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  • Zeldzame ‘Donald Trump’-buffel uit Bangladesh wordt sensatie rond Eid

    Zeldzame ‘Donald Trump’-buffel uit Bangladesh wordt sensatie rond Eid

    Ahead of the 2026 celebration of Eid al-Adha, a one-of-a-kind albino water buffalo has captured public attention across Bangladesh and social media worldwide, all thanks to an unexpected resemblance to former U.S. President Donald Trump. Weighing in at nearly 700 kilograms, the pale buffalo has lived on a small family farm in Narayanganj district, just outside the Bangladeshi capital Dhaka, since it was born. What turned the animal into an overnight viral sensation is a signature shock of blonde hair that falls across its forehead – a feature that locals say echoes Trump’s iconic hairstyle. It was the farmer’s younger brother that first coined the nickname ‘Donald Trump’, and the name stuck as word spread of the unusual buffalo.

    Farmer Ziauddin Mridha, who owns the buffalo, says dozens of tourists and curious visitors have flocked to his farm daily, many traveling for hours from distant districts across the country just to snap selfies and record clips of the rare animal. Despite its high-profile new fame, Mridha notes the albino buffalo has a gentle, calm temperament, a trait he says is common for albino cattle that rarely become aggressive unless provoked. To keep the buffalo in healthy, show-ready condition ahead of Eid al-Adha, Mridha says the animal requires specialized daily care, including four washes and four scheduled feedings every day to maintain its condition.

    Albinism is extremely rare among water buffalo in Bangladesh, where the vast majority of the species have dark, black hides. This buffalo’s creamy pale coat, pink nose and distinct blonde mane make it stand out dramatically among the thousands of livestock gathered and prepared for the annual Islamic festival, where families and communities traditionally slaughter livestock to honor the prophet Ibrahim. In recent years, unusually large or uniquely marked sacrificial animals have grown in popularity across the country, with owners often naming them after celebrities to draw attention from potential buyers and visitors.

    Unlike many celebrity-named sacrificial animals that are kept for display, this viral albino buffalo is already slated for ritual slaughter during the festival. Mridha confirmed that he has already sold the buffalo to a buyer who will complete the traditional offering as part of their Eid al-Adha observance, wrapping up its brief stretch as Bangladesh’s most unlikely new celebrity.

  • Another Caribbean Newspaper Cuts Jobs to Stay Afloat

    Another Caribbean Newspaper Cuts Jobs to Stay Afloat

    The Caribbean regional media landscape continues to grapple with deep-seated financial strain, as one of Trinidad and Tobago’s most prominent print publications becomes the latest outlet to downsize its workforce to maintain operational viability.

    The Trinidad Express, a long-standing major news organization in the twin-island nation, has notified the Banking, Insurance and General Workers Union (BIGWU) of its planned restructuring initiative that will shrink the outlet’s editorial department from 33 current positions to just 26. The cuts target seven roles across the newsroom: two sub-editors, one night editor whose position will be eliminated entirely, and four reporters. Three of the affected reporters are based in the capital Port-of-Spain, with the fourth stationed in the southern city of San Fernando.

    As the official representative body for Trinidad Express staff, BIGWU has moved to formally contest the restructuring decision, with the union emphasizing its commitment to ensuring all applicable labor regulations and legal procedures are strictly followed throughout the process. In a public message shared with affected and remaining employees, the union acknowledged widespread workplace anxiety sparked by the job cut announcement, but offered reassurance that union leadership is actively negotiating with newspaper management to advocate for staff interests.

    The layoff announcement arrives just weeks after One Caribbean Media, the parent company that owns the Trinidad Express, published its first quarter 2026 financial results reporting a net profit of $4.36 million. Despite this positive quarterly bottom line, company chairman Faarees Hosein has acknowledged that the broader media sector still faces severe headwinds from a challenging advertising market. Hosein did note that there are early indicators of gradual industry recovery, adding that parent company leadership remains focused on ongoing cost-cutting measures and efficiency improvements across all its holdings.

