CARIBBEAN-FINANCE-OECS urges MSMEs to apply for matching grants

The St. Lucia-based Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS) Commission says it will launch the second call for proposals for the regional MSME matching grants programme on Friday, saying the initiative presents a golden opportunity for blue economy entrepreneurs.

The programme is a flagship component of the Unleashing the Blue Economy of the Caribbean (UBEC) Project, which seeks to strengthen blue economy value chains, promote sustainable entrepreneurship, and improve livelihoods across the OECS.

The Commission says that by supporting MSMEs in fisheries, marine tourism, and waste management, the programme not only drives economic growth but also contributes to environmental sustainability and food security.

Funded by the World Bank and implemented by the OECS Commission, ‘UBEC is building a resilient, competitive, and sustainable Blue Economy across the Eastern Caribbean,’ the Commission said.

It said that micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs) operating in fisheries, marine tourism, and waste management now have the chance to strengthen and expand their businesses with grant funding ranging from US$5,000 to US$25,000. T

The Commission said that the project is already transforming businesses and improving livelihoods in Grenada, St. Lucia, and St. Vincent and the Grenadines, with MSMEs in the three participating islands already being awarded grants from the previous call for proposals earlier this year.

‘The regional MSME matching grants programme continues to make significant strides in advancing blue economy efforts within the OECS. To date, 28 grants valued at over US$500,000 have been awarded to MSMEs,’ said UBEC’s senior grants advisor, Kyle Garnes.

‘In addition, the programme has begun delivering tailored capacity-building and training services to MSMEs in waste management, fisheries, and tourism. Training has already commenced in St. Lucia, with more than 25 MSMEs actively participating, while rollouts in Grenada and St. Vincent and the Grenadines are scheduled for the weeks of October 13, and October 20.’

The Commission said that individual MSMEs in the three OECS countries may be may be eligible if they are legally registered and have been in operation for at least two years, with supporting financial or bank statements.

CRICKET-NEP/WIS-SCOREBOARD West Indies vs Nepal – 3rd T20I

Scoreboard of the third T20I between West Indies and Nepal here at the Sharjah Cricket Stadium on Tuesday.

NEPAL

Kushal Bhurtel c Mayers b Hosein 39

Kushal Malla c +Jangoo b Holder 12

*Rohit Paudel c +Jangoo b Simmonds 17

Gulsan Jha run out 10

Sundeep Jora c Allen b Blades 14

Aarif Sheikh c Holder b Simmonds 6

Mohammad Alam run out 3

Lokesh Bam c +Jangoo b Blades 9

Sompal Kami lbw Simmonds 4

Karan KC b Simmonds 0

Shahab Alam not out 0

Extras (lb 1, nb 1, w6) 8

TOTAL (ten wickets; 19.5 overs) 122

Fall of wickets: 1-41, 2-60, 3-75, 4-84, 5-91, 6-105, 7-109, 8-118, 9-118, 10-122.

Bowling: Mayera 2-0-13-0, Hosein 4-0-26-1, Holder 3-0-19-1, Blades 3.5-0-20-2, Gore 3-0-23-0,

Bidaisee 1-0-5-0, Simmonds 3-0-15-4.

WEST INDIES

+Amir Jangoo not out 74

Ackeem Auguste not out 41

Extras (lb4, wd4) 8

TOTAL 0 wickets; 12.2 overs) 123

Did not bat: Kyle Mayers, Keacy Carty, Karima Gore, Jason Holder, Fabian Allen, Akeal Hosein, Navin Bidaisee, Jediah Blades, Ramon Simmonds

Bowling: Paudel 2-0-18-0, Karan 2-0-19-0, Kami 2.2-0-17-0, Mohammad Alam 2-0-24-0, Bhurtel 2-0-17-0, Shahab Alam 2-0-24-0

Toss: West Indies won and elected to field.

