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Festive time on Boxing Day

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With their Christmas Day hams heartily eaten and all their gifts opened, Barbadians and visitors continued their holiday celebrations outdoors yesterday.

Whether sinking their toes in the warm sand of the beach or picnicking under the shade of a tall tree, families and groups came together yesterday in observance of typical Boxing Day tradition
of food, drinks and merriment. 

At the picturesque King George V Memorial Park located in Jezreel, St Philip, members of the Mount Pisnah Spiritual Baptist Church came out in their numbers to celebrated the season. 

Among them was the Yarde family huddled together in groups with a mouth-watering spread of sweet potato pie, macaroni pie, rice, chicken, baked pork, spare ribs and cole slaw. 

According to Monica Yarde Harris, sharing in the meals with her loved ones and her community is what the season truly meant to her.

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Ham thief sent to hospital for evaluation

After stealing two hams a week before Christmas, Jadon Oneal Branker will be spending the remainder of the Yuletide season at the Psychiatric Hospital.  

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High hopes for women’s football

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Mario Vanterpool has set himself a clear mission: to return the Lady Tridents to their former standards and push them even further by 2026.

Speaking with Saturday Sport, the 38-year-old coach, who has experience at youth, senior men’s and international women’s levels, outlined his long-term vision for women’s football in Barbados, with particular emphasis on the Senior Women’s National Team.

The Lady Tridents, who endured a prolonged absence from competitive action, received a boost this year with the appointment of former national player Kerry Trotman as head coach. Vanterpool believes that renewed leadership, coupled with player buy-in, will be key to the team’s resurgence.

“If we can get the Lady Tridents firing on all cylinders and the players fully buying into what the coaching staff are trying to do, that sets us up well heading into 2026,” he said.

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High Court judge dismisses application by Irish tycoon

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A High Court judge last month dismissed the application by Irish tycoon, John McManus, for judicial review against former coroner Graveney Bannister, who conducted an inquest into the death of his wife Emma McManus.

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Demand for Chinese hospital ship ‘a concern’

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Former minister of health Donville Inniss has described the long lines of Barbadians seeking medical attention from the visiting Chinese hospital ship as “embarrassing”, warning that the scenes point to what he cautiously termed a growing crisis in the public health care system.

“As we welcome the Chinese medical ship, we must not be distracted from the general deteriorating state of our public health care system in Barbados,” he said, adding that it was “truly painful to see hundreds of Bajans lining up in 2025 for health checks on a ship”.

While welcoming the assistance being provided by the visiting vessel, Inniss said the demand for its services raised serious questions.

“The fact that thousands of Barbadians have to line up to try to get on a visiting medical ship to be examined or treated is a bit embarrassing,” he said. “It tells me that there is significant pressure in the polyclinics, resulting in many Barbadians not being seen, or not being seen in a timely fashion.”

Turning to the Queen Elizabeth Hospital (QEH), Inniss said long-standing challenges were continuing to affect patient care.

“We all know the challenges there – long waiting times in Accident and Emergency, persistent delays in surgeries, malfunctioning equipment, inadequate equipment, and what appears to be bad management of personnel, particularly on the clinical side,” he said.

Inniss thanked China for its continued support to Barbados’ health sector, noting that over the years the partnership had facilitated the presence of Chinese medical professionals in critical areas at the QEH. However, he said that reliance on a floating hospital could not address the underlying problems.

“So kudos to the Chinese and thank them on behalf of Barbadians for coming and helping us,” he said. “But this is not sustainable. Going on a floating health care facility is not the solution to Barbados’ health care challenges.”

Private care

He said the situation was forcing many citizens to seek private medical care, often at great personal expense.

“Every day, I encounter Barbadians who lament the fact that they seem to be forced to go private because the public system is not meeting their demands. There is a lot of pain out there – challenges accessing medication, challenges accessing timely care. These are real issues.”

Inniss also questioned how follow-up care would be handled for patients treated on the ship.

“The questions that must now be asked are: who will do the follow-up work on these citizens, what further diagnostic work is to be done, and to whom will the Chinese doctors be referring these patients?” he asked, saying those concerns pointed to weaknesses in coordination within the health system.

