作者: admin

  • Paus Leo roept op tot vrede te midden van oorlogen in de wereld

    Paus Leo roept op tot vrede te midden van oorlogen in de wereld

    On the holiest night of the Catholic liturgical calendar, Pope Leo XIV used his address during the Easter Vigil at Vatican City’s St. Peter’s Basilica to deliver a urgent plea to global Catholic communities, urging people not to grow numb to the human suffering caused by active conflicts across the world — most notably the escalating war roiling the Middle East. In his remarks delivered Saturday evening, the pontiff called for intentional, active pursuit of peace, warning against the paralysis that fear and mutual distrust can sow in global relations.

  • UPDATE: Public health officials rescue abandoned man in Sosúa after authorities alert

    UPDATE: Public health officials rescue abandoned man in Sosúa after authorities alert

    In the Altos de Chila sector of Cangrejos district, near the Granito de Mostaza community home in Sosúa, Puerto Plata, a coordinated multi-agency effort has successfully rescued an at-risk adult who was found abandoned in the area.

    The operation was triggered after local residents noticed the man’s vulnerable condition and raised alarms to relevant oversight bodies. While the individual is not a minor, his obvious poor health and unsafe living situation prompted immediate action from the Prosecutor’s Office for Children and Adolescents (NNA) and the National Council for Children and Adolescents (CONANI), which quickly passed along the report to public health teams to enable a rapid response.

    A dedicated ambulance from the Dominican Ministry of Public Health was dispatched to the location without delay. Emergency medics transported the man to a local public health center, where he has since been admitted for comprehensive medical assessment and ongoing specialized care tailored to his needs.

    Witnesses who observed the rescue effort confirmed that the intervention unfolded far faster than expected. The quick action from coordinated authorities is widely credited with preventing potentially life-threatening complications for the man, who was already in fragile health when he was discovered.

    Public officials have highlighted that this successful rescue serves as proof of the value of cross-institutional collaboration when addressing emergency cases involving vulnerable populations. They reaffirmed the government’s ongoing commitment to safeguarding the rights and well-being of people who face heightened risk of neglect or abandonment.

    In the wake of the rescue, authorities have issued a public call for all community members to report any suspected cases of abandoned or at-risk people they encounter. Early reporting, they note, is critical to allowing response teams to act quickly and deliver effective support before situations escalate.

    This incident has also reignited public discussion about the urgent need to strengthen national and local public policies focused on supporting unhoused populations, expanding social inclusion initiatives, and reinforcing systemic protections for the most marginalized groups in Dominican society.

  • COE raises alerts in 17 provinces due to risk of flooding and rising water levels

    COE raises alerts in 17 provinces due to risk of flooding and rising water levels

    As holiday crowds prepare to gather for Easter Sunday celebrations across the Dominican Republic, the nation’s Emergency Operations Center (known locally as COE) has activated a two-tiered alert system across 17 provinces, citing elevated risks of widespread water-related hazards.

    Two provinces, Monseñor Nouel and San José de Ocoa, face the higher of the two alert levels, a yellow warning, marking them as areas at greatest risk of hazardous flooding. The remaining 15 jurisdictions under alert – including the capital’s National District, the larger Santo Domingo province, Sánchez Ramírez, Hermanas Mirabal, Puerto Plata, San Cristóbal, Santiago, Espaillat, Duarte, Samaná, La Vega, La Altagracias, Monte Plata, Hato Mayor, and El Seibo – are placed under a lower-level green alert.

    Across all affected regions, officials warn that rising water levels are possible in natural waterways including rivers, streams, and mountain ravines, with the added threat of sudden flash flooding and urban inundation that can catch communities off guard during the busy holiday weekend.

    Beyond inland flood risks, COE has issued additional safety guidance for marine activities along a large stretch of the country’s coastline. From the northwestern border province of Monte Cristi extending east to Isla Saona, operators of small, medium, and structurally fragile watercraft have been strongly advised to stay anchored in port. This advisory comes in response to the development of dangerous ocean swells paired with moderate to strong winds that create unstable, high-risk conditions for small vessels.

    For recreational beachgoers – a large demographic expected to travel to coastal areas over the Easter holiday – the agency has issued a critical warning about powerful rip currents, which are among the leading causes of drowning incidents at beaches. It is urging all swimmers and members of the public to exercise extreme caution when entering the water, and to check in with local lifeguard and rescue services to confirm current safety conditions before accessing any beach.

    For all other sections of the Dominican Republic’s Caribbean coastline, no movement or activity restrictions have been put in place at this time.

