Saturday, May 30, 2026
Home Blog Page 176

Briton Joshua hurt in fatal car crash in Nigeria

0

British former heavyweight boxing champion Anthony Joshua was involved in a car accident in Nigeria’s Ogun State that killed two people, local police said on Monday.

Joshua, 36, sustained minor injuries when his vehicle collided with another car, Ogun State Police Command said, adding that he had been taken to hospital and that they are investigating the cause of the accident.

Joshua, who is the son of British-Nigerian parents, attended a boarding school in Ikenne, 53 miles from where the crash happened, before returning to Britain at age 12.

The accident occurred just over a week after Joshua knocked out American social media star Jake Paul in the sixth round of a bout in Miami.

Joshua was returning to the ring after a 15-month layoff. He is expected to fight long-time rival Tyson Fury in 2026. (Reuters)

‘Clarify’ UN tax plan

0

Barbados is calling for clarity, precision and respect for national sovereignty as discussions that could see oversight of global tax matters shift from the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) to the United Nations (UN) continue.

The country’s position was communicated to the chair of the Inter-governmental Negotiating Committee (INC) Framework for a UN Convention on International Tax Cooperation by Barbados Revenue Authority (BRA) Revenue Commissioner, Jason King.

The UN General Assembly established the INC to develop the convention between 2025 and 2027 and Barbados submitted comments via the BRA on draft articles four to nine.

“Overall, while Barbados supports the principles underlying these provisions, however, we emphasise the need for clarity, precision, and respect for national sovereignty to ensure that obligations are both actionable and consistent with domestic policy priorities,” King said in the communication.

The third INC session was held at the UN in Nairobi, Kenya, from November 10 to 19 and the discussion taking place included in relation to draft article four, which deals with fair allocation of taxing rights.

Right to tax

This article proposed that countries “parties agree that every jurisdiction where a taxpayer conducts business activities, including jurisdictions where value is created, markets are located and revenues are generated, have a right to tax the income generated from such business activities”.

King said that while Barbados agreed with this article in principle, “the language is loose because it uses overly broad terms and mixes different nexus concepts without clarification”.

“Saying that ‘every jurisdiction where a taxpayer conducts business activities’ has taxing rights is problematic, since ‘conducts business activities’ is undefined and could include minimal or purely digital interactions that are not normally sufficient to establish nexus under international tax norms, hence frustrating the concept of a permanent establishment,” he noted.

“The reference to jurisdictions ‘where value is created, markets are located, and revenues are generated’ combines distinct and often contested bases for taxation, value creation, market presence, and revenue generation-without indicating whether they are cumulative, alternative, or subject to specific thresholds.

“By stating that all such jurisdictions ‘have a right to tax the income’, the text implies overlapping and potentially unlimited taxing rights that conflict with the fundamental treaty objective of preventing double taxation.”

Avoid duplicating efforts

Article five concerns high network worth individuals. King said on behalf of Barbados that the country supports the consensus to consolidate the exchange-of-information provisions into a single dedicated article or protocol, but “we urge caution to avoid duplicating efforts already well advanced by the OECD Global Forum in the area of tax transparency”.

“We also note with concern that the text appears to single out tax avoidance. Conceptually, tax avoidance involves operating within the boundaries of the law to reduce tax liabilities, whereas tax evasion is an illegal activity,” he stated.

“If any reference to tax avoidance is to be included, it should be carefully qualified to avoid conflating lawful conduct with unlawful behaviour and to ensure that the scope of the provision remains clear and appropriately targeted. Failure to do such, the article may unintentionally broaden obligations or create inconsistent interpretations across member states.

“In addition, we believe that a protocol is necessary to further refine this article. For example, the reference to ‘coordinated approaches’ to ensure the effective taxation of high-net-worth individuals lacks specificity regarding the mechanisms, standards, and obligations that member states are expected to adopt.

“Greater detail will be essential to ensure consistent interpretation and meaningful implementation across jurisdictions,” King said.

The Revenue Commissioner restated Barbados’ concerns about the exchange of information provisions regarding draft article six (mutual administrative assistance) and article seven (illicit financial flows, tax avoidance and tax evasion).

