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  • Nieuw trainingsprogramma helpt werkende ouders bij ontwikkeling jonge kinderen

    Nieuw trainingsprogramma helpt werkende ouders bij ontwikkeling jonge kinderen

    On May 14, UNICEF and Republic Bank announced the official launch of a groundbreaking Workplace Parenting Programme in Suriname, an initiative tailored to strengthen caregiver skills and support the critical early developmental stages of young children across the country. Targeted specifically at working parents raising children between the ages of 2 and 4, a window widely recognized as the most formative period for long-term cognitive and social growth, the program fills a key gap in accessible, convenient parenting support for employed caregivers.

    The core mission of the partnership is to equip working parents with practical tools and evidence-based knowledge to actively nurture their children’s learning and growth during these critical early years. Unlike many parenting support programs that require parents to travel outside work hours, this initiative brings training directly to the workplace, making participation accessible for employed caregivers who often struggle to balance work and family responsibilities.

    In the first rollout of the program, employees from a diverse mix of public and private entities will participate in an 8-week on-site training course. Participating organizations span multiple sectors of Suriname’s economy and public services, including the Fernandes Group, Assuria, Rudisa Group, the Ministry of Social Affairs and Housing, and the Academic Hospital Paramaribo.

    To reinforce learning and extend support beyond in-person sessions, all participating parents will gain access to a curated library of 15 instructional videos that can be accessed from home. This hybrid model allows caregivers to review key concepts and practice new parenting techniques on their own time, ensuring the skills learned during training translate to real-world family life.

    Representatives from the Fernandes Group, one of the first participating organizations, noted that the program aligns perfectly with the company’s corporate social responsibility goals. “By giving our employees the opportunity to join this initiative, we are not only supporting our workforce but investing in stronger families and better developmental outcomes for the next generation of Suriname,” the representative said.

    The new Workplace Parenting Programme is part of a broader strategic partnership between UNICEF and Republic Bank, focused on advancing child-friendly workplaces and expanding robust support systems for families across Suriname. Program organizers emphasize that cross-sector collaboration between public institutions and private enterprises is essential to driving sustainable development that centers the needs of children and families, creating long-term benefits for communities across the nation.

  • 2026 Caribbean Travel Trends Report Unveiled at Caribbean Travel Forum in Antigua

    2026 Caribbean Travel Trends Report Unveiled at Caribbean Travel Forum in Antigua

    St. John’s, Antigua – The annual Caribbean Travel Forum kicked off this week in the heart of Antigua, bringing together industry leaders, destination marketing organizations, hospitality stakeholders and tourism policymakers from across the region and around the globe. A key highlight of the opening sessions was the official unveiling of the highly anticipated 2026 Caribbean Travel Trends Report, a comprehensive analysis that maps out shifting consumer behaviors, emerging market opportunities and pressing challenges for the Caribbean’s $50 billion tourism sector.

    Drawing on 12 months of data collection from passenger surveys, booking platforms, airline route planning and hotel occupancy analytics, the report identifies three core trends set to shape travel to the region over the next two years. First, it projects a 18% growth in demand for multi-destination itineraries, as travelers increasingly seek to combine island hopping with immersive cultural experiences rather than sticking to a single resort stay. Second, it notes a sharp rise in the share of travelers prioritizing sustainability, with 62% of recent visitors indicating they would pay a 10% premium for accommodation certified as carbon-neutral by regional environmental bodies. Third, it highlights fast-growing demand from emerging long-haul markets, particularly Southeast Asia and West Africa, where outbound travel to the Caribbean has grown by an average of 22% annually since 2022.

    Forum attendees emphasized that the report comes at a critical moment for the Caribbean tourism industry, which is still balancing post-pandemic recovery with growing economic pressures from global inflation and the impacts of climate change on coastal infrastructure. “This data gives our member nations a clear roadmap to adapt their marketing and investment strategies to meet evolving traveler expectations,” said Carla Gullory, chair of the Caribbean Tourism Organization, in her remarks following the launch. “By leaning into sustainable development and tapping new growth markets, we can strengthen the resilience of our tourism economies while preserving the natural and cultural assets that make the Caribbean such a desirable destination.”

    The forum is scheduled to run for three days, with additional working sessions focused on infrastructure investment, workforce development, and climate adaptation strategies for coastal tourism destinations across the region.

