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The blogmaster read the following article a couple days ago and thoughts of how we can hold elected and public officials more accountable immediately came to mind. It is amazing to believe local officials do not engage in illegal and corrupt behaviour.

There are several instances mentioned in Auditor General reports and ‘leaks’ to suggest public funds have been used for ‘manufactured’ work. If we can get citizens as concerned about these kinds of matters to compare with the removal of tint or the increase in the price of eggs, we would be in good shape.

Until we get to a point where the public see action from central government and agents that appear to be transparent, the public’s trust in government will continue to decline. After decades of promises by BOTH Barbados Labour Party (BLP) and Democratic Labour Party (DLP) there has been no serious effort to implement a suite of comprehensive transparency laws in the country. A court system groaning under the weight of its case load does not help!


Vietnamese tycoon loses death row appeal over world’s biggest bank fraud

Jonathan Head

Getty Images Truong My Lan in a dark blue shirt in court, sitting next to a security officer wearing a mask.
Truong My Lan, pictured in court on Tuesday, could still avoid execution

Vietnamese property tycoon Truong My Lan has lost her appeal against her death sentence for masterminding the world’s biggest bank fraud.

The 68-year-old is now in a race for her life because the law in Vietnam states that if she can pay back 75% of what she took, her sentence will be commuted to life imprisonment.

In April the trial court found that Truong My Lan had secretly controlled Saigon Commercial Bank, the country’s fifth biggest lender, and taken out loans and cash over more than 10 years through a web of shell companies, amounting to a total of $44bn (£34.5bn).

Of that prosecutors say $27bn was misappropriated, and $12bn was judged to have been embezzled, the most serious financial crime for which she was sentenced to death.

It was a rare and shocking verdict – she is one of very few women in Vietnam to be sentenced to death for a white collar crime.

On Tuesday, the court said there was no basis to reduce Truong My Lan’s death sentence. However, she could still avoid execution if she returns $9bn, three-quarters of the $12bn she embezzled. It’s not her final appeal and she can still petition the president for amnesty.

During her trial Truong My Lan was sometimes defiant, but in the recent hearings for her appeal against the sentence she was more contrite.

She said she was embarrassed to have been such a drain on the state, and that her only thought was to pay back what she had taken.

Getty Images Truong My Lan, second left, in a white shirt arrives in court in March 2024.
Truong My Lan was sentenced to death earlier this year

Born into a Sino-Vietnamese family in Ho Chi Minh City, Truong My Lan started as a market stall vendor, selling cosmetics with her mother. She began buying land and property after the Communist Party introduced economic reform in 1986. By the 1990s, she owned a large portfolio of hotels and restaurants.

When she was convicted and sentenced in April, she was the chairwoman of a prominent real estate firm, Van Thinh Phat Group. It was a dramatic moment in the “Blazing Furnaces” anti-corruption campaign led by then-Communist Party Secretary-General, Nguyen Phu Trong.

All of the remaining 85 defendants were convicted. Four were sentenced to life in jail, while the rest -including Truong My Lan’s husband and niece – were given prison terms ranging from 20 years to three years suspended.

The State Bank of Vietnam is believed to have spent many billions of dollars recapitalising Saigon Commercial Bank to prevent a wider banking panic. The prosecutors argued that her crimes were “huge and without precedent” and did not justify leniency.

Truong My Lan’s lawyers said she was working as fast as she could to find the $9bn needed. But cashing in her assets has proven difficult.

Some are luxury properties in Ho Chi Minh City which could, in theory, be sold quite quickly. Others are in the form of shares or stakes in other businesses or property projects.

In all the state has identified more than a thousand different assets linked to the fraud. These have been frozen by the authorities for now. The BBC understands the tycoon has also reached out to friends to raise loans for her to help reach the target.

Getty Images Motorbikes speed past a branch of Saigon Commercial Bank (SCB) in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, on Wednesday, April 17, 2024.
Truong My Lan defrauded Saigon Commercial Bank, one of Vietnam’s biggest lenders

Her lawyers have argued for leniency from the judges on financial grounds. They said that while she is under sentence of death it would be hard for her to negotiate the best price for selling her assets and investments, and so harder for her to raise $9bn.

She could do much better if under a life sentence instead, they say.

“The total value of her holdings actually exceeds the required compensation amount,” lawyer Nguyen Huy Thiep told the BBC before her appeal was rejected.

“However, these require time and effort to sell, as many of the assets are real estate and take time to liquidate. Truong My Lan hopes the court can create the most favourable conditions for her to continue making compensation.”

