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  • Team Saint Lucia set for Pan Am Swimming in Colombia

    Team Saint Lucia set for Pan Am Swimming in Colombia

    As the second edition of the PanAm Aquatics Swimming Championships approaches, the Saint Lucia Aquatics Federation has announced its competitive roster: an eight-member delegation of talented swimmers primed to compete against the region’s best at the Hernando Arbeláez Jiménez Olympic Swimming Pools in Ibagué, Colombia. Running from July 8 to 12, this year’s tournament has attracted more than 500 athletes from 31 countries and territories across the Americas, marking one of the largest regional aquatics competitions on the 2026 calendar.

    Saint Lucia’s participation in the championships has grown dramatically since the island nation made its debut appearance in 2025. That year, then-rookie Jayden Xu made history by claiming a bronze medal in the men’s 50-meter backstroke, becoming the first Saint Lucian to podium at the event. Just 12 months later, the country’s national team has more than doubled in size, a shift that reflects growing investment and rising interest in competitive swimming across the island.

    For 2026, Xu returns to the championship looking to improve on his 2025 result, where he finished fourth in the 100m backstroke after his opening bronze. He will compete in the 50m and 100m backstroke, 200m backstroke, and 400m freestyle. Joining Xu on the men’s roster are Olympian Mikaili Charlemagne, CARIFTA gold medalist Tyler Dantes, Jase Daniel, and Caden Calderon, each bringing a diverse range of strengths across multiple strokes and distances.

    Charlemagne, who represented Saint Lucia at the Olympic Games, will focus on sprint events: the 50m and 100m freestyle and butterfly. Dantes, a rising young talent, carries the busiest individual schedule of any team member, with races scheduled in the 50m and 100m freestyle, 50m butterfly, and all three backstroke distances (50m, 100m, and 200m). Daniel will contest four freestyle events spanning 50m to 400m, plus three butterfly races from 50m to 200m, while Calderon will compete across freestyle, butterfly, breaststroke, and backstroke, closing out his individual schedule with the 200m individual medley.

    The women’s side of the delegation features three of the Caribbean’s most promising young swimming stars, all gold medalists from the recent CARIFTA Aquatics Championships: Sapphire Parks, Maya Andrew, and Fayth Jeffrey. At just 12 years old, Parks has already established herself as one of the region’s top young competitors, earning back-to-back high point honors in the 11-12 girls division at CARIFTA. For the PanAm Championships, she will compete in six events: 100m and 200m backstroke, 100m and 200m butterfly, 200m breaststroke, and both the 200m and 400m individual medley.

    Andrew will turn her focus to sprint freestyle and butterfly, plus multiple breaststroke distances, racing the 50m freestyle, 50m butterfly, and 50m, 100m, and 200m breaststroke. Jeffrey, who trains based in the United States, will compete in the 50m and 100m divisions of both freestyle and breaststroke.

    Beyond individual events, Saint Lucia will field two mixed relay squads for the tournament. Parks, Andrew, Dantes, and Daniel will team up for the 4x100m mixed medley relay on July 9, followed by the 4x100m mixed freestyle relay on July 11. Leading the delegation is head coach Brian Charles, supported by assistant coach Jonathan Calderon and chaperone Sariah Daniel, who will oversee the team’s preparations and logistics throughout the championship. For a small island nation with a fast-growing aquatics program, this year’s expanded roster represents a major milestone, with fans across Saint Lucia eager to see how their young athletes perform against elite regional competition.

  • WhatsApp to let users go by usernames, not phone numbers

    WhatsApp to let users go by usernames, not phone numbers

    One of the world’s most widely used messaging platforms, WhatsApp, is closing one of its longest-standing privacy vulnerabilities by rolling out a new feature that will allow users to connect with others exclusively through custom usernames, eliminating the mandatory requirement to share personal phone numbers to connect on the app. With over 3 billion active users across the globe, the Meta-owned social platform announced the update on Monday, opening up early reservations for unique usernames ahead of a full global rollout scheduled for later this year.

