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  • CARPHA expands Caribbean early warning systems for vector-borne diseases

    CARPHA expands Caribbean early warning systems for vector-borne diseases

    The Caribbean Public Health Agency (CARPHA) is pushing forward landmark efforts to boost the region’s capacity to detect and respond to vector-borne diseases, rolling out expanded regional surveillance networks and cutting-edge monitoring technologies through a collaborative multi-country workshop held recently in Guyana.

    Held from April 27 to 28, 2026 at the Pegasus Hotel Exhibition Centre in Georgetown, the Regional Multisectoral Workshop, officially titled “Advancing Regional Vector-Borne Disease Surveillance through Technology and Harmonisation,” marks the latest milestone in a multi-phase regional public health initiative funded entirely through CARPHA’s Pandemic Fund Project. The convening gathered 28 key stakeholders, including senior epidemiology and vector control officials from 12 CARPHA member states, leadership from the Caribbean Vector-Borne Disease Network Steering Committee, and CARPHA’s in-house technical public health experts.

    This Georgetown gathering builds on two prior successful regional workshops held in Barbados (August 2025) and Trinidad and Tobago (December 2025), where participants focused on foundational topics including Integrated Vector Management, insecticide resistance testing, and the application of Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to Caribbean pandemic preparedness. Unlike earlier sessions that laid operational groundwork, the 2026 workshop centered on streamlining cross-border collaboration: participants worked to standardize regional disease datasets, validate unified early warning indicators, and integrate modern digital tools to enable faster, evidence-based decision-making across three core areas: epidemiological tracking, climate monitoring, and vector population surveillance.

    Lisa Indar, a senior CARPHA official, emphasized the ongoing urgency of the effort in her remarks, noting that vector-borne illnesses remain a persistent, major strain on Caribbean health systems and local communities. “As vector-borne diseases continue to pose a significant threat to Caribbean health systems and communities, CARPHA is working with Member States to strengthen the systems needed to detect risks earlier and respond more effectively,” Indar explained. “Through CARPHA’s Pandemic Fund Project, we are advancing integrated early warning systems, building technical capacity, and supporting the use of data and new technologies to guide timely public health action across the Region.”

    Horace Cox, CARPHA’s Director of Surveillance, Disease Prevention and Control, echoed this focus, noting that robust, standardized surveillance forms the backbone of any effective public health preparedness framework. “Effective surveillance is at the centre of public health preparedness. By strengthening the way countries collect, analyse, and share vector-borne disease data, we are improving the Caribbean’s ability to detect threats earlier and coordinate timely responses across the region,” Cox said.

    Roshan Parasram, another leading public health figure involved in the initiative, highlighted why modern, structured vector control systems are non-negotiable for Caribbean public health safety. “We are here because the Caribbean deserves a public health system that can see threats coming and act before they become crises,” Parasram stated. “We have built our approach on three pillars: Integrated Vector Management, Insecticide Resistance Testing, and Geographic Information Systems. These are not buzzwords. They are the operational backbone of a modern vector control system.”

    Brian Armour, who leads work on regional early warning infrastructure for CARPHA, further outlined the value of integrating vector surveillance into broader regional public health systems. “Our Regional Integrated Early Warning and Response System (RIEWSS) is about connecting data, systems, and people so that public health threats can be identified and acted upon more quickly,” Armour explained. “The integration of vector-borne disease surveillance into this broader early warning framework is an important step toward a more coordinated, data-driven approach to pandemic preparedness and response in the Caribbean.”

    Over the course of the two-day workshop, participants conducted in-depth reviews of proposed regional early warning indicators and evaluated methodologies to unify data collection and reporting across epidemiology, entomology, climate science, and geographic information systems. Technical breakout sessions explored the practical application of a range of innovative tools, including DHIS2 digital workflows, insecticide resistance analytics platforms, satellite remote sensing technology, artificial intelligence-powered risk mapping, and social listening tools designed to improve situational awareness and cut response times for public health agencies.

    Among the tools highlighted, DHIS2 — an open-source digital health information management platform — was singled out as a core enabling technology for the region’s new surveillance framework. The platform is designed to streamline the collection, analysis, and visualisation of public health data, enabling faster detection and response to emerging disease outbreaks.

