Prime Minister Mia Mottley shows off a Kensington Oval ready for T20 World Cup

A disappointment the blogmaster holds of the incumbent DLP government of ten years is the inability to communicate forthrightly with Barbadians.  Whether at a personal or impersonal level, without clear communication, a wholesome relationship will be elusive. What is the state of the foreign reserves, important to infusing investor confidence? Why has the governmentagain withheld the IMF report from the citizenry?

The following message was posted to the timeline of leader of the Opposition Mia Mottley. It is a message worthy of unpacking for a BU discussion made so in a poorly performing economy. We eagerly await the Quarterly Economic Review of the newly installed Governor of the Central Bank of Barbados.

Zip it Minister Sinckler!

Stop fooling Bajans.

When discussing the state of Barbados’s international reserves earlier this week, Minister Sinckler urged people not to panic. We would concur that panic is seldom a productive reaction. However, the Minister fails to understand that the Government’s practice of infrequent release of information itself breeds distrust and fear. This Government seems surprised that, even at a time of national crisis, the people of Barbados would want even monthly updates.

Minister Sinckler, if there is no need for noted regional economists, such as Ms. Dukharan, to be concerned, then why has the Government refused to release the 2017 Article IV report approved by the Executive Board of the IMF in January? The publication of Article IV reports is widely considered around the world to be sound practice in terms supporting transparency in economic policy-making and strong investor relations. It is only troubled governments, fearful of the political fallout of IMF criticism, that shun publication. While we have been the first to question prescriptions of austerity, we believe that transparency and openness to debate are essential in our democracy (and we note that the IMF Article IV reports from the BLP years are available online for all to scrutinise). What is in the document that Minister Sinckler does not want people to find out as elections loom?

Minister Sinckler, if there is no need for ordinary Barbadians not privy to ‘the facts’ to worry, then why are there rumours circulating that the Central Bank is desperately knocking on doors, pleading with financial institutions to pledge their foreign assets and those of their clients in order to allow the Central Bank to then use these assets to raise emergency external on a secured basis? When the Central Bank reports on the first quarter results later this month, will it confirm these last-ditch schemes, which skirt the Parliamentary approval process, or deny them?

Minister Sinckler, reserves are now at a crisis level of 6 weeks’ worth of imports – half the CBB’s target: if the people are not panic, they will need to have not just the facts, but also the details of how the Government plans to save our dollar. This plan must be a credible one that goes to the heart of our economic malaise, and not one that pathetically relies on uncertain, one-off fire-sales of Barbados’s national assets for a temporary recovery in reserve levels.

The Minister is totally out of his depth. He is swimming in waters too deep. I am Not having a debate with Chris Sinckler on the economy. He is looking for a political landing platform.

The Governor of the Central Bank needs to take notice – he must decide which God is he serving, Barbados or the Minister of Finance. The Governor of the Central Bank is a servant of the people – not a creature of the Minister of Finance.

To tell us that the country is good because the reserves are at $420m – only $10 million more than December 31 – . is to distract when he knows that the trajectory is going downward; when he and everyone else in the financial sector locally knows that the Central Bank has been desperately seeking to get a loan of US$100 million and asking people to bring back home their second tier reserves.

Chris you are swimming in waters too deep for you – you need to stop it and zip it up and stop fooling people.
The Minister needs to speak plainly to the country but, maybe, that is what he is afraid of.

Barbadians need to be told:-

  1. How many times you have been written by the same Governor of the Central Bank with respect to the state of affairs. And when? Has he not told you that there is an urgent need to seek foreign financing to support the reserves given the delays in your planned divestments and the high levels of foreign debt financing the country must face.
  2. Why you as Minister of Finance will not release the IMF Article IV Report for last year.
  3. That there were no foreign debt payments in March unlike February; and that when combined with the inflows from CDB/IDB meant that there was no decline in what would otherwise be higher receipts in March. Bajans need to know that there will be more than $330 million in foreign debt payments in the next 12 months – provided that there are no further downgrades – BUT THE official projected foreign exchange inflows are less than $100 million.
  4. That even with that, the increase in March 2018 is less than half of what the incerease was in March 2017.
  5. What will be our fate in June? How much foreign debt must be paid in the month of June? Is it not more than 3 times what we had to pay in foreign debt payments in February. Do we not have to pay $120m in foreign debt payments, immediately after the date by which the election must be held?
  6. Is there a Central Bank projection that places the worst case scenario of our Reserves as low as $100 million in December 2018.

The Governor of the Central Bank must speak plainly to Barbadians and not allow a Minister with an electoral interest to serve to paint a picture with his blue-Coloured lenses.

The Minister is consumed with telling us that his policies are working. That is his only interest. The Minister is taking figures out of context deliberately. It reminds me of the story once told in Parliament of the man who jumped out the skyscraper from 120th floor and when he passed the 30th floor he said “So far so good”.

