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.

B.S.I Says Sugar Commission Report Includes Its Recommendations  

The Commission of Inquiry’s report on Belize’s sugar industry, completed at the end of November 2024, is still under wraps. The commission handed the report to the prime minister, who will decide when to share it with the public. Mac McLoughlin, General Manager of A.S.R/B.S.I, hinted that a sneak peek at the documents shows many of the sugar factory’s recommendations were included. Meanwhile, Alfredo Ortega from the B.S.C.F.A. mentioned that they are eagerly waiting to see what the report contains.

 

                       Mac McLoughlin

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

“What we’ve seen so far, I mean, it really just tells us what we were expecting, which is that we really need to concentrate on modernizing and improving the productivity and quality in the cane farm, you know. I think the commission will be recommending a number of things, including quality testing and improved quality testing of cane in the future. Increasing, amounts of replanting of cane because these things are not rocket science. This is what any modern industry has to do, and I assume it will be talking about finding funding for, for farmers to be able to achieve that because that’s what’s required, that we need investment in the cane farm. The factory has had a lot of investment in it and I think if we can get to the right quality levels, we can prove what our industry here can achieve.”

 

                       Alfredo Ortega

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

“The Prime Minister said that report will give an opportunity to better off the Sugar Industry Act. So we are waiting on that so that we can also have our start the negotiation with BSI in regards to our agreement based on what the Commission brings out.”

 

 

B.S.C.F.A Wants Fair Trade Money

Meanwhile, the Belize Sugar Cane Farmers Association is turning to the courts over the issue of Fairtrade premiums, aiming to reclaim what they believe is rightfully theirs. The association claims they haven’t received the appropriate Fairtrade payments for several years and is seeking a resolution to the dispute with the involved sugar companies, ASR/BSI and Tate and Lyle. Alfredo Ortega shared how much they’re looking forward to collecting, while Mac McLoughlin pointed out that the association’s issue is actually with their parent company, Tate and Lyle.

 

                        Alfredo Ortega

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

“For the past two years now, we can see three years we have not. The B-S-C-F-E has not been getting any premium in regards to our can being delivered to the mill. And we, in regards to the regulations, we  comply with the regulation. We have our certification. We are not suspended. We passed the audit that has been done to us and nevertheless, we have not been getting our premium from since 2021. So, we are awaiting that, um, we were trying to negotiate that with BSIT and like, but it came out futile. We didn’t went through to nothing. So that is why we have it in court now.  We are expecting that, um, something positive come out of that.”

 

Marion Ali

“How much are you expecting out of this premium?”

 

Alfredo Ortega

“Well, every year it’s in the vicinity of three million, three point five million, depending on the amount of sugar being sold on the Fairtrade certification.  So, it’s two years that we have and plus this past crop that we have not got nothing. So, if we include all three.”

 

                       Mac McLoughlin

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

“Fair trade is between, you know, the associations and Tate and Lyle Sugars, which is the body that sells the fair-trade sugar and pays the farmers for it. So it’s really nothing to do with BSI.”

 

Marion Ali

“The farmers tend to disagree with you on that.”

 

Mac McLoughlin

“Well, it’s the truth. I mean, we don’t sell fairtrade. Well, we sell sugar that’s Fairtrade eligible, but we don’t actually market the sugar as Fairtrade. And, back to when Fairtrade started, it was long before ASR arrived in Belize. I think it was 2008. It’s always been Tate and Lyle paying the farmers the premiums.”

 

Seeds of Change: Belize’s 2024 Agricultural Gains, Challenges, and the Road Ahead

Important Agriculture Road in the West to be Paved

The road from Bullet Tree Village to the Spanish Lookout Community is a lifeline for Belize’s agricultural sector, with farmers transporting livestock and grains along this route every day. Now, this crucial stretch is getting a much-needed upgrade. On Friday, a groundbreaking ceremony in Santa Familia Village marked the start of paving the nine and a half miles. News Five’s Paul Lopez has the details.

