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  • ESFN Launches Summer Internship Program for Youths in Antigua

    ESFN Launches Summer Internship Program for Youths in Antigua

    The EcoShores Sustainable Futures Network (ESFN), a registered non-profit working across Small Island Developing States (SIDS) and the Southern United States, has opened applications for its 2026 Summer Internship Program, targeted at young people based in Antigua. The initiative was crafted to build hands-on, career-ready skills across environmental stewardship, digital storytelling, strategic communication, and youth leadership, addressing longstanding gaps in practical development opportunities for emerging leaders in island communities.

    Spanning six to eight weeks across the summer months, the program will operate through a flexible hybrid structure that combines structured virtual training modules with curated in-person gatherings and on-the-ground field experience. Unlike traditional classroom-based learning programs, this internship places participants directly at the center of active local projects spanning environmental outreach, community organizing, and cross-island youth development across Antigua and Barbuda.

    Interns will choose from five specialized focus tracks aligned with their interests and career goals: media and digital communication, journalism and communication, environment and conservation, finance and program support, and public health and community wellness. The environment and conservation track, tailored for young people passionate about geography, biodiversity, and coastal protection, includes immersive fieldwork, introductory training in geographic information systems (GIS) and mapping, hands-on work in waste management systems, and targeted conservation projects focused on ecologically critical habitats including wetlands, mangrove forests, and nearshore coastal zones. The finance and program support track, designed for aspiring business and operations professionals, offers exposure to core skills including financial literacy, non-profit administrative processes, and coordination of fundraising and sponsorship activities. For those interested in the intersection of planetary and human health, the public health and community wellness track combines community outreach, applied research and data collection, and development of youth-centered wellness programming that connects environmental health to individual well-being.

    One of the program’s most innovative components is a youth leadership and public speaking initiative modeled after the popular TED Talk framework. Participants will walk through every step of developing, refining, and delivering their own original ideas and youth-led community projects, with a deliberate focus on boosting communication competency, building personal confidence, and translating ideas into actionable initiatives. This portion of the program draws on collaborative learning frameworks rooted in Southern-led international youth development and resilience-focused approaches that center local knowledge.

    Beyond professional skill-building, all interns will take part in ESFN’s existing Community Swim Program, a community-facing initiative that builds water safety competence, personal confidence, and marine ecological literacy. This hands-on component includes integrated data collection activities that connect recreational swimming to environmental education, reinforcing the program’s core message that personal growth and conservation action are deeply interconnected.

    Registration for the 2026 internship is currently open via the official ESFN program application portal. All applicants are required to submit a short written or video statement as part of their application package, and selected candidates will be contacted directly by program coordinators. In addition to recruiting participating interns, ESFN is actively seeking support from partner organizations, donors, and community stakeholders to expand program access and impact. Financial and in-kind support allows the organization to offer more youth the opportunity to gain practical work experience, expand community-wide environmental awareness, and nurture the next generation of sustainability leaders. Interested sponsors and individual donors can connect with ESFN to fund the overall program, sponsor an individual intern, or support a specific focus track.

    ESFN’s core mission centers on advancing sustainability, environmental conservation, and community empowerment across SIDS and the Southern U.S., with a particular focus on addressing pressing global challenges including climate justice, biodiversity loss, youth underdevelopment, technological innovation, and accessible environmental education. The organization runs a range of community-focused initiatives beyond the summer internship, including the Volunteer Explorer Program, annual World Wetlands Day awareness campaigns, the Build Your Future career development program, the Community Swim Program, and the Endeavour publication. Through these efforts, ESFN works to cultivate innovative, locally rooted solutions and inspire collective action to protect vulnerable marine and coastal ecosystems, with a long-term goal of building a more resilient and sustainable future for all. The organization also prioritizes supporting creative media and cultural expression from marginalized vulnerable communities, with an explicit focus on centering youth voices in all its work.

  • Trump-Xi top: Taiwan-waarschuwing en energieoverleg

    Trump-Xi top: Taiwan-waarschuwing en energieoverleg

    On May 14, 2026, U.S. President Donald Trump arrived in Beijing for a historic two-day summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping, marking the first visit by an American sitting president to China in nearly a decade. The long-awaited high-level meeting brought the world’s two largest powers together to confront a sprawling agenda of divisive geopolitical and economic issues, at a moment of growing global uncertainty fueled by regional conflict and shifting trade alliances.

