Should Belize Issue Travel Advisory to 15 US States? 

Recently, the United States reissued a travel advisory for Belize urging its citizens to “exercise increased caution” due to a surge in violent crime, particularly gang-related violence. The advisory was updated on December 30, 2024, with serious safety risks, including armed robberies, home invasions, and sexual assaults, even in popular tourist areas.

When asked about this yesterday, Minister of Home Affairs, Kareem Musa, defended the country’s safety record. According to Musa, he has brought up these concerns in talks with the U.S. embassy, especially over the past two or three years. He says that with the decrease seen in the number of homicides each year, Belize’s homicide rate is now lower than that of around fifteen U.S. states.

“It could be argued that Belize should be issuing a travel advisory to those fifteen states… And it is something that I flag each year, and it certainly doesn’t make sense in my opinion why it is that these travel advisories are issued when in fact there is that downturn,” Musa said.

Musa added that the significant rise in overnight visitors in 2024 reflects the contrary, stating, “But no doubt I think travellers on their own have seen the beauty and charm of Belize. They don’t find it as a violent destination.”

This morning in the Open Your Eyes morning show, Minister of Tourism and Diaspora Relations, Anthony Mahler, stated that while the crime rate in Belize may be a factor that affects tourism, he said, “I like the trend that we’re seeing—the murders go down, major crimes go down.”

Just last week during the CompStat report, the Belize Police Department reported that eighty-nine murders were recorded, a slight increase from the eighty-seven in the previous year. According to the report, this reflects a sixteen percent decrease in major crime. 

The Canadian government issued a similar advisory in December 2024. 

 

Palestinian Liberation Organization Reps. to Visit Belize

Representatives of the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) are expected to arrive in Belize this afternoon. They were invited by the Belize People’s Front (BPF). A statement from BPF Leader Nancy Marin says that the visit is “primarily aimed at signing a historic bipartisan agreement of mutual collaboration” between the PLO and the BPF.

Representing the PLO are Mohamed Salam, Commissioner of the PLO and Coordinator of the Anti-Apartheid Department, as well as Roboan Rodriguez, Coordinator of the Latin American Alliance for Palestine.

They are expected to discuss key areas of cooperation, solidarity, and shared values between the BPF and PLO.

Marin says that the delegation will pay Prime Minister John Briceño a courtesy call.

“They will also be hosted for lunch by Minister Kareem Musa and former Prime Minister Said Musa, in a spirit of camaraderie and mutual respect.”

They are scheduled to meet with Honorary Consul of Lebanon Sarkis Abou-Nehra to further regional ties.

“As part of the BPF’s ongoing commitment to the education of Belizean youth, the delegation will also make an introductory visit to the University of Belize.”

 

Haiti’s Displacement Crisis Surpasses One Million: UN Report

The number of displaced people in Haiti has surged threefold over the past year, surpassing one million amid escalating gang violence, according to the United Nations. Children make up more than half of the displaced population.

A report released by the UN’s International Organization for Migration (IOM) on Tuesday revealed that 1,041,000 individuals, many of whom have been displaced multiple times, are struggling to survive. The crisis is driven by relentless gang violence, which claimed over 5,600 lives in 2024 and left thousands more injured or abducted. Armed gangs now control large parts of Port-au-Prince, while the police face accusations of violence against suspected gang members, compounding the nation’s long-standing political instability.

The IOM highlighted that 83 percent of displaced Haitians rely on already overburdened host communities, including friends, family, and acquaintances, for shelter. The remainder endure harsh conditions in makeshift sites, which have increased from 73 to 108 over the past year.

Further exacerbating the situation, 200,000 Haitians were deported back to the country in 2024, placing additional strain on its overstretched social services.

Efforts to address the crisis have seen limited success. Despite a Kenyan-led police support mission backed by the United States and the UN, violence continues to escalate.

Belize’s involvement in the Kenya-led mission to restore peace in Haiti has begun with the deployment of two Belize Defence Force (BDF) soldiers to Port-au-Prince. These soldiers are serving as staff officers in the CARICOM Joint Taskforce, led by Jamaica, and are gathering ground-level intelligence. Brigadier General Azariel Loria explained that their work will help inform the timing of a larger deployment, which is contingent on the procurement of necessary equipment. Countries like the Bahamas and Barbados are also contributing troops, coordinated by the Regional Security System (RSS). The BDF will proceed with its full deployment once conditions and logistics are deemed favourable.

