Thursday, 29 November 2012

Lord Gibsons Project Lesotho

Twin Peaks Investment Group concentrates it's investment efforts to work in conjunction with the economic growth strategy developed by the government of Lesotho. Twin Peaks has established a direct relationship with the Royal family of the country in an effort to improve overall quality of life for all it's citizens.
Lesotho , had surpassed most LDCs in attracting foreign direct investment (FDI), predominantly export-oriented, and in significant amounts to the apparel industry, which had generated employment and foreign exchange. However, this FDI was dependent on temporary trade privileges, and Lesotho had to face the challenge of full global competition once those trade privileges were to expire. The IPR recommended a strategy to retain existing investors and diversify investment. Key actions included:

  • Developing a competitive base for manufacturing FDI.
  • Exploiting more fully complementarities with Lesotho´s neighbour, South Africa .
  • Improving access to other large markets.
  • Building up the country´s own capabilities in manufacturing, services and agriculture.
  • Fine-tuning the investment framework.
  • Raising workers´ productivity.
  • Strengthening local entrepreneurship.
  • Addressing infrastructure constraints.
  • Strengthening FDI promotion and facilitation.

Sunday, 11 November 2012

Lord Gibsons Entertaining and Wierd News of the Week

LEAD STORY -- Disgraced but Not Contrite
Chutzpah! The former police chief of Bell, Calif., Randy Adams, had resigned in disgrace after prosecutors charged eight other city officials with looting the municipal budget. Adams had been recruited by the alleged miscreants (at a sweetheart salary twice what he made as police chief of much larger Glendale), and his resignation left him with a generous state pension of $240,000 a year. Rather than quietly accept the payout, Adams immediately appealed to a state pension panel, claiming that his one inexplicably rich year in Bell had actually upped his pension to $510,000 a year. In September, with a straight face, Adams pleaded his case to the panel, but 20 times during the questioning invoked his right not to incriminate himself. [Los Angeles Times, 9-21-2012]

The Continuing Crisis
-- Doctors Just Want to Have Fun: (1) Navy medical examiner Dr. Mark Shelly was notified of disciplinary action in July after admitting that he let his children handle a brain (and pose for photos with it) that he was transporting for autopsy to Portsmouth, Va. (2) A 15-year-old Swedish student, working at Malmo University Hospital on a "practical work-life" internship, was allowed by a doctor to make part of the incision for a cesarean section childbirth and to examine the patient vaginally. One alarmed cesarean patient alerted news media after reading about the orientation program in May and wondering if she had been a "hands-on" patient. [Virginian-Pilot (Norfolk, Va.), 7-13-2012] [The Local (Stockholm), 10-1-2012] -- IRS agents, investigating tax-fraud suspect Rashia Wilson, 26, turned up "thousands" of identification numbers in a September home search in Tampa. Wilson had already laid down a challenge in May, when she wrote on Facebook: "I'm Rashia, the queen of IRS tax fraud. (I'm) a millionaire for the record. So if you think that indicting me will be easy, it won't. I promise you. I won't do no time, dumb (expletive unpublished)." The search also turned up a handgun, and since Wilson is a convicted felon (with 40 arrests), she was jailed, and denied bail in part because of the Facebook post. [Tampa Bay Times, 9-22-2012] -- Many visitors to San Francisco's historic Castro neighborhood are shocked at the city's culture of street nudism (virtually all by males). Only if the display is "lewd and lascivious" (with the purpose to arouse) is it illegal, but a September report in SF Weekly suggests that the nudity must be total -- that calling any attention at all to the genitals may suggest lewdness, such as by rings worn around the scrotum. [SF Weekly, 9-7-2012]
Bright Ideas
Way Too Many Apps: (1) The Swiss company Blacksocks offers an iPhone app that utilizes radio frequency identification chips inserted into socks so they can be automatically sorted. (2) The iPoo app, reported Wired magazine in November, "(l)ets you chat with your fellow defecators from the comfort of your own toilet." (3) "In development" now, according to Harvard freshman Olenka Polak, is a "Code Red" app that creates an exchange network so that women and girls who find themselves unexpectedly spotting can locate an emergency source for a tampon or pad. [New York Times, 9-22-2012] [Wired, November 2012] [Harvard Crimson, 10-3-2012]
Latest Religious Messages
-- The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that an insane person cannot be executed, no matter how heinous the crime, because he cannot understand why he was being killed. Notwithstanding that, Florida Judge David Glant has ordered John Ferguson, 64, to death for a 1978 multiple-murder conviction, despite evaluations from 30 doctors that Ferguson is an insane paranoid schizophrenic. (At press time, the U.S. Court of Appeals is considering Ferguson's lawyers' last-second challenge.) Judge Glant acknowledges that Ferguson is delusional, but found that he nevertheless understands why he is being executed. Ferguson's belief in a Jesus-like resurrection upon death, with a glorious afterlife, is not, Glant said, "so significantly different from beliefs (that) other Christians may hold so as to consider it a sign of insanity." [The Guardian (London), 10-14-2012; CNN, 10-23-2012] -- Spare the Rod: Former Arkansas state legislator Charlie Fuqua is running again after a 14-year absence from elective office. In the interim, reported the Arkansas Times in October, he wrote a book, "God's Law: The Only Political Solution," reminding Christians that they could put their super-rebellious children to death as long as proper procedure (set out in Deuteronomy 21:18-21) was followed. "Even though this (capital punishment) would rarely be used," Fuqua wrote, "if it were the law of the land ... it would be a tremendous incentive for children to give proper respect to their parents." [Arkansas Times, 10-8-2012] -- Evangelicals' Nightmare Come to Life: A city official in nominally Catholic Tupa, Brazil, granted, for the first time, official "civil union" status to a man and two women, who thus enjoy all the legal benefits of marriage (as per a recent Brazilian Supreme Court decision). A CNN reporter, translating Portuguese documents, said the union was called "polyfidelitous." [CNN, 8-31-2012]
Family Values
"Why You Little ...!" (1) A teenager, apparently fed up with his parents' commandeering of their home's basement for an elaborate marijuana-growing operation, turned the couple in in August. The Doylestown Township, Pa., couple (a chiropractor mom and software engineer dad) had sophisticated hardware and 18 plants. (2) Police in Athens, Ga., searching for Homer Parham, 51, at his house in September, came up empty, and his wife said he wasn't there. But as officers were leaving, the couple's young daughter said, "Mommy locked Daddy in the closet." Parham was found hiding in a high-up crawl space. [PhillyBurbs.com, 8-19-2012] [Athens Banner-Herald, 9-20-2012]
First-World Problems
America now has about 700 pet "aftercare" facilities, providing funeral services to the nation's companion animals, according to a September NBC News report. Oakey's, in Roanoke, Va., performs 800 to 900 pet cremations annually and provides about 20 customers a year with pet caskets, part of the estimated $53 billion America spends on pets (higher than the Gross National Products of more than 100 countries). The basic charge of Heartland Pet Cremation of St Louis is $275 for a private cremation, including a "basic" urn and memorial video slideshow. (For the more upscale, other facilities offer deluxe urns, taxidermy, freeze-drying pets and creating a synthetic diamond out of pet ashes.) [NBC News, 9-17-2012]
People Different From Us
Gareth Lloyd, 49, admitted that he is the one who made about 5,800 random phone calls (over a 90-day period -- averaging 64 a day!) to people just to listen to their reactions when he told them that his penis was stuck in a household object (usually jars or a vacuum cleaner). A Flintshire, Wales, court sentenced Lloyd only to probation (with restrictions on telephone use). [Daily Mail (London), 10-11-2012]
Least Competent Criminals
Latest Negative-Cash-Flow Robbery: Two men robbing an Open Pantry store in Madison, Wis., in October escaped, but with less money than they came with. The lead thief grabbed a handful of cash that the clerk had been counting when the pair entered. The clerk pleaded, then sternly demanded that the man give back the money. The thief thought for a moment, became remorseful, threw all the money in his pocket to the floor, and fled. The clerk told police that when she re-counted the money, there was $1 more than in her original count, meaning that the thief had accidentally tossed in a dollar of his own. [WISC-TV (Madison), 10-22-2012]
Readers' Choice
(1) The Red Flower Chinese Restaurant in Williamsburg, Ky., was shut down by health authorities in September after a customer said he witnessed a roadkill deer carcass being wheeled through the dining room into the kitchen. The chief Whitley County health inspector said the owners did not appear to understand that they should not do that. (2) Edward Archbold, 32, died in October following his victory at the bug-eating contest sponsored by the Ben Siegel Reptile Store in Deerfield Beach, Fla. Archbold (described by friends as a "life of the party" type) had stuffed handfuls of insects into his mouth (which people do harmlessly around the world in various cultures), but collapsed a short time later. [WKYT-TV (Lexington, Ky.), 9-30-2012] [South Florida Sun-Sentinel, 10-9-2012] Thanks This Week to David Swanson, Jeff Powell, John McGaw, Peter Smagorinsky, Jan Wolitzky, Doug Smith, Paul Peterson, Peter Swank, Nate Tracy, Gary Davidson, Scott Huber, Gary DaSilva and William Ellis, and to the News of the Weird Board of Editorial Advisors. (Are you ready for News of the Weird Pro Edition? Every Monday at http://NewsoftheWeird.blogspot.com and www.WeirdUniverse.net. Other handy addresses: WeirdNews at earthlink dot net, http://www.NewsoftheWeird.com, and P.O. Box 18737, Tampa FL 33679.) COPYRIGHT 2012 CHUCK SHEPHERD DISTRIBUTED BY UNIVERSAL UCLICK

