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  • Home Burgled in Crosbies; SUV Stolen

    Home Burgled in Crosbies; SUV Stolen

    A residential burglary in the Crosbies area has triggered an active investigation by local law enforcement, after intruders broke into a private residence while the homeowner was asleep inside the property.

    According to initial law enforcement accounts, the thieves did not only gain unlawful access to the home, but also made off with multiple personal items belonging to the resident, in addition to a silver Hyundai Santa Fe SUV that was taken from the location.

    Local police have issued a public appeal for community assistance, asking any residents or passersby who spot the stolen vehicle, or who hold any tips that could help advance the investigation, to contact the department at the dedicated line 562-5730.

    Preliminary reports confirm that the sleeping homeowner was not physically harmed during the break-in. As of the latest update, additional details about the incident, including potential clues about the suspects or the full list of stolen property, have not been released to the public pending ongoing investigative work.

  • Trump sends warship to Caribbean in Show of Force Toward Cuba

    Trump sends warship to Caribbean in Show of Force Toward Cuba

    In a high-profile demonstration of American military power amid a sharp escalation of tensions between Washington and Havana, the USS Nimitz aircraft carrier and its accompanying strike group arrived in the southern Caribbean this week. The deployment comes as the former Trump administration ramped up diplomatic and legal pressure on Cuba, just after federal law enforcement officials unsealed rare criminal charges against former Cuban President Raúl Castro.

    U.S. Southern Command has publicly clarified that the movement of the massive naval contingent is designed as a show of force, not a precursor to imminent direct military action against the island nation. Prior to repositioning to Caribbean waters, the carrier and its crew had been completing joint maritime training exercises with the Brazilian Navy, a routine partnership activity that predated the current escalation.

    The timing of the strike group’s arrival aligned exactly with the Justice Department’s decision to publicly unseal the long-sealed charges against Castro. The allegations tie Castro directly to the 1996 shooting down of two civilian aircraft piloted by members of Brothers to the Rescue, a prominent anti-Castro exile group based in the United States.

    The heavily equipped strike group, which consists of the nuclear-powered supercarrier, advanced fighter aircraft squadrons, guided-missile destroyers, and dedicated logistics support vessels, marks a measurable expansion of already growing U.S. military and intelligence surveillance activity in the maritime region surrounding Cuba. This deployment is the most visible step in a steady build-up of American pressure on the Cuban government in recent years, as bilateral relations between the two nations deteriorated sharply during the administration’s tenure.

  • Petition to reinstate death penalty surpasses 7,500 signatures

    Petition to reinstate death penalty surpasses 7,500 signatures

    A grassroots campaign to bring back capital punishment in Saint Lucia has rapidly built public support in the wake of a high-profile fatal shooting that has sent shockwaves across the Caribbean nation. As of the latest update, the online petition hosted on Change.org has collected 7,622 signatures, far exceeding the organizers’ initial 7,500 signature milestone, and campaign leaders are now preparing to deliver a formal formal appeal to the country’s parliamentary representatives.

    The petition, officially titled “Petition to Reinstate and Active-enforce Capital Punishment for Capital Murder and Heinous Offences in Saint Lucia”, was launched last Thursday. Its launch came just 24 hours after 24-year-old Joy St Omer — a budding entrepreneur, student, and mother of one — was killed in a shooting that has sparked national public outrage.

    In an update posted to the petition page, organizers announced the movement’s next steps: “Family, we have officially crossed 7,500 supporters! Thank you to everyone who signed and shared. We are moving to the next phase. I am currently compiling our final signature list and drafting the formal letters to be delivered to Members of Parliament so we can get this issue officially brought to the floor of the House of Assembly.”

    Campaign leaders are now pushing to expand their support base even further, setting a new target of 10,000 signatures to demonstrate the depth of public demand for action on citizen security and judicial reform. “Let’s hit 10,000 signatures next to show our leaders exactly how serious the community is about citizen security and justice!” the petition page reads.