This notion that better cannot be done is a nonsense. And too much mock sport is now being made of Bajans and the state of our country.

Our Debt was unsustainable for years now. And we have said it – Clyde, Ryan, Marsha, myself – the former PM, Minister Estwick and independent economists.

There is a way out of this, of our economic malaise.l We have said over and over we will do whatever makes sense to the local, regional and international community and economists. But we need to see the data – unvarnished. We need ALL of the facts – all of the arrears.

If things are getting better why has the PM abruptly ended negotiations with unions.

Why is it that your boast of VAT Returns causes us to ponder? Some people may have had VAT returns paid but at what costs? Some say 20% 30% – I don’t know. What I do know is that Not Everyone is getting their returns.

Look Barbadians need independent data so that they may understand how serious the country is. What are our true vital statistics? The blood pressure improving early in the morning and then dropping dangerously low again by the next day or next week cannot be used as a measurement that the patient is out of the woods and is recovering. The truth is the underlying bleeding will resume with a vengeance in June and December. And we have not prepared for those moments.

The Minister needs to release the 2017 IMF Article IV REPORT TO THE PUBLIC.

Equally the Governor must ensure that he is not put in an awkward or invidious position. The Minister is trying to write the Governor’s Quarterly Report for April for him. He is putting the pressure on the Governor causing people to believe the Nation’s back page story of the IDB Report that places our Central Bank at the bottom of the pack when it comes to independence and transparency of Central Banks – a horrendous 84th place out of 89. Now you know why I have pledged for the last 4 years to deal with the independence of the Bank. The Governor needs to tell the country what he has written under sections 25 and 48 to say.

Whether there can only be recovery of reserves if the sale of assets.

Whether the Bank is warning that there will have to be more printing of money or building up of arrears or both to meet both the domestic deficit and foreign debt payments.

Independent economists, who the minister is intent on attacking, must not take fear. They must continue to speak truth to power about the state of our economy.

This Minister is out of his depth and really needs to zip it. It is no longer cute to be trifling with our economic well being – we cannot be the props to his re-election campaign.

Barbadians need the facts as they get ready to make decisions about their future in the upcoming elections.
We need to get on with our lives and let us all get on with the business of fixing this country.

4th April 2018

114 responses to “Mia Tells Sinckler to ‘Zip it’”


  1. P

    On Tue, Apr 10, 2018, 9:04 PM Barbados Underground wrote:

    > David posted: “A disappointment the blogmaster holds of the incumbent DLP > government of ten years is the inability to communicate forthrightly with > Barbadians. Whether at a personal or impersonal level, without clear > communication, a wholesome relationship will be elus” >


  2. Barbadians ADD loans in forex to their reserves instead of SUBTRACTING the interest for these loans and NEUTRALIZING the loan itself. When I borrow 1 million USD, I have to pay back the loan PLUS interest. So I am poorer than before.

    B I G M I S T A K E.
    A LOAN is no positive asset for the sake of accounting!!! Also not in economy and law. Get that right.

    In the future, Barbadian men must prepare themselves for a nice Arabian or Guyanese pegging instead of a dollar peg.


  3. Absolute hog wash !

    Three choices.
    1. Float bajan dollar
    2. Scrap bajan dollar
    3. Use £ € or $ as legal tender

    Or return to bartering
    Chicken for flying fish

    Says simple simon

  4. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    An absolute waste of time. The average voter doesn’t understand or give a damn about the island’s financial affairs.
    Do not expect now at the 11th hour, anything to change. We all know the Article IV report isn’t good, one only need read the final paragraph of the IMF Directors report
    “Directors emphasized that stronger and deeper structural reforms are critical to unlock the economy’s growth potential and maintain macroeconomic stability. They underscored that reforms should focus on strengthening the business environment, facilitating economic diversification, and improving the efficiency and effectiveness of public service delivery. Directors supported the authorities’ efforts in improving the timeliness and quality of economic data.”
    NONE of this is NEW?


  5. Exactly,

    The Barbadian masses are clueless and needy. They still think they are the master race of the Caribbean while Jamaicans and Guyanese laugh about them and nobody takes Barbadian economists seriously anymore. I was also told that EU is considering to rescind the visa waiver for Barbados since they fear mass emigration.

    Only empty shelves in the supermarket, lack of medicine and fuel and the necessity for civil servants to go into prostitution will change their minds.

    The DLP will fish at least 40 % of the votes and catch at least 10 seats in parliament, given that the local population is highly uneducated when it comes to financial matters. Also: Do not forget the very many DLP civil servants who will do everything to sabotage economic recovery after next elections.


  6. Crooks do not communicate their intentions.


  7. Surprisingly on the eve of a general election one would have reasonably expected for a matter like this to hold traction. We allow the politicians to mamaguy. There is no financial intelligence capacity demonstrated by local media.


