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CDB pleased with new ratings from Standard and Poor’s

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The Barbados-based Caribbean Development Bank (CDB) Wednesday welcomed the ratings by the US-based Standard and Poor’s (S&P) Global Ratings, affirming the bank’s issuer credit rating of ‘AA+’ and an improved short-term issuer credit rating of ‘A-1+’, with a Stable Outlook.

The region’s  premier financial institution said that this rating reflects S&P’s view that, over the next two years, CDB will maintain high capitalisation and a solid business profile, as the region’s preferred lender.

It said that this assessment endorses CDB’s continued financial strength and its critical role in supporting sustainable development across the Caribbean.

According to S&P, the affirmation follows a comprehensive review under its revised methodology for multilateral lending institutions.

The CDB’s risk-adjusted capital (RAC) ratio increased to 59.6 per cent, well above the threshold for extremely strong capital adequacy. This improvement was supported by CDB’s recent Exposure Exchange Agreement (EEA), which reduced portfolio concentration and enhanced risk management.

“This rating underscores the confidence of our shareholders and partners in CDB’s prudent financial and risk management and its unwavering commitment to the region,” said CDB Daniel M. Best.

“Our strong capital position enables us to continue delivering on our mandate to accelerate inclusive and resilient growth for our 19 Borrowing Member Countries,”  he added.

The S&P highlighted CDB’s very strong enterprise risk profile, citing its policies and status among Caribbean sovereign borrowers. The Stable Outlook reflects expectations that CDB will maintain high capitalisation and robust liquidity over the next two years, even amid global economic headwinds and climate-related challenges.

“The bank’s enhanced capital base positions it to expand its loan portfolio in order to strengthen regional climate action and sustainable development,” the CDB added. (CMC)

Insanally elected as IACHR Commissioner

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The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) Wednesday announced that the Permanent Council of the Organization of American States (OAS) has elected Dr. Riyad Insanally as Commissioner.

The IACHR said that Insanally has over 31 years of experience in multilateral diplomacy and that from 2016 to 2021, he served as Guyana’s eighth ambassador to the United States and fourth permanent representative to the OAS, as well as ambassador-designate, nonresident, to Mexico.

It said that he held several senior positions within the OAS and the inter-American system, including serving as chair of the Permanent Council, the Inter-American Council for Integral Development, and the CARICOM Group of Ambassadors.

Most recently, he served as head of the OAS Electoral Observation Mission for the general elections in St. Lucia, held on December 1, this  year.

Insally received Guyana’s third highest award, the Cacique’s Crown of Honour (CCH), in the 2019 National Honours, for “long and distinguished service in the field of diplomacy and international relations”.

The IACHR said that Insanally’s term will run through December 31, 2027 and that his candidacy was presented by Guyana following the resignation of Dr.  Arif Bulkan, who stepped down during his first term as commissioner after being appointed judge with the Trinidad-based Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ).

The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) is an autonomous body of the Organization of American States (OAS) whose mandate is based on the OAS Charter and the American Convention on Human Rights. Its mission is to promote and defend human rights throughout the Americas and to serve as an advisory body to the OAS in this area. (CMC)

Latham & Conway humble West Indies on day of dominance

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 A green-tinged Bay Oval strip at Mount Maunganui promised a bowler’s paradise.

Still, by stumps on Day One, it was the site of a West Indian nightmare, expertly orchestrated by New Zealand’s record-breaking openers Tom Latham and Devon Conway.

When the umpires lifted the bails, the hosts were in a commanding position of 334 for one, and looking ominous for a gigantic first innings score.

Skipper Latham, defying the pitch’s menacing appearance, opted to bat first, a decision Roston Chase’s West Indies initially embraced.

Their pace attack, led by Kemar Roach, Jayden Seales, and Anderson Phillip, generated significant movement, repeatedly beating the edges of both Latham and Conway in a tense, gripping first hour.

Yet, the breakthrough never came. Surviving that early examination, the left-handed pair ground the visitors’ attack into submission.

