Two Minors and Sixty-year-old Woman Shot in Belize City

Belize City confronts a deepening public security crisis following a brazen shooting attack that injured three civilians in the Lake Independence area on Tuesday evening. The incident, occurring at approximately 7:30 PM near the intersection of M & J Street and La Croix Boulevard, marks the latest episode in a troubling pattern of urban violence.

According to eyewitness accounts, an unidentified assailant opened fire on a small gathering, striking two seventeen-year-old male adolescents and sixty-year-old Julia Vialto. All victims were transported to Karl Heusner Memorial Hospital for emergency treatment. While the teenage victims have been discharged, Vialto remains hospitalized with a gunshot wound to her heel.

The shooting occurs against a backdrop of escalating concerns regarding public safety, coming merely one week after the fatal shooting of fifteen-year-old Eric Reyes and multiple armed confrontations throughout the city. Vialto, who was en route to church services when attacked, described a sudden eruption of gunfire from multiple directions. ‘I immediately threw myself to the left side of the street, but one of the bullets hit my foot,’ she recounted from her home during recovery.

Residents report intensified security measures following the incident, with visible deployments of police patrols, Belize Defense Force soldiers, and GI3 tactical officers. However, community members argue these reactive measures insufficiently address root causes. Vialto emphasized the need for legislative reform and youth intervention programs: ‘They have to put a bit more strictness in the country because innocent people will lose their lives. There are too many drugs and firearms out there.’

Law enforcement authorities have yet to make arrests in connection with the shooting, though police conducted investigative operations at the residence of one male victim. The family characterizes these visits as part of recurring security operations they’ve experienced in recent months. The persistent violence has ignited renewed debate about gang activity, firearm proliferation, and social prevention strategies in urban Belize.