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15th September 2001

One St Lucian missing after WTC attack; fears of war

Odlum in awkward position on Libya after US attack

Gang violence flares in old CDC, residents fearful

Moths threaten leaves of gliricidia trees

Petrol stations return to normal opening hours

CIBC, RBC, Bank of St Lucia drop interest rates

Caribbees in new hands, to re-open as Cara Hotel

Four days of sea egg harvesting very popular

American Chamber of Commerce for EC launched

Chris JnCharles critically ill at Victoria Hospital

British Army to recruit St Lucians next February

Resident Cuban Ambassador in St Lucia this month

Alleged thief killed; one schoolboy stabbed

Silverline: new ferry shuttle St Lucia- Martinique

 

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Quotes

"May God bless America and bless every other country in this world too".
Dennis Dabreo (One Caribbean, 15th September).

"In certain communities in the south, some people could hardly wait for the sea egg to cook. It was straight from the fire into their mouths".
The Voice on the 4-day harvesting period for sea urchins (15th September).

"Have a nice night".
Host of radio talkshow IPI to a caller who had related the latest gun battle outside her apartment in the CDC (The Star, 15th September).

"Our greatest concern is that St Lucia might learn the hard way how important tourism is to the economy. An incident like this can stop tourism the same as if the island had been struck by a hurricane".
Konrad Wagner, general manager of Sandals St Lucia on the terrorist attack on the USA (The Star, 15th September)

"I am saying all this to agree and disagree with last week's letter writer on the subject of 'bias' (I use the singular, mindful of a pleasant and supportive letter I received some years ago from Hunter Francois, who informed me that the word 'bias' had no plural!) ... But you listen to some of the leads and 'conclusions' (I thought that hard news had no conclusion) in what is advertised as news reports over radio and TV especially, and your jaws drop".
David Vitalis (The Mirror, 14th September).

"The Prime Minister has advised those who have lost their jobs as a result of the closing of a number of hotels in St Lucia that there is no need to panic. ... The Prime Minister advised St Lucians to be very prudent with spending and very thrifty with their money. ... [He] also told the nation to avoid the temptation of living off credit cards and wasting foreign exchange by going overseas".
Tuesday Voice on PM Dr Kenny Anthony's advice to the nation at this time of economic hardship (11th September).

"I am hoping he [Compton] will be able to consider the interests of the country, the interests of the farmers, and tell us more clearly what damage he thinks an alliance with Libya or relations with Libya could bring"
George Oldum (Wednesday Star, 12th September).

 

PM's 2001 New Year Message

The Constitution of St. Lucia 

Budget 2000 speeches

Casino Survey Report

Full Text of  Blom-Cooper inquiry report

 

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One St Lucian missing after WTC attack; fears of war

