标签: Jamaica

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  • Martinique gets green light to seek Caricom associate membership

    Martinique gets green light to seek Caricom associate membership

    FORT DE FRANCE, Martinique – In a landmark legislative move, the French Senate has granted preliminary approval for Martinique to pursue associate membership within the Caribbean Community (CARICOM). This decisive vote, cast on January 28, represents a critical advancement for the territory’s formal application, which was initially submitted during the CARICOM summit in Barbados in February of the previous year.

    French governmental authorities have clarified that while this Senate endorsement is a significant political milestone, it does not finalize the institutional process. The accession agreement must still undergo review and ratification by the French National Assembly to complete the requisite domestic legislative procedure. Officials emphasized that the overwhelming support in the Senate delivers a powerful message of solidarity with the 15-member regional bloc, a relationship that has historically been fragmented for French Caribbean territories.

    Established in 1973 via the Treaty of Chaguaramas, CARICOM is a coalition of sovereign states and dependent territories collaborating on key regional initiatives, including economic integration, climate change resilience, public health, education, and cultural exchange. For French overseas collectivities like Martinique, engagement with CARICOM has traditionally been conducted through ad-hoc partnerships and limited technical cooperation, lacking a structured institutional foundation. Martinique’s bid for associate membership is strategically designed to bridge this longstanding gap.

    Associate membership status, a provision within the Treaty of Chaguaramas, is specifically designed for non-independent territories. It permits full involvement in CARICOM’s programs and deliberations but does not confer sovereign privileges, such as voting on binding community decisions or conducting independent foreign policy.

    French officials have further assured that this new affiliation will not alter Martinique’s constitutional status. The island will continue to be governed as a French collectivity under the code général des collectivités territoriales and will fully retain its position as an outermost region of the European Union. The French legal system permits local authorities to join regional organizations with state consent, a process that involves no transfer of governmental competences or any challenge to French or European sovereignty.

    According to Richès Karayib, a multimodal media platform focused on Caribbean culture and development, the Senate’s approval inaugurates a new chapter for Martinique. The primary objective is now to convert this institutional framework into concrete, actionable projects and fruitful cooperation that will directly benefit the territory and its citizens, marking the beginning of deeper regional integration rather than a symbolic achievement.

  • Former inmate credits rehabilitation programme for second chance

    Former inmate credits rehabilitation programme for second chance

    KINGSTON, Jamaica—A powerful testament to the transformative power of correctional rehabilitation emerged at the recent Planning Institute of Jamaica’s Best Practice Symposium for Social and Community Development. Taneka Stewart-Blake, formerly incarcerated at South Camp Adult Correctional Centre, credited structured rehabilitation programs for providing her with essential skills and renewed life purpose.

    During her three-year incarceration from May 2022 to March 2025, Stewart-Blake overcame initial despair by engaging in educational opportunities. She earned multiple certifications including social studies, customer service through HEART/NSTA Trust, data operations, and biology—where she achieved top student honors. These qualifications directly facilitated her successful employment transition post-release, with data entry skills proving immediately applicable in her inventory management position.

    The emotional dimension of rehabilitation proved equally crucial. Stewart-Blake emphasized the overwhelming support from family, neighbors, and coworkers who embraced her return without stigma. Her 83-year-old mother cared for her daughter throughout the incarceration period, while her church community provided spiritual solace during challenging times.

    Commissioner of Corrections Brigadier (Retired) Radgh Mason highlighted that such success stories demonstrate the effectiveness of holistic rehabilitation approaches. The Department of Correctional Services implements comprehensive programs focusing on education, vocational training, psychosocial support, and spiritual development to reduce recidivism and promote successful societal reintegration.

    South Camp Adult Correctional Centre specifically offers academic certification and skills training in cosmetology, sewing, data operations, customer service, and dance. Stewart-Blake’s advice to others emphasizes mindset transformation: “It all has to do with your mental state. If you set your mind to change, it can happen.”

  • Norway crown princess’s son pleads not guilty to rapes as trial opens

    Norway crown princess’s son pleads not guilty to rapes as trial opens

    OSLO, Norway — The Norwegian royal family confronts its most severe crisis in modern history as Marius Borg Høiby, the 29-year-old son of Crown Princess Mette-Marit, entered a not guilty plea to four counts of aggravated rape during Tuesday’s trial opening. The proceedings have captivated the nation and triggered intense scrutiny of the monarchy’s stability.

    Høiby, whose biological father is a former reality television personality, stands accused of sexually assaulting four women between 2018 and 2024 while they were incapacitated through sleep or intoxication. Prosecutors presented evidence indicating Høiby recorded some of these alleged assaults. The defendant did acknowledge guilt concerning lesser charges including physical assaults, narcotics violations, traffic offenses, and breaches of restraining orders.