    In addition to digital technology, participants also discussed new vector control innovations, including spatial repellents and emanator products engineered for use in the Caribbean’s densely populated urban centers. The workshop also included working sessions to review plans for formalizing the governance structure of the Caribbean Vector-Borne Disease Network Steering Committee and aligning stakeholders on the body’s upcoming work agenda.

    A key outcome of the convening was the opportunity for individual member states to assess which technologies and interventions best fit their unique national epidemiological contexts, while also mapping out the infrastructure, cross-border partnerships, and workforce training required to roll out new systems locally. CARPHA officials noted that the discussions and agreements reached at the workshop are expected to improve the consistency and timeliness of regional disease data reporting, strengthen cross-border coordination, and enable more targeted, effective vector control measures across the entire Caribbean region.

  • Honduran Fishermen Arrested for Illegal Fishing

    Honduran Fishermen Arrested for Illegal Fishing

    A cross-agency law enforcement operation led by Belize’s Toledo Institute for Development and Environment (TIDE) and the Belize Coast Guard has resulted in the arrest of three Honduran fishermen accused of violating protected marine area regulations last week, authorities confirmed. The intervention unfolded inside the boundaries of the Sapodilla Cayes Marine Reserve, specifically in Conservation Zone IV — a strictly protected segment of the coastal reserve where commercial fishing is entirely prohibited to preserve sensitive marine ecosystems.

    During the joint patrol, law enforcement officers caught the three men actively engaged in unauthorized fishing operations inside the restricted zone. Upon inspection, investigators confirmed multiple violations of Belize’s fishing and maritime regulations: the trio was conducting commercial fishing in a no-take conservation area, operating without a valid individual fisherman’s license, sailing their vessel without an official active vessel license, and possessing processed fish fillets that did not meet mandatory labeling requirements (specifically lacking the required skin patch for traceability).

    In addition to the fishing-related offenses, the three fishermen also face separate immigration-related charges. The court handed down cumulative penalties for the violations: each man was ordered to pay 1,000 Belize dollars for every individual fishing offense, plus an additional 1,005 Belize dollars to resolve the immigration-related charges brought against them. Along with financial penalties, authorities have seized all assets linked to the illegal operation, including the fishermen’s vessel, its engine, all their fishing gear, and the illegally harvested marine products. The case underscores Belize’s ongoing enforcement efforts to protect its ecologically critical coastal reserves from unregulated foreign fishing activity.

  • Just 16 Days Left…Are You Ready?

    Just 16 Days Left…Are You Ready?

    The 2026 FIFA World Cup, the first 48-team edition of soccer’s global showpiece co-hosted by the United States, Mexico and Canada, is just 16 days away from its opening kickoff on June 13. The month-long tournament will conclude with the final match on July 19 at New Jersey’s MetLife Stadium, but as anticipation builds among fans worldwide, two major issues have dominated pre-tournament discourse: a staggering hike in premium ticket prices and growing geopolitical uncertainty over Iran’s ability to compete on U.S. soil.

    The most eye-opening controversy centers on FIFA’s new pricing structure for top-tier tickets, which has drawn widespread criticism from fans across the globe. Football’s governing body has tripled the cost of the most expensive final tickets, pushing the highest price point to $32,970 per seat — a dramatic jump from the 2022 Qatar World Cup’s priciest final ticket, which cost roughly $1,600, and far outstripping the previous record high of $10,990 for an elite 2026 final seat.

    FIFA President Gianni Infantino has pushed back against criticism, defending the pricing model as a reasonable response to U.S. market conditions. “We have to look at the market,” Infantino said of the decision. “We are in a market in which entertainment is the most developed in the world, so we have to apply market rates.”

    Alongside the ticket pricing row, escalating military tensions between the U.S. and Iran have thrown Iran’s participation in the tournament into serious question. Iran has qualified for the 2026 World Cup and is scheduled to play group stage matches in the U.S., but rising hostilities between the two nations have cast doubt on whether the Iranian national team will be allowed to enter the country.

    The head of Iran’s football federation has reiterated that Iran expects full respect for the country’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) if the team travels to the U.S., stressing that FIFA, not the U.S. government or former U.S. President Donald Trump, is the ultimate authority hosting the tournament.

