作者: admin

  • Trump says ‘Cuba is next’ as CARICOM moves to send aid to Havana

    Trump says ‘Cuba is next’ as CARICOM moves to send aid to Havana

    Tensions around U.S. policy toward Cuba have escalated in recent days after former President Donald Trump dropped a cryptic hint about potential new U.S. action against the island, at the same time that the Caribbean community mobilizes to deliver life-saving humanitarian aid to a country reeling from severe American sanctions.

    Speaking at the Future Investment Initiative summit hosted in Miami on March 27, Trump touched on Washington’s ongoing military and diplomatic posture toward neighboring Venezuela, when he offhandedly added the comment that sent shockwaves through regional policy circles. “We have been very, very successful. You know, when I went into Venezuela… I built this great military, I said, you’ll never have to use it, but sometimes you have to use it,” Trump told attendees. Before stepping away from the remark, he added, “And Cuba’s next, by the way, but pretend I didn’t say that, please.”

    The comment arrives against a backdrop of escalating U.S. economic pressure on Cuba that has been squeezing the island’s economy since early 2026. Washington moved to cut off Venezuela’s longstanding oil exports to Cuba that year, and has since issued formal threats to impose punitive tariffs on any third-party country that chooses to supply crude oil to the Caribbean nation. Because Cuba’s national energy infrastructure is almost entirely dependent on imported fuel to power electricity grids and transportation networks, these restrictive measures have triggered widespread fuel shortages, rolling national blackouts, and cascading economic disruptions that have worsened living conditions for millions of Cuban residents.

    Just last week, one Russian-flagged tanker carrying an estimated 730,000 barrels of crude oil was permitted to dock and unload its cargo at Cuban ports. But the White House moved quickly to clarify that the exception did not signal a shift in Washington’s hardline policy toward the island. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt confirmed to reporters that the sanctioned vessel was granted approval to deliver the shipment solely on humanitarian grounds, and that future cases of this nature would be evaluated and decided on an individual, case-by-case basis.

    As U.S. policy remains firmly anchored in pressure, regional governments have moved to coordinate a collective humanitarian response to address the growing crisis on the island. Member states of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) began mobilizing relief efforts last week, with the initiative coordinated through the CARICOM Secretariat based in Georgetown, Guyana. The relief package will include a wide range of urgently needed supplies: powdered milk, non-perishable staple goods including beans, wheat flour, rice and canned foods, basic essential medical equipment, renewable energy infrastructure such as solar panels and storage batteries, and water storage tanks to address widespread access gaps. Member states are collectively funding the purchase of these supplies, which are then prepared for shipment to Cuba. The entire effort has received backing from the government of Mexico, which has pre-vetted local Mexican suppliers capable of delivering the requested goods to departure ports, and will cover all costs of shipping the humanitarian cargo from Mexico to Cuban ports at no charge to the initiative.

  • Choiseul Secondary students win Regional Schools Investment Competition

    Choiseul Secondary students win Regional Schools Investment Competition

    A young student team from Saint Lucia’s Choiseul Secondary School has emerged as the overall winner of the third annual Regional Schools Investment Competition, an educational initiative organized by the Eastern Caribbean Securities Exchange (ECSE) designed to introduce regional youth to foundational concepts of finance and investing. Now in its third iteration, the contest challenges participating student groups from across the Eastern Caribbean to develop data-backed investment strategies that respond to realistic market conditions, blending simulated fictional company assets with real-world economic scenarios to give participants hands-on learning experience.

    At an official award ceremony held last week, the Choiseul Secondary team, competing under the name Alite Investors, was officially crowned regional champion. The six-member team includes Melanie Poyotte, Deighdra Denis, Kayleigh Zoe Flavien, Alisha Jn Baptiste, Kayann Simon and Faith Charlemagne, guided by faculty coaches Shirle Ann James and Stephanie Theophane-Charles.

    In her acceptance speech delivered at the ceremony, team member Kayann Simon expressed gratitude for the transformative learning opportunity the competition provided. “The opportunity to participate in the regional school investment competition is one that I truly appreciate,” Simon said. “We gained a better understanding of how the stock market works in terms of the factors that influence share prices.” As the winning team, Alite Investors took home an array of prizes: custom backpacks filled with branded gifts from competition partners, official participation certificates, gold medals, an EC$540 investment gift voucher, and a EC$6,500 cheque awarded to their school to support future programming.

