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  • Belizean Fishers Demand Action with Release of Fisher’s Audit 2025

    Belizean Fishers Demand Action with Release of Fisher’s Audit 2025

    Even as Belize has built a reputation for robust marine conservation legislation, the nation’s small-scale fishing community is calling for immediate intervention after a groundbreaking new industry audit laid bare deep systemic flaws threatening the future of the trade.

    Published in June 2026, the 2025 Fisher’s Audit draws on direct input from working fishers across the country and evaluates the sector against 29 key performance indicators. The report identifies three core, ongoing challenges: inadequate mandatory catch reporting, chronic underfunding for fisheries management bodies, and glacial enforcement of existing conservation rules. The audit confirms that early signs of overfishing are already appearing in Belize’s coastal waters, putting thousands of livelihoods at risk.

    At the official launch of the audit, Jorge Aldana, president of the San Pedro Fisherfolk Association, outlined the growing pressures facing an industry that supports thousands of coastal households across Belize. Aldana noted that while incremental progress has been made on some fisher-led demands, the community continues to face overlapping barriers across governance, professional representation, regulatory enforcement, economic opportunity, access to public information, and meaningful participation in policy decisions that shape their work.

    “The findings of this audit simply formalize concerns that fishers have been raising for decades,” Aldana said. “Unlike past policy reports that collect dust on policymakers’ desks, all recommendations included in this audit are intentionally practical and achievable. They are not designed to target any single agency or stakeholder group. Instead, they aim to foster cross-sector collaboration between government bodies, fishing cooperatives, civil society, non-governmental organizations, and other key partners with a stake in Belize’s fishing industry. Our ultimate goal is stronger, more equitable fisheries management, improved communication between all stakeholders, and a permanent, amplified seat at the table for the people who depend on these waters for their living.”

    Beyond governance and management failures, fishers also highlighted unregulated widespread dredging operations as an immediate, growing threat to marine ecosystems. The practice, they warned, is rapidly destroying critical fish breeding grounds and foundational coastal habitats that sustain healthy fish populations for generations.

    This report comes as Belize celebrates 52 years of membership in the Caribbean Community (CARICOM), a milestone focused on advancing people-centered opportunity across the region – a framing that adds urgency to fishers’ calls to protect a core sector that supports coastal communities nationwide.

  • Chamber Says Business Community Been Preparing For OSH

    Chamber Says Business Community Been Preparing For OSH

    Nearly a month of gridlock in the Belizean Senate has left the landmark Occupational Safety and Health (OSH) Bill in limbo, but government officials and private sector leaders are aligning on a path forward for the landmark worker protection legislation. As the bill advances through committee review, Attorney General Anthony Sylvestre has confirmed that the administration is proceeding with deliberate caution, noting that outstanding technical details — particularly provisions tailored to the domestic worker sector — still require final negotiation and refinement.

    While legislative negotiations wrap up, Belize’s business community has already invested substantial time and capital to align with the bill’s new requirements, according to top leaders of the Belize Chamber of Commerce and Industry (BCCI). William Usher, BCCI Vice President, told reporters that the private sector has been deeply involved in the drafting and consultation process from its earliest stages, meaning the business community is far from unprepared for the law’s rollout.

    “This legislation isn’t coming as a surprise to any of us,” Usher explained. “It has gone through years of extensive stakeholder consultation, with heavy input from the private sector at every turn. The BCCI has conducted deep, line-by-line reviews of the full text of the bill, and we recognize that any comprehensive regulatory framework of this scale will require ongoing adjustments and open dialogue between government and industry.”

    Throughout the multi-year consultation process, the BCCI has prioritized connecting with its member network to collect on-the-ground feedback, flag implementation challenges, and ensure small and medium business perspectives are included in final negotiations. While Usher acknowledged that preparation levels vary across sectors and business sizes — with smaller operations facing a steeper climb to meet new standards — he emphasized that a majority of business owners recognize the long-term value of upgrading national workplace safety standards, and have begun adapting their policies accordingly.

