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Saturday, February 21, 2026

 🏏🔥 CHOISEUL ON THE MOVE 🔥🏏

Your window into the heart of the South — now with Super 8 cricket fever!

SUPER 8 LOCKED IN – WHO WILL RULE THE WORLD?

Cricket fans, brace yourselves! The ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026 has officially entered the Super 8 stage, and what a lineup we have. The giants are here. The challengers are ready. The underdogs are dreaming. And the cricketing world is watching.

From the Caribbean flair of West Indies, to the powerhouse precision of India, the grit of South Africa, the fire of England, the discipline of New Zealand, the flair of Sri Lanka, the resilience of Pakistan, and the fearless spirit of Zimbabwe — this is no ordinary final eight.

This is war with willow and ball. And every match will feel like a final.

🌍 The Big Question: Who Takes It All?

Let’s break it down, Choiseul style — no fence sitting!

🇮🇳 India – The Machine

Balanced batting, lethal spin options, and depth in the pace attack. When India gets momentum, they don’t just win — they dominate. If they peak at the right time, they are extremely hard to stop.

🇿🇦 South Africa – Calm but Dangerous

Technically sound and tactically sharp. They’ve often come close in world tournaments. Could this finally be their breakthrough year?

🏴 England – Built for T20

Explosive top order. Aggressive mindset. They play fearless cricket. If their hitters fire in the knockouts, trouble for everybody.

🌴 West Indies – Pure T20 DNA

You can never count them out in this format. Power hitters. Big-match temperament. If the Caribbean rhythm clicks, fireworks will follow.

🇳🇿 New Zealand – Silent Assassins

They don’t talk much — they just execute. Clinical and composed, always dangerous in knockout cricket.

🇱🇰 Sri Lanka – Spin Kings at Home

Conditions could play into their hands. When their spinners grip and turn, batting becomes a nightmare.

🇵🇰 Pakistan – Unpredictable X-Factor

Capable of brilliance. Capable of collapse. But when they catch form, they can beat anyone.

🇿🇼 Zimbabwe – The Story Everyone Loves

Already shocking the cricketing world. Playing with belief. Playing without fear. Every tournament needs a Cinderella story — could this be it?

🏆 Choiseul On The Move Prediction

🔥 Final Prediction: India vs England

🏆 Champion Pick: India (slight favorites)

Why? Depth. Momentum. Tactical maturity. But this is T20 cricket — one over can change everything. And don’t be surprised if West Indies or South Africa crash the party.

Cricket lovers of Choiseul and beyond — this Super 8 stage is going to test nerves, skill, and character. Who are YOU backing? 🇱🇨🏏

#ChoiseulOnTheMove   #T20WorldCup2026   #Super8   #CricketFever

© Choiseul on the Move — bringing the vibes, the voice, and the views.
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🏏 T20I WORLD CUP 2026

Remaining Schedule (Saint Lucia Time 🇱🇨)

All match times below are converted to Saint Lucia (AST – UTC-4).

NZ vs PAK
21 Feb — 9:30 AM (AST)
Colombo
ENG vs SL
22 Feb — 5:30 AM (AST)
Pallekele
IND vs SA
22 Feb — 9:30 AM (AST)
Ahmedabad
ZIM vs WI
23 Feb — 9:30 AM (AST)
Mumbai
ENG vs PAK
24 Feb — 9:30 AM (AST)
Pallekele
NZ vs SL
25 Feb — 9:30 AM (AST)
Colombo
WI vs SA
26 Feb — 5:30 AM (AST)
Ahmedabad
IND vs ZIM
26 Feb — 9:30 AM (AST)
Chennai
ENG vs NZ
27 Feb — 9:30 AM (AST)
Colombo
SL vs PAK
28 Feb — 9:30 AM (AST)
Pallekele
ZIM vs SA
1 Mar — 5:30 AM (AST)
Delhi
IND vs WI
1 Mar — 9:30 AM (AST)
Kolkata

🔥 Knockout Stage (Saint Lucia Time)

Semi-Final 1: 4 Mar — 9:30 AM (AST)
Semi-Final 2: 5 Mar — 9:30 AM (AST)
Final: 8 Mar — 9:30 AM (AST)

Who you backing to lift the trophy? Drop your predictions in the comments! 🏆🔥

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

 

A Disgraceful Betrayal - Choiseul on the Move
Choiseul on the Move Blog

A Disgraceful Betrayal: Condemning the Threat Against Our Prime Minister

February 18, 2026

There are moments when silence becomes complicity. This is one of them.