“With respect to assistance in the collection of tax debts, while we support this objective in principle, we note that its implementation may be challenging for revenue authorities with limited capacity,” he said in the correspondence on article six.

“Without appropriate safeguards, resource support, and clearly defined procedures, such obligations could impose administrative burdens that some jurisdictions may be unable to meet effectively.”

Regarding article seven, he said Barbados urged caution “in grouping illicit financial flows together with tax avoidance, for the reasons outlined above”.

Creating ambiguity

“Tax avoidance, while sometimes aggressive, remains conduct within the law, whereas illicit financial flows and tax evasion constitute illegal activities. Conflating these concepts risks creating ambiguity in the scope of the article and undermines the clarity needed for effective implementation.”

King also commented on paragraph two of article eight, harmful tax practices, saying that Barbados “has no objection to tackling harmful tax practices and requiring substantial activity requirements”.

However, he said paragraph two of the article “appears to be attempting to limit member states’ fiscal autonomy by implying restrictions on the design of domestic tax incentives, and we cannot support such because it potentially infringes on Barbados’ sovereign right to design its own tax policy”.

“Simply put, the language cannot be supported because it risks undermining sovereignty, policy flexibility, and national development objectives,” King said.

There was no comment on article nine – sustainable development. (SC)

Petition to rename Stadium

0

A petition has been launched to name the National Stadium, when rebuilt, after Louis Albert Lynch, the late former principal of Modern High School.

The driving force behind it is the Modern High School Old Scholars’ Association, and the move has garnered support from former Director of Sports Erskine King and Steve Stoute, immediate past president of the Barbados Olympic Association (BOA).

The appeal is being made under the Barbados National Honours And Decorations (Amendment) Act, 2025.

An advisory council has been set up and can make recommendations to the Prime Minister to “name or rename a public building, a public road or a public space after a person as a national honour”.

Achievements

“We, the members of the Modern High School Old Scholars’ Association, assert that the qualities and achievements of our beloved principal and mentor exceed any that can reasonably be expected from a candidate for this honour,” the petition stated.

Lynch founded the Modern High School in 1944 to expand the opportunities for secondary and tertiary education in Barbados. He not only established scholarships to the school, but negotiated the first athletics and academic scholarship for graduates to pursue studies in the United States, with Patsy Callender and Lorna Forde among his success stories.

The VIP Stand at the old National Stadium was named after Lynch, who served as president of the Amateur Athletics Association of Barbados from 1955 to 1962 and was the first BOA president from 1962 until his death seven years later. He was also president of the Barbados Table Tennis Association and the Basketball Association.

Lynch was a sportsman in his own right, having played football, cricket, basketball and table tennis.

He was also a boxer. According to the Old Scholars, he held the 440 yards record for 20 years. “We, the past students of the Modern High School, together with our friends and supporters, are dismayed that, with the demolition of the building that housed the Louis Lynch Secondary School, coupled with the destruction of the Louis Lynch Stand at the old National Stadium, very little will remain to honour the legacy of this outstanding Barbadian. We therefore earnestly request that the new facility now under construction be named the Louis Albert Lynch National Stadium and affix our signatures below in support of our petition.” Stoute said Lynch was a pioneer and he would be happy to speak to the Prime Minister or Minister of Sport about the renaming.

“I would be fully supportive of that. He is the father of Olympism in Barbados.”

He explained that it was Lynch who reached out to the International Olympic Committee (IOC) in 1953 seeking membership for Barbados and later became the first president. In 1955, when the IOC accepted the island, the chairman was Fred Goddard, the vice-chairman was Justice Henry and Lynch was secretary general.

Barbados became part of the British West Indies Olympic Association on the formation of the West Indies Federation in 1958 and competed in the 1960 Olympic Games in Rome, in which James “Jim” Wedderburn won a bronze medal with the 4×400 metres relay team. When the federation broke up in 1962, Lynch worked towards forming the first BOA, Stoute recalled.

Asked how he would present an argument to younger people about Lynch in an era where Olympic bronze medallist Obadele Thompson would no doubt be mentioned in the same conversation, Stoute stated: “Well, if Lynch hadn’t started the Olympic movement, Barbados would never have participated at the Olympic Games.

