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Antigua signs MoU with actor Robert De Niro for US$250M resort

Posted By Stabroek editor On November 29, 2014 @ 7:54 am In Entertainment,Local News | 

The Gaston Browne Administration of Antigua yesterday signed a Memorandum of Agreement for an investment project valued at over US $250 Million with film star Robert De Niro.

A release from the Office of the Antiguan Prime Minister said that during a special sitting of the Cabinet of Antigua and Barbuda, Prime Minister Browne and De Niro, who is a regular visitor to one of Antigua and Barbuda’s most prestigious vacation resorts Jumby Bay, signed the MOA giving the green light to the renovation and expansion of the K-Club on Barbuda into an exclusive 5-Star resort.

“We are indeed very delighted that you will be embarking on a very exciting project on Barbuda, transforming the island, making it one of the most exciting islands in the region. Your project has increased interest in Barbuda. The project is attracting additional investors to our country. That is why I am delighted to appoint you as a Special Economic Envoy of Antigua and Barbuda to attract more investments to our twin island state. It is my belief that your celebrity status will attract more American celebrities to Antigua and Barbuda and the Caribbean,” Prime Minister Browne said, according to the press release.

“My Government is very happy to be a part of this historic and significant moment. Your presence as an international celebrity is of significance and to have you as an investor and a friend of the people of Antigua and Barbuda and an economic envoy is equally significant. Today is indeed an historic day for our nation and we are very pleased to have you and your team here and we are hoping that within thirty days we can conclude the deal and construction can begin in the next twelve months providing employment to the people of Antigua and Barbuda,” Browne told the American actor.

The award winning actor who has appeared in over ninety films, including the Godfather Part II and Raging Bull is also a film director, restaurateur and hotelier. He noted that he is happy and excited to do business in Barbuda and pointed out the project will be unique and “great.” He also thanked Prime Minister Browne and his Cabinet for accepting his team into the Antigua and Barbuda family and pledged not to let the government and country down.

“We expect this project to be one of the most exciting projects in the Caribbean,” Browne noted.

This photo shows the Antigua PM Gaston Browne (left) with Robert De Niro.

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Ramotar hired cash-flush pilot for three state visits

 

Posted By Staff Writer On November 29, 2014 @ 5:17 am In Local News | 

President Donald Ramotar used the private jet service of alleged smuggler Khamraj Lall on three occasions for state visits, the government admitted yesterday, while saying that payments were made each time for the charter.

The government’s disclosure came amidst questions about the head of state’s use of the jet on which Lall was held last week in Puerto Rico with over US$620,000 hidden away.

Questions have been raised about the propriety of the President’s charter since the trip would have been illegal given that Lall’s Exec Jet Club service is registered as a Private Jet Club and not for charter. The administration’s admission yesterday that President Ramotar has used the service for travel to neighbouring Brazil and two other destinations and paid for the charter reiterated the impropriety. “The company’s services were procured on three occasions by the Government of Guyana for transporting delegations led by President Donald Ramotar to official State business overseas,”the administration said in a statement. “On all such occasions, payments were rendered for the charter of an aircraft operated by the Exec Jet Club, Guyana,” it added.

The government statement said that it had noted with interest recent media reports pointing to alleged breaches of Federal Customs regulations of the United States of America, by the Exec Jet Club Guyana, which operates out of the Kaylee Service Station, East Bank Demerara.

Security sources have said that the arrest of Lall with the huge amount of cash would be deeply embarrassing to the government here and would raise a host of security questions. Sources say the administration was likely to do an immediate review of the permission for Lall to have a private hangar at Timehri and it was likely that it would be revoked.

 

‘No infraction’

The entrance to Khamraj Lall’s private hangar at Timehri.

The entrance to Khamraj Lall’s private hangar at Timehri.

Guyana Civil Aviation Authority (GCAA) head Zulficar Mohammed, who returned to Guyana yesterday, broke his agency’s silence saying that as far as the agency knows, there have been no civil aviation infractions here by Lall. “There has been no infraction. It is an American-registered aircraft and it can fly from point A to B once a flight plan is provided and he always provided that,” Mohammed said.

“What he has arranged to do is, because he lives in Guyana, is have it (his jets) parked here so it is an international flight coming in and leaving. Like any (other international flight), he has to fill out a form to say that he is flying from point A to B and then that is approved by us and we send it to the minister for approval,” he added.

Mohammed said that Lall had wanted to have the company registered here and it became a part of his long-term business plan instead of immediate because it would have to meet a series of requirements and would have also needed to have maintenance facilities here. “He was thinking in terms of getting something in Guyana but for him to get that he has to meet a lot of requirements and maintenance requirements and so. That was his long term proposal but it hasn’t gone through,” he explained.

Mohammed pointed out that Lall will have to face whatever consequences is determined in Puerto Rico without local interference as he is an American citizen caught on American soil doing an alleged illegal act. He said that if Lall’s jet company was locally registered, the process would have been different.

He also pointed out that the issue of whether Lall’s business is allowed to retain the hangar at the Cheddi Jagan International Airport (CJIA) is a matter for the airport and not his, as the GCAA is not responsible for approving hangars for companies. “We only approve his flight on a one off at a time thing. The hangar issue it is the airport who will deal with that…it is them not us who determines that, you know, if you reach their requirement, like if you can pay the rental and that kind of thing,” he stated.

