作者: admin

  • Luta says he deleted only ‘personal files’ from consulate’s computer

    Luta says he deleted only ‘personal files’ from consulate’s computer

    A public dispute has erupted over the handover of St. Vincent and the Grenadines (SVG)’s New York Consulate General, with former top diplomat Rondy “Luta” McIntosh pushing back forcefully against claims made by the country’s Foreign Affairs Minister Dwight Fitzgerald Bramble that all computer systems at the mission were wiped clean at the end of McIntosh’s tenure.

    McIntosh, who served as Consul General to New York from August 1, 2022, to February 28, 2024, broke his silence in a Facebook video posted Saturday, laying out a detailed account of the handover process and refuting every part of Bramble’s allegation.

    According to the former consul general, the only action he took on the consulate computer he used was removing files personal to him — a step he described as standard, proper conduct for any departing official. He also clarified that he cleaned up personal correspondence, private family documents and other personal clutter from the official email account that would be passed to his successor, a move he stressed is far from wiping an entire device clean. McIntosh added that his own official consular email remained active on his final day at the mission, and any subsequent deletion or disabling of that account was carried out by a third party, not him. If files linked to that account are now inaccessible, he argues, the blame falls to whoever disabled the account, not him.

    Bramble first made the wiping claim during a parliamentary address Tuesday, stating that incoming Consul General Roland “Patel” Matthews informed him that every computer system at the consulate was completely wiped when he took office in early March. The following day, speaking on local radio station Hot 97 FM, Bramble defended his statement as factual, though he acknowledged uncertainty over whether it was a single device or an entire server that was affected, noting that the situation remained under further investigation. When pressed on who might be responsible, Bramble declined to speculate, saying he was only reporting what he had been told by the new consul general.

    Despite Bramble’s refusal to explicitly name a culprit, McIntosh said the minister’s comments clearly implied he was responsible for the alleged data erasure, damaging his professional reputation and personal integrity. That, he said, left him no choice but to respond publicly — an action he emphasized is not rooted in bitterness or partisan gain, but in correcting factually incorrect and unfair claims.

    McIntosh went on to share extensive details of the supervised handover process to refute the allegations. He confirmed that his final physical day at the consulate was March 3, and the entire transition was overseen by SVG’s Ambassador to the United States, Lou-Anne Gilchrist, who traveled from Washington D.C. to New York for the process. On that day, McIntosh said, he personally assisted Matthews with setup on the consul general’s assigned computer, all devices were fully functional, and no wiping of data occurred. He also noted that he picked Matthews up from Brooklyn — as the new consul could not drive — and the three parties even shared a meal after the handover was completed, leaving the consulate together. He called this the conduct of a transparent professional with nothing to hide, not someone who had tampered with official data.

    The handover, McIntosh explained, was completed in two fully documented phases, both oversaw by Ambassador Gilchrist. He also prepared a comprehensive 17-page handover booklet covering all aspects of the consulate’s operations — from banking arrangements and account balances, system passwords and access codes, monthly expenses, key contact lists, consular operating procedures, staffing updates, outstanding active cases, and strategic guidance for the incoming administration. He stressed that no information was withheld or hidden from his successor or overseeing officials.

    McIntosh also pushed back on the core premise of the allegation by explaining the operating structure of the New York consulate. Unlike larger diplomatic missions, he noted, the SVG consulate operates largely on physical documentation rather than a centralized digital database or server. Core consular services including passport and travel document processing, notarial services, repatriation of human remains, immigration and deportation cases, and community liaison work are all handled via physical paperwork. All critical official records are duplicated and stored both at the consulate and at SVG’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Immigration Office, and central registry in Kingstown, with the government always maintaining full access to official documents. Even if personal files were removed from individual work devices, he argued, there is no scenario where that could erase the government’s institutional knowledge of consular operations.

    The former consul general also pointed out a key gap in the government’s process: in the nearly two months following his March 3 handover, he received no official inquiry from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs or any other state body about the computers or handover before Bramble made the allegation public. McIntosh noted that he had remained fully available and cooperative after leaving office, even offering to travel to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Kingstown to sign off on financial accounts once he returned to SVG. He questioned why, if the discovery of wiped computers was such a serious issue, no one reached out to him for an explanation before the minister went public with the accusation. He argued that an honest, timely inquiry would have quickly revealed the claim had no merit, and that Ambassador Gilchrist’s official report to the ministry already confirms his version of events, noting that he complied fully with all handover requirements and the entire process proceeded professionally and respectfully.

