分类: society

  • Eight children killed in US domestic violence shooting

    Eight children killed in US domestic violence shooting

    On an early Sunday morning just after 6 a.m. local time, a devastating mass shooting shook the quiet city of Shreveport, located in the southern U.S. state of Louisiana, leaving eight children dead and sending shockwaves across the nation. According to local law enforcement, the attack is believed to stem from a domestic disturbance, marking the deadliest mass shooting recorded in the United States in more than two years, data from the Gun Violence Archive confirms.

    The shooter, an adult male whose identity was not immediately released to the public, was shot and killed following a high-speed car chase and confrontation with responding officers. Louisiana State Police have confirmed that no law enforcement personnel sustained injuries during the encounter, though Mayor Tom Arceneaux told CNN it remains unclear whether the shooter died from a self-inflicted wound or gunfire from police.

    Investigators are still working through an expansive crime scene that stretches across three separate residential properties, which are being systematically combed for forensic evidence to piece together the timeline and motive of the attack. Police Corporal Chris Bordelon shared details on the victims at a formal press briefing, noting that the deceased children ranged in age from just 12 months to 14 years old. Bordelon confirmed that some of the slain children were direct descendants of the shooter, and added that investigators have concluded the gunman acted alone in carrying out the attack.

    Two adult women, who the shooter had previously established personal relationships with, were also shot during the rampage. Arceneaux told CNN that the full nature of those relationships has not yet been confirmed, as both women remain in extremely critical condition and are unable to speak with investigators. Local ABC affiliate KTBS reported that both women suffered gunshot wounds to the head. During the attack at the second residence, nine children were present at the time of the shooter’s arrival; only one child survived the incident, and is currently receiving hospital care for a non-life-threatening injury, Arceneaux confirmed.

    Local authorities have stated that additional information about the shooter and all victims will be released publicly only after all next of kin have been formally notified of the deaths. State and national political leaders have already publicly responded to the tragedy: U.S. Senator Bill Cassidy, a Republican representing Louisiana, described the attack as an unfathomable act of horrific violence, and extended well wishes for a full recovery for all surviving victims. Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry said he was absolutely heartbroken by the loss of life, echoing the sentiments of local leaders. “It’s a terrible morning in Shreveport, and we all mourn with the victims,” Arceneaux told reporters at the press briefing.

    The shooting once again brings renewed attention to the ongoing crisis of gun violence in the United States, where widespread access to firearms has led to thousands of gun-related deaths across the country every year.

  • Hope rising across Montego Bay as new homes initiative takes shape

    Hope rising across Montego Bay as new homes initiative takes shape

    In the wake of Hurricane Melissa’s destructive path across Jamaica, the island’s national recovery push reached a heartfelt milestone last week in Montego Bay, when hundreds of local and international volunteers came together to launch the construction of new permanent housing for displaced storm victims.

    Working from dawn to well into the afternoon, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., volunteer teams labored under the Caribbean sun, united by a mission that extends far beyond erecting four walls and a roof. For participants, the project is not just about restoring physical shelter—it is about rebuilding the dignity, stability, and hope that the hurricane stole from hundreds of families. By the end of the packed work day, new home frames stood tall against the sky, a tangible symbol of Jamaican resilience and the promise of fresh starts for households whose lives were upended by the storm.

    The coordinated housing initiative is the product of an unprecedented partnership between six local and international non-governmental organizations and faith-based mission groups: Youth With A Mission (YWAM Jamaica & Costa Rica), Operation Blessing, WhyNot International, the National Baptist Convention, Mission Uprising, and the BridgePoint Foundation, which has teams based in both Jamaica and Dallas, Texas. Photos captured on site show volunteers hauling lumber, laying concrete foundations, and applying fresh coats of interior paint to the newly finished structures, as teams celebrated the first completed homes of the project.

    The workday hummed with an atmosphere of shared purpose and mutual encouragement. Unskilled volunteers carried heavy building materials, while trained tradespeople donated their expertise to lay foundations and ensure every home met safe, durable building codes, all working toward the shared goal of rebuilding lives one home at a time.

