April 14, 2026 • 3 min readTrini Brief
Good morning from Port of Spain, where the Prime Minister is fighting CARICOM, the crime statistics are fighting everyone, and the fuel situation is a global problem that is somehow arriving at our doorstep at the usual island speed.
PM KAMLA: CARICOM MEETING CONVENED, TRINIDAD DID NOT ATTEND
This is a sentence that requires careful reading: Trinidad demanded an emergency CARICOM meeting about CARICOM governance. CARICOM held the emergency meeting. Trinidad did not attend.
Read More → April 14, 2026 • 4 min readDaily Brief
Good morning, Guyana. The petrol queue is long, the global situation is longer, and the news is exactly as chaotic as you’d expect from a small oil-producing nation that does not yet refine its own oil in the middle of a war over oil. Let’s get into it.
FUEL EMERGENCY: THE TANKER, THE ANCHOR, AND THE PANIC
President Ali dropped the initial explanation on Monday: a tanker’s anchor broke off, the ship had to turn back, and suddenly Georgetown looked like it was auditioning for a dystopian film. Lines stretched around the block at GUYOIL and RUBIS while SOL stations sat dry. Minibus drivers were reportedly rationed to $3,500 at the pump. People began hoarding fuel in plastic bottles — a move Prime Minister Mark Phillips gently but firmly described as a fire hazard and a very bad idea.
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