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  • Caribbean Voices Must Be Heard in Global Climate Talks, Says Minister Joseph

    Caribbean Voices Must Be Heard in Global Climate Talks, Says Minister Joseph

    Against the backdrop of the 2026 Berlin Climate Mobility Forum, a top Caribbean official is amplifying a long-silenced call: Small Island Developing States (SIDS) like Antigua and Barbuda must be granted far greater influence in global climate governance, rather than being sidelined from decisions that shape their very survival.

    In a post-forum interview, Michael Joseph, who serves as Antigua and Barbuda’s Minister of Health, Wellness, Environment and Civil Service Affairs, drew a stark contrast that underscores the injustice at the heart of the global climate crisis. While Caribbean nations collectively contribute less than a fraction of one percent of the world’s total greenhouse gas emissions, they bear a wildly disproportionate share of climate harm, from crippling extreme weather to slow-onset disasters like rising sea levels that threaten to erase entire territories.

    Joseph emphasized that this gap in responsibility is matched by a gap in representation: even as climate-induced displacement and mobility emerge as defining global challenges of the 21st century, Caribbean voices remain drastically underrepresented in international negotiations focused on adaptation and climate-driven migration. “Caribbean voices are diminished even more,” Joseph noted, arguing that the region cannot afford to be an afterthought in policy processes that will directly determine the future of its people and nations.

    The region’s unique vulnerability is on clear display every year, Joseph pointed out: for six months annually, Caribbean communities brace for the destructive force of Atlantic hurricanes, which can wipe out years of development gains in a matter of hours. He cited recent examples across the region, including Antigua and Barbuda and Dominica, where single storm events have caused catastrophic damage to infrastructure, crippled local economies, and reversed hard-won progress in poverty reduction and public service expansion.

    For SIDS across the Caribbean, climate risk is not a distant hypothetical. “For many of us, it is not a matter of if, but who is going to be impacted,” Joseph said, framing the urgency of the region’s demand for a permanent seat at the table when global leaders negotiate climate financing and resilience-building measures. Without a direct voice in these discussions, he argued, policies are often designed that fail to address the unique needs of small island nations, leaving communities more exposed to preventable harm.

    To address the systemic barriers that block SIDS from accessing critical climate support, Joseph renewed calls for the broader adoption of the Multidimensional Vulnerability Index (MVI) by international financial institutions. The minister explained that traditional metrics used to determine eligibility for grants, concessional loans, and other climate-related funding often fail to capture the full scope of small island states’ inherent vulnerability. These outdated frameworks force many SIDS into unfair disadvantage, locking them out of the affordable support they need to prepare for and recover from climate disasters.

    Joseph closed by reiterating the region’s core demands: increased climate finance tailored to the needs of SIDS, formal and meaningful representation in global climate decision-making bodies, and targeted international support to protect the livelihoods, distinct cultures, and traditional ways of life that are now at risk due to rising global temperatures.

    Held in Berlin, the annual Climate Mobility Forum gathers policymakers, academic researchers, and leaders of international organizations to address the rapidly growing challenge of displacement and migration triggered by climate change, a crisis that is projected to displace hundreds of millions of people globally by mid-century if decisive action is not taken.

  • Derde helft WK 2026: Dag 9 – VS en Brazilië in actie, Mexico verzekerd van knock-out

    Derde helft WK 2026: Dag 9 – VS en Brazilië in actie, Mexico verzekerd van knock-out

    The 2026 FIFA World Cup group stage continues Friday with four high-stakes matches spread across host cities across the United States, as tournament favorites and underdogs alike fight for precious spots in the knockout round. Mexico has already made history as the first team to punch its ticket to the next round, while off-pitch developments have cast both celebration and concern over co-host Canada’s breakout tournament run.

