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  • LETTER: APUA and PWD- What a mess

    LETTER: APUA and PWD- What a mess

    A frustrated local resident named Denzil has penned an open letter to the editor calling out widespread mismanagement and a total lack of accountability for botched infrastructure works in Newfield, slamming a series of uncoordinated, wasteful construction projects that have upended daily life for local homeowners for months.

    In his scathing critique, Denzil argues that the entire initiative has been marked by chaotic planning from start to finish, with no clear leadership, no cohesive master plan, no regulatory oversight, and ultimately no one willing to take responsibility for the mess left behind.

    The core of his anger centers on work carried out by the Antigua Public Utilities Authority (APUA), which tore up local roadways to install new utility pipes that have sat disconnected and abandoned for months. Today, local roads remain ripped up and littered with construction debris, while thick clouds of dust plague nearby residential properties — and residents still have no access to improved water service that the project was meant to deliver.

    One particularly egregious example, Denzil notes, is the stretch of road connecting Friars Hill Road and Marble Hill Road. Crews first excavated this roadway in the first week of January. Two months ago, they returned to spend six weeks constructing a new sidewalk along one side of the corridor, then pulled out of the site with no further work for a full month. Now, crews have returned once again to dig up the opposite side of the road to build a second unnecessary sidewalk.

    Denzil questions the logic behind this piecemeal approach, pointing out that the road sees very little pedestrian traffic, making the two new sidewalks a complete waste of public funds that only serve to narrow the roadway and disrupt vehicle access.

    Worse still, he explains, the entire project was launched to address persistent recurring damage to the road surface. A simple preliminary investigation would have revealed that the root cause of the damage is runoff water from a nearby entertainment complex that undermines the road’s foundation every weekend. Despite all the disruption, dust, and public money spent on the current pipe and sidewalk works, the root problem has not been addressed at all — meaning the newly rebuilt road will inevitably crack and crumble again once work is complete, whenever that may be.

    “For how much longer will we put up with this nonsense?” Denzil asks, closing his letter with a plea for action to fix the broken system that allowed this unplanned, wasteful project to move forward.

  • Hospital Condemns Unauthorised Recording of Patient

    Hospital Condemns Unauthorised Recording of Patient

    Officials from Belize’s largest public healthcare facility, the Karl Heusner Memorial Hospital Authority (KHMHA) based in Belize City, have issued a formal public call for the immediate takedown of an unauthorized patient video circulating widely across social media platforms. The recording, which captures an unidentified patient admitted after a violent assault, has drawn sharp criticism from hospital leadership for flagrant violations of the individual’s fundamental rights to privacy and personal dignity.

    In an official statement released to the public on June 29, 2026, KHMHA leaders outlined deep concern over the unregulated spread of the footage, which was captured without the patient’s consent either by an unauthorized visitor or a member of the public before being shared online. The patient is currently receiving ongoing care at the facility for injuries sustained in the violent attack that led to their hospitalization.

    The KHMHA statement emphasized a core principle of patient-centered care: every individual receiving treatment within the hospital’s wards is more than just a medical case. “Behind every bed in our wards is a person, someone’s mother, father, child, or friend, going through one of the most vulnerable moments of their life,” the statement read. “They deserve compassion, and above all, they deserve privacy.”

    Hospital management is urging all social media platforms users who have shared or reposted the video to remove it immediately, framing the request as a necessary action to uphold the patient’s basic human rights. Officials stressed that the requirement for patient privacy is not merely an internal institutional rule—it is a foundational expectation of basic human decency. “This is not just hospital policy; it is a matter of basic human respect,” the statement concluded.

  • Derde helft WK 2026: Droom of drama? Brazilië, Duitsland en Oranje in actie

    Derde helft WK 2026: Droom of drama? Brazilië, Duitsland en Oranje in actie

    The 2026 FIFA Men’s World Cup enters its first day of Round of 32 action on Monday, June 29, with three high-stakes matches on the schedule headlined by global powerhouses Brazil, Germany, and the Netherlands, while off the pitch, Canada celebrates a landmark milestone in its men’s soccer history, and other nations grapple with heartbreak and organizational upheaval following early tournament exits.