www.newsoftheweird.com
www.lordneilbgibson.mobi

Tuesday, 6 November 2012

Lord Neil Gibson – Victim of an Internet Stalker

Lord Neil Gibson is a humanitarian and financier. In the course of his every week he meets all kinds of people – from lobbyists for needy charities to asset holders who have billions of dollars in assets they wish to trade. According to Neil he will get over 400 emails on a standard day. He has 7 meetings a day arranged, and that is when he is not flying from one side of the planet to the other.
If you are that busy, every now and again you’ll meet a bad egg. Someone will say they have assets which do not exist or are from a source you’d be better not dealing with.
Lord Gibson has several times come across such people, who are often desperate and will go to extreme lengths to pretend that they are real. This may be because they are desperate to get rid of a bad debt or perhaps they have promised unrealistic results to a fellow trader.
Unfortunately for Neil, one such ne’er-do-well contacted him. As a result Neil worked with the US authorities to put him away. The man was found guilty and served his time. 
Alas, when the man got out of jail and tried to pick up the pieces he turned bitter and started pursuing Neil. This resulted in a court case which Neil Gibson won. This victory made the pursuer even bitterer.
Lord Neil Gibson spends many hours of his week trying to make the world a better place, so it’s not as if he should put the encounter down to karma. He believes that in fact the Internet is to blame. In the past it was not so easy for anybody to post slanderous comments online in minutes which get acknowledged worldwide in seconds.
Internet defamation laws are gradually changing for the better but right now while spending millions on a libel case in London your Internet stalker can be posting thousands of defamatory posts about you online. People are getting better at hiding the trail; using IP address hiders and Internet cafes.
So, libel cases are outmoded and a waste of money; especially when your pursuer has spent time in jail and has lost all his money in the process.
Lord Neil Gibson is not phased. He knows he is not how the Internet stalker portrays him.
Lord Gibson continues to work as a humanitarian and currently presides over billions in assets across three continents. It’s just part of being who he is that one man has decided to write and post loads of tosh about him online.

Saturday, 27 October 2012

World's thinnest house built in Polish capital

The world's thinnest house opened up its doors for the first time this weekend, however it is unlikely there was enough room to throw a moving in party.

World's thinnest house, Warsaw, Poland, Keret House, Jakub Szczesny The 'world's thinnest house' has popped up in Warsaw (Picture: AFP)
Measuring just five feet at its widest point, the ultra-thin home was unveiled in the Polish capital of Warsaw on Sunday.
Squeezed into an alleyway between a pre-World War II house and a modern apartment block, the unusual property was originally due to be installed as an art installation.
The ground floor contains a kitchen, toilet, shower and eating area, while tenants can access the upstairs bedroom via a metal ladder.
World's thinnest house, Warsaw, Poland, Keret House, Jakub Szczesny Tiny: The house is just five foot wide (Picture: AP)
World's thinnest house, Warsaw, Poland, Keret House, Jakub Szczesny Tenant: Etgar Keret (EPA)
Polish architect Jakub Szczesny said the claustrophobic living quarters has all the basics a tenant could need.
'It contains all necessary amenities such as a micro-kitchen, mini-bathroom, sleeping cubicle and tiny work area, all accessible via ladders,' he said.
'I think plenty of light is most important in order to eliminate the fear of the small space.'
World's thinnest house, Warsaw, Poland, Keret House, Jakub Szczesny A 3D design of the house (Picture: AP/Foundation of Polish Modern Art)
He added: 'Research shows we are approaching a social disaster because too little living space is built.
'You don't need that much space to live in, so it is worth considering building smaller scaled, cheaper housing.'
Israeli writer Etgar Keret will be the first person to live in the property, which has been named Keret House in his honour.
Many members of Keret's family died in the Holocaust under Nazi Germany's occupation of Poland, with the house built at the point where one the largest Jewish ghettos in occupied Europe was created.
VIDEO: World's thinnest home unveiled


Read more: http://www.metro.co.uk/weird/915731-worlds-thinnest-house-built-in-polish-capital#ixzz2AW86Qy00

Thursday, 18 October 2012

Baby elephant rescue will steal your heart

A baby stuck in a well. A frantic mother crazed with worry for her off-spring. Anyone could relate, but these very human emotions came from the bond of an elephant baby and her mother. And a video capturing the rescued calf has captivated the Web.