    Four matches on Friday’s schedule will shape the fate of multiple groups. The home United States side faces Australia in Seattle, with both teams entering the clash off opening-match wins, looking to move one step closer to knockout qualification. In Foxborough, Massachusetts, Scotland will square off against Morocco, a repeat of their 1998 World Cup group stage encounter where Morocco claimed a dominant 3-0 victory. Morocco has built a strong record against European opposition at recent World Cups, with nine of their 12 matches since 2018 coming against European sides, and will look to continue that form against Scotland. In Philadelphia, five-time World Cup champions Brazil will chase their first win of the tournament against Haiti, a side still reeling from an opening-match defeat to Scotland. Brazil holds an unblemished 3-0 record against Haiti in all prior meetings, having scored 17 goals while conceding just one, and enters the match as the clear favorite. The day’s action closes with a late-night kickoff between Turkey and Paraguay in Santa Clara, California – the first ever World Cup meeting between the two sides, who previously played out a 0-0 friendly draw back in 1995.

    Co-host Canada’s biggest ever men’s World Cup win is overshadowed by a devastating injury
    Canada’s men’s national team earned the most lopsided and historic victory in its program’s history on Thursday, defeating Qatar 6-0 at Vancouver’s BC Place to move to the brink of knockout qualification. But the jubilant celebrations were cut short by a severe injury to star central midfielder Ismael Kone.

    The 24-year-old was stretchered off the pitch in the second half following a dangerous tackle by Qatar’s Assim Madibo, who received a red card for the challenge. Canadian captain Stephen Eustaquio said the severity of the injury was immediately apparent, and head coach Jesse Marsch confirmed after the match that Kone was rushed to hospital for surgery after scans confirmed fractures to both his fibula and tibia. The midfielder faces multiple months of rehabilitation to recover.

    “Everyone was devastated when it happened,” Marsch told reporters. “But we found a way to stay focused. We knew Ismael would want us to finish the job.”
    Marsch added that Madibo visited the Canadian locker room after the match to apologize to Kone, and said he did not believe the tackle was intentional. “I don’t think he meant to make such a hard challenge, I don’t blame him,” Marsch said. “But I don’t understand the reaction from their bench.” The red card for Madibo left Qatar with nine men for the remainder of the match, after defender Homam El Amin was also sent off in the first half for a professional foul.
    Despite the emotional blow, Canada pushed on to secure the 6-0 win, the first five-goal victory by a CONCACAF side in World Cup history, and now sits firmly in position to advance to the knockout round in its first home tournament.

    Mexico becomes first team to lock in knockout round spot
    Mexico claimed a 1-0 victory over South Korea on Thursday, securing back-to-back wins to open group play and become the first nation to officially qualify for the 2026 World Cup knockout stage.

    Other off-pitch tournament developments
    The 2026 World Cup has already produced no shortage of memorable off-pitch stories, from a viral fan anthem to updates on global soccer icons. Bosnian side Bosnia and Herzegovina’s tournament run has been accompanied by an unexpected cultural phenomenon: a reworked World Cup anthem that began life as a satirical track about emigration. Sarajevo-based band Dubioza Kolektiv reworked their 2011 hit *USA* into *I Am From Bosnia, Take Me to America*, transforming a song that originally poked fun at the desire to leave the Balkans for the United States into an ode to Bosnia and Herzegovina’s long-awaited return to the World Cup. The reworked track has quickly gone viral among fans, racking up nearly 2 million views on YouTube in just a few weeks, and has become the unofficial soundtrack of the country’s tournament run, with band members saying they are stunned by how fans have embraced the track as a rallying cry of national pride.

    Family of Argentine icon Lionel Messi has shared a positive health update for Jorge Messi, the star’s father, who recently faced an undisclosed medical issue. The Messi family announced Thursday that Jorge is recovering well, his condition is progressing favorably under medical supervision, and asked for privacy as he continues his recovery. The update comes after widespread speculation over Jorge’s health following Lionel Messi’s emotional goal celebration in Argentina’s opening match against Algeria, where the captain later confirmed he was navigating a difficult personal matter unrelated to football.

    The United States, meanwhile, is waiting on a fitness update for captain Christian Pulisic, who picked up a left calf injury in the opening half of the team’s opening match against Paraguay. Pulisic has done individual rehabilitation work since being substituted at half-time, and coach Mauricio Pochettino said his participation in Friday’s match against Australia remains uncertain. A final decision will be made following consultation with the team’s medical and performance staff, Pochettino added. “We’ll see,” he said. “If he’s not available tomorrow, he’ll be ready for the next match.” Pulisic remains a critical piece of the U.S.’s tournament run, and his fitness is being closely monitored as the co-host chases a spot in the knockout round.