  8. @Tron
    “The DLP will fish at least 40 % of the votes and catch at least 10 seats in parliament.”
    Only 10????

    @David
    “We allow the politicians to mamaguy.”
    And thus it has been for time immemorial.

    Employment OR Economic Growth OR Social Services – Pick one, can’t get all.

    Just observing


  9. In the first pass the poll system a % of the vote is not the best indicator of wins and losses.


  10. @David

    Wily has come to the conclusion that the MAJORITY of the BU family understand the seriousness of the Barbarian political situation. It’s unfortunate however we all have corrective ideas and suggestions, that we apparently do not know how to effectively instill on the populace and politicians. It is becoming increasing apparent that a total failure of the Barbadian economic and political system maybe the only corrective measures that will be effective. In all senarios the social lifestyle of ALL BAJANS is going to be downgraded and social unrest will result. The only question is will Barbados ever recover to an assemlance of it’s past stature.


  11. Hey Donville…. Ya got enough balls ta publicly tell Bajans who is the real enemy of the state?……ask Kelly.


  12. Wily – “BARBARIAN POLITICAL SITUATION” Spot on!!

  13. Frustrated Businessman: Animal Farm sequel playing out in Bim. Avatar
    Frustrated Businessman: Animal Farm sequel playing out in Bim.

    Wily Coyote April 11, 2018 6:18 AM

    It is becoming increasing apparent that a total failure of the Barbadian economic and political system maybe the only corrective measures that will be effective. In all senarios the social lifestyle of ALL BAJANS is going to be downgraded and social unrest will result. The only question is will Barbados ever recover to an assemlance of it’s past stature.

    ……………………………………………………..

    The biggest threat to our post-2018 economy is the 2013 – 2018 divestment of Bajan businesses from said economy. We did our best to weather the 2008 – 2013 lunacy but no-one with any economic sense could believe Fumble’s Fools would have won the 2013 election.

    There was never any chance of economic recovery under Fumble’s teefin’ Fools. That set business survival tactics in motion, mainly local preservation and foreign expansion. Shore up the fort to protect what you have and send out patrols to get more.

    Mia’s biggest challenges will be enticing foreign and local business investment back here through a massive civil service shake-up and consequential business facilitation and providing the FX to fuel consequential renewed growth.

    If this country is to be taken seriously again, prosecution of the corrupt will be necessary.

    All the people who matter to the economy understand the situation. The idiots who voted for the DLP in 2013 do not but I think most of them have felt the consequences.


  14. Fruendolittle and his gang won the 2013 election with the collusion of Cambridge Analytica and all the corruption that entailed… I was stunned when I heard they were reelected back then, I dont think the electorate is that uninformed or misled now.


  15. Here listening to some person sending a message to VOB about sending home 7500 people from the civil service and saying typical to myself in the box solution that has not been working. I believe done right 40% of the civil service can work from home and save government millions of dollars in rent and building upkeep. We continue to do the same thing over and over and expect a different result.


  16. Telecommuting has been around for couple decades, but when you have backward small island government ministers whose sole purpose in life is to suppress the progress of the country and people so they can engage in continuous corruption to enrich themselves, that is what you are left with…an antiquated, totally outdated, taxpayer funded money sucking civil service…mostly filled with useless, unproductive yardfowls.

  17. Frustrated Businessman: Animal Farm sequel playing out in Bim. Avatar
    Frustrated Businessman: Animal Farm sequel playing out in Bim.

    The Bajan civil service have been the ‘elephant in the room’ for the past 30 years.

    Good governments work around them to keep us moving forward.

    Fumble’s teefin’ gov’t take advantage of their uselessness to extort bribes.

    No-one has yet put forward any tangible ways of solving the problem. Even ISO9000 implementation ideas aren’t backed up with remedies and punishments for failing to meet standards.


  18. Under Grenville’s delusions and with the Weatherhead cockroaches in the background, corruption and tiefing from the majority population will be taken to a whole nother level…multiple people have already voiced those concerns on Facebook no less.

    ISO is meant for leadership and management who actually know what they are doing, it was not designed for a den of thieves.


  19. @ Roverp

    Prior to the 2008 election the EPD occupied the buildings of the old hospital on Jemmott’s Lane. Sometime after the election (around 2009 i think) they were moved to the NUPW building (Dalkeith).

    Want to hazard a guess as to how much they pay the NUPW in rent per month

    The truth is salaries have not increased since this administration took power but transfers and subsidies have exploded.

    Reigning in the transfers and subsidies will be met with fierce resistance from the civil servants and the benefactors like the NUPW

  20. Frustrated Businessman: Animal Farm sequel playing out in Bim. Avatar
    Frustrated Businessman: Animal Farm sequel playing out in Bim.

