Trapp Refutes Claims of financial Mischief

Recently, the San Ignacio and Santa Elena Town Council shared its profit and loss balance sheet for the month of May 2024. Shortly after, the council came under fire after the full document was leaked to the public, revealing that forty-three thousand dollars was allocated for a monthly consultancy.  Mayor Earl Trapp maintains that the council has always been completely transparent with its finances.

 

                                    Earl Trapp

Earl Trapp, Mayor, Santa Elena & San Ignacio

“A profit and loss balance sheet as a responsible town council. We have always posted that on our Facebook page, every month we post that. It’s just a mischievous act, I would say. And I’m sure it’s one of my council members that took a snapshot and right after the meeting, he was in the administrator’s office discussing the issue, and I can tell you that the administrator went through this with me. About two weeks ago, and I said to him, sir, the best person to make clarification is the accountant. And why didn’t he take the time and get the accountant to explain to him if he doesn’t understand? What happened there is that, for example, what was not spent in March and April was spent in there. It’s nothing wrong with that. We have a contract with a company that provides the license. I think that’s basically what they are talking about. That’s what we repeated the forty-three thousand for so many months. But there’s nothing to hide. We have been one, like I said, one of the most transparent council and one of the council in the country of Belize that is more financially stable. It’s just false allegations.”

P.C.C. Finances Spent with Four Extra Months to complete Project

The People’s Constitution Commission was configured in November 2022 with a mandate to review Belize’s Constitution, to consult with the people of Belize, to make notes of what those consultations reflect, and to present them to the Prime Minister in a report. The work was to have been completed within eighteen months, but unforeseen delays required a six-month extension. The commission had hoped for a budget of seven million dollars to conduct the work, but was only given one point one million to work with. The commission had to eliminate a great part of the plan it had that included media coverage for its consultative process in order to cut costs. It has long invested the money it was allotted for the project and is hoping that another allotment will be granted in order to finish up the next four months of work.  Will it be able to get it done in that time that is left? We posed that question to the Chairman of the P.C.C, Anthony Chanona.

 

                            Anthony Chanona

Anthony Chanona, Chairman, People’s Constitution Commission

“Having spent over one and a half million dollars to do we cannot just show things together. It has to represent.”

 

Marion Ali

Is there a need, you think, for another extension?

 

Anthony Chanona

“I’ve heard that question been asked of me that there’s need for, there might be need for more time. That would take a legislative amendment because the legislative amendment – the legislative law we have said eighteen months, which ended in May, six months which ends in November.  I want to believe, Marion, that we have all the information; we have a lot of it, but if we can double down and dedicate these next four months to putting together the information from the commission to the people and back to the commission and work hard into the wee hours in the morning. In October, I’ll be able to give you a straight answer.”

P.C.C. Held Public Consultations with Wide Cross Section of Belize

While the Commission has its financial challenges, it still managed to reach a wide cross section of the community, including the ones that do not have access to technology or to the two volumes of the summary of the Constitution that they continue to disseminate. Chanona told News Five that they had originally put aside their public outreach program from June to December of last year, but that it went on for two months beyond that because of the need to reach the remote areas. All in all, he said, the coverage they were able to make was significant. In the coming months, the commission will prepare and present a report that reflects what it captured in the public consultations and outreach.

 

                             Anthony Chanona

Anthony Chanona, Chairman, People’s Constitution Commission

“We visited, of the two hundred and six villages, over seventy percent of those villages in Toledo alone where fifty-four villages are.  I would say we sensitized one hundred percent because we went directly to thirteen villages and indirectly right over there at the Father Ring Parish Hall, thanks to the efforts of Commissioner Christina Coc. We were able to meet with the Toledo Alcalde’s Association and that is forty-one members. So we distributed these books and we sensitized our nation. We directly engage with over twenty-two thousand persons and we issued over ten thousand survey instruments, over three hundred thousand Digicel text blasts and one hundred and twenty-six thousand smart text blasts. We went all the way into the diaspora, but all that needed to be captured into some format of a tool of education, because when this effort is finished, the legacy that we all aspire to leave as a P.C.C is a tool that would create an agenda. The importance of our Belize Constitution, and the importance of having knowledge. of the way we govern ourselves. And now we’re in the process of trying to match what the people said. To a recommendation and where that effort will lead is what we want to do is develop an interim report.  So we will take these next months of June, July, August, September to create the recommendations based on the people’s responses. How do we take all that they said, from the highest percentages of priorities to the lowest, put them into some constitutional format. If it fits, is it a recommendation that will fit in the Constitution? Or is it something that is aspirational? I would like it to fit, but it’s not of a constitutional nature. And then, because we want to be able to call this effort the People’s Constitution of Belize. We are going to release in October what is titled an Interim Report and what the Interim Report will have is basically a summary of all recommendations  and we are going to put it back into the twenty-three stakeholders  of which the media is one  and we’re going to have hopefully truly media public outreach for the people of Belize to be able to see what  we saying we heard you say and to see if in fact we documented or heard properly.”

