Water sports operators have been warned that unless they comply with regulations governing the sector, they will face sanctions by the relevant authorities.Shipping Superintendent Walter Best has indicated that over the years Government’s International Transport Division has had to grapple with various levels of indiscipline among some operators, with infractions ranging from driving without a licence, to speeding and driving vessels into buoyed swimming areas. This conduct has posed a threat to the safety of passengers and other beach users.Noting that the enforcement agencies, the Barbados Coast Guard and the Royal Barbados Police Force’s marine arm, had been unrelenting in their commitment to ensuring the safety of shipping in Barbados, Best disclosed that joint efforts to crack down on indiscipline would be ongoing.“Enforcement agencies have been targeting areas of concern known to have undesirable activity, and they have been reaping much success. Similar operations will continue to be carried out,” he saidd, while maintaining that not all operators were guilty.With the water sports sector being an integral part of the tourism product, the International Transport official indicated that operators needed to ply their trade in an orderly manner in an effort to ensure the safety of their clients and other beach users, as well as to protect their livelihood.Citing the Shipping (Watersports) Regulations 2004 governing the sector, Best underscored the need for adherence to these basic rules, which include the mandatory acquisition of insurance for third party risks, safety inspections of vessels, and operating watercraft in designated zones. (BGIS)
PM on the job
PRIME MINISTER DAVID THOMPSON was on the job and in the House of Assembly yesterday, attending to the country’s business. He was in his seat during the pre-luncheon session and led off debate on two bills after delivering a Ministerial Statement on the proposed development at Pickering, St Lucy.In this Gregory Waldron photograph, the Prime Minister, who announced last Friday that he was ailing and must undergo further medical tests, is captured as he left the Parliament Buildings. (ES)
Warrant signed for ‘Dudus’ arrest
KINGSTON – A warrant for the arrest of Tivoli Gardens strongman, Christopher ‘Dudus’ Coke was signed yesterday morning by a high court judge, the Observer has learnt. The warrant gives the police Fugitive Apprehension Team the power to collar Coke who is wanted in the United States on drug and gun- running charges.Monday night Prime Minister Bruce Golding announced that the authority to proceed with the extradition of Coke would be signed by Justice Minister and Attorney General Dorothy Lightbourne.The United States State Department has since last August requested that the Jamaican government extradite Coke, who they described as a major trans-national narcotic kingpin. Coke’s stronghold of Tivoli Gardens and Denham in West Kingston has been barricaded by his supporters who say they fear an invasion from the security forces.(Observer)
Sorry Golding begs forgiveness
KINGSTON – The Jamaica government has agreed to extradite a national wanted in the United States on guns and drug related charges as an apologetic and remorseful Prime Minister Bruce Golding asked for forgiveness over the entire matter.“I regret the entire affair and it has been deeply painful for me, members of my family and you who have been hurt and disappointed. In hindsight, the party should never have been involved in the way that it did, and I should never have allowed it but I must express responsibility for it and express my remorse to the nation,” Golding said in a nationwide radio and television broadcast on Monday night.The Prime Minister said he would not be stepping down as a result of the issue. He said his party had rejected his offer to resign.“Yesterday [Sunday], I indicated that I was prepared to step aside as Prime Minister . . . a special general conference would have to be convened to elect a new Prime Minister. The offer was rejected and I was asked to reconsider,” he said, telling the nation “If I was to consider it cannot be business as usual.” The Prime Minister said Jamaica’s business cannot continue to be disrupted by the ordeal of the last few months.’ (CMC)
Twenty20 ‘coffee cricket’
THE STAGING of the International Cricket Council (ICC) 2010 World Twenty20 Championships was a resounding success. As a result the West Indies Cricket Board came in for well deserved praise from ICC chief executive Haroon Lorgat. It was indeed a memorable event and must have set ideas in motion for a truly global event, involving countries from all around the world who have not previously been associated with cricket. The Twenty20 success is going to revolutionise the game. It seems to be accepted that this model is going to move cricket from a sport to a huge global and marketing business franchise. Given the spectator support that Twenty20 cricket has engendered, it is going to be a painful viewing experience to sit through a 50-over One-Day match. Ironically, some purists believe the five-day Test may still survive as the classic example of the gentleman’s game for a while longer, but the immediate victim is going to be the One-Day match which is not likely to pull in the crowds like the Twenty20. A number of solutions for the One-Day survival have been proffered. One is that it should be divided into two 25-over innings to give the fans a double Twenty20 option and could see his favourite players bat and bowl twice over two innings. Cricket is becoming like coffee; finished in an instant. With the kind of money attached to the Twenty20 version of the game, there is little doubt that other countries are taking note and are planning to take up the sport. It will no longer be limited to just the old Commonwealth members of the former British Empire nor will the ICC have the dominant role in the way cricket will be played on a global basis. Instead, cricket will become much more competitive, tougher and much more technologically savvy to cater to a new type of fans who will want more and more variety in keeping with games like football and basketball. The purists could scream and blow their trumpets until they are blue in their faces but the circus element will intensify and permeate the character of cricket. It has become, after all, entertainment much like American football, which is much more about “bringing it” than technique. More attention is attached to atmosphere and filling the stadium than the state of the pitch. With this new dimension brought about by Twenty20, there is little doubt that business interests in the United States, China and Japan will also invest in Twenty20 cricket and bring a new marketing thrust to the game. We will safely then predict that within ten years the 12 cricket playing nations will expand “with dramatic elasticity”. In this form of game, even cricket fatigue does not have time to set in. After two months of non-stop matches viewers are not into fatigue or boredom from slow over rates. Goodbye Test cricket!
