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Originally Posted by Nehru:

You need a whole paragraph to realise hoe STUPID, IGNORANT and DUNCE you are???? It is NOT difficult!!!!

You have to do better. The two sentences do not add up to a coherent sentence. 

FM
Originally Posted by Nehru:

So you are acutely DUNCE. Are you disabled in anyway or just lack basic understanding????

Shhhh...don't shout! I know it is hard for an ignorant buffoon like you to express yourself in a decent and humane manner but at least try, nuh. 

FM
Originally Posted by Nehru:

What happen Prak Bhai like yuh run out of big words.

The poster  is simply letting the china fall where it must knowing fully well there is a bull in the shop.

FM

Badlu Nahu you are the biggest dunce and empty skull on this site,wake up and walk straight for once.You should read properly before you post or ask someone for help in your old age.

FM
Originally Posted by Wendy Holmes:

Nehru, the AFC bullies are trying to run you and a few others off the board.  It's mind-boggling that these creatures were recently running for office. 

 

The last I checked the AFC ran and did admirably when most people thought they will get at most 2 seats. Did you fools not call them the 2 seat party? Today they have the balance of power. They have much room for improvement. Filled with dunces, incompetents and corrupt leaders, the PPP has passed its prime. Keep that in mind. 

FM
Originally Posted by Gerhard Ramsaroop:
 

After studying documents released by the government on the proposed hotel for Kingston, AFC MP Khemraj Ramjattan today likened it to a grand Ponzi scheme which he said will leave taxpayers in the lurch.

 

Ramjattan in a statement said that from even a perfunctory reading of the documentation supplied and the answers to the questions he posed in Parliament, there is every indication that this proposed Marriott-managed Hotel is a sort of “Ponzi scheme in the making where Guyanese taxpayers are going to be ripped off and some crony of the PPP will be fattened with a good deal”.

 

He noted that taxpayers’ monies, which are in NICIL’s accounts, are going to be used to substantially underwrite the financing of this proposed project and that from all indications the sum will be US$21M comprised of subordinate loan stocks of US$15M, US$4M in equity and US$2M which allegedly is already spent on design fees paid to, from reliable AFC’s sources, a  New York-based Pakistani Mike Ahmad and his team.

 

Ramjattan said that an additional sum of $27M, rated as a senior debt, is to be syndicated by a Trinidad bank but there is no disclosure as to who will be guaranteeing this. The AFC, he said, believes that ultimately this debt will be a Government obligation.

 

He argued that in the case of a default, “which is inevitable, the people of Guyana will lose, at the very least, US$21m. Why in configuring this arrangement our Government, who we trust to act in our interest and who are obligated to do so, would have NICIL’s interest (US$15m) subordinated” to that of the Trinidad bank, he queried.

 

He added that the government seems to think that NICIL and Atlantic Hotels Inc (AHI) are private companies as evidence by the claim that “agreements between Atlantic Hotels Inc and Shanghai Construction Group International (Trinidad and Tobago) Ltd (SCG) prohibit disclosure of specified contract documents”. Ramjattan pointed out that both NICIL and AHI are State companies created with taxpayers’ resources and therefore all transactions and commitments are subject to public scrutiny.

 

He said the terms and conditions of the Trinidad bank’s syndicated debt, terms and conditions of AHI’s subordinated debt, the feasibility study by Marriott and the unnamed American firm must be submitted for public review. He declared that the Economic Services Committee of Parliament will review this deal and conduct a risk analysis to evaluate the “huge burden” the Government is bringing to future generations.

 

Another major question to be answered he said is why did AHI, “without being properly capitalized, and therefore without the capacity to deliver, enter into a contract with SCG for the construction of a US$52m Hotel and a management agreement with the Marriott Chain?” and on the other hand why Marriott, SCG and others would enter binding agreements with AHI when it had no track record.

“The AFC feels that this only happened because AHI is an instrument of the PPP Government! Lift AHI’s veil and aha it is PPP and its cronies!”, Ramjattan declared.

He charged that there was no commercial justification for the planned massive spending on a hotel when occupancy rates are so low in Guyana.

 

He noted that many investments in the local hotel industry have gone bust because of low occupancy as well as the issues of crime, unreliable and uncompetitive electricity, a dirty city, poor drainage, etc. which retard any development of local tourism, even among overseas Guyanese longing to visit their homeland.

 

“I recall the case of one investor group failing in its quest to buy Guyana’s iconic Pegasus Hotel for US$14m. They could not raise the required financing because the Banks viewed it as too risky at that price. The proposed US$52m for the Marriott, a far cry from US$14m, have for 5 years failed to attract credible investors for the same reason. Two hotels are up for sale on Main Street, Georgetown and another on the East Bank (in which the Government put money) with no takers even at discounted prices!”, he stated.