    WhatsApp product vice president Alice Newton-Rox told reporters that the new functionality has been built as a core privacy-focused feature, designed to put greater control of personal information into users’ hands. Unlike many social platforms that maintain public searchable directories of usernames and offer autocomplete search suggestions, WhatsApp’s system will be intentionally restricted: new contacts will only be able to reach a user if they know their exact username, cutting down on unwanted outreach from strangers who have obtained a user’s phone number through public or unscrupulous means.

    For years, WhatsApp has offered full end-to-end encryption for all communications across its smartphone, tablet and desktop versions, but the platform has carried a key privacy flaw: any user who possesses another person’s phone number can contact them directly on the app, regardless of whether they know the user personally. Up until this announcement, the platform’s only privacy tools to counter unwanted contact have been limited to blocking individual users and muting calls from unknown numbers, which many users have criticized as insufficient for protecting personal privacy.

    While the platform remains far less popular than native SMS texting in the United States, it has become a dominant communication tool across Europe, Asia, Latin America, Africa and most other regions globally, making this privacy update impactful for a huge swath of the global population. The company has already kicked off early reservations for usernames, a move designed to accommodate the expected rush for catchy, desirable handles that are highly sought after on digital platforms. Newton-Rox explained the decision to open early reservations, noting that high demand for popular usernames was the key driver for opening access ahead of the full feature launch.

    The platform has put rules in place to protect users from impersonation: usernames must fall between 3 and 35 characters, and the service will reserve high-profile handles for public figures, celebrities, government entities and notable organizations to prevent bad actors from impersonating prominent people or groups. No exact full launch date has been announced, with the company only confirming that the full functionality will roll out to all users in the coming months.

  • Suriname en Panama verkennen intensievere samenwerking op handel en investeringen

    Suriname en Panama verkennen intensievere samenwerking op handel en investeringen

    Two Latin American and Caribbean nations, Suriname and Panama, have laid the groundwork for deeper economic collaboration during a working visit by a Surinamese delegation to Panama’s investment and trade promotion body, ProPanama. The delegation was led by Melvin Bouva, Suriname’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, International Trade and Cooperation, who traveled to the country to explore new partnership opportunities across trade, logistics, cross-border investment, and special economic zone development. The entire visit was centered on strengthening bilateral economic ties and sharing specialized knowledge around trade expansion and logistics infrastructure growth. Minister Bouva opened discussions by highlighting Panama’s unique strategic value as a leading regional trade and logistics hub. For Suriname, which is currently entering a transformative new economic phase driven by the rapid expansion of its offshore oil and gas sector, Panama’s decades of experience in managing trade and logistics hubs offers critical, actionable insights, Bouva noted. “Panama’s progress over the years offers valuable lessons for nations like Suriname that are looking to expand their own trade-focused economic sectors,” the minister stated during the visit. A core highlight of the delegation’s itinerary was a guided tour and in-depth briefing at the Colón Free Trade Zone, one of the largest free trade zones in the entire Latin American and Caribbean region. During the stop, Suriname’s delegation gained first-hand insight into how the zone is organized, its advanced logistics infrastructure, and the strategies Panama has used to attract consistent foreign direct investment. Stretching across more than 1,064 hectares of land, the Colón Free Trade Zone currently has approximately 280 hectares of undeveloped space reserved for future expansion, and offers participating businesses a wide range of tax and customs incentives to operate from the location. Talks between the two sides also included a focus on building a formal partnership between ProPanama and the Suriname Investment and Trade Agency (SITA), Suriname’s national trade and investment promotion body. According to Suriname’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, International Trade and Cooperation, the proposed partnership will prioritize four core areas: cross-institutional knowledge sharing, joint development of special economic zones, and collective efforts to boost two-way trade and cross-border investment between the two nations. This working visit aligns with both countries’ broader long-term strategy to expand and deepen their economic relations. The ministry emphasized that the discussions with ProPanama leadership and the on-site visit to the Colón Free Trade Zone mark a tangible, concrete step toward closer collaboration that will unlock new opportunities for entrepreneurs and investors based in both Suriname and Panama. Going forward, both sides are expected to continue working through their respective trade agencies to turn the initial agreements from the visit into actionable projects that deliver mutual economic growth.