    Off the pitch in Colombia, Liverpool star Luis Diaz has become a source of inspiration and opportunity for his hometown of Barrancas, where his impact extends far beyond the football pitch. Through his charitable foundation, Diaz has funded new artificial grass pitches and community sports facilities for the region, which has long lacked resources for young aspiring players. Diaz’s father, Luis Manuel Diaz, recalled recognizing his son’s natural talent from an early age: “He was so agile, so fast. He loved getting past defenders and always wanted the ball at his feet,” he said. “I knew he could make it as a professional, but I never imagined he’d reach the level he has today.” Even after facing significant personal challenges, including Luis Manuel’s 2023 kidnapping, the Diaz family has remained deeply committed to supporting their home community. For young local players, Diaz has become a symbol of what is possible: “What happened to me is in the past,” Luis Manuel said. “What matters now is that there are kids here who dream of becoming the next Luis Diaz. We have to help more stories like his happen here.”

    With all 48 participating teams having now played their opening group stage matches, the race for knockout spots is taking shape. While Mexico has already booked its place, the fight for remaining spots remains wide open in nearly every group. Co-hosts Canada and the United States sit in strong positions after strong opening results, while defending champions Argentina and other pre-tournament favorites have also impressed in their early outings.

  • Over 100 hospitality professionals complete Caribbean Supercharged Training in Grenada

    Over 100 hospitality professionals complete Caribbean Supercharged Training in Grenada

    Grenada’s tourism sector has marked a major milestone in workforce development, with more than 100 local hospitality professionals successfully completing the second level of the Caribbean Supercharged Training Series, a collaborative upskilling initiative led by the Caribbean Hotel and Tourism Association Education Foundation (CHTAEF) and the Tourism Enhancement Fund of the Grenada Hotel and Tourism Association (GHTA).

    The industry-focused training program was designed to address core skill gaps across the regional hospitality sector, with coursework structured around three high-priority competency areas: supervisory and management leadership, Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points (HACCP) food safety protocols, and customer service excellence through the specialized “The Big Score: Service with a Difference” curriculum. All sessions were led by experienced industry facilitators Louise John and Suzanne Brooks, with on-the-ground support from two prominent local Grenadian hotels, Point Salines Hotel and True Blue Bay Hotel, which served as local program partners.

    A formal closing ceremony to honor the graduating cohort was chaired by Arlene Friday, Chief Executive Officer of GHTA, who opened the event by welcoming participating learners, program partners, lead trainers, cross-sector tourism stakeholders, and media representatives. In her opening address, Friday praised the graduates for their consistent dedication to ongoing professional development and self-improvement, emphasizing that the collective upskilling effort directly elevates three critical pillars of the destination’s tourism industry: leadership capacity, standardized food safety, and customer service excellence. “To the participants: you came eager to learn, you engaged fully, and you committed to change,” Friday stated in her remarks. “That commitment matters — not just to your individual properties, but to the reputation and long-term future of our entire Grenadian destination.”

    Elvis Lewis, President of GHTA, used his remarks to spotlight the critical role of the GHTA Tourism Enhancement Fund in enabling accessible, industry-aligned training for local hospitality workers, and urged graduates to translate their new knowledge and skills into tangible improvements in their daily work, rather than treating the certification as a final career milestone. “The certificate you receive today is not the destination; it is a passport to the next phase of your professional and personal growth,” Lewis told the graduating cohort.

    A message of encouragement from CHTAEF Chair Karolyn Troubetzkoy was delivered on her behalf by Maxine Pierre, while official remarks from Senator the Honourable Adrian Thomas, Grenada’s Minister for Tourism, the Creative Economy and Culture, were presented by Chief Planning Officer Petra Fraser. The minister’s statement called on graduates to embrace the training as a starting point for transformative change across the sector. “Let this training be the beginning of a new attitude, a new confidence, a new standard, and a new commitment to excellence,” the statement read. “The tourism industry of tomorrow will not be built by buildings alone, beaches alone, or marketing slogans alone. It will be built by trained people, confident people, creative people, disciplined people, and patriotic people who understand that every visitor interaction is an opportunity to lift the image of Grenada.”

