Wyndham Grand Barbados Highlights How Caribbean Travelers Can Earn Free Stays Through Wyndham Rewards

News Americas, SAINT PHILIP, Barbados, March 06, 2026: As loyalty programs increasingly influence how travelers choose where to stay, Wyndham Grand Barbados Sam Lord’s Castle Resort & Spa is encouraging Caribbean travellers to take advantage of a benefit many may not realize is available to them; earning free hotel stays around the world through Wyndham Rewards, one of the largest hotel loyalty programmes globally.

The program allows guests to earn points for qualifying stays and redeem them at more than 9,000 Wyndham hotels across over 95 countries, meaning a getaway in Barbados can also help travelers build rewards for future trips to destinations across North America, Europe, the Caribbean, and beyond.

For many travelers in the region, however, the ability to earn global rewards from regional travel remains relatively underutilized. The resort is therefore encouraging Barbadians and visitors from across the Caribbean to sign up for Wyndham Rewards and begin building points through their stays.

To help travellers get started, the resort is offering double Wyndham Rewards points on eligible CARICOM and local bookings made through the end of April, allowing guests to accelerate their points while enjoying a luxury all-inclusive experience in Barbados.

General Manager Leroy Browne says the initiative is designed to raise awareness among Caribbean travellers who may not yet realize they can earn global travel rewards through regional stays.

“Many travelers in the Caribbean don’t realize that when they stay with us, they can earn points that can be redeemed at thousands of hotels around the world,” Browne said. “Wyndham Rewards allows our regional guests to enjoy a luxury all-inclusive experience here in Barbados while building points they can use for future travel. The double-points offer simply helps them reach those rewards faster.”

Situated on approximately 29 acres of oceanfront property along Barbados’ southeastern coast, Wyndham Grand Barbados Sam Lord’s Castle Resort & Spa blends the heritage of the historic Sam Lord’s site with a modern all-inclusive resort experience.

The 422-room resort features sweeping Atlantic views, six swimming pools, multiple dining venues, curated entertainment experiences and the island’s only ESPA-branded spa, offering both leisure and regional travellers a luxury escape within easy reach of major Caribbean gateways.

Year-round local and regional offers also make the property accessible to Barbadians and Caribbean nationals seeking a premium staycation experience while participating in Wyndham’s global loyalty ecosystem.

For travelers across the Caribbean, the message is simple, a Barbados getaway today can help unlock free hotel stays around the world tomorrow.

Website: https://www.wyndhamgrandbarbados.com/

The Healing Rhythm: How Reggae Transcends Struggle And Tells Jamaica’s Story

By Nyan Reynolds

News Americas, NEW YORK, NY, Fri. Mar. 6, 2026: Reggae music has always been more than entertainment. It has been memory, resistance, healing, and identity woven into rhythm. From the early days of Jamaican sound systems to the global revival movement of today, reggae has served as both a mirror and a refuge for the people who created it. It tells the story of struggle, faith, and cultural pride while offering something equally important: a moment of relief from the weight of daily life.

FLASHBACK: Chronixx performs onstage during All Points East on August 15, 2025 in London, England. (Photo by Joseph Okpako/WireImage)

To understand reggae is to understand transcendence. The genre has always carried the emotional weight of the past while guiding listeners toward a more hopeful future. Each generation of artists has inherited the sounds and the responsibility of those who came before them. Through rhythm, lyrics, and spiritual reflection, reggae has continuously translated the lived experience of the Caribbean into music that resonates worldwide.

The roots of this journey can be traced back to the pioneers of Jamaican music, including Prince Buster and the early architects of ska and rocksteady. These musicians built the foundation for what would eventually become reggae. Their music emerged during a time when Jamaica was navigating independence, cultural identity, and social change. The energetic horns of ska and the evolving rhythms of rocksteady reflected the pulse of a nation finding its voice.

In those early years, music was deeply tied to community life. Sound systems were not simply entertainment platforms. They were social spaces where people gathered to listen, dance, debate, and escape the pressures of everyday existence. The large speakers, often stacked high in open yards or on street corners, carried music across neighborhoods. When the bass began to vibrate through the air, the atmosphere changed. For a few hours, the hardships of life could be set aside.

Reggae eventually emerged from this environment, carrying with it a deeper spiritual and political consciousness. Few artists embodied that transformation more powerfully than Bob Marley, Jimmy Cliff, and Peter Tosh. Through their music, reggae became a global voice for justice, unity, and liberation.

Marley’s songs carried messages of redemption and spiritual awakening. Cliff told the stories of resilience and perseverance in the face of hardship. Tosh spoke boldly about equality, human rights, and resistance against oppression. Together, their voices elevated reggae beyond national borders, turning it into one of the most recognizable and influential musical movements in the world.

But reggae’s strength has always come from its collective voices. Artists like Marcia Griffiths, Phyllis Dillon, and Bob Andy added emotional depth and cultural richness to the genre. Their music reminded listeners that reggae was not only a vehicle for protest but also a space for love, reflection, and storytelling.

By the 1990s, reggae found renewed spiritual direction through artists such as Garnett Silk and Sizzla. Garnett Silk’s voice remains one of the most cherished in reggae history. His tone was soft yet powerful, carrying a spiritual resonance that seemed to transcend the music itself.

Silk did something particularly unique in his songs. He wove biblical language into the realities of everyday struggle. His music often sounded like a prayer set to rhythm. When he sang lyrics like “Bless me, bless me, Mighty Judge,” listeners did not hear merely a song. They heard a spiritual plea, a reflection of faith amid hardship.

His ability to blend scripture, culture, and social consciousness created a deep emotional connection with audiences. Through his music, Silk reminded listeners that reggae was not just about confronting injustice but also about maintaining hope and spiritual grounding.

Artists like Sizzla continued that tradition by emphasizing cultural pride, moral responsibility, and spiritual awareness. Their music spoke directly to communities navigating social and economic challenges while encouraging listeners to remain rooted in faith and identity.

Today, that lineage continues through the work of artists like Chronixx and members of the Marley family, including Damian Marley. Chronixx, in particular, has emerged as one of the leading voices of the modern reggae revival.

