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Why is there a big white end of life Boeing 747- 400 aircraft, capable of carrying 490 passengers or troops 7,285 nautical miles non stop, sitting at Grantley Adams International Airport for the past month being de-registered from an FAA holding registration of N508BB to a Barbadian registration of 8P-ERI?

Research shows that this is the very same aircraft, serial number 29031 registration number B18208 that was delivered to China Airlines, a Taiwanese airline company in September 1998, and retired from service in October 2017 to long term storage at the California Logistics airport at Victorville (Aircraft Boneyard).

This aircraft was recently de-registered and re-registered as N508BB by AAR corporation in May 2018, and then transferred to a Trust company called Aero Intelligence Inc (Trustee) in April 2019.

This aircraft was then re-painted white, overhauled engines were fitted, and it was ferried from the southern California logistics airport (SCLA) at Victorville California (boneyard) on May 23rd 2019 to Phoenix sky harbor airport (PHX) Arizona, and then Ferried from Phoenix to Argyle International Airport (SVD) in St. Vincent on May 24th 2019, by Canadian company Nolinor Aviation.

It arrived in St. Vincent to great fan fare, to be delivered into the waiting arms of fledgeling Vincentian charter airline One Caribbean which is only 2 years old, and only operates a single Beechcraft 1900, 19 seater charter aircraft. Sources say that one of the owners of One Caribbean is the son of Vincentian Prime Minister Dr Ralph Gonsalves.

One Caribbean then sought to de-register and re-register this end of life Boeing 747 aircraft in St. Vincent under the Eastern Caribbean Civil Aviation Authority. However, the ECCAA said they had never registered a Boeing 747 and sought guidance from the US FAA on registration of this aircraft, since this would require oversight and maintenance to be done in accordance with ECCAA regulations.

Capt. Paul Delisle, ECCAA’s flight operations inspector, confirmed that the request to certify the 747-400 was a big step for ECCAA.

Related link:

ECCAA Seeks FAA Guidance over St. Vincent 747-400 Registration Plan

St Vincent’s First Boeing 747- 400 Now Registered In Barbados

He noted that, as the airworthiness regulator for six member nations of the English-language Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States (Antigua and Barbuda, Dominica, Grenada, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, and St Vincent), ECCAA today has oversight of six AOCs, 14 airports and just 41 aircraft. Six are helicopters—but none of the aircraft is a large commercial jet.

Delisle said ECCAA was taking a two-step approach to re-registering the One Caribbean 747-400. First, “We were discussing the whole plan with the FAA,” which originally awarded the Boeing 747-400 its type certification, he said. “We wanted concurrence” with the FAA on all matters relating to N508BB’s potential SVG certification.

One reason is that, 21 years ago, ECCAA’s predecessor certified a McDonnell Douglas DC-10-10 for the Antigua and Barbuda registry, for a company called Skyjet. However, according to Delisle, the aircraft actually was based in Belgium, from where it was leased to various carriers throughout the world.

The FAA took such a dim view of the situation that in 2002 it removed the Eastern Caribbean regulator from its list of approved Category 1 airworthiness authorities. “We had to stop that [Belgium-based] operation to get Category 1 categorization” back, said Delisle. “It’s a sensitive subject.”

It seems that following information received from One Caribbean about the purpose and use of this aircraft, as well as the information received from the FAA regarding the maintenance requirements of this aircraft, the ECCAA is not interested in registering it.

Following this development, we are reliably told that Vincentian Prime Minister Dr. Ralph Gonsalves phoned Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley and asked for her help, by having this aircraft registered in Barbados.

Barbadian colors were then painted on it’s tail; and it was ferried under dark of night to Grantley Adams International Airport, where it now sits.

We are reliably informed that Prime Minister Mia Mottley has given instructions to the Director of Civil Aviation to have this aircraft registered on the Barbados aircraft registry, despite objection from the DCA, and that this has now been completed and it is registered as 8P-ERI.

This however poses other serious issues for Barbados. Being a Barbados registered aircraft, it will need to be operated under a Barbadian commercial air carrier with a valid Air Operators Certificate (AOC). There happens to be one such Vincentian owned charter operator in Barbados called Executive air, run by Vincentian John Ackie. On a side note, John Ackie’s brother in law is currently serving time in a US prison for drug smuggling and money laundering. John’s sister still resides in Florida.

We are reliably informed that this aircraft has been licensed under Executive Air’s AOC to be operated by fledgeling Vincentian charter operator One Caribbean, and apparently re-leased to a Dubai company to move passengers and cargo between the UAE, Africa and St. Vincent.

