Bank of Nova Scotia said on Friday it will not proceed with a proposed sale of its operations in Guyana following opposition from the central bank.
Canada’s third-biggest lender agreed in November to sell the business to Republic Financial Holdings Ltd, the Trinidad and Tobago-based parent company of Republic Bank, as part of a plan to exit nine countries in the Caribbean, including Antigua and Grenada.
A Scotiabank spokesman said the bank is in final stages of closing its deals in Anguilla, Dominica, Grenada, St. Maarten, St. Lucia, St. Kitts and St. Vincent.
The bank’s efforts to sell its Antiguan branch have been held up due to opposition from the government of Antigua and Barbuda.
Scotiabank had been exiting non-core businesses and focusing its international operations on the Pacific Alliance trading bloc of Peru, Mexico, Chile and Columbia, which now accounts for around a quarter of its revenue.
What can I say, Chacho?😊 I would be shocked if you and your pastor regain your piece of seat…
Let me know what you and the pastor have done since the last elections.
The idiot politicians are turning their incompetence into a race war, and the people love it.
Suddenly the Christian Party are pro Dutch. The National Alliance and USP are anti Dutch. The UDP are anti Dutch. They all are portraying themselves as our saviours, when they haven’t been able to hold a government together, for more than a few months, in ten years.
The clowns in politics can organize attacks against bloggers, but they can’t keep their shit together, even on an international stage.
The games have begun, it seems the only people prepared for this latest fall is myself and a few skeptical friends.
The blogs were reactivated one day before the government fell. It is more than just sxmgovernment, it’s also the ORIGINAL and ONLY St Maartens.com. I am used to people like Hilbert Haar and Terrence Rey. They are both familiar with my work, that’s why they try to copy me but their panties are not big enough.
I am reactivating the St Maarten Elections blog today. I will post links here.
The Election groups are reactivated, the links will also be posted here.
The Election pages are active, and so are all social media sites.
Because everything is being done by phone things are a little bit slower when I can’t blog at 120 words per minute.
For the past month I have been installing the necessary equipment and diligently completing my courses.
I intend to be as heartless in dealing with the government as they are in dealing with us.
Fortunately it’s easy to despise these crooks in government, so this will be easy work for someone like me.
The below are the 3 videos from the National Alliance Town Hall Meeting.
Nothing but recycled crooks in government, even the fresh faces are corrupted before the voting even takes place.
The definition of insanity is repeating the same b.s. pattern over and over again but still expecting change, right? So why do you keep electing the same clowns and expecting something different?
The St Maarten voter recycles these dusty, crusty, old musty politicians like a cow chewing the same old cud, wondering why it tastes the same.
I apologize to Big Ray Helliger, because I said the same thing yesterday, but expressed myself profanely.
St Maarten voters are malnutritioned souls. Swallowing the same old political vomit and backwash, and wondering why they are not getting the nutritional benefits of a well balanced meal.
And it’s the plantation slaves who are suffering the most, who hate me the most.
This election, no doubt those bent over politicians will be sending their most ignorant goons to start fights with people like me. The people who asks the right questions.
This is not a blogging day, it is a vlogging day. When I find the time, I will let loose
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CLICK BACK ALL DAY. I WILL BE UPDATING. THESE VIDS FROM SXM DAILY NEWS FB PAGE.
British OAPs cruising their way to jail: How retired chef and his secretary wife will swap golf courses and yoga classes on the Algarve for a Lisbon prison after pure greed led them to smuggle £1m of cocaine across the Atlantic
Roger Clarke and wife Sue, aged 72 and 71, arrested last year in Lisbon, Portugal
The pair, from Kent, were arrested after 9lbs of cocaine found in their suitcases
Former chef Roger insisted he had no idea the cocaine was hidden in the lining
Elderly couple convicted of drug trafficking, sentenced to eight years in prison
Shortly before dawn on December 4 last year, four plain-clothes Portuguese policemen boarded the cruise ship Marco Polo as it docked at Lisbon at the end of a month-long trip to the Caribbean.