    Five more spots in the Round of 16 will be claimed by the end of the day, joining Canada, which already locked in its place in the knockout stage over the weekend. Today’s fixture list kicks off at 14:00 local time at Houston’s NRG Stadium in Texas, where five-time World Cup champions Brazil face an up-and-coming Japan side. The second match of the day kicks off at 17:30 local time at Boston Stadium in Massachusetts, where Germany meets Paraguay, with Die Mannschaft desperate to end their streak of early World Cup exits dating back to their 2014 title win. The day’s action closes at 22:00 local time at Monterrey Stadium in host nation Mexico, where the Netherlands takes on North African side Morocco.

    Heading into their matchup with Japan, Brazil hold a clear historical upper hand over the Blue Samurai: across 14 previous meetings, Brazil have claimed 11 wins and suffered just one loss. The pair’s only prior World Cup meeting came 20 years ago, when Brazil secured a convincing 4-1 victory en route to their fifth title. However, Japan enters Monday’s clash with a boost of confidence, having overturned a 2-0 deficit to beat Brazil 3-2 in a friendly in Tokyo last October, snapping Brazil’s long unbeaten streak in head-to-head matchups between the two sides. Even with that upset in recent memory, Brazil remain the heavy favorites to advance to the next round.

    For Germany, their matchup against Paraguay marks just their third meeting across all competitions, and their first in a World Cup since the 2002 Round of 16. The most recent encounter between the two sides was a thrilling 3-3 draw in a friendly match back in 2013. Having failed to make it out of the group stage in both the 2018 and 2022 World Cups, Germany is hungry to end its drought of early exits and secure a place in the Round of 16, and is widely expected to get the win against Paraguay on Monday.

    The final match of the day between Netherlands and Morocco marks just the second ever World Cup meeting between the two nations, with their only prior tournament matchup coming in the 1994 group stage, where the Dutch claimed a 2-1 win behind goals from Dennis Bergkamp and Bryan Roy. Historically, the Netherlands has an unbeatable record against African opponents at the World Cup, remaining undefeated across six previous matches, with every win coming by a margin of at least two goals. Monday’s clash will however mark the Netherlands’ first ever knockout stage match against an African side. Morocco, for its part, enters the match full of confidence after a win over Scotland in the final group stage match, and is targeting back-to-back World Cup wins against European opposition to pull off an upset.

    Beyond the three matches scheduled for Monday, multiple key storylines unfolded across the tournament over the final days of group stage play. Leading off the off-field developments, Canada made men’s World Cup history, securing its first ever knockout stage win with a dramatic stoppage-time victory over South Africa that booked their spot in the Round of 16.

    The late match-winning goal from midfielder Stephen Eustaquio sparked wild celebrations across the Canadian camp, with co-host nation Canada celebrating the biggest milestone in the country’s men’s soccer history to date. Canadian head coach Jesse Marsch hailed his players, saying they had earned the title of “Canadian heroes” and already inspired a new generation of domestic soccer players across the country. Celebrations were made even more emotional by the presence of injured midfielder Ismael Kone, who was forced to withdraw from the tournament earlier after suffering a broken leg, but joined his teammates on crutches to celebrate the historic moment.

    In contrast to Canada’s joy, Iran’s World Cup campaign ended in devastating heartbreak, after the side missed out on a knockout stage spot by the narrowest of margins, becoming the first team in World Cup history to have three goals disallowed via VAR decisions. The dramatic late elimination sparked widespread emotional reactions across Iran and global soccer circles. Iranian head coach Amir Ghalenoei described his side’s bad luck as extraordinary. State media commentators in Iran also publicly questioned the circumstances of the elimination, while Austria head coach Ralf Rangnick rejected any suggestions of match fixing, noting that only “someone completely crazy” would believe the result was manipulated.

    In the wake of their own group stage elimination, South Korea has been thrown into soccer turmoil after head coach Hong Myung-bo stepped down from his role, facing heavy public and political criticism following the team’s underperforming campaign. South Korean President Lee Jae-myung launched a full investigation into the country’s national team program, calling the team’s early exit “deeply baffling” and openly questioning both the national team’s organizational structure and Hong’s appointment. Lee emphasized that personnel decisions ultimately determine on-pitch results, stating: “When loyalty and cronyism count for more than competence, and an unqualified person is put in a leadership position, the outcome is as predictable as fire.”