    Future homeowners who visited the site were visibly moved by the massive outpouring of support from near and far, and repeatedly shared heartfelt gratitude with volunteers throughout the day. Their reaction underscores a core truth of the recovery effort: this housing project is far more than a construction campaign. It is a movement to restore community connection, bring healing, and renew families’ faith in what comes next.

    By the end of last week alone, volunteers completed 15 new homes, putting the initiative firmly on track to hit its broader target of delivering 200 new permanent homes to Hurricane Melissa-impacted families across the region. This early milestone reflects the growing momentum of the recovery campaign, and the collective commitment of all partner organizations that no displaced family will be left without shelter as recovery efforts progress.

    The initiative will continue steadily over the coming weeks, coordinated through YWAM Montego Bay under the dedicated leadership of John and Daniel Hess. Partner organizations including the BridgePoint Foundation, participating NGOs, and international mission teams all remain committed to expanding the project’s reach to build more homes for the families still waiting for permanent housing after the storm.

    In an official press statement, the BridgePoint Foundation extended special recognition and thanks to every volunteer—both Jamaican and international—who have donated their time, physical energy, material resources, and professional skills to move Jamaica’s recovery forward.

    “As recovery efforts continue across western Jamaica, the homes completed to date stand as a powerful reminder of what collective action rooted in compassion and purpose can achieve,” the foundation’s release noted.

  • St James police release sketch of murder suspect

    St James police release sketch of murder suspect

    In St James, Jamaica, law enforcement officials have published a composite drawing of a suspect linked to a deadly shooting that unfolded earlier this month in the parish’s Somerton District. The fatal attack, which claimed the life of a local auto mechanic, took place on March 5 at a residence on Easy Street in the Bullock Heights neighborhood.

    The victim has been formally identified as Rohan Green, who was also known by two local nicknames: ‘Blacks’ and ‘Ockra Bud’. Green worked as an auto repairman and resided at the Easy Street address where the incident occurred.

    According to official statements from the Adelphi Police Division, the violence broke out at approximately 11:25 a.m. that Thursday. Green was in the process of repairing vehicles at his home when he was suddenly ambushed by one or more unknown attackers. The assailants opened fire multiple times, striking Green before they fled the scene quickly to avoid capture.

    Local residents immediately alerted police to the shooting. When first responders and investigators arrived at the location, they found Green lying motionless on the ground. He had sustained multiple gunshot wounds to his upper torso and head, which proved fatal.

    Investigators have since worked to build a clearer picture of the attacker, using detailed witness descriptions to generate the official composite sketch now released to the public. St James police are now launching a public appeal for information to help move the case forward.

    Authorities are asking any member of the public who has details related to the murder, the suspect’s identity, or the events of March 5 that could assist the investigation to reach out to law enforcement immediately. Tips can be submitted anonymously or directly through several contact channels: the Montego Bay Criminal Investigations Branch (CIB) at 876-953-6191, the independent Crime Stop hotline at 311, the national 119 police emergency line, or any nearby local police station.

  • ‘An act of evil’

    ‘An act of evil’

    The charged conversation around incest in Jamaica has reignited in recent weeks, after a former national parliament member was taken into custody and formally charged with the crime. According to official allegations, the former lawmaker brought his 13-year-old female relative to his residence after running errands together in January of this year, where he is accused of sexually assaulting her. The minor victim filed a formal report with law enforcement, leading to the suspect’s arrest; his name has been withheld by authorities to protect the child’s privacy, in line with local protective legislation.

    Following the public emergence of this case, Dr. Sapphire Longmore, a consultant psychiatrist based at the University Hospital of the West Indies (UHWI), has outlined key contextual and psychological drivers that push perpetrators to commit incest, the taboo act of sexual intercourse between close family members. In an interview with the Jamaica Observer, Longmore framed incest as a fundamentally harmful act rooted in multiple overlapping factors, ranging from intergenerational trauma to inherent sexual deviance, moral breakdown, and deep-seated power imbalances.

    Longmore explained that when an adult commits incest against a child, the behavior often mirrors patterns seen in cases of paedophilic abuse, frequently linked to unaddressed trauma the perpetrator experienced during their own childhood. Unresolved early-life trauma, she noted, can disrupt healthy sexual development and create cycles of harm that pass between generations. “To commit such an act, it is usually related to sexual deviance, a reflection of power and control, and even sometimes there can be some motivation around revenge for some unrelated incident, unfortunately targeting the child,” she said. “Quite frankly, it is an act of evil.”