 

Ramjattan asserted that at US$52m (amount tendered by SCG) and taking three years) with US$42m in fixed debt at minimum of 10% interest per annum (more like 15% for that level of risk), AHI would have accumulated US$12.6m in three years without any income to pay Debt-holders, and all of this  even before the start of operations.

 

“This gives a cost of US$64.6m (without escalation in prices). With electricity cost of more than 20% of sales, labour cost of more than 15% of sales, management fees of 10% of sales to Marriott, and interest cost of US$5.4m per year, this project would not last 3 months of operation. In fact it would not even cover 20% of its interest cost if it were to attract all the tourists who visit Guyana.  A taxpayers’ bailout will then be needed, just like the Skeldon Sugar Project and CLICO. And what will follow will be a sale to some friend of the Government at a knock down price!”, the MP and AFC Chairman argued.

 

Further, he contended that no bank, local or overseas, would even consider a hotel in Guyana where the equity contribution is less than 50% (AHI only has proposed 22% equity). He argued that if the government believes in the Marriott’s and the unnamed American firm’s feasibility studies, “let them put their own money on this project, not poor taxpayers. If indeed the feasibility is so glowing, why is the Marriott International not putting its money on this project? How paradoxical that a working class Government is going to fund a huge multinational!”

 

The MP said that Guyana has a strong private sector which given a good investment climate would invest in any viable venture with a healthy good return. He added that the local banks are flush with cash and hunting for such opportunities. “The hotel sector must be invested in by these private sector companies if the feasibility is so good”, he said.

 

Ramjattan advised that rather than focusing on building a hotel for Marriott International,  and then paying them 10% to operate it, Government should focus on addressing the everyday problems of poor roads, drainage, unreliable electricity, crime, public health, unemployment, poverty and hopelessness among youths and migration. Money should also go into the University of Guyana to enhance a tourism programme.

Tower Hotel shuts, workers left stranded

Posted By Staff Writer On May 24, 2014 @ 5:21 am In Local News | No Comments

Hotel Tower shut abruptly yesterday, leaving dozens of workers without pay and raising questions about its future.

Nonpayment of wages coupled with the abrupt termination of their services saw employees of the landmark Georgetown hotel on Main Street staging a vocal afternoon protest outside their place of work. Tower, which has struggled for business in recent years, had been on the market since March but there has apparently been no takers and mounting bills saw power to the hotel being cut this week.

Its last known owners are West Demerara businessman Salim Azeez, US-based businessman James Manbahal, Varendra Shiwratan and Bharti Persaud Misir. The owners have not been available to the media since taking over the establishment in 2009.

Hotel Tower on Main Street

Hotel Tower on Main Street

“Three fortnights now I ain’t get a blind cent only promises then today we get a letter saying the place closing from today and nobody ain’t saying weh people hard earn dollars deh… they ain’t even had the decency to come tell we to we face,” an angry female employee told Stabroek News.

The woman along with about 30 other employees, mostly female, vented their anger and frustration yesterday.

 

 

____________

No visitors to Tower in the HEART of the CITY but yet they expect visitor to the Mariiot?

 

JOKERS!

 

Money laundering by the PPP and downright FRAUD!

FM

These hotels have run their course and maybe it's time for them to be retired or rebuilt.  There are many hotels in GT and the ECD which draws the visitors and starve old places like Tower.  This is not a reflection of the macro environment.

FM
Originally Posted by baseman:

  There are many hotels in GT and the ECD which draws the visitors and starve old places like Tower.  This is not a reflection of the macro environment.

US arrivals were down 17%.  Caribbean arrivals were flat despite what the PPP will claim as people crossing from Nickerie to Corriverton, and going to Lethem from Boa Vista do not stay at these hotels.  In order to disguise declining visitor arrivals the PPP decided to re classify border crossers as tourists.

 

I will suggest that G/town has way too many hotels, if the intent is to make money from visitors, and to not use them to launder you know what.

FM
Last edited by Former Member
Originally Posted by Gerhard Ramsaroop:
 

After studying documents released by the government on the proposed hotel for Kingston, AFC MP Khemraj Ramjattan today likened it to a grand Ponzi scheme which he said will leave taxpayers in the lurch.

 

Ramjattan in a statement said that from even a perfunctory reading of the documentation supplied and the answers to the questions he posed in Parliament, there is every indication that this proposed Marriott-managed Hotel is a sort of “Ponzi scheme in the making where Guyanese taxpayers are going to be ripped off and some crony of the PPP will be fattened with a good deal”.