“Dr. Sutherland” Thanks ComPol, “Chester, I Love You”

On Friday, we reported that Harry Sutherland, also known as Doctor Sutherland, was charged by police for riding his bicycle with a five-gallon bottle of water on the handle. At the time, Sutherland was carrying the water for an elderly woman in the area. The charge alleged that he was unable to fully control his bike due to the way he carried the bottle. This sparked public outrage, with many people finding the charge unreasonable. Shortly after the story broke, Commissioner of Police Chester Williams took to Facebook to call the charge unusual and announced that he had ordered it to be withdrawn. Today, we heard from both ComPol Williams and Sutherland.

 

                          Chester Williams

Chester Williams, Commissioner of Police

“The issue with Harrison Sutherland is one that outrages the public. While I can say categorically that I do not act on public outrage, but I act on what is reasonable and just. While there is a law that says you are not supposed to carry load on a bicycle that disallows you from properly maneuvering the bicycle, that law does not contemplate a five-gallon bottle of water, or grocery bags you go to the grocery store and buy and have to come riding on your bicycle with those items on your bike. Even in the absence of the good gesture that Mr. Sutherland was performing, to arrest a person for carrying a five gallon on a bicycle is not reasonable. The law itself, as I said to my commanders this morning, would deal with those persons you see carry a fridge, a chest of draw, maybe lumbers, large piece of lumbers extending out and impeding traffic.”

 

                     Harry Sutherland

Harry Sutherland, Belize City Resident

“I will shake my hand and scratch it for Mr. Chester, using his discretion against that officer that held that charge against me. That is why Mr. Chester I love you and respect you for what you did and said about me. I could understand if I was doing something wrong or whatever. I would accept all my charges against me. But to assist with something, come on Mr. Chester. That is why I love how you use your discretion against that officer towards me.”

 

Paul Lopez

“So you were detained, place behind a cell, dragged before a magistrate, do you feel like you deserve more than just an apology and the charge dropped?”

 

Harry Sutherland

“Further discretion, I will leave that to Mr. Chester conversation, let Mr. Chester think bout that.”

 

Crazy Bar Brawl in Peini

Over the weekend in Punta Gorda, a wild bar fight broke out involving several patrons, prompting the Commissioner of Police to seek the suspension of the bar’s liquor license. The cause of the chaos inside the bar remains unclear, but surveillance footage shows furious customers hurling bottle after bottle at the bar, leaving a trail of destruction. ComPol Williams briefly addressed the incident.

 

                         Chester Williams

Chester Williams, Commissioner of Police

“I just told the legal officer this morning, in conference, to write the Toledo Liquor Licensing Board and seek to have the license suspended.”

 

Policeman Arraigned for Theft from Chinese Grocery Store  

                          Peter Graham

A police officer from Mahogany Heights is out on bail after being charged with theft, caught on camera stealing from a Chinese businesswoman he was supposed to be protecting. The officer, fifty-two-year-old Peter Graham, was brought to court this morning. Wearing a shirt that read ‘Dear Santa, define good,’ Graham appeared before Chief Magistrate Jayani Wegodapola around noon, accompanied by his attorney, Norman Rodriguez. He was charged with stealing five hundred and fifty dollars from Jiabi Wang, the proprietor of a shop on Mahogany Street, Belize City, on January sixth, 2025. Graham pleaded not guilty. The prosecutor requested bail with conditions, including that Graham sign in at a police station weekly since he is now on interdiction. Chief Magistrate Wegodapola granted bail at one thousand, five hundred dollars with conditions: Graham must sign in every Monday at the Mahogany Heights Police Station, avoid contact with the complainant and witnesses, attend all court dates, and not get arrested for any other offenses while on bail. Graham posted bail and is due back in court on March thirteenth, 2025. Here’s Commissioner of Police Chester Williams’ reaction to the incident.

