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Turks and Caicos Returns to CHTA Caribbean Marketplace

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San Juan, Puerto Rico, October 12, 2022  – The Turks & Caicos Hotel and Tourism Association (TCHTA) and Turks and Caicos Tourist Board presented an impressive representation at the Caribbean Hotel and Tourism Association’s 40th annual Caribbean Travel Marketplace held October 3rd-5th.

 The region’s largest travel forum made a high-energy and heartwarming return to its live format this year, hosted by Discover Puerto Rico and the Puerto Rico Hotel & Tourism Association.

 Karen Whitt, TCHTA Board Director and Marketing Chair for the regional event shared, “It was a beautiful reunion of the travel community. After nearly 3 years of virtual communications, the excitement to engage with travel partners and friends was palpable. As Lead for the event, I was very proud to have such strong participation from Turks and Caicos. There is a beautiful shift happening right now as the region is moving into a mode of growth, so to have our destination here ensuring our brand is front and center is priceless.”

 The TCHTA, Turks & Caicos Tourist Board, The Hartling Group properties, Ocean Club Resorts, Tides Grace Bay, interCaribbean Airways, The Somerset, Villa Renaissance, and Seven Stars Resort were all a part of the delegation representing ‘brand TCI’.

 Tanya Duelfer, Managing Director of U.S. Operations for Ocean Club Resorts shared why Ocean Club Resorts is always represented at the annual Marketplace, “Events like this where you can talk with your island and at-large partners is tremendously effective on keeping a pulse on the industry and market trends.” As for the feeling of the entire event she said, “It was good to finally be back, in person. We’ve worked hard over the years to establish Ocean Club Resorts within the TCI resort community and build strong relationships with our market partners. Being together in person…it’s so important for those relationships.”

This year, the Destination Resilience Awards were introduced with Turks and Caicos claiming the number one spot in the Human Resources and Staffing Category won by Grace Bay Car Rentals & Sales. The company nabbed the top stop by demonstrating their ability to maintain their employees throughout closure, support community food basket initiatives, provide personal and professional development opportunities to team members, new developments in the business operation, and their focus on sustainability. TCHTA CEO, Stacy Cox, accepted the award of GBCR’s behalf.

 More than 1100 delegates from 28 countries, representatives from 19 buyer markets, and 350 supplier companies attended this year’s Marketplace resulting in over 14,000 appointments.  The regional forum saw new interest with buyers from Latvia, Poland, Mexico, and India participating for the first time.

 The meeting floor was busy throughout, and the State of the Caribbean Hospitality Industry Address delivered by CHTA President Nicola Madden-Greig revealed that the Caribbean has now shifted from recovery to growth mode with affluent travellers driving that momentum. Data shows that the South America market should be a focus for the region, and that sustainable policies must be at the forefront of the region’s growth plan. She also told travel stakeholders that regional and multi-destination travel is another growth opportunity to be explored.

 A key component of the Caribbean Marketplace is the destinations’ opportunity for an up-close and personal experience with the fourth estate. Updates, new brand campaigns, new developments, and features are shared with local, regional, and international journalists.

 The Turks and Caicos press conference was led by CEO of the TCHTA, Stacy Cox, and Acting Director of the Tourist Board, Mary Lightbourne. Starting off the session with a vibrant video presentation produced by TCHTA members Visual Storytelling and SOS Media, Cox and Lightbourne shared industry updates on recent and upcoming resort openings; the $25m investment slated for the cruise sector; plans for the new Providenciales and South Caicos terminals; the destination’s recent awards and sustainability efforts; and the ongoing DMO transition. Feedback from media was outstanding, and interest remains piqued for projects in the pipeline in Turks and Caicos.

 With forty-five appointments in two days, Turks and Caicos is still trending as a top destination among buyers and their clients. The TCHTA CEO shared, “There is nothing quite like these touchpoints with the travel community to gauge interest from buyers. We couldn’t be more pleased with the positive feedback we’ve received. Turks and Caicos is still top of mind for travel.”

Cox was also the recipient of a commemorative plaque in appreciation of her leadership as President of the Caribbean Society of Hotel Association Executives (CSHAE) from 2017-2020. “Reconnecting with fellow Association Executives from the region was also an invaluable part of the experience. This is always a great opportunity to hear how other destinations are faring, share best practices, and build relationships with incoming executives for continued dialogue and partnership with our brothers and sisters in the region.”

