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Monday, July 13, 2026

 

Choiseul on the Move | Special Commentary

Rijock Drops Explosive Saint Lucia Money-Laundering Allegations

But where is the verifiable evidence?

Important: The claims discussed in this article are allegations published by financial-crime blogger Kenneth Rijock. They have not been proven in court, and no publicly available official documentation has yet been produced to substantiate them.

Saint Lucia has once again found itself at the centre of an extraordinary international allegation—this time involving the country’s Citizenship by Investment Programme, senior government officials, alleged drug proceeds and supposed contact with United States law-enforcement authorities.

On Monday, July 13, 2026, Kenneth Rijock’s Financial Crime Blog published an article alleging that unnamed senior Saint Lucian government officials had approached American law enforcement and offered information against Prime Minister Philip J. Pierre and leaders of the Saint Lucia Labour Party.

Rijock claimed that the information concerned an alleged money-laundering operation involving Saint Lucia’s Citizenship by Investment Programme—commonly called the CIP—and the laundering of proceeds supposedly connected to drug trafficking.

Those are extremely serious accusations. They deserve public attention—but they also demand a very high standard of proof.

Explosive allegations may raise legitimate questions, but allegations alone are not evidence—and repetition does not transform a claim into a proven fact.

What Exactly Is Rijock Alleging?

According to Rijock, unnamed Saint Lucian officials supposedly possess incriminating evidence and offered to cooperate with American authorities in exchange for protection from exposure over other alleged wrongdoing.

He also suggested that the alleged meeting or communication occurred outside Saint Lucia because those involved feared that their identities and actions might become known locally.

However, the article does not publicly identify:

  • The government officials who allegedly supplied the information;
  • The American law-enforcement agency supposedly contacted;
  • The date and location of the alleged meeting;
  • Any court case, investigation number or official correspondence;
  • Any banking records, transaction documents or sworn statements;
  • Any named independent witness capable of confirming the central claims.

Rijock may argue that confidentiality is necessary to protect his sources. That is understandable in investigative work. But from the public’s standpoint, it also means that his allegations cannot presently be independently tested or verified.

The Critical Distinction

There is a major difference between saying that someone has been accused of money laundering and saying that the person committed money laundering. At this stage, Rijock has published accusations—not a proven criminal case.

What Can Be Independently Verified?

What can be confirmed is that Saint Lucia is strengthening its anti-money-laundering and counter-terrorist-financing framework ahead of an upcoming international assessment.

In March 2026, the Government of Saint Lucia reported that the Attorney General’s Chambers, in collaboration with the Caribbean Financial Action Task Force, conducted a sensitisation workshop involving agencies such as the police, Customs and Excise, the Financial Intelligence Authority, the Inland Revenue Department and the Financial Services Regulatory Authority.

Government officials stated that Saint Lucia is expected to undergo its fifth-round mutual evaluation in 2028. That process will assess not merely whether laws and policies exist, but whether the country is effectively investigating financial crimes, prosecuting offenders and maintaining reliable financial and beneficial-ownership information.

This is important context. However, Saint Lucia preparing for an anti-money-laundering evaluation does not prove Rijock’s allegations against any particular politician or political party.

Who Is Kenneth Rijock?

Kenneth Rijock is known within anti-money-laundering circles as a former Miami lawyer and former money launderer who later worked as a financial-crime consultant and adviser.

His background may give him knowledge of how international money-laundering networks operate. But experience, reputation or claimed access to confidential sources does not automatically prove every accusation published on a blog.

Rijock must be judged by the evidence supporting each individual claim—not simply by his biography.

Questions That Demand Answers

Rather than choosing between blind acceptance and automatic dismissal, Saint Lucians should demand clear answers from all sides.

  1. Has any United States agency opened an investigation involving Saint Lucia’s Citizenship by Investment Programme?
  2. Have any Saint Lucian government officials contacted American authorities or entered into cooperation, immunity or protection arrangements?
  3. Has the Government, the Citizenship by Investment Unit or any political official received a request for documents or information from foreign investigators?
  4. Can Rijock provide redacted correspondence, dates, case references or other material that can be independently authenticated?
  5. Will the Prime Minister, the responsible CIP authorities or the Saint Lucia Labour Party issue a direct and detailed response?
  6. Will the opposition treat the article responsibly, or repeat unverified accusations as though they were already proven?