    Redguard April 11, 2018 3:27 PM

    @ Roverp

    The truth is salaries have not increased since this administration took power but transfers and subsidies have exploded.

    Reigning in the transfers and subsidies will be met with fierce resistance from the civil servants and the benefactors like the NUPW

    ………………………………………………………

    Much worse situation at new BWA Pine offices and SSA Vaucluse offices, both BOLT arrangements with plenty steal in the buildings.

    Statutory corporations are rife with teefin’, tender legislation doesn’t apply to them.

    All must go.

    Bajans have had enough.


  21. By any review of the poor performance of the DLP administration, every DLP candidate deserves to lose his or her deposit. Yet such foolishness as “Mara is a good woman, she does bring me corn beef and groceries” abounds and may cause some of the DLP scamps to get elected.


  22. It is a myth that a bloated civil service can be tamed, can be transformed into a highly productive unit.

    Check Parkinson’s law of triviality. Only a small civil service will be productive, will facilitate private business.

    The next gov has to make a hard decision: Either to sacrifice the whole country for the sake of the civil service or to shrink the civil service from the present abnormal size to a size more suitable for a country with zero growth and a very high debt load.

    Time is running out. Forex depleted in December 2018.


  23. Barbados must be the island equivalent of the Al Capp character “Joe Btlsplk” who appeared in the Lil Abner comic strip. Joe was the worlds worst jinx and whenever he appeared there was a dark cloud hovering overhead. The latest dark cloud is the Supreme Court building which is now said to be overrun with mould which resulted in the staff downing their tools and abandon their desks. This is a new building that should still have the “new car smell” and is already an environmental concern.

    Would the last person leaving turn off the lights.


  24. This is a BOLT building isn’t it, constructed when Mia was AG with direct responsibility?


  25. @Sargeant April 11, 2018 8:48 PM

    I assume for the Supreme Court that a) the A/C does not work properly or was switched off to save energy, b) the windows are super-tight and do not let in fresh air and c) they did not open the windows regularly to let in fresh air.

    It is really sad to read that the so-called local elite cannot handle simple things like shi… and A/C. And that 52 years AFTER independence in the early 21st century, not ONE year after emancipation in the 1830s. Every smart owner of a villa in Barbados with proper, sealed windows knows how to handle A/C and fresh air. Marston Gibson and his registrar are obviously not amongst these smart locals. Does Gibson know at all how to drive his silver Mercedes or does he also need some foreign helper to sort it out?


  26. Today’s Barbados Today editorial. There is a long memory.

    #BTEditorial – Ms Mottley’s uncertain road to Ilaro Court

    If the events of October 2010 are to be used as a gauge, Opposition Leader Mia Mottley could possibly find herself in a win-lose situation after the next general election. It is public knowledge that not every member of her current political team has always lined up behind her. And in the weeks leading up to the general election, there might be concerns among her ardent supporters that even if the national poll favours her, the majority of her parliamentary colleagues might not do so.

    Among those remaining from the 2010 palace coup that saw her removal as Opposition Leader are St George North MP Gline Clarke, St Andrew MP George Payne, St Joseph MP Dale Marshall and St Michael North MP Ronald Toppin – all highly influential personalities within the Barbados Labour Party and who previously dangled the sword of Damocles above Miss Mottley’s head. Returning candidate and then Christ Church West MP Dr William Duguid did not sack the battlement with his colleagues at that time.

    There has also been an uneasy relationship between St James Central MP Kerrie Symmonds and Miss Mottley. Following the Barbados Labour Party’s defeat in the 2008 general election, Mr Symmonds, a losing candidate, was selected to be an Opposition Senator. However, following a personal incident, Miss Mottley announced on August 14, 2009, that Mr Symmonds had resigned from the Senate. But, on March 16, 2010, Mr Symmonds publicly refuted Miss Mottley’s suggestion while at a meeting at the then St James Secondary School stating that his resignation had been “eagerly sought and accepted”. The St James Central MP while extolling the leadership qualities of former Prime Minister Owen Arthur at the meeting, said then that there were some in the higher echelons of the party who were “wasting their time and intellectual energy.” His reference was palpably clear.

    Like Messrs Toppin, Clarke, Payne and Marshall, Mr Symmonds is a highly influential and important member of the Barbados Labour Party. Indeed, there are many who view him as a potential leader of the party, if not now, sometime in the future.

    In November 2015, following the impasse between the Opposition Leader and Christ Church West MP Dr Maria Agard, and the latter’s subsequent expulsion from the party, MP George Payne was publicly supportive of Miss Agard. He expressed his belief that she would be the party’s representative in the next general election and suggested that she should sue his Barbados Labour Party over her expulsion. Though indicating that there was no resultant rift in the party from Miss Agard’s expulsion, Mr Payne told the media: “I am not aware of any rift in the party. It is a political party, it is not a Sunday school. There is no rift in the BLP. There might be one individual in the Labour Party who might be causing certain things to happen but I am not saying there is any rift.” To whom he was referring as “causing certain things to happen” was not lost on many within earshot.

