🟥 One Week to Stop the 13th Amendment: Belizeans Must Halt This Constitutional Overreach
By: Omar Silva I Editor/Publisher
National Perspective Belize I Digital 2025
FEATURE HEADLINE:
BELIZE CITY: Thursday, 21 August 2025: In just a few days—on August 26—the controversial 13th Amendment to the Belize Constitution will be eligible for its second reading in the House of Representatives. First introduced in May, this proposed amendment claims to enhance public safety. But beneath the surface lies a dangerous reality: the creation of permanent emergency-style policing powers, constitutionally shielded from judicial challenge.
If passed, this legislation will permanently transform Belize’s democracy into a place where entire neighborhoods can be declared “special zones,” and citizens can be stopped, searched, and detained without a warrant, all in the name of crime control.
Despite a surge in opposition from legal professionals, human rights advocates, and the public at large, the Briceño Administration appears hell-bent on constitutionalizing the powers of a police state.
đź”´ What the 13th Amendment Actually Does
This amendment is not just “an update” to existing crime laws. It entrenches powers that go far beyond what was envisioned in 1994 under the Crime Control and Criminal Justice Act—placing them in the supreme law of the land.
It includes:
- 🛑 The ability to declare “special zones” where due process is suspended.
- 🛑 The power to detain and search without a warrant, even without proof of criminal activity.
- 🛑 A new gang and firearms court that expedites punitive measures.
- 🛑 A provision that retroactively legalizes past unconstitutional SOEs, stripping victims of any legal redress.
Once these powers are embedded in the Constitution, they override all other rights, including:
- Presumption of innocence,
- Freedom of movement,
- Protection from arbitrary arrest,
- Right to challenge unlawful detention in court.
⚖️ Government's Talking Points vs. Constitutional Reality
The government’s narrative hinges on downplaying the risks. Let’s examine it clearly:
[What the Government Says ] [What the Constitution Actually Protects]
- “It’s just what’s already in the 1994 law.”   Â
- That law was challengeable in court. This amendment makes it unchallengeable.
- “We’re not increasing police powers.”
- Embedding them in the Constitution increases their authority and eliminates legal safeguards.
- “It’s not like El Salvador.”      Â
- Belize’s amendment follows the same logic—treating entire communities as suspects.
- “There’s oversight by the National Security Council.”    Â
- The NSC is part of the Executive, not an independent judicial authority.
- “Public consultations were held.”     Â
- Only two limited sessions were held—no clause-by-clause legal rebuttals were given, and key officials dodged public challenges.
🗣️ What Belizeans Are Saying
From legal scholars to ordinary citizens, the verdict is clear:
- 🔹 “The bill is too vague. It gives too much room for profiling and abuse.” – Senior Attorney
- 🔹 “Who checks the police when they go too far? We already see abuse today.” – Belize City Resident
- 🔹 “This doesn’t solve crime—it turns every poor community into a prison yard.” – Activist Leader
- 🔹 “You can’t defend the Constitution by rewriting it to excuse abuse.” – Public Commenter
⏳ What Happens Next?
The 90-day mandatory waiting period ends on August 26. That means:
- The House Committee will present its report.
- Second reading could occur the same week, pushing it forward to the Senate.
- If passed in both chambers with a supermajority, the 13th Amendment becomes law—and so do permanent, constitutionally protected violations of rights.
📢 What Belizeans Must Do—Now
The time for passivity is over. Belizeans must act before this dangerous amendment becomes irreversible.
Here’s what you can do this week:
- Contact your Area Representative—demand they vote “NO” on the 13th Amendment.
- Urge Senators from the Unions, Churches, and Business sector to reject this law in the Upper House.
- Share the 14-pointed questions from the National Perspective—questions the government still has not answered.
- Send letters to the Clerk of the National Assembly to formally object.
- Mobilize your community. This is not about party lines—it’s about protecting your rights.
🧨 Final Word: This Is Not Reform. It’s Constitutional Vandalism.
The 13th Amendment isn’t about peace—it’s about power. And when that power is hidden behind promises of “safety,” the people must ask: safety for whom, and at what cost?
We must stop this amendment before the Constitution is rewritten to normalize repression.
🔴 The Constitution should protect us—not police us.
#Reject13thAmendment
#BelizeWillNotBeSilenced
#KnowYourRights
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