    This second iteration of the Caribbean Supercharged Training Series underscores the shared, long-term commitment of CHTAEF, the GHTA Tourism Enhancement Fund, and local industry partners to investing in Grenada’s tourism workforce and raising the bar for the overall visitor experience on the island.

  • ECAB Advises Customers Visa and Mastercard Cards No Longer Accepted in Cuba

    ECAB Advises Customers Visa and Mastercard Cards No Longer Accepted in Cuba

    Travelers and businesses planning financial activity in Cuba are facing a major shift in payment options, as all Visa and Mastercard branded cards are no longer accepted for transactions across the country. The change stems from a recent United States Executive Order signed into effect on May 1, 2026, which has triggered operational restrictions for the international financial partner that previously handled all credit card processing for Cuban financial institutions.

    After the new executive order entered force, Cuba’s Central Bank issued a formal notification confirming that the third-party processing partner has significantly scaled back its operations in the jurisdiction, leaving no infrastructure to support Visa and Mastercard transactions. This suspension applies to all card types issued by the Eastern Caribbean Amalgamated Bank (ECAB) and other issuing institutions, including standard credit cards, debit cards linked to personal checking accounts, and prepaid cards loaded for travel.

    ECAB and other card-issuing institutions have issued urgent advisories to their customer bases urging anyone with upcoming travel or business plans in Cuba to arrange alternative payment methods well in advance of their departure. Financial leaders note that failing to prepare alternate payment options could lead to significant disruptions to travel plans, business operations, and daily purchases during a stay in Cuba.

    In their advisory, bank management apologized for the unplanned disruption this policy change creates for cardholders, emphasizing that the suspension is a result of external regulatory changes outside of the issuing bank’s control. They expressed gratitude for customers’ patience and understanding as the global financial system adjusts to the new policy framework. Customers with questions about the change or concerns about upcoming travel are encouraged to reach out to their bank’s customer support team for further guidance.

  • Tropical Storm Arthur Causes an Estimated $4-6 Billion in Total Damage and Economic Loss

    Tropical Storm Arthur Causes an Estimated $4-6 Billion in Total Damage and Economic Loss

    In late summer, a relatively weak tropical system has left a staggering mark on the U.S. Gulf Coast, with preliminary assessments from AccuWeather forecasting total damage and economic losses ranging between $4 billion and $6 billion. Tropical Storm Arthur, which spent less than 24 hours officially classified at tropical storm strength after forming off the Texas coast, unleashed catastrophic, life-threatening weather across a multi-state stretch from Texas to the Florida Panhandle, with Louisiana and Mississippi bearing the brunt of the destruction.

    Record-shattering rainfall amounts overwhelmed local infrastructure across the region. In Cottonport, Louisiana, the storm dumped a total of 31.56 inches of rain over just a few days, while nearby Plaucheville and Simmesport recorded 24.47 inches and 20.66 inches respectively. Even in Carriere, Mississippi, totals reached 15.75 inches, far exceeding the capacity of local drainage systems. The extreme precipitation sparked widespread flash flooding that closed dozens of roads, inundated hundreds of homes and businesses, and forced emergency teams to carry out dozens of high-water rescues. As of 7 a.m. Friday, at least two fatalities have been confirmed, two tornadoes have been recorded in Louisiana, and additional twisters are expected to be documented as assessment teams reach isolated areas.

    AccuWeather’s preliminary estimate accounts for every dimension of the storm’s economic footprint, from direct physical damage to homes, businesses and public infrastructure to indirect costs including extended business interruptions, hundreds of flight delays, prolonged power outages, supply chain disruptions, crop losses, emergency evacuation and response expenses, and ongoing recovery costs. AccuWeather experts note the final total could climb even higher, as many hard-hit areas have not yet submitted full damage reports, and lingering impacts continue to disrupt local communities weeks after floodwaters first rose.

