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  • Government Sets Goal of Completing 75% of National Road Network Within Four Years

    Government Sets Goal of Completing 75% of National Road Network Within Four Years

    Antigua and Barbuda’s Prime Minister Gaston Browne has laid out an ambitious infrastructure target for his administration: delivering upgrades to at least 75 percent of the country’s entire national road network within the next four years. The bold commitment was announced during a weekly Cabinet meeting held on Wednesday, where Browne pressed his ministerial team to speed up infrastructure delivery across both islands, reminding them of the promises the government made to voters ahead of taking office. The prime minister stressed that the remaining term of the current administration must be focused on delivering tangible, visible results that directly benefit local communities.

    Speaking at a post-Cabinet media briefing on Thursday, Director General of Communications Maurice Merchant outlined that Browne has centered the government’s remaining policy agenda on people-centric infrastructure projects that directly lift quality of life for residents. The massive national roadworks program sits at the core of a broader infrastructure push that extends far beyond pavement repairs. The wider agenda also includes expanding street lighting coverage, nationwide environmental beautification projects, upgrading public recreational and community spaces, and finalizing preparations for Antigua and Barbuda’s high-profile hosting of the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) scheduled for later this year.

    Alongside the road network target, Cabinet has given formal approval to a suite of additional community enhancement initiatives, all funded through the national Tourism Fund. These projects include the installation of new directional markers, road signage and traffic signs across every part of the country. Officials also confirmed that existing faded road markings will be repainted, and public bus stops will receive comprehensive upgrades as part of the push to improve both the functionality and visual appeal of local public infrastructure.

    Browne has demanded immediate action on all components of the infrastructure program, rejecting any delays on what he frames as basic quality-of-life improvements. Merchant noted that the prime minister has framed this accelerated rollout as non-negotiable, pointing out that the government cannot claim to be driving national renewal while core public amenities remain in a state of disrepair. “Because we cannot speak about renaissance and have simple amenities like these in disrepair,” Merchant quoted Browne as saying.

    Virtually all community improvement projects, including the signage and bus stop upgrades, will draw funding primarily from the Tourism Fund, with additional logistical and operational support provided by multiple government ministries and agencies – most notably the national Transport Board and the Ministry of Tourism. Cabinet also used Wednesday’s meeting to reaffirm its ongoing commitment to removing derelict and abandoned vehicles from residential and public areas, a key measure to clean up community spaces and improve overall neighborhood aesthetics.

    In closing remarks to his ministerial team, Browne reiterated that the entire administration must remain focused on delivering measurable, trackable improvements across every region of Antigua and Barbuda. He emphasized that the electorate holds the government accountable for delivering on the development commitments it campaigned on, and that tangible results are the top priority for the remainder of the term.

  • Police Probe Theft of Construction and Agricultural Equipment in Bolans Area

    Police Probe Theft of Construction and Agricultural Equipment in Bolans Area

    Authorities in Antigua have launched a formal investigation into two separate theft incidents that targeted construction and agricultural work sites across the Bolans region over the recent weekend. The two cases, which occurred days apart but within the same weekend window, have left local work operations short of critical gear and prompted detectives to comb through evidence for leads.

    The first of the two thefts took place at the Chapa Housing Project construction site, where a high-powered Bosch jackhammer, valued at approximately $2,000, was stolen from an on-site storage container. Investigators have narrowed the window of the theft to between Friday afternoon and early Monday morning, when the missing tool was first discovered. A key detail that has drawn investigators’ attention is the total lack of forced entry evidence at the storage container, suggesting the perpetrator may have had access to keys or knew the site’s security layout.

    As part of ongoing inquiries, law enforcement officers have already conducted interviews with multiple witnesses and persons of interest connected to the housing project, and have collected statements and physical evidence to advance the case. As of the latest update, however, the stolen jackhammer has not been recovered, and the search continues.

    In a second, unrelated incident just days later, thieves targeted the Green Castle Agriculture Station, making off with multiple pieces of landscaping and agricultural equipment. In this case, the perpetrators used force to gain entry: investigators confirmed that the suspects forced open two separate padlocks to access the equipment storage area, and caused additional damage to a window before fleeing the property with their stolen goods. The items taken include four weed wackers and one commercial mist blower, a tool commonly used for pesticide and fertilizer application on agricultural sites. Authorities have not yet released a total estimated value for the stolen agricultural gear, as they continue to document the loss for the facility.

    The break-in at the agriculture station is believed to have occurred between Saturday evening and Monday morning, when staff arrived to start the work week and discovered the break-in. Antigua Police confirmed that active investigations into both of these theft cases are still ongoing, and have asked any members of the public who saw suspicious activity in the Bolans or Green Castle areas over the weekend to come forward with information that could help solve the cases.