    The current uncertainty comes amid a sharp escalation of direct military clashes between the two countries. According to BBC reporting, the U.S. launched new airstrikes on southern Iran earlier this week, targeting what U.S. officials described as Iranian missile sites and boats suspected of laying mines. U.S. Central Command justified the strikes as a self-defense measure, claiming the action was necessary to protect American troops from imminent threats posed by Iranian forces.

    Iran has responded forcefully to the strikes. The IRGC claimed it shot down one U.S. drone and opened fire on a second unmanned aircraft and an American fighter jet that it says entered Iranian airspace. Iranian state media has also emphasized that the country retains full right to retaliate for any violation of existing ceasefire agreements, leaving the geopolitical situation highly volatile just two weeks before the tournament gets underway.

  • Belize Among 20 Nations in Massive Gun and Drug Crackdown

    Belize Among 20 Nations in Massive Gun and Drug Crackdown

    In a landmark six-week multinational law enforcement operation spanning 20 countries across the Americas and the Caribbean — including Belize — authorities have taken down thousands of criminal suspects and seized a massive stockpile of illegal weapons, narcotics and contraband, in one of the largest coordinated anti-trafficking operations in recent regional history.

    Coordinated by international police body INTERPOL, with strategic backing from the Organization of American States (OAS) and financial support from the European Union, Operation Orca XI ran between October and November 2025, with official results of the crackdown announced publicly on May 26, 2026. By the end of the operation, law enforcement teams had recorded 8,701 arrests linked to organized crime and illicit trafficking. Beyond arrests, officers confiscated more than 3,300 unregistered firearms, nearly 200,000 rounds of ammunition, 210 suspected criminal vehicles, and $256,025 in undeclared cash linked to trafficking activity. The largest seizure by weight was 56 metric tonnes of illegal narcotics, destined for distribution across regional and global black markets.

    Unlike disjointed unilateral enforcement actions, Operation Orca XI was deliberately designed to target the shared trafficking corridors that transnational gangs and organized criminal networks rely on to move weapons, drugs, and even trafficked people across open regional borders, the OAS confirmed in its official press release announcing the results.

    Belize was one of 20 contributing nations from across Central America, South America and the Caribbean. The full list of participating partner countries also includes Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guyana, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Suriname, and Uruguay.

    OAS Secretary General Albert R. Ramdin framed the operation as a clear demonstration of the power of coordinated hemispheric security action. “This is what success looks like when hemispheric coordination and world-class technical and operational capacity join forces: thousands of firearms off the streets, drugs seized, and safer communities,” Ramdin said in his statement. “Operation Orca XI proves that international cooperation and information sharing get results, and our security frameworks must continue delivering. The OAS stands ready to continue supporting member states with partners like INTERPOL.”

    INTERPOL Secretary General Valdecy Urquiza echoed that commitment, emphasizing that the evolving nature of transnational crime requires constant adaptive cooperation. “INTERPOL’s commitment remains to support law enforcement agencies with the intelligence, tools and coordination they need to stay ahead of these evolving threats,” Urquiza added.

    Operation leaders also noted that the scale of seizures and arrests exposes just how interconnected transnational criminal networks have become across the region, highlighting the ongoing need for sustained cross-border collaboration to disrupt illicit trafficking activity.

  • Opposition Senators Condemn Expulsion of MP Pringle as ‘partisan and meant to embarrass’

    Opposition Senators Condemn Expulsion of MP Pringle as ‘partisan and meant to embarrass’

    A major political confrontation has erupted in Antigua and Barbuda’s legislature after the Senate President barred Opposition Leader Jamale Pringle from taking his seat for the annual Throne Speech on the morning of May 26, 2026, triggering a walkout by all opposition lawmakers and sharp accusations of partisan manipulation of parliamentary procedure.

    The United Progressive Party (UPP), the country’s main opposition bloc, has issued a fierce condemnation of Senate President Alincia Williams-Grant’s controversial decision, which it says violates long-standing parliamentary norms and undermines democratic representation. Pringle, a newly elected Member of Parliament, had been formally invited to the sitting in an official May 14 correspondence from the Clerk to Parliament, which addressed him as “Honourable Member.” The invitation explicitly called him to attend for necessary parliamentary business, which includes completing the oath of office administered by the Clerk, and he arrived at the chamber well ahead of the scheduled event.