After the first eight overs, West Indian discipline evaporated. Lengths strayed, pressure dissolved, and the morning session closed with a chanceless New Zealand sitting pretty at 83 for no loss.

The floodgates opened after lunch, as boundaries flowed with increasing ease as Chase scrambled for answers. Conway was particularly severe on Roach in one over, driving, pulling, and punching three consecutive boundaries to signal his intent.

Both batters cruised past fifties, and even a brief rain interruption failed to disrupt their rhythm.

The middle session was a study in dominance: 133 runs came in 29 overs, none of them maidens. Conway, treating spin with disdain, elegantly on-drove Roston Chase to bring up his sixth Test century.

A solitary moment of concern came when a Seales delivery reared into his forearm, but after brief treatment, he batted on unperturbed.

Latham joined him in three-figure territory after tea, notching his 15th Test ton. West Indies’ misery was compounded by a dropped catch off Latham and boundary-laden overs that drained morale. The pair surged past 300, their partnership entering the history books.

The only solace for the regional side arrived with the second new ball. Roach, bowling round the wicket, finally found the edge of Latham’s bat on 152, with Chase taking a sharp, low catch at first slip.

The 86.4 overs it took to get that wicket was the fourth longest this century, with the longest being the 114.1 overs it took Zimbabwe to get a wicket against the West Indies in Bulawayo back in 2023.

It ended a monumental 323-run stand, the joint 12th-highest opening partnership in Test history, and the highest in New Zealand.

Conway marched on, finishing the day unbeaten on 178, with a maiden Test double-century firmly in his sights. For the West Indies, a day that began with promise descended into a physically and morally draining ordeal, leaving them with a monumental task to wrest back control of the Test. (CMC)

Call to strengthen Public Service

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Instead of reducing the number of members in the House of Assembly, Barbados needs to “do everything it takes to strengthen the Public Service”.

That was the recommendation from Government backbencher Marsha Caddle recently, who said she was “bemused to see recent comments that suggested that there are too many MPs (Members of Parliament)”.

Speaking in the Upper Chamber recently during debate on the Constitution (Amendment) Bill, 2025 and the Parliament (Miscellaneous Provisions) Bill, 2025, Independent Senator Andrew Mallalieu asserted that Barbados had too many parliamentarians.

Caddle, during debate on the Public Service (Appointments) Bill, 2025, said fewer MPs was not the answer, suggesting that improving public sector processes and systems was the more viable solution and outcome which would ultimately benefit constituents.

“I was bemused to see recent comments that suggested that there are too many MPs, and the irony of the origin of the comment from an unelected official with a platform to be able to say that . . . if there are 30 MPs, we estimate that they have 7 000 constituents each,” said the representative for St Michael South Central.

“Well, first of all, there are some that have 10 000 [constituents], but not only that . . . the MP now will sit weekly and meet in her or his clinic dozens of those . . . constituents, and enter in her system or in their notebook the range of requests and concerns that then have to . . . be directed to all the many different organs and tentacles of Government.”

Caddle noted that “Barbadians are very dignified people and public officers tend to take great pride in their office, and they also tend to have a lot of respect for your office and so it is a function of that respect that means that an MP will tend to have a positive relationship with a public officer”.

Marshall: Contract judges not being disadvantaged

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Members of the judiciary who have been appointed temporarily, and hence work on contract, are not being disadvantaged and their ability to adjudicate independently is not under threat.

Attorney General Dale Marshall made that clear recently, as he also stressed that all of the appointments in question were constitutional.

Marshall was responding to what he called “another red herring” raised by Opposition Leader Ralph Thorne recently as the House of Assembly debated, and later passed, the Public Service (Appointments) Bill, 2025.

Marshall, who is also Minister of Legal Affairs, said that appointing temporary judges was permitted under the Constitution in circumstances where more of these jurists were needed beyond the 13 allowed under the Supreme Court Of Adjudicature Act.

He explained: “TheSupreme Court of Adjudicature Act in Section Four says that the High Court shall consist of the Chief Justice and 13 judges. That’s the number that is stipulated.