  • Olieprijzen licht omhoog in afwachting van Trump-Xi top

    Olieprijzen licht omhoog in afwachting van Trump-Xi top

    Global crude oil prices recorded a mild uptick on Thursday, as market participants held their breath ahead of a high-stakes bilateral meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping scheduled for later the same day. All trading attention remained firmly fixed on evolving developments tied to the ongoing conflict in Iran, a major driver of global energy market volatility.

  • Hopeful Hearts Foundation Launches Into 2026 With 10 Community Initiatives and More National Projects Ahead

    Hopeful Hearts Foundation Launches Into 2026 With 10 Community Initiatives and More National Projects Ahead

    As the calendar turns to 2026, the Hopeful Hearts Foundation, a prominent non-profit organization focused on community uplift, has launched its most ambitious slate of programming to date, rolling out 10 targeted community initiatives across urban and rural regions to address pressing local needs.

    The newly launched projects cover a wide range of public welfare priorities: three neighborhood food security programs targeting food-insecure households, two after-school mentorship schemes for at-risk youth, three affordable home repair initiatives for low-income elderly residents, and two community mental health outreach clinics that offer free counseling services to underserved populations. Each initiative was designed after months of community needs assessments, with local stakeholders and residents contributing input to ensure programming aligns with on-the-ground demands.

    Organizers behind the foundation note that the 2026 launch is more than just an expansion of services—it is a stepping stone to a broader national rollout planned over the next two years. “These 10 community projects serve as proof of concept,” said Maria Gonzalez, executive director of Hopeful Hearts Foundation, in a press briefing earlier this week. “We’ve seen over the past five years how localized, resident-led interventions create lasting change, and now we’re ready to scale that impact across the country.”

    The foundation has already secured $2.7 million in multi-year donor funding to support both the initial local projects and the upcoming national expansion. Local community leaders have welcomed the new initiatives, noting that they fill critical gaps in existing public services that have been underfunded for years. For many residents in the pilot regions, the programs mark the first time they have had access to free, accessible support tailored to their specific challenges. Moving forward, the foundation plans to publish quarterly impact reports to track progress, solicit ongoing community feedback, and update donors and the public on the push toward national expansion.

  • Wellness Waves Foundation Launches Youth Theme Song Competition

    Wellness Waves Foundation Launches Youth Theme Song Competition

    The Wellness Waves Foundation, a leading non-profit organization focused on youth mental health advocacy, has officially announced the launch of its much-anticipated national youth theme song competition, aiming to channel young people’s creative energy into conversations around emotional well-being.

    Open to all aspiring musicians, lyricists and composers aged 14 to 24 across the country, the competition calls for original entries that center on the experiences, hopes and challenges of growing up in today’s fast-paced, digitally connected world. Organizers note that the initiative was developed in response to rising concerns about adolescent anxiety and social disconnection, which have intensified in the years following global public health disruptions.

    “Young people have so much untapped creative voice that often goes unheard,” said Maria Hale, executive director of Wellness Waves Foundation, in a press briefing this Wednesday. “This competition isn’t just about picking the best song—it’s about giving young creators a platform to talk about what matters to them, and to connect with peers through shared experience.”

    Winners of the competition will receive a $5,000 cash grant for their artistic development, a professional studio recording session for their winning track, and the opportunity to perform the song at the foundation’s annual national youth wellness summit this coming fall. A panel of respected musicians, mental health experts and youth advocates will judge entries based on originality, thematic alignment, emotional resonance and artistic execution.

    Submissions opened on Monday and will close on August 15, with finalists announced in mid-September. The foundation has already partnered with 12 secondary schools and 8 post-secondary institutions across the country to promote the competition and encourage participation from underrepresented creative youth groups. Local community arts organizations have also signed on to host regional informational workshops for interested participants who lack access to professional music training.

    Mental health researcher Dr. Lena Torres, who is serving as an advisory judge for the competition, emphasized that creative expression has long been proven to support emotional processing for young people. “When teens and young adults turn their feelings into art, it helps them process their own struggles and lets others know they aren’t alone,” Dr. Torres explained. “This kind of initiative fills a gap between traditional mental health outreach and the everyday ways young people connect.”

  • OPINION: What is Antigua and Barbuda but not a majority black country?