    Williams-Grant’s official justification for barring Pringle from the chamber was that he had not yet completed his oath of office. But the UPP and its senators reject this reasoning as baseless and politically motivated. Following the expulsion, when Senate Minority Leader Chester Hughes attempted to raise an objection to the ruling on the floor, Williams-Grant also refused to allow him to speak. In response, all four sitting opposition senators staged a coordinated walkout of the upper chamber in protest.

    Hughes has laid out detailed arguments challenging the Senate President’s decision, framing it as clear partisan favoritism toward the ruling government. He emphasized that if a governing party MP had faced the same situation, they would have been permitted to complete the oath immediately before the Throne Speech and take their seat. Hughes also called out a double standard in procedural treatment: the Attorney-General, who holds no formal voting or priority position in the Senate, was allowed to address the chamber, while the minority leader, as an elected Senate representative, was denied his basic right to speak on a critical procedural matter.

    Beyond accusations of favoritism, Hughes dismissed the secondary justification cited for the ruling — that the decision aligned with procedural norms in nearby Trinidad and Tobago — as entirely irrelevant. He stressed that Antigua and Barbuda’s parliament holds the independent authority to set its own procedural rules, meaning appeals to another country’s practices hold no weight in this context.

    The UPP has gone further, alleging that the entire incident was the result of prearranged collusion between the Senate President and government members of the lower house of parliament. The party says the deliberate snub was designed specifically to embarrass Pringle personally and humiliate the opposition as a whole. In closing its condemnation, the opposition bench warned that the arbitrary use of parliamentary procedure to sideline elected opposition representatives poses a direct threat to the foundations of democratic governance in the country.

  • UWI FIC Now Boasts Of Over 2000 Students, $300M expansion set to begin

    UWI FIC Now Boasts Of Over 2000 Students, $300M expansion set to begin

    Four years ago, when the government of Antigua and Barbuda first announced its plan to establish a local campus of the University of the West Indies (UWI), critics across the region and at home lined up to dismiss the ambitious project as a foolhardy gamble for a small island nation.

    Skeptics raised a litany of objections to derail the initiative: some argued a tiny country like Antigua and Barbuda had no business pursuing a full-fledged UWI campus, writing off the plan as overly presumptuous. Others claimed the decades-old unpaid arrears the government was expected to settle would be too heavy a financial burden to overcome, forcing the administration to abandon the project. Detractors also spread claims that the UWI risked compromising its institutional reputation by bowing to political pressure to approve the campus, warning that any approval would irreparably damage the century-old university’s global brand. Even the repurposing of existing buildings originally designed for a secondary school was called out as inadequate for the standards of a tertiary education institution.

    Today, that once-mocked initiative stands as a resounding success, silencing every one of the project’s critics. The UWI Five Islands Campus welcomed its first cohort of fewer than 350 students when it opened its doors. Four years on, total enrollment across its academic programs has surged to nearly 2,000. The campus has already expanded its offerings beyond undergraduate degrees to launch master’s programs, with long-term plans to roll out doctoral programs in the coming years.

    To support this rapid growth and meet rising student demand, the Antigua and Barbuda government is moving forward with an EC$300 million expansion project for the campus. As part of the development, the Five Islands local community will also receive new standalone primary and secondary school facilities, benefiting residents of all age groups beyond university students.

    The Five Islands Campus sits at the center of the government’s broader education renaissance, which includes a landmark policy of tuition-free tertiary education for all Antigua and Barbuda citizens. This investment in public education is designed to unlock the potential of the nation’s human resource base, laying the foundation for a renewed, more prosperous future for the entire country.

    Government officials credit Education Minister Daryll Matthew for delivering the successful project to the nation’s young people, noting his consistent leadership, unwavering determination, and commitment to shared principles that aligned the government’s goals with the UWI’s institutional benchmarks. “He deserves our continuing applause,” said a government statement.

    Beyond university education, the government is also expanding vocational skills training to create more economic opportunity for youth. Antigua Barbuda Institute of Continuing Education (ABICE), now integrated into the new Antigua and Barbuda College of Advanced Studies (ABCAS), will provide accredited trade training for young people, equipping them with industry-recognized certification that will help them secure higher-wage employment across the country.