    Along with millions of people worldwide, St Lucians were glued to their television screens on Tuesday and the following days, as the drama of the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center in New York and the Pentagon in Washington DC unfolded. One St Lucian, originally from Soufriere and identified in The Voice only as 'Bobby', worked in one of the WTC towers and remains missing. Another, Verena James, originally of Bridge Street, Castries, managed to escape from the 27th floor of the first WTC tower, after the first hijacked airplane ploughed into it. According to reports from family members quoted in One Caribbean, James was not injured in the ordeal. Therold Prudent, a frequent US-based contributor to The Star newspaper, describes how he witnessed the airplane attack from his office windows on Broadway and eventually joined the thousands of people who evacuated the area on foot, walking some 60 blocks to the 59th bridge and on into Queens.
    While no precise numbers are available yet, The Voice reports that some thirty West Indians remain unaccounted for following the attack on the World Trade Center. All local newspapers give prominence to the disaster with minute-by-minute accounts and several photographs detailing the despair, fear and chaos that followed. Most papers also carry a message of condolence from prime minister Dr Kenny Anthony in which he states that St Lucia "shares the deep sense of loss which these brutal and senseless assaults have visited upon all humanity. Our thoughts and prayers are with the families and relatives of all who have been touched or traumatised by these inane acts. Even here in St Lucia where we take our normally peaceful lives for granted, we reach out to the many St Lucians who live and work in US cities. Moreover, we know that each summer many St Lucians travel to the United States hoping to reunite with friends, family and loved ones".
    The prime minister also touches on the likely fall-out that this act of war on American soil will have for St Lucia's tourism, travel, trade, banking and communications sectors. Leading tourism officials quoted in The Star say that they fear and expect a spate of no-shows, cancellations and a general drop in tourist arrivals from the United States - certainly in the next few weeks. What will happen once the 2001/2002 tourist season gets underway, around November/December, is anybody's guess, say leading resort managers and the president of the St Lucia Hotel and Tourism Association, Berthia Parle. The Star quotes one manager as saying: "Americans are often nervous travellers and there will be some cancellations. Many people will step back and wait and see what action, if any, the US will take against the individuals or countries responsible for this. And even if the status quo is maintained, the impact on the economy itself will certainly lead to its own cancellations. Consumer confidence was not at a high level prior to this incident, and we can only predict that it will get worse". SLHTA president Berthia Parle, who also manages the Bay Gardens Hotel, reports that Americans who were left stranded at hotels in St Lucia following Tuesday's attacks on New York and Washington, were "terribly" distressed. "Some visitors have been crying, some just want to get out of the island and get home to their families. People are going around very sad and very sombre, almost like zombies and, like the rest of us, are still reeling from the shock of what has happened". She, too, expects a drop in business, not only from the US but also from other destinations, as tiresome airport security measures are stepped up globally. "What will probably have to happen is that hotels will have to look to other markets, such as the Caribbean market, maybe the French islands, and put out a lot of specials so that in the event people may want to come out, we have specials available to them".
    Minister of Tourism Menissa Rambally is expected to meet with hoteliers and other industry officials on Tuesday to discuss the implications of the WTC attack for the island's hospitality sector, as well as existing security arrangements at the ports of entry in St Lucia and the national security plan. The Star reports this. American Airlines resumed some of its flights to the United States over the weekend while BWIA and Air Jamaica were hoping to receive clearance from the Federal Aviation Administration to resume their flights into the US as soon as possible.
    The weekend's crop of local papers further offers a number of analyses on the perceived causes and consequences of Tuesday's horror - analyses which also shed much light on continuing ideological differences of opinion amongst local political leaders as regards foreign policy, particularly St Lucia's relationship with Libya [see article below].
    In The Star, some people express their concern that the US will retaliate aggressively and thereby aggravate the situation. Editor Dennis Dabreo of One Caribbean also worries about the American response which, he says, consists of "nothing but negative emotions of anger, hate, and a desire for revenge". Dabreo hopes that America will refrain from "repaying violence with violence" and will instead "find a way whereby it could work more peacefully with the rest of the world". In a televised commentary on DBS, Dabreo further stated: "What happened in America today is almost as bad as the American bombing of Nagasaki and Hiroshima after the second world war had already ended, or the American use of B52 bombers, napalm bombs and tear gas against the people of Korea and Vietnam. Let us keep things in perspective. Human life is human life irrelevant of race, nationality or religion or even the origin of the bomb or the bomber and certainly not dependent upon who is being bombed. America has openly attacked Vietnam, Grenada, Iraq and Libya in the last half century alone but the world has not condemned this country. ... My point is that the world has become bitter towards the United States and today's incidents are a reflection of this".
    The editor of the Crusader takes a similar approach to Tuesday's attack, stating that "It is American policy that is at the heart of the problems. ... The impression of America in the rest of the world, after Seattle, after the meeting of the G7 countries, the WTO, the meeting on global warming and America's stance on those issues - the impression is that America does not care as President Bush has so arrogantly demonstrated".
    As for America's response to Tuesday's terrorist attack, the Crusader editor also warns against a full-blown retaliatory war. "America has threatened to declare war on the entire world in an effort to stop terrorism, a terrorism that has come in existence because of America's questionable policies. Whoever was behind the masterminding of the attacks in New York and Washington might one day be captured, or killed, or their country or countries reduced to ashes by American bombs, but what will that have accomplished? More hatred of America, more individuals and organizations determined to carry out even more devastating attacks upon American soil. So, on and on this will continue until the world has been reduced to a rubble".