As a Barbadian registered aircraft, this plane will have far less scrutiny than a US, Vincentian, or UAE registered aircraft. It will also require local civil aviation authorities to have oversight and sign off on all maintenance and inspections. It will require an approved maintenance program be put in place, none of which the local authorities in Barbados have experience in, for such a colossus as a Boeing 747-400. We don’t even have a hanger in Barbados large enough to house a 747 for maintenance inspections.

Why is a Dubai company going to such great lengths to conceal the true identity of the operators of this aircraft? If such a company wanted to offer 747 Charter flights between the UAE, Africa and the Caribbean, why not simply lease or purchase one directly and register it in the UAE under the UAE Alpha 6 registration?

Why would a tiny startup Vincentian air charter operator who has only ever operated a 19 seater Beechcraft turboprop aircraft, purchase or lease a near end of life Boeing 747-400 aircraft which can carry 490 people, through a trust company, register it in Barbados through a Barbados based Vincentian owned air charter company’s AOC, only to lease it to a Dubai company to do charters between the UAE, Africa and St. Vincent?

That aircraft can carry 490 people or troops, or thousands of tons of cargo, weapons or drugs over 7200 nautical miles, non-stop.

This Boeing 747-409 would be close to it’s maximum airframe life limit of 20,000 cycles for its age, is extremely uneconomical to operate, will require compliance with an extensive list of service bulletins (SB’s) and airworthiness directives (AD’s)? This type of aircraft is only useful for extremely long flights, moving large numbers of passengers and huge quantities of cargo.

It is an inordinate and uneconomical gas guzzler.

Where would any charter operator find enough passengers in the UAE who want to travel to tiny St.Vincent to justify the cost of owning and operating such a large and expensive aircraft? Are there enough Vincentians anxious to travel to Africa or the middle east each week to fill up 490 seats?

Or will it be used to transport marijuana grown in the Caribbean to far away destinations?

Perhaps it will be used to deliver aircraft parts to Iran who has been using front companies to purchase 747 parts to keep its aging fleet in the air?

Is it really being leased to a Dubai company? Or an Iranian front company posing as a Dubai charter operator?

This is a highly unusual arrangement, and can place Barbados Civil aviation and International Airport in jeopardy of being de-categorized by the FAA, or worse.

Further, FAA records show that Aero Intelligence Inc (Trustee), the owners of N508BB told the FAA that this 747 aircraft was being exported to Antigua and Barbuda, but we now know that it was in fact exported to St. Vincent and not Antigua. Why did they tell the FAA they were exporting this aircraft to Antigua & Barbuda and not St. Vincent? Would this have created a red flag?

Antigua is well known for aviation operators and is the base of regional air carrier LIAT. But St. Vincent has never ever had an aircraft this large land there until now.

What will this plane carry?

Marijuana? Troops? Weapons, drugs, nuclear material? Regional politicians on long expensive business trips to the middle east? aircraft parts or weapons to Iran or other countries?

We sincerely hope that the United States, The International Civil Aviation Organisation and international customs agencies keep a very close eye on this Boeing 747-409 registered in Barbados as 8P-ERI. Who knows what it may be transporting in the future, and to where?

By the way, the middle east is presently on a heightened aviation terror alert. Could Dubai based operatives be planning to use a Barbados registered 747-400 aircraft as a flying bomb in a terror attack against Iran in retaliation for recent attacks on UAE targets? What impact would this have on Barbados if this aircraft is used for such a purpose? How will the Barbados Civil aviation authority have proper oversight of an aircraft being subleased to 3rd parties in St. Vincent or the middle east?

Barbados Civil Aviation Authority should not touch this aircraft with a ten foot pole. They are setting Barbados up for international trouble. If One Caribbean wants to operate or lease this aircraft to a middle eastern company, let them register it in the eastern Caribbean or the middle east.

Barbados should not touch it.

We need some answers about this.


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287 responses to “Message to PM Mottley: Why is 747-400 Boeing Being Registered Under Barbados Colours in the Dark?”

  1. WURA-WAR-on-U Avatar

    Duwayne…thanks for the info…we know only too well and can’t stand…any of those skunks.


  2. No WARU

    The damaging frame of the geostrategic is much more important at this time of an impending world war.

    There can be no comparison of risks, scale, scope.


  3. Why is it being said that things are done in the dark when the author seem to know all the details of each and every transaction and every detail about the plane itself (maybe even the serial numbers on its parts)?