    Claiming second place in the regional competition was the Boys on the Hill Investment team from Grenada Boys’ Secondary School, made up of students Ericson Howard, Chemarion Ross, Caleb Williams, Ché Toussaint, and Jaedyn Pierre, led by teacher coach Jocelyn Emmons. For many competitors, the contest served as a first introduction to core financial concepts that they say will shape their long-term personal financial decisions. “Before this competition, I never knew what stock trading was. I normally heard it on the media but now I have an understanding of what I should do with my money and how it can shape my future,” second-place team member Caleb Williams shared.

    Two additional special awards were presented to outstanding teams this year. Vieux Fort Comprehensive Secondary School’s team N’Oct’urnal Invests took home the honor for most creative video submission, while St. Martin’s Secondary’s SMSS Prosperity Pioneers won recognition for the most clear, well-structured strategic investment approach.

    Looking ahead, organizers have announced that the fourth edition of the competition, scheduled to launch at the end of this year, will be renamed the Trevor E. Blake Regional Schools Investment Competition, to honor Blake’s 25 years of transformative contributions to the ECSE and the broader Eastern Caribbean securities market. Blake, who retired from his post as managing director of the Exchange on December 31, 2025, leaves a legacy of expanding financial literacy and market access across the region.

  • Verdachten in Vaco-brandstichtingszaak in hoger beroep

    Verdachten in Vaco-brandstichtingszaak in hoger beroep

    More than a year after a devastating arson attack destroyed a beloved historic bookstore and damaged three adjacent city-center buildings in the Netherlands, two men convicted in the case have formally launched an appeal against their convictions and sentences. The appeal hearing got underway Monday, marking the next chapter in a case that has shaken the local community. At the original trial, defendant N.J. was sentenced to 10 years in prison, while co-defendant H.S. received a six-year custodial sentence. N.J. has long contested his conviction and sentence, arguing that he received disproportionate punishment because he was neither the mastermind nor the lead organizer of the arson plot, a claim he has reiterated throughout the legal process.

    According to N.J.’s statements to police, he was approached by H.S. to participate in the plan to set fire to one of the city center’s iconic green-and-white listed buildings. The pair were promised a payout of €10,000 for the attack from a figure identified only as “Lori,” who is alleged to be the person who ordered the arson. Lori and another man, identified as rapper K., were taken into custody in 2024 in connection with the plot, but were quickly released by the examining magistrate and will not face any further prosecution for the crime.

    N.J. also told investigators that he had only been released from prison for three months when he agreed to take part in the scheme. He initially claimed he had only been asked to provide a taxi ride for the group, but admitted under judicial pressure that he had thrown an oil-soaked rag into the fire to help the blaze spread more quickly.

    The targeted building on Domineestraat, which housed the well-known Vaco Bookstore, was set on fire on January 15, 2024. The blaze quickly spread beyond the original structure, leaving three other nearby buildings also damaged by fire. In the wake of the attack, Vaco has offered a $50,000 reward for any information or witness statements that can lead to the identification and prosecution of the actual mastermind behind the arson. The appeal case is scheduled to resume in June, with no further updates on proceedings expected before that date.

  • Dominica’s geothermal plant begins power export as commissioning enters final phase

    Dominica’s geothermal plant begins power export as commissioning enters final phase

    After years of anticipation and months of rigorous preparation, Dominica’s groundbreaking geothermal energy project has hit a critical developmental milestone: the facility has officially started exporting power to the country’s national electricity grid, as confirmed by Dominica Electricity Services Limited (DOMLEC) amid ongoing commissioning work.

    In an official update released to the public on March 30, 2026, DOMLEC shared that all core infrastructure of the new 33kV transmission network – including substation equipment at the Fond Colé and Laudat sites, plus the underground transmission line connecting the two locations – has passed all performance tests and been successfully energized. Initial testing of the plant’s geothermal generators began back in early March, when the first test loads were connected to DOMLEC’s existing national grid using a pre-established network segment.

