Prime Minister Gaston Browne (Antigua and Barbuda), former Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta, and Zambian President Hakainde Hichilema convened at the NEO Framework Forum in Antigua to lead a transformational initiative aimed at enhancing governance transparency and recalibrating economic risks.
The event, set for January 16, signifies not an end, but a new beginning. There will be no dramatic upheavals; rather, it will herald the subtle but vital adjustments that will redefine how global systems operate.
What started in the Caribbean has now spread to Africa, forming the backbone of the People’s New Economic Order (NEO) — a governance structure founded upon principles of law, transparency, and measurable outcomes.

Prime Minister Gaston Browne (Antigua and Barbuda), former Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta, and Zambian President Hakainde Hichilema at the NEO Framework Forum in Antigua. This alignment focuses on promoting governance transparency and risk correction across Africa and the Caribbean.
THE GRAVITY FIELD
Analysts are observing the emergence of a Sovereign Gravity Field where governance is characterized by clarity rather than dominance. When governance becomes visible in law, traceable in decision-making, auditable in finance, and correctable without causing collapse, external systems will respond accordingly. Risk desks will recalibrate, capital will be repriced, and mobility will normalize.

Delegates from across Africa and the Small Island Developing States (SIDS) participated in the Africa–SIDS Forum of NEO, aiming to coordinate multiregional approaches to governance transparency and economic correction.
REPARATIONS – REDEFINED AS CORRECTION
NEO offers a new perspective on reparations, framing them not as demands but as corrections, redefining the approach with a focus on honesty and accountability.
We will measure you correctly now.
In this new environment, distorted valuations will lose their power.

The NEO Headquarters in Antigua serves as the hub for governance data, legal order, and risk recalibration efforts coinciding with the January 16 baseline reset.
THE VISA QUESTION – AND THE MAY 2026 WINDOW
Experts anticipate that U.S. visa processing for Antiguan citizens may normalize by May 2026, depending on how the system inputs are recalibrated on January 16.




