  • Implementing on the Global Governance Initiative, Advancing a More Just and Equitable Global Governance System

    Implementing on the Global Governance Initiative, Advancing a More Just and Equitable Global Governance System

    In an op-ed shared with audiences in Antigua and Barbuda, H.E. Jiang Wei, China’s Ambassador to the Caribbean nation, outlined the core vision and practical progress of China’s approach to global governance, tied to the June 2026 release of China’s new white paper *More Just and Equitable Global Governance: China’s Principles, Proposals and Actions*.

    Today’s international order stands at an inflection point, shaped by the most profound systemic shifts in a century. Peace and development, long held as the shared goals of the global community, now face unprecedented headwinds. Geopolitical frictions have intensified, sparking armed conflicts across multiple regions, while growing global economic fragmentation has choked off inclusive development pathways. Compounding these challenges, overlapping crises are accumulating at an accelerated pace, with new threats emerging in rapid succession. Unilateral power grabs and hegemonic interference have inflicted deep damage on the global order, flagrantly flouting international law and the long-accepted basic norms that govern cross-border relations.

    Against this backdrop, anti-globalization sentiment and protectionist policies are gaining traction, as economic and trade issues are increasingly politicized, turned into strategic tools, and even weaponized for geopolitical gain. The existing global governance framework has failed to keep pace with shifting global demographics, rising power of the Global South, and emerging transnational challenges, leaving its structural gaps and inequities increasingly impossible to ignore.

    This moment demands a fundamental reset of global governance: a new model that is more inclusive, fair, and sustainable, one that centers the underrepresented voices of Global South nations that have long been sidelined in key global decision-making processes.

    The framework for this reset was first laid out in September 2025, when Chinese President Xi Jinping launched the Global Governance Initiative (GGI), a comprehensive Chinese proposal that addresses the two defining questions of our era: what kind of global governance system the world needs, and how this system can be reformed and improved to meet modern challenges.

    Since its launch, the initiative has quickly garnered broad international buy-in, earning the support of nearly 160 countries and international organizations, with more than 60 nations joining the GGI’s Group of Friends to advance collaborative implementation.

    At its core, the GGI is built on five foundational principles. First, it enshrines sovereign equality as the non-negotiable starting point for all global governance. Every nation, regardless of its size, military power, or economic wealth, is entitled to have its sovereignty and national dignity respected, and to have an equal voice in decision-making and an equal share of the benefits of global cooperation. Second, it upholds international rule of law as the fundamental safeguard for fair governance. Only a system rooted in consistent, universally applied rule of law can deliver a level playing field for all nations’ development and build a truly just international order. Third, it advances multilateralism as the core path forward, urging all countries to uphold the principle of extensive consultation, joint contribution and shared benefits, protect the central coordinating role of the United Nations in global affairs, and prioritize multilateral dialogue and cooperative problem-solving. Fourth, it anchors global governance in a people-centered value framework, recognizing that the citizens of all countries are the true actors in global governance, and that improving public well-being is the ultimate goal of all collective action. Reform of global governance must deliver greater fulfillment, security and well-being for people across every region. Fifth, it prioritizes practical problem-solving as a key guiding principle, emphasizing that effective global governance must deliver tangible solutions to the real challenges facing nations today.

