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  • Peru: Fujimori leidt eerste ronde presidentsverkiezingen terwijl hertelling voortduurt

    Peru: Fujimori leidt eerste ronde presidentsverkiezingen terwijl hertelling voortduurt

    As Peru’s post-general election vote counting stretched into its third day on Tuesday, political tensions have surged across the Andean nation, sparking parliamentary investigations and unsubstantiated claims of widespread electoral fraud. With roughly 80% of ballots now counted, the identity of the candidate that will face conservative frontrunner Keiko Fujimori in the June 7 presidential runoff remains uncertain.

    Fujimori, a former congresswoman and daughter of late former Peruvian president Alberto Fujimori, currently holds a narrow lead in official vote tallies with 16.8% of the vote. No candidate has secured the 50% of support required for an outright first-round victory, meaning Fujimori – who is making her fourth bid for the country’s highest office – is all but guaranteed a spot in the second round of voting.

    A tight and shifting race for second place has unfolded behind the frontrunner, according to data from Peru’s National Office of Electoral Processes (ONPE), the country’s independent electoral authority. Right-wing former Lima mayor Rafael Lopez Aliaga sits in second position with roughly 12% of the vote, just a single percentage point ahead of center-left candidate Jorge Nieto, who holds 11%. Left-wing congressman Roberto Sanchez trails closely in fourth place with just over 10% of counted ballots.

    As the slow counting process drags on, accusations of electoral fraud have grown louder from trailing candidates. Lopez Aliaga has already publicly decried what he calls “brutal fraud”, and he earned public backing from Sanchez on Tuesday, who also raised questions about the integrity of the voting process. Neither candidate has presented concrete evidence to support their fraud claims to date.

    Critics have drawn parallels between the current slow counting process and previous elections in the copper-rich South American nation, recalling that former president Pedro Castillo was not officially confirmed as the winner until eight days after the 2021 second round vote.

    European Union electoral observers, who monitored Sunday’s first round vote, have acknowledged significant logistical issues during the electoral process but found no concrete evidence to support the widespread fraud claims that have circulated since polling opened. “There have been clear problems,” said Annalisa Corrado, head of the EU’s electoral observation mission to Peru. “But we have not found objective elements that support the narrative of fraud.”

    The extended counting period follows major logistical disruptions to ballot distribution on polling day Sunday. The issues forced election officials to extend voting hours into Monday for more than 50,000 eligible voters, concentrated mostly in parts of Lima, the national capital that is home to roughly one-third of Peru’s total electorate.

    ONPE head Piero Corvetto was summoned before Peru’s parliament this week to explain the delays to the vote counting process. He denied that serious irregularities had taken place, framing the distribution issues as an isolated error in the rollout of electoral materials. Corvetto also issued a public apology for the disruptions to voting and counting.

    He emphasized that both the presidential and parliamentary elections presented unprecedented challenges for voters and electoral officials alike, particularly amid years of sustained political unrest that has eroded public trust in national institutions and left many voters disillusioned with the political class.

    Long-running political instability remains one of the most pressing issues facing Peru, regardless of the final election outcome. The country has seen multiple presidents turnover in recent years, creating widespread skepticism that any new administration will be able to complete a full five-year term. Repeat impeachments, high-profile corruption scandals, and fragile legislative coalitions have made it nearly impossible for recent administrations to serve out their full terms.

    The current interim president, José Balcázar, was appointed by parliament in February after legislators removed his predecessor José Dina from office. Dina had served only four months in office before being ousted over a scandal involving secret meetings with a Chinese business executive.

  • LETTER: Barbuda Youth Voter Calls for Shift Beyond Land Debate Ahead of Election

    LETTER: Barbuda Youth Voter Calls for Shift Beyond Land Debate Ahead of Election

    Ahead of upcoming elections in Barbuda, a young first-time voter who grew up in a family deeply engaged in land rights discussions has issued a public call for an end to the ongoing divisive debate over land policy that has dominated local political discourse. Raised in what she describes as an “all green” household, where land issues have been a central topic of conversation especially during election cycles, the voter says she has grown increasingly frustrated with the misinformation, public confusion, and constant political drama that have shrouded the land conversation for far too long.