    OPINION: What is Antigua and Barbuda but not a majority black country?

    The principle of non-refoulement, a cornerstone of international refugee and human rights law, bans nations from sending any individual back to a territory where they face credible threats of persecution, torture, inhumane treatment, or irreversible harm. This foundational rule is now casting a long shadow over a proposed immigration deal between the United States and small Caribbean nations like Antigua and Barbuda, where Washington is pushing to offload the burden of migrants who have entered the U.S. illegally, been denied asylum, or overstayed their visas. The plan, championed by U.S. President Donald Trump’s Homeland Security Advisor Stephen Miller, has sparked heated debate over its racial undertones, legal ambiguities, and tangible risks for small host states.

    Trump’s well-documented history of racially charged rhetoric on immigration frames the context of this proposal. In 2018, he infamously labeled Haiti, El Salvador, and a host of African nations “shithole countries,” and doubled down on this stance in 2025, calling for a “permanent pause on Third World migration, including from hellholes like Afghanistan, Haiti, [and] Somalia.” He has openly questioned why the U.S. cannot prioritize immigration from majority-white Nordic countries like Norway, Sweden, and Denmark instead. This rhetoric makes clear the racial bias at the core of the current U.S. administration’s immigration policy, argues Franchesca Sterling, an OAS child advocate and author of this analysis.

    Sterling points out that Trump’s willingness to frame migrants as commodities to be “exported” or “imported” echoes the dehumanizing language of chattel slavery, a framing that she says enables bigotry and echoes harmful patterns of racial exploitation. As a humanist who has worked for eight years as a volunteer child advocate with the Young Center for Immigrant Children’s Rights, supporting unaccompanied minor migrants in the U.S. system, Sterling emphasizes that she holds no anti-immigrant sentiment. Instead, she argues that the proposed third-country national (TCN) deportation deal poses avoidable legal, social, and public health risks to Antigua and Barbuda that the government has not publicly addressed.

    The core legal risk, Sterling explains, stems directly from the principle of non-refoulement. If Antigua and Barbuda agrees to accept TCNs deported from the U.S. — even those without criminal records who do not qualify as “bona fide visitors” under Antigua and Barbuda’s existing immigration law — the nation would be barred from deporting those individuals onward if they commit crimes or violate local laws later. Without a clear agreement requiring the U.S. to take back individuals who become Antigua and Barbuda’s responsibility after they are resettled, the small nation would be left holding an unplanned and unsustainable burden. While existing Antigua and Barbuda law places the cost of repatriation on the carrier or agent that brings an unauthorized migrant to the nation’s shores, it remains unclear whether the U.S. government would honor this requirement under the proposed bilateral deal.

    Sterling also outlines a series of unanswered legal questions that the Antigua and Barbuda government has yet to resolve. Will the government reclassify deported TCNs as “bona fide visitors” upon arrival? If so, who will bear the cost of their housing, food, and social support during their stay — effectively making the Antigua and Barbuda government their official sponsor? If they are not reclassified, what will their legal status be in the country? Under the 2014 Immigration and Passport Act, entry rights can be extended to new groups of people via ministerial order, but TCNs deported from the U.S. are not explicitly named in existing legislation. It remains unclear whether the government will issue such an order, or whether the plan will require full parliamentary approval, a key transparency question that has yet to be addressed publicly.

    Practical documentation challenges add another layer of complexity. Most migrants targeted for deportation from the U.S. entered without valid passports or travel documents, many of which were destroyed during their journey to North America. For large shares of these individuals, formal identity documents such as birth certificates are impossible to obtain: slow bureaucratic processes at foreign consulates based in the U.S. leave many applications stuck in limbo, and many migrants were born in remote rural communities where births were never formally registered with their home government.

    Public health is another critical underaddressed risk. The U.S. requires all incoming migrants to complete a full slate of vaccinations — including influenza, Hepatitis A and B, rotavirus, polio, measles, mumps, rubella, tetanus, diphtheria, pertussis, meningococcal disease, pneumococcal disease, and varicella — as well as screening for tuberculosis, HIV, other sexually transmitted infections, and mental health conditions. Sterling questions whether Antigua and Barbuda will enforce the same strict health requirements, given the strain that unaddressed public health issues could place on the nation’s small healthcare system. She also notes that while U.S. rules accept laboratory evidence of immunity for migrants without formal vaccination records, Antigua and Barbuda’s existing immigration law requires all arriving migrants to be examined by a licensed medical practitioner to verify their health status, a requirement she strongly recommends the government uphold if the deal moves forward.