    McIntosh concluded that the minister’s public comments amount to an attack on his years of public service, and he made clear that he will not accept any implication that he engaged in wrongdoing.

  • Prime Minister Browne Says ABLP Manifesto Not Generated by AI

    Prime Minister Browne Says ABLP Manifesto Not Generated by AI

    As Antigua and Barbuda prepares for its upcoming general election, the country’s top leader has pushed back against sharp opposition claims that his party’s key policy platform was produced by artificial intelligence. Prime Minister Gaston Browne, leader of the ruling Antigua and Barbuda Labour Party (ABLP), has firmly refuted assertions that the party’s newly released election manifesto relies on generative AI tool ChatGPT for its content. During an appearance on the local *Browne and Browne* current affairs program, the prime minister laid out a clear defense of the manifesto’s origins, emphasizing that every line of the policy document grew from the hands-on work of ABLP members. Browne explained that the manifesto was assembled entirely in-house by the party, pulling together ongoing policy initiatives that his sitting administration has already advanced during its current term. “None of the content of this manifesto is ChatGPT generated,” Browne stated directly to the program’s audience. He went on to clarify that the document collates years of policy work that he and other party officials developed collaboratively, structuring the party’s priorities and planned actions for the next electoral term. “All this is actually work that myself and others in the party would have done that we have actually collated into a manifesto, setting what will happen within the next few years and where we’re going in the future,” he added. Browne’s public clarification comes at a time of intensifying pre-election scrutiny, as opposition figures have stepped up criticism of the substance and authenticity of the ABLP’s campaign platform, questioning the origins of its policy pledges. After addressing the AI allegations, the prime minister shifted to laying out key components of the party’s upcoming economic agenda, highlighting a flagship policy proposal to transition the country toward a national livable wage that would raise baseline earnings for working Antiguans and Barbudans. The pre-election debate comes as voters prepare to head to the polls to select a new government, with policy credibility emerging as a central point of contention between competing political blocs.

  • Vluchten hervat na ingrijpen president: verkeerstoren weer operationeel

    Vluchten hervat na ingrijpen president: verkeerstoren weer operationeel

    On April 26, commercial air travel operations fully returned to normal at Johan Adolf Pengel International Airport, Suriname’s primary international gateway, after air traffic control staffing was fully restored in the control tower. The resolution of the service disruption came directly after direct intervention from Suriname’s President Jennifer Simons, following internal unrest among the country’s air traffic control workforce.

    The disruption began after an emergency meeting held by the Suriname Air Traffic Controllers Association (SATCA), where association members raised collective concerns about persistent operational challenges and inequities within the national air traffic control department. In response to these unaddressed issues, participating air traffic controllers temporarily limited their on-duty availability, creating cascading delays and disruptions for both incoming and outgoing commercial flights passing through the country’s busiest airport.

    Weeks prior to the emergency work action, SATCA had submitted an official letter to Suriname’s Ministry of Transport, Communication and Tourism, formally requesting a direct negotiation session with the President’s Cabinet. In the correspondence, the association pushed for a formal, concrete proposal to address long-standing pay and operational inequities across aviation sector frontline teams, alongside a clear, legally binding timeline for implementing any agreed-upon reforms.

    Following the disruption, President Simons confirmed she will host SATCA leadership at her official cabinet offices next Monday to deliberate on the ongoing situation and collaborate on developing a long-term, structural solution to the underlying issues. By midnight following the start of the unrest, full staffing had been restored to the airport’s air traffic control tower, clearing the way for a full return to scheduled flight operations.

  • Trump unhurt after shots fired at White House correspondents’ dinner

    Trump unhurt after shots fired at White House correspondents’ dinner

    On a Saturday evening in Washington, D.C., what was supposed to be a landmark moment for former President Donald Trump—his first appearance as president at the annual White House Correspondents’ Dinner—was violently interrupted by a shooting outside the event venue at the Washington Hilton. Immediately after gunfire rang out near the ballroom hosting the traditional media gala, security personnel rushed Trump off the stage in an emergency evacuation. Footage from inside the venue captured attendees scrambling for cover, with shouts of “Get down!” and “Stay down!” ringing out as armed Secret Service agents swarmed the president’s table to move him to safety.

