St. Lucia Online: Last Week's News

DISCUSS EMAIL

ST. LUCIA 'S SEARCH ENGINE

search
St. Lucia Online logo
St. Lucia Flag

Business community closes ranks behind Eagle Air

St. Lucia's Prime Sites         News          Sports        Jobs         Entertainment        Community        Society

19th August 2000

Snail infestation in North demands unified control

Squatters upsetting school routines to be evicted

Aerial spraying resumed to combat leaf spot

Tourist Board on US promotion blitz

LUCELEC soon to deal with customers online

WIBDECO chief denies Geest liquidation

Eagle Air demise: betrayal or inevitable?

National Tennis Centre at Beausejour, Gros Islet

Nurses threaten strikes after 8th September

Employers Fed. denied more time for Labour Code

Communal effort to curb tourist harassment and crime

Caribbean must be on red alert for AIDS/HIV

New private primary school to open doors

Visit  the Current Events discussion forum
CLICK HERE

THIS WEEK'S HEADLINES

SEARCH ARCHIVES

Quotes:

"Our St. Lucian society is certainly an eminently enigmatic one. We use ATM cards to obtain the money with which we purchase the camphor balls and garlic to cast spells on our neighbours".
Victor Marquis on the schizophrenic situation in St. Lucia where people maintain the old while adopting the new (The Voice, 19th August).

"Everybody was just catching up on everybody. Jason (Bachelor) Joseph looking almost relieved after getting untied from the calypso crown, Educator looking every bit as GQ as Morgie tries to be onstage, Magilla and Chassie at the bar, marvelling at the bill they incurred for a beer and a screwdriver". ...
"But to say he was the most improved... isn't that something of an insult? ... Here is a man who was third runner-up for Calypso Monarch, Soca Monarch and Road March, and you give him the Most Improved Calypsonian Award? That's kind of like telling Educator he was the Most Energetic Performer at Soca Monarch and then saying that he's second runner-up".
Jason Sifflet on the Calypso Association's prizegiving ceremony (The Mirror, 18th August).

"Indeed, it has become quite dangerous to drive even thirty feet behind those monsters that in St. Lucia pass for public transport. And not only because the maniacs who drive them are likely to stop suddenly without the smallest signal. What makes driving too close to those gas-propelled missiles is the debris that flies out their windows when you least expect it: from discarded KFC containers packed with chewed chicken bones to half-empty soft-drink containers and worse. Is there a motorist in this town who has not suffered a facefull of trash from our public transport?"
The Wednesday Star on 'Things that make us go.... eee-yeeech' (16th August).

"There is the tendency in this country to point an accusing finger at someone whenever things go wrong. In this instance, Ewart Hinkson is pointing one finger at the government. I simply ask that he ponder for a moment, where, in so doing, his other three fingers are pointed".
Gregory Thomas on who is to blame for the allegedly imminent demise of Eagle Air (Wednesday Star, 16th August).

"Responding to Mrs Williams' challenge to Dr. Lewis for the leadership of the party, Mr. King said everyone should 'prepare for the expected - and the unexpected'".
Earl Bousquet citing UWP general secretary Stephenson King on the issue of Lorraine Williams challenging current UWP leader Dr Vaughan Lewis (The Star, 19th August).

"The old saying that one never misses the water until the well runs dry still holds firm but St. Lucia which has the knack of changing things around has permitted us to interpret this saying differently: 'We can miss the water while the well remains full but the pipe lines remain empty'".
The Voice on the problem of water shortages in the north of the island (19th August).

"[F]armers have now become the country's self-maintained slaves indefinitely, till you die and, like it or not, that's what it is. ... These slaves were supplied with medical attention, housing, clothing, bedding, you name it. Everything was supplied for them and all they had to do was to work for the master. Today you have to work for the master and you have to pay him to work for him. This is the banana industry we are faced with today".
Patrick Joseph, chairman of the St. Lucia Banana Corporation, during the official launch of the SLBC's Fruit Quality Programme (The Crusader, 19th August).

"Shortly, a weekend seminar will be hosted to sensitise owners of goats about prospects of goat racing as a sport".
Ed Harris, furthering his idea of developing goat-racing as a sport in St. Lucia (The Crusader, 19th August).

"There was the father who had thrust his fingers in his child's eyes because he thought the child had been staring at him for too long".
One Caribbean on the often excessive use of physical punishment by St. Lucian parents (One Caribbean 19th August).

