NTUCB Demands Mira’s Immediate Resignation

As public outrage builds over a widening contracting scandal tied to a Belizean cabinet minister, the nation’s largest labor umbrella organization has added its powerful voice to calls for urgent accountability, joining the Public Service Union in demanding immediate action. The National Trade Union Congress of Belize (NTUCB) is publicly calling for Infrastructure and Home Affairs Minister Oscar Mira to step down immediately, alongside a full, independent probe into millions in public contracts awarded to firms linked to Mira’s immediate family. The investigation, the union says, must dig into alleged irregularities exposed by leaked documents from Smart Stream Technologies, Belize’s government financial management platform. These leaked records, NTUCB argues, reveal suspicious contracting patterns that appear designed to intentionally evade the nation’s financial oversight regulations, putting hundreds of thousands in taxpayer dollars at risk of improper use.

In a strongly worded official statement, the national labor congress stressed that the controversy extends far beyond the actions of a single sitting minister. At its core, the dispute has become a test of the current government’s commitment to upholding public trust, institutional transparency, and the integrity of guardrails put in place to protect public funds from misuse. Beyond Mira’s resignation, NTUCB is also calling for full accountability for any senior public officials found to be complicit in the irregularities, as well as sweeping legislative and regulatory reforms to close what it describes as systemic loopholes in Belize’s government procurement process. For Belize’s labor leaders, the outcome of this scandal will serve as a critical benchmark of how seriously the government takes its commitments to good governance.

The opposition United Democratic Party (UDP) has thrown its full support behind NTUCB’s demands, amplifying pressure on the ruling People’s United Party (PUP) administration to take decisive action. Opposition Leader Tracy Panton has publicly derided the government’s recent decision to grant Mira a temporary leave of absence as nothing more than a bad joke, arguing that the half-measure falls far short of the full accountability Belizean voters deserve.

Panton forcefully pushed back against the government’s incremental response, saying: “This is so offensive and such a slap in the face to the Belizean people. This administration promised, through a motion passed in the National Assembly, that they would embed good governance, transparency, and accountability into every level of public office. Here we have a sitting member of the executive, a core cabinet minister, and the evidence of wrongdoing is staggering—it’s overwhelming. In my view, a temporary leave of absence is the bare minimum. Mr. Mira must do the honorable thing: he should not wait to be stripped of his executive responsibilities. He should have voluntarily stepped down from cabinet and surrendered all his ministerial appointments long before this.”

She went on to criticize Prime Minister John Briceño for failing to uphold his own stated zero-tolerance policy on corruption, adding: “The prime minister went on record, he introduced a motion in the National Assembly that amounted to a legal commitment to zero tolerance for corruption. Yet when corruption has reared its ugly head, this administration refuses to act in the best interest of the Belizean people, their own government, and the nation as a whole. That is wholly and completely unacceptable.”

As pressure builds both in public and within government circles, cabinet is set to convene a high-stakes meeting on Tuesday that will place the Mira controversy at the top of its agenda. Deputy Prime Minister Julius Espat, who stepped in to take over control of the Ministry of Home Affairs after Mira’s leave was announced, has already publicly stated he is pushing for full, unflinching answers into the contracting irregularities. Cabinet Minister Anthony Mahler has also confirmed that the scandal is a formal item on the meeting’s agenda, confirming that the controversy will not be swept under the rug despite internal government pressure to downplay the issue.

Speaking to reporters ahead of the closed-door meeting, Mahler noted: “For my own ministry, I can speak clearly: I have a very competent, capable CEO with impeccable integrity who oversees all our procurement processes. I don’t get involved in day-to-day contracting work—the government system is too slow for my patience, so she handles all of that properly. But we will have a full discussion of this controversy in cabinet tomorrow, as far as I’m aware. I’ve been out of the country for a week and a half, so we’ll wait to see where the conversation goes.”

As tensions rise ahead of the cabinet meeting, the unfolding scandal has put the PUP administration’s commitment to anti-corruption and good governance to its most high-profile test, with the public and organized labor watching closely to see what actions emerge from Tuesday’s closed-door discussions.