When listening to Chronixx, one cannot help but notice how his music carries echoes of the past. His vocal style, rhythmic phrasing, and lyrical themes reflect the influence of the legends who came before him. Yet his sound also feels contemporary, speaking directly to the challenges and aspirations of a new generation.

Chronixx’s music often reflects themes of healing, cultural awareness, and social reflection. In many ways, his songs feel like a continuation of the spiritual conversations that artists like Garnett Silk began decades earlier. When he chants and serenades through his melodies, listeners can hear the lineage of reggae’s past resonating through the present.

This intergenerational continuity is one of reggae’s greatest strengths. Music evolves, but its core purpose remains the same: to tell the people’s stories.

Reggae has always been a cultural archive. It documents the struggles of communities, the aspirations of youth, the lessons of elders, and the resilience of a society that has faced profound historical challenges. Through rhythm and poetry, reggae captures experiences that might otherwise be forgotten.

But perhaps its most remarkable power lies in its ability to transport listeners beyond their circumstances.

Anyone who grew up in the Caribbean understands the magic of a sound system gathering. When the large speakers were strung up and the music began to play, the entire community seemed to transform. The bass rolled through the streets, people gathered in yards, and the music created a shared atmosphere of celebration.

For a moment, the struggles of daily life faded into the background.

People danced.
They laughed.
They sang along to the lyrics.

In those moments, the pressures of unemployment, economic hardship, and political tension seemed distant. The music created a temporary refuge where people could reconnect with joy and community.

By morning, reality returned. The same social challenges remained. But the memory of those moments carried people forward.

This is one of reggae’s quiet miracles. Music does not eliminate suffering, nor does it erase injustice. What it does is provide psychological and emotional relief. It gives listeners the space to breathe, reflect, and regain the strength needed to face another day.

That power explains why reggae resonates far beyond Jamaica’s shores. Across Africa, Europe, the Americas, and Asia, people have embraced reggae’s rhythms and messages. The music speaks to universal themes of dignity, freedom, and resilience.

For the Caribbean diaspora, reggae carries additional significance. It preserves cultural memory. It connects younger generations to the experiences, struggles, and spiritual perspectives of those who came before them.

Artists like Chronixx carry on that responsibility. Through their music, they are shaping a new generation of cultural storytellers and, in many ways, modern freedom fighters. Their tools are not weapons but words, melodies, and rhythms that challenge listeners to think critically about society while maintaining faith in the possibility of change.

This role has always been central to reggae. From its earliest days, the genre has served as both commentary and comfort. It has exposed social injustice while offering listeners a sense of unity and hope.

Reggae reminds people of who they are.
It reminds them of where they come from.
And it reminds them that their stories matter.

From the foundational rhythms of Prince Buster to the global influence of Bob Marley, from the spiritual voice of Garnett Silk to the modern revival led by Chronixx, reggae’s journey is one of cultural endurance.

It is a music born from struggle but sustained by faith.

And as long as artists continue to raise their voices through rhythm and melody, reggae will remain what it has always been: a powerful reminder that even in the face of hardship, the human spirit can still rise, sing, and dance its way toward healing.

EDITOR’S NOTE: Nyan Reynolds is a U.S. Army veteran and published author whose novels and cultural works draw from his Jamaican heritage, military service, and life experiences. His writing blends storytelling, resilience, and heritage to inspire readers.  

RELATED: Women’s History Month – Caribbean Women Who Shaped The Modern World

Only Three Caribbean Leaders Invited To Donald Trump ‘Shield Of The Americas’ Summit

News Americas, NEW YORK, NY, Fri. Mar. 6, 2026: Just three Caribbean leaders are set to participate in a high-level regional security summit hosted by U.S. President Donald Trump this weekend, highlighting the region’s growing role in hemispheric discussions on migration, security, and organized crime and reinforcing the Monroe Doctrine.

Lionel Messi, a soccer player for Inter Miami CF, from left, US President Donald Trump, and Jorge Mas, owner of Inter Miami CF, during an event with Inter Miami CF in the East Room of the White House in Washington, DC, US, on Thursday, March 5, 2026. Inter Miami CF is visiting the White House to celebrate their 2025 championship win. Photographer: Yuri Gripas/Abaca/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Guyana’s President Dr. Mohamed Irfaan Ali; Trinidad and Tobago’s Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar and the Dominican Republic’s  Luis Abinader are the only Caribbean heads of government invited to the inaugural “Shield of the Americas” Summit, scheduled for tomorrow, Saturday, March 7th in Doral City, Florida.

The gathering will bring together leaders from 12 countries across Latin America and the Caribbean to discuss coordinated responses on tightening security, curbing mass migration, and dismantling drug cartels across the Western Hemisphere, signaling a shift toward a more focused alliance-based approach to regional security

According to the White House, the summit is designed to strengthen regional cooperation among governments confronting similar security challenges. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said the meeting will focus on building stronger partnerships to address issues affecting countries across the Americas. Ousted US DHS Secretary, Kristi Noem, has been named Special Envoy for The Shield of the Americas summit. But it is unclear if Noem will be present at the summit.

In addition to Guyana, the DR and Trinidad and Tobago, leaders from Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Honduras, Panama and Paraguay are expected to attend the summit.

Ali and Persad-Bissessar are the only two CARICOM leaders invited as the US administration steps up its focus on organized crime, drug trafficking routes, and migration dynamics.

Guyana, one of the fastest-growing economies in the hemisphere due to its rapidly expanding oil sector, has also gained strategic importance in regional geopolitics and energy security. President Ali’s participation reflects the country’s expanding diplomatic profile as it engages more actively in hemispheric dialogue.

Meanwhile, Trinidad and Tobago continues to play a key role in Caribbean security cooperation and regional diplomacy. Prime Minister Persad-Bissessar’s presence at the summit signals the country’s continued involvement in discussions on regional stability and law enforcement collaboration.

The summit comes amid heightened concern across the Americas over the influence of transnational criminal organizations and the need for coordinated strategies to combat drug trafficking and organized crime networks that operate across borders.

U.S. officials say the “Shield of the Americas” Summit aims to strengthen intelligence sharing, security cooperation and policy coordination among participating governments as they confront these evolving threats. Leavitt added at the briefing the meeting aims to “promote freedom, security, and prosperity in our region.”

