News
TCIFA Celebrates Long-Serving Employees
Published
1 year agoon

In a heartwarming tribute to dedication and loyalty, the TCIFA celebrates its long-serving employees. These employees have not only contributed their valuable skills and expertise but have also shown unwavering support and passion for their work. As we honour their years of service, we also acknowledge the invaluable impact they have had on shaping the culture and success of TCIFA. Their resilience, hard work, and positive attitude serve as an inspiration to us all, reflecting the true spirit of teamwork and excellence that defines our organisation.
Taking on a new career adventure, ten years ago, Candia Ewing joined the Turks and Caicos Islands Football Association with a background in pre-medicine and considerable knowledge in the medical and dental fields. Initially assuming the role of administrative assistant at TCIFA, she later took on the responsibilities of Acting General Secretary during the crucial period of Sonia Fulford’s Presidency transition. Over time, Candia went on to become the Marketing and Communications Coordinator. Her creative flair and strategic approach brought a fresh perspective to the FA, enhancing its public image and engagement with stakeholders. Eventually, in addition to this role, she undertook the position of Office Manager. In her multifaceted capacity, Candia fulfils various duties, such as overseeing the organisation and execution of matches and events, managing travel arrangements for national teams, and handling a myriad of tasks essential to the smooth daily operations of the FA. Her dedication, professionalism, and unwavering commitment to excellence make her an invaluable asset to the TCIFA and a true inspiration to aspiring professionals in the field of sports administration.
“In 2014, I discovered a whole new world within the TCIFA, filled with passion, dedication, and teamwork. Initially, there wasn’t much familiarity with the game aside from occasionally watching my mother and sister play. This gave me a unique perspective; but working within TCIFA broadened my horizons and deepened my appreciation. With that being said, my journey has been nothing short of transformative. Every day, I am surrounded by individuals who share a love for football, immersed in an environment brimming with enthusiasm and unity, and it is truly inspiring. While I may have started off as a very reserved person, football has helped me find my voice and a place in a world full of vibrant personalities and stories waiting to be shared.” Candia remarked, “Looking forward, I am enthusiastic about continuing on this illuminated path that football has set before me. Each person who loves football contributes to the rich tapestry of this sport. It is a testament to its inclusive nature that there is a place for everyone, regardless of their background, gender, age, or ability.”
From her early days as a player in the Football Development Programs to representing the U15, U17, and Women’s national teams, Olivia Graveley’s passion for the sport has been unwavering. Transitioning into a role as a Youth Development Officer at the TCIFA, in 2014, was just the beginning of her impactful career in football. Her dedication and expertise led her to the position of Head Coaching Development Officer, where she played an important role in shaping the future of football in the TCI. Consequently, as the Deputy Women’s Director, Olivia continued to break barriers and pave the way for women in football. Her commitment to the sport and her leadership skills did not go unnoticed, as she now holds the prestigious role of Director of the Grand Turk Football Program. With her U.S. and Concacaf C Licenses, Olivia continues to inspire and empower the next generation of football enthusiasts. Moreover, she holds a position as a member of the Caribbean Football Union Women’s Committee. Notably, she is the visionary behind #GOAM (Girls On A Mission), a collective of young female leaders devoted to community service in the TCI region, and an initiative that aims to empower women through various projects and workshops, underpinned by values of service. Her narrative exemplifies the profound impact of perseverance, diligence, and an unwavering passion for a sport that transcends boundaries.
“Football has been a part of my life for almost all my life,” Olivia reflects, showcasing her deep connection to the beautiful game. “From the early days of kicking a ball around with friends to the adrenaline rush of playing competitively on the field and coaching, football has been a constant source of joy and excitement for me. The beautiful game has taught me the value of teamwork, discipline, and perseverance. It has a way of bringing people together and creating unforgettable memories. I am reminded of the passion and love that has fueled my journey with this sport. Football isn’t just a game to me; it’s a part of who I am, shaping my character and providing endless opportunities for growth and camaraderie. I am very grateful for the invaluable years of growth and development experienced within TCIFA.”
