International news agency
International News Services archives articles supplied to clients one year or more after initial publication. These articles are protected by a password and not made available to readers without permission from clients. They are used as a background resource by agency journalists. Upon client requests, International News Services will remove such articles from the archive or not upload them in the first place. They are included to demonstrate the breadth of topics undertaken by the agency and also to help promote clients’ coverage.

Search Results for: Caribbean

10 results out of 375 results found for 'Caribbean'.

BRITISH OVERSEAS TERRITORIES MAKE PROGRESS IN ANTI-MONEY LAUNDERING LEGISLATION



BY ROBERT STOKES

TIME was when hearing the British Virgin Islands (BVI) or Cayman Islands described as role models of watchfulness and legal retribution against money laundering and terrorist financing would have raised at least a snigger.

Yet these and other UK Overseas Territories (OTs) in the Caribbean have made "significant progress" in AML/CFT provisions, according to Calvin Wilson, executive director of the Caribbean Financial Action Task Force (CFATF).…

Read more

IATA BOSS WANTS NEW MEXICAN GOVERNMENT TO BACK DELAYED NEW MEXICO CITY AIRPORT



BY PACIFICA GODDARD

THE INTERNATIONAL Air Transport Authority’s (IATA) Americas airports chief has called on Mexico’s new incoming government to make progress on the long delayed proposals to build a new international airport for Mexico City, the capital.

Indeed, Mexico City International Airport (AICM) is no longer able to accommodate the growing demands of Mexican tourism and trade, and the capital city is in desperate need of a second airport.…

Read more

DESPITE PROGRESS, GLOBAL ANTI-MONEY LAUNDERING EFFORTS STILL CONTAIN SIGNIFICANT GAPS



BY ALAN OSBORN

THE WORLD has been fighting money laundering in more or less the same way for a quarter of a century now and many of those in the thick of the battle are starting to wonder, frankly, whether the game is worth the candle any more.…

Read more

EU ROUND UP - CONFECTIONERY INDISTRY FIGHT PROPOSALS TO DELAY END OF EU SUGAR QUOTAS



BY KEITH NUTHALL

EUROPE’S confectionery industry is fighting rearguard moves at the European Parliament to delay the abolition of European Union (EU) quotas on EU sugar production. A report from French conservative MEP Michel Dantin on the new EU Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) has proposed that the quotas stay until 2020 – they are currently to be phased out by 2015.…

Read more

CRACKING THE CALYPSO CONUNDRUM - CARIBBEAN STARTS TO CLEAN UP ITS ASSET PROTECTION ACT



BY ROBERT STOKES

CARIBBEAN jurisdictions are stereotypically seen as information black-holes whose minimal filing requirements for companies and trusts facilitate fraud.

Think Stanford International Bank and Westbond International Bank, two Antigua based vehicles for high-profile Ponzi schemes. Also, the Madoff scandal in the USA led to the liquidators of Fairfield Sentry – a British Virgin Islands (BVI) domiciled hedge fund that was among Madoff’s main victims – unsuccessfully trying to claim back money from investors who had legally withdrawn money from Sentry.…

Read more

EUROPEAN BOOST FOR CARIBBEAN RUM



BY MICHAEL KOSMIDES

The Caribbean rum industry will receive a multimillion Euro boost after the European Commission signed three financial agreements with the Caribbean Forum of African Caribbean and Pacific States, identifying the sector as a priority for assistance. Senior sources from the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) told just-drinks the regional run industry will be supported with EUR7.7 million out of a EUR46.5 million agreement finalised on Wednesday (April 18) that will help, for instance, remove technical barriers to trading Caribbean rum.…

Read more

SPAIN VIEWS LONG TERM PRIZE IN LATIN AMERICA



BY ROBERT STOKES, IN MÁLAGA

JUST like El Dorado, the never-was city of gold, Latin America’s 390 million Spanish speakers, are a siren call to Spanish publishers, whose domestic market numbers just 46 million souls. There is even a side bet on 190 million Portuguese speaking Brazilians

Some publishers, lured by these big numbers, have tried and failed in the past, foundering on the reefs of censorship, economic and currency volatility, and the local business culture, though taking forever to get paid – if at all – should not have come as a shock to Spanish firms.…

Read more

BLUE CARIBBEAN SKIES BECKON BRITISH NURSES



BY GEMMA HANDY, IN PROVIDENCIALES, TURKS & CAICOS, AND POORNA RODRIGO

SWAPPING the grey British skies for the sun-soaked shores of the Caribbean might sound like an easy decision to make.

For 56-year-old nurse Anne Males, there was some initial trepidation at how she would cope living on a tiny island with a population of just 25,000, more than an hour’s flight from the nearest major American city.…

Read more

STANFORD CASE SHOWS HOW BULLYING AND BRIBERY CAN SUSTAIN A PONZI SCHEME



BY LEAH GERMAIN

SWINDLER, liar, bully and briber, R. Allen Stanford was once one of the world’s wealthiest men. With a net worth of USD 2 billion, the Texas-born financier lived a life of lavish luxury, with yachts, airplanes and an international bank to call his own.…

Read more

STANFORD CASE SHOWS BRASS NECK FRAUDS CAN WORK, EVEN IF THEY LACK SOPHISTICATION



BY LEAH GERMAIN

WITH what was once an estimated net worth of over USD2 billion, R. Allen Stanford was once revered as one of the wealthiest men in America. Yet a Texas court has now heard in detail that his wealth, which he displayed in both opulent and lavish ways, was derived from ill-gotten gains.…

Read more