The World Bank has revealed a key leadership appointment for its regional work in the Caribbean, announcing Wednesday that Achim Fock will take up the post of Division Director for the Caribbean region. In this senior leadership role, Fock will steer the global development institution’s strategic partnerships and active project portfolio across all Caribbean nations, with oversight over a broad portfolio of initiatives including development lending, data-driven analytical work, policy advisory services, and targeted trust fund programs. All of these efforts are focused on advancing inclusive, sustainable, and shock-resistant development across the small and vulnerable economies of the region. Fock brings a quarter-century of hands-on experience within the World Bank’s global network to his new role, giving him deep institutional knowledge of the bank’s operating models and development priorities. Most recently, he served as Country Manager for Zambia, where he led portfolio oversight and direct engagement with national government stakeholders and development partners. Prior to his posting in Southern Africa, Fock held the role of Operations Manager for four major Southeast Asian economies: Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand. He also previously served as Operations Manager for Vietnam, and has held senior leadership roles including Manager of the Development Effectiveness Unit for the South Asia region. Early in his World Bank tenure, Fock worked as a Senior Economist, delivering policy and economic analysis across multiple countries across Africa, East Asia, and Eastern Europe, building a global perspective on diverse development challenges. In his new position, Fock will take ownership of all the World Bank’s regional programming across the Caribbean. Core priorities will include expanding and strengthening collaborative partnerships with national governments, local civil society organizations, and private sector actors across the region. He will also lead the bank’s support to Caribbean nations as they navigate a complex set of interconnected development challenges. These pressing priorities include expanding job creation and driving inclusive growth in key economic sectors, supporting a just and affordable energy transition to meet global climate commitments, and building comprehensive 360-degree resilience across the region. Key resilience-focused efforts will include expanding investment in disaster risk preparedness and accessible disaster risk financing, delivering climate-resilient infrastructure, and strengthening broad economic resilience to withstand global shocks and climate impacts. Fock holds an impressive academic background aligned with his development work: he earned a PhD in Agricultural Economics, two master’s degrees in Agricultural Science and Agricultural Economics respectively, and a postgraduate diploma focused on European Integration and International Economics.
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Fuel Shortages Hamper Earthquake Rescue Efforts in Venezuela
Nearly a week after two powerful earthquakes tore through Venezuela’s northern coastal region of La Guaira, desperate families and volunteer rescuers are still digging through mounds of collapsed concrete and debris by hand, crippled by widespread fuel shortages that have left state-owned heavy rescue machinery idle, CNN reports. The devastating disaster has laid bare deep systemic failures in the country’s emergency response framework, drawing sharp criticism from observers and triggering a small-scale corruption scandal that has compounded public anger.
In one high-profile example of the logistical gridlock, a large excavator parked meters from a major rubble pile has sat completely unused since the earthquakes struck, with no gasoline available to power its engine. Without access to the heavy equipment that could speed up search efforts, locals hoping to locate missing loved ones have been forced to rely on nothing more than basic hand tools — shovels, pickaxes — and their own bare hands to sift through wreckage.
The botched response has amplified longstanding criticism of the Venezuelan government’s disaster preparedness. Political analyst Carmen Beatriz Fernández notes that the ongoing crisis exposes the severely diminished capacity of national institutions to coordinate large-scale emergency operations when disaster strikes. Adding to the controversy, Venezuelan law enforcement agencies have announced the arrest of four public officials who are accused of looting valuables from the earthquake wreckage. All four have been removed from their positions and their cases have been transferred to the national judiciary for prosecution.
As of Tuesday, the official confirmed death toll from the quakes has risen to at least 1,943, but aid workers and local residents fear the actual number of fatalities is far higher, as hundreds of people remain unaccounted for buried beneath destroyed buildings. In response to the growing need for body recovery, the United Nations has reportedly begun the process of procuring 10,000 body bags to support ongoing recovery operations. Even as the death count continues to climb and hopes of finding more survivors fade, scores of grieving families continue to gather at disaster sites, clinging to the slim possibility that their loved ones will be pulled out alive.