    In the aftermath of the incident, Trump confirmed that he, First Lady Melania Trump, and members of his Cabinet emerged from the attack without injury. According to the president’s account during a post-incident press conference, an armed suspect carrying multiple weapons attempted to breach a security checkpoint serving the event before being detained by Secret Service agents. A Secret Service officer who was shot during the confrontation avoided fatal injury thanks to his bulletproof vest, and is currently reported to be in stable, good condition. When asked if he believed he was the target of the attack, Trump acknowledged, “I guess”.

    Shortly before holding his press conference, Trump shared visual evidence of the incident on his social media platform Truth Social, posting a photo of the suspect restrained on the ground as well as surveillance footage showing the man running past security personnel before agents drew their weapons and opened fire. Multiple U.S. mainstream media outlets have since identified the suspect as 31-year-old Cole Tomas Allen, a resident of Torrance, California. Jeanine Ferris Pirro, U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, announced that the suspect will face formal charges including use of a firearm during a violent crime and assault on federal officers with a dangerous weapon.

    FBI Director Kash Patel confirmed that investigators have launched a full review of the suspect’s background and issued a public appeal for any community members with relevant information about Allen to contact law enforcement. “No piece of information is too small; no piece of information is inadequate. We will evaluate it all,” Patel stated. Al Jazeera producer Chris Sheridan, who was on-site at the dinner, reported that his team heard approximately five gunshots originating from just outside the ballroom entrance. “We could smell the powder. We immediately dove to the ground. It was directly behind me,” Sheridan recalled, noting that while the ballroom itself had stringent, airport-level security screening, any ticket holder could access the lower hotel level where the venue is located, creating a gap in perimeter security.

    In his public remarks after the attack, Trump called the suspect a “very sick person” and a “thug” who had launched an attack against the U.S. Constitution. He also highlighted that this marked not the first recent assassination attempt against a U.S. leader, noting “this is not the first time in the past couple of years that our republic has been attacked by a would-be assassin who sought to kill.” The incident is the latest in a string of targeted attacks against Trump, who survived a near-fatal assassination attempt during his 2024 presidential campaign in Butler, Pennsylvania. In that 2024 attack, attacker Thomas Crooks fired eight shots at Trump, killing one innocent bystander and wounding Trump in the right ear before Crooks was killed by Secret Service agents.

    In the wake of Saturday’s incident, Trump called for national unity: “In light of this evening’s events, I ask that all Americans recommit with their hearts in resolving our differences peacefully.” He also pushed back against suggestions that public events should be canceled amid security threats, stating “We’re not going to cancel things out, because we can’t do that. We wanted to stay tonight. I will tell you, I fought like hell to stay… But it was protocol. They said, ‘Please, sir.’” Trump added that the event would be rescheduled, and acknowledged that unprecedented security measures are now required for public figures in the current climate: “Today, we need levels of security that probably nobody has ever seen before.”

    The attack drew immediate international condemnation from world leaders who expressed relief that Trump was unharmed. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi wrote on X that “Violence has no place in a democracy and must be unequivocally condemned.” Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi and Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum also issued statements condemning the violence and extending well wishes to all those involved in the incident. As of Sunday morning, law enforcement continues to assess the full details of the attack and the suspect’s potential motives.

  • Antigua and Barbuda Sees Surge in US Applicants for Second Citizenship as ‘Plan B’ Demand Grows

    Antigua and Barbuda Sees Surge in US Applicants for Second Citizenship as ‘Plan B’ Demand Grows

    Against a backdrop of mounting domestic political and social turbulence in the United States, a growing share of high-net-worth American citizens are turning to second citizenship as a strategic safety net, new industry data shows. Global citizenship advisory firm Henley & Partners has reported that U.S. nationals made up nearly one-third of all citizenship-by-investment applications the firm processed worldwide in the first quarter of 2026 alone, marking a dramatic surge in interest over the past decade.