Few had expected the judges to be moved by these arguments. She is now, in effect, in a race with the executioner to raise the funds she needs.

Vietnam treats the death penalty as a state secret. The government does not publish how many people are on death row, though human rights groups say there are more than 1,000 and that Vietnam is one of the world’s biggest executioners.

Typically there are long delays, often many years before sentences are carried out, although prisoners are given very little notice.

If Truong My Lan can recover the $9bn before that happens, her life will most likely be spared.

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cd753r47815o


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139 responses to “Time to call out corruption”


  1. SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — The Bahamas’ police commissioner has resigned after a sergeant and two officers were recently indicted in the U.S. in what federal authorities describe as a case of massive drug trafficking.

    The Bahamas’ prime minister, Philip Brave Davis, announced on Wednesday that Clayton Fernander was stepping down, noting that he faces no charges in the case but that the police department needs a change.

    “We are taking important steps to restore trust and accountability,” Davis told Parliament, adding that there’ll be more leadership changes in upcoming days.

    The resignation comes after a police sergeant, a senior police officer and a Royal Bahamas Defense Force officer, and several other suspects were indicted in the U.S. in late November.

    The U.S. Justice Department called the case a “massive cocaine importation conspiracy enabled by corrupt Bahamian government officials, including high-ranking members of the Royal Bahamas Police Force.”

    The department noted that since May 2021, drug traffickers have smuggled tons of cocaine through the Bahamas bound for the U.S. with the help of corrupt local officials who controlled airports and disclosed information about U.S. Coast Guard movements.

    The bribes that officials were promised or given ranged from $10,000 to $2 million to help with the trafficking, including the movement of 1,320 pounds (600 kilograms) of cocaine through the Bahamas’ main international airport, according to the indictment.

    The Bahamas has not yet appointed a new police commissioner.

    On Monday, Fernander said he was interviewing officials to determine when the alleged drug trafficking began and said he supported a government proposal for independent civilian oversight of the police department.

    He also announced several measures, including the creation of an encrypted and anonymous whistleblower system to crack down on corruption.

    “This culture of corruption that has infiltrated the Royal Bahamas Police Force did not happen overnight,” he said. “But from today, we will redouble our efforts to stamp it out.”

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/bahamian-police-chief-resigns-after-us-indicts-officers-116486620


  2. Spanish police chief found with 20 million Euros in his home

  3. Retired and frustrated Avatar
    Retired and frustrated

    Carsicot, Dodds Prison, Four Seasons, Flyovers, ABC Highway, Port Authority, Construction of GAIA, Sherbourne, Generator at QEH, Crab Hill Police Station, Edutech, NHC, Coverly,Vaccines, Hope, Steel Frame Houses, WhiteOak, Kensington Loan, South Coast Sewerage Plant, Green Land, St Joseph Hospital. All the aforemetioned had cost overruns and lacked oversight. Courts multi million writeoff to IRD and a duty free jewellery company closed down and reopened under a new name owing $418 Million to BRA.


  4. The United Health CEO murder.
    At some point, delay-deny-defend has a price.


  5. $9B or your life.

    I wonder if she thinks that her 68 year old life is worth $9B?


  6. @Frank December 6, 2024 at 11:24 am “At some point, delay-deny-defend has a price.”

    Gie we back we money, or yah life?


  7. @BBC? “…a total of $44bn (£34.5bn).”

    I wonder what she was planning to do with the money?

    After all we can only eat one meal at a time. We can only wear one set of garments at a time, we can only sleep in one bed at a time, we can’t take a single penny with us when we go off to the place where the streets are paved with gold, and the diet is free plentiful milk and honey, so what was the of $44bn (£34.5bn) for?

    Help me out here please.

  8. NorthernObserver Avatar

    As it is now December, and the office is mentioned in thread, still no Report from the Auditor General?
    We are 15 months past the PM announcement in Aug ’23, that NIS Reports from ’10-16 were completed. Where are they?
    There is a tipping point, where delay turns to a refusal to comply with the law(s).
    Btw…the NISSS is now one year old🎂


  9. Greenland landfill which is still not a landfill, where de $80 million or so gone?


  10. @Frank

    Aren’t we seeing the public distrust close home? An MP in Antigua and in Jamaica and Bahamas what can we say?

    Time longer than twine.


  11. @Simple Simon

    You do know you are simplifying why people engage in corrupt practices?