    In closed-door strategic talks, President Xi delivered a firm warning on one of the most sensitive flashpoints in bilateral ties: the Taiwan question. Xi stressed that any misstep in handling the issue would push U.S.-China relations into “extremely dangerous territory.” China has long maintained that Taiwan is an inalienable part of its sovereign territory, while the United States retains a long-standing legal commitment to provide defensive support to Taipei. Senior U.S. administration officials reaffirmed during the summit that Washington’s long-held policy of strategic ambiguity on cross-strait relations remains unchanged.

    Beyond cross-strait tensions, the two leaders turned their attention to critical global energy security. The Strait of Hormuz, the world’s most vital energy chokepoint that carries roughly one-fifth of global oil and liquefied natural gas supplies, has seen major disruptions amid ongoing escalations in the conflict with Iran. The two leaders agreed to pursue coordinated efforts to keep the strategic waterway open to international navigation. The summit also revealed China’s growing interest in increasing purchases of U.S. crude oil as part of broader efforts to diversify its energy imports and reduce its overreliance on Middle Eastern energy supplies.

    On the economic front, Trump announced that China had finalized an agreement to purchase 200 commercial aircraft from U.S. aerospace giant Boeing. The deal marks the first major U.S. commercial aircraft contract secured by Boeing in the Chinese market in nearly 10 years, a symbolic breakthrough after years of frozen trade engagement. While the total value and volume of the agreement fell short of initial market expectations, it signals a shared commitment to normalizing bilateral trade ties following the fragile partial trade deal reached between the two powers last October.

    During the discussions, Trump also raised the case of Jimmy Lai, the imprisoned Hong Kong-based media tycoon and prominent critic of Beijing, who is currently serving a lengthy prison sentence. The U.S. delegation stated that it hopes for a positive outcome on the issue, though Chinese officials have repeatedly emphasized that matters related to Hong Kong are purely internal affairs of China, falling outside the scope of foreign interference.

    The summit comes as Trump seeks to shore up his domestic political standing ahead of upcoming political cycles, but his agenda in Beijing was constrained by ongoing challenges: stalled progress on broader trade negotiations and ongoing political and military fallout from the U.S.-linked conflict in Iran that has left his administration vulnerable to domestic criticism.

    By the end of the two-day meeting, the two leaders closed their summit with a working lunch and informal off-the-record talks, with both issuing a joint statement expressing a shared desire to strengthen overall bilateral cooperation. That said, fundamental disagreements on core issues remain unresolved, and those differences are expected to shape the trajectory of U.S.-China relations in the coming months. As the leaders wrapped up their talks, the global community continues to closely watch how the world’s most consequential bilateral relationship will evolve amid a period of unprecedented global geopolitical upheaval.

  • Regering zet extra machines en crisisaanpak in tegen wateroverlast

    Regering zet extra machines en crisisaanpak in tegen wateroverlast

    On Thursday, three top Surinamese government officials faced the National Assembly to outline the state of the country’s ongoing flood crisis and the steps the administration is taking to mitigate damage and prevent future disasters. Public Works and Spatial Planning Minister Stephen Tsang, Agriculture, Livestock and Fisheries Minister Mike Noersalim, and Government Coordinator André Misiekaba delivered detailed testimony before the legislative body, laying bare the depth of infrastructure decay that has compounded the impact of recent extreme rainfall.

    Tsang opened his address by explaining that when his cabinet took office in late July 2025, it inherited a decades-long backlog of critical infrastructure maintenance that left both water-related and land-based infrastructure in what he described as a deplorable state. “We found trees growing inside drainage canals and sea outfalls. Drainage sumps were completely clogged with garbage, and we even recovered discarded mattresses, refrigerators and gas stoves from these waterways,” Tsang told parliament.

    The minister added that the majority of the government’s heavy equipment tasked with maintaining drainage infrastructure was either broken or entirely non-functional when the new administration took office. None of the country’s three dedicated dredging pumps operated at full capacity, he confirmed. In the months since, multiple pieces of equipment have been repaired, and the government has launched a combined operational model that relies on both public assets and contracted private construction firms to address urgent needs.

    Since September 2025, Tsang noted, the government has been building a long-term structural program focused on clearing outfalls, rehabilitating roadway networks, and upgrading national drainage systems across the country. He emphasized that the extreme rainfall that triggered the latest round of severe flooding was far outside normal weather patterns for the region. While 25 to 50 millimeters of rain is already classified as heavy precipitation for Suriname, measurements recorded on May 10 showed between 80 and 110 millimeters of rain falling across affected areas in just one event. “With that amount of water, major problems are unavoidable,” Tsang said. Even so, he added that preliminary interventions already completed have allowed floodwaters to recede far faster than they would have in previous years.