Result: West Indies won by 10 wickets

Player-of-the-Match: Ramon Simmonds

Player of the series: Kushal Bhurtel

Series Result: Nepal won the 3-match series 2-1

Umpires: Buddhi Pradhan, Vinay Kumar

TV Umpire: Akbar Ali

Reserve Umpire: Durga Subedi

Match Referee: Narayanan Kutty.

SURINAME-POLITTICS-Venezuela seeking closer ties with Suriname

Venezuela is seeking closer ties with Suriname and has described as ‘ a new beginning’ discussions held on Monday between Finance and Planning Minister, Adelien Wijnerman and the Venezuelan Ambassador, Ms. Ayezim Y. Flores Rivas,

The Communications Service Suriname (CDS) in a statement following the discussions said that the ‘visit was intended to strengthen the close ties between Suriname and Venezuela’.

It quoted Wijnerman as expressing her appreciation for the initiative and emphasized that Suriname is open to intensive cooperation.

Ambassador Flores Rivas called the meeting ‘a new beginning’ adding that Venezuela, despite the challenges it faces, stands ready to support Suriname in various areas, including education, finance, and the oil and gas sector.

‘During the meeting, various opportunities for cooperation were discussed. For example, the ambassador proposed offering Spanish classes to ministry employees. She also highlighted Venezuela’s investments in education and social projects, which lay the foundation for future joint initiatives,’ the CDS statement stated.

‘Suriname and Venezuela expressed their intention to further expand their cooperation, including through knowledge exchange and training through universities in both countries,’ it said.

Suriname and Venezuela are oil-producing countries.

CANANEWS AND SPORTS SCHEDULE AT 1200 ECT

The following is the CANANews and SPORTS Schedule for Tuesday, September 30, 2025.

HAMILTON – Bermudians were being urged to closely monitor the passage of two hurricanes that could begin affecting the British Overseas Territory later on Tuesday.

BASSETERRE – Caribbean Community (CARICOM) agriculture ministers meet here on Tuesday focusing on a wide range of issues including the status and trends in fisheries and aquaculture production, trade, and employment; initiatives to combat illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing and a new grievance redress mechanism for the Belize-based Caribbean Regional Fisheries Mechanism (CRFM).

WASHINGTON -The Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) has unveiled a five year strategic plan that sets out a ‘bold agenda’ towards advancing health and well-being across the Americas, including the Caribbean.

KINGSTON – The Bank of Jamaica(BOJ) says the outlook for real economic activity for next two fiscal years is likely to be in line with the last forecast and that preliminary indicators suggest that the economy should expand in the September 2025 quarter, resulting from expansions in electricity and water supply, agriculture and tourism and its allied services.

NASSAU – The Central Bank of the Bahamas (CBB) says preliminary indicators are that the domestic economy grew at a moderated paced up through the month August, relative to the year earlier, as performance indicators continued to trend closer to their expected medium-term potential.

SPORTS:

DUBAI – West Indies seeking to avoid a whitewash at the hands of Nepal, the first-ever associate nation to win a bilateral series in the third T20I of the Unity Cup at the Sharjah Cricket Stadium on Tuesday.

CARIBBEAN-EDUCATION-CDB president calls for greater role for education in region’s socio-economic development

The President of the Barbados-based Caribbean Development Bank (CDB), Daniel Bet, Tuesday, called for a region where education is a launchpad for innovation, resilience, and global leadership.

Addressing the 2025 Regional Symposium and Policy Dialogue on Transforming Education,’ Best recalled the vision of the late St. Lucian Nobel Laureate, Sir Arthur Lewis, Nobel Laureate, that the fundamental cure for poverty is not money but knowledge.

Best told the three-day symposium being held under the theme ‘Stronger Together: Empowering Parents as Partners in Caribbean Education,’ that Sir Arthur was right then, as he is now.

‘Sir Arthur recognised that education is the deciding factor between a Caribbean that lingers on the margins of the global economy and a Caribbean that leads, as innovators, creators, and builders of prosperity,’ Best told delegates attending the symposium that has brought together key regional stakeholders to underscore the vital role of parents and guardians in the education system.