 Marketplace is set apart as the Caribbean’s largest tourism marketing event and is one that many TCHTA member properties ensure is a part of their annual marketing calendar. Snjezana Andrews, General Manager of The Somerset on Grace Bay, shared her property’s interest in attending, “The event, I feel, could not have been at a more opportune time to re-energize our base, revitalize existing relationships that may have fell off and make new ones; a great “meet and greet” to put faces to names and actually restore the human connection of face-to-face interactions. The buyers were vibrant and ready to link with its industry partners, and based on the overall feel of the event, the sellers showed just as much enthusiasm. I know that I did! … Kudos to CHTA for making this all possible again as we all travel the road back to normalcy!”

 The CHTA has announced that it will likely produce the next Caribbean Marketplace event as soon as Spring 2023, with a host destination to be announced soon.

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Guyanese Scholar and Olympian Arrested in Iowa ICE Crackdown

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Deandrea Hamilton | Editor

 

September 27, 2025 – In a shocking breach of public trust and institutional oversight, Ian Andre Roberts, superintendent of Des Moines Public Schools, who is a citizen of Guyana, was arrested on September 26 by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) under a string of serious offenses that raise troubling questions about hiring practices, accountability, and public safety.

Roberts, born in Georgetown, Guyana, is a former Olympian and accomplished scholar.  According to online reports, he earned a bachelor’s degree from Coppin State University after transferring from St. Francis College in Brooklyn, where he played soccer.  He holds two master’s degrees—from St. John’s University and Georgetown University’s McDonough School of Business—attended an Executive MBA program at MIT Sloan School of Management and earned a doctorate in education with a focus on urban educational leadership from Trident University.

Despite these accomplishments, Roberts was living and working without legal authorization.  ICE reported that he fled a traffic stop and abandoned his school-issued vehicle.  At the time of his arrest, he was reportedly in possession of a loaded handgun, a fixed-blade hunting knife, and $3,000 in cash.  He also has a prior weapons-related charge.

ICE officials questioned how Roberts could hold such a prominent role while subject to a final deportation order issued in May 2024.  The school district said they were unaware of his immigration status, noting that he had undergone background checks and completed an I-9 form confirming work authorization.  Roberts was placed on administrative leave pending further investigation.

This case highlights vulnerabilities in systems meant to safeguard public institutions and underscores the challenges ICE faces in identifying individuals operating outside U.S. immigration laws while in positions of authority.

For many, Roberts has become a near-literal poster child for these enforcement gaps.

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Bermuda Shaken by Targeted Murder as Crime Returns After a Decade of Calm

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Deandrea Hamilton | Editor

 

Bermuda is reeling after the brazen murder of 37-year-old Janae Minors, a mother of two, who was gunned down in her own beauty supply store on Court Street, Pembroke. The attack, which police describe as “targeted,” has rattled the island, not only for its brutality but for what it says about the state of law and order in a country that less than a decade ago was celebrating a dramatic fall in violent crime.

The Attack on Court Street

According to police, at approximately 4:45 p.m. on Tuesday, September 16, a lone gunman pulled up on a stolen black motorcycle, walked into the Beauty Monster shop Minors owned, and shot her multiple times. Despite the rapid response of emergency services, she succumbed to her injuries shortly after being transported to hospital.

Detectives say the killer was thin, tall, dressed in dark clothing with a full-face helmet, and wearing bright gloves. CCTV shows him fleeing north on Court Street, down Tills Hill toward TCD, before turning onto Marsh Folly Road. Investigators are pursuing all leads, with a focus on recovering evidence from nearby cameras and eyewitness accounts.

Police Commissioner Darrin Simons confirmed the attack bore the hallmarks of gang-related violence, a chilling indicator that Bermuda’s gang rivalries — long simmering beneath the surface — may once again be spilling into broad daylight.

A Vibrant Life Cut Short

Minors, remembered as a hardworking entrepreneur with “a vibrant, beautiful personality,” leaves behind two children, ages 16 and 18. Her murder has ignited outrage across Bermuda, not just for its senselessness but for its timing: the island had once prided itself on virtually stamping out gun violence.

Then: Near-Zero Murders

Back in 2014, Bermuda made international headlines for reporting zero firearm murders — a remarkable achievement given the small island had endured a spate of gang-related shootings in the early 2010s. Police credited intelligence-led operations, tighter firearms interdictions, and aggressive prosecutions of gang leaders. Community programs and mentoring initiatives also played a role, giving at-risk youth alternatives to gang life.