  12. What about the HOPE investigation?


  13. Like Frank, my mind immediately went to that insurance executive’s murder which is being celebrated by the working class and the “middle class” across the USA. And then I came across Chris Cuomo on News Nation and had the best Bajan belly laugh as corporate operatives tried to shame the celebrants back in line with the usual Jesus-styled narrative. And then, can you imagine that one executive tried to divorce policy from the denial of claims! He sounded scared. It was hilarious!

    And yet, the solution being touted is a security guard or team! Not a thought given to refraining from cheating your policy holders when their very lives or those of their loved ones depend on it!

    Systemic violence, as I have said here before, takes more lives than a hit man. The corruption of the “political class” also takes more lives than the bad boys on the block.

    One category gets a criminal record and the other gets national honours.

    Still….time is longer than twine! It is only so much “cake” that some people will eat before they try to eat the rich.


  14. @David December 6, 2024 at 1:18 pm “Simple Simon You do know you are simplifying why people engage in corrupt practices?”

    Nope.

    There are only 2 things one can do with money.
    1. Keep it.
    2. Spend it.

    If you can think of anything else, kindly enlighten me. Thanks very much.


  15. @Donna December 6, 2024 at 2:38 pm “And yet, the solution being touted is a security guard or team!”

    I am really, really glad that some poor underpaid security guard did not take a bul let for this fella.

    Glad that the New York security guards went home safely to their parents/spouses/children.

    Why should a poor man take a bul let for a rich man?

    Tell me why?


  16. On December 4th his Wikipedia entry read “today Brian Thompson got what he deserved.” To tell the truth I was shocked. I had never read an entry like that.

    I should have taken a screen shot.

    24 hours later the entry was the usual boring, sedate stuff.


  17. @Donna “corporate operatives tried to shame the celebrants back in line with the usual Jesus-styled narrative”

    But are the corporate operatives really and truly Jesus people? Jesus is kinda radical when it comes to the poor. He is known for saying things like

    “Sell your possessions and give to the poor. Provide purses for yourselves that will not wear out, a treasure in heaven that will never fail”.

    “But when you give a banquet, invite the poor, the crippled, the lame, the blind, and you will be blessed”.


  18. And Jesus’ Father speaking through the Old Testament prophets said
    “If you are harvesting in your field and forget a sheaf there, do not go back to get it. It is to be left for the foreigner, the fatherless, and the widow, so that the LORD your God may bless you in all the work of your hands. When you beat the olives from your trees, you must not go over the branches again. What remains will be for the foreigner, the fatherless, and the widow. When you gather the grapes of your vineyard, you must not go over the vines again. What remains will be for the foreigner, the fatherless, and the widow.”
    “Deuteronomy 24:19-21


  19. “When you reap the harvest of your land, you shall not reap your field right up to its edge, neither shall you gather the gleanings after your harvest.
    And you shall not strip your vineyard bare, neither shall you gather the fallen grapes of your vineyard. You shall leave them for the poor and for the sojourner: I am the LORD your God.”
    Leviticus 19, verses 9 and 10


  20. Public trust is virtually nonexistent under capitalism. Resulting in a system of dictatorship which the writer has never expressed any trenchant critique against.

    Why should ‘public trust’, as perceived be even a variable. For this notion merely plays into the farce that populations in their ‘divinely’ ignorant judgements should hand popular power to an exalted bourgeoise expectant that such an equation could ever bring balance.

    For such is the ability of power thusly given to then be exercised in favor of the feckless has never made sense, not even when a guillotine is deployed as a motivator.

    Indeed, the existence of capitalism, carried to its deathbed by neoliberalism, financilization and this current World War Three should act as clear proof that notions like ‘public trust’ are merely ways to market lies to those who have believed the entire tapestry as presented to us all.

    More deeply, what public trust could there be anywhere when terrorists, HTS, formally al-Queda, has been weaponized by Western democracies, so called, to invade Syria to overthrow a presumed sovereign government in order to extent hegemony.


  21. https://youtu.be/npbjwkZFTXA?si=qZU5qc3y5VqFQacV

    Not even sure of the motive for the murder yet, but……


  22. Extend


  23. Donville Inniss adds his voice to the saga of issues plaguing the QEH
    Once upon a timeb there was concern for the building of a new hospital by the past govt
    The more things deteriorate at the QEH the lambasting of the QEH gets louder
    However all is not lost adopt a ward have become a beckoned call to save the QEH


  24. The shooter in the NY murder reminds me of the anti-hero in Lawrence Block’s books named “Keller” who was an assassin for hire. He appeared in novels titled Hit Man; Hit List; Hit Parade; Hit me and Hit and Run. Keller took his assignments from an individual whom he had never met and took out people he didn’t know, all for a price.