“I’m sure somebody else would have done it later on, but as it stands right now, he was the individual that reached out to the International Olympic Committee in order to get Barbados its membership, and led the first team, which I was a member of, to the Olympic Games in 1968 in Mexico City.”

Meanwhile, King said there was uncertainty about whether the names from the old National Stadium would be reused.

‘Deserving’

“So they might be a little previous in doing that . . . . They can easily come back and say, ‘Well, we haven’t made a determination about the existing names’,” he said.

“Of course he [Lynch] deserves it, and all of those persons whose names adorn those stands are deserving of having the stands go back to them again . . . . There’s no harm in sending a petition to the committee, but that’s two years down the line before that’s completed.”

King said Thompson’s name and possibly that of Commonwealth gold medallist Andrea Blackett might also be up for consideration, but Lynch “would have done quite well in terms of the administrative aspect of it”.

When contacted, Minister of Sports Charles Griffith said members of the public could petition to have public buildings and other places renamed and signatures could strengthen an application.

“It is not a one-man thing, like a Minister of Sports being able to make that decision. There’s a committee in place that will look at it based on merit, based on the signatures that you were able to gather and then a decision will be made,” he said.

The petition is online at https://docs.google. com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSeqLqkVDbMcYsg5j4_ OQsE5lWkYK_v6Dw0TmUHahTAaLc4qfg/ viewform.

Bajans in Venezuela ‘not in danger’

0

Barbadians in Venezuela are not in danger even though there is an air of concern amid tension between the country and United States that has been rising for months.

Chargé d’Affaires of the Embassy of Barbados in Venezuela, Commander Aquinas Clarke, said people, including the Barbadians living or visiting there, were going about their normal business.

“We are hoping that whatever is going on can be solved by diplomatic means and that we preserve the peace in the region. So everyday is just basically holding on to see what is happening.

“But from this side, I can say to you that things are relatively calm, despite what is going on,” Clarke said.

The friction between the United States and Venezuela started months ago with a US naval build-up in the southern Caribbean and nearby waters, which US officials insisted was to address threats from Latin American drug cartels.

There have been several fatal bombing of fishing vessels which the US said were smuggling narcotics but that has been disputed by Venezuela.

At the United Nations 80th General Assembly in September, Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley warned that the situation between the United States and Venezuela could put the southern Caribbean at risk, even as a result of an accident, adding the region could not be seen as collateral damage from a build-up in military assets by both sides.

Clarke said: “We are in contact with them and everybody is safe. So we don’t have any challenges on that end at this point in time. It is a safe destination to be in. I have been from the terraces and heights to what we call the ghettos, walking without any problems.

“Every Barbadian that has come here so far has left with a completely different impression,” he told the Sunday Sun during a recent telephone interview.

The Barbadian diaspora comprises several first-generation Barbadians living there for 50 years and 70 years and their families.

There are more than 100 Barbadians in the country and regular consular business includes facilitating the applications for passports and, more recently, citizenship.

This year the embassy has handled seven new Barbadian citizenships – six by descent and one by registration through marriage.

“There are Barbadians here, descendants, who are very interested in achieving citizenship,” the envoy said.

There was one instance, Clarke said, of a man whose father was born in the 1900s and the man, having lived in Venezuela since 1957, has sent in his information in order to become a citizen.

One of the oldest members of the Barbadian community in Venezuela is a 99-year-old woman who has been living there for more than 70 years. There is a planned visit for her during the Christmas season and another celebration for her 100th birthday in July next year, he said. ( AC)

Brigitte Bardot, icon of French cinema, dies at 91

0

 Actress Brigitte Bardot shot to international fame dancing the mambo barefoot in “And God Created Woman”, her tousled hair and fierce energy radiating a sexual magnetism rarely before seen in mainstream cinema.

A global icon was born.

At just 21, she scandalised censors and captivated audiences. Her free-spirited performance in the 1956 film, shot by her husband Roger Vadim, marked a decisive break from the demure heroines of the previous era.

Brigitte Bardot, often referred to in France simply as “B.B.” and whose later years were marked by animal rights campaigns and far-right political sympathies, has died at the age of 91, her foundation said on Sunday. The cause was not immediately known.

