Months after being inaugurated with great fanfare and high expectations, San Pedro’s brand-new artisan market sits completely vacant, leaving community members and local vendors questioning the logic behind the project and its chosen location.
The core of the controversy stems from widespread pushback among the artisans and small-scale vendors the market was built to serve. Many of these sellers have made it clear they prefer to remain at their long-standing original selling locations, rather than relocate to the newly constructed facility, leaving the modern building unused.
Andre Perez, the Area Representative for Belize Rural South, has defended the government’s decision to greenlight the move, framing the relocation as a long-term strategic play rather than a misstep. In an interview with local reporters, Perez explained that the vacancy is temporary, tied to a broader multi-use development project planned for the Sacatchepas area. The upcoming project includes construction of a regional events center that will host a wide range of activities, from local sports tournaments to large-scale public concerts. Once completed, the development will also add a dedicated public parking lot and an upper-story multi-purpose space, requiring vendors to ultimately vacate their current spots to make way for the new amenities.
Perez rejected claims that the new artisan market project is a failure, pointing out that the completed facility is structurally sound, aesthetically appealing, and offers scenic views that will draw visitors once vendors move in. “The building is there, it’s beautiful, it has an excellent view. When the time comes, they need to prepare. They know that they have to move. They will not be staying,” Perez told reporters.
When pressed for a concrete timeline for the broader development project, Perez confirmed that local officials have targeted a completion window within the current calendar year, but acknowledged that funding constraints have slowed progress. While the events center project is considered a critical community need, other pressing public priorities have taken precedent for budget allocations, pushing back some phases of construction. Even so, Perez reaffirmed that the project remains on track to be completed, and once finished, vendors will be required to relocate to the already-built new artisan market.
In a separate but related comment on local infrastructure development, Belize’s Tourism Minister Anthony Mahler used San Pedro’s ongoing dock project as a cautionary example, urging the country to accelerate upgrades to its public infrastructure. Mahler warned that if Belize fails to modernize its key tourism-related facilities, it risks losing its standing as one of the world’s top travel destinations.
This report is adapted from a transcript of an evening television newscast, with original Kriol language speech transcribed using a standardized spelling system for publication.