The symposium is organised by the CDB in collaboration with the Barbados Ministry of Education Transformation and other partners, and Best said that over the last four decades, global gross domestic product per capita has nearly doubled, and the share of humanity living in extreme poverty has decreased from 44 per cent in 1981 to just nine per cent in 2022.

He said research shows that education accounted for half of global economic growth since 1980, and two-thirds of income gains among the world’s poorest people.

‘The takeaway is unmistakable; education is the most powerful driver of inclusive growth known to humanity,’ best said, adding that for generations, Caribbean parents and grandparents sacrificed, stretched scarce resources, walked miles, and leaned on their communities to ensure their children could enter a classroom.

‘Many of us here today are direct beneficiaries of their determination. Our region’s progress rests squarely on their belief in the power of learning. Now, it is our turn to honor their sacrifices by transforming our systems to meet the challenges of our time. Because, colleagues, the reality is sobering’.

The CDB president said that fewer than one in five adults in the Caribbean hold a university degree with girls dominating tertiary education even as this success is not matched in leadership roles or pay equity.

He said boys were exiting the education pipeline too early, with lasting effects on their well -being and society.

Best said that this year, 44 per cent of the candidates who sat the Caribbean Examination Council’s (CXC) Caribbean Secondary Education Certificate (CSEC) passed five or more subjects, including Mathematics and English, ‘still very much below what we can consider satisfactory.

‘While we continue to produce brilliant minds, too many migrate in search of opportunity, with some countries losing more than 70 per cent of their university graduates. My friends, weak outcomes block the dreams of families and constrain our region’s growth. They erode social cohesion and deepen cycles of inequality.’

Best said he was envisioning a transformed Caribbean region where education is a launchpad for innovation, resilience, and global leadership.

‘A Caribbean where lifelong learning is guaranteed through skills certificates and reskilling pathways. young innovators harness AI and robotics to design platforms that transform the way the world learns, heals, trades, and connects, universities and TVET institutions fuel breakthroughs in renewable energy, climate resilience, and digital entrepreneurship.

‘Our hubs of trade are models of sustainability, and our scientists lead in marine biotechnology and clean energy. Tourism is redefined as sustainable, agriculture is transformed by agro-tech, and our blue economy becomes the Silicon Valley of the Seas, (and) most importantly, where our brightest young people no longer feel they must leave the Caribbean to succeed.’

He said that this is transformation needed urgently and it begins with how investments are made in education development today.

Best also urged parents and first teachers to instill values and build resilience in the transformation, noting that ‘education is a journey that begins long before the first school bell.

‘Parents are the first teachers, the ones who instill values, build resilience, and sustain learning at home. Every child’s success story is a testament to the unseen labor of a mother or guardian, the faith of a father, and the resilience of grandparents who held onto the promise of education against all odds.

‘Policymakers can craft a vision and strategy, but it is parents who bring these principles to life, making them an indispensable part of the education system. One cannot succeed without the other.

‘In our region, it has always taken a village to succeed. It will take the whole Caribbean village, including parents, teachers, communities, policymakers, and the diaspora, to raise this generation into prosperity. That is why parents must have a seat at the table of transformation.’

Best said that through stronger Parent-Teacher Associations, regional alliances, and community networks, ‘we are embedding parents’ voices alongside policymakers in decisions that will shape Caribbean education for decades to come.

‘At this critical juncture, we have a unique opportunity to strengthen the entire education ecosystem by vigorously advancing the participation of parents. Over the next few days, I invite us to rethink how we engage, empower, parents as partners with formal roles, clear access points, and enshrined rights in shaping the future of education.’

He said to guide the conversations, he is proposing what he termed ‘The Big Four Agenda for Parents’ which focuses on parents as partners, protecting every child’s right to learn, preparing children for the future, and passing on a legacy of opportunity.