Accountability Must Work Both Ways

The Government should not assume that silence will make an allegation of this magnitude disappear. A clear public response would help citizens determine whether there is any substance to the story.

At the same time, Rijock and anyone circulating his article must accept that the burden of proof rests with the accuser.

It is not enough to refer vaguely to insiders, American law enforcement and incriminating evidence. When the reputation of a prime minister, a political party and an entire country is placed at risk, the public deserves more than anonymous assertions.

Likewise, political opponents should resist the temptation to convert an unverified blog report into a verdict of guilt. Responsible opposition requires scrutiny, not sensationalism.

Our Position

Choiseul on the Move will not dismiss Rijock’s report merely because it is politically uncomfortable. Neither will we present his allegations as proven facts merely because they are dramatic.

The responsible position is straightforward:

Investigate the allegation. Demand the evidence. Give those accused an opportunity to respond. Follow the facts wherever they lead.

If Rijock possesses credible evidence, it should eventually emerge through official requests, court filings, indictments, sanctions, sworn testimony or authenticated documentation.

If no supporting evidence emerges, the public must also be prepared to question whether Saint Lucia’s name and the reputations of its leaders are being unfairly damaged through speculation.

Saint Lucia Deserves the Truth

Citizenship by Investment is not an ordinary government programme. It involves the sale of citizenship, international movement, large financial transactions, national security and Saint Lucia’s global reputation.

Any credible allegation of corruption or money laundering connected to that programme must therefore be treated seriously and investigated independently.

But seriousness must never be confused with gullibility.

Saint Lucians deserve neither political cover-ups nor trial by social media. We deserve evidence, accountability, transparency and due process.

Until verifiable evidence is placed before the public, Kenneth Rijock’s article must be described accurately: it is an explosive allegation—not an established finding of criminal guilt.

What do you think?

Should the Government issue a full response, and should Kenneth Rijock be required to provide more verifiable evidence?

Share your views respectfully. Let facts—not party colours—guide the discussion.

Published by Choiseul on the Move | Commentary and public-interest analysis

 

THE WORLD CUP REFEREE:

The Most Important Man Nobody Came to Watch

Every four years, billions of eyes turn to the FIFA World Cup.

Here in Choiseul and Saltibus, families gather around television screens, friends crowd together to watch the big matches, and passionate arguments erupt over every goal, every tackle and, of course, every decision made by the referee.

But have you ever stopped to wonder what the referee in the World Cup Final actually earns?

Many football fans would be surprised to learn that while the winning country’s football federation can collect tens of millions of dollars in prize money, and individual players may earn hundreds of thousands in bonuses, the referee entrusted with controlling the biggest match in world football receives only a small fraction of that amount.

Think about the pressure resting on that whistle.

The referee cannot hide on the substitutes’ bench.

He cannot ask another official to take his place because he is having a bad afternoon.

One incorrect decision can change football history, hand one country the trophy and send another nation home in tears.

Every whistle is questioned. Every penalty decision is replayed from ten different angles. Every yellow card, red card and offside call becomes the subject of worldwide debate.

Yet, despite carrying that enormous responsibility, the referee will never be the main star of the show.

Why Are the Players Paid So Much More?

The answer is simple: football is not only a sport. It is also a massive global entertainment business.

Supporters buy jerseys carrying the names of famous players. Television stations pay enormous sums for broadcasting rights because viewers want to watch the world’s greatest footballers. Sponsors invest millions because those players attract attention, sell products and create excitement.

The referee is essential—but he is not the reason the audience showed up.

Nobody normally buys a World Cup ticket because of the referee. Very few children ask their parents for a referee’s jersey. The cameras follow the goalscorers, the captains and the superstars.

The official protects the match, but the players create the attraction.

A Powerful Lesson Beyond Football

There is a much bigger lesson hidden inside this World Cup comparison.

Pay often follows demand more closely than effort.

The hardest-working person is not always the highest-paid person. The person carrying the greatest responsibility does not always receive the biggest reward.

In music, the session musician may play perfectly while the famous singer earns the royalties. In publishing, a ghostwriter may do much of the writing while the celebrity author receives the recognition. In business, the people doing the quiet background work may be essential but remain largely unseen.

The same pattern exists in football.