By 2015 and 2016, gun crime was at historic lows. That period was hailed as proof Bermuda could beat back the tide of violence with coordinated policing, social investment, and political will.

Now: Alarming Resurgence

Fast forward nine years, and the picture looks starkly different. In 2024 and 2025, Bermuda has recorded a rise in gun-related deaths. Rival gangs such as Parkside and 42 have resurged, fueled by a new generation of recruits. Economic pressures, high youth unemployment, and the easy flow of smuggled firearms through maritime routes have undermined earlier gains.

Community trust in the police has also eroded, making investigations harder and retaliations more likely. Opposition MPs and neighborhood leaders warn that without sustained focus, Bermuda risks sliding back into the violent cycles of the early 2010s.

Public Alarm and Political Pressure

Premier David Burt condemned Minors’ killing as “an escalation of community violence that cannot be tolerated,” promising stronger enforcement and deeper engagement with residents. The Bermuda Police Service has appealed for CCTV, dashcam, and doorbell footage from the area, urging residents that even the smallest detail could break the case.

Yet among the public, frustration is growing. People remember the calm of 2014 — when zero murders were recorded — and cannot understand how the island has returned to headlines dominated by gun violence. The contrast is stark: from celebrating the elimination of gun murders to confronting the targeted execution of a businesswoman in broad daylight.

A Test for Bermuda’s Future

The murder of Janae Minors has become more than a single case; it is now a symbol of Bermuda’s struggle to hold on to the progress it once made. The question facing the island is whether the successes of a decade ago can be replicated and sustained in today’s harsher climate of economic pressure and gang rivalries.

For Minors’ family, nothing can erase the tragedy of losing a mother and daughter so violently. But for Bermuda at large, her death is a wake-up call — that the island cannot afford complacency when it comes to crime.

As one community leader put it: “Nine years ago, we had beaten this. Now, we’re back to fearing what happens when the sun goes down. That is not the Bermuda we want to live in.”

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CARICOM-Africa Summit Yields Draft Pact on Trade, Travel and Reparations

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Imagine an Atlantic Bridge connecting the Caribbean Region to the African Continent

 

Deandrea Hamilton  | Editor

 

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia — When CARICOM leaders convened with African counterparts and Afreximbank officials in Ethiopia, the outcomes were savory and exactly what many Caribbean people want to see materialise as the islands become uniquely reconnected to the African continent.

At the Second CARICOM-Africa Summit, held at the African Union headquarters, leaders moved beyond symbolic language to agree on a draft communiqué that, if finalized, would anchor this partnership in practical action. While not yet officially published by the AU or CARICOM, the document points to an agenda that blends history with urgent twenty-first century priorities.

The draft outlines commitments to improve air and sea transport links, including the pursuit of a multilateral air services agreement to break down the barriers that still keep the Caribbean and Africa physically apart. It also calls for visa facilitation and simplified entry regimes, making it easier for citizens of both regions to travel, study, and work across the Atlantic.

Equally significant are pledges to advance double taxation treaties that could remove one of the most stubborn obstacles to investment. With Afreximbank’s Caribbean headquarters already established in Barbados and the AfriCaribbean Trade and Investment Forum (ACTIF) gaining momentum, leaders now want to lock in the financial and legal frameworks that will drive new business.

Reparatory justice also featured prominently, with the draft communiqué sharpening a joint call for coordinated advocacy. CARICOM’s long-standing Reparations Commission is expected to work more closely with African institutions to demand global recognition and redress for the shared traumas of slavery and colonial exploitation.

CARICOM’s incoming chair, Prime Minister Dr. Terrance Drew of St. Kitts and Nevis, captured the spirit of the gathering when he urged that the Atlantic Slave Trade be reimagined as an “Atlantic Bridge — a bridge of hope, a bridge of advancement, a bridge that will ensure our people take their rightful place in this world.”

For Secretary-General Dr. Carla Barnett, the meeting was a “homecoming,” but also a reminder that concrete steps like the Health Development Partnership for Africa and the Caribbean (HeDPAC) and improved transportation links are needed to transform rhetoric into results.

For citizens back home, wrestling with inflation and economic uncertainty, the Addis outcomes — transport, visas, investment, health, and reparations — are precisely the kinds of measures that can validate leaders’ journeys and rekindle faith in South-South cooperation. What was once only rhetoric now hints at the beams of an Atlantic Bridge, connecting the Caribbean and Africa in ways that could finally turn history’s tragedy into tomorrow’s advantage.

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