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  • Brandstofcrisis legt grotere druk; overheid blijft afwachtend

    Brandstofcrisis legt grotere druk; overheid blijft afwachtend

    Global aviation markets are facing unprecedented upward pressure on operating costs, driven by a sharp rally in jet fuel prices that is forcing carriers across the world to implement fare increases and new fuel surcharges. This trend is now hitting South America’s small Caribbean nation of Suriname, where local airlines have moved to pass higher energy costs directly to consumers.

    Effective April 17, 2026, regional carrier Gum Air introduced a $25 one-way fuel surcharge for its Paramaribo-Georgetown route, with return flights carrying a $50 surcharge. The airline also added a 10% fuel surcharge to all air cargo shipments on the route. Surinam Airways, the country’s flag carrier, rolled out a similar surcharge policy for all passenger tickets back on March 25, becoming the first major Surinamese airline to adjust pricing in response to the fuel crisis.

    Airlines argue these extra charges are an unavoidable necessity: without passing through rising jet fuel expenses, daily operations would become financially unsustainable, and carriers would be unable to maintain service levels for customers. Even so, the new pricing structure has pushed up travel costs for both leisure and business passengers, adding new strain to Suriname’s tourism sector – one of the most critical contributors to national employment and GDP across the country.

    While most nations across Latin America and the Caribbean have rolled out targeted policy interventions to mitigate the fallout of the global fuel crisis, the Surinamese government has so far taken a hands-off, wait-and-see approach. As of mid-April, no formal regulatory framework or support policy has been announced to address soaring jet fuel costs or cushion the blow for consumers and key economic sectors.

    Rooted in heightened geopolitical tensions between the United States and Iran, the ongoing global jet fuel crisis has sent energy costs soaring across the Americas, putting widespread economic pressure on both net energy importers and exporters. Governments across the region have responded with a diverse range of policy measures to contain the impact. Mexico, for example, has ramped up domestic crude oil production and tapped into its national strategic petroleum reserves, while also introducing new subsidies for public transit to keep household transportation costs low. Brazil has doubled down on its longstanding biofuel strategy, expanding incentives for ethanol production and use to cut the country’s reliance on imported fossil fuels.

    Argentina has opted for direct price caps on fuel to stem rising inflation and prevent widespread social unrest, while also investing in renewable energy infrastructure to shore up long-term energy security. Colombia and Peru have both activated strategic reserves and rolled out targeted fuel subsidies for low-income and vulnerable population groups.

    For small island nations across the Caribbean, which are almost entirely dependent on imported fossil fuels, urgent emergency measures have been put in place. Trinidad and Tobago has increased domestic oil and fuel exports while maintaining government-funded fuel subsidies for residential households. Jamaica has implemented temporary cuts to fuel taxes and accelerated incentives for electric vehicle adoption and expanded public transit access. Regional bodies have also stepped up collaboration on collective fuel purchasing initiatives, designed to lower procurement costs for smaller markets through bulk buying agreements.

    Beyond short-term emergency interventions, a growing number of countries in the region are investing in the development of sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) and exploring new technological innovations to cut the aviation sector’s long-term reliance on fossil jet fuel. Initiatives to optimize flight routes for lower fuel consumption and improve overall aviation logistics are also being accelerated, with the dual goal of cutting fuel use and stabilizing long-term operating costs for carriers.

  • Murder victim’s mother charged with murder, other crimes

    Murder victim’s mother charged with murder, other crimes

    A shocking development has emerged in a string of connected gang-related killings across St. Vincent and the Grenadines: the mother of one of two men gunned down in a public shooting spree last week has been arrested and charged with murder and conspiracy to commit murder in the death of a 19-year-old found dead in Buccament Bay over the weekend.

    Rosia John, whose 29-year-old son Enrique John — also known by the alias Shoubu — was killed in a two-minute shooting rampage in Stony Ground this past Friday, will appear before the Serious Offences Court this coming Friday to face her charges. She is accused alongside 19-year-old Augustas Matthews, also a resident of Layou, in the fatal shooting of Perrance Matthews, 19, whose body was recovered along Buccament Bay’s river defence with multiple gunshot wounds to the head and chest.

    In addition to the violent conspiracy and murder charges, John also faces separate counts of cocaine possession and drug trafficking. Local law enforcement rules in St. Vincent and the Grenadines prohibit bail for individuals accused of murder until a nine-month period has elapsed following arraignment, a restriction that means John will almost certainly be denied temporary release and will miss the opportunity to arrange or attend the funeral of her only child.