Born in Paris on September 28, 1934, Bardot grew up in an upper-middle-class household. She described herself as a shy, self-conscious child who “wore spectacles and had lank hair”.

By 15, however, she graced the cover of Elle magazine, launching a modelling career that soon led to film.

Bardot’s character in “And God Created Woman” was the embodiment of liberated femininity. The controversy only fuelled her appeal. Bardot became a symbol of 1950s and 60s France.

Her allure extended far beyond French cinema. At 15, Bob Dylan is said to have written his first song about her, the never-released “Song for Brigitte”, while Andy Warhol painted her portrait.

Bardot’s ability to subvert traditional gender roles made her not just a sex symbol, but a pop culture icon and a touchstone for shifting social attitudes.

In 1959, Simone de Beauvoir penned an article for Esquire magazine in which she lionised Bardot’s conspicuous sense of freedom. “B.B. does not try to scandalise,” the feminist philosopher wrote. “She follows her inclinations. She eats when she is hungry and makes love with the same unceremonious simplicity.

“Moral lapses can be corrected, but how could B.B. be cured of that dazzling virtue — genuineness? It is her very substance.”

De Beauvoir concluded: “I hope she will mature, but not change.”

Despite her influence, Bardot found celebrity life isolating. She often spoke of being a prisoner of her own fame, unable to enjoy life’s simple pleasures.

“Nobody can imagine how horrific it was, such an ordeal,” she reflected decades later. “I couldn’t go on living like that.”

Her personal life was shaped by four marriages, widely reported affairs, and well-documented struggles with depression.

On her 26th birthday she was found unconscious at a house on the French Riviera after trying to take her own life. Rumours of another attempted suicide surfaced years later when she mysteriously cancelled a 49th birthday party then appeared in hospital.

Alongside her acting, Bardot enjoyed a successful music career. Her collaborations with singer-songwriter Serge Gainsbourg, including the erotic “Je t’aime … moi non plus” (“I Love You … Neither Do I”), drew both acclaim and controversy.

In the late 1960s she modelled for a bust of Marianne, the personification of the French Republic.

But she found little satisfaction in the praise she garnered.

“I have been very happy, very rich, very beautiful, much adulated, very famous and very unhappy,” she told the magazine Paris Match around the time of her 50th birthday. “I’ve been let down too often. I’ve had really terrible disappointments in my life. That is why I’ve chosen to withdraw, to live alone.”

Bardot made the last of her 42 films in 1973. Disenchanted with the industry, she declared the world of cinema “rotten” and left public life.

“I will have given 20 years of my life to cinema, that’s enough,” she said in a TV interview at the time.

She settled in the fashionable French resort of Saint-Tropez, where she found solace among animals and the Mediterranean landscape.

There, she began a passionate defence of animal welfare. “This is my only battle, the only direction I want to give my life,” Bardot said in 2013.

Her devotion to animals became legendary. In 1986, she established the Brigitte Bardot Foundation for the Welfare and Protection of Animals, auctioning off personal souvenirs the following year to raise funds for her cause.

Bardot supported high-profile activists, such as anti-whaling campaigner Paul Watson, and campaigned vigorously against animal cruelty, at times threatening to leave France over animal welfare disputes.

When actor Gérard Depardieu accepted Russian citizenship after a public spat with French authorities, in 2013, Bardot threatened to follow suit if France euthanised two sick circus elephants.

For much of the latter part of her life, Bardot lived alone behind high walls in Saint-Tropez, surrounded by a menagerie of cats, dogs and horses.

This passion, she often suggested, was an antidote to her disappointing relationships. “I gave my beauty and my youth to men,” she once said. “I am going to give my wisdom and experience to animals.”

As her advocacy intensified, so too did the backlash to her political statements.

Bardot’s public remarks on immigration, Islam and homosexuality led to a string of convictions for inciting racial hatred.

Between 1997 and 2008, she was fined six times by French courts for her comments, particularly those targeting France’s Muslim community.

In one case, a Paris court fined her €15,000 ($17,000) for describing Muslims as “this population that is destroying us, destroying our country by imposing its acts”.