    She expanded on this framing, explaining that incest violates the most foundational bonds of family and trust: it shatters a child’s sense of safety, belonging, and connection to their kin, inflicting long-term psychological damage that can last for decades. In many cases, Longmore added, the perpetrator themselves were survivors of incest or childhood sexual abuse, creating a self-replicating cycle of trauma. If survivors do not undergo appropriate therapeutic intervention to process their abuse, they may internalize harmful beliefs that normalize the behavior, leading them to repeat the pattern later in life, even if they consciously understand the act is wrong.

    Longmore also emphasized that Jamaica’s post-colonial history contributes to the persistent stigma and underreporting of incest across the Caribbean. During the colonial era, enslaved people were treated as property, and enslavers routinely forced inbreeding to increase their holdings of enslaved people. This legacy, she argues, has fostered a subtle cultural normalization of the abuse across the region, and the problem is not unique to Jamaica. That said, she clarified that not all perpetrators were abused themselves: some commit incest as a result of innate sexually deviant urges that fall far outside accepted social and cultural norms. For these individuals, the abuse often centers on power and control; many paedophiles, she noted, target children for the sadistic pleasure of dominating a vulnerable person, representing a clear psychopathological pathology.

    For survivors of incest abuse, Longmore argues that a holistic, spiritually centered approach to healing is critical to long-term recovery. While conventional medication and talk therapy can help survivors process trauma, incest abuse strikes at the core of a survivor’s sense of self-worth and identity, she explained. To fully recover, survivors need support to rebuild their sense of inherent value, unconditional love, and purpose — work that requires attending to the spiritual dimension of healing alongside clinical treatment. “It is not to say that other methods don’t work, but they take a very long time, and they’re not guaranteed, and sometimes they carry their own adverse effects,” she noted. “That is why the holistic approach is necessary, and specific attention to healing the individual’s sense of self and value is really very critical.”

    Official data from the Jamaica Constabulary Force (JCF) shows a steady downward trend in reported incest cases across the country over the past five years: 33 cases were reported in 2019, compared to just 8 reported incidents between January and mid-November 2024. Historical JCF data mirrors this gradual decline: 30 cases were recorded in 2016, 29 in 2017, 23 in 2018, according to a 2020 Jamaica Observer analysis of incest hot spots across the country. However, researchers and public health experts warn that falling reported case numbers do not mean incest has been eliminated. Experts note that significant social stigma around the crime often discourages survivors and their families from coming forward, meaning the true prevalence of incest is likely far higher than official data suggests.

  • Rebuilding pains

    Rebuilding pains

    More than five months have passed since Hurricane Melissa tore across western Jamaica, leaving a trail of destruction in its wake. Today, three of the hardest-hit parishes – Westmoreland, St James, and Trelawny – still see residents mired in unforeseen barriers as they work to reconstruct storm-damaged homes and rebuild their daily lives under the government’s flagship recovery initiative, the Restoration of Owner or Occupant Family Shelters (ROOFS) programme.

    Jamaica Observer correspondents Horace Hines and Rosalee Wood Condell recently conducted on-the-ground interviews with local residents and participating hardware store operators across the three parishes to document the ongoing struggles. Their firsthand reporting, published on pages 4 and 5 of the outlet, shines a light on the persistent frictions that have slowed the recovery process for thousands of storm survivors.

    Many residents report travelling long distances across regional terrain to reach the few authorized hardware stores that stock subsidized building materials under the ROOFS scheme. Beyond the logistical burden of extended travel, affected households also face widespread issues with inconsistent stock availability, leaving many unable to secure the materials they need to continue construction work. Compounding these frustrations are growing community concerns over the lack of transparency surrounding the government’s process for selecting which retail stores are allowed to participate in the programme, a point of contention that has left many questioning the fairness of the initiative’s implementation.

    As recovery efforts drag on, the unaddressed challenges have left many displaced families waiting far longer than expected to return to safe, permanent housing, prolonging the disruption caused by the deadly storm.