    What is the significances of mentioning that the plane came into Barbados “under the cover of darkness” when in the day there is I strange, huge, white plane parked up for all eyes to see?

    DRAMA?


  4. @John 2

    You are much smarter. The issue here is the registration process of a 747 and the ownership and purpose down the road. Also the implications for the country.


  5. *Significance


  6. David

    That maybe true (I will join the group of wait and see/more information)

    But when you can mention about the plane entering under the cover of darkness….then…..??????


  7. @John 2

    Do not get distracted with the storyline at the fringe.

  8. WURA-WAR-on-U Avatar

    “What is the significances of mentioning that the plane came into Barbados “under the cover of darkness” when in the day there is I strange, huge, white plane parked up for all eyes to see?”

    unless told, do you really think anyone in Barbados would know the plane’s owners….the optics will read…that the plane belongs to a big country…and stuck in Barbados for repairs or some other reason….since no ANNOUNCEMENTS were made about its presence..

    .AND

    people traversing the airport every day cannot see the plane anyway…only those who have clearance and access to the area…and no one will tell them anything, they also know better than to ask…so let’s take this for what it is…a glimpse into the leaders and their SECRECY….AND DECEPTIONS..


  9. David
    I am well aware of you and other printed/electronic media outlets using dramatic headlines to catch the eyes of the viewing public.

    “Barbadian colors were then painted on it’s tail; and it was ferried under dark of night to Grantley Adams International
    Airport, where it now sits.”

    under dark of night – could have been left out and the point would still have been made.
    Adding it (dramatizing) could make someone question the motives of the author.

    I just left it at the simple question.

    (Was it just that)…. Drama?


  10. Got ya Pacha..

    but throw corrupt, small island leaders in the mix and ya have A SITUATION…an unwanted one..

    ….THESE ARE DISGUSTINGLY evil people…not to be trusted…

    ya know WHAT to expect from WARMONGERS…but these deceitful lot who STILL use colonialism and all the DESTRUCTION that comes with it…FOR THEIR OWN ADVANTAGE to this day……are much more dangerous…

    ….for the vulnerable people of the Caribbean….we cannot even begin to envision the dangers ahead.

    we know there is a bigger picture here…there always is…


  11. Wuwa

    Would it have made a difference to transparency or any other factor if it had came in during the day?

    My last comment on this topic!

    Keep the comments coming don’t go astray.


  12. “.AND
    people traversing the airport every day cannot see the plane anyway…only those who have clearance and access to the area…and no one will tell them anything, they also know better than to ask…so let’s take this for what it is…a glimpse into the leaders and their SECRECY….AND DECEPTIONS..”

    GAIA? HA


  13. “under cover of dark”…is just an expression…the plane more than likely flew in ..BROAD DAYLIGHT…no one would have known the difference…not even air traffic control..

    not making an announcement…is the problem..the PEOPLE DESERVE TO KNOW WHAT Gonsalves and Mia are cooking up. it is their land mass…2 of them…being used for these elaborate plans….SINCE at at some point in time, these plans will have an impact on their respective treasuries and pension funds…just take a look at LIAT…a cockup from beginning to end..


  14. @John 2

    Politicians and others in the directorate have been ignoring and doing what they like managing the peoples business. It is only a matter of time people fight back with all options available.


  15. John2…the plane was reportedly up at the airport for A WHOLE MONTH…did you even hear a whisper?…

    …….am sure you would not be so flummoxed now, if ya had..lol


  16. wuru

    I ha – only at the idea of people traversing the airport each day and cannot see the plane.

    A plane that size Sitting at GAIA – one may more miss the airport that that plane ( hence my HA).


  17. Waru.

    “Barbadian colors were then painted on it’s tail; and it was ferried under dark of night to Grantley Adams International Airport, where it now sits.”

    Where in that sentence would you say under the cover of darkness is a figure of speech ?

    If it flew into to Barbados (day or night) with the Barbadian colours on its tail and sits on the tarmac for all to seem – where is it flew into Barbados secretly (under the cover of darkness)?