 

Paul Lopez, Reporting

On Friday, the Government of Belize kicked off an exciting project to pave nine and a half miles of road from the Spanish Lookout Community to Bullet Tree Village. Orlando Habet, the Area Representative for Cayo Northeast, highlighted the road’s significance, noting that over fifty percent of Belize’s cattle exports to Guatemala travel this route. This upgrade is set to boost the nation’s economic growth by improving this vital thoroughfare.

 

                            Orlando Habet

Orlando Habet, Area Rep., Cayo Northeast

“For many years we have been looking through various administrations to get this road paved, because it is heavily trafficked. We have hundreds of workers that come this side and work In Spanish Lookout. We have farmers who have access to their farms through this road and as I mentioned, very important, because sixty to seventy percent of all the cattle that goes to Guatemala passes through this road. All the corn and all the beans exported pass through this road. When we have flooding events it is important, because apart from those commodities, we have chicken, egg, beef, milk, ice cream, you name it, all the food items that has to pass through here when the lower lying bridges are closed. So, it is important.”

 

Habet also pointed out that this project will boost property values along the road and open up new opportunities for tourism in the area. The initiative is a collaborative effort between the Ministry of Infrastructure Development and the Spanish Lookout Community. According to Julius Espat, the Minister of Infrastructure Development & Housing, the community is even pitching in to help finance part of the work.

 

                            Julius Espat

Julius Espat, Minister of Infrastructure Development & Housing

“This project is a special project, because it is a public, private venture. It is the Spanish Lookout community coming together with government and financing the project to make it work. It was one of the ways we found to fast track the bureaucratic way of doing road construction. So I would like to sincerely thank the Credit Union of Spanish Lookout who I know are the people with the cheese, so thank you very much and the leadership of Mr. Reimer of Spanish Lookout.”

Cayo North Area Representative Michel Chebat was also present at the groundbreaking ceremony in Santa Familia Village. He says this is phase one of Plan Belize. The work is expected to be completed in eighteen months.

 

                      Michel Chebat

Michel Chebat, Area Rep., Cayo North

“It is important because it will enhance the lives of all our citizens in the area. It will make commerce better. It will make access to education, agriculture, all the lands around here, the value of these lands will appreciate. So it is a win-win situation. It represents a commitment and a belief by government in the residents and the people of Belize. This government believes in our people, and we are working to make the lives of our people better. This is just another example of that commitment to making people’s lives better under Plan Belize. This is Plan Belize phase one, because in a few months we are going to have phase two of plan Belize.”

 

            Joyce Tun

Joyce Tun, Chairlady, Santa Familia

“We can attest to the fact that from day one when this government came into power we saw the roads upgraded and keeps being upgraded and maintained. And we can say it is not only talk and talk, but you also walk the talk and this is important to us.”

 

Reporting for News Five, I am Paul Lopez.

 

Espat on Roads: “I feel for our residents”  

On Friday, Minister of Infrastructure Development & Housing, Julius Espat attended a groundbreaking ceremony out west for a road upgrade. In his speech, Espat highlighted the urgent need for road improvements in villages across the country. He explained that his ministry has been working tirelessly, despite limited resources, with the support of fellow area representatives. Espat emphasized that his government isn’t shying away from the challenges but is actively seeking solutions.

 

Julius Espat, Minister of Infrastructure Development

“I also understand that villagers across the country are concerned that when it rains, we do have problems, we do have mud, we tend to slip and slide when we drive. But we inherited a road structure of six thousand kilometers and of that only about ten to fifteen percent are paved. So that is what we deal with daily and so I feel for our residents when they are slipping and sliding, but we also do too. The area reps when they request assistance from us, we don’t have resources so they chip in so they would put the salaries for the drivers. Sometimes they assist with fuel, and we give them the equipment. We find ways to be able to solve our problems and we don’t run away from them. We understand what we inherited. I would like to remind, and correct me if I am wrong, wasn’t it Dean Barrow who stood here and say his coffers was endless and that this would be the project to be done immediately when they were desperately looking for support. I am getting a bit political, but we are in the political season so I am allowed. The difference between the political parties is that we don’t talk too much, we come in and we bring the private sector mentality in government and we work and work and work and elections come again and we hope people see the benefit in that and we hope they give us their thank you and say lets go again.”