The officers headed straight for cabin 469, waking its occupants, pensioners Roger and Sue Clarke.
On the bedside table, officers found a gold-covered 2018 diary belonging to Mrs Clarke, a bespectacled 71-year-old former secretary, its days marked with the handwritten minutiae of the couple’s life.
There was an entry for her husband, who suffers from a heart condition, to attend a doctor’s appointment and another noting a forthcoming facial and manicure for her. Other days were marked with details of trips to bingo and meals out. ‘Indian with Karen and Paul, April, Sean and Sean’s boys,’ read one such entry, alongside a scrawled shopping list of Clarke and Sue Clarke, a British pensioner couple convicted of smuggling drugs aboard a cruise ship, arriving at the court in Lisbon ‘shampoo, conditioner, washing powder, deodorant, tea bags’.
So far, so mundane.
But it was under the bed that police found what they were really looking for – four new suitcases, two blue and two brown.
Officers cut into the lining of one, revealing a white powder concealed within. It was cocaine.
In total, 9kg (20lbs) of the drug with a street value of £1 million was hidden inside the luggage.
From the start, the Clarkes said they had no idea what it was or why it was there. They were just ordinary pensioners who had settled in Spain to enjoy an ex-pat retirement in the sun. They had paid for the £6,800 cruise with savings accrued through ‘hard work’.
But their story did not hold water for long.
A further search of the diary revealed details of another cruise they had taken to Brazil earlier that year and the dates of a third 16-day voyage booked for the coming March. The entry read: ‘Fly to Havana, Cuba. Cruise to Philipsburg, St Maarten; St John, Antigua and Barbados; Funchal, Madeira; Malaga, Alicante. Approx £4,000.’
And that was just the 2018 diary. Investigations by police would show that in the two years before their arrest, the couple had been on a series of cruises worth £18,000.
Given that they were living on a joint monthly income, after rent, of just £885, how could they possibly fund such a lifestyle?
The Portuguese police had another ace up their sleeve. The tip-off about the Clarkes had come from British police – who knew about a dark secret in their past.
‘Roger Clarke and Susan Clarke have a criminal history of drug trafficking offences and were imprisoned in Norway… for the importation of 240kg of cannabis,’ the communique read.
Arrested by Portuguese police, the couple have spent the past nine months in prison waiting for their day in court. When it finally arrived last week, their explanations were hardly convincing.
Mr Clarke claimed he had an agreement with a mysterious Jamaican entrepreneur to help ship pineapples to the UK, earning £2,000 per container of fruit he organised while on stopovers on his cruises. As a ‘sideline’, he said he had been asked to take new suitcases back to the UK for which he would be paid £200 a time.
Portuguese police had a very different theory – namely that the couple were being paid between £18,000 and £26,500, plus expenses, per trip to smuggle drugs.
Three judges in Lisbon agreed, and yesterday sentenced the Clarkes to eight years in prison.
Mr Clarke, who held hands with his wife as they learnt their fate through a translator, whispered to her: ‘Jesus Christ, I wasn’t expecting more than four years. I’ll be 80 when all this is over.’
Back on Spain’s Costa Blanca – where the couple settled three years ago – there is little sympathy for the Clarkes.
Home before their detention was a rented whitewashed villa with a roof terrace and turret in the resort of Guardamar del Segura, south of Alicante. Mrs Clarke attended yoga and spinning classes and her husband was a member of a golf society at a British-run bistro bar.
But while softly spoken Mrs Clarke was well liked, her 72-year-old husband’s abrupt manner had quickly ruffled feathers. ‘He ordered drinks without saying ‘hello’, even when the staff tried to get him to be more polite by teaching him how to say it in Spanish,’ a local recalled. Another described him as ‘a complete know-it-all’ and a ‘very loud Londoner’.
Known for his tendency to exaggerate his past, he quickly earned the nickname ‘Mr Bull*****er’.