    Notably, many of Belize’s largest established firms have already adopted safety protocols that go beyond the minimum requirements laid out in the current version of the bill. “Companies like BEL, Santander, and BSI have already invested in robust safety frameworks that exceed what this legislation mandates,” Usher noted. “These leading firms show that higher safety standards are not just achievable, but beneficial for businesses across the country.”

    The BCCI is not only tracking the bill’s passage through the Senate, but also pushing for clear, phased implementation guidance to help businesses adjust. All provisions of the OSH Bill will not take effect simultaneously once passed, a structure that the Chamber has supported to give businesses time to adapt to new requirements.

  • Motorcycle Slams Into Golf Cart in San Pedro, Man Dies Hours Later

    Motorcycle Slams Into Golf Cart in San Pedro, Man Dies Hours Later

    A late-night road collision in San Pedro has claimed the life of a 33-year-old local Belizean technician just hours after the crash, according to official police updates. The fatal incident unfolded at approximately 11 p.m. Thursday along Pescador Drive, a busy thoroughfare near the Atlantic Bank branch in the coastal town. When first responders arrived at the scene, they found Gilberto Noble, the identified victim, lying unconscious on the pavement with catastrophic head trauma.

    Preliminary investigative findings have outlined the sequence of events that led to the crash. Noble was not operating the vehicle at the time of impact; he was riding as a rear passenger on a red Lifan motorcycle piloted by 29-year-old Vincent Canul, who sustained non-life-threatening injuries in the crash. Canul was traveling southbound along the corridor when he attempted to overtake a golf cart operated by local resident Demas Zelaya. As Canul initiated the overtaking maneuver, Zelaya made a gradual left turn from the travel lane, leaving insufficient space for the motorcycle to avoid contact. The motorcycle collided head-on with the front left fender of the golf cart, throwing both Canul and Noble violently onto the asphalt.

    Emergency medical teams immediately transported both injured men to the San Pedro Polyclinic for urgent care. Despite medical intervention, Noble’s injuries proved too severe, and he was pronounced dead shortly after midnight on Friday. Canul, by contrast, only suffered injuries to his right foot and received outpatient treatment for his wounds.

    In the wake of the crash, law enforcement officials have issued formal notices of intended prosecution to both Canul and Zelaya as they continue to piece together the full circumstances of the collision. Investigators are reviewing witness statements and examining physical evidence from the scene to determine fault and any traffic violations that contributed to the fatal outcome. The investigation remains active and ongoing as authorities work to finalize their findings for the local prosecutor’s office.

  • Belize Reopens Investigation on Cold Cases with DNA Testing

    Belize Reopens Investigation on Cold Cases with DNA Testing

    For thousands of Belizean families living through the unending agony of losing a loved one without explanation, a long-awaited breakthrough has finally arrived. The nation’s National Forensic Science Service (NFSS) has launched an ambitious new initiative to crack decades-old cold missing person cases, leveraging cutting-edge mitochondrial DNA testing to identify unclaimed human remains that have confounded investigators for years, including one set of remains recovered all the way back in 1998. When traditional identification methods like fingerprint analysis are no longer viable due to degradation over time, this advanced genetic technology is offering a new path to answers.

    Across the country, hundreds of families have spent years trapped in limbo, clinging to fragmented memories and unanswered questions about relatives who vanished without a trace. One high-profile example is Annie Young, who disappeared just days before the 2018 holiday season and has never been located. For nearly eight years, her family has navigated the heartbreak of permanent uncertainty, clinging to the faint hope that one day they would learn what happened to her. Now, that hope has been reignited by the NFSS’s new program, which aims to match unidentified skeletal remains to open missing person cases, closing chapters of grief that have stretched on for decades.

    NFSS Executive Director Gian Cho explained that the effort to solve these cold cases required years of foundational work before genetic testing could begin. Prior to 2013, Belize’s forensic investigation ecosystem was fragmented; it was only when the medical examiner’s office was brought under the NFSS umbrella alongside crime scene response units that investigators began building consistent, organized case files. This consolidation allowed teams to preserve and reconstruct critical contextual information for remains that had been recovered as much as ten years earlier, information that would have otherwise been lost to time.

