2025 in Jamaica
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Events
January
- 22 January – Othneil “Thickman” Lobban, the leader of the One Order gang, is killed in a police operation in Spanish Town, sparking riots.[1]
March
- 27 March – ADHD and cervical cancer are added to the National Health Fund coverage.[2]
June
- 10 June – The European Union removes Jamaica from its list of high risk jurisdictions for money laundering and terrorism financing.[3]
July
- 12 July – Port Royal is designated as a World Heritage Site by UNESCO.[4]
- 21 July – Five people suspected of involvement in a murder plot are shot dead by police in Saint Andrew Parish.[5]
September
- 3 September – 2025 Jamaican general election: Prime Minister Andrew Holness is elected to a third term after his Jamaica Labour Party wins 34 of 63 seats in Parliament, followed by the opposition People's National Party with 29 seats.[6]
October
- 5 October – Five people are killed in a shooting in Linstead.[7]
- 7 October – Seven people are injured in a shooting in Kingston.[7]
- 28 October – Hurricane Melissa makes landfall over Westmoreland Parish, killing at least 45 people and leaving 15 others missing.[8][9]
December
- 1 December – Jamaica receives a joint aid package valued at $6.7 billion from the CAF – Development Bank of Latin America and the Caribbean, the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, the Caribbean Development Bank and the Inter-American Development Bank as part of recovery efforts following Hurricane Melissa.[10]
Holidays
Source:[11]
- 1 January – New Year's Day
- 5 March – Ash Wednesday
- 18 April – Good Friday
- 21 April – Easter Monday
- 23 May – Labour Day
- 1 August – Emancipation Day
- 6 August – Independence Day
- 20 October – National Heroes Day
- 25 December – Christmas Day
- 26 December – Boxing Day
Deaths
- 8 June – Uriah Rennie, 65, football referee.[12]
- 24 November – Jimmy Cliff, 81, Hall of Fame reggae singer-songwriter ("Many Rivers to Cross", "You Can Get It If You Really Want") and actor (The Harder They Come).[13]
- 2 December – Ena Collymore-Woodstock, 108, barrister and magistrate.[14]

