作者: admin

  • Thompson slams BPL for ‘excuses’ over power outages

    Thompson slams BPL for ‘excuses’ over power outages

    A senior opposition lawmaker in the Bahamas has launched a scathing critique of the ruling Progressive Liberal Party (PLP) government, accusing state power utility Bahamas Power and Light (BPL) of hiding behind excuses instead of resolving chronic power outages and holding the administration accountable for broken pledges on affordable, reliable electricity.

    Speaking during parliamentary debate Monday, Kwasi Thompson, the member of parliament for East Grand Bahama, pushed back against a recent public statement from BPL that blamed recent widespread service disruptions on a combination of unexpected equipment breakdowns, underreported underground cable faults, and an earlier-than-usual summer heat wave. Thompson argued that these explanations do nothing to address the daily struggles Bahamian households and business owners face, telling lawmakers that residents have every right to demand concrete action instead of vague justifications.

    “The PLP came into office in 2021 promising voters sweeping changes to the country’s energy sector: lower monthly bills and a far more consistent power supply,” Thompson noted. “Instead, we have seen electricity costs climb steadily year after year. Working families have been forced to slash spending on groceries and other essential household items just to cover their energy bills, while small and medium businesses have seen their operating costs surge — costs that are ultimately passed on to already cash-strapped consumers.”

    Thompson emphasized that the financial relief the government promised to ease energy burdens has never materialized, leaving millions of households across the country facing growing financial pressure. Beyond rising costs, he added, the government has also failed to deliver on its pledge to improve service reliability, particularly for residents of the Bahamas’ outer Family Islands, where persistent outages have been a years-long problem that disrupts every part of daily life. He highlighted a recent island-wide blackout on Cat Island that shut down economic activity during the island’s popular annual Rake and Scrape festival, with local business owners describing the disruption as tragic for their livelihoods.

    “Power outages do more than just turn off the lights — they undercut new economic opportunities, drive away tourists, and upend daily routines for entire communities,” Thompson said. He warned that even New Providence, the country’s most populous island and home to the capital Nassau, is on track for another summer of repeated service interruptions, pointing to recent reports of rolling blackouts across multiple residential communities in the city.

    With the PLP having now completed a full term in office and won re-election, Thompson said the government can no longer shift blame to previous administrations and must accept full responsibility for resolving the country’s long-running energy crisis. “You have had more than enough time to fix these problems,” he said. “At this stage, responsibility rests squarely with the government.”

    Thompson laid out three core questions that Bahamian voters want answered: when will electricity costs come down, when will service reliability improve, and when will the government release a detailed, public roadmap to modernize the country’s aging power infrastructure. For residents of Grand Bahama, he added, the promised benefits of energy reform have yet to materialize, leaving communities still waiting for the change they were promised ahead of the 2021 election.

    He also questioned the timeline for one of the government’s flagship energy reform pledges: allowing Bahamian citizens to take ownership stakes in the national power utility and share in the benefits of a restructured energy sector. While the government frames its current energy agenda as progress, Thompson said that for the vast majority of ordinary Bahamians, what the government calls progress has only translated to greater financial pressure and more uncertainty about access to reliable power.

  • Dominican Republic strengthens airport health controls to prevent Ebola entry

    Dominican Republic strengthens airport health controls to prevent Ebola entry

    In response to ongoing global Ebola outbreak alerts, the Dominican Republic has rolled out strict new mandatory health surveillance protocols designed to stop high-risk infectious diseases like Ebola from entering the country via international air routes. The policy, formally adopted as Resolution 144-2026 by the nation’s Civil Aviation Board (JAC), aligns with directives from the Dominican Ministry of Public Health focused on shoring up epidemiological monitoring across all points of entry, including international airports, seaports, and land border crossings.

    Under the updated regulatory framework, all commercial airlines operating inbound flights to the Dominican Republic are legally required to deny boarding to any passenger or crew member who has been classified by public health officials as a confirmed, probable, or suspected Ebola case. The boarding ban also extends to individuals who have documented recent exposure to the virus in regions currently experiencing active outbreaks.