“President will be speaking with the leaders of this country who have really formed a historic coalition to work together to address criminal, narcoterrorist gangs and cartels and counter illegal and mass migration into not only the United States, but the Western Hemisphere, which remains a key and top priority of this President,” Leavitt said.

For the Caribbean, the participation of three of its leaders places the region within a broader hemispheric conversation on security, migration and economic stability – issues that increasingly connect Caribbean nations with developments across Latin America and the United States.

RELATED: IDB Growth Forecast: How Each Caribbean Economy Is Expected To Perform in 2026

How Strong Compliance Laws Protect Investors And Local Communities

News Americas, NEW YORK, NY, Thurs. Mar. 5, 2026: Strong compliance laws are the glue to building trust in business, whether in the Caribbean, Latin America or globally. They don’t only protect investors; they also shield local communities from corruption, fraud, and reckless corporate conduct. In simple terms, compliance laws ensure that everyone plays by the same rules.

When a company plays by the rules and acts responsibly, everybody wins. Investors are confident, employees feel safe, and communities thrive. Michael Hershman is one of the names that pops up when transparency and governance are discussed. His contributions remind us, yet again, why doing the right thing in business always pays off.

Why Compliance Laws Matter

Compliance laws are rules about how companies should behave. They help ensure that businesses do not take shortcuts or conceal the truth from the public. One can only hope that we never have a world without these laws, as that would cause chaos.

Here’s what these laws accomplish for us:

Protect investors: Compliant businesses maintain honest financial records. Investors can use actual data, rather than false claims, to make decisions.

Protect employees and communities: Vendors who follow compliance laws must care for people, pay fair wages, ensure safe work conditions, and avoid illegal shortcuts.

Prevent corruption: Rules about transparency and anti-bribery help stop powerful people from using money for unfair advantage.

Encourage long-term growth: Ethical companies stay stable. They attract more customers and investors who trust their reputation.

It’s simple: when companies do the right thing, their success lasts longer.

Transparency Builds Investor Confidence

Transparency is one of the strongest pillars of compliance. It’s the open sharing of information so that everyone knows what’s really happening behind closed doors. A transparent company doesn’t merely demonstrate the profits it made, but how it made them.

Investors love that. People tend to invest when reports are accurate and honest. They know that their money isn’t going toward shady deals. This kind of openness also keeps the marketplace fair; it helps prevent sudden crashes or unknown debts that harm people and economies.

Protecting Local Communities

Now let’s talk about the ones closest to local business communities. These are the neighbourhoods and towns where companies operate. Compliance laws act as guardrails to ensure business growth doesn’t harm people living nearby.

For example, environmental compliance laws stop factories from dumping waste into rivers or polluting the air. Labour compliance laws make sure workers are not overworked or unpaid. These laws create balanced profit for the business and safety for the people.

And when companies respect these rules, communities often give back with loyalty and long-term support.

Ethical Business And Corporate Governance

The heart of compliance is ethical business practice. It’s not just about avoiding punishment; it’s about doing what’s morally right. Strong corporate governance systems support this by ensuring that leaders are accountable for their decisions.

In a well-run company, there are checks and balances. It responds to employees, addresses grievances, and speaks honestly to regulators. When leaders know they will be called to account, they hesitate before taking shortcuts. That’s how the roots of corruption are cut off. For years, experts like Michael Hershman have emphasized the necessity of integrity in leadership.

How Companies Can Stay Compliant

Compliance is not just paperwork; it protects your company, your people, and your reputation. When you take it seriously, you avoid trouble and build trust at the same time.

It starts with regular audits; it is a routine checkup. You review your records, systems, and processes to catch small mistakes early. When you fix problems fast, they don’t grow into costly crises. Audits keep you prepared and confident.

Training is just as important. Your team needs to understand company policies and legal rules. When you explain expectations clearly and use real examples, people make better decisions. Over time, good habits form. Everyone moves in the same direction.

You also need safe channels for employees to reveal what’s going on. Strong legal protection for whistleblowers means you may not know sensitive business secrets, but they are crucial because people who have them report problems without prejudice. If employees trust the system, they will blow the whistle early. This avoids loss and preserves good habits and integrity.

Shaping Tomorrow With Ethical Values

Integrity grows from the leadership. When leaders are full of integrity, others will follow suit. Compliance is not an extra burden; it becomes part of regular work. Employees feel good about being part of an organization that emphasizes doing things right.

People like Michael Hershman, who advocate an ethical management spirit, tell us that abstention is also a moral act. However, there is an artistic interest. You invest most effectively in your future by spending it on integrity. Integrity gives your company safety, confidence, and a solid foundation for continued success.

New Caribbean Music: Shaggy Teams With Beres Hammond & Dexta Daps As Fresh Reggae Releases Drop

By NAN Entertainment Editor

News Americas, NEW YORK, NY, Fri. Mar. 6, 2026: Caribbean music fans have a fresh wave of releases to explore as several reggae and dancehall artists roll out new singles, collaborations and videos, keeping the region’s global soundtrack vibrant.

Among the standout releases is “Dancehall Nice,” the latest track from Jamaican Grammy-winning artist Shaggy, featuring reggae legend Beres Hammond and dancehall star Dexta Daps.

Shaggy shares “Dancehall Nice,” featuring Beres Hammond and Dexta Daps, alongside an official music video directed by Jay Will. Co-produced by Shaggy and Lloyd “John John” James Jr., the track marks the first-ever collaboration between all three artists, with the song serving as a tribute to Jamaican music culture.

The track marks the first-ever collaboration between the three Jamaican artists and serves as a tribute to Jamaica’s dancehall culture. The single was co-produced by Shaggy and Lloyd “John John” James Jr., while the official music video was directed by noted Caribbean director Jay Will.

The release comes as Reggae Month celebrations concluded in Jamaica and alongside the Island Music Conference, held in Kingston from February 25–28. The conference brought together artists, producers and music executives to discuss the global business of Jamaican music.

“Dancehall Nice” continues Shaggy’s recent series of collaborative projects following “Til A Mawnin” with Sting and “Boom Body,” featuring Akon and Aidonia.