LIAT successfully flies cricketers
ST. JOHN’S, Antigua – Regional airline LIAT is reporting a well managed and superbly executed airlift programme for the teams and officials involved in the just concluded ICC World T20 West Indies 2010 Cricket Tournament. LIAT was contracted to move the teams and officials during the three-week competition. A company official said the airlift called for more than 150 extra flights to move teams and officials to and from various match venues including Barbados, Guyana, St Lucia and St Kitts. “In addition to the movement of the teams and officials, the programme, which covered the period April 25 to May 17, also called for the use of an aircraft, in a combi-configuration, in order to move the [extra] amount of bags and cricketing gear,” Director of Schedules and Special Projects Lesroy Browne said. “We were able to move all of the teams and their cricketing gear in line with the plan.” Browne explained that the final week of the programme, concentrated between Barbados and St Lucia, from May 8 to 16 was intense. He said LIAT also added extra flights for the spectators. “On May 15, for example, our St Lucia station handled 23 flights, 13 more than the average 10 flights per day and the passenger uplift was more than four times their daily average,” Browne said. The LIAT official said the influx of passengers into the region for the tournament was expected to impact positively on the company’s operations. (PR)
NOTES FROM A NATIVE SON: Greek crisis affects many
by HAL AUSTIN THE MELTDOWN in the Greek economy and its spreading contagion in the rest of the eurozone is not, as many people suggest, a little domestic difficulty.It is true that for the last ten years the Greeks have been taking the rest of the eurozone for a ride, extracting as much as possible out of the collective pot while making a minimum contribution – and topping it all by taking retirement at age 53 and paying state employees for a 13th and 14th month of pay under the guise of Easter and Christmas bonuses. Who do they think they are, Barbadians?But the chickens have come home to roost and the nation is paying a huge price for its profligate past with savage cuts in civil service salaries and state benefits, and an overall reduction in government spending and cuts in revenue to a manageable size. First, the European Union (EU) and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) came to the rescue with a US$140 billion bail-out, which quickly rose to nearly $1 trillion. This, however, is in real terms a fiscal stimulus which will be used up in the three-year period, leaving Greece back where it started with huge structural problems. Greece depends on tourism for its revenue and it does not have a huge manufacturing base or dynamic ntrepreneurial sector to fall back on. So, the normal fiscal kick-start of cutting interest rates, devaluing the currency, making exports cheap and attractive is not an option. As it stands, Greece, which represents only two per cent of the eurozone GDP, owes French banks $75bn, Irish banks $8.5bn, and stricken Portuguese banks $9.7bn, none of which can afford a default. Portugal’s banks owe a further $286bn,, $86bn alone to Spanish banks, which owe $1.1 trillion, $30bn of which they owe to Irish banks and a further $31bn to the Italians. Even Britain, which is outside the eurozone, is owed $15bn by Greece, $77bn by Italy, $24bn by Portugal, $114bn by Spain, and £188bn by Ireland.However, Greece is just the worst of a long list of nations just balancing on the edge of financial disaster as the impact of shock transmission in terms of adverse liquidity, a tightening of loan supply through an understandable caution in interbank lending, and by both local and overseas-owned affiliates. And if this sovereign debt mountain collapses, it will bring a number of leading banks down with it, since the contagion has gone far beyond the confines of the 16 eurozone nations, or even the whole 27 nations of the EU, reaching as far as the United States. According to the Bank for International Settlements, the global central bank of central banks, American banks are exposed to about $1 trillion of European debt.The small matter of the Greek over-exuberance has all the making of the sub-prime bubble that tilted the United States, and then the global economy, in to an historic meltdown. As the sovereign crisis deepens right across Europe, Asian central banks are rushing to the safe haven of the greenback, with China alone buying US$140.5bn in United States treasuries during March – more than $100bn up on February. China now has $895.5bn in United States treasuries, and total foreign holdings of nearly $4 trillion, one reason why any devaluation of the greenback will hit China’s economy very hard. That aside, the anti-euro brigade has been emboldened with this crisis and to a man and woman are calling for the end of the euro. It is political and economic nonsense. Despite their prosperity, none of the twenty-seven member of the EU could survive going in to the 21st century if they were to leave the eurozone. In fact, the eleven outside the eurozone are all battling for survival, including the United Kingdom. With a market of 500 million, key economies such as Germany, France and the United Kingdom, and enormous growth potential, including the whole of Southern and Eastern Europe, the EU remains the only northern geographical area which could challenge the Asian economies growing medium to long-term dominance. Finally, over and above the tourist traffic, the Greek crisis has important lessons for Barbados and the rest of CARICOM as it spells out how not to go about creating a single currency. Not only that, the majority of tourists to Barbados come from Germany and the UK and if these economies are experiencing difficulty then households will cut back on their spending. Long-haul tourism is a luxury none but the rich can afford.