    Currently, active mitigation work is underway in multiple high-priority communities including Wintiwai, Pontbuiten, Rahimal, Leiding 10A, and Domburg, according to Tsang. In the coming months, the government will launch new bidding processes for additional contracts to clear canals and upgrade drainage networks across multiple districts. Rehabilitation work on critical sluices and pump stations is also ongoing in Paramaribo-Noord, Santo Boma, and other flood-prone regions.

    Looking ahead, the government is partnering with the Inter-American Development Bank to develop and deploy early warning systems for extreme weather events, a proactive measure designed to give communities more time to prepare for future flooding. An interdepartmental crisis working group has also been established, bringing together representatives from Public Works, Agriculture, Spatial Planning, and the National Disaster Management Coordination Center to align response efforts.

    For his part, Agriculture Minister Noersalim confirmed that his ministry has also deployed all available heavy equipment to address acute flood issues in key agricultural and residential regions including Nickerie, Saramacca, Weg naar Zee, and Commewijne. He noted that the ministry faced an early challenge just mapping out what operational equipment was actually available, a process that revealed significant gaps in the government’s asset inventory. “It was a complicated puzzle to piece together. Police are still conducting investigations into the whereabouts of a number of missing pieces of heavy equipment,” Noersalim explained.

    During clearing work on the Jahkrikreek in Saramacca, crews have encountered massive volumes of illegally dumped waste clogging the waterway, he added. To keep public spending under control, the ministry is prioritizing carrying out as much clearing and mitigation work as possible with in-house resources, only bringing in private contractors when work cannot be completed by public teams. A public tender for seven new flood mitigation projects is scheduled for next week, Noersalim confirmed.

    Government Coordinator Misiekaba closed the parliamentary briefing by calling for understanding and support from both the public and parliament for the government’s recovery efforts. He stressed that even modern, well-maintained drainage systems struggle to cope with extreme rainfall events of the scale Suriname recently experienced. “Guyana was flooded, Trinidad was flooded, even Hilversum in the Netherlands was inundated by recent heavy rains,” Misiekaba noted, adding that it will take significant time to fully eliminate the decades of maintenance backlog that left the country so vulnerable to flooding.

    Misiekaba also acknowledged that the government currently faces limited capacity to allocate new funding for flood mitigation work, as the 2026 national budget has not yet been finalized and approved by parliament. Even with these constraints, he guaranteed that the administration would not abandon communities affected by flooding. “Ministers are on the ground with communities every single day, working to identify ways to bring relief to those impacted,” he said.

  • Column: Vrije meningsuiting ook voor impopulaire meningen

    Column: Vrije meningsuiting ook voor impopulaire meningen

    Freedom of speech is not designed only to shield ideas that already enjoy widespread public acceptance. It is the unpopular, heterodox perspectives that most need legal and cultural protection, after all; without this protection, free speech becomes little more than the freedom to repeat what everyone already agrees with.

    This week, a sharp and illuminating debate has emerged in Suriname following the publication of a reader submission on local news platform Starnieuws. Written by contributor Karel Donk, the piece was a response to an upcoming national HIV testing campaign. In his contribution, Donk publicly questioned the established scientific link between HIV and AIDS, and urged readers to think carefully before agreeing to get tested.

    The reaction from the medical community was swift and indignant. Multiple doctors, including clinicians who work directly in the HIV/AIDS treatment sector, condemned the publication. They argue that giving space to this unsubstantiated perspective puts public health at direct risk, and have criticized Starnieuws for platforming a claim that contradicts decades of established medical consensus.

    This criticism is not unfounded. Medical professionals bear daily responsibility for patient lives, and they evaluate any such publication through the lens of rigorous scientific evidence and years of clinical experience. It is entirely natural that concern arises when claims directly contradict universally accepted medical understanding.

    Yet it is precisely here that the fundamental debate over free speech begins. When a news outlet opens its pages to reader-submitted opinion pieces, it does not automatically endorse every view it publishes. Starnieuws made the decision to run Donk’s essay because a meaningful commitment to free speech requires making space for controversial, dissenting, even unpopular perspectives — as long as those contributions remain within established editorial guidelines. The outlet did not hide or suppress the medical community’s pushback: it published doctors’ critical responses in full, allowing readers to weigh competing perspectives against one another.

    This is exactly how an open, democratic society is supposed to function. It does not ban dissenting views ahead of publication; instead, it brings conflicting ideas into public debate, where they can be challenged with evidence, facts and counterarguments. In recent years, calls to censor unpopular perspectives have grown steadily louder. Any view that deviates from dominant consensus is quickly labeled disinformation, conspiracy thinking or dangerous. Sometimes that label is justified.

