A surge in high-profile child sexual abuse cases involving trusted adults across Belize has reignited urgent public and official demands for the implementation of a long-discussed national sex offender registry, with child safety advocates and government leaders warning that inaction is putting the country’s youngest populations at growing risk.
The latest controversy that pushed this long-simmering issue to the forefront of public discourse stems from recent charges against 41-year-old Elias Tzib, a Santa Elena-based teacher based in the Bullet Tree Falls area. Tzib was arrested following a report from a student, and now faces four counts of assault and two counts of rape. The case has sent shockwaves through the community, as residents question how an educator with access to vulnerable children could face such serious allegations in a space that is supposed to be one of the safest for young people.
This arrest is far from an isolated incident. Just weeks earlier, a suspended police officer, Dexter Diego, was returned to prison on four additional counts of child rape involving a 10-year-old and an 11-year-old, with offenses occurring between 2024 and 2025. This was not Diego’s first brush with allegations: he had previously been accused of abuse against a 14-year-old, revealing a troubling pattern that could have been flagged earlier if a public registry was already in place, according to advocates. Other high-profile cases have already made headlines this year: in January, 47-year-old San Pedro educator Alex Noralez was found guilty on two out of three counts of sexual assault, and is currently appealing his conviction to stay out of prison. In 2025, former UDP senator and teacher Macario Coy was also hit with sexual misconduct allegations; while he was ultimately cleared, the case still raised serious questions about weak oversight of adults who work closely with children.
Officials confirm that documented cases of reported child sexual abuse are on a steady upward climb. Adele Catzim Sanchez, CEO of Belize’s Ministry of Human Development, noted that the ministry’s internal tracking database shows consistent annual growth in the number of abuse reports brought to authorities. “What we know historically and from research is that people who have a tendency to be sex offenders seek out professions in which they will have access to children and people who can become their victims,” Catzim Sanchez explained. “And so it’s in the professions that are supposed to be helpful, like teaching professions, health professions, other professions civil society, where we might see people gain access to children or those who become their victims.”
For the first time, multiple government agencies have aligned behind the push for a fully operational public registry. The Office of the Special Envoy for Women and Children has led the renewed call for action, which has gained formal backing from both the Ministry of Human Development and the Ministry of Home Affairs. Catzim Sanchez said the ministry is eager to collaborate with partner agencies to move the registry from proposal to implementation: “we’re ready to work or collaborate with our partner agencies including the Office of the Special Envoy and the Ministry of Home Affairs to make sure that this, the sex offender registry is operational.”
Oscar Mira, Minister of Home Affairs, expressed unwavering support for the initiative, emphasizing that zero tolerance for child abuse requires transparent public accountability. “I cannot understand how someone would look at a child, you know without saying any names, but children as young as four years old,” Mira said. “We have to make sure that we treat their people in a different kind of way. We cannot tolerate the abuse of children from anybody, you know, and be it male or female. I think that I fully support her call. I think that if you are convicted of something like that, then the public should know who you are.”
Child safety advocates echo this urgency, arguing that a centralized, publicly accessible registry is a critical tool to prevent repeat offenses. Currently, the lack of a centralized system allows convicted offenders to move between communities and continue working in roles that give them regular access to children, putting new populations at risk. Proponents say the registry will not only give families critical information to protect their children, but also allow law enforcement and institutional leaders to conduct more thorough background checks for adults working with minors. After years of discussion, the recent wave of high-profile abuse cases has turned public conversation into a widespread demand for immediate action, with leaders across Belize now signaling that the registry is finally moving forward.