  • Kiwanis Nature Island Club welcomes 13 new members, installs 2025/2026 executive

    Kiwanis Nature Island Club welcomes 13 new members, installs 2025/2026 executive

    On Saturday, June 27, 2026, the Kiwanis Nature Island Club of Dominica marked a key milestone in its community service mission, holding an official induction and installation ceremony at the UWI Global Campus Auditorium to welcome 13 new members and swear in its 2025/2026 executive leadership team. The event, which capped a period of steady growth for the local service organization, was officiated by a delegation of senior Kiwanis leaders traveling from neighboring Martinique, including current Lieutenant Governor Jean Michel Pajaniady, 2026-2027 incoming Lieutenant Governor Thierry Jean-Bart, and Distinguished Lieutenant Governor Didier Saint-Louis.

    Mary Winston, who was first elected to the top post of the club on September 30, 2025, was formally installed as president for the 2025/2026 administrative year during the ceremony. In her opening address to gathered members, guests, and organizational partners, Winston opened by expressing sincere gratitude to all stakeholders in attendance, thanking sponsors, affiliated partners, fellow Kiwanians, and community supporters for their ongoing backing, and noting that she deeply valued the confidence the club’s membership had placed in her to lead the organization through the coming year.

    Winston went on to reaffirm the core mission of Kiwanis International, a global volunteer service network bound by the official motto “serving the children of the world.” The organization’s central purpose, she emphasized, is to drive tangible improvements in the lives of children and local communities worldwide, a mission the Dominica chapter has worked tirelessly to advance.

    Looking back on the work of the current tenure to date, Winston highlighted a slate of impactful community projects the club has already delivered. These included a holiday Christmas celebration for students at Goodwill Primary School held in late December 2025, the distribution of essential food hampers to vulnerable individuals and low-income families across the island, a financial contribution to the youth-focused Operation Youth Quake program, targeted support for a household in crisis in the Stock Farm neighborhood, and an in-kind donation of a mirror to contestants in the upcoming 2026 Miss Teen Dominica pageant. Each of these initiatives, Winston noted, reflects the club’s unwavering commitment to centering youth development and responsive community service in all its work.

    “Since assuming this role, I have witnessed firsthand the dedication, generosity, and commitment that defines our Kiwanis family,” Winston told attendees. “These initiatives are only possible because of the generosity and dedication of our members and supporters.” Looking ahead to the remainder of the term, she encouraged all existing members to keep their membership dues current, and challenged the broader club network to continue proactive recruitment of new members to expand the organization’s reach and service capacity across Dominica.

    Beyond the presidential installation, the ceremony formally swore in the full 2025/2026 executive board: Nicole Karama will serve as vice president, newly inducted member Daniah Labadie takes on the role of secretary, and Lisa Francis will act as club treasurer. The full roster of 13 new inductees joining the club this term includes Daniah Labadie, Sherika Winston, Shernel St. Rose, Laila Langford, Mitchel Jean Jacques, Erickson Romain, Kernilia Adams, Nea Liverpool, Lisa Francis, Alicia Griffith, Tamara Etienne, Twanny Govindin and Melisha Blanchard.

    In a closing statement shared via a post-ceremony press release, the Kiwanis Nature Island Club extended its gratitude to all members, community partners, and private supporters who have sustained its work over the past year. The organization reaffirmed its longstanding commitment to strengthening communities across Dominica through the core values of volunteerism, fellowship, and public service, noting that expanded membership will allow the club to take on more impactful projects for island residents in the months ahead.

  • New Senators Urged to Put National Interest Above Partisan Politics

    New Senators Urged to Put National Interest Above Partisan Politics

    In a formal address to the Upper House of Antigua and Barbuda on Monday, Senate President Alincia Williams-Grant presented an open letter from Jessica Zouetr, the immediate former president of the country’s National Youth Parliament Association, that carried a clear, principled message for two newly appointed senators with youth parliament roots.

    The letter extended warm, targeted congratulations to Senators Jonathan Wehner and Shaquan O’Neal, both graduates of the National Youth Parliament program, framing their ascension to the Senate as a landmark achievement not just for the organization itself, but for all young people across the twin-island nation.

    “Your appointments are a source of immense pride, not only for your families and communities, but also for the countless young people who now see that dedication, preparation and service can lead to the highest institutions of our nation,” Williams-Grant read aloud to the chamber during the opening of the sitting.