    Data from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) for 2024–2025 shows that the largest groups of individuals ordered deported from the U.S. come from Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Venezuela, Ecuador, Colombia, Brazil, and Peru — with Mexico accounting for the largest share due to its shared border with the U.S. Other major nationalities include migrants from Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, China, Jamaica, the Philippines, Vietnam, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nigeria, Ethiopia, Somalia, Afghanistan, Syria, Yemen, and a range of European, Asian, and African nations. Sterling emphasizes that many people from these countries already live legally and productively in Antigua and Barbuda, a welcoming small twin-island nation of fewer than 100,000 people that has a long history of hosting visitors and new residents. It is not opposition to migration, but a commitment to protecting Antigua and Barbuda’s national interest that drives her call for greater transparency and scrutiny of the proposed deal.

    Disclaimer: The views expressed in this analysis are the author’s own.

  • Georgetta Lewis-Buchanan Announces Bid for ABFA First Vice President

    Georgetta Lewis-Buchanan Announces Bid for ABFA First Vice President

    A trailblazing figure with decades of cross-disciplinary sports experience is stepping into a new leadership challenge in Antigua and Barbuda’s football ecosystem. Georgetta Lewis-Buchanan, a decorated former national player, award-winning coach and established sports administrator, has formally announced her bid to claim the position of First Vice President of the Antigua and Barbuda Football Association (ABFA).

    Lewis-Buchanan’s connection to football spans more than 20 years at the highest competitive level, where she emerged as one of the nation’s most recognized female athletes. Over two decades representing Antigua and Barbuda on the national team, she collected a string of top individual honors, including multiple Golden Boot awards, Most Valuable Player recognitions, and repeated Player of the Year titles. These accolades cement her reputation as a consistently high-performing competitor who understands the needs of elite-level athletes from firsthand experience.

    Her athletic resume extends far beyond the football pitch, demonstrating a rare versatility across competitive sports. A successful international martial arts competitor, Lewis-Buchanan claimed three gold medals at the 2000 World Games hosted in Melbourne, Australia, followed by back-to-back first-place finishes at the U.S. Open Martial Arts Tournament in 2004 and 2005. This cross-sport success has shaped her approach to leadership, blending discipline, strategic thinking, and a commitment to excellence that translates across all areas of sports work.

    In her coaching career, Lewis-Buchanan has built a proven track record of developing winning programs and nurturing young talent. She guided Princess Margaret Secondary School to multiple championship titles between 2014 and 2016, before taking on the role of Head Coach for Wings SC from 2019 through 2024. Industry recognition of her coaching acumen includes the 2025 CPTSA Outstanding Coach Award, and a 2016 shortlisting for the prestigious CONCACAF Female Coach of the Year honor. Currently, she holds the position of Assistant Coach with Empire FC, continuing to engage with on-the-ground team development.

    Complementing her competitive and coaching experience, Lewis-Buchanan has invested deeply in building expertise in football governance and education. She has completed a range of specialized courses through FIFA focused on core areas including grassroots football development, refereeing protocols, sports administration, and advanced coaching technique. Beyond her coaching role, she currently serves as Secretary for Old Road FC, giving her hands-on experience with the day-to-day operations of a local football club.

    According to her official campaign biography, Lewis-Buchanan’s candidacy is rooted in a longstanding commitment to advancing inclusive sports development, strengthening leadership pathways, and expanding mentorship opportunities for emerging athletes and administrators within the Antigua and Barbuda football community. Her broad base of experience across every segment of the sport positions her as a candidate with unique insight into the challenges and opportunities facing the ABFA as it works to grow football across the nation.

  • Building Materials to Be Distributed to Those in Need in Barbuda

    Building Materials to Be Distributed to Those in Need in Barbuda

    On the Caribbean island of Barbuda, a local support initiative led by the Antigua and Barbuda Labour Party (ABLP) is moving forward to address critical housing needs across the community. Kendra Beazer, the ABLP’s designated caretaker for Barbuda, announced in a public post that collaborative working groups are currently finalizing preparations to distribute essential building supplies to residents facing the greatest hardship.