  • Kollision Band lead singer Jermaine ‘Chubby’ Clarke killed

    Kollision Band lead singer Jermaine ‘Chubby’ Clarke killed

    BASSETERRE, St. Kitts – Authorities in the Federation of St. Kitts and Nevis have opened a homicide investigation following the fatal shooting of well-known local entertainer Jermaine “Chubby” Clarke, frontman of the popular regional group Kollision Band. The shooting is reported to have taken place in the Keys Village area, with full, confirmed details of the incident still emerging as of Sunday, April 5, 2026.

    Early unconfirmed accounts from local media indicate that Clarke had just finished performing at a public event in the area when he was attacked. Witness accounts suggest the gunfire struck Clarke while he was seated inside his private vehicle. When reached by reporters for comment, law enforcement officials confirmed the identity of the deceased and confirmed that a full formal public statement will be released in the coming days as the investigation progresses.

    News of Clarke’s sudden, violent death has sent immediate shockwaves across the small Caribbean nation, with messages of condolence and remembrance flooding in from across the islands and the broader Caribbean entertainment community. Samal Duggins, the federation’s Minister of the Creative Economy, released an official statement expressing deep grief over the entertainer’s untimely passing.

    “It is with profound sadness that I acknowledge the untimely passing of Jermaine Clarke, affectionately known as ‘Chubby’, lead singer of the Kollision Band,” Duggins said. Reflecting on Clarke’s far-reaching cultural impact across the country, the minister described the artist as a magnetic, joyful force that united audiences across generations. “He was a spirit, as a presence, and a voice that brought joy, energy, and connection to so many,” Duggins added.

    Clarke’s killing marks only the second recorded homicide in the Federation so far in 2026, but it is projected to leave a lasting, unforgettable mark on the nation’s local and regional entertainment scene. Duggins emphasized that through decades of live performances and his warm, approachable personality, Clarke cemented a permanent place in St. Kitts and Nevis’ cultural landscape and in the hearts of countless fans and fellow artists.

  • Why were vacationers trapped in Ocoa after the Nizao River overflowed despite weather warnings?

    Why were vacationers trapped in Ocoa after the Nizao River overflowed despite weather warnings?

    Pre-emptive alerts from national emergency and meteorological agencies failed to prevent a mass stranding incident in central Dominican Republic over the Easter holiday weekend, when the overflowing Nizao River left dozens of visitors and local residents trapped in isolated communities of San José de Ocoa province.

    Alcedo de los Santos, mayor of Rancho Arriba municipality, clarified the root cause of the crisis that unfolded on Holy Saturday, pushing back on common assumptions that the incident stemmed from recreational bathers ignoring safety warnings in the river. He explained that regional authorities had completed evacuations of all riverside resorts before floodwaters began to rise, clearing the river and its immediate banks of any visitors. The true source of the crisis, he told local newspaper Hoy, was the simultaneous evacuation of recreational groups scattered across a far wider area.

    Fifteen small rural communities beyond the Nizao River are popular destinations for campers and ecotourism enthusiasts, who flocked to the region over the four-day Easter holiday weekend. Once flood warnings were issued, all of these visitors attempted to exit the area at the same time, triggering crippling traffic jams on the region’s already inadequate rural road network. “There were too many vehicles on the road and unfortunately those who couldn’t get out in time were the ones who were left behind,” de los Santos said in his interview.

    The mayor added that local infrastructure conditions exacerbated the gridlock. Narrow local roads, combined with informal, random parking by visitors, left no room for vehicles to maneuver and extended traffic delays long enough for floodwaters to cut off the exit route. The Nizao River spilled its banks around 8:00 p.m. on Saturday, right as the stream of returning vacationers hit its peak, submerging the only exit road and leaving those who had not crossed stuck in the isolated communities on the opposite side.

    In the aftermath of the overflow, dozens of people remain trapped, with many requiring emergency shelter and basic assistance. De los Santos confirmed that he personally facilitated shelter for roughly 25 stranded young travelers who had been exploring the mountain and river areas, hosting the group at the local town hall after they were left with no accommodation options for the night.

    As of Monday, the situation remains unresolved, with many trapped people expected to miss the return to their workplaces. “It’s still raining today, and they’re stuck on that side,” de los Santos noted, adding that communication with the affected groups is a growing source of concern. With many visitors running low on phone battery, their families back home are left in the dark about their safety, amplifying anxiety around the incident.