From the humble beginnings at Tropical Plaza to the bustling headquarters of today, Fritz Elvariste has been a pillar of support for football at the TCIFA. His expertise in grounds maintenance and active involvement in various football activities, both within the FA and the Sharks Football Club, exhibits his deep love for the sport. Fritz has fulfilled multiple roles, serving as the groundskeeper, equipment manager, driver, player, coach, and referee, showcasing remarkable versatility and unwavering dedication to the sport. His passion for the game can be traced back to his roots at Violette Athlete Club in Haiti, underlining his lifelong connection to football.
Fritz’s infectious enthusiasm and optimistic outlook shine through his words, “Football holds a special place in my heart.” His joy in his work and gratitude for being part of TCIFA is palpable. He frequently articulates that his colleagues serve as an enduring wellspring of motivation and inspiration. For Fritz, football is a lifelong passion that continues to fuel his dedication and bring him immense happiness. He thrives on the energy of the game, finding solace in the rhythm of each moving component.
TCIFA President, Sonia Fulford, commented, “The dedication and commitment shown by by our employees are truly commendable. Candia, Olivia and Fritz embody the very essence of loyalty and expertise within the association. As we mark their milestones of 10 (in the case of Candia and Olivia) and 24 years (in the case of Fritz) respectively, we reflect on the invaluable contributions they have made to the Turks and Caicos Islands Football Association. Their unwavering passion for their work has not only shaped the organization but has also inspired others around them. Their commitment and hard work have not gone unnoticed, and we are immensely grateful for everything they do. Here’s to celebrating these remarkable individuals and looking forward to many more years of success and collaboration ahead. Congratulations on this significant milestone, and may their passions continue to drive them to even greater achievements in the years to come.”
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News
Beaches Turks and Caicos Showcases and Supports Local Creativity
Published
3 weeks agoon
September 12, 2025
September 12, 2025
PROVIDENCIALES, Turks & Caicos Islands – The Turks and Caicos Islands are home to a wealth of creativity, from artisans and craft vendors to musicians and performers. Beaches Turks and Caicos, the Caribbean’s leading all-inclusive family resort, has pledged its continued support for these individuals by providing meaningful platforms for them to share their skills and stories with guests from around the world.
The resort’s commitment is most evident in its weekly Cultural Night showcase, where visitors are immersed in the vibrant traditions of the islands. Guests enjoy live performances which feature local music genres such as ripsaw, while artisans display and sell handmade creations. This event not only enriches the guest experience but also strengthens economic opportunities for local entrepreneurs.
Entertainment Division Manager Garett Bailey emphasized the significance of Cultural Night, “we want to showcase everything the Turks and Caicos Islands culture has to offer. Our goal is for guests to leave with a deeper appreciation of the island’s art, music and traditions, while giving local talent the opportunity to share their creativity with visitors from across the globe.”
Beyond Cultural Night, Beaches Turks and Caicos also welcomes local craft vendors onto the resort every Wednesday and Friday where they are offered a direct space to market their goods. Guests have easy access to the Turks and Caicos Cultural Marketplace, where they can purchase authentic local arts and crafts.
Managing Director, James McAnally, highlighted how these initiatives reflect the resort’s broader mission, “we are committed to celebrating and sharing the vibrant culture of these islands with our guests. By showcasing local artistry and music, we not only provide entertainment but also help sustain and grow the creative industries of the Turks and Caicos Islands. From our cultural showcases to nightly live music, we are proud to create authentic connections between our guests and the people of these islands.”
Local musician Keon Hall, who frequently performs at the resort, expressed gratitude for the ongoing partnership, “being able to share my music with Beaches’ guests has created lasting relationships. Some visitors return year after year and request songs from previous performances. This partnership continues to celebrate what we do and strengthens the bond between local artists and the resort.”
The resort’s support of local artisans and entertainers extends beyond business opportunity; it is about preserving heritage and sharing stories. Guests take home more than souvenirs; they leave with experiences that deepen their understanding of Turks and Caicos’ culture and history.
Public Relations Manager, Orville Morgan, noted the importance of this commitment, “for many visitors, these interactions represent their first genuine connection to the Turks and Caicos Islands. From artisans and musicians to farmers and transport operators, our local talent helps shape every guest experience. At Beaches, we are proud to give them the stage to share their stories and their heritage.”
Beaches Turks & Caicos remains dedicated to developing cultural connections and supporting the artisans, musicians and entrepreneurs whose creativity makes the Turks and Caicos Islands unique. Each guest experience is an opportunity to celebrate and sustain the spirit of the islands.