    According to official police statements, the prime suspect in St Omer’s murder is her estranged husband, who has since turned himself in to authorities and remains in custody. Records confirm that a full protection order was already in effect against the suspect prior to the killing, with an active court case pending over allegations that he had already violated the terms of that order. St Omer had repeatedly contacted police to report concerns about the suspect, including making contact on the very day she was killed.

    Court documents show the suspect was arrested and charged in March 2026 with assault, criminal threats, and violation of the protection order following a complaint filed at the Anse La Raye Police Station. Bail was initially denied by the First District Court, but the suspect successfully appealed the decision to the High Court and was released on bail ahead of his trial. The circumstances of his release have sparked widespread criticism of gaps in the country’s judicial and law enforcement systems.

    While the call for reinstating the death penalty has resonated with large swathes of the public hungry for accountability, the movement has also drawn competing perspectives from community members who argue that harsher punishment will not address root failures in public safety. “Yes, the death penalty is punishment for such crime, but that doesn’t solve the issue. We have to focus on … preventative action, which is better response from the police and the judiciary system. If the system fail[s] our citizens, there should be serious repercussions,” one local Facebook user wrote. Other commenters have called for expanded early intervention services through family and community programs to prevent violent conflicts from escalating into fatal harm.

    As of publication, police investigations into St Omer’s murder are still ongoing.

  • Cave Hill Campus hopeful of strong showing at UWI Games in Trinidad

    Cave Hill Campus hopeful of strong showing at UWI Games in Trinidad

    After a four-year hiatus forced by the global COVID-19 pandemic, one of the Caribbean’s most anticipated inter-campus collegiate sporting competitions is making a triumphant return this month, and the Cave Hill Campus of the University of the West Indies (UWI) has entered the 2024 iteration ready to compete for the top podium spot.

    A 150-strong delegation of student-athletes from the Cave Hill Campus departed Barbados last week for the 2024 UWI Games, which will be hosted across 10 days from May 21 to 29, primarily on the grounds of UWI’s St Augustine Campus in Trinidad and Tobago. This year’s tournament marks the first time the games have been held since 2019, after repeated pandemic-related postponements left the beloved competition on pause for years.

    More than 575 competitors are set to take part in this year’s event, drawn from all five of UWI’s regional campuses. For the first time in the tournament’s history, the Five Islands Campus will field a team, joining long-standing participants Cave Hill, Mona, St Augustine, and UWI Global.

    Across the 10-day competition, athletes will compete for medals in 96 events spanning 11 popular sporting disciplines: track and field, swimming, basketball, netball, volleyball, lawn tennis, table tennis, football, cricket, and hockey. Competition gets underway early on Saturday morning, with the first wave of Cave Hill Campus athletes already in position to compete in opening day matches.

    Speaking ahead of the team’s departure from Grantley Adams International Airport on Thursday night, Barbados’ Minister of Sport Charles Griffith expressed confidence in the Cave Hill squad’s ability to deliver strong results. Griffith noted that the team appeared visibly excited for the opportunity to compete, and drew a parallel to Barbados’ recently successful CARIFTA Games delegation, predicting Cave Hill would finish atop the overall standings. “The coaches are all in place and they have been prepared very well, so I can only expect the very best from Cave Hill,” Griffith said.

    Reached by Barbados TODAY after arriving in Trinidad, Cave Hill team manager Aundrea Wharton outlined the squad’s opening day schedule, confirming that table tennis kicks off the action at 8 a.m., followed by opening fixtures in netball, football, hockey, and cricket on the first day of competition.

    Wharton explained that the Cave Hill delegation enters the tournament with a clear goal: to improve on their second-place overall finish at the 2019 UWI Games, the last edition held before the pandemic shutdown. He framed the 2024 games as a new beginning for the entire UWI collegiate sporting community, aligned with this year’s official theme: “Reunited, Reignited, Ready.”