 

He noted that taxpayers’ monies, which are in NICIL’s accounts, are going to be used to substantially underwrite the financing of this proposed project and that from all indications the sum will be US$21M comprised of subordinate loan stocks of US$15M, US$4M in equity and US$2M which allegedly is already spent on design fees paid to, from reliable AFC’s sources, a  New York-based Pakistani Mike Ahmad and his team.

 

Ramjattan said that an additional sum of $27M, rated as a senior debt, is to be syndicated by a Trinidad bank but there is no disclosure as to who will be guaranteeing this. The AFC, he said, believes that ultimately this debt will be a Government obligation.

 

He argued that in the case of a default, “which is inevitable, the people of Guyana will lose, at the very least, US$21m. Why in configuring this arrangement our Government, who we trust to act in our interest and who are obligated to do so, would have NICIL’s interest (US$15m) subordinated” to that of the Trinidad bank, he queried.

 

He added that the government seems to think that NICIL and Atlantic Hotels Inc (AHI) are private companies as evidence by the claim that “agreements between Atlantic Hotels Inc and Shanghai Construction Group International (Trinidad and Tobago) Ltd (SCG) prohibit disclosure of specified contract documents”. Ramjattan pointed out that both NICIL and AHI are State companies created with taxpayers’ resources and therefore all transactions and commitments are subject to public scrutiny.

 

He said the terms and conditions of the Trinidad bank’s syndicated debt, terms and conditions of AHI’s subordinated debt, the feasibility study by Marriott and the unnamed American firm must be submitted for public review. He declared that the Economic Services Committee of Parliament will review this deal and conduct a risk analysis to evaluate the “huge burden” the Government is bringing to future generations.

 

Another major question to be answered he said is why did AHI, “without being properly capitalized, and therefore without the capacity to deliver, enter into a contract with SCG for the construction of a US$52m Hotel and a management agreement with the Marriott Chain?” and on the other hand why Marriott, SCG and others would enter binding agreements with AHI when it had no track record.

“The AFC feels that this only happened because AHI is an instrument of the PPP Government! Lift AHI’s veil and aha it is PPP and its cronies!”, Ramjattan declared.

He charged that there was no commercial justification for the planned massive spending on a hotel when occupancy rates are so low in Guyana.

 

He noted that many investments in the local hotel industry have gone bust because of low occupancy as well as the issues of crime, unreliable and uncompetitive electricity, a dirty city, poor drainage, etc. which retard any development of local tourism, even among overseas Guyanese longing to visit their homeland.

 

“I recall the case of one investor group failing in its quest to buy Guyana’s iconic Pegasus Hotel for US$14m. They could not raise the required financing because the Banks viewed it as too risky at that price. The proposed US$52m for the Marriott, a far cry from US$14m, have for 5 years failed to attract credible investors for the same reason. Two hotels are up for sale on Main Street, Georgetown and another on the East Bank (in which the Government put money) with no takers even at discounted prices!”, he stated.

 

Ramjattan asserted that at US$52m (amount tendered by SCG) and taking three years) with US$42m in fixed debt at minimum of 10% interest per annum (more like 15% for that level of risk), AHI would have accumulated US$12.6m in three years without any income to pay Debt-holders, and all of this  even before the start of operations.

 

“This gives a cost of US$64.6m (without escalation in prices). With electricity cost of more than 20% of sales, labour cost of more than 15% of sales, management fees of 10% of sales to Marriott, and interest cost of US$5.4m per year, this project would not last 3 months of operation. In fact it would not even cover 20% of its interest cost if it were to attract all the tourists who visit Guyana.  A taxpayers’ bailout will then be needed, just like the Skeldon Sugar Project and CLICO. And what will follow will be a sale to some friend of the Government at a knock down price!”, the MP and AFC Chairman argued.

 

Further, he contended that no bank, local or overseas, would even consider a hotel in Guyana where the equity contribution is less than 50% (AHI only has proposed 22% equity). He argued that if the government believes in the Marriott’s and the unnamed American firm’s feasibility studies, “let them put their own money on this project, not poor taxpayers. If indeed the feasibility is so glowing, why is the Marriott International not putting its money on this project? How paradoxical that a working class Government is going to fund a huge multinational!”

 

The MP said that Guyana has a strong private sector which given a good investment climate would invest in any viable venture with a healthy good return. He added that the local banks are flush with cash and hunting for such opportunities. “The hotel sector must be invested in by these private sector companies if the feasibility is so good”, he said.

 

Ramjattan advised that rather than focusing on building a hotel for Marriott International,  and then paying them 10% to operate it, Government should focus on addressing the everyday problems of poor roads, drainage, unreliable electricity, crime, public health, unemployment, poverty and hopelessness among youths and migration. Money should also go into the University of Guyana to enhance a tourism programme.

This was a class article from Ramjattan.

FM

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