A 90 million dollar development hits San Salvador and not one Hallelujah in the Tribune! Not one Praise the Lord! Not one Thank You Jesus from the people!

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A $90 million development hit San Salvador – and not one Hallelujah! NOT ONE THANK YOU JESUS!

A the Heads of Agreement signing at Club Med in San Salvador, Oct. 28, 2013, sitting from left: Xavier Mufraggi, Prime Minister Perry Christie, Wendall Major, Cabinet Secretary, Jean Marc Daigle, and Rouschard Martin. Standing: Labour and National Insurance Minister Shane Gibson, Tourism Minister Obie Wilchcombe, Clement Maynard, Sophie Standbrook, Luc Poiier, and Deborah Frazier.

Not one praise da Lord in the dutty, wutless terlet paper this morning as Bahamians heads back to work – WHAT IN THE HELL DO WE WANT?

Election Promises to create Jobs and Opportunities for Bahamians DELIVERED, and yet, we stand UN-THANKFUL!!!!

REMARKS BY

THE RT. HON. PERRY G. CHRISTIE

PRIME MINISTER OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF THE BAHAMAS

AT HEADS OF AGREEMENT SIGNING

WITH CLUB MEDITERRANEE (BAHAMAS) LIMITED AND SAND AND OCEAN INVESTMENTS LTD FOR RESORT EXPANSION AT

SAN SALVADOR

OCTOBER 28, 2013

Christie lands major investment deal in the land of discovery! Christie delievers on major election promises to put Bahamians back to work...

Salutations,

During this same month of October, five hundred and thirty-one years ago, Captain Christopher Columbus and a group of European sailors became the first European visitors to visit The Bahamas, when they first set foot on the historic soil of San Salvador.  They were amazed at their discovery, as evidenced in the journal of Christopher Columbus in his famous entry “This land exceeds the beauty of all others even as the splendour of the day surpasses the night”.  Coupled with that statement, and indeed even more significant was his apt description of the then Lucayans who peopled this fair land, whom he describes as handsome, gentle, mild mannered and welcoming.  With these same characteristics of our land and people still intact some five centuries later, The Bahamas plays host to almost six (6) million visitors annually from around the globe.

It was shortly after our nation’s independence that our visionary first Prime Minister, the late Sir Lynden Pindling, as Chairman of The Hotel Corporation of The Bahamas, entered into discussions with Mr. Albert Trigaro, the French investor and founder of Club Mediterranee about a joint venture for a Club Med Village at San Salvador, on land to be leased by The Hotel Corporation.  As the discussions progressed and after lengthy negotiations, the Corporation conveyed its land to Club Med who built the village, which has undergone extensive renovations from time to time.

The partnership between Club Med and the Government of The Bahamas has been constant over the years.  One of the largest, if not the largest investment in airport infrastructure in the Family Islands, is the San Salvador airport.  It was during my first administration from 2002-2007, when I came to office and found Club Med at San Salvador closed.  The airport and its facilities were inadequate to accommodate direct long haul flights from Europe, Canada and the United States, the resort had suffered economic setbacks from hurricane damage and recession, I led my Government in intervening with the airport upgrade, and airlift/marketing support, which not only reopened and turned this property around, but saved and expanded the economy of San Salvador.

Today, I am proud to be here during my second term in Office as Prime Minister to build on this relationship, as we will signal with the execution of Heads of Agreement between my Government and Club Mediteranee and Sand and Ocean Investments Limited as an added partner, a ninety (90) million refurbishment and expansion project at Columbus Isle Village and on adjacent land in San Salvador.  In this regard I most warmly welcome Mr. Xavier Mufraggi, CEO of Club Med, and Mr. Jean Marc Daigle, Principal of Sand and Ocean Investments and express my deepest appreciation to them for this vote of confidence in the Government and people of The Bahamas in making this major and strategic investment, which will not only transform the economy of San Salvador but also impact and undoubtedly attract other development and employment in the south-eastern Bahamas.  The credentials and operations of Club Med are well known to us, having pioneered the now popular all inclusive resort concept and having at one time operated three Club Med villages on Paradise Island, Eleuthera and San Salvador.

Mr. Jean-Marc Daigle, Principal of Sand and Ocean, has extensive real estate projects in Quebec, Canada, the Dominican Republic, Venezuela and Turks & Caicos, with a concentration in the hospitality industry. Sand and Ocean’s investment partner is Luc Poirier Investment Company, which has an extensive variety of business portfolios, including expertise in real estate,

The refurbishment works of Club Med which will start shorty will include existing guest rooms, buildings, grounds, mechanical plant and the creation of a spa and updating of restaurants.

The expansion phase will consist of construction of 360 new luxury condo-hotel units and staff housing, all of which will be built in phases, to be developed and financed by Sand and Ocean and operated by Club Med.

Additionally Sand and Ocean is planning the construction of a 125 room boutique hotel to be managed by a European luxury resort operator.

All of the above works are to be completed within four years.  During construction it is projected that some direct 335 jobs will be made available to qualified Bahamians and a minimum of 250 Bahamians would be employed in resort operations.  Many other indirect jobs in both the public and private sectors and entrepreneurial opportunities will be created.