    In her public message, the young voter pushes back against the singular focus on land that has defined much recent political rhetoric, arguing that land on its own cannot solve the many challenges facing the people of Barbuda. “Land alone cannot feed us, land alone cannot build a future, and land alone cannot secure the next generation,” she writes, challenging political actors and community members alike to broaden their policy priorities ahead of casting their ballots.

    Instead of continuing to cycle through the same unproductive debates that have failed to deliver meaningful progress for years, the voter urges her fellow Barbuda residents to wake up to the need for a broader, more future-focused approach to governance. She encourages the community to shift focus toward long-term priorities that will shape the quality of life for generations to come, including public health, sustainable development, and intergenerational progress.

    Rejecting the status quo that has kept the island trapped in repetitive, unproductive political patterns, the first-time voter stresses that continuing to accept the same cycle of division and unmet promises will not improve outcomes for any community member. She calls on all eligible voters to stop settling for incremental, ineffective change and to reject the political distractions that have pulled focus away from the issues that truly matter to daily life and long-term prosperity.

    Closing her message with a firm call to action, the voter emphasizes that the future of Barbuda hinges on delivering serious, bold political transformation that meets the evolving needs of the island’s people. “Enough is enough,” she declares, demanding an end to unproductive political drama and a new era of forward-thinking governance.

  • Scrub Life Cares Named 2026 Applied Practice Experience Site of the Year by Georgia State University School of Public Health

    Scrub Life Cares Named 2026 Applied Practice Experience Site of the Year by Georgia State University School of Public Health

    ST. JOHN’S, Antigua and Barbuda – April 15, 2026 – Public health non-profit Scrub Life Cares, an organization focused on expanding menstrual equity, advancing evidence-based reproductive and sexual health education, and designing community-centered public health solutions, has been named the 2026 Applied Practice Experience (APE) Site of the Year by Georgia State University’s School of Public Health.

    The award was officially conferred during the school’s annual Celebrating Student Excellence ceremony, an event that spotlights host organizations that deliver exceptional, hands-on learning opportunities that move beyond theoretical training to create tangible public health impact for public health graduate and undergraduate students.

    Today, Scrub Life Cares operates as a multifaceted public health entity that sits at the intersection of community outreach, public health education, original research, and policy-informed programming. Its core work spans five critical focus areas: addressing menstrual equity and ending period poverty, delivering comprehensive reproductive and sexual health education, supporting maternal and child health outcomes, designing and implementing community-led public health programs, conducting public health research and translating data into accessible public knowledge, developing policy briefs and supporting advocacy initiatives, and managing strategic public health communications.

    Through its APE internship placement program, Scrub Life Cares has enabled students to contribute to high-stakes research and advocacy work at both local and global levels, including key contributions to programming for the International Association for Adolescent Health World Congress. Key student contributions to date include supporting large-scale research projects examining menstrual health inequities and gaps in reproductive and sexual health education across Antigua and Barbuda, the broader Caribbean region, and the Southern United States. Students also played a central role in drafting policy briefs, creating advocacy resources, and translating research findings for public and stakeholder audiences to elevate underaddressed public health issues.

    Notably, the work of APE students informed a formal motion that was successfully passed at the World Congress, accelerating global dialogue and actionable policy around adolescent health and menstrual equity. When the conference shifted to fully virtual participation in response to Hurricane Melissa, APE interns stepped in to support logistics and session coordination, ensuring that the global knowledge exchange process continued without disruption.

    These hands-on opportunities underscore Scrub Life Cares’ core mission: not just training entry-level public health practitioners, but nurturing the next generation of researchers, policy advocates, and thought leaders who can drive systemic change. A defining strength of the organization’s model is its integrated research portfolio, which directly informs its programming, shapes policy debates, and guides global advocacy work. For students, this means placements do not just involve shadowing or administrative work – they get direct experience shaping conversations about health equity, access, and systemic transformation.

