Dancehall Artist Munga Honorable Freed Of Murder Charge
A wave of celebration swept through the camp of dancehall artist Munga Honorable on Friday after the entertainer and his co-accused walked free from the Home Circuit Court in downtown Kingston.
A wave of celebration swept through the camp of dancehall artist Munga Honorable on Friday after the entertainer and his co-accused walked free from the Home Circuit Court in downtown Kingston.
Veteran dancehall deejay Don Yute is enjoying a resurgence of attention thanks to his latest single, Upstream, a collaboration with conscious reggae artist I-Wayne that is steadily gaining traction both online and on radio.
For years, independent music label Overproof Records has quietly built a reputation for discovering emerging talent from western Jamaica and helping propel artists onto the national stage.
Music producer Prod.LoudSpeakr is preparing to release his highly anticipated 1876 Riddimcompilation on June 26, a project that brings together a diverse cast of emerging artistes from Jamaica and beyond.
Recording artist Vybrid is preparing to unveil the official visualizer for his single, Outlet, on June 17; delivering a powerful message centered on mental health, self-love, and resilience.
Reggae pioneer Stranger Cole has passed away on Thursday, June 11. He was 83.
Cole’s death marks the end of one of the longest and most influential careers in Jamaican popular music, a journey that stretched from the birth of ska in the early 1960s to reggae’s global expansion and beyond.
News Americas, TORONTO, Canada, Thurs. June 11, 2026: Guyana possesses oil wealth that most countries would envy. Corruption index score: 41 out of 100; 135th globally in economic freedom; net migration rate is minus 8 per thousand annually – people are physically choosing to leave rather than endure a system that extracts national wealth and concentrates it among the politically connected. In Regions 1, 6, 7, and 10, communities wait for roads, schools, water, ambulances, and electricity that Georgetown takes for granted. Children in Region 7 stop schooling after primary level because government decisions about who matters have made secondary education structurally inaccessible.
This is policy. Single-party dominance without genuine coalition accountability in a nation whose Constitution demands something categorically better. Region 10, home to 65,000 Guyanese, still has no Regional Chair. That is deliberate denial of representation. When a regime controlling oil wealth blocks regions from meaningful participation, constitutional rights exist on paper alone and democracy begins its quiet death.
The People’s National Congress (PNC), which led Guyana for many decades, practiced this identical methodology, packing courts, police, and institutions along ethnic and class lines. The faces have changed. The pattern hasn’t. A constitutional principle that the current Parliament has placed under acute stress and that every Guyanese citizen must understand with clarity: the Speaker of the National Assembly isn’t a government appointee. The Speaker is the servant of the entire Parliament and the servant of the entire electorate.
The exclusion of Amanza Walton-Desir, MP, from parliamentary committee service is a constitutional violation. Walton-Desir represents the Forward Guyana Movement, the 3rd largest opposition party by parliamentary seat count, following the 2025 election. She holds evident professional qualifications. She holds a constitutional entitlement, identical to every other elected MP, to meaningful parliamentary participation, including committee service. Her exclusion on the basis that her party is new, small, or inconvenient to the administration’s parliamentary management strategy is constitutionally indefensible on every available ground.
The logic is elementary: Parliament exists to represent the electorate. Every citizen who voted for FGM is represented by Walton-Desir. Excluding her from committee service does not merely sideline one MP – it disenfranchises every Guyanese who placed their trust in that movement and every citizen whose democratic interest her committee participation would have served. Partisanship has no constitutional home in the Speaker’s chair. None. The moment a Speaker accommodates MPs whose cooperative disposition serves the administration while blocking MPs whose independence challenges it, the Speaker has ceased to be an officer of Parliament and become an instrument of executive control. That transformation is precisely what the 2026 comparative study documented in Tunisia, Turkey, and Venezuela as the procedural face of soft authoritarianism.
Mr. Norton, PNC’s leader, would serve the Opposition’s cause considerably better by directing his political science training toward building the coalition that displaces this administration rather than targeting WIN’s leader, Azruddin Mohamed. His target is misplaced.