‘If you’d done something you could bet your bottom dollar Roger had done it – but he’d done it bigger and better,’ said plumber Paul Craven, 64, a former friend who was nearly ensnared by the couple’s lies.
Over a brandy, Mr Clarke would boast of having been a boxer, doctor, pilot, paramedic and prison officer. He even said he’d served in the SAS during a six-year military career. Most often, though, he’d claim to have been a chef, working in a Michelin-starred restaurant and owning two eateries in Benidorm.
Most took what he said with a giant pinch of salt. As Mr Craven’s wife Pauline, 61, the Clarkes’ former cleaner, said: ‘I knew it was rubbish when he invited us over for chilli and started to boil the mince in a pan of water.’
Portuguese police acting on a tip-off from Britain’s NCA discovered 9lbs of cocaine hidden inside the lining of four suitcases Clarke had taken from the island of St Lucia
In reality, Mr Clarke, who was born in Dartford, had spent much of his life working as an HGV driver.
But his biggest secret wasn’t his job – it was his identity. Mr Clarke was born Roger Button in Dartford, Kent, and was using that name when he met Sue more than 20 years ago. She, meanwhile, had three children from her first marriage to an actor. The couple had been together for about 25 years when they split up.
She stayed in the marital home in Cheadle, Cheshire, to look after the children, who were then in their late teens. But then she met Mr Clarke and simply ‘abandoned’ them, it is claimed.
‘She just left the children with her husband and walked out on them,’ a former colleague said.
‘She had to make a choice and she chose to start a new life with Roger and that did not include the children. The children were in their teens and you can imagine they were very upset.’
At around the turn of the century, the couple relocated to the Costa Blanca. At the time they lived in an apartment block just outside Torrevieja, near Alicante, where they ran a bar-restaurant. But by 2002, it was in serious financial trouble.
Struggling to pay his suppliers, Mr Clarke claims he was approached by a customer who said that if he was willing to smuggle cannabis to Norway, he could clear his debts.
Giving evidence to the Portuguese court, Mr Clarke said he agreed to the trip but that on his return the smuggling gang got ‘heavy’ with him, insisting that he go again. He added: ‘When I said ‘no’ they beat me up badly and said they would do the same to my wife if I didn’t do another trip.
‘They insisted I take my wife because it looked better than a single man on his own. We were caught in Norway and put in prison for two months before being released. We stayed in Oslo but we were threatened and followed. We went to the police and asked for help but they said they couldn’t help us.’
Court documents reveal that between 2003 and 2004, the couple took part in 16 drug-smuggling trips to Norway over 15 months in Mr Clarke’s battered old Nissan.
In total, £1million of drugs was imported – hidden in secret compartments within the body of the vehicle. For their role they were paid a total of £33,000. Eleven of the trips were made from Spain, the other five from the Netherlands.
Sue and Roger Clarke’s Villa in Guardamar, Spain, where they were the life and soul of local bars and members of a golf club before their arrest and conviction for drug trafficking
Mr Clarke usually collected the drugs from ‘a supermarket near Alicante’. The couple then headed for the German port of Kiel before making the 20-hour crossing to Oslo by ferry.
They were caught in Oslo on September 13, 2004, but skipped bail and returned to England in January 2005. It was then that they changed their names to Clarke ‘to avoid revenge from criminal associates’.
Their life on the run ended when Mr Clarke became chairman of a residents’ association and his picture appeared in a local newspaper. It led to the couple’s arrest and extradition to Norway, where they were jailed in 2011 – Mr Clarke for almost five years and his wife for three years and nine months.
After the couple’s release from prison in Norway, they told friends they had been convicted of tobacco smuggling.
Settling in Spain in 2016, their love of luxury cruises quickly raised eyebrows.
But Mr Clarke explained away their expensive tastes by saying they were funded by ‘the pineapple run’. He said acquaintances – a Jamaican businessman called Lee and another man nicknamed Dee – had asked him to negotiate to buy exotic fruit for shipment back to the UK while in the Caribbean.
His work as a chef made him suited to the role, he added.