"Today, as the Christian family is under constant attack by secular and humanistic forces, the fondness people share for their relatives, especially love between parents and children, is very crucial".
Desmond Brathwaite, 'Christian Corner' (One Caribbean 19th August).

 "If one is not 'tuned in' to a steady boom boom sound, it can send you berserk. Not too long ago, a mobile disco was right on my tail in traffic, I was so disoriented that I was forced to pull over".
Cletus Springer on the need to enforce the Noise Abatement Act in St. Lucia, where noise pollution is rampant (The Mirror 18th August).

"The Government of St. Lucia does not subscribe to the notion that the private sector should be separated by nationality or racial origin in order to assess its contribution to national development".
Earl Bousquet, PM's press secretary, responding to what he sees as the Chamber of Commerce's attempt to divide national and foreign entrepreneurs (The Mirror, 18th August).

Budget 2000 speeches

Casino Survey Report

Full Text of  Blom-Cooper inquiry report

Photo Gallery: "The Wrath of Hurricane  Lenny"

NEWSPAPERS:

RADIO STATIONS:

  • Helen 100 FM
  • Radio Caribbean International
  • Radio St. Lucia
  • Gem Radio

TELEVISION:

REGIONAL:

Snail infestation in North demands unified control

    They may not move fast but they leave a trail of destruction: the Giant African Snails which appear to have infestated a twenty acre area to the north of Castries, from Mongiraud along the Moulin-a-Vent area, then along the left side of the Monchy main road, all the way to Careffe-Lafeuille where the Monchy road turns into Bonne Terre, and back towards Rodney Heights. The ministry of Agriculture was first alerted to the presence of the unusual-looking snail-like creatures in July, and has since put in place a multi-departmental task force to oversee the management of this new pest. A two-pronged approach has been adopted, consisting of an intensive baiting programme, aimed at reducing the snail population and, secondly, mobilisation of the households in the area, to get these people to help to carry out localised baiting, sanitisation of their living surroundings, and manual collection and destruction of the snails. The Ministry is also investigating the possibility of using the snail's natural predators - ants - to combat this latest pest.
    Meanwhile, an expert is working towards establishing whether the identified pest is indeed the Giant African Snail, achatina fulica.
    According to articles in The Voice and Star, the presence of the snails can be detected by sight, or by the extensive rasping signs, defoliation, slime trails and ribbon-like excrement which they leave behind on plant material. It is reported that whereas the adult snails prefer to eat decaying organic matter, young snails also cause damage to living plants in vegetable and flower gardens, and certain fruit and tree crops. Safe from the snail's appetite are sugar cane, maize, rice, coconuts, pineapple and coffee. As yet, the snail infestation does not pose a threat to St. Lucia's domestic agriculture, "provided that property owners in the area cooperate fully in the Ministry's control programme".
    In a press release, the ministry of Agriculture reminds both residents and visitors to St. Lucia once again of the need to adhere strictly to existing quarantine rules, so as to avoid potentially destructive pests such as this one from occurring in the first place.

ñ BACK TO TOP OF PAGE ...

Squatters upsetting school routines to be evicted

    Squatters who are disrupting the daily routines of at least three schools in Castries will possibly be evicted this week. So claims The Voice on its front page. According to the newspaper, the Bocage Secondary, George Charles Secondary and the Morne du Don Primary schools all suffer extensively from the allegedly destructive and disruptive behaviour of people who have unlawfully taken up residence within the school grounds. At the Bocage Secondary School, squatters apparently harvest the crops from the school's agricultural lot, before students have a chance to reap the fruits of their own labour. Squatters and residents of the area also allegedly use the school's multi-purpose court, resulting in "noise and foul language emanating from the court which disrupts classes", writes The Voice. According to the reporter, there are currently seven houses within the fenced area of the Bocage Secondary School. In addition to theft of crops, noise pollution and the use of foul language, the school also lost several pieces of valuable electronic equipment when thieves broke into the school last Thursday night.
    Matters are no better at George Charles Secondary school, according to the acting principal. "There are several canteens operating on the school compound illegally. The proprietors are habitually harbouring students, encouraging them to stay away from classes. It is alleged that these proprietors act as temporary custodians of stolen property, weapons and even illegal drugs. ... There is little doubt that those individuals pose a serious threat to our students, teachers and other staff members". According to the acting principal, a gateman was physically attacked by a squatter, who subsequently proceeded to throw stones at the gateman seeking cover in his guard hut. A student has been attacked by a cutlass-wielding squatter, classes have been interrupted because of squatters using foul language, and the building has been vandalised by squatters trying to get into the toilets. Finally, at the Morne Du Don Primary school, a squatter is engaged in selling alcoholic beverages and marijuana on the school compound. "Students cannot stay in classes because of the strong smell of marijuana", says the principal. She adds that she has been writing to "the powers-that-be" for four years about the problems encountered with this squatter.

