Extradition Case Against Azruddin Mohamed, Dad Advances Despite Defense Appeal

News Americas, Georgetown, Guyana, Jan. 6, 2026: Extradition proceedings against Guyanese businessman Nazar Mohamed and his son, political leader of the WIN party and presumed Guyana opposition leader, Azruddin Mohamed, advanced on today after a Georgetown magistrate declined to suspend the matter, despite the defence filing an appeal to the Full Court.

Presiding at the Georgetown Magistrates’ Courts, Principal Magistrate Judy Latchman ruled that there was no legal basis to pause the committal proceedings, noting that no stay had been granted by a superior court. She subsequently directed the prosecution to begin presenting its case.

Earlier in the proceedings, defence attorneys served the court with a Notice of Appeal challenging a recent High Court ruling by Acting Chief Justice Navindra Singh, which refused an application to halt the extradition process. The defence argued that the magistrate’s court proceedings should be suspended pending the determination of constitutional issues raised in their challenge to Guyana’s extradition framework.

Magistrate Latchman, however, maintained that until a stay is formally ordered by the Full Court or another superior tribunal, the committal hearing must continue. In the absence of such an order, she ruled, the court was legally obliged to proceed.

As the case moves into the evidentiary phase, the prosecution is expected to call its first witness, Sharon Roopchand, Permanent Secretary at Guyana’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

The ruling followed submissions from the prosecution, led by King’s Counsel Terrence Williams, who argued that the mere filing of an appeal does not automatically suspend ongoing extradition proceedings. The magistrate accepted that position.

The extradition request was initiated by United States authorities, who are seeking the surrender of Nazar and Azruddin Mohamed in connection with federal criminal charges filed in the Southern District of Florida. The allegations relate to purported financial crimes linked to gold exports, including fraud and money laundering offences.

The matter is being heard under Guyana’s Fugitive Offenders Act and an existing extradition treaty between Guyana and the United States. Since late 2025, the defence has pursued multiple legal avenues aimed at delaying or stopping the extradition process, including constitutional litigation.

On Monday, Acting Chief Justice Singh dismissed the application for a stay, clearing the way for proceedings to continue in the magistrates’ court. Although the defence has since appealed that ruling, no order has been issued suspending the extradition hearing.

Both Nazar and Azruddin Mohamed remain on bail, subject to court-imposed conditions, as the committal proceedings continue.

RELATED: Guyana High Court Rejects Bid To Halt Extradition Proceedings Against Nazar And Azruddin

Venezuela’s Crisis Is A Warning: When Ideology Replaces Governance, Nations Fail

By Keith Bernard

News Americas, NY, NY: Venezuela stands as the clearest warning of what happens when ideology replaces governance. Caught between neoconservative interventionism and neo-Bolivarian defiance, the country has become less a sovereign state than an ideological battlefield – one its people did not choose.

Hundreds of protesters turned out at the Hands Off Venezuela demonstration in response to the United States of America’s actions in Venezuela on the 5th of January 2026, London, United Kingdom. The US attacked Venezuela on the 3rd of January and captured President Maduro and his wife Celia Flores in a highly controversial military action, which critics have suggested is illegal and in breach of international conventions. (photo by Kristian Buus/In Pictures via Getty Images)

Neoconservatism, as reflected in U.S. policy toward Venezuela, rests on the belief that economic pressure and diplomatic isolation can force democratic change. Years of sanctions and international pressure, however, have failed to dislodge the ruling elite. Instead, they have deepened economic collapse, fueled mass migration, and hardened authoritarian rule. Leverage became punishment, with ordinary Venezuelans paying the price.

The neo-Bolivarian movement, born under Hugo Chávez and sustained by Nicolás Maduro, presented itself as an anti-imperial alternative—one promising sovereignty, equality, and social justice. In practice, it centralized power, dismantled institutions, and reduced accountability. Oil wealth masked mismanagement until it vanished, leaving scarcity, corruption, and repression in its wake. Revolutionary rhetoric became a substitute for policy.

Venezuela exposes the shared flaw of both doctrines. Neo-conservatism assumes coercion produces reform. Neo-Bolivarianism assumes ideology can replace institutions. Both are wrong.

The fallout is regional. Millions of Venezuelans have fled, straining neighbors across Latin America and the Caribbean. Trade has suffered, diplomacy has stalled, and external powers have filled the vacuum left by ideological deadlock.