    I am going the guessing route but based on the Police reports, this man is no amateur and based on his reported reconnaissance, attention to detail and aversion to public scrutiny is the mark of a professional for hire.

    The question is who hired him and why?


  25. Cuhdear Bajan,

    But Jesus never advocated for violence.

    However, I said the Jesus-styled narrative, the “turn the other cheek” narrative. The “you must be better” narrative.


  26. It seems that the man did make a few unforced errors though. If the person of interest is the shooter, he purchased some snacks just before the murder, showing everything but his forehead in the process. And he left his empty bottle and wrappers in Central Park. Unless that was a decoy, I question his professionalism.


  27. What was the motive for the killing?

    The man who was killed was a father and a husband, apparently happily married.

    He was a CEO of a large health insurance company.

    Earned $10 million a year.

    “The messages on the 9 mm ammunition found at the scene of the shooting mimic the phrase “delay, deny, defend,” which is commonly used by lawyers and insurance industry critics to describe tactics used to avoid paying claims.

    It refers to insurers delaying payment, denying a claim and then defending their actions. Health insurers like UnitedHealthcare have become frequent targets of criticism from doctors and patients for denying claims or complicating access to care.”

    The killer may or may not have been a pro but it looks like there may have been a motive that was enough to drive an individual to single mindedly hunt the victim.

    Maybe a loved one was denied insurance and died and the killer wanted revenge.


  28. There are other theories out there. The man also defrauded his investors. And I think I heard that he and his wife are separated but live in close proximity to each other. She was very flippant in her response I heard quoted in news media.

    “I knew he was getting death threats, but I don’t know the details.”

    A happily married woman would want details. Even an unhappily married woman would want details. She and their children would be at risk if living or travelling with her husband, no? She too is under suspicion, apparently.

    The motive is unclear. The words on the bullet casing could have been a deliberate misdirection.


  29. When even BU bloggers can seek to justify extra judicial murders as laudable, then we know where we are in time…
    This signals the total breakdown in the justice system – in the USA where those of the Trump ilk can literally ‘shoot a man in Main Street – and get away with it’,
    ..and in Brassbados where those responsible for the justice system are so crooked themselves, that we have the wolves guarding the sheep.

    We have straight forward criminal cases here being dragged out for DECADES by wicked players – waiting for critical witnesses and victims to die..
    We have NUMEROUS cases of fraud in GOVERNMENT AGENCIES, clearly detailed by the Auditor General, being completely IGNORED by authorities…
    We have convicted lawyers being allowed to continue practicing their wickedness

    We ALSO now have petty criminals, empowered by stupid new DRUG laws – which created a legal market for otherwise illicit drugs, KILLING EACH OTHER almost daily in their own ‘justice system’ – while the idiots in charge seem to think that this is some kind of ‘solution’, that (like the Covid Injection) will remain in its original location and not spread throughout the whole body (society)….

    Only the TRUTH can set us free from the descent into chaos…
    The TRUTH is ALWAYS associated with…
    -Openness
    -Transparency
    -Integrity
    -The consistent application of justice
    -ACCOUNTABILITY

    NONE of the above are currently characteristic of Brassbados society. So we can expect that like the Covid experimental brew, this too will spread and we too will soon be seeing ‘justice’ dispensed quickly, widely and indiscriminately by disgruntled victims of the lotta brassbowlery that is now endemic.

    Will we even notice when the spread occurs…?

    What a time!
    What a place!


  30. @Bush Tea

    Even officers of the court are having a tough time getting delivery of timely justice in our failing system.
    Judge raps conduct of two cops

    Attorney awarded major damages and costs

    By Heather-Lynn Evanson heatherlynevanson@nationnews.com

    Calling the actions of two constables “unacceptable and quite frankly alarming” after finding that they “conspired to concoct a web of lies to undergird any charges which they chose to lay”, a High Court has awarded attorney Lani Daisley almost $400 000 in costs and damages as a result of her 2012 arrest and subsequent charging.

    “This is a case in which a junior attorney-at-law was arrested and charged with offences by police officers for fearlessly carrying out her duty as an attorney-at-law and an officer of the court,” said Justice Bryan Weekes in his decision.