    For Scrub Life Cares Founder and CEO Tanya Ambrose, MPH, the award carries both personal and professional meaning, rooted in her own history with the university.

    “Signing the memorandum of understanding to partner with Georgia State University as an APE host site was a full-circle moment for me and our whole team,” Ambrose said in a statement following the ceremony. “Scrub Life Cares was actually founded when I was an undergraduate student at Georgia State, after a study abroad trip to Uganda opened my eyes to the deep, systemic global health inequities that shape outcomes for women and girls around the world.”

    Ambrose added: “Our APE students don’t just help run community programs – they contribute to cutting-edge research, draft policy frameworks, create advocacy tools, and shape global public health conversations. That’s the point of this work: we’re building professionals who understand that public health isn’t just textbook theory. It’s about centering people, building fair systems, leaning on evidence, and taking intentional action.”

    The honor comes as Scrub Life Cares marks five years of transformative public health work, and the organization is already leveraging this recognition to expand its APE placement model across the Caribbean region. Over the past half-decade, Scrub Life Cares has delivered evidence-based programs across Antigua and Barbuda, the Caribbean, and the United States; integrated rigorous research into every stage of program design, advocacy, and policy engagement; contributed to peer-reviewed public health research and global health dialogue; reached hundreds of women, girls, and families through direct education and free resource distribution; hosted its annual flagship Grow With the Flo Women & Girls Health Expo, which is now entering its fifth consecutive year; and built cross-sector partnerships with academia, healthcare systems, and local community organizations.

    Through this work, the organization has challenged long-held assumptions about grassroots public health nonprofits, proving that community-led groups can deliver both exceptional direct services and world-class research excellence. The 2026 APE Site of the Year award further cements Scrub Life Cares’ standing as a leading training ground for emerging public health leaders, a research-driven and policy-engaged contributor to local, regional, and global health discourse, and a trusted community partner focused on advancing sustainable, people-centered health outcomes. In a field that demands both innovative problem-solving and deep compassion for the communities served, Scrub Life Cares stands as a powerful example of what can be achieved when education, research, policy, and community impact are intentionally aligned.

    ### About Scrub Life Cares
    Scrub Life Cares is a non-profit public health organization dedicated to advancing menstrual equity, expanding access to comprehensive reproductive and sexual health education, and improving access to life-saving essential health resources for women, girls, and families across Antigua and Barbuda, the Caribbean, and the United States. Through a combination of community education, policy advocacy, and original research, the organization works to advance health dignity, informed personal decision-making, and health equity for all.

  • Labour Department Reminds Employers to Grant Four Hours Paid Time Off to Vote

    Labour Department Reminds Employers to Grant Four Hours Paid Time Off to Vote

    As Antigua and Barbuda prepares for an upcoming electoral event, the Office of the Labour Commissioner has issued a formal public reminder to all employers across the nation regarding their legal obligations to support worker participation in the democratic process. Under the terms of Section 34 of the Representation of the People (Amendment) Act 2001, every business and organization must grant all registered voters on their payroll a guaranteed block of four consecutive hours off from work to cast their ballot on polling day. Critically, this time off must be provided with no reduction to an employee’s regular pay, and no financial penalties, disciplinary action, or other repercussions can be imposed on workers for taking this legally protected leave.

    The legislation also outlines clear penalties for employers that fail to comply with this mandate. Any employer that directly or intentionally refuses to grant the required voting time, or uses intimidation, undue influence, or any other underhanded tactic to interfere with an employee’s right to vote is considered guilty of a criminal offence. Following a summary conviction, non-compliant employers face a maximum fine of three thousand Eastern Caribbean dollars, or a custodial sentence of up to twelve months in prison.