    While European Golden Visa programs remain a popular choice for Americans seeking temporary overseas residency, the Caribbean has emerged as a particularly attractive destination for those looking to secure a second passport quickly and accessible. Industry data confirms that U.S. applicants dominate Caribbean citizenship-by-investment intake this year, with applicants from more than 25 other countries also pursuing these programs, but Americans accounting for the clear majority.

    Among Caribbean nations, Antigua & Barbuda has seen the sharpest rise in American interest: U.S. nationals now make up 50% of all applications to the country’s citizenship program in 2026, up from just 26% of total applications in 2025. Henley & Partners attributes this growing appeal to Antigua & Barbuda’s flexible, family-friendly framework, which allows a wider range of dependents to be included on a single application than most competing programs globally. The country also does not require applicants to relocate to obtain citizenship, and offers visa-free access to dozens of countries worldwide.

    John Maniatis, Managing Director of Private Clients at Henley & Partners, explained that for most applicants, Caribbean second citizenship is not intended as an immediate relocation plan, but rather a “mobility hedge.” This strategic buffer is designed to protect against future global or domestic disruptions, providing a reliable exit option if circumstances change. Unlike many other regional programs that only offer residency, Caribbean citizenship-by-investment pathways deliver a full second passport in a matter of months, with most popular programs processing applications in just 4 to 6 months.

    Beyond Antigua & Barbuda, four other Caribbean nations consistently rank as top choices for American investors: St. Kitts & Nevis, Dominica, Grenada, and Saint Lucia. All five countries offer visa-free or visa-on-arrival access to more than 140 countries worldwide, with varying minimum investment thresholds to suit different investor profiles. The lowest entry point is Dominica, where an individual applicant can secure citizenship with a $200,000 investment, or $250,000 for an applicant plus up to three qualifying dependents. Antigua & Barbuda’s lowest contribution option is $230,000 to the country’s National Development Fund, while Grenada starts at $235,000, Saint Lucia at $240,000, and St. Kitts & Nevis at $250,000 for contributions to public benefit projects. Additional pathways, including real estate purchases and business investments, are available across all programs with higher minimum investment thresholds.

    The upward trend in American demand for second citizenship has accelerated dramatically in recent years, with growth spiking following Donald Trump’s return to the U.S. presidency. In 2018, U.S. applicants accounted for just 5% of all global applications received by Henley & Partners; by 2025, that share had jumped to nearly 40%, representing an almost 2,400% increase over seven years. Competing industry firms have recorded similar surges: Citizenship Invest reported last year that inquiries from U.S. nationals for backup residency and citizenship options rose 183% between the first quarter of 2024 and the first quarter of 2025. Analysts trace the origins of this trend back to the COVID-19 pandemic, when widespread global disruption highlighted the value of geographic and mobility diversification. Today, wealthy Americans cite a range of motivations for pursuing a second citizenship, from potential tax optimization to access to improved global healthcare and greater personal security amid domestic uncertainty.

  • Antigua and Barbuda sees steady progress in voter ID replacements

    Antigua and Barbuda sees steady progress in voter ID replacements

    The Electoral Commission of Antigua and Barbuda has announced consistent incremental advances in its nationwide voter identification card replacement initiative, confirming that more than 31,900 applications from eligible voters have been finalized as of the April 2026 reporting period.

    Breaking down the latest official statistics, the electoral body processed 8,558 replacement applications throughout the month of April, pushing the cumulative total of completed requests to 31,909. For the final full week of the month, spanning 19 to 25 April, commission teams completed work on 1,606 replacement applications, while also adding 178 entirely new voter registrations to the system.

    One of the most notable trends emerging from the data is the stark gap in completion rates across the country’s 16 parliamentary constituencies. St. Peter has emerged as the clear leader in implementation, with 92 percent of all its eligible voters already submitting and receiving approval for their new ID cards. Four other constituencies have also cleared the 70 percent completion threshold: St. Philip North at 76 percent, St. Philip South at 73 percent, All Saints West at 71 percent, and Barbuda, the nation’s smallest electoral district, at 79 percent.

    On the opposite end of the spectrum, multiple constituencies have yet to cross the 60 percent completion mark. St. John’s City West, St. John’s Rural West, and St. Mary’s North are all hovering just below or at the two-thirds completion target the commission has highlighted as a key benchmark. The lowest completion rates recorded in the latest data were 60 percent, shared by both St. John’s Rural South and St. Mary’s North.