    Zouetr, who once served as the presiding officer of the youth parliament, noted that Wehner and O’Neal’s appointments mark the latest milestone for the organization. Back in 2022, the association celebrated its first Senate appointment when alumnus Keleir Gardner took a seat in the Upper House. This latest pair of appointments, Zouetr argued, is tangible proof that the youth parliament consistently fulfills its core mission: equipping young people with the skills and experience to step into national leadership and public service roles.

    Drawing from her own experience leading the youth body, Zouetr shared that she had overseen parliamentary sittings in which both Wehner and O’Neal participated, making their new appointments a full-circle, full-heartening moment for everyone involved with the program.

    “As you take your seats in these hallowed halls, remember the principles that guided your training,” the letter read.

    While Zouetr acknowledged that both new senators hold formal affiliations with political parties, she emphasized that their primary duty within the Senate extends beyond partisan loyalty. Their core responsibility as legislators, she argued, requires rigorous scrutiny of proposed legislation, thoughtful and constructive debate, and unwavering commitment to serving all residents of Antigua and Barbuda.

    “Your foremost allegiance here must be to the Constitution and to the people of Antigua and Barbuda,” she wrote. “Let every contribution you make and every vote you cast be guided by the principles of fairness, sound judgment and the national interest rather than partisan considerations.”

    After reading the letter in full, Williams-Grant explained that she chose to present the entire correspondence to replace her own planned opening remarks, because the message aligned perfectly with the core reminder she wanted to deliver to the entire Senate at the start of the sitting.

    “I think it was fitting for it to replace what I would have said this morning,” she said, adding that Zouetr’s message serves as an important reminder for every sitting senator that their role exists to serve the people of Antigua and Barbuda, and that the public rightfully expects their full commitment and best work in the chamber.

  • Antigua Moves Toward a New Era of Flood Forecasting

    Antigua Moves Toward a New Era of Flood Forecasting

    As climate change amplifies the frequency and intensity of extreme rainfall events across the Caribbean, Antigua and Barbuda is undertaking a landmark transformation of its flood forecasting infrastructure, shifting from traditional rainfall prediction to actionable, impact-focused early warning systems designed to save lives and protect critical infrastructure.

    For years, local meteorologists have accurately predicted when heavy rain will arrive, how long it will persist and what total accumulation residents can expect. What has remained uncertain, however, are the tangible downstream effects of that precipitation: which roadways will succumb to pooling water first, which low-lying communities face the highest flood risk, whether clogged drainage networks will block access for emergency responders, and whether schools and businesses need to shut down proactively. Those unaddressed questions are now the driving force behind a national effort to modernize the country’s approach to flood forecasting.

    In June, a two-day interdisciplinary workshop hosted at Antigua and Barbuda’s National Office of Disaster Services brought together more than a dozen stakeholders, including meteorologists, civil engineers, emergency management coordinators, utility providers and government agency representatives. Organized by the Antigua and Barbuda Meteorological Service (ABMS) in partnership with the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), the event marked the official launch of work to draft the nation’s first comprehensive Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) for flood forecasting and warning, a core component of a broader initiative to strengthen national early warning capacity.

    The centerpiece of this overhaul is the development of the Urban Flash Flood Information System (UFFIS), an advanced AI-powered forecasting and decision-support platform that reimagines what flood warnings can deliver. Unlike conventional weather forecasts that only detail atmospheric conditions, UFFIS integrates multi-source data: official precipitation outlooks, real-time soil moisture readings, drainage network mapping, river basin topography, terrain elevation data and historical rainfall records to generate granular estimates of where flooding is most likely to occur and how severe its impacts will be.

    For average residents, the change may seem incremental, but for emergency management leaders, it represents a paradigm shift in how warnings are communicated and response decisions are made. Instead of releasing generic alerts that state “100 millimeters of rain is expected,” forecasters will be able to share specific, actionable information: which neighborhoods face imminent inundation, which key routes will likely become impassable, and when first responders should pre-position resources for potential water rescues.

    This outcomes-focused model, called impact-based forecasting, has emerged as a global gold standard for meteorological services in an era of accelerating climate change. By shifting focus from describing weather conditions to predicting their real-world consequences, the approach allows governments and communities to take proactive protective action far earlier than outdated systems permit.

    ABMS Director Dale Destin emphasized to workshop attendees that basic rainfall forecasting is no longer sufficient to meet the country’s growing climate resilience needs. “Flood warnings must be more than forecasts—they must be actionable guidance that leads to timely decisions and protective action,” Destin said, framing the workshop as a critical milestone toward building “a truly integrated, impact-based flood early warning system for Antigua and Barbuda.”