In 1992, she married Bernard d’Ormale, a former adviser to the far-right National Front, and later publicly endorsed the party’s successive leaders, Jean-Marie Le Pen and his daughter Marine Le Pen. Bardot called the latter “the Joan of Arc of the 21st century”.

Yet, for all her polarising views, Bardot’s influence endured, whether in fashion – with media noting regular comebacks of her trademark hairstyle – or through regular documentaries and coffee‑table books celebrating her rare impact on French cinema.

Asked by French channel BFM TV in May 2025 if she considered herself a symbol of the sexual revolution, she said: “No, because before me, plenty of wild things had already happened — they didn’t wait for me. Feminism isn’t my thing; I like men.”

In the same interview, she was asked how often she reflected on her film career. “I don’t think about it,” she said, “but I don’t reject it, because it’s thanks to it that I’m known everywhere in the world as someone who defends animals.” (Reuters)

Docs: Take symptoms seriously

0

Family physician Dr Adrian Lorde is urging Barbadians to take respiratory symptoms seriously as cases climb sharply, warning that shortness of breath and worsening illness could signal dangerous complications.

He said yesterday that while respiratory illnesses were typical at this time of year, the current spike was far more pronounced than in previous seasons.

“Some people have shortness of breath and if that is so, that is cause for concern. They’re either asthmatic or have complications,” Lorde said.

His warning comes amid an alert issued earlier last week by the Ministry of Health and Wellness, which reported a notable increase in respiratory illnesses, particularly among adults. According to the ministry, infections over the past four weeks ranged between 14 and 24 cases, rising sharply to as many as 39 in the week ending December 12, 2025. Some patients have required hospitalisation and two acute deaths were recorded up to that date, one involving a known asthmatic.

Health officials identified the main causes as Influenza A (H3N2 or H1N1), Influenza B, and the Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV), with a few cases of COVID-19 and the common cold also detected.

Lorde attributed the surge to a combination of factors, including cooler weather, increased social activity and heightened travel.

He pointed to “the cooling weather, an increase in social gatherings as well as the influx of visitors from North America and the United Kingdom where there has been an outbreak of the flu virus”.

Among the most common symptoms he has observed are fever, cough, sore throat and headaches, with some patients also experiencing vomiting and diarrhoea.

To reduce transmission, Lorde advised those showing symptoms to stay at home, avoid close contact with others, wear a mask and maintain social distancing, alongside regular and thorough handwashing.

In terms of treatment, he emphasised rest and basic supportive care.

“A cough syrup or a decongestant is also important. Also because they have fevers, they become dehydrated, so they need to take lots of fluids, so that’s water, juices, coconut water, that type of thing. If it is worse after 24 to 48 hours, they should seek medical attention. In severe cases, antiviral medication is available as well but I have not had to prescribe that,” he said.

Lorde recommended antipyretic medications such as Paracetamol, Tylenol and Panadol, but cautioned against the use of ibuprofen.

“I don’t recommend the Ibuprofen because if they’re not eating well, those could affect the stomach in persons and if they were drinking alcohol or something, it might be already inflamed,” he added.

Greater risks

Lorde further cautioned that people living with hypertension, diabetes, heart disease, cancer, or those on immunosuppressant therapy should be particularly vigilant, as respiratory infections might pose greater risks for them.

Addressing concerns about the spread of the H3N2 Subclade K flu strain, Lorde encouraged vaccination, noting that flu and COVID-19 vaccines were available free of charge at polyclinics.

“Vaccines still help to prevent any serious illness. I went two months ago and got my vaccine, both the COVID and the flu vaccine. It’s just a matter of protecting yourself and protecting others. Going to work sick will not only affect your recovery, but also can pass [the infection to] other people at work,” he counselled.

President of the Barbados Association of Medical Practitioners, Lynda Williams, appealed to the public to protect themselves and others, encouraging good hygiene practices like using hand sanitiser and wiping down services, especially if food is being served.

She also implored those affected to stay indoors if they are sick, wear masks and employ cough and sneezing etiquette by covering their nose and mouth.