    Unlike many global initiatives that remain only words on paper, China has positioned itself as both a leading advocate and active implementer of the GGI. In the area of common security, China is a major contributor to UN peacekeeping operations: it is the second largest contributor to the UN peacekeeping budget and the largest provider of peacekeeping troops among the permanent members of the UN Security Council, and has developed a distinctive, dialogue-centered approach to de-escalating long-running international flashpoints. In pursuit of greater global fairness, China has driven the historic expansion of the BRICS bloc, supported the growth of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), backed the African Union’s gaining full membership in the G20, and launched and advanced a open, inclusive initiative for Global South cooperation. Through eight targeted support measures, China is helping Global South nations collectively advance along sustainable pathways to modernization. To foster greater global solidarity, China initiated and led the establishment of the International Organization for Mediation, filling a long-standing gap in global conflict mediation infrastructure. It has also convened the Conference on Dialogue of Asian Civilizations and the Ancient Civilizations Forum to build bridges of mutual understanding and learning across different cultural traditions. On the governance of emerging global challenges, China established the Kunming Biodiversity Fund to support global conservation action, and launched the Global Initiative on Data Security and the Global AI Governance Initiative to help develop inclusive, fair governance frameworks for these emerging domains.

    Global governance is a collective endeavor that requires constant forward progress; in an era of turbulence, standing still means falling backward. Today, as the world enters a new period of turbulent transformation, there is a greater need than ever to revitalize inclusive multilateralism, uphold universal international rule of law, and build a more effective global governance system. China stands ready to work side by side with the government and people of Antigua and Barbuda to deepen multilateral cooperation, advance the GGI’s goals through the principle of shared consultation, contribution and benefit, and jointly build a more just and equitable global governance system for all.

  • RCA donates $10,000 to UWI Five Islands Campus as part of yearly scholarship programme

    RCA donates $10,000 to UWI Five Islands Campus as part of yearly scholarship programme

    A long-running commitment to nurturing young talent in Antigua and Barbuda has taken concrete form, as the Rotary Club of Antigua (RCA) has formalized a new contribution to the University of the West Indies Five Islands Campus (UWIFIC) through an EC$10,000 cheque donation. The gift, which forms part of the club’s ongoing scholarship programme and deepens its long-standing institutional partnership with the university, was presented during an intimate ceremony hosted at Rotary House.

    The donation was officially received by Adeola Matthew, manager of the Student Retention and Success Unit under UWIFIC’s Office of the Campus Registrar. Speaking on behalf of the service organization, RCA President Elisa Graham emphasized that access to quality education has remained a core strategic priority for Rotary globally, and specifically for the Antigua chapter, which views educational investment as foundational to Antigua and Barbuda’s long-term prosperity.

    Graham noted, “The Rotary Club of Antigua is proud to continue its partnership with the University of the West Indies Five Islands Campus through this scholarship contribution. We believe that education is one of the most powerful tools for transforming lives and strengthening communities. This donation reflects our ongoing commitment to supporting students as they pursue their academic and professional aspirations.”

    The RCA president also extended public recognition to the all-volunteer scholarship committee, which spearheaded the initiative. Led by two past RCA presidents, Dr. Vanetta Rodgers and Dr. Errol Samuel, the committee also includes Rotarians Nabia Burton and Yasmine Ephraim. Graham credited the group’s consistent dedication and hard work for turning the annual scholarship commitment into a reality for students.

    In her response, Matthew expressed heartfelt gratitude for the club’s sustained investment in the campus’ student body. She highlighted that financial scholarship support does more than offset tuition costs—it directly improves student retention outcomes and raises overall graduation rates, opening pathways for economic mobility for young people across the country.

    “Partnerships like this demonstrate the power of community,” Matthew said. “The Club’s continued scholarship support has had a measurable impact on student success and retention, helping to ensure that more students can complete their studies and build brighter futures.”

    For the Rotary Club of Antigua, this donation is just one part of a decades-long legacy of local community impact. The organization has consistently prioritized educational projects, youth leadership development, and community infrastructure initiatives across Antigua and Barbuda, aligned with Rotary International’s global mission of service above self. Looking ahead, RCA says it plans to deepen its collaborative relationship with UWIFIC and continue investing in the development of Antigua and Barbuda’s next generation of leaders.