Rejecting calls for means testing, Inniss said he remained committed to a socialised health care model.

“I like a system that says we all contribute into a pool of funds, which is then used to take care of individuals regardless of their socioeconomic circumstances,” he said.

The former minister warned that greater reliance on private insurance would place further strain on middle-income Barbadians, many of whom already received limited state support and risked becoming the “working poor”.

Instead, Inniss called for better management of existing resources, sustainable financing, and a stronger emphasis on primary and preventive care.

“Solutions are there. What is required now is the political will to wrap our minds around these issues and engage all stakeholders, even those who may not share the same political views,” he said. ( CLM)

Joys of Park parade

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It was another wonderful Christmas morning in Queen’s Park where a large crowd of Barbadians and visitors turned out to enjoy the annual concert by the Band of the Barbados Police Service.

The age-old tradition, a highlight of the Christmas celebrations, continues to attract new patrons and yesterday was no exception, with several visitors saying they were advised a visit to the Park on Christmas morning was a must.

Mainly British and Canadian, out among the large number park-goers and took every photo op.

When the Police Band notes on the stroke of 7 a. a few patrons standing around However, it did not take long numbers swelled, with the out front to ensure they did while others took up position walkways leading to the bandstand. Under the baton of the Senior Superintendent Andrew band treated patrons to aCanadian, they stood number of exquisitelydressed took advantage of Band sounded its first a.m., there were just around the bandstand. long before those the regulars standing did not miss a beat, position on the lawn and bandstand. the director of music, Andrew Lynch, the a variety of music on a programme lasting for one and a half hours, leaving people asking for more as it ended.

Band members not only displayed their instrumental prowess but also their vocal competency, with officers such as Constables Maughn, Weekes, Bend and Roach taking to the microphone to belt out Christmas favourites, many arranged by present and former members of the band.

Even the director of music temporarily set aside his baton to join the crooners, stepping into the shoes of his late predecessor Keith Ellis, to thrill the audience with his own rendition of the Christmas standard You’re All I want for Christmas.

It is a crowd favourite which Ellis, as director, could not end the annual concert without singing for a park audience pressing him to do so.

Guest artiste Llettesha Sylvester-Charles blew the audience away with her renditions of The First Noel and O Holy Night, her powerful voice sending notes soaring high over the Park, while Biggie Irie raised the tempo with Drummer Boy, and Gather The Children, sung to a distinct Caribbean beat. By the time the band launched into Keith Ellis’ arrangement of The Most Honourable Stedson Red Plastic Bag Wilshire’s Bajan Christmas hit Maizie, the line dancers were in full step showing off their colourful moves to flashing cameras.

For President The Most Honourable Jeffrey Bostic, who made a surprise appearance, it was his first Christmas morning in the Park since taking office.

Remarking on what a “wonderful show” it was, he told the DAILY NATION he intended to make it part of his annual Christmas calendar.

His arrival caused an excited stir and several people – locals and visitors – eagerly rushed forward to be greeted by him as he mingled, accompanied by his daughters Teara and Akeima. (GC)

Private sector backs Caricom

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The Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Private Sector Organisation (CPSO) has reaffirmed its commitment to regional integration and the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME) in light of the ongoing spat involving regional leaders and the future direction of the 15-member grouping.

In a statement, the CPSO said since it became an “associate institution” within CARICOM, it has worked with fellow private sector companies and business organisations “to advance projects and representations to pursue the noble objectives of the CSME”, which allows for the free movement of goods, skills, labour and services across the region.

The CPSO said that the CSME has “delivered tangible benefits to firms and workers throughout the region, supporting significant intra-regional trade, strengthening regional supply chains and contributing meaningfully to foreign exchange earnings and economic activity in member states, including Trinidad and Tobago”.

In recent days, Antigua and Barbuda Prime Minister Gaston Browne has called on Trinidad and Tobago Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar to “produce the evidence” that CARICOM, including Antigua and Barbuda, had aligned itself with “the Maduro narco-government headed by a dictator” in Venezuela.

She said that Venezuela has been threatening to invade Guyana for years and since last June it began making similar threats that Trinidad and Tobago is a part of Venezuela.