    Beyond the boarding restriction, air carriers are mandated to collaborate closely with local public health agencies and airport security teams to carry out enhanced entry screening. They are also required to immediately report any passenger who develops visible Ebola-compatible symptoms mid-flight to ground health authorities before arrival.

    Officials have emphasized that the new rules do not bar Dominican citizens from returning to their home country. Any returning national who may have been exposed to the virus will, however, be required to complete a full public health evaluation, and may be subject to quarantine, isolation, or other control measures as outlined in existing Ministry of Public Health guidelines. The surveillance package is framed as a proactive, adaptive measure that will be updated regularly to reflect changing global epidemiological conditions as the international Ebola situation evolves.

  • Nintendo to remake classic ‘Zelda’ game ‘Ocarina of Time’

    Nintendo to remake classic ‘Zelda’ game ‘Ocarina of Time’

    In a major announcement from its Paris presentation Tuesday, Japanese gaming powerhouse Nintendo has confirmed that a brand-new remake of its genre-defining 1998 action-adventure masterpiece *The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time* is in development for the company’s upcoming Switch 2 console. The reveal came during a pre-recorded livestream showcasing Nintendo’s pipeline of upcoming releases, though company representatives shared only limited details about the highly anticipated project, confirming only that the title will launch sometime this year to coincide with the 40th anniversary of the entire *Legend of Zelda* franchise. When the original version of Ocarina of Time launched for the Nintendo 64 console in 1998, it revolutionized the global gaming industry. It introduced players to an unprecedentedly immersive, intricately detailed open 3D world and a groundbreaking combat mechanic that let players lock on to individual enemies— a feature that is now a universal standard across nearly all 3D action and adventure games today. The game follows its iconic green-tunic-clad hero Link on a sprawling adventure that bends time itself, splitting his journey between childhood and adulthood, as he battles the dark tyrant Ganondorf to rescue Princess Zelda and save the kingdom of Hyrule from destruction. For decades, *Ocarina of Time* has retained its reputation as one of the greatest video games ever created, consistently topping “best games of all time” lists from leading gaming publications and holding a nearly perfect 99% aggregate critic score on the review platform Metacritic. This is not the first time Nintendo has revisited the classic title: back in 2011, the company released an updated remake for its Nintendo 3DS handheld console, which reworked the original’s low-polygon graphics to leverage the device’s stereoscopic 3D display technology. The entire *Legend of Zelda* franchise has grown into one of Nintendo’s most successful and enduring intellectual properties, with global sales of all series entries topping 140 million units to date. The most recent mainline installment, 2023’s *The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom*, became the fastest-selling game in franchise history, cementing the series’ ongoing popularity decades after its debut. Beyond the new game remake, Nintendo is expanding the Zelda franchise beyond interactive entertainment: a big-budget live-action *Legend of Zelda* feature film is currently in production and scheduled to hit theaters worldwide in April 2027.

  • JLP mourns passing of former councillor Lorna Leslie

    JLP mourns passing of former councillor Lorna Leslie

    The Jamaica political community is mourning the loss of one of its most dedicated public servants, Lorna Joy Leslie, the former long-serving Councillor for the Denham Town Division who passed away on Tuesday following a prolonged battle with illness. Leslie holds the distinction of being the longest-serving Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) representative to ever serve on the Kingston and St Andrew Municipal Corporation (KSAMC), and her decades of advocacy for marginalized communities have left an enduring legacy across the nation.

    In the wake of Leslie’s passing, senior JLP figures have led tributes celebrating her decades of service. Desmond McKenzie, Deputy Leader of the JLP, Member of Parliament for Kingston West, and Jamaica’s current Local Government Minister, offered a heartfelt reflection on Leslie’s decades-long commitment to public life. “Lorna Leslie was a true stalwart of the Jamaica Labour Party,” McKenzie shared in his statement. “She served the residents of Denham Town and the wider West Kingston area with extraordinary distinction until her retirement from office in 2011.”

    McKenzie extended the party’s deepest sympathies to Leslie’s loved ones, acknowledging the sacrifice her family made to enable her decades of public service. “The entire Jamaica Labour Party, and especially the West Kingston political family, send our most sincere and heartfelt condolences to Lorna’s family,” he said. “We are endlessly grateful for her extraordinary contributions to our party and our country, and we thank her family for sharing her with us throughout all these years of service.”