    But there is a critical line between publishing a controversial perspective as part of open debate, and actively seeking to cause harm. Speech that calls for violence, spreads hatred, or deliberately disseminates lies with malicious intent is a separate category entirely from what occurred in this case.

    Added context is important here: HIV testing in Suriname is not legally mandated. It remains a voluntary choice for every citizen, who retains full responsibility for seeking out information, consulting medical professionals, and making their own decisions.

    The true strength of a free society is not measured by its ability to silence dissenting voices, but by its ability to refute those voices publicly with evidence. Science is not strengthened by censorship; it grows stronger through open debate, transparent evidence-gathering and public scrutiny. That is precisely why freedom of expression must be protected and cherished. This is not because every unpopular opinion is correct, but because a free society that eliminates space for open debate gradually becomes a society ruled by fear, where self-censorship dictates what can and cannot be said.

    A striking detail in this controversy is how many other media outlets have only repeated the doctors’ angry condemnation, without addressing the full original context: that Starnieuws intentionally created space for public debate, and that its decision to run the controversial piece was a deliberate editorial choice to fuel broader public discussion. When only the doctors’ criticism, with its harsh condemnation of Starnieuws, is published without the full original context, there is a serious risk that Starnieuws will be misrepresented as willfully spreading disinformation, when the outlet actually opened the door to debate and published critical counter perspectives.

    At the same time, it is well within any other outlet’s rights to judge the doctors’ reaction as newsworthy. When medical professionals warn that public health may be endangered, that is inherently a societally relevant news story. It is appropriate and healthy for media outlets to hold each other accountable, but they have an obligation to be honest about the full context and intentions of their peer organizations. Without that commitment to context, we do not get a debate about ideas — we get a blanket moral condemnation of the outlet that opened space for discussion.

    Freedom of speech does not mean every opinion is equally correct, or equally rooted in fact. It means that all ideas deserve to be publicly discussed, criticized and refuted, without an immediate call for censorship and silence. The strength of a democratic society lies not in banning controversial opinions, but in its ability to counter them openly with evidence and argument. A society where people are afraid to publish, to debate, to deviate from consensus for fear of public condemnation is ultimately far more dangerous than a single controversial reader submission.

  • Pg wijst uitnodiging DNA-commissie af: extra toelichting alleen schriftelijk

    Pg wijst uitnodiging DNA-commissie af: extra toelichting alleen schriftelijk

    On May 15, 2026, new developments emerged in Suriname’s high-stakes impeachment process against three former senior government officials, after Prosecutor General Garcia Paragsingh formally notified a parliamentary investigative committee that the Public Prosecution Service (OM) has already turned over all required documentation related to the cases.

    The proceedings target three ex-cabinet members: Riad Nurmohamed, Bronto Somohardjo and Gillmore Hoefdraad, with the National Assembly required to reach a final ruling on whether to allow criminal prosecution by June 9. Paragsingh’s May 14 correspondence was addressed to committee chair Rabin Parmessar, who had previously extended a written invitation for the prosecutor general to deliver additional in-person testimony to the National Assembly. In her official response, Paragsingh confirmed that the already submitted impeachment motions and accompanying documentation are sufficient to address the committee’s needs. She added that the OM stands ready to provide written responses to any further follow-up questions the committee may put forward within the bounds of national law.

    Per Paragsingh’s statement, the three impeachment motions were formally filed with the National Assembly on March 9, 2026, under Article 140 of the Surinamese Constitution and the country’s Law on Impeachment and Prosecution of Political Office Holders. The motions center on alleged criminal offenses the three former ministers are accused of committing during their tenures in public office. Nurmohamed’s case is tied primarily to the controversial Pan American Real Estate project, while proceedings against Somohardjo draw heavily on investigative findings from a CLAD report. Hoefdraad, a former finance minister who is currently a fugitive, faces new impeachment motions linked to the corruption investigation into the Suriname Post Savings Bank (SPSB).

    In her letter, Paragsingh emphasized that all filed motions fully comply with the legal requirements laid out in Article 3 of the impeachment law. She confirmed that the submitted documents include detailed factual descriptions of the alleged offenses, alongside clear references to the specific legal provisions that underpin the charges against the three men.

    The prosecutor general also clarified the legal scope of the National Assembly’s review role. Under Article 5 of the relevant legislation, parliament is only required to assess whether proceeding with prosecution is justified by the broader public interest from a political and administrative perspective. For this reason, Paragsingh explained, the OM intentionally included supporting background context alongside the formal motions, rather than releasing the full confidential criminal investigation dossier to the public and parliamentary body.