    This is not the first time John has made headlines for involvement with the criminal justice system. Nine years prior, police were forced to restrain her outside the Kingstown Magistrate’s Court after she attempted to instruct her son to hide his face as he was led away following an arraignment on statutory rape charges. The victim in that 2015 case was a minor between the ages of 13 and 15. John was a regular presence in court for her son throughout a string of subsequent criminal hearings, and multiple charges against him remained unresolved at the time of his death.

    Enrique John was not the only fatality in last Friday’s Stony Ground violence: his close associate 22-year-old Raheem Guy was also shot and killed on the sidewalk outside the Caribbean Medical Imaging Centre, while John died inside a shop at the Russells Shopping Centre. The spree marked the start of a deadly 24 hours that ended with the discovery of Perrance Matthews’ body in Buccament Bay the next day.

    Local authorities and community observers have linked all three killings to long-running gang warfare across the country. The conflict pits an alliance of factions from Central Kingstown and their Layou-based associates against a rival gang based in West Kingstown. Perrance Matthews, who went by the alias “Suspect”, was reportedly a former member of one of the involved groups who had left the faction and was in the process of attempting to rejoin at the time of his death. At the time of his own killing, Enrique John was still awaiting the verdict on two outstanding attempted murder charges against him.

  • Every Mile Costs More as Bus Operators Say ‘Enough is Enough’

    Every Mile Costs More as Bus Operators Say ‘Enough is Enough’

    A looming transportation crisis is building across Belize, as the nation’s bus operators have formally announced they will suspend all service starting Monday unless the national government intervenes to address crippling cost increases from soaring diesel prices. The impending shutdown comes after months of failed negotiations and growing financial strain that has pushed even small, family-run operations to the edge of collapse, threatening to leave thousands of daily commuters stranded across the country.

    The crisis traces back to a nearly 20% jump in global diesel prices at the end of March, which translated to an extra $2.50 per gallon at the pump for operators. For many companies, that increase pushed daily operating costs far beyond revenue, turning every mile driven into a net loss. Leaders of the Belize Bus Association say operators have absorbed these extra costs for as long as they can, and patience has now run out.

    “For a very long time, our members have pressured us to take action, but I held out for diplomacy and negotiations with the ministry of transport,” explained Phillip Jones, president of the Belize Bus Association. “That approach has gotten us nowhere, so we have reached this breaking point. The reality is we are running on fumes presently, and we simply cannot sustain these losses any longer.”

    Operators have put forward three potential solutions to ease the strain: temporary fuel tax relief, government subsidies to offset higher fuel costs, or approval for a modest adjustment to passenger fares. To date, all three proposals have been rejected by government officials, who have only urged operators to “wait and see” how global fuel markets evolve. But for small and independent operators already operating on razor-thin margins, waiting is no longer an option.

    News Five’s deep dive into the financials of two independent family-run bus operations lays bare the unsustainable math operators now face. Michael Frazer, owner of LIMTD Bus Service, runs one route between Orange Walk and Belize City, and a second cross-border route to Chetumal, Mexico. He says a single round trip on the Orange Walk–Belize City route now costs $350 in diesel alone – that is before accounting for driver wages, vehicle parts, licensing fees, insurance, and regular maintenance.

    “In peak season, when the bus is completely full with teachers, students, farmers, working people and shoppers, we bring in roughly $550 in total revenue from that round trip,” Frazer explained. “Of that, $350 goes straight to fuel, leaving just $200 to cover every other cost. We survive only because this is a family business: I drive one bus myself, my son drives the other, my wife handles ticketing and on-board help. We even do all our own maintenance and cleaning to cut costs. Most independent operators rely on affordable secondhand parts from the Mennonite community just to keep repair bills down. After 18 years in this business, I can’t cut costs any further.”

    Jaquelline Bonell, owner of D & J Guinea Grass Trans Service, tells an identical story. Her company serves hundreds of rural villagers running routes between Guinea Grass, Belize City, a local technical secondary school, and Orange Walk Town. On her core Guinea Grass–Belize City route, fuel costs alone hit $325 per round trip, while revenue often falls short of covering that cost, especially on return trips where passenger volumes are low.