    Cross-agency coordination was a central focus of the workshop, as effective early warning systems depend not just on accurate forecasting data, but on clear alignment between institutions before, during and after flood emergencies. Participants mapped existing information sharing pathways between agencies, reviewed current operational protocols, and identified gaps in role clarity that could slow response times. They also examined end-to-end warning communication workflows, mapped decision-making authority across different stages of flood events, and explored how new UFFIS technology can be integrated into existing emergency response infrastructure. The end goal of the collaborative process is a finalized set of national SOPs that explicitly define roles, communication chains, escalation triggers and decision-making responsibilities long before severe rain threatens the islands.

    The drafting process builds on months of preliminary institutional consultations between ABMS, the Antigua Public Utilities Authority, the National Office of Disaster Services, the Ministry of Works and the Department of Environment, which covered everything from rain gauge monitoring and groundwater data collection to public warning dissemination, post-flood impact verification and event review protocols.

    The new system also reflects a broader global shift in meteorological science: modern flood forecasting now relies on combining diverse data streams rather than depending solely on raw weather data. ABMS officials outlined at the workshop that forecast models, weather radar, satellite imagery, automated weather stations, community rain gauges and on-the-ground resident reports all contribute to a comprehensive picture of evolving flood risk. UFFIS will expand this capacity by adding high-resolution hydrological modeling and basin characteristic data to improve accuracy for urban and flash flood events, the most common and destructive flood types in the country.

    When fully operational, this approach will allow forecasters to tailor warnings to a community’s specific vulnerability, not just the expected rainfall amount. A complementary key feature of the new system is customized risk matrices that combine the probability of a flood event with its projected impacts, rather than only classifying events by total rainfall. This allows forecasters to assess potential harm to people, infrastructure and essential services, helping emergency managers decide whether to advise residents to prepare, evacuate, or take immediate protective action.

    The entire project is a core component of ABMS’ Meteorological Renaissance 2030 strategic initiative, and aligns with the United Nations’ global Early Warnings for All programme, which aims to ensure every person on Earth is protected by early warning systems against extreme weather and climate hazards by 2027.

    “Every dollar invested in the Meteorological Service strengthens public safety, protects critical infrastructure, supports economic development, enhances climate resilience, and reduces disaster losses,” Destin noted.

    While UFFIS is still in active development, officials emphasize that the behind-the-scenes work now underway will significantly strengthen the country’s ability to respond to flooding, one of the most frequent and damaging natural hazards facing the twin-island nation. If the initiative delivers on its promise, future flood warnings will finally answer the question residents actually care about when storm clouds gather: not just how much rain is coming, but what that rain will mean for their homes, their neighborhoods and their personal safety.

  • Blazers are back as KFC basketball champions

    Blazers are back as KFC basketball champions

    On Saturday night at Beausejour Gymnasium, the Bonne Terre Blazers delivered a masterclass in defensive intensity and long-range shooting to secure a 17-point comeback victory over two-time defending champions Soufrière Kings, claiming the Ricky “Skecky” Estwick Trophy 49-32 in the decisive third game of the 2026 KFC National Basketball League finals. This marked the Blazers’ second league title in four years, with standout forward Andre Louison leading his squad to a historic win after a tightly contested series.

    For the first time since the league’s revival in 2023, the championship series was pushed to a winner-takes-all final match, a testament to the two teams’ exceptional parity. After the first two games, the combined point difference between the squads stood at just six points, setting the stage for a dramatic deciding matchup. Reeling from a underwhelming performance in Game 2, the Blazers restructured their game plan heading into the decisive contest: they slowed the tempo to build a more structured offensive scheme and drastically ramped up their defensive pressure compared to their previous outing.

    Despite the Blazers’ adjustments, the defending champions got off to a fast start, taking control of the game early. Center Jayzee Saltibus dominated the interior rebounding, while guards Linzell Alcee and Kimani Charles ran efficient fast breaks that pushed the Kings to an 8-point lead, 20-12, early in the second quarter. What followed was a pivotal turnaround that shifted the entire momentum of the game.

