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  • Sports Minister Hails Two More CARIFTA Medals as ‘Proud Moment’ for Antigua and Barbuda

    Sports Minister Hails Two More CARIFTA Medals as ‘Proud Moment’ for Antigua and Barbuda

    The annual CARIFTA Games, one of the Caribbean’s most prestigious regional track and field competitions, has delivered another pair of historic moments for Antigua and Barbuda, with two young javelin athletes securing podium finishes that have earned high praise from the nation’s top sports official. Daryll Matthew, the country’s Sports Minister, has publicly extended his warm congratulations to under-20 competitor Maliek Francis and under-17 athlete Zonique Charles, framing their achievements as a source of deep national pride. Francis stepped onto the bronze medal stand in the men’s under-20 javelin event, marking the third medal that Antigua and Barbuda has earned across all competitions at this year’s CARIFTA Games. Minister Matthew highlighted that Francis delivered a disciplined, high-energy performance from start to finish, one that resonated across the small twin-island nation and left sports fans proud of the young athlete’s hard work. Not long after Francis’ landmark finish, Charles followed with an equally impressive showing in the women’s under-17 javelin competition, where she claimed the silver medal to secure Antigua and Barbuda’s fourth medal of the regional championships. Minister Matthew emphasized that Charles’ standout effort left the entire nation celebrating, noting that her consistent training and competitive grit paid off on one of the region’s biggest youth athletic stages. Matthew’s public statements of congratulations come as Antigua and Barbuda continues to build growing momentum throughout the multi-day championships, with young athletes continuing to exceed expectations and deliver historic results for their country.

  • LISTEN: After Alfa Nero Court Win, Browne Warns He Will Retain Top Lawyers if Legal Action Continues Against Him

    LISTEN: After Alfa Nero Court Win, Browne Warns He Will Retain Top Lawyers if Legal Action Continues Against Him

    Antigua and Barbuda Prime Minister Gaston Browne has announced plans to deploy top-tier, high-cost legal representation against his political and legal opponents after securing a favorable ruling from a United States court in the high-profile Alfa Nero yacht appeal case. In a recent public broadcast appearance, the leader doubled down on his stance, warning that any further challenges from his accusers will be met with escalated legal action designed to inflict meaningful financial consequences.\n\nThe legal dispute centered on unsubstantiated claims that Browne and his administration engaged in corrupt practices tied to the sale of the superyacht Alfa Nero, with additional allegations linking the case to questionable Venezuelan oil and gold transactions. Browne has long maintained that these accusations were entirely baseless, framing the entire investigation as a “fishing expedition” launched by his opponents to damage his reputation and undermine his government.\n\nThe recent US court decision brought an end to ongoing discovery proceedings in the case, after a full review of financial records failed to turn up any evidence of wrongdoing on the part of Browne or the government. The court quashed the original subpoena and dismissed the appeal against the prime minister, a outcome Browne calls complete vindication. Despite his accusers having full access to sensitive banking and financial data, investigators were unable to document any improper transactions or misuse of public funds, a result Browne says confirms his long-stated innocence.\n\nWith the case now resolved in his favor, Browne has outlined two key next steps. First, his administration is moving to recover hundreds of thousands of dollars in public funds that were spent to cover legal defense costs, which he justified as appropriate because he was acting in his official capacity as head of government when the allegations were made. Second, Browne has already launched an independent $1 million defamation lawsuit against US-based attorney Martin DeLuca and his law firm, seeking damages for the reputational harm he claims he sustained as a result of the false allegations.\n\nLooking ahead, Browne issued a stark warning to any opponents considering continuing to challenge the court ruling. He stated that if accusers choose to pursue further litigation, he will retain what he called “the most expensive lawyers in the world” to counter their claims, with the explicit goal of ensuring any resulting legal costs levied against his opponents are severe enough to “hurt them.” The prime minister emphasized that the court’s decision has permanently validated his position that no laws were broken and no public money was misused in the Alfa Nero transaction.

  • Man to appear in court over fatal Bank Hall fire

    Man to appear in court over fatal Bank Hall fire

    Authorities in St Michael have levied serious criminal charges against a local man in connection with the death of 51-year-old Shanell Smith and a deliberate house fire that led to the discovery of her body.

    The 54-year-old suspect, a resident of Bank Hall where the incident unfolded, faces two counts: arson and murder. The tragedy unfolded on March 27, when emergency services responded to a raging residential fire in the Bank Hall neighborhood. After crews successfully extinguished the blaze, they made the grim discovery of Smith’s body inside the damaged property.

    The accused has been identified as Ricardo Okella Stanford. He is set to make his first court appearance before District ‘A’ Criminal Court on April 7, where legal proceedings in the case will formally get underway. Local authorities confirmed the details of the charges and upcoming court date in an official statement.