  • Supreme Court shuts down Trump’s effort to end birthright citizenship for millions

    Supreme Court shuts down Trump’s effort to end birthright citizenship for millions

    On a landmark Tuesday ruling that reverberated across American political and immigration circles, the US Supreme Court struck down a signature executive order from former President Donald Trump that sought to upend decades of established legal interpretation around birthright citizenship. The policy, which was a core plank of Trump’s presidential agenda even as legal experts widely questioned its constitutionality from its inception, has now been formally invalidated by the nation’s highest court.

    This outcome marks a notable political defeat for Trump, who centered much of his election campaign on curbing so-called “birth tourism” and made restrictive immigration policy — targeting both unauthorized and legal immigration — a defining priority of his second term in office. The court’s ruling leaves intact the long-standing legal principle that has guided American citizenship for more than a century: any person born within the territorial boundaries of the United States automatically qualifies for citizenship, regardless of the immigration status of their parents.

    Chief Justice John Roberts penned the majority opinion for the court, which drew bipartisan support from both conservative and liberal justices. Three prominent conservative members of the bench — Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, and Neil Gorsuch — broke with the majority to issue a dissent against the ruling.

    In his authoritative opinion reflecting the court’s majority position, Roberts emphasized the foundational role of citizenship in American democratic life. “Citizenship, then and now, was the right to have rights — to freely participate in our political community,” Roberts wrote. “The Framers of the Fourteenth Amendment extended that promise to ‘every free-born person in this land.’ We keep that promise today.”

  • Fishing leaders press for urgent upgrades, fair pricing

    Fishing leaders press for urgent upgrades, fair pricing

    Two leading Barbadian fishing industry associations have issued an urgent plea to the national government for targeted interventions to fix crumbling infrastructure, update outdated equipment, and implement internal pricing reforms, as mounting challenges threaten the sustainability of the sector and drive up consumer costs for fresh seafood. The heads of both the Oistins Fisherfolk Association and the Paynes Bay Fisherfolk Association outlined overlapping and unique challenges facing their coastal communities during recent discussions with government officials, calling for swift action to protect livelihoods and make fish accessible to local consumers.

    Neil Cougar Bourne, president of the Oistins Fisherfolk Association, opened with a breakdown of the critical utility failures plaguing the iconic Berinda Cox Fish Market that have brought daily operations and vessel maintenance to a standstill. The jetty that serves as the hub for the market currently lacks access to consistent electricity and running water, forcing fishers to improvise solutions for even basic tasks like repairing damaged vessels. “Our challenge is clear: we need power restored to the jetty, we need upgraded utility lines run out to the docking area, and at minimum we need functional 220-volt plugs for work,” Bourne explained. “If a fishing vessel needs emergency repairs and a mechanic comes out, we can’t do the work without power right at the dock.”

    According to Bourne, the issue was raised directly during a recent meeting with a government minister, who has committed to conducting an on-site inspection of the facility to assess the full scope of repairs needed. Beyond restoring basic utilities, Bourne emphasized the urgent need for climate-resilient infrastructure upgrades, after severe tropical weather destroyed three on-site storage structures in recent years. To avoid repeated losses, he proposed constructing a collapsible diesel storage station that can be moved or disassembled ahead of major storm events, rather than rebuilding permanent structures that are vulnerable to damage.

    The Oistins market also faces a critical disruption to its cold supply chain from a broken commercial ice machine. While a smaller backup unit remains operational, it only produces enough ice to keep catches fresh on fishing vessels, leaving onshore vendors without the stock they need to preserve product for consumers. When addressing growing calls from some fishers to extend natural gas fuel lines directly to the jetty, Bourne urged careful consideration, warning that the plan carries unacceptable safety risks. He noted that natural gas is far more flammable than the diesel currently used, and the prevalence of smoking among many fishers creates a major hazard for explosions or fires at the docking area.

    Bourne also raised a longer-term challenge facing the entire industry: attracting and training younger generations of fishers, while avoiding overreliance on digital navigation tools. Reflecting on his own early career, when he mastered traditional open-sea navigation techniques before GPS became widespread, he warned that young fishers who depend entirely on technology put themselves at severe risk if their equipment fails far from shore.