Five minutes examining the current administration’s regional record reveals a government that has progressively lost clarity about who Guyana’s genuine allies are. The Essequibo question has been managed through the International Court of Justice’s jurisdiction and diplomatic passivity, without building the bilateral treaty architecture and American partnership that would make any eventual judgment enforceable. Regional policy increasingly reflects patronage network priorities over sovereign national interests.
Mohamed’s conduct stands in categorical contrast. In August 2025, with no executive power, he formed his Political Movement – WE INVEST IN NATIONHOOD, (WIN). He deliberately navigated obstructed hinterland routes to reach communities that the established parties had abandoned. He donates part of his parliamentary salary to those in need. He works 16-hour days. He defers publicly to his colleagues rather than seeking personal prominence. He has named specific governmental misconduct with documented evidence on at least 5 occasions in May and June 2026, identifying ministers whose corrupt lifestyles he has cataloged as Leader Of The Opposition while their fellow Guyanese stand in bread lines.
In law, behavior consistent with a declared principle across 13 months of unscripted public life meets the standard of proof beyond a reasonable doubt. Mohamed’s record runs from 26th May, 2025, to present. It can’t be manufactured for “silly season” (election time). It already exists and is the most reliable predictor of what his presidency would produce. One year old. Documented. Constitutionally coherent. Guyana’s future is on the ballot in 2030.
EDITOR’S NOTE: M. Shabeer Zafar is a Guyana-born, Canadian-based Barrister-at-Law.
By Staff Reporter | NewsAmericasNow.com
NEWS AMERICAS, NEW YORK, NY, Thurs. June 11, 2026: The Caribbean is not just playing in the 2026 FIFA World Cup. It is providing the soundtrack. Three Caribbean artists – Puerto Rico’s Daddy Yankee, Jamaica’s Shaggy, and Jamaica’s Shenseea – have been confirmed on the Official FIFA World Cup 2026 Album, the most extensive multi-track music project ever created for football’s biggest event.
The 18-track album, unveiled by FIFA Sound this week, brings together artists from six continents representing multiple musical genres in celebration of the historic 2026 tournament – hosted across the United States, Canada, and Mexico. For the Caribbean diaspora already celebrating two regional nations – Haiti and Curaçao – making historic World Cup appearances, the presence of three Caribbean artists on the official soundtrack adds another layer of regional pride to what is shaping up to be an unforgettable Caribbean moment in world football.
Fresh off the release of his latest album Lottery – and Brooklyn Day in his honor – global reggae icon, Jamaican Shaggy, continues his extraordinary 2026 run with a feature on the Official FIFA World Cup 2026 Album.
Contributing the track “Love Always Wins” alongside Cuban artist Cimafunk and Zema, Shaggy joins a diverse roster that spans continents, languages, and genres in celebration of the world’s biggest sporting event. The inclusion further underscores his enduring influence as one of Caribbean music’s most recognizable global ambassadors — introducing reggae and dancehall sounds to FIFA’s worldwide audience at precisely the moment when the Caribbean region is making its most significant World Cup showing in decades.
Puerto Rican reggaeton superstar Daddy Yankee and Jamaican dancehall star Shenseea collaborated on “Echo” – one of the album’s lead singles, released on April 28, 2026, along with an official music video.
The pairing of two of the Caribbean’s biggest international music stars on a FIFA World Cup track represents a landmark moment for Caribbean music on the global stage – and a natural extension of the cross-Caribbean musical collaboration that has defined both artists’ careers.
The Official FIFA World Cup 2026 Album features 18 tracks bringing together some of the biggest names in global music – many collaborating for the very first time through the unifying power of football:
Including Goals by LISA, Anitta and Rema; Game Time by Future and Tyla; Three Nations by 21 Savage, Nata Cano and French Montana; No Place Like Home by Major Lazer, Nelly Furtado and Davido; Show Me by Ayra Starr and Latto; Champion by IShowSpeed; Dai Dai by Shakira and Burna Boy; and more.
