Submitted by Heather Cole

For want of a nail the shoe was lost.
For want of a shoe the horse was lost.
For want of a horse the rider was lost.
For want of a rider the battle was lost.
For want of a battle the kingdom was lost.
And all for the want of a horseshoe nail. -Unknown

In essence this rhyme is about a seemingly unimportant act that can lead to grave consequences. Some call it the effects of causation others the chain of causality.

In our scenario, there is no nail, no horse, no rider, or kingdom to be lost. Instead we have stolen vehicles, a check, a murder and guns and drugs. We have discovered a chain that has blown the cover of the New Triangular Trade.

Since we have established in the last article that vehicles were removed from the Bridgetown Port without the proper paperwork, we have learnt that disassembled vehicles are now part of the trade. One reader wanted a story done on what happens at Transtec. They informed that one of those luxury vehicles regularly receives service there.

Our scenario starts with the check. Payment by a check to be precise. An act so trivial but lead to a chain of events. Had the payment been in cash, an Englishman would not be dead but I am skipping ahead of myself. Checks are traceable. Checks contains names, dollar amounts, bank names, account numbers and check numbers. More than likely the Englishman who had already exchanged the vehicle for the check would have had to return to England to deposit it, if his bank did not accept deposits by taking a picture of the check with his phone. We do not know if this was done. Even if the check was deposited by phone, it still had to clear the bank unless he had deposits to cover the amount of the check. We do not know the date on the check. One wonders with the Englishman still on the island how he would get access to that amount of cash to make his payment. Did he have a local bank account? Was the check written on the day of his untimely demise? No one has borne the burden of proof that this check does NOT exist.

Cash is the “legal” tender for the underground, not checks. So, there was therefore no cash to pay for his purchase which we have not been able to confirm if it was guns or drugs or a combination of both but for the lack of cash, an Englishman was beaten to death. One wonders if the person who exchanged the check for the vehicle is aware that they had ultimately signed the death warrant for the Englishman. However, that is speculative without a known motive but a complicity still remains.

We know that a stash of guns or drugs or of both guns and drugs were already delivered to the Englishman that were not paid for. It is unknown if the police have recovered that stash or if they have already left the island. We know that the police have 5 men on remand for his murder.

There is a crisis in Venezuela that has led to a lack of food and money. There has been well documented evidence is both Guyana and Trinidad of instances where Venezuelans have been caught as they tried to sell guns in those respective territories. Guns are not manufactured in Barbados yet they now becoming increasingly available.

The mere fact that there is an abundance of guns on the local market means that the Venezuelans have already established trade here.

A triangular trade is trade between three ports or countries. When sugar was King a few centuries ago, that term was used to reference the removal of millions of peoples from West Africa to work under the conditions of slavery to produce sugar which was shipped across the Atlantic creating a class of wealthy individual who became known as sugar barons and the Plantocracy.

The story an Englishman being murdered in Barbados is therefore part of a clandestine activity that can be termed the New Triangular Trade. The guns and drugs are going elsewhere because the local demand on the market for drugs has not changed. Barbados is too small to make the gun trade within the island profitable. So most likely than not, it is being used as a trans-shipment point to Europe and North America for both guns and drugs.

What the Englishman’s murder has brought to light is a lucrative underworld trade of luxury vehicles, guns and drugs. We do not know who all the players are. The only things we know for sure is that the new trade is creating a new class of wealth owners; is bringing destruction by gun violence; and that guns are the “new sugar” coming straight outta Venezuela.

60 responses to “A Heather Cole Column – The New Triangular Trade?”


  1. @Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. September 30, 2017 at 1:12 PM “Lol…I dont think cassava thieves read BU”

    Just used my last piece of cassava with some lentil soup.

    The cassava which I planted is not ready yet.

    Thanks for telling me this.

    Lol


  2. @Bush Tea September 30, 2017 at 5:06 AM “but Henry Ford really started it – by allowing Arthur to become PM “because he could not find a job to support his family’.”

    Unless I am beginning to forget.

    When Owen became the leader of the BLP and subsequently PM

    His mother was already dead.

    His father was in good health.

    His wife was a nurse working for her own living.

    He had no [known] children.

    So what is this I am hearing about needing a job to support family?

    What family?


  3. Frustrated Businessman

    By what management magic is anyone able to operate a tourist hotel in Barbados without providing foreign exchange to the banking system?

    Explain to me how a businessman meets local payroll and pays his utility bills while keeping all the foreign exchange from his foreign guests in overseas bank accounts.


  4. Chad,

    Many local hotels have their charges paid overseas. Some English friends of mine stayed in a West Coast hotel and the charges were paid to a company in Atlanta. We get the tourists, but we do not get the money.
    Moneylaundering has many facets. You can buy property at an official low price, to satisfy the tax man, then pay the agreed remaining money in an off shore account.

  5. Talking Loud Saying Nothing Avatar
    Talking Loud Saying Nothing

    @ Tron September 30, 2017 at 7:48 AM,

    I know that you are relatively “new” to BU, however, many years ago on BU i made the suggestion that the private motor vehicle should be banned in Barbados; and that we should adopt the tram as our main form of transport. As you should know we use to have a train service that operated along the east coast of the island.

    As a UK born Bajan it is very difficult to air one’s views about Barbados especially when the majority of Bajans consider the British diaspora as being slightly mad. Barbados remains a conservative environment devoid of any revolutionary cutting edge ideas. I prefer to leave you guys to continue developing in your own slow and backward ways. Who knows perhaps Barbados will catch up with the rest of the world whilst at the same time developing a unique model which will allow her to maintain her sovereignty.

    (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fsEnfjMXiAs)


  6. Talking Loud,

    Constant dripping wears away the stone!

  7. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    Barbados does not see the bulk of money from tourism, only to pay salaries and overheads, the balance of the money stays offshore, not benefitting the island…in essence, every hotel built with overblown deception, creates a couple hundred lowpaying jobs…and that’s it, it’s the countries where the owner’s bank accounts are domiciled, benefits from hotels operating in Barbados.

    One would think that Chadster the pretend genius would know this.


  8. Frustrated Businessman: Animal Farm sequel playing out in Bim. September 30, 2017 at 8:14 AM #

    Accurate.


  9. Lol when you enter barbados they always ask where are you staying.Do you think anyone has actually taken the time to add up the days someone has stayed at a particular residence and pass it on to the govt tax people so they can be given a bill. I am sure they only use those figures to say how many hotel,condo,guest house stays. Time to put some people on this and get that revenue.
    ccc isnt a bad rating ww is worse


  10. […] was always about money. So it will not go away so easily, perhaps not at all. In my last article The New Triangular Trade, the Frustrated Business Man wrote that there was no evidence to support part of my analysis. He […]

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