    “Flooding, travel disruptions, power outages and business interruptions can quickly add up to billions of dollars in impacts for families, businesses and communities,” said Dan DePodwin, AccuWeather Vice President of Forecasting Operations. “Arthur is another reminder that tropical systems do not need to reach hurricane strength to cause significant, expensive and even deadly damage and economic losses.”

    Flooding was by far the costliest impact of the storm, a pattern DePodwin says is common for weaker tropical systems that move inland. To better communicate the full scope of a storm’s threat beyond just wind speed, AccuWeather used its proprietary RealImpact™ Scale for Hurricanes to rate Arthur a 2, due to its life-threatening flooding. This differs from the traditional Saffir-Simpson scale, which only ranks storms by wind speed and would have classified Arthur as a low-level event before dissipation.

    “Arthur is a clear example of why the AccuWeather RealImpact Scale for Hurricanes is so important. Instead of classifying a storm’s threat by just its wind speed, the scale accounts for the other many threats that are caused by tropical systems. Storm surge, and in the case of Arthur flooding, are typically responsible for more widespread impacts than wind damage alone and more people are killed by water than wind in tropical systems. Some of the most destructive flood events in our nation’s history were caused by tropical storms or unnamed tropical rainstorms,” DePodwin added.

    AccuWeather’s damage estimate uses independent, proprietary methodology that incorporates both insured and uninsured losses, drawing on a wide range of public and proprietary data sources to capture both short-term and long-term economic impacts. The company has been a leading provider of preliminary disaster damage estimates since 2017, when its widely cited early assessment of Hurricane Harvey helped the public and policymakers grasp the full scale of that catastrophic event. Unlike many partial assessments that only count insured property damage, AccuWeather’s methodology includes lost wages and business income, cleanup and emergency management costs, long-term disruptions to tourism and transportation, and even unreported medical and mortality costs that are often omitted from official early estimates.

  • OPINION: Is Extending and Expanding the Windfall Tax the Correct Answer?

    OPINION: Is Extending and Expanding the Windfall Tax the Correct Answer?

    A fresh debate over the future of Antigua and Barbuda’s temporary windfall tax has erupted following a June 2026 opinion piece calling for the policy’s extension and expansion to advance national education goals. Responding to Professor C. Justin Robinson’s argument that the proposal deserves full national deliberation, a veteran policy analyst with over 35 years of decision-making experience has pushed back against the rushed framing of the conversation, while calling for greater transparency and dispassionate cost-benefit analysis before any final policy vote.

    The analyst emphasizes that effective problem-solving does not prioritize being seen as correct, but rather making the right, contextually informed decision. A robust decision-making process requires first defining clear, measurable outcomes, diagnosing why current systems are falling short, evaluating emerging trends and alternative solutions, and only then deliberating on a path forward. In the analyst’s view, the current conversation around the windfall tax has inverted this process: the solution—extending and expanding the levy—has been presented to the public before any clear consensus on the underlying problem has been established.

    While the analyst acknowledges alignment with some of the equity-focused education outcomes Professor Robinson aims to achieve, they reject the windfall tax as the appropriate funding mechanism. They also note a structural conflict of interest: Professor Robinson is affiliated with the University of the West Indies (UWI), the primary beneficiary of the tax revenue, so full objectivity on the policy cannot reasonably be expected.

    For context, the windfall tax was first introduced in 2019 as a three-year temporary measure to fund the construction of UWI’s Five Islands Campus. Levied at a 10% rate on net profits, it applies exclusively to private businesses operating in banking, telecommunications, insurance, and petroleum distribution—on top of the existing 25% corporate tax already paid by these firms. Despite its original temporary mandate, the government has repeatedly extended the tax without public justification, a move the analyst describes as convenient and dishonest.

    Critically, the analyst argues that the sacred cow of public education should not shield the proposal from rigorous scrutiny. Before committing scarce public resources to expanded education funding, policymakers must first answer a fundamental question: what measurable return on public investment do Antiguans and Barbudans expect from expanded education spending? Is the goal to produce more tourism-sector workers, legal professionals, or tech and AI specialists? Without clear outcome metrics, strategic budget allocation is impossible.

