Archive for February, 2012
Cruise ship visitor found dead in North Sound
(CNS): A 56-year-old man who was visiting the Cayman Islands on a cruise ship died yesterday afternoon in the area of Coral Gardens in the North Sound. The visitor was found floating on the water by people on a boat in the area, the police reported. The RCIPS said that shortly before mid-day Wednesday 15 February the emergency services received a report that the man was unconscious and unresponsive after the people on board the boat had lifted him onto their vessel and attempted CPR. The Joint Marine Unit vessel Tornado attended the location and transported the man to the Yacht Club, where paramedics were standing-by.
The visitor was taken to the Cayman Islands Hospital in George Town, but was found tobe dead on arrival.
Police said that enquiries into the circumstances surrounding the incident are ongoing and further details will be made available in due course.
Society promises entertaining farming show
(CNS):Visitors can look forward to a great day out next Wednesday organisers of the 45th Annual Agriculture Show said. The Ash Wednesday show at the Agriculture Pavilion in Lower Valley, is the oldest and the biggest one day event in the Cayman Islands and Cayman Islands Agriculture Society president Errol Watler said everyone was keen to be there. All participating farmers will be bringing out their best livestock and crops to display or sell. Art and craft, and of course, a variety of local foods will be on sale. The show begins at 7:00 a.m. and the entertainment from rodeos to cooking contests will run all day.
Following the official opening at 9am there will be a host of activities throughout the day, including the farmer’s interactive tent that gives members of the public a chance to ask farmers tips on crops, the best fertilizers for different types of soil and what’s new in the farming community.
“Just about everybody in the agriculture business is eager to be here. This is going to be a very exciting show,” said Watler.
Livestock farmer Paul Bodden said this was his favorite day of the year. “The public can get to see the best of agriculture in the Cayman Islands. This is the one day of the year that the community can see what we farmers do.”
Juliana O’Connor-Connolly, the minister responsible for Agriculture, encouraged the public to support the show. “It is all about everyone working in harmony to achieve a product that is sustainable and beneficial to the islands, its economy and people and the farming community. The farmers and the public come to see who will get bragging rights and we must all work together to move agriculture forward,” she stated.
There will a rodeo, petting zoo and a cooking competition hosted by the Youth Services Unit. The rodeo will be hosted by the Wrangler’s Association and starts at 12:00 noon with a host of events, including barrel races, team penning, pole bending, flag races and calf roping. Children will also be able to participate in sack races and pony rides, said Shanna Pandohie who organises the rodeo portion of the show.
Entertainers are JR Douglas and Impulse Bands, Gospel Explosion, the Cayman Islands Marching Band and Gideon Pathfinder Drill Demonstration and Drum Corp.
The beautiful baby contest will begin at 11:00 a.m. Already there are 10 registered entrants for the contest, which will feature four age groups: 10-18 months; 19- 24 months; 25-36 months and 37-48 months. In addition to the title prize of Most Beautiful Baby, entrants will compete for the Best Smile and Personality titles.
One of the new features this year is the Youth Service Cooking Competition, which starts at 11:30 a.m. The public will be able to watch eight students who have been coached by some of Cayman Islands top chefs. The cooking competition is the culminating event of a four-year culinary programme which aims to prepare high school students for careers in the culinary field.
Tickets for the show cost $25, which includes entry into the raffle, with a grand prize of $20,000. General admission tickets are $10 for adults and $5 for children aged two to 12 years. Tickets outlets are Funky Tangs, Rembley Reid and Audley Williams of A.L. Thompson’s, Agriculture Society members, Seymour’s Jerk Chicken, Welly’s Cool Spot, Blue Marlin Restaurant Meringue Town and Cayman Coating. Visit our website at www.cias.ky for more information. Like us on Facebook at Cayman Agriculture.
Alarm raised over cave threat
(CNS): The revelation that some of Cayman’s most sensitive cave systems are to be developed into a tourist attraction has caused considerable alarm, and it also appears that the developer does not have planning permission for the work he has started at the site. Pictures circulating online this week showing heavy machinery in one of the North Side caves raised a number of questions as neither the National Trust or the Department of Environment have been consulted about the clearance work which appears to have started on an as yet undisclosed project. The director of planning told CNS yesterday that the department had been informed about the work and was now making enquiries at the site.
“We have become aware of this situation and a compliance officer has been dispatched to investigate. I am awaiting his report to determine a future course of action,” Haroon Pandohie stated via e-mail in response to CNS enquiries.