Competition Remains Tense as KTV Season 6 Winds Down  

It’s episode six of KTV the Remix Season Six and the competition is as tense as ever. With only three more episodes to go, tonight will see crowd favorites fight for those final spots. KTV Producer Viannie Reyes promises a night of excitement that will keep viewers on the edge of their seats. Here’s more on that.

 

                                   Viannie Reyes

Viannie Reyes, KTV Producer

“It’s hard to say this, but one of your favorites will be going home tonight. We have been seeing A lot of great performances from all of these contestants and it’s hard to see them leave. Last week was the first battle round. It was very emotional. So we’re hoping that tonight can be a bit smoother. They’re preparing for country or pop tonight. That’s a genre. And after tonight, there will be four more contestants that will be battling it out to stay in the last of KTV and that one person to become the champion.”

 

Britney Gordon

“So what’s the energy like going into this? How are the contestants faring?”

 

Viannie Reyes

“They’re very nervous, of course. There’s a lot of emotions behind the scenes, and it’s totally understandable, especially when they’re announced that they made it to the bottom two. Like I said before, the emotions came out behind the scenes, they took it on stage. So that can also be a bit, scary for them, too, because this is where the judges will have their say and they will be deciding out of those two who will be keeping that run for KTV the Remix Season six champion. We’re looking forward to see who is the bottom two. But we’re also asking for you for everybody to come out at the bliss to support them. It’s a different vibe than seeing it on TV. And also you get to participate in a lot of different giveaways. And also the halftime challenge as well to where you get to win a lot of different prizes as well. And like I said, it’s just the ambience, the entertainment and everything at The Bliss is so much better than seeing it online.”

Belize City Fisherman Shot Dead Near Yabra Bridge

“If you can’t catch Harry, catch his sleeve.”  It’s an old saying used to describe a scenario where a killer is unable to locate his target and takes aim at someone else.  Oftentimes, that individual is a victim of circumstance.  That’s what happened this morning when an unsuspecting fisherman was pounced upon by a gunman who was pursuing someone else.  Frustrated by not being able to catch up with his quarry, the lone assailant turned his weapon on Mark Francisco and fired a single shot, mortally wounding him as he stood near his vehicle.  News Five’s Isani Cayetano begins our newscast this evening with the following story.

 

Isani Cayetano, Reporting

This morning in Belize City, a retiree turned fisherman was gunned down not far from the Yabra Bridge. Mark Francisco was getting ready to head out to sea when he was approached by a gunman and fatally shot.  According to his sibling, a pair of men set out in pursuit of an unnamed individual.  When they could not catch up with him, they turned their attention to Francisco who was near his vehicle.

 

David Francisco

David Francisco, Brother of Deceased

“The guys chased after another guy, he escaped over two fence.  The other guy came to my brother, right by his vehicle, right there, and told him lift up his head.  When he lifted up his head, he shot him in the head.”

 

 

 

It is not clear why the men targeted Francisco who, by his family’s account, was not a troublesome person.  Earlier today, Commissioner of Police Chester Williams echoed a similar sentiment.

 

Chester Williams

Chester Williams, Commissioner of Police

“At this time, we are not aware of a motive.  We are still puzzled with this one.  Mr. Francisco is not known to police, he is not in the underworld, he was not a gang member.  He was a productive Belizean and we are still trying to figure out why he was killed.  Nonetheless, investigators are still busy, they were out up to late last night trying to gather evidence and we were hoping that we would be able to make some progress.  We have people who are saying things to us but are reluctant to give statements, so it’s a matter of trying to convince them to reduce what they know to the police in writing so that we can make an arrest.”

 

For many years, Mark Francisco was an employee of Benny’s.  When he retired, he picked up fishing as a livelihood.  He was going about his preparation for another fishing trip when he was pounced upon by his killer.

 

David Francisco

“This guy had no right to come and just shoot my brother just like that.  This is insane.”

 

Isani Cayetano

“I understand that your brother was getting ready to go to sea this morning when this happened.”