    Moving forward, the utility company confirmed, power generated from the geothermal plant will flow through the newly completed transmission system as part of the final round of integrated testing. That said, DOMLEC has issued a public notice that energy production will not run on a continuous basis during this pre-commissioning phase. Local customers may face occasional unplanned power outages as engineering teams complete final safety and functionality checks on all newly installed infrastructure. The organization extended its gratitude to the Dominican public for their patience through the final stages of construction and testing, emphasizing that this meticulous work is critical to ensuring geothermal energy can be integrated into the national grid safely and reliably long-term.

    DOMLEC’s update follows an announcement from Dominican Prime Minister Roosevelt Skerrit, who confirmed at a recent press conference that the Laudat-based geothermal plant remains on schedule for formal commissioning by the end of March 2026. Skerrit noted that the facility has already undergone several weeks of phased testing, and is currently fully operational across all core systems. Early performance data from testing has exceeded expectations, he added, and the government is eager for Dominican citizens to begin reaping the full benefits of this major national infrastructure investment.

    Worth a total of US$34.8 million, the 10-megawatt Laudat plant holds major regional significance: it will be the second operational geothermal facility across the Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS), and the first utility-scale geothermal plant within the Caribbean Community (CARICOM). According to the Dominica Geothermal Development Company, the project leverages Dominica’s abundant volcanic geological resources to generate clean, baseload power. Once fully operational, it is projected to supply consistent electricity to roughly 23,000 households across the island, while cutting the country’s dependence on costly, carbon-intensive imported fossil fuels dramatically.

    The formal launch of the Laudat plant also marks one of the first tangible deliverables under the OECS Decade of Action for Sustainable Energy Development, an initiative launched earlier in 2026 via the Basseterre Declaration. The regional framework sets an ambitious target of achieving at least 30% renewable electricity generation across all OECS member states by 2035. Dominica is one of five OECS members taking part in the GEOBUILD Programme, a regional geothermal expansion initiative backed by the Caribbean Development Bank that aims to unlock geothermal potential across the Eastern Caribbean.

    As the project enters its final stretch before full commercial operation, DOMLEC reaffirmed its commitment to providing regular public updates on progress, and to delivering a more resilient, low-carbon, and sustainable national energy system for all of Dominica.

  • Dominica plays to goalless draw with Sint Maarten

    Dominica plays to goalless draw with Sint Maarten

    When the 2026 Concacaf Nations Series resumed in the Dominican Republic Monday night, Dominica’s Senior Men’s National Football Team delivered one of its strongest performances in recent memory — yet could not turn territorial and attacking dominance into a winning goal, settling for a hard-fought scoreless draw against Sint Maarten.

    Heading into the fixture, Dominica carried a tough recent tournament history: a 2-0 loss to Guyana in the current cycle, plus a prior defeat to Sint Maarten in the 2025 first leg of the competition hosted in St Kitts. Undeterred by that track record, the side came out of the opening whistle flying, pinning Sint Maarten back in their defensive half and generating a string of promising scoring chances through the first 45 minutes.

    Dominica’s opening-half momentum hit an unexpected hurdle when starting midfielders Briel Thomas and Dhamario Challenger both had to exit the match due to injury. However, substitutes Eustace Marshall and Lyan Edwards seamlessly stepped into the gaps, maintaining the team’s high pressing intensity and ensuring Dominica retained clear control of the half.

    The national side carried that aggressive energy into the second half, continuing to throw numbers forward and test Sint Maarten’s backline. Repeated attacking pushes forced the opposing goalkeeper into a flurry of critical saves to keep his sheet clean. Key chances from forwards Audel Laville, Troy Jules and Marcus Bredas were all turned away by the sharp-shooting Sint Maarten custodian, leaving Dominica unable to break the match’s deadlock.

    Despite full-field dominance, sustained pressure, and more shots on target than their opponents, Dominica could not find the breakthrough goal, and the full-time whistle left the two sides level at 0-0. The result wraps up Dominica’s 2025-2026 Concacaf Series campaign: the team leaves the tournament with three total losses (to Sint Maarten and Saint Martin in 2025, and to Guyana in 2026) paired with this single draw in the Dominican Republic, marking a step forward in performance even as it ends without a tournament win.