    The cross-party investigative committee tasked with reviewing the motions is led by Parmessar, with additional seats held by members from Suriname’s major political parties: Dew Sharman (VHP), Xiabao Zheng (PL), Jennifer Vreedzaam (NDP), Mahinder Jogi (VHP), Ivanildo Plein (NPS) and Ebu Jones (NDP).

  • Carter Center recommends adjustment of Guyana’s electoral boundaries

    Carter Center recommends adjustment of Guyana’s electoral boundaries

    In a post-election analysis published Thursday, May 14, 2026, the U.S.-based Carter Center has delivered a mixed assessment of Guyana’s 2025 general and regional elections, praising the process’ far greater transparency than the heavily contested 2020 vote while calling for sweeping reforms to fix outdated electoral boundaries that violate the core democratic principle of equal suffrage.

    The September 1, 2025 polls delivered a clear political shift: incumbent President Irfaan Ali’s People’s Progressive Party Civic (PPPC) secured re-election with an expanded parliamentary majority, while the long-dominant opposition bloc A Partnership for National Unity, led by the People’s National Congress Reform, was upset by the newly launched We Invest in Nationhood (WIN) party. WIN claimed 16 seats to become the largest opposition faction in the 65-seat National Assembly, with APNU finishing second among opposition groups.

    The core recommendation from the Carter Center, which has observed Guyanese elections and supported democratic development in the country since 1992, centers on the urgent need to redraw electoral constituency boundaries that have not been updated in 24 years, since they were set by parliamentary legislation in 2001. New 2022 national population data, released in January 2026, confirms that significant demographic shifts across the country have left the current boundary framework severely misaligned with the principle of one person, one vote.

    Under Guyana’s current complex electoral system, 40 parliamentary seats are allocated through a single national constituency, while the remaining 25 seats are distributed across the country’s 10 regions as a geographic component. The framework assumes equal population distribution across the 25 geographic seats, but two national censuses conducted in 2012 and 2022 have recorded substantial population changes that the system has never adjusted to.

    The Carter Center’s report notes that Guyana’s existing Representation of the People Act already grants the Guyana Elections Commission (GECOM) legal authority to divide the country into polling districts and sub-districts, with the only restriction that districts cannot cross regional boundaries. To bring the country in line with global democratic standards, the organization proposes that a ongoing national constitutional review process evaluate Guyana’s entire electoral system and boundary delimitation methodologies to guarantee equal suffrage.

    International best practices mandate regular boundary reviews to prevent unequal voting power, and the Carter Center is calling on Guyanese authorities to codify mandatory periodic reviews into national law. The reforms would adjust boundaries to reflect current population counts and cap the allowed population deviation between constituencies at less than 10 percent, down from the large deviation that currently exists. The organization also recommends that all apportionment criteria, including whether boundaries are drawn based on total residents, registered voters, actual voter turnout or a combination of metrics, be made fully public to increase accountability.

    “Reforming laws related to boundary delimitation and addressing the large gap between electoral quotients for obtaining seats in small and large electoral constituencies will allow Guyana to more fully respect the principle of equal suffrage,” the report states.

    Beyond boundary reform, the Carter Center joined other regional and international observer missions in highlighting persistent flaws in Guyana’s electoral ecosystem. Key concerns cited include lax campaign finance regulations that allow unregulated spending, the misuse of state resources that disproportionately benefits incumbent political parties, unequal access to media coverage for opposition groups, limited participation from civil society organizations, and structural barriers that prevent marginalized communities from fully engaging in the political process.

    Even as it called for further reform, the Carter Center offered significant praise for improvements made after the deeply flawed 2020 election, which was marred by widespread attempts to rig the vote count. Post-2020 legislative overhauls to the tabulation process delivered tangible progress, the organization confirmed.

    “Overall, the post-2020 reforms were positive, contributing to a more efficient and transparent tabulation process that better ensured results reflected the will of the electorate,” the report read. Carter Center observer teams assessed tabulation procedures across all 17 national tabulation centers, finding the process was conducted reasonably or very well in every location. Transparency was greatly improved through the public posting of official Statements of Poll and the timely upload of all results to GECOM’s official website, the organization added.