    The trial commenced under extraordinary circumstances, with Høiby having been re-arrested just days earlier on fresh allegations involving knife threats and additional restraining order violations. He currently remains in custody following a four-week remand order.

    Prosecutor Sturla Henriksbo emphasized the principle of equality before the law, stating: “The accused is the son of the crown princess. He is part of the royal family. Nonetheless, he should be treated the same way anyone else accused of the same crimes would be.”

    The case has unfolded against a backdrop of multiple royal controversies, including recently revealed connections between Crown Princess Mette-Marit and the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. These disclosures have compounded the monarchy’s challenges, though King Harald and Queen Sonja maintain substantial public support as unifying figures.

    According to prosecution documents, Høiby’s pattern of abusive behavior extended across multiple relationships. Former partner Nora Haukland, a model and influencer, has publicly detailed extensive physical and psychological abuse allegedly occurring between summer 2022 and autumn 2023.

    The timing of the trial coincides with parliamentary deliberations on maintaining Norway’s constitutional monarchy, which ultimately received overwhelming legislative support. Crown Prince Haakon and Princess Mette-Marit have confirmed they will not attend court proceedings.

    Høiby’s defense team has remained largely silent publicly, while the prosecution presented evidence from seven protected witnesses. One alleged victim provided testimony behind closed doors Tuesday, with Høiby scheduled to take the stand Wednesday.

    The case represents a critical juncture for Norway’s monarchy, with recent polling indicating over 70% of citizens believe royal standing has deteriorated due to successive scandals. A verdict is anticipated several weeks following the trial’s conclusion on March 19.

  • Man shot and injured in Mount Salem

    Man shot and injured in Mount Salem

    A targeted shooting incident in Mount Salem, St James sent shockwaves through the community on Tuesday afternoon, leaving one male victim hospitalized with serious injuries. The attack occurred in broad daylight along the main roadway near Brunswick Lane, an area now under intense police scrutiny.

    Preliminary investigative reports indicate this was not a random act of violence. Evidence suggests the victim was deliberately followed by armed assailants who opened fire in a calculated assault. The severity of the victim’s injuries prompted immediate emergency response, with medical personnel rushing him to a nearby medical facility where he remains in serious condition.

    Law enforcement authorities have secured substantial sections of the crime scene as forensic investigations continue. Yellow police tape cordons off critical areas where investigators are documenting ballistic evidence and gathering witness accounts. The Jamaica Constabulary Force has yet to establish a motive for the attack or identify potential suspects, with investigations ongoing.

    This incident marks another episode in St James’s ongoing challenges with violent crime, particularly gun-related offenses. Community members express growing concern over public safety as police intensify their presence in the area. The investigation continues as authorities pursue all leads regarding this targeted shooting.

  • 60 years of rocksteady

    60 years of rocksteady

    As Jamaica prepares to commemorate the 60th anniversary of rocksteady music in 2026, the Jamaica Reggae Industry Association (JaRIA) will host a landmark gathering of the genre’s surviving architects. The ‘Back 2 Bass-es’ forum, scheduled for February 4 at Edna Manley College of the Visual and Performing Arts in St. Andrew, will feature legendary bassists Boris Gardiner, Jackie Jackson, and Lloyd Parks sharing firsthand accounts of music history.

    These instrumental pioneers shaped the distinctive sound that bridged ska and reggae, with Jackson having served as the backbone of producer Duke Reid’s Supersonics band during rocksteady’s golden age (1966-1968). His basslines defined timeless classics including Alton Ellis’s ‘Rock Steady’ and The Wailers’ ‘Thank You Lord.’ Jackson notably expresses profound admiration for fellow panelist Gardiner, whose work at Clement ‘Sir Coxsone’ Dodd’s Studio One provided creative inspiration despite the legendary rivalry with Reid’s Treasure Isle label.

    Gardiner’s understated yet revolutionary bass techniques powered anthems like The Heptones’ ‘Party Time’ and Marcia Griffiths’s ‘Feel Like Jumping.’ Meanwhile, Parks transitioned from vocalist with The Techniques to becoming one of reggae’s most sought-after bassists during the 1970s, contributing to definitive works by Dennis Brown and Ken Boothe.

    The event forms part of JaRIA’s Reggae Month programming, addressing what Jackson identifies as a critical knowledge gap: ’99 percent of aspiring bass players and young musicians have no knowledge of the rocksteady era.’ This living history initiative aims to inspire new generations through direct engagement with the creators who established Jamaica’s musical legacy.

    Music historians generally credit Hopeton Lewis’s 1966 recording ‘Take It Easy’ as the first rocksteady composition—a transitional style that replaced ska’s upbeat tempo with slower, bass-heavy rhythms that ultimately catalyzed the global explosion of roots reggae.