  • Lashley insists gun courts will be fully staffed, ready despite concerns

    Lashley insists gun courts will be fully staffed, ready despite concerns

    Barbados’ Minister of Legal Affairs and Criminal Justice Michael Lashley has moved to ease mounting anxiety among local legal practitioners over the administration’s plan to launch two dedicated gun courts, confirming that all staffing and operational frameworks for the initiative have already been finalized.

    Speaking on the floor of the Senate Wednesday while introducing the Supreme Court of Judicature Amendment Bill, Lashley emphasized that the new specialized tribunals will be fully resourced from their opening day, with all personnel hired from outside the country’s existing overstretched criminal justice system. “I have heard concerns from some practitioners about how we will deliver fast-tracked rulings, but this is a specialized court built for speed,” Lashley stated. “We have already secured approval to appoint two external judges who have dedicated availability to handle these cases exclusively. Beyond the bench, we will also bring on two additional legal assistants, four court marshals, and four probation officers, all from outside the current system. Four prosecuting attorneys are already on standby and ready to begin work as soon as the courts launch.”

    Lashley explained that procedural adjustments have also been made to cut down on unnecessary delays, with pre-sentence reports prepared as soon as an accused person enters a guilty plea, eliminating the need for repeated case adjournments.

    A prominent criminal defence attorney before joining the government in February, Lashley also pushed back against criticism from fellow lawyers, arguing that many opponents of the plan have failed to put forward actionable solutions to the country’s decades-long problem of sprawling case backlogs. He challenged legal practitioners to propose concrete adjustments, such as shifting lower-level non-violent offences to magistrate courts to free up High Court capacity. For example, he noted, indecent assault cases that do not involve minor victims and common law escape from custody charges could easily be handled at the lower court level, while the most serious offences would remain in the High Court. He also pointed out that no practitioner had proposed the early guilty plea system that the new gun courts are set to implement.

    Lashley underscored the urgent need for the specialized courts by pointing to the country’s worsening firearm crime crisis. He revealed that 23 of the 27 murders recorded in Barbados so far this year have been linked to illegal guns, and police have already seized 51 unregistered firearms since January. Last year alone, law enforcement seized more than 80 illegal weapons and 3,309 rounds of ammunition, generating hundreds of new pending cases that will add to existing court loads. “This means that there are cases to be done, cases to be fast-tracked, cases to be tried,” Lashley said.

    Thanks to a recent collaborative effort between an independent consultant and the Barbados Police Service’s prosecution department, hundreds of backlogged case files from 2022 to 2024 have already been processed and prepared for trial: 672 files have been completed and submitted to prosecuting officers, Lashley confirmed. Ready cases are already lined up to fill the dockets of the new courts from launch: four cases from the start of the year are trial-ready, three more from March, and 11 from April, he said, dispelling claims the new courts would sit idle without a pipeline of cases.

    Drawing on successful regional precedent, Lashley noted that Jamaica’s specialized gun court achieved significant reductions in case backlogs, and Barbados will adapt that proven model to fit local needs. Under the Barbados plan, one of the two new courts will focus exclusively on clearing the existing backlog of gun crime cases, while the second will handle all new firearm offences filed from 2026 onward.

    The minister’s goal is to ensure all gun-related cases go to trial within six months of being filed, a timeline he argues will both cut gun crime in the country and protect the rights of defendants. “A man who is on bail for firearm possession or a related gun offence will not be able to reoffend freely if his case is heard within four or five months,” Lashley explained. “Speedy trials lead to reduced criminal activity because we get dangerous offenders off the streets faster. At the same time, this approach upholds a defendant’s right to a trial within a reasonable time without unnecessary delay, and it also protects the rights of victims who have been waiting for justice.”

    Lashley added that the Barbados Police Service will receive additional resources to strengthen evidence gathering and case management in the prosecution department. New criminal procedural rules will also be rolled out in the near future to require both prosecution and defence teams to be fully prepared before a trial begins, eliminating the last-minute delays that have bogged down existing court proceedings. “All the speculation from some lawyers about new delays and backlogs is unfounded, because the procedural rules that will prevent these issues are already coming,” he said.

    To address additional concerns about witness safety, Lashley confirmed that the Criminal Proceedings Act will soon be officially proclaimed, bringing into force new protections for witnesses that include the option to safeguard their identities during proceedings, a change that addresses longstanding concerns about intimidation in the High Court.