    Even with organized case files, the initiative faces steep barriers. Many sets of remains were recovered decades ago in isolated, remote coastal regions, with little to no original documentation to narrow down potential identities. Today, investigators must cross-reference these remains against incomplete missing person reports that date back to 2013, a painstaking process of elimination. Compounding these challenges is the poor condition of many genetic samples: decades of exposure to the elements have left DNA severely degraded, rendering Belize’s existing Rapid DNA technology useless. While Rapid DNA delivers full identification results in as little as 48 hours for recent cases, it cannot extract usable genetic profiles from the oldest, most damaged samples.

    To overcome these obstacles, the NFSS partnered with international experts to lay the groundwork for DNA testing. In 2023, the service launched an anthropological profiling project in collaboration with Rutgers University, bringing in overseas specialists to work alongside local forensic anthropologists. The team systematically analyzed every set of unidentified remains to build detailed bioprofiles, narrowing down key characteristics including biological sex, ancestry, estimated age at death, height, and evidence of trauma. These profiles allow investigators to eliminate mismatches early, focusing DNA testing resources only on the most likely matches for each set of remains.

    For families like that of Mason Patnett, the initiative comes as a small comfort amid years of turmoil. Patnett, a 38-year-old man, vanished without warning from his Vista Del Mar home just last year, leaving his dog tied outside his property and his family with no clues to his disappearance. “Every time we hear of a potential body or anything like that, we’re going to go through the same emotions every single time. We’re going to have to relive it over and over again,” explained Sasha Patnett, Mason’s sister, in a 2025 interview. “So we just want to find him at this point.”

    Annie Young’s family has spent years pushing for answers on their own, even considering fundraising to send DNA samples to the United States for private testing and hiring a private investigator – efforts that ultimately went nowhere, the family says. Now, the national initiative aligns with exactly what they have begged for over the years.

    While dozens of families are now one step closer to closure, many others remain in limbo. Seventy-seven days after Deborah Bree Arthurs disappeared during a short trip to Belize City, investigators still have no leads, and her family fears her case will eventually join the ranks of the unsolved cold cases the NFSS is only now beginning to address.

    Beyond solving crimes, the NFSS frames this work as a fundamental matter of human dignity. Though the service is primarily known for supporting active criminal investigations, its leaders say identifying unclaimed remains is a core mission rooted in one simple principle: every person deserves to have their name restored, even in death, and every family deserves the closure of knowing what happened to their loved one. Reporting for News Five, Britney Gordon.

  • Youth Body Condemns Auditorium Clash as ‘Unacceptable’

    Youth Body Condemns Auditorium Clash as ‘Unacceptable’

    A violent confrontation between an adult and a 14-year-old teenage basketball player at Dangriga’s Russell Garcia Auditorium has sparked widespread public outrage across Belize, after footage of the incident circulated widely on social media platforms. The incident, which left many shocked, has drawn strong condemnation from the Child Advisory Body (CAB), a national youth advocacy organization that represents young people across all Belizean municipalities, which is calling for full accountability and urgent action to prevent similar cases of child abuse.

    At the center of the incident is Brian Swazo, who was taken into police custody shortly after an official report was filed against him over the confrontation. The National Sports Council, which maintains a strict zero-tolerance non-confrontation policy for all staff and affiliates, is now facing mounting public pressure to complete a full investigation into whether the policy was violated in this case.

    In an interview with local media, Richard Martinez, president of the CAB’s Dangriga branch, detailed why the organization took a public stance on the incident. “When I first saw the video, I immediately asked myself: what could a 14-year-old child possibly have done to deserve this level of violence?” Martinez said. “All of my fellow CAB members shared the same deep shock and concern.”

    Martinez also pushed back against premature public speculation that attempted to justify the violence against the teen, noting that the teenager’s side of the story had not been made public before many commentators drew conclusions. “I was appalled to see so many people immediately jump to the claim that this extreme violence was warranted or acceptable,” he said. “That’s why we issued an official press release: we want the public to know that CAB is actively working on this case, and this is not an incident we can brush under the rug or dismiss as just another everyday news story.”

