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Ruel Reid trial reset as Ascot row and Parliament clash drive national headlines

15 min readSt. James
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Senior Parish Court Judge Sanchia Burrell has ordered the long-delayed trial of former education minister Ruel Reid, Sharen Reid, Sharelle Reid, councillor Kim Brown Lawrence and former Caribbean Maritime University president Fritz Pinnock to resume on October 5, saying it must proceed then and that all attorneys must attend or be represented. The case started in October 2025 and has moved slowly amid repeated rulings. Prosecutors allege that more than $25 million was fraudulently taken from the Ministry of Education and CMU between 2016 and 2019 through payments for work and services that were never provided. More than 90 witnesses are expected.

The For Children Foundation is calling for Ascot Primary School principal Mark Jackson to resign immediately after video showed students being treated differently at a recent graduation. The report says pupils with higher Primary Exit Profile scores wore gowns, while those with lower results stayed in uniform and marched behind them. The group said it reviewed messages sent before the event warning the move could damage the children's emotional well-being, but Jackson allegedly replied that it was "a hard pill to swallow" and would encourage them to work harder.

Youth policy committee chair Sabrina Barnes said publicly separating children by exam performance is discriminatory, damaging to self-esteem and a breach of their rights. Jamaica Teachers' Association president Mark Malava said the decision was wrong but argued that the controversy also reflects a wider, long-standing inequality in the education system.

Questions about conduct in Parliament also remained in focus. Political analyst Dr. Nadeen Spence said the debate comes down to whether the standing orders need revision or whether the Speaker is being disrespected. The People's National Party said Philip Paulwell, leader of opposition business, was not fully heard when he tried to raise issues about the order paper and an Integrity Commission report. Paulwell alleged bias by House Speaker Juliet Holness, said a requested division on a vote was ignored, called for Hansard and official recordings to be reviewed, and argued that the commission's annual report, received on Monday, should not have waited until the next sitting to be tabled. He also rejected criticism from former House Speaker Marisa Dalrymple-Philibert, saying comments about South St. James MP Nika Burchell confused assertive representation with disrespect. Paulwell said the standing orders committee meets next week.

Opposition finance spokesman Julian Robinson also criticised the Government's transfer of $500 million from the Financial Services Commission, warning that higher regulatory fees could push up insurance costs. He said the FSC itself had warned the withdrawal threatened its finances and cited one company moving from a $500,000 annual fee to nearly $120 million under a new asset-based charge. On infrastructure, Works Minister Robert Morgan said the $45 billion SPARK programme will improve roads used to reach schools, hospitals, town centres, markets and other services, with more than 300 community roads now being built.

In overseas news, Syrian state media said an explosion near the Palace of Justice, by the central court complex in Damascus, killed at least five people.

Syndicated from CVM TV News (Video) · originally published .

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