  • MP Baltimore Donates Medical Supplies to Glanvilles Polyclinic

    MP Baltimore Donates Medical Supplies to Glanvilles Polyclinic

    A prominent Antiguan legislator has delivered a tangible boost to local healthcare access, with a targeted donation of essential medical goods to one of the country’s community care hubs. Randy Baltimore, the Member of Parliament for the St. Philip’s North constituency, has confirmed that the contribution of assorted medical supplies was delivered this week to Glanvilles Polyclinic, with the dual goal of strengthening direct patient care and easing the burden on frontline clinical teams.

    In comments shared following the donation, Baltimore emphasized the foundational role that accessible, well-resourced local healthcare facilities play in sustaining healthy, thriving communities across the nation. “Healthcare facilities are the backbone of our communities,” Baltimore stated, noting that consistent, practical support for clinical staff working on the front lines of care is non-negotiable for keeping community health systems strong.

    Visual documentation of the donation, shared alongside the official announcement, shows a range of items including mobility support devices and packaged clinical supplies staged at the polyclinic ahead of distribution to clinical teams. The donation addresses ongoing gaps in resource access that many small community clinics face, directly benefiting both patients who rely on the facility for regular care and the staff who serve them daily.

    Closing out his statement on the contribution, Baltimore reaffirmed his longstanding dedication to delivering tangible improvements for the residents he represents. “St. Philip’s North, the work continues,” he said, signaling that more investments in constituency infrastructure and public services are planned in the coming months.

  • Govt signs $6.8m contracts for two Exuma cays airport upgrades

    Govt signs $6.8m contracts for two Exuma cays airport upgrades

    The Bahamas government has given formal approval to a $6.8 million infrastructure upgrade project for airports located on Farmers Cay and Staniel Cay, two popular tourist destinations in the country’s Exuma island chain. Construction work is scheduled to break ground by the end of April and will take approximately eight months to complete, according to senior government officials.

    Of the total investment budget, $5.7 million is allocated directly to the construction and upgrade works. Two local Bahamian contractors have secured the contracts for the project: Rowdy Boys Construction will handle all airside improvements across both airports, while A and E Construction has been tapped to build a brand-new passenger terminal at the Farmers Cay site.

    The initiative forms a core part of the national administration’s Family Island Airport Renaissance program, a long-term strategy designed to boost inter-island connectivity, strengthen the country’s vital tourism sector, and expand inclusive economic opportunity across less developed outer islands. Minister of Works Clay Sweeting detailed the scope of the planned upgrades, noting that works will include full reconstruction and resurfacing of existing runways, plus modernization of apron and ground pavement areas at both facilities. When complete, the Farmers Cay runway will measure 2,170 feet long and 50 feet wide, while Staniel Cay’s upgraded runway will stretch 2,827 feet by 70 feet wide.

    The new Farmers Cay terminal will feature passenger-focused amenities including a dedicated ticket counter, private passenger waiting area, modern restrooms, administrative office space, seating capacity for at least 20 travelers, and covered outdoor verandas. Once upgrades are finalized, both airports will be able to accommodate larger, more modern aircraft: Farmers Cay will be able to handle Cessna Caravan planes, while Staniel Cay will support Cessna 408 SkyCourier operations. The improvements are also expected to boost service reliability for major domestic carriers including Flamingo Air and Titan Air.

    Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Tourism Chester Cooper emphasized that the investment is a targeted move to strengthen critical infrastructure across the Family Islands, where tourism growth has outpaced existing facility capacity. “Demand without infrastructure will ultimately lead to frustration, and that is why we are creating improved infrastructural conditions to facilitate more flights, more consistent service, and greater confidence from airlines and operators,” Cooper explained. “Today is not just a signing of contracts. It is about unlocking potential, advancing opportunity and driving economic growth.”

    For Rowdy Boys Construction, the project marks a return to the site the firm originally developed more than two decades ago. The company built the original Farmers Cay Airport back in 2002, and has previously completed road and water main projects across both cays. Jaylan Knowles, Chief Financial Officer of Rowdy Boys Construction, noted the contract is a major milestone for the local firm, and the company plans to prioritize hiring local workers for the project — including potentially re-engaging workers who participated in the original 2002 construction. Construction will kick off first at Farmers Cay before the team shifts operations to Staniel Cay, with mobilization set to begin once final administrative approvals are secured.