“It’s important to remember that the key thing here is that we don’t want the health care system to be completely overwhelmed and that happens when a lot of the vulnerable persons in society – those who have co-morbidities; those who are elderly; and even children whose immune systems are not fully developed – become very ill on account of having these viruses.

“Most of us will get any of these illnesses and shake it off but not all of us. For those who cannot protect themselves and who become very ill, hospitalisation or seeking tertiary care becomes inevitable. When you have a lot of people seeking tertiary care, it means that everyone’s progress in the emergency department is delayed if there are an overwhelming number of respiratory illnesses,” she added.

Meanwhile, president of the Barbados Pharmaceutical Society, Marlon Ward-Rogers, said supportive care and immuneboosting supplements might also assist recovery. He underscored the importance of professional guidance.

“If anything, they should contact their doctor or they [can] come to the pharmacy and speak with a pharmacist, who would best direct them [on] other than that just normal vitamins. It varies from case to case, but obviously vitamin C, for sure, and anything that will help boost the immune system,” he said. (JRN)

Some hired car companies fully booked

0

Despite early concerns raised by hired car rental companies regarding Government’s $5 car rental levy, some proprietors have noted a positive response from customers.

The levy, which officially went into effect in October, sparked concern across multiple sectors from vehicle rental operators to insurance professionals, who feared the measure could drive up costs and worsen an already challenging business environment.

Some proprietors reported they were fully booked for the tourist winter season, with no rentals left before the start of the new year.

Manager at My Rides Auto Rentals powered by Fusion Auto World, Azhad Mangera, said they did not have any drastic fallout with the introduction of the levy, neither was there a price increase, as they opted to maintain their prices.

“Levy-wise, we’ve just let them know that it’s a Government levy that has been replacing the visitors’ permit. All of our customers overseas come from countries which have similar levies, so we don’t really find a big, drastic complaint.

“We’ve been having a lot of cruise passengers, locals as well, with double bookings and repeat customers as well, so we’re fully booked up until New Year’s,” Mangera said.

Director at Tweety Car Rentals, Andrew Smith, said the season was busy with bookings around the clock. Likewise, he also reported that the levy did not cause a noticeable shift in business.

“One question the tourists have, is if they no longer need the temporary licence anymore, because, normally, they are accustomed to getting a piece of paper. We told them that law that has changed since October, so it’s not really like they have any room for argument, and I find they are very understanding for the most part,” he said.

A representative at BCR car rentals said that during the busy winter season and full bookings, they adjusted the car rental price to account for the change in the levy.

“We added it into the total for the rentals, so if it is that you’re renting a vehicle for however long, we just incorporated it into our total, so we don’t do anything else different.

“The most feedback we get is from tourists who are still expecting permits, so we just let them know that the permits are no longer issued, but we haven’t heard anyone complaining about it,” they said. ( JRN)

Pollard’s unbeaten knock helps Emirates demolish Capitals

0

Kieron Pollard played a captain’s knock to lead MI Emirates to a convincing eight-wicket victory over the Dubai Capitals in the International League T20 here on Saturday.

Chasing the Capitals’ paltry total of 122 for eight at the Zayed Cricket Stadium, Pollard stroked an unbeaten 44 off 31 balls as the Emirates cruised to 126 for two in 16.4 overs.

Pollard struck five massive sixes and a four, and shared an unbroken partnership of 67 with Tom Banton, who scored an unbeaten 28 off 20 balls, to carry their side to a seventh win in 10 matches.

Andre Fletcher scored a pedestrian 21 off 30 balls at the top of the order and shared an opening stand of 47 in just over six overs with Muhammad Waseem, who made 27 off 19 balls.

Earlier, Player-of-the-Match AM Ghazanfar captured 3-28 to restrict the Capitals to a below par score.

Only captain Mohammad Nabi, who scored an unbeaten 22 off 30 balls and James Neesham, who made 21, scored more than 20, as the Capitals never recovered from being 52 for five in the 10th over. (CMC)

Nine dead in mass killing in Suriname

0

 At least nine people, including four children were killed as a man went on a rampage in the district of Commewijne,  located on the right bank of the Suriname River, early Sunday morning, police have confirmed.

They said that they had received a “troubled”  call at around 12.23 am (local time) and on arrival found nine people killed in the attack.

