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JAMAICA: Drug Courts Making An Impact

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#Kingston, October 19, 2018 – Jamaica – Minister of Justice, Hon. Delroy Chuck, says the Drug Treatment Courts across the island are making an impact in transforming the lives of drug-dependent offenders.  He cited the 2017 report from the drug court in Manchester, which pointed to “improvement in the participants’ behaviour as the court authorities monitor their treatment”.  He said the report further highlighted increased support and court attendance by family members of offenders.

Minister Chuck was speaking at the opening of a two-day training workshop on alternatives to incarceration for individuals with a substance-abuse disorder, at his Constant Spring Road offices in St. Andrew on Wednesday (October 17).

The Drug Treatment Courts provide for treatment and rehabilitation of persons with drug/substance-abuse problems, under judicial supervision.  Focus is placed on non-violent criminal offenders, who are identified soon after arrest and placed in the programme at their consent. Regular drug tests are conducted in order to monitor their progress.  The intervention involves the participation of judges, prosecutors, defence counsel, substance-abuse specialists and law-enforcement personnel.

Minister Chuck, in hailing the work of the drug courts, said that providing assistance for persons with substance-abuse problems is a crucial focus of the Ministry in alleviating the pressure on the justice system.  He argued that Jamaica, like many countries around the world, has had to grapple with the reality that a number of persons who are brought before the criminal courts are suffering from substance-abuse problems, which may have influenced their criminal behaviour.

“Many of these persons were non-violent offenders, who repeatedly pass through the courts and probationary systems without being held accountable for changing their behaviour and, therefore, followed a predictable cycle of arrest, prosecution, conviction, incarceration and release, only to return to the courts again,” he pointed out.

He implored the authorities at the drug courts to remain steadfast in “engaging the community, going into schools, visiting the street corners” and spreading the message of drug-abuse prevention.

Minister of Health, Dr. the Hon. Christopher Tufton, for his part, pointed out that the establishment of the drug courts was in recognition that a new approach was required in dealing with offenders that places them in rehabilitation rather than behind bars.  He said national drug-prevention efforts need to incorporate best practices such as sustained interventions across developmental stages that include families and communities.

Dr. Tufton said that greater emphasis must be placed on building the capacity of teachers and guidance counsellors to detect risks and problems early, and interventions in the primary healthcare setting to address adolescent substance abuse before they advance into misuse and high-risk behaviour that may lead to criminal activity.  He welcomed the staging of the workshop in assisting these efforts.

The two-day session involved partnership with the United States Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (INL), and the Organization of American States (OAS), among others.  It provided training to health and justice sectors personnel on alternatives to incarceration for non-violent drug offenders.

The objective is to develop a local plan of action that will better enable offenders to access treatment alternatives instead of incarceration, and to break the cycle of criminal behaviour, alcohol and drug use, and imprisonment.

 

Release: JIS

Contact: Ainsworth Morris

 

Photos: Adrian Walker

 

Justice 1: Minister of Justice, Hon. Delroy Chuck, addresses a training workshop on alternatives to incarceration for individuals with a substance abuse disorder, held on Wednesday (October 17) at the Ministry in St. Andrew.

 

Justice 2: Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP), Paula Llewelyn (right), accepts an Alternatives to Incarceration manual from Senior Foreign Affairs Officer, United States Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (INL), Charlotte Sisson. Occasion was a training workshop on alternatives to incarceration for individuals with a substance abuse disorder, held on Wednesday (October 17) at the Ministry of Justice in St. Andrew.

 

Justice 3: Minister of Justice, Hon. Delroy Chuck (centre); and Minister of Health, Dr. the Hon. Christopher Tufton (third right), display copies of the Alternatives to Incarceration manual, during a training workshop on alternatives to incarceration for individuals with a substance abuse disorder, held  on Wednesday (October 17) at the Ministry of Justice in St. Andrew. Others (from left) are Senior Foreign Affairs Officer, United States Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (INL), Charlotte Sisson; Executive Director, National Council on Drug Abuse (NCDA), Michael Tucker; Senior Puisne Judge, Supreme Court, Carol Lawrence-Beswick; Organization of American States (OAS) Representative in Jamaica, Jeanelle van GlaanenWeygel; and Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP), Paula Llewellyn.

 

 

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Mottley Sworn in After Historic Clean Sweep in Barbados Election

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Barbados, February 12, 2026 – Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley was this afternoon officially sworn in for a third consecutive term, hours after delivering one of the most emphatic election victories in Caribbean political history — another complete capture of all 30 seats in Barbados’ House of Assembly.

The ceremony, conducted by President His Excellency Lt. Col. The Most Honourable Jeffrey Bostic, marked the formal start of a new administration following the February 11, 2026 general election, which returned the Barbados Labour Party (BLP) to power with a renewed and overwhelming mandate.

In a statement after taking the oath, Mottley said she accepted the responsibility “with humility and resolve,” thanking the people of Barbados for placing their trust in her leadership once again and urging national unity as her government begins its new term. Attorney Wilfred Abrahams was also sworn in as Attorney General.

The result is historic not only for its scale but for its consistency. This is the third straight general election in which the BLP has won every constituency, reinforcing Mottley’s dominance in national politics and extending an unmatched era of one-party control in the modern democratic period.

Voting day unfolded under the watch of a CARICOM Election Observation Mission, led by Antigua and Barbuda’s Supervisor of Elections Ian Hughes and supported by senior electoral officials from Belize and Jamaica. The team engaged key institutions ahead of the poll and monitored the process across the island.

Regional leaders were swift in their congratulations.

