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Urgent US military intervention needed in Grand Cayman
Cayman News ^ | 09/15/04 | Timothy Adam

Posted on 09/15/2004 8:37:06 PM PDT by Pikamax

Urgent US military intervention needed in Grand Cayman The following is the full text of an open letter from Mr Timothy Adam Chief Executive, Cable & Wireless (Cayman Islands) Ltd

Wednesday, September 15, 2004 Grand Cayman urgently needs military intervention to restore and to preserve law and order. This needs to happen TODAY.

No doubt US authorities are already aware of the widespread looting that has occurred. I have heard sporadic attempts at looting continue to occur. I got caught in traffic right beside a site where police had shot several times at a looter and had detained him, and there was a near riot - a very volatile situation to which police responded promptly with heavy assault weapon teams.

Last night there was a prison riot at HMP Northward in which a number of prisoners escaped. A prison guard was injured (I have heard it was not fatal) and a fire was started in the prison. ALL the island's law enforcement agencies had to be diverted to deal with this. The situation has been calmed down but it is still volatile, the police have had to go back there in force subsequent to the initial incident being calmed, and there now remains a serious weakness in the security force because a lot of the police and Special Constables are now diverted to handle the situation. Worse yet, there is a convicted rapist and a convicted murderer on the loose. Police have now been diverted from their already seriously stretched law and order duties to search for these dangerous criminals under difficult circumstances. The island's power supply has not been turned back on yet and even when it is, most of the electricity poles on the island have been broken, even huge concrete poles snapped, and there are NO streetlights ANYWHERE on the island. Police are operating in total darkness.

Police communication with outside law enforcement agencies have been very restricted due to the storm.

Our towers appear to have all withstood the storm and at least seven of them have anti-collision lights operating, which is great news because that means they still have electrical power. One of our top priorities is restoring the national transmission system links so that we can get those RBSs operational again. The Cable & Wireless core systems are now fully functional, including both GSM and TDMA core systems, local host exchange, ISC, internet, international submarine cable Maya 1, etc.

National transmission links have sustained damage and are out due to flooding and other physical damage inflicted by Hurricane Ivan. Restoration of national transmission links is one of our top priorities, and our teams are working day and night on this. Once we get transmission to our cell sites we are hopeful most of them will become operational again.

On-island communication is spotty. Police use cellular communication in addition to the Government radio system, but presently only a few areas have cellular coverage. There is a good Government radio communication network but in several areas the police are having to operate without any communication at all with headquarters or other units for backup.

Central Police Headquarters in George Town has been destroyed by Hurricane Ivan. The police have moved their headquarters to the first floor of One Technology Square, the island's telecommunication bunker owned and operated by Cable & Wireless (Cayman Islands) Ltd. of which I am Chief Executive.

This site is presently also housing the 911 Emergency Communications Centre, which we moved here as a temporary measure a couple of days in advance of the storm at the request of government due to their concerns about the survivability of their normal centre located in Central Police Station. Suffice it to say that proved to be a very wise decision!

I should emphasise (to the US Military) that in the present situation all the islands' internal and external telecommunications are entirely dependent on the continued operation of this site.

In summary: If we lose this site, we have lost the country. This site needs to be defended with military assistance as a matter of urgent priority. The US Military also need to know that in this site and in an adjacent building (AT&T Wireless offices in Trinity Square on Eastern Avenue) there are in total at least 25 United States citizens who in my considered opinion need their country's protection NOW, hence I believe under US laws use of the military is justified or authorised. For the most part these are people who are very necessary to help in the telecommunications restoration work. PLEASE BE CLEAR: WE ARE NOT SUGGESTING THAT THE US SHOULD EVACUATE THEM; on the contrary most of these people need to remain here because THEY ARE VITAL TO THE REBUILDING PROCESS THAT IS GOING ON SO THAT THE COUNTRY CAN RECOVER FROM THE HURRICANE AS QUICKLY AS POSSIBLE! There are a few of this number who are spouses and children of Cable & Wireless staff, families, and/or others who have taken refuge in One Technology Square, several of whom we are planning to evacuate through existing channels and military assistance is not needed for that.

I should also mention the thousands of United States of America citizens who are located elsewhere in the island, who for the most part are also necessary for the restoration effort. A bit of US Military help is required not just for One Technology Square, but to assist law enforcement across the island, and will no doubt contribute to the safety and security of those US citizens.

This will work best if the US Military works closely with the Royal Cayman Islands Police [RCIP]. It does not need an over-reaction, a heavy-handed approach, or imposition of martial law, but rather assistance and relief for the exhausted police team and the capability to execute no-nonsense law enforcement across the island, but the US Military must make it clear to British (and if necessary local) officials that either the RCIP will let them help or the US Military will do what is necessary without RCIP cooperation. If the US do not act in a measured way and if they come in with too heavy a hand, we risk losing the island's reputation for stability, and that will destroy our economy.

Let me emphasise that what is needed is for the US Military to provide the necessary relief to the limited and over-extended local authorities, and the local authorities need to accept that help. While the local law enforcement authorities seem to be "holding strain" and are maintaining peace and stability, this is not sustainable without some relief from the outside whether it is British or US but I am concerned that at this point the British are too far away.

