.

    Deploying capital in this intentional order unlocks incremental growth: first, commercial bank lending (supported by guarantee instruments where needed) builds local productive capacity. Then, CARICOM and CARIFORUM markets absorb initial output, allowing producers to refine production consistency and quality standards to meet the requirements of larger export markets. Next, Caribbean diaspora markets in the U.S., Canada, and the UK are natural next steps for scaled-up producers, generating additional foreign exchange that strengthens the region’s monetary sovereignty. Finally, Latin American neighbors including Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, and Mexico can be tapped as additional export markets.

    ### Building Domestic Production Creates Jobs That Solve Regional Social Crises
    The multiplier strategy has a critical social dimension that the current trade debate has largely ignored. The jobs created by domestic production, raw material processing, food manufacturing, agricultural export supply chains, renewable energy installation, and small-scale industrial activity go disproportionately to young men. This demographic group’s widespread exclusion from productive economic life is the primary driver of the social instability that threatens tourism, undermines governance, and weakens the Eastern Caribbean dollar through its impact on crime, investor confidence, and the region’s reputation as a stable travel destination.

    Professor Justin Robinson’s “Big Push” development framework specifically identifies this dynamic. The vacuum of productive sector employment is not just an economic problem — it is the direct root cause of the social crisis that Caribbean development institutions have long attempted to address through programs that only treat symptoms, not the source. The case for economic multipliers and the case for social stabilization are one and the same, Charles argues. A regional food processing cooperative in Dominica that employs 20 young men in grading, packaging, and logistics does not just add to the country’s GDP. It removes 20 young men from the pool of unemployed, socially disconnected people whose disengagement drives crime rates that lower tourism arrivals, raise insurance premiums, and erode the foreign exchange earnings that back the Eastern Caribbean dollar.

    The ECCB’s EC$12 billion deposit-lending gap is simultaneously a missed opportunity to boost economic multipliers, a missed chance to create thousands of life-changing jobs, and an unacknowledged driver of the region’s most urgent social crisis. Charles emphasizes that commercial banks holding these excess deposits should not be passive bystanders to this crisis — they have a structural role to play in solving it, generating long-term benefits for all regional stakeholders.

    ### A Call to Action for the Caribbean Banking System
    Leonce’s call for expanded, more robust financial infrastructure for alternative trade routes is correct and necessary, Charles confirms. But that infrastructure must extend far beyond correspondent banking and letters of credit: it must prioritize the prudent, profitable deployment of the EC$12 billion in excess capital held by commercial banks, which Charles identifies as the most urgent unmet need to drive regional integration, food security, and OECS economic growth.

    The pieces for transformation are already in place, Charles concludes: the OECS monetary system already holds the required capital, Caribbean commercial banks already hold the deposits, the CARIFORUM trade framework already guarantees market access, and diaspora communities already represent untapped demand for Caribbean-made goods. What has been missing is a clear governing framework that directs these existing assets toward the multiplier-focused outcomes that genuine regional integration requires. The work ahead is to design and deploy a fully integrated financial architecture aligned with these shared goals.

    Donald O. Charles is Founder and Managing Director of WOCAP Finance Corporation, a development finance institution operating across Jamaica, the OECS, and the broader Caribbean. His forthcoming book *The Leadership Imperative — African Wisdom, African and Western Philosophy and Artificial Intelligence: A Re-interpreted Pathway to the Flourishing of Human Society* will be submitted to Harvard Business Review Press for publication in November 2026. OIKONOMISM™, OIKONOMIST™, and OIKONOMIST NICHE STRATEGY™ are original trademarks of Donald O. Charles © 2026, with trademark applications filed in Antigua and Barbuda in April 2026.

  • Mexico Steps In After Trump Bars Iran’s World Cup Team

    Mexico Steps In After Trump Bars Iran’s World Cup Team

    As the 2026 FIFA World Cup co-hosted by the United States, Mexico and Canada approaches, a geopolitical dispute has disrupted competition logistics for Iran’s national men’s football team, with Mexico stepping in to accommodate the squad after a controversial restriction from U.S. President Donald Trump.