    Midway through the second quarter, Andre Louison knocked down four consecutive free throws to spark an 11-0 Blazers run, which Kyanni Elwyn capped off with a key basket that put Bonne Terre up 21-20. Though Sidney Didier tied the game at 21 with a single free throw, Andre and his brother Troy Louison each connected on late-second-quarter scores to push the Blazers’ lead to four heading into halftime, with Bonne Terre holding a 31-27 advantage at the break.

    From halftime onward, the Blazers never surrendered their lead, locking in on defense to stifle the defending champions’ offense. Bonne Terre notched 28 second-half points while holding the Kings to just 15 total points after the break. In the fourth quarter, the Blazers sealed the win with red-hot three-point shooting: the squad finished the game with eight total three-pointers, two of which came from Andre Louison in the final frame, while the Kings managed only two long-range baskets across the entire 40 minutes of play.

    Andre Louison earned well-deserved Player of the Game honors after posting a near-triple-double: he finished with 32 points, 14 rebounds, three assists and three steals, cementing his legacy as one of the league’s top players. His brother Troy turned in an impressive all-around performance of his own, contributing 14 points, six rebounds, four assists and six steals to the championship win.

    For the defeated Soufrière Kings, Kimani Charles led the squad with 12 points, six rebounds, five assists and six steals, but was undone by a game-high nine turnovers that proved costly in the tight contest. Saltibus once again anchored the Kings’ interior, putting up 10 points and 14 rebounds, while Didier and Clayton William carried the team’s offensive production in the early going.

    Parity defined the entire series, and the decisive third game was no exception. For the third consecutive matchup, the two teams finished with identical rebounding totals, 36 apiece, though Bonne Terre held a clear advantage on the offensive glass that generated extra scoring opportunities.

    Three key statistical differences separated the winner from the loser on Saturday night. After a sloppy opening, the Blazers cleaned up their ball handling, finishing with 20 turnovers compared to the Kings’ 26 unforced errors. At the free throw line, both teams finished with nine made shots, but the Blazers converted 9 of 13 attempts (a 69% success rate) while the Kings only managed 9 makes from 16 trips to the line. Most impactful of all was the Blazers’ three-point shooting, which outpaced the Kings’ long-range production by a four-to-one margin.

    This championship series went down as one of the most competitive in the past four years, producing a deserving champion in the Bonne Terre Blazers. For the Soufrière Kings, the defeat ends their bid for a third consecutive title, and the squad will almost certainly be gunning for revenge when the next season tips off. For the Saint Lucia Basketball Federation, three consecutive close, high-stakes, exciting games provided the perfect opportunity to grow the popularity of basketball across the island and draw new fans to the sport.

  • SVG Men’s Senior Basketball Team to compete in FIBA tourney in Guyana

    SVG Men’s Senior Basketball Team to compete in FIBA tourney in Guyana

    After more than six years away from official international competition, the small Caribbean nation of St. Vincent and the Grenadines is poised to make its return to elite regional basketball, with the St. Vincent and the Grenadines Basketball Federation (SVGBF) officially naming its 20-member delegation for the upcoming FIBA AmeriCup 2029 Caribbean Pre-Qualifiers. The tournament, which brings together 10 top national men’s squads from across the Caribbean region, will run from July 6 to 13 in the host city of Georgetown, Guyana.

    This appearance marks a long-awaited milestone for Vincentian men’s basketball: it will be the senior men’s national team’s first outing at an international FIBA tournament since the 2018 event held in Suriname. The team has set its sights on securing a spot in the next qualifying round of the FIBA AmeriCup, which is scheduled to take place in November 2026.

    In a statement released by the federation, organizers revealed a key logistical challenge that the team has had to overcome ahead of the tournament: St. Vincent and the Grenadines currently lacks an indoor wooden basketball court that meets all of FIBA’s international competition standards. To address this gap, the entire national delegation will hold its pre-tournament training camp in neighboring Trinidad and Tobago. The squad is set to depart St. Vincent and the Grenadines this Friday, July 3, for the three-day intensive training camp in Trinidad, before traveling directly to Guyana on July 5 to prepare for their opening matches.

    The 10 participating nations have been split into two groups of five teams for the pre-qualifiers, with only the top finisher from each group earning a promotion to the next round of the qualifying campaign. St. Vincent and the Grenadines (SVG) has been drawn into Group B, where they will face off against regional rivals Barbados, Grenada, Haiti and the Cayman Islands. Group A is made up of Bermuda, Antigua and Barbuda, Dominica, the Turks and Caicos Islands, and tournament host Guyana. Team SVG will compete in a round-robin format against every other team in their group, fighting to claim one of the two available qualification slots for the next stage.