    At the time of Miss Mottley’s ouster from the leadership of the Barbados Labour Party in 2010, Mr Payne explained to the media that the action was taken because the majority of the Opposition’s parliamentary group “had no confidence” in Miss Mottley. Subsequently, three years later, Miss Mottley was returned to the leadership of the party following another general election defeat with an eight to five split of the parliamentary vote.

    But, if as late British Prime Minister Harold Wilson once noted that a week is a long time in politics, then a three-year period is even longer. Much could have transpired within the inner circle of the Barbados Labour Party. Fences might have been mended, the infusion of new blood into the party might have brought different perspectives and led to the creation and strengthening of new allegiances. At the time of the great pain inflicted on Miss Mottley, the likes of St Thomas MP Cynthia Forde stood by her side. Though not a member of the parliamentary group at that time, St Michael East incumbent Trevor Prescod has been a faithful lieutenant to Miss Mottley. In the midst of the hurly-burly of the political game, there have been some who have been unflinchingly loyal to Miss Mottley.

    But the proverb of once bitten, twice shy cannot be ignored. And as an intelligent, ambitious and quite capable politician, Miss Mottley can be forgiven if due to the unpleasant experiences of 2010, she is inclined not to take anything or anyone for granted going into the imminent general election. Across the divide, her actual political foes are Prime Minister Freundel Stuart and his Democratic Labour Party colleagues. But standing behind her could be some who provide an equal threat to her ambition to become Barbados’ first female Prime Minister. Could there be a situation brewing where Miss Mottley wins but still loses? The next few weeks will provide the answers.

  27. Frustrated Businessman: Animal Farm sequel playing out in Bim. Avatar
    Frustrated Businessman: Animal Farm sequel playing out in Bim.

    Tron April 11, 2018 4:16 PM

    It is a myth that a bloated civil service can be tamed, can be transformed into a highly productive unit.

    Check Parkinson’s law of triviality. Only a small civil service will be productive, will facilitate private business.

    The next gov has to make a hard decision: Either to sacrifice the whole country for the sake of the civil service or to shrink the civil service from the present abnormal size to a size more suitable for a country with zero growth and a very high debt load.

    …………………………………………………………………………….

    But here is the contradiction:

    There is hardly a civil servant who is paid enough to save anything.

    That means that every cent paid to them in salaries and wages is instantly re-cycled back into the economy. The loss of civil service jobs will immediately result in economic contraction.

    The statutory corporations and other non-producing, money-pit gov’t assets hold the key.

    UCAL was supposed to be the gov’t privatisation model. BTB workshop employees were given the choice of either taking severance cash and walking or investing that cash into shares in the new company. This model can still work without political meddling.


  28. Good point Frustrated Businessman, it is all connected. Careful scenario planning is required.


  29. @David

    “Good point Frustrated Businessman, it is all connected. Careful scenario planning is required.”

    It’s a point, however it’s NOT GOOD. Everyone except for a few idiots know the civil service is bloated beyond reason and has to be reduced. Yes there will be significant severe impacts however this medicine is necessary for patient survival. Barbados has dug itself into a deep hole from which it will be difficult to climb out of. Surplus money in circulation is the problem and defenitely not a solution. We all agree the impacts will not be pleasant however it’s time to BITE THE BULLET and move on.

  30. Frustrated Businessman: Animal Farm sequel playing out in Bim. Avatar
    Frustrated Businessman: Animal Farm sequel playing out in Bim.

    Wily, don’t confuse a ‘good point’ with a ‘good situation’; in this case my point, as you infer, represents a grave danger.

    Let’s assume that 2/3 of monthly gov’t costs are civil services and 1/3 are statutory corporation subventions.

    Business people in Bim would be happy to pay 2/3 of the taxes we do if there was real civil service facilitation that would increase business efficiency by 20%. They don’t need to be fired if they would just do their jobs.

    The real money pits are the statutory corporations for inefficiency, unwanted goods and services, gov’t meddling, unfair competition in the economy and outright teefin’.

    That was my point. The statutory coprporations are the real problem.


  31. @Frustrated Businessman: Animal Farm sequel playing out in Bim.
    April 12, 2018 7:05 AM

    Frustrated,

    Agreed that a transition period of five years is preferable to shrink the public service and to privatize statutory corps.

    However, little was done during the past ten years to transform Barbados from a socialist welfare state to a modern, open economy. When the reserves are gone at the end of the year, as MAM predicts, there will be no time for any transition.

    Either cut off the inflamed limb or die.


  32. The issue is not that the public service is bloated. It is how does one modify the existing and not cause the damn thing to crash. Some are saying, like the Governor to slash by thousands, the merger packages given will be enough to mitigate the problem. The blogmaster says bullshit.