    McKenzie went on to highlight Leslie’s lifelong work advancing the rights and needs of Jamaica’s most vulnerable populations, describing her as an “undisputed champion of the poor and dispossessed.” He emphasized that Leslie was unafraid to speak up for marginalized communities, and her advocacy delivered tangible improvements for countless low-income Jamaicans. “She was fearless and incredibly effective in advocating for the under-privileged across our society,” McKenzie explained. “Lorna’s work, her dedication, and her passion will never be forgotten. She was an exceptional public representative who always went above and beyond to fight for elderly and low-income residents.”

    Leslie’s commitment to supporting vulnerable communities extended beyond her work as a division councillor. She served with notable distinction as chair of the KSAMC’s Poor Relief Committee, and also made significant contributions to the daily operations and improvement of the Denham Town Golden Age Home, a long-term care facility for elderly Kingston residents.

    Leslie’s legacy has already been formally honored by the KSAMC: in 2021, the municipal body unanimously approved a resolution to rename Metcalfe Street, a major thoroughfare in Denham Town, to Leslie Street in recognition of her 35 years of continuous service to the division. The renaming effort enjoyed broad grassroots support, with 174 local residents signing a petition in favor of the change. Even across party lines, Leslie won widespread respect for her work: at the time of the renaming, councillors from both major Jamaican political parties recognized her as a tireless advocate for the poor, praising her unwavering passion and dedication to improving the lives of the most vulnerable members of Jamaican society.

  • Strachan pledges reform for Public Parks Authority

    Strachan pledges reform for Public Parks Authority

    In a heated parliamentary session that sparked immediate cross-aisle tension, Jamahl Strachan, the newly appointed Executive Chairman of the Bahamas Public Parks and Public Beaches Authority, outlined an ambitious reform agenda yesterday, aimed at pulling the agency out of a damaging spending scandal that marred his predecessor McKell Bonaby’s tenure. The announcement triggered visible friction among lawmakers, with an opposition MP accusing Strachan of publicly scapegoating Bonaby, a moment that drew awkward exchanges and muted laughter across the chamber.

    Rising to speak for the first time in a prominent public role after keeping a low profile through the Davis administration’s first term, Strachan framed his appointment as a critical turning point for the embattled authority. “The Bahamian people deserve to see tangible, visible evidence of how public resources are being invested in their communities,” he told the House, emphasizing his commitment to wholesale institutional overhaul. “We intend to deliver visible, measurable, and meaningful improvements on the ground. Our vision is clear: we are building a more transparent, more accountable, safer, and more technologically advanced authority.”

    Strachan’s remarks did not go unnoticed by lawmakers, with attention immediately turning to Bonaby, who serves as the Member of Parliament for Mount Moriah and held the executive chairman post before Strachan. MPs exchanged quiet glances and made offhand jokes, with Bonaby exiting the chamber briefly before returning shortly after. Long Island MP Dr. Andre Rollins, an opposition figure, quickly condemned the address, claiming Strachan had thrown Bonaby “under the bus” to score political points.

    Strachan pushed back firmly against the accusation, arguing Rollins was twisting his words to create unnecessary conflict: “He is trying to savage the environment by putting his spin on this presentation.” Rollins doubled down on his critique, noting Strachan’s pledge to modernize the agency amounted to an admission that the $141 million spent under Bonaby’s leadership over the past four years delivered no meaningful public benefit.

    Under Bonaby’s tenure, the authority was engulfed in sustained controversy over unchecked high spending and the persistent lack of a independent public audit. Despite repeated public pledges to release a breakdown of expenditures, Bonaby never provided a detailed account of how public funds were allocated.

    Strachan reiterated that reforms to boost transparency are already underway, with new auditing protocols and formal operational procedures already implemented. The authority is currently conducting a comprehensive, unflinching review of its staffing model, operational workflows, procurement processes and overall institutional capacity, he confirmed. Strachan stressed that transparency without accountability is meaningless: “Accountability must walk hand in hand with transparency. Bahamians deserve assurance that every dollar allocated to the authority is spent responsibly and produces real, measurable results.”