    Nearly all of Cave Hill’s 150 athletes will be competing in the UWI Games for the first time, Wharton said. Many of the young competitors were still completing primary school when the tournament was last held in 2019, meaning the event will bring a notable cultural shift and new experience for the first-time participants. Even with this new cohort, Wharton said he remains optimistic about the team’s chances of taking the overall title, pointing to a roster stacked with elite junior and senior national-level players across multiple key disciplines.

    “Naturally we have a very strong cricketing core and our female volleyball unit is very strong as well. This also the case with our male hockey unit which is again, very strong. We are looking to get key performances, especially out of those units,” Wharton said. He added that Cave Hill’s netball squad also features a large contingent of junior and senior national team players, leaving the campus well-represented across every competitive discipline in the tournament.

  • Creative Industries Minister Dwayne George Meets Festival Officials as Carnival 2026 Planning Intensifies

    Creative Industries Minister Dwayne George Meets Festival Officials as Carnival 2026 Planning Intensifies

    As Antigua and Barbuda moves forward with early-stage planning for its highly anticipated 2026 Carnival, the nation’s Minister of Sports and Creative Industries Dwayne George held a strategic planning meeting this week with key stakeholders from the Festival Team and national Festivals Commission. Against a backdrop of growing regional competition in cultural tourism, officials have announced ambitious goals to deliver a larger, more energetic celebration that elevates Antigua Carnival’s standing as one of the Caribbean’s premier cultural events.

  • Trump’s Green Card Policy Forces Immigrants Back Home

    Trump’s Green Card Policy Forces Immigrants Back Home

    In a major overhaul of the U.S. legal immigration system scheduled to take effect ahead of 2026, the Trump administration has announced a sweeping revision to the permanent residency application process that will upend decades of established policy. Under the new rule unveiled by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services on Friday, most applicants seeking green cards will no longer be permitted to complete their entire application process while residing in the United States. Instead, they will be required to return to their countries of origin to submit and finalize their applications from abroad.

    This policy shift marks the end of a longstanding practice that has allowed would-be permanent residents to remain in the U.S. throughout the often lengthy application timeline. For thousands of affected immigrants, the new requirement means uprooting their lives: leaving stable U.S.-based employment, separating from family members who may remain in the country, and stepping away from established communities, all for a process that can stretch on for months or even years.

    The change is projected to impact a substantial share of the U.S. legal immigration population. Data from fiscal year 2024 shows that roughly 1.4 million people obtained lawful permanent resident status in the U.S. that year alone, giving a clear indication of the scope of people who could be affected by the new rule going forward.

    Administration officials have defended the policy, framing it as a targeted measure to cut down on the number of people who overstay their legal status in the U.S. Officials argue that requiring applicants to complete the process from their home countries “reduces the need to find and remove those who decide to slip into the shadows and remain in the U.S. illegally after being denied residency”. The administration notes that exemptions will be available for extraordinary circumstances, but has so far released no detailed guidance on what will qualify for an exemption.

    Critics across the political and policy spectrum have pushed back sharply against the new rule. Democratic lawmakers have labeled the policy “cruel”, warning that it will cause irreversible harm to America’s global reputation as a destination for top global talent. One sitting congressman argued that the policy will directly benefit U.S. geopolitical competitors including China and Russia, by pushing skilled immigrant professionals to relocate their careers and expertise to other countries. Immigration policy analysts have additionally criticized the rule as logically flawed, arguing that it will erode the United States’ competitive position in the global business landscape by restricting access to skilled immigrant labor.

    While cracking down on unauthorized immigration has remained a top policy priority for the Trump administration since it took office, legal experts widely expect the new green card requirement to face immediate and extensive legal challenges in federal courts over the coming weeks, as immigrant advocacy groups prepare to file lawsuits to block the policy from taking effect.

  • Who cares for the carers? BCD wellness event may give answer

    Who cares for the carers? BCD wellness event may give answer

    Caregiving for a dependent family member, loved one, or ward is far from a simple undertaking. The constant physical, emotional, and mental demands of the role often leave caregivers struggling under the weight of their responsibilities, even as public focus almost always remains on the people receiving care rather than the people providing it. On Friday, a small but impactful event at a Christ Church garden centre sought to change that narrative, carving out dedicated space to honor, listen to, and support caregivers whose tireless work often goes unrecognized.