  • The city slows down: neighborhoods in Greater Santo Domingo experience a quiet Holy Saturday

    The city slows down: neighborhoods in Greater Santo Domingo experience a quiet Holy Saturday

    On Holy Saturday, Greater Santo Domingo’s normally vibrant urban landscape fell into an unusual, profound stillness. The sprawling capital’s streets, avenues and residential neighborhoods, which typically hum with daily commerce and movement, saw a sharp drop in activity, with sparse traffic, empty thoroughfares, and most businesses shuttered for the religious holiday.

    Following the mandatory full shutdown of public life on Good Friday, the traditional period of religious reflection extended into Holy Saturday, bringing a near-total pause to routine commercial activity. Once-bustling corridors were reduced to a quiet lethargy, with foot traffic and vehicle movement dropping far below typical weekend levels. Nearly all retail shops, beauty salons, and non-essential service businesses remained closed for the observance, leaving only limited operations for food-focused establishments to serve residents who stayed in the capital over the holiday. Grocery stores, small local food vendors, and roadside fried food stands were among the only businesses welcoming customers.

    Streets lined with parked cars signal that most locals opted to stay home for the holiday, with the usual city soundtrack of honking horns and blaring music entirely absent. Even Santo Domingo’s iconic Malecón, the waterfront boardwalk that usually draws crowds of locals and visitors, remained nearly deserted. Salt air drifted across the quiet promenade, where the ocean lay calm with barely a ripple, and only small groups gathered to chat on benches or complete casual exercise on foot or bicycle.

    Across residential neighborhoods, residents adapted to the slow holiday pace in small, personal ways. In Ensanche Espaillat, local resident Fiordaliza Capellán set up two inflatable swimming pools outside her home for her grandchildren to enjoy, noting that police had removed an identical setup the day before in an adjacent street. Unlike many local families, Capellán opted not to prepare the traditional holiday dish sweet beans this year, citing both the high cost of the ingredient and the large volume she would need to make to share with neighborhood friends. She did, however, keep the tradition of preparing fish for Good Friday. The high price of sweet beans was a common complaint across the city: on Diego Colón Street in Los Mina, an unidentified local resident voiced frustration over the inflated cost of the staple holiday ingredient.

    For other locals, the quiet holiday brought unhurried, low-key celebration. Roberto, a Los Mina resident, joked that his Good Friday plans centered on generous amounts of rum, a tradition he planned to continue through Holy Saturday, noting that a nearby private club charged only 200 pesos for adult entry to its swimming pool, with free admission for children under five.

    In the Villas Agrícolas neighborhood near Nicolás de Ovando Avenue, community members came together to build a makeshift public cooling station on the sidewalk, running three shower pipes connected to a shared water pump where neighborhood children and adults could cool off in the warm holiday weather. Longtime local resident Sandino Henríquez, who has lived in the area for more than 60 years, explained that the group removes the shower heads each night to prevent theft by water truck operators. On Saturday, Henríquez gathered with neighbors to share bread topped with avocado and tuna, while local youth prepared pots to cook a communal meal of fish, rice, and beans later in the day. “We don’t have many plans, just drinks, food, and turning on the shower for a dip,” Henríquez said.

    Despite the near-standstill of daily activity, law enforcement and security agencies maintained a heavy visible presence across the capital, continuing patrols and monitoring to preserve public order throughout the holiday. Police officers conducted routine stops and checks across the city, even as vehicle and pedestrian volumes stayed far below normal.

  • Distribution of 10,000 food kits in the Southern Department of Haiti

    Distribution of 10,000 food kits in the Southern Department of Haiti

    Against a persistent backdrop of widespread food insecurity plaguing vulnerable communities across Haiti, state-backed social assistance agencies launched a major food distribution mission during the 2026 Easter holiday period, rolling out 10,000 emergency food kits to households in the country’s South Department.

    Ahead of the field deployment, Jean Sadrack Jean François, director of Haiti’s Directorate for the Fight Against Poverty (DLCP), led a high-level coordination meeting at the Departmental Emergency Operations Center (COUD) based in Fonfrède. The gathering brought together key stakeholders from multiple government agencies to iron out operational logistics, ensuring the aid would reach intended recipients efficiently and without disruption. Attendees included Kesner Romilus, director general of the Economic and Social Assistance Fund (FAES, the lead implementing body for the mission); Lincosld Charles, the South Department’s regional government delegate; Pierre-Marie Boutin, FAES’ regional coordinator; Abner Jean-Charles, regional coordinator for the Directorate General of Civil Protection (DGPC); and Yacinthe Germain, regional coordinator for the Ministry of Social Affairs and Labor (MAST).

    The distribution operation, which ran from April 2 to April 6, forms a core component of the national Multisectoral Emergency Program, an initiative overseen by MAST and managed by FAES that is explicitly designed to combat the severe food insecurity that has pushed thousands of Haitian households into food instability.

