January 16 — A Day Every Antiguan Should Remember
St. John’s, Antigua & Barbuda — On Thursday, January 16 at 9:00 a.m., something important happens right here at home — at the Supreme Court of the Eastern Caribbean.
This is not a rally. Not a protest. Not a foreign event.
It is a public reading in open court, and it matters because it shows Antigua standing firmly on law, transparency, and confidence.
This is our moment — and it belongs to the people.
Why January 16 Matters to Us
For generations, small countries like ours were told to wait, to stay quiet, or to accept decisions made elsewhere.
January 16 shows something different.
It shows Antigua doing things properly, in the open, under the law — not behind closed doors and not on anyone else’s timetable.
This is how a country earns respect.
What the Prime Minister Is Saying
In the video above, Prime Minister Gaston Browne, introduced by Minister of Housing, Lands and Urban Renewal Maria Bird-Browne, speaks directly about leadership, responsibility, and the future we are building.
If we are open, if we are lawful, and if we do the work properly — Antigua will be taken seriously.
That message is for the world — but it starts with us.
This Is About Law, Not Politics
January 16 is not about party politics.
It is about the court, the process, and doing things the right way.
The reading will happen in open court, under the authority of the Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court, and will be broadcast live worldwide.
Nothing hidden. Nothing rushed. Just record.
Be There — Or Watch Live
Thursday, January 16
9:00 a.m.
Supreme Court of the Eastern Caribbean — St. John’s
A Final Word for Antiguans
This is not about one person. It is not about headlines.
It is about showing the world — and ourselves — that Antigua stands on law, dignity, and confidence.
January 16 is not noise. It is record.





















