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10:15 pm, Oct 18, 2025
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The UK’s Prince Andrew gives up royal title amid Epstein allegations 

Britain’s Prince Andrew says he will give up using his title of Duke of York following years of criticism about his behaviour and connections to the late United States sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

The reputation of Andrew, 65, the younger brother of King Charles and second son of the late Queen Elizabeth, has taken a battering in recent years, most notably because of his links to Epstein.

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But there have also been revelations that one of his close business associates was thought by the government to be a Chinese spy.

In a statement on Friday, Andrew said “the continued accusations about me” distracted from the work of his elder brother King Charles and the wider work of the British royal family.

“I will therefore no longer use the title or the honours which have been conferred upon me. As I have said previously, I vigorously deny the accusations against me,” Andrew added in his statement.

Andrew, the eighth-in-line to the throne, was once regarded as a dashing naval officer and served in the military during the Falklands War with Argentina in the early 1980s.

But he gained a reputation as a playboy prince, and in 2022, was stripped of most of his titles and removed from royal duties due to his connections to Epstein.

The announcement comes as excerpts have been published of an upcoming posthumous memoir from Virginia Roberts Giuffre, who alleged she was trafficked by Epstein and had sex with Andrew when she was underage.

Giuffre died by suicide in April at the age of 41. In the memoir, she details alleged encounters with Prince Andrew, whom she sued in 2021, claiming that they had sex when she was 17. Andrew denied her claims and said he did not recall having met her.

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His attempt to refute Giuffre’s allegations backfired during a November 2019 BBC interview. Viewers saw a prince who proffered curious rebuttals – such as disputing Giuffre’s recollection of sweaty dancing by saying he was medically incapable of perspiring – and showed no empathy for the women who said Epstein abused them.

Within days of the interview, Andrew stepped down from his royal duties. Giuffre sued him, and the case was settled in 2022 for an undisclosed sum. A statement filed in court said that the prince acknowledged Epstein was a sex trafficker and Giuffre was “an established victim of abuse”.

Andrew will remain a prince, which he has been entitled to since birth. And he will retain his dukedom, which can only be removed by an Act of Parliament, but not use it.

But he will give up his knighthood as a Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order (GCVO) and his Garter role as a Royal Knight Companion of the Most Noble Order of the Garter.

 

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UVI Hosts Heat Summit to Address Growing Heat Risks Across Territory

The University of the Virgin Islands’ Caribbean Green Technology Center hosted a Heat Summit 2025 on Friday, a bi-campus event on St. Thomas and St. Croix that brought together experts and community members to discuss the growing impacts of extreme heat and strategies to stay safe and resilient.
The all-day summit, which was also streamed virtually and attended by the Source, examined how extreme heat is affecting Virgin Islands residents and highlighted practical strategies to reduce its impacts.
“Summers used to be nice and warm. Now they’re hot – sometimes too hot. So now, the question is how to keep enjoying summer life when it’s hot all the time,” said Gregory Guannel, director of the Caribbean Green Technology Center, in an update from UVI ahead of the event. “The Heat Summit focuses on practical, everyday solutions that help people stay healthy, comfortable, and connected to the outdoors, even as our summers are hotter.”

The summit was packed with information provided by numerous speakers, and partners in the event included the National Weather Service, the University of the Virgin Islands, the Caribbean Collaborative Adaptation Network, UVI Safety in Paradise, the Virgin Islands Planning and Natural Resources Department, as well as the V.I. Health Department.
Presenters underscored the importance of community awareness and preparation, noting that higher temperatures are expected to continue across the territory. Heat Summit 2025 provided tools, resources, and local perspectives on how residents can adapt to hotter summers while protecting health and quality of life, and information from several speakers has been included in this story.
Staying Safe During Hot Weather
Ernesto Morales, a Warning Coordination Meteorologist at the National Weather Service in San Juan, Puerto Rico, was the first speaker of the day, and Morales shared information including temperature trends and the types of heat alerts that are issued by the NWS to help keep individuals across both the USVI and Puerto Rico safe from extreme heat.