Guyana’s President Irfaan Ali described the outcome as “emphatic and historic,” saying the clean sweep reflected how deeply Mottley’s leadership has connected with Barbadians and expressing optimism about strengthening ties between the two countries.

Jamaica’s Prime Minister Andrew Holness also hailed the victory, noting that her re-election provides an opportunity to deepen cooperation within CARICOM and advance shared regional priorities.

The scale of the win again leaves Barbados without a parliamentary opposition, a reality that has become a defining feature of the political landscape since 2018. Supporters argue the repeated mandate reflects public confidence in Mottley’s stewardship of economic reform, climate diplomacy, the transition to a republic, and Barbados’ expanding global influence.

Now, newly sworn in and backed by another unanimous parliamentary majority, Mottley begins a third term with both extraordinary political capital and equally high expectations at home and across the region.

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Liberty Caribbean Committed to ‘Elevating Region’ at CANTO  

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Simone Martin-Sulgan, Vice President and General Manager, Flow Trinidad & Tobago

Liberty Caribbean is Diamond Sponsor of CANTO Connect 2026 and 42nd AGM

 

Port of Spain, TRININDAD & TOBAGO (February 1, 2026) — Liberty Caribbean, the operators of Flow. Liberty Business and BTC, has reaffirmed its commitment to turning regional connectivity into measurable economic and social outcomes as Diamond Sponsor of CANTO Connect 2026 and its 42nd Annual General Meeting.

CANTO is the leading regional body that brings together telecommunications operators, ICT providers, regulators, governments, and industry partners to support the development of the Caribbean’s digital and communications landscape.

Simone Martin-Sulgan, Vice President and General Manager, Flow Trinidad & Tobago delivered the sponsor’s address on behalf of Liberty Caribbean.

“The work of laying fibre and lighting towers is done; connectivity is now our foundation,” she said.

“The real task before us is to translate that foundation into innovation, productivity and prosperity for our people. Intelligent connectivity, such as networks designed for 5G, AI and IoT, will be the platform for smarter public services, more resilient systems and scaled opportunities for Caribbean entrepreneurs.”

Martin-Sulgan emphasised that infrastructure alone will not deliver sustainable progress.

“Digital progress must become digital prosperity. That means creating career pathways for young people, helping local businesses scale and ensuring citizens across our communities can fully participate in the digital economy. A connected Caribbean should also be a confident, creative and globally competitive Caribbean,” she said.

Liberty Caribbean is represented by a senior delegation at CANTO Connect to support the conference objectives of aligning policy, investment and execution across the region under this year’s theme ‘Elevate the Caribbean – From Connectivity to Global Competitiveness’.

Liberty Caribbean’s delegation includes Inge Smidts, Chief Executive Officer; Desron Bynoe, VP and General Manager, Flow Barbados; Susanna O’Sullivan, VP and General Manager, North Caribbean; Marilyn Sealy, Senior Director, Head of Communications; Dominic Boon, VP, People; Daniel Neiva, Chief Commercial Officer, B2B; Bradley Ramcharan, Director, B2B, Trinidad & Tobago; Yolande Headley, Country Manager, Dutch East Caribbean; and Jade Reymond, Country Manager, Flow Anguilla.

Martin-Sulgan thanked CANTO’s local secretariat for convening the forum and urged delegates to convert conversation into action.

“If we align policy, capital and capability, the Caribbean can move from connectivity to competitiveness. Liberty Caribbean will continue to invest in resilient networks, nurture homegrown talent and partner to deliver measurable social and economic value across our markets,” she said.

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Adam Stewart named CNW’s Businessman/Philanthropist of the Year for 2025

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Executive Chairman of Sandals Resorts, Adam Stewart, has been named Businessman/Philanthropist of the Year for 2025 by the regional news publication, Caribbean National Weekly (CNW).

The publication recognised Stewart for his leadership in hospitality, his ongoing investments in regional tourism, his steady crisis response and his philanthropic work throughout what it described as a year filled with both remarkable achievements and significant challenges.

CNW highlighted how 2025 saw industry recognition for Stewart, major announcements of multimillion‑dollar developments across his all‑inclusive luxury resort brands and an invitation to join the prestigious Wall Street Journal CEO Council.

But the publication said his impact extended well beyond business milestones.

“In 2025, the Executive Chairman of Sandals Resorts didn’t just guide his iconic hospitality empire through crisis – he used its scale and influence to help shape Jamaica’s rebound and lay groundwork for future regional growth,” CNW wrote.

The defining moment, it said, came in late October when Hurricane Melissa caused severe damage to parts of Jamaica’s tourism infrastructure. Stewart responded by leading transparent communication with global travel advisors, partners and team members, and made a landmark pledge, that 100 per cent of Sandals and Beaches employees would remain on payroll and receive Christmas bonuses, even at resorts temporarily closed for extensive restoration and upgrades. The company also committed more than US$3 million in staff recovery aid, providing direct support to families affected by the storm.

CNW further highlighted the work of the Sandals Foundation under Stewart’s guidance, noting record levels of community engagement and targeted disaster‑recovery support in healthcare, livelihoods and the environment.

In response to the honour, Stewart said he was “deeply humbled” to receive the Businessman/Philanthropist of the Year recognition and expressed his gratitude to his teams and partners for their dedication during an extraordinary year.

“This award reflects far more than any one individual. It is a direct result of people showing up every day for their communities and believing business is a force for good. It belongs to the extraordinary teams who carry our shared vision forward – especially the Sandals Foundation, whose work continues to create lasting change across education, health care, disaster relief and environmental stewardship,” Stewart stated.

“To every colleague and partner who helps bring this mission to life – thank you for your commitment, heart and belief.”

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