    The 13-player roster for SVG features a mix of emerging young talent and experienced veteran players: Sean Baptiste, Opong Bramble, Shamore Charles, Tyler Fraser, Darreo Glasgow, Jermaine John, Elton Joseph, Phillip Lawrence-Ricks, Hosea Martindale-DeFreitas, Brendon Smart, Steveon Taylor, Chrisford Telesford and Shad Thomas.

    The 7-person supporting staff delegation is led by Suzette Jackson, president of the SVGBF, who serves as Head of Delegation. Sabrina Mitchell takes on the role of Team Manager and Chef de Mission, while Justin Scott is the team’s head coach, supported by assistant coach Randolph “Sticky” Williams. Rounding out the staff are Social Media Manager Ella Mitchell-Sutton, Team Physiotherapist Shirnan Jacobs, and Team Doctor Dr. Rico Audain.

    Team SVG has released its full match schedule for the group stage of the tournament: they will open their campaign against Grenada on Wednesday, July 8 at 3 p.m. local time, followed by a match against the Cayman Islands on Friday, July 10 at 3 p.m. They will then face Haiti on Saturday, July 11 at 3 p.m., before wrapping up their group stage play against Barbados on Sunday, July 12 at 12:30 p.m.

  • The UWI warns public about fake website using university’s name

    The UWI warns public about fake website using university’s name

    The University of the West Indies (UWI), a leading regional higher education institution spanning multiple Caribbean nations, has issued an urgent public warning to prospective students, institutional partners and community members after uncovering a sophisticated fraudulent website that impersonates the university.

    In an official press release published by the institution, UWI officials confirmed that the unauthorized platform has been misappropriating the university’s official name, branding and visual identity without permission to deceive users into believing it is an official UWI digital resource. The institution emphasized that the fake site holds no endorsement, authorization, or affiliation with the legitimate university in any capacity.

    A key point of concern raised by UWI is the fake website’s inclusion of an interactive form that collects sensitive personal data from unsuspecting visitors. The university clarified that it does not receive any of the information submitted through this fraudulent platform, including full names, email contact details, telephone numbers and other personally identifiable information.

    As a proactive protective measure, UWI is advising any individual who has already interacted with the fake site to exercise extreme vigilance against any unsolicited follow-up communications, including emails, phone calls or messages that falsely claim to originate from the university. The institution has urged the public not to share additional personal or financial information in response to unvetted requests, and to confirm the authenticity of all purported UWI communications through the university’s verified official channels.

    According to the press release, all legitimate information about UWI’s academic programs, admissions processes and institutional partnership opportunities is exclusively hosted on the university’s verified official websites: these include dedicated platforms for the Mona Campus in Jamaica, the St. Augustine Campus in Trinidad and Tobago, the Cave Hill Campus in Barbados, the Five Islands Campus in Antigua and Barbuda, the UWI Global Campus, and the institution’s Regional Headquarters website.

    UWI has already activated a coordinated, multi-pronged response to resolve the incident and mitigate harm. Steps taken so far include reporting the fraudulent activity to international cybercrime watchdogs and relevant law enforcement agencies, pursuing both legal and technical avenues to have the fake website permanently taken offline, and collaborating with digital and industry partners to limit potential damage to users and the institution’s reputation.

    Members of the public who have visited the fraudulent site or hold information that could support the investigation into the scam are invited to contact UWI’s official response team at [email protected]. The institution reaffirmed its ongoing commitment to safeguarding its students, partners and institutional standing, and stated it will continue implementing all necessary measures to fully address this cyber fraud incident.

  • Wijngaarde: Excuses moeten leiden tot kennis en bewustwording

    Wijngaarde: Excuses moeten leiden tot kennis en bewustwording

    As the Feydrasi fu Afrikan Srananman (Federation of Afro-Surinamese People) marks its 30th anniversary, its founding president Iwan Wijngaarde reflects on three decades of advocacy for addressing the intergenerational harms of the transatlantic slave trade, arguing that official apologies for historical slavery are a critical starting point — but never an endpoint.