  • Taxi drivers ‘barely breaking even’

    Taxi drivers ‘barely breaking even’

    For two straight years, Jamaica’s taxi operators have tightened their belts, absorbing frozen fares while the island’s economy navigated one crisis after another. Today, that unending financial pressure has reached a breaking point: many operators now struggle to cover basic operating costs, and dozens have already lost their vehicles to loan repossession. The latest surge in global fuel prices, triggered by ongoing geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, has completely shattered their fragile hopes of finally securing the delayed fare adjustment they have waited years for. Adding to their anxiety, recent discussions among local officials about potential work-from-home mandates to cut national fuel consumption have left the industry bracing for even steeper losses.

    Lorraine Finnikin, president of the All Voice Taxi Association, outlined the sector’s crisis during a recent press conference, warning that reduced commuter travel from work-from-home policies would deliver a fatal blow to already strained operator earnings. The conference came after Energy Minister Daryl Vaz publicly warned Jamaicans to prepare for sharp fuel price increases, confirming the government can no longer afford to cover billions in fuel subsidies to keep consumer costs low.

    Vaz has since announced a new pricing framework for the state-owned refinery Petrojam Limited, tied directly to global market fluctuations. Under the new tiered system, consumers began seeing higher petroleum prices as early as this week, a change that has hit fuel-reliant taxi operators particularly hard.

    Finnikin explained that the last fare adjustment for Jamaica’s route taxis and rural stage carriages came in October 2023, when a 19% hike was implemented as the first phase of an approved 35% total increase designed to offset rising operating costs. The remaining 16% increase was scheduled to roll out in 2024, but implementation has been delayed indefinitely. Over the past three weeks alone, operators have seen their costs skyrocket, pushing many to the edge of insolvency.

    To illustrate the scale of the fuel cost increase, Finnikin shared data with the Jamaica Observer: for a Probox, one of the most common taxi vehicles in Jamaica, daily fuel costs jumped from between J$5,500 and J$6,000 before the latest Middle East crisis to between J$7,300 and J$8,600 today — a daily increase of up to J$2,600 just for fuel. Beyond fuel, operators are also facing steep jumps in other overhead costs, including stationery supplies for licensing and documentation, and vehicle maintenance. Some maintenance parts and services, particularly engine lubricants, have increased in price by as much as 80% in recent months. While these maintenance costs are not incurred daily, they still add a massive extra burden to operators already struggling with daily fuel costs.

    “The gas is really killing us,” Finnikin said. “The worst part is that we cannot increase our fares, so daily incomes have stayed exactly the same, and operators have to cover the extra fuel costs out of their existing earnings. For years, we have been operating at barely break-even levels — this extra cost is pushing many under.”

    Work-from-home proposals have added a new layer of fear, Finnikin noted, because most operators upgraded their vehicles over the past five years to meet new industry standards, and more than 70% of those upgrades were financed through loans. With commercial banks offering few accessible loan options for small operators, most have turned to micro lenders that charge exorbitant interest rates, requiring steep weekly repayments. Over the past four weeks alone, Finnikin said rural association leaders have reported a sharp rise in vehicle repossessions as operators can no longer cover both weekly loan payments and inflated fuel costs. If current conditions continue, the country could see mass repossessions that put hundreds of operators out of work, he warned.

    While a small number of operators have responded by illegally raising fares to cover costs, Finnikin has urged members to hold off and remain patient — but he cautioned that the sector can only absorb so much strain before widespread collapse occurs. Over the past two years, operators have repeatedly delayed their demand for the final 16% fare hike in response to broader economic conditions. When inflation began falling to a stable 4% by mid-June 2025, operators were confident the hike would finally be approved — but the general election was called shortly after, and no government would implement a fare increase ahead of a vote, so operators once again tightened their belts to wait.

    Operators shifted their hopes to a November 2025 implementation, but that hope was washed away when Category 5 Hurricane Melissa made landfall on October 28, 2025, devastating infrastructure and destabilizing the national economy. By late November, the Bank of Jamaica and the Planning Institute of Jamaica (PIOJ) warned of broad price increases for goods and services across the first quarter of 2026, a shift that directly impacts the transportation sector, the largest mover of goods and people across the island. After Hurricane Melissa, prices began rising as early as December 2025, and while operators hoped post-hurricane recovery would stabilize inflation quickly, the Middle East conflict delivered another crippling blow. Now, operators are clinging to the promise of a definitive timeline for the fare increase from Minister Vaz, who said last month that a timeline would be released within weeks. As of last Wednesday’s post-Cabinet media briefing, Vaz confirmed no final decision has been made on movement curtailment measures to address rising fuel costs.