  • Government Weighs Wider Windfall Tax to Help Fund Education

    Government Weighs Wider Windfall Tax to Help Fund Education

    Top government officials in Antigua and Barbuda are actively evaluating a plan to expand the nation’s existing windfall profit tax to every profitable business sector, as policymakers work to secure new, reliable revenue streams for the country’s growing education and workforce development initiatives. The potential policy change was the focus of detailed discussions during this week’s regularly scheduled Cabinet meeting, where ministry leaders reviewed a range of funding options designed to support the long-term expansion of the national education system, which has outpaced current budget allocations in recent years. Currently, the country imposes a 10 percent windfall tax exclusively on large profit-making firms operating in four key sectors: telecommunications, banking, insurance, and energy. To qualify for the tax, businesses in these industries must already meet a threshold of at least 1 million Eastern Caribbean dollars (EC$) in annual profits. The proposed amendment would remove the sector restriction, bringing all profitable businesses that cross the EC$1 million annual profit mark under the tax policy. This policy conversation comes as the national government has ramped up public investments in post-secondary education across the country, including sustained institutional and financial support for the University of the West Indies Five Islands Campus and the multiple campuses that make up the Antigua and Barbuda College of Advanced Studies (ABCAS). Cabinet officials have emphasized that the tax expansion proposal is just one of multiple revenue-raising options on the table, all targeted at generating new funding for ongoing educational development projects. In the coming weeks, policymakers will continue deliberations, with planned deep dives into the potential legal, economic, and social ramifications of any adjustments to the current tax structure. Any formal modification to the nation’s existing tax framework will require a full review and approval by the country’s parliament before it can go into effect. Government representatives have reaffirmed their core commitment to ensuring broad-based benefits from national economic growth, and have consistently ranked investment in public education as one of the administration’s top national priorities.

  • ‘Mandatory minimums’ for gun crimes, says senator

    ‘Mandatory minimums’ for gun crimes, says senator

    As firearm-related violence continues to climb across Barbados, independent legislator and real estate executive Andrew Mallalieu is amplifying public calls for sweeping criminal justice reform centered on harsher penalties for gun-involved offenses. Mallalieu has thrown his support behind the Supreme Court of Judicature (Amendment) Bill, a piece of legislation that would establish dedicated firearms courts to streamline the processing of gun-related cases. But in a stark acknowledgment of the current public safety climate, he says even this structural reform is incomplete without a core policy shift: mandatory minimum prison sentences for anyone convicted of committing a crime with a firearm.

    In remarks delivered on the floor, Mallalieu reaffirmed his long-held stance that the island’s current sentencing framework fails to match the scale of public anxiety around rising gun crime. “If you asked Barbadians today, the vast majority would tell you that the sentences for crimes committed with firearms need to be much harsher than they are,” he argued. While Mallalieu acknowledged that existing rulings from the Caribbean Court of Justice and other judicial frameworks may present procedural hurdles to implementing mandatory minimum sentences, he said the overwhelming will of the public justifies moving the proposal forward. He added that he personally regrets the need for such harsh penalties under normal circumstances, but the current public safety crisis leaves no other viable option.

    Mallalieu also outlined two additional critical requirements to make the new judicial framework outlined in the amendment bill functional. The legislation includes a provision to expand the High Court by up to 15 new judge positions, but the independent senator emphasized that this change will only deliver practical improvements to court efficiency if the government actually follows through on appointing those new judges. Beyond judicial appointments, he noted, the reform will require a robust, transparent case routing system to direct firearms cases to the new dedicated courts without delays. Most importantly, Mallalieu stressed that passing the legislation itself will not improve public safety. “Passing this bill will do nothing if we don’t put the resources behind it to do it,” he said, warning that adequate funding and infrastructure support are non-negotiable for the reform to succeed.

    In a surprising addition to his remarks, Mallalieu also opened a new national debate on gun control by asking whether Barbados should hold a public referendum on a near-total national ban on civilian firearms. Under the proposal he floated, only three groups would be exempt from the ban: active police officers, members of the national army, and firearms stored legally at regulated gun-sporting facilities. The question has opened a new front in the ongoing national conversation about how to curb rising gun violence across the island.

  • Derde helft WK 2026:  Dag 8 – Mexico favoriet, Afrika viert historisch succes

    Derde helft WK 2026: Dag 8 – Mexico favoriet, Afrika viert historisch succes

    As the 2026 FIFA World Cup co-hosted across North America enters its eighth day, four high-stakes group stage fixtures are scheduled to take place on June 18, with teams fighting to secure their spots in the knockout round of the tournament. The day’s action kicks off at Atlanta Stadium in Atlanta, Georgia, where Czechia will square off against South Africa at 13:00 local time. Next, Switzerland will face Bosnia and Herzegovina at Los Angeles Stadium in California at 16:00, followed by a clash between co-host Canada and Qatar at Vancouver’s BC Place Stadium at 19:00. The headline matchup of the day will close out the schedule, as Mexico takes on South Korea at Guadalajara Stadium in front of a raucous home crowd at 22:00 local time. Ahead of kickoff, one Mexican supporter already captured global attention, posing in the stands with a replica of the FIFA World Cup trophy while wearing a traditional lucha libre wrestling mask.

