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26‑Year‑Old Fatally Shot in Anguilla, Marking 3rd Homicide of 2026.

26 year old alleged victim. Reports reaching All Angles UK from our correspondents in Anguilla confirm that the Royal Anguilla Police Force (RAPF) is investigating the island’s third homicide of the year, following a fatal shooting in the South Hill area during the early hours of Saturday, 14 February 2026.  LIVE RADIO LISTEN NOW Police say that at approximately 2:20 a.m., officers responded to reports of multiple gunshots in the Back Street area, where they discovered a 26‑year‑old male lying unresponsive outside an apartment complex with multiple gunshot wounds. He was pronounced dead at the scene by medical personnel. The victim has not yet been publicly named. AD: SHOP WITH AVON This killing marks Anguilla’s second unsolved homicide of the year and adds to the 11 cases that remained unresolved at the end of last year. The area has been cordoned off as investigators process the scene and pursue several lines of inquiry. Police have not announced any arrests or identified suspec...

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From Anguilla to Jamaica: We Know the Storm You’re Facing and the Recovery Ahead


When it was confirmed that Hurricane Melissa will make landfall in Jamaica as a Category 5 monster, my heart clenched. The sound of those winds—over 185 mph—stirred memories no Anguillian can ever forget. In 2017, Hurricane Irma tore through our island with that same unrelenting force. Roofs vanished in seconds. Homes flattened like paper.

Prime Minister Hon. Andrew Holness speaks after Hurricane Melissa’s Cornage 

Power lines tangled in the streets. Our hospital lost its roof, our schools and police station were damaged, and our communication with the world went dark. For weeks, we lived by candlelight, clinging to hope and to each other. Those days reshaped us forever.

Hurricane Irma hit Anguilla as a Category 5 storm on 6 September 2017, with sustained winds of 185 mph.

Now, as Melissa lashes Jamaica, Anguillians watch with heavy hearts and deep understanding. We know what it means to see your landscape transformed overnight—to wake up and not recognize your own street.

Flat bridge completely submerged in water.

We know the exhaustion of endless cleanup, the long wait for power, and the silence after the storm when all you can hear is your own heartbeat and the mosquitos singing. 

Melissa’s strength, the strongest storm Jamaica has seen in over a century, will test the island’s endurance. But we also know the resilience of Caribbean people—it runs through every island, every village, every heart that refuses to break.

National Reserve called Out as Jamaica prepares for Hurricane Melissa's Impact

To  our brothers and sisters in Jamaica, we say: you are not alone. We have walked this road. The road of rebuilding from rubble, of comforting children in the dark, of watching hope return one roof at a time.

The Anguilla Government has already pledged assistance to Jamaica in this time of crisis—a small gesture of solidarity from one storm-hardened island to another. Because we know that in times like these, Caribbean unity is not just a slogan—it’s survival.

And so, as the winds ease and the floodwaters recede, know that the rest of the region stands beside you. We remember Irma; we will never forget her. And we will not forget Melissa.


Image shows medical facility roof being torn off during Melissa's passing

Recovery can be long, but you will rebuild—stronger, wiser, and more united. From Anguilla to Jamaica, our message is simple: we know the storm, but we also know the sunrise that follows.

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