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Monday, August 18, 2025

Sandals CEO on Tobago pullout

Criticism of project threatened brand

by

Rhondor Dowlat
2406 days ago
20190115
Gebhard Rainer CEO Sandals Resorts, left, and National Security Minister Stuart Young face the media during a press conference at the Office of the Prime Minister in St Clair yesterday.

Gebhard Rainer CEO Sandals Resorts, left, and National Security Minister Stuart Young face the media during a press conference at the Office of the Prime Minister in St Clair yesterday.

ANISTO ALVES

Too much bad­ger­ing and neg­a­tive pub­lic­i­ty are be­ing blamed for San­dals Re­sorts In­ter­na­tion­al’s pull­out from the To­ba­go project by its Chief Ex­ec­u­tive Of­fi­cer Geb­hard Rain­er.

The pull­out was re­vealed at a me­dia con­fer­ence yes­ter­day at the Of­fice of the Prime Min­is­ter, St Clair, chaired by Stu­art Young, Min­is­ter of Na­tion­al Se­cu­ri­ty and Com­mu­ni­ca­tions.

There was no hint of the col­lapse of ne­go­ti­a­tions as the me­dia wait­ed for the end of a closed-door meet­ing with Prime Min­is­ter Dr Kei­th Row­ley, Young, Rain­er and San­dal’s deputy chair­man Adam Stew­art.

Less than two weeks ago Prime Row­ley boast­ed that San­dals would be one of the linch­pins of not just To­ba­go’s econ­o­my but that of the over­all coun­try.

The Prime Min­is­ter and the Com­mu­ni­ca­tions Min­is­ter dis­missed those crit­ics who cast doubt on the va­lid­i­ty of the ne­go­ti­a­tions and the im­pact on the en­vi­ron­ment.

Rain­er in­sist­ed that they have re­ceived con­stant and on­go­ing neg­a­tive pub­lic­i­ty over the last two and a half years since the in­cep­tion of the project and added that the re­ports could have even­tu­al­ly have a neg­a­tive im­pact on its brand.

He stressed that ob­jec­tions to the project failed to take in­to ac­count the pos­i­tive im­pact such a re­sort project would have on To­ba­go’s tourism prospects.

Rain­er em­pha­sis­es the im­pact of their op­er­a­tions on lo­cal economies and the di­rect and in­di­rect ben­e­fit to sev­er­al sec­tors such as agri­cul­ture, trans­porta­tion and even oth­er ho­tel prop­er­ties.

In ex­tend­ing grat­i­tude and thanks to Dr Row­ley and min­is­ter Young for their “un­wa­ver­ing sup­port and con­sis­tent trans­paren­cy and di­rect­ness through­out the process,” Rain­er stressed that there was “nev­er a shad­ow of a doubt what the PM and the min­is­ter are in­tend­ing to do for the good of T&T, specif­i­cal­ly To­ba­go.”

“A very trans­par­ent process…we are a com­pa­ny that works on the prin­ci­ples of trans­paren­cy, on the prin­ci­ple of hon­esty and the prin­ci­ple of liv­ing and work­ing and ben­e­fit­ting com­mu­ni­ties that we are op­er­at­ing in,” Rain­er said.

Re­fer­ring to the MOU, Rain­er made it clear that both par­ties signed it as an in­di­ca­tion of good faith.

Rain­er dis­closed that there are no signed agree­ments that would cre­ate or would have cre­at­ed any li­a­bil­i­ty on ei­ther par­ty.

He said San­dals worked in good faith and at their own risk, “which means that there is no cost from San­dals that would be passed on to the T&T gov­ern­ment. There are no costs in­volved. We have worked on our own risk; any cost that we have ac­cu­mu­lat­ed from pre­lim­i­nary de­signs any oth­er ex­pens­es are all our ex­pens­es,” Rain­er said.

Young said it was a sad and dis­ap­point­ing day for T&T that saw a hand­ful of peo­ple, “some with agen­das and some with per­son­al agen­das, in par­tic­u­lar,” chase away one of the best brands of the Caribbean from T&T.”

Just over two months ago, on No­vem­ber 1 dur­ing a post-Cab­i­net me­dia brief­ing, Row­ley ad­mit­ted that T&T’s back would be against the wall if San­dals Re­sorts pulled out of build­ing two ho­tels in To­ba­go. The prime min­is­ter said then that quite a few de­trac­tors have been say­ing that Gov­ern­ment has not been fol­low­ing prop­er pro­cure­ment process­es with San­dals In­ter­na­tion­al since the sign­ing of a Mem­o­ran­dum of Un­der­stand­ing (MOU).

Row­ley said then that they had no in­for­ma­tion to hide and de­scribed those sug­gest­ing some el­e­ments of se­cre­cy in the ne­go­ti­a­tions as mis­chie­vous and not fa­mil­iar with the con­duct of busi­ness.­

—Rhon­dor Dowlat


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