Home Affairs Minister Mira Dodges Tough Questions Before Abrupt Exit

On Wednesday, June 18, 2026, Belizean Home Affairs Minister Oscar Mira broke weeks of public silence to address mounting controversy surrounding questionable procurement contracts at the Ministry of Defense, where he also holds a position as Minister of State. What was supposed to be a transparent press interaction to ease public concerns ended in chaos after just 10 minutes, when ministry staff twice interrupted the briefing and abruptly escorted Mira out before reporters could dig into the core allegations.

The scandal centers on revelations that Mira’s immediate family members, specifically his siblings, have secured multiple high-value, taxpayer-funded contracts through the Ministry of Defense procurement process, raising widespread accusations of nepotism and improper influence. When pressed by reporters on these claims, Mira repeatedly denied any involvement or knowledge of the deals, emphasizing that he has never sat on any government procurement committee and holds no decision-making authority over contract awards.

Over the course of the abbreviated briefing, Mira repeated this denial more than a dozen times, declining to address specific questions about how his relatives came to win the lucrative public contracts under his oversight. “Let me just make clear that I sit on no procurement committee. I had no say, I had no influence and I had never in my ministry or any other ministry try to influence the decision of that committee,” Mira told reporters. “I have nothing to do with how government pays their contractors or suppliers. That is not my decision, I don’t know.”

When reporters pushed for further clarification on why he had not launched an internal review after learning of his family’s links to the contracts, Mira declined to engage, cutting off the question before staff intervened. Stacy Smith, a senior staff officer at the ministry, interrupted the briefing twice to remind the press that Mira was expected at a post-medal ceremony reception, and that the press interaction had run over its allotted time.

The abrupt exit has done little to defuse public anger, instead intensifying scrutiny of the government’s procurement oversight mechanisms and Mira’s claimed lack of awareness. Speaking to News Five, Infrastructure Development and Housing Minister Julius Espat weighed in on the controversy, saying that senior ministers bear ultimate responsibility for knowing what happens within the portfolios they oversee.

“The truth is the minister needs to be advised, that is why he has a CEO, that is why he has an FO, an AO – everyone has a role to play,” Espat said. “If you are seeing something happening that you are not comfortable with, it is your responsibility to report it. None of us are perfect, but we have to take our jobs seriously. If you don’t know you ask and if you still don’t know then you go study. You have to be able to be aware of the product you are administering, so that the product is a good one.”

As of Wednesday evening, Mira has not offered any additional comment on the allegations, and no official government investigation into the procurement deals has been announced. The truncated press conference has left members of the public and press with more unanswered questions than it resolved, fueling ongoing calls for full transparency and a independent audit of the Ministry of Defense’s recent contracting awards.