    The Trinidad Express’s restructuring is far from an isolated incident, reflecting a broader crisis that has swept through traditional media across the entire Caribbean region. For years, legacy news organizations have seen growing pressure as marketing budgets and advertising revenue shift steadily from print and broadcast outlets to digital and social media platforms, leading to consistent revenue declines for traditional outlets.

    This trend has already forced multiple outlets across the region to scale back operations or close their doors permanently in recent months. Earlier this year in January, another major Trinidadian newspaper, Newsday, ceased all operations entirely, leaving dozens of journalists and support staff unemployed. Industry analysts note that unless traditional media organizations are able to build sustainable new revenue models to replace shrinking advertising income, further layoffs and closures are likely across the Caribbean in the coming years.

  • JCI Antigua Successfully Hosts Historic 2026 Conference of the America in Antigua and Barbuda

    JCI Antigua Successfully Hosts Historic 2026 Conference of the America in Antigua and Barbuda

    ST. JOHN’S, Antigua and Barbuda – In a landmark milestone for the small Caribbean nation, the 2026 JCI Conference of the Americas wrapped up its four-day run this month, drawing 338 young leaders, entrepreneurs and changemakers from 40 nations across the hemisphere to the shores of Antigua and Barbuda. Hosted locally by JCI Antigua on behalf of JCI West Indies, the annual gathering – one of the Western Hemisphere’s most prominent youth leadership and professional development events – ran from May 13 to 16, 2026.

    This year’s conference carries historic weight for the region: it marks only the third time the Conference of the Americas has been hosted in the West Indies, with the last West Indies-based iteration taking place nearly four decades ago in 1987. Critically, 2026 marks the first time Antigua and Barbuda has ever held the distinguished role of host nation for the regional JCI summit.

    Delegates from across North America, South America, Central America and the Caribbean took part in a packed, multi-faceted program designed to drive connection and growth. The agenda featured interactive leadership training modules, high-stakes public speaking and debate competitions, structured networking sessions, vibrant cultural showcases highlighting Caribbean heritage, and the official JCI General Assembly – where delegates held critical deliberations and made key decisions shaping the future of both the organization and the broader region.

    The event drew top JCI leadership from across the Americas, including JCI global President Alejandra Castillo, a native of Bolivia. Also in attendance were the organization’s Executive Vice President for the Americas (based in the United States) and JCI Board of Directors members representing Brazil, the Dominican Republic, Suriname and the United States.

    To accommodate the historic gathering, conference activities were spread across multiple purpose-chosen venues across Antigua and Barbuda, a decision that also served to showcase the country’s growing ability to host large-scale international events. Attendees were housed at the Royalton Antigua resort, which also hosted many core conference sessions. Leadership workshops and training modules were split between Royalton Antigua and the University of the West Indies Five Islands Campus, while the formal closing ceremony was held at the American University of Antigua.

    Securing the right to host the conference was no small feat. The bidding process launched three years prior, and JCI Antigua – backed by full support from JCI West Indies – outcompeted other international candidates by putting forward a compelling vision framing Antigua and Barbuda as an unmatched destination for regional collaboration, offering world-class Caribbean hospitality and a dynamic setting for leadership development.

    Beyond the successful delivery of the summit, JCI Antigua also earned strong results in the conference’s competitive programming segments. In a post-event statement, Conference Director Senator Shenella Govia shared her gratitude for the widespread support that turned the multi-year project into a reality.

    “This conference was far more than just another industry event – it was a powerful demonstration of what shared vision, resilience, cross-sector partnership and collective belief can achieve,” Govia said. “Three years ago, this was nothing more than an ambitious bid and a dream held by a small, dedicated team. Today, Antigua and Barbuda has successfully welcomed the entire Americas region, and we’ve showcased the warmth, professionalism, rich culture and incredible capability of our people to the world.”