    The 2026 World Cup, running from June 11 to July 19, has scheduled all three of Iran’s Group G matches for U.S. host cities: two matches against New Zealand and Belgium in Los Angeles, and a third against Egypt in Seattle. Despite approving Iran’s participation in matches held on American territory, Trump issued an order barring the Iranian squad from staying overnight anywhere in the U.S. The restriction comes amid a three-month ongoing U.S.-Israeli military campaign against Iran that launched on February 28, a conflict that has already killed roughly 3,468 people and injured more than 26,500, according to data from Al Jazeera.

    In March, Trump defended the policy, claiming that barring overnight stays was “appropriate” “for their own life and safety.” As of press time, entry visas for Iranian team members have not yet been issued by U.S. authorities. Stuck between its match schedule and the U.S. travel restriction, global governing body FIFA turned to neighboring Mexico to resolve the logistics gap.

    Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum publicly confirmed the new hosting arrangement during her daily press briefing on Monday. “The United States doesn’t want the Iranian team to spend the night…So they asked us, ‘Can we stay the night in Mexico?’ We said sure, no problem,” Sheinbaum told reporters. She added that Mexico sees no justification for turning the Iranian team away, saying “We have no reason to deny them the possibility of staying in Mexico.”

    Under the new plan, Iran will establish its team base at the Xoloitzcuintle Centre in Tijuana, a Mexican city located just south of the U.S.-Mexico border opposite San Diego, California. On each match day, the squad will cross the border into the U.S. to compete before returning to their Tijuana base after the game.

    The unusual arrangement highlights how geopolitical tensions are spilling over into global football less than three months before the kickoff of the 2026 tournament, which is the first expanded 48-team World Cup in history.

  • From Choiseul to London, the nursing journey of Otillear Tia Athanase

    From Choiseul to London, the nursing journey of Otillear Tia Athanase

    Every great career trajectory begins with a single step, and for Otillear Tia Athanase, that step grew out of humble roots in the rural community of Choiseul. Born to working parents who made their living as farmers and beekeepers, Athanase did not start her professional life with a clear roadmap for success. When she graduated from Vieux Fort Comprehensive Secondary School in 1996, she faced an uncertain future with no concrete career plan – but a passing suggestion from a local nurse would end up altering the entire course of her life.

    At the recommendation of that nurse, Athanase’s mother encouraged her 17-year-old daughter to apply for the volunteer programme at St Jude Hospital. Stepping onto the surgical ward for the first time, Athanase carried a mix of nervous apprehension and quiet determination to carve out her own path. That initial volunteer placement quickly sparked a deep sense of purpose: within eight months, she earned a full-time position at the hospital and made the firm decision to pursue nursing as her lifelong career.

    The path to qualification was far from smooth. To gain entry to nursing school, Athanase had to pass her CXC-level Mathematics examination – a hurdle that required her to retake the test three times. Rather than letting repeated defeat discourage her, these setbacks cemented a core life belief that would carry her through decades of challenge: never abandon a goal, even when failure feels inevitable. In 2002, she crossed the finish line, graduating with a special award for professional excellence and returning to St Jude Hospital as a fully qualified registered nurse, an achievement she still describes as a source of immense personal pride.

    Seeking new professional challenges and growth opportunities, Athanase made the bold decision to relocate to the United Kingdom in 2005. Challenges emerged almost immediately: her first role at London’s King Edward VII Hospital ended just months after she arrived, leaving her facing the expiration of her work visa. In a twist of fate that she calls “divine timing”, she secured a new position with the National Health Service on the very final day of her visa grace period, saving her chance to build a life in the UK.

    From that point, her career accelerated rapidly. She chose to specialize in intensive care nursing, completed a Bachelor of Science degree in her specialty, and quickly climbed the ranks into senior leadership positions. Working across major hospital sites in London refined her skills and prepared her for even bigger opportunities, leading her to discover a natural talent for guiding multidisciplinary teams and overseeing the complex operations of critical care settings.

