“No Further Negotiation”: Perez on Caye Caulker Police Station Dispute

Months of growing public tension over the planned new Caye Caulker police station in Belize reached a decisive turning point on April 23, 2026, when Andre Perez, Area Representative for Belize Rural South, announced an end to all further negotiations on the controversial project.

Perez confirmed that the project’s path forward was finalized following closed consultations between multiple top governing bodies, including Prime Minister’s office, the Ministry of Home Affairs, the Caye Caulker Village Council, and his own representative office. Once the formal agreement was reached, the broader community was notified of the outcome, and discussions have now been closed permanently.

“As consultations have concluded, there will be no further negotiation,” Perez stated in his official address to local media. Despite shutting down additional talks, Perez noted that he remains committed to backing the infrastructure project while continuing to acknowledge and address valid concerns raised by Caye Caulker residents.

The final call to move forward with construction comes after weeks of fierce public pushback from island residents and opposition political figures. The most prominent criticism came Wednesday from Gabriel Zetina, a senator representing the opposition United Democratic Party (UDP), who accused Perez of deceiving local residents and conducting government business with no transparency. Zetina argued that sustained public pressure and street protests were the only reason the proposal was forced into public view, rather than being approved behind closed doors.

“If the people of Caye Caulker had not stood up, risen together, and took to the street to protest, you best believe the ruling People’s United Party (PUP) would have sold that land,” Zetina claimed in his remarks.

Local governing officials have also joined the opposition effort: the Caye Caulker Village Council launched a public petition just last Friday, aimed at triggering a binding community referendum to decide the future of the disputed land. The petition frame effort as a push to “save the police station as a community,” reflecting widespread disagreement over the site selected for the new facility.

Perez pushed back on this opposition in his comments to News 5, insisting that the decision to resume construction aligns with the input the government has received from the community. “Basically we are listening to the concerns and what the village of Caye Caulker wants. They want the police station to proceed…. And as such we decided that we will move forward and construction will resume,” he explained.