The CDB president said that the region’s premier financial institution ‘will be right there alongside you, our policymakers, parents, students, educators, and partners.

‘Under our Rebirth Vision, we are designing a new education policy and strategy that will bolster the education ecosystem and further strengthen parent-teacher partnerships, building on our track record to ensure the basics, so that by Grade 3, every Caribbean child can read, count, think critically, and navigate the digital world with confidence, cultivate future skills for renewable energy, resilient construction, agro-tech, health tech, the creative economy, and the digital frontier.’

He said the project will also allow for linking education to jobs and lifelong learning through micro-credentials, modular qualifications, and demand-driven competency-based skills.

CRICKET-NEP/WIS-RESULT West Indies defeat Nepal by 10 wickets – 3rd T20I

West Indies defeated Nepal by 10 wickets in the third and final T20I of the Unity Cup here at the Sharjah Cricket Stadium on Tuesday.

Scores

NEPAL 122 in 19.5 overs (Khushal Bhurtel 39, Sandeep Jora 14; Ramon Simmonds 4-15, Jediah Blades 2-20).

WEST INDIES 123-0 in 12.2 overs (Amir Jangoo 74 not out, Akeem Auguste 41 not out)

*Nepal won the 3-match series 2-1

JAMAICA-FINANCE-BOJ optimistic about real ecnomic activity in Jamaica

The Bank of Jamaica(BOJ) says the outlook for real economic activity for next two fiscal years is likely to be in line with the last forecast and that preliminary indicators suggest that the economy should expand in the September 2025 quarter, resulting from expansions in electricity and water supply, agriculture and tourism and its allied services.

The BOJ’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) which earlier this month deliberated on the bank’s monetary policy stance in the context of continued low domestic inflation, global uncertainties and evolving interest rate trajectories in major developed countries, said thereafter, economic activity is anticipated to strengthen throughout financial year 2025/26.

‘In this context, real gross domestic product (GDP) is projected to recover in financial year 2025/26 in the range of one to three per cent, largely due to growth in the agriculture, mining, and tourism sectors,’ said the BOJ, which is also the country’s central bank.

It said in August this year, headline inflation in the United States increased to 2.9 per cent from 2.7 per cent in July 2025 and that it is projected to remain above the US Federal Reserve’s (Fed) target of two per cent for the remainder of the year.

‘BOJ’s July 2025 survey of businesses’ inflation expectations indicated that respondents expected inflation 12 months ahead to be seven per cent, generally stable relative to 7.1 per cent in the previous survey.’

The BOJ said the domestic banking system remains sound with adequate capital and liquidity and that the domestic fiscal policy stance continues to pose no risk to inflation over the near term.

‘The MPC reaffirms its commitment to maintaining low and stable inflation. To this end, the Committee will continue to monitor the incoming data and adjust its policy accordingly. This includes maintaining heightened surveillance of the trajectory of core inflation relative to the lower bound of the inflation target range,’ said the MPC which is chaired by Richard Byles, the BOJ Governor.

The BOJ said that during its meeting it also determined that the current policy stance continues to be appropriate to support inflation converging to the target range and therefore, unanimously agreed to hold the policy rate, which is offered to deposit-taking institutions (DTIs) on their current account balances at the BOJ) at 5.75 per cent per annum.

It also agreed to continue taking measures to preserve relative stability in the foreign exchange market.

The decision to maintain the policy rate is based on several factors including that while headline inflation of 1.2 per cent at August 2025 is below the bank’s target range of four to six per cent, core inflation continues to track within the target range.

‘Moreover, the causes of the low headline inflation rate at August 2025 are temporary,’ the BOJ said, noting that the temporary factors that caused low headline inflation in August were primarily related to improvements in supply conditions.

‘In particular, agricultural prices during the month were lower than a year earlier, when prices rose due to the negative impact of Hurricane Beryl on domestic crop production. Supplies improved subsequent to the adverse weather, leading to prices reverting to more normal levels.