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Odlum in awkward position on Libya after US attack

    The terrorist attack on America has come at a particularly unfortunate time for political leader of the National Alliance, George Odlum, who only last week proposed that St Lucia seriously consider an offer by Libyan leader Colonel Muammar Gaddafi to buy all Windward Islands bananas at higher-than-world prices. Furthermore, Odlum challenged his co-leader and president of the Alliance, Sir John Compton, to change his views on Libya. Sir John has steadfastly maintained over the years that St Lucia (and the OECS as a whole) should steer clear of establishing relations with countries like Libya which are looked upon with deep suspicion by its other allies, particularly the United States. Last week, Sir John reaffirmed that stance - despite the fact that in so doing, he deepened the ideological divide between himself and his co-leader Odlum possibly jeopardising unity within the National Alliance.
    Odlum, in response, challenged Sir John to revisit his opinion, arguing that Libya has changed from its former pro-terrorist stance. Oldum also stressed that Gadaffi's offer to buy Windward bananas at a better price than currently available on the European market would mean a significant improvement for local farmers. "I am hoping he [Compton] will be able to consider the interests of the country, the interests of the farmers, and tell us more clearly what damage he thinks an alliance with Libya or relations with Libya could bring", Odlum is quoted in the Wednesday Star. He also stressed at the time (before Tuesday's attacks on New York and Washington DC) that: "America tagged Libya as a rogue nation because they were trying to pin on them a lot of terrorist activities. In the past they probably have funded various terrorist groups. But they have changed. Gadaffi's international position now is much more respectable. Even America has softened its line on Libya because America now says they really have no objections to the OECS going Libya's way".
    Libya's offer to buy Windward Islands bananas was reportedly made - not directly to Odlum - but to the prime ministers of Grenada, Dominica and St Vincent and the Grenadines, who recently visited Tripoli to meet with Colonel Gadaffi. St Lucia's prime minister Dr Kenny Anthony had pulled out of the meeting, along with the prime ministers of Antigua and St Kitts and Nevis, for fear of offending the United States. However, none of the prime ministers who met with Gadaffi relayed the Colonel's offer to buy the islands' bananas, and it was George Odlum who, despite neither being a member of the delegation nor a member of the St Lucian government, made Gadaffi's offer public. The Crusader suggests that perhaps the members of the delegation did not feel that Gadaffi's offer was a serious one. Instead, media attention focussed on rumours that St Vincent's prime minister Dr Ralph Gonsalves had received funds from Gadaffi on behalf of St Lucian prime minister Dr Kenny Anthony. Nevertheless, the Libyan banana offer was taken seriously enough for the Windward Islands Banana Development and Exporting Company (WIBDECO) to feel it necessary to issue a press release this week stating that Libya's offer could do "untold damage to the marketing of Windward Islands bananas in the UK". Already, says WIBDECO, reports about Libya's offer have "cast a shadow over the marketing of Windward Islands bananas in the UK". The Mirror reports this. The London Times (September 11th) also carried an article on Gadaffi's banana offer and its implications. The article is reprinted in the Crusader and mentioned in the Wednesday Star. The Times writes: ""The controversial deal links islands that have strong political and family ties with Britain to a country that has long funded the IRA and other anti-Western terrorist organisations. The $21 million (£14.4 million) aid package promised by Libya has alarmed Britain and the United States and threatens to give Colonel Gadaffi a vital political toehold in America's backyard. The Libyans, who are on the American list of countries backing terrorism, were accused of backing black Muslim insurgents who tried to overthrow the Government in Trinidad and Tobago ten years ago. They are also backing Islamic insurgencies in the Philippines and elsewhere in the world. Libya's aid package to countries closely linked to Britain includes help to Grenada to pay off a $6 million construction loan for its international airport, which was used by the US Marines during the American invasion in 1983 to suppress a pro-Libyan regime brought to power in a coup".
    Following Tuesday's attack on America and with the threat of retaliatory action on terrorist fundamentalist Islamic factions pending, George Odlum's proposal to strengthen diplomatic and economic ties between St Lucia and Libya has come at a particularly awkward time. Moreover, the US attack has moved the differences of opinion on the Libya question between George Odlum and Sir John Compton from the realm of the academic to the acute. Already, Zephyrin Francis, deputy leader of the United Workers Party and a high-ranking member of the Alliance has indicated that such an incompatibility of ideologies cannot co-exist at the head of the Alliance.