The recent threat made against the life of Prime Minister Philip J. Pierre by a Saint Lucian residing in the United Kingdom is not merely reprehensible—it is a vile, cowardly, and unforgivable attack on every principle that holds our nation together. It is an assault on democracy itself, a betrayal of our shared heritage, and a stain on the character of our diaspora community.

This Cannot Stand

Let us be absolutely clear: there is no justification, no excuse, and no rationalization for threatening the life of our Prime Minister. None.

You may oppose his policies. You may disagree with his governance. You may feel passionate about the direction of our country. That is your democratic right—indeed, it is the very essence of democracy. But the moment you cross the line from disagreement to death threats, you have abandoned reason, rejected civility, and forfeited any claim to be part of the democratic process.

This threat is not "passionate politics." It is not "strong opposition." It is criminality of the highest order, dressed up in the pathetic costume of political conviction.

A Coward's Act from Afar

What makes this act even more contemptible is that it comes from someone sitting comfortably in England—thousands of miles away from the consequences of their words, insulated from the fear they seek to instill, removed from the democratic institutions they seek to undermine.

This individual enjoys the safety, stability, and rule of law provided by their adopted country while attempting to export chaos and violence back to the land of their birth. They sit in comfort while threatening to plunge Saint Lucia into crisis. They lecture about Saint Lucia's problems while contributing nothing but poison to the discourse.

If you are so dissatisfied with the leadership of Saint Lucia, return home. Vote. Organize. Engage in the democratic process. Run for office yourself. But do not—do not—dare to threaten violence from your safe distance and pretend it is patriotism.

An Attack on All of Us

When someone threatens the life of the Prime Minister of Saint Lucia, they threaten every single one of us.

They threaten the mother in Choiseul who depends on stable governance for her children's future.

They threaten the fisherman in Laborie whose livelihood depends on peaceful political transitions.

They threaten the teacher in Vieux Fort who believes in the power of democratic example.

They threaten the young person in Castries who dreams of a Saint Lucia where ideas compete, not bullets.

This is not about Philip J. Pierre the man—this is about the office he holds and what that office represents. It represents the will of the people. It represents the peaceful transfer of power. It represents the principle that we settle our differences through dialogue and ballots, not through intimidation and violence.

Democracy Dies in the Shadows of Threats

History has shown us, time and again, what happens when political violence becomes normalized. When threats are dismissed as "just talk." When we shrug our shoulders and say "people are just emotional."

We have seen nations torn apart. We have seen democracies crumble. We have seen the descent into chaos begin with words that were ignored, with threats that were not taken seriously, with lines that were crossed without consequence.

Saint Lucia has worked too hard, sacrificed too much, and come too far to allow this poison to take root in our political culture.

We are a nation that has weathered colonialism, hurricanes, economic hardship, and political transitions. We have done so because we have, by and large, maintained a commitment to democratic norms and peaceful political engagement. We cannot—we will not—allow that legacy to be destroyed by individuals who have lost all sense of decency and proportion.

Justice Must Be Swift and Certain

The authorities in both Saint Lucia and the United Kingdom must treat this threat with the utmost seriousness.

This individual must be identified, investigated, and prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. If they are in the UK, extradition must be pursued. If extradition is not possible, cooperation with UK authorities must be secured to ensure they face justice under British law.

There must be consequences. Real, meaningful, legal consequences.

Anything less sends the message that such behavior is tolerable. Anything less emboldens the next person who believes their political frustrations justify threats of violence. Anything less makes a mockery of our justice system and our democratic values.

To Our Diaspora: You Are Better Than This

To the Saint Lucians living abroad—in the UK, the United States, Canada, and beyond—we know that the overwhelming majority of you would never condone such behavior. We know that you love Saint Lucia deeply and want the best for our nation.

But this is your moment to speak up. To make clear that this individual does not represent you. To affirm that the Saint Lucian diaspora stands for democracy, for peaceful engagement, and for the rule of law.

Your silence allows this poison to fester. Your voice can help contain it.

A Line in the Sand

Choiseul on the Move stands unequivocally against this threat and any attempt to normalize political violence in Saint Lucia.

We may have our own political views. We may criticize or support various policies. We may engage vigorously in the democratic debate about our nation's future.

But we draw a bright, unmistakable line: threats of violence against our elected leaders are unacceptable, unconscionable, and un-Saint Lucian.

To the individual who made this threat: you have disgraced yourself, betrayed your country, and violated the most basic norms of civilized society. You deserve the full weight of the law and the contempt of every Saint Lucian who values democracy.

To Prime Minister Philip J. Pierre: while we may not always agree with your policies, we stand firmly with you against this threat. No leader should have to govern under the shadow of death threats. You have our support in ensuring that justice is served.