“But in Section 82(2) of the Constitution, it says that if the Chief Justice at any time feels that the business of the court is such that it requires the appointment of additional judges, those additional judges can be appointed on a temporary basis.

“If you are 13, any other judges that you bring on have to be a contract, because you can’t appoint more than 13, plain and simple, and this was so when the number of judges was nine. It was so when the number of judges was five.”

The Member of Parliament for St Joseph said this meant that “the Constitution recognises that there may come a time when the number of judges that has been statutorily set will not be sufficient to discharge the work that’s before the Supreme Court, and it gives the Chief Justice the opportunity to bring on additional judges, but because you can’t appoint them permanently, the only way you can bring them on is on contract”.

Fogging suspended until 2026

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The Ministry of Health and Wellness advises that its routine fogging programme has been suspended for the Christmas period.

However, the Vector Control Unit will continue to provide rapid response and emergency fogging services throughout the holiday season.

In the event of an emergency, members of the public are encouraged to contact the Environmental Health Officers at their nearest polyclinic.

The Ministry further advises that the weekly fogging programme is expected to resume early in the New Year. (BGIS)

US-Venezuela conflict ‘bad for business’

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The possibility of rising tensions becoming military conflict between the United States (US) and Venezuela means that it cannot be business as usual for the Caribbean business community or the region’s economies.

That is the consensus of a panel of regional business leaders and industry experts, who are calling for the private sector and Caribbean governments to unify and come up with a plan to make their countries more resilient whether or not there was military action.

This was in the context of three scenarios involving the US and Venezuela military conflict, protracted standoff, or a negotiated deal.

These issues were in focus last week when the Trinidad and Tobago-based Caribbean Corporate Governance Institute (CCGI) assembled a panel to discuss how tensions between the United States and Venezuela could impact on the Caribbean business community. 

The panel, which was moderated by CCGI chief executive officer (CEO) Kamla Rampersad de Silva, included Reshma Advani Rojas, managing director of Advance Commercial Equipment Ltd and CEO of the Odin Group of Companies in Trinidad and Tobago, and Ken Hackshaw, who is managing director and lead consultant at KH Business Consulting Limited.

The others were Lorraine Pouchet,  president of The Trinidad & Tobago Incoming Tour Operators Association and interim chair of The Trinidad and Tobago Coalition of Tourism Associations; and Martha Miller, CEO of National Rums of Jamaica, who is also first vice president of the Jamaica Chamber of Commerce.

Key points discussed included the need for regional cooperation, supply chain security, energy diversification, risk management, proactive planning and regional unity.

Rojas said she was “a Caribbean business owner who has to live with the knock on effects in real time”
of the US-Venezuela issue.

“When these big countries have disagreements, small, open economies like ours feel it in ordinary places – so the ports, the foreign exchange queue, the cost of insurance and the mood in the boardroom,” she warned.

“We sit in a region that depends on three fragile things – confidence, connectivity and cooperation. When tensions rise between the United States and Venezuela, all three of these things come under quiet pressure, and that’s where us as boards and private sector have the real work to do.”

Her concern was that “if tensions were to harden into a visible conflict zone in our basin, the headlines would focus first on security and on energy, but the private sector would feel a tightening around the chest when it comes to money and when it comes to movement”.

“The practical response for boards is to treat access to capital and trade routes as strategic assets, not background services. That means reviewing how dependent the business is on short term credits that can be repriced very quickly and deliberately hitting some shifts into more stable facilities while the markets are still relatively calm,” she advised.

“It also means looking at where your goods actually travel, because if you are reliant on [specific] ports and . . . hubs, if you don’t have a regional alternative, you’re talking about your preferred route becoming more complex or more expensive.” 

Rojas also identified a key role for CARICOM, stating: “CARICOM has to stop treating us as though the single market and economy is an academic exercise. We have to remove petty non-tariff barriers, harmonised basic standards and fixed inter-island transport so they’re not nice-to-haves anymore; this is risk mitigation.