  18. Seeing a huge 747 sitting on a tarmac is one thing…knowing who owns it and it’s PLANNED USED …is quite another…

    do you hear anyone saying that they knew the plane was there to be registered and tagged under the Barbados flag??

    huge planes fly into the island on a daily basis…no one would have given that plane a second thought or knew unless in the inner circle of deceit and secrecy…that Mia was tied to it, those in that innercircle would also have known it came in from St. Vincent..

    few would have known anything…and said even less…if they wanted to keep their jobs..

    do you remember that piece of shit Gonzales getting a security guard reprimanded at Granley Adams for doing his job, just because they guard did not know who his fat, sloppy looking ass was…..ya dealing with black faced trash, well that one is portugues descent the worse type of human trash…… who now believe themselves to be the new colonialists and slave masters of black Caribbean people, these are dangerously, wicked subhumans with no souls.


  19. Why do we have to shitpick here? We know the more substantive issues to which we needs answers.


  20. John2…when the BIG PICTURE…presents itself, you will surely miss it..

    those small issues are not worth allowing them to niggle at ya…..they are a waste of energy..who cares if it was day or night…the reality…IT HAPPENED…with NOTHING SAID..to the people whose taxes and pensions fund these useless SELFSERVING LEADERS..

    there is something else at play that is much bigger…AND A THREAT..

    FOCUS ON THAT INSTEAD..

    cause if shit goes sideways because of these secrets and deceit..NO TRANSPARENCY whatever…….no one will care if it is night or day…


  21. cause if shit goes sideways because of these secrets and deceit..NO TRANSPARENCY whatever**”no one will care if it is night or day…”***


  22. Some of us have to learn that if WE DON’T have the ABILITY to PRECEIVE a threat and OTHERS do…you LISTEN..

    AND stay ON GUARD…

    that is quite simple


  23. Waru

    “….no one will care if it is night or day…”

    This is the point I have been making from the beginning. You just chose not to understand!

    I said the author could have made the point without the “darkness” comment


  24. “under dark of night – could have been left out and the point would still have been made. Adding it (dramatizing) could make someone question the motives of the author.”

    “That may be true (I will join the group of wait and see/more information)…”

    John 2

    I agree with you 100%.
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    “…the plane more than likely flew in ..BROAD DAYLIGHT…no one would have known the difference…not even air traffic control..”

    UTTER NONSENSE!!!!!!


  25. David

    I am sure answers to some questions or some explanation will come at a time government/PM deems to be appropriate.

    Some of us are calling for more transparency from government. My question would be…..for a case like this, when should the government give out info?

    Some of us can wait until information is provided by the government while other seem anxious and would like that information NOW.

    The same thing is occurring with the external debt situation and the liat sale.

    For this situation can it not be a situation like when Signicor move from Barbados to the Bahamas ?

    With the detail provided so far I cannot determine if there is/was anything illegally done or if there was/will be any disadvantages to the tax payers of Barbados.

    One thing I agree with is that government need to bring some details to the public.


  26. Waru

    You always perceive a threat.


  27. You may be sure some of us are not given the track record of previous governments.


  28. Comrade Gonsalves made it clear that he asked the favour of Barbados because they in St Vincent were slow on Getting their certification in place. Because of this and to avoid the plane sitting down for weeks possibly, the owners would of been pushing him to help get it registered so it can start earning money. For all we know once their airport gets certification next year the registration may well shift to there.

    This kind of registration in alternate cointries is nothing new and has been going on for years. Half of the cabin cruisers for instance here in Barbados along with some of our commercial vessels were registered in st Vincent and the Grenadines going back years .

    So far I see nothing done that shows any form of impropriety. We of course will have to wait until the plane starts to work and see what purpose it serves and who it services before final judgement can be passed.


  29. Ya better precieve THREATS….if you want your upcoming generations to survive with their sanity and wellbeing INTACT…manmade threats….they do exist and are even MORE SOPHISTICATED…than the previous ones experienced by the vulnerable and unaware..

    i am watching a video now by a very ENLIGHTENED female that says it all… ..

    “the devil WEARS PRADA”


  30. I support the opening of new trade routes between Caribbean and African continent. South America already have travel with the African continent.

    The popular thinking is bloody Red Ocean thinking which encourages many to follow blindly like sheep.

    Why is it so hard not to go after new uncontested markets and non customers.

    Let’s hope we do not accept airframes that are near they end of life usage at the expense of souls. Perhaps this may be a bargain and may even provide an opportunity to upgrade our aircraft certification skills.

    Come on people stop the linear thinking. Let me disclose I know Mr Ackie and he has struck me as a young hardworking young man who for many years has been trying to look at new aviation routes.

    If your ancestors sold other Africans into slavery does not make you a slave trader?


  31. @John A

    If nothing has been done incorrectly we will be so happy. However it is the right of the citizenry to ask questions in the absence of information. Let this position be known.