The referee may run several miles during the match, maintain concentration for the entire game, manage emotional players and make decisions under intense pressure. Yet the money flows mainly towards the people the audience came to see.

The Human Being Behind the Whistle

World Cup referees do not simply arrive one morning, collect a whistle and walk onto the field.

They spend years officiating domestic matches, passing fitness tests, attending seminars and being assessed at international tournaments. Thousands of qualified officials begin that journey, but only a small number are eventually selected for the World Cup.

They also make sacrifices that rarely appear in the headlines:

long periods away from family, constant travel, demanding physical preparation and the knowledge that one mistake could overshadow years of excellent work.

Some officials will spend an entire career hoping for the opportunity to referee at a World Cup. Even fewer will ever be considered for the final.

For them, the medal, the appointment and the place in football history may carry greater meaning than the cheque.

A Message for Choiseul and Saltibus Fans

We in Choiseul and Saltibus love football deeply. We celebrate goals loudly, defend our favourite teams passionately and sometimes blame the referee when the result does not go our way.

But perhaps the next time we are tempted to condemn an official after one controversial decision, we should pause and remember the enormous burden he carries.

Without the referee, there is no kickoff.

Without the whistle, there is no control.

Without fair enforcement of the Laws of the Game, there is no legitimate champion.

The players may receive the fame, the endorsements and the biggest bonuses. But the referee carries something else: the responsibility of protecting the integrity of the match.

He may leave the stadium without the trophy, without millions of supporters chanting his name and without a jersey-selling empire behind him.

But if he has officiated the World Cup Final fairly and successfully, he walks away with a place in the history of the world’s greatest sporting event.

The Big Question

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If you had the choice, would you rather be a player collecting a massive World Cup bonus—or the referee trusted to control the biggest match on Earth?

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Share your opinion in the comments.

Choiseul on the Move
Where Community Meets Conversation.

Saturday, July 11, 2026

 

WATER IS LIFE? THEN WHY IS ROBLOT BEING LEFT TO GO DRY?

There comes a point when silence is no longer patience—it becomes surrender.

The people of Roblot and the surrounding communities have reached that point.

For months we have been hearing about improvements to water supply across Saint Lucia. We have listened to speeches. We have watched official announcements. We have seen photographs of ceremonies and promises of better days.

But here in Roblot, one simple question remains:

Where is the water?

To the best of my recollection, the potable water situation in Roblot has never been this bad.

There was a time when we could at least depend on a Wednesday and Sunday supply. It wasn't perfect, but we knew water would arrive, often for several hours and sometimes for most of Sunday.

Today, that has become a distant memory.

For the past six months, the situation has deteriorated to the point where many households receive water only once a week—if they are fortunate. And when it does come, the supply may last no more than 90 minutes, sometimes even less.

How is any family expected to survive under those conditions?

I have four water tanks with a combined storage capacity of approximately 3,200 gallons. Today, every single one of them is empty—not because I failed to prepare, but because there simply has not been enough water flowing through the pipes to fill them.

That is the reality behind the official statements.

Naturally, people are beginning to ask difficult questions.

Has WASCO deliberately reduced the supply to Roblot and neighbouring communities?

If so, why?

Is this the result of technical limitations, poor management, or political convenience?

The public deserves honest answers—not rumours and speculation.

What makes the situation even more painful is that Choiseul residents continue to pay increasing water bills whenever water is available. At the same time, taxpayers contribute toward major national water infrastructure, including the redevelopment of the John Compton Dam, from which many residents here feel they receive little direct benefit.

People are not asking for special treatment.

They are asking for fairness.

They are asking for reliable access to one of life's most basic necessities.

During the recent Budget debate, our parliamentary representative reminded the nation that "water is life."

He was absolutely correct.

But if water truly is life, then what are we to conclude about Roblot and its neighbouring communities?

Because if the amount of water reaching us is any measure of how much our lives matter, we would all be dead by now.

That may sound sarcastic, but it reflects the depth of frustration felt by ordinary families who have been carrying buckets, rationing every gallon, postponing laundry, struggling to cook, and worrying whether there will be enough water for children, the elderly and the sick.

No amount of ribbon-cutting.

No amount of social media photographs.

No amount of carefully crafted speeches.

No amount of political spin...

...can make water flow through dry pipes.

Representation is measured by results—not publicity.

The people of Roblot do not need another promise.

They need water.

They need WASCO to explain what has gone wrong.