    Digging into the granular daily data from the 19–25 April reporting week, application processing volumes followed a predictable upward-then-downward curve, peaking early in the week before tapering off. The busiest single day was 20 April, when commission staff finalized 393 applications, followed closely by 335 completed requests on 21 April. By the final day of the reporting window, 25 April, daily processing volumes had dropped to 73 applications.

    Even with this week-to-week fluctuation and the recent slowdown in processing volumes, commission officials have emphasized that voter engagement remains consistent across the vast majority of constituencies. For the 19–25 April week, St. John’s Rural West logged the highest number of processed applications at 168, followed by St. George at 165 and St. Mary’s North at 153. Barbuda, despite its small eligible voter population, recorded 19 applications during the same period, keeping its overall completion rate among the highest in the country.

    With more than a third of constituencies still falling short of the 66 percent completion target, the Electoral Commission is continuing its outreach campaign to encourage all registered eligible voters to complete their ID replacement applications. Commission leaders have stressed that the initiative is a critical foundational step to maintain an accurate, transparent, and secure national electoral register ahead of upcoming general elections. To date, no official deadline for the completion of the replacement programme has been announced, but officials confirmed that targeted outreach and education efforts will be ramped up in constituencies with the lowest completion rates in the coming weeks.

    Overall, the latest official data confirms that the programme is moving forward at a steady nationwide pace, though progress remains uneven across electoral districts. Electoral authorities have set a clear priority to close the performance gap between high- and low-performing constituencies over the coming weeks to get the initiative back on track ahead of future electoral events.

  • Ontslagen RvC Canawaima: wij zijn nooit gehoord en zijn onbekend met facturen

    Ontslagen RvC Canawaima: wij zijn nooit gehoord en zijn onbekend met facturen

    On April 26, new contradictions emerged surrounding the recently dismissed Supervisory Board (Raad van Commissarissen, RvC) of Canawaima Management Company, deepening uncertainty around an unfolding public controversy centered on disputed invoices and questionable personnel decisions.

    The now-dismissed board issued a vehement denial this week that it ever possessed the controversial invoices that have recently entered the public domain. Richenel Vrieze, the former chair of the RvC, confirmed that neither the full board nor Canawaima Management Company itself has ever examined the documents in question. This immediate denial has placed serious questions over the origin of the leaked invoices, which have become the core of the public scandal. Repair firm Sardha has already filed a formal police report over the documents, alleging forgery, as the company states it never actually submitted the invoices that have appeared in public.

    Alongside denying access to the invoices, Vrieze has launched sharp criticism of the process that led to his board being removed from office. He claims that the fundamental principle of due process, which requires allowing all parties to state their case before action is taken, was completely ignored in the dismissal. “Despite reaching out to the responsible minister in writing to request a hearing, we were given no opportunity to present our side of the story, and no response was ever forthcoming,” Vrieze stated in his remarks.

    The controversy has become further complicated by conflicting accounts of the membership status of RvC member Abdul Madhar. Madhar claims that he stepped down from the board effective February 10, a date that holds particular significance: it is the very same day that Vrieze’s board, which included Madhar and fellow member Edgar van Genderen, was originally appointed to its three-year term by Minister Raymond Landveld. Madhar says he offered his resignation verbally, and already holds a partial copy of the official dismissal resolution for his position.

    This document names Fandi Bogor as Madhar’s replacement on the RvC, a development that the former board says it was never informed of. Notably, Bogor has since been appointed as a member of the newly installed RvC that replaced Vrieze’s dismissed board. Vrieze counters Madhar’s claims, stating that the former board never received any formal notification of Madhar’s resignation. “Nothing was communicated to us formally. Madhar participated in all board deliberations and was kept fully informed of every decision the board took,” Vrieze explained. He added that Madhar is still officially registered as a board member with the Suriname Chamber of Commerce and Industry, a registration that was completed on March 19, when Madhar was personally present to complete the paperwork.

    Contradictions grow even deeper: Vrieze confirmed that Madhar also co-signed a formal notice of default addressed to Lesley Daniel, Canawaima’s terminal manager, a document that was never delivered because Daniel was not present at the work site at the time. This runs counter to Madhar’s claim that he had already left the board long before that document was drafted.

