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TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 2024
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‘No harm’: Private aviation meets ‘bonkers’ prior years By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net THE Bahamas’ private aviation business was yesterday said to have suffered “no harm” from saturation media coverage of this nation’s crime woes with visitor numbers matching the “bonkers” prior two years. Rick Gardner, director of CST Flight Services, which provides flight co-ordination and trip support services to the private
aviation industry throughout the Caribbean and Latin America, told Tribune Business the private pilot social media forums he monitors showed regular fliers to The Bahamas “pushing back” and advising others not to worry about reports on the recent murder spike. A Bahamas Flying Ambassador, he disclosed that his firm had witnessed no cancellations of flights to The Bahamas for which it was scheduled to provide services after negative reporting on
the country’s crime situation first surfaced in late January and earlier this month. And Charles Bowe, general manager at Jet Nassau, the major fixed base operator (FBO) at Lynden Pindling International Airport (LPIA), told this newspaper that private aviation business handled by his company has remained “consistent” with prior years. While the crime coverage had created a “hiccup”, and sparked multiple inquiries from concerned
aviation industry participants and visitors, Mr Bowe said Jet Nassau had largely been able to reassure them that The Bahamas remains a safe destination for tourists to visit and he has “personally” seen no flight cancellations as a result. “They’ve been consistent,” he added of private aviation business volumes. “We had a slow period right after the New Year mark, but that’s normal. Everyone travels in that period, and then everybody settles down for two
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Deltec pleaded Bahamas law breach, poverty over FTX evidence demands By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net DELTEC Bank & Trust pleaded poverty and violations of Bahamian law in a failed bid to block aggrieved former FTX investors from forcing it to provide evidence. South Florida federal court files, seen by Tribune Business, reveal the extent of efforts by the Bahamian financial institution to prevent itself and its chairman, Jean Chalopin, from having to speedily provide both documents and testimony after they were named as defendants in a class action lawsuit over the crypto exchange’s collapse.
t A4FSJPVT TBODUJPOT JG OP 4VQSFNF $PVSU HP BIFBE t "OE AJNQPTTJCMF UP NFFU SFRVFTUT JO XFFLT t "T ATNBMM CBOL XJUI VOEFS N QSPmU TUBGG Besides arguing that they were “bound by Bahamian law” and its “strict confidentiality” mandate, which required Supreme Court permission before they could provide the requested evidence via the Evidence (Proceedings in Other Jurisdictions Act), Deltec and Mr Chalopin also
asserted it was “impossible” to comply with over 70 document production requests in two weeks. They based this on Deltec’s status as “a small Bahamian bank that does not litigate in the US”, with less than 150 fulltime staff and net profits of under $15m for 2023. Mr Chalopin and his bank also
demanded the very same day that the south Florida district court “quash” the former FTX investors’ attempt to obtain evidence and protect them from further discovery efforts. However, US magistrate judge Eduardo Sanchez, in a January 19, 2024, verdict dismissed the duo’s efforts to dismiss the discovery action. “Defendants Deltec Bank and Trust Company and Jean Chalopin shall produce to plaintiffs documents evincing Deltec Bank and Trust Company’s banking license and corporate structure,” he ruled, “as well as any contracts and agreements that Deltec Bank and
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Apprenticeship ‘Sting operations’ net 1,500 initiative to impact pounds of illegal grouper ‘big numbers’ By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net THE planned National Apprenticeship Programme will impact “big numbers” with ambitions to have the first entrants working in the Bahamian maritime industry as early as April/May 2024. Peter Goudie, the Bahamas Chamber of Commerce and Employers Confederation’s (BCCEC) labour division head, told Tribune Business that the initiative will have “a ripple effect” through the entire Bahamian economy as well as society through increasing employability, productivity and reducing the private sector’s demand for foreign labour. Through certifying graduates, he explained that the scheme - once enshrined in law and operational - will provide employers with a pool of skilled labour whose abilities have been verified, thus improving the overall quality of the workforce and the job prospects of individual Bahamians. “We’re hoping it will be starting very soon, April or May,” Mr Goudie told this newspaper, with the enabling legislation due to be debated by the House of Assembly next week on February 28. “We hope to have 100 apprentices working in maritime and, at the same time, another bunch will be doing soft skills in math and English and moving into maritime.
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By FAY SIMMONS Tribune Business Reporter jsimmons@tribunemedia.net
A SENIOR fisheries official yesterday revealed that “sting operations” over the past three weeks have netted more than 1,500 pounds of Nassau grouper caught illegally out-of-season. Gregory Bethel, acting director of marine resources, disclosed at the Ministry of Agriculture and Marine Resources’ first leadership conclave that his department has collaborated with the Royal Bahamas Defence Force to conduct two covert investigations into mail boats entering Potter’s Cay dock. This, he added, uncovered the 1,500 pounds of illegally harvested grouper. He said: “The Nassau grouper closed season is from December 1 until February 28 of the following year. Let me say most recently, over the course of the last three weeks, we did two sting operations [which were] joint efforts between my department and the Royal Bahamas Defence Force. “[We] investigated mail boats coming in at Potter’s Cay and, to-date, we have uncovered in excess of 1,500 pounds of Nassau grouper that has been fished during the close season. So we want to take this opportunity
again to remind the public that we are still engaged in the Nassau grouper closed season.” Mr Bethel said individuals found in possession of, or selling, freshly caught grouper are committing an offense and can receive fines and/or jail time. He added that the operation at Potter’s Cay was a “search and seize” so the items were confiscated and only two individuals faced penalties. “It is an offence to fish Nassau grouper. It’s also an offence to have it for sale. The penalty is $3,000 or a year in prison or both. A word to the wise is sufficient, so we want to encourage Bahamians to follow the law,” Mr Bethel said. “No penalties except for two were imposed. The ones coming from the sting operation of the mail boats, it was just a case of search and seize. We just seized the product.” Mr Bethel said there have also been poaching incidents on the Family Islands, including two men who were in a traffic accident with and caught with 400 pounds of grouper. The individuals were fined $1,500 and given 50 hours of community service. “We had an incident in Long Island where two young men,
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NASSAU CRUISE PORT
‘Zero’ crime fall-out for cruise numbers By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net NASSAU Cruise Port’s top executive yesterday said he can “guarantee” passenger numbers for the past three days have surpassed prior years to show there has been “zero” impact from recent crime concerns. Michael Maura, the Prince George Wharf operator’s chief executive, told Tribune Business that while cruise port employees have had to reassure a small minority of visitors that Nassau remains safe following international media coverage of
the recent murder spike there has been “no mass or overwhelming concern” expressed. And, responding to assertions by Wesley Ferguson, the Bahamas Taxi Cab Union’s president, that drivers have suffered an up to 50 percent reduction in earnings due to the crime reporting fall-out, he suggested this may have also been influenced by the loss of passengers from three cruise ship cancellations due to bad weather in early February. “An observation from where I sit, but I think it
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