    This reminder underscores the government’s commitment to protecting accessible voting for all citizens, removing workplace barriers that could prevent eligible voters from exercising their constitutional right to participate in elections. By codifying paid time off for voting into law, Antigua and Barbuda’s legislative framework aims to ensure that working residents do not have to choose between earning a paycheck and participating in the democratic process.

  • Traditionele leiders Marowijne- en Lawagebied vragen betrokkenheid bij grensakkoord

    Traditionele leiders Marowijne- en Lawagebied vragen betrokkenheid bij grensakkoord

    On April 15, traditional leaders from five Indigenous and tribal communities along the Marowijne and Lawa Rivers gathered in Paramaribo, the capital of Suriname, to issue a joint declaration calling for their formal inclusion and full recognition of their inherent rights amid ongoing negotiations to implement the border agreement between Suriname and French Guiana.

    The communities involved — the Kali’na, Lokono, Aluku, Paamaka and Wayana peoples — have inhabited the riverine border lands for multiple generations, making them the first-hand witnesses to the growing cross-border challenges threatening their way of life.

    In their statement, the leaders outlined the daily crises their communities face: unchecked river pollution, rampant illegal gold mining, widespread deforestation and surging transnational criminal activity. These overlapping threats have already eroded their natural habitats, undermined local food security, and put the long-term survival of their villages at risk. “When the rainy season comes, all the waste and pollution washes up onto our riverbanks,” the declaration noted, emphasizing that communities bear the direct brunt of unregulated cross-border activity.

    The leaders clarified that they do not oppose moving forward with the existing border framework reached between Suriname and France, in contrast to a recent petition calling to halt all proceedings on the agreement. They explicitly distanced themselves from that petition, stressing that long-term residents of the border region deserve a seat at the table, not a stoppage of negotiations.

    Instead, the leaders are calling for clear, binding commitments and robust cross-border cooperation between the two nations to restore order, strengthen security, and protect the ecologically and culturally vital border region. Without clear regulations and enforced rule of law, the area will descend into chaos, they warned.

    Beyond security and environmental protection, the declaration underscores three core demands for the further development and implementation of the border agreement: First, the full legal recognition of Indigenous and tribal rights to their traditional territories, their distinct cultures, and their traditional ways of life. Second, guaranteed participation in all decision-making processes that impact their communities. Third, the preservation of cross-border social, cultural and familial ties that have existed for centuries between communities on both sides of the artificial international border.

    As traditional authority figures for the border region, the leaders emphasize that their perspectives, shaped by generations of living on and caring for the land, must be heard and meaningfully integrated into national decision-making on the border issue. In particular, they seek to act as active partners in developing and executing initiatives to maintain security and public order along the border.

    The statement concluded with a reaffirmation of the leaders’ willingness to engage constructively in the process, to advance solutions that protect their traditional homelands, secure long-term stability for the border region, and build a sustainable future for their communities. The declaration was signed by top traditional leaders from all five represented communities, including Granman Ipomadi Pelenapin of the Wayana, Granman Simeon Glunder of the Aluku, and Jona Gunther, chair of the Kali’na and Lokono of Lower Marowijne, among others.

  • Bondsvoorzitter BBS Biswan ontslagen na manipulatie examencijfers rekruten

    Bondsvoorzitter BBS Biswan ontslagen na manipulatie examencijfers rekruten

    In a disciplinary action announced this Tuesday, Suriname’s Minister of Justice and Police Harish Monorath has immediately removed Elio N. Biswan, chair of the Security and Assistance Service Suriname (BBS) union, from his post. The termination, categorized as a severe disciplinary penalty, was issued in full compliance with Suriname’s current civil service legislation.

    An internal probe conducted by the BBS Interim Management Team (IMT) uncovered serious professional misconduct on Biswan’s part during his 2024 tenure as secretary of the examination committee for the BBS 2023 basic training program. Investigations confirm that Biswan independently and intentionally altered failing grades of multiple trainee recruits to passing marks. This manipulation allowed the candidates to bypass required requirements for exemptions or retests, and incorrectly marked their training as successfully completed.