    Vrieze also moved to clarify his own temporary role as acting terminal manager at the South Drain facility. He confirmed that he served in this interim position between March 13 and March 29 2026 under a formal written authorization, and that the permanent terminal manager only returned to the site on April 16. He also rejected widespread accusations that he holds undisclosed family or business ties to companies that have secured contracts from Canawaima, calling the claims entirely unfounded and stating no such links exist to his knowledge.

    To date, key questions surrounding the Canawaima controversy remain unanswered. It is still unclear who leaked the disputed invoices to the public, and what formal basis was used for the decision to dismiss the full RvC. With the former board’s categorical denial of ever holding the documents and conflicting testimony over board membership and internal decisions, the fog around the scandal has only continued to thicken.

  • St. Kitts Sinks Aircraft to Create Stunning Artificial Reef for Travelers

    St. Kitts Sinks Aircraft to Create Stunning Artificial Reef for Travelers

    The Caribbean island nation of Saint Kitts and Nevis has launched a groundbreaking new initiative that merges creative tourism development with urgent marine conservation, positioning the destination as a global leader in eco-conscious travel. In an event unveiled this week near Basseterre, tourism and environmental officials successfully submerged a fully decommissioned aircraft off the coast of Potato Bay, converting the former airport workhorse into a one-of-a-kind artificial reef that will support marine regeneration and create an unmatched diving experience for adventure travelers.

    The aircraft, which previously served operations at Robert L. Bradshaw International Airport, underwent months of rigorous environmental preparation to ensure it would not introduce harmful contaminants into the ocean ecosystem before being carefully placed on the seabed. Its new location is just a short distance from the popular Talata Wreck, a well-established dive site that already draws scuba enthusiasts from across the globe. Over time, marine biologists project that the plane’s metal frame will gradually become colonized by coral, sponges, and other marine organisms, creating a complex new habitat that will attract a wide range of tropical fish and other sea life.

    Unlike many novelty underwater attractions, St. Kitts’ artificial reef project is rooted in core conservation goals. Global natural reef systems are facing unprecedented pressure from climate change, ocean acidification, and overvisitation from recreational divers. By creating new artificial habitats, the initiative aims to boost local marine biodiversity while diverting foot (and fin) traffic away from fragile natural reef systems, giving these critical ecosystems space to recover and regenerate.

    “This project perfectly demonstrates how innovation and environmental stewardship do not have to be mutually exclusive,” a spokesperson for the St. Kitts and Nevis Tourism Authority shared. “We are reimagining what sustainable Caribbean travel can look like, creating value for both visitors and the natural ecosystems that make our island so special.”

    For travelers, the submerged aircraft offers a uniquely immersive experience that goes beyond typical Caribbean diving. It is far more than a static underwater attraction: visitors get the rare chance to watch a new marine ecosystem develop in real time, turning a routine dive into an interactive lesson in ocean conservation. Instead of just viewing the ocean as a scenic backdrop for vacation, guests leave with a deeper understanding of the work required to protect coastal marine environments.

    Industry analysts note that the project comes at a time when Caribbean travel destinations are increasingly competing to offer authentic, purpose-driven travel experiences. As climate change continues to threaten coastal ecosystems across the region, St. Kitts’ model of merging creative infrastructure development with conservation offers a replicable template for other destinations. By building new natural beauty where it is most needed, the island is working to ensure its vibrant coastal waters remain a draw for generations of future travelers, while opening up a new frontier of adventure for today’s eco-conscious visitors. In St. Kitts, paradise is not just preserved—it is being actively reimagined, beneath the waves.

  • Killings fall, fear rises

    Killings fall, fear rises

    For years, violent crime has stood as one of the most pressing and destabilizing challenges facing Trinidad and Tobago, eroding public confidence and placing immense strain on government resources. A decades-long upward trajectory in homicides has turned the issue into the defining political flashpoint for the nation’s major parties, with campaign promises around public safety shaping recent electoral outcomes.

    Leading up to the April 28, 2025 general election, the United National Congress (UNC) made national safety a central pillar of its campaign, tapping into widespread public frustration over the surge in murders that unfolded over the 10-year tenure of the preceding People’s National Movement (PNM) government. Now, one year into the UNC’s term, new crime data offers a mixed picture: while overall homicides have dropped to their lowest level in 15 years, violent crime remains a persistent reality for communities across the country.