    Govia extended special recognition to the local organizing committee, whose relentless work behind the scenes made the event possible. “I am deeply grateful to our sponsors, community partners, government agencies, volunteers, delegates, and every single person who played a part in bringing this conference to life. Special thanks goes to the Conference Organising Committee, whose countless sacrifices, long hours and unwavering dedication ensured we pulled off this historic event seamlessly. I also want to sincerely thank JCI Antigua and JCI West Indies for believing in this vision from day one and standing with us through every step of the journey.”

    Govia added that feedback from international and regional delegates has been overwhelmingly positive, with many attendees praising the unmatched hospitality of Antigua and Barbuda, the high quality of the conference programming, the professionalism of the local organizing team, and the overall four-day experience.

    Looking ahead, the successful hosting of the 2026 conference is expected to deliver long-term benefits for Antigua and Barbuda. It will reinforce the country’s growing reputation as a premier destination for major regional and international events, while also generating immediate and sustained economic activity across tourism, hospitality, transportation, entertainment and local small businesses.

    Beyond economic gains, the conference served as a critical platform to strengthen ties across the Americas, boost investment in youth leadership and civic engagement, and elevate the essential role young changemakers play in driving forward sustainable development, entrepreneurship, innovation and community impact across every corner of the hemisphere.

    In closing, JCI Antigua reaffirmed its ongoing commitment to nurturing leadership development, advancing active citizenship and deepening regional collaboration, and extended a final note of appreciation to all delegates, sponsors, partners, volunteers, participating nations and supporters who helped make the 2026 JCI Conference of the Americas in Antigua and Barbuda the historic success it became.

  • Gunmen Kill 25, Including 6 Officers, in Wave of Attacks Across Honduras

    Gunmen Kill 25, Including 6 Officers, in Wave of Attacks Across Honduras

    On Thursday, a shocking wave of coordinated gun assaults spread across Honduras, leaving at least 25 people dead—six of them active police officers—making it one of the deadliest single days of violence the Central American nation has recorded in recent memory.

    The single deadliest incident unfolded on a commercial African palm plantation in the northern city of Trujillo, where 19 lives were cut down by multiple armed gunmen who stormed the property. Local accounts of the attack remain divided: a rural community leader speaking to Agence France-Presse claimed all of the victims had ties to a rival armed faction that controls the plantation, while local Honduran media outlets reported that the attackers opened fire indiscriminately on all workers present at the site. The oldest victim identified was 61 years old, according to early reports.

    This brutal attack occurred in the vicinity of the contested Aguán River Valley, a region that has served as a persistent hotspot for violent conflict for decades. Control over land and natural resources for palm oil production has long pitted armed groups, large agribusiness firms, and local communities against one another, and the area is now widely recognized as one of the most dangerous places on Earth for land rights and environmental defenders.

    A second targeted attack took place hundreds of kilometers away in the western Honduran town of Omoa, located just kilometers from the country’s border with Guatemala. Six police officers were conducting a targeted operation against local gang activity when they were ambushed by a squad of armed attackers, who killed all six officers at the scene.

    The wave of killings comes at a moment when Honduran authorities have ramped up a national crackdown on organized criminal activity. In recent months, the government has implemented sweeping new anti-gang legislation, including a provision that allows the state to formally classify major gangs and drug trafficking cartels as terrorist organizations. The administration also launched a new dedicated anti-organized crime unit to lead counter-gang operations across the country.

    In the immediate aftermath of the attacks, Honduras’ National Police announced that it would deploy additional forces to the affected regions immediately. Law enforcement leadership has vowed to track down and apprehend all perpetrators responsible for the killings, and pledged to bolster security protections for at-risk communities in conflict-prone regions.

    The dual attacks not only highlight the persistent threat organized criminal groups pose to state security and civilian life in Honduras, but also underscore how long-running unresolved land disputes continue to fuel cycles of deadly violence across the country’s rural regions.