LISTEN HERE

Vybz Kartel and Shenseea Drop “Panic”

Meanwhile, dancehall heavyweights Vybz Kartel and Shenseea have teamed up on the energetic new track “Panic,” produced by TJ Records.

The collaboration brings together two of the genre’s most influential voices, adding another high-profile release to dancehall’s current momentum.

LISTEN HERE

Lovers Rock Revival With Shauna Shadae, Nigy Boy and Seani B

In the reggae space, Shauna Shadae, Nigy Boy and Grammy-winning producer Seani B have joined forces for “When I Think,” a sultry lovers-rock track blending classic reggae elements with R&B influences.

The trans-Atlantic collaboration highlights Jamaican-born, UK-based singer Shauna Shadae’s fusion style, combining reggae, R&B and Afro-inspired sounds.

Nigy Boy, one of reggae and dancehall’s rising stars, brings a unique story to the project. The artist, who lost his sight at a young age, developed his musical talents while attending The Salvation Army School for the Blind before later studying political science at Stony Brook University in the United States.

The track offers a modern take on traditional lovers rock, arriving at a time when many reggae artists are revisiting the genre’s roots while blending contemporary production styles.

Check it out Here

Anthony Cruz Returns With Reflective Single

Veteran reggae vocalist Anthony Cruz has also returned with a new single, “What’s a Man to Do,” delivering a soulful reinterpretation of a classic song exploring emotional vulnerability and the pressures men face.

The single was produced by Mark Ho-Sang for Bwoyla Room Productions, with the riddim crafted by KashieF Lindo and final mixing and mastering handled by the HeavyBeat Crew.

Cruz’s latest release blends a traditional reggae sound with contemporary production, aiming to appeal to reggae, R&B and adult contemporary audiences. Stream now

Gyptian Releases “Anything 4 U”

Adding to the lineup of new music is Gyptian, who recently unveiled “Anything 4 U,” a melodic, piano-driven love song produced by platinum producer Ricky Blaze.

Known for hits like “Hold Yuh,” Gyptian delivers another heartfelt track, serenading a woman he promises to give everything for. The single, released via FME Recordings, is now streaming across digital platforms worldwide. Stream Now

Reggae and Dancehall Continue Global Influence

The latest releases underscore the continued influence of Caribbean music globally, with artists across generations collaborating and blending traditional reggae sounds with contemporary production and international partnerships.

From dancehall anthems to lovers-rock revival and soulful reggae ballads, the region’s newest tracks highlight the diversity and enduring creativity of Caribbean music.

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IDB Growth Forecast: How Each Caribbean Economy Is Expected To Perform in 2026

By NAN Staff Writer

News Americas, NEW YORK, NY, Wed. Mar. 4, 2026: Caribbean economies are expected to continue expanding in 2026, although growth across the region will remain uneven, according to the latest Latin American and Caribbean Macroeconomic Report from the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB).

The report says overall economic growth in Latin America and the Caribbean is projected at about 2.1% in 2026, reflecting modest expansion amid global economic uncertainty, high debt levels, and persistent structural challenges. The analysis underscores the resilience of the region’s economies and finds that accelerating inclusive growth will demand sound macroeconomic frameworks and bold structural reforms, alongside efforts to harness opportunities in technology and commodities, amid growing global risks. The projection reflects a gradual slowdown compared to the region’s 2.2% growth in 2025.

Within the Caribbean, however, growth trajectories vary widely depending on energy production, tourism recovery and infrastructure investment.

Oil-producing Guyana remains the region’s fastest-growing economy by a wide margin, while most tourism-driven island economies are expected to expand at moderate rates between two and four percent.

Caribbean GDP Growth Forecasts For 2026

Based on the IDB macroeconomic outlook and regional projections, the expected growth outlook for Caribbean economies includes:

Energy-Driven Economies

Guyana: 10–12% growth, driven by continued offshore oil production expansion.

Trinidad and Tobago: 2–2.5%, supported by energy exports and industrial production.

Suriname: 2–3%, with expected recovery tied to mining and energy investments.

Tourism-Dependent Economies

Dominican Republic: 4–5% growth, supported by tourism and construction.

Bahamas: 1.8–2% expansion as tourism stabilizes.

Barbados: about 3% growth, driven by tourism and services.

Jamaica: about 2–2.1%, reflecting moderate tourism recovery and fiscal discipline.

Belize: around 2–2.5%.

Eastern Caribbean Economies

Grenada: 3–4%.

Saint Lucia: 3–4%.

Saint Vincent and the Grenadines: about 4%.

Antigua and Barbuda: 3–4%.

Dominica: about 3–4%, supported by reconstruction projects.

Saint Kitts and Nevis: roughly 2–3%.

Fragile Economy

Haiti: growth remains negative or near zero due to ongoing political instability and economic disruption.

Tourism and Energy Driving Growth

The IDB report notes that tourism recovery and energy production are the two biggest drivers of Caribbean growth.

Tourism-dependent economies across the region continue to benefit from strong visitor demand from the United States and Europe, while energy exporters such as Guyana and Trinidad and Tobago are benefiting from global energy markets.

At the same time, the bank warns that most Caribbean economies still face structural constraints, including small domestic markets, vulnerability to climate shocks, high debt levels and dependence on a limited number of industries.

Growth Remains Modest for Most Islands

Despite pockets of strong performance, the IDB cautions that long-term growth potential in many Caribbean economies remains around 1–2%, highlighting the need for greater productivity, investment and economic diversification.

The report recommends strengthening institutions, expanding regional integration and improving fiscal management to support sustainable growth.

For the Caribbean, the challenge is clear: maintaining economic resilience while building more diversified and competitive economies capable of sustaining growth beyond tourism and commodities.

The report concludes that policies promoting stronger competition, improved skills formation, deeper regional integration, and the development of more sophisticated regional value chains can significantly boost productivity – and should remain at the center of Latin America and the Caribbean’s policy agendas.

“Latin America and the Caribbean navigated global uncertainty with resilience, supported by fiscal and monetary frameworks that have helped contain inflation and sustain macroeconomic stability,” said Laura Alfaro Maykall, IDB chief economist and economic counselor. “Looking ahead, countries have to accelerate productivity-led growth, strengthen public finances, and seize new opportunities from digitalization, artificial intelligence, and the energy to raise living standards and build more resilient and inclusive economies.” 