    Since the UNC won power in 2025, the nation has recorded 353 murders through late April 2026. As of April 24 this year, 111 homicides have been registered, compared to 127 murders on the same date in 2025. By the end of 2025, the full annual murder toll hit 367 — a figure that aligns closely with the 355 murders recorded in the PNM’s first year in office after its 2000 election win. But when placed in the context of long-term trends, the 2025 number marks a dramatic reversal:

    Historical data shows the national murder toll climbed steadily from 354 in 2011 to an all-time record of 626 in 2024, the final full year of PNM rule. That 2024 toll included the deaths of more than 40 women and 10 children, pushing public anger to a breaking point. The 2025 drop to 367 represents the lowest annual homicide count recorded in the nation since 2011.

    Firearms remain the dominant weapon in homicides, responsible for more than 80% of all killings. The widespread availability of high-powered weapons has also driven a pattern of multiple-victim attacks: between 2025 and early 2026, there have been at least 94 incidents with multiple casualties, including 33 double homicides, 8 triple homicides, 4 quadruple homicides and 2 quintuple homicides.

    To address the escalating gang violence that drove the 2024 murder peak, successive governments have turned to states of emergency (SoEs) as a core crime-fighting tool. During the PNM’s first term, COVID-19 public health restrictions — including stay-at-home orders, border closures and business shutdowns — acted as de facto movement limits before a full SoE was declared in 2021 amid a pandemic surge. As pandemic restrictions lifted, homicide rates climbed steadily back to the 2024 record, prompting the PNM to call its first anti-crime SoE in December 2024, which ran through April 2025.

    Since taking office, the UNC government led by Kamla Persad-Bissessar has declared two additional SoEs. The first, launched in July 2025, targeted violent criminal networks operating within the national prison system and remained in place until the end of January 2026. The current active SoE, declared on March 2, 2026, was implemented in response to rising organized gang activity and direct threats against law enforcement and protective services.

    Despite the controversial nature of emergency measures, early data suggests the strategy is delivering measurable results. Beyond the 2025 annual drop in homicides, projections for 2026 point to further reductions, with current estimates putting the full-year murder toll around 355 — matching the PNM’s first-year figure and continuing the downward trend from the 2024 peak. This decline is also visible across other categories of serious crime:

    Trinidad and Tobago Police Commissioner Allister Guevarro recently reported that serious reported crimes (SRCs) have dropped 30% year-over-year, falling from 3,413 incidents in the first four months of 2025 to 2,397 over the same period in 2026. Guevarro noted that all policing divisions across the country have recorded reductions, ranging from 32% to 55% compared to last year.

    In remarks to the Trinidad and Tobago Chamber of Industry and Commerce in Westmoorings, Guevarro pushed back against widespread public anxiety over crime, arguing that public fear is being amplified by political and special interests with their own agendas. He warned that unfounded fear distorts public behavior, raises operational costs for local businesses, discourages foreign and domestic investment, and erodes public confidence in government and law enforcement.

    Guevarro also defended the ongoing state of emergency, emphasizing that the measure is not designed to restrict the lives of law-abiding citizens or hinder legitimate business activity. Instead, he said, emergency powers are targeted exclusively at violent actors and organized criminal networks. Over the first 42 days of the current SoE alone, police conducted more than 3,500 targeted enforcement operations, made over 1,500 arrests, and filed 340 criminal charges. Guevarro framed these actions as evidence of consistent, aggressive disruption of criminal activity, adding that while violent crime remains a real challenge, widespread public fear is often disconnected from the improving statistical reality.

  • Moonilal: Young disrupting T&T’s energy future

    Moonilal: Young disrupting T&T’s energy future

    A sharp political clash has erupted over Trinidad and Tobago’s cross-border energy negotiations with neighboring Venezuela, after the country’s Energy Minister Dr. Roodal Moonilal publicly accused opposition lawmaker Stuart Young of deliberately undermining national energy interests during an unpublicized meeting with Venezuela’s acting President Delcy Rodríguez. The explosive accusation came during the United National Congress (UNC)’s national congress and annual report to the nation, held in Couva to mark both one year of the current UNC administration and 37 years since the party’s founding.