    The federation was founded in 1996, when a coalition of Afro-Surinamese community groups and individual activists came together out of shared deep concern: for generations, the Afro-Surinamese community had faced systemic social, economic, and political marginalization that traced directly back to the legacy of slavery. Organizing a cohesive leadership structure proved challenging in the early days, with no volunteers stepping forward to lead the new coalition before an elder member nominated Wijngaarde to take on the role.

    The early years were defined by grassroots pioneering. To keep the organization financially stable, members ran fundraising events and sold homemade food to cover operating costs. Over time, the federation grew into Suriname’s leading organizer of public commemoration events, educational lectures, and cultural programming centered on Afro-Surinamese identity, historical awareness, and equity, rather than solely focusing on past trauma.

    One of the federation’s earliest milestones was hosting prominent American activist Louis Farrakhan just months after its founding. It also established enduring annual community traditions, most notably Blakaman Dey, later renamed Black Civilization Day, held every first Sunday of January. The holiday is designed to let the community start each new year by centering their own cultural heritage, carrying that identity and traditions forward through the rest of the year.

    Wijngaarde has been clear that apologies from institutions and governments for slavery must be paired with sustained action, not treated as a solution in themselves. He emphasizes that apologies must include clear explanation of why they are necessary, and points to the harmful framing of emancipation in 1863, when formerly enslaved people were pressured to thank their former enslavers and colonial authorities during post-emancipation thanksgiving services. He also notes that abolition was only achieved through widespread resistance by enslaved people, a history that has often been erased from mainstream narratives.

    Wijngaarde argues that religious institutions, particularly the Christian church, have a unique responsibility to participate in the healing process. The church played an active role in erasing Afro-Surinamese cultural identity during the colonial and slavery eras, he says, and now must contribute to the rehumanization of the Afro-Surinamese community by acknowledging this historical role.

    Over 30 years, the federation has expanded its programming to honor the full spectrum of Afro-Surinamese and Black resistance history. It leads annual commemorations of freedom fighters Kodjo, Mentor, and Present; honors 18th-century Maroon warrior Boni on Boni Dey; and holds public remembrances of the 1757 Tempati Uprising, the 1791 Haitian Revolution, and M’ma Seri, an enslaved woman tortured and killed by her enslaver in 1743. Every December, it organizes the national Switiwatra ritual cleansing herbal bath, a traditional practice adapted from small-scale plantation and family ceremonies that has grown into a major public event since the federation took over its organization in 2014. The federation also hosts an annual remembrance for the approximately 700 African people who died in the 1738 sinking of the slave ship Leusden.

    Wijngaarde acknowledges the federation has faced significant challenges across its three decades. It has faced opposition from hostile groups, struggled to retain long-term volunteer engagement, and navigated internal tensions driven by clashing egos, differing strategic visions, and power imbalances. These challenges, he says, are themselves a legacy of the colonial system of division and dehumanization that the federation works against. To counter that, the organization centers a collective “we philosophy” rather than individualism, a core principle that has kept it moving forward.

    This 30th anniversary year marks a new milestone for the federation: for the first time, it will co-host July 1 emancipation commemorations alongside Indigenous Surinamese organizations, following months of collaborative planning. Wijngaarde says the partnership is designed to build collective power, and the next phase of the federation’s work will focus on collaborative development beyond remembrance — leveraging the spiritual and economic strengths of both marginalized communities, and seeking international partnerships when local knowledge and resources are insufficient.

    Wijngaarde welcomes the 2023 formal apology for Dutch slavery issued by King Willem-Alexander, calling it an important foundational step for future work. However, he criticizes the king’s 2025 visit to Suriname for falling short on substantive engagement, arguing that the wreath-laying ceremony at the Mama Sranan national slavery monument remained overly symbolic with little concrete discussion of ongoing harms. He notes that the Kwakoe statue remains the only small-scale public monument to slavery in Suriname, highlighting how much work remains to embed this history in public consciousness.

    Looking back on 30 years of organizing, Wijngaarde identifies three core values that have sustained the federation through challenges including the COVID-19 pandemic, when the organization refused to pause its programming: patience, love, and mutual respect. Healing the intergenerational harm of dehumanization cannot happen overnight, he explains, so sustained patience is essential. The work also requires mutual love within the community, and respect for one’s culture and all community members.

    On July 1, the federation will celebrate its 30th anniversary with a full schedule of public events, including a historical exhibition, cultural performances, the launch of a commemorative book, a public community reception, and the annual wreath-laying at the Kwakoe statue.