Friday, July 10, 2026
Village Voice News
ADVERTISEMENT
  • Home
  • News
  • Sports
  • Editorial
  • Letters
  • Global
  • Columns
    • Eye On Guyana
    • Hindsight
    • Lincoln Lewis Speaks
    • Future Notes
    • Blackout
    • From The Desk of Roysdale Forde SC
    • Diplomatic Speak
    • Mark’s Take
    • In the village
    • Mind Your Business
    • Bad & Bold
    • The Voice of Labour
    • The Herbal Section
    • Politics 101 with Dr. David Hinds
    • Talking Dollars & Making Sense
    • Book Review 
  • Education & Technology
  • E-Paper
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Sports
  • Editorial
  • Letters
  • Global
  • Columns
    • Eye On Guyana
    • Hindsight
    • Lincoln Lewis Speaks
    • Future Notes
    • Blackout
    • From The Desk of Roysdale Forde SC
    • Diplomatic Speak
    • Mark’s Take
    • In the village
    • Mind Your Business
    • Bad & Bold
    • The Voice of Labour
    • The Herbal Section
    • Politics 101 with Dr. David Hinds
    • Talking Dollars & Making Sense
    • Book Review 
  • Education & Technology
  • E-Paper
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Village Voice News
No Result
View All Result
Home Regional

CARIBBEAN | Who Gave Washington the Right?

Admin by Admin
February 4, 2026
in Regional
US President Donald Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio

US President Donald Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio

0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The US Issues ‘Instructions’ to St. Lucia While Expelling Caribbean Citizens

As Marco Rubio prosecutes a 62-year vendetta against Cuba, Caribbean sovereignty becomes collateral damage

READ ALSO

Barbados Reviews Black Belly Sheep Strategy as Guyana’s Flock Tops 5,000

Mottley Calls on Caribbean Businesses to Cut Profits on Essentials to Ease Cost of Living

MONTEGO BAY, February 3, 2026 – The words landed with the weight of colonial decree. Standing before the Second World Congress on Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities this weekend, St. Lucia’s Prime Minister Philip Pierre made an admission that should alarm every Caribbean citizen: “I have a big problem. Many of our doctors got trained in Cuba, and now the great United States has said we can’t do that any longer.”

Not requested. Not suggested. Said we can’t.

Let that sink in. A sovereign nation—independent since 1979—has been issued instructions by Washington on where its citizens may pursue education. The United States, which does not fund these scholarships, does not operate these medical schools, and bears no responsibility for St. Lucia’s healthcare outcomes, has arrogated unto itself the authority to dictate the educational partnerships of a foreign state.

By what right?

St Lucia Prime Minister Phillip J. Pierre

Rubio’s 62-Year Vendetta

The answer lies not in international law or diplomatic convention, but in one man’s ideological obsession. For 62 years, Cuba has endured the most sustained economic blockade in modern history—a campaign of strangulation that has failed spectacularly to achieve regime change but has succeeded in immiserating ordinary Cubans. Now Secretary of State Marco Rubio, the Cuban-American hardliner who has made Havana’s destruction his life’s work, seeks to deliver the killing blow.

Washington has imposed an oil embargo on Cuba, blocking supplies from Venezuela and Mexico while threatening sanctions against any nation that dares assist Havana. The intent is naked: plunge eleven million Cubans into darkness and desperation until their government collapses. Caribbean medical partnerships represent another lifeline Rubio is determined to sever. For decades, Cuba has trained thousands of Caribbean physicians, creating the backbone of healthcare systems across the region. This arrangement—born of South-South solidarity, not Washington’s largesse—offends Rubio’s sensibilities. His State Department now peddles allegations of “forced labour” against Cuban medical missions, weaponizing human rights language to advance a transparently political agenda.

The Caribbean has become collateral damage in Washington’s vendetta. Pierre admitted as much: “Some of my colleagues have already taken a position on this and banned them.” One by one, Caribbean governments are being picked off, bullied into compliance with threats that remain largely unspoken but universally understood.

The Rank Hypocrisy

The audacity would be breathtaking if it weren’t so enraging. Consider what Washington demands of the Caribbean even as it issues these imperial edicts.