  33. Again, there is the political reality that BOTH political parties have engaged in padding the public service because it is the only tool the duopoly in Barbados has used as the avenue to sustain popularity by rewarding party faithfuls.

    Incumbents will retrench when there is no choice read the economy is tanking.


  34. @Tron

    We can blame Marston for some things but we shouldn’t blame him for building maintenance or shoddy construction. This is a part of a systemic failure in Barbados note the issues with NIS building, Treasury building and the formerly Custom building now hosting the Immigration Dept. A few years ago I used to walk around the Gymnasium and I noticed the building was deteriorating, I haven’t been there recently but I heard it has reopened after being closed for “repairs” , perhaps the Parliament building is one of those “sick” buildings but we will never know as the MP’s don’t spend much time there.

  35. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    From the time the uselessly weak government brought Cambridge Amalytica into the last general election, they sealed their own fates and any future control blacks had on the island is less than tentative.

    Sputnik the russian mediabis very in tune with every news item coming out of Barbados and are broadcasting it across europe and on facebook…ordinarily they would not give 2 shits.

    Black politicians are their own worse enemies, they had control of the island for decades, instead of building a strong base to benefit everyone, particularly their own people, they played fast and loose, greedy, deceitful and corrupt, using extortion and bribery for self enrichment…..now it is not easy to tell who actually has control of the island, although I have very strong suspicions but it is becoming very clear that the ministers and politicians dont, whatever little grip they had left, is gone, they lost control …… unless a new government legislate and enforce new laws to get the intruders the DLP idiots let in, gone from the island..

    From Sputnik:

    “Sputnik International
    all editions
    15:24 GMT +312 APRIL 2018SEARCH
    LIVE:

    Barbados Freed to Kill Again? Convicted Murderer Arrested in Caribbean Over Woman’s Death
    EUROPE
    14:30 09.04.2018(updated 15:25 09.04.2018)
    Get short URL
    220
    A convicted murderer who attacked a teenage girl and then spent more than 20 years in a British prison for killing a man has been charged with another murder on the Caribbean island of Barbados.

    Lawrence Mullin, 58, has been charged with murdering Laura Springer, 56, whose body was found at her home in the small town of Christ Church on March 19.

    Mrs. Springer’s daughter became suspicious after her mother failed to answer phone calls and police learned a man had been seen running away from her house a few hours after the last time she was seen alive.

    Barbados-born Mullin was deported from England three years ago after serving 21 years of a life sentence for a horrific murder in Essex.

    Essex Police’s newspaper reports Mullins’ conviction in 1994
    © PHOTO: ESSEX POLICE
    Essex Police’s newspaper reports Mullins’ conviction in 1994
    Horrific crime in 1993

    In March 1993, Barry Bradford was attacked in the grounds of Highwood Hospital in Brentwood, just outside London.

    Mullin, who is also known as Mullins, stabbed him several times in the throat and chest, stripped him from the waist down and stamped on his head.

    He then threw mud over Mr. Bradford’s face and, in a sinister ritual, placed a single daffodil on either side of the dead man’s head.

    When police arrested Mullin they learned he had also attacked a 16-year-old girl in a similar random attack.

    Pulled Teenage Girl’s Teeth Out
    The girl, who never recovered enough to be able to give a statement to police, had teeth literally pulled out of her mouth by Mullin during the barbaric attack.

    “You are plainly an extremely dangerous man. I will recommend to the Home Secretary that you are imprisoned for many, many years,” the judge, Lord McPherson, told Mullin.

    He was sentenced to life in prison with a minimum tariff of 20 years.

    Detective Superintendent Malcolm Hargreaves, who led the investigation into Mr. Bradford’s murder, described Mullins as “evil”.

    He is not the first killer to have been freed only to be accused of more crimes.

    Mullin has been remanded in custody and is expected to go on trial later this year. Barbados does have the death penalty but sentences are usually commuted to life by the Privy Council in London, which is the ultimate court of appeal.”


  36. There are always several critical comments about the “bloated” Civil Service to which I respond “Be careful what you wish for you might get it”.

    The Civil Service isn’t the only institution that is “bloated” there are many instances where private industry can be considered “bloated”, I am not going to list the instances (don’t want to give any smart person ideas) but I saw them every day.
    If we reduce the Civil service and those private Industries to mean, lean fighting machines think of the human toll that would exact. If we are unhappy with shit flowing in the streets, how would we deal with blood flowing in the gutters from a violent army of unemployed people?

    We don’t want a repeat of the headline “Barbados, no blasted paradise”

  37. Frustrated Businessman: Animal Farm sequel playing out in Bim. Avatar
    Frustrated Businessman: Animal Farm sequel playing out in Bim.

    All that is necessary to solve the civil service problem is proper management and the ability to hire and fire based on merit.