    Barbados TODAY reporters on site at Nature Care in Lowlands documented the event, a Mental Wellness Day hosted by staff from the Barbados Council for the Disabled (BCD) and led by counselling psychologist Janelle Skinner, who herself lives as a paraplegic. Drawing on both her professional expertise and personal experience as a disabled person relying on care from her mother, Skinner opened with a frank discussion of the little-discussed crisis of caregiver burnout.

    “Caregiving drains you in every way – emotionally, physically, mentally – and burnout is a very real experience that far too many caregivers go through,” she explained. Skinner emphasized that caregivers cannot sustain their work without intentional breaks, even short ones, that let them step away from their role and recharge. “Too many caregivers operate in constant survival mode. They pour every bit of energy into the person they care for and completely ignore their own needs. They never stop to ask, ‘What will happen to the person I care for if something happens to me?’ That’s why creating spaces where caregivers can receive care themselves is so critical.”

    Speaking from her own experience, Skinner noted that she has learned to spot early signs of burnout in her mother, Joan Skinner-Graham, who has served as her primary caregiver for 26 years. “I do everything I can do independently to reduce her load, but there are some things I cannot do on my own. The key is being attentive to those subtle signs that fatigue is building, both for the disabled person and the caregiver themselves.”

    Skinner also pointed to the importance of professional support and strong personal networks, sharing that she sees a therapist herself to manage the emotional weight of her work and personal circumstances. “There is no shame in therapy – it helps. Having a support network means you always have people you can turn to, people who can step into the caregiving role temporarily so you can step back, reset, and refocus,” she said.

    For Joan Skinner-Graham, the journey of caregiving began with a devastating phone call 26 years ago, when her daughter was on holiday in New York. “My niece called and said she had bad news. Janelle was in the hospital, paralyzed. I got on a flight the very next day and stayed with her until she could come home,” she recalled. Through decades of care, she has held fast to a core principle: never let the person you care for feel like a burden.

    “When you care for a person with a disability, you must never let them see your frustration or anger,” she said. “They will internalize that, think they are a burden, and that sets back their own progress. If you feel overwhelmed, step away for a few minutes, take a breath, and come back when you are grounded. That small break makes all the difference.”

    Now retired, Skinner-Graham admitted that the long-term weight of caregiving brings quiet worries, especially as she ages. “Many nights I pray for strength to be here for my daughter. What I’ve seen over the years is that unaddressed stress kills caregivers. Too many people bottle up their feelings instead of reaching out, and that stress makes them sick, and then there is no one left to care for them. That’s why we need more accessible counselling and support for caregivers – we need spaces to talk through what we’re feeling instead of holding it all in.”

    When it comes to balancing daily care with other life responsibilities, Skinner-Graham relies on intentional planning and unapologetic self-care. “I plan out my days, and I stick to my plan. I get Janelle set up for her work day, handle household tasks, and when I need a break, I tell her straight: this is mommy’s time. I sit down, play my game, and recharge before I come back. There’s no shame in taking that time for yourself.”

    BCD President Patricia Padmore-Blackman, who is blind and cares for a disabled son, echoed that call for intentional self-care for caregivers. “My son has been with me since birth, so it can feel like I never get a break. There are definitely days when I need to step away,” she said, crediting her own support network of family, friends, and professionals for helping her sustain her role over decades. “That support is non-negotiable. We can’t do this alone.”

    BCD Operations Manager Roseanna Tudor explained that Friday’s gathering was designed specifically to prioritize the mental and emotional wellbeing of BCD’s own frontline staff, who navigate high-stress, emotionally demanding work supporting disabled people and their families every day. “This event was about reducing emotional fatigue, building stronger connections among staff, and creating a culture of psychological safety,” Tudor said. “When we invest in our staff’s wellbeing, that directly improves the quality of the services we deliver. We need workplaces that prioritize care for the people who care for others, and I encourage every organization to host similar events for their teams.”