Just your typical day on the Amboseli National Park in Kenya, where a team of elephant conservations from the Amboseli Trust for Elephants received a call about a baby stuck in an five-foot hole dug by Masai tribesman. They raced to the site of the accident.
The baby was fine, but the hole was too deep for the eight-month-old calf to climb out. And the mother was unable to help.
To complicate matters, the mother thought the rescuers were a threat, and almost sat on the Land Rover. The driver, Dr. Vicki Fishlock, resident scientist of the elephant trust, recognized the mother, Zombe, from a mark on her ear.
The scientist scared her away with a high pitched yell, maneuvered around her, as two men managed to get rope around the baby. By attaching the line to SUV and putting the vehicle into reverse, they were able to pull the elephant calf out.
A happy ending, but especially rewarding as the video captures the baby's sprint to its mother's side.
The rescue is a reminder of the challenges faced by humans and elephants that share the land. Without the rescue, the elephant would have died in the well, causing conflict with the Masai.
The organization's website noted, "Luckily the report came in early in the morning and we were able to get there quick before the mother was forced to leave by herders arriving to water their cattle. It was a happy ending as we were able to reunite the calf with her mother, Zombe."
The organization has a long-time relationship with the elephants, which they've been studying since 1972, as well as the Masai. Fishlock noted to Yahoo News in an email, "Our biggest fears for the elephants of Amboseli and elsewhere lie not with their sharing land with the Maasai, who we work with and who report elephant emergencies to us, but from the burgeoning ivory trade."
Indeed, thousands of elephants are slaughtered across Africa for their ivory tusks, used to make trinkets that are in high demand in Asia .
Fishlock added, " We are delighted by the web response to our video, and we hope it persuades people that elephants are special and deserve to be protected and cherished."

Thursday, 11 October 2012

Lord Gibson Ambassador at Large

We typically define an ambassador as someone who brings goodwill and positive intentions to troubled situations, looking for compromises and solutions to problems that will ultimately benefit everyone involved. By that definition, it’s difficult to think of Lord Neil Gibson as anything other than a true ambassador—not only in his official, appointed position as an ambassador, but in other ways, as well. Indeed, Lord Neil Gibson continues to do good work on humanity’s behalf, and his role both as a diplomat and as a more general humanitarian make him a true unsung hero, someone worth knowing about and even celebrating.

But who is Lord Neil Gibson, exactly? It’s amazing to think that a man who has done so much in terms of diplomacy and humanitarianism in foreign countries—ranging from African nations to troubled Middle-Eastern states—is still unknown to so many of us. Here is a quick rundown of the roles in which he has served:

  • Once named “Ambassador at Large” for West Africa, a role in which he served for several years, Lord Neil Gibson has dedicated a great amount of time and energy to collecting, packing, and shipping much-needed supplies, including books, clothes, and computers, into West Africa. He was able to develop his own method of doing so by building a relationship with local business partners, ensuring that these supplies were safely delivered to the folks who really needed them.
  • Enacting positive change in a troubled nation is one thing, but what many of us forget is that it takes the concentrated efforts of economists to ensure that change is sustained. Lord Neil Gibson has used his knack for finance to teach international communities and their representatives how to manage their financial assets effectively and efficiently.
  • Lord Neil Gibson has created new and improved shelters and infrastructures for people living in troubled or impoverished countries around the globe. From the creation of a new road between the Port of Belize and Guatemala to the construction of medical facilities in Iraq, Lord Neil Gibson has used his resources to create positive, lasting change on foreign soil.

As you can see, Lord Neil Gibson is a real agent for positive change; learn more about this humanitarian, and witness the good work he is doing both at home and abroad!

Thursday, 6 September 2012

Pirates seize oil tanker, kidnap crew off Nigeria


LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) — Pirates attacked and seized an oil tanker off the coast of Nigeria's largest city, the country's navy said Wednesday, kidnapping 23 sailors who were trying to hide from their assailants.
The pirates targeted the MT Abu Dhabi Star, which was anchored 80 kilometers (50 miles) off the coast of Lagos, the country's biggest port, said Commodore Kabir Aliyu, a spokesman for Nigeria's navy. The sailors onboard sent distress signals as the pirates boarded the ship Tuesday night, with their last message indicating they had locked themselves inside a panic room on the vessel, Aliyu said.
The oil tanker, flagged out of Singapore, is operated by Pioneer Ship Management Services LLC, a company with offices in Dubai. The company said in a statement that it lost radio contact with the tanker on Wednesday.
"Pioneer have since received contact from the crew onboard the vessel and can confirm that all crew members are currently reported to be safe and uninjured, but that the vessel has been boarded by suspected pirates," the statement read.
Pioneer said it had not received any ransom demands for its crew. The company said 23 sailors were onboard the vessel, but did not disclose their nationalities.
The attack mirrored two others carried out in recent days in waters off the coast of Togo. In both of those cases, the crew were released unharmed after pirates ransacked the vessels and stole the gasoline or oil onboard the ship, according to the International Maritime Bureau, which tracks piracy across the world.
Pirate attacks are on the rise in West Africa's Gulf of Guinea, which follows the continent's southward curve from Liberia to Gabon. Over the last year and a half, piracy there has escalated from low-level armed robberies to hijackings and cargo thefts. Last year, London-based Lloyd's Market Association — an umbrella group of insurers — listed Nigeria, neighboring Benin and nearby waters in the same risk category as Somalia, where two decades of war and anarchy have allowed piracy to flourish.
Pirates in West Africa have been more willing to use violence in their robberies, as they target the cargo, not the crew for ransom as is the case off Somalia. Experts say many of the pirates come from Nigeria, where corrupt law enforcement allows criminality to thrive.
Analysts believe the recent hijackings of tanker ships may well be the work of a single, sophisticated criminal gang with knowledge of the oil industry and oil tankers. Those involved in the hijackings may have gotten that experience in Nigeria's southern Niger Delta, where thieves tap pipelines running through the swamps to steal hundreds of thousands of barrels of oil a day.