    This cannot happen without the support of the unions.

    I maintain that civil service numbers do not need to be culled.

    All the savings that need to be made can come from shedding statutory corporations and leasing of attendant gov’t assets.

    BWU supported the clsure of the BTB workshop because it represented a saleable ‘free-market’ opportunity in UCAL which was actually further gov’t subvention in the form of BTB maintenance contracts.

    We all know gov’t has no maintenance capability. So why do we allow them to acquire assets at our expense?

    The purpose of gov’t is to LEGISLATE, REGULATE AND FACILITATE, NOT OPERATE.


  38. I maintain that civil service numbers do not need to be culled.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    Well said Frustrated B.
    But you cannot expect brass bowls to grasp that kind of thinking.

    There is no way on God’s Earth that it could ever make sense to cull a workforce if it was productive, creative and innovative.
    Culling ONLY makes sense where we are dealing with infected, diseased, unproductive, stagnant brass bowls.
    By focusing on culling, we are admitting that we are INCAPABLE of being productive.

    “PROPER MANAGEMENT” is the concept of releasing the inherent productivity of the human potential
    This CANNOT be executed by idiots, morons, mendicant dimwits or political yardfowls.

    In sum.
    The REAL solution for Barbados is to identify and to implement – wise, competent, proven and measurable MANAGEMENT systems -based on merit.
    …..shiite, the workforce may even grow….

    Instead, we have opted for the dregs of our society – idiots who could not even manage to pass the damn 11+; who never managed ANYTHING successfully before in their ENTIRE lives; ….and handed them the role of ‘management of the country’ …

    …and now that they have failed miserably – we are looking to prostitutes and pimps.
    What does THAT say about us….?

    Wuh…
    If a fool and his money are soon parted … what the hell would you expect of a fool and OUR money…?


  39. Like ISO 9001 Bushie?


  40. “UCAL was supposed to be the gov’t privatisation model. BTB workshop employees were given the choice of either taking severance cash and walking or investing that cash into shares in the new company.

    Frustrated Businessman: Animal Farm sequel playing out in Bim

    Yes, I agree “This model can still work without political meddling.”

    “Without the political meddling,” Michael Lashley, as the minister responsible for the Transport Board, would not have had the opportunity to systematic attempt to destroy UCAL. Majority of the work once undertaken by UCAL is being outsourced to other businesses, especially one owned by an individual that is known to the minister.

    The Transport Board could be privatized as well…….government does not need to be involved in transport services to maintain buses fares at $2 or allowing senior citizens and police officers to travel free, for example.

    Government also “missed the ball” when they refused to give retrenched workers from Beautify Barbados and NCC the opportunity to invest and operate Beautify Barbados, rather than outsource the operations to a company owned by Mark Maloney……or these workers could have been in incorporated in any agreement with Maloney.

    But you will also have to look at SOE that provide similar services, such as National Assistance Board, Urban & Rural Development Commissions, National Housing Corporation, Constituency Councils and the Poverty Alleviation Fund.
    The services now being rendered by the UDC & RDC were once undertaken by the National Assistance Board, under the Housing Welfare Program……..which was closed to facilitate the establishment of UDC & RDC.

    Additionally, the Enterprise Growth Fund, Fund Access and the Youth Entrepreneurship Scheme provide similar services……“empowerment and development through the establishment of viable and sustainable micro and small businesses.”


  41. @FB
    “The statutory coprporations are the real problem.”

    I agree that statutory corporations are part of the problem, however the bloated under performing civil service is the major part of the problem. Take at look at properly functioning countries and compared their civil services numbers to Barbados with respect to total population,and you’ll note that Barbados has 2 to 5 times the number of civil servants as these countries. At the moment approximately 60% of the workforce in Barbados is either directly or indirectly employed and paid by the GOB. Does this 60% represent 60% of the GDP, not even close. All civil service positions and SOE must be able to show how they contribute to the GDP, if they can’t their gone.


  42. @ David
    Like ISO 9001 Bushie?
    +++++++++++++++++
    A Co-operative structure would be better, but that would require some imagination.

    ISO 9001 is more up our street – that would be a straight albino-centric copy.


  43. Dumbville can’t even comment on this one, he can’t cuss them or deny it, he can’t open his mouth, no one in the government can, not now that all their pigs and those of the KNOWN crooks in the minority business community have all come to fine market..lol

    when you sell your soul, there is always a reckoning, there are more but I know of at least one involved who is now an international person of interest.

    Damning report

    Article by
    Marlon Madden Published on
    April 11, 2018
    Proceeds from illicit activities abroad are being laundered through Barbados, according to the latest International Narcotics Control Strategy Report.