  • From St Andrew to St James

    From St Andrew to St James

    Nearly eight months after Category 5 Hurricane Melissa devastated large swathes of Jamaica, the island nation’s flagship post-storm housing recovery initiative is navigating unforeseen demand and supply chain bottlenecks, according to on-the-ground reports from participating suppliers and government officials in St James.

    The Restoration of Owner or Occupant Family Shelters (ROOFS) programme — a $10 billion cornerstone of the national Shelter Recovery Programme — was launched to deliver targeted financial assistance to homeowners whose properties suffered minor, major or severe damage during the October 2023 storm. Administered through the Ministry of Labour and Social Security, the initiative allows approved beneficiaries to redeem grant funds for building materials or cash at pre-vetted participating retail outlets, using a unique QR or digital code sent directly to their mobile phones.

    But in St James, one of the parishes hardest hit by the hurricane, participating hardware stores are already reporting unexpected strains on operations. CC Fair Deal Hardware, a participating outlet based in Cornwall Courts, has seen a flood of beneficiaries traveling from outside the parish to redeem their grants — some coming from as far as St Andrew, St Ann and Westmoreland, according to a senior store representative who requested anonymity.

    “Today alone, we had a beneficiary travel all the way from St Andrew to pick up her supplies here,” the representative shared, adding that the constant stream of out-of-parish patrons has kept the store’s team working at full capacity. Still, the outlet has struggled to meet consistent demand for key construction inputs, including cement and concrete blocks. Many beneficiaries have also reported being unable to source specialized roofing materials such as roof capping and shingles, as few participating hardware stores stock these products in bulk. CC Fair Deal Hardware, for example, only carries basic roofing supplies like zinc sheets and waterproof sealant. To manage the overwhelming demand, the store now only processes ROOFS grant redemptions from Tuesday through Friday, suspending processing on weekends to keep up with regular commercial customers.

    In contrast, another participating St James outlet, Tools and Parts Supplies, told reporters it has so far managed to keep up with demand for core building materials. The store has implemented a separate queuing system for ROOFS beneficiaries, allowing regular patrons to complete their purchases without delays while recovery clients wait to be served.

    Government officials in the St James Ministry of Labour office acknowledged the growing strains on existing retail partners, confirming that plans are already underway to expand the network of participating hardware stores to reduce overcrowding and cut travel distances for beneficiaries. As demand for materials continues to rise, officials note that adding more outlets will cut down on the long trips many beneficiaries currently make to access approved suppliers — for example, residents of northern St James communities like Goodwill often travel to Falmouth in Trelawny rather than all the way to Montego Bay, a workaround that will become unnecessary as more local outlets join the programme.

    A ministry representative, who also requested anonymity, explained that phased approvals of beneficiaries have been intentional to avoid overwhelming the limited supply capacity of local hardware stores, which still must serve their regular commercial and residential customer bases. “It’s been thousands of people already, and we haven’t even hit the halfway mark of assessments,” the representative said. “It’s a good thing we didn’t send out approval texts to everyone at once — no hardware store could stock enough material to meet that sudden demand all at once.”

    While most participating stores have adapted by implementing pre-order and curbside pickup systems — where beneficiaries place orders in advance and are called to collect supplies once they are sourced — one major participating outlet has already exited the programme due to unresolved operational challenges. Officials did not share further details on the discontinued partnership.

    The government is also working to expand the number of approved cash redemption outlets, which currently only has two locations across St James: one on Barnett Street and another in the Fairview district. Assessments of damaged properties are still ongoing, eight months after the hurricane, as dozens of property owners who were out of the country or off-island in Kingston during the storm have only recently returned to file claims. Officials report that the volume of new assessment requests in April 2024 matches the level seen immediately after the storm in November 2023, meaning demand for ROOFS programme services will continue to rise in the coming months.