    “Everything is getting more expensive: coolant for the engine, cleaning supplies, social security contributions for employees, income tax, parts. We are a family operation too – I work full time without drawing a salary, my son worked last week and didn’t get paid, I handle all my own administrative work to avoid hiring extra help,” Bonilla said. “We have kept running even while losing money because hundreds of local people depend on us to get to work, school and town for services. But we have hit our limit. All we are asking for is a little help, a small fare increase to cover our extra fuel costs. We don’t expect to get everything we want, just some relief.”

    Operators stress they are not seeking to disrupt daily life for commuters, but they have no other option after repeated requests for government intervention have gone unanswered. “We aren’t trying to create havoc, but we aren’t backing down. We’ve asked for help too many times with nothing to show for it,” Frazer said. Unless government acts to provide some form of relief before Monday, operators across the country will pull their buses off the road, leaving thousands of Belizeans without access to their primary form of public transportation. This report was compiled by Paul Lopez for News Five.

  • Transport Minister Meets Bus Operators Over Fare Dispute

    Transport Minister Meets Bus Operators Over Fare Dispute

    As a nationwide shutdown of bus services loomed just days away, Belize’s government moved quickly to de-escalate tensions between transport officials and independent bus operators locked in a bitter fare dispute. On April 16, 2026, Transport Minister Dr. Louis Zabaneh held urgent talks with leadership of the Belize Bus Association (BBA) in Belize City, just days after the group warned service would halt entirely on the coming Monday if no intervention was made to address their core demand.

    Independent operators currently charge a regulated rate of 14 cents per mile, but the BBA is pushing to raise that figure to 19 cents per mile — the same rate already charged by state-owned National Bus Company (NBC). BBA President Phillip Jones emphasized that the requested adjustment is not a push for inflated profits, but a bid for a level competitive playing field. Speaking ahead of the meeting, Jones laid bare the financial struggles facing small, independent operators, noting that many have gone weeks without drawing a salary, and he himself could not recall the last time he took home pay. “We are not asking for a lot,” Jones explained. “We simply want all operators, NBC and independents alike, to charge the same price. This is a matter of fairness, not greed.”

    Jones added that operators see a strike as an absolute last resort, noting that both bus operators and Belizean commuters want to avoid a shutdown. “This is the last thing we want to do to the public, but we have reached a point where we have to stand our ground,” he said. If no deal was reached by Monday, Jones warned the shutdown would bring what he dubbed “busgeddon” — a total halt to all public bus transit across the country that would disrupt travel for thousands of commuters.

    Despite the urgent calls for a fare adjustment, Minister Zabaneh quickly shut down the prospect of a rate increase, saying the option remains completely off the table. Ahead of the meeting, he clarified that he cannot recommend a fare hike to the Cabinet, noting that Belizean commuters are already facing widespread cost-of-living pressures. The core purpose of creating the NBC, he reminded, was to improve operational efficiency to avoid passing cost increases onto riders.

    Instead of a fare adjustment, Zabaneh presented an alternative proposal: if independent operators do not wish to work under the NBC umbrella, they can follow the NBC model and form their own unified bus company in northern Belize, a restructuring that the government says would unlock operational efficiencies and improve their financial footing. The minister also noted that the early meeting was granted at the BBA’s request, and that a full review of the dispute will be presented to Prime Minister, who was out of the country during the talks, by Friday afternoon for full Cabinet consideration.

    In a last-minute development that averted immediate chaos, late on the day of the meeting Jones confirmed to local news outlet News Five that the planned Monday shutdown has been tentatively called off, with operators holding off on action to await a formal response from the Belizean Cabinet. It remains unclear whether the government’s alternative proposal will be enough to satisfy operators and avoid a shutdown down the line, leaving both commuters and industry stakeholders waiting on the Cabinet’s final decision in the coming days.

  • Mother’s Fear Confirmed as Missing Teen Found Dead

    Mother’s Fear Confirmed as Missing Teen Found Dead

    Almost a full week after 17-year-old Alwin Marin Jr. left his Belize City home for a planned fishing trip with a friend, what began as a frantic search for a missing teen ended in unspeakable tragedy on April 16, 2026. Marin’s decomposing body was discovered by his own mother, Patricia Cardinez, in the isolated, bush-covered Dykes area of Belize City, confirming the worst fear she had carried since her son’s disappearance.