    Cooper also addressed public concerns about repeated contract awards to a small pool of local firms, noting that airport runway construction requires specialized engineering and operational expertise that few domestic companies possess. “There are not many companies in The Bahamas with the capacity to build runways, and therefore you may see a few companies repeated across the islands,” he said, adding that all contracts for the initiative were awarded through a fully transparent, competitive public procurement process.

    In addition to the Farmers Cay and Staniel Cay projects, Cooper provided updates on other ongoing airport modernization efforts across the country. Expansion works at Exuma International Airport are progressing, with construction of the expanded departure lounge now reaching the second floor. Once complete, the upgraded lounge will be able to accommodate up to 400 passengers. At North Eleuthera Airport, preliminary upgrade works have already been finished, and airside improvement activities — including land clearing at the eastern end of the runway — are now underway. Additional development works at the site will move forward once required environmental and geotechnical assessments are completed.

  • Parents oppose teen boy’s ‘SURE’ Programme placement

    Parents oppose teen boy’s ‘SURE’ Programme placement

    A viral campus brawl at Doris Johnson Senior High School has sparked a heated dispute between the families of two student defendants and Bahamas’ Ministry of Education, over a controversial decision to reassign the teens to a specialized behavioural intervention program. The two 16-year-old eleventh graders, Kenaj Bain and Durell Farrington, were officially charged with disorderly fighting following the altercation that was filmed and spread widely across social media last month.

    After the pair entered guilty pleas, the court handed down a sentence that included mandatory conflict resolution counselling and a set number of community service hours. Bain was also given a two-week out-of-school suspension, with both students cleared to return to their regular classes once the suspension term was completed. But when the teens arrived back on campus, they received an unexpected notification: instead of resuming their normal studies, they would be reassigned to Programme SURE for a six-month term.

    Programme SURE is a Ministry of Education initiative created to support students who struggle with persistent behavioural challenges, offering instruction in a smaller, more tightly structured learning environment tailored to their specific needs. However, the mothers of both students are vehemently opposing the placement, arguing it is an unfair and inappropriate penalty that does not fit their children’s records or roles in the brawl.

    Farrington’s mother, Anya Taylor, claims her son was not an active participant in the fight at all — he only stepped in to protect Bain when the altercation turned violent. She emphasized that her son has never faced disciplinary action during his time at the school, noting, “If you check his record, he never got in problems in school. I just drop him to school and pick him up. I does be there before the bell even ring so he don’t even have time to be idle.”

    For Bain’s mother, nurse Kelda Forbes, the situation is even more distressing. She says her son only fought back in self-defense after he was struck with a rock by another student. Like Taylor, she insists Bain is not a problem student — teachers regularly praise his academic performance, and he is on track to graduate next year, with ambitions of becoming an orthopaedic surgeon. Last year, Bain completed the competitive Doctor’s Hospital STEM program, ranking among the top male participants in his cohort. Forbes has raised serious questions about how a six-month placement in the alternative program will derail his final year of high school, noting the term spans more than half of his grade 12 studies.

    Forbes also alleges that the decision to place Bain in the program stems from a long-running strained relationship between her son and a senior school administrator, not his role in the recent brawl. She traced the tension back two years, when Bain transferred to the school from the United States while grieving the death of his father. She claims that in a 2024 incident, a school security officer struck Bain first, injuring him, but the school initially moved to suspend Bain. After the family escalated the issue to the Ministry of Education, a review cleared Bain, the officer was removed from the school, and a formal apology was issued.

    Later that same year, Forbes says another unfair incident saw Bain suspended and accused of drug dealing after he picked up a small bag from the school bleachers that a female friend opened and consumed from, leading to the friend falling ill. Even after toxicology tests found no traces of drugs in Bain’s system, the suspension stood. Then, in March 2025, Bain was suspended for leaving a campus fight to seek safety in the school administrative office, charged with skipping class. Forbes adds that even in the current brawl case, Bain was initially arrested and charged, then later cleared of any involvement — yet the school still refused to readmit him until Forbes took the issue to the Ministry of Education.