Clarke, from Bromley, Kent, claimed after his arrest a mysterious UK-based Jamaican businessman called Lee had asked him to negotiate the exotic fruit sales during cruise ship stopovers in the Caribbean and bring back the suitcases ‘as a sideline’ [File photo]
He revealed he was also occasionally asked to bring back suitcases. These were supposedly high-end samples, the aim being to sell them for up to £1,500 per case at ‘places like Harrods’. He would be paid £200 per case.
He couldn’t explain in court why his paymasters didn’t simply put the cases in the shipping containers along with the fruit.
It was a story the Cravens were familiar with. In May 2016, the Clarkes invited them to join them on an all-expenses-paid £3,000-a-head cruise to the Caribbean.
‘Roger told me about his business importing pineapples and wanted me on the ship to keep his wife company,’ Mrs Craven said. ‘They offered to pay for everything.’
But the three-week trip came with a catch. The Cravens would have to transfer their clothes into new suitcases that Mr Clarke was picking up in St Lucia. ‘He said the people with the pineapples paid for the cruises as well,’ Mr Craven said.
‘They’d be paying for ours. He said, ‘all I want you to do is bring back some suitcases with you’.’
But as soon as the suitcases were mentioned, the Cravens became suspicious. They declined the offer – and were immediately cut off by the Clarkes. Mrs Craven even lost her £80-a-month cleaning job.
Police have little doubt that the trips were a cover for drug-smuggling. They believe the couple had contact with drugs trafficking gangs during two trips in 2017 and another they made in 2018.
Fast-forward to November 2018 and the Clarkes set sail once more. They left from Kent, possibly arousing suspicion because when they had flown in from Spain they had spoken only of visiting family in Kent at passport control – and ‘made no mention of travelling to the Caribbean’.
During the trip, Mr Clarke went ashore at the island of St Lucia and returned with four new cases. He gave away the cases they started their cruise with – one to a cabin steward and two to the man in St Lucia who handed him the new cases.
As the ship headed back to Europe, Britain’s National Crime Agency contacted Portugal’s police drug trafficking unit. Where the specific details they passed on came from is unknown. ‘Roger and Susan Clarke are believed to have collected suitcases containing 10kg of cocaine when the Marco Polo stopped at St Lucia on 21/11/2018,’ the tip-off read.
Warning that it was ‘highly likely’ they would try to offload the drugs once the ship docked in Portugal, the message ended: ‘Please keep me informed on the action you propose to take.’
The rest, as they say, is history.
In court, Mr Clarke broke down in tears as he said that as a result of their arrest he and his wife had ‘lost all their possessions’.
Given this is their second offence, the performance cut little ice with the court – or their former friends. As Mrs Craven said last night: ‘That could easily have been us in that courtroom instead of them and we’d have lost everything.
‘I’ll never forgive them for what they did to us.
‘I don’t have an ounce of sympathy for them. They’re just plain greedy. They wanted to live the high life with money they hadn’t earned through hard work and they were willing to sacrifice friends like us. Roger talked in court about being tricked by people he trusted when that’s exactly what they did to us. Whatever happens to them from now on in is entirely their fault.’
King Willem-Alexander attended a meeting organized by the Netherlands and Aruba on Thursday afternoon in New York with representatives of small island states.He thus followed up his statement earlier this week in the General Assembly of the United Nations that they should be better listened to.
“Every person counts.Every member state counts!That is why the voice of the small island states needs to be heard louder in a UN context.They have not been sufficiently heard so far, “said the king on Tuesday when he emphasized speaking on behalf of a kingdom with four countries: the Netherlands, Aruba, Curaçao and Sint Maarten.“We know both the tropical trade and the cool North Sea wind from our own experience,” said Willem-Alexander.
At the lunch meeting in the residence of the Dutch representative at the UN, Prime Minister Evelyn Wever-Croes of Aruba was present in addition to the king.Her colleague from Curaçao, Eugene Rhuggenaath, was missing and Prime Minister Leona Marlin-Romeo of Sint Maarten had to cancel after the States part of the kingdom had submitted a motion of no confidence against her.