    Moonilal launched a pointed critique of the main opposition People’s National Movement (PNM), framing the party as an uncooperative, obstructive force that stands in the way of the government’s work to revitalize Trinidad and Tobago’s struggling energy sector. “That PNM that is known for their wickedity, they are known as wicked, clueless, hapless, obstructionists. Stuart Young and the PNM continue to undermine our national interest. I am told that he was in Panama, he got lost and ended up in Venezuela,” Moonilal joked sharply.

    Going further, the minister questioned the purpose of Young’s unannounced visit, raising a series of public challenges for the opposition MP to answer. “He went there to undermine Trinidad and Tobago and the multinational companies. He went there to join another conga line. I asked him today, what was his agenda? Was it an official trip? Did he go for a lime? Was it a frolic of his own? Is Penny Beckles sending him there? Does she know he’s there? Because she don’t know anything going on in Arima,” he said.

    Moonilal directly connected the visit to ongoing bilateral energy negotiations between Trinidad and Tobago, Venezuela, and major international energy firms operating in the region, demanding Young end his disruptive actions. “Why was he there? To undermine Shell, bP, Trinidad and Tobago? He’s undermining our interest. And today I call upon him to cease disrupting the negotiations, agreements and discussions between our countries and the multinational companies to secure our energy future,” he stated.

    He doubled down on his critique of Young, portraying him as a reckless agitator who puts national energy security at risk for political gain. “Moonilal wondered “if Stuart Young will now dust out the bullhorn and go in the Strait of Hormuz with the bullhorn to conduct sea traffic. Will he do that? He is a disruptive character who only intends to disrupt and undermine the national energy security of Trinidad and Tobago. Brothers and sisters, while he’s playing the fool, we were busy working in the Cabinet”, the minister said.

    Alongside the political attack, Moonilal used the party congress to outline the UNC government’s progress in rebuilding the energy sector, which he said was left in a state of long-term decline after a decade of PNM rule. According to government data, oil production hit a low of 50,000 barrels per day in 2024, but has since climbed to 56,000 barrels per day as of April 2026. Output is projected to reach 60,000 barrels per day by the end of the current year, and major ongoing projects from operators including EOG, bP, Perenco and Heritage Offshore are expected to push production to 70,000 barrels per day by 2028.

    Moonilal also highlighted progress in natural gas production, noting that after years of steady decline, the ministry has stabilized output and put the sector on a trajectory for strong growth. Eleven major gas development projects are currently in motion, including the flagship Manatee Plus development, Juniper Phase II, Onyx, Coconut and Ginger. Manatee Plus alone is expected to boost national gas production by 10%, he added.

    One of the government’s biggest wins, Moonilal said, is the return of energy giant ExxonMobil to Trinidad and Tobago after a 20-year absence that began during the previous PNM administration. Updated exploration results are expected by September, and independent global estimates indicate the agreement with ExxonMobil could unlock as much as US$20 billion in new investment for the country’s energy sector. The sector is already on track to outperform budget projections, contributing more than TT$1 billion in additional revenue, and the state-owned National Gas Company has posted its highest annual profit in 11 years, reaching $3.2 billion, under the current administration. Interest in the government’s refinery restart program also remains strong, with new inquiries from potential investors received as recently as the prior Friday, the minister confirmed.

    The criticism of Young and the PNM was echoed by Works and Infrastructure Minister Jearlean John, who also questioned whether Opposition Leader Pennelope Beckles had any knowledge of Young’s trip to Venezuela. John noted that she had never seen Young and Beckles photographed together, joking that “Because Penny is like the mysterious tombstone in Tobago. I’m from Tobago, so I know about that. Because she’s a leader of the Opposition without knowing it.” She further claimed that the PNM currently operates with three separate de facto leaders, and emphasized that the UNC has no intention of returning to opposition after the widespread hardship the country experienced during 10 years of PNM governance.

    Turning to her own portfolio’s achievements in the UNC’s first year in office, John reported that the government’s road patching initiative has completed more than 2,055 roadway repairs, deploying 953 tonnes of hot-mix asphalt to improve infrastructure across the country. In total, more than 83 road infrastructure projects, ranging from general roadway maintenance to landslide slope stabilization, have been completed within the administration’s first 12 months in power.