To our fellow Saint Lucians: let us recommit ourselves to the principles that have sustained our democracy. Let us debate fiercely but fairly. Let us disagree without being disagreeable. Let us remember that our strength lies in our unity, our democracy, and our shared commitment to resolving our differences through peaceful means.

Saint Lucia deserves better. We demand better. And we will accept nothing less.


🌴 CHOISEUL ON THE MOVE

When Fear Whispers and Conscience Shouts: Are Saint Lucians Afraid to Speak?

A reflection on silence, courage, and the cost of truth
Sunday, February 15, 2026

“In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends.”
— Martin Luther King Jr.

The Silence We Can Feel

There is a peculiar silence that has settled over our island, a silence so thick you could cut it with a machete. Walk through the streets of Choiseul, Castries, Vieux Fort, or any community in Saint Lucia, and you'll hear the whispers—people talking in hushed tones about things that trouble them, about injustices they've witnessed, about concerns they carry in their hearts.

But raise the volume, put a microphone in front of them, ask them to speak publicly, and suddenly that voice disappears. The question that haunts our democracy is simple yet profound: Are Saint Lucians afraid to speak?

The Architecture of Fear

Fear in Saint Lucia doesn't announce itself with trumpets and drums. It creeps in quietly, disguised as pragmatism, dressed up as “keeping the peace,” masquerading as wisdom.

It shows up in small moments—when a civil servant bites their tongue rather than report corruption; when a businessperson avoids criticizing a policy that harms their industry; when ordinary citizens see wrongdoing but look the other way because “you don’t know who to trust.”

The Price of Silence

When good people say nothing, corruption flourishes. When educated citizens remain quiet, poor governance becomes normalized. The cost of our collective silence is measured not in words unsaid, but in opportunities lost, justice denied, and a future stolen from our children.

The Weaponization of Partisanship

Saint Lucia has become so deeply divided along partisan lines that to criticize the government of the day is to be labeled as belonging to the opposition, and vice versa. This false binary has poisoned the well of public conversation.

You cannot critique a policy without being accused of partisan motivation. You cannot point out failures without being told “you’re just a red” or “you’re just a yellow.” The irony is bitter—we claim to love democracy while strangling one of its essentials: citizens holding leaders accountable.

“Patriotism is not blind loyalty to any political party. It is the courage to demand better from whoever governs us.”

This weaponization of partisanship keeps citizens divided and distracted. While we fight over colors, real issues go unaddressed—and power escapes scrutiny.

Economic Chains and Employment Fear

Let’s speak plainly about one of the strongest silencing mechanisms in Saint Lucia: economic vulnerability. In a small island economy where everyone knows everyone, where government is often the largest employer, and where connections can make or break a business, the fear of retaliation is real.

Civil servants feel they cannot speak freely. Teachers watch what they say. Healthcare workers keep their heads down. Business owners curry favor rather than speak truth. Contract workers live in anxiety about renewal.

The tragedy is that silence helps the very systems that keep people vulnerable. Fear leads to silence. Silence enables poor governance. Poor governance produces more fear. It becomes a cycle.

Social Media: Brave Behind Screens, Silent in Streets

There’s a paradox in modern Saint Lucian society. On Facebook, everyone is a critic. Anonymous profiles unleash torrents of opinions. But in the real world, many vanish like morning mist when asked to speak publicly.

Social media gives the illusion of participation without the risk of engagement. The revolution will not be liked and shared into existence. It requires real people speaking real truth in real spaces.

“The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good people to do nothing.”
— Edmund Burke

When Conscience Shouts: The Cost of Speaking Out

Let’s not romanticize speaking out. There is a real cost. Whistleblowers have lost jobs. Critics have been marginalized. Activists have been threatened. Journalists have faced lawsuits. Some citizens have been isolated and attacked professionally and personally.

But silence has a cost too—often higher. Every time we stay silent in the face of injustice, we surrender a piece of dignity. Every time we know the truth but refuse to speak, we become complicit in the lie.

Breaking the Chains: A Path Forward

How do we move from a culture of fear to a culture of courage? It won’t happen overnight—but it must begin somewhere, and it must begin now.

Four Moves That Change the Climate
  1. Reject partisan blinders: You are not “red” or “yellow”—you are Saint Lucian.
  2. Protect truth-tellers: Push for whistleblower protections, strong civil society, and independent media.
  3. Speak up, even shaking: Start small—family, workplace, community meetings, letters, call-ins.
  4. Support the brave: Stand with those who speak truth. Courage spreads.
The Challenge Before Us
Choiseul—and indeed all of Saint Lucia—stands at a crossroads: fear and silence, or courage and truth. Our children’s future depends on the choice we make.