    On the island’s West Coast, the Paynes Bay Fisherfolk Association is grappling with its own set of economic and infrastructural challenges, which association president Eulene Haynes says cannot be blamed solely on annual hurricane season disruptions to supply. Haynes pointed to a shrinking active fishing fleet, widespread ice shortages, and inflated retail prices that are pushing local consumers away from buying fresh seafood. “Barbadians are traditional fish eaters – we love our fish, and people want to buy it locally,” Haynes explained. “But the constant high prices keep turning people away, even when they want to purchase.”

    Haynes added that unregulated pricing practices among some vendors worsen the issue, with many failing to pass lower costs onto consumers when there is a surplus of fresh catch. “When we have a glut of fish and wholesale prices drop, some vendors keep their retail prices artificially high, so the savings never reach the consumer,” she said. Beyond pricing reform, Haynes is calling for government support to redevelop underused public space in Paynes Bay, specifically clearing out a long-abandoned bar on association land to repurpose it for community and commercial use.

    She noted that Paynes Bay holds important historical significance as the original hub of Barbados’ popular fish fry culture, decades before the Oistins market grew to national prominence. Haynes hopes that redeveloping the vacant space will allow the community to revive the vibrant nightly fish fry economy that once drew locals and tourists alike, boosting incomes for local fishers and vendors. “We started this tradition here – long before Oistins became the go-to spot, we had dozens of small huts and a thriving night scene,” Haynes said. “We want to reclaim this space, bring back our weekly night markets, and redevelop the area for the next generation.”

  • OPEN LETTER: To the Chairman of the Electoral Commission and the Chief Elections Officer

    OPEN LETTER: To the Chairman of the Electoral Commission and the Chief Elections Officer

    On June 30, 2026, Dominican public figure Gregor Nassief delivered an open letter to the Chairman of Dominica’s Electoral Commission, Duncan Stowe, and Chief Elections Officer Anthea Joseph, demanding a full public accounting of the body’s handling of the 2025 landmark electoral reform legislation. The letter raises 20 targeted questions addressing persistent legal and procedural gaps that have sown widespread public uncertainty around upcoming elections, including the pending Roseau North by-election, and the overall integrity of the island’s electoral system.

    In 2025, Dominica’s legislature passed two sweeping pieces of electoral reform: the *Registration of Electors Act 2025* and the *House of Assembly Elections Act 2025*. The new framework introduced a series of critical changes designed to strengthen electoral credibility: a system of continuous voter registration, a formal confirmation process for existing registered voters, expanded powers to investigate voter residency compliance, a mandate for issuing official voter ID cards, updated rules governing polling conduct, equal access requirements for state-owned media, clearer definitions of electoral offenses, and formal accreditation processes for independent election observers. To date, Nassief argues, the Electoral Commission has failed to implement these reforms in a transparent, lawful, and independent manner, leaving core legal questions unanswered.

    Nassief’s first set of questions centers on voter registration, local elections, and voter ID card distribution. He questions why the commission suspended all new voter registration from March 19, 2025, to March 9, 2026, despite the 2025 act explicitly establishing a regime of continuous registration, and why the public received no advance warning that the body was unprepared to roll out the new law. He also asks the commission to publicly assess how this suspension impacted local government elections held during the period, which the new law explicitly covers. Additional questions address the ongoing failure to issue required voter ID cards to approved registrants, despite the law mandating ID issuance and framing oath-based voting at polling places as a limited exception, not a permanent replacement, and why the commission failed to alert parliament and the public of its lack of operational readiness before the law entered into force.

    A second block of questions probes allegations of political interference and threats to the commission’s institutional independence. Nassief asks whether the commission itself formally requested external electoral assistance from the Commonwealth Secretariat, Organization of American States, Organization of Eastern Caribbean States, and CARICOM, or whether the request originated from the prime minister’s office. He also asks what objective legal criteria the commission will use to decide whether to extend the voter confirmation period, a power the 2025 law vests exclusively in the commission. He further demands clarity on whether the recent change allowing birth certificates as an alternative form of voter identification originated from the commission or was ordered by the prime minister, and how the decision was formally documented.