“Yet CARICOM has chosen to support the Maduro narcogovernment through the fake ‘zone of peace’ narrative which is clearly designed to get the American military to leave the Caribbean region and therefore enable Maduro to remain as dictator in Venezuela.

“An organisation that chooses to disparage our greatest ally, the United States, but lends support to the Maduro narcogovernment headed by a dictator who has imprisoned and killed thousands of civilians and opposition members as well as threatened two CARICOM members is one that has clearly lost its way,” Persad-Bissessar said in a statement.

“My priority is in the best interests of the citizens of Trinidad and Tobago,” she added.

In its statement, CPSO, which serves as the umbrella body for at least seven national private sector organisations, said it places great value on the benefits derived both from intra-CARICOM trade “and from the Community’s strong trading relationships beyond the region, including with the United States, the largest collective external trading partner for CARICOM.

“From a private sector standpoint, these relationships are not in competition, they are complimentary, reinforcing economic resilience and diversification,” it stated.

The CPSO said at a time of global economic uncertainty, “the private sector depends on confidence, stability and constructive engagement among member states.

“In these times, the phrase ‘stronger together’ is particularly relevant. CARICOM continues to serve as the forum for leaders, governments, institutions and the people of our Community to join hands and stand shoulder to shoulder in solidarity to transform vulnerabilities into assets by building resilience and strategically integrating into the global economy.”

The CPSO warned that in a world of increasing isolation, “we recognise that CARICOM and the CSME vision are critical for our joint sustainability.

“We acknowledge the collaborative and inclusive framework afforded to the regional private sector by the CARICOM Heads in our pursuit of the full implementation of the CSME. We in the private sector across the region are committed to working together with our governments and other stakeholders in CARICOM to achieve this vision.”

The CPSO statement was also signed by the Private Sector Organisation of Trinidad and Tobago, the Private Sector Organisation of Jamaica, Barbados Private Sector Organisation, Private Sector Commission of Guyana, the OECS Business Council, the Suriname Chamber of Commerce and Industry and the Belize Chamber of Commerce and Industry. (CMC)

West Indies batsmen, bowlers slip in ICC Test rankings

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 There is no West Indies batsman in the top 50 of the ICC’s Test batting rankings following their disappointing performances in the recently concluded Test series against New Zealand.

Shai Hope, who was the lone Windies previously ranked in the top 50, has fallen 11 places to 60th and is the highest ranked batsman from the regional team in the most recent ICC rankings.

Hope, who battled an eye infection in the drawn second Test and food poisoning in the third and final Test, slipped out of the top 50 despite a decent series that saw him score 255 runs at an average of 42.50.

Justin Greaves, the regional team’s highest scorer in the series with 283 runs at an average of 56.60, fell one spot to 62nd in the rankings despite his unbeaten double century in the second Test.

Former West Indies opener Kraigg Brathwaite, who last featured for the West Indies in July against Australia, is the next highest batter at 65th.

The biggest jumpers on the list for the Windies were Kavem Hodge and Brandon King.

Hodge, who scored an unbeaten 123 in the first innings of the third Test, leapt 11 spots to 66th, while King, who replaced injured opener Tagenarine Chanderpaul and scored half centuries in both innings of the third Test, jumped 27 places and now sits in 73rd position.

John Campbell (75th), Alick Athanaze (76th), Joshua Da Silva (83rd), Chanderpaul (99th) and captain Roston Chase (100th), are the other West Indians on the list.

In the bowling rankings, veteran pacer Kemar Roach, who had climbed to 18th after his impressive performance in the opening Test dropped two spots to 20th, one ahead of the injured Shamar Joseph who did not take part in the series.

Jayden Seales slipped one spot to 25th, while the inactive Alzarri Joseph and spinner Jomel Warrican maintained their rankings at 31st and 32nd respectively.

Gudakesh Motie did not move from 65th, while Chase dropped nine spots to 67th.

Greaves was the lone West Indies bowler to rise in the rankings, moving up 12 spots to 80th. (CMC)

US launches strikes against Islamic State in Nigeria

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The US has launched strikes against militants linked to the Islamic State group (IS) in north-western Nigeria, where militants have sought to establish a foothold.