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Gang violence flares in old CDC, residents fearful

    Residents of the CDC apartments closest to Jeremie Street in Castries report that violence between rival gangs in the area has reached critical levels once again and that they fear for their lives. The Tuesday Voice, Mirror and Star all report this. Gang violence flared earlier this year, with a number of shooting incidents in the CDC area in which at least one innocent passer-by was killed. Late last month two young men were killed, one in a drive-by shooting on Grass Street and one in Black Mallet after being stabbed. According to The Mirror, the gang warfare was fuelled by the apparent theft of one pound of marijuana from drug dealers. The Star quotes a resident describing an exchange of gunshots on Tuesday of last week. "I sat listening to the news when I heard gunshots like nobody's business. My 15-year-old daughter went flat on the floor and put my grandson under her. I took my 96-year-old mother and put her on the floor too. We stayed down until the shooting had stopped. There were about six or seven shots, one after the other and they actually rocked the place. The police came later that night in plain clothes but on Wednesday morning they sent some little, half-dead policemen fresh from training school. The pushers were pappyshowing them". The following Saturday, more shots were fired in the area. "We even have a bullet planted in one of the apartments", the resident told The Star reporter. "Our lives are in danger here, The children can't play or even sit in the balcony - as hot as it is. ... We have not even seen any representative of the past, future and neither the present. Not even the chairman of the Housing Authority!"
    After detailing the alleged dispute in some detail, Mirror reporter Jason Sifflet similarly concludes that "all around the blocks surrounding the alley, there is a tension, a fear that at any time, violence could explode again and anyone who is there could be killed".

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Moths threaten leaves of gliricidia trees

    Gliricidia trees in St Lucia are under siege from the larvae of the Gliricidia Moth (Azeta melanea) which destroy foliage but do not actually kill the plant itself. The moth also does not attack other plant species. This is reported by the Crop Protection Unit of the ministry of Agriculture, which has been receiving reports of affected Gliricidia's since July. Larvae (caterpillars) of the Gliricidia Moth were detected in Barbados last year. Samples of the larva have been collected in St Lucia and sent to the UK for positive identification. Once this has been achieved, the ministry of Agriculture will announce what management strategies it will deploy to counter the presence of this pest. The Tuesday Voice, Wednesday Star and Crusader all report this.
    Gliricidia (also known as Glory Cedar or Gloricidia), is often used as a living fence. It blooms with pink flowers in the dry season, when the trees are leafless. The leaves are poisonous to mice, other rodents, horses and dogs but are commonly used to feed sheep, cattle and goats. Gliricidia grows well on depleted soils.

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Petrol stations return to normal opening hours

    Petrol stations islandwide have returned to normal opening hours for the time being, pending the outcome of renewed discussions with prime minister Dr Kenny Anthony on their demand for an increase of seventeen cents per gallon on their profit margins. Some weeks ago, the Petroleum Dealers Association (PDA) decided to close gas stations islandwide at 6:00 pm every day and remain closed on Sundays altogether in a bid to reduce operating costs. The PDA stated that high costs for security and electricity at night made these operating times unprofitable at existing profit margins. The move angered some motorists, particularly minibus drivers and taxi drivers. In a press release printed in the Thursday Voice, Wednesday Star and One Caribbean, the PDA states that it has decided to revert to normal opening hours after it became aware that the prime minister "may probably not have been made aware of all the circumstances of their case". It is not clear what action will be taken should the PDA not get the demanded increase of seventeen cents per gallon. Other PDA demands are a moratorium on the granting of petroleum dealer licenses for a period of four years, and revision of the system of rebates to minibus operators on fuel purchases. Meanwhile, prime minister Dr Anthony has welcomed the PDA's decision, calling it "sensible". The Thursday Voice reports this.