    Since the latest placement decision, Bain has remained at home, and his mental health has deteriorated sharply. Forbes says her son has grown increasingly depressed, has experienced significant unexplained weight loss, and often breaks down crying uncontrollably. She also claims school administrators have privately labeled Bain as a drug dealer and a “bad seed” to other parents, and she has been repeatedly denied a direct meeting with senior Ministry of Education officials to resolve the dispute.

    When contacted for comment, Education Director Dominique McCartney-Russell explained that placement recommendations for Programme SURE are not made by individual school campuses, but by a centralized cross-functional team within the Ministry of Education. Principals submit referrals that include full disciplinary reports, and the team reviews each referral on an individual, case-by-case basis. While McCartney-Russell declined to comment on the specifics of Bain and Farrington’s cases, she confirmed that three students connected to the viral brawl have been recommended for the program.

    McCartney-Russell outlined the official process for parents raising concerns about placement decisions, advising that families should first raise their objections with the school principal. If the issue remains unresolved after that step, parents can then escalate the complaint to the district superintendent. “We like to go up the chain because they are on the ground and they are more aware of what’s going on so you always want to start from there,” she said.

  • Review expected on Police Officers’ Club finances

    Review expected on Police Officers’ Club finances

    A growing controversy over financial opacity at Jamaica’s Police Officers’ Club is putting new pressure on senior leadership of the Jamaica Constabulary Force (JCF) to resolve longstanding questions around how the institution’s millions in annual revenue are spent, with calls for audited financial statements to be released before the month ends. Multiple senior JCF officers have raised alarms in anonymous briefings to the Jamaica Observer, noting that no audited accounts for the club have been made available to rank-and-file gazetted officers for several years. At the core of their concerns are unconfirmed questions about whether lease income from the club’s prime Hope Road property has been diverted to cover unapproved overseas travel costs and misallocated from designated Hurricane Melissa relief donations. Financial estimates peg the club’s annual income at roughly $10 million, generated through venue rental fees plus mandatory $1,000 monthly dues collected from every gazetted officer in the JCF. Speaking on condition of anonymity, one senior gazetted officer told the outlet that the lack of transparency does not look appropriate, and that only publicly shared, independently audited accounts will ease growing tensions among officers. When reached for comment, Wayne Cameron, the recently suspended Senior Superintendent and former chair of the Police Officers’ Association (POA), confirmed that he had received multiple formal complaints from concerned officers, but clarified that the POA holds no fiscal or oversight responsibility for the Police Officers’ Club itself. Cameron declined to identify which JCF official or body controls the club’s assets and revenue, instead directing all questions to the Office of the Police Commissioner. Follow-up reporting by the Observer confirmed that Deputy Commissioner of Police Karina Powell-Hood, who oversees the JCF’s Force Development and Logistics Portfolio, addressed the issue at a gathering of the Officer Corps this month, announcing that a leadership election for a new POA management team will be held in April, and that the long-awaited audited financial statements will be presented at that meeting. Powell-Hood also addressed one key point of speculation, confirming that last year’s annual Christmas Officers’ Cocktail, a traditional fundraiser hosted by the club, was canceled to redirect its expected budget to the JCF’s Children’s Advocacy, Recovery, and Empowerment (CARE) initiative — a program that earned broad public praise for its work supporting children in regions of Jamaica devastated by Category 5 Hurricane Melissa, which made landfall on the island last October. The debate over the Police Officers’ Club’s finances comes amid an already high-profile public scandal over the management of JCF-linked institutional funds, sparked by Cameron’s arrest on fraud charges connected to POA finances. Following a months-long investigation into alleged financial irregularities within the POA, the director of public prosecutions issued a ruling that led to Cameron being charged with larceny and fraudulent conversion. He has since been suspended from his role as POA chair pending the outcome of his court cases. But a group of senior police sources have pushed back against the charges, arguing that the timing and scope of the investigation raise red flags that the action is rooted in political maneuvering and union-busting. These critics are now demanding that an independent forensic audit identical to the one that led to Cameron’s charges be conducted into the Police Officers’ Club’s finances to level the investigative playing field. Critics point to the suspiciously close timing of Cameron’s charges, which were filed shortly after he launched a court challenge against Police Commissioner Dr Kevin Blake’s move to remove him from his POA leadership post. Blake formally notified Cameron in a September 8, 2025 letter that he was required to vacate the POA chair, arguing that allegations of misconduct and indiscipline against Cameron threatened to undermine the POA’s work, particularly during ongoing high-stakes negotiations with the Government of Jamaica over salary and benefit adjustments for officers. Cameron’s legal team immediately contested the order, and the court granted an interim injunction blocking Blake, whether acting personally or through agents, from organizing any POA meeting to remove Cameron or appoint an interim chair pending a final judicial review of the commissioner’s decision. The court also ordered that implementation of Blake’s removal order be stayed until the judicial review claim is resolved or further court direction is issued. Both Cameron’s upcoming fraud trial and the full judicial hearing on his challenge to his removal from the POA chair are scheduled to be held in the near future, leaving the unresolved question of the Police Officers’ Club’s finances hanging over the JCF’s senior leadership until at least April, when the promised audited accounts are scheduled to be released.