Camps run by the group in Sokoto state, which lies on Nigeria’s border with Niger, were hit, the US military said, adding that an “initial assessment” suggested “multiple” fatalities.

US President Donald Trump said theChristmas Day strikes were “powerful and deadly” and labelled the group “terrorist scum”, saying it had been “targeting and viciously killing, primarily, innocent Christians”.

Nigerian Foreign Minister Yusuf Maitama Tuggar told the BBC it was a “joint operation” and had “nothing to do with a particular religion”.

Tuggar said the strikes had been planned “for quite some time” and had used intelligence information provided by Nigeria. He also did not rule out further strikes.

Referencing the timing of the strikes, he said they did not have “anything to do with Christmas, it could be any other day – it is to do with attacking terrorists who have been killing Nigerians”.

The Nigerian government has for several years been fighting a complex network of jihadist groups, which includes Boko Haram and IS-linked splinter groups, but largely in the north-east of the country, hundreds of miles away from Sokoto state.

The Trump administration has previously accused the Nigerian government of failing to protect Christians from jihadist attacks and has claimed a “genocide” is being perpetrated.

Trump has previously labelled Nigeria a “country of particular concern”, a designation used by the US state department that provides for sanctions against countries “engaged in severe violations of religious freedom”.

The US military was ordered to prepare to intervene in Nigeria in November.

At the time, an adviser to Nigerian President Bola Tinubu told BBC News that militants had targeted people “across faiths”, and said any US military action should be carried out jointly.

Groups monitoring violence say there is no evidence to suggest that Christians are being killed more than Muslims in Nigeria, which is divided roughly evenly between followers of the two religions.

In a social media post late on Christmas Day confirming the strikes, Trump said that he would “not allow Radical Islamic Terrorism to prosper”.

US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth said on Thursday that he was “grateful for Nigerian government support & cooperation”.

“Merry Christmas!” he added, writing on X.

The US Department of Defense later posted a short video that appeared to show a missile being launched from a ship.

On Friday morning, the Nigerian foreign ministry said in a statement that the country’s authorities “remain engaged in structured security co-operation with international partners, including the United States of America, in addressing the persistent threat of terrorist and violent extremism”.

“This has led to precision hits on terrorist targets in Nigeria by air strikes in the North West,” the statement said.

Jihadist groups such as Boko Haram and IS-linked offshoots have wrought havoc in north-eastern Nigeria for more than a decade, killing thousands of people.

Most victims have been Muslims, according to Acled, a group that analyses political violence around the world.

Nigerian human rights lawyer and conflict analyst Bulama Bukati speculated that Thursday’s strikes had targeted a relatively new IS-aligned splinter group, which originated in the Sahel region and has recently moved its fighters to Nigeria.

The largest IS-linked group in Nigeria – Islamic State West Africa Province – operates in the north-east of the country, he told BBC World Service, while the smaller group – known locally as Lakurawa – has sought to establish a base in north-western Sokoto state.

He continued: “They started slipping into Nigeria in 2018 but over the past 18 months or two years they established camps in Sokoto state and Kebbi state.

“They have been launching attacks and imposing their social laws over people in Sokoto state over the past 18 months or so.”

According to BBC Monitoring, a pro-IS social media channel has been reporting on almost daily US reconnaissance flights in Sokoto, as well as in the north-eastern state of Borno, where the Nigeria’s largest IS-linked group has its stronghold.

In central Nigeria, there are also frequent clashes between mostly Muslim herders and farming groups, who are often Christian, over access to water and pasture.

Deadly cycles of tit-for-tat attacks have also seen thousands killed – but atrocities have been committed on both sides.

The Nigeria strikes are the second major US intervention targeting IS in recent weeks.

Last week, the US said it had carried out a “massive strike” against IS in Syria.

US Central Command (Centcom) said fighter jets, attack helicopters and artillery “struck more than 70 targets at multiple locations across central Syria”. Aircraft from Jordan were also involved.

