CAYE
COFFEE is the freshest,
most
aromatic coffee sold in Belize.
Located
here on Ambergris Caye, we
roast only
enough coffee to meet demand – whenever, and as often as necessary. Buy
the cup, by the pot or buy the pound, it's the freshest taste around- CAYE
COFFEE
In Belize
email:info@cayecoffee.bz
or see
www.cayecoffee.bz
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EXOTIC CAYE
BEACH RESORT
CENTRALLY
LOCATED ONE HALF MILE SOUTH OF SAN PEDRO
TOWN.
FULLY
EQUIPPED OCEAN FRONT CONDOS
FIVE
STAR ATTITUDE
WARM AND FRIENDLY
SERVICE.
THREE HUNDRED FEET
OF BEACH
FRONT.
CLICK
HERE FOR INFORMATION ABOUT OUR CHARMING ISLAND RESORT, RATES AND
AMENITIES.
WWW.BELIZEISFUN.COM
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Featured Properties

3 unit apartment building
Blue
Reef Island Resort
BEACHFRONT LOTS AND LAND
CONDOMINIUMS
LUXURY RESIDENCES
PRIVATE ISLANDS
RESORTS & HOTELS
COMMERCIAL OPPORTUNITIES
RE/MAX ISLA
BONITA
10 Coconut Drive, San Pedro
Ambergris Caye, Belize C.A.
voice 011 (501) 226 4400
fax 011 (501) 226 4401
mobile 011 (501) 624 5252
www.owninbelize.com
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Crazy
Canuck’s
Beach Bar
Located
at Exotic Caye/Playador
Happy
Hour every day
4 – 6 PM
Live
music every
Monday & Saturday
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Pasta La Vista
Where good friends and good
food meet
Gourmet
Pizzas
Calzones,
Subs,
Scrumptous
Pasta
3:00PM to 10:00PM
7 Days a Week
Delivery: 226-2651
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VERY
GOOD INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY
Ready for a great investment opportunity?
With an amount of
US$500,000 for 5 years?
- great benefits
- real jungle resort
- 3 types of
accommodation
- river front
- SPA - massage-
sauna - jacuzzi - exercise room
- restaurant
- snack bar
- juice bar
- 1 main bar
- 2 pools
- exercise trail
outside- tennis - climbing wall
- playground for
kids and adults
- working on
European market too during slow season
- huge marketing
budget
- renewable energy
(self sufficient)
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Interesting Stuart Krohn commentary
"A lot of words and
pictures have
been broadcast over the last week, by ourselves and our media
colleagues, in the course of our coverage of Hurricane Dean. I have not
seen or heard all of it and will not try to judge its quality or bias,
other than to remind viewers that reporters are human. And just like
the folks working around the clock to provide relief to the Corozal
District, they eventually get tired. It’s not easy to move into an
emotionally charged environment in which people are suffering and
produce reports that accurately reflect both the reality of the
destruction and context of what can and can’t be done to improve the
situation. I have nothing but respect for all those who have laboured
so long and hard. But my concerns coming out of this turbulent week are
not cantered on journalism or even on how to solve the problems up
north, which I believe are being sorted out as I speak. No, my greatest
fears involve the next hurricane. The one that will hit next month,
next year or next decade, or maybe all three. The experience of Dean
has exposed some major flaws, not necessarily on how we respond to
disaster, but how we prepare.
Both of the suggestions I’m
about to make have been made many times before, but it seems very few
people are listening. The first involves insurance. Yes, it can be
costly and sometimes the fine print is intimidating but if you can
afford to own a home, you can probably afford to insure it. on the
morning after the storm when you’re sitting in front of what used to be
your house, the difference between waiting for a cheque from the
insurance company and waiting for a free piece of zinc from NEMO is the
difference between hope and despair.