Tuesday, 5 June 2012

Venus Transit

Sunday, 3 June 2012

MP calls for better management of businesses

A Labour MP has told the House of Commons that UK businesses need better management rather than deregulation.
During Business, Innovation and Skills questions on 24 May 2012, Barry Sheerman quoted a Chartered Management Institute report which claimed that "43% of managers in this country are rated as poor".
He added: "Let's do something about management rather than going on about red tape."
Conservative MP Stephen Hammond had tabled a question asking ministers what steps they had taken to reduce the burden of regulation on business.
Mr Hammond said small businesses in his constituency wanted "access to lending and… deregulation".
Business and Enterprise Minister Mark Prisk told him that the government had reviewed 1,500 regulations as part of its Red Tape Challenge and "ministers have agreed to scrap or substantially overhaul 59% of those - some 887 regulations".
Liberal Democrat MP Lorely Burt referred to the recent report by venture capitalist Adam Beecroft, which included proposals to give firms more flexibility to sack workers.
"A fire at will policy might actually be counter-productive and won't actually increase productivity or growth," she said.
Mr Prisk said the proposal was just "one of 23 different measures" in Mr Beecroft's report.
Labour MP Ian Lavery asked whether "a person who has made in excess of a £500,000 donation to the Conservative Party and made more than £100m from private equity deals is a fit and proper person to determine government policy on workers' rights".
Mr Prisk warned him that "we need to be very careful" when making such allegations.
He defended Mr Beecroft's role, saying "it is important to have good employers, good people who actually understand the market" advising the government.
Shadow business minister Ian Murray referred to reports of Business Secretary Vince Cable's opposition to the Beecroft proposals and alleged that the report "puts old Tory ideology before any credible strategy to get people back to work".
But the minister accused him of producing "platitudes", adding: "We are actually acting and you are not."
Other questions were on topics including business confidence, the post office network and caravan manufacturing in and around Hull.

Saturday, 2 June 2012

In fitting start to Queen's Jubilee, it's a day at the races

LONDON — Long known as the sport of kings, today horse racing is the Sport of the Queen, as the Diamond Jubilee got underway with a familiar annual ritual, the running of the Epsom Derby.
Horse-loving Queen Elizabeth II did not have a horse in the "dah-bee," as it's known here; instead it was the appropriately named Camelot, the favorite, that won the feature race today, in front of a crowd of 150,000 racing fans, with the No. 1 fan watching in the royal enclosure.
Along with her were members of her family, including her husband, Prince Philip; her two younger sons, Prince Andrew, Duke of York, and Prince Edward, Earl of Wessex; and two of her grandchildren, Andrew's daughters, Princess Beatrice and Princess Eugenie.
The day was overcast, windy and cool but it was an especially colorful and cheerful derby, decorated with flags, flowers and jubilee bunting. It opened with military parachutists, bearing Union Jacks, floating down in their scarlet red jumpsuits, one of the reasons they're known as the Red Devils.
The crowds cheered and waved little flags (35,000 were handed out beforehand) as the queen and her husband arrived in a Rolls motorcade down the track. Smiling broadly, she exited the car and the Royal Marine Band struck up the familiar notes of the national anthem. Katherine Jenkins, the Welsh classical vocalist who finished second in Dancing With the Stars last month, sang God Save the Queen with gusto, although she looked slightly chilled in the cold while dressed in a creamy, strapless mermaid-tail gown, standing just a few feet away from the queen.
"This is definitely a day that I will never forget," she told the BBC later.
Unlike so many others, Jenkins was not wearing a hat for her performance but she didn't have to. By contrast, there's a strict dress code for those in the royal enclosure: Hats for women; top hats for men; and smart outfits for all. Elsewhere in the stands, fans are allowed to wear what they want and many of them apparently believe the wackier the better.
As per usual, the queen went down from the royal box to the paddock where she inspected some of the horses that competed in one of the races, the Coronation Cup, renamed the Diamond Jubilee Coronation Cup. She awarded the cup to the owner, trainer and jockey of winner St. Nicholas Abbey.
The big winner, Camelot, was trained and ridden by a father-son team, the first in derby history, adding to the historic character of this year's event.
Epsom is not just any horse-racing venue; the derby is way older than the Windsor dynasty, with the first was one in 1779. It's also one of the richest, at about $2 million. And it's free for fans.
The race also is the United Kingdom's only major one that the horsewoman-in-chief has not won. An expert in breeding, raising, training and racing horses, she has gone to the derby every year except one in her 60 years on the throne. She even attended just a few days after she was crowned in 1953, when her horse, Aureole, finished second, nearly giving the new queen a coronation victory.
Last year, her horse Carlton House, was the favorite but finished third, although it did win at another racetrack on Thursday.
Racing is one of the queen's real passions, so it's no coincidence that the derby opens the jubilee weekend. Brits are used to seeing her at the races, a standout in the royal box in her colorful hats and outfits, peering through binoculars, surrounded by family and friends. She typically visits the paddock and the winner's circle, loves talking to the trainers and jockeys, closely reads the daily racing press.
British commentators have repeatedly pointed out that no other event during jubilee weekend will be as much fun for the 86-year-old queen as the derby. Typically, she shows an enigmatic or neutral expression on her face during engagements, although lately she's been seen beaming for jubilee events. But it's at the races where she shows her excitement. One piece of video often shown features the queen at a race, grabbing her binoculars and rushing out of the royal box as one of her horses moved to the front of the pack.
Following the horses is the queen's hobby, one that provides a "relief from her daily duties," said her top-hatted (and rarely interviewed) racing manager, John Warren, interviewed by Sky News.
When the queen goes to the USA on rare private visits, she typically heads for Kentucky bluegrass country. There she visits Lane's End Farm, a top breeder owned by her friend William Farish, the former American ambassador to Britain.
And when she made her historic visit to Ireland last year, the first by a British monarch to its former colony, she made a point of spending hours at the Irish National Stud, talking horse bloodlines with people whose love of horses is as high as her own.

Friday, 1 June 2012

Taylor Calls for Calm Terming 50-yr Sentence a Mockery to Justice, Democracy

Written by Stephen Binda                                                    
Taylor Calls for Calm Terming 50-yr Sentence a Mockery to Justice, Democracy
Speaking from custody in The Hague yesterday shortly after being sentenced to 50 years of imprisonment for crimes against humanity, convicted former president Charles Taylor reportedly told his family back home to tell his supporters to remain calm as his lawyers process the appeal case against his conviction.