“But this is also where the private sector participation in regional investment really matters. When each country does its own quiet analysis in isolation, we get 15 versions of the same anxiety, but when business leaders engage through CARICOM structures, through chambers or board industry groups like [CCGI], we can start building common positions around energy projects, around shipping, correspondent banking, and present a more coherent face to the world.”

The business woman added: “From my perspective, sitting in a Trinidad company that trades across the region, the most useful thing we can do is behave as though the Caribbean is like an interconnected space, and organise our risk thinking accordingly. So that means seeing a Trinidad risk, Guyana risk, a Barbados risk, and the Venezuelan and US risk as part of a bigger picture, not all these disconnected stories.

“If tensions escalate, the companies . . . that have built regional shock absorbers will bend rather than
break. But if the tensions drag on, those who have embedded regional data and cooperation into their governance will have fewer blind bets that they’re making.

“We cannot script Washington or Caracas, that is not our purview, but we can absolutely decide whether we show up as a collection of spectators or as a region that understands vulnerabilities and prepare ourselves to act together.”

Pouchet said there was a need to “find a creative and positive way as to how we are going to respond to these external factors that will affect us”.

Noting that most Caribbean islands “pride themselves on tourism being the backbone of their economies, while her homeland long focused on oil and gas, she said the Trinidad and Tobago tourism sector was already feeling fallout from the US-Venezuela stand-off.

This included groups cancelling trips to the twin island republic and the fact that “we have seen one cancellation of a cruise line”.

“It is affecting us. We have received notice of cancellations of bookings in the hotels, some of the bed and breakfast cancellations for groups coming in for tours. We have also have had cancellations for groups coming off the cruise lines,” Pouchet reported.

She saw it as an opportunity “domestically to help our people to be able to holiday at home, to help our people to be able to understand that they are going to be called upon to be ambassadors for the destination, [and] for the government to also look at how can they assist the various stakeholders to stay afloat”.

“When we don’t have the numbers, then we have a problem. St Lucia, for example, has over 600 calls this cruise ship season, we have 40-something. So we need to understand why we’re not having what we’re supposed to have,” said Pouchet.

Hackshaw, who is founder and president of the Caribbean Risk Management Academy and CEO of the Trinidad and Tobago Risk Management Institute, stated: “If US attacks, I would advise folks to throw out whatever business continuity plans they may have had in the past, whether it’s COVID or for hurricanes.

“This is a game changer, this is unprecedented for the Caribbean. God forbid, [and the] US attacks Venezuela, . . . and this is not fear-mongering here, literally, all bets are off as we know [for] business transactions today. Airspace is going to be locked down, maritime traffic is going to be locked down. I need us to be very realistic when dealing with this possible scenario.”

His view was that “it’s more likely than that” there would ultimately be military conflict involving the US and Venezuela, warning that “if the first scenario comes to pass, there is just so much impact and not just Trinidad, [but] to the wider Caribbean.

“All three scenarios are very much possible and as the movies will sometimes tell us, . . . pray for the
best, but plan for the worst – and a plan is needed.”

Miller said the unfolding situation between the US and Venezuela had the Caribbean sitting “directly
in line of economic, social and security consequences”.

“We’ll have an active conflict zone in the Caribbean if the United States were to launch an attack on Venezuela. The impact on Jamaica and region would be immediate and severe,” she stressed.

“For NRJ, the first challenge would be shipping disruption, our rum exports, molasses imports, fuel deliveries, container movements rely on safe and predictable Caribbean sea lanes.

“In a conflict, insurers raise premiums overnight, vessels re-route, transit times increase, costs surge.
That directly affects production, cash flow and our ability to fulfil international contracts.

“Second is energy cost volatility. Any instability in Venezuela reverberates across the Caribbean. Third, financial and foreign exchange volatility, and more broadly, a decline in tourism, which affects on island consumption.”

Miller called the current situation “another catastrophe like COVID looming in the background”.

“The risks are here, we need to now recognise that we’re in this period, and as a board, as private sector individuals, engage the people we need to engage. If we need to engage the government, we need to do so. But this is an opportunity for us to deal with all the risks that we face,” she said.