ñ BACK TO TOP OF PAGE ...

Aerial spraying resumed to combat leaf spot

    Aerial spraying of banana farms to combat the onset of leaf spot disease is due to start again this week. This was announced by minister of Agriculture, Cass Elias. For the next six months, aerial spraying will be conducted by Crop Protection Co., a subsidiary of the St. Lucia Banana Corporation (SLBC). Furthermore, local company Agrico Ltd. has been contracted for one year to monitor the development of leaf spot disease in St. Lucia. Arrangements for ground spraying, however, have not yet been finalised. Last week, SLBC chairman Patrick Joseph called on government to start combatting leaf spot disease, as farmers stood to lose their crops within a matter of weeks. In the past, the SLBC assumed responsibility for ground and aerial spraying. In 1999, the SLBC charged a levy of 2.96 cents per pound of bananas for this, but following conflicts between the various banana companies regarding this levy, the government was called upon to provide pest control instead. Government put the job out for tender, legislating that it would pay a maximum of 3 cents per pound of bananas. The SLBC subsidiary won the contract but demanded 4.5 cents per pound. It is not clear from this week's articles in the Thursday Voice and The Mirror how much farmers will be asked to pay for the aerial spraying.

ñ BACK TO TOP OF PAGE ...

Tourist Board on US promotion blitz

    The St. Lucia Tourist Board will this week start a two week sales promotion in the United States, in an attempt to expand business from this major tourist market. New Jersey and the New York metro areas - already strong markets for St. Lucia - are to be targetted, as well as the Philadelphia area, from where Apple Vacations is scheduled to commence a charter service this coming winter. The second week of the promotion has been reserved for the 'St. Lucia Summer Island Adventure', which for four years now has worked at increasing US arrivals during the summer, and also a 'Travel Agent Briefing', which is meant to offer US travel agents a familiarisation trip of St. Lucia together with a price discounted vacation. This is reported in The Thursday Voice.

ñ BACK TO TOP OF PAGE ...

LUCELEC soon to deal with customers online

    The St. Lucia Electricity Company LUCELEC is going online. LUCELEC intends to offer customers the opportunity to access information about their usage history and patterns, accept customer maintenance requests and queries online, and accept online bill payments. LUCELEC expects that its website will eventually "greatly enhance customer service", will make the company "a leader in business development" and that customer service will "get a boost as the company will be able to keep abreast of customer queries, concerns and requests on a more timely and efficient basis". The Thursday Voice, Star and Crusader all report this.

ñ BACK TO TOP OF PAGE ...