    “Attorneys-at-law, as officers of the court, are bound by the ethical and moral standards set by the code which governs their conduct as attorneys-at-law. They are held to a higher standard of conduct than other members of civil society, and this is certainly the case in their interactions with the police,” he said.

    Embarrassment

    “So that when they are arrested and charged with assaulting police officers and resisting arrest, attorneys-atlaw are exposed to not only personal, but professional embarrassment, humiliation and hurt caused by the malicious actions of members of the very body tasked with ‘protecting and assuring’ the public. [T]he conduct of the officers involved in this matter fell far below the level of professionalism and decency expected of members of the Barbados Police Service,” Justice Weekes declared.

    Daisley was represented by attorneys Marilyn Moore and Olius David. No lawyer appeared for the State.

    Daisley, of Paradise Beach Drive, Black Rock, St Michael, had visited Shed 2 at the Customs Department to see a client who was detained there. Present were Constables Hughshone Gamble and Kim-Marie Rock.

    Daisley “demanded” to see her client but was denied. She was then arrested, taken to a police station and charged with assaulting and resisting Rock; resisting Gamble; having lawfully entered the premises, misconducted herself by behaving in an annoying manner and not leaving the premises, after she was directed to do so by the Assistant Comptroller of Customs Charles Parris, all on September 12, 2012.

    The prosecution withdrew the charge of resisting Constable Gamble and Magistrate Kristie Cuffy-Sargeant dismissed the charges of misconduct on the premises and refusing to leave after being directed to do so.

    The magistrate later found her not guilty of resisting and assaulting Constable Rock.

    Daisley subsequently sued the Attorney General, claiming the evidence on which she was charged came exclusively from the false accounts of Constables Rock and Gamble; that the charges laid were based on the false accounts of Rock and Gamble; that the police intentionally lied under oath whilst giving evidence; and that there was an audio recording of the entire incident which showed that the police officers fabricated and falsified the information upon which the charges were laid.

    Daisley also claimed the prosecution against her was brought without reasonable and probable cause because there was no factually objective basis known to either constable that could have given rise to reasonable and/or probable cause to detain her and remove her from the premises.

    She argued her prosecution was malicious and without merit, because Constables Rock and Gamble so acted intending that she should be convicted of an offence which they knew she had not committed.

    Justice Weekes noted: “The prospect for an attorney-at-law being forced over a period of ten years to attend court as an accused person where their presence there was caused by the malicious conduct of public functionaries must have been crippling for [Daisley].

    ‘Significant award’ “The court finds that the level of reputational damage and the mental anguish and embarrassment inflicted on [her] over a period of ten years merits a significant award,” he said.

    He then awarded her $175 000 for reputational damage, mental anguish and embarrassment; $65 000 for loss of income suffered as a result of time spent preparing to defend herself; and $103 400 as indemnification for reasonable legal fees incurred defending herself.

    She was also awarded court costs of $30 504, bringing the overall total to $373 904.

    “It is clear to this court that at no time did the police officers ever follow the accepted protocols for arresting an individual without a warrant,” the judge said.

    “This much was found by the magistrate who was satisfied that there was sufficient doubt about the ‘arrest’ by the officers, that she dismissed the charges. This court simply does not believe that [Daisley] assaulted the officers.

    “The court found the actions of the police officers involved in this matter to be completely unacceptable and quite frankly alarming. The transcript of the recording reveals a lack of professionalism and a standard of behaviour which was shocking to the court’s conscience,” he said.

    “[Daisley] was subjected to a level of physical and verbal abuse to which no citizen should ever be exposed. The court accepts [Daisley’s] assertion, based on the transcript, that Constables Gamble and Rock conspired to concoct a web of lies to undergird any charges which they chose to lay against [her].”

    Justice Weekes said the court found Daisley would have suffered damage to her personal and professional reputation, and that she would have been exposed to fear for her personal safety and would no doubt have suffered significant mental distress.

    Source: Nation


  31. The party of the government cannot successfully run a credit union, where do we go from here?

    FSC puts BLP co-op on notice

    By Maria Bradshaw

    mariabradshaw@nationnews. Combermerians

    The Barbados Labour Party’s (BLP) credit union appears to be in the red.

    This week, the Financial Services Commission (FSC) published a notice indicating that on December 12, it intends to cancel the registration of the Progressive Cooperative Credit Union Ltd, which has been in operation by the political party for decades.

    The FSC also published the names of the close to 300 BLP members. The credit union’s office is located at the BLP’s headquarters at Grantley Adams House, Roebuck Street, The City.