  • Daryll Matthew Highlights Continued Roadworks in Creekside and Nut Grove

    Daryll Matthew Highlights Continued Roadworks in Creekside and Nut Grove

    Ongoing infrastructure upgrade initiatives are transforming transportation networks across multiple residential communities, with local political candidate Daryll S. Matthew, who is running for the St John’s Rural South seat, releasing the latest progress updates for two key project sites: Creekside and Nut Grove. In a public statement shared this Monday, Matthew confirmed that construction teams have maintained consistent momentum on road improvement works in the Creekside region. He framed the ongoing construction as a core component of a broader pledge to deliver transportation infrastructure that meets the needs of local residents, prioritizing enhanced safety and durability for daily commutes and local travel. Beyond Creekside, Matthew also reported that rehabilitation and upgrade projects in Nut Grove are advancing on schedule, with no major delays reported to date that would disrupt the project timeline. These targeted works form part of a larger constituency-wide push to overhaul aging road networks. For years, local residents have raised consistent concerns about deteriorating road conditions and underfunded community infrastructure, prompting authorities to launch a series of coordinated rehabilitation projects to address these long-standing grievances. As construction teams continue their work across both sites, additional public updates on project milestones, timeline adjustments, and completion dates will be released to keep local communities informed.

  • Pope to Trump: ‘Find a Way Out of War’

    Pope to Trump: ‘Find a Way Out of War’

    In a high-profile public intervention ahead of the 2026 Easter holiday, Pope Leo XIV — the first American-born pontiff in the history of the Catholic Church — has issued a direct appeal to former U.S. President Donald Trump to seek a diplomatic exit from rapidly escalating tensions between the United States and Iran. The rare public naming of a sitting U.S. leader by the pontiff marks a significant shift in the Vatican’s public engagement with the ongoing crisis, according to details of the pope’s comments shared during a recent CNN interview.

    Speaking amid the solemn observances of Holy Week, the Pope used his traditional Urbi et Orbi address, delivered to millions of faithful around the globe, to ramp up his push for global peace amid growing fears of open conflict. He centered his appeal on the urgent need for an “off-ramp” from confrontation, urging political and military leaders with the power to authorize armed conflict to choose diplomacy over violence. “Let those who have weapons lay them down,” the pontiff stated. “Let those who have the power to unleash wars choose peace.”

    Pope Leo XIV also pushed back firmly against emerging rhetoric that frames the escalating standoff through a religious lens, arguing that religious justifications for war have no place in Christian teaching. “Jesus is the King of Peace, who rejects war,” he emphasized. “He does not listen to the prayers of those who wage war but rejects them.” The pontiff further warned of a dangerous growing global indifference to widespread violence, noting that prolonged conflict has numbed global publics to the human cost of armed confrontation.

    Senior leaders across the Catholic Church have quickly voiced their unified support for the Pope’s stance. Cardinal Robert McElroy publicly cautioned against claims of divine backing for the conflict, describing it as morally unjustified. Archbishop Timothy Broglio, meanwhile, raised pointed questions about the legal and ethical foundation of pre-emptive military action against Iran, aligning with the Pope’s call for negotiated de-escalation.

  • Brooklyn Lyttle Leaps to Gold for Belize at CARIFTA 2026

    Brooklyn Lyttle Leaps to Gold for Belize at CARIFTA 2026

    As the 53rd edition of the CARIFTA Games wrapped up its three-day run at Grenada’s Kirani James Athletics Stadium on April 6, 2026, young Belizean athlete Brooklyn Lyttle delivered a historic, standout performance that put her nation firmly on the regional athletics map.

    Competing in the Girls’ Under-20 Long Jump event, Lyttle launched herself to a winning distance of 6.16 meters, a result that outpaced all competing athletes from across the Caribbean. Rivka Goede from Curaçao secured the silver medal with a jump of 5.80 meters, while Seannah Parsons of Trinidad and Tobago rounded out the top three, taking home bronze with a 5.76-meter leap.

    The news of Lyttle’s victory was quickly celebrated across Belize, with the Belize Olympic and Commonwealth Games Association issuing an official public statement on social media Sunday to honor the young champion. “Congratulations to Brooklyn Lyttle on winning GOLD in the Long Jump at CARIFTA 2026! An incredible achievement and a proud moment for Belize, your hard work, talent, and determination truly paid off! Way to represent, champion!” the association wrote.

    First launched decades ago, the CARIFTA Games stand as the Caribbean’s most prestigious annual junior track and field competition, drawing rising athletic talent from more than 20 member nations across the region. This year’s tournament ran from April 4 to 6, 2026, with Lyttle’s gold marking a landmark win that strengthens Belize’s growing profile in regional junior sports. For the small Central American and Caribbean nation, Lyttle’s victory is more than a single medal—it is a testament to the dedication of young emerging athletes and a moment of national pride that resonates far beyond the athletics stadium.