They need a clear timetable for restoring a reliable supply.

And they need their elected representative to advocate as passionately for this community's right to water as he speaks about water being life.

Because in 2026, no community in Saint Lucia should be reduced to wondering whether the tap will run for an hour this week.

Water is not a luxury.

It is not a political favour.

It is not something communities should have to beg for.

It is a basic human necessity.

The people of Roblot have waited long enough.

Now they deserve answers—and more importantly, they deserve water.

Wednesday, July 08, 2026

 

Are Choiseulians and Saltibusians in Positions of Influence Treating Their Fellow Constituents Fairly?

A sermon delivered on Sunday by Fr. Albert Aaron Smith has sparked a conversation that deserves to reach far beyond the walls of the church.

His message was simple but piercing: too many people who profess Christian values are treating those under their authority unfairly. According to Fr. Albert, there are individuals in influential positions who attend church faithfully, yet their employees and those who depend on them experience disrespect, intimidation, and unfair treatment.

Whether one is Catholic, another Christian denomination, or of a different faith altogether, the message speaks to a universal principle: leadership without compassion is a failure of leadership.

That brings us to a question every resident of Choiseul and Saltibus should quietly ask:

Are Choiseulians and Saltibusians who occupy positions of influence treating their fellow constituents fairly?

Across our constituency, many of our sons and daughters have worked hard to become teachers, principals, nurses, police officers, managers, supervisors, public servants, business owners, board members, and leaders in various organizations. Their success is something we should celebrate because it shows what our people are capable of achieving.

But success also comes with responsibility.

A position should never become a licence to belittle others. Authority should never be used to humiliate, intimidate, victimise, or deny deserving people opportunities because of personal differences, politics, family connections, or favouritism.

Too often we hear quiet stories that never reach the public.

Stories of employees afraid to speak.

Stories of qualified people being overlooked.

Stories of constituents feeling that they have no voice because someone "important" holds the power.

Many suffer in silence because they fear losing a job, a contract, or an opportunity.

If even a fraction of these stories is true, then we have a serious conversation to have—not about politics, but about character.

A truly successful Choiseul is not measured only by new buildings, roads, or community projects. It is measured by how we treat each other.

The mark of a great leader is not how many people salute them.

It is how the cleaner is treated.

How the security guard is respected.

How the junior employee is encouraged.

How the struggling constituent is listened to.

How decisions are made fairly, transparently, and without prejudice.

Every one of us who occupies a position of influence—whether in government, the private sector, schools, churches, statutory bodies, or community organisations—should occasionally ask ourselves a difficult question:

Would the people who work with me describe me as fair, respectful, and compassionate?

If the answer is no, then perhaps it is time for reflection.

Choiseul and Saltibus have always been known as communities where neighbours looked after neighbours and where respect formed the foundation of village life. Those values should not disappear simply because someone receives a title, an office, or authority over others.

Leadership is a privilege.

Power is temporary.

Character is permanent.

As Fr. Albert reminded his congregation, our faith—or indeed our values—mean very little if they are not reflected in the way we treat people every single day.

Perhaps the greatest legacy any leader from Choiseul or Saltibus can leave is not a title or a position, but a reputation that says:

"I treated people with dignity, fairness, and respect."

That is the kind of leadership our constituency deserves.

Tuesday, July 07, 2026

 

USA DESERVED TO LOSE AGAINST BELGIUM

There are moments in sport when the final score tells only part of the story.

The United States' heavy 4-1 defeat to Belgium may have ended their FIFA World Cup dream, but for many football lovers around the globe, justice had already taken the field long before the opening whistle.

This was never about America.

This was never about Belgium.

This was about protecting the integrity of football.

The controversy surrounding the reversal of Folarin Balogun's suspension left millions asking one uncomfortable question:

Can the rules of football be bent when powerful people make phone calls?

President Donald Trump openly admitted that he contacted FIFA President Gianni Infantino to seek a review of Balogun's red-card suspension. Shortly afterward, FIFA's judicial process overturned the suspension, allowing the American striker to play against Belgium. FIFA insists the decision was made independently and according to its regulations. Yet across the football world, the optics were disastrous, with Belgium, commentators and supporters questioning whether politics had crept into a game that should belong only to the players.

Whether the decision was legally permissible is one matter.

Whether it strengthened public confidence in football is another.