    The FSC further advised that “interested parties may contact the commission” to make arrangements for the payments of outstanding monies.

    Among the list of credit union members were party stalwarts such as former Prime Minister Owen Arthur, who passed away in 2020; and Sir Henry Forde, who recently passed away, as well as former Chief Justice Sir David Simmons and former Cabinet minister Sir Louis Tull.

    Ministers

    Several current ministers were also listed, such as Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley, Attorney General Dale Marshall and Minister of Home Affairs Wilfred Abrahams, as well as veteran Member of Parliament Cynthia Forde, who once managed the credit union.

    When contacted about this development, Forde said she had seen the notice but stated: “Another person was managing it after my tenure.”

    Dr Lynette Holder, chief executive officer of the Small Business Association and a credit union expert who was also involved in the management of the BLP’s credit union, told the Saturday Sun it was not as solvent as it used to be.

    “I was involved sometime ago, years ago, not recently. I know that when I was involved every effort was made to try to revamp it and get it operational – get persons to make deposits in it again and there was a lot of promotional activity done at the party level. But, unfortunately, there wasn’t the uptake for it,” she said, as she mentioned competition from bigger credit unions,” she said.

    “Most of the smaller credit unions that are unable to meet the prudential standards and operating standards kind of had no choice but to be shaken up.”

    Holder revealed that after efforts failed to get the credit union reactivated, discussions occurred about wounding up its operations.

    “So, maybe a lot of people have credit union accounts with several of the other larger ones. And so, we were never able really to get this one operating at a level that would satisfy not only the regulators, but the members in terms of growing the deposits and so on that it can offer credit to members.

    “So, I’m not surprised that it’s gone this route, where I would assume that those who were still there in the leadership, you know, would have engaged the FSC.

    “Even before it went off, those talks were being had to engage the regulator to wind up the society, because it just wasn’t solvent, it wasn’t operational to the level that the regulators would be satisfied with.”

    She recalled that there were several efforts to revive it but some BLP members did not even know the party’s credit union existed.

    Disappointing

    “I think that from where I sit, the disappointing part of it was not getting the interest from those in the party. I remember when I got involved, we tried to revamp it and we were allowed to make a pitch or two at our conference and so on. There were a lot of people that did not even know the party had a credit union. This is why we were trying to revamp it because obviously the strategy was if you can grow your deposits, then you can offer credit.”

    She also recalled that there were some loans on the books.

    “So there was still one or two members that had loans and that were paying, but it was just not enough to sustain the operations. So you needed to grow deposits or look to maybe merge with another credit union.”

    In relation to member deposits, Holder admitted they were minuscule and that an offer would be made on “cents on the dollar”, but she lamented that there was no deposit insurance for credit unions.

    “[This] is the point that the credit union movement has been making all the time. If that was so, you know, the deposits would have been insured in this instance. So, we have to wait and see what it is that they’ve agreed to, the FSC, to pay back the depositors.”

    Source: Nation


  32. What is the surprise here?
    Anyone can ‘run’ a government when you can
    -spend as you like without accountability,
    -borrow as much as is possible,
    -dig into the consolidated fund without ANY restraint
    …and pass all the liabilities on to the brass bowls who you are supposed to be representing.

    Running a business is a DIFFERENT ANIMAL.
    This is also why practically ALL the SOEs are LOSERS…

    The current damn drivers CANNOT drive….
    LOL
    But the joke is that the PREVIOUS drivers were downright idiots
    – driving off cliff after cliff….

    What a place..
    apparently we have NO licensed drivers in town..????
    ..or perhaps the BBs like the ZR stylee…

  33. William Skinner Avatar

    Have we heard a name of those involved in the beating of the vagrant Mr. John, who it was reported by the Commissioner of Police, died , after two beatings , from natural causes.
    Did any name or the description of person or persons involved appear in the media ?

  34. William Skinner Avatar

    @ Bushie
    Why worry about what’s happening around here in Bim ? We have more pressing matters to occupy or minds.
    You probably heard that attempts are being made to turn the region into a dumping ground for deported US illegal emigrants .Would this present the opportunity to increase our population by the magical 80, 000. ? Oh well, why worry , we have more pressing matters to dissect …….


  35. It’s good to see that law could be subjected to law in Barbados.

    That a lawyer has successfully sued the establishment of which she is a central part, being an officer of the court, is a circumstance which is long overdue.

    Maybe, just maybe, in the interest of justice the courts themselves should be so subjected on matters, almost all, involving justice delayed, as no doubt is in this case. For justice delayed is another large crime which effects the whole country.