WIBDECO chief denies Geest liquidation

    "Absolutely flabbergasted" and "absolutely irresponsible". Those were Bernard Cornibert's reactions to the news released last week by St. Lucia Banana Corporation (SLBC) chairman Patrick Joseph, and later confirmed by minister of Agriculture Cass Elias, that Geest Bananas intends to go into liquidation to allow Fyffes to buy it over for £50 million or less. Cornibert is the Chief Executive Officer of the Windward Islands Banana Development and Exporting Company WIBDECO. WIBDECO and Fyffes each own 50 percent of the shares in Geest. The possible liquidation of Geest, says Cornibert in The Mirror, "has never been discussed with WIBDECO, it has not been discussed within WIBDECO, it has not been discussed between WIBDECO and Fyffes. I am totally baffled. I read about this thing in the media, I hear about it and I say I don't know where they got this thing from".
    The only partners who could decide whether or not Geest is to liquidate are the shareholders and these, as said, are WIBDECO and Fyffes. According to Cornibert, there has not been a meeting between the two shareholders to discuss anything of the kind. "How anyone could jump to the conclusion that the company is about to be liquidates leaves me absolutely flabbergasted". The SLBC is a shareholder in WIBDECO but, says Cornibert, he has no idea where SLBC chairman Joseph might have obtained his information.
    Nevertheless, the fact that the SLBC and the minister have made their statements can seriously upset Geest employees, especially in the United Kingdom, and Geest's reputation in the market. "It is absolutely irresponsible on the part of those people who are making statements about the company going into liquidation. There is absolutely no basis, no foundation for such statements", Cornibert states in The Mirror.
    The WIBDECO top man admits however, in part one of a two-part interview with The Mirror, that both WIBDECO and Fyffes are going through financially trying times. But he emphasises that WIBDECO does all it can to 'live within its means'. WIBDECO has greatly reduced its costs over the past three years, according to the CEO, and since it exists on the basis of a percentage commission, falling banana prices mean that WIBDECO's source of income continues to diminish also. "But we are determined to live within our means", says Cornibert. "Let us say ten years ago we were earning 10 million dollars and today we are are earning five million dollars, we are determined to live on five million dollars, and if it falls again to three million dollars, we will live within that three million dollars. ... We would like the SLBC and other companies to operate on that basis, and see if they will be able to do it".
    Cornibert further states that in his opinion, the government should have approached WIBDECO and asked it to use its 50 percent influence within Geest to try and support falling banana prices. Although WIBDECO does not have a majority vote within Geest, says Cornibert, it can - and will - use all the support it can raise to keep banana prices paid by Geest as high as possible, in the interest of banana producers in the Windward Islands. "[But] we must recognize that the market is in bad shape at the moment. Secondly, Fyffes itself is in some difficulty. I am not saying that we will not try, but I don't want to raise people's hopes that we can go there and get price support for them. It will be irresponsible on our part to do that". The Star also reports on Cornibert's denial of the Geest liquidation rumours.

ñ BACK TO TOP OF PAGE ...

Eagle Air demise: betrayal or inevitable?

    Opinions expressed in this week's papers vary considerably on the issue of whether the government is to blame for the allegedly imminent demise of St. Lucian airline Eagle Air Services, as a result of this company having lost its contract with Federal Express [see last week's news]. According to (what appears to be) an editorial article in The Mirror, "the whole affair smells of a sell-out - the betrayal of a local entrepreneur on the flimsy grounds t[hat the foreign-based concern, in this case Federal Express may, just may, take its business elsewhere". One Caribbean's editor Dennis Dabreo takes a very similar approach, alleging that "this government does not give a damn about local investors and is not even willing to put on a show of pretense when any of us go under".
    But in a lengthy article in the Wednesday Star, commentator Gregory Thomas provides an opposing argument. Thomas writes: "Critics could argue over the morality of FedEx's decision to downsize and terminate the service of Eagle Air, but it remains a mystery how blame for Eagle Air's hard luck story could be placed at the feet of the Civil Aviation Board and the government".
    According to Eagle Air's CEO Ewart Hinkson in last week's papers, his company lost the FedEx contract after St. Lucia's Air Transport Licensing Board (ATLB) - with the consent of minister of Aviation Menissa Rambally - granted a one-year license to US airline Mountain Air to operate a second aircraft from St. Lucia. Although Eagle Air's contract with Federal Express was not due to expire until February 2002, within weeks of Mountain Air getting its new license, Eagle Air received word from FedEx to the effect that it was cancelling this contract as of the 27th of August. Mountain Air will be taking over Eagle Air's Federal Express route from St. Lucia to Martinique and Dominica. In an attempt to clear the air, the ATLB last week released a statement explaining that special conditions had been set in granting Mountain Air its license, which stipulated that local carriers (such as Eagle Air) must be given special consideration by both Federal Express and Mountain Air. Furthermore, the ATLB insisted that "it would today, if requested by a local operator, give favourable consideration to granting a similar or identical license to an indigenous company to perform the same functions [as Mountain Air]. It is to be hoped that Eagle Air would avail itself of this opportunity".
    Based on the ATLB's release, The Mirror takes the stance that "Federal Express and Mountain Air Cargo are clearly in violation of the conditions under which the license was granted. While FedEx, according to Tourism Minister Menissa Rambally, had the right to conduct its business as it chooses especially in terms of awarding and terminating contracts, the fact remains that a major condition for the utilisation of this license was ignored by the two parties. Thus Minister Rambally and the [ATLB] must stand on principle and revoke the license granted to Mountain Air Cargo. Otherwise all the talk about safeguarding the interests of locals is so much hot air. St. Lucians, and especially our leaders, must learn that we have a right to compete in the market place, without sacrificing our ideals on the altar of political and economic expediency". Dabreo in One Caribbean similarly calls on the ministry to retract the license granted to Mountain Air.
    But Gregory Thomas in the Wednesday Star places the blame to a large extent at the feet of Eagle Air itself. "Eagle Air never apparently sought to upgrade or diversify its service, but pinned its entire operations in St. Lucia on the strength and security of one contract. ... There is the tendency in this country to point an accusing finger at someone whenever things go wrong. In this instance, Ewart Hinkson is pointing one finger at the government. I simply ask that he ponder for a moment, where, in so doing, his other three fingers are pointed. Mr. Hinkson should have known that sooner or later all good things had to come to an end and he should have used the period of his contract to expand and diversify his services". Besides Eagle Air not having correctly anticipated the changes at FedEx, argues Thomas, there is also the predicament of small nations like St. Lucia "in the new world order, where the rich get richer and the poor get poorer. Pointing accusing fingers here in St. Lucia at each other will in no way solve the much wider problem of how small companies such as Eagle Air will stand up to the self-serving practices of larger conglomerates such as Federal Express".
    According to The Mirror, Eagle Air employs ten permanent staff and three part-timers. According to Gregory Thomas, Mountain Air also "employs St. Lucian pilots and engineers whom it all trained".