Caribbean News
“Barbecue” is Cooked! US Turns Over 11 Million Haitians into Potential Informants with $5 Million Bounty
Published
2 months agoon
August 12, 2025
August 12, 2025
The United States just set fire to the underworld in Haiti — and this time, the smoke might finally flush out the man many call the most feared in the Caribbean.
On Tuesday, the U.S. government slapped a $5 million bounty on the head of Jimmy “Barbecue” Chérizier, the ex-police officer turned gang boss accused of orchestrating massacres, torching neighborhoods, and strangling Haiti’s capital into chaos. This isn’t just a headline — it’s a full-blown game-changer.
That kind of cash — offered under the State Department’s Transnational Organized Crime Rewards Program — is enough to turn the country’s entire population, more than 11 million people, into potential informants overnight. Add the millions in the Haitian diaspora, and Chérizier isn’t just wanted. He’s surrounded.
The Number That Changes Everything
Five million U.S. dollars today equals about 655 million Haitian Gourdes. In a country where many scrape by on less than $5 a day, that’s not just life-changing — it’s life-defining. It’s enough to rebuild homes, put generations through school, or buy a one-way ticket far from the gunfire.
In a place where trust is scarce and survival is everything, that figure is more than tempting — it’s irresistible. For Chérizier, it means every friend could be a future informant, and every loyalist might be calculating the cost of staying loyal.
‘We Will Find Them’ — Jeanine Pirro, U.S. Attorney
Jeanine “Judge Jeanine” Pirro, the U.S. Attorney, set the tone with fire in her voice. “This indictment is the first of its kind,” she announced. “Jimmy Chérizier, also known as ‘Barbecue,’ is a notorious gang leader from Haiti who has orchestrated and committed various acts of violence against Haitians, including the 2018 La Saline attack in which approximately 71 people were killed. He both planned and participated in that massacre.
“Anyone who is giving money to ‘Barbecue’ cannot say, ‘I didn’t know.’ They will be prosecuted, and we will find them. They are supporting an individual who is committing human rights abuses, and we will not look the other way.”
Pirro wasn’t just going after Chérizier. She was sending a warning to the Haitian diaspora accused of feeding his war chest from abroad: the days of claiming ignorance are over.
‘No Safe Haven’ — Darren Cox, FBI
Then came Darren Cox, Deputy Assistant Director of the FBI, delivering the muscle of America’s most powerful investigative force. “There is no safe haven for Chérizier and his network,” Cox declared. “We are closing every link, every cell.” Since January, he said, the FBI has arrested three Top Ten fugitives, taken more than 19,000 criminals off the streets, and seized thousands of tons of narcotics — enough to save millions of lives across the U.S.
The FBI’s Miami and Houston offices have already bagged one of Chérizier’s Viv Ansanm associates inside the United States without firing a shot. “These efforts are a deliberate and coordinated plan,” Cox said, “to protect our communities and confront escalating threats from terrorist organizations like Viv Ansanm.”
‘Three-Year Investigation’ — Ivan Arvelo, HSI
Ivan Arvelo, Assistant Director of Homeland Security Investigations, brought the receipts. “This is the result of a three-year investigation into Chérizier’s procurement networks, cash pipelines, and operational financing that violates sanctions,” he explained. Arvelo described 400 structures destroyed, entire communities erased, and a gang exploiting U.S. dollars, technology, and immigration loopholes to keep its killing machine running. “We tracked how Americans unwittingly bankrolled brutality,” he said — proof that the net is tightening both inside Haiti and abroad.
‘The Worst of the Worst’ — Chris Lambert, State Department
Chris Lambert, representing the State Department’s International Affairs division, gave the political bottom line.
“Mass violence in Haiti must end,” Lambert said. “The instability resulting from Chérizier’s actions fuels illegal migration, regional instability, and transnational crime. We will continue to apply every tool available — including our rewards programs — to stop the spread of unchecked violence, especially to target the worst of the worst criminal leaders threatening the people of our hemisphere.”
Lambert confirmed what many have long known: Chérizier is not just a gang leader. He commands Viv Ansanm, officially designated in May as a Foreign Terrorist Organization. In the eyes of the U.S., that makes him not just Haiti’s problem — but everyone’s.
Why Haitians May Not Resist
In Haiti, money talks — loudly. And when you put 655 million Gourdes on the table, it shouts.