The National Trust has also confirmed that, despite being an immediate neighbour to the property the land owner intends to develop, it has not been informed about the planned project. At the time of issuing a statement yesterday afternoon the National Trust for the Cayman Islands said it had not received any notification from the Department of Planning regarding the North Side property where the caves which appear to be under development are located.
“The Trust expects to have received such notification prior to the commencement of any form of development given that the Trust’s Mastic Reserve is adjacent to this property, and landowners are legally required to notify adjacent property owners of their intent to develop their property,” the Trust stated.
It went on to explain the sensitivity of the area and why people were right to be concerned as three species of bats have been recorded roosting in the large cave which was shown on the photographs that circulated this week. (Click photo to see larger image)
“Two of these species are considered quite rare, and are verysusceptible to disturbance by the presence of humans. For this reason, among others, these caves have been recognized as an environmentally sensitive area,” the Trust said.
“One of the first objectives in any plan for protecting a sensitive natural area is to identify stakeholders in order to seek their input. As a key stakeholder, the National Trust has not been approached regarding the recent undertakings and is not aware of any other stakeholders who have been contacted.
“Although at present Environmental Impact Assessments are not legally required for the development of any environmentally sensitive area in the Cayman Islands, such assessments are accepted as best practice in the vast majority of developed countries. Such an Assessment will objectively rate the value of the unmodified site as compared with the value of proposed enhancements to accurately inform the development process along with the relevant stakeholders,” the National Trust added.
The Department of the Environment also appears to have been left in the dark over the cave plans. Gina Ebanks-Petrie, the department’s director, told CNS that the DoE met with the developer of the proposed attraction a few years ago and advised him to take a low-impact, environmentally sensitive approach to the development of the site.
“In relation to the current activity on the site, the DoE has not been requested for input on any planning application seeking approval for the access road or the excavation that has apparently taken place in the caves,” she added.
Ebanks-Petrie sent a memo to the chief officer in the financial services department almost two years ago after the department had received a project proposal from Crystal Caves to develop a natural tourism attraction and forest preserve. in it the DoE noted a number of concerns, in particular the sensitivity of caves to disturbance from visitors. It advised the developer to establish a maximum visitor number that the cave system could sustain rather than financial based targets of visitor numbers, which the DoE said were not only overly optimistic but unsustainable.
The DoE was also concerned about the developer’s proposal to put in a 30 foot road, which the department advised against and asked him to consider a far narrower road that ended some distance from the caves which visitors would then access via a pathway.
It is not clear exactly what the developer, Christian Soresen, has in mind for the project though he dismissed accusations that he planned to develop a nightclub, bar or restaurant at the site in an interview Wednesday evening with Cayman27. However, Soresen had applied for a liquor license for the caves during the moratorium on licenses in January last year but the board has not yet responded to CNS enquiries to state whether or not the license was approved.
With no national conservation law on the books, the only legal sanction to prevent the land owner from developing these caves are the planning laws. There is no requirement in law for him to develop in a way which would fit with the internationally accepted description of eco-tourism, which seeks not to disturb but sustain and support the environment in its natural state.
The excavation work in the caves may, according to some experts, already have destabilized the sensitive eco-systems and affected the bats that call the caves home.
The Cayman Islands indigenous and native bats are all at risk and none of them are protect in law. However the National Trust Bat Conservation Programme and its volunteers works tirelessly to try and protect these incredible animals and offers a wealth of expertise on the various species, their natural habitats and unique biodiversity of the areas where they roost.
Go to www.nationaltrust.org.ky/environment/bats for more information.
‘We’ll get 25%,’ say MLAs
(CNS): Arden McLean and Ezzard Miller say then are confident of getting at least twenty-five percent of the country's electorate to sign their petition for a referendum on changing Cayman's voting system to single member constituencies. The two MLAs said at the official launch of the petition that their goal was to get 5,000 signatures from registered voters to support the call for government to adopt the Boundary Commission recommendations of 18 constituencies across the Cayman Islands. Miller and McLean have set November as the target date for the people-led referendum, leaving government enough time to conduct the 2013 general election in accordance with the result of that national ballot, which they say will be one man, one vote.
“We believe it is time that the whole islands have some form of equality,” Ezzard Miller stated at a press briefing on Wednesday as he explained that the introduction of the three extra seats at the next election would create an even greater democratic injustice across the islands when it comes to influencing government.
Government has selected the option which its own commission, which pointed to the obvious inequality and extraordinary influence it would give voters in the capital. Nevertheless, government means to add two seats to Goerge Town and one to Bodden Town before the 2013 May election, giving voters in the capital six times more influence on the result than voters in the two single member constituencies.