ñ BACK TO TOP OF PAGE ...

National Tennis Centre at Beausejour, Gros Islet

    Lands have been acquired at Beausejour, Gros Islet, for the construction of a national Tennis Centre, where local, regional and international matches can be played. This was announced last Monday by president of the St. Lucia Lawn Tennis Association, Stephen McNamara, at the opening ceremony of the 17th annual ITF Coca Cola Junior International Tennis Tournament which is being held at the St. Lucia Racquet Club at Club St. Lucia. The Mirror, Star and Crusader all report this. According to McNamara, "This has come as very welcome news to the Association, and we wish to pledge our ... intention to work closely with the Ministry to ensure that this Tennis Centre becomes a reality". The ministry has confirmed that land has been designated for this purpose. The land is part of 23 acres which the government recently purchased at Beausejour, Gros Islet, for the construction of a National Cricket Ground [search news archives].

ñ BACK TO TOP OF PAGE ...

Nurses threaten strikes after 8th September

    Tension is mounting at the island's only mental hospital, Golden Hope, following minister of Health Sarah Flood-Beaubrun's alleged refusal to institute security measures to protect the hospital's patients and staff "because she does not want the hospital to turn into a prison". According to the Wednesday Star, the ministry has been given the 8th of September as a deadline, following which the Nurses Association will take further industrial action.
    Four weeks ago, nine nurses from Golden Hope staged a two day sick-out. They were objecting to the allegedly poor and dangerous working conditions at Golden Hope, and clamoured for better security and the establishment of an insurance scheme for nurses. Direct cause for the strike was the suspension of three nurses by minister Flood-Beaubrun pending an investigation into three separate incidents of alleged physical abuse of patients. According to the Wednesday Star, these three nurses have since been reinstated and are now posted at the Castries Health Centre, although the five-member investigative committee has not yet presented its findings Meanwhile however, the minister of Health "has shut the door on negotiations in the ongoing dispute between her ministry and nurses at the Golden Hope Hosital", writes the Wednesday Star. Marilyn Paul, president of the Nurses Association, claims that the minister and ministry officials refuse to meet directly with her. In accordance with protocol, says Paul, the association has sent a formal letter of dispute to the ministry, giving that department 31 days to deal with the issues of security and nurses insurance, before further industrial action will be taken. According to the Wednesday Star, "Nurse Paul said further that if the ministry continued to decline the request for security she would be left with no choice but to instruct nurses to 'refrain from attempting to seclude patients, walk away when patients are behaving violently and let them do as they please on the ward'."

ñ BACK TO TOP OF PAGE ...

Employers Fed. denied more time for Labour Code

    The St. Lucia Employers Federation (SLEF) has been denied an additional three months to study and respond to the proposed new Labour Code which the government intends to implement before the end of the year. Although the SLEF asked for the additional time because of "lingering concerns of the private sector over its ability to sustain current levels of employment after it is enacted" (The Voice), minister of Labour Velon John ruled that the SLEF has had all the time it needs, having been involved in the drafting of the new Labour Code from the start, some ten months ago. The Star quotes minister John as saying about the SLEF that: "They have been involved in the process from day one, that is why I find it passing strange and a belated reaction to something their own spokesmen on the task force agreed to and that was done in consultation between their representatives on the task force and the body of the Federation". According to minister John, the government is under pressure from the International Labour Organisation (ILO), who is sponsoring the project, to finalise it on time. The SLEF is particularly concerned with a section in the new Labour Code which deals with severance pay and constructive dismissal - sections from which employees stand to benefit. One Caribbean also reports on this.