The same administration telling St. Lucia where its students cannot study has revoked over 1,600 student visas and terminated the immigration status of more than 4,700 international students—many for infractions as minor as dismissed misdemeanours or campus protest activity. The same government lecturing Caribbean nations about Cuban partnerships has suspended immigrant visa processing for 75 countries, including Caribbean states. The same State Department issuing instructions to Pierre operates a sprawling detention archipelago housing nearly 70,000 migrants awaiting deportation.

And in a twist of particularly cruel irony, Washington is simultaneously pressuring CARICOM nations to accept deportees expelled from American soil—including third-country nationals who have never set foot in the Caribbean.

The message is unmistakable: Caribbean people are unwelcome in America, but Caribbean sovereignty still requires American approval.

A Manufactured Healthcare Crisis

Pierre did not mince words about the stakes: “Our medical system would basically collapse if the Cuban doctors were not here.” This is not hyperbole. Cuban-trained physicians staff hospitals across the Eastern Caribbean. Cuban medical brigades fill gaps that neither local training nor Western aid programmes have ever addressed.

Yet Washington offers no alternative. The same administration strangling Cuban medical cooperation shuttered USAID programmes throughout the region. Marco Rubio demands the Caribbean abandon partnerships that work while providing nothing to replace them. This is not policy—it is sabotage.

The CARICOM Test

CARICOM Chairman St. Kitts and Nevis Prime Minister Dr.Terrance Drew

When regional leaders convene in Basseterre on February 24 for CARICOM’s 50th summit, they will face a defining question: Will they accept being dictated to, or will they defend the sovereignty their predecessors fought to achieve?

 

The summit’s chairman, St. Kitts and Nevis Prime Minister Terrance Drew, is himself a Cuban-trained physician. He knows intimately what the region stands to lose. The question is whether CARICOM will muster the collective spine to say what individual leaders dare not: that Caribbean nations answer to their own citizens, not to Marco Rubio’s vendettas.

If Washington can issue instructions to St. Lucia today, which nation receives orders tomorrow?

Our forebears did not throw off European empires to become vassals of Washington. Sovereignty is not negotiable—not for visas, not for aid, not for anything.

WiredJA

ShareTweetSendShareSend

Related Posts

The black belly sheep that arrived in Guyana from Barbados
News

Barbados Reviews Black Belly Sheep Strategy as Guyana’s Flock Tops 5,000

by Admin
July 9, 2026

Barbados is rethinking its Black Belly sheep development strategy after the island's national flock failed to grow, even as Guyana...

Read moreDetails
Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley
Regional

Mottley Calls on Caribbean Businesses to Cut Profits on Essentials to Ease Cost of Living

by Admin
July 8, 2026

Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley has urged Caribbean businesses to accept lower profit margins on essential goods as part of a regional...

Read moreDetails
News

French Guiana becomes CARICOM’s eighth associate member

by Admin
July 8, 2026

French Guiana has officially become the eighth associate member of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM), marking a significant expansion of the...

Read moreDetails
Next Post
Coretta McDonald MP (APNU)

Education Funding Falls Short for Guyana’s Children-McDonald


EDITOR'S PICK

UWI’s coming leaves us with more questions than answers

November 20, 2020

Live Life with Assuria Christmas Giveaway 2025 – Announcement of Winners.

January 14, 2026

WORD OF THE DAY: ELYSIAN

January 12, 2024
Sherwyn Greaves, former CEO, CH&PA and the property he reportedly bought at 11530 142nd Street, Jamaica, New York,

Campbell urges U.S probe into purchase of New York property by Greaves, cites alleged connection to Ahmad

February 7, 2025

© 2024 Village Voice

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Sports
  • Editorial
  • Letters
  • Global
  • Columns
    • Eye On Guyana
    • Hindsight
    • Lincoln Lewis Speaks
    • Future Notes
    • Blackout
    • From The Desk of Roysdale Forde SC
    • Diplomatic Speak
    • Mark’s Take
    • In the village
    • Mind Your Business
    • Bad & Bold
    • The Voice of Labour
    • The Herbal Section
    • Politics 101 with Dr. David Hinds
    • Talking Dollars & Making Sense
    • Book Review 
  • Education & Technology
  • E-Paper
  • Contact Us

© 2024 Village Voice