The former warlord, who became president after leading years of brutal civil law in his homeland, reportedly urged his supporters not to stage any street demonstration in protest against his sentencing. They should rather respect the democratic process, family spokesman Senator Sando Johnson, who claimed to have spoken directly to convict Taylor after the sentence, told the Daily Observer.
“Mr. Taylor has asked me to inform our people to remain calm and that God was in control of the situation,” he quoted Taylor as saying yesterday. “He (Taylor) informed me that his lawyers were preparing to appeal against the 50 years sentence brought against him.”
Johnson said the standing rule of the International Court for Sierra Leone provides for the accused to file an appeal following the sentence. Taylor will remain in the UN’s detention unit in The Hague until his appeal procedure is finalized within six months.
Quoting Mr. Taylor, Sen. Johnson termed the 50 years jail sentence as a mockery to justice and democracy for both Liberia and Sierra Leone.
He saked,“ While jail Mr. Taylor for 50 years for aiding and abetting war crimes when in fact the main perpetrators in Sierra Leone who were convicted went to jail for 15 to 30 years?”
According to him, Taylor said he was not surprised at the sentence, citing an international conspiracy by western powers.
“Mr. Taylor has said that there should not be any street demonstration or chaos in Liberia. We should respect the democratic peace process and pray for him and that every Liberian should remain calm,” Senator Johnson said.
Taylor (64) was convicted last month of all 11 counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity for aiding and abetting Sierra Leone’s Revolutionary United Front (RUF) during the country’s brutal 1991-2001 civil war.
In return, the court said, he was paid in diamonds mined by slave labour in areas under control of the rebels, who murdered, raped and kept sex slaves, hacked off limbs and forced children under 15 to fight.
“The accused has been found responsible for aiding and abetting some of the most heinous crimes in human history,” said Special Court for Sierra Leone judge Richard Lussick on Wednesday.
“The trial chamber unanimously sentences you to a single term of imprisonment for 50 years on all counts,” the judge said as he announced the ruling of the court based at Leidschendam, just outside The Hague.
“The trial chamber noticed that the effects of these crimes on the families and society as a whole in Sierra Leone was devastating,” Lussick said in handing down the ruling, the first sentence against a former head of state in an international court since the Nazi trials at Nuremberg in 1946.
Taylor, wearing gold-rimmed glasses and dressed in a dark suit and gold tie, listened with his eyes closed as the judge handed down the sentence, which Taylor’s team, and prosecutors, have two weeks to appeal.
Early this month, chief prosecutor Brenda Hollis argued for 80 years behind bars for Taylor, once one of west Africa’s most powerful men and a driving force behind Sierra Leone’s decade-long war which claimed 120 000 lives.
His defense argued such a sentence would be “excessive”. Throughout the trial, Taylor himself maintained his innocence and insisted he was instrumental in eventually ending Sierra Leone’s civil war.
Taylor’s sentence will be served in a British prison. London’s offer in 2007 to host Taylor in custody if he was found guilty was part of the deal to put him on trial in the Netherlands-based court.
The trial, which lasted nearly four years, wrapped up in March 2011. It saw several high-profile witnesses testify, including supermodel Naomi Campbell, who told of a gift of “dirty diamonds” she received in 1997 at a charity ball hosted by South Africa’s then president Nelson Mandela.
Handing down the verdict last month, Lussick stressed that although Taylor had substantial influence over the RUF, including its feared leader Foday Sankoh, this “fell short of command and control” of rebel forces. Sankoh died in 2003 before he could face trial.
Authorities in Nigeria arrested Taylor in March 2006 as he tried to flee from exile after being forced to quit Liberia three years earlier, under international pressure to end that country’s own civil war.
He was transferred to the Hague in mid-2006 amid security fears should he go on trial in Sierra Leone’s capital Freetown.
Taylor’s sentencing came 66 years after the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg sentenced admiral Karl Donitz to 10 years in jail for his part in Nazi crimes during World War II.

Can Liberia Be Liberated From Its Past?

By ILENA SILVERMAN

Former Liberian President Charles Taylor in April.Peter Dejong/AFP/Getty Images Charles Taylor, former president of Liberia, in April.
The recent news that The Hague has handed down a 50-year prison sentence to Charles Taylor, the former president of Liberia, brought to mind a couple of articles the magazine has published about that ravaged country. One was a moving excerpt from Helene Cooper’s memoir, “The House on Sugar Beach,” about growing up there in the 1970s and early ’80s, when the Liberian president, William Tolbert, was viciously murdered by a young rebel named Samuel Doe. Doe had the support of Taylor, who later became president himself.
Liberian president Ellen Johnson Sirleaf in 2011.Issouf Sanogo/AFP/Getty ImagesLiberia’s current president, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, in 2011.
After Taylor’s brutal leadership, Liberians elected Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, profiled by the magazine in 2010. Sirleaf has done a lot to fight corruption in that war-town country and is respected by many in the West, but her own complicated relationship with Taylor reflects the entanglements, moral and other, so often in play in Africa.

Monday, 28 May 2012

Lord Neil Benjamin Gibson involved in new Las Vegas Project?

Monster Las Vegas Ferris Wheel Aims to One-Up London’s ‘Eye’

Caesars Entertainment
Caesars Entertainment
London, your days as king of the big wheel are numbered. Las Vegas is coming for you.
Vegas is also coming for fans of ridiculously big carnival rides. Caesars Entertainment, the world’s largest casino company, will plant shovels in the dirt next month and start digging the foundation for a rotating upright wheel to outshine the London Eye, as well as the Eye’s more recent international rivals. The Vegas wheel’s name: The High Roller, what else?
(LIST: Top 10 Tallest Structures in the World)
The London Eye, which commands soaring views of London, the river Thames, Parliament and Big Ben, reaches to 443 feet at its apex. It’s the tallest wheel in Europe, and had been the tallest in the world after it was erected in 1999, until China’s 520-foot Star of Nanchang went up in 2006, followed by the current record-holder: the 541-foot Singapore Flyer, as of 2008.
The High Roller? It’s reaching for a towering 550 feet tall, only a hair taller than Singapore’s giant observation wheel. It’ll sit behind Caesars’ Imperial Palace and Flamingo hotels along an in-progress quarter-mile, $550 million food, clubbing and shopping stretch dubbed “the Linq.” The wheel itself looks to offer 32 giant-sized cars capable of holding 40 people each. Want to host an acrophobics-not-allowed birthday or bachelor bash while swinging around Sin City? You’ll probably be able to buy a ticket by the end of 2013.
Then there’s the question of “why.” To paraphrase Stephen King: Maybe it’s part of growing up American — dig the deepest, write the longest, build the tallest. Or you could just credit Vegas’ need to cast off its recession blues.
“It would be the centerpiece of a trip for a lot of people,” said Caesars CEO Gary Loveman in a USA Today travel piece. “They’re looking for the next thing to do.”


Read more: http://newsfeed.time.com/2011/08/22/monster-las-vegas-ferris-wheel-aims-to-one-up-londons-eye/#ixzz1w98AJngG

Wednesday, 23 May 2012

Lord Neil B. Gibson sponsors End of the World Bullriding Event December 2012?