    Limiting their critique to the funding components of the proposal, the analyst has laid out nine core questions that demand public answers from the government before any vote to extend and expand the tax. These include: what is the annual revenue yield of the current tax, and how is that money currently spent; how much additional revenue does the new education plan require; what happened to revenue from the existing Education Levy; with a total national budget exceeding EC$2 billion, can funds be reallocated from existing priorities instead of raising new taxes; how is the government addressing widespread public sector waste to free up additional revenue for education; how long can the increased tax burden be sustained before it pushes struggling private firms out of business, particularly when they face unfair competition from tax-exempt state-owned enterprises and ongoing global economic shocks; what is the plan to make new education initiatives self-sustaining after the windfall tax is eventually withdrawn; when will state-owned enterprises operating in the taxed sectors start contributing their fair share to the fund, and is it fair to require private firms to compete against state competitors that do not pay the levy; and finally, how will expanded funding guarantee improved education quality, rather than just more spending with no accountability for outcomes.

    The analyst rejects Professor Robinson’s framing that policymakers should only focus on what new programs the tax can fund, ignoring the concept of opportunity cost and the growing financial strain already faced by private sector businesses. No discussion has yet addressed how expanding the tax net will push up business costs, which will inevitably be passed on to consumers, already strained by a per-capita annual public spending burden of $20,000. The analyst also questions whether the country can afford to expand public spending programs without risking sovereign fiscal instability.

    For the proposal to qualify as a genuine national consideration, the government must first release all relevant data to the public to allow for informed public feedback. Echoing the core principle of democratic governance, the analyst concludes: “No taxation without representation!”

  • Belize Loses Miss Universe Franchise

    Belize Loses Miss Universe Franchise

    In a development that has disappointed pageant communities across Belize, the Miss Universe Belize Foundation has confirmed it will no longer hold the national franchise for the iconic Miss Universe competition, with the licensing rights transferred to an El Salvador-based organization. This transition brings a sudden end to the Foundation’s tenure overseeing the Belizean national pageant, at least for the immediate future.

    According to an official statement from the Foundation, the organization had already notified the global Miss Universe leadership of its plan to step back temporarily after the 2025 pageant cycle. The Foundation intended to use the pause to restructure its internal operations and community outreach programs, with a clear goal of reclaiming the franchise and returning to host the national competition in 2027.

    Despite this arranged temporary exit, Miss Universe’s central governing body made the final call to reassign the Belize franchise to the Salvadoran organization, derailing the Foundation’s planned comeback timeline.

    The Belizean foundation expressed deep disappointment over the outcome, but took time to highlight the meaningful work it has advanced during its years of stewardship. Over its tenure, the organization prioritized empowering the young women who competed as delegates and titleholders, fostering personal growth that has transformed many of its past queens into prominent community leaders, respected role models, and public ambassadors for Belize on global stages.

    Beyond empowering contestants, the Foundation also embedded support for local economic growth into its pageant operations. It intentionally built pathways for Belizean creatives, independent entrepreneurs, and small local businesses to showcase their products and skills to national audiences, allowing these local stakeholders to contribute directly to the pageant’s success while gaining valuable exposure.

    In closing, the Foundation confirmed that the current titleholder, Miss Universe Belize 2025 Isabella Zabaneh, will continue to fulfill her scheduled duties. She remains available for public appearances, speaking engagements, brand partnerships, local community events, and marketing opportunities throughout her remaining tenure.

  • Digicel introduces new Digi-Duo mobile and fibre bundle

    Digicel introduces new Digi-Duo mobile and fibre bundle

    Digicel St. Lucia has launched an innovative new convergence package called Digi-Duo, merging mobile connectivity and home fibre internet into a single, cost-effective offering built for the needs of contemporary families.

    Crafted to address the growing demand for reliable connectivity both at home and while out and about, the new bundle promises faster speeds, greater overall value, and a more seamless user experience than managing separate mobile and fixed-line services from different providers.

    Pricing for the entry-level Digi-Duo plan starts at just $191 per month. For this monthly rate, new customers receive 20GB of mobile data and a 350 Mbps home fibre connection, all consolidated onto one bill for added convenience. The company has also structured attractive perks for existing subscribers: current Digicel+ customers can add mobile service to their existing home internet plan for only $55 extra per month, unlocking enhanced savings. Additionally, users can extend the full benefits of the bundle to a second household member for just $50 more monthly, making it simple for the whole family to access high-quality connectivity without breaking the bank.