    Marin was last seen leaving his Jane Usher Boulevard neighborhood alongside 17-year-old Jaheil Westby. When neither teen returned home after four days, their families filed missing person reports with local authorities. Westby’s bullet-riddled body was recovered in the same region last Friday, launching an immediate, widespread search for Marin that Cardinez never paused, even amid widespread speculation that Marin may have been involved in Westby’s death.

    In an interview with News Five reporter Isani Cayetano, Cardinez described her relentless search through dense, remote brush that ended with the devastating find she had dreaded. “I feel good that I find my son, that I searched. I search eena di bush. I sih jankro, and I search til I find my son,” Cardinez said, speaking in Belizean Kriol. “I hurt fi know that I find my son way da back yah soh cause my son da wah lee bwai weh usually goh and cohn home back. But, at the same time, too, how my son dead now, soh who kill my son?”

    Like Westby, Alwin died a violent death far from his neighborhood, leading senior law enforcement officials to conclude the two killings are connected. ACP Hilberto Romero, head of Belize’s National Crime Investigation Branch, confirmed that investigators have been tracking the linked case from the day Westby’s body was recovered. “The body has been retrieved and taken to the forensic laboratory where it awaits a post mortem examination,” Romero told reporters. “This report was made from last week Friday and from then searches were being conducted in the area and the body of Jaheil Westby was found on Friday. They were together, so it’s case we were following up on from the day.”

    Romero added that evidence at the two discovery sites indicates the teens fled their attacker in separate directions, explaining why Marin’s body was found much farther from Westby’s. This new observation has forced investigators to discard earlier theories that suggested Marin was involved in Westby’s killing—a conclusion Cardinez pushed back on forcefully even before her son’s body was found.

    “Di policeman dehn weh gaan da my house and di search fi my son, how I wah di hide my son when I still yet deh pan di news and still yet di search fi my son. Now I find my son now, soh who kill my son?” Cardinez said.

    Cardinez alleges the double murder is tied to a long-simmering public nuisance that has increasingly turned violent across Belize: stolen and stray horses. She says the two teens were together on a horse when they were attacked, a motive that aligns with growing community frustration over the persistent problem of unauthorized horse grazing and horse theft in the area.

    Now that both bodies have been recovered, investigators are reworking their case strategy to pursue new leads tied to the possible horse-related motive, as they work to identify and arrest those responsible for the killings. Cardinez has called for immediate action from authorities, urging police to hold all involved in her son’s killing accountable.

  • Canti Returns; Indian Creek’s Leadership Battle Back In Focus

    Canti Returns; Indian Creek’s Leadership Battle Back In Focus

    Nearly two years after a simmering leadership conflict paralyzed community life in Indian Creek, the unexpected return of First Alcalde Marcus Canti has pulled the village’s decades-long governance rift back into the national spotlight. While many residents breathed a sigh of relief after Canti’s safe return following an unexplained disappearance, the incident has also re-opened deep-seated divisions between rival leadership structures in the Indigenous community, prompting intervention from Belize’s national government and law enforcement.

    In an official press briefing on April 16, 2026, Minister of Indigenous Peoples’ Affairs Dr. Louis Zabaneh confirmed the government’s long-standing commitment to resolving the dispute, noting that ongoing negotiations aligned with a Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) consent order are nearing their final stages. “We were always praying for his safe return and we thank God that has occurred,” Dr. Zabaneh told reporters. “Through my colleague Minister Mira, we are waiting to hear back what the police investigation will reveal. We hope that we come to a good understanding of what transpired and move from there.”

    When pressed on whether the government’s recognition of both the elected village council and the traditional alcalde system fuels existing divisions, Dr. Zabaneh pushed back on the criticism, emphasizing that both bodies have operated in parallel for years and that collaborative talks are already underway to chart a path forward. “They have powers from being elected members of the village council and the alcalde system is in place. And they have been operating side by side. We have met with them, both alcalde and village council together. And we have talked about how we move forward and we hope we can continue to do that,” he explained, adding that the CCJ process is expected to conclude within a few months after years of delays.

    Even as the government works toward a long-term governance solution, law enforcement is still untangling the mystery of Canti’s disappearance. Assistant Commissioner of Police Hilberto Romero, head of the National Crime Investigation Branch, confirmed that Canti returned to his Indian Creek home with minor bruises and reported physical pain, and has since received medical treatment and begun giving his official statement to investigators.

    “Yesterday police went to Indian Creek where he was from. At a house in Indian Creek, he complained that he was in pain and had some small bruises. He was brought for medical attention and since that he has received treatment and now he’s being – I mean he’s given his statement and that is being done at this time,” Romero told reporters. “We are carrying out a thorough investigation and so we’ll have all the facts when his statement is concluded today.”

