Vybz Kartel To Headline Back-To-Back Shows At London’s O2 Arena

News Americas, LONDON, ENGLAND, Weds. Sept. 3, 2025: Jamaican dancehall superstar Vybz Kartel is set to electrify fans in the United Kingdom this week as he headlines two nights at London’s O2 Arena on Thursday, Sept. 4, and Friday, Sept. 5, as part of his Worl’ Boss Tour.

The shows mark Kartel’s first-ever UK arena performances and come on the heels of his widely celebrated set at this year’s Wireless Festival, where he commemorated two decades in music. Known for his commanding stage presence and chart-topping catalog, Kartel is expected to deliver a career-spanning performance for his London audience.

FLASHBACK – Vybz Kartel performs live on stage during day three of Wireless Festival 2025 at Finsbury Park on July 13, 2025 in London, England. (Photo by Simone Joyner/Getty Images)

Stage Times

6:30 p.m. – Arena doors open

7:00 p.m. – Support DJs

9:00 p.m. – Vybz Kartel

Weeknight events at the O2 typically conclude by 10:30 p.m. and no later than 11:00 p.m., meaning fans can expect Kartel’s show to run for just under two hours.

The two-night run is part of Kartel’s Worl’ Boss Tour, which has seen the dancehall icon extend his influence across global stages while celebrating the evolution of the genre. His O2 Arena appearances are widely anticipated, with both longtime supporters and new fans eager to witness one of dancehall’s most controversial and influential figures in action.

Kartel will also play Manchester at the Co-op Live on September 10th from 8:30 pm.

Kartel, often hailed as “World Boss,” remains one of the most impactful voices in Jamaican music. From classics such as Clarks and Romping Shop to newer hits that continue to dominate dancehall playlists, his influence extends beyond music into style, culture, and politics.

The O2 Arena shows are expected to draw large crowds, with many fans seeing them as a rare opportunity to experience a living legend at the peak of his career.

Observers Urge Major Reforms To Guyana Elections Commission, Voter List And Campaign Rules

News Americas, GEORGETOWN, Guyana, Weds. Sept. 3, 2025: With nearly all Statements of Poll posted but most of the final tallies still pending from Guyana’s Sept. 1, 2025 vote, three major observer missions on Wednesday praised a peaceful election day and laid out a reform to-do list they say would strengthen confidence before the next national contest.

The Commonwealth Observers group delivering a analysis of the 2025 Guyana elections. (Commonwealth image)

The Carter Center, the Commonwealth Observer Group and the CARICOM Election Observation Mission each urged faster, clearer rules, less politicization at the elections commission and tighter controls on campaign conduct and financing. GECOM’s website shows roughly 98% of SOPs uploaded nationwide. Region 7 remains the laggard all SOPs still to be posted.

Depoliticize and professionalize GECOM.
All three missions flagged the structure and perception of the Guyana Elections Commission as a core risk. The Carter Center said the current formula – three commissioners aligned with the governing party, three with the opposition and a chair chosen from a list acceptable to the president – has produced gridlock and eroded trust. It recommended moving to a more independent, less political model and publishing full written polling and tabulation procedures well ahead of any vote. The Commonwealth team likewise called for a review of GECOM’s composition and urged the immediate appointment of a substantive legal adviser to the body.

Voters wait in line to cast ballots at a polling location during the general election in Leonora, West Demerara, Guyana, on Monday, Sept. 1, 2025. Photographer: Yancey Haywood/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Make tabulation and communication more transparent.
Observers commended GECOM’s new step of publicly uploading SOPs and displaying them during tabulation, but noted delays where staff had to both upload and later re-display the same documents. They recommended streamlining the sequence and improving public guidance on how tabulation works. All three missions encouraged more frequent, consistent briefings and easier access to information for parties, media and citizens to cut space for rumor and misinformation.

Fix the voter list — and publish the census.
The size and integrity of the voters roll dominated stakeholder complaints, the missions said. The Carter Center urged GECOM to fully implement 2022 legal changes that allow removal of deceased voters using official data, and to explore methods for identifying electors who died overseas. It also recommended an independent “people test” sampling of the list before the next election. The Commonwealth and CARICOM teams said releasing results of the 2022 census would bolster transparency around demographics and the roll’s size.

Consider biometric verification.
Both the Commonwealth and CARICOM missions pressed for renewed, early-cycle consideration of voter-identification biometrics to reduce the risk of impersonation and restore confidence, noting GECOM cited technical and legal hurdles this year.

Curb misuse of state resources and modernize campaign finance.
Citing multiple complaints and evidence of blurred lines between state functions and party activity, observers urged clear legal prohibitions and enforcement against the use of public assets in campaigning. The missions also called current campaign-finance rules outdated and largely unenforced, and recommended a comprehensive framework covering donations, disclosure and oversight to level the playing field.

Broaden inclusion — women, persons with disabilities and smaller parties.
Women were highly visible in the process — making up roughly half of registered voters and the great majority of polling staff observed — but missions urged stricter enforcement of the legal requirement that party lists include at least one-third women and asked parties to publish gender data on their slates. All three groups faulted persistent accessibility barriers: many polling places lacked ramps; tactile ballot guides were not provided this cycle; and proxy voting, while available, compromises ballot secrecy for some voters with disabilities. The Commonwealth team recommended extending early voting to other essential workers beyond the disciplined services and offering more support so newer and smaller parties can participate on equal footing.