    In 2012, Athanase embraced another life-changing professional leap, accepting a role as a matron of an intensive care unit in Saudi Arabia – a position that was three seniority levels above her previous role. Navigating this role required her to adapt to an entirely new cultural and professional environment, pushing her out of her comfort zone and helping her develop greater confidence and strategic leadership capabilities that would serve her for the rest of her career.

    When Athanase returned to the UK, she rebuilt her career incrementally, working her way up from senior staff nurse to ICU sister. She continued to invest in her professional development, earning a Master of Science degree in Leadership and Management and completing specialized training in project management. Today, she holds the role of duty manager at London’s prestigious Wellington Hospital, where she oversees daily operations, patient safety standards, and staff support. For Athanase, this role is both a profound privilege and the highest point of her decades-long professional journey.

    Beneath the surface of her impressive professional resume lies a deeply personal story of hardship and unbreakable resilience. Athanase speaks openly about the darkest period of her early years in the UK, when she was forced to live out of her car and rely on leftover meals from the hospital where she worked to get by. She describes those isolating, humbling weeks as a transformative experience that revealed an inner strength she did not know she possessed, reshaping her perspective on life and work permanently.

    That period of struggle taught her resilience at a depth no classroom or training programme ever could, she says, strengthening her determination and reinforcing her sense of purpose as both a nurse and a leader. While most of those hardships are long behind her, she still jokes that adjusting to the cold, dark British winter remains an ongoing challenge.

    Athanase attributes her steady rise to leadership to an unwavering core sense of purpose and a lifelong commitment to caring for vulnerable patients. Even on days when she doubted her own abilities, she learned to rise above self-doubt and external distractions, staying anchored to the mission that brought her into nursing in the first place. Today, she frames every obstacle not as a devastating setback, but as an opportunity to learn and grow.

    Her decades of dedicated work have not gone unrecognized: recent recognition as a featured leader on a prominent UK healthcare platform left her feeling both humbled and affirmed. For Athanase, the recognition served as proof that hard work, dedication, and authentic commitment to service never go unnoticed – even though she has always built her career out of a passion for care, not a desire for public praise.

    Even with all she has achieved, Athanase remains grounded and committed to continuous growth, never content to stop pushing herself. She still approaches every new chapter with the same curious, ambitious question that has driven her from the start: “What’s next?”

    For young St Lucian nurses who hope to follow a similar international career path, Athanase offers clear, practical advice drawn from her own experience: start planning early, approach your goals with intentionality, and remember that preparation is everything. Above all, she emphasizes, hold fast to resilience, stay adaptable to changing circumstances, and never stop believing in your own potential, even when the path forward feels uncertain.

  • FFB Coach Critically Injured After Bus Crashes Into Cane Truck

    FFB Coach Critically Injured After Bus Crashes Into Cane Truck

    A late-night traffic collision in northern Belize has left a senior Football Federation of Belize (FFB) coach critically injured, with multiple youth footballers and other technical staff also hurt after their team bus crashed into a parked sugar cane truck. The incident unfolded on Tuesday evening along San Victor Road in Corozal District, as the group was returning from a scheduled training session for the FFB Northern Zone High Performance Program.

    When the FFB team bus made contact with the stationary cane truck, most people on board sustained only minor injuries that were treated quickly at local medical facilities. But the program’s most senior leader — identifying as Villamil, who serves as NSC Corozal coordinator and high-performance head coach — received life-threatening harm. Positioned in the front passenger area of the team coach bus, she was left pinned inside the crumpled wreckage by the force of the impact.

    First responders from local law enforcement, emergency medical teams, and even local residents who rushed to the scene worked together quickly to extract her from the destroyed vehicle. She was immediately airlifted by emergency transport to the country’s main tertiary care center, Karl Heusner Memorial Hospital (KHMH) in Belize City, where clinical teams continue to monitor her. As of the latest FFB update, her status is listed as critical but stable, giving small hope for her recovery.

    In response to the high demand for blood products to support her ongoing care, the FFB has issued an urgent public appeal for donations of O+ blood, which is the required type for her treatment. The federation has directed any community members who are willing and able to donate to contact the hospital directly to coordinate their contribution.

    The crash has sent shockwaves through Belize’s small football community, which is now coming together to support the injured coach and her family as she fights for recovery.