‘In addition, the dissipation of the impact of a previous adjustment in public transport fares, as well as a reduction in the General Consumption Tax (GCT) on electricity consumption announced by the government in March 2025, contributed to lower-than-targeted inflation. ‘

The BOJ said that economic indicators continue to point to a stable macroeconomic environment.

‘Further, with stable domestic interest rates, the decline in interest rates abroad has improved the differential between domestic and external rates, which should better support stability in the foreign exchange market.

‘In addition, the current account of Jamaica’s balance of payments is projected to remain in surplus over the near term, and the international reserves are healthy and are projected to improve further.’

CARIBBEAN-AGRICULTURE-CARICOM agriculture ministers meeting in St.Kitts-Nevis

Caribbean Community (CARICOM) agriculture ministers meet here on Tuesday focusing on a wide range of issues including the status and trends in fisheries and aquaculture production, trade, and employment; initiatives to combat illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing and a new grievance redress mechanism for the Belize-based Caribbean Regional Fisheries Mechanism (CRFM).

The meeting forms part of the activities for the 19th Caribbean Week of Agriculture (CWA 2025) that got underway here on Monday with St. Kitts and Nevis Agriculture, Fisheries and Marine Resources Minister, Samal Duggins, highlighting the central role of agriculture in regional development and resilience.

Agriculture Minister, Samal Duggins, addressing the opening of the Caribbean Week of Agriculture (CWA 2025)

‘Agriculture is not just another sector. It is the very lifeblood of our people. It is the guarantee that every family can access healthy and nutritious food,’ he said in his feature address, reflecting also on the CWA 2025 theme ‘Sowing Change, Harvesting Resilience: Transforming our Caribbean Food Systems for 2025, saying that the ‘seeds we plant here today, the policies we shape, the partnerships we build, will determine the resilience and the prosperity that we shall reap tomorrow’.

He urged regional leaders to confront long-standing challenges and elevate the agricultural agenda.

‘Our region has not always given agriculture the priority it deserves. Too often, it has been seen as a last resort, rather than recognised as a pillar of sovereignty and a pillar of growth,’ Duggins said, outlining efforts being made locally including the food import reduction programme, which prioritises local investment to increase the production of high-demand crops such as bananas, plantains, coconuts, and pineapples..

‘We are scaling climate-smart practices, expanding agro-processing, and empowering our youth and women to lead in this very transformation,’ he said, acknowledging the importance of unified regional efforts and emphasising the value of South-South cooperation, particularly through strengthening relationships with African nations.

He said the twin island Federation has been actively forging closer ties with countries like Nigeria and that such South-South collaboration enables shared learning in climate-smart agriculture, the creation of cross-continental value chains, and the development of deeper trade and innovation networks.

The agriculture ministers meeting, which will be chaired by Anguilla’s Minister of Economic Development, Industry, Commerce, Lands, Planning, Water, and Natural Resources, Kyle Hodge, will also discuss a regional training and capacity needs assessment being undertaken by the CRFM with support from GRÓ-Fisheries Training Programme (FTP), under the auspices of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), as well as south-south cooperation with China.

The ministers will also receive updates and provide policy guidance on regional initiatives to address climate resilience and blue economic growth. These include the Global Affairs Canada-funded Sustainable Technologies for Adaptation and Resilience in Fisheries (STAR-Fish) Project; the GEF/CAF/FAO/CRFM BE-CLME+ Project: Promoting National Blue Economy Priorities through Marine Spatial Planning in the Caribbean Large Marine Ecosystem Plus (BE-CLME+); and the New Zealand Bioeconomy Science Institute: Plant and Food Research Group/CRFM Sargassum Products for Climate Resilience in the Caribbean Project.

Meanwhile, the Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS) will this week launch its landmark Common Apiculture Policy coinciding with the 9th OECS Council of Ministers: Agriculture meeting.