  32. “Because of this and to avoid the plane sitting down for weeks possibly, ”

    according to reality…IT HAS BEEN SITTING FOR WEEKS….a month is 4 weeks..

    and WHY DO WE HAVE TO WAIT AND SEE..why not tell THE PEOPLE…even if the project was started by private investors…ya think the people will appreciate their money being put in something they from INCEPTION..knew nothing about…

    as i said…don’t know if Gonzales told the people of St. Vincent yet what the plane is really being used for…but if he did not…that is even worse, because you can guarantee that at some point in time…tax money will enter that fray..planes, even refurbished ones, are very, very expensive to upkeep..

    remember when the Bizzy Co. Redjet scam started out, i know the regulators and such helped caused its demise, with their badminded sluggard attitudes…but within a year or so of operations…they were trying to dip their hands in pensioners money to keep the plane in the air…..around the time they ripped off the pension for the 4 seasons scam….

    ..this is a 747, those Redjet planes were nowhere as HUGE..

    and then with this PRETEND CARICOM rahrah they are always espousing that can never get anywhere, ya will see how quickly they want Caricom as a unit to put money into whatever they got planned..

    what comrade what…these are ENEMIES OF VULNERABLE..BLACK PEOPLE.


  33. “Let’s hope we do not accept airframes that are near they end of life usage at the expense of souls. ”

    insurance scams are a THING…

    every avenue must be looked at that will present OPPORTUNITIES FOR EXPLOITATION…

    why is it so easy for people to FOLLOW SO BLINDLY WITHOUT LOOKING at reality and the EVIL that resides in the hearts of men and women..

    i would not trust any of these two PMs as far as i can see them…their track records are UGLY ENUFF already…

    i like being mildly surprised if things work out in favor of the people and not the self serving..


  34. And…now we know why Gaston Browne PM of ANTIGUA was so HESITANT…to JUMP INTO any scams ARISING out of ACQUIRING the LIAT shares…


  35. David

    Agreed 100%


  36. @ Kammie Holder

    Take it from me, a person that has been ROBBED by pilot John Ackee, that son of a bitch is NEVER EVER to be trusted. His company, Executive Air is a bloody shambles and a potential accident waiting to happen.


  37. @david

    I agree and as I have said SO FAR we can’t fault what has occurred. Now having said that we will wait until the venture gets going to form an opinion.

    Remember at 21 years old this plane has years left in it once properly maintained. Many that are in service from Europe are over 30 years old but are still active and perfectly maintained. What is also interesting is that of the 1500 odd made, although 512 are still in service another 500 have been retired as they are more fuel efficient options out there. So you have 500 that were retired working that still can be retrofited and start life again. Remember some of the 40 year old jumbo still in service too, like the one I mentioned in an earlier post.

    We will watch and see what unfolds but it would be great if it could open new airfreight options into here from England and further.


  38. SVG PM Gonsalves was reported as having said SVG is hoping to “have its own Boeing 747 indigenous based airline in the not too distant future.” In the meantime, a group of Vincentian pilots and business people wanted to start a small locally based B747 service, which would link SVG from different airports, to which Gonsalves pledged his support.

    One Caribbean was established in 2017, as an air shuttle service exclusive to Bequia Beach Hotel. Essentially, One Caribbean is a small airline, even much smaller than Mustique Airways. It has an operating certificate and currently uses a 19-seat Beechcraft 1900D aircraft to link SVG with BGI and Beef Island (BVI) and apparently is seeking to use the Boeing 747-400 aircraft to launch flights to destinations such as Dubai.

    Having acquired the B747 to be integrated into its operations and developing a flight schedule, means the airline has to secure local (SVG) certification…….. for the aircraft and the airline. Unfortunately, the Eastern Caribbean Civil Aviation Authority (ECCAA) is not staffed to process these types of request and does not have the resources currently available to manage a B747 in its jurisdiction.

    Chief Flight Operations Inspector for ECCAA, Captain Paul Delisle, acknowledged receipt an application to have the aircraft transferred to the local registry, while also noting “there are a lot of things that must happen before we can do that, and even more before it can be placed on the AOC.”

    Delisle indicated the ECCAA was planning to train at least one additional inspector specifically for the new aircraft, with additional services likely borrowed from other regulators (e.g. FAA-certified inspectors), but neither the timing nor the numbers for that work was clear at this point.

    The airline also applied for a Foreign Air Carrier Permit with the US Department of Transportation ahead of plans to offer ad-hoc charter flights to the United States.