CHARITY DRIVE
by WADE GIBBONSBARBADOS is set to become a more attractive tax jurisdiction as it will now be easier for people to contribute to charitable organisations.The House of Assembly yesterday approved amendments to the Income Tax Act and the Charities Act, following debate led by Prime Minister David Thompson on the two bills, which were taken together.Thompson said the amendments would make Barbados a more attractive tax jurisdiction for non-domiciled people who wished to be resident here for tax purposes and as a result, would encourage more foreign exchange earnings. He added the amendments would also make it more appealing for people to contribute to charitable organisations especially those that were specifically declared exempt charities.Thompson said the Income Tax Act amendments would reduce the effective rate of income tax that those resident, but not domiciled here, would be required to pay on their foreign income.He added the amendments would also allow an individual who became domiciled here to claim the foreign currency earnings credit in respect of income derived from outside Barbados.Dividends derived by Barbadian resident companies, he said, including those licensed to operate in the international business sector, should be exempt from tax here on dividends derived from a substantial shareholding in an overseas company.Thompson said exemption from withholding tax with respect to dividends paid by a resident company to non-resident shareholders out of foreign source income earned by the company would be granted.He indicated the amendments would see both cash donations and property being allowed for tax purposes.He added small organisations should not be required to prepare and file legal documents with the Corporate Affairs and Intellectual Property Office in order to be a benevolent organisation. The Prime Minister explained that a letter from the appropriate ministry that the organisation was an approved organisation should be sufficient. He noted that covenant rules should be abolished and in their place, official donation receipts be allowed.Large one-off donations to specially scheduled charities with a major public purpose such as the Queen Elizabeth Hospital project or the constituency councils project, he said, should be written off in one year since such donations would reduce charities’ dependence on Government.Opposition Member of Parliament Dr William Duguid questioned donations to the constituency councils, noting they could be politically motivated. He asked what was in the legislation to stop an organisation from inappropriately donating $15 million to a political party and then benefit from unfair political patronage. [email protected]
T&T journalists criticised
PORT OF SPAIN – UNITED National Congress (UNC) chairman Jack Warner has strongly criticised the three journalists who interviewed Prime Minister Patrick Manning on Sunday night, during a government information service programme titled Prime Minister Unplugged. Warner said the interview was the saddest day for journalism in the country.“I would have thought that the prime minister would have had some tough questions from some tough journalists,” Warner said.“I don’t want you to judge those journalists by the journalists we have in this country . . . this country has produced journalists like Patrick Chokolingo, George John and Owen Baptiste . . . who, if they had been there last night, Manning would not have escaped unscathed.”He urged the people to vote for UNC leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar to bring about change and betterment. (Express)
Arrest warrant for chopper shooter
SAN JUAN – Federal authorities issued an arrest warrant yesterday for a man they say fired at a Puerto Rico police helicopter and injured two people, one of whom later died.The man was one of 11 suspects that police had detained earlier this month shortly after the shooting, which forced the helicopter to land in a baseball field. The suspects were released before police found the AK-47 assault rifle used in the shooting, said Luis Fraticelli, special agent in charge of the FBI in Puerto Rico.The suspect was identified as Edwin Bernard Astacio Espino, 20. (AP)