  • Mah-Lee, TotalEnergies reach deal, but…

    Mah-Lee, TotalEnergies reach deal, but…

    A long-running standoff between a veteran Jamaican petroleum retailer and French energy giant TotalEnergies Jamaica has concluded with an amicable settlement, according to the Jamaica Gasoline Retailers Association (JGRA) — but industry leaders warn the case exposes deep-rooted, systemic unfairness that continues to disadvantage independent dealers across the country’s fuel retail sector.

    The dispute centered on Howard Mah-Lee, a dealer who had operated the Seashore Harbour View Service Station under TotalEnergies for 43 years. Late last year, the company informed Mah-Lee it would not renew his distribution contract, a decision that caught JGRA off guard. JGRA President Philip Chong emphasized that Mah-Lee had an unblemished four-decade tenure, consistently adhering to the association’s ethical guidelines, meeting all operational requirements, and delivering reliable service to both local customers and TotalEnergies itself with zero documented breaches of his agreement.

    Behind the non-renewal was a discriminatory pricing structure that put Mah-Lee at a severe competitive disadvantage, Chong explained. TotalEnergies supplies fuel to two adjacent service stations, including Mah-Lee’s and the neighboring lot. Despite receiving the same product from the same supplier, the neighboring dealer was granted fuel at a vastly lower wholesale cost, allowing them to undercut Mah-Lee on retail prices and siphon away customers. Compounding this inequity, TotalEnergies moved to consolidate both locations under a single operator, issuing Mah-Lee a 30-day eviction notice requiring him to vacate the property by March 2026 with no severance or compensation for his decades of operation — a move Chong called unconscionable, particularly noting the ripple effect it would have on Mah-Lee’s long-tenured hourly and salaried staff.

    At Mah-Lee’s request, JGRA escalated the issue to Jamaica’s Minister of Energy Daryl Vaz, who stepped in to mediate negotiations between the dealer and TotalEnergies. After weeks of back-and-forth discussions facilitated by the minister, the two parties reached a confidential settlement that Mah-Lee has publicly confirmed he is satisfied with. As of this report, TotalEnergies has not issued an independent confirmation of the agreement’s terms.

    Chong noted that while Vaz worked to balance the interests of the multinational marketer and local dealers, the JGRA counts the amicable resolution of Mah-Lee’s case as a win for its member — but the association’s broader advocacy work is far from over. He stressed that the core issues that sparked this dispute: one-sided contracts and unfair pricing practices, are pervasive across Jamaica’s petroleum retail sector, not limited to Mah-Lee’s case. Chong pointed to a second recent termination of a long-serving dealer’s contract by another major marketer as further evidence of the trend.

    The root of the problem, Chong explained, dates back to the sector’s transition from legacy multinational operators like Shell and Texaco to newer entrants including TotalEnergies. Modern contracts, rebranded as “licenses” by the new operators, are heavily weighted in favor of marketing firms, granting them unprecedented control over retail operations that extends far beyond their traditional wholesale role. While companies justify the unequal terms as a necessary response to growing industry competition, Chong says the outcome has been devastating for independent dealers: hundreds now face mounting financial pressure, shrinking profit margins, and growing risk of business failure, with many reporting they are systematically denied fair treatment by the multinational fuel marketers that control their supply.