    It has been reported that currently, SVG’s AIA see 55 weekly scheduled departures, of which 49 are flights operated by LIAT. The other medium-haul network includes flights operated by Caribbean Airlines, AA, Air Canada.

    Having spent approximately EC$700M on Argyle, with only 55 weekly departures, perhaps SVG is anxious to have One Caribbean increase airport capacity.


  39. Separately

    We are amazed how the kakistocrats are rising to power as if a 747-400, broken by age

    Now we have the Boris Johnson – the idiotic and cloned brother of Donald Trump – the father of all JAs.

    Be Jesus Christ! If we escape some kind of global catastrophe in the coming years we would have done well.


  40. @ David

    Here is a bit of trivia on the jumbo 747 that shows this one is a spring chicken compared to some.

    KLM retired one of the oldest 747s in their fleet this year. It had served them from 1989 when it was put into service under the name
    “Queen of The Skies”. It has transported over 6 million passengers in its service life and it’s final flight was from L.A. to Schiphol which was done free of any issues. The plane was retired in perfect working order after completing the flight.

  41. WURA-WAR-on-U Avatar

    Ok…so now we have some info..

    flights to the middle east, specifically Dubai and US….

    a passenger plane..no cargo, if the reports are accurate..

    who is FUNDING this behemoth of a plane…St. Vincent could NEVER go it alone..

    the term GAS GUZZLER…is a hint..


  42. @John A

    You have conveniently omitted the high operating cost to support this equipment?

  43. WURA-WAR-on-U Avatar

    We know new planes crash too, but would much prefer not test either theory…


  44. @ David

    Yes as I said earlier that is why 500 were retired globally. It’s not that they are not good planes or can not handle plenty cargo, but they are too thirsty for passenger travel. The reason they are used by many cargo companies is that the volume they can carry outweighs the additional thirst of the engines, unlike with passenger travellers who must have leg room, aisles etc cargo just needs a large space.

    I will bet you that this plane like Air Canada now, will cater to both passengers and cargo. As to what percentage will be dedicated to which category that is their business plan to decide on.


  45. Abigail de Salemite

    You are a liar, an expert in vacillation. Your morning words are not your evening words. See example below:

    “WURA-War-on-U July 23, 2019 3:56 PM

    Lol…when ya go looking for SOUND INVESTORS…instead of local thieves and crooks, this is what you get….PROGRESS…St. Vincent once again CAPITALIZED. Keep watching me…muh chicken and goat done curry…lol”

    Now people have posted the other side to the story, you’re changing your mouth. You’re a dangerous, deadly human being and have NO shame, NONE!! Exorcism!!


  46. David

    When you poor and want a piece of the action you start out at the bottom and move up. They start out with probably the cheapest (and perhaps the most reliable at that price) that their can find. If the venture fail then the lost will be minimal. If it succeeds then the expand by probably leasing/buying more efficient aircraft and retire this one when they can afford to,


  47. @ David.

    Here is one other reason why these guys probably went for the 747 even though it thirsty.

    Along with carrying 416 passengers it CAN ALSO HOLD 5330 CUBIC FEET OF CARGO. So in Bajan terms how much dat is? Well a 20 ft container the 8.6 ft high one, is 1360 cu ft full. So this animal can bring 416 people and 4 twenty foot containers all in one flight!

  48. WURA-WAR-on-U Avatar

    “Now people have posted the other side to the story, you’re changing your mouth. You’re a dangerous, deadly human being and have NO shame, NONE!! Exorcism!!”

    yall aint getting any EXORCISM…ya DESERVE every moment and every millisecond OF ME……

    ya trying to DEFLECT from WHO is FUNDING this giant of a plane…but we will find out…

    what is DONE IN THE DARK..ah know ya can finish for me…lol


  49. Enuff

    How come you were not seeing these things when WARU was the most avid supported of your BLP when the DLP were in their last days.

    We warn you both that the BLP = the DLP!

    If not in the short term in the medium and long term for sure.

  50. WURA-WAR-on-U Avatar

    Would much prefer not travel on that animal..

    Liat has a good maintenance record…but who do they have to maintain such maybe still state of the art aircraft since it was not retrofitted for cargo…

    ..certainly not Barbados, ah saw only last year baby incubators in the yard of QEH rusting away…imagine depending on these RETARDS for leaders to maintain a 747…wide bodied to boot…never going to happen..

    so who is really behind this operation.

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