    Beyond altering existing scores, the investigation found Biswan had pre-promised recruits he would adjust their results, and even went so far as to fabricate official grade transcripts that did not match the original assessments submitted by training instructors. IMT investigators have classified these actions as a grave breach of institutional integrity and a clear case of abuse of public office.

    In response to the uncovered irregularities, the IMT has moved to correct the process, granting all affected recruits the opportunity to take official re-examinations so they can properly and legitimately complete their mandatory training.

    Minister Monorath determined the proven violations were severe enough to warrant the harshest possible disciplinary outcome, with the termination executed under Article 61 Paragraph 1 Subsection j and Article 69 Paragraph 2 Subsection e of Suriname’s Personnel Act.

    As of Wednesday morning, it remains unclear whether additional criminal proceedings will be launched against Biswan following the conclusion of internal disciplinary handling.

    Shortly after receiving his termination notice at approximately 11:00 PM Tuesday, Biswan called an urgent emergency general membership meeting for Wednesday morning. In his announcement, Biswan claimed the dismissal was an attempt to silence him, arguing the action was retaliation for his public criticism of current BBS leadership.

  • Bodemprocedure 8 decembermoorden gestart; vijf families dienen geen vordering in

    Bodemprocedure 8 decembermoorden gestart; vijf families dienen geen vordering in

    A landmark full civil procedure case against the state of Suriname, filed by 10 family groups of victims of the infamous December 8 murders, officially got underway in court this Tuesday. After a brief opening presentation of the case before the judge, legal representatives for both sides exited the courtroom, with lead counsel for the victims’ surviving relatives Hugo Essed stopping to speak with reporters to outline the details of the historic proceeding.

    Essed emphasized that this is not a fast-track summary proceeding, but a full substantive civil trial that will examine the core merits of the families’ claims. Against expectations for a years-long delay, he noted that the case launched with far greater speed than anticipated, and projects that a final court ruling could be delivered within roughly 12 months.

    In total, 60 family members of the 10 slain victims – including prominent public figures John Baboeram, Cyril Daal, Edmund Hoost, Rudie Kamperveen, Harrie Oemrawsingh, Leslie Rahman, Cornelis Riedewald, Jiwansing Sheombar, Jozef Slagveer and Somradj Sohansingh – have joined the collective lawsuit against the Suriname state. The claimants are demanding three core outcomes: official public rehabilitation of the victims’ reputations, a formal public apology from the Suriname government, and financial compensation for the harm they have suffered. Per participating family, the claims total 500,000 euros for material damages and an additional 750,000 euros for non-material harm stemming from the killings.

    Beyond compensatory damages, the families are also seeking 250,000 Surinamese dollars per family to cover court and legal representation fees. To enforce any potential ruling in their favor, they have additionally requested a daily penalty payment of 500,000 Surinamese dollars per family for every day the state fails to comply with the court’s final judgment.

    A notable detail emerging from the opening day is that five additional families of victims connected to the 1982 massacre have opted not to join the legal action. Essed told reporters that he has no insight into what led these families to decline participation, noting that all surviving heirs were extended a formal invitation to join the claim. “All heirs were given the opportunity to participate in this action. I cannot say why some chose not to take part; as counsel for the participating families, I have had no contact with the unrepresented families,” Essed explained.

    He added that outreach to all surviving relatives was coordinated through the Organization for Justice and Peace (OGV), which first shared detailed information about the planned legal proceeding with families more than a year ago. Collecting the required legal documentation, including proof of inheritance and formal power of attorney from all claimants, took longer than initially projected to complete, contributing to the gap between initial planning and the launch of the trial.

    Essed also laid out the legal foundation for holding the Suriname state directly liable for the killings. “The murders were carried out by individuals acting in their capacity as state officials and government functionaries, using state-owned resources and infrastructure, including weapons and military facilities belonging to the National Army of Suriname. That direct connection makes the state co-liable for the killings,” he argued.

