Anglican Cathedral College, the school where fifteen-year-old Lamisha Moody was enrolled, issued a statement on her murder. The school said, “Last night, we received devastating news that Lamisha Moody, a cherished member of our A.C.C. family, was taken from us by senseless gun violence.” The school says that Lamisha was more than a student. “She was a bright light cherished by her peers and loved by her teachers.” The school said, “Gun violence has no place in our society, and Lamisha’s passing reminds us of the urgent need for action.”
The school’s counselling team and spiritual leaders will support students through this time of grief.
Lamisha along with street figure thirty-six-year-old Troy Hyde were shot and killed last night in the Jane Usher Boulevard area.
Belize City police are investigating a double murder that occurred last night near a basketball court in the Jane Usher Boulevard. The victims have been identified as thirty-six-year-old Troy Hyde and fifteen-year-old Lamisha Moody. The shooting happened at around 8:40 p.m. when a silver vehicle stopped nearby and one of the gunmen inside opened fire. Hyde and Moody were rushed to the Karl Heusner Memorial Hospital where they died minutes later.
Hyde is a known street figure in the area. Moody was a student at Anglican Cathedral College.
Across the country today, thousands of voters and supporters of the various political organizations paraded through the streets of their cities and towns to usher they candidates of choice to be nominated. In Belize City, Belmopan, and Orange Walk, much like in San Pedro and other parts of the Jewel, the spirit was festive, as motorcades and processions kept the mood energized. Tonight’s newscast is a look at the sight and sounds, as well as the campaigns leading up to March sixth.
Isani Cayetano, Reporting
Today is significant for politicians, seasoned and novice, because it marks the formal process of being selected as a candidate for a political party. It is also the first step in the election cycle where politicians are officially recognized and supported by their respective organizations to run for office.
Bernard Wagner
Bernard Wagner, Mayor Candidate, P.U.P.
“Nomination Day is always an exciting time for the party machinery, being able to galvanize the number of people we saw out there this morning. Essentially, the horses are now at the gate and we have to dig in deeper as a team.”
It is crucial because it validates the eligibility and readiness for the slate to move advance to the municipal elections on March sixth. It also signals to voters and other politicians that these candidates are the official choice of the People’s United Party.
Kareem Musa
Kareem Musa, Area Rep, Caribbean Shores
“It’s an exciting time. I know that the people of Caribbean Shores are waiting for March sixth to deliver another victory for Mayor Bernard Wagner and his team and I think I speak not only for myself, but my predecessor, Santi Castillo, and it’s not often that you get two candidates, the predecessor and the current candidate endorsing a mayoral candidate like Mr. Wagner and so I think that speaks volumes of his integrity as a mayor and the hard work he has put in.”
Nomination Day is one for celebration and commitment, as it sets the stage for the approaching electoral contest. Today, the incumbent administration, led by Mayor Bernard Wagner, shored up the support of as many voters from across Belize City. It began with a procession from Independence Hall, the seat of the People’s United Party, and made its way to ITVET where all councilor candidates, as well as the two-time mayor, made their formal application.
Allan Pollard
Allan Pollard, Councilor Candidate, P.U.P.
“I’m feeling good, and I am amped up. With that crowd today and I was feeling the vibes of the residents of the city was a good way to get here. You know, I just feel blessed, in general, just to wake up and to have the opportunity to run on the slate again, this is my third municipal election so I’m pretty hyped, I’m pretty hyped.”
Isani Cayetano
“What’s different about this time around for you?”
Allan Pollard
“What’s different? For me, it’s like we have a lot of new candidates in it. I think now, for me when I was just coming in, it was sort of a newcomer type. So right now I feel a little bit of nostalgia and also being more senior to it. It’s just a different role now. So that’s kind of the contrast there.”
This is Bernard Wagner’s third bid for the highest seat at City Hall. Is he poised for another victory at the polls?
Bernard Wagner
“I never want to say that you are overconfident, you always want to maintain humility throughout the whole process and ensure that you do what you need to do as a team, as a party, as a machinery and let the other chips fall in place.”
Isani Cayetano
“With that said, how satisfied are you with the work that you’ve been able to accomplish in office over the past three years?”