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Wayne George Football Academy receives EC$5,000 support from RUBIS
Dominica’s long-running grassroots football program, the Wayne George Football Academy, has received critical financial support from local fuel brand Team RUBIS to upgrade its athlete resources ahead of the organization’s upcoming competitive fixtures. In a recent official press statement, the academy announced the EC$5,000 donation, which will be allocated exclusively to purchasing new team uniforms and modern football training and match equipment for its young roster of players.
The contribution from Team RUBIS is designed not just to outfit athletes for upcoming matches, but also to sustain the academy’s 15-plus-year mission of nurturing youth football talent across the island nation. Vanalda Henry-Vidal, Accounts Executive at RUBIS, noted that the company was proud to formalize this partnership with the community-focused academy.
“Sports play a fundamental role in shaping the next generation of leaders, instilling core values like collaborative teamwork, personal discipline, and persistent resilience,” Henry-Vidal said in a statement shared alongside the announcement. “We are honored to contribute to an initiative that directly improves young lives and makes our local community stronger.”
Wayne George, founder and head coach of the academy, expressed sincere gratitude for Team RUBIS’ investment in the program and its young athletes. He emphasized that corporate partnerships like this are instrumental to the academy’s work of growing football talent and molding well-rounded, responsible citizens out of program participants. “A huge thank you to RUBIS for partnering with us to nurture young football talent and help us build future leaders and community members. We deeply appreciate this support and look forward to continuing our collaboration moving forward,” George said.
Founded all the way back in 2008, the Wayne George Football Academy is a legally registered, community-led football development program that has served young Dominicans for over 15 years. Headquartered in Bath Estate, the academy welcomes both boys and girls starting at age five, and currently supports more than 100 active young players across age groups. It has grown into a cornerstone of grassroots football development in Dominica, holding weekly training sessions every Saturday, organizing regular friendly matches against other local teams, and fielding senior squads that compete in official local leagues run by the Dominica Football Association.
Over its decades of operation, the academy has helped develop dozens of promising young footballers, while embedding values of leadership, teamwork and discipline in all participants. The new funding from Team RUBIS will remove longstanding resource barriers, providing the gear and uniforms that players need to thrive both on the pitch and in their personal growth off the field, positioning the program to expand its positive impact across Dominica’s youth sports community.
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Pearly Eusebe hits 102; three other centenarians share June birthdays
On June 30, 2024, Pearly Paulina Ferdinand Eusebe — affectionately known to all as Auntie Pearly — marked her 102nd birthday, capping a century of life defined by unshakable resilience, quiet compassion, and a decades-long commitment to turning her childhood dream into reality. Born exactly 102 years ago in the small Dominican community of Delices, Auntie Pearly grew up as the second of seven siblings, her early years shaped by the humble, often harsh realities of rural life in the 1920s and 1930s.
Even at age five, Auntie Pearly walked three miles barefoot to reach her local school, carrying her daily lunch in a repurposed butter tin. Her route crossed multiple rushing streams; during seasonal heavy rains, the crossings became impassable, forcing her to miss classes entirely. It was at this school that a young Auntie Pearly first learned of the Second World War: her strict headmaster, Teacher Didier, read daily newspaper updates to students, discussing Hitler, Churchill, and the conflict’s global reach. Back in the village, entire communities gathered at the local church every afternoon to pray for an Allied victory, reciting the collective chant “Down with Hitler.”
Auntie Pearly’s lifelong calling to nursing emerged during a childhood trip to the village clinic for a vaccination. As she watched the nurse calmly care for patients, she knew immediately that she wanted to dedicate her life to helping others — a dream she would hold close through decades of setbacks. When she left school at 15, Teacher Didier helped her submit an application to a local hospital, but she never received a response. Her mother, resigned to the barriers facing poor rural girls, was not surprised. Refusing to accept her fate, Auntie Pearly moved to Dominica’s capital Roseau to live with relatives, taking a job as a live-in domestic servant that she openly disliked.
A year later, her good character caught the attention of Cissie Caudeiron, a Dominican woman married to a French engineer based in Venezuela. Caudeiron hired Auntie Pearly as a nanny for her five children, and when Caudeiron relocated to Venezuela permanently, she left the young nanny to care for the children in her absence. When the order came to bring the children to Venezuela, 20-something Auntie Pearly set off alone on a multi-leg sea journey, first to Grenada, then to Trinidad. The ship’s captain was stunned by her youth, exclaiming, “But you are only a child!”