    Questions related to upcoming general election preparations and longstanding electoral integrity concerns follow. Nassief asks what proactive measures the commission will take to detect and deter common electoral offenses such as bribery, voter treating, and undue influence before the next vote, and how it will enforce the new law’s requirement for equal access to state-owned media for all competing parties. He also presses for details on the concrete procedures the body has put in place to verify that all registered voters meet the legal residency requirement for their polling district, including removing voters who primarily reside overseas from the rolls through fair, lawful processes that allow affected voters to contest decisions. Nassief asks the commission to publicly commit that only voters meeting all legal eligibility requirements, including residency, will be permitted to vote in future elections, barring narrow statutory exceptions.

    The letter dedicates seven questions specifically to preparations for the upcoming Roseau North by-election, the first major electoral contest to be held under the new 2025 framework. Nassief asks the commission to confirm which version of the voter register will be used for the by-election, consistent with the legal requirements laid out in the *Registration of Electors Act*, how the register will be compiled, certified, and shared transparently with candidates, parties, and the public, and what the legal cut-off date will be for new registrations, additions, deletions, and appeals before the vote. He also highlights the major legal and operational risk created by the ongoing failure to issue voter ID cards, asking how the commission will avoid turning the exception of oath-based voting into the norm for the by-election, and what special measures it will put in place to ensure the contest adheres to all new statutory rules for voter ID, residency verification, anti-corruption, and media access. Finally, he asks whether the commission will accredit independent domestic and reputable international observer missions to monitor the by-election, and how it will ensure external technical assistance preserves, rather than undermines, its institutional independence from executive influence.

    The final questions address progress on voter registration and confirmation. Nassief asks the commission to publicly confirm or deny independent estimates that put Dominica’s voting-age resident population at approximately 55,000, and to publish its own population estimate alongside its methodology so the public can assess whether the emerging voter register aligns with the actual eligible population. He also asks whether the commission realistically expects to complete the voter confirmation process by October 14, 2026, the statutory deadline, in a manner that will meet public confidence standards, or whether an extension will be required.

    Closing the letter, Nassief emphasizes that all 20 questions go to the core of whether the Electoral Commission is upholding its constitutional and statutory duties with the independence, competence, and transparency that the Dominican people are entitled to expect. He notes that public distrust in the electoral system is rooted in longstanding concerns: lingering questions about voter list integrity, inconsistent enforcement of residency rules, the failure to issue mandated voter ID cards, and doubts about whether the commission can administer upcoming elections in a lawful and credible manner. These concerns are not unfounded, he argues: in a 2022 judgment stemming from litigation over the 2019 general election, the Caribbean Court of Justice – Dominica’s highest appellate court – highlighted “areas of grave concerns about how the process of these elections was conducted” and emphasized that future Dominican elections “ought not to proceed with these or similar taints.”

    Nassief argues that instead of addressing these historic weaknesses with urgency and accountability, the rollout of the 2025 reform laws has only generated prolonged uncertainty around registration, confirmation, ID cards, and implementation. Dominican voters are entitled to clear answers about whether the commission understands its legal duties, whether it will exercise its statutory powers independently of political pressure, and whether it can deliver a lawful, fair election that earns public confidence. A prompt, substantive public response to these questions is not just a matter of transparency, Nassief concludes, it is essential to protecting the fundamental legitimacy of Dominica’s electoral process.

  • Hopeful Hearts Foundation and WISH Officially Launch Inspirational Mural at Parham Primary School

    Hopeful Hearts Foundation and WISH Officially Launch Inspirational Mural at Parham Primary School

    On June 26, 2026, a transformative new community art project came to fruition at Parham Primary School in Parham Town, Antigua and Barbuda, as two local youth-focused organizations joined school leaders to officially launch a motivational mural designed to uplift students and reimagine positive learning environments.