    The United States report, dated March 2018, said the information was based on a review done last year.
    “Narcotics trafficking, money laundering, and firearms trafficking are major sources of illicit funds in the country. In addition to the use of financial institutions, money is laundered through a variety of businesses and through the purchase of real estate, vehicles, vessels, and jewellery,” said the 215-page report, which pointed out that “bearer shares are not permitted [and] there are no free trade zones and no domestic or offshore casinos”.
    Barbados was one of 92 countries examined under the money laundering and financial crimes section of the 2018 report, which included the United States, as well as several Caribbean countries, including the Bahamas, Antigua and Barbuda, Dominica, Cuba, Guyana, Haiti, Jamaica, St Kitts and Nevis, St Lucia, Trinidad and Tobago, St Vincent and the Grenadines and the United States Virgin Island.

    The report described Barbados as a regional financial centre with a sizeable international business centre (IBC) presence whose “susceptibility to money laundering is primarily associated with the domestic sale of illegal narcotics and the laundering of foreign criminal proceeds.

    “There are reports of proceeds from illicit activities abroad being laundered through domestic financial institutions,” the INCSR 2018 said.

    It recalled that authorities here revoked the licences of four international businesses after they were found guilty of money laundering and corruption in other jurisdictions, including the US.

    “The Government should continue to take a more aggressive approach to conducting examinations of the financial sector and asserting more control over vetting and licensing of offshore entities,” it recommended.
    Minister of International Business Donville Inniss, who had announced last October that his ministry would be revoke the four licences, would not comment on this latest report, which pointed out that the local Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU) was administrative in nature, which “means that it does not have the capacity to do investigative work or resolve legal issues”.


  44. The human resource management (hiring, promoting, training and additionally firing) of the civil service needs to be de-centralised.

    Permanent secretaries and senior management in ministries need to be empowered and allowed to play an intimate role in how ministries are staffed, how the staff is developed. This foolishness of a Minister sending a person to a ministry for a job must stop.

    While some may argue that for a civil service the size of ours (25000) centralised HR management is necessary, I think a better approach is The ministry of the civil service provide oversight and guidance but the actually work of HR management be left up to the respective ministries.

    And most importantly Ministers should have absolutely no role in HR management.


  45. If any incoming government with ethics and integrity cannot see that this is the best and only opportunity they will ever get to clean up the corruption and criminal enterprises operating in the business sector and in government completely, put those in the business sector who have recently lost control, have been exposed worldwide to various investigating agencies and are intent on continuing to commit crimes on the island…in prison where they belong.

    Instead of Dumbville bitching and whining that they do not have the legal framework available on the island to investigate and make arrests, what the hell has the government been doing for 10 years that they never asked for Interpol or FBI help in investigations and arrests of the criminals in the business community who are all well known to everyone, it’s not like Dumbville and Adriel Nitwit et al did not know what was going on, they are all friends

    why did Dumbville et al not also as well ask other agencies that exist who are skilled at developing such
    legal and investigative frameworks….for help…they had 10 freaking years to clean this up.

    it is my hope that international warrants come down eventually and with the names of all the culprits/suspects and their enablers in the outgoing government attached…what a thing…lol


  46. No more diplomatic immunity, no more protecting minority criminals and their crimes against Bajans..what a thing..lol


  47. WHEN YA SEE CARSON C. CADOGAN…on barbadostoday website badmouthing white and Indian business people in the community…ya know the shit is well and properly turned up…the message has been received loud and care, it’s every wannabe slave master for himself, they house negros have revolted, lol, lol, hahahaa.

    house negros are revolting yall…murder..lol

    See for yaselves:

    “CARSON C. CADOGAN
    We have a very poor private sector. They wait on Govt. for everything unlike the other private sectors throughout the Caribbean. The Barbados private sector is made up largely of moaners and groaners. Complaining about everything is their stock in trade.

    Innovation is not their watch word. And strangely enough the private sector is made up largely of persons from the White Bajan plantation class and Indians who believe that they are entitled. People with only a buy and sell mentality.

    They are led by a man called CHARLES HERBERT who tried very hard to fool Bajans that 2017 was the worst year in the history of Barbados which of course was a bloody lie. And that is how the Barbados private sector spend most of their time telling lies, lies, and damn lies. No wonder they are so closely aligned with the Barbados Lying Party sometimes known as the Barbados Labour Party.”


  48. Ah guess we will see more black owned businesses in Barbados now, hundreds more, as I have been saying for the last how many years….. this day will go down in history, recorded as the day yardfowls and ministers on the island mysteriously had an epiphany ….if I did not know better, I would be wondering what caused that major and well deserved backstabbing.

    let’s call today ….

    When Ya Own House Negros Bite Ya..lol

    April 12th , 2018


  49. David

    That BT editorial was so full of crap from a biased bitter editor. Ms Mottley defeated her in the law courts so she has a vendetta against MAM.

    She is an acolyte of OSA so no surprises here. I wait to read a similar editorial on the ramblings that are going on in the DLP.

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