Although Miller’s efforts to introduce single member constituencies through parliament have been thwarted on a number of occasion, the mounting evidence from the work of the commission, various straw polls and surveys is pointing to greater than ever support for one man, one vote, which may be down to his efforts in the Legislative Assembly.
“The constitution prohibits people from casting more than one vote,” he said as he read section 92. “In every dictionary I look up ‘an’ is singular. So how government can make that mean four or even six is difficult for this country boy to understand,” Miller added. He explained that when the constitution was implemented all laws that had not been update were to be read as though they had already been changed to be in line with the constitution. “The Election Law must be read as if it is already amended to a single vote.”
Given that government does not take this view, both he and McLean have changed tack and are now focusing on the referendum and believe they will get much more than the 3,795 signatures they need from the electorate to trigger the referendum and go on to win that ballot.
“I believe, although I have failed to get government to support my motions during that process, there has been a greater awareness about the need for one man, one vote,” Miller said. “The constitutional commissioners said themselves that at every public meeting held in Grand Cayman people expressed a preference of one person one vote. Given that situation, it boggles my mind why the government could entertain the possibility of giving George Towners six votes.”
The constitution provides for a people-initiated referendum, which requires 25% or more of the electorate to support the referendum and force the hand of government to hold that vote within a reasonable time frame.
Joined by a group of more than a dozen local business representatives at the launch, the MLAs said they had recruited another two dozen people who will be going to the doors of registered voters with the petition books to ask people to sign. They will also be at a number of strategic locations across the islands over the six week campaign set aside to collect the necessary signatures. The goal is to have the petition in the hands of Cabinet by the first week of April, giving government eight months to prepare for the referendum.
Miller said lessons were learned from the fate of the petition collected by the various activist groups in West Bay regarding the proposed road closure and as a result every signature will be supported by photo ID and carry the voter’s election number.
The petition simply asks potential signers if they support a referendum to ask the electorate if they want single member constituencies as set out in boundary commission report. “It is very clear and deliberate,” Miller said.
The members explained that the 18 constituencies across the three islands have already been identified and marked and are currently set out under the polling districts. As a result, the MLAs say there will be no difficulty changing to the more democratic system before 2013.
“The election’s office could conduct an election tomorrow with single member constituencies as the work has already been done,” Miller stated.
Arden McLean said the principle was not about party politics or specific politicians but empowering the people to choose and hold their representatives accountable.
“It demands accountability,” McLean stated. “In plural districts you don't get that as politicians can discount entire communities and still get elected.”
He said there was no equality in the current system and it would get worse if the government is allowed to go ahead and adopt the proposal to add seats to existing multi-member districts. “The time has come for Cayman to move its democracy forward; it’s time for equality,” McLean said as he warned that politicians would no longer be able to hide.
The cost of conducting a referendum is estimated to be about $250,000, which given its significance for the future of democracy was a price worth paying, the MLAs agreed.
DoT considers fines to close statistics gap
(CNS Business): A significant discrepancy between the surge in overnight visitors to the Cayman Islands and a decline in hotel and condo occupancy rates through 2011had some tourism stakeholders concerned that things didn’t add up. However, the Department of Tourism has said this is down to the failure of the islands’ accommodation owners to accurately report their occupancy rates. Acting Director of Tourism Shomari Scott is appealing to owners to send in the information, which is crucial to the DoT’s work. Given the current economic climate, he said, no one would welcome legislation introducing financial sanctions for a failure to report. Read more on CNS Business
Caribbean cruise industry stagnant, CTO stats reveal
(CNS Business): The cruise industry continued to grow internationally last year, but this was not felt in the Caribbean, where growth in the cruise sector was described as “inconsequential” by the Caribbean Tourism Organization, as it released its tourism statistics for 2011. Destinations in the Southern Caribbean were severely affected by the redeployment of several cruise vessels, particularly during the summer months, to routes outside of the Caribbean, the CTO said, and based on preliminary schedules, cruise arrivals to the Caribbean in 2012 are not likely rise by more than 2-3%. Stay-over tourism fared better and overall the Caribbean had an estimated 23.8 million tourists in 2011, a 3.3% rise over 2010, which saw just over 23 million stay-over visitors. Read more on CNS Business
One child in four too malnourished to grow properly
(The Independent): A quarter of young children around the world are not getting enough nutrients to grow properly, and 300 die of malnutrition every hour, according to a new report that lays bare the effects of the global food crisis. There are 170 million children aged under five whose development has been stunted by malnutrition because of lack of food for them and their breastfeeding mothers, and the situation is getting significantly worse, according to research by the charity Save the Children. In Pakistan, Bangladesh, India, Peru and Nigeria recent rises in global food prices are forcing the parents of malnourished children to cut back on food and pull children out of school to work.