  • THE KWAK: Red pill men demand women be women again and men be women too

    THE KWAK: Red pill men demand women be women again and men be women too

    Amid ongoing cultural conversations about gender roles and extremist online ideologies, a satirical take on the manosphere has generated viral attention through a fictional, absurd movement that upends the typical talking points of the Red Pill community.

    A joke splinter faction of the controversial Red Pill movement, self-named “Bros Are Better In Every Situation” (shortened to BABIES), has put forward a chaotic, contradictory set of gender demands that turn conventional misogynistic ideology on its head. Unlike mainstream Red Pill groups that typically enforce rigid patriarchal gender hierarchies, this satirical faction claims that while its members hold contempt for women, they also acknowledge women hold a better position in society — and argue that all men should transition to become women, while cisgender women should return to traditional domestic roles solely to bear children for the movement, with a requirement that all offspring be female.

    The group’s supposed spokesperson, who identified themselves as Shi Hym and reported being unemployed, delivered a performance rife with contradiction that further leans into the satire. After first agreeing to provide a comment, then backing out, then changing their mind again — all while reading from a pre-written statement — the spokesperson blamed the unfair pressure of media questions for their own inconsistency. When pressed to clarify the movement’s nonsensical platform, they claimed to be channeling their inner two-spirit feminine identity, shouted solidarity with all “sisters”, identified as a “high value man”, and ended by thumping his chest aggressively in an imitation of King Kong, framing the outburst as a demonstration of “superior male logic”.

    This absurd bit of satire comes from Mesyé Kwik, a publication known for its humorous, pointed takes on current cultural and social issues. The outlet explicitly labels the piece as a work of satire, noting that the entire scenario is intentionally silly: it is designed to poke fun at the contradictory talking points common in misogynistic manosphere circles, inject lighthearted humor into ongoing cultural conversations, and highlight the underlying absurdity of rigid gender ideology. The outlet adds a tongue-in-cheek disclaimer that anyone who takes the fictional piece seriously will be cursed with all of their children being less intelligent than the collective drama surrounding bouyon music feuds.

  • SIV biedt alternatieven voor Offerfeest door hoge prijzen

    SIV biedt alternatieven voor Offerfeest door hoge prijzen

    As Eid-ul-Adha approaches 2026, thousands of Muslim families across Suriname are facing an unprecedented barrier to a core religious tradition: the soaring cost of sacrificial animals, which has become unaffordable for many low- and middle-income households. In response to growing financial strain, the leadership and Religious Affairs Council of the Surinamese Islamic Association (SIV) have developed and published a new guidance document outlining flexible, alternative ways for believers to fulfill the spiritual meaning of Qurbani, or ritual sacrifice, when purchasing an animal locally is out of reach.

    Riaz Ahmadali, chair of the SIV Religious Affairs Council, explained to local outlet Starnieuws that while Qurbani has long been framed as an annual religious obligation, the tradition’s core tenets frame it as a strongly recommended sunnah (practice of the Prophet) only for those with the financial means to do so. Contrary to common misunderstanding, the SIV emphasizes that Qurbani is not limited solely to the ritual slaughter of an animal, but centers on a deeper spiritual commitment.

    Drawing directly from Quran 22:37, the guidance notes: “It is not their meat nor their blood that reaches Allah; it is your piety that reaches Him.” This verse underpins the SIV’s interpretation that the symbolic act of sacrifice matters more than the physical slaughter itself. Ahmadali explained that the ritual calls on believers to sacrifice their own negative traits — including ego, jealousy, corruption, and resentment toward others — by setting these harmful impulses aside, regardless of whether an animal is slaughtered.

    The steep price hike for sacrificial animals stems from ongoing economic instability in Suriname. This year, a single sacrificial animal costs roughly 20,000 Surinamese dollars (SRD), nearly double the price recorded in 2025. Large livestock such as bulls, which are often split between multiple families, now cost between 140,000 and 160,000 SRD, putting them completely out of reach for most local households. SIV officials also noted that middlemen exploit pre-Eid demand by purchasing animals months in advance at low prices, then marking up costs dramatically ahead of the holiday to inflate their profits.