    These should be the new norm. And when the establishment is so subjected to civil penalties the policemen and others should also be personally liable as well. For payments should never be only made from the treasury, if there’s anything there!

    However, should we now want to be serious not only the one-off junior police should be so treated but the lawyers themselves who have been, for an eternity, committing financial crimes against their clients. For these are vastly more important important criminal matters.


  36. Above on 12/7/2024: Attorney awarded major damages and costs

    I do not see this as a victory for the attorney. I suspect that many attorneys will not have the patience or resources to fight such a battle for 12 years. A strong and hostile message has been sent to the legal fraternity.

    By conducting this war, the police have expanded their battle of intimidation into the very heart of lawyers’ offices. Now, added to the fight of representing a client is the fear of being caught up in a senseless war. How can a lawyer defend your rights when he/she first have to fight for his/her own?

    In addition to monies being awarded the GOB should be searching for two replacements for these officers. Leaving these lying and corrupt officers in position tell these officers that they will not be punished no hatter how egregious their acts. Prior cases in which these officers were involved with should be reviewed.

    I would also suggest a very short course on the rights of citizens to the Assistant comptroller of Customs


  37. Time to call out CORRUPTION
    Question: Why is Barbados called Little England?
    Answer: Because it is just another Little Babylon

    Natural Progression is equal to Natural Aggression
    I refer you to Revelation 18 to see how the story goes*

    Natural progression
    Necessity,
    The mother of I and I inventions
    Are using what Jah gave us
    And there was plenty
    In mother Africa
    Government society
    Colonialise the black nation
    Left us crying
    Natural progression
    Now you confuse I early tuition
    Hold I customs then you call it
    Religion
    Inventing military weapons to gain
    Supremacy – over I
    Natural progression
    They want to execute political systems
    – on I and I


  38. (*) Revelation 18

    Lament Over Fallen Babylon

    18 After this I saw another angel coming down from heaven. He had great authority, and the earth was illuminated by his splendor. 2 With a mighty voice he shouted:

    “‘Fallen! Fallen is Babylon the Great!’[a]
    She has become a dwelling for demons
    and a haunt for every impure spirit,
    a haunt for every unclean bird,
    a haunt for every unclean and detestable animal.
    3
    For all the nations have drunk
    the maddening wine of her adulteries.
    The kings of the earth committed adultery with her,
    and the merchants of the earth grew rich from her excessive luxuries.”
    Warning to Escape Babylon’s Judgment

    4 Then I heard another voice from heaven say:

    “‘Come out of her, my people,’[b]
    so that you will not share in her sins,
    so that you will not receive any of her plagues;
    5
    for her sins are piled up to heaven,
    and God has remembered her crimes.
    6
    Give back to her as she has given;
    pay her back double for what she has done.
    Pour her a double portion from her own cup.
    7
    Give her as much torment and grief
    as the glory and luxury she gave herself.
    In her heart she boasts,
    ‘I sit enthroned as queen.
    I am not a widow;[c]
    I will never mourn.’
    8
    Therefore in one day her plagues will overtake her:
    death, mourning and famine.
    She will be consumed by fire,
    for mighty is the Lord God who judges her.
    Threefold Woe Over Babylon’s Fall

    9 “When the kings of the earth who committed adultery with her and shared her luxury see the smoke of her burning, they will weep and mourn over her. 10 Terrified at her torment, they will stand far off and cry:

    “‘Woe! Woe to you, great city,
    you mighty city of Babylon!
    In one hour your doom has come!’

    11 “The merchants of the earth will weep and mourn over her because no one buys their cargoes anymore— 12 cargoes of gold, silver, precious stones and pearls; fine linen, purple, silk and scarlet cloth; every sort of citron wood, and articles of every kind made of ivory, costly wood, bronze, iron and marble; 13 cargoes of cinnamon and spice, of incense, myrrh and frankincense, of wine and olive oil, of fine flour and wheat; cattle and sheep; horses and carriages; and human beings sold as slaves.

    14 “They will say, ‘The fruit you longed for is gone from you. All your luxury and splendor have vanished, never to be recovered.’ 15 The merchants who sold these things and gained their wealth from her will stand far off, terrified at her torment. They will weep and mourn 16 and cry out:

    “‘Woe! Woe to you, great city,
    dressed in fine linen, purple and scarlet,
    and glittering with gold, precious stones and pearls!
    17
    In one hour such great wealth has been brought to ruin!’