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CIBC, RBC, Bank of St Lucia drop interest rates

    Mortgage rates at the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CIBC) and the Royal Bank of Canada have been reduced and the Bank of Saint Lucia has announced a reduction in its lending rate on new development loans from 10 percent to 9 percent. On Monday, prime minister Dr Kenny Anthony reportedly met with managers of commercial banks to discuss the state of the international, regional and domestic economies, and to inform them of measures which the government intends to take to stimulate the local economy. "A major item of discussion was the existing interest rates", states a press release in the Thursday Voice, One Caribbean and Crusader. According to the statement, "Dr Anthony ... indicated that the reduction in interest rates would encourage investors and stimulate lending for investment. However, he invited the bankers to consider further reductions in interest rates and the banks agreed to give the suggestion due consideration. The bank managers generally reported that liquidity levels were more than adequate to meet demands for local investment funding".
    Only six weeks ago, after a July 24th meeting with the Eastern Caribbean Central Bank, the government still shied away from reducing interest rates despite "intense debate" on the topic. Press secretary Earl Bousquet at the time stated that "Preliminary research undertaken by the Eastern Caribbean Central Bank proved highly inconclusive as to the effect of an interest rate change on the foreign exchange sectors of the regional economy. Furthermore, as the cases of America and especially Japan illustrate, simply altering the interest rates is not an automatic cure for economic ills, especially when structural deficiencies exist. In addition, it was noted that the measure - which the Central Bank can institute - is not guaranteed to entice commercial banks to reduce interest rates". Prime minister Anthony has also on a number of occasions declared that it is not within his government's power to lower interest rates.

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Caribbees in new hands, to re-open as Cara Hotel

    Caribbees Hotel at La Pansee, a locally-owned hotel which went into receivership last year, has been sold to Cara Hotels, a Guyana-based company which already operates six hotels, located in Guyana, Trinidad and St Vincent and the Grenadines. Cara has acquired Caribbees with financing from the Caribbean Investment Fund and Development Finance Ltd. to the tune of US$3.5 million. Part of this sum will be used to refurbish the property. According to Cara co-chairman Shaun McGrath, "Cara will be renovating, upgrading and refurbishing the existing room stock and all public areas", as well as equip the new hotel with a gym, tennis and squash courts, upgraded banqueting and conference facilities and a refurbished bar and restaurant. With 75 rooms, Caribbees is the largest hotel in the city of Castries. It will be re-branded as a Cara Suites property and will target business travellers from within the region.

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Four days of sea egg harvesting very popular

    After several years of close monitoring of what had become an endangered population of white sea urchins due to severe overharvesting, this week the department of Fisheries allowed a four-day period during which divers and fishermen could freely harvest any sea urchins over 3.75 inches in diameter. Sea urchins, also known as sea eggs or chadons, proved to be a very popular commodity, particularly at the south of the island where stuffed and roasted sea eggs eagerly changed hands at ten dollars apiece. According to officials of the department of Fisheries, the sea urchin population had recuperated to such an extent that overgrazing of sea grass was actually threatening the survival of young sea urchins. Despite strict surveillance of the harvest, no illegal activities have been reported. The only area were harvesting continued to be forbidden was in the Maria Island Marine Reserve in Vieux Fort. The Voice, Thursday Voice and Wednesday Star all report on this.

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American Chamber of Commerce for EC launched

    A new internet-based Eastern Caribbean American Chamber of Commerce (ECAmCham) was launched recently in a bid to become "the leading business organisation that facilitates and stimulates two-way investment and trade between the Eastern Caribbean and the United States of America". The Wednesday Star reports this. The ECAmCham will serve St Lucia, Barbados, St Vincent, Grenada, Dominica and St Kitts and Nevis and joins another 86 AmChams around the world, including ones in Puerto Rico, Trinidad and Tobago and Jamaica. According to the press release, the goal of these American Chambers of Commerce is to "provide information of general interest to the membership related to conferences, expositions, trade missions, trade shows, workshops, new laws and highlights if US congressional action. They organise seminars and talks by experts on ... taxes, export regulations, market access, customs procedures and management programmes, and provide office facilities in Washington DC. The chambers also make available scholarships and fellowships and lobby for funding resources to provide loan or grant money for businesses". The website for the Eastern Caribbean Amercian Chamber of Commerce is: www.ecamcham.org