RELATED: Oil-Rich CARICOM Nation Guyana Still Faces High Poverty Levels, Data Shows

US Seeks Forfeiture Of Oil Tanker Flying False Guyana Flag

By NAN Staff Writer

News Americas, WASHINGTON, D.C., Wed. Mar. 4, 2026: The United States government is seeking the forfeiture of a crude oil tanker seized on the high seas in December 2025 that authorities say was falsely flying the flag of Guyana while transporting millions of barrels of Venezuelan oil linked to sanctioned networks.

The U.S. Department of Justice said a civil complaint has been filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia seeking to seize the Motor Tanker Skipper and its cargo of approximately 1.8 million barrels of crude oil supplied by Petróleos de Venezuela, S.A. (PdVSA).

A group of Iranian men prays in an area that is targeted in U.S.-Israeli attacks in Tehran, Iran, on March 4, 2026. (Photo by Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

According to the complaint, the vessel was intercepted by U.S. authorities on December 10, 2025, after it was determined the ship was falsely claiming Guyana’s flag, effectively rendering it stateless under international maritime law.

The tanker and its cargo are being targeted for forfeiture because prosecutors allege the operation helped generate revenue and influence for Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, including its Qods Force, which the United States has designated a foreign terrorist organization.

US Officials Cite Sanctions Enforcement

U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi said the case demonstrates Washington’s determination to disrupt financial flows to hostile regimes.

“Under President Trump’s leadership, the era of secretly bankrolling regimes that pose clear threats to the United States is over,” Bondi said. “This Department of Justice will deploy every legal authority at our disposal to dismantle operations that defy our laws and fuel chaos across the globe.”

FBI Director Kash Patel said the complaint highlights the agency’s efforts to enforce sanctions and disrupt global networks used to fund militant groups.

“The FBI, working alongside our interagency partners, will continue aggressively identifying, disrupting, and dismantling the financial networks used by foreign adversaries to fund terrorist organizations and destabilize international security,” Patel said.

  “We will aggressively enforce U.S. sanctions against Iran and relentlessly pursue ghost fleet vessels whose illicit oil shipments have served as revenue sources for the IRGC and its terrorist proxies,” said U.S. Attorney Jeanine Ferris Pirro for the District of Columbia. “With the continued seizures and forfeitures of tankers and related profits, we are sending a clear message that there will be no safe harbor for sanctions evasion – and that we will deny Iran the ability to fund terrorism through its shadowy maritime networks.”

Assistant Attorney General A. Tysen Duva added that the case is part of broader efforts to stop millions of dollars from flowing to designated terrorist organizations.

Alleged Global Oil Smuggling Network

According to the DOJ, the forfeiture complaint alleges a scheme dating back to at least 2021 involving the shipment and sale of petroleum products to benefit the IRGC.

Investigators say the Skipper transported crude oil originating in both Iran and Venezuela, using ship-to-ship transfers and other deceptive maritime practices to move cargo around the world.

Authorities say the tanker most recently loaded approximately 1.8 million barrels of Venezuelan crude oil in November 2025 at the José Terminal in Venezuela.

Shipping documents cited in the complaint show that about 1.1 million barrels of the cargo were scheduled for delivery to Cubametales, a Cuban state-run oil importer that has been under U.S. sanctions since 2019.

However, U.S. officials say the vessel changed course before reaching Cuba and was intercepted on the high seas in the Caribbean.

Part of Broader Oil Enforcement Campaign

The seizure of the Skipper is part of a wider U.S. effort to disrupt sanctioned oil trade linked to Venezuela and Iran.

Officials allege the tanker had been operating as part of a so-called “shadow fleet” used to evade sanctions by falsifying locations, changing vessel identities and flying false national flags.

If a federal judge approves the forfeiture request, the U.S. government could take ownership of the tanker and its oil cargo, potentially selling the crude and redirecting the proceeds.

The case remains pending before the court.

RELATED: Caribbean Watch: Anticipation and Uncertainty Ahead of High-Profile Talks With Washington

Women’s History Month – Caribbean Women Who Shaped The Modern World

By Nyan Reynolds

News Americas, NY, NY, Tues. Mar. 3, 2026: Every March, Women’s History Month invites reflection. It asks us to consider who shaped our world, who challenged injustice, who built institutions, and who carried culture across borders. Too often, those narratives center the same global capitals and the same familiar names.

But to understand modern political leadership, diasporic activism, literary authority, and cultural power, we must look to the Caribbean.

Caribbean women have never been confined by geography. From small island states and colonial territories emerged leaders, thinkers, artists, and organizers whose work reshaped the 20th and 21st centuries. Their influence moved across oceans. Their ideas crossed languages. Their leadership challenged assumptions about race, gender, power, and nationhood.

As we begin Women’s History Month, we highlight just a few of the women whose lives demonstrate a larger truth: Caribbean women are not peripheral to global history. They are central to it.

And this list is only a beginning.

Political Power: Rewriting the Image of Leadership

When Eugenia Charles became the first woman prime minister in the Caribbean in 1980, it was a defining moment for the region. Leading Dominica during a period of political instability and economic strain, she earned a reputation for firmness and resolve. Internationally, she stood alongside world leaders at a time when female heads of government were still rare.

Her leadership disrupted long-standing assumptions about who could command authority in post-colonial Caribbean politics. She was not symbolic. She was decisive.

Years later, Portia Simpson-Miller would rise to become Jamaica’s first female prime minister. Her story mattered not only because of her gender, but because of her journey. Coming from working-class roots, she expanded the image of national leadership. She embodied possibility for women who had never seen themselves reflected in the highest office.

Today, Mia Mottley represents a new phase of Caribbean political influence. Under her leadership, Barbados transitioned to a republic, formally removing the British monarch as head of state. Beyond regional milestones, her advocacy on climate justice has positioned her as one of the most respected voices on the global stage. In international forums, she has spoken with urgency about the vulnerabilities of small island developing states, insisting that global financial systems account for historical inequities.

Together, these women illustrate a clear progression. Caribbean women are not merely participating in governance. They are shaping international policy conversations, redefining sovereignty, and expanding what political leadership looks like.