    Beazer framed the project around the simple, powerful motto: “Building hope, one home at a time.” This grassroots effort is rooted in the core conviction that access to safe, stable housing is a fundamental human right, not an exclusive privilege reserved for a select few. Beazer emphasized that the initiative will continue its work uninterrupted, even as the island grapples with longstanding unresolved challenges surrounding its land tenure system.

    In her statement, Beazer framed each bundle of building material as more than just construction supplies—it represents a tangible step toward broader community resilience, greater social equality, and the fulfillment of the promise that every Barbudan deserves to have a secure place they can call home. To date, the announcement has not included key logistical details, including a specific timeline for the distribution of materials or an estimate of how many local households are expected to receive support through the program.

  • Tourism Ministry Mourns Passing of Sarah Laurent

    Tourism Ministry Mourns Passing of Sarah Laurent

    The combined Ministry of Tourism, Civil Aviation, Transportation and Investment has issued an official statement of mourning following the passing of long-time staff member Sarah Laurent, honoring her contributions to the institution and extending heartfelt sympathies to her inner circle.

    Laurent served as a member of the ministry’s Tourism Statistics Department, a role that supported the organization’s core work tracking and analyzing industry trends for the national tourism sector. The formal tribute, released on Monday, carried the unanimous backing of Tourism Minister Charles Fernandez, the ministry’s senior management team, and all agency employees.

    In the statement, ministry officials reflected on Laurent’s time with the organization, emphasizing that the entire tourism community is pausing to recognize and celebrate her life and service. “Today we remember and honour the life of our dear colleague, Sarah Laurent,” the statement read.

    Amid the sudden loss, the entire ministry has rallied around those closest to Laurent, offering emotional support and collective sympathy. “Our thoughts and prayers are with her loved ones during this difficult time,” the ministry added.

    The statement closed with a final farewell to the beloved team member, noting that her presence within the ministry will leave a lasting gap that will be felt by all who worked alongside her. “Rest peacefully, Sarah. You will be deeply missed.”

  • OPINION: When Good Intentions Do Harm: Why We Must Donate Responsibly

    OPINION: When Good Intentions Do Harm: Why We Must Donate Responsibly

    For the Caribbean region, which is frequently battered by natural hazards, international goodwill and charitable giving are nothing new. But two disaster response specialists are sounding the alarm: even the most well-meaning acts of generosity can spiral into a secondary disaster if they are not properly organized, hampering life-saving response efforts at a time when every second counts for vulnerable communities.

    In a joint opinion editorial, Kevon Campbell, a logistics specialist with the Caribbean Disaster Management Agency (CDEMA), and Jan Willem Wegdam, a shelter advisor with the International Organization for Migration (IOM), outline the persistent challenges created by unsolicited, uncoordinated donations in the aftermath of major catastrophic events. Too often, these unscreened contributions overwhelm already overstretched local ports and storage facilities, they report. Common problematic donations include heavy winter clothing shipped to tropical Caribbean nations, expired food products, unsorted mixed boxes of goods that no staff can organize, and flimsy tarpaulins that cannot hold up to heavy tropical rainstorms.

    Far from supporting communities in crisis, these inappropriate donations create massive logistical backlogs and draw critical resources away from addressing the most urgent, life-threatening needs. Data collected by CDEMA and its participating member states underscores the scale of the problem. Without clear, enforced donation management policies in place, large volumes of unusable or ill-suited goods consume limited, valuable staff time, operational capacity, and emergency funding. This places crippling strain on already strained national logistics networks, which in turn delays the delivery of actually essential supplies: clean drinking water, nutritious food, durable shelter materials, and critical medical equipment and pharmaceuticals.

    Worse still, experts estimate that as much as 60 percent of all unsolicited donated goods end up never being distributed to people in need. Most are ultimately discarded as waste, creating additional environmental damage that compounds the destruction already caused by the original disaster.

    The specialists emphasize that these challenges extend far beyond operational logistical headaches, carrying tangible human costs. When emergency response systems are bogged down by unneeded donations, the most vulnerable populations – including children, elderly residents, and low-income communities already hit hardest by disasters – are forced to wait longer for the life-saving aid that can mean the difference between life and death.