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Chris JnCharles critically ill at Victoria Hospital

    Luck has run out once again for Chris JnCharles, the 12-year-old brain tumour patient who returned home in such good spirits just over four weeks ago from a life-saving operation in Barbados which was paid for by the generosity of the St Lucian public. The young girl from Anse la Ray is once again in critical condition at Victoria Hospital, after the aggressive tumour in her brain returned. She was due to fly back to the Barbados hospital for emergency surgery last week but her condition deteriorated quickly, making travel impossible. According to the Wednesday Star, Chris has since become paralysed and slips in and out of a deep sleep. She received her first communion last Sunday evening.

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British Army to recruit St Lucians next February

    St Lucians interested in joining the British Army are requested to return their application forms by the 15th of October to the ministry of Foreign Affairs, so that they can be forwarded to the British Army before the 1st of November. According to a paid advertisement in the Mirror, Star and Voice newspapers, British Army personnel are expected to be in St Lucia between the 29th of January and the 1st of March of next year to conduct interviews and select applicants. It is added that applicants do not have to travel at their own expense to the UK to be interviewed, and that all successful applicants will be enlisted in the British Army. "Other persons between the ages of 18 and 26 who are interested in joining the British Army can collect application forms from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Trade", states the ad.

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Resident Cuban Ambassador in St Lucia this month

    A Cuban Embassy is expected to open in St Lucia this month, says Cuban Ambassador to the Eastern Caribbean and the Bahamas, Lazaro Cabezas following a visit to St Lucia earlier this week. According to an article in The Star and One Caribbean, the Republic of Cuba hopes to increase its ties with the Eastern Caribbean in general and St Lucia in particular in years to come. According to Ambassador Cabezas, Eastern Caribbean countries have supported Cuba in the past despite the US-imposed economic blockade against Cuba, while "Cuba continues to lend support to many Caribbean states. In St Lucia's case, apart from providing scholarships to scores of St Lucian students, Cuba continues to assist in the areas of agriculture, sports and health".

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Alleged thief killed; one schoolboy stabbed

    St Lucian citizen Andre James was shot and then slashed early on Tuesday morning, allegedly by a 35-year-old resident of Marc who told police that he had been a constant victim of theft from his plantain farm. According to the Marc resident, he was guarding his plantain trees early on Tuesday morning when James "appeared with a flashlight and cutlass and began to examine some plants". The farmer is alleged to have shot James several times in his lower body with a .380 pistol and to have dealt him several blows with a cutlass. No charges have been laid as yet and investigations are ongoing. The Star reports this.
    Meanwhile, a 14-year-old student of a Castries senior primary school was stabbed on Darling Road on Thursday and currently remains in a stable condition at Victoria Hospital. According to The Voice, the incident is the result of an ongoing conflict between a group of students from the school and a gang of youths from Conway. One young man is assisting police with investigations.

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Silverline: new ferry shuttle St Lucia-Martinique

    A fleet of three 12-seater diesel engine vessles have started a twice-daily ferry service between St Lucia and Martinique aboard the Silver Princess, Silver Queeen and Silver Countess. Known as Silverline, the Martinique-based company offers daily departures from Rodney Bay at 11am and 5pm, and daily departures from Marin Marina in Martinique at 8am and 1pm. On Thursdays, a special shopping trip is offered leaving St Lucia at 7:30 am and returning at 6:30 pm. According to local manager Sophia Garcia, the Silverline service is convenient and cheaper than existing airline or ferry arrangements. The regional tourism and shopping market are expected to grow following a recent decision to allow Martiniquans into St Lucia with only identification cards. St Lucians, too, no longer require a visa for short-term visits to Martinique. The Silverline St Lucia/Martinique shuttle service can be contacted at 458-3508.

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