“FIFA has brought together an extraordinarily strong music squad and one befitting the biggest single-sport event in history,” FIFA President Gianni Infantino said, as quoted in the official release. “From global superstars to breakthrough voices who are shaping the future of music, the Official FIFA World Cup 2026 Album features artists from across continents, languages and genres in a project designed to unite fans worldwide through the power of music and football.”
The full album is available for pre-save on all streaming platforms at open.spotify.com/album/37JAJeWRJIQb2mNzKsoi2N
The presence of three Caribbean artists on the Official FIFA World Cup 2026 Album arrives as the Caribbean prepares for its most significant World Cup moment in decades.
Haiti returns to the World Cup for the first time since 1974 – taking on Scotland, Brazil, and Morocco. Curaçao makes its historic debut as the smallest nation ever to compete in a FIFA World Cup – facing Germany, Ecuador, and Côte d’Ivoire.
Caribbean music. Caribbean football. Caribbean Heritage Month. June 2026 is the Caribbean’s moment – and the world is watching.
The Official FIFA World Cup 2026 Album is available on all streaming platforms. Full track list at FIFA.com
News Americas, MIAMI, FL, Thurs. June 10, 2026: The numbers are staggering – and largely invisible to the businesses living inside them. It’s a Financing Crisis. The International Finance Corporation estimates that 87 percent of small and medium enterprise financing needs in Latin America and the Caribbean go unmet, according to a September 2025 report by the ICR Facility on access to finance in the Caribbean. In absolute terms, the Inter-American Development Bank has estimated the financing gap for small and medium enterprises in the region at between $210 billion and $250 billion.
Globally, the picture is no less alarming. According to the IFC and the SME Finance Forum, there is currently a $5.7 trillion financing gap for micro, small, and medium enterprises worldwide – concentrated primarily in emerging markets and developing economies.
“MSMEs make up over 90 percent of all firms and account, on average, for 60 to 70 percent of total employment and 50 percent of GDP worldwide,” the IFC noted in a 2024 statement. “Still, there is currently a roughly $5.7 trillion financing gap for MSMEs.”
For the Caribbean specifically, the data reveals a region in crisis. Jamaica carries the largest absolute financing gap among Caribbean pilot countries at $2.717 billion – second highest relative to GDP, according to the September 2025 ICR Facility report. Belize records the highest financing gap as a percentage of GDP at 26 percent.
The LAC region has also seen a contraction in the supply of formal finance of approximately 4 percent per year over the most recent four-year measurement period, according to the SME Finance Forum’s MSME Finance Gap database – even as other emerging market regions expanded access significantly.
The barriers are well documented. According to research published by the Inter-American Development Bank, more than half of all small and medium enterprises in the Latin America and Caribbean region do not have access to the formal financial sector in the best of times. For women-owned businesses, the failure of the financial system is described as even greater.
“The financing gap is significant with respect to regional GDP,” the IDB concluded. “At the micro-level, the system does not serve MSMEs well.”
The structural causes are familiar – documentation requirements that do not fit the realities of emerging market borrowers, a lack of standardized deal packaging, and lenders who lack the local knowledge to assess risk accurately.
Technology platforms are beginning to address this gap. AI Capital Exchange, a platform powered by Invest Caribbean, uses AI-driven pre-qualification to connect companies including in Latin American and the Caribbean, to institutional debt capital – screening borrowers against real lender criteria in under 30 minutes and matching qualified applicants to the right lending partner.
“The problem was never a shortage of capital,” said Felicia J. Persaud, Founder and CEO. “It was a discovery failure. Qualified borrowers were invisible to lenders. We built the Whale Filter to make them visible – and to protect lenders from the 98 percent of deal flow that isn’t ready.”
The IFC committed a record $71.7 billion to private companies and financial institutions in developing countries in fiscal year 2025 – underscoring both the scale of institutional appetite for emerging market lending and the urgency of building better pipelines between qualified borrowers and available capital.
For small and medium enterprises across the Caribbean and Latin America, that pipeline has never been more urgently needed.
To check capital readiness and explore financing options, visit: www.investcaribbeannow.com/capital-readiness-check