At the table were representatives from numerous island states, including President Charles Savarin of Dominica, and representatives from Barbados, Saint Lucia and the Marshall Islands, among others.They went for the interview, where the problems that these developing countries are experiencing partly due to climate change were discussed, first in the photo with King Willem-Alexander.He encouraged the company to come a bit closer to him.“I do not bite.At least not today.
Two British pensioners have been sentenced to eight years in prison for smuggling cocaine on a luxury cruise ship.
A Portuguese court convicted Roger Clarke (72) and his wife Sue (71).
This is despite their claims they had been duped into transporting the haul by a Jamaican businessman.
The judge said the couple were “fully aware” they were smuggling cocaine and “only accepted to do it because of high profits”.
They said Portugal is often used as a major entry point for cocaine and other drugs to Europe.
Mr and Mrs Clarke held hands and cried after the decision, saying they wanted people to know the “real story”.
Police arrested the couple last December in Lisbon after they were tipped off by the UK’s National Crime Agency (NCA).
During a search of the Clarkes’ cabin on board the MC Marco Polo cruise liner, investigators found 9kg (20lbs) of cocaine “ingeniously concealed” within four suitcases.
They told officers they had been fooled into transporting the drugs by a man named Lee, who had paid for their trip.
The retired couple were not able identify the mystery man or provide any contact information for him – a detail investigators found suspicious.
Court papers showed the pair, from Kent in England, had spent over €20,000 on exotic cruises over a two-year period – despite the fact they were living on €1,000 a month after paying rent.
Police also seized a 2018 diary from Mrs Clarke’s bedside which detailed the couple’s extravagant trips.
One entry, referring to a trip which was never taken as the couple were behind bars, read: “12 March 2019. 16 days. Fly to Havana, Cuba. Cruise to Philipsburg, St Maarten; St John, Antigua and Barbados; Funchal, Madeira; Malaga, Alicante. Approx 4,000 pounds.”
A Portuguese police report signed by police chief Carla Nunes said: “There is no doubt Roger and Susan Clarke had contact with drugs trafficking organisations during two trips in 2017 and another they made in 2018.
“They were made to South America, to countries which were linked to the transport of cocaine to Europe.
“While they made their first trip at the beginning of 2017 by plane, they made subsequent trips on cruise ships which allowed them to carry a larger amount of drugs.”
The Clarkes also had a previous conviction for a similar offence in Norway.
The couple’s lawyer, Susana Paisana, said she will consider appealing against the verdict but the pair will remain in jail.
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.,Sept. 26, 2019/PRNewswire-PRWeb/ — Over the last few months berth holders all over the world have been placing their votes for their favorite marina to receive Towergate’s Marina of the Year 2019 award.The Yacht Harbor Association(TYHA), one of the oldest international yachting associations in the world, worked closely with partner Towergate Insurance, to recognize the best of over 160 Gold Anchor accredited marinas from round the world.
Upon receiving the news of this award, Kenny Jones MBE, Executive Vice President of Global Operations at IGY Marinas stated, “I am very proud that the marina team at Yacht Haven Grande has set such a high standard of service that yacht crew, captains, owners, and guests have acknowledged their level of dedication by votingYacht Haven Grandeas the best.”
“The team at Yacht Haven Grande – as well as our larger IGY family – have worked tirelessly to provide a second home for our yachts and guests” statesPhil Blake, General Manager of Yacht Haven Grande, “The double accolades of Platinum status and Superyacht Marina of the Year is a wonderful testament to the IGY customer ethos, and our commitment to servicing the unique needs of the world’s largest yachts.”
Yacht Haven Grande in St. Thomas is one of the busiest ports during theCaribbeanwinter season and is a dedicated superyacht marina capable of taking vessels up to 656 ft. (200m). Its greatest feat is that it is the only marina in the world, to have receive this award twice, and considering challenges faced by the IGY in the recovery after the 2017 hurricanes in theCaribbean, this is an amazing achievement.