Morales emphasized that extreme heat in the Virgin Islands and wider Caribbean is no longer an occasional event but an intensifying trend. He highlighted that both daytime highs and nighttime lows are rising, with 2024 in particular breaking records for prolonged stretches above 90°F.
Morales explained how higher sea-surface temperatures and increased urbanization amplify heat stress, while humidity worsens the body’s ability to cool itself. He noted that 2025 was not quite as hot as 2024, due in large part to stronger trade winds across the islands during the summer months.
Morales warned that extreme heat poses serious health threats, including heat exhaustion, dehydration, and cardiovascular stress. He emphasized that certain groups – particularly the elderly, children, and outdoor workers – face the highest risk, and he urged the public to take heat alerts and advisories seriously to help prevent heat-related emergencies.

Morales also explained that even when the actual temperature is very high, the “heat index” is often higher. “The heat index, also known as the apparent temperature, is what the temperature feels like to the human body when relative humidity is combined with the air temperature,” according to a definition from the NWS.
In a previous interview between the Source and Morales about extreme heat, Morales offered the following advice regarding staying safe in the heat. With the heat reaching dangerously high levels, staying hydrated and as cool as possible is extremely important – for humans and pets as well.
“What we recommend to the public is to stay in the shade. Drink a lot of water. And if you need to be working or doing something outside, try to complete activities outside of the peak periods of heat between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. And if you have to be outside in the heat, do not expose yourself for more than 15 minutes. We all should know our limitations,” Morales warned.

Community Data and Building Impacts
Hilary Lohmann, Coastal Resilience Coordinator at the V.I. Planning and Natural Resources Department, and Gregory Guannel also shared preliminary findings from a community-driven data campaign that tracked local temperatures in homes across St. Thomas and St. Croix.
The results showed that while outdoor temperatures peak midday, indoor spaces often stay hotter into the evening, with many homes never cooling below 80°F overnight. Data shared during the presentation also revealed that building orientation and construction materials, including concrete, play a major role in heat stress.

“Everybody spent the overnight period of time sleeping where the temperature didn’t go below 80 degrees. Or it certainly didn’t feel like it,” Lohmann said.
The findings underscored the challenges of the territory’s building stock, where most homes are concrete with galvanized roofs and louvered windows, which capture breezes but make air conditioning inefficient. Additionally, not all residents have access to air conditioning units. The speakers pointed to solutions such as increasing shade, improving airflow through design, and considering energy efficiency when installing cooling systems.
The Role of Vegetation in Cooling

David Hensley, a Science Research Specialist at UVI, explained how the built environment and natural ecosystems both influence rising heat in the Virgin Islands. Materials like concrete and metal trap and radiate heat, driving up nighttime temperatures. Vegetation plays a critical role in cooling through both shading and evaporative cooling, in which water evaporating from leaves lowers the surrounding air temperature. He also noted that soil under trees and plants retains more moisture and stays cooler, which prevents it from baking and radiating heat the way bare soil or pavement does. Hensley said that greenery at every scale can help reduce heat stress.
“A single tree would have these effects right around it. So, if you have a tree shading your house, that will make a difference,” he said.
Looking Ahead: Building Resilience Together
 As Heat Summit 2025 concluded, attention turned to the next steps for climate adaptation in the Virgin Islands. Viewers raised questions about practical measures such as establishing cooling centers to safeguard residents during the hottest periods, underscoring the urgency of finding community-level solutions.
One of the most impactful closing messages came from LaVerne Ragster, former UVI president and co-investigator with the Caribbean Climate Change Adaptation, Cancer, and Health Disparities Research Center (CARIB-CARES) initiative, which links the University of the Virgin Islands with the University of Puerto Rico. Ragster highlighted that building resilience in the face of rising heat will require regional collaboration, science-based strategies, and a focus on equity in healthcare. CARIB-CARES, funded by the National Institutes of Health, is dedicated to understanding how climate change affects health disparities — particularly cancer prevention and care — across both U.S. territories.
“I think what we have to do as a community is to get enough information from ourselves and from the science to figure out how to effectively function in a changing environment, and that will eventually help us to be more sustainable,” Ragster said in a previous Source interview.
Her remarks echoed the theme running throughout the successful Heat Summit 2025: adaptation is not optional, but a shared responsibility. From planting trees and designing cooler homes, to strengthening healthcare and emergency preparedness, the Virgin Islands must prepare for a hotter future by investing in community resilience and regional partnerships.