    Created in partnership between the Hopeful Hearts Foundation and community well-being initiative WISH, the three-day collaborative project brought together artists, educators and students to turn a blank wall into a permanent reminder of young people’s limitless potential. The mural, which bears Hopeful Hearts Foundation’s official motto “Dare to Dream Big”, was designed by Chaneil Imhoff, WISH’s founder and the 2026 winner of the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting Logo Competition. Imhoff’s design weaves together vivid colors and bold imagery to capture the spirit of ambition and possibility for every child who passes through the school’s gates.

    Far more than a decorative addition to the school campus, the mural was conceptualized to serve as a daily reminder that young people can dream beyond their immediate circumstances, trust in their own capabilities, and build purpose-driven futures. Unlike many external community projects, this initiative invited Parham Primary students to take an active role in the painting process, cultivating a sense of ownership, school pride and personal connection to the artwork’s core message.

    Reflecting on the experience, the Parham Primary School Student Council President shared enthusiastic excitement for the finished piece: “It was honestly very fun and exciting, even though we got a little bit messy. This whole thing looks very nice and I love how all of the colours look.”

    For Imhoff, the project held personal as well as community significance. “For me, it was an honour and a pleasure to not only collaborate with Hopeful Hearts Foundation, but to design the mural,” she explained. “We pulled inspiration from a range of sources and worked together to refine what we wanted this space to represent, but seeing it come to life at this scale was an amazing experience. It is even more meaningful because anyone who knows me knows that when something positive is happening, Parham Primary School will always be close to my heart. This is just the start of more work to come, not only in this community, but across every corner of Antigua and Barbuda.”

    Kristine Louisa, founder of the Hopeful Hearts Foundation, noted that the project aligned perfectly with her organization’s core mission. The youth-focused nonprofit, founded by National Youth Ambassador Kristine Louisa, runs community outreach, service projects and support programs to lift up young people across the country, with “Dare to Dream Big” embedded as its guiding ethos. “It means a lot that we were able to paint this amazing mural because if you have followed our journey, you will know that ‘Dare to Dream Big’ is Hopeful Hearts Foundation’s motto,” Louisa said. “It is a privilege to have our motto displayed here at Parham Primary School. We have supported the school in the past, including through the donation of school supplies, but this is an even bigger milestone for us. To know that our artwork is now a permanent part of the school environment, created in collaboration with WISH, is very special.”

    Parham Primary School principal Gayle Walter emphasized that the mural will do more than brighten the campus – it will act as a subtle, ongoing learning tool that shapes students’ mindsets. “This mural is more than a beautiful addition to our school,” Walter said. “It is a learning space, a source of inspiration, and a reminder that education does not only happen when a teacher is speaking and a child is listening. When children are surrounded by positive messages, they begin to absorb them. As they read, they ingest; as they ingest, it becomes part of their mindset, and that mindset influences their actions. We are grateful to the Hopeful Hearts Foundation and Madam Imhoff for helping us create something that will support the mental space of our children, improve the atmosphere of our school, and hopefully spill over into the wider community.”

    The project would not have been possible without the support of local sponsor Fast Lane Construction, which turned the two organizations’ shared vision into a tangible reality. Their backing has created a lasting legacy that will benefit generations of students, staff and local residents connected to Parham Primary School. Both Hopeful Hearts Foundation and WISH have announced plans to continue expanding this type of creative youth empowerment work, with future projects planned at Parham Primary and across communities throughout Antigua and Barbuda.

    WISH, founded by Imhoff, focuses on advancing mental health support, self-care advocacy and community healing across the region. Through creative public outreach, educational campaigns and local projects, the organization works to reduce stigma around mental health, build supportive community spaces and foster greater emotional well-being for all residents.

  • LIVE: Disasters And You with the Office of Disaster Management 30th June 2026

    LIVE: Disasters And You with the Office of Disaster Management 30th June 2026

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