That’s the kind of figure that turns casual acquaintances into informants and makes even the most hardened loyalist wonder if the payout is worth more than the risk. It’s not a matter of “if” word gets out, it’s a matter of “who will be first to collect.”
For grieving families, it’s a chance at justice. For the desperate, it’s a chance at survival. For Haiti as a whole, it’s hope — wrapped in the most dangerous of temptations.
An Answer to Prayers
For years, Haiti’s headlines have been a scroll of horrors — kidnappings, executions, burned neighborhoods, bodies in the streets. Chérizier’s name has been attached to too many of them.
This move by the U.S. isn’t just strategy. It’s personal. It’s a signal to every Haitian — at home or abroad — that the days of impunity could be ending.
I’ll admit it: when I heard the news, I danced, I sang, and I nearly cried. Not because $5 million is a lot of money, but because of what it means — the possibility, at last, of stopping the man accused of helping turn Haiti into hell on earth.
Four officials, four angles, one mission: Pirro’s fire, Cox’s grit, Arvelo’s precision, Lambert’s conviction. Together, they’ve put the heat on “Barbecue” like never before.
BBQ is cooked. The only question now is: which one of over 11 million potential informants will serve him up?
Africa
What If Caribbean Dollars Flowed to Africa? A Trade Revolution Within Reach
Published
2 months agoon
August 8, 2025
By Deandrea Hamilton | Editor
What would happen if the Caribbean started spending more with Africa?
That question is no longer hypothetical. It’s the vision behind a growing movement that sees the Caribbean not just as a neighbor of the Americas, but as a key partner in the rise of a “Global Africa.” With shared history, deep cultural ties, and emerging trade frameworks, experts say the potential is enormous—if the will to act finally matches the passion of the speeches.
Billions on the Table
Today, trade between Africa and the Caribbean sits at just over US $729 million annually. But the International Trade Centre (ITC) and Afreximbank project that number could balloon to US $1.8 billion per year by 2028—more than doubling in just a few years.
This boost is expected to come not just from commodities, but increasingly from services, particularly in transport, travel, food exports, and creative industries. Two-thirds of that growth, according to analysts, could come from services alone—sectors where the Caribbean is eager to expand. (afreximbank.com).
Meanwhile, Africa’s consumer and business spending is forecasted to skyrocket to US $6.66 trillion by 2030, driven by a population boom and rising middle class.
The Case for a New Trade Axis
The Caribbean imports 80% of its food, but many of those goods can be sourced from African markets. What we offer in return? World-class logistics, tourism know-how, financial services, and proximity to the U.S. market. It’s a natural fit—one that is currently underdeveloped.
The recent call by Grenadian Prime Minister Dickon Mitchell for a “Global Africa Commission” underscores this urgency. He urged stakeholders at the Afreximbank Trade Expo to stop the cycle of empty talk and get to work: building shipping routes, finalizing trade agreements, and boosting knowledge of what each region actually has to offer.
“We will not leave here with another communiqué,” Mitchell continued. “We will leave here with a commitment to act, to build together, to trade together, to succeed together and rise together.” The statement underscored a central theme of the summit — that both Africa and the Caribbean can no longer afford to admire the idea of unity; they must operationalize it.Pilot platforms like the Pan-African Payment and Settlement System (PAPSS) are already simplifying how cross-border payments work between African countries—and could extend to Caribbean partners. The system removes the need for U.S. dollars in trade between African nations, creating space for sovereign empowerment.
What’s the Hold-Up?
Let’s be blunt: political will, slow bureaucracies, and lack of coordination are stalling real action. Despite a decade of “Africa–Caribbean unity” talk, less than 3% of CARICOM trade currently involves the African continent. That fact continues to undermine these brave speeches and ambitious notions.
Where Caribbean Consumers Fit In
Caribbean consumers—especially the younger, tech-savvy generation—are already looking for affordable, ethical, and culturally relevant goods. African markets offer exactly that. Redirecting even a fraction of spending toward African-made clothing, beauty products, tech tools, or agro-processed foods could start a real trade revolution.
Bottom Line
If the political leaders won’t build the bridge fast enough, maybe Caribbean consumers will. The money is there. The interest is rising. Now it’s time to turn the “Global Africa” vision into a real economic shift—one shopping cart at a time.