  • Dominica and India deepen ties with new grant-funded development initiatives

    Dominica and India deepen ties with new grant-funded development initiatives

    Diplomatic ties between the Commonwealth of Dominica and the Republic of India have deepened following the recent signing of two key Memoranda of Understanding (MOUs) during an official visit by India’s Minister of State for External Affairs, Honourable Shri Pabitra Margherita. Both agreements fall under India’s Grant Assistance Programme, which backs small-scale, high-impact development initiatives across Dominica.

    The first MOU establishes a framework for bilateral cooperation on pharmacopoeia standards, laying groundwork for shared regulatory work, knowledge exchange, and improved quality assurance for pharmaceutical products between the two nations. The second MOU paves the way for the rehabilitation of the Chateau to Pierre Charles Boulevard Link Road, a key transportation artery located in Dominica’s Grand Bay district.

    Following the signing ceremony, Minister Margherita conducted an on-site tour of multiple ongoing development projects across Dominica that already receive Indian funding. In Grand Bay, his itinerary included visits to the under-construction Centre Basketball Court, the upgraded farm access road in Macaton, and a new pedestrian walkway being built in Fond St. Jean. Beyond Grand Bay, India is also financing critical rehabilitation work on two additional road networks: the Cuba-Carholm Feeder Road and local routes in the community of Giraudel.

    The minister’s tour also extended to the Kalinago Territory, where he reviewed a suite of India-backed projects centered on climate resilience and sustainable development. These initiatives include climate-smart agricultural training programs, support for small-scale backyard gardening, projects focused on restoring local forest ecosystems and watershed resources, and efforts to expand sustainable cultural tourism that centers the indigenous Kalinago community’s heritage and economic development.

    In an official statement released after the visit, the Government of Dominica reaffirmed its commitment to expanding bilateral collaboration with India, noting that the new MOUs and ongoing projects reflect the longstanding, mutually beneficial partnership between the two countries focused on advancing grassroots development and shared progress.

  • Two Charged in Unitedville Murder

    Two Charged in Unitedville Murder

    A rapid police investigation in Belize’s Cayo District has ended with formal murder charges filed against two people, including a juvenile, following the fatal shooting of a local man at his home earlier this week.

    On the evening of May 19, 2026, neighbors living in the small community of Unitedville called emergency services just after 9:00 p.m. to report multiple gunshots ringing out near the home of 45-year-old Allen Geovanni Gongora. Witnesses told responding officers they saw an unidentified male running from the property and jumping into a waiting black SUV, which immediately fled toward nearby Belmopan. That call launched an intensive manhunt led by local law enforcement, which ultimately detained seven people for questioning earlier this week: six adult men and one adult woman.

    After two days of evidence gathering and witness interviews, authorities formally charged 27-year-old Jevon Ramclam and a 15-year-old male minor with murder on Thursday, May 21. In an official statement on the case, Assistant Superintendent of Police Stacy Smith confirmed that investigators have categorized the killing as drug-related, noting that Gongora’s residential property had long been identified by area residents as an illicit drug distribution and storage hub.

    As of the latest official update, law enforcement has not released any details on the legal status of the five remaining detainees who were brought in for questioning. The investigation remains active as officers continue to piece together the full sequence of events leading up to the shooting.

  • LETTER: Young People Feel Used After Election Promises Go Quiet

    LETTER: Young People Feel Used After Election Promises Go Quiet

    For countless residents of Antigua and Barbuda, the promise of responsive, equitable governance has curdled into deep frustration, as widespread accounts of official misconduct, systemic neglect, and lack of accountability have eroded public trust in elected leadership and state institutions. What should be a straightforward process for citizens seeking support from their elected representatives has turned into a demoralizing experience for many: constituents who reach out in moments of crisis report being met with inappropriate flirtatious advances instead of the genuine assistance they need, while others who follow guidance to submit job applications to government-linked organizations are left waiting indefinitely for replies – even as those same positions are filled by new hires connected to existing officials.