  • EDITORIAL: Hope, hard choices for sugar

    EDITORIAL: Hope, hard choices for sugar

    For Barbados, the sugar cane sector is far more than just an agricultural commodity — it is woven into the very fabric of the nation’s identity, economy, history and natural landscape. Tied inextricably to the island’s painful legacy of slavery and plantocracy, while also shaping its financial systems, cultural traditions and ecological health, the industry cannot be sidelined even as the country develops new alternative revenue streams. Though sugar contributes far less to national GDP today than it did at its historic peak, it remains a critical source of livelihood for thousands of farmers, workers and small businesses across the island. It is for this reason that the recent announcement of a new round of industry restructuring has drawn close public and policy attention.

    This week, Minister of Agriculture Dr. Shantal Munro-Knight outlined the core priorities of the latest restructuring push: boosting crop yields, elevating sugar quality, and securing the long-term viability of the sector. She framed the effort as a strategic “right-sizing” of Barbados’ sugar cane production that aligns with modern economic realities. Notably, this marks the second major restructuring attempt in just two years, a fact that underscores the deep, persistent challenges facing the industry and the difficulty of forging a lasting, sustainable solution.

    The current 2024 crop season has already been thrown off course by repeated shutdowns at the Portvale sugar factory, triggered by unresolved mechanical failures and ongoing labour disputes. Cane farmers have voiced loud frustration over extended delays in the factory accepting harvested crops, while factory workers have raised urgent concerns around union recognition and unsafe, inadequate working conditions. These ongoing disruptions have eroded stakeholder confidence in the industry and laid bare long-standing weaknesses in operational and management practices.

    Beyond Barbados’ borders, global shifts have fundamentally reshaped the international sugar market, creating significant headwinds for small island producers. World sugar prices are plagued by constant volatility, driven largely by production and policy changes in major exporting nations including Brazil, India and Thailand, which enjoy massive economies of scale and far lower labour and production costs. International trade policy has also dramatically altered the playing field for Barbados: for decades, local sugar producers benefited from protected preferential access to European Union markets, which delivered stable prices and guaranteed demand. But sweeping reforms to the EU sugar regime and updates to global trade rules have eroded nearly all of those historic advantages, leaving most Caribbean sugar industries grappling with declining competitiveness over the past two decades.

    Domestic challenges compound these global pressures. Barbados faces inherently high production costs for sugar, and climate change has introduced new layers of uncertainty, with erratic rainfall and more frequent extreme weather events disrupting planting and harvesting cycles. Combined, these factors make it impossible for Barbados to compete globally in bulk sugar production on cost alone. Against this backdrop, the government’s decision to revisit restructuring is widely viewed as a necessary step. Dr. Munro-Knight’s focus on boosting productivity and product quality is strategically sound: for the industry to survive, it must become far more efficient and deliver higher-value output to stand out in crowded global markets.

    Even so, policy makers and stakeholders must confront hard realities. Beyond productivity gains, there needs to be an open, honest conversation about the realistic scale of sugar production moving forward. Fewer young farmers are interested in entering the cane sector, and growing demand for residential housing has steadily encroached on prime agricultural land, reducing the total area available for cane cultivation. It is also critical to acknowledge that restructuring alone will not fix the industry’s problems. Barbados has overhauled the sugar sector multiple times in recent decades, yet many of the same operational, labour and financial challenges have reemerged repeatedly. Unsurprisingly, stakeholders are questioning whether this latest effort will deliver different outcomes. Key open questions remain: how will the restructured industry be financed, what is the long-term role of government in supporting the sector, and how will changes impact the livelihoods of the workers and small farmers who form the backbone of the industry. For many dependent on sugar, the term “right-sizing” carries deep fears of job losses, reduced growing acreage, and disruptive changes to ownership and management structures that threaten their livelihoods.