Most recently, from deep down in the beautiful Caribbean country of Belize that the wheels are in motion to put on the Worlds very first, and what could be the last, professional Bullriding in Belize. Lord Neil B. Gibson and First Interstate Group are currently in discussions and planning for this stellar Event.  A portion of the proceeds will go towards the Belize Housing Project and the construction of a new hospital in the goal is to draw 10,000 people for the event over 3 days. Fans are said to come to Belize from all over the world for this incredible event. With such a big draw, organizers are expecting to fuel and stimulate tourism and the economy of Belize.
Every one of the three days, there will be professional Bullriding with 100 plus bullriders per day. A total of $100,000.00 prize money will be up for grabs. $50,000.00 will be paid out in day monies and a Sunday evening Top 10 Ride off will provide the best Bullrider with a Check for $50,000.00.
Along with the End of the World Bullriding, there will be special events such as the freestyle Bullfight. Mexican fighting bulls will be specially brought in for this event. The bull is not killed in this bullfight. The only one at risk is the Bullfighter. He must play with the bull for a minimum of 60 seconds,  making contact with the bull as much as possible without getting hit by the bull. Judges score him based on this.
Another event will be Cowboy Poker. Six entrants will be seated in chairs at a poker table and given a deck of cards. They will begin to deal the cards and at that time a raging bull will be turned loose in the arena. The last man still seated at the table will receive the prize money for the day, totalling $500.00. This event always keeps you on the edge of your seat and provides many laughs, chills and thrills.
Another event will be the Wild and Wooly. This is where all of the entrants are 5 years old and younger. They will be given a chance to ride a sheep. All our contestants in this event will be given prizes.
The organizers tell us that there will also be some special guests appearing at the EOW Bullriding. Gary Leffew, many times World Champion Bullrider and teacher of many, has agreed to show up at the event. Gary has been in movies such as Pink Cadillac with Clint Eastwood to Johnny Knoxville’s Jackass movie series. The one time representative of Bulls Eye BBQ sauce says he is looking forward to coming to Belize and has heard many good things about the people here.
Along with all the sporting and special events of each of the 3 nights will be a special concert each night. Three bands are slated to appear on Friday and Saturday night with a 5 band grand finale on Sunday. Musicians will be coming from Canada, United States, Mexico, Guatemala, Jamaica, and of course Belize.
Finishing off each night will be a fireworks show so be sure to come one, come all. Watch some of the greatest entertainers in the world, some of the greatest musicians in the world and watch the End of the World in the Caribbean, home of the Mayans where the 2012 prophecy began.
Tickets will be on sale in September of 2012 and will start at $30.00 for Friday and Saturday with a ticket price of $50.00 for the Sunday Grand Finale. Packages and Discounts are being offered at sponsor Resorts and Hotels.

Thursday, 17 May 2012

Lord Gibson under fire?


INDEPENDENT PRESS WALL STREET JOURNAL EDITION



LORD NEIL BENJAMIN GIBSON has currently been under fire in regard to his integrity and status as a humanitarian around the world.  After my interview with him, it is very clear as to how people could misunderstand who he is.  He has peripheral of world knowledge and is committed to empowering mankind in a positive manner.  The perception of his “lord” title is that he sits in a congested room and yells across elderly gentlemen.  Yet, this is not what position he holds.    In reality he acquired his title by the purchase of land acquisition, as many lords, barons, counts, etc. did in previous times.  When asked what he thought of the title, he stated “It gets me into the front of the line at the airport.”  He does not look at it as a power symbol.  He is a very humble person.



On the other hand, when he was asked about the world economy, starvation etc., he voiced his opinion and expressed himself very clearly.  After serving as Honorary Consulate General to Liberia, he saw much devastation and hunger and declared to work to thrive to create a better place for people in such war torn and poverty stricken areas.



He shared some of his new endeavors with me, such as housing projects and medical facilities, schooling, and farming.  He is working on the implementation in the country of Belize, which is close to his heart. As an English-speaking continent, which was once held in hierarchy with some people such as Queen Elizabeth. Currently, Lord Ashcroft still has a strong presence in Belize.



With the above being said, after reviewing articles write-ups and different information on the Internet, he appears to be a self-driven, philanthropic humanitarian who will continue to serve mankind. 



Jaqueline Cordot



PM: "The eurozone... either has to make up, or it is looking at a potential break-up."

Related Stories


David Cameron has said there will be no retreat on deficit reduction - and that he was right to speculate publicly about the break up of the euro.

He told business leaders in Manchester that it was "more dangerous to stay silent than to speak out".

The prime minister later discussed the crisis with other European leaders including Angela Merkel and new French President Francois Hollande.

Labour says the recession is caused by coalition policies not the euro crisis.

Mr Cameron raised eyebrows at Prime Minister's Questions on Wednesday when he warned the eurozone it "either has to make up or it is looking at a potential break-up".

Chancellor George Osborne has repeatedly warned against speculating about eurozone break-up, saying it would cause instability amid Greece's ongoing inability to form a government able to push through austerity plans.
'Genie out'
But he told MPs earlier on Thursday that the Greek elections had "let the genie out of the bottle" and "some of the things we were happy to say in private we are now also willing to say in public because the issue is out there".

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The coalition believed that it was winning the argument on deficit reduction, but fears it is in danger of losing the argument on growth.”
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"We have very clear ideas about what the eurozone needs to do to make their currency work," he added, saying he backed austerity measures in "peripheral" countries but also wanted to see the "core of the eurozone" do more "to support demand".

Mr Cameron discussed the eurozone situation with Mr Hollande, Mrs Merkel, Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti and EU officials in a conference call ahead of the forthcoming G8 summit in the United States.

The BBC's political editor Nick Robinson said the prime minister had reiterated the importance of decisive action to sort out the eurozone and to prevent contagion and repeated the key points of his speech.

But he said No 10 had refused to say whether Mr Cameron used the phrase "make up or break up" during the 45-minute conversation.
'Contingency planning'
Downing Street has disclosed that the National Security Council has been involved in contingency planning in case of a worsening situation in Greece and the eurozone.

A spokeswoman said the Treasury had been drawing up contingency plans "for some time" but when asked whether there'd been any planning to deal with "civil strife" she said: "Certainly the national security council has, in the past, looked at issues regarding the eurozone."

In his speech in Manchester, Mr Cameron said it was "essential to speak out about what needs to be done to safeguard the eurozone, to safeguard Britain, to take the steps to make sure we deliver the strong and stable economic growth that we want".

Describing the situation in Greece as a "crisis that never really went away", he said the eurozone could find itself in "unchartered territory" unless it took steps to strengthen its banks and protect its weaker members.