Social Justice and Diasporic Vision

Long before “intersectionality” became common language, Caribbean women were articulating the connections between race, gender, labor, and empire.

Amy Ashwood Garvey, co-founder of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, was instrumental in shaping early 20th-century Pan-African thought. While often overshadowed in popular history, she advocated for women’s leadership within global Black liberation movements and worked to ensure that women were not relegated to supportive roles.

Her activism traveled across continents, from the Caribbean to the United States and the United Kingdom. She understood that Caribbean identity was inseparable from the wider African diaspora.

Similarly, Claudia Jones carried Caribbean radical thought into international spaces. Born in Trinidad and later active in the United States and Britain, she confronted racism, economic inequality, and gender discrimination head-on. She argued that the liberation of Black communities required attention to the unique experiences of women.

Jones also founded what would become the Notting Hill Carnival in London, transforming Caribbean culture into a powerful symbol of resistance and pride in the diaspora. What began as community expression evolved into one of the largest cultural festivals in Europe.

Through activism and institution-building, these women reshaped not only political discourse but cultural memory. They demonstrated that Caribbean women were theorists, strategists, and movement architects.

Literature and Intellectual Authority

If politics shapes policy, literature shapes imagination. Caribbean women have long insisted on telling their own stories.

Maryse Condé confronted colonialism and its aftermath through novels that explored identity, displacement, and womanhood. Her work complicated romanticized images of the Caribbean, revealing the layered histories of slavery, migration, and resistance. In 2018, she received the New Academy Prize in Literature, an acknowledgment of her global literary impact.

Edwidge Danticat has similarly ensured that Haiti’s history and the experiences of Haitian women are preserved in global consciousness. Through fiction and essays, she addresses migration, memory, political violence, and resilience. Her work bridges homeland and diaspora, reminding readers that Caribbean narratives extend far beyond tourism brochures and simplified stereotypes.

These writers expanded intellectual space. They challenged dominant narratives written about the Caribbean and replaced them with narratives written from within it. In doing so, they reshaped how the world understands Caribbean history and womanhood.

Culture as Global Power

Cultural influence is one of the Caribbean’s most visible contributions to the world. And women have been central to that influence.

Rihanna emerged from Barbados to become one of the most recognized entertainers and entrepreneurs in the world. Beyond music, her business ventures in beauty and fashion disrupted industries long criticized for limited representation. When she was declared a National Hero of Barbados, it symbolized more than celebrity recognition. It marked the elevation of cultural entrepreneurship as national pride.

Before and alongside contemporary icons, artists like Celia Cruz carried Afro-Caribbean music onto international stages. Known as the “Queen of Salsa,” her voice became synonymous with joy, defiance, and cultural affirmation. Through performance, she preserved and amplified Afro-Caribbean identity across borders.

Culture, in this context, is not entertainment alone. It is diplomacy. It is economic power. It is narrative control.

Caribbean women have used it to shift perceptions and claim space in industries that once excluded them.

More Than a List

It is important to say clearly: this is not an exhaustive roster. For every internationally recognized figure, there are countless Caribbean women shaping academia, grassroots activism, public health, environmental policy, education, and community development.

Women’s History Month offers an opportunity to widen the lens. To move beyond token recognition and toward deeper acknowledgment of sustained impact.

The Caribbean’s history is one of colonization and resistance, migration and reinvention. Within that history, women have always been central. They organized communities during independence struggles. They preserved language and culture under colonial rule. They built businesses, led classrooms, and carried families across borders in search of opportunity.

The 21st century did not create Caribbean women leaders. It revealed them to a wider audience.

Why This Moment Matters

Beginning Women’s History Month by honoring Caribbean women is not about regional pride alone. It is about correcting perspective.

Global history often flows through powerful nations and dominant narratives. Yet many of the ideas shaping today’s conversations about climate justice, diasporic identity, intersectional activism, cultural entrepreneurship, and post-colonial sovereignty have deep Caribbean roots.

The women highlighted here did not wait for permission to lead. They entered political chambers, literary circles, protest movements, and global industries with clarity about who they were and what they represented.

They shifted the image of the Caribbean woman from background figure to global force.

As this month unfolds, there will be space to explore their stories individually and to highlight many others whose work deserves equal attention. But at the outset, the message is simple.

Caribbean women have shaped the modern world.

Women’s History Month gives us language to celebrate that truth. The Caribbean gives us generations of women who made it undeniable.

 EDITOR’S NOTE: Nyan Reynolds is a U.S. Army veteran and published author whose novels and cultural works draw from his Jamaican heritage, military service, and life experiences. His writing blends storytelling, resilience, and heritage to inspire readers.  

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Caribbean Watch: Anticipation and Uncertainty Ahead of High-Profile Talks With Washington

By Keith Bernard

NEWS AMERICAS, NY, NY, Mon. Mar. 2, 2026: If ever there were a moment in recent Caribbean and hemispheric history where one would desperately wish to be a fly on the wall, it is now — on the eve of the anticipated meeting between the Presidents of Guyana, Trinidad and Tobago, and the United States of America. At a time when the Middle East continues to burn with a ferocity that is reshaping global alliances, energy markets, and the very architecture of international order, such a gathering carries implications that stretch far beyond the walls of whatever room these three leaders occupy.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio participates in a family photo with Caribbean Community (CARICOM) heads of government in Basseterre, Saint Kitts and Nevis, February 25, 2026. Rubio is meeting with Caribbean leaders seeking a common line on Venezuela and pressure on Cuba. He’s also addressing President Donald Trump’s priorities, including combating illegal immigration, drug trafficking and regional security. (Photo by Jonathan Ernst / POOL / AFP via Getty Images)

The world in which this meeting takes place is not the world of even five years ago. The ongoing conflict in the Middle East — with its cascading effects on oil prices, shipping routes, global food security, and the re-alignment of geopolitical loyalties — has elevated the strategic importance of the Western Hemisphere’s energy producers to a degree that would have seemed extraordinary in calmer times. Guyana, sitting atop one of the most significant oil discoveries of the twenty-first century, and Trinidad and Tobago, a seasoned natural gas exporter with decades of energy diplomacy under its belt, are no longer peripheral players in conversations that Washington must have. They are, increasingly, central to them.