 

                 Chester Williams

Chester Williams, Commissioner of Police

“Sometimes I really and truly wonder what goes through the minds of some police, honestly.  His action, or conduct, is disgusting.  I won’t say much because I have already directed that that matter be dealt with.  I know we have received a report from the proprietor of the establishment, and I had given instructions over the weekend for him to be arrested and charged and I was told that he eventually took back the money, with the hope that the matter would not be pursued.  But believe you me, what I saw on that video footage is certainly something that is unforgiveable.  We are police officers; we are charged with the trust and confidence of the people.  His conduct in that video goes against the grain of what being a police officer is, and so, he was suspended immediately, and I have already directed the legal office to write him because, again, as much as the public might be outraged and I agree with them that we all should be outraged, the law requires that we must follow a process.”

Remanded for Allegedly Assaulting Couple with License Firearm

Forty-year-old Tyron Lee Humes is now behind bars at the Belize Central Prison, facing charges of aggravated assault with a licensed firearm. The incident allegedly took place just after midnight on Sunday at the Princess Hotel & Casino. According to initial investigations, fifty-seven-year-old Edwin Bowen and his girlfriend, thirty-five-year-old Rachel Wallace, were leaving the casino and heading to Bowen’s vehicle when they spotted two men rummaging through it. When Bowen and Wallace approached, one of the men reportedly pulled out a firearm and pointed it at them. Bowen, fearing for his life, backed off and called the police. That’s when Humes allegedly advanced towards Bowen, punched him in the forehead, and caused his Motorola cell phone to fall and break. In court, Humes pleaded not guilty. Due to the serious nature of the charges, he was denied bail and remanded to the Belize Central Prison until February twenty-eighth. Today, Commissioner of Police Chester Williams was asked if there would be recommendations to revoke Humes’ gun license.

 

                      Chester Williams

Chester Williams, Commissioner of Police

“Certainly we are going to make recommendations to the board like we have done in many cases where persons with licenses misuse their firearm, to have the person’s license revoked.”

 

Still No Arrests in Giovanni Ramirez’s Murder

Giovanni Ramirez, the whistleblower in the case that sent attorney Oscar Selgado to prison for ten years, was tragically gunned down on Thursday afternoon in Belize City. It’s still unclear if Ramirez’s murder is linked to Selgado’s conviction and lengthy sentence. Ramirez, who had his own run-ins with the law, had appeared in court for various criminal offenses. As the investigation into this high-profile killing continues, police have yet to make an arrest.

 

                     Chester Williams

Chester Williams, Commissioner of Police

“At this time there is no update.  We have a few people that we are looking for but we have not been able to locate them.  I’m hoping that the police would be able to get them in due course.”

 

Moises Verde to be Charged After Gunshot Wound Heals

Police are waiting for Corozal resident Moises Verde to recover so they can charge him with aggravated assault. Verde is currently healing from a gunshot wound he got during a shootout with Sarteneja police last Thursday. Reports say officers were chasing Verde for an aggravated assault charge when he pulled out a point thirty-eight pistol and fired several shots at them. The police fired back, hitting him in the leg, and he was taken to the Northern Regional Hospital for treatment. Commissioner of Police Chester Williams provided an update on the incident.

 

Britney Gordon

“Update on Moises Verde, the man that was accused of shooting the police officer and he got allegedly shot back by a police officer?”

 

Chester Williams, Commissioner of Police

“At this time, that’s a matter in Sarteneja. I don’t have any further details. I know that the man Verde, I think he has been released or is still in the hospital. But as soon as he is able to be arraigned, he will be charged by the police for aggravated assault.”

 

Sugar Roads Repair Underway; Cane Quality is Poor

Repairs have started on the dirt roads in northern Belize that lead to the cane fields. Last week, the Corozal Sugarcane Producers Association raised concerns about the deteriorating roads, which have been made worse by constant rain, making it difficult for farmers to access their fields. This has led to a significant drop in the amount of sugarcane delivered to Tower Hill. To make matters worse, the poor quality of the harvested cane is producing less sugar, causing the mill to halt operations at times. This is problematic because the mill isn’t designed to stop during the cane season, and doing so can cause damage. News Five’s Marion Ali has more on this story.