    Multiple local residents have been detained and questioned as part of the probe, but Romero confirmed no charges have been filed to date. To prevent potential unrest amid the ongoing investigation, additional police officers have been deployed to the village to monitor tensions and prevent any escalation of conflict between rival factions. “Yes. Additional police officers are in Indian Creek monitoring the situation to prevent any further escalation,” Romero confirmed.

    For residents of the small Indigenous community, the coming months will prove critical: the conclusion of the CCJ-mediated process, paired with the outcome of the investigation into Canti’s disappearance, will likely shape the future of governance and social cohesion in Indian Creek for years to come.

  • Belastingdienst digitaliseert aangifte: gratis hulp via SAS-HUBA

    Belastingdienst digitaliseert aangifte: gratis hulp via SAS-HUBA

    The Dutch Tax Administration (Belastingdienst) has officially opened the application window for its new online SAS-HUBA initiative, offering taxpayers free, dedicated guidance for digital income tax submissions through May 15, 2026. The launch of the Self-Assessment System – Hulp Bij Aangifte (SAS-HUBA) marks a key milestone in the tax authority’s ongoing shift to fully digital public services, streamlining what has long been a cumbersome, in-person process for millions of filers.

    Running from April 13 through May 15 2026, the program provides no-cost assistance to taxpayers completing both provisional and final income tax returns for the 2025 tax year. Prior to the digital transition, filers were required to complete submissions via in-person visits at physical tax office locations. Now, the entire process can be managed remotely online, a change designed to make filing faster, simpler, and far more transparent for all users.

    Target groups for the SAS-HUBA support program include small business owners, self-employed workers, and wage earners claiming itemized deductions, all of which often face more complex filing requirements than standard filers. All guidance through the initiative is delivered entirely online at no cost to participants.

    To access the platform and its support resources, users are required to complete pre-registration before starting their filing process. Tax officials have also issued preparatory guidance: all filers are advised to double-check personal and financial information before submission, while business owners are specifically reminded to have a fully itemized breakdown of annual income and expenses ready to reference during filing.

    The digitalization of income tax filing is just one component of a broader, agency-wide modernization effort underway at the Dutch Tax Administration, which also includes ongoing work to restructure and reform the national tax system as a whole. April remains a critical month for tax compliance deadlines: provisional 2025 returns must be submitted no later than April 15, while the deadline for final returns is April 30. Beyond the online SAS-HUBA platform, the tax authority confirms that additional support remains available to taxpayers both through its digital channels and at in-person office locations across the country.

  • Double Standards Alleged in BTL Severance

    Double Standards Alleged in BTL Severance

    A new controversy over unequal treatment in severance compensation has erupted at Belize Telemedia Limited (BTL), reigniting long-simmering public anger over unfair labor practices that prioritize corporate leadership over rank-and-file workers. The dispute comes on the heels of recent public outrage over extremely generous exit packages awarded to senior executives at the Belize Electricity Limited (BEL), and has now shifted focus to systemic inequities across Belize’s major telecommunications provider.

    Former frontline BTL employees say they have been systematically denied the severance benefits they legally earned after decades of service to the company. In a surprising turn that has deepened accusations of hypocrisy, a former chief executive officer of BTL recently filed a claim for his own severance payout – a move that worker advocates say directly contradicts the company’s reasoning for rejecting ordinary workers’ claims.

    The Belize Communication Workers for Justice, the group representing the affected employees, has condemned the practice as a clear example of a broken system that consistently favors top-tier corporate leaders while forcing everyday workers to fight for compensation they are owed. Emily Turner, an organizer for the advocacy group, laid out the contradiction in comments shared with reporters.

    Turner explained that during a publicly advertised severance open day held by BTL last Saturday, the company’s former CEO arrived in person to submit his severance claim. What makes this act particularly striking, Turner argues, is that BTL has repeatedly rejected severance claims from ordinary workers by citing a one-time payment issued to staff back in 1995. Company officials have claimed that 1995 payment disqualifies current claims from rank-and-file employees. But that same 1995 payment was also issued to the former CEO when he held the top leadership position at the firm, raising obvious questions about why his claim is being considered while ordinary workers’ claims are thrown out.