Cayman Airways ran "first-come, first-served" evacuation shuttle flights to Miami yesterday from the time the runway opened up until nightfall prevented airport operations. The airport has NO navigational aids, NO PAPI, and only partially functional runway lights. They are hoping to have PAPI operational again by the end of the week. Air Traffic Control is operational, and inbound aircraft can use RNAV for approaches and landings. Kingston ATC is coordinating the air traffic. Grand Cayman ATC has had very limited outside communication due to storm damage to telecommunication faculties, but I have received word that that has been restored overnight.

The British appear to be "playing politics". The police force is a dedicated team of professionals who are determined to do their job - and do it on their own if they get no help - but they are very limited in number, they have been part of this tremendous group of people across this island who have brought us through the worst storm ever in these islands' known history without ONE SINGLE reported death so far, but the police are very limited in number and they are exhausted yet reports are that the British have refused to send in Royal Marines or Military Police to help. HMS Richmond and Royal Fleet Auxiliary Tanker Wave Ruler are here, the navy has sent ashore several of their crew from the ships, but they are unarmed and not prepared to engage in law enforcement. We understand the civilian Governor Bruce Dinwiddy has asked the British for military assistance in maintaining law and order, but so far it has not been forthcoming and so far as I have heard, there is not even a promise that it will come. There may be some reluctance at the higher echelons of the Government and Law Enforcement as to the need for outside assistance, but at the senior operational leadership level my sense of the situation is that the police are desperate for outside help.

Please know that I don't want to criticise anybody who is here in Grand Cayman. We have been through a living nightmare, we have done this together, we are determined, willing, competent and know what it takes to work together to put this country back together FAST, we are not at present in a total breakdown of law and order, but we are very much on the edge right at the moment and we do need some help NOW.

If I do not see a positive response by US Military to help us get our country's law and order stable which will also protect US citizens and US interests, I will assume this message has either not reached the right people or that they do not believe or understand it. We will then have to rely entirely on US and international public pressure to have the US give us some assistance immediately and for the local officials to accept it. Therefore I have already provided a copy of this to a local publisher, and to his webmaster who is located overseas. This person is a personal friend of mine, a ""fellow believer", who is one of the over 460 people who took shelter in this one building during the onslaught of Hurricane Ivan. He has sworn an oath to embargo this until noon today, however if I do not advise him to the contrary (and/or if we lose contact with his webmaster) this will appear on a website that is receiving hundreds of thousands of hits a day from people wanting to know what's happening in Cayman right now. Yesterday it received 509,000 hits.

Miami is one hour by jet away from here, Guantanamo Bay about 30 minutes, British forces are too far away to be of use now even if the British make the decision to intervene.

BUT MY AIM IS THAT THIS IS NEVER TO BE MADE PUBLIC - it would cause a lot of unnecessary panic, it will get blown way out of proportion and so will the response. it's not that the situation is out of control right now: with some help the RCIP can keep it under control, but we have to have a bit of military help to give us a margin of safety as a temporary measure, and hence my precaution to use publication as a "last resort" to see that we get some help. I just pray that it works.

Trust me and listen loud!

Timothy Adam Chief Executive, Cable & Wireless (Cayman Islands) Ltd


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: caymanislands; hurricaneivan
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To: Pikamax

Sorry, but Team America is a little busy right now.


101 posted on 09/16/2004 9:41:19 AM PDT by rabidralph (Doing the gloating that Republicans won't do.)
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To: Travis McGee

I have to say that any country that provides a tax haven from the IRS has got my sympathy, although the very idea seems to tick off a fair amount of freepers.

This thread is kind of embarassing so far.

Hope your houseboat at Bahia Mar did OK in Frances.


102 posted on 09/16/2004 9:44:37 AM PDT by Sam Cree (Democrats are herd animals)
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To: Travis McGee; onyx

All cultures are equal now...don't forget that.

In JA, there are a fair amount of legal firearms....but loads of armed bandits too with Cuban and South American full autos.


103 posted on 09/16/2004 9:45:27 AM PDT by wardaddy
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To: Pikamax

Just tell them that there is an active al Qaida cell in town and we'll send in the 82nd Airborne.


104 posted on 09/16/2004 9:47:55 AM PDT by Non-Sequitur (Jefferson Davis - the first 'selected, not elected' president.)
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To: Sam Cree

It's been a while since I was docked in Lauderdale.


105 posted on 09/16/2004 9:49:40 AM PDT by Travis McGee (----- www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com -----)
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To: wardaddy

I "think" we have her on an emergency flight off
the island this afternoon... a US Air via the US
Embassy in Kingston.

Of course this too is iffy... we have had so many disappointments.

Husband was going to have me write to you about the
charters... I am hoping this flight materializes.


106 posted on 09/16/2004 9:50:25 AM PDT by onyx (JohnKerry deserves to be the last casualty of the Vietnam War.)
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To: wardaddy

I "think" we have her on an emergency flight off
the island this afternoon... a US Air via the US
Embassy in Kingston.