    Beyond these individual disappointments, a broader crisis of accountability has taken root. After winning office on the backing of local voters, many elected officials have cut off consistent communication with the communities that put them in power, leaving constituents feeling disenfranchised. Widespread fear of victimization and retaliation for speaking out has silenced many residents, creating a culture of silence that allows unaddressed problems to fester.

    The most damaging gaps are visible within the country’s own government entities, where long-standing mismanagement has left qualified young workers locked out of opportunity while unqualified incumbents cling to posts. Multiple reports confirm that existing public employees regularly leave their assigned shifts midday to run personal side businesses, despite a large population of capable, hardworking young Antiguans and Barbudans who remain unemployed and actively seeking stable public sector work. Insiders confirm that hiring and promotion in many government offices is driven not by merit, professionalism, or competence, but by favoritism, personal connections, and partisan loyalty. In the most extreme cases, individuals with only a primary school education – and in some cases, no functional literacy or writing skills – hold critical public positions that require far greater qualifications.

    Basic public infrastructure also continues to fail residents, with road conditions emerging as a particularly persistent grievance. Across the country, road repair projects are often only partial, shoddily completed, and quick to deteriorate, leaving taxpayers frustrated by the lack of quality and long-term sustainability of public works projects that their tax dollars fund.

    Crucially, the nation’s youth demographic – the future of Antigua and Barbuda’s political landscape – are not ignoring these failures. Young voters are carefully tracking every broken campaign promise, every unfair hiring decision, and every instance of official neglect, and their growing frustration is set to reshape the country’s next electoral cycle. Political analysts and local observers agree that the upcoming election will be a direct reflection of the widespread discontent that has built up among voters who have been failed by the current system of governance.

  • DPSU president raises concerns over delayed negotiations and college board authority

    DPSU president raises concerns over delayed negotiations and college board authority

    At the 13th Biennial Delegates Conference hosted this week at the Dominica Public Service Union (DPSU) headquarters in Roseau, union president Steve Joseph has issued an urgent call for the immediate settlement of a slew of unresolved grievances affecting staff at the Dominica State College (DSC), warning that lingering gridlock on these matters threatens the institution’s ability to deliver quality education to students.

    Joseph outlined that the outstanding disputes date back years, ranging from a long-delayed job reclassification process for college staff to incomplete structural repairs on key sections of the campus building and un-finalized infrastructure development projects. Most critically, he noted, talks to sign a binding collective agreement between the union and the institution have dragged on without closure, creating persistent uncertainty for DSC employees.

    “When our staff are preoccupied with these unaddressed concerns, how can we expect them to bring clear, focused focus to supporting our student body?” Joseph told conference delegates. “These problems demand swift resolution, and we must work to bring all ongoing negotiations to a definitive conclusion without further delay.”

    Beyond operational and staffing issues, a core point of contention raised by Joseph centers on the legal authority of the DSC Board of Governors. While the board is formally designated as DSC’s “supreme executive body” and all members are appointed by the Ministry of Education, Joseph argues the government retains undue veto power over key institutional decisions, stripping the governing board of its ability to act independently on operational matters.

    To fix this structural imbalance, Joseph laid out two clear policy options: either amend the existing State College Act to grant the board full, unfettered autonomy to govern the college without government interference, or reverse the institutional split and bring DSC staff back under the direct umbrella of the public service. “If you are going to create an independent governing board, empower it to actually make independent decisions,” he explained. “If the central government is going to hold onto veto power over every major decision that impacts how the college runs, then we need to change the law and re-integrate DSC staff into the public service framework.”

    Joseph closed by emphasizing that the issue is too consequential to ignore, and he hopes all relevant stakeholders will come to the table for open, constructive dialogue to reach a mutually acceptable resolution.