    Beyond the food kit rollout, the interagency delegation conducted an inspection visit to the under-development Southern Rehabilitation Center in Madame Combe. The facility is set to welcome nearly 2,000 vulnerable Haitians in the near future, and the visit allowed officials to assess infrastructure and operational needs for a new on-site community restaurant scheduled to open its doors on April 6.

    This latest regional relief effort is part of a far larger, ongoing national social assistance commitment by the Haitian government. Through FAES, the administration currently provides 48,000 prepared meals every day to internally displaced persons across the country, with the allocation broken out across three major regions: 2,000 meals for Artibonite, 9,000 for the Centre region, and 37,000 for the country’s most populous region, West. In addition to fixed-site meal programs, 36,000 additional meals are served daily via mobile canteen operations across Port-au-Prince, Delmas, and Pétion-ville, reaching low-income and food-insecure residents in dense urban areas that have been disproportionately impacted by ongoing economic and humanitarian instability.

  • «Konbit Haiti Zero Waste» : 15,200 m3 of waste collected in the metropolitan area

    «Konbit Haiti Zero Waste» : 15,200 m3 of waste collected in the metropolitan area

    Haiti’s national clean environment initiative, “Konbit Haiti Zero Waste”, has delivered strong early results in the country’s metropolitan region, with project officials announcing this week that more than 15,200 cubic meters of solid waste have been collected across five participating municipalities since the program launched. Minister of the Environment Valéry Fils-Aimé, who unveiled the program at its official launch, reported that the first phase of on-ground interventions has already mobilized more than 1,500 local workers to support waste collection efforts. All participating workers have received full compensation for 10 days of work completed over the 2026 Easter holiday period, with payments disbursed entirely via the MonCash digital payment platform as of April 2, 2026, according to the ministry.

    Data compiled by two technical bodies under the Ministry of the Environment — the National Solid Waste Management Service (SNGRS) and the Living Environment and Sanitation Directorate (DCVA), which coordinate and oversee all sanitation work for the initiative — confirms the impressive early output of the program. Working with a fleet of 23 heavy-duty vehicles including waste trucks, compactors, and dump trucks contributed by partner institutions, organized into five rotating work teams, the initiative has covered 30 collection roads split evenly across five target municipalities: Pétion-ville, Delmas, Tabarre, Cité Soleil, and Port-au-Prince. Over 23 days of active collection work, teams have pulled in an average of 632 cubic meters of waste per day, totaling the milestone 15,200 cubic meters reported this week.

    The Ministry of the Environment has publicly praised the cross-sector collaboration that made these early gains possible, extending sincere gratitude to all institutional partners that contributed equipment, coordination, and labor to the first phase. Minister Fils-Aimé specifically highlighted the dedication of the SNGRS team led by Director Daril Balthazar, as well as the consistent on-the-ground support from leaders and staff at the five participating municipalities. The ministry also commended the Haitian public for its widespread commitment to the initiative’s goals and the positive reception the program has received since it rolled out.

    Looking ahead, the Haitian government confirmed that the program will continue expanding its reach across the country, with preparation work already underway to extend services to two additional major Haitian cities: Cap-Haïtien in the north and Ouanaminthe on the Dominican border.

    First launched by the Ministry of the Environment, Konbit Haiti Zero Waste was designed to revitalize and reenergize Haiti’s fragmented solid waste collection and management systems. Operated under the ongoing direction of SNGRS with active input and participation from local municipal authorities, the initiative carries two core overarching goals: to improve public health and quality of life for Haitian communities, and to strengthen consistent presence of state public services across the country.

    In a closing statement, the Ministry of the Environment reiterated the core philosophy guiding the program, noting: “It is important to never forget that beyond large-scale government policies, a clean, healthy, and sustainable environment can only be achieved through the consistent daily actions of every individual.”

  • Goodbye brother Chan

    Goodbye brother Chan

    For nearly two decades, Ramon (Radjkumar) Ramsodit has maintained a close, trust-based friendship and working relationship with Chan Santokhi, the prominent Surinamese political leader, tracing their connection back to their first meeting in 2006. In this personal tribute, Ramsodit shares intimate insights into Santokhi’s character, political leadership, and lifelong commitment to uniting Suriname and its diaspora community in the Netherlands.