    This new bundle builds on Digicel’s ongoing pledge to expand access to faster, more affordable internet. The 350 Mbps entry-level home fibre speed, first rolled out across the provider’s network in 2025, is now a standard feature of all base-tier Digi-Duo plans. Backed by Digicel’s upgraded national network, the combined service supports a wide range of modern connected activities, from high-definition streaming across multiple devices to uninterrupted video calls with family and friends.

    Joel Wallace, CEO of Digicel St. Lucia, shared his perspective on the launch in an official statement. “Our focus is simple: to give customers more speed, more value, and more reasons to choose Digicel,” Wallace said. “From our new Digi-Duo bundle, which brings together the best of mobile and home fibre connectivity, to our enhanced entry-level fibre speeds, we are committed to delivering smarter, better connectivity experiences that power everyday life. Our ongoing investments in the network and offerings ensure that customers truly feel the difference in performance and value.”

    Wallace, who was appointed Regional CEO for Digicel’s operations across Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent, Grenada and Dominica earlier in 2025, brings decades of industry experience to the role. He has continued to lead customer-focused product innovation and network quality improvements across the company’s mobile, residential fibre, and business service lines.

    Digicel maintains its long-term commitment to expanding and upgrading digital infrastructure across the Caribbean, with a focus on rolling out customer-centric solutions that foster meaningful real-world connections. Interested customers can sign up for the new Digi-Duo bundle either in-person at any Digicel retail location or online via the company’s official St. Lucia website at https://www.digicelgroup.com/lc.

  • This Day in History: 19 June 1980

    This Day in History: 19 June 1980

    On June 19, 1980, the Caribbean island nation of Grenada was shaken by a senseless act of violence that cut short three young lives and left dozens injured, just as the country gathered to celebrate its revolutionary legacy. On that fateful Wednesday, thousands of passionate supporters had flocked to Queen’s Park, the island’s iconic public gathering space, for a commemorative rally meant to formally recognize two of the movement’s most iconic figures: Tubal Uriah “Buzz” Butler and Alister Strachan, who had been designated Heroes of the Grenadian Revolution.

    As attendees prepared to hear remarks from the nation’s leadership, a hidden explosive device detonated beneath the venue’s main grandstand. The blast immediately transformed a day of national celebration into a scene of chaos and grief: three young women lost their lives in the attack, and dozens more people suffered injuries of varying severity. In the hours after the tragedy, Prime Minister Maurice Bishop addressed the nation in a special evening broadcast on Radio Free Grenada, titled *New Martyrs, New Heroes, New Patriots*, to respond to the attack and honor the lives lost. The original account of this tragic event draws from two key historical sources: Beverley A. Steele’s authoritative work *Grenada: A History of its People*, and archival materials published on the independent historical platform Grenada Revolution Online. This article, published via NOW Grenada, adheres to the platform’s contributor content guidelines, which hold contributors responsible for the claims and context included in shared historical materials, with an open channel for reporting potential content violations.

  • Forum urges shift from aid to private investment

    Forum urges shift from aid to private investment

    On Thursday, a cross-sector coalition of Caribbean regional leaders and major global investors issued a clear call to action: Caribbean governments must break long-standing patterns of aid dependence and aggressively pivot toward mobilizing private sector capital to drive inclusive, sustained growth. Opening the high-stakes inaugural Caribbean Economic Forum (CEF) — a gathering that unites global investment firms, national government officials, and leading multilateral financial bodies — organizers laid out an ambitious core goal: to reframe the Caribbean from a patchwork of fragmented small markets into a cohesive, globally competitive, and investable asset class.