    Martinez emphasized that failing to hold actors accountable for this incident could set a dangerous precedent, leading to even more severe violence against children in the future. “If we let this go unaddressed now, the next incident could be 10 times worse,” he said. “We need to stop this pattern before it starts.”

    The CAB is now calling on leading child welfare organizations, including UNICEF, the National Committee for Families and Children (NCFC), and the National Commission for Families and Children, to publicly condemn the incident and join a broader review of safe spaces for children across the country. The organization stressed that far stronger preventative measures and protective policies are needed to end violence against children in Belize.

    This report is based on a transcript of an evening television broadcast from local Belizean media, originally published online on June 12, 2026.

  • Court Says ‘Answer the Questions’ in Budna’s Abduction Case

    Court Says ‘Answer the Questions’ in Budna’s Abduction Case

    A high-stakes legal process involving an alleged cross-border abduction is set to move forward in Belize, after a High Court justice rejected efforts to dismiss a constitutional claim brought by imprisoned defendant Joseph Budna. Budna’s case centers on his assertion that he was captured and taken into custody illegally via a cross-border law enforcement operation, a serious allegation that has advanced past the initial dismissal stage.

    Justice Martha Alexander, who presides over the case, issued a landmark ruling last week that the dispute remains a pressing, unresolved legal question that requires formal answers from the state, rather than being thrown out of court before a full hearing. The ruling has forced the Belizean government to prepare for a fresh, high-profile legal battle over the conduct of its law enforcement agencies.

    In comments to reporters following the ruling, Attorney General Anthony Sylvestre outlined the government’s next steps, confirming that the state is actively building its formal defense ahead of upcoming procedural deadlines. Sylvestre added that alongside trial preparations, the government is also open to two alternative dispute resolution mechanisms embedded in Belize’s court system: voluntary mediation between parties, and a court-led judicial settlement conference.

    Sylvestre explained that judicial settlement conferences, in particular, offer a structured space for both sides to re-evaluate their positions, with a senior independent legal guide helping each party assess the strengths and weaknesses of their claims ahead of a full trial. Currently, the case is in the active case management phase, with ongoing proceedings to set deadlines for filing legal statements and other core court documents. Sylvestre noted that the government is still working through these preliminary procedural steps, and will not make a final decision on pursuing settlement versus trial until that process is complete.

    When pressed by reporters on whether a potential out-of-court settlement would implicitly confirm long-standing rumors of a high-level official cover-up of the alleged abduction, Sylvestre rejected that framing. He emphasized that court decisions and case resolutions are shaped by both factual evidence and existing legal precedent, not just public speculation. He noted that while Budna’s legal team argues the state is liable for the actions of its officers, the government currently disputes that interpretation of existing Belizean law, and will have the opportunity to make that case in formal proceedings later in the process.

    In a related procedural development, the court has already struck out claims against five individual defendants named in the original filing, including high-ranking officials: the current Minister of Home Affairs and the Commissioner of Police. Only the claim against the state itself will move forward in the coming months.

    This report is adapted from a transcribed evening television news broadcast originally published online.

  • Senior Surgeon Found Dead Outside Belmont Home

    Senior Surgeon Found Dead Outside Belmont Home

    A senior surgeon at one of the region’s prominent medical facilities has died in unexpected circumstances, prompting a full investigation from local law enforcement. Dr. Krishna, a leading senior surgeon at Mount St. John’s Medical Centre, was discovered unresponsive outside his private residence in Belmont last Friday, according to initial official reports. First responders were immediately dispatched to the location to provide emergency care, but medical personnel confirmed Dr. Krishna had passed away upon their arrival. Early preliminary assessments have pointed to the possibility that his death was the result of an accident, but law enforcement officials have emphasized that no official determination has been made regarding the exact cause or surrounding circumstances of the incident. Forensic and investigative teams have cordoned off the area surrounding the Belmont home to preserve evidence, and a formal probe into the death is already underway. As of the latest media update, leadership at Mount St. John’s Medical Centre has not released any public statement commenting on Dr. Krishna’s passing or the ongoing investigation. Police have indicated that they will release additional details to the public once they complete key stages of their inquiry, and updates are expected as the investigation progresses.