Sport survives because of one simple belief: the same rules apply to everyone.

If ordinary nations believe that influence can accomplish what appeals cannot, then football loses something far more valuable than a match.

It loses trust.

Here in Saint Lucia, and especially here in Choiseul and Saltibus, we spend countless hours teaching our young footballers about discipline, respect for referees, accepting difficult decisions and playing by the rules.

What lesson do they learn when they see the world's biggest football tournament engulfed in accusations that political influence helped rewrite a disciplinary decision?

Do we tell them that talent and hard work are enough?

Or do we unintentionally teach them that power speaks louder than the rule book?

Football has always been bigger than presidents, politicians and celebrities.

A referee's whistle must carry more weight than a politician's telephone.

The laws of the game must never depend on who has access to the FIFA President.

Belgium ultimately answered the controversy in the best possible way.

Not with press conferences.

Not with political statements.

Not with complaints.

They answered on the pitch.

Four goals.

One unforgettable statement.

Football settled the argument where it should always be settled—between the white lines.

If there is one positive to emerge from this controversy, it is that the beautiful game reminded the world that influence cannot score goals.

Power cannot defend against superior football.

Politics cannot substitute for ninety minutes of excellence.

For FIFA, however, serious questions remain.

The governing body now carries the burden of convincing the football world that justice is blind, impartial and immune from outside influence.

Because once supporters begin believing that rules can change depending on who is asking, the credibility of every future decision comes under suspicion.

As we continue developing young footballers here in Choiseul, let us teach them the lesson this episode ultimately delivered.

Win fairly.

Lose honourably.

Respect the referee.

Respect the game.

And remember that football belongs to the players—not to politicians.

Belgium won the match.

Football won the lesson.

May FIFA ensure that the integrity of the game wins every time.

Sunday, July 05, 2026

🌊 CHOISEUL MYSTERIES EXPLAINED #5

💙 Why Does the Sea Change Colour?

A Sunday Feature from Choiseul on the Move

Stand on the coastline of Choiseul on a bright sunny day and take a good look at the Caribbean Sea.

Near the shore, the water may sparkle in brilliant shades of turquoise.

A little farther out, it becomes emerald green.

Beyond that, it turns a rich, deep blue that stretches to the horizon.

Come back after a heavy shower, and parts of the sea may even appear brown or grey.

Have you ever wondered why?

Does the sea actually change colour?

Or is there something else happening?

☀️ It All Begins With Sunlight

Believe it or not, the sea itself has very little colour.

What we see depends largely on sunlight.

When sunlight reaches the ocean, different colours of light penetrate the water in different ways.

Blue light travels deeper than other colours, which is why the open ocean often appears deep blue to our eyes.

🌊 Why Is Shallow Water So Turquoise?

The beautiful turquoise waters that surround parts of Saint Lucia are created by a combination of factors.

In shallow water, sunlight reflects off the white sand beneath the surface.

The reflected light mixes with the naturally scattered blue light, creating those breathtaking shades of turquoise and aqua that make our Caribbean coastline famous around the world.

That's why beaches with white sand often have the brightest blue waters.

🌿 Nature Paints the Sea

The sea's colour is also influenced by what lies beneath the surface.

Areas with healthy seagrass may appear green.

Coral reefs can give the water different shades of blue and green.

Rocky seabeds create darker colours.

Even tiny microscopic plants called phytoplankton can give the sea a greener appearance when they are abundant.

Nature is constantly painting the ocean with its own palette.

🌧️ Why Does the Sea Turn Brown After Heavy Rain?

After a period of heavy rainfall, rivers and streams carry soil, leaves, and tiny particles into the sea.

This muddy freshwater mixes with the saltwater near the coast, making the sea appear brown or cloudy for a short time.

As the sediment settles and the water clears, the familiar blues and greens return.

🌬️ Calm Seas and Rough Seas

Have you ever noticed that the sea looks different on windy days?

When the water is calm, it acts almost like a mirror, reflecting the sky above.

When waves become rough, sunlight is scattered in many directions, changing the way the sea appears.

Clouds can also affect the colours we see by reducing the amount of sunlight reaching the water.

🏡 The Choiseul Connection

The changing colours of the sea are part of what makes Choiseul so beautiful.