  • Two Pitbulls Reported Missing in Bolans as Owners Appeal for Help

    Two Pitbulls Reported Missing in Bolans as Owners Appeal for Help

    A community-wide search is underway for two missing pitbulls in Bolans village, with the animals’ owners stepping up their efforts to bring the beloved pets home safely and calling on local residents to help with any information they can provide.

    The two missing dogs, named Raptor and Catalyea, were last spotted wandering in the Bolans region, and details of their appearance and circumstances have been shared widely across local online platforms to boost visibility of the search. Three-year-old Raptor is a medium-sized pitbull with a distinct light golden coat. Described as naturally friendly by his owners, he was wearing a plain black collar when he went missing. Catalyea, the younger of the two dogs at 18 months old, is a smaller pitbull with a rich chocolate-brown coat. She was outfitted with a multicolored black, red and yellow collar at the time of her disappearance.

    Public alerts shared across social media and local community groups note that both dogs are approachable and gentle with people. This key detail has sparked a specific concern among the owners: that a well-meaning local resident may have taken the two stray-looking dogs in, without realizing they are already beloved pets reported missing from their home.

    With the search entering its active phase, the owners are urgently asking anyone who has spotted the two dogs, or has information about where they might be staying, to come forward with any details that can help reunite the pair with their family.

  • Wegenautoriteit start onderhoud primaire wegen; SRD 125 miljoen uitgetrokken

    Wegenautoriteit start onderhoud primaire wegen; SRD 125 miljoen uitgetrokken

    The Suriname Road Authority is preparing to kick off a large-scale rehabilitation program for key primary road networks across three key regions of the country: Greater Paramaribo, Nickerie, and Para. The ambitious infrastructure initiative has been allocated a total budget of 125 million Surinamese dollars, marking one of the most significant public works investments in the country’s road sector in recent years.

    Three local contracting firms have been selected to carry out the construction and maintenance work, with each assigned responsibility for a specific district. Baitali Group will lead projects in Nickerie, Caremco Holding NV will handle upgrades across Greater Paramaribo, and I-Roads NV will oversee works in Para. The public tender process for the program was completed back in February, and all formal construction contracts have already been finalized and signed by all involved parties, clearing the way for work to begin.

    According to Ridgeley Kasantirto, Director of the Suriname Road Authority, the comprehensive maintenance work has become an urgent necessity. Years of heavy use have left large sections of the country’s primary road network suffering from severe deterioration, including widespread road subsidence and persistent rutting that creates major safety hazards for motorists and slows traffic flow. Kasantirto confirmed that all roads selected for inclusion in the program were identified based on rigorous technical assessments of their current condition, and independent third-party consultants will be on-site throughout the project to monitor construction quality and ensure full compliance with project specifications. This oversight is designed to deliver a long-lasting, high-quality upgrade that avoids the need for premature repeated repairs.

    The Suriname Road Authority, which manages approximately 890 kilometers of the country’s primary road infrastructure, anticipates that on-site construction work will get underway within the next three to four weeks. Once completed, the overhaul program is expected to deliver widespread benefits: it will drastically improve overall road safety, cut down on travel time by smoothing traffic flow, and create the more reliable transport infrastructure needed to support long-term regional economic development across the three districts.

  • St Andrew man to face court on drug charges

    St Andrew man to face court on drug charges

    A major drug trafficking crackdown by Barbadian law enforcement has resulted in felony charges against a 31-year-old local man, who is set to face justice this weekend at the District ‘A’ Magistrates’ Court.

    Identified by authorities as Justin Tevin Archer, a resident of Bawdens Hill, St Andrew, the suspect faces two separate drug-related offenses: acts preparatory to cannabis trafficking and the actual trafficking of the controlled substance. According to official statements from the Barbados Police Service Narcotics Unit, the alleged offenses are believed to have occurred over a three-day window between February 9 and February 12, 2026.

    Investigators seized a staggering 737.20 kilogrammes of suspected cannabis during operations connected to the case. Law enforcement estimates the illicit haul has a combined street value of just over $11,795,200, marking one of the more substantial drug seizures the Narcotics Unit has recently disrupted.

    Archer’s first court appearance is scheduled for Saturday, where formal judicial proceedings will get underway as the case moves through Barbados’ legal system.