Strengthen domestic civic oversight and fact-checking.
The missions noted Guyana lacks a well-resourced, nonpartisan domestic observer network capable of nationwide coverage. They urged investment in civil society election monitoring and suggested an independent fact-checking mechanism to counter online misinformation that spiked during the campaign.

Implement recommendations — with deadlines.
Each mission stressed that many of these proposals echo past cycles. They urged the new Parliament to empower the Constitutional Reform Commission and enact priority electoral reforms — including GECOM restructuring, campaign-finance rules, access-to-information guarantees, and media-equity provisions — at least two years before the next vote.

Election day itself drew broad praise, however. The Carter Center said teams visited 234 polling stations across all 10 regions and reported orderly openings, trained staff and party agents present at nearly all locations. The Commonwealth and CARICOM groups observed punctual openings, calm voting and transparent counts, with SOPs signed and posted at polling sites and uploaded for public view.

As tabulation wraps up, the missions urged parties and supporters to remain patient and channel any disputes through the courts. The test ahead, they said, is not only announcing winners but converting a largely smooth election day into lasting confidence through visible, timely reforms.

Jamaica Election 2025 – Jamaicans Head To The Polls As Tight Race Hinges On Turnout

News Americas, KINGSTON, Jamaica, Weds. Sept. 3, 2025: Jamaicans including from the Diaspora will vote today, September 3rd, in the 2025 Jamaica election that analysts say could come down less to persuasion than participation – with the incumbent Jamaica Labour Party, (JLP) and main opposition People’s National Party, (PNP) running neck and neck in the final polls.

FLASHBACK – Voters at a polling station at the Ewarton Methodist Church, Edna Leslie memorial hall, St Catherine north west on Election day September 3, 2020. (Photo by RICARDO MAKYN/AFP via Getty Images)

The last Don Anderson/RJR-Gleaner survey showed the PNP with a razor-thin 0.8-point edge over the JLP, well within the margin of error. But nearly one in three voters remains undecided or disenchanted – a block large enough to tip the balance in the Caribbean island’s 63-seat parliament.

“The deciding factor may not be persuasion, but mobilization,” political analyst Helene Davis-Whyte told the Gleaner. “This election could hinge on which party gets its base to the polls.”

Competing Messages

The JLP, in power since 2016, has campaigned on stability, pointing to falling unemployment, fiscal discipline and a sharp drop in murders this year. Prime Minister Andrew Holness has promised deeper reforms, more land titles, tax relief and 50 percent renewable power by 2030.

The PNP, led by Opposition Leader Mark Golding, insists that stability has not translated into opportunity for ordinary Jamaicans. Its platform calls for low-income housing, constitutional reform, lower electricity costs and programs aimed at youth and the poor.

Anti-incumbency is a strong driver among PNP backers. The Anderson poll found that nearly three in 10 opposition supporters said their main motivation was simply to remove the JLP. For government supporters, the main driver was the belief the administration “is doing a good job.”

Disillusionment and Protest

With more than 2 million registered voters, turnout will be closely watched. In the last election in 2020, participation slumped to just 37 percent.

Adding another wrinkle, the Jamaica First Movement, a small group led by Reverend Al Miller, is urging voters who feel alienated to still show up and mark “0” on their ballots as a formal protest against all candidates. Miller said disengagement only gives “silent approval,” while a “0” vote records discontent.

Heavy Oversight

The Organization of American States and CARICOM have both deployed observer missions across Jamaica’s 14 parishes. OAS mission chief Kenny D. Anthony, the former prime minister of Saint Lucia, urged citizens to exercise their democratic right peacefully.

The CARICOM mission, led by Trinidad and Tobago elections chief Fern Narcis, will observe preparations, voting, counting and the tabulation of results. Both groups are expected to issue preliminary statements later this week.

High Stakes

Jamaica’s election comes at a sensitive moment. The island has posted steady economic growth and debt reduction but still faces stubborn inequality, crime and pressure to accelerate the shift to renewable energy.

With polls too close to call, the result may rest on whether undecided Jamaicans – especially younger voters, who are the least engaged – decide to stay home, cast a protest ballot or rally behind one of the two major parties.

Investor Outlook

Both the Jamaica Labour Party, (JLP) and the People’s National Party, (PNP) have released detailed manifestos that present starkly different roadmaps for economic growth, foreign investment, and private-sector opportunities.

The stakes are high. Jamaica has enjoyed strong tourism rebounds, an expanding IPO market, and steady GDP growth in recent years. At the same time, debt management, high energy costs, and the need for economic diversification remain top concerns. For international and local investors, the September election outcome could shape whether Jamaica doubles down on its stability-first policies or pivots toward diversification and new industries. For the investor community, Jamaica’s 2025 election represents a choice between two investment philosophies:

The JLP’s Stability Play: Doubling down on fiscal discipline, major tourism projects, and proven economic management.

The PNP’s Transformation Agenda: Betting on diversification into new industries, green growth, and SME financing as engines of long-term resilience.

With Jamaica already attracting record IPOs and steady foreign direct investment, both visions hold appeal. However, the party that wins in September will decide whether investors can expect more of the same stability or a bold pivot toward new industries.