A Special Word for Choiseul

Choiseul has always been a community of resilience and pride. We have produced leaders, scholars, artists, and builders. But we cannot build the Choiseul we dream of—better roads, more opportunities, quality healthcare, stronger schools—if we cannot speak freely about what holds us back.

Our silence benefits only those who profit from the status quo. Our collective voice is the most powerful tool we have for change. The question is not whether we should speak—the question is whether we have the courage to do so.

Conclusion: When Conscience Shouts

Yes, Saint Lucians are afraid to speak. But fear is not destiny. It is a challenge to be overcome. The conscience that shouts within us—demanding justice, insisting on truth—can be louder than the fear that whispers.

Frederick Douglass said, “Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will.” If we want accountability, we must insist on it. If we want change, we must speak it into existence.

Final Question: Despite our fear, will we speak anyway?
Our children are watching. History is recording. Conscience is shouting.
Choiseul on the Move
Speaking truth • Building community • Creating change
Share this post if you believe Saint Lucians deserve to speak freely and without fear.

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Sunday, February 15, 2026

Choiseul on the Move • Community Watch • Development Focus

💧💡🏗️ What Our New Minister Role Means for Choiseul–Saltibus

Public Utilities + Physical Development — in plain talk, this ministry touches water, lights, housing, and the very shape of our communities.

Choiseul–Saltibus has entered a new season of influence. Our newly elected Parliamentary Representative has been allocated the ministry of Public Utilities and Physical Development — one of the portfolios that quietly decides whether communities move forward or remain stuck in the same old struggles.

Let’s translate this ministry into everyday language for every resident from Victoria to Piaye, from Saltibus to Roblot, from La Fargue to River Doree: This ministry is about services + development.

💧 PUBLIC UTILITIES: Water, Lights & Reliable Services

When people hear “public utilities,” they often think it’s a big government phrase. But in plain terms, it means: the essentials we depend on every day.

  • Water supply and pressure — especially during dry season stress
  • Pipelines and repairs — fewer bursts, faster fixes
  • Street lighting — safer roads, safer evenings
  • Utility expansion — bringing services to areas that are still underserved
What this means for Choiseul in a 5-year term
Better water reliability
Upgrades to improve pressure, reduce downtime, and strengthen supply in problem zones.
Expanded street lighting
More lights in communities and along key routes—safety, visibility, and peace of mind.
Faster response & coordination
Better “utility + community” coordination so repairs don’t drag on for weeks.

In short: if water is weak, if pipes are always bursting, if roads are dark — this ministry is positioned to move the needle.

🏗️ PHYSICAL DEVELOPMENT: Housing, Land & How We Build Choiseul

Physical development is the blueprint work — the rules and decisions that shape how communities expand: where housing goes, how drainage is done, and whether development is safe and sensible.

For Choiseul–Saltibus — with hillsides, valleys, and flood-prone pockets — physical development matters deeply because it can prevent future disaster.

  • Better drainage planning so heavy rains don’t turn roads into rivers
  • Retaining walls & slope protection for vulnerable hillsides
  • Safer approvals for building in high-risk areas
  • Housing initiatives that reach real families, not just paper plans
  • Regularizing long-standing land issues to help residents move forward legally and confidently
Big picture: If managed well, Choiseul can benefit from development that is planned, safe, and built to last—not patchwork fixes.

🎯 Opportunity + Accountability: The Choiseul Standard

This portfolio gives influence — but Choiseul on the Move believes in a simple principle: power must show results.

Here’s what residents should watch over the next 5 years:
  1. Is water pressure improving in weak-supply communities?
  2. Are burst-pipe situations being addressed faster and more permanently?
  3. Is street lighting expanding into dark zones and key routes?
  4. Are drainage and retaining wall projects being prioritized where risk is highest?
  5. Is housing development reaching local families in real ways?

In other words: not just speeches — we need projects, timelines, and visible change.

✅ The Bottom Line for Choiseul–Saltibus

With Public Utilities and Physical Development in the hands of our own representative, Choiseul–Saltibus has a chance to push for stronger water systems, safer lighting, better drainage, smarter housing, and development that respects our terrain.

The opportunity is real — and so is the responsibility. Choiseul on the Move will continue to watch, report, and advocate for results that improve the daily life of the people.

Choiseul on the Move Community First. Results Always.

Thursday, February 05, 2026

The Living Legend: Marie “Leoni/Amo” Emmanuel of Roblot Honoured atChoiseul Leg of Independence Baton Relay

In the heart of the community of
Roblot, there lives a woman whose life story reads like a powerful testimony of faith, endurance, sacrifice, and love.