Among the victims are four of the suspect’s own children, an elderly couple living nearby, and members of another family. One child, the suspect’s eldest daughter, survived but suffered severe stab wounds. She was transported by ambulance to the hospital, where she remains in critical condition under intensive medical care.

Police have since apprehended the suspect, identified as D.A, the children’s father. He reportedly attempted to attack officers with a knife, but police responded by shooting him in the legs before taking him into custody at the Richelieu police station.

Investigators say that the man had been struggling with psychological issues for some time, which had contributed to the breakdown of his marriage. His four children had been left in his care.

Police have cordoned off the crime scene, and forensic teams are conducting a large-scale investigation to reconstruct the events and collect evidence. The motive behind the attack remains unclear. (CMC)

Full rooms signal bright start to winter tourism season

0

Barbados’ winter tourism season has opened on a strong note, with hotel occupancy levels climbing above last year and many properties already operating at or near full capacity, according to chairman of the Barbados Hotel and Tourism Association (BHTA) Javon Griffith.

Speaking in an interview with the Sunday Sun yesterday, Griffith said early data for the 2025-26 winter period pointed to a “minor but clear increase” in occupancy compared with the same period last year, even as the association prepares to conduct a fuller data poll among its members.

“What we are seeing so far is an increase in occupancy levels for winter,” Griffith said, stressing that while figures vary across the sector, the overall trend was upward. He explained that most of the data received to date reflected single-digit increases, noting that the numbers would continue to fluctuate as more properties report their figures.

For the current weekend, however, performance across the sector was particularly robust, he said. Griffith revealed that many hotels were operating in the “very high 90s”, with several properties reporting full occupancy.

“Most places are in the very high 90s and several properties are 100 per cent full,” he said, describing the situation as encouraging for hoteliers who were bracing for uncertainty in global travel markets.

The BHTA chairman said demand this winter was being driven by a relatively balanced mix of traditional source markets, particularly the United States and the United Kingdom. That balance, he explained, was not uniform across the island, but varied depending on location.

“This winter we’re definitely seeing an equal split at the moment between the United States (US) and the United Kingdom (UK),” Griffith said.

“But that will vary based on coastline. On the west coast, you tend to see that more equal split, while on the south coast the business is more geared towards the US market” .

Improved airlift

He added that the east coast continued to present a more mixed pattern, reflecting its smaller accommodation base and niche appeal.

One notable feature of the season so far, according to Griffith, was the rise in late or last-minute bookings, particularly from North American travellers. He said this trend had become more pronounced over recent weeks and was being widely reported by BHTA members.

“Last-minute business is definitely more noticeable this winter.

Almost all of that is coming from the US market, where there are seats available into the destination and people are deciding at very late notice to book trips to Barbados”.

Griffith pointed to improved airlift as a major factor behind the strong occupancy numbers and the increase in first-time visitors. In particular, he highlighted the impact of expanded services by Delta Airlines, which he said had significantly improved Barbados’ accessibility to the American market.

“Airline capacity has definitely impacted occupancies quite positively,” he said. “We are seeing a number of first-time visitors who had never even considered Barbados before but did so because they saw their preferred airline now flying into the destination”.

According to Griffith, the availability of convenient connections through Atlanta made the island more attractive to the average American family, translating directly into hotel bookings during the busy festive and winter periods.

Current trends

He also noted clear differences in the average length of stay by market, with North American visitors typically staying for shorter periods than their British counterparts.

“For North Americans, the average length of stay is four to five nights,” Griffith explained.

“The British market remains around ten nights on average. So there really isn’t one single average that can be used for the entire industry. It depends very much on the source market”.

Looking ahead, he said the association was “quietly confident” about maintaining and potentially improving occupancy levels through the remainder of the winter season, based on current trends and forward bookings.

“Forward bookings through to April next year are steadily arriving,” he said, adding that the industry was now entering its most critical sales period of the year.

“January is a makeor- break period for many of our members, particularly with the UK market promotions that take place at this time”.

Griffith said the next few weeks were expected to bring a further surge in bookings, especially from the UK, painting what he described as a “very positive picture” for the remainder of the winter season and into 2026. (CLM)