  • Guyana offers Caribbean training, long-distance robotic telesurgery

    Guyana offers Caribbean training, long-distance robotic telesurgery

    In a landmark breakthrough that redefines the boundaries of modern medical innovation, the South American nation of Guyana has successfully completed the world’s longest-distance robotic-assisted telesurgery, marking a new era in accessible, high-precision healthcare across the Caribbean region. The unprecedented procedure, performed on May 26, 2026, saw internationally renowned cardiac surgeon Dr. Sudhir Srivastava, founder of India-based SS Innovations, conduct a Coronary Artery Bypass Graft (CABG) on a patient located 20,000 kilometers away in India, operating from a control room at Georgetown Public Hospital (GPHC) in Guyana.

    President Irfaan Ali announced the historic achievement at an official press briefing Tuesday night, alongside Health Minister Dr. Frank Anthony and a multi-national team of medical specialists. He emphasized that Guyana’s new technological leap positions the country to serve as a regional hub for robotic surgery, extending access to this cutting-edge care to all member states of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM).

    “What patients can access in the most advanced medical facilities in India will be available right here in Guyana for the entire region in the coming weeks,” President Ali stated. “Our plan builds a central robotics, surgery and care hub based in Guyana, with outposts across the Caribbean, and we will provide full training for medical teams from every CARICOM nation.” To support this initiative, Guyana has purchased a complete robotic surgery training module and finalized an agreement with SS Mantra, the Indian developer of the surgical system used in the procedure, to establish an accredited international training center on its soil. Previously, all of Guyana’s surgical teams traveled to India to complete certification on the system.

    Health Minister Dr. Frank Anthony confirmed the training program will receive formal accreditation and will be integrated into post-graduate fellowship training offered through the University of Guyana and the Ministry of Health. The milestone telesurgery procedure beat the previous world record for the longest-distance robotic surgery, also set by SS Mantra for a procedure between Australia and India. Multiple layers of internet redundancy were built into the operation, with an on-site Indian surgical team on standby to take over if connectivity issues arose, and the procedure was completed without complications.

    Alongside the historic telesurgery milestone, GPHC also announced a second first for the English-speaking Caribbean: the first fully local robotic surgery, a successful inguinal hernia repair performed by Guyanese surgeon Dr. Hemraj Ramcharran, with support from Dr. Bibi Hussain and Dr. Jagnanand Ramnarine. Ramcharran is now the first Caribbean surgeon to complete a robotic procedure within the region.

    Medical experts outlined the transformative benefits of the latest-generation SSI Mantra robotic system, noting it delivers high-resolution 3D magnified views of surgical sites and allows for precision control of tissue manipulation within fractions of a millimeter — a level of accuracy impossible to achieve with traditional open surgery. Unlike conventional open-heart surgery that requires splitting the sternum (breastbone), robotic-assisted procedures use small incisions between ribs to access the surgical site, drastically reducing patient recovery time, blood loss, post-operative infection risk, and complications such as deep vein thrombosis.

    Cost is another major advantage: traditional open-heart surgery typically costs between $6,000 and $12,000 U.S. dollars, including a minimum seven-day post-operative hospital stay, while robotic-assisted surgery cuts that cost by 50%. Critically, GPHC announced it will offer all robotic-assisted procedures to patients completely free of charge.

    To advance the expansion of robotic surgery in Guyana and the region, President Ali has established a new Robotics Advisory Committee, co-chaired by prominent Guyanese cardiologist Dr. Mahendra Carpen, with members including Dr. Anthony, Dr. Riyad Gafoor, Satindra Prasad, and Steve Carryl. Officials are already working to address remaining gaps in local expertise, including training for a perfusionist — a specialized clinician who operates the heart-lung machine used during cardiac surgery — with SS Innovations assisting with placement for international training.

    Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley, who delivered remarks at the briefing, welcomed Guyana’s regional offer, noting the new hub will help reduce the growing backlog of delayed surgeries across CARICOM member states. GPHC officials called the dual achievements a groundbreaking milestone in global healthcare, positioning Guyana as a leader in medical innovation and expanding access to life-saving care for underserved populations across the Caribbean.