The second suggestion
involves the concept of savings. There was a time when the phrase
‘saving for a rainy day’ meant just that. You set aside a portion of
every pay check and put it in an account, either for a particular
future purpose or just in case. Today it seems, saving is for suckers.
Belizean families prefer to max out their credit cards, owe as much as
possible, and when disaster strikes, complain that government isn’t
giving them enough. Of course, government can never give enough because
government behaves no differently than its citizens. It borrows like
crazy for asperous projects, maxes out it’s credit lines, and when
disaster strikes goes begging to Taiwan, Venezuela and the European
Union. The truth is that saving, by individual families or governments,
is an essential part of disaster mitigation. I strongly believe that
parents should open a credit union account for every child as he or she
is born, and keep adding to it regularly, even if it’s only five or ten
dollars a month. When the children grow up, they take over the saving
habit; and when disaster strikes their families, at least they have the
means to pick up the pieces and access emergency food and shelter.
Of
course, both the buying of insurance and maintaining a savings account,
assume that you have a job and are not poverty stricken; a situation in
which far too large a minority of Belizeans find themselves. For those
disadvantaged people, the concepts of insurance and savings means
little in the face of the daily struggle to survive. But that’s just
the point, if those of us with the ability to plan ahead did so, then
government could direct it’s relief where it belongs, to those who
really need it." Read More
G.O.B. donates truck/engines to
Coast Guard
 For
the
past two years, the members of the National Coast Guard
Service have been patrolling Belizean waters but our limited resources
are no match for the expanse of the high seas. However, thanks to
significant contributions from the U.S. Government and other donors,
the Coast Guard’s assets have been steadily increasing. This morning,
the Government of Belize handed over a new utility truck and two
outboard engines to the guard.
Ismael Cal, Minister of State, Home Affairs
“The government of Belize is committed to ensuring that our waters are
protected from any form of threat including drug trafficking, human
smuggling, weapons trafficking, terrorism, illegal fishing, destruction
to our barrier reef system, and any other potential threats that may
impact on the economical development and prosperity of this nation.”
Commandant Cedric Borland, Belize National Coast Guard
“We had only one truck that is now disabled and so this
is going to
take up all the responsibility of that one truck that we had. Despite
the major part of our operations is at sea, we do need a truck to
transport equipment, men, and for towing the boat on land. So it’s
going to be a great part of our support.”
Marion Ali
“How were you operating without the truck?”
Commandant Cedric Borland
“Well I’ll be honest with you. Over the past two months
or so, we
have been getting some support from B.D.F. and the police in movement
and that has worked well because we have good cooperation with them.
But now having our own truck means that we can do our own movements.”
“These two new engines that we have received is the first of
four-stroke type engines that we are looking forward to. This is more
fuel economic, it’s quieter, and it’s highly reliable.”
There are currently fifty-six men and women enlisted in
the Coast
Guard Service. The truck and the two outboard engines are valued at
approximately one hundred and twenty-five thousand dollars. Read More
150th Anniversary of 'Back A
Baptist'
The old prison building,
commonly
known as “Back a Baptist’ is 150 years old today. Of course it’s now a
museum, but if those walls could talk, well, the stories, they’d tell.
Today to commemorate the 150th anniversary the museum staff put
together some of the objects that was formerly used to punish the
inmates. And former Superintendent Bernard Adolphus, told us that the
old place still gives him chills.
Bernard Adolphus,
“It brought back a rush, to me. Memories which I had
put aside came back. Memories like the fire, memories like hurricane,
memories like executions; memories of corporal punishment which used to
be done where those officers are. All those people who corporal
punishment was administered to, when we say corporal punishment, those
who were whipped because of rape and other activities. I notice all
those people never did came back to prison again; never did came back
to prison because in those days when you raped somebody, it was cat o
nine. Later on we became more decent and we started using the tambran
whip.
All of those people who considered
themselves lions in those days, and if they were lions out there, when
that was administered, they became mice and as a result that has
rehabilitated a number of our Belizean people. I am not saying it
should be implemented back again but something is wrong with our
society.”