According to the report, A Life Free from Hunger: Tackling Child Malnutrition, a third of parents surveyed said their children routinely complain they do not have enough to eat. One in six parents can never afford to buy meat, milk or vegetables. It suggests that six out of 10 children in Afghanistan are not getting enough nutrients to avoid stunted growth.
"If no concerted action is taken," warns Justin Forsyth, the charity's chief executive, "half a billion children will be physically and mentally stunted over the next 15 years".
Robbery pepper spray came from cop’s home
(CNS): The two teenagers convicted last year of the robbery at the Blackbeard’s store in Grand Harbour were found to have handcuffs and pepper spray in their possession that had been stolen from a police officer’s home in an earlier burglary. Jonathan Welcome (18) and Jordon Powell (19) were sentenced to 6 years for a foiled daylight hold-up at a liquor store after they were apprehended by civilians at the scene. The teenagers were carrying a load shotgun, which failed to fire, as well as pepper spray which they used during the struggle with the civilians who prevented their escape. The court heard Friday that the pepper spray belonged to a serving police officer.
The teens are now facing burglary and handling stolen goods charges and although the two are denying being responsible for the burglary at the police officers house, their defence attorney told the court that the two young men were willing to plead guilty to handling stolen goods.
Welcome and Powell pleaded guilty to attempted robbery, possession of an unlicensed firearm and other related offences in connection with their bungled heist at Blackbeard’s and their attempts to rob a member of the public.
The loaded firearm was later discovered to be faulty and not capable of firing but the court heard during the sentencing hearing that one of the young men had his finger on the trigger and had attempted to fire the weapon during the struggle that ensued with the witnesses to the attempted robbery. Charles Ebanks who grabbed the barrel of the gun and struggled with the teen offender did not know at the time that the firearm was faulty. He along with Edward Azan and Ray MacGuire had gone on to chase the would-be robbers, as well as disarmed and restrained them until the police arrived.
‘Bermuda Cliff Jumping’ goes viral on YouTube
(CNS): A teenager's video of his Bermuda vacation, which includes many shots of a group of friends jumping into the ocean at Abbott’s Cliff, has been viewed on YouTube so far over 150,000 times, and now that it has been featured by the Huffington Post website it will no doubt become even more popular. 15-year-old Giles Lorimer Turner, who made the video last August with his 16-year-old brother James using a waterproof, shockproof, near-indestructible GoPro camera, told the Royal Gazzette that by October the video was getting 30 or 40 views a day. “I remember telling one of my friends we were ecstatic just to get 700 views. I don’t know how, but it went viral," he said.
Giles, a student at the UK's Rugby School, said, “We were at Admiralty House park and did a lot of cliff jumping there. Those jumps were planned very carefully. We made sure it was deep water at high tide. It’s exhilarating up there you get up top and you know it’s deep water and high tide. I don’t want to say it’s group pressure, but you have to overcome some fear. We just want to have a good time, but you don’t want to do stunts and risk it.
“The cliff jumping video was shot all in the same day. We went that afternoon to Abbott’s Cliff. You get a really nice panoramic view there. We shot that around August 20, and I think we put it up around August 24.”
Judge warns defendant over witness harassment
(CNS): A grand court judge warned an accused man Friday that having friends and family call a witness won’t help his situation and is likely to ensure he would remain in custody until his trial. Jonathan Mellard has been charged with wounding and was hoping that the charges against him would be dropped as a result of the main witness withdrawing his complaint. However, the crown revealed that the witness still intended to testify against the accused man despite phone calls made to him to persuade him otherwise. The defendant’s attorney told the court of his intention to apply for bail if the trial was to go ahead but the judge said the calls would not help the defendant’s case.
Prosecuting counsel Marilyn Brandt told Justice Seymour Panton that the complainant was going ahead despite claims by the defence that he was not willing to testify. She told the court the witness had made no indication that he wanted to withdraw the charges but he did state that he had received calls from people who wanted him to stop the legal proceedings.
The judge said the people involved were “playing a dangerous game” in their efforts to stop the case and such reports would need to be given serious consideration by whichever judge heard the bail application. Aside from warning the callers about the damage they were doing to the defendant’s chances of getting bail he pointed out that it is not up to the witness to decide if the case goes ahead. “It is not his prerogative to say if the case proceeds,” the judge said adding that if a wounding has happened then it should be prosecuted by the crown.
The defence attorney asked for the case to be adjourned for two weeks so that he could proceed with the bail application.