    To address this gap, the SIV has laid out multiple accessible alternatives for believers facing financial hardship. For those unable to sacrifice annually, the guidance permits performing Qurbani once every several years instead of every year. Believers who share a household and economic resources — for example, extended family groups including parents, adult children, and cohabiting grandparents — can also split the cost and share a single sacrifice, a long-standing practice that the SIV has reaffirmed as valid. A third option allows believers to arrange Qurbani through international Islamic organizations in lower-income countries, where animal costs are far lower than in Suriname; common destinations for this practice include India, Nigeria, and Gaza, and Ahmadali confirmed that a small share of SIV members have already used this alternative this year.

    The guidance also prioritizes immediate humanitarian needs over ritual sacrifice. The SIV states that for families on tight budgets, covering essential costs such as medical care for an ailing family member takes clear precedence over purchasing a sacrificial animal. This precedent was widely established during the COVID-19 pandemic, when leading international Islamic scholars universally recommended directing available funds to support unemployed and vulnerable households rather than spending on Qurbani.

    In addition to practical guidance, the SIV document also outlines the historical origins of Qurbani, tracing it back to the Prophet Abraham’s dream, in which he was commanded to sacrifice his son Ismail. At the time, human sacrifice of firstborn children was a common cultural practice. When Abraham prepared to follow the command, Allah revealed that the sacrifice was not required, and that a sacrificial animal could be offered in his son’s place — abolishing the tradition of human sacrifice forever. From this origin, the SIV draws the core lesson that Qurbani calls on believers to give up a portion of their own wealth, time, and resources to support poor and vulnerable community members.

    As of late May, the central SIV mosque on Keizerstraat in Paramaribo has only received registrations for two full bulls, which are split into seven shares each, meaning just 14 people have signed up for a local sacrifice. Registration numbers are higher in regions outside the capital, but still far below pre-price-hike levels.

    Despite the broader financial strain, the SIV will continue its long-standing tradition of distributing packages of sacrificial meat to low-income and unhoused people across Paramaribo this year. SIV board member Raoul Bechoe confirmed that the number of people in need requesting meat assistance grows annually, and even included Cuban migrants seeking support at the Keizerstraat mosque last year. This year’s distribution is made possible by a generous donor who has gifted a bull to support two local SIV branches and unhoused community members.

    Concerns over the skyrocketing cost of Qurbani were recently raised during a meeting between SIV representatives and Suriname’s President Jennifer Simons.

  • Sir Rodney Says Road and Housing Projects Continued Despite Cement Shortages

    Sir Rodney Says Road and Housing Projects Continued Despite Cement Shortages

    Antigua’s governing administration has announced significant advancements in national public infrastructure, marking steady progress across two core portfolios: road network upgrades and affordable housing expansion. Officials confirmed that road quality across the country has seen measurable improvement in recent months, with several key high-traffic thoroughfares already completed and open to motorists. These finished projects include the Sir George Walter Highway, Friars Hill Roadway, Sir Sidney Walling Highway, the Valley Road connecting Golden Grove to Old Road, and the Parham to Wilikies Highway, all of which have been repaired to deliver a smoother, safer driving experience. Work is currently underway on a full renewal of All Saints Road, and the government notes that upgrades are not limited to primary arteries: secondary local roads running through villages and residential communities are also being repaved as part of the broader infrastructure initiative. To fund the multi-project program, a consortium of local financial institutions has approved a $150 million advancement, which will be repaid through a small annual user fee imposed on all registered motorized vehicles in Antigua. The governing administration has publicly extended its gratitude to the senior leadership of the Ministry of Works, particularly Minister of Works the Honourable Maria Browne, the first woman to hold the position. Since assuming office, Minister Browne has overseen a workforce that has consistently delivered strong results, with the Director of Works and other senior team members providing visible, effective leadership that has motivated frontline staff to meet the high expectations of road users across the country. The administration acknowledged that the project faced temporary supply chain disruptions, specifically a widespread cement shortage that slowed progress at multiple sites. However, officials confirmed that the ongoing dredging of the shipping channel leading to cement storage silos at Crabbes is nearing completion, which will resolve the supply issue and remove the barrier to ongoing construction work. Beyond her track record delivering on infrastructure projects, Minister Browne has been praised by the government for her personal leadership qualities: she brings consistent energy, proven competence, unwavering determination, and a solutions-focused mindset to every assigned responsibility, and holds high regard across the governing administration. Joining the Ministry of Works leadership team is newly re-assigned Minister of State the Honourable Shenella Govia. A youthful senator who also serves as Leader of Government Business in the Senate, Govia is described as bringing abundant energy and enthusiasm to her new role, and the government expects her contributions will strengthen the ministry’s capacity to deliver on the administration’s ambitious infrastructure targets. Beyond infrastructure upgrades, the statement also highlighted the government’s signature “housing revolution,” a cornerstone initiative that has defined the administration’s 12 years in office. To date, two government agencies—the National Housing and Urban Development Company and the Central Housing and Public Authority (CHAPA)—have completed construction of more than 2,000 new affordable homes across Antigua. Private sector contractors have also made significant additional contributions to expanding the national housing stock over the same period. While the government has made substantial progress in meeting existing demand for new housing, officials noted a unique side effect of that success: the high delivery rate has spurred even greater public demand for additional housing units. The administration commended the minister responsible for housing for the progress achieved to date, and confirmed that new construction projects are already planned to roll out in the coming months to meet rising demand.