    A full review of internal policies, reporting hierarchies and governance controls is currently in progress, Strachan confirmed. Where overlapping responsibilities and inefficiencies are found, departments will be restructured to cut duplication, clarify role boundaries, streamline workflows and strengthen decision-making. “There must be clear lines of authority, clear mandates, and clear accountability,” he said. “Every department must know its role. Every employee must know their responsibilities. Every dollar spent must advance the Authority’s mission.”

    To build public trust, all updated policies, procedures and operational guidelines will be published on the authority’s official website for full public access, he added. Beyond governance reform, Strachan laid out a broad policy agenda centered on public safety, community renewal, digital modernization and regulated commercial use of public spaces.

    Public safety will be a top priority, with an ongoing review of security frameworks for parks and beaches. Proposed upgrades include deploying additional lifeguards, expanding the park warden program, and increasing the use of modern surveillance monitoring across high-traffic public areas. Strachan also outlined plans to beautify green and coastal spaces across New Providence, revitalizing these areas to encourage greater community use and connection.

    Rebuilding public trust will rely on open communication, Strachan said, with plans to expand public outreach initiatives and improve two-way communication between the authority and Bahamian residents. On the digital front, the authority will upgrade its online infrastructure with a fully redesigned website and a dedicated public portal for submitting complaints and service requests.

    A new Digital Permit System is also in the works, which will allow electronic permit issuance for beach and park vendors, event organizers, billboard operators, concessionaires and other commercial users of public spaces. Billboard and signage regulation will be a key early focus, Strachan said, noting that unpermitted advertising structures have proliferated across public lands without proper oversight, consistency or planning.

    Going forward, the authority will implement a clear, transparent permitting framework with standardized rules for location, design, size and placement of all commercial signage. Strachan also announced a nationwide compliance review to target unapproved advertising structures—billboards, signs, and banners—built on public property without required permits. “The rules must apply equally to everyone,” he said. “Those who follow the law should not be undercut by those who ignore it. This initiative is not about punishment; it is about restoring order, fairness, accountability and public confidence in the management of public land.”

  • Abinader meets with private sector to discuss global price volatility

    Abinader meets with private sector to discuss global price volatility

    SANTO DOMINGO – On Monday, Dominican Republic President Luis Abinader gathered top leaders from the country’s key productive sectors for a high-stakes meeting at the National Palace, where officials and private representatives aligned on strategies to buffer the national economy and everyday consumers from the ripple effects of unpredictable global market shifts.

    The closed-door working session centered on three core priorities: updating the national standardized price table, evaluating the latest trends unfolding across international commodity markets, and coordinating targeted interventions that can curb the spillover damage of global economic volatility. A particular focus of the discussion was addressing ongoing swings in global oil and natural gas prices, a key driver of inflation and cost of living pressures that have impacted economies around the world in recent years.

    Speaking after the meeting, Abinader highlighted that sustained, open dialogue between the national government and the country’s commercial, industrial, agricultural, and broader business communities has already proven instrumental in forging broad consensus. These cross-sector discussions have also produced actionable recommendations that reinforce existing government policies aimed at insulating the Dominican economy from external economic shocks, he noted.

    The president emphasized that ongoing collaboration between public officials and leading organizations representing business, manufacturing, trade, and agriculture remains non-negotiable for protecting the nation’s hard-won economic stability, and shielding household budgets from the weight of international economic pressures. Attendees at the gathering included multiple senior government officials, alongside leadership representatives from the Dominican Republic’s most prominent industry groups: the National Business Council (CONEP), the Association of Industries of the Dominican Republic (AIRD), the National Business Owners Organization (ONEC), the National Union of Agricultural Producers (ÚNASE), and the Dominican Agribusiness Board.

  • Leonel Fernández urges Latin America to embrace a knowledge-based economy

    Leonel Fernández urges Latin America to embrace a knowledge-based economy

    MADRID — Against a backdrop of shifting global power dynamics and rapid technological advancement, former Dominican President Leonel Fernández has sounded a clarion call for Latin America to step out of its passive role and shape its own destiny amid a sweeping reordering of the post-Cold War international system. Delivering his address at the Funglode Ibero-American Forum held in the Spanish capital, Fernández argued that the global framework constructed at the close of the 20th century is now in the throes of deep, irreversible transformation, giving rise to a far more fragmented and unpredictable global landscape than the region has ever faced.

