JPS engineers worked through the night to restore power after an unprecedented blackout plunged the entire island into darkness. Share Jamaica was plunged into darkness on Friday night after a major system failure within the Jamaica Public Service (JPS) network triggered a rare island‑wide blackout, cutting electricity to homes, businesses and essential services across all 14 parishes. The outage, which began shortly after 8pm, spread rapidly across the national grid and exposed once again the fragility of the country’s energy infrastructure. Energy Minister Daryl Vaz confirmed the nationwide collapse, calling it “unacceptable” and ordering a full investigation into what went wrong. J PS said the failure originated deep within the system and activated emergency protocols as engineers worked through the night to stabilise the grid. A phased restoration began with the careful restart of generating units to avoid further instability. While the exact cau...
Reform UK Draws Fire After Saying Caribbean Islands ‘Breaking Britain’s Back’ on Reparations.
Caribbean nationals could face sweeping travel restrictions to the United Kingdom if Reform UK wins the next general election, following a declaration from the party’s Home Affairs spokesperson, Zia Yusuf. Yusuf confirmed that Reform UK intends to block all visa applications from countries that have formally demanded reparations for Britain’s role in the transatlantic slave trade, a list that includes Jamaica, Barbados, Trinidad and Tobago, Grenada, Saint Lucia, Guyana, Belize, Antigua and Barbuda, and several others. He described reparations demands as “insulting” and insisted that Britain “will no longer tolerate being ridiculed on the world stage.”
This proposed ban would apply regardless of an individual’s personal views, meaning that even Caribbean citizens who do not support reparations — including those simply wishing to visit family, study, work, or travel — would be denied entry solely because their government supports reparatory justice. Reform UK argues that Britain has already issued 3.8 million visas and billions in foreign aid to these nations over the past two decades, claiming the UK has been “taken advantage of.”
Caribbean leaders and reparations advocates have condemned the proposal as discriminatory and punitive, warning that it effectively punishes entire populations for their governments’ diplomatic positions. The CARICOM Reparations Commission called the stance a “legacy of toxic racism,” stressing that those seeking justice for historical crimes should not be targeted with modern‑day penalties. The UN has recently intensified global discussions on reparations, declaring the transatlantic slave trade the “gravest crime against humanity,” a resolution supported by most Caribbean nations, and one the UK abstained from.
For Caribbean people with deep family ties, cultural links, and long‑standing migration routes to the UK, this policy could represent one of the most significant shifts in mobility in decades. If implemented, it would mean that ordinary Caribbean citizens, including those with relatives in Britain, could suddenly find themselves unable to visit, reunite with family, or pursue opportunities in the UK, not because of personal actions, but because of their nation’s stance on historical justice.
As Reform UK continues to lead in several polls, Caribbean communities worldwide are watching closely, aware that the outcome of the next UK election may directly shape their freedom of movement for years to come.