  • PM Browne Blasts Opposition Senators for Walking Out With Pringle

    PM Browne Blasts Opposition Senators for Walking Out With Pringle

    A heated political clash has erupted in Antigua and Barbuda’s Parliament after a coordinated opposition walkout, drawing scathing condemnation from Prime Minister Gaston Browne who labeled the move a clear display of inadequate leadership from the opposition bloc. The confrontation unfolded during a ceremonial joint sitting of the Parliament on Tuesday, triggered when Senate President Alincia Williams-Grant issued a formal ruling barring Opposition Leader Jamale Pringle from taking part in proceedings. The ruling stemmed from a straightforward constitutional requirement: Pringle had not yet completed the mandatory oath of allegiance for all participating parliamentary members.

    Instead of complying with the ruling, Pringle exited the chamber, and the four other opposition senators followed him out in an organized protest. Speaking to the press immediately following the annual Speech from the Throne, Browne launched a sharp rebuke of the opposition’s actions, arguing that the group had intentionally ignored long-established constitutional rules, only to manufacture political controversy after being blocked from participating.

    “The Constitution is the ultimate authority in this nation,” Browne emphasized during the press briefing. “Any action that runs counter to its text is not permissible, and we cannot set aside its clear requirements for political convenience.” The Prime Minister stressed that the rule requiring an oath of allegiance for participating members was widely known, and even the opposition had previously acknowledged this mandate. “They have already accepted that the constitutional provisions require every member taking part in these formal proceedings to have completed the oath,” he noted.

    Browne explained that Pringle had simply missed the window to complete the oath ahead of the Tuesday sitting, making his participation unlawful under existing rules. He pointed to Barbuda MP Trevor Walker as a point of comparison: Walker chose to stay away from the sitting voluntarily, because he understood he could not join proceedings without first taking the required oath. “The opposition will have to wait until the next parliamentary sitting, when the oath of allegiance will be formally added to the agenda,” Browne said. “Once they complete the requirement, they will be able to participate fully, as is their right.”

    The Prime Minister also pushed back against claims that the opposition faced unfair treatment in the incident, revealing that parliamentary officials had tried to resolve the issue quietly ahead of the sitting to avoid public embarrassment for Pringle. “Officials spoke to him in private before Parliament convened because they did not want to put him in an awkward position publicly,” Browne said. “He refused to cooperate with the reasonable request.”

    Browne characterized the opposition’s decision to stage a walkout as reckless and politically immature, arguing that the bloc should have taken responsibility for its own procedural oversight rather than abandoning the sitting entirely. “This lack of cooperation is just ridiculous,” he said. He added that opposition leaders need to “learn to pick their fights,” noting that the walkout only served to highlight deep weaknesses in the opposition’s leadership. Closing his remarks, he doubled down on his criticism, directly tying the incident to Pringle’s leadership: “And that is just poor leadership.”