    When they first met in 2006, Santokhi served as Suriname’s Minister of Justice and Police, and Ramsodit immediately noticed his rare combination of expertise, calm demeanor, professional competence, and genuine dedication to advancing the well-being of both Suriname and its global diaspora community. Years later, when Santokhi took the helm as chairman of the Surinamese Progressive Party (VHP), he personally reached out to Ramsodit to invite him to contribute to the party’s work and to Suriname’s national development. Santokhi was fully aware that Ramsodit’s political views aligned more closely with social democratic ideals and the National Democratic Party (NDP), but this ideological gap never created a barrier. Instead, this open invitation underscored Santokhi’s inclusive approach to politics and his unique ability to unite people across ideological divides.

    In recognition of Santokhi’s decades of work connecting Suriname and the Netherlands—particularly his engagement with the diaspora community based in Rotterdam—Ramsodit and other community leaders honored Santokhi with three distinct awards: the Diaspora Certificate, the Rotterdam Four Lions Pin, and the SuRo Pin. These honors were a public reflection of the deep appreciation community members held for Santokhi’s consistent efforts to build lasting bridges between the two nations.

    For Ramsodit, what stands out most beyond Santokhi’s proven governing skills is his fundamental humanity. Even with the heavy demands of high public office, Santokhi remained consistently thoughtful and engaged. He regularly turned to Ramsodit for support drafting texts and researching complex policy questions, never failed to send a personal birthday greeting each year, and even surprised Ramsodit with a beautiful bouquet of flowers for his 50th birthday. One of Ramsodit’s most cherished memories is a late-night meeting in Lelydorp held on his birthday, where their conversation stretched into the early hours until the date shifted to May 17 in the Netherlands. With his characteristic good humor, Santokhi pointed out that the day was also Queen Máxima’s birthday and encouraged Ramsodit to send his congratulations to the queen. The chairman of the Satya Dharma Netherlands organization was also present at this gathering.

    When Ramsodit worked to nominate Santokhi for a royal honor from the Netherlands, Santokhi pushed back, noting that the award could be weaponized for political gain against him. This response revealed both his sharp understanding of political realities and his personal humility. Instead of accepting the nomination for himself, Santokhi suggested that Ramsodit put forward other VHP members based in the Netherlands—an act that reflected his genuine respect for the work of his peers.

    The pair’s relationship was built on deep personal trust and mutual respect, with both addressing each other by their first names. Their final in-person conversation took place on Friday, November 21, 2025, at the De Olifant venue. During that meeting, Santokhi thanked Ramsodit for his work supporting the state visit of the King and Queen of the Netherlands to Suriname, as well as his efforts to nominate diaspora members and Suriname-based residents for royal honors. At Santokhi’s request, part of this conversation was recorded for posterity.

    Santokhi’s trust in Ramsodit extended even to personal family matters. When Santokhi’s daughter Shanylla Santokhi graduated from Leiden University, Santokhi was unable to attend the ceremony in person. He asked Ramsodit and Ram Rambarstsingh to be present on his behalf, so he could follow the milestone moment remotely via video call.

    Looking back on nearly 20 years of collaboration and friendship, Ramsodit emphasizes that his work with Santokhi has been incredibly valuable. Even when the pair held differing views, they always maintained mutual respect, trust, and a shared commitment to advancing the interests of Suriname and its people. Their friendship has remained genuine and durable, standing the test of time since 2006.

    For Ramsodit, Santokhi is far more than just a skilled political leader. He remains, above all, a warm, engaged, and deeply principled human being. The tribute closes with two rallying cries: “Jai Jai Chan, Jai Jai Sarnam” from Ramon (Radjkumar) Ramsodit.

  • Police in Los Alcarrizos kill a young man they were looking for in connection with armed robberies

    Police in Los Alcarrizos kill a young man they were looking for in connection with armed robberies

    A fatal police-involved shooting in Los Alcarrizos has left a 24-year-old suspected criminal dead, according to official statements from Dominican Republic’s National Police. The deceased has been identified as Ambiorix Acevedo, who succumbed to multiple gunshot wounds while undergoing emergency treatment at Dr. Vinicio Calventi Hospital.

    Preliminary official accounts outline that the shooting unfolded when uniformed police patrols moved to apprehend Acevedo, who was already the subject of an active arrest warrant. Law enforcement officials state that Acevedo opened fire on the arriving patrol officers, forcing officers to return fire in self-defense.

    National Police have confirmed that Acevedo was a person of interest linked to multiple armed assault and robbery cases across several neighborhoods in Santo Domingo Oeste municipality. Following the confrontation, authorities secured a loaded firearm and a motorcycle at the incident site.

    The investigation into the encounter remains active and ongoing, with law enforcement currently conducting a manhunt for a second individual believed to be connected to Acevedo and the broader robbery network he was allegedly part of. No further details about the second suspect or the timeline for concluding the investigation have been released to the public as of the latest update.