A Portion of Old Haulover Creek Bridge Going to Branch Mouth

A piece of the old Haulover Creek Bridge is heading to the Cayo District! On Friday, Orlando Habet announced at an event in his Cayo Northeast constituency that a request had been made to place part of the bridge between Branch Mouth community and San Ignacio Town. Following his speech, Minister of Infrastructure Development Julius Espat confirmed that the bridge is on its way and will significantly improve access to the town for many residents.

 

                            Orlando Habet

Orlando Habet, Area Representative, Cayo Northeast

“I am hoping that Minister Julius Espat will tell you that we also requested and asked that the bridge in Belize City, that when that bridge is dismantled it can be placed somewhere here close to branch mouth so that you can have a close access from San Ignacio to Santa Familia and beyond. So that will also cut a few miles instead of going around.”

 

                 Julius Espat

Julius Espat, Minister of Infrastructure Development

“I must backup Landy when he mentioned the bridge. We have now dismantled the section of the bridge that will be coming here and it will come. So, the bridge is now not in place at Haulover. The contractor has dismantled it and have it in his compound. They will have to do some refurbishing and that is where the chief engineer takes over with all the technical expertise to design the permanent concrete structure to hold the bridge. So you will have the bridge. There is another bridge that we are in discussion with the Spanish Lookout community that if these guys do their work properly and myself and we form government again, we will be looking at the other bridge here in the Cayo district that is very important to us.”

 

Current residents in the area has access to a bridge across the Belize River that is only big enough for pedestrians.

Will Elections be Called Before June 2025?

The 2025 General Election is slated to happen sometime between March and June, with funds already allocated for the big event. But the burning question remains: when will the date be announced? As election fever grips the nation, Belizeans are buzzing with anticipation. We tried to get a hint from Prime Minister John Briceño this morning, but he’s playing his cards close to his chest.

 

          Prime Minister John Briceño

Prime Minister John Briceño

“I’ve been consulting with a number of people and, you know, you usually have a small group of close advisors and I’m trying to feel and talking to them, not trying to set a date, but when they think we’re ready. We’ve done our complete assessment and the national campaign manager, we’ve finished in December.  So there’s a state of readiness in our constituencies and most of them are pretty much almost there.  And then also I’ve consulted Cabinet, not as a group but as individuals to feel them out on how they think.  Most, of course, from last year they wanted to call elections.  A few were saying, “Let us hold a little bit.”  Some are saying or are of the opinion that it doesn’t matter if you hold the elections in February or November, we’re still going to win.  Well I come from the school that you do not take things for granted, you have to continue to work.”

 

Sabreena Daly

“Because elections are won on election day.”

 

Prime Minister John Briceño

“It’s not won on election day.  Elections are won before election day, based on the work that you do.  If you are not properly prepared for elections then you can’t win on election day.”

Musa Says Clean Sweep is ‘Very Possible’

Prime Minister John Briceño is keeping everyone in suspense about the date of the 2025 elections, but that hasn’t stopped the People’s United Party from rallying their supporters. With the United Democratic Party embroiled in internal conflicts, rumors of a potential P.U.P. clean sweep are flying around. While this prospect excites P.U.P. members, some worry it could undermine Belize’s democracy. We caught up with Caribbean Shores Area Representative, Kareem Musa, to get his take on the situation. Here’s what he had to say.

 

Kareem Musa, Area Representative, Caribbean Shores

“The campaign never stops. I try to stay as grounded. As possible within my constituency visiting homes off my constituents. And so that is certainly going to be intensified in 2025 because this is an election year. And it is my hope that we’ll be meeting with our committee this week and hopefully start the campaign within the next few weeks”

 

Reporter

“Do you think you guys will pull off a clean sweep?”

 

Kareem Musa

“It’s possible but I don’t know whether it will be a clean sweep, but I think it’s very possible given the current state of the United Democratic Party.”

 

Reporter

“Do you think, do you think that would bode well for democracy in Belize?”

 

Kareem Musa

“No I think any healthy democracy requires not just, a strong opposition, but also a strong media. I think that you guys have been an been exceptional in holding the government accountable. And so for any healthy democracy, not just the media, but you do need a strong, vibrant opposition.”

 

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