“We know that whenever Russia becomes involved in geopolitical conflict, critical industries become targets of cyber security attacks. Energy facilities, logistics systems and manufacturers must be prepared for heightened cyber threats.

“War doesn’t start the day they fire the first bomb they have done their planning before, and everything will hit you. So we have to be prepared at this point for all of the cyber security risks, et cetera, that could come at us,”Miller suggested.

Taitt: Debate feels rushed, unsure  

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Just before she abstained from voting in the Constitution Amendment Bill, 2025, Independent Senator Monique Taitt had a number of burning questions surrounding the bill.

Speaking recently at the sitting of the Senate before the Bill was passed, Taitt made her concerns known before the vote was taken.

First of all, she expressed concern about Government addressing the Constitution in “pieces”.

“The Constitution is our law. It is who we are supposed to be. It is supposed to be the position, our law. And what I am concerned about is why we keep going at it, piece, piece, piece, piece, like it’s a bill as opposed to the Constitution,” she stated.

“We should be approaching the Constitution carefully. We should be approaching it slowly. I know that’s
a term that Senator (Dr Shantal) Monroe-Knight does not like us to use. She always says we don’t go slow. But we should be clear when we are going towards the Constitution. So my first query is, we had a Constitutional Reform Commission that dealt with constitutional amendment, but we haven’t seen it here yet. And so are these proposed amendments a part of that commission’s remit? Where’s the report?”
she asked.

Taitt added: “I was expecting if we’re going to be tackling a Constitution that has been around for some time, that we’re gonna do it holistically. We’re gonna do it after public discourse, public debate. Piecemeal sounds or feels like a rushed thing, an unsure thing.”

In terms of the two amendments presented she stated: “I’m looking for the earth-shattering urgency of either one. Now, one can argue, depending on how you look at it, that the one that’s dealing with the speaker may be earth-shattering or urgent, depending on when the bell is rung. But by itself, it’s not urgent. Not to the point where we’re doing a Constitutional amendment on the 15th of December, 2025, before Christmas, without more, without discussion, without bringing in the public, without the commission’s input.”

She added that the Constitutional Reform Commission had not been presented to the Senate.

“So my question is, why? Why are we messing, my word, with the Constitution with two not very important to my mind amendments for something as important as our Constitution? Now, whether it’s a republic Constitution, as referred to by Senator (Andre) Worrell, or if it’s a Constitution, it is the ultimate law of Barbados. It is not something to be trifled with. So that is my first question. Why these two? What about more important things that we could be dealing with the Constitution?”

 Secondly, Taitt questioned information relating to the amendment.

“If we’re coming with an amendment, where is the detail? We have no information. The information that comes with this proposed amendment, let’s deal with the speaker, has no procedural detail. We’re making amendments that if we’re not careful, we’re gonna have to amend our amendments.” 

She added: “And we know this government is good at that. But the problem is, when you do it with a bill, that’s one thing. But to have to be messing with the Constitution to fix something, that is a different thing altogether.You’re not supposed to come to the Constitution unless and until
you’re sure.”

In terms of the amendment relating to the appointment of a Speaker Taitt also had concerns.

“If I’m looking at clause 45A2, and I quote, sir, ‘when the House of Assembly first meets after any dissolution of Parliament and before it proceeds to the dispatch of any business, it shall elect a person who is not a member of the House of Assembly or the Senate to be speaker. And whenever the office of speaker becomes vacant for any reason other than a dissolution of Parliament, the House shall, as soon as practicable, elect another such person to that office.’

“Okay, we have that. But Mr President, the person shall not be a member of the House of Assembly or the Senate. But is this person . . . . I believe it was the leader of the Government business spoke of an independent speaker. So what does that really mean? Because it’s not defined here from what I can see from my quick glance. I just became aware of the legislation this morning, having only been sworn in on Friday.”

She queried: “How soon before a person is not a member of the House of Assembly or the Senate can a person be qualified to be the Speaker?”

Taitt, an attorney, referenced the office of the President which she said could not be a“must neither be of either house, but it has to be for a period of 12 months, if I’m correct, subject to correction. There’s no such qualification for the Speaker. So having set a precedent and a qualification for the President, I would figure that the Speaker’s position is just as important.”

