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August 20, 2014

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Chinese investors to build huge resort on cash-strapped Antigua

CHINESE investors are to plunge more than US$1 billion into developing Antigua and Barbuda’s first mega-resort, creating 1,000 jobs for the tiny cash-strapped nation.

Construction on the mammoth 647-hectare multi-hotel, residential and commercial project is slated to begin early next year.

The “Singulari” scheme — 50 percent bigger than the regionally-heralded Baha Mar resort under way in the Bahamas — is being lauded as a major feather in the East Caribbean country’s tourism cap.

Spanning 364 hectares of land in the north of Antigua and 283 hectares of tiny islands, it will include several luxury hotels, hundreds of private homes, a school, hospital, marinas, golf courses, an entertainment district, horse racing track and the Caribbean’s biggest casino.

It is being built on land formerly owned by disgraced US financier Allen Stanford, once Antigua’s largest employer.

Sam Dyson, of Luxury Locations real estate agency which introduced Beijing-based Yida International Investment Group to the island in May 2013 and negotiated the deal with the land’s liquidators, said: “Singulari will provide Antigua & Barbuda with an economic boost and galvanize the destination as a tourism force to be reckoned with.”

A Yida spokesman said job fairs would be held within weeks to ensure locals were given first priority for the 200 positions being made available later this year when the land is prepared for development, and the 800 created next year when construction starts.

“Over the next 10 years, Yida Group and its global partners will create an additional US$2 billion of gross domestic product and economic value to Antigua, including sales of real estate, creation of new industries and origination of foreign direct investment,” he added.

Antiguan Prime Minister Gaston Browne signed an agreement with the developers on June 13, one day after taking office following June’s general election. Browne declared his intention to transform the country, suffering crippling national debt and unemployment, into an economic powerhouse.

With national debt at almost 90 percent of GDP, the main challenges for the new government will include reviving the 280-square-kilometer country’s tourism-dependent economy.




 

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