    Looking ahead to the day’s marquee fixture, Mexico enters its Group A matchup against South Korea with historical momentum on its side. The two sides have met twice previously at World Cup tournaments, with Mexico claiming victory on both occasions — most recently a 2-1 win during the 2018 World Cup in Russia. Both nations got their 2026 campaigns off to a strong start with opening match wins, boosting their early knockout stage hopes, but oddsmakers and analysts still peg Mexico as the clear favorite to pick up three points on home soil.

    In the day’s opening fixture, Czechia and South Africa will meet for just the second time in senior international history. South Africa has a surprisingly strong track record against European opposition at the World Cup, including a famous 2-1 group stage win over eventual champions France during the 2010 tournament it hosted. The Bafana Bafana have dropped only one of their last four World Cup matches against European sides. For Czechia, this will only be its second World Cup match against an African opponent, and its first ended in a disappointing 2-0 loss to Ghana in 2006.

    Switzerland and Bosnia and Herzegovina will lock horns for the first time ever at a World Cup, with the only prior meeting between the two nations coming in a 2016 friendly match hosted in Zurich. On that occasion, Bosnia and Herzegovina claimed a 2-0 win behind goals from legendary duo Edin Dzeko and Miralem Pjanic. Despite that past result, Switzerland is favored to claim all three points in their 2026 group stage encounter.

    Closing out the day’s action before the Mexico-South Korea kickoff, co-host Canada will face Qatar, and historical trends heavily favor the North American side. In the three previous instances a World Cup host nation has faced an AFC (Asian Football Confederation) member at the tournament, the host has walked away with a win every time: Mexico beat Iraq in 1986, France defeated Saudi Arabia in 1998, and Russia also downed Saudi Arabia in the 2018 tournament opener.

    Beyond Matchday 8’s scheduled fixtures, the tournament has already delivered no shortage of historic moments, breakout performances and talking points through its first week of action. The race for the Golden Boot, awarded to the tournament’s top goalscorer, already has a clear early leader: Lionel Messi netted a hat-trick in his opening match, putting him three goals clear of seven chasing players who have each scored one goal so far, including global superstars Kylian Mbappe of France, Erling Haaland of Norway and England’s Harry Kane.

    One of the biggest historic milestones of the tournament so far came from the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), which notched its first ever World Cup goal through Brentford forward Yoane Wissa in a stunning 1-1 draw with Portugal. The result marked DRC’s first World Cup appearance in 52 years, sparking jubilant celebrations among Congolese fans across the globe. Another standout early performance came from Colombia, which opened its Group K campaign with a confident 3-1 win over World Cup debutant Uzbekistan. Liverpool winger Luis Diaz was the star of the match, notching an assist for Daniel Munoz’s opening goal and scoring Colombia’s second after halftime. Uzbekistan briefly pulled level through winger Abbosbek Fayzullaev, but the South American side regained control to lock in three full points. The win gives Colombia a major early boost as it looks to reach the knockout stage after missing out on qualification for the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.

    The first week of the tournament has already delivered several stunning upsets that have shaken up group standings. Beyond DRC’s draw with Portugal, Cape Verde earned a historic point against defending champions Spain in a surprise draw, while Iran and New Zealand also played out an unexpected stalemate in their opening fixture.

    A widely noted positive theme of the 2026 tournament has been the growing diversity on display across competing squads. Top European sides including England, France, Spain and Sweden have fielded rosters made up of players from a wide range of religious, cultural and ethnic backgrounds, a trend that football experts have praised as a powerful positive example amid ongoing global societal debates around immigration and integration.

    One of the more surprising storylines of the tournament’s opening week has been the slow start for Cristiano Ronaldo, who is making his record sixth World Cup appearance but has yet to find the back of the net, while his fellow global superstars Messi, Mbappe, Haaland and Kane all opened their goal accounts in their first matches.

    Off the pitch, FIFA’s new heat protection policy, which adds formal drink breaks during matches to help players cope with high summer temperatures across North America, has sparked ongoing controversy. Critics argue that the breaks disrupt the natural flow of matches and give teams extra opportunities to make unplanned tactical adjustments, disrupting competitive balance. FIFA has defended the policy, emphasizing that player health and safety is its top priority.

    This year’s tournament has also made history for African football, with a record six African nations qualifying for the final group stage. Despite facing pre-tournament challenges including logistical hurdles and visa processing issues for teams and fans, African sides have enjoyed overwhelming support from their large diaspora communities across North America. While the vuvuzela horns that became a global icon during the 2010 South Africa World Cup are not a common sight this year, the passionate energy and atmosphere brought by African fans remains as vibrant as ever.