    Under Suriname’s legal framework, if the court finds the state liable for damages, the government would then have the right to pursue separate claims to recover those funds from the perpetrators of the massacre or their heirs. Essed, however, cautioned that this path would be largely unworkable in practice, as most of the individuals directly involved in the killings are not believed to hold significant personal assets that could be seized to cover the damage awards.

  • EZOTI en districtscommissarissen bundelen krachten voor strengere marktcontroles

    EZOTI en districtscommissarissen bundelen krachten voor strengere marktcontroles

    In a strategic move to strengthen nationwide economic regulation and market governance, Suriname’s Ministry of Economic Affairs, Entrepreneurship and Technological Innovation (EZOTI) has announced plans to sharpen economic activity oversight by forging deeper formalized partnerships with district commissioners across the country. The initiative, aimed at building a more coordinated, holistic approach to regulatory monitoring and enforcement, was finalized during a recent working meeting attended by senior ministry officials and district representatives.

  • Indian Creek on Edge After First Alcalde Disappears

    Indian Creek on Edge After First Alcalde Disappears

    On the cusp of a years-long internal crisis, the small Maya community of Indian Creek has been thrown into further chaos by the unexplained disappearance of its top traditional leader, First Alcalde Marcus Canti. Last seen on his farm this Monday, Canti’s sudden absence has escalated long-simmering tensions between two rival governance factions in the village, leaving residents on edge and authorities scrambling to de-escalate growing violence.

    Canti’s disappearance has laid bare a bitter rift that has split the once close-knit community for generations: a power struggle between backers of the centuries-old traditional alcalde system, which Canti led, and supporters of the state-recognized elected village council, headed by Chairman Domingo Choc. Choc has been taken into police custody for questioning in connection with Canti’s disappearance, though no formal charges have been filed.

    Local residents report that only two items were found at the site where Canti was last seen: his bicycle and a traditional Maya bag. One anonymous resident, who spoke to local outlet News Five on condition of anonymity, stated that many supporters of Choc maintain his innocence, saying there is no evidence linking the village council chairman to Canti’s disappearance. News Five has also obtained an audio recording, recorded before Canti went missing, that captures the alcalde pleading for assistance in his native Mayan language, though full details of the recording have not been released publicly.

    The conflict that preceded Canti’s disappearance centers on unauthorized land distribution. Canti began issuing what he called communal land certificates to village residents, claiming consent orders gave him the authority to redistribute unassigned land. Among the parcels included in the redistribution were roughly 300 acres of privately held conservation land managed by the Ya’axché Conservation Trust, a regional environmental organization.

    Dr. Louis Zabaneh, Belize’s Minister of Indigenous Peoples’ Affairs, told reporters that the Ministry of Natural Resources is the only governing body with legal authority to issue formal land titles. Prior to Canti’s disappearance, the ministry sent a formal cease-and-desist letter ordering the alcalde to stop issuing the unapproved documents. Zabaneh noted that Canti’s land grab already infuriated private landowners, community members who recognize the ministry’s formal authority, and conservation groups, deepening the village’s divisions long before he went missing.

    Christina Garcia, executive director of Ya’axché Conservation Trust, confirmed that initial reports claimed Canti issued 200 land certificates, but updated information from the community puts the number closer to 280. While Garcia emphasized that the organization recognizes the pressing need for affordable residential land among Indian Creek residents, she stressed that all land transactions must follow formal legal processes to avoid conflicts like the one currently roiling the village.

    Since Canti’s disappearance, the situation has grown increasingly volatile. According to village residents, supporters of the missing alcalde have issued violent threats against Choc and his family, vowing to kidnap one of Choc’s children if Canti is not found quickly. Zabaneh also confirmed that supporters of Canti have targeted property linked to Choc, and that the Ya’axché Conservation Trust’s local field station was damaged during a recent community unrest.