    “When we take this case to court, all of these inconsistencies will be brought to light,” Turner said. “The company will be required to turn over all employment and payment records for our members, so we can verify that every worker receives the full and correct compensation they are owed.” The case is expected to proceed through Belize’s judicial system in the coming months, as workers push for transparency and equal treatment under company severance policies.

  • Henry Charles Stands by Administrative Leave for Immigration Officers

    Henry Charles Stands by Administrative Leave for Immigration Officers

    In a developing public sector dispute stemming from an Easter weekend coordinated sickout, Belize’s Public Service Minister Henry Charles Usher has doubled down on the government’s decision to place involved immigration officers on administrative leave, pushing back against claims the action was unfair and punitive. The standoff emerged after at least one immigration officer, who was placed on administrative leave following the labor action, is now preparing to pursue legal recourse. The officer’s attorney, Norman Rodriguez, has argued that the administrative leave order has caused irreversible reputational harm to his client. Despite the looming legal challenge, government officials have refused to reverse the decision, framing the move as a routine regulatory step rather than punishment.

    In public comments on the case, Usher, who also oversees the Disaster Risk Management portfolio, clarified that the policy aligns with longstanding public service regulations. While he declined to share confidential details of the specific active investigation, Usher acknowledged that pursuing legal representation is the right of any public servant facing disciplinary procedures, and he raised no objection to the officer’s planned legal action.

    Responding to questions about whether it was inappropriate to place officers on leave who had submitted valid medical certificates for their absences, Usher reaffirmed that the placement follows standard internal investigation protocols. Under Belizean public service rules, individual ministries — including the Ministry of Immigration — retain the authority to launch internal inquiries when workplace disputes or grievances arise. If agency leadership determines that having the involved officers remain on the job would impede the investigation process, administrative leave is a permitted and standard step, Usher explained. He also emphasized that administrative leave in this case is fully paid, confirming it does not constitute pre-judgment punishment for the officers involved.

    Usher outlined the formal multi-step process for resolving unresolved public service disputes: if the affected officers do not reach a resolution at the immigration ministry level, the grievance will be escalated to the Ministry of Public Service, where additional formal due process protocols will be followed. Under these requirements, all officers under investigation must be granted full opportunity to respond to the claims against them before any further action is taken. If the dispute remains unresolved after that review, it will then be passed up to the national Public Service Commission for a final administrative ruling.

    The disagreement comes amid lingering tensions between Belize’s public sector workforce and government leadership, with this case setting up a test of how administrative regulations balance institutional investigation needs with the employment rights of public servants.

  • Pharmacists are Concerned About Unreported Effects of Medication

    Pharmacists are Concerned About Unreported Effects of Medication

    In Belize, a months-long public debate over prescription regulation for contraceptives is set to enter a 12-month phase-in period that has softened tensions, but the Pharmacy Association of Belize is holding firm to its core message: patient well-being remains the non-negotiable top priority.

    As public discourse around contraceptive access has intensified in recent weeks, the association says the narrative around its position has been widely misconstrued. Far from pushing for restrictions on reproductive rights, organization representatives emphasize their work is rooted in a fundamental professional responsibility to protect public health, particularly as questions mount over unreported long-term impacts of hormonal contraceptive use.

    Beverly Coleman, public relations officer for the Pharmacy Association of Belize, laid out the group’s stance in comments to local media, clarifying that the push for stronger prescription oversight is not an attempt to limit personal autonomy. “Personally, I am against controlling women’s reproductive rights — a woman’s body is hers to make her own choices,” Coleman explained. “Where we have failed in the past is in properly educating the public about what we actually stand for, and now it’s our job to make that clear to all people, especially women accessing contraceptives.”

    Coleman went on to outline the core concern driving the association’s advocacy: the lack of localized research on how the synthetic hormones in contraceptives affect Belizean communities. Hormonal contraceptives introduce foreign chemical compounds to the human body, she noted, and there is little to no local data tracking what long-term impacts these compounds may have.

    Over recent years, Coleman pointed out, Belize has seen a sharp, unexplained rise in chronic health conditions among younger populations, including hypertension and stroke. While the association stops short of drawing a definitive causal link to contraceptive use, the absence of research into potential connections leaves critical gaps in public health understanding that need to be addressed. “We don’t have the hard data to confirm any connection, only observations of worrying trends,” Coleman said. “That’s why we’re calling for greater transparency and monitoring — it’s not about restricting access, it’s about looking out for the long-term health of our patients.”