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Virgin Islands News

Demonstrators March in St. Thomas as Part of Nationwide ‘No Kings’ Movement

On Saturday, demonstrators on St. Thomas gathered at Windward Passage and marched along the Waterfront to the People’s Promenade, taking part in the nationwide ‘No Kings’ movement.
The St. Thomas rally was part of a nationwide effort involving more than 300 grassroots organizations, with events at over 2,600 locations across all 50 states. Organizers emphasized nonviolent resistance and the defense of democratic principles and institutions.
Events were held in cities ranging from New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles to smaller areas across the country, including all three islands of the USVI.
The demonstrations drew criticism from Republican leaders, such as House Speaker Mike Johnson, who told reporters earlier in the week, “I encourage you to watch — we call it the Hate America rally — that will happen Saturday.”
But on St. Thomas, one protester carried a sign that read, “We love America. That’s why we protest.” The sign provided a stark contrast to Johnson’s characterization, reflecting that local participants saw the demonstrations as a patriotic exercise of their First Amendment rights. Motivated by their love for their country, not hatred.

Jane Higgins, organizer of the St. Thomas rally, pushed back against Republican leaders who had labeled the events as hostile and un-American. “They are afraid of people standing up for their rights. People who want to suppress your rights are in fear. We’re not in fear,” she said.
Anna Monica, a local participant, also disagreed with Republican leaders’ characterizations. “It’s peaceful. It is nothing but peaceful,” she said, noting the presence of attendees from diverse backgrounds and communities. “We have some children, we have some older people. It’s a very pleasant gathering, with nice music.”
Demonstrators danced to the music of the St. Thomas All Stars Steel Orchestra, highlighting the peaceful nature of the event. “We are here playing to support the No Kings event, and we’re happy to be here,” said a representative of the orchestra.

Attendees raised concerns on a wide range of issues, including defending democracy against what they described as early signs of authoritarianism, advocating for fair and livable wages, higher taxes on billionaires, climate action, stronger opposition to Project 2025, and greater government transparency, including calls for the release of the Epstein files.
Demonstrators voiced opposition to the growing presence of immigration authorities in the territory and across the nation. Others expressed concern about the effects of national policy decisions on the islands.

“We are a US territory. There’s always the fear. It’s the ripple down effect. Budget cuts and defunding of social programs for children and parents. It is happening, and no one here in our local government was paying enough attention to addressing this previously and preparing people, or coming up with other solutions. Well, now it’s here on our doorstep, so we’re having to demonstrate like the rest of the country is,” said Megan Anderson, a local participant in the demonstrations.
Attendees expressed concern over what they described as worrying signs of authoritarianism and shifting definitions of anti-fascism. Attendees highlighted personal or family histories of resisting fascism and strongly disagreed with the Trump administration’s designation of antifa as a domestic terrorist organization. They viewed this move as an attempt to suppress dissent and intimidate political opposition.
“The government has twisted the meaning of ‘anti-fascist’ and said it’s people here in the United States who don’t like the government,” said Suzy Petersen, a local demonstrator, who said she disagrees with the actions of the Trump administration. “Congress isn’t stopping him. No one’s stopping him. And I’m here marching today because I believe in democracy, and I believe in freedom. I’m not a fascist, I’m anti-fascist.”

Many participants said their involvement was about more than any single issue. From protecting civil liberties to challenging policies they viewed as overreach, demonstrators described the rally as a chance to exercise free speech, stand united, and inspire action on a variety of local and national challenges.
Amid their diverse concerns, participants agreed on the need to act collectively to protect the nation’s democratic foundations in response to the unprecedented actions of the current administration. “We’re all going to come together because of this. We have to, to save our country,” said Higgins.

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