  • Ebola Treatment Centre Burned After Group Tried to Retrieve Body

    Ebola Treatment Centre Burned After Group Tried to Retrieve Body

    In a disruptive development that has deepened concerns over the worsening Ebola outbreak in central Africa, an Ebola treatment and body storage facility in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) was burned to the ground earlier this week. The arson attack followed an attempt by a local group to forcibly retrieve the body of an individual who had succumbed to the virus, according to initial on-ground reports.

    The facility served a critical public health function: it held the bodies of Ebola victims before they could be carried out through safe, controlled burials, a process widely recognized as one of the most essential steps to stop the virus from spreading to new communities. Ebola, which transmits via direct contact with infected bodily fluids, is already capable of spreading rapidly from deceased individuals if proper burial protocols are not followed.

    Even in the wake of the violence, local residents who showed suspected Ebola symptoms continued to arrive at remaining health facilities seeking care, demonstrating the ongoing unmet demand for treatment in the affected region. In response to the unrest, national security forces including soldiers and police have been deployed to the area to restore order and prevent additional attacks on health infrastructure.

    While the immediate risk of Ebola reaching Belize and other Caribbean nations remains low, regional health bodies are not lowering their guard. The Caribbean Public Health Agency (CARPHA) has issued an official call for all member states to maintain high levels of preparedness and alertness, a move that comes after the World Health Organization (WHO) formally declared the ongoing DRC outbreak a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC), the global body’s highest level of alert.

    Official data from the WHO confirms that the outbreak has already claimed more than 170 lives, with close to 750 suspected cases recorded across affected areas of the DRC. International aid organizations have identified multiple interconnected factors that have allowed the outbreak to escalate at an alarming rate. These include chronically weak health infrastructure in rural parts of the DRC, ongoing ethnic conflict that blocks access for testing and treatment teams, and recent cuts to United States funding for global public health initiatives.

    The funding cuts have triggered cascading challenges for response teams: thousands of local health workers have been laid off, critical medical supplies are in acute shortage, and overall operational support for both WHO and United States Agency for International Development (USAID) programs has been drastically reduced. Even though U.S. government officials have stated that core response systems remain operational and that emergency funding has been redirected to the outbreak, public health experts warn that years of sustained underinvestment in global health preparedness have left response teams playing catch-up. Today, responders are forced to airlift even basic protective equipment like medical gloves and surgical masks into remote clinic sites, a logistical hurdle that slows their ability to contain the spread of the virus.

    With a high average fatality rate, Ebola outbreaks require rapid, well-resourced response to avoid large-scale community transmission, making the current gaps in funding and access a growing source of global concern.

  • Mentally-ill baby killer to spend 20 more years in jail

    Mentally-ill baby killer to spend 20 more years in jail

    A shocking case of infant harm in St. Vincent and the Grenadines has concluded with a significant custodial sentence for the perpetrator. 24-year-old Jeremiah Samuel, a resident of Rose Hall, has been ordered to spend 19 years, nine months and six days behind bars for the kidnapping and killing of 1-year-old Janae Samuel-Wright in the North Leeward community on February 10, 2024.

    Justice Rickie Burnett handed down the concurrent sentences during a Friday hearing at the Kingstown High Court. Samuel faced two separate charges: manslaughter for the death of the infant, who was confirmed to be one of his relatives, and kidnapping. For the abduction charge alone, the judge issued a four-year, one-month and seven-day prison term. Under the rule of concurrent sentencing, however, Samuel will only serve the longer manslaughter sentence, rather than completing the terms back-to-back.

    A key mitigating factor cited in the case is that Samuel was living with an undiagnosed mental disorder at the time he committed the fatal crime. Local independent news outlet iWitness News, which first broke details of the sentencing, has announced it will release additional court documents, victim background, and community reaction in a forthcoming expanded report, and has invited readers to follow its updates via the outlet’s official WhatsApp Channel.