    Looking ahead, Barbados must expand its vision for what the sugar cane industry can contribute to the national economy. The sector’s future likely does not rest primarily on bulk sugar exports. Instead, stakeholders must integrate opportunities from sugar cane by-products, bio-renewable energy production, high-value specialty sugars, and value-added rum production into a new, diversified industry model.

    None of these changes will be easy to implement, but abandoning the sugar cane industry entirely is not a viable option for the nation. Beyond its economic contributions, sugar cane continues to play a central role in maintaining Barbados’ iconic landscape and preserving a critical (if complicated) part of the country’s history and cultural heritage. The core challenge facing policy makers and stakeholders today is striking a sustainable balance between the nation’s historic ties to sugar cane and the unforgiving economic realities of the 21st century global market.

    To build buy-in and deliver tangible results, the latest restructuring process must be fully transparent and inclusive, centering the voices of all farmers, workers, businesses and community stakeholders who have a stake in the industry’s future.

  • Wanted: Shane Anthony Greene

    Wanted: Shane Anthony Greene

    Law enforcement authorities in Barbados are calling on community members to help track down a wanted individual suspected of involvement in serious criminal activity. The Barbados Police Service has issued an official appeal for public assistance locating Shane Anthony Greene, who is also known by the street aliases “Thuggy” and “Shaney Poo”, as investigators work to move forward with questioning in an ongoing criminal probe.

    Authorities have released detailed identifying information to help members of the public recognize Greene. His last confirmed address was in Ashby Land, along Lodge Road in the parish of Christ Church. According to police descriptions, Greene stands roughly 5 feet 10 inches tall, has a dark complexion, and a slim physical build. He also has two distinct identifying tattoos: the word “Thug” is inked on his right hand, while his left hand features the word “Faith” paired with a tattoo of several birds.

    In a formal notification to the suspect, police have stated that Greene may voluntarily surrender to investigators at the Criminal Investigations Department housed within the Oistins Police Station. Authorities have added that he is permitted to bring a legal representative with him when turning himself in.

    Police are urging anyone with current information about Greene’s location to contact law enforcement immediately. Tip lines available for leads include the Oistins CID office at 418-2609 or 418-2612, the national 24/7 police emergency line at 211, the anonymous Crime Stoppers hotline at 1 800-8477, or any local police station closest to the member of the public.

    The Barbados Police Service has also issued a critical reminder to the public: harboring or intentionally providing aid to a wanted person is classified as a serious criminal offense under Barbadian law. Anyone found to have helped Greene avoid arrest will face prosecution, authorities confirmed.

  • Dominican broadcasting pioneer, Jeff Charles, has died

    Dominican broadcasting pioneer, Jeff Charles, has died

    The Caribbean island nation of Dominica is mourning the loss of one of its most influential media trailblazers, Jefferson “Jeff” Charles, whose passing was confirmed by Dominica News Online.

    Charles’ career stands as a foundational chapter in Dominica’s modern media history. As a veteran local broadcaster, he earned the distinction of becoming the first manager of Radio Dominica — the country’s first ever national broadcasting outlet, which was reorganized into the Dominica Broadcasting Corporation in 1976. During an era when radio served as the primary channel for public information and community connection across the island, Charles guided the development of the station’s first local content schedules and built the institutional framework that would support national broadcasting for decades. His early work not only gave Dominicans a dedicated local voice on airwaves but also permanently shaped the small island’s emerging media ecosystem.

    Later in life, Charles relocated to the United States to expand his expertise in the rapidly evolving communications field. He pursued advanced academic study in communications technology, ultimately completing a doctorate in satellite communication — a cutting-edge discipline that was undergoing explosive growth in the late 20th century. His academic research and technical contributions advanced global satellite communication systems, creating a unique throughline between his hands-on experience building local media in the Caribbean and the global push to connect the world through advanced communications technology.

    Today, Charles is remembered by communities in Dominica and across international communications circles for his far-reaching dual contributions. His passing represents the loss of a rare figure who left indelible marks on both the development of national media in his home country and the advancement of global communication technology. His decades-long career remains a notable example of how local media innovation can intersect with and contribute to global scientific progress.