Those strikes were launched in retaliation for the killing of three Americans – two soldiers and a civilian interpreter – in an ambush launched by the group. (BBC News)

Lorde: Deeper point being missed

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The tension between Trinidad and Tobago Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar and some of her counterparts in CARICOM rooted in the Venezuela-United States (US) conflict has unearthed unresolved tensions within the region.

That is the view of Professor Troy Lorde who said “any honest analysis must also confront the elephant in the room: Trinidad and Tobago’s economic exposure to the United States.”

Persad-Bissessar’s remarks drew swift response from Prime Minister of Antigua and Barbuda Gaston Browne and criticism from Dr Keith Rowley, Persad-Bissessar’s predecessor.

“The US is a dominant destination for Trinidad’s energy exports and petrochemical products. Access to US markets, US dollar clearing and US regulatory goodwill is not optional. It is existential,” Lorde said.

He said that when Persad-Bissessar declared that CARICOM was “not a reliable partner at this time”, it sounded to some like the opening shot of a fracture in the region’s most durable post-independence institution. On the other hand, others dismissed it as campaign rhetoric dressed up as foreign policy realism.

“Both readings miss the deeper point. This is not, at heart, a dispute about Venezuela. It is about the limits of Caribbean regionalism under geopolitical pressure and what happens when a regional organisation built on consensus, sovereignty and diplomatic restraint collides with the hard realities of security dependence, energy markets and domestic political survival,” he said.

Unique geographical position

The Dean of the Faculty of Social Science at the University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus said Trinidad and Tobago occupied a unique geographical position in relation to Venezuela, and structurally embedded in US energy markets and security architectures in a way most CARICOM states are not.

“When Trinidad grants approval for US military aircraft to transit its airspace – however carefully framed as logistical or non-hostile – it inevitably triggers regional anxieties. Not because other CARICOM states believe Trinidad is conspiring in regime change, but because precedent matters in small-state diplomacy. Once one state is perceived as facilitating “great power” projection, others worry about where the line will be drawn next,” he said.

Against this background, Persad-Bissessar’s criticism was not merely that CARICOM disagreed with Trinidad’s posture, but that the organisation had lost coherence, discipline and reliability,” Lorde reasoned.

“That is a much more serious charge, because it attacks institutional legitimacy, not just policy substance. Is this a real fracture? The short answer is no – but it is a stress fracture and stress fractures become breaks if pressure is repeated often enough,” he said.

Lorde reasoned that CARICOM often behaved as though all member states face equivalent constraints when they do not, since energy dependence, market concentration and security exposure widely vary, and when CARICOM adopts positions that appear morally coherent but strategically detached, states like Trinidad experienced that as indifference rather than solidarity.

‘Real danger’

“Persad-Bissessar’s intervention, read this way, is less a rejection of CARICOM than a warning: regional unity cannot be sustained if it ignores differentiated vulnerability. The real danger is not that Trinidad will abandon CARICOM. It is that CARICOM will drift into performative consensus – issuing statements that satisfy ideological instincts but fail to account for the lived constraints of its members.

“If that happens, more leaders will do what Persad-Bissessar has done: bypass the organisation rhetorically while remaining inside it institutionally. Over time, that hollowing out is far more damaging than any formal exit.

Political analyst Devaron Bruce believes it is time for chairman of CARICOM, Prime Minister of Jamaica Andrew Holness to step in and have a dialogue rather than the parties publicly fighting.

“I know he is certainly caught up with his circumstances, given the hurricane situation but as chairman, I really think that he has to take a stance regarding how the perception of CARICOM is being possibly hurt due to the infighting publicly,” he said.

The issues of the 52-year-old CARICOM are known, but to have the leaders criticising each other was a step in the wrong direction, Bruce said.

“I believe that he would have to put together an emergency session amongst them and really discuss how do we move forward in a more uniformed and conciliatory and less divisive fashion,” said Bruce, who suggested the start of the year for the meeting.

He said the entire set of circumstances was unfortunate, considering that CARICOM has been working in many people’s favour for generations.

He regarded Persad-Bissessar as a lone wolf in her strong criticisms of CARICOM but noted they were not new as he recalled her Trinidad was not the ATM for CARICOM remarks from 2010 when a hurricane affected the region. (AC)