PM not worried about jobs after Baha Mar case ruling

Prime Minister Philip Davis has downplayed concerns about the potential impact of the $1.9 billion judgment against China Construction America (CCA) in favour of Sarkis Izmirlian on hotel operations and jobs at British Colonial and Margaritaville Beach Resort.

Speaking at the soft opening of the Nassau Village Community Centre, Davis assured the public that there is no immediate threat to hotel operations or employment as a result of the New York State Supreme Court ruling.

"Well, that's the judicial process in the United States," Mr Davis said. 

"I appreciate the American laws as much I do the Bahamian law. But if that was happening here in The Bahamas, it is a discretion to be exercised by the judge, which apparently was exercised in favor of Izmirlian. I don't, at this time, see any threat to, I call it, the Bahamian assets. The hotels are operating."

Mr Davis said: "We got what we want, we got hotels open, we got them operating, and we have thousands of Bahamians working in these hotels, and I don't think that the operations here could or would be affected by what's going on the United States at this time."

He continued: "The hotels are here, the rooms are here. They'll be operating here. All that can happen is a change in ownership. Doesn't mean that the hotel is going to close or jobs will be lost, right? And in those instances, the government has, will have a duty in the public interest to ensure that jobs are protected. We're not going to get involved in the private dispute between those persons, whenever it's going to impact what I call public, public issues and public security in jobs or otherwise, that's when, in the public interest."

The ruling allows Izmirlian to enforce the $1.642 billion damages award, raising questions about whether assets might be liquidated to satisfy the judgment. Addressing these concerns, Davis clarified that liquidation would likely mean changes in ownership rather than closure or job losses. “In those instances, the government will have a duty in the public interest to ensure that jobs are protected,” he stated, reiterating the government's commitment to safeguarding public interests if necessary.

CCA has announced its intent to appeal, maintaining that the decision overlooks evidence of mismanagement during Baha Mar’s development. Meanwhile, the Bahamian government continues to monitor the situation to ensure economic stability and employment security.

In a statement to The Tribune on Friday, a spokesperson for the co-defendants, said: “This ruling has no bearing on the merits of our case and will not deter us from seeking to have the trial court’s error-ridden decision overturned on appeal. 

The statement continued: "As we intend to show, the lower court failed to apply well established principles of New York law and disregarded clear evidence that BML Properties grossly mismanaged the Baha Mar project and then drove it into a wrongful, secret bankruptcy to eliminate its obligations to other stakeholders, including the government and people of The Bahamas.”

Comments

hrysippus says...

If, and thank goodness that I am not, I was in the unenviable position of being the Prime Minister of this the perhaps smallest, least consequential, of the English Commonwealth countries, then my first and most important concern would be to get elected to a 2nd term as PM as only then do you qualify for the huge pension enjoyed by two term holders of the office, or the surviving spouse of the deceased holder. The amount of our tax money paid out to certain people due to this is enormous and would shock those trying to survive on a paltry $15,000 per month.....Sigh.

Posted 20 December 2024, 8:41 p.m. Suggest removal

bahamianson says...

Dude is like Joe Biden, clueless.

Posted 20 December 2024, 10:23 p.m. Suggest removal

birdiestrachan says...

Mr Davis is a brilliant man from the soil of the beautiful Cat Island he can stand tall with all intellectual men and women from all over the wide world, and no insults can take that from him some of the greatest and the best hail from Cat Island and those facts can be taken to the bank it is worth money,

Posted 21 December 2024, 1:14 p.m. Suggest removal

Porcupine says...

birdie, you continue to talk utter nonsense and foolishness.
Some people might call you an idiot.

Posted 22 December 2024, 10:56 a.m. Suggest removal

birdiestrachan says...

Call me what you must. But what I have written is the TRUTH so to hell with the lies

Posted 22 December 2024, 1:09 p.m. Suggest removal

Godson says...

Dear Tribune Readers,

I am on record to say that it is the Bahamian people that is being hoodwinked and bamboozled out of their economic interest in this fiasco.

The Chinese government was more than willing and is pleased to pay $2-billion to rest control of the economic breadbasket of a sovereign country such as the Bahamas. That's a small price to pay and they will pay it.

This fiasco is just a guise to make it all legit and give the impression to the Bahamian people that it all came about due to some contractual malfeasance. As it now stands, the Chinese government now controls two-thirds of the major hotels in the Bahamas.

At the end of the day, they will pay the $1.6 - $2 billion.

Izmirlian will get what he had covertly bargained for in exchange for his participation in the fiasco, and the Chinese government will get to have economic and political power over the people and government of The Bahamas. That is, except for me, it's us who got f_cKed.

Lastly, have no doubt, the PLP (Christie administration) was completely complacent. As for the FNM (Minnis administration) such chess play is way beyond the scope of their understanding... however, Dionisio may have acted as a gate-keeper to ensure all stayed on tract.

We need to elect government officials that puts the Bahamian people, absolutely, first.

Posted 22 December 2024, 3:19 p.m. Suggest removal

ThisIsOurs says...

If you believe Izmirlian went through all this as some elaborate ruse, you've clearly never envisioned and developed a big idea. The idea and its development become a part of your flesh and blood, you dont part with it lightly. And clearly, dragging through court for 10 long years, Izzy wasnt giving up his flesh and blood

Posted 22 December 2024, 5:56 p.m. Suggest removal

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