The policy, developed under the EU-funded BioSPACE Programme in collaboration with regional partners, seeks to protect bees as vital pollinators while strengthening the apiculture sector through sustainable practices, standardized approaches, and research-driven strategies.

‘We are going to have a technical paper and presentation presented within CWA so this is something that will be very pertinent for people like beekeepers, people who want to get into the apiculture space and policy makers,’ said Beekeeper at the Department of Agriculture here, Monroe Tweed.

‘What it is basically it is a document about how we would like to flesh out how we (standardise) beekeeping in the region and not just in St. Kitts but this is a document that’s been building up for a number of years with baseline studies funded by Small Grant Programs (SGPs)

‘We would also like to do an IPM which is an Integrated Pest Management paper because bees have their own pests, especially in the climate that we are in. It is an agricultural venture now so we must consider that as good stewards of bees.’

As part of the celebrations, the OECS-CARICOM Caribbean Honey Show will also be featured during CWA 2025, offering patrons the opportunity to taste and purchase honey and related products, including soaps made from beeswax, honey cocktails, pastries, and more.

On Wednesday, the CRFM will partner with the local Department of Marine Resources and the National Fisherfolk Organization to convene the Caribbean Small-scale Fisheries and Aquaculture Forum.

UNITED STATES-RIGHTS-US lists Caribbean countries in 2025 Trafficking in Persons Report

The United States Department of State has listed several Caribbean countries in its 2025 Trafficking in Person Report, stating that ‘trafficking in persons’ and ‘human trafficking’ are umbrella terms, often used interchangeably, to refer to a crime whereby traffickers exploit and profit at the expense of adults or children by compelling them to perform labor or engage in commercial sex.

‘When a person younger than 18 is used to perform a commercial sex act, it is a crime regardless of whether there is any force, fraud, or coercion involved,’ the State Department said, adding that Washington recognizes two primary forms of trafficking in persons, namely sex trafficking and forced labour.

In its report, the State Department has placed The Bahamas, Guyana and Suriname in Tier 1 which it said are those ‘whose governments fully meet the Trafficking Victims Protection Act’s (TVPA) minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking.

Antigua and Barbuda, Aruba, Belize, Jamaica, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Curaçao, Dominican Republic, and Trinidad and Tobago have all been placed in Tier 2 ‘ whose governments do not fully meet the TVPA’s minimum standards but are making significant efforts to bring themselves into compliance with those standards’.

St. Lucia and Barbados have been placed in Tier 2 Watch List ‘whose governments do not fully meet the TVPA’s minimum standards but are making significant efforts to bring themselves into compliance with those standards (with certain exceptions), and for which the estimated number of victims of severe forms of trafficking is very significant or is significantly increasing, and the country is not taking proportional concrete actions’.

Sint Maarten, Venezuela and Cuba have been placed in Tier 3 ‘whose governments do not fully meet the TVPA’s minimum standards and are not making significant efforts to do so.’

The State Department also listed Haiti, along with Libya, Somalia and Yemen in the ‘Special Case’ category.

The State Department said the US Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000, as amended (TVPA), defines ‘severe forms of trafficking in persons’ as sex trafficking in which a commercial sex act is induced by force, fraud, or coercion, or in which the person induced to perform such an act has not attained 18 years of age; or the recruitment, harbouring, transportation, provision, or obtaining of a person for labor or services, through the use of force, fraud, or coercion for the purpose of subjection to involuntary servitude, peonage, debt bondage, or slavery.

The State Department said more than 180 countries ave ratified or acceded to the UN Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons (the UN TIP Protocol), which defines trafficking in persons and contains obligations to prevent and combat the crime.

The report says the TVPA directs the US Secretary of State to consider, as proof of a country’s failure to make significant efforts to fully meet the TVPA’s minimum standards, adding that governments on Tier 3 may be subject to certain restrictions on foreign assistance, ‘whereby the President may determine not to provide US government nonhumanitarian, nontrade-related foreign assistance as defined in the TVPA’.