  • Controversy Brews Over Bush Stick Extraction in Indian Creek

    Controversy Brews Over Bush Stick Extraction in Indian Creek

    A simmering conflict over unapproved bush stick extraction has erupted into open tension in Belize’s Indian Creek Village, exposing deep fractures in local governance and reigniting a long-running national battle over Indigenous Maya land rights.

    The unrest unfolded earlier this week when Cristina Coc, spokesperson for the Maya Leaders Alliance (MLA), encountered the standoff while traveling through the area. Coc explained that the community’s long-standing internal land and resource permitting system has collapsed in recent years, leaving villagers dependent on small-scale extraction permits issued by the national Forest Department. Under existing local rules, any national permit requires formal endorsement from the village’s alcalde – the traditional local governing authority – before extraction can proceed. On this occasion, Coc confirmed, the permit was granted without the required local sign-off, leaving residents unaware of the planned activity.

    “For villagers, this amounts to illegal extraction,” Coc said in an on-the-record interview. The dispute has been fueled by conflicting claims to the land: the village council has recognized a third party’s ownership claim, arguing that the third party only needed council approval to harvest bush sticks, while community members maintain the land is part of their traditional territory, and their own local regulatory framework should take precedence.

    Coc pulled no punches in assessing the root of the local crisis, blaming a complete breakdown of cooperative governance among village leaders. “None of the leaders are willing to set aside their differences and do what is right for the village members,” she said. “This division has eroded all mutual respect. There is disregard for the village police, disregard for the alcalde, and a great deal of misinformation being spread.” Contrary to circulating false claims, Coc confirmed that the alcalde was not present at the extraction site and did not attempt to block the movement of harvested materials. The situation quickly escalated when a truck carrying a group of young men, brought to the site by allies on the village council, arrived and immediately began engaging in physical violence. Coc, who was already on site to mediate, prioritized de-escalation to prevent serious injury, noting that conflict over bush stick extraction did not justify harm to community members.

    This local flare-up comes as the MLA is already challenging a national government land rights reform bill that was explicitly intended to reduce intercommunal and state-community land conflicts across Belize. Instead of easing tensions, the new proposal has triggered fresh pushback from Indigenous leaders, who argue the legislation fails to uphold the Maya community’s constitutionally guaranteed and internationally recognized land rights.

    Coc emphasized that the MLA does not oppose land rights reform as a concept – on the contrary, the group has long called for clear legislative frameworks to resolve ongoing territorial disputes. “We want legislation that advances our rights, but it has to align with existing court judgments, our constitutional rights, and international indigenous rights standards,” she explained. “The current proposal does not do that – it actually limits our rights and threatens our control over our traditional lands.”

    To address the government’s proposed framework, the MLA has filed a request with the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ), the region’s highest appellate body, to clarify the scope of the Maya community’s land rights as defined in the court’s original landmark ruling on the issue. The government has claimed that the proposed legislation aligns with a prior consent agreement between the state and the Maya community, but Coc argues the government has misrepresented the agreement’s terms. “That agreement was never an empty document,” she said. “It was built on the lower court ruling, which explicitly confirms our rights based on our centuries-long use and occupation of these lands.”

    Looking ahead, local village leaders have scheduled a meeting with the Forest Department next week to negotiate a peaceful resolution to the Indian Creek Village conflict, while the broader legal fight over national land rights policy will now proceed back to the CCJ for formal review.

    This report is adapted from a transcript of a televised evening newscast, with all quoted content from English-language statements preserved accurately from the original broadcast.

  • CEO Responds to Veteran Soldier’s Benefits Concerns

    CEO Responds to Veteran Soldier’s Benefits Concerns

    In a public account of systemic administrative backlogs plaguing Belize’s retired military personnel, an 18-year veteran of the Belize Defense Force (BDF) has spoken out about being denied the pension he earned after five months of waiting since his discharge. The retired soldier, who served multiple tours guarding Belize’s southern border at the Sarstoon River including direct confrontations with Guatemalan forces, turned to local media to highlight what he calls unacceptable gridlock in the benefits approval pipeline. His case has reignited long-simmering conversations about the bureaucratic hurdles that many former BDF service members encounter when seeking post-service entitlements they are legally owed.