Former Inmate #1,
“I remember 1989 coming in that corridor from
Magistrate’s Court, the first time coming to prison the feeling I had,
looking at these brick walls and the gates closing behind me, the
buzzer ringing, entering into this corridor. It was a whole new world
right within our little community.
George McKenzie and Derrick Brown
were down in that side of ‘capital charge’ and we started a thing and
we erupted a thing within some of the older guys who were within the
prison. C-Wing started to claim that they were crips and some of the
older guys started to follow the younger guys. I remember Leopold
Audinett, Poli, took side with us, Bloods, and Mr. Lopez decided to
switch up things. So I was brought down to this area. It was cell 5, I
think, cell 5 and then they gave us a visit to the execution room and
showed us and said, if you guys don’t try to change your lives, this is
where you will end up with this gang banging stuff.”
Former Inmate #2,
“When you come here, it is darkness and you never see
the light, unless you leave here. All the while you are here, it is
darkness. You do have to find the way of light to be released, to go
back to society to take your rightful place.”
Bernard Adolphus,
“My advice, take advantage of what is offered to you.
Take advantage. That is to say, if there is an education process, take
advantage of it because at the end it will be of benefit to you; not
me, you and I have seen a number of men change their lives. Those in
the prison service cannot rehabilitate a person, the person himself has
to need, has to have that desire to change. If you don’t have that
desire to change, not even God can help you.” Read
More
NOTICES/LETTERS
TO THE EDITOR
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Friends in
Need
Fundraiser
Events
Help us raise
funds
for surgery for our friends, Drummer Dan Van Patten
and Miss Trudy.
Saturday
September
1st-
7
p.m.
Raffles at
Crazy
Canucks Bar
Music with
Dennis
Wolfe
and The Usual
Suspects
Band
Many surprise
prizes
such as dinner at
Lily’s
Restaurant
B.C.’s Beach Bar
Jam Session with
The
Usual Suspects Band
All musicians
are
invited to participate
Dinner BZ$10.00
featuring
Cajun
Don Seruntine’s famous Gumbo
Or Choice
of
:
Pork Roast /
Roast
Beef / Creole Shrimp
Mashed Potatoes
and
gravy or Spanish rice
Tossed salad or
Parmesan vegetables
Sweet corn,
Dinner
rolls
Key Lime Pie or
Black
magic chocolate cake
For
reservations
call 663-9615
There will also
be a
small auction
We will have
raffles
and yard sale items
during the day
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Holy Cross
Anglican
School is looking
for volunteers to help get classrooms ready for the new school year and
varnish desks. Call the school office, 226-3456 for more
information
THOUGHT
OF THE DAY
Neither
fire nor wind, birth nor death can erase our good deeds
Buddha
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BERMUDA
BEACH
LUXURY RESORT
Fantastic Views!

1/4
Mile North of the Bridge
Best
Location
Best
Design
Best
Construction
Best
Value
2
and 3 Bedroom Plans
Poolside
Kitchen
and Entertainment Center
For a no-obligation
tour and free cocktail please call
226-2509
or
663-9615
CLICK HERE
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OUR
SERVICES
Demand
Deposit Accounts
Savings Accounts * Loans Letters of Credit * Global (International)
Transfers
Term Deposits
CONTACT:
PO Box 11, Coconut Drive, San Pedro,
Ambergris Caye, Belize
Tel: +501-226-2388
Fax: +501-226-2892
Email: cibl@btl.net
Website: CLICK
HERE
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www.grandcaribe.bz
debbiewade@gmail.com
BELICAN
SUPPLY DEPOT
belican@btl.net
226-2669
EVERYTHING TO BUILD
& MAINTAIN YOUR POOL
Tiles
Pool Cement
Pumps
Filters
Lights
Maintenance Equipment
Pool Chemicals
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