The lesson is not about choosing the “right” ideology. It is about rejecting ideological certainty altogether. Sustainable democracy is built on credible institutions, economic diversification, political pluralism, and pragmatic engagement—not sanctions alone, and not slogans wrapped in sovereignty.

Venezuela’s crisis is not inevitable. But its warning is unmistakable: when ideology becomes destiny, nations fail – and citizens pay the cost.

EDITOR’S NOTE: Keith Bernard is a Guyanese-born, NYC-based analyst and a frequent contributor to News Americas. 

RELATED: Is Trinidad And Tobago Showing Signs Of A Failing State?

Better Jobs, Not Just More Visitors, Will Shape The Future Of Caribbean Tourism – World Bank

News Americas, NEW YORK, NY: For decades, tourism has been the Caribbean’s most powerful economic engine, driving foreign exchange earnings, employment, and growth across the region. But new analysis suggests that the sector’s future success of Caribbean tourism will depend less on rising visitor arrivals and more on a fundamental shift in the quality of jobs it creates.

According to research and analysis from the World Bank, tourism’s role in the Caribbean economy is undeniable. The sector contributes a significant share of regional GDP and supports millions of jobs, making it one of the largest sources of employment across island and coastal economies. Tourism also plays an outsized role in employing women and young people, often serving as the first point of entry into the labor market.

Yet, despite its scale and importance, tourism has struggled to consistently deliver stable, high-quality employment that allows workers to build long-term economic security.

The Job Quality Gap

While tourism creates jobs at a faster pace than many other sectors, those jobs are often characterized by seasonal contracts, income volatility, and limited career progression. As a result, workers may remain economically vulnerable even when employment levels are high.

World Bank analysis examining tourism employment in select Caribbean countries shows that tourism jobs generally outperform those in primary sectors such as agriculture, but often fall short of the quality found in manufacturing and other service industries. In practical terms, this means that tourism workers may have access to benefits and acceptable working conditions, but face weaker job stability and fewer opportunities to advance.

This instability is not evenly distributed. Young workers frequently hold entry-level tourism jobs that offer experience but little security, while women – who make up a majority of the sector’s workforce – continue to face persistent gaps in earnings and job quality. Rural communities and resort-adjacent areas also tend to see lower-quality tourism employment than urban centers, reinforcing geographic inequality.

Lessons From the Pandemic

The COVID-19 pandemic exposed the structural weaknesses of tourism-led growth. Border closures and travel restrictions triggered widespread job losses across the Caribbean, leaving hundreds of thousands of workers without income almost overnight. The crisis underscored how heavily tourism jobs depend on global conditions beyond the region’s control.

For policymakers and investors, the lesson was clear: tourism growth that is not paired with workforce resilience can quickly unravel in the face of external shocks.

As the region recovers, the focus is shifting from how many visitors arrive to how tourism revenues are distributed – and whether workers can rely on tourism jobs to support households during both good times and bad.

Rethinking Tourism As A Business Strategy

From a business and economic development perspective, improving job quality in tourism is increasingly seen as a competitiveness issue. Destinations that offer better-trained, more stable workforces are better positioned to deliver higher-quality visitor experiences, adopt digital tools, and pivot toward sustainable tourism models.

The World Bank points to several policy and market-oriented approaches that could help tourism generate better jobs. These include encouraging formal employment through simplified regulations and targeted incentives, expanding vocational and skills-based training aligned with digital and sustainable tourism trends, and strengthening enforcement of labor standards.

Equally important is building stronger linkages between tourism and the wider economy. When hotels, restaurants, and tour operators source more goods and services locally – from farmers and fishers to creatives and service providers—the economic benefits of tourism spread more broadly, supporting jobs beyond the hospitality sector itself.

A Turning Point For Caribbean Tourism

The Caribbean’s natural beauty, cultural assets, and proximity to major markets ensure that tourism will remain central to the region’s economic future. But the World Bank’s findings suggest that the next phase of growth will be defined not by volume alone, but by value – particularly the value created for workers.

For governments, businesses, and investors, the message is increasingly clear: tourism that delivers better jobs is more resilient, more inclusive, and better positioned to support long-term development.

As Caribbean nations rethink their tourism strategies, prioritizing job quality may prove to be the most important investment of all – one that strengthens both the industry and the communities that sustain it.