And so, as a Caribbean citizen watching all of this unfold, I confess I would give much to hear what is truly said — not the polished communiqués that will emerge for public consumption, but the frank exchanges that happen between statesmen who know the weight of what they carry. What does Washington really want from Guyana and Trinidad? Is this a conversation about energy security — redirecting supply chains away from volatile Middle Eastern sources — or is there a broader strategic ask being made, perhaps regarding regional security architecture, the posture toward Venezuela, or the management of China’s deepening footprint in the region?

I would want to hear how our leaders push back — or whether they do. Will Guyana’s President articulate a vision for how this oil wealth serves Guyanese first, even as global powers circle with their interests? Will Trinidad’s leader bring to the table the voice of a small island state that has survived the boom-and-bust cycles of hydrocarbon dependence and has something honest to say about the terms of these relationships? The Middle East crisis has a way of making powerful nations suddenly generous — but generosity from the powerful rarely arrives without strings.

There is also the humanitarian dimension to consider. As the Middle East conflict has deepened divisions within international institutions — the United Nations rendered increasingly impotent, Western consensus fractured, and the Global South watching with a mixture of anger and calculation — small states like ours face real choices about which version of the international order we wish to inhabit and uphold. I would want to hear whether anyone in that room speaks to this, or whether the conversation stays safely within the language of investment, trade, and strategic partnership.

History is being made in real time, and the Caribbean — often spoken about as an afterthought in global affairs — now finds itself in a peculiar and powerful position. I would want to know, in that room, whether our leaders recognise this fully and are negotiating accordingly; or whether old habits of deference and dependency are quietly reasserting themselves under the pressure of a superpower’s invitation.

A fly on the wall would hear the truth of it. The rest of us will have to read between the lines of whatever statement follows. I trust that our leaders understand that the people of this region are watching — and hoping — that they negotiate not just for today’s headlines, but for the long arc of our sovereignty and wellbeing.

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

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The Triple C Crisis, The Caribbean Person, And What We Must Do For Ourselves

By Prof. C. Justin Robinson

News Americas, NEW YORK, NY, Sun. Mar. 1, 2026: On August 1, 2023, I assumed the role of Campus Principal at The University of the West Indies Five Islands in Antigua and Barbuda, determined to make real the Vice

Chancellor’s call for UWI to be an activist university. At my induction ceremony on January 27 2024, I framed my principalship around what I called the ‘ Triple C Crisis: the Climate Crisis, the Crime Crisis, and the Chronic Non-Communicable Diseases Crisis.’ Three interlocking emergencies destroying Caribbean lives, potential, and futures. After watching the 50th CARICOM Heads of Government opening ceremony in St. Kitts last week, I believe more than ever that confronting these crises cannot rest with politicians alone. It must rest with us and let me say why through the stories of real people I know.

I.   The Brother and the Mother  

A brother sits in Anguilla, staring at his phone. The last message from his sister in Cuba reads: They want us to die! His sister, their mother’s daughter, born of a union with a Dominican man who settled in Cuba, lives on an island the United Nations warns is approaching humanitarian collapse. Cuba’s American-imposed fuel blockade has closed schools, grounded aircraft, darkened homes for twenty hours a day, and left garbage rotting in Havana’s streets. There are no half-sisters in Afro-Caribbean culture, she is his sister and her crisis is his crisis.

His mother wonders about her other son in Miami. Will I get the visa to attend his wedding? Can I get to see my child married?

This family watched CARICOM’s leaders speak from the Marriott Dome in Basseterre on

Tuesday night. Their words felt both vital and hopelessly distant. They heard Jamaica’s Andrew Holness warn that a prolonged crisis in Cuba will affect migration, security, and stability across the basin. They heard St. Kitts’ Terrance Drew deliver an arithmetic that should terrify every leader in that room, Cuba’s population is nine to twelve million, excluding Haiti, the rest of CARICOM does not amount to ten million.

And they heard Trinidad’s Kamla Persad-Bissessar tell the room, to our delight, that crime in Trinidad and Tobago has fallen by 42%. They also heard “who vex, loss” as she lauded President Trump and Secretary Rubio for deploying the US military in Caribbean waters, declared she could not depend on CARICOM for security, and called the regional body “unreliable.”

They heard about the dilemma around Cuba’s political system. Our leaders had no dilemmas about Cuba’s political system when Cuban aid was being accepted. This newfound moral dilemma among some of our leaders seemed curious, as the leaders shared the room with the prominently seated Saudi delegation, a detail worth lingering on, given that no one at the podium or from the USA was demanding democratic elections in Riyadh.

The brother turned off the television and his mother went to bed without an answer. The next morning she saw a clip of President Trump joking about people being afraid to go fishing during his State of the Union address.

II.  The Wife Who Cannot Sleep

In the village of Fancy, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, a wife lies awake listening for the sound of her husband’s boat engine. Since September 2025, the United States military has carried out at least forty-four strikes against vessels in Caribbean and Pacific waters, killing at least one hundred and fifty people. Washington calls them narco-terrorists. Families and governments say many were fishermen. Human Rights Watch has called the strikes “unlawful extrajudicial killings.”

This wife does not know geopolitics but she knows the sea has always fed her family. She knows that tonight, her husband is on that sea, in a small boat that looks exactly like every other small boat that has been blown to pieces without evidence, without warning, without apology. She can see the lights of Vieux Fort in St. Lucia across the water, the same waters where someone’s partner died on a boat just like her husband’s.

III.          The Sea moss Vendor, the Boutique Owner, and the Factory Worker

In Antigua, a sea moss vendor does his accounts. His profit margins depend on bottles sourced at the China price. Not any other price, the China price. When Washington pressures Caribbean nations to sever ties with Beijing, it is not a diplomatic abstraction to him, it is the survival of his enterprise. A small island cannot eat geopolitics, it must eat. When one global power offers you bullets and the other offers you bottles, a small island’s choice is not a moral one, but a survival instinct.

In Grenada, a boutique owner stocks affordable fashion sourced from Shein. This is not a confession, it is the reality of retail in a small island developing state. When supply chains are weaponized in great-power competition, she is a woman watching her margins vanish.

