On June 16, 2026, Belize’s main opposition United Democratic Party (UDP) has launched a formal demand for the resignation of national Home Affairs Minister Oscar Mira, triggered by a wave of brutal fatal violence that left multiple people dead across the country over a single weekend.
Speaking on behalf of the UDP, opposition Senator Patrick Faber laid out the specifics of the three high-profile killings that have sparked public outrage and political backlash. The first victim, Dr. Bonilla, was murdered in front of his own daughter, who remained trapped in the back seat of the vehicle during the attack. Second, Kiffer McKenzie was shot dead in a public shooting on busy Albert Street while his own young children were seated inside his parked car. The third victim, 25-year-old Eric Nelson, was killed in what investigators allege was a senseless gang-related killing, targeted solely for wearing a shirt of the wrong color in a territory controlled by a rival gang.
Faber argued that Mira has lost all credibility to lead the ministry tasked with curbing violent crime and protecting public safety, stating bluntly: “Minister Mira must go before he is completely impotent. He has no meaningful agenda to fight crime.” The senator drew a sharp contrast between the current administration’s delayed, low-profile response to the bloodshed and the protocols of previous governments, noting that former prime ministers would immediately address the nation to outline next steps and acknowledge public grief following any major outbreak of fatal violence. In Faber’s assessment, Mira’s prolonged public silence and the complete absence of visible, decisive action following the weekend violence are clear proof that he is unfit to hold his post overseeing national public security.
Senior officials within the Home Affairs Ministry have pushed back against the opposition’s demands, however. Rear Admiral Elton Bennett, Chief Executive Officer of the Home Affairs Ministry, told local outlet News 5 that Minister Mira remains fully focused on his official duties and has not been distracted by what Bennett characterized as “noise in the market” – a direct dismissal of the opposition’s calls for resignation.
Full additional details on the unfolding political dispute and the ongoing investigations into the three weekend killings are set to be broadcast during News 5 Live’s prime time 6 p.m. broadcast Monday evening.