    Clinton White, founder of Counselor Global Solutions and co-convenor of the CEF, delivered the opening welcome remarks, drawing on his decades of experience working and living in the region during his tenure covering Caribbean economies for the now-disbanded U.S. Agency for International Development. White pointed to Barbados’ decades-long track record of economic resilience as a powerful case study for what small Caribbean states can accomplish when they embrace strategic economic transformation. “After gaining independence in 1966, this 166-square-mile island completely rewrote its economic story: it moved from a system almost entirely reliant on sugar exports to a diversified economy powered by tourism, international financial services, education, and a fast-growing innovation and sustainability sector,” White explained. “That transformation proves small states can deliver extraordinary outcomes when they set clear, ambitious goals.”

    White traced the origins of the forum back to a 2020 partnership he forged with CEF Executive Director Kiran Maharaj, USAID, and the Trinidad and Tobago Chamber of Industry and Commerce. The founding principle of that collaboration, he noted, is that no government can deliver large-scale economic transformation on its own. “We all acknowledge that development assistance still plays a critical role in the region, but we also recognize that aid alone will never be enough to tackle the full scale of the Caribbean’s opportunities and challenges,” White said in his address. “Aid can kickstart change, but only private investment can sustain it. Grants can build institutional capacity, but private capital builds entire industries, generates long-term jobs, and rewrites economic trajectories for entire communities.”

    White’s opening arguments drew heavily on data from the newly published *Caribbean Development Dynamics 2026* report from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), which frames the Caribbean as standing at a defining crossroads for development. The report confirms that nearly 80% of all current investment flowing into the Caribbean already comes from the private sector. With that in mind, White argued, the region’s top challenge is no longer convincing global investors of the Caribbean’s inherent value — it is removing structural barriers to channel existing investor interest into high-impact, transformative sectors that deliver broad-based growth. Key priority sectors he identified include renewable energy, climate-resilient sustainable tourism, the blue economy, digital transformation, and artificial intelligence innovation.

    “At the end of the day, this forum is not about us — it’s about the next generation of Caribbean people,” White emphasized. “Our goal is to build economies where young people don’t feel forced to leave their home islands to find opportunity. The choices we make in this room will determine whether the next generation inherits a region defined by vulnerability, or one defined by resilience, innovation, and shared prosperity for all.”

    Following White’s remarks, CEF co-founder Gregory Hill, who also serves as Managing Partner at ACERO Capital, took the stage to challenge attendees to set aside generic conference rhetoric and focus exclusively on tangible financial execution. Hill pushed back against the long-held international narrative that frames the Caribbean as a collection of isolated, economically vulnerable small states, instead positioning the region as one of the world’s most strategically important untapped investment frontiers.

    “Let me be completely blunt and clear from the start: this is not just another regional development conference,” Hill told assembled delegates. “We are not here to talk — we are here to work, we are here to collaborate, and we are here to deliver actual results. We did not gather just to discuss what development could look like; we are here to finance it. So bring your checkbooks.”

    Hill argued that the Caribbean economy can no longer afford endless cycles of diagnostic reports and policy discussions that never translate to on-the-ground action. He noted that the combined balance sheets of the global institutional investors and financial bodies represented at the forum total roughly $25 trillion — creating an unprecedented opportunity to close the long-standing gap between abundant global capital and the pipeline of viable, high-impact local projects across the Caribbean.

    Over the course of the forum, discussions will center on four core strategic pillars: accelerating the region’s energy transition, building climate-resilient infrastructure, advancing food security through agricultural modernization, and growing the Caribbean’s creative economy. To deliver scaled investment across these sectors, Hill argued, the region needs a modernized financial framework that leverages blended finance structures to reduce risk for private sector entities entering the market.

    Hill also called for a fundamental shift in how the success of multilateral development banks and development finance institutions operating in the Caribbean is measured. He proposed that these entities should be evaluated primarily by their ability to mobilize and deploy private capital into productive regional assets, rather than by the total volume of independent loans or grants they disburse.

    “Success will not be measured by how eloquent our speeches are today,” Hill said. “Success will only be measured by the formal mandates we sign, the partnerships we lock in, the projects that get actual funding, the businesses that expand, and the jobs that are created for Caribbean people. If we get this right, future generations will look back and see that this was the moment the Caribbean stopped viewing itself as a collection of independent, isolated, fractured economies — and started acting as a unified, investable asset class that delivers shared prosperity for all.”