"As I have consistently said it is in Britain's interest for the eurozone to sort out its problems," he said.

"But be in no doubt: whichever path is chosen, I am prepared to do whatever is necessary to protect this country and secure our economy and financial system."
'Bystander'
He defended the coalition's austerity measures, saying the programme of spending cuts, tax rises and pay freezes was already having the desired effect of reducing the deficit.

"Let me be clear, we are moving in the right direction - not rushing the task but judging it carefully. And that is why we must resist dangerous voices calling on us to retreat.

Earlier, Business Secretary Vince Cable said Britain "shouldn't be panicking or be unduly negative" about the crisis in the eurozone.

"We need to get the risks in perspective," he told BBC Breakfast, adding there was no reason the crisis should spread beyond Greece.

But Labour said the UK government had become a "bystander" to events in Europe.

"David Cameron isn't part of the solution, he is part of the problem," opposition leader Ed Miliband said. "He promised Britain there would be recovery and he has delivered a recession.

"All of Europe's leaders, including David Cameron, bear responsibility for the fact that over the last two years they haven't sorted out the problems of the eurozone and they haven't had a proper plan for growth and jobs."

Saturday, 3 March 2012



Diamond Jubilee: Prince Harry visits Mayan ruins in Belize


Prince Harry at Xunantunich Prince Harry climbed the highest pyramid at Xunantunich


Prince Harry has visited the ruins of a Mayan city in Belize on the second day of his jubilee visit to the former British colony on behalf of the Queen.

The prince toured Xunantunich, a city of stone pyramids, palaces and temples that was abandoned in AD 950-1000.

He climbed the site's highest pyramid, El Castillo, as part of a private tour.

Over seven days, Prince Harry will visit the Bahamas and Jamaica as part of his jubilee tour. He will also go to Brazil for his charity, Sentebale.

Members of the Royal Family are visiting the 15 countries other than the UK where the Queen is head of state, along with some other Commonwealth nations, as part of this year's Diamond Jubilee celebrations.
Queen Elizabeth II Boulevard
Arriving in Belize City, Prince Harry was greeted by a guard of honour and his grandmother's representative in the country, Governor General Sir Colville Young.

He then travelled to Belize's capital, Belmopan, where he officially named a new road Queen Elizabeth II Boulevard after his grandmother and took part in a street party.

Map showing Xunantunich in Belize

Other engagements during his time in the country include laying a wreath at the memorial to British soldiers who have died in the country over the years.

The trip to Brazil is in support of the government and his charity Sentebale, which supports orphans and vulnerable children in the southern African country of Lesotho.

Other royal tours as part of the Jubilee celebrations include a visit by the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge to the Far East and the Pacific.

The Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall will visit Australia, Canada, New Zealand and Papua New Guinea, the Duke of York will travel to India and the Princess Royal is set to visit Mozambique and Zambia.

The host countries are likely to hold a range of events for the visiting royals, from official banquets and public celebrations to events that showcase the individual nations.

The Diamond Jubilee will also see the Queen, 85, and the Duke of Edinburgh, 90, travel as widely as possible across the UK to mark the occasion.
Feb 22, 2012

PM says Superbond is Jack Boot on throat of Belizeans


Dean Barrow
The super bond slid into the election campaign when the prime minister announced the date for early general elections. He said he was going back to the people for instructions to do something about the super bond. The result was a prompt downgrade to junk territory of Belize’s credit ratings from agencies such as Standard and Poor and Moody’s. If he was floating that idea, today, at the launch of the U.D.P. Manifesto, Prime Minister Barrow was more provocative. He said he was not concerned at all about the Belize’s credit ratings and that bond holders would have to sit around the table with a future U.D.P. government to re-negotiate the five hundred and sixty-five million dollar bond. The February payment has been made but another is due past the elections in August, which according to the PM’s bravado, he won’t pay at eight and half percent interest rates.
Dean Barrow
“I was deliberate in announcing the date of the election, deliberate in saying that the U.D.P. was asking for a new mandate to among other things, do something about the super bond. Now, that really set the cat among the pigeons. And you say that the so called rating agencies fell all over themselves to say’ oh wi di downgrade Belize bonds. Explain to mi how Mr. Man downgrading the Belize bonds hurts the Belizean people? The Belize Bonds are the bonds that are owned out there by all those that loaned the People’s United Party this one point one billion dollars for which there is nothing to show. And if you downgrade the bonds so that the bonds have less value, I say that that strikes me something like poetic justice, because while the greatest blame for the share of saddling this country with the super bond must lie with the P.U.P., the creditors, the bond holders, the commercial entities, agreed to that super bond, knowing full well that the kind of burden it was placing on the Belizean people is absolutely unconscionable, merciless; those people also have a share of the blame. Therefore, this eight and a half percent that we have to begin to pay as of August of this year, which means ninety-four million dollars of our re-current revenue that ought properly speaking to be spent on you the people of this country. This eight and half percent interest rate, we will not suffer. Belize is a country that is a country of honor; we do not easily renege on commitments but if there are commitments that in effect represent a jack boot on the throat of the Belizean people, then unless those that are applying that jack-boot are prepared to re-negotiate, they will see that the Belizean people are not going to take it. We won’t lie down so that anybody could tek chance on us and the bottom line is, ‘Mr. Bond holder, Mr. Bad creditor, come to the table and renegotiate with Belizeans. You are obliged to give us a fairer deal.”

So what will be the impact of the prime minister’s statement? Well, it is likely that there could be a further erosion of investor’s confidence and that the economy could continue to languish. At the launch of the People’s United party manifesto on Tuesday, Francis Fonseca, called on the PM to whining about the super bond and put the economy back to work. The super bond is a consolidation of government loans that was negotiated in 2006 and concluded in 2007. It also includes loans made by former U.D.P. administrations.

Friday, 2 March 2012

Prince Harry needs tact in Belize on first solo Royal tour

He is known as the party prince, but Prince Harry will need to show tact, maturity and diplomacy when he arrives in the Caribbean today for his first solo Royal tour.

Prince Harry will begin his tour in Belize today
Prince Harry will begin his tour in Belize today Photo: Getty Images
One of the key engagements being undertaken by the 27-year-old will be a meeting with Jamaica’s Prime Minister, Portia Simpson Miller, who said in January that she intended to remove the Queen as head of state to turn the country into a republic.
Rumours in Jamaica that the Prince’s itinerary was changed as a result of Mrs Simpson Miller’s forthright comments have been strenuously denied by St James’s Palace, which arranged the tour at the request of the Queen as part of her Diamond Jubilee celebrations.
The Prince will begin his tour in Belize today, where he will meet the country’s prime minister before a visit tomorrow to the Mayan pyramid of Xunantunich.
He will also visit the Bahamas, moving on to Jamaica, where he will meet the world’s fastest man, Usain Bolt, before undertaking a trade mission to Brazil.
Royal aides are alert to the possibility that the visit to Brazil could be hijacked by protestors from neighbouring Argentina following increased tension over the sovereignty of the Falkland Islands.