  • Revisit CARICOM Secretary General’s reappointment – UWI international relations expert

    Revisit CARICOM Secretary General’s reappointment – UWI international relations expert

    The Caribbean Community (CARICOM) is facing a growing internal rift over the planned reappointment of incumbent Secretary-General Dr. Carla Barnett, with a leading regional international relations scholar calling for a do-over of the selection process rooted in consensus and performance assessment. The dispute comes ahead of the end of Dr. Barnett’s first five-year term, which is scheduled to conclude this July.

    Dr. Kai-Ann Skeete, a trade research fellow at the Shridath Ramphal Center for International Trade, Law, Policy and Services at the University of the West Indies (UWI) Cave Hill Campus in Barbados, laid out her stance on the contentious issue Thursday during an international conference hosted by the Centre for International and Border Studies. The event, themed “Navigating The Future: Guyana, the Caribbean and Latin America in a Changing Global Environment”, provided a platform to address the leadership crisis unfolding within the 15-member regional bloc.

    Dr. Skeete stressed that any decision on the top CARICOM leadership post must be reached through full consensus among all member states, rather than the majority vote that was used to approve Dr. Barnett’s second term. Her position directly contradicts the announcement made in March by CARICOM Chairman and St. Kitts and Nevis Prime Minister Dr. Terrance Drew, who confirmed that leaders had approved Dr. Barnett’s reappointment for a second five-year term starting this August at their February 24–27 summit, citing that the vote met the bloc’s required majority threshold.

    “For CARICOM, such a critical decision needs buy-in from every member,” Dr. Skeete argued. “If we rely on majority rule, you will inevitably have a faction that feels disenfranchised, and that fracture undermines the very foundation of regional integration. Consensus means no winners and no losers — it means we all move forward together.”

    Beyond the procedural dispute, Dr. Skeete also pushed for selection criteria that prioritize tangible performance over institutional tradition or political negotiation. She acknowledged that she entered Dr. Barnett’s first term with high hopes: as a woman, a former CARICOM Secretariat staffer, and a former vice president of the Barbados-based Caribbean Development Bank, Dr. Barnett entered office with intimate firsthand knowledge of the long-running tensions between the bloc’s more developed countries (MDCs) and its least developed countries (LDCs). Dr. Skeete had expected Dr. Barnett to leverage that experience to bridge divides and unify member states around shared regional goals.

    Unfortunately, Dr. Skeete said that expectation went unmet. Over the past five years, the gap between richer and poorer CARICOM members has actually widened, leaving the bloc more fragmented than it was when Dr. Barnett took office in 2021. She attributed this underperformance to the overriding influence of regional politics that constrained Dr. Barnett’s ability to act as a unifying leader, noting that “politics stepped in and Dr. Barnett stayed in her lane.”

    Against this backdrop, Dr. Skeete called for an urgent revisit of the reappointment question to resolve the dispute quickly, warning that the bloc cannot afford to be distracted by internal leadership conflict when it faces a host of pressing collective challenges to grapple with by the end of 2026. “Regional integration is non-negotiable for the Caribbean,” she emphasized. “The core question we need to answer is simple: can this candidate unite the region, deepen integration, and advance our shared goals? If the answer is no, it is time to give another candidate the opportunity.”

    The call for a revised process comes as the bloc remains deeply split over the 2026 reappointment. Trinidad and Tobago, one of CARICOM’s largest economies, has been the most vocal opponent, vowing it will not recognize Dr. Barnett’s second term because it was excluded from the heads of government forum that approved the appointment. Trinidad and Tobago has been joined by Antigua and Barbuda, Jamaica, and the Premier of Nevis in calling for the issue to be reopened for discussion. On the opposing side, Guyana, Belize and Dominica have publicly thrown their support behind the original reappointment process and Dr. Barnett’s second term.

    The dispute is unfolding under the framework of the Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas, the legal document that governs CARICOM operations. Article 24 of the treaty states only that the Secretary-General shall be appointed by the Conference of Heads of Government on the recommendation of the Community Council, for a term no longer than five years, and may be reappointed by the Conference — it does not explicitly require a consensus vote for reappointment, leaving the procedural question open to interpretation amid the current rift.

  • 135 Days! Belize still without an Ombudsman Panton warns

    135 Days! Belize still without an Ombudsman Panton warns

    More than four months have passed since Belize’s Office of the Ombudsman was left without a sitting leader, creating a critical gap in the country’s system of public oversight that has already halted legal proceedings and sparked fierce criticism from the nation’s opposition. As of this week, the vacancy stretches to 135 days, with no formal announcement of a confirmed replacement from the ruling administration.