Whether you're looking toward the coastline from the hills, enjoying the view from the beach, or watching fishermen head out at sunrise, the sea is never exactly the same from one day to the next.

Its changing colours tell a story about the weather, the sunlight, the depth of the water, and the living world beneath the surface.

🌎 A Reminder to Protect Our Coastline

The beauty of our sea depends on healthy reefs, clean rivers, and unpolluted beaches.

Every piece of litter kept out of our drains, every tree preserved along our rivers, and every effort to protect our coastline helps keep our waters healthy and beautiful for future generations.

The sea is one of Choiseul's greatest treasures.

It deserves our care.

💡 What the Sea Teaches Us

The sea changes colour many times, but it never stops being the sea.

People are much the same.

Life brings different seasons—times of joy, sadness, success, and challenge.

We may look different from one season to another, but our true character lies beneath the surface.

🌊 The Next Time You Look at the Sea...

Pause for a moment.

Notice its colours.

Watch how they change with the light, the weather, and the waves.

What you're seeing isn't just beauty.

You're witnessing science, nature, and one of God's most magnificent creations working together.

And now you know why the sea changes colour.

🔍 Coming Next Sunday...

🌙 Why Does the Moon Look Bigger Near the Horizon?

💬 Got a Choiseul mystery you'd like us to explore? Leave it in the comments—it might become a future edition of Choiseul Mysteries Explained!

Choiseul on the Move

Our People. Our Culture. Our Future. 

Saturday, July 04, 2026

WHEN SAYING NOTHING SAYS TOO MUCH

The Government of Saint Lucia has issued an official statement following confirmation that Housing Minister Richard Frederick was detained by the Royal Saint Lucia Police Force for questioning and subsequently released. (https://www.facebook.com/share/p/178WCAhshg/)

No charges have been announced, and the Government has emphasized that the matter remains an active process. As citizens who believe in the rule of law, we must respect due process and the fundamental principle that every individual is presumed innocent unless proven guilty in a court of law.

However, respecting due process does not mean suspending critical thought.

The Government's statement, while legally cautious, raises an important question:

Did it really tell the public anything?

The release simply confirms that the Minister was detained, released, and that the Government will not comment further because the matter is under investigation. It then reiterates its respect for the independence of the Royal Saint Lucia Police Force and its commitment to transparency.

Those are admirable principles.

But in a democracy, communication during moments of public concern requires more than repeating principles. It requires leadership.

The Elephant in the Room

When a sitting Cabinet Minister is detained by police, it is not an ordinary event. It naturally generates concern among citizens.

People are not necessarily asking for evidence or confidential investigative details.

They are asking questions such as:

Does the Government still have confidence in the Minister?

Will he continue to carry out his ministerial duties while the investigation proceeds?

Has the Prime Minister discussed the matter with him?

What assurances can the public receive that government business will continue without interruption?

What steps are being taken to preserve public confidence in the administration?

None of these questions requires revealing confidential police information.

Transparency Is More Than A Promise

The Government says it remains committed to transparency and accountability.

Transparency, however, is demonstrated not simply by stating it exists but by communicating openly within the limits permitted by law.

A statement that merely repeats that there is an investigation and that no further comment will be made leaves the public almost exactly where they were before reading it.

In many respects, it is a statement that says very little.

Respecting Both Due Process And Public Confidence

There is an important balance to be maintained.

On one side is the integrity of the police investigation.

On the other is the public's confidence in the institutions of government.

Protecting one should not unnecessarily weaken the other.

The Government could have reinforced several important principles without compromising the investigation:

That no one is above the law.

That every citizen, including ministers, enjoys the presumption of innocence.

That the Government expects the investigation to proceed independently and without political interference.

That it will continue to update the public whenever legally appropriate.

Such assurances would have demonstrated leadership while respecting the judicial process.

Democracy Depends On Trust

Public trust is built not only by the actions governments take but also by how they communicate during difficult moments.

Citizens understand that investigations cannot be discussed in detail.

What they expect is reassurance that their institutions are functioning fairly, independently, and transparently.

This situation is not ultimately about one individual.

It is about how governments respond when public confidence is tested.

As Saint Lucia watches developments unfold, one principle should remain clear:

Justice must be allowed to take its course. But transparency should never become a casualty of silence.

Choiseul on the Move will continue to follow this matter responsibly, respecting due process while encouraging openness, accountability, and good governance in the public interest.