    Local media reached out to Francis Usher, Chief Executive Officer of Belize’s Ministry of National Defence and Border Security, to respond to the veteran’s complaint and shed light on ongoing efforts to resolve widespread processing delays. Usher, who himself retired from military service last March and only expects to receive his own full retirement benefits by the end of June 2026, acknowledged that the current multi-step approval process is unfairly burdensome for veterans who have dedicated decades of their lives to national security.

    “It hurts to tell a veteran they have to wait years for benefits they earned over 20 years of service,” Usher told reporters, before walking through the full chain of administrative steps required to finalize retirement payouts for BDF personnel. He explained that benefit packages are first assembled at BDF headquarters, before being transferred to the defense ministry for his personal review. Once cleared by his office, the application is passed to the Security Services Commission, which only holds voting sessions to approve requests once per month. After commission approval, the file moves to the national treasury, where analysts conduct a full line-item review of the veteran’s career to confirm benefit calculations align with years of service, rank, and other regulatory criteria to prevent over or underpayment. Once treasury signs off, the application is sent to the Ministry of Finance for budget approval, then forwarded to the Public Service Commission for final sign-off, before being returned to the defense ministry to activate payment.

    While Usher called the slow, multi-agency process an “unfortunate reality,” he noted that government bodies across Belize’s public sector are now moving to modernize outdated administrative systems, with a key focus on digitizing paper-based personnel records. This digital overhaul is already underway for both the BDF and the Belize Coast Guard, though Usher confirmed the project remains in its early stages. The outlet also noted that extended wait times for post-retirement benefits are not an issue isolated to the BDF, affecting public sector retirees across multiple government agencies in the country.

    This report is a transcript of a televised evening news broadcast, with Kriol language statements transcribed using an industry-standard spelling system for accessibility.

  • Print-It-Yourself Belizean Birth Certificates Draw Backlash

    Print-It-Yourself Belizean Birth Certificates Draw Backlash

    A controversial policy shift surrounding one of Belize’s most essential civil documents has sparked widespread public pushback, just months after the government rolled out the new system. As of December 2025, the country replaced its long-standing, intricately designed official birth certificates with a plain, digitally-issued format that allows citizens to print the document from any location on any paper of their choosing. The change, introduced alongside the launch of Belize’s upgraded digital Civil Registry and Vital Statistics system, has left many residents confused and frustrated, with widespread calls from the public to reverse the policy and bring back the familiar, secure official document generations have trusted.

    Public frustration centers on concerns over document legitimacy, potential confusion for institutions processing official paperwork, and the loss of a formal, government-issued document that many view as a core marker of legal identity. In response to growing public outcry, Attorney General Anthony Sylvestre defended the government’s decision in an interview with local reporters, framing the shift as a deliberate step to expand access to vital document services for all Belizeans.

    Sylvestre explained the practical challenges that shaped the policy change, noting that the old system relied on pre-printed, secured stock with unique serial numbers that had to be produced and stored in government offices in advance. Under the previous process, every birth certificate had to be printed directly onto this specialized stock at a government facility, requiring in-person visits and limiting access for residents living in remote areas far from civil registry offices.

    The new digital-first model eliminates that barrier, Sylvestre argued: after accessing the civil registry service and obtaining an official electronic copy of their birth certificate, citizens can print the document on any paper they choose, whether that is plain printer paper or a decorative heavy stock purchased by the user. When pressed by a reporter on whether citizens could opt to use their own decorative paper to replicate the old format, Sylvestre confirmed that no rule prohibits residents from using whatever paper they prefer for their printed copy.

    Addressing concerns over potential confusion, Sylvestre acknowledged that maintaining two parallel systems — one for the old pre-printed official certificates and one for the new print-at-home format — would create far more significant administrative challenges for key government agencies. Institutions including the Social Security Board and the Department of Immigration and Nationality, which regularly process birth certificates as part of their core work, would face unnecessary complexity verifying two distinct document formats, he explained. For that reason, the government has decided to move forward with the unified print-your-own model at this time, despite public dissatisfaction, to align with the broader rollout of the new digital civil registry system.