St. Thomas and the rest of the IGY Caribbean facilities have not only bounced back from massive category five storms, but surpassed expectations by showing the world that IGY teams are dedicated to being a world leader in the yachting industry.
“At IGY Marinas our goal is to continually raise the standard for the superyacht experience at all of our global locations,” remarksTom Mukamal, CEO of IGY Marinas, “This recognition validates our efforts and we look forward to delivering for our customers everyday regardless to the inherent challenges posed at our island locations.”
Along with Yacht Haven Grande efforts being recognised at the award ceremony held in Southampton International Yacht Show, IGY’sMarina Cabo San Lucas(Mexico), Yacht Club at Isle De Sol (St. Maarten) andRodney Bay Marina(St. Lucia) were also awarded their 5 Gold Anchors for the third consecutive time, thus holding the accreditation for nearly a decade.
About IGY MarinasIGY Marinasis one of the largest international marina companies in the world and a leading destination network for vessels across the globe. The company’s network includes 17 marinas operating in 10 countries (United States,Mexico,Costa Rica,Panama,Colombia, Turks & Caicos,St. Maarten,St. Lucia,FranceandItaly); welcoming over 10,000 vessels and approximately 100,000 customers each year.
The company has 3,000 slips under management catering to a variety of vessel markets, including superyacht, sportfish, cruise and sail. With 400 purpose-built slips accommodating superyachts from 80 feet (24m) to 800′ (243m), IGY’s marinas serve as leading destination ports for the world’s largest vessels – serving more than 1,800 superyachts per year.
With a passion for giving back on a global scale, the company’s bi-annual charitable initiative “IGY Inspire Giving through You” supports over 40 charity-based initiatives across its marina destinations.
From left: (Front) Lililita Johnson-Forbes, Jessica Rogers, Calvin Mardembrough, Provost Sally McRorie and Cindy Green. (Back) Cherrianne Dangleben York, Betty Jensen, Assistant Provost Stephen McDowell, Kristen Hagen, Ashley Krutz and Jocelyn Vaughn.
Florida State University’s Office of the Provost welcomed guests from St. Maarten’s Ministry of Education, Culture, Youth and Sport Wednesday, Sept. 25, as a part of the 20th anniversary of the Sister City agreement between St. Maarten and Tallahassee.
The relationship was established in 1999 as the territories recognized the mutual benefit and potential partnership, particularly in education and tourism.
Calvin Mardembrough, policy adviser for the Ministry of Education, Culture, Youth and Sport (ECYS), and his colleague Jessica Rogers, represented the Government of St. Maarten on the visit. They also took part in an anniversary celebration at City Hall and visited Florida A&M University and Tallahassee Community College during the two-day trip. Lililita Johnson-Forbes of the Tallahassee-Sint Maarten Foundation hosted the officials.
At Florida State, the delegation met with Provost Sally McRorie, Assistant Provost Stephen McDowell, staff members from the Center for Global Engagement, including Director Cindy Green, and CherrianneDangleben York, an FSU student from St. Maarten.
“We are very glad to welcome students from St. Maarten to Florida State University and appreciate their contributions to campus life,” McDowell said. “We are also happy to recognize the renewal of the Sister City agreement between St. Maarten and Tallahassee.”
Florida State currently has 13 students from St. Maarten enrolled at the university, including some who are supported by the Provost’s Latin America/Caribbean Merit Scholarship. Through this scholarship, the students receive a scholarship of $500 for one or two semesters and classification as a Florida resident for tuition purposes, during the semester(s) of the scholarship.
St. Maarten’s Education, Culture, Youth and Sport Minister, Wycliffe Smith, told the local newspaper that the relationship between St. Maarten and Tallahassee is strong.
“Our students are given such care and special treatment, it is as close as it gets to having a ‘home away from home,’” Smith told The Daily Herald. “This is all possible because of the work done by key persons in both territories over the years.”