 

Marion Ali, Reporting

Since last week, crews from the Ministry of Infrastructure Development and Housing have been hard at work fixing the badly damaged dirt roads in the Corozal and Orange Walk Districts that lead to the cane fields. The relentless rains over the past few weeks have made it tough for farmers to harvest their mature cane, and their heavy-duty equipment has only worsened the road conditions. Jose Majil, the chairman of the Belize Sugar Cane Farmers Association’s Corozal Branch, has been closely monitoring the situation.

 

                            Jose Majil

Jose Majil, Chairman, B.S.C.F.A, Corozal Branch

“Some farmers have big machinery, so they try to take out the product, but they are at the time, they’re hurting the roads too and the farmers that have small trucks, well they cannot pass.”

 

The farmers were forced to harvest the cane they can reach, but the crop is immature and that has also added to the problem, according to BSI’s General Manager, Mac McLoughlin.

 

                     Mac McLoughlin

Mac McLoughlin, General Manager, A.S.R./B.S.I

“We’re milling very, very poor-quality cane. So obviously that’s having an impact, and it will have an impact on the whole industry, because farmers are paid on the sugar that’s produced and for the mill. At this point, we’ve milled over seventy thousand tons of sugar cane. At this point last year, we’d only milled fifty-seven thousand tons because of the delays to the crop, because of one association, but this year, we’ve made three thousand three hundred tons of sugar. Last year, we made three thousand seven hundred tons, so we made more sugar with thirteen thousand tons less cane last year.”

 

With the rain finally letting up, crews from the Ministry of Infrastructure Development and Housing have been busy restoring the sugar roads in the north. Chief Engineer Evondale Moody reports that most of the work is now complete.

 

                             Evondale Moody

Evondale Moody, Chief Engineer, M.I.D.H

“In the Corozal District we have over two hundred and seventy miles of road and in the Orange Walk District we have about three hundred and fifteen miles of sugar roads. With the budget that we receive annually there’s no way that we could maintain all these roads continuously, especially when we have significant rainfall as what we’ve been having in this past year, 2024. However, we try our best to initiate the upgrading of these sugar roads, especially the main ones prior to the sugar cane season. So we started these roads in late November, early December once we had the funds available to commence  these works.”

 

But the rain started again and interrupted the road works, until last week. Moody mentioned that during this period, the farmers’ heavy equipment further damaged the roadworks, making the situation even worse.

 

Evondale Moody

“Some of the cane fields are wet but you still have those trucks going into the cane fields and bringing out that contaminated material onto the road. Please bear in mind that these roads are not paved roads, they’re gravel roads and once that gravel gets contaminated it creates another problem for us because we still need to go back and do the same thing again to address that.”

 

The cane fields in the north are mostly lowlands, about eighty percent, with only twenty percent being highlands. Alfredo Ortega, Chairman of the Committee of Management for the B.S.C.F.A Orange Walk Branch, suggests that the mill should consider shortening the harvest period to avoid the rainy season.

 

                       Alfredo Ortega

Alfredo Ortega, Chairman, Committee of Management, B.S.C.F.A, Orange Walk Branch

“We have been trying to do what we can, but nevertheless, climate change is one of the issues that is affecting us now, left, right and center because the amount of rain that we are getting now is much more than any other given year. Starting one day, two days after Christmas, many of the cutters – because we rely on the manpower – many of them are still in the party mood and that is why we’re telling them that they delay so that whenever we start in January, then we have a better flow of cane being delivered to the mill.”

 

However, McCloughlin argues that climate change has blurred the lines between rainy and dry seasons. He emphasizes that making better investments is crucial for successful crops, just like in other sugar-producing countries.

 

Mac McLoughlin

“All four cane farmer associations and the mill agreed to start when we started, as that if we start earlier, albeit a little bit wet sometimes, it’s better than ending in the rain. You have upland fields, you have lower land fields, there needs to be effective drainage in fields. You know, you need to have better water management, you need to have investment, you’ve got to have investment in the cane farm. Really, we have to change the whole structure, I think, of the way the cane industry works here because we’re seeing, year by year, more of a deterioration in the cane crop, both the yields and the quality.”

 

There’s no estimate yet on the losses for this sugar crop due to the delays, but cane farmers are hopeful that they can make up for lost time if the weather stays dry. Marion Ali for News Five.

Exit mobile version