  • CDC moves to regulate AI use in Vincymas music (+video)

    CDC moves to regulate AI use in Vincymas music (+video)

    As artificial intelligence reshapes creative industries across the globe, one of the southern Caribbean’s most iconic cultural celebrations is moving to set clear boundaries for the emerging technology — to safeguard its centuries-old cultural roots without rejecting innovation entirely.

    The Carnival Development Corporation (CDC), the governing body of Vincymas, St. Vincent and the Grenadines’ premier annual carnival, is currently developing a formal policy that will limit and regulate the use of AI in festival music. The initiative comes amid growing concern that unregulated overreliance on generative AI could erode the unique cultural authenticity that defines the centuries-old regional celebration.

    CDC Chairman Ricardo Adams outlined the organization’s plan during a press conference focused on preparations for the 2026 iteration of Vincymas, confirming that event organisers have already identified AI-generated musical submissions among tracks released for this year’s festival. Rather than pushing for an all-out ban on the technology, Adams framed the new rules as a defensive measure to protect human creativity and local cultural ownership, core pillars of the southern Caribbean carnival tradition.

    “We’ve had a very robust discussion on the introduction of AI into our creative space, and we recognise that there is a place for AI,” Adams explained during the briefing in Kingstown. “I’m not going to say that we should ignore AI, or completely eliminate it. But AI cannot become your creative juice. AI can help you refine your creation, but it cannot become the core of your work.”

    Adams warned that without clear guardrails, Vincymas risks losing the raw passion and cultural specificity that makes it unique, eventually devolving into a series of events centered on generic, algorithm-generated content disconnected from local heritage. “Otherwise, we’ll all be jumping up to metadata-created music with no input of the passion and the energy and the culture of what is Vincy Mas,” he said.

    While Adams did not disclose specific regulatory thresholds or draft rules during the press conference, his comments confirm that formal guidelines will apply to all future competitions and official performances overseen by the CDC. The organization is currently collaborating directly with local artists to shape the policy, which aims to strike a deliberate balance between innovation and preservation: AI will be permitted as a supporting tool for editing, mixing and refining tracks, but all core creative work — including melody composition, lyric writing, and core performance — must be completed by human creators rooted in local cultural experience.

    Adams tied the AI regulation debate to a broader, longstanding concern about cultural sovereignty for Caribbean creators. He reminded stakeholders that foundational elements of modern carnival culture, including steelpan instrumentation, mas design, and soca music, originated in the southern Caribbean and remain driven by regional artists. Unchecked AI adoption, he argued, risks reducing local creators to passive consumers of generic content produced outside the region, stripping them of control over an art form they built.

    The policy push also comes as the CDC works to address a larger shift in global carnival culture: the gradual erosion of artistic and cultural identity driven by a turn toward commercialization. Adams noted that without intentional guardrails, Vincymas could drift from its cultural roots to become nothing more than a series of high-priced commercial parties, prioritizing convenience and volume over the artistic expression that has long defined the event. He framed unregulated AI as one more shortcut that could hollow out the festival’s core artistic identity if left unaddressed.

    The debate over AI regulation comes as the CDC enters a pivotal period for the festival: the organization is currently pushing for a formal economic impact analysis of Vincymas, recognizing it as both a core cultural expression and a major local creative industry, and preparations are underway for the 50th anniversary of Vincymas’ current June-July schedule, a milestone branded the “Road to 50”.

    Adams emphasized that protecting the festival’s cultural authenticity through responsible AI governance now is critical to building a credible, meaningful celebration for the golden anniversary and future iterations. “The best way to promote next year’s milestone is to ensure that when people come here this year, we give them a safe festival, we let them experience the warmth and the energy that is St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Vincymas,” he said.

    Vincymas’ move to regulate AI places the festival among a fast-growing group of global cultural institutions and creative industries grappling with the same question: what role should generative AI play in reshaping traditional art forms? For Adams and the CDC, the answer is not outright rejection of new technology, but a deliberate reaffirmation that human creators and local culture must remain at the center of the celebration.

  • Barbados now a fully aged society, minister declares

    Barbados now a fully aged society, minister declares

    A top opposition leader in Barbados has launched a sweeping condemnation of the Mia Mottley-led administration, accusing it of deliberately concealing critical public financial information and fostering a culture of institutional secrecy that erodes democratic accountability. Ryan Walters, opposition Democratic Labour Party (DLP) Senate leader and shadow finance minister, argues that the growing volume of unanswered questions surrounding major public spending and infrastructure projects can no longer be brushed aside as isolated oversights.

    The most recent flashpoint in this ongoing dispute centers on the BiMPay instant payment platform, where Central Bank Governor Dr. Kevin Greenidge has declined to release the project’s total development and implementation cost. Walters emphasizes that this controversy is not an isolated incident, but rather the clearest latest example of a years-long pattern of behavior among ruling party officials. He argues that senior government figures consistently dismiss legitimate scrutiny from journalists and opposition politicians as unnecessary annoyance, rather than a core requirement of democratic governance.