 

David Francisco

“Yes, he was getting ready to go to sea.  He was right there by his vehicle, cleaning up to put his stuff in and take off to go to the boat and put on his machine and put in his gas and food and stuff when this guy came and shoot my brother.”

 

 

 

Isani Cayetano

“Why do you believe that either your brother or the other person they were pursuing would be attacked in this manner?”

 

David Francisco

“Well I guess because you can’t catch the guy you came for, you made an example out of a senior man, not a young guy, a senior man and shoot him in his head, chance him out of his life.”

 

The Belize Police Department is looking for one person of interest.

 

Chester Williams

“We’re looking for someone of interest, we do not have that person in custody as yet. No.”

 

Isani Cayetano for News Five.

Former Councilor Deannie Requena is Stabbed and Robbed

Former City Councilor Deannie Requena is recovering from stab wounds and other injuries she suffered when she was attacked on Sunday. The incident happened sometime before two in the afternoon near Hattieville and Requena was found by another motorist who helped her to the Hattieville Police Station. She was observed with stab wounds to her face and neck and with a damaged vehicle on the roadside near mile fifteen on the George Price Highway. It Is reported that Requena knew her attacker and within a few hours, police had already apprehended the individual and charged him. In a Facebook post, Requena wrote that she’s doing okay physically. She informed that there were two attackers, both of whom she knew. She said one stabbed and punched her, while the other robbed her of her iPhone and the money that was in her purse, cut all the tires on her vehicle, and broke up the glass on her vehicle. Requena said that she’s grateful to be alive, but that the attack has left her mentally damaged. Today, Commissioner of Police, Chester Williams told the media what they have on the incident so far.

 

                            Chester Williams

Chester Williams, Commissioner of Police

“Miss Requena visited a friend in the central prison yesterday and while she was leaving, the relative of that same friend that she visited attacked and stabbed her, robbed her of three thousand dollars and damaged the four tires for her vehicle. She was taken to the hospital, treated, released, and she gave a report to the police. The suspect is in custody and should be charged by now.”

 

Reporter

“Was she receiving any threats prior to this incident?”

 

Chester Williams

“Not to our knowledge, no.”

 

Reporter

“And did Miss Requena ever mention to you that she had interacted with this individual before?”

 

Chester Williams

“No.”

 

Reporter

“Is it true that they rammed her off the road while she was leaving the prison?”

 

Chester Williams

“I know the vehicle is damaged. The four tires were also stabbed and perhaps that could be the case. But like I said, the vehicle got damaged. She got stabbed and the matter is now with the police.”

Compol says Police had Sufficient Evidence to Charge Budna

Last week, self-styled journalist, Joseph Budna was taken to court after he was charged for abetment to murder. He was arraigned in connection to a murder that occurred three years ago which resulted in the death of fifty-year-old Guatemalan national Armando Cacao. Upon leaving court, Budna told the media that he was being wrongly accused and maintains that the police department did not have sufficient evidence to charge him. Today, we spoke with Commissioner of Police, Chester Williams, who refuted those claims. 

 

                             Chester Williams

Chester Williams, Commissioner of Police

“I don’t know if he has met bail, but as I had said to the media before, we had an investigation involving him. Witnesses came forward, provided statements to the police, which was sufficient for us to be able to get sufficient evidence to charge him, and he was charged.”

Joseph Budna Speaks After Murder Abetment Arrest

On Friday, Joseph Budna was granted High Court bail after being remanded to the Belize Central Prison for abetment to commit murder. The charge stems from the 2021 murder of fifty-one-year-old Armando Coy Cacao in Belmopan. Budna was represented by attorney Arthur Saldivar. One of the conditions of his bail is that he cannot speak publicly about his arrest or any matter surrounding the arrest. So, when Budna spoke with the media today, he simply thanked the justice system. He also wanted us to know that he is being cyberbullied. He claims that a prison guard took a picture of him while he was on remand as part of security procedure. But, that photo of a shirtless Budna has since been leaked on social media. And, though he did not shy away from showing the image to our cameras, he is questioning the credibility of the prison guards who took the picture.

 

                                  Joseph Budna

Joseph Budna, On Bail for Abetment to Murder

“Thank God I am out. Gid is great and he will stand by those who is doing what is right. So, I got my bail, thank God for that, the justice system was at least fair to grant me bail. Each and every one is innocent until proven otherwise. That is the bail for the abetment to murder.”

 

Reporter

“So your attorney had to file for that?”

 

Joseph Budna

“Yes my attorney had to file for bail application and it was granted by the Court, nonetheless I will not go into any details on the matter because it has been restricted by the court to make comments publicly concerning the case itself.”