    The position became open at the end of December 2025, when the government opted not to renew the term of former Ombudsman Major Gilbert Swaso. While administration officials signaled earlier in 2026 that a formal appointment process would move forward in short order, no candidate has been publicly named or sworn in to fill the role.

    Under Belizean law, the Ombudsman acts as one of the country’s key independent watchdog bodies, with explicit authority to investigate public complaints against government departments and state agencies. The office’s mandate covers everything from allegations of abuse of power, maladministration, and public corruption to disputes over Freedom of Information (FOI) requests, giving it a central role in upholding transparency and government accountability.

    Opposition Leader Tracy Panton has emerged as one of the most vocal critics of the prolonged vacancy, warning that the extended gap in leadership is actively eroding Belize’s systems of public checks and balances. In an exclusive interview with *The Reporter*, Panton described the unfulfilled post as “deeply troubling and unacceptable,” noting that the office serves as a core independent avenue for citizens seeking redress for government wrongdoing.

    The vacancy has already had tangible impacts on ongoing government transparency cases. One high-profile FOI appeal, currently pending before the Belize Court of Appeal, has been brought to a standstill as a result of the empty post. The case stems from a 2025 ruling by former Ombudsman Swaso, which ordered the Attorney General’s Ministry to release records detailing public payments made to private legal practitioners. The Attorney General challenged that ruling and the matter is now before the Court of Appeal, but proceedings cannot move forward while the Ombudsman position remains vacant.

    Panton argues that the delay in filling the post comes at a particularly sensitive moment for Belize’s democratic institutions, when public trust in government bodies is already low. She also raised pointed questions about whether the current administration remains committed to the transparency and accountability commitments it made to voters before taking office.

    Going further, the opposition leader called for a transparent, independent appointment process that is fully insulated from political interference. She emphasized that Belize urgently needs an Ombudsman who can carry out the office’s mandate “without fear or favour,” free from pressure from the ruling party to soften oversight of government activity.

  • ‘Free Education’ Still Costing FamiliesFamilies Outside ‘EUp’ Still Facing School Costs

    ‘Free Education’ Still Costing FamiliesFamilies Outside ‘EUp’ Still Facing School Costs

    A heated political clash has erupted in Belize over the country’s flagship education access reform, with the opposition demanding accountability for hundreds of families trapped in a bureaucratic and financial limbo that threatens students’ academic progress. Opposition Leader Tracy Panton made the explosive allegations this week in a formal press statement, arguing that the ruling government’s repeated claims of expanding free education mask a broken system that still leaves thousands of households grappling with crippling school-related costs.

    Panton revealed that her constituency office in Albert Division has been flooded with urgent appeals from desperate parents over the past weeks. Dozens of families reported their children face being barred from graduation or withheld final report cards because of unpaid outstanding school fees, a penalty that upends years of academic work for young learners. What makes the situation more egregious, Panton emphasized, is that many of these families had already completed the full application process for government tuition assistance through the Ministry of Education. In a number of cases, they even received official commitment letters confirming the government would pay all eligible fees directly to their children’s schools.

    Yet according to the families’ accounts shared with Panton, the schools have yet to receive a single cent of the promised funding, leaving minors and their caregivers caught between unresponsive government bureaucracy and rigid institutional fee policies. Panton pointed out that most of these families are already stretched thin by overlapping cost-of-living crises, navigating skyrocketing grocery prices, rising rent and utility bills, and a host of other unexpected education-related expenses on top of basic needs.

    Beyond the broken payment promises, the opposition leader also called out the proliferation of extra charges that fall outside the scope of the government’s tuition coverage. These additional fees range from mandatory registration and supplementary material costs to graduation fees, institutional mission fees, and required summer program charges, all of which add up to substantial sums that low-income households cannot absorb. Panton also raised alarms about the new online application portal the Ministry of Education rolled out for assistance requests, arguing that the digital system introduces unnecessary red tape and creates new barriers for families without reliable internet access or digital literacy, defeating the purpose of expanding support.

    Framing the crisis as a systemic failure of national priorities, Panton argued that Belize is abandoning its young people and working families if access to quality education remains contingent on a household’s ability to pay.

    For its part, the ruling government has defended its signature policy, the Education Upliftment Project (EUp), marketed under the slogan “Together We Rise,” maintaining that the initiative has dramatically expanded tuition-free access to secondary education across the country, especially at state-run campuses. According to the Ministry of Education, the program launched in the 2022/23 academic year as a pilot at four government-owned secondary schools in southside Belize City, before rolling out to southern Belize and other districts across the nation. By the start of the upcoming 2024/25 academic term, the government projects the program will extend coverage to nearly half of all secondary school students in Belize.