  • OP-ED: Sport is a universal language which serves as a powerful catalyst for social transformation

    OP-ED: Sport is a universal language which serves as a powerful catalyst for social transformation

    Against a backdrop of growing global fragmentation, the United Nations is gearing up to mark the 2026 International Day of Sport for Development and Peace (IDSDP) on April 6, shining a spotlight on sport’s unique, underrecognized power to drive cross-border solidarity, advance inclusive development, and break down systemic barriers.

    For decades, global leaders and development experts have framed sport as far more than a recreational pastime. The United Nations has long championed it as a transformative social force: even amid active conflict and deep political divisions, athletic activity creates neutral, shared space that connects communities across generational and national divides, eases isolation for marginalized groups, and fosters the dialogue, mutual respect, and solidarity that form the foundation of cooperation between nations. This unrivaled reach, universal popularity, and inherent foundation of positive values are what led the UN General Assembly to formally establish April 6 as a global observance of sport’s contributions to global peace and development.

    The 2026 IDSDP theme, “Sport: Building Bridges, Breaking Barriers,” amplifies growing international recognition of sport’s positive impact on advancing human rights, inclusive economic progress, and social equity. This year’s observance will center evidence-based strategies and proven best practices that demonstrate how sport delivers measurable progress toward the 2030 UN Agenda for Sustainable Development, with a particular focus on advancing public health, gender equality, reduced inequality, and inclusive, peaceful societies. Through cross-sector dialogue, collaborative partnerships, and shared community experiences, IDSDP 2026 will reaffirm sport’s role as a strategic development tool: one that connects diverse groups of people and dismantles barriers to full inclusion, upholding the core promise of the 2030 Agenda to leave no one behind.

    Concrete examples of sport’s unifying power stretch across decades and regions. For many, Jamaica’s historic 1998 FIFA World Cup qualification remains a defining example of how athletic achievement can rally an entire nation. When the Reggae Boyz secured their spot in the tournament, long-standing social divisions that typically split the country fell away, and the entire population united behind the team. Moments like these—when national flags are raised and anthems played at international competitions—forge a shared sense of national pride that transcends class, regional, and political divides.

    Closer to home for Caribbean nations, the annual CARIFTA Games stands as a long-running model of sport-driven regional integration. Founded in 1972 by then Amateur Athletic Association of Barbados president Austin Sealy, the games were launched to mark the transition from the Caribbean Free Trade Association (CARIFTA) to the Caribbean Community (CARICOM), with a core mission of strengthening ties between the region’s English-speaking countries. Held every Easter over three days, the games host more than 150 track and field competitions ranging from sprints and hurdles to jumping, throwing, and relay events. For half a century, the event has served as a foundational vehicle for regional integration, cross-border cooperation, peace, and inclusion across CARICOM member states.

    At the global level, the United Nations’ Football for the Goals (FFTG) initiative leverages football’s unmatched global reach to advance the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). As a membership-based platform, FFTG brings together the entire global football ecosystem—from grassroots community clubs and local nonprofits to professional leagues and international confederations—to align their strategies, messaging, and operations with SDG aspirations. The initiative supports organizations to build on existing sustainability work and implement SDG-aligned strategies that drive tangible behavioral change, while also leveraging member organizations’ global visibility to raise public awareness of the 2030 Agenda.

    As the global community prepares to commemorate IDSDP 2026, development educator and commentator Wayne Campbell, the author of this analysis, is calling for urgent policy shifts to unlock sport’s full potential. Campbell emphasizes that governments worldwide must increase public investment in youth athletic development, and reframe school physical education to align with UN sustainable development objectives. Too often, he notes, physical education is sidelined as an afterthought, receiving little funding or policy attention—an oversight that must be corrected to align school sports with broader national development and peacebuilding goals.

    Campbell argues that development efforts must move beyond outdated top-down models to incorporate bottom-up, collaborative approaches that engage all stakeholders. The core goal of development, he notes, is to create an enabling environment where all people can build long, healthy, creative lives, so intentional partnerships with communities are essential. Nations must also recognize that athletes are national treasures that deserve targeted investment and support.

    This focus on sport as a peacebuilding tool is rooted in centuries of tradition. The ancient Greek practice of ekecheiria, or the Olympic Truce, dates back to the 8th century BCE, and was revived by the International Olympic Committee in 1992. Today, a UN General Assembly resolution urges all member states to observe the truce from seven days before the opening of each Olympic Games through seven days after the Games close. The 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda, adopted by global leaders in 2015, formally reaffirmed sport as a critical enabler of sustainable development, aligning with the Olympic movement’s core mission to build a more peaceful future through athletic education. The Games bring together athletes from every corner of the globe, advancing the shared UN and Olympic goals of peace, mutual understanding, and global goodwill.