Level of borrowing ‘can’t be sustained’

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Government is misusing, mismanaging and abusing debt, says Opposition Senator, Ryan Walters.

“This level of borrowing and the way in which this Government is treating to the borrowing is not sustainable for our future generations,” Senator Walters told the Senate recently.

He charged that, “between June 2018 and September 2025 government is reported to have borrowed $7.341 billion”. He added that Minister in the Ministry of Finance Ryan Straughan had reported that between June 2018 and September this year government paid $9.64 billion of debt.

“Mr President, at June 2018, the gross public sector debt as per the Central Bank was $16.065 billion,” he added. 

“If you add the money borrowed by this government, $7.34 billion and you subtract the government claimed to have paid or repaid, $9.643 billion, the result is $13.763 billion. The Central Bank report at September 2025 shows gross public sector debt at $14.876 billion Mr President,” Senator Walters said. 

 “That is a gap of $1.1 billion based on this government’s assertions. Of what they borrowed and what they paid.”

He added: “Mr President, they must come and answer to this difference because this is a material difference,” the Senator added.

Walters said” People are scared of the debt. People are concerned. They (Government) are kicking the can down the road,” he said.

Walters said Government had allocated $120 million to upgrade the medical facility used during the COVID-19 pandemic to a medical tourism facility.

He said the site was currently being used to provide accommodation for construction workers. (HH)

US$81m profit for Sagicor

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Sagicor is reporting an “outstanding” third quarter performance, including a US$81 million net profit attributable to is shareholders.

As they look to the rest of the financial year, senior management of the group say that following Hurricane Melissa’s recent devastation in Jamaica they expect no more than a US$10 million “potential net income hit”
in that country.

The financial services provider in Canada, the United States (US), and the Caribbean, recently  announced its results for the third quarter ended September 30.

Sagicor Financial Company Ltd president and chief executive officer Andre Mousseau, told an earnings conference call: “I’m very pleased for us to announce another outstanding quarterly performance. On a core basis, our results reflect broad-based strength.

“Our Canadian business continues to show outstanding profitability, our US business grew its assets by about US$250 million from the prior quarter and continues to generate strong spreads, and both of our Caribbean operating segments showed strong core profitability, reflecting progress on initiatives that we’ve been working on for years.”

He said the US$81 million in net income to shareholders reflected those strong core numbers “plus a reversal of some of the income volatility that had gone the other way earlier in the year and seems endemic under the IFRS 17 standard”.

“With these strong results, coupled with some opportunistic share buybacks, we’re at a record book value per share whether you follow in Canadian or US dollars,” Mousseau added.

Sagicor’s financial report covered the period before Hurricane Melissa made landfall in Jamaica on October 28.

The group’s chief financial officer Kathy Jenkins told the conference call that “with respect to the economic impact on our business, our preliminary estimate is that the impact in quarter four will be either immaterial or just marginally material to Sagicor at a group level”.

“So today we would say a potential net income hit of US$5 million to US$10 million to SFC. Our small property and casualty business in Jamaica is heavily reinsured and could only generate losses of less than US$3 million,” she told financial analysts from RBC Capital Markets, National Bank Financial, Scotiabank and Acumen Capital Partners.

“It will take more time to assess the impact on our lending portfolio through our bank in Jamaica, but again, our major clients are insured with other companies and so we are talking primarily about the knock-on effects to small borrowers.

“We are assessing forbearance for a number of smaller customers, doing the right thing for customers in affected areas as they sort themselves out, not ultimately economic losses necessarily.”

Jenkins added: “And we have also given well over US$1 million so far directly to relief efforts that we and other private sector leaders are championing, and we will expense those.

“Once you factor in the fact that we own 49 per cent of the Jamaican operations, our view today is that SFC’s net exposure will be below US$10 million.

“Prior to this event, our Jamaican business was really hitting on all cylinders, so we believe our Jamaican business will come back strong in 2026 and beyond as rebuilding efforts may stimulate the economy there.”