  • Jolyan Silvera pleads guilty to manslaughter in wife’s death

    Jolyan Silvera pleads guilty to manslaughter in wife’s death

    KINGSTON, Jamaica — In a dramatic courtroom development, ex-Parliament member Jolyan Silvera has entered a guilty plea to manslaughter charges concerning the fatal shooting of his spouse Melissa Silvera in 2023. The case has drawn significant public attention, unraveling a narrative that initially pointed to natural causes.

    The tragic incident dates back to November 10, 2023, when Melissa Silvera, a respected land developer and mother of four, was discovered deceased at the couple’s residence in Stony Hill, St Andrew. While early reports suggested the 42-year-old had succumbed to natural causes during sleep, a subsequent police investigation revealed three bullet fragments within her body, prompting a murder probe.

    Authorities took Silvera into custody in January 2024, where he has remained detained throughout judicial proceedings. The couple had been married since 2015, with their family tragedy compounded by the previous loss of one of their four sons.

    The legal representation includes defense attorneys Peter Champagnie King’s Counsel and Patrice Riley advocating for Silvera, while prosecutors Dwayne Green and Latoya Bernard are presenting the case for the Crown. The guilty plea represents a significant turning point in a case that has captivated Jamaican society, highlighting issues of domestic violence and judicial accountability.

  • Jamaica need big win to advance in Women’s Concacaf U17

    Jamaica need big win to advance in Women’s Concacaf U17

    Jamaica’s Under-17 Women’s football squad confronts a mathematically daunting challenge as they prepare for their decisive Group D finale in the CONCACAF Women’s U17 Qualifiers. The young Reggae Girlz must achieve a double-digit victory margin against undefeated Honduras this Monday at Stadion Guillermo Prospero Trinidad in Oranjestad, Aruba, to keep their championship aspirations alive.

    The current group standings reveal a tightly contested battle for advancement. Honduras dominates the group with a perfect record of nine points from three matches, while both Jamaica and Guyana trail with seven points each. Despite identical point totals, Guyana currently holds the advantage for second place due to superior goal differential.

    Jamaica’s campaign began with a 1-1 stalemate against Guyana, followed by consecutive clean sheet victories: 2-0 against Aruba and 5-0 against St. Vincent and the Grenadines. These results have given the Jamaicans a goal difference of +7. Honduras, meanwhile, has been utterly dominant with a staggering +19 goal difference from their three matches. Guyana, having completed all their fixtures, maintains a +14 goal differential that Jamaica must surpass to advance.

    The mathematical imperative leaves Jamaica requiring nothing short of a spectacular offensive performance against the group leaders to overcome the twelve-goal differential deficit and secure advancement to the next qualification round.

  • Culture must be at the centre of Jamaica’s recovery

    Culture must be at the centre of Jamaica’s recovery

    Hurricane Melissa’s devastating impact on Jamaica has catalyzed a profound national reevaluation, transforming disaster recovery into a strategic opportunity for economic reinvention. Beyond physical destruction, the catastrophe has compelled the Caribbean nation to confront fundamental questions about building a more resilient, equitable, and prosperous future.

    The establishment of a statutory recovery body represents a crucial governmental response, though its ultimate success will be measured beyond infrastructure repairs and fund mobilization. The central challenge lies in reimagining Jamaica’s cultural assets—from music and entertainment to creative industries—as core economic infrastructure rather than peripheral activities.

    For decades, cultural expression has been largely confined to symbolic celebrations organized through entities like the Ministry of Culture, Gender, Entertainment and Sport (MCGES) and the Jamaica Cultural Development Commission (JCDC). While valuable for morale and identity preservation, this approach has limited culture’s economic potential. The reconstruction effort now demands intentional activation of cultural resources as drivers of job creation, tourism retention, export growth, and national development strategy.

    The hurricane simultaneously damaged multiple economic pillars: agriculture (particularly in St Elizabeth’s heartland), tourism (representing approximately 40% of GDP including indirect effects), public infrastructure, and the frequently overlooked creative sector. Overall, Melissa disrupted an estimated 18-25% of national income flows, necessitating both physical rebuilding and rapid economic reactivation.

    Critical considerations emerge for Jamaica’s recovery blueprint. Tourism revenue retention requires urgent attention, as current models see 70-80% of visitor spending leaking from the local economy. Strategic redeployment of displaced tourism workers into culture-driven value chains could enhance local economic circulation. Similarly, formal recognition of remittances linked to creative exports—music, digital content, diaspora-supported businesses—could reshape export policy and financial frameworks.

    The statutory recovery authority presents an unprecedented opportunity to integrate cultural considerations across government systems. Embedding cultural elements into infrastructure, tourism redevelopment, housing, and public space management could transform both morale and economic participation in affected parishes.