    To date, Belizean police have not confirmed that foul play was involved in Canti’s disappearance, and no suspects have been named publicly beyond Choc’s detainment for questioning. As law enforcement continues the search for the missing traditional leader, Minister Zabaneh has issued an urgent call for calm, urging all factions in the community to stand down and allow authorities to complete their investigation. The village now remains at a tense tipping point, with the land dispute that divided the community for years now transformed into an urgent search for a missing leader and a fight to prevent further violent conflict.

  • Police Engage as Indian Creek Dispute Escalates

    Police Engage as Indian Creek Dispute Escalates

    A years-long dispute over land tenure and community leadership in Belize’s Indian Creek has boiled over into open confrontation, pushing government officials to deploy police to the area to de-escalate rising unrest marked by property damage and targeted intimidation. The conflict has split the tight-knit community into two deeply divided camps: one faction backs the traditional local alcalde system, which advocates for Maya customary land rights aligned with longstanding Indigenous tenure practices, while the other supports the elected village council, which pushes for individual, nationally recognized land titles identical to those held by landowners across the rest of the country.

    Dr. Louis Zabaneh, Belize’s Minister of Indigenous Peoples’ Affairs, confirmed that law enforcement has been on the ground responding to the unrest since tensions first flared into violence. Recent incidents have included trespassing and vandalism at the private property of the village council chairman, as well as tampering with a field station operated by the Ya’axché Conservation Trust, a leading local environmental and land rights organization. The conflict has been simmering for decades, but recent escalations have raised alarms across national and regional stakeholders.

    Minister Zabaneh emphasized that community leaders from both factions had committed to peaceful negotiation just weeks before the outbreak of violence. Just two months prior, he had held a productive meeting with representatives from both sides, and just two weeks before the confrontation, another senior cabinet minister had brokered a second agreement to resolve differences through dialogue rather than confrontation. He has now issued an urgent appeal to all residents to honor these earlier commitments, warning that years of structured negotiation could be undermined by violent retaliation that would only deepen divides and harm community members.

    Zabaneh also stressed that a formal institutional process already exists to address the core land rights dispute, tied to a consent order from the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) that outlines a path to formalize Indigenous land claims across Belize.

    Beyond the community’s internal divisions, new controversy has emerged over the unauthorized issuance of hundreds of land certificates, a move that has thrown national efforts to formalize Maya land rights into chaos. According to analysis from the Ya’axché Conservation Trust, local alcalde leadership has already issued 280 individual land certificates to community members, far more than the number initially reported to government officials.

    Christina Garcia, executive director of Ya’axché Conservation Trust, explained that the issuance of these certificates directly clashes with ongoing national negotiations between the Government of Belize and the Maya Leaders Alliance over a formal Maya Land Tenure Policy and accompanying land rights legislation. While these policy and legal frameworks, which outline a structured, agreed-upon process for recognizing and registering collective and individual Maya land rights, have not yet been finalized or approved by all parties, the unilateral action by the alcalde has pre-empted this national process.

    Garcia noted that the lack of clear, agreed-upon procedural guidance has sparked widespread confusion and frustration, extending beyond Indian Creek to affect private landowners and leaseholders across the Toledo District. Despite the escalation, she reaffirmed her organization’s commitment to dialogue, stating that Ya’axché stands ready to resume joint negotiations with Indian Creek community leaders, government representatives, and other stakeholders to craft a lasting solution that aligns with national policy and legislation and benefits all parties involved.

    The situation has drawn urgent criticism from regional landowner associations, who are calling for additional security deployment to stem rising violence. Toledo Private and Lease Landowners Limited has sent an official letter to Minister Zabaneh demanding the immediate deployment of additional security forces to the area. The association’s letter documents escalating volatile activity, including organized mob action, targeted attacks on private homes, and direct threats against both community leaders and Ya’axché field station staff. Tensions have been further amplified in recent days following the unexplained disappearance of the alcalde who led the certificate issuance effort.

    This report is a transcript of an evening television newscast, with all Kriol-language remarks transcribed using a standard spelling system for accessibility.