Less than three weeks after Belize City authorities declared a State of Emergency (SOE) to curb a surge in violent crime, two separate shooting incidents in under 24 hours have reignited public debate over whether the controversial security measure is delivering on its promises.
The most recent attack unfolded early on the morning of May 25, 2026, along Freetown Road. Initial reports confirm one person was urgently transferred to Karl Heusner Memorial Hospital for emergency care, with law enforcement officials set to release official details on the victim’s condition and case progress later that afternoon.
This shooting came just hours after a targeted attack late Friday night on Jane Usher Boulevard, where two armed suspects ambushed 38-year-old Alonzo Myers in the front yard of his home. Surveillance camera footage captured by a nearby resident shows the sequence of the attack: Myers had just stepped into his yard shortly before 11 p.m. when the first gunman rushed to the property gate and opened fire. The footage shows Myers falling to the ground in an attempt to avoid the volley of bullets, before a second suspect is spotted looking over the gate to confirm the attack. Both suspects then fled the area on foot before police arrived. Investigators have since taken possession of the footage to process it as key evidence in the case.
Tragically, this string of violence is not an isolated pattern in the neighborhood. Just 10 days before the Friday night attack, 19-year-old Lamar Garnett was shot and killed outside his home in the same district, marking one of the high-profile homicides that prompted the SOE declaration in the first place.
The State of Emergency was officially enacted on May 8, after a rapid succession of violent incidents left the city reeling and put intense pressure on local law enforcement to intervene. Under the extraordinary security measure, members of the Belize Police Department and Belize Defence Force (BDF) have been granted expanded law enforcement powers, including the ability to conduct searches without a warrant and detain suspected individuals for up to 30 days without formal charges. The measure was framed as a temporary crackdown to disrupt local criminal gangs and gun trafficking networks responsible for most of the city’s violent crime.
But now, with two confirmed shooting incidents occurring while the SOE is already in effect, community members and policymakers are increasingly questioning whether the heavy-handed security approach is actually reducing violence, or if more targeted, long-term interventions are needed to address the root causes of Belize City’s persistent gun crime.