Even as she cared for Caudeiron’s children through years of international relocation, first in Venezuela and later in Trinidad, Auntie Pearly never abandoned her dream of nursing. Multiple applications were met with silence, rejection rooted in her humble origins. In Venezuela, she even survived being caught in the crossfire of the national revolution; soldiers and rebels paused their fighting to let the stranger pass, a small moment of grace amid chaos that she would remember for the rest of her life. While in Trinidad, she joined the local church choir, where her soaring voice and command of Latin hymns won her widespread admiration.
Decades after she first dreamed of becoming a nurse, Auntie Pearly finally got her chance. After stints working in Dominica and Curaçao, she moved to England to join her sister, who worked at a London hospital. Now in her early 40s, she feared she was too old to train, but a doctor she met through her sister encouraged her, telling her: “Once you have life and are prepared to learn, nothing is impossible.” Auntie Pearly threw herself into studying anatomy and physiology alongside students half her age, passed every exam, and officially qualified as a registered nurse in England.
Her career was a testament to her warmth and devotion: patients affectionately called her “Mama,” explaining to the hospital matron that she was far more than a nurse — she was a caring maternal figure to all who relied on her. To supplement her modest nursing salary, she took extra shifts through a medical agency on her days off, saving every extra penny to buy a home back in Dominica and support her parents and siblings back home. A devout Catholic, she relied on her faith through every challenge, often praying during her daily commute through London, calling God her constant protector.
Today, at 102, Auntie Pearly remains sharp, lucid, and in good health, with a sharp sense of humor and a memory that retains every detail of her 10 decades of life. She still maintains her independence, cooking her own meals, cleaning her own catch of fish, making her favorite cocoa tea every morning, and tending to her own household. She loves talking about her nursing career, and delights in conversing in fluent Spanish with visiting doctors, a skill she picked up during her years in Venezuela. Though she regrets no longer being able to walk the local streets, and finds modern noise like loud motorbikes and music jarring, her attitude remains positive and warm.
Auntie Pearly’s remarkable life story is now being captured in a biography written by author Mary Isidore, giving audiences the chance to learn more about her extraordinary journey. She is not the only centenarian from Dominica celebrating a milestone birthday this June: Mathew St. Rose of Kings Hill turned 100 on June 16, Margaret Andre of Goodwill marked her 101st birthday on June 12, and Lucille Pascal of Grand Fond celebrated her 100th birthday on June 22.
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Sperm Whale Reserve Board launches consultations with watersports operators in Dominica to advance whale reserve inititiative
The Caribbean island nation of Dominica has reached a critical early milestone in the development of its groundbreaking, world-first sperm whale conservation reserve, as the newly appointed governing board for the project has launched its first round of engagement with key local industry stakeholders.
On June 10, 2026, the 10-member Sperm Whale Reserve Board gathered with watersports and whale watching operators at the St. Alphonsus Parish Hall in Goodwill, marking the board’s first public consultation since it was formally established under the 2025 Sperm Whale Reserve Act. The gathering allowed board members to introduce their roles, share updates on the reserve’s development timeline, and lay out the core mandate and long-term objectives that will guide the body’s work.
As the governing body tasked with strategic oversight of the unique protected area, the board draws representation from across public and private sectors to ensure diverse perspectives shape management of the reserve. Its membership includes delegates from multiple government ministries, the Dominica Air and Sea Ports Authority, the Dominica Watersports Association, two local fishermen’s cooperatives, a national scientific research institution, and the country’s Maritime Unit, creating a cross-sector governance framework designed to balance competing priorities for marine use.
Lisa Valmond, chair of the Sperm Whale Reserve Board and Permanent Secretary in Dominica’s Ministry of Environment, opened the consultation by emphasizing the non-negotiable value of collaborative governance for the initiative. Valmond stressed that long-term conservation success depends on centering the needs and input of local stakeholders whose livelihoods are inherently tied to the health of the island’s marine ecosystems.