In Trinidad, a factory worker clocks in every morning at a plant whose business depends on exports to the Eastern Caribbean under the CARICOM Common External Tariff. When her Prime Minister calls the regional body “unreliable,” she wonders, unreliable for whom? That tariff is her pay cheque.

And somewhere in the Eastern Caribbean, a high school waits for a Huawei-equipped computer lab that may never arrive. The school did not choose Chinese technology over any other, there is no similar offer from anywhere. The students will not understand the geopolitics, but they will understand that everyone talks about coding, but they still do not have the computers.

IV.  The Triple C Crisis

Every person above is living inside the Triple C Crisis, whether they name it or not.

The Climate Crisis is here. Hurricane Melissa made landfall in Jamaica on October 28, 2025 as one of the strongest Atlantic hurricanes ever recorded, with winds of 185 miles per hour, killing at least ninety-five people and causing an estimated forty-eight to fiftytwo billion dollars in damage. Cuba’s eastern provinces, still recovering from Melissa, have no fuel to run recovery operations. Our reefs are bleaching, our coastlines are eroding and our aquifers are salinizing.

The Crime Crisis is our deepest wound. We are people who know how to love and that is what makes the violence so incomprehensible. In 2024, Trinidad and Tobago recorded a homicide rate of approximately 45.7 per 100,000, Jamaica approximately 40 per 100,000, each roughly eight to nine times the US rate. The wife in Fancy is afraid not only of American missiles but that her sons will become statistics in a crisis that predates any foreign intervention and will outlast every foreign policy. She cannot accept that extra judicial bombing of boats is the best we can do to solve the crime crisis.

It is too easy to write the role of American made guns and American addiction out of the Caribbean drug and crime story.

The NCD Crisis hides behind our beauty. We are not only the beach, reggae, and carnival capitals of the world, we are also the hypertension and diabetes capitals of the world. Over a third of Caribbean adults are hypertensive and barely a third have their blood pressure controlled. I am one of the victims and take my meds daily. The seamoss vendor is, without knowing it, part of the solution, promoting indigenous, nutritious products in a region that imports too much of what it eats.

V.  The Woman Nobody Elected

Let me tell you about a woman I know who runs a small community health initiative in the Eastern Caribbean. No government funding, no foreign grant, just a conviction that her neighbours should not die from conditions a blood pressure cuff could have caught. She organizes screening days at the church hall, she tracks who comes back and who does not, she calls the ones who do not. Nobody elected her, nobody will give her a podium at the Marriott Dome, but she is saving more lives than most communiqués.

Remember her as she is the answer to the question I am about to ask.

VI.  What Tuesday Night Taught Me

The leaders said many of the right things, but speeches are what leaders do, the question is what do we do.

Foreign priorities will change, American administrations come and go, the Cuba blockade may ease or tighten, but the Triple C Crisis will still be here. It was here before Donald Trump and it will be here next year and the year after that.

We cannot outsource the survival of our people to foreign powers or to leaders who come and go. But I am not here to castigate our politicians. They are playing a weak hand in a rigged game. When a superpower blockades your neighbor, blows up boats in your waters, and sends its Secretary of State to explain why this is all for your own good, no communiqué is enough. Our leaders need support, not from Washington, not from Beijing but from us, Caribbean people who understand that the cavalry is not coming because we are the cavalry.

VII.   What You Can Do Starting Today

This is not where I list policy recommendations for heads of government. They have had fifty years of those; this is where I ask what you can do.

Against climate: Grow something. A kitchen garden reduces your dependence on imported food shipped on fossil fuels. Buy from the farmer before the supermarket. Harvest rainwater. Teach your children a hurricane plan in the sunshine. If you run a church, make your grounds a community garden.

Against crime: Mentor a young man. I cannot say this loudly enough. The Caribbean’s crime crisis is overwhelmingly a crisis of young Black men killing other young Black men. Every dataset confirms it. This is a problem of disconnection, young men cut off from purpose, belonging, and legitimate paths to dignity. If you are an older man who found a way, go back and show a younger man the path. If you own a business, hire a young person who needs a chance more than a credential.

Against NCDs: Move your body. Cook your food. Know your numbers. When last did you check your blood pressure? Reduce the sugar, the salt, the processed imports. Rediscover the ground provisions and local fruits our grandmothers knew were medicine before we had a word for it. Dance thirty minutes a day, we are Caribbean, for heaven’s sake, we know how to move. We cannot build a thriving CARICOM on a population riddled with preventable disease.

VIII.  What Our Organizations Must Do

Civil society is the Caribbean’s most underused asset. Our diaspora, our churches, our service clubs, our credit unions, these outlast any government. They must now step up, not to replace our leaders, but to support them.

The woman with the blood pressure cuff and the church hall is not an anecdote. She is a model! Every civic organization should adopt at least one Triple C initiative. A Rotary club that mentors young men is fighting crime. A credit union financing solar panels is fighting climate change. A university training the next generation of Caribbean problem solvers, as we are trying to do at UWI, is fighting all three.

IX.   Beyond Words

The leaders will leave Basseterre on Friday, Rubio will fly home and the communiqué will be filed. On Monday morning, the seamoss vendor will still need affordable bottles. The factory worker will still need the CET. The fisherman in Fancy will still push off in the dark, and his wife will still lie awake until she hears his engine. The brother will still check his phone. The mother will still wonder about the wedding.

Caribbean people have survived slavery, colonialism, indentureship, hurricanes, volcanoes, earthquakes, pandemics, and fifty years of promises. We are still here. We still dance, sing, cook, worship, fish, farm, study, and build with a resilience the rest of the world admires but does not fully understand. That resilience is not a consolation prize, it is a resource, the most renewable resource we possess.

The brother cannot save his sister alone, but he can join with others who refuse to wait for a communiqué. The mother may not make, the wedding, but she can make sure her community is stronger for the grandchildren who follow. The wife in Fancy may not stop the missiles but she can help build a village where her sons choose nets over guns. The sea moss vendor can keep selling health in a bottle if we, his customers, his neighbors, his country, make sure he can.

It falls to us now, not to Basseterre, not to Washington, not to Beijing, but to us.

EDITOR’S NOTE: Prof. C. Justin Robinson is Pro Vice-Chancellor and Campus Principal of The University of the West Indies Five Islands Campus in Antigua and Barbuda.