    “What we are seeing right now with BiMPay is not just a single disagreement over one piece of information, one reporter’s question or one public official’s decision,” Walters told the Senate. “It is a symptom of a culture that has become deeply embedded within this administration. A culture where legitimate questions are brushed off as irritants, independent scrutiny is labeled political opposition, and full transparency is increasingly treated as an optional extra, not a legal and ethical obligation.”

    Walters outlined a multi-year trend of the administration deflecting, delaying, ignoring, or directly attacking anyone who questions how public funds are managed. He reminded the chamber that public officials are only temporary stewards of the national treasury, not private owners of state assets. “The government does not own the public purse. Cabinet ministers are not custodians of private wealth. Every dollar that passes through the hands of government departments, statutory corporations, state-owned enterprises and public agencies ultimately belongs to the people of Barbados,” he said. “As the ultimate owners of these resources, citizens hold an unquestionable right to know how their money is spent, whether they are getting value for every dollar, and whether proper safeguards are in place to protect public funds from waste or misuse.”

    The shadow finance minister highlighted a long list of unresolved transparency failures across nearly every sector of government, stretching back to the administration’s 2018 election. Beyond the undisclosed cost of BiMPay, he raised questions about hidden fees for external consultants hired since 2018, undisclosed ministerial travel expenditures, limited public data linking fuel import costs to retail pump prices, and the complete absence of published cost-benefit analysis for the government’s high-profile We Gathering 2025 development initiative.

    Walters also pointed to the ongoing disposal process for the Holetown Civic Centre, noting that the project is moving forward without ever disclosing full cost details to Barbadian taxpayers. In the health and infrastructure sector, he called out the unexplained repurposing of a major pandemic-era health facility built in the northern parish of St. Lucy. The facility, constructed at a reported public cost of more than $125 million during the COVID-19 public health emergency, no longer provides healthcare services and has reportedly been converted to housing for migrant labor. “Barbadians deserve a full explanation of what happened to this massive public investment, which was originally meant to expand healthcare access for citizens in the north of the island,” Walters said.

    Additional concerns were raised about spending oversight at state-run entities and cultural initiatives, specifically naming the state development organization HOPE Inc. and the regional cultural festival CARIFESTA. Despite hundreds of thousands of public dollars flowing through HOPE Inc., and multiple red flags raised by the Auditor General in past reports, Walters said a newly appointed cabinet minister recently confirmed the organization continues to spend public funds without having released a single public annual financial report for independent scrutiny. For CARIFESTA, he called for a full independent audit after reported expenditures ballooned from an original projection of $8 million to more than $34 million. He added that hundreds of millions of dollars allocated to related infrastructure projects for the festival remain incomplete, with repeated shifted deadlines and steady cost increases that have never been justified to the public.

    “The public is entitled to concrete facts, not just vague assurances and generic political talking points,” Walters said, noting that the administration has consistently failed to produce comprehensive post-project evaluations that would allow independent assessment of public spending value.

    Turning to Barbados’ core social safety net, Walters focused his criticism on the National Insurance and Social Security Service (NISSS). While reaffirming the DLP’s longstanding support for progressive social protection programs, including the ruling administration’s Solidarity Allowance and Cost of Living Cash Credit initiatives, he stressed that a commitment to compassion cannot justify a lack of compliance with transparency rules. He questioned whether public funds transferred from NISSS to finance these temporary emergency programs have been fully repaid to the social security scheme.

    “NIS funds belong to the working people of Barbados who have contributed to the scheme over decades, and they must be protected accordingly,” Walters said. “This is about safeguarding workers’ contributions, guaranteeing pensioners’ future benefits, and protecting the long-term financial sustainability of the country’s most critical social protection institution. To date, the government has not provided clear answers to these questions.”

    He also raised alarm over the repeated delay of the mandatory independent actuarial review of NISSS, an assessment designed to identify early financial risks to the social security system. Taken as a whole, Walters argued that these overlapping transparency failures add up to a deeply troubling pattern that cannot be dismissed.

    “Viewed one by one, the government may try to explain away each of these concerns as a simple mistake or a minor delay,” he said. “But when you look at all of them together, they reveal a deeply disturbing pattern. Questions get asked, and most are ignored. Answers are promised, time passes, and reports never materialize. Audits get delayed, costs go up, deadlines get shifted, and accountability disappears. This pattern is now too consistent to be written off as a coincidence.”

    Walters clarified that the DLP does not oppose government spending on public projects and social programs, but objects to the complete lack of independent oversight and public reporting for that spending. He called on the Mottley administration to immediately publish all outstanding audits, project reports, full expenditure breakdowns, and the delayed NISSS actuarial review.