Jullan Defoe, Minister of State in the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries, Blue and Green Economy, echoed that sentiment during his address to the gathering, noting that inclusive collaboration is the foundation of the reserve’s long-term viability. “The success of the Sperm Whale Reserve depends on meaningful collaboration with those who interact with our marine resources daily,” Defoe told attendees. “Through continued engagement and shared responsibility, we can protect this globally significant population of sperm whales while supporting sustainable economic opportunities for present and future generations.”
The reserve itself marks a historic milestone in global marine conservation: it is the first protected area in the world created specifically for the long-term protection of sperm whales and their critical deep-water habitat off Dominica’s coast. The board’s core priorities span far beyond species protection, integrating conservation with sustainable economic development aligned with Dominica’s broader blue and green economy strategy. Key mandates include conserving the island’s resident sperm whale population and their habitat, advancing science-backed sustainable marine resource management, supporting ongoing research and population monitoring, developing standards for responsible whale watching and marine tourism, expanding public outreach on marine conservation, strengthening cross-stakeholder cooperation, and building a resilient, inclusive blue economy that benefits local communities.
Industry representatives in attendance at the June 10 consultation responded positively to the board’s outreach. Delegates from the Dominica Watersports Association and local whale watching operators welcomed the opportunity for direct, ongoing dialogue with the reserve’s governing body, and reaffirmed their commitment to collaborative stewardship that positions Dominica as a global benchmark for responsible marine conservation.
This first consultation is the opening of a series of ongoing engagement sessions planned by the board, designed to ensure that local stakeholders, community members, researchers, and conservation partners all have a voice in shaping the reserve’s management framework. Government officials frame the initiative as a landmark model that proves it is possible to balance rigorous species protection with inclusive, sustainable economic growth. Through intentional collaborative governance, the reserve is set to not only safeguard one of Dominica’s most iconic and ecologically valuable marine species, but also cement the island’s global reputation as a leader in innovative, community-centered marine conservation that will benefit generations to come.
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Tamis Modeste crowned Soufriere Carnival Queen
On a vibrant Saturday, June 27, the stands of Soufriere Mini Stadium buzzed with electric energy as hundreds of attendees – from multi-generational local families to high-ranking dignitaries, event sponsors, and loyal community supporters – gathered to kick off this year’s Lucian Carnival celebrations. The gathering centered on honoring Saint Lucia’s rich cultural heritage, the creative talent of its young people, and the unifying communal spirit that has defined the Carnival tradition for decades.
The highlight of the opening festivities was the annual Miss Soufriere Carnival pageant, which brought five dynamic, carefully selected delegates to the stage to compete for the coveted annual crown. Each contestant represented a leading local establishment that had thrown its support behind the event: Triana Busette stood as Miss Sugar Beach (a property of the upscale Viceroy Resort), Ella Albert represented Miss MBC/Real FM, Lovely Son carried the banner for Miss B&B Money Savers, Tamis Modeste competed as Miss Saint Lucia Daily Post, and Hailey Reid represented Miss Soufriere Experiences. Across every segment of the competition, the five contestants delivered poised, memorable performances that held the packed audience’s attention from the opening introduction to the final announcement of results.
When the judges’ scores were tallied, Tamis Modeste emerged as the clear standout, earning the official title of Soufriere Carnival Queen 2026. Lovely Son secured the position of first runner-up, while Triana Busette took home second runner-up honors. While the full official prize package will be awarded during the Carnival’s closing ceremony later this summer, all contestants received recognition for their achievements on the day of the pageant, along with gift certificates donated by a network of generous local small businesses based in Soufriere.
Modeste dominated multiple special award categories, taking home honors for Miss Photogenic, People’s Choice, Best Evening Wear, Best Interview, and one of two Best Costume awards. Busette was recognized with the Miss Congeniality title for her warm rapport with fellow contestants and audience members. Son also earned multiple accolades, including Best Ambassadorial Address, Best Swimwear, and the second Best Costume award, alongside recognition for the most outstanding talent performance.
The 2026 Soufriere Carnival is scheduled to conclude over the final weekend of July. The closing activities will open with the traditional early-morning J’ouvert celebration kicking off at 4 a.m. on Sunday, July 26, followed by a vibrant parade of Carnival bands through the town in the afternoon. The annual celebration will wrap up with the popular Last Lap Jump-Up street party on the following day, Monday, July 27.