    “Every sea captain, and all who travel by ship, the sailors, and all who earn their living from the sea, will stand far off. 18 When they see the smoke of her burning, they will exclaim, ‘Was there ever a city like this great city?’ 19 They will throw dust on their heads, and with weeping and mourning cry out:

    “‘Woe! Woe to you, great city,
    where all who had ships on the sea
    became rich through her wealth!
    In one hour she has been brought to ruin!’

    20
    “Rejoice over her, you heavens!
    Rejoice, you people of God!
    Rejoice, apostles and prophets!
    For God has judged her
    with the judgment she imposed on you.”
    The Finality of Babylon’s Doom

    21 Then a mighty angel picked up a boulder the size of a large millstone and threw it into the sea, and said:

    “With such violence
    the great city of Babylon will be thrown down,
    never to be found again.
    22
    The music of harpists and musicians, pipers and trumpeters,
    will never be heard in you again.
    No worker of any trade
    will ever be found in you again.
    The sound of a millstone
    will never be heard in you again.
    23
    The light of a lamp
    will never shine in you again.
    The voice of bridegroom and bride
    will never be heard in you again.
    Your merchants were the world’s important people.
    By your magic spell all the nations were led astray.
    24
    In her was found the blood of prophets and of God’s holy people,
    of all who have been slaughtered on the earth.”


  39. “…we have more pressing matters to dissect …….”
    ~~~~~~
    ..make a note of that remark William.
    It will come to be known as THE understatement of the last Decade.

  40. The OG Translation services - An INDEPENDENT business Avatar
    The OG Translation services – An INDEPENDENT business

    12/7/2024: 8:11 a.m
    A story such as that one always catches my attention. To read and understand it fully, requires a level of skill that the common man would not apply on the first reading. Few read an article more than once.

    To fully understand an article of this type, one must read it in Bajan as the Queens language lacks the beauty and cannot fully convey the details. I have hired a self described expert in Bajan to translat a few lines for me:

    “The FSC further advised that “interested parties may contact the commission” to make arrangements for the payments of outstanding monies.”
    ** If wunna want wunna money, yuh bettah start askin around. Don’t play wunna go in de people place to ask fuh money; Get wunna cap in hand and go to de commission.

    When contacted about this development, ‘xxx’ said she had seen the notice but stated: “Another person was managing it after my tenure.”
    *** I saw de notice. I aint write dat ting. Not me boasie, I was outta dey wenever what happun, happun

    In relation to member deposits, XXXX admitted they were minuscule and that an offer would be made on “cents on the dollar”, but she lamented that there was no deposit insurance for credit unions.
    **** De money we had was small and wha peeple get back gun be even smaller (scents on de dollah – dem gun only smell money, no touching)

    “[This] is the point that the credit union movement has been making all the time. If that was so, you know, the deposits would have been insured in this instance. So, we have to wait and see what it is that they’ve agreed to, the FSC, to pay back the depositors.”
    *** A fellah bettah not get he hopes up. yah gotta wait and see wha dem gun pay yah back.

    **** This translation was done using the latest AI program available. As such, there may be a few errors in the translation


  41. It does not matter the government in office, collecting garbage from the streets, maintaining an adequate public transportation fleet, overseeing order of the PSV sector etc is a recurring problem. How can we progress as a nation if our leaders struggle to lead?


  42. @ Donna December 7, 2024 at 5:20 am “But Jesus never advocated for violence.”

    And Jesus went into the temple of God, and cast out all them that sold and bought in the temple, and overthrew the tables of the money changers, and the seats of them that sold doves,

    And said unto them, It is written, My house shall be called the house of prayer; but ye have made it a den of thieves.
    Matthew 21:12-14


  43. @ Donna December 7, 2024 at 5:20 am “But Jesus never advocated for violence.”

    And when he had made a scourge of small cords, he drove them all out of the temple, and the sheep, and the oxen; and poured out the changers’ money, and overthrew the tables;

    And said unto them that sold doves, Take these things hence; make not my Father’s house an house of merchandise.
    John 2:15-17


  44. It seems as though the financiers, the money changers, the banksters, the insurance executives are still doing business as usual.


  45. I don’t know if Jesus actually hit anybody with the scourge or whip, but if anybody comes towards me with a whip I am going to feel threatened, and I will run.

    Or fight back.


  46. I also read somewhere a proposal of green cards for university graduates, so send me 2 “criminal illegal aliens” and I’ll send you 2 university graduates.

    Fair exchange right?

    Or more brain drain?

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