    “Accountability is not a favor that the government grants to citizens. Accountability is the basic price of holding public office in a democracy,” he said. “Transparency is not achieved through PR stunts, speeches, press conferences or empty political rhetoric. Transparency is only achieved through full disclosure. Until the required information is made available to the Barbadian public, legitimate questions will keep being asked, and the Democratic Labour Party will keep demanding answers on behalf of all the people of this country.”

  • Health and wellness conference launched to address ageing, chronic illness

    Health and wellness conference launched to address ageing, chronic illness

    Barbados’ Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) Council has launched its first-ever national health and wellness conference, launching a targeted effort to strengthen the country’s healthcare workforce to address two pressing public health challenges: a rapidly ageing population and a growing epidemic of non-communicable diseases (NCDs).

    The three-day high-level forum, which kicked off Wednesday at the Hilton Barbados under the theme “Health, Education, and Promotion: Developing a Workforce that Supports Society and Ageing”, has drawn cross-sector participation from top government policymakers, post-secondary education leaders, and healthcare industry stakeholders to collaborate on workforce upskilling solutions.

    At the core of the conference is an urgent goal: accelerating skills development for allied health practitioners and paraprofessional healthcare workers, who form a critical frontline in responding to the dual public health pressures currently facing Barbados. Official data highlighted at the event shows NCDs already account for approximately 80 percent of all deaths recorded on the island, making the need for workforce adaptation increasingly pressing.

    Opening the gathering, TVET Council Chairman Dr. Albert Best emphasized that the conference is far more than a conventional industry event—it represents a targeted policy intervention aligned with Barbados’ evolving social needs. He noted the initiative marks a key expansion of the council’s core mandate, bringing together aligned stakeholders who share the core understanding that population health and wellness are foundational to national economic growth, labor productivity, and overall quality of life for Barbadians.

    Dr. Best outlined the clear, urgent rationale for the gathering: Barbados’ demographic landscape is shifting rapidly, with residents enjoying longer life expectancies while simultaneously facing widespread, persistent lifestyle-related health risks. Currently, more than one-third of Barbadian adults live with hypertension, and nearly two-thirds of the adult population is classified as overweight or obese. These public health challenges cost the country hundreds of millions of dollars in lost economic productivity each year, placing direct strain on both public institutions and private businesses.

    In response to this gap, the TVET Council designed the conference to advance the development of a skilled, adaptive, and forward-looking health and wellness workforce, with a specific focus on paraprofessionals and allied health practitioners. These workers, Dr. Best explained, play an irreplaceable role in closing gaps in patient care, community health education, and public outreach that would otherwise go unfilled by the existing primary care system.

    “This conference is therefore not simply an event; it is an intervention. It reflects our commitment to ensuring that training remains relevant, practical and align with the realities of our society,” Dr. Best told attendees.

    TVET Council Executive Director Henderson Eastman expanded on the connection between workforce health and national economic performance during his address, noting that employee absenteeism stemming from unaddressed chronic illness has a severe, measurable impact on institutional output. On days when a large share of staff are out sick, production levels drop directly, hitting the bottom lines of both public sector agencies and private sector businesses.

    Eastman also noted that the rapid pace of technological and social change in recent decades has outmoded older approaches to vocational skills training and qualifications, requiring new, flexible approaches to workforce development. He echoed Dr. Best’s framing of the conference as a deliberate intervention, rather than a routine industry gathering, explaining that it aligns with the TVET Council’s core mission to oversee the development, coordination, and quality assurance of technical vocational training across Barbados, with a consistent focus on applied learning that equips people with practical skills for employment and entrepreneurship.

    The event also forms a key pillar of the council’s long-term strategy to expand continuous professional development (CPD) opportunities and modernize skills certification processes across all sectors of the Barbadian economy. Eastman emphasized that conferences are far more than platforms for information sharing—they are powerful tools for lifelong learning and continuous professional development, occupying a unique space where theoretical knowledge meets real-world practical application, policy design meets on-the-ground implementation, and reflective analysis meets actionable change.

    In today’s fast-evolving labor market, where new skills are required almost as quickly as new job roles are defined, the outdated model of “one and done” post-secondary education no longer meets the needs of workers or employers, Eastman argued. Instead, Barbados must fully embrace a culture of continuous, structured, measurable skills upgrading across all industries.

    Over the course of the three-day event, attendees will dive into a range of priority topics, including the full scale of the NCD crisis across the Caribbean region, expanding access to high-quality home-based care for ageing patients, addressing gender-specific gaps in men’s and women’s health, and integrating new digital technologies that allow families to remotely monitor the health and safety of elderly relatives.