  • Experts sound alarm over sexualised behaviour among schoolchildren

    Experts sound alarm over sexualised behaviour among schoolchildren

    Two prominent Caribbean child welfare leaders have issued an urgent public warning following the spread of multiple viral videos showing uniformed school students engaging in explicit sexual activity, calling attention to a worrying trend of growing sexualisation among minors that risks causing long-term harm to young people’s futures.

    Sean Clarke, chief executive officer of Supreme Counselling for Personal Development, and Melissa Savoury-Gittens, president of the National Organisation of Women (NOW), say three key factors are driving increasingly risky sexual behaviour among youth: unregulated social media consumption, heightened peer pressure, and critical gaps in consistent parental guidance.

    Clarke emphasized that social media has grown to become one of the most powerful forces shaping how young people think, interact, make decisions, and understand the world around them. While peer pressure predates digital platforms, he explained that social media has amplified the problem by creating a culture where young people chase external validation through likes, shares and view counts. Many minors are willing to put themselves in compromising, explicit situations simply to gain online attention, a dynamic that would have been unthinkable for previous generations.

    This risky behaviour is often rooted in low self-esteem, Clarke added. Young people grappling with feelings of inadequacy will frequently go to great lengths to fit in with peer groups and gain acceptance from popular classmates, even if that means participating in activities they know are inappropriate.

    Savoury-Gittens echoed these concerns, noting that mainstream entertainment and television programming also normalize constant sexual content that shapes children’s expectations of behaviour from a young age. She also pointed out the stark gender double standard that emerges when explicit content of minors spreads online: while boys often face little social backlash and may even gain social status from the attention, girls are far more likely to face public shaming that leaves long-lasting emotional damage.

    Both leaders acknowledge that underage sexual activity is not a new phenomenon, but stress that modern technology has completely transformed the scope and consequences of the issue. The widespread availability of smartphones and the virality of social media mean explicit content can spread across communities in hours, and once posted, it never truly disappears. Clarke warned that content shared as a child can follow people into adulthood, limiting educational and employment opportunities and undermining their ability to build the lives they want.

    The advocates agree that families serve as the first and most critical line of defence against these harmful trends. Conversations about sexuality, self-worth, and personal responsibility need to start early in the home, with Clarke arguing that girls must be taught from a young age to value themselves and respect their bodies, while boys must learn to respect both their own boundaries and the boundaries of the girls around them. He also stressed that parents must model healthy behaviour for their children, noting that young people absorb the norms they see practiced by the adults in their lives.

    Crucially, Clarke added that education about the risks of social media cannot be limited to children: many parents lack a full understanding of how digital platforms operate and the unique dangers they pose to minors, so adult-focused education programmes are also urgently needed.

    Savoury-Gittens expanded on this framework, noting that schools, faith institutions and community organizations also have vital roles to play in supporting children. Many young children, especially those in primary school, hold deep trust in their teachers, giving educators unique access to have open conversations about healthy boundaries and safe online behaviour that children may not be as receptive to when coming from parents. Churches and community groups can also fill gaps in support by offering age-appropriate guidance beyond what is covered in standard school curricula.

    Both leaders called for early intervention to identify at-risk children before they engage in harmful behaviour, urging parents and educators to watch for key warning signs: sudden shifts in behaviour including increased aggression, withdrawal from social activities, excessive secrecy around online activity, emotional instability, dropping grades, reduced motivation, and increased absenteeism from school. Clarke noted that these changes can often signal that a child is grappling with peer pressure, bullying, emotional distress, substance use, gang influence, or online manipulation.

    Savoury-Gittens also pushed for greater participation in existing parenting support programmes, noting that while free resources are available, uptake remains consistently low. She shared an example of a local parenting initiative that saw attendance surge after organizers offered small financial incentives to participants, proving that removing barriers to access can dramatically increase engagement. Most importantly, she added, adults must not shy away from having difficult conversations with young people about inappropriate behaviour: the goal should be to protect children from harm rather than shame them for their mistakes, while still being clear about what boundaries exist to keep them safe.