 

‘Not given any thought’

Since Lall’s arrest a persistent question has been what would have happened to the US$620,000 if the plane had landed at Timehri as planned after transiting the US Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, where federal agents intercepted the flight. Money-sniffing dogs would have been required here to detect the money.

The opposition on Thursday called on the government to conduct a thorough investigation into Lall’s operations here, saying that it may reveal breaches including tax evasion.

Stabroek News understands that the United States’ Internal Revenue Authority (IRS) has launched an investigation to determine if Lall’s US-registered businesses are in violation of any tax laws.

However, head of the Guyana Revenue Authority (GRA) Khurshid Sattaur yesterday said that he is presently not interested in investigating the local businesses of Lall.

“I haven’t given the matter any thought. I am trying to recover here from Kaieteur News so I am more concerned about catching up on lost grounds than an airplane flying in the air,” Sattaur told Stabroek News yesterday.

Sattaur was adamant that the tax agency is not seeing any investigation as a matter of urgency. “I said—you write that—I said that I am more concerned about catching on lost ground than a plane,” the GRA Commissioner-General stressed before hanging up his phone.

Stressing that a Commission of Inquiry was needed, Opposition Leader David Granger said on Thursday that that even now several issues have been highlighted that need remedial action. “In the first instance we know that the aircraft was headed for Guyana and it is an indication that our own money laundering legislation has been ineffective. No one knows if there were other flights with other monies on them,” he said.

“Then from the point of the CJIA, we see other things that the enforcement at CJIA seems to have been very lax. The plane was given the go-ahead to come and go as it please,” he added. Granger said it seems that the plane might have been given certain privileges, security and otherwise, because of its affiliation to the Head of State,” he said.

“It was not a secret operation. It indicates that the aircraft was used for the Head-of-State and when that happens it might not have conformed to the normal security procedures and checks as other private jets,” he added.

FM
Originally Posted by kp:

The DEA should send sniffer dogs at the hangar to see if he is storing more than plane.

Hey hey hey de man na going foh keep he wite powda there. He bisness a foh transport out dem PPP bais gold and wite powda. 

FM

So Sattaur investigates one Lall for driving the car of a friend who leaves it parked at Lall's place, but doesn't investigate another Lall who lets his friend Ramotar use his plane that is parked up at the Guyanese international airport. Strange. 

Mr.T
Originally Posted by Mr.T:

So Sattaur investigates one Lall for driving the car of a friend who leaves it parked at Lall's place, but doesn't investigate another Lall who lets his friend Ramotar use his plane that is parked up at the Guyanese international airport. Strange. 

He know things in the right hands no use gettin in the way.

cain

PM Hinds raps Urling

Fibre optic cable in Guyana…

…says private sector initially blanked project
By Erica Williams

Prime Minister Samuel Hinds said the Private Sector did not commit to the Fibre Optic Cable project in its inception. His comments were made in response to remarks made by former Head of the Georgetown Chamber of

Prime Minister Samuel Hinds

Prime Minister Samuel Hinds

Commerce, and Industry (GCCI) Clinton Urling.
Urling in a letter recently published by sections of the media, said projects and initiatives like these should ideally be left to the Private Sector to undertake.
“Digicel has for years expressed an interest in a fibre-optic cable and it was only in October this year that the company was informed that its application for a submarine cable was approved,” he said.
Minister Hinds told Guyana Times on Saturday that “one has to go back to the time when this project was put in place. There was not commitment by any company”.
Hinds explained that the doors were open for any company in the Private Sector to get on board with the project. But he said “no one had committed although the Government had committed”.
Hinds said that there was a group from Guadeloupe that had also indicated interest in the project but that subsequently fell through.
Urling expressed dissatisfaction in the revelation of the suspension of the project.   “It is both disturbing and disappointing to read that the fibre-optic cable component of the E-Government Project has been suspended since November 2013 due to faulty installation that now requires remedial work,” he said.
Project Manager Alexei Ramotar earlier on disclosed the year-old suspension to this newspaper and it was this disclosure that seemed to infuriate Urling.
Further, the lack of mention of the suspension by Head of the Presidential Secretariat, Dr Roger Luncheon was also cited by Urling.
Luncheon, during his post cabinet press briefing on December 10, revealed that discussions are being held with a local firm as well as another in a neighbouring country to conclude the rehabilitation of the existing cable that spans from Lethem, Rupununi, Region Nine (Upper Essequibo-Upper Takatu) to Castellani House in Georgetown, Region Four (Demerara-Mahaica).
He had assured the project is still standing. Dr Luncheon explained that in 2011/2012, it was recognised that contractors were not meeting the requirements to develop and unfold the project. As such, he took the initiative to get involved in discussions to remedy the situation.
The project which started four years ago has missed a series of deadlines for completion. Prime Minister Hinds earlier this year indicated that these missed deadlines stemmed from difficulties in procuring piles, adverse weather conditions, and the provision of electrical access to the sites.
The project was expected to provide better high-speed coverage in heavily populated areas such as Linden, New Amsterdam, Georgetown, Anna Regina, and Port Mourant/Albion. Nevertheless Hinds believes that in time, Guyana should have about three or four international links.
The Information Communication Technology (ICT) project is a part of the Government’s quest to modernise the nation’s technological front.

FM

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