    Workforce displacement necessitates innovative retraining initiatives. Institutions like Edna Manley College of the Visual and Performing Arts (EMCVPA) collaborating with HEART-NSTA Trust could rapidly certify skills for transitioning workers into production management, festival operations, and cultural tourism.

    Recovery also enables tourism diversification beyond traditional enclaves. Cultural programming—pop-up stages, rotating festivals, culinary tours, heritage walks—can distribute visitor traffic across less-damaged parishes while maintaining economic activity in rebuilding communities.

    Effective execution requires genuine partnership with industry organizations including Jamaica Reggae Industry Association (JaRIA), Private Sector Organisation of Jamaica (PSOJ), Jamaica Hotel and Tourist Association (JHTA), and Jamaica Manufacturers and Exporters Association (JMEA). Their technical expertise must be embedded from inception rather than consulted post-decision.

    A culture-centered recovery framework would include: formal recognition of culture as economic infrastructure; establishing a National Culture and Entertainment Recovery Programme; redeploying displaced workers into creative industries; accelerating islandwide cultural tourism; using events to activate rebuilding communities; and acknowledging remittance portions as creative export income.

    Hurricane Melissa damaged physical structures but preserved Jamaica’s greatest asset: its people and their creativity. By treating culture as strategy rather than symbolism, Jamaica can transform recovery into an inclusive, sustainable renaissance rooted in cultural identity. Reggae Month 2026 offers a strategic launch platform for this transformed approach—not merely rebuilding what was, but creating a more resilient, innovative, and globally competitive nation.

  • Tourism minister says Jamaica on track to achieve good winter season

    Tourism minister says Jamaica on track to achieve good winter season

    Jamaica’s tourism industry is demonstrating remarkable resilience as it rebounds from Hurricane Melissa’s impact, with officials projecting a strong winter season performance. Tourism Minister Edmund Bartlett unveiled the nation’s recovery strategy during a keynote address to nearly 100 travel advisors and industry stakeholders at Apple Leisure Group Vacations’ welcome dinner at RIU Montego Bay Resort on January 31.

    The minister revealed that Jamaica’s approach mirrors its successful COVID-19 pandemic response, emphasizing consistent messaging and strategic coordination. Bartlett recalled how the creation of ‘resilient corridors’ during the pandemic enabled controlled reopening from Negril to Port Antonio, providing the template for current recovery efforts.

    Following Hurricane Melissa, authorities implemented a targeted assessment and recovery plan involving property visits and a unified communication strategy centered on the message: ‘Jamaica is open for business.’ This coordinated approach has yielded significant results, with the majority of hotels and attractions now operational and over 500,000 visitors recorded in January alone.

    Bartlett confirmed that only eight hotels remain temporarily closed while repairs continue, including at the Princess Grand Jamaica Resort. The minister expressed confidence in achieving winter season targets running from December 15, 2025, through April 2026, noting that 71% of tourism assets were restored by December 15.

    Jacki Marks, Global Head of Trade Brands at ALG Vacations, emphasized the importance of firsthand experience for travel advisors, describing the four-day visit as a confidence-building initiative. She acknowledged the emotional impact of Hurricane Melissa on Jamaica, which represents a crucial market for ALG, and praised the island’s generosity and resilience.

    The ‘Advisors in Action: Come Back to Give Back’ event highlighted tourism’s rebuilding momentum and the essential role travel partners play in sustaining Jamaica’s economy during recovery efforts.

  • Police identify men killed in Trelawny crash

    Police identify men killed in Trelawny crash

    A tragic head-on collision on the North Coast Highway in Trelawny has resulted in two fatalities, with local authorities confirming the identities of the deceased victims following Sunday morning’s devastating accident.

    The fatal incident occurred approximately at 7:10 AM near the Carey Park main road segment, where a gray Toyota Corolla traveling toward Falmouth collided with a blue Nissan X-Trail moving in the opposite direction. The impact proved fatal for both occupants of the Toyota Corolla, who sustained critical injuries during the crash.

    Medical personnel transported all involved parties to Falmouth Public General Hospital for emergency treatment. Despite medical intervention, the Toyota Corolla’s driver and passenger were pronounced dead upon arrival. The victims have been identified as 50-year-old Donovan Robinson of Lyndhurst Crescent, Kingston 5, and Lloyd Buchanan, also of Kingston.

    The female operator of the Nissan X-Trail survived the collision with non-life-threatening injuries and remains under medical supervision at the healthcare facility.

    Trelawny Police Division has launched a comprehensive investigation into the circumstances surrounding the accident, examining road conditions, vehicle mechanics, and potential contributing factors to determine the collision’s cause.

    This incident adds to Jamaica’s concerning traffic safety statistics, with official data revealing 25 road fatalities recorded island-wide since January 1st. While this figure represents a modest decrease from the 29 deaths reported during the same period last year, authorities continue to emphasize road safety awareness and responsible driving practices.