Wednesday, 8 February 2012

Thursday, 2 February 2012

Belize Housing Project Plan

Belize Eco-Village Housing Program


Overview

Ecovillages are people-based initiatives to model sustainable, low-impact, human settlements. They are applicable to both rural and urban settings and accessible to all. Eco-villagers utilize green energy technology, ecological building techniques, and human-scale design to reduce exploitation of natural resources, facilitate community self-reliance, and improve quality of life. Medical clinics will be included in the development of each village. These medical clinics can assist in the care management of other local villages and expand the Belize Healthcare footprint.

They are about the creation of new settlements as well as retrofitting existing villages and urban areas. An ecovillage is designed in harmony with its bioregion instead of the landscape being unduly engineered to fit construction plans. By thinking in terms of bioregions, sustainable settlements are planned considering water availability, the ability to grow food, and accessibility.

Many projects use the principles of permaculture for creating integrated, interactive and efficient systems for structural planning, food production and social needs in their community. Ecovillages are human scale, (somewhere where you can feel you know the others in your community), fully featured settlements, (comprising housing, businesses, agriculture, culture, etc. as appropriate to the local setting), in which human activity is integrated harmlessly into the natural world, supports human development and can be continued into the indefinite future.

There are hundreds, maybe thousands of ecovillages around the world that have been living true to their values, even if it means not quite meeting the building codes or zoning laws according to their local government. Global Ecovillage Network defines ecovillages as“Alternative experimentation laboratories, with food production, ecological buildings, a resources center, a reception place, or artistic workshops. The aim is to create, together, a convivial and fair way of life, with a minimal ecological trace becoming more socially, economically and ecologically sustainable.”

There are examples of Ecovillage Zoning and Sustainable Development Testing Sites in Taos, NM, Portland, OR, Eugene, OR and British Columbia. There are many more with pending legislation across the globe.

Modular in design and scalability.


There are a number of benefits in using ISBUs– inter-model steel building units – for home building or residential projects. Otherwise known as shipping container houses, these sturdy, steel structures are a captivating idea.

Shipping containers are made from special steel in order to be strong enough to withstand rough conditions at seas and long exposure to outside elements while being able to protect the goods stored inside. They are made to a standard set of measurements in order to be stackable the world over. There are three sizes – 20 feet long or 40 & 53 feet long. Each shipping container has a width of 8 feet and a height of 8 feet 6 inches or 9.6 in high cube versions.

Because of their uniform size, large number, and the fact that they were built to last, it became important to consider alternative uses for containers that began to stack up in back lots and shipping docks. Years ago, the military explored their potential for portable operation centers. It wasn’t too long, however, before their low cost and ready availability attracted the attention of architects and builders with a unique need – safe, fast, inexpensive construction for hospitals, office space, apartments, and homes.


Besides the obvious quality of building material, there are several eco advantages to the use of this component. Globally these containers are discarded after their service life is finished. They are then used for artificial reefs, thrown in landfills or melted for scrap. The availability of these containers globally reduces our need to manufacture from virgin materials which are precious resources for the future of the world.


Benefits

The benefits of using ISBUs for home building are hard to ignore:

· Environmentally friendly approach to building as you make use of existing materials rather than require additional trees to be cut down for building lumber.

· Less expensive than wood construction– particularly if you use used shipping containers.

· Faster build times as containers are pre-fabricated.

· Easily expandable – often compared to building with Legos because the containers can be stacked on top of each other or side by side. One or more walls of a container can be removed to increase a home’s interior space.

· Fire resistant

· Mold resistant

· Resistant to insect damage

· Ability to stand up to strong winds and heavy storms and have been tested category 5

The thought of living in a shipping container home evokes images of cold, tight quarters in ugly, metal boxes but the finished product is usually anything but ugly. Add other elements such as stone and glass and complete the outside with special paints or coverings and you easily end up with sleek, sophisticated, styling and crisp lines.

All of our projected use containers will be painted with an exterior ceramic particle paint which blocks UV rays and deflects 94% of all heat from the sun. The interior will be painted with a similar paint which will have greater anti-microbial shielding from all forms of bacteria and fungus growth. This micro coating will help maintain comfortable temperatures inside the homes.

The placement of the containers can be performed in several ways to accommodate local surroundings and to reduce the impact on its precious flora and fauna. The units can be placed on top of pre-stressed concrete pillars, poured foundation, on top of a block foundation or on a wooden platform with walk around decking.


Unit Features

Large sqft of interior space

Reclaimed water containment

L.E.D. Low impact 12v lighting

Kitchen with cook top, sink, storage and refrigerator

1-5 bed rooms

1-3 bath rooms

Sliding glass doors and Hurricane Shutters

Community provided hot water

Community provided potable water

Community provided purified water

Community provided electricity

Community provided Biogas

Direct community sewer access


Community Provided Services

Geo Thermal hot and cold water

Geo Thermal heating and cooling

Methane Digester for human, animal and community waste

Methane processor for converting waste into bio gas, fertilizer and fuels

Recycling center for breakdown and separation of all materials

Food production and farming facilities

Medical care facility and village wellness center to assist other villages locally

Job training and educational center for visitors and residents

Eco Village management training center

Property and Housing location

This is prime real-estate located very close to the capital city of Belmopan. This will be used for the pilot project. The village phase 1 will be the main entrance from the Western Hgwy. This facility will be cleared for staging of materials and the setting of foundations for the first houses to be placed. The first phase of the project will encompass the following core utilities ;

Medical Clinic Community Methane Digester Geo Thermal heating/cooling

Power generation center Fresh and waste water processing


Summary

A model village of this type of construction has been utilized in over 70 countries for everything from public and student housing, to office buildings and schools. The idea is not new; it has been accomplished since the 1960’s when military engineers first deployed entire hospitals in interlocking suites. Since then, the shipping container has been servicing all forms of housing for millions of people globally.

The village becomes a training facility which enables other local groups to be trained to perform certain aspects of the construction where jobs will be created. The strategy of expanding the villages to remote areas is very possible with the help of surplus military transporters which are designed to carry these units across most terrain. Once a village is proposed, a team will be trained in all aspects of maintaining, constructing and delivering these homes.

SEED Foundation will provide a complete package of all that is needed to build our model village including a list of donors and special tax forms for US and EU donors.

Below is a container hospital and clinic which is fully operational in Sudan, the concept is proven and the project’s success weighs on the acceptance of change.