Further upgrades are necessary at the airport including navigational aides, security, terminal expansion, ground handling.  We have canvassed local suppliers and fixed base operators to provide a reliable supply of aviation fuel and fixed based operation, to which Oddysey Aviation has responded favourably.  They are concluding arrangements to have a reliable supply of fuel installed to meet a deadline of mid-December.  The company plans to employ and train several local persons in connection with this service which will serve to attract both international and domestic passenger as well as private flights.

The Government through the Ministry of Tourism will work cooperatively with the developers to promote and support airlift for the benefit of San Salvador as a destination.  A determined and focussed effort will be made through the National Training Programme to increase Bahamian employment and to provide a high level of service for the upgraded and expanded resort.

The San Salvador clinic is to be upgraded and serviced by a full time medical doctor to meet the needs of both the community and visitors to the Island.  Other social and infrastructural works will are to be improved and will receive the focused and timely attention of the Deputy Prime Minister, your member of Parliament and all relevant Ministers, many of whom are present here today.

Ladies and Gentlemen:

I would also like to make it known today that my government, in partnership with private sector interests and hopefully in the long run with the support of global organizations like UNESCO as well, will launch a major cultural and historical project here in San Salvador, one that will, I am sure, become a uniquely enriching experience for Bahamians and visitors alike.

There will be three main elements to this project.  I will take each of them in turn, not necessarily in order of importance but rather according to their place in the historical timeline.

Firstly, the project will seek to re-create in a very tangible and visual form an historically faithful microcosm of the Lucayan civilization as it would have subsisted in San Salvador in the pre-Columban period.  As I envisage it, this would involve the re-creation of a Lucayan village as a central feature of a larger cultural exposition. Historical authenticity would be stressed in the design of this village so as to make it make it appealing not only to tourists but to scholars and students as well.

Such a village will, of course, be of great economic value to San Salvador as it will provide opportunities for architects, builders, and construction workers, as well as entrepreneurs, audio-visual technicians, artists, artisans and handicraft workers in relation to the provision of ancillary services just outside the village, such as souvenir stores, restaurants and the like, as well as new jobs as trained tour guides, hospitality hosts, and support staff.

Secondly, the project will bring focus to the European Discovery of the New World by Christopher Columbus in 1492.  Again, as I envisage it, there would be a dramatic re-enactment of this seminal event in world history, focusing on the historical importance of the European discovery and what it foreshadowed for the development of western civilization. I foresee the re-enactment of the Discovery in a theatrical, audio-visual form, perhaps as a sound-and-light show, one that would showcase, in dramatic fashion, the moment when two distinctly different cultures and races met, literally face-to-face-for the first time, on the beaches of San Salvador.

As in the case of the Lucayan village, this re-staging of the European Discovery of the New World by Christopher Columbus, complete with replica vessels on a smaller scale, and sailors in period costume, would become a major feature of the cultural project.  Again, historical authenticity would be stressed in the design and execution of this part of the exposition. And, as in the case of the Lucayan village, new jobs will be created for the dramatists, the actors and actresses, the production staff, and, of course, for the whole range of support facilities that will required to sustain this element of the exposition.

Thirdly, and next in the order of historical progression, the project would also re-create a historically accurate plantation from the era of slavery in The Bahamas.  San Salvador is the prefect place for this because we have Farquharson’s journal as a guide.

Charles Farquharson was a Loyalist of Scottish descent who had a plantation at Prospect Hill on the eastern side of San Salvador, or Watling’s Island, as it was known back then.  Unlike many plantation slaveowners of his time, Farquharson actually lived on site so that he was able to observe and record first-hand what was happening, including the rebellious activities of some of his slaves.  He kept a journal from January 1st, 1831 to 31st December 1832. This journal has survived to this day.  It represents the most complete first-hand record of Bahamian plantation slavery that has come down to us.

Thus, the third limb of the San Salvador historical and cultural exposition will focus on the slavery period since it is out of that period that the dominant racial identity of the Bahamas that we know today evolved.

Again, as I envision it, there will be a historically faithful re-creation of Farquharson’s plantation on, or as near to the original site as may be practicable, having regard to land titles and other planning considerations. Again, this will provide additional jobs for architects, construction workers and the whole range of support staff and entrepreneurs similar to what I have already described for the Lucayan village component of the Project.

So, putting everything together, you will readily appreciate that the three separate parts of the Project that I have just outlined represent the three major civilizations that underpin the historical development of The Bahamas – the Lucayan, the European, and the African.

I am personally very excited about this Project and I hope to be a position to announce a timeline for it and further details once we have collaborated with our private sector partners and other interested stakeholders in the country, including the local government leadership here in San Salvador.

I should perhaps also add that I intend to announce in early course, in relation to the Clifton site in New Providence, a project that is very similar in concept.

But as for today’s event, however, it marks yet another major initiative and advance in my Government’s commitment to the Bahamian people, to expand the economy, create sustainable jobs, employment and entrepreneurial opportunities.  We are doing this Bimini, in Grand Bahama, in New Providence, in Eleuthera, in Exuma and now in the South-eastern Bahamas in San Salvador.  There is more to come in further resort development now being planned and as we implement initiatives to reduce the cost of electricity, modernize infrastructure, improve healthcare, social, education and security services, expand agriculture and fisheries, create new industries and embrace emerging opportunities.

Let us take full advantage of the present and look to the future of San Salvador and the south-eastern Bahamas with confidence.