    As the world marks the 2026 IDSDP, the words of Nelson Mandela remain as relevant as ever: Sport has the power to change the world. It has the power to inspire, and to unite people in a way few other forces can. It speaks to young people in a language they understand, and it can create hope where once there was only despair.

  • Annalisa Brown returns to CARIFTA podium with 1,500 m Bronze

    Annalisa Brown returns to CARIFTA podium with 1,500 m Bronze

    The 53rd edition of the CARIFTA Games, the premier regional track and field competition for Caribbean athletes, got off to a memorable start for host nation Grenada on opening day, as local middle-distance talent Annalisa Brown from Boca Secondary School claimed a podium finish that cemented her status as one of the country’s rising young stars.

    Brown delivered a career-best performance in the women’s under-20 1,500-meter final, crossing the finish line in 4:46 to secure the bronze medal. This marked the second regional CARIFTA medal of the young athlete’s career, and the second medal won by host nation Grenada across all events on the competition’s opening day.

    The bronze medal finish also marked Brown’s triumphant return to the CARIFTA podium, two years after her successful regional debut at the 2024 championships, where she earned another bronze in the 800-meter event. Her consistent progression across multiple distances underscores the steady improvement and targeted training that have positioned her as one of the most promising middle- and long-distance runners in the region.

    Leading into the 2026 CARIFTA Games, Brown turned heads with a dominant showing at the 2026 InterCol Games, where she swept an unprecedented five individual event titles. Her stunning performance in the domestic competition included gold medals in the 200m (24.51), 400m (56.24, a new meet record), 800m (2:29.20), 1,500m (5:21.48) and 3,000m (11:51.14), proving her versatility and endurance across a wide range of distances.

    Brown’s campaign at the 2026 CARIFTA Games is far from over. She is scheduled to compete in the 800-meter event on the championship’s second day, a race where she already has a proven track record of regional success and currently holds the domestic title. With her opening-day momentum and personal best confidence boost, she enters the 800m as one of the top contenders in what is expected to be a highly competitive field.

    As the host country for this year’s CARIFTA Games, Grenada has already celebrated two podium finishes in the early stages of the competition, with Brown’s bronze playing a key part in the nation’s strong start on home soil.

  • National Soca Fraternity Calls Meeting for Artists and Stakeholders on April 8

    National Soca Fraternity Calls Meeting for Artists and Stakeholders on April 8

    The National Soca Fraternity of Antigua and Barbuda (NSF) has issued a broad call to all soca music creators and industry stakeholders to participate in its upcoming general meeting, which will take place at 7:00 p.m. on Wednesday, April 8, hosted at Dele’s Restaurant and Bar. Originally planned for Tuesday, April 7, the gathering was pushed back one day due to unforeseen logistical challenges outside of the organizing body’s control.

    As the governing body for the Caribbean nation’s soca community, the NSF has stressed that attendance at this meeting carries significant weight for the long-term growth and strategic direction of the local soca sector. Leaders of the NSF Executive Board have underscored that broad participation from across the industry is not just welcomed, but essential, as the organization works to deepen engagement with its member base, reinforce community bonds, and build a stronger, more cohesive national soca fraternity that can better support artists and industry professionals across the country.

  • Naeem Simon Shows Grit and Promise in U17 High Jump at CARIFTA

    Naeem Simon Shows Grit and Promise in U17 High Jump at CARIFTA

    One of Antigua and Barbuda’s rising young track and field talents, Naeem Simon, has wrapped up his competition at the CARIFTA Games, claiming 11th position in the fiercely contested Under-17 boys’ high jump event. Competing against the most promising young high jump prospects from across the Caribbean region during the afternoon competition slate, Simon stepped onto the regional stage with clear focus, carrying the hopes of his home nation and holding his own against elite-level youth competition.

    Though he did not claim a podium finish, Simon’s performance drew widespread praise from the Antigua Barbuda Athletic Association, the governing body for track and field in the country. In an official statement released following the event, the association highlighted the 17-year-old competitor’s remarkable determination and grit throughout every round of the contest.

    The association emphasized that high-level youth competitions like the CARIFTA Games are critical stepping stones for emerging athletes, noting that every attempt, every jump, and every moment of competition contributes to an athlete’s long-term growth. For Simon, the association stressed, this appearance at one of the region’s most prestigious youth athletic events is just the starting point of what promises to be a promising athletic career.

    In closing, the association extended encouragement to Simon as he continues his training and athletic development, urging him to maintain his drive and commitment. “Keep pushing, keep rising. The future is bright,” the statement read, underscoring the confidence that local sporting officials have in Simon’s potential to achieve greater success in upcoming competitions.