Of course this too is iffy... we have had so many disappointments.

Husband was going to have me write to you about the
charters... I am hoping this flight materializes.


107 posted on 09/16/2004 9:50:59 AM PDT by onyx (JohnKerry deserves to be the last casualty of the Vietnam War.)
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To: Non-Sequitur
"Just tell them that there is an active al Qaida cell in town and we'll send in the 82nd Airborne."

Interestingly, that is exactly who they sent into my neighborhood after it was wrecked in a cat 5 hurricane. Some days after the storm, elements of the 82nd showed up and camped out on a school athletic field about a block away. Also National Guard troops, in Humvees, with M 16's. They patrolled the entire neighborhood for weeks and set up roadblocks after dark. Most of us were damn happy to have them here.

108 posted on 09/16/2004 9:53:07 AM PDT by Sam Cree (Democrats are herd animals)
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To: onyx

I sure hope this one works dear.

Sounds like order is an issue there....and frankly I'm surprised but my memories are 10 years old.


109 posted on 09/16/2004 9:57:37 AM PDT by wardaddy
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To: Travis McGee

http://stormcarib.com/reports/2004/cayman.shtml

One assumes the elders and financials are desperate to keep the problems from coming out for fear of a run on the banks there.

I'll bet the Cable and Wireless honcho's ass is grass for putting out the SOS. Tis a shame.


110 posted on 09/16/2004 10:01:18 AM PDT by kinghorse
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To: wardaddy
You nailed it the other night in a post:
the "hip-hop thugs"

I hate to say it, but the influx of Jamaicans
has added to the thuggery. Most of them are
renters, with no real stake in the well being
of the island.
111 posted on 09/16/2004 10:07:37 AM PDT by onyx (JohnKerry deserves to be the last casualty of the Vietnam War.)
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To: Sam Cree
This thread seems to have attracted all the biggest jerks on FreeRepublic.

Not all of them. The rest are over on another thread arguing about some woman who 'deserved' a broken nose.

112 posted on 09/16/2004 10:08:46 AM PDT by ladyjane
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To: spunkets

Boy the irony of this is rich. I feel for the folks of the Cayman's (or at least the little folks) but here you have an island where large corporations have probably committed a plethora of financial sins against the rest of the world and the average guy. Yet now these rich corporations want the US to bail them out immediately when it is not our jurisdiction. Let the financial institutions that have benefitted go in there and rebuild and keep the peace. I say give humanitarian aid but the irony of militarily helping this island which is a haven for corporations while those same corporations have probably been opposed to our fighting a war with Iraq or helping Sudanese victims who have been equally suffering for years--is just too much.


113 posted on 09/16/2004 10:14:41 AM PDT by applpie
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To: Sam Cree

This tax haven for the IRS will promise to reimburse us for the expense of sending aid, no?


114 posted on 09/16/2004 10:21:36 AM PDT by kaboom
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To: onyx

They are drooges come to real life.

I despise them....in all colors.


115 posted on 09/16/2004 10:23:03 AM PDT by wardaddy
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To: wardaddy

What are drooges...?
The on-line dictionary doesn't list the word.

Minions?


116 posted on 09/16/2004 10:35:55 AM PDT by onyx (JohnKerry deserves to be the last casualty of the Vietnam War.)
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To: onyx

Clockwork Orange thugs....modern day hip hop punks wid attitude are the same crap and our culture accepts it, nay actually venerates that behavior.

I sure don't.

I loathe them with every fiber of my being....especially the white trash ones.

You hear I've been shot down at one of my businesses, most likely it will have been with white trash "w-words"...but there will be blood spilled besides mine I swear.

They are all a scourge that should not have to be tolerated in our culture.

*I had a beef with several the other day...weapons drawn but not brandished.


117 posted on 09/16/2004 10:41:01 AM PDT by wardaddy
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To: wardaddy

OMG!
Weapons drawn but not brandished?
What does Sweet Virginia have to say about THAT?


118 posted on 09/16/2004 10:44:04 AM PDT by onyx (JohnKerry deserves to be the last casualty of the Vietnam War.)
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To: wardaddy

You might seriously consider heading home
to a quiet, littler town in MS, where y'all
will be a lot safer, especially your lads.


119 posted on 09/16/2004 10:46:51 AM PDT by onyx (JohnKerry deserves to be the last casualty of the Vietnam War.)
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To: kaboom

What's your point? If you want to make an argument, let's hear it.

I gather there are quite a few freepers who don't realize that the US has traditionally had a petty good relationship with the UK. Check out the war in Iraq.

Not that that's what is important here. If your neighbor needed emergency assistance, are you going to ask for a signed IOU first, before driving his kid to the hospital.

However, don't worry, they haven't asked officially for help in Cayman anyway.

But I'm sure Tony Blair would be delighted to understand so many freepers think he should get lost. Although he's probably smart enough to know it's not too important anyway.

There was a time (18th century) when the US considered this part of the world within its sphere of influence. Some of you guys are ready to give that up, I guess.


120 posted on 09/16/2004 10:49:05 AM PDT by Sam Cree (Democrats are herd animals)
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