The message lands like a geopolitical shockwave, not merely as rhetoric but as a signal of a hardening posture that could redefine one of the world’s most historically durable alliances. If interpreted as more than bluster, it suggests a United States increasingly willing to transactionalize security guarantees and energy stability, long considered pillars of its relationship with the United Kingdom. The implication is stark: loyalty is no longer assumed currency, and access to critical global supply routes like the Strait of Hormuz may no longer be quietly underwritten by American power. View this post on Instagram A post shared by ALL ANGLES UK (@all_angles_uk) For the United Kingdom, the consequences would be immediate and deeply uncomfortable. The UK is heavily reliant on global energy markets, and any disruption to Gulf flows, especially through a chokepoint as vital as Hormuz, would send energy prices surging. Households would feel it first through rising fue...
CURRENT TOPICS OF DISCUSSION - VOICE YOUR OPINION BELOW
Anguilla is facing a deepening public‑safety crisis that can no longer be dismissed or delayed. In 2025, the island recorded 11 homicides — none of which have been solved. Today’s killing marks the second homicide of 2026, reigniting widespread concern about the island’s escalating violence and the justice system’s ability to respond. For a small territory built on close-knit communities, the growing list of unresolved killings raises urgent questions about policing, investigative capacity, and public trust.
Robert M. Clark (Commissioner of Police) speaks on why Policing on a small island like Anguilla presents distinct challenges — from limited forensic capacity to stretched personnel and infrastructure.
Video breakdown: • 01:13 Challenges of Policing on a Small Island • 03:36 Murder and Other Crimes • 04:15 Capacity Challenges and Assistance • 06:23 Forensic Limitations and Collaboration • 09:10 Safety and Politeness on the Island.
Law‑enforcement challenges in small jurisdictions are real, but they are not insurmountable. Limited forensic resources, delays in securing and processing evidence, and dependence on off‑island forensic services often weaken investigations during the most critical early hours.
Advertisement
Compounding this is the lack of consistent police presence across multiple districts, which affects response times, community intelligence, and deterrence. Equally significant is the issue of witness cooperation. Fear of retaliation, social pressure, and a lack of confidence in outcomes frequently lead to silence — a silence that can stall even the strongest cases.
Policing in Anguilla remains heavily centralized, with the main station located in The Valley. Yet historically, stations in communities such as Blowing Point and Sandy Ground played a vital role in neighbourhood‑level policing and early intervention.
Advertisement
Increasingly, residents are calling for these stations to be reopened and fully staffed — not only to respond to crime, but to restore visible law‑enforcement presence in areas where it is most needed. Research consistently shows that proximity policing builds trust, encourages information sharing, and reduces the likelihood of violent crime taking root.
The consequences of inaction extend far beyond individual tragedies. A pattern of unsolved homicides erodes public confidence, emboldens offenders, and threatens Anguilla’s social stability and international reputation. As violence rises, so does the cost of doing nothing.
Anguilla had a 0% homicide clearance rate for the year 2025 — a rare and troubling statistic for any jurisdiction, especially one as small and tightly knit as Anguilla.
This moment demands transparency, investment in investigative capacity, and renewed collaboration between law enforcement and the communities they serve. Without decisive action, Anguilla risks allowing violence to become normalized — a shift far harder to reverse than to prevent.