    Education Minister Francis Fonseca confirmed that all students enrolled in government secondary schools now pay no tuition under the EUp initiative, adding that the program also includes extra support for low-income learners: free school uniforms, on-campus meals, transportation stipends, internet access, and personal digital learning devices to close the digital divide.

    The core of the disagreement, however, stems from a critical gap in the program’s design: the Education Upliftment Project primarily extends benefits to government-owned secondary schools, while a large share of Belize’s student population attends grant-aided and church-managed institutions, which operate with separate funding frameworks and retain the authority to set their own fee requirements. This gap leaves thousands of students ineligible for the full free tuition benefits the government repeatedly touts.

    Economists also add a broader contextual layer to the debate: the term “free education” is often a misnomer, as the model is more accurately described as taxpayer-funded or government-subsidized education. All program costs are ultimately covered by Belize’s public revenues drawn from national taxes, so expanding assistance naturally increases the fiscal burden on the country’s national budget and ordinary taxpayers.

  • Global Food Prices Rise Again; Oils and Meat Push Index Higher

    Global Food Prices Rise Again; Oils and Meat Push Index Higher

    After two straight months of gains, global food prices continued their upward climb in April 2026, according to the closely monitored Food Price Index published by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). The monthly benchmark, which tracks price shifts for the world’s five major traded food commodity groups, hit an average of 130.7 points last month. That marks a 1.6% increase from March 2026 and a 2% rise compared to the same period one year earlier. While the sustained upward movement has raised concerns about new food inflation pressures, the current index still sits 18.4% below the all-time record set in March 2022, when the Russia-Ukraine war sent global food markets into unprecedented volatility.

    The April uptick was led by a sharp surge in vegetable oil prices, which jumped 5.9% month-over-month to hit their highest level since July 2022. Growing demand from the global biofuel sector has been the primary catalyst for the rally: palm oil prices have now risen for five straight months, fueled by both rising biofuel adoption and market jitters over shrinking production outputs across major Southeast Asian producing nations. Prices for soy oil and rapeseed oil also trended upward in April, as biofuel production ramped up in the United States and European Union, boosting competing demand for the agricultural commodities.

    Following vegetable oils, the meat category recorded the next largest gain, with the FAO Meat Price Index climbing to a new all-time high in April. Beef prices led the increase, driven by tight cattle supplies in top exporter Brazil and sustained strong international demand, particularly from key importer China. Both poultry and pork prices also moved higher, as ongoing supply chain disruptions and shipping bottlenecks in multiple producing regions kept markets tight.

    Cereal prices posted a more modest 0.8% increase in April, with individual sub-sectors facing their own unique supply-side pressures. Wheat prices rose on the back of ongoing drought concerns across major growing regions of the U.S. and forecasts for below-average rainfall in Australia, another top global exporter. Elevated costs for fertilizers and energy have also led market analysts to anticipate that many farmers may scale back wheat planting in upcoming seasons, adding upward support to prices. Maize prices also climbed, as unfavorable weather outlooks have dampened production projections in Brazil and the U.S. Rice prices increased by 1.9% during the month, as higher energy prices pushed up both transportation and production costs for major exporting nations.

    In contrast to the upward trend across most commodity groups, two categories moved lower in April. The FAO Sugar Price Index fell 4.7% month-over-month, sitting more than 21% below its level from April 2025. The decline stems from widespread expectations of larger global sugar supplies this season, with increased production projected in top producing nations including Brazil, China, and Thailand. Dairy prices also dipped, dropping 1.1% overall, driven by lower prices for butter and cheese as milk supplies expand across major exporting regions in Europe and Oceania.

    For small Central American nation Belize, the latest shifts in global food markets carry mixed economic consequences. As a country that relies heavily on imports for wheat-based products, cooking oils, and many core food commodities, the country is directly exposed to rising international cereal and vegetable oil prices. Higher global costs will likely translate to increased import expenses, upward pressure on domestic food prices, and higher input costs for local livestock producers and food processors.

    At the same time, the ongoing slide in global sugar prices creates fresh challenges for Belize’s domestic sugar industry, which has already been struggling with weak international pricing and shrinking profit margins. The 4.7% April drop in global sugar prices adds further downward pressure on the sector’s revenue and profitability.

    As a leading benchmark for global food commodity markets, the FAO Food Price Index is tracked closely by policymakers, economic analysts, agribusiness leaders, and food producers around the world. It measures monthly price changes for a weighted basket of the most widely traded food commodities, covering cereals, vegetable oils, meat, dairy, and sugar.