 

Paul Lopez

“You are taking offense to an image that seems to have been taken behind bars of you, can you give us some details about that image?”

 

Joseph Budna

“In regards of the picture that was taken of me inside the Kolbe Foundation facility while I was in isolation, restricted from phone calls, restricted from communicating with anyone, I believe they would have allowed me to communicate with an attorney. This was done in the name of having me on observation; the observation they had me on was unnecessary, but that was according to the prison authorities. Now, you come to my cell and take photographs of authority dressed in black and say Mr. Budna we need a photo of you so that we can send to our chief executive officer who command us to take the photo sot hey can know you was alive. No problem, I will comply. I never knew that that photograph was taken for other activity. I know it is being circulated on other social media pages and it is causing quite a bit of distress on my behalf.”

Joseph Budna Claims His Life is In Danger

Budna claims that he is being targeted by those in authority because he works as an activist. He says the Belize Police Department has him fearing for his life. When asked why he decided to become an activist, he says that he did some introspection after escaping Guatemala.

 

Joseph Budna, On Bail for Abetment to Murder

“And I am hoping the police department, the commissioner of police, Mr. Chester Williams, I still call you Chester Williams, Mr., maybe I should take that off and just call you Chester, maybe by this afternoon I will have the police at my house and maybe they might done have a gun plant on me or something. I just say maybe, I don’t know. But that is just the way the police department has me feeling.”

 

Reporter

“So, do you believe your life is in danger?”

 

Joseph Budna

“It is in danger, it is in danger, it is evident. The Belizean people are watching what is being playing. They are watching what is being playing.”

 

Paul Lopez

“Where did this passion derive, this passion for this sort of national issues and advocacy?”

 

Joseph Budna

“It arise because I took a deep analysis of myself and said God has freed me from Guatemala prison, let me do something for my country, let me do the best I can do for my country. Let me give my life for my country Belize, and that is where it grows.”

Should SOE Minor Remain at New Beginnings Until He’s 18

The thirteen-year-old who was taken to the Wagner’s Youth Facility during the State of Emergency was transferred to the New Beginnings Youth Centre on the George Price Highway. It is where many people feel he should have been taken in the first place. Today, the Commissioner of Police, Chester Williams and the Minister of Home Affairs, Kareem Musa, gave their perspectives on the matter.

 

Chester Williams, Commissioner of Police

“The fact that he had been shot on the ninth of March this year after eight p.m., at night, one would then wonder what was a thirteen-year-old doing on the street around nine at night to have been shot? Where was the parent? There is still the curfew law that prohibits any child under the age of sixteen to be out in public after eight p.m., absent any parent or guardian. So in that particular instance, the mother could have been held accountable for what happened to the child. Subsequent to that, we had two other reports of the child being involved in gunplay going after people with intent to shoot them. And so there was sufficient for us to have been able to take him under the S.O.E. And I still believe it was the right thing to do. Now, when we look at this whole situation, the child is now at the New Beginnings. I believe that sending him there is a good thing, but we have to look at it more broadly. What else can be done? The mother is fighting for the child to be released, but does she have the capacity to take care of that child? If you look at the history, the child’s father was a street figure. He was killed. The child’s stepfather is a street figure. The mother is absent. So if the child is released back to her how can she act in the best interest of that child, as stated by the Families and Children Act? I don’t think she has the capacity. So if it is that something can be done where the child can be taken in as a ward of the state and kept at New Beginnings until he attains the age of eighteen, I think that would be the best thing for that child in this particular instance because at New Beginnings, he’ll be able to get the mentorship that he needs the guidance that he needs to be able to transform him and become a more productive young person. If he’s let back on the streets in the hands of the mother, we might report of him being killed or him killing somebody. So as a society, we need to look at it holistically and not just try to demonize the system for what was being done.”

 

                                   Kareem Musa

Kareem Musa, Minister of Home Affairs

“While at Wagner’s Youth Facility, he was in protective custody, as were the other minors. I believe there are eight total, two of them under the age of sixteen. The others I believe are seventern, seven of them.  And so having them in protective custody in the first instance was important because when you put him automatically at new beginnings, you’re not taking into consideration the best interests of the children who are new beginnings because we’re dealing here with an individual who it is alleged is dangerous. And so you have to look at whether he’s a danger to himself, whether he’s a danger to others. And it is in conjunction with the Ministry of Human Development and UNICEF that we took a visit, myself, Ms. Alison Parker from UNICEF, the CEO from the Ministry of Human Development and Home Affairs visited the Wagner Youth Facility and had an opportunity to speak with these young men.”

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