Wednesday, May 13, 2026 | News for the diaspora Subscribe
USD = GYD 209.19 JMD 158.00 TTD 6.77 BBD 2.00 Updated May 13

What’s happening back home — and what it means for you.

Saint Kitts and Nevis

Saint Kitts and Nevis coverage from The Tradewinds Brief.

RSCNPF confirms death of Kittitian national in Dominica, monitors investigation

The Royal St Christopher and Nevis Police Force has confirmed that a citizen of St Kitts and Nevis who had been residing in the Commonwealth of Dominica was recently killed there, according to a statement issued by the police force and carried by the St Kitts Nevis Observer. The matter is under active investigation by Dominica’s law enforcement authorities.

The RSCNPF said it remains in communication with the relevant authorities in Dominica and will continue monitoring developments in the case. Based on preliminary investigations, the force noted there is currently no indication that the death is connected to any criminal matter or court proceedings involving the deceased in St Kitts and Nevis. The force urged members of the public to refrain from speculation or circulating unverified information, particularly on social media.

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St Kitts and Nevis Citizenship Programme named Programme of the Year at CIS 2026

St Kitts and Nevis walked away with four awards at the Caribbean Investment Summit in Saint Lucia, including the evening’s most coveted prize — Programme of the Year — for its revamped Citizenship by Investment offering. SKNIS reported the result, which lands at a sensitive moment for CBI programmes across the Caribbean.

The award matters because of where it sits in the regional CBI conversation. The US Department of State suspended visa processing for Antigua and Barbuda and Dominica in January, citing concerns about due diligence in CBI screening — particularly for applicants from China, Eastern Europe, Russia, Nigeria, and parts of Asia. The European Union has separately warned that CBI programmes could trigger visa-waiver suspensions. St Kitts and Nevis was not named in the US suspension list, and its programme has been positioned as the regional benchmark for reform compliance.

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St Kitts hosts IShowSpeed as 31st Agriculture Open Day draws strong turnout

Daily Brief Saint Kitts and Nevis

St Kitts and Nevis drew a marquee global-streaming spotlight earlier this month with a visit from IShowSpeed, during which Basseterre artist Vaughn Anslyn presented the YouTube creator with a custom portrait — a small moment with outsized social-media reach for the federation’s tourism brand, according to SKN News.

The 31st Agriculture Open Day and Marine Expo opened May 1 with what officials described as strong turnout in St Kitts. The expo bridges traditional small-farmer outreach with the federation’s blue-economy ambitions, including marine-sector investment showcases.

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Basseterre Continues CBI Due-Diligence Reforms Through Regional Consultative Group

Daily Briefing

Basseterre continues to push Citizenship-by-Investment due-diligence reforms through the regional CBI consultative group. US and EU pressure on applicant screening standards is shaping the next phase — particularly around source-of-funds verification and the post-grant monitoring window. The Federation’s revenue model remains tied to the programme, so the reform pace will be calibrated against fiscal need as much as external pressure.

Tradewinds Brief Newsroom.

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Drew administration tightens CBI residency rule as Washington deadline approaches

Daily Brief St Kitts & Nevis

Saturday from Basseterre. The federation’s week.

Drew tightens CBI residency framework

PM Terrance Drew has continued to push CBI program reforms, and the framework now includes the much-discussed clause that only people from the region will qualify to be hosted under the deportee-acceptance agreement signed with Washington — a meaningful narrowing of an earlier formulation.

The diplomatic line being walked is delicate: maintain the federation’s CBI revenue (the program is the regional benchmark for processing speed), satisfy Washington’s due-diligence demands, and answer domestic concerns about how the deportee arrangement is implemented.

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