    The event’s agenda will shift from closed-door policy and stakeholder discussions to public community outreach on Saturday, when it will host an interactive Open Day for Barbadian families to connect directly with local health practitioners and access free wellness resources. The conference will conclude on Sunday with an industry dinner and awards ceremony to recognize outstanding contributions and excellence across the Barbadian health and wellness sector.

  • Minister Michael Joseph Calls for Greater Support for Communities on the Frontlines of Climate Change at Berlin Climate Mobility Forum 2026

    Minister Michael Joseph Calls for Greater Support for Communities on the Frontlines of Climate Change at Berlin Climate Mobility Forum 2026

    Against the backdrop of escalating climate impacts that disproportionately threaten low-lying and small island nations, Michael Joseph, Antigua and Barbuda’s Minister of Health, Wellness, Environment, and Civil Service Affairs, delivered a urgent, community-centered call to action at the 2026 Berlin Climate Mobility Forum in Germany on Wednesday. Speaking to a cross-sector audience of government delegates, leaders of international organizations, development finance specialists, and leading climate researchers, Joseph centered his remarks on the need to redirect more climate investment directly to frontline communities already grappling with climate change’s worst effects.

    The forum’s ongoing discussions focus on advancing the Global Principles for Addressing Climate Mobility, a framework Joseph publicly endorsed, while stressing that successful climate adaptation cannot be designed from distant capital cities. “Local communities hold unique on-the-ground knowledge that no external stakeholder can replicate,” Joseph explained. “They know exactly which neighborhoods flood during storm surges, which coastal roads erode faster each year, which shorelines are retreating, which households need urgent support, and which natural ecosystems once buffered their communities from extreme weather. But local knowledge means nothing without the resources to turn that knowledge into action.”

    For Small Island Developing States (SIDS) like Antigua and Barbuda, Joseph noted, climate change has already stretched critical public systems to breaking point, putting housing, public healthcare, national food security, core infrastructure, and overall community well-being at growing risk. He argued that climate finance mechanisms must not only strengthen national governing institutions but also be structured to deliver tangible support directly to the vulnerable populations that need it most.

    To illustrate what effective local climate action looks like, Joseph highlighted his country’s ongoing Home Assistance Programme for the Indigenous (HAPI), a targeted initiative that supports low-income and at-risk groups including elderly residents, unemployed workers, people displaced by climate disasters, and storm survivors. The program provides funding for new housing construction and home rehabilitation, allowing vulnerable citizens to stay safe and rooted in their home communities rather than being forced to relocate prematurely.

    Beyond physical infrastructure and economic impacts, Joseph drew attention to a long-overlooked dimension of climate harm: the persistent mental health toll of repeated climate shocks. Repeated exposure to hurricanes, forced displacement, sudden loss of livelihoods, and ongoing uncertainty about the future, he explained, leaves lasting psychological damage on affected communities that is rarely accounted for in global climate planning.

    Joseph also emphasized the irreplaceable role of natural coastal ecosystems in building climate resilience, highlighting that beaches, wetlands, coral reefs, mangroves, and healthy fisheries deliver a suite of critical services that protect communities from extreme weather, sustain food supplies, support local livelihoods, and preserve centuries of cultural heritage for island nations.

    Reiterating Antigua and Barbuda’s unwavering commitment to global climate goals, Joseph warned that uncurbed global warming poses an existential threat to SIDS, reaffirming his country’s support for global efforts to cap long-term warming at 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels. “For Antigua and Barbuda, 1.5 degrees is not an arbitrary policy target – it is the line between manageable climate risk and permanent, irreversible damage to our homeland,” he stressed.

    The minister also drew global attention to the growing crisis of climate loss and damage, noting that even the most robust adaptation measures have limits when communities face repeated climate shocks, gradual land loss, destroyed public infrastructure, failing water systems, and permanent collapse of local livelihoods. Drawing on decades of collective experience across Caribbean nations, he noted that recent hurricane seasons have inflicted trillions in combined economic and social harm across the region, and called for a fundamental overhaul of the international financial architecture to make it more responsive and equitable to the needs of vulnerable climate frontline nations.

    Joseph reaffirmed Antigua and Barbuda’s support for two key policy frameworks designed to address this gap: the Multidimensional Vulnerability Index and the Antigua and Barbuda Agenda for Small Island Developing States. Both frameworks, he explained, are critical to expanding access to affordable climate finance and ensuring that the unique vulnerability of SIDS is properly recognized in global development and climate financing systems.

    Joseph’s participation in the 2026 Berlin Climate Mobility Forum is supported by Rulita Kamasho Thomas, Antigua and Barbuda’s Climate Ambassador. The annual forum brings together high-level stakeholders from across governments, multilateral bodies, development institutions, and civil society to advance practical, actionable solutions to the growing challenges of climate mobility, while accelerating global progress on climate resilience and adaptation.