Her name is Marie Emmanuel, affectionately called Leoni or Amo.

Born on July 18th, 1930, Marie is now approaching an extraordinary milestone — 96 years of life by the grace of God. In an age where many struggle to reach such longevity, Marie stands tall as a living example of what resilience, discipline, and humility can produce.

Marie is a devoted mother of sixteen children. Her journey has been filled with both tremendous joy and unimaginable sorrow. Five of her children have gone before her, and even now she faces the heartbreaking task of preparing to lay her sixth child to rest. Yet, through every storm, Marie remains steadfast, prayerful, and grounded in faith.

Those who know Marie will tell you that she has always believed in hard work and honest sweat. In her younger years, she labored tirelessly, including working at Windward Islands Tropical, located just across from her community. She balanced long days of work with the responsibility of raising her family, never complaining, never giving up.

Her lifestyle has always been simple and natural — a major contributor, many believe, to her long life. Marie’s meals mainly consist of ground provisions and fresh fish, foods grown and sourced close to home. No frills. No excess. Just wholesome nourishment, discipline, and consistency.

Recently, during activities surrounding Saint Lucia’s Independence celebrations, Marie Emmanuel was honored with the National Independence Baton, a symbolic recognition of her contribution to nation-building through community service, motherhood, and perseverance. She also received a beautiful bouquet from the Parliamentary Representative for Choiseul–Saltibus, Honorable Keithson Charles.

Watch the video at https://youtu.be/ZoBc_WO5YAY

At Choiseul on the Move, we believe that development is not only about roads, buildings, and infrastructure — it is also about celebrating the people who quietly built our communities with their bare hands, strong backs, and big hearts.

Marie Emmanuel is one of those builders. 

Today, we say thank you, Marie Emmanuel.

Thank you for your service.
Thank you for your sacrifice.
Thank you for your example.

96 years and still standing strong.

Choiseul is proud. Roblot is proud. Saint Lucia is proud.

Monday, February 02, 2026

Parliament to Debate VAT Relief and Tax Changes — What It Means for You

The Parliament of Saint Lucia will meet on Tuesday, February 3rd, 2026, and buried inside the formal language of its press release is news that many businesses and individuals should pay close attention to.

This sitting is not about ceremony or speeches. It is about money, relief, and overdue taxes.

Here is what it really means, in plain language.

💸 Government Proposes Relief for Old VAT Debts

At this sitting, Members of Parliament will vote on two resolutions aimed at people and businesses who still owe Value Added Tax (VAT) from previous years.

1️⃣ No more interest on old VAT

Normally, when VAT is not paid on time, interest is added to the amount owed.

What is being proposed:

  • The interest rate will be reduced from 1.25% to 0%
  • It applies to VAT debts up to December 31, 2023
  • The relief runs from May 2, 2024 to May 1, 2026

In simple terms: If you owe old VAT, government will stop charging interest during this period.

2️⃣ No more VAT penalties

VAT debts also attract a penalty of up to 10%.

What is being proposed:

  • The penalty will be reduced from 10% to 0%
  • It applies to VAT owed before December 31, 2023

In simple terms: You can clear old VAT without being punished by penalties.

🧾 Why is government doing this?

This move functions as a VAT amnesty window.

Government is essentially saying:

“Pay what you owe — and we will remove the extra burden.”

The aim is to:

  • Encourage people to settle long-standing VAT arrears
  • Bring overdue revenue back into the system
  • Ease pressure on businesses still recovering from difficult economic years

The VAT itself is not being forgiven — but the interest and penalties are being lifted.

📜 Other Bills Before Parliament

Two important bills will also be debated:

  • Public Procurement (Amendment) – changes to how government awards contracts and spends public funds
  • Income Tax (Amendment) – adjustments to income tax rules (details to follow after debate)

🧠 Why this matters to ordinary Saint Lucians

This sitting signals a shift in approach.

Instead of punishment, government is prioritizing compliance and recovery. It is an acknowledgment that many fell behind not out of choice, but because of sustained economic pressure.

This window offers a chance to reset — without fear.

⚖️ Policy Focus: Relief is helpful, but reform is necessary

While VAT relief provides breathing room, it also raises a deeper policy question:

Should Saint Lucia continue relying on periodic tax amnesties, or is it time for deeper reform?

Sustainable tax policy must:

  • Be clearer and easier to comply with
  • Support small businesses before they fall behind
  • Rely less on penalties and more on early engagement

Relief helps — but long-term fairness and transparency are what prevent arrears in the first place.

For now, one thing is clear: If you owe old VAT, this parliamentary sitting matters.