    In his keynote remarks, the former leader outlined the most pressing challenge confronting Latin America: breaking away from its long-standing reliance on a raw material export-led economic model to build a new growth paradigm rooted in knowledge, innovation, advanced technology, digital transformation and artificial intelligence. Fernández framed the persistent digital gap across the region as a modern iteration of illiteracy, warning that nations that delay widespread adoption of emerging cutting-edge technologies will face marginalization in the competitive 21st century global economy, unable to keep pace with more digitally advanced economies.

    Fernández further emphasized that meaningful progress requires coordinated effort across key sectors, calling for strengthened strategic collaboration between higher education institutions, private industry, and national governments. This tripartite partnership, he argued, is critical to advancing groundbreaking research, scaling innovative solutions, and crafting effective public policies that drive inclusive growth. The three-day forum brought together policymakers, academics, and business leaders from across the Ibero-American community to deliberate on a broad slate of pressing shared issues, from shifting geopolitical alignments and cross-border migration to the defense of democratic institutions, sustainable economic expansion, cross-regional academic collaboration, and the opportunities and risks of new technological innovation.

    Closing his remarks, Fernández reiterated that targeted investment in artificial intelligence and the intentional development of regional innovation ecosystems are non-negotiable steps for Latin America to boost its global competitiveness, unlock new economic opportunities, and secure a prosperous foothold in an increasingly digitized global economy.

  • Immigration advocates hail court rejection of Trump’s ‘unlawful’ immigration restrictions

    Immigration advocates hail court rejection of Trump’s ‘unlawful’ immigration restrictions

    Two separate federal court rulings have invalidated controversial, unlawful immigration policies implemented during the Donald Trump administration, drawing widespread applause from immigration advocates, legal organizations and state officials who have pushed back against the administration’s restrictive, anti-immigrant agenda.

  • EU rejects Apple blame for delayed Siri AI rollout

    EU rejects Apple blame for delayed Siri AI rollout

    BRUSSELS, Belgium – A public dispute between the European Union and Apple has erupted this week after the U.S. tech giant blamed EU regulatory rules for its decision to hold back the launch of its new artificial intelligence-powered Siri upgrade across the bloc. The standoff marks the latest clash between the influential tech firm and Brussels over landmark digital regulation.

  • Gonzalo Castillo meets U.S. Ambassador after visa reinstatement

    Gonzalo Castillo meets U.S. Ambassador after visa reinstatement

    In a significant development reshaping the political trajectory of Dominican Republic presidential candidate Gonzalo Castillo, the former public works minister and nominee of the Dominican Liberation Party (PLD) has concluded a high-stakes meeting with United States Ambassador Leah Francis Campos that both sides frame as a breakthrough for cross-border collaboration.

    The closed-door gathering in Santo Domingo comes on the heels of two pivotal wins for Castillo: a recent court acquittal in the high-profile Calamar corruption case, and the U.S. government’s decision to reverse a prior revocation and reinstate his 10-year non-immigrant visa. Castillo opened up about the talks following the meeting, emphasizing that the discussion centered on aligning shared visions for the Dominican Republic’s future and unlocking new avenues of bilateral cooperation that would deliver concrete economic and social gains for both the Dominican and American peoples.

    Castillo first went public with news of his visa restoration on May 26, using the announcement to extend formal gratitude to the U.S. government, then-President Donald Trump, and Ambassador Campos personally for facilitating the decision. The sequence of recent positive outcomes—ranging from the clearing of his name in the corruption investigation to the visa reinstatement and now the high-level diplomatic meeting—marks a clear turning point in Castillo’s bid for the presidency, reigniting momentum for his political campaign after months of legal and diplomatic setbacks. Analysts note that the restored U.S. travel access and formal diplomatic meeting signal a shift in international standing for the candidate, strengthening his position ahead of upcoming electoral contests.