On the heels of Saint Lucia’s 47th Independence Anniversary, celebrated under the national theme Douvan Ansanm – Nourishing Our People, Strengthening Our Nation, Digicel Business hosted a high-level event focused on advancing secure and resilient digital transformation within the financial services sector.
The event brought together over 50 senior leaders from banks, insurers, credit institutions, hospitality and industry experts to examine how the rapid evolution of digital technologies is reshaping the financial landscape across Saint Lucia and the wider Eastern Caribbean. With increasing adoption of digital banking, rising customer expectations for seamless, always-on services, and tightening regulatory requirements around cybersecurity, data protection and compliance, the importance of trust in financial services has never been more critical.
Speakers highlighted that in today’s environment, trust must be built, maintained and protected in a digital-first world. As cyber threats become more sophisticated and emerging technologies continue to evolve, financial institutions are being called upon to embrace transformation that is not only innovative, but secure, resilient and compliant by design.
As host, Digicel Business underscored its role as a key enabler of this transformation, backed by significant investment in infrastructure across the region, including Saint Lucia’s first true Fibre-to-the-Business network. These investments ensure financial institutions have access to reliable, scalable connectivity to support mission-critical operations and real-time transactions.
Through its strategic collaboration with Symptai Consulting and Trend Media, Digicel Business showcased a comprehensive approach to digital transformation, combining secure connectivity with cybersecurity expertise, regulatory compliance support, business continuity planning, and data-driven customer engagement solutions.
This reinforces Digicel Business’ position as a single, trusted partner, helping institutions simplify operations, strengthen resilience and scale securely in an increasingly complex digital landscape.
Joel Wallace, CEO of Digicel St Lucia, emphasised the importance of trust and resilience in the sector: “At Digicel, we recognise that in today’s financial services environment, connectivity is not just about speed—it’s about stability, security and trust. As institutions across Saint Lucia and the region accelerate their digital transformation, our role is to ensure that this transformation is built on resilient, secure and compliant foundations that protect customers and support long-term growth.”
Key discussions focused on areas such as strengthening cybersecurity frameworks, enhancing business continuity, and aligning digital transformation initiatives with both regulatory requirements and business priorities.
The event reinforced a central message: the future of finance in Saint Lucia and the region will be defined not only by technology adoption, but by how responsibly, securely and intelligently that technology is implemented.
As Saint Lucia continues to move Douvan Ansanm, Digicel remains committed to strengthening the digital foundations of the nation’s financial system and supporting institutions in building a more secure and resilient future.




I found this most dangerous & scary phrase hidden in the middle of this article, which was no doubt authored by Digicel’s legal team:
“This reinforces Digicel Business’ position as a single, trusted partner…”
The deliberate, oxymoronic use of the indefinite article, “a”, before “single, trusted partner” is legal subterfuge used to obfuscate the real aim of Digicel: to become the tip of the security “pyramid scheme” being devised for banking services in St. Lucia (and perhaps, the wider Caribbean region).
The obvious question which arises is why, if Digicel is all about stability, security and trust, did they default to a pyramid security model with the inevitable single point of failure and the more egregious single point of abuse/fraud. Did Digicel ever consider using the distributed security model inherent in blockchain technology? If not, was it because it is anathema to total control over citizens’ lives sought through the implementation of Digital IDs?
Okay nudge, we get it…you are supposed to be educated. But this is an opportunity for you to be intelligent enough to also bring your point across to the layman using this platform.
If you expect the average layman to understand what you just read, then you aren’t as an intellect as you believe yourself to be, leaving your display of verbosity valueless!
I am a layperson who wants to sound smart by the way
Well-spotted Smh! My comments were directed at the Digicel executives & lawyers (not to laymen) to inform them that (despite their sweet talk) I saw through their whole scheme to control citizens’ lives for the benefit of their unnamed masters!
Now, to address your concerns: The initiative towards digital IDs (digital everything) is not inherently dangerous to the common citizen; it becomes dangerous when control of all data about us is given to one entity (person, organization, algorithm, government). The opposite of this single control can be found in blockchain technology, where individuals retain control over their information, for all time, and only allow access to portions of their data required to conduct individual transactions. Once a transaction is completed to an individual’s satisfaction, the data required for that transaction reverts back to the control of the individual owner.
In this way, businesses & “governments” cannot use an individual’s information (combined with a total demographic or population) to reap profits that the individuals will never see; to exercise control over every area of an individual’s life, such as denying them access to their finances; in effect to turning an entire population into slaves (just like during the Covid scam-demic. (remember when the government of Canada denied citizens’ access to their bank accounts because those citizens wanted to contribute to the truckers’ demonstration?)
The topic of digitization is wide & deep, yet businesses and governments are hoping to implement it without democratic oversight, because their fear is that they will lose control over their subject’s lives if those very subjects know too much & want to retain control over their personal data (those who have not already given over control to business & political parties)! Businesses in capitalist countries are wholly undemocratic (a tiny group at the top makes decisions for the large majority at the bottom of the pyramid), while governments have usurped the democratic will of the people (you are only allowed to vote on 17 individuals you did not nominate) they serve for their political parties’ benefit.
I have exposed just the tip of this digitization grift, but I encourage readers to do their own research, because I will be very surprised if this comment is allowed to be published in this forum; as it goes directly against the aims of the big CONTROL pyramid being built under the public-private (fascist) banner!