The report states that the US President may also determine to instruct the US executive director of each multilateral development bank and the International Monetary Fun(IMF) to ‘vote against and use their best efforts to deny any loans or other uses of the institutions’ funds to a designated Tier 3 country for most purposes.

CRICKET-CWI unveils 2025/26 retainer contracts

In a significant move to secure the future of West Indies cricket, Cricket West Indies (CWI) has officially unveiled its list of players offered International Retainer Contracts for the 2025/26 season.

The new contract cycle, beginning October 1, sees a blend of established stars and exciting newcomers across both the Men’s and Women’s teams.

A key feature of this year’s list is the expanded use of multi-year deals, an initiative designed to provide players with greater financial security and help CWI retain its most valuable assets in the competitive global cricket landscape.

Miles Bascombe, CWI’s Director of Cricket, emphasised the dual focus of the selection process.

‘We have placed a premium on both current performance and long-term potential,’ Bascombe stated. ‘Our strategy is firmly focused on building competitive squads for major global tournaments, ensuring stability for our top performers, and aligning our pathways with long-term success for West Indies cricket.’

The senior Men’s list features 15 players who have become central figures across formats. The exciting pace duo of Alzarri Joseph and breakout sensation Shamar Joseph are retained, alongside batting mainstays like Shai Hope and Brandon King. Spin options Akeal Hosein and Gudakesh Motie are also included, highlighting their importance to the squad.

Notably, the ‘Starter Contracts’ for developing players have been offered to promising teenagers, including young wicketkeeper-batter Jewel Andrew. Furthermore, the Men’s Academy list features a 15-player pool, such as Nathan Edward and Rivaldo Clarke.

The Women’s squad sees a strong core of experienced campaigners like captain Hayley Matthews and legendary Stafanie Taylor. They are joined by key players such as Chinelle Henry and Karishma Ramharack.

The commitment to development is mirrored in the Women’s program, with ‘Starter Contracts’ awarded to Jahzara Claxton and Realeanna Grimmond.

A 14-player Women’s Academy, including names like Trishan Holder and Shabika Gajnabi, rounds out a comprehensive plan to build depth and sustain success for the Maroon women.

West Indies Men’s Contracts 2025/26 Senior Men Alick Athanaze, Keacy Carty, Roston Chase, Justin Greaves, Shai Hope, Akeal Hosein, Alzarri Joseph, Shamar Joseph, Brandon King, Gudakesh Motie, Rovman Powell, Sherfane Rutherford, Jayden Seales, Romario Shepherd, Jomel Warrican.

Starter Contracts (Development) Jewel Andrew, Jediah Blades, Johann Layne,

Men’s Academy Ackeem Auguste, Ryan Bandoo, Jediah Blades, Rivaldo Clarke, Mavendra Dindyal, Giovonte Depeiza, Nathan Edward, Damel Evelyn, Amari Goodridge, Mbeki Joseph, Johann Layne, Zishan Motara, Kelvin Pittman, Renico Smith, Carlon Tuckett.

West Indies Women’s Contracts 2025/26 Senior Women Aaliyah Alleyne, Shemaine Campbelle, Deandra Dottin, Afy Fletcher, Jannillea Glasgow, Shawnisha Hector, Chinelle Henry, Zaida James, Qiana Joseph, Hayley Matthews, Ashmini Munisar, Stafanie Taylor, Karishma Ramharack.

Starter Contracts (Development) Jahzara Claxton, Realeanna Grimmond.

Women’s Academy Abigail Bryce, Asabi Callender, NaiJanni Cumberbatch, Shabika Gajanbi, Brianna Harricharan, Trishan Holder, Djenaba Joseph, Nyia Latchman, Samara Ramnath, Amrita Ramtahal, Selena Ross, Shunelle Sawh, Steffie Soogrim, Kate Wilmott.