ñ BACK TO TOP OF PAGE ...

Communal effort to curb tourist harassment and crime

    Intensive sharing of information, sensitization training for police officers, restructuring the operations of beach rangers, greater enforcement of the National Conservation Authority Act, action to curb the noise pollution in Rodney Bay and attempts to legally define the phenomenon of 'visitor harassment' - these and other points of action have come out of the second of a series of three planned meetings between hoteliers, the prime minister, the ministers of Tourism and Home Affairs, director of the Tourist Board, general manager of the National Conservation Authority and several top policemen. Two weeks ago, the St. Lucia Hotel and Tourism Association (SLHTA) called for an emergency meeting with the prime minister, top law enforcers and others [search news archives] to discuss the alarming increase of crime against visitors, as well as the shortage of water in the north, where most hotels are situated. Last Monday's meeting was a sequel to that, while a third meeting is planned for early September. The Star reports this. During Monday's meeting, police commissioner Francis Nelson announced that the persons who recently violently attacked a couple in the Anse la Raye area, have since been arrested and convicted. The government and SLHTA have agreed to work towards developing a training programme to sensitise police officers to the occurrence of visitor harassment, and a committee has been established to look into the staff, command structure and effectiveness of the beach rangers. The Star also mentions some other problem areas, such as "horseback riding on the beach, soliciting on the beach or hotel property by unlicensed fishing boats, unauthorised and unregulated operations of jet skis and harassment of visitors by unlicensed taxi and minibus drivers", which will be tackled.

ñ BACK TO TOP OF PAGE ...

Caribbean must be on red alert for AIDS/HIV

    St. Lucia media practitioners were absent from a five-day workshop that started on Monday in St. John's, to disseminate and sensitise journalists on the national and regional situation with respect to HIV and AIDS. Journalists from Antigua and Barbuda, Belize, Anguilla, BVI, Dominica, Grenada, Montserrat, St. Vincent and the Grenadines and the Turks and Caicos Islands learned that the Caribbean region could be facing "an Africa-type crisis". The Star reports this. According to a spokesman of the Caribbean Epidemiology Centre (CARAC), the Caribbean comes second in the world, after sub-Saharan Africa, when it comes to the prevalence of HIV infection. "My fear is in looking at the HIV/AIDS picture in Southern Africa and relating the picture there to our situation in the Caribbean, on a personal level I am deeply worried that we are today where they were 18 years ago - complacency, apathy, nochalance, denial. And my fear is that because we remain that way in many instances very soon, we can be where they are today".
    In South Africa, 20 percent of the adult population is infected with HIV, in Zimbabwe and Swaziland 25 percent and in Botswana, 36 percent. Currently, 6,030 Africans die of AIDS every day, according to The Star - "the equivalent of 15 fully-laden jumbo jets crashing daily, with no survivors".

ñ BACK TO TOP OF PAGE ...

New private primary school to open doors

    A new private primary school is opening its doors in September, aiming to provide fun, creative, quality teaching in a well-equipped environment. This is reported in The Star. The Discovery School, based in Becune Park, offers French language and vocal and instrumental music as part of the curriculum and classes will be no larger than fifteen students. The new school's teachers hold university degrees and have practical teaching experience, and there is an air-conditioned library with hundreds of child-friendly books, as well as a computer lab, arts and crafts room and science room. Registration opens on the 19th of August, and there will be an open day on the 26th of August. For more info, call: 450-8000.

ñ BACK TO TOP OF PAGE ...
 

[HOME]

[CHAT]

[BOOKMARK]

[ABOUT US]

[CONTACT US]

Translate website:

french

Francais

german

Deutsch

spanish

Espanol

italian

Italiano

portuguese

Portugues

Copyright 1999-2000 © St. Lucia Online.  All rights reserved.
 Anse De Sable Beach, Vieux Fort, St. Lucia, W. Indies. Tel: +758 454-3418.  Email: info@slucia.com

slucia