Bernard Wagner
“I am so amazed at this team and the resiliency of this team. I always stress it, the perseverance and the tenacity of the team, the six years that I’ve been there. We have really faced some tremendous crisis.”
With those challenges, including the setbacks caused by the COVID-19 pandemic behind it, the People’s United Party is once again ready to lead the residents of the Old Capital into the next three years.
Allan Pollard
“I think the residents have received us well. They are excited for the election and of course they have seen the work that we have been doing over time. So, for them, they are excited to go to the polls just as we are.”
The United Democratic Party also had its turn this afternoon and, like the People’s United Party that came before it, did not fail to disappoint. The procession began at its headquarters on Youth for the Future Drive and ended at the ITVET a short while later, but it was also energetic and festive. Here’s News Five’s Isani Cayetano with another report.
Isani Cayetano, Reporting
This afternoon, the United Democratic Party also led a parade of supporters from the foot of the BelChina Bridge to Freetown Road, where its slate of candidates presented themselves for nomination. Notwithstanding the challenges that the U.D.P. has been facing internally, it was able to muster a throng of supporters to rival the numbers brought out by the People’s United Party earlier today. Leading the charge for his party its team of eleven was Opposition Leader Shyne Barrow.
Shyne Barrow
Shyne Barrow, Party Leader, U.D.P.
“I want the Belizean people to see, with all humility, this is my projection, nine, nine municipalities and it is not farfetched. There was a time where the United Democratic Party administered all nine municipalities and no municipality is out of reach because the cost of living, the neglect, as Dr. Mortis Jones mentioned, people just don’t feel the love. They feel abandoned, they feel neglected and maybe it was the over-promising, maybe it was the hardies and brodies that the People’s United Party sold, rather than be practical and give deliverables that they could actually meet.”
Dr. Nelma Mortis Jones is the U.D.P.’s mayoral candidate. She is a first-time politician running under the red banner. She is optimistic about her chances of taking City Hall.
Nelma Mortis Jones
Dr. Nelma Mortis Jones, Mayoral Candidate, U.D.P.
“I was confident from I was in the field because of the expression and the sentiments of the people that I associated or made relationships on the ground.”
Reporter
“While you were campaigning, what were some of the criticisms or complaints you’ve been hearing?”
Nelma Mortis
“Basically, the issues are more of national issues and the people feel that the People’s United Party has no love for them. The relationship was not there and so that was one of the major complaints for them. The local issues were secondary and we can understand that, people’s basic needs come first.”
Of particular interest is the fact that the U.D.P.’s mayoral candidate was endorsed by the sitting party leader, as well as his predecessor. For the most part, they haven’t seen eye-to-eye on a number of issues within the party.
Patrick Faber
Patrick Faber, Area Rep, Collet
“At the end of the day, we’re all UDPs and that’s what we have always maintained. I did not want to ever leave my party and so when the election gun is sounded I am here and we are going to do our best to bring victory for our party on March sixth.”
Isani Cayetano
“How practical, in your opinion, has the campaign been in terms of trying to muster the support of voters across the country?”
Patrick Faber
“Well I think there’s been a really wonderful exercise on the part of the UDP. Of course, there are many new candidates and, as I am in those areas and I’ve visited many of them over the last couple of weeks, it is a testing of their machinery, it is putting in place that machinery if it didn’t exist. And I feel that win or lose for the party overall, the UDP will leave on March sixth with a victory and that victory can well be translated into a further victory whenever the general elections are called because we would have had a stronger machinery as a result of going through these elections on March sixth.”
With the possibility of a U.D.P. victory in Belize City on March sixth, a new mayor and a new team of councilors would mean that they would have to work with a People’s United Party central government. Here’s how the U.D.P.’s mayoral candidate responded to that question.
Nelma Mortis
“I am hoping to change that kind of politicking, in the sense that we’re supposed to move towards development. This is for all Belizeans and so I am hoping [that] if my opponents are still the central government and of course we’ll change them very soon, that they will see the relevance of my work and my leadership to serve the people of Belize and not to serve a UDP or a PUP person, but the people of Belize.”