多明尼克凯宾斯基渡假酒店正式开幕仪式

The official opening ceremony of the Cabrits Resort & Spa, Kempinski in Dominica on November 2 has cemented Range Developments’ reputation as the leading developer of luxury hotels in the Eastern Caribbean. The hotel, set on the stunning Caribbean shores on the edge of a national park and near the town of Portsmouth, has already won widespread praise for the quality of its design and construction.

“The hottest Caribbean hotel opening of 2019 is here,” said the Caribbean Journal. “The Cabrits Resort and Spa Kempinski Dominica resort is a monumental new addition to an island that has always been one of the best-kept secrets in the Caribbean.”

The Cabrits Resort & Spa Kempinski, Dominica

Speaking to a distinguished group of politicians, including His Excellency Charles Savarin, president of Dominica, and The Right Honorable Roosevelt Skerrit, Prime Minister of Dominica, numerous high-level businesspeople and journalists, Mr. Mohammed Asaria, Managing Director of Range Developments, described the hotel’s development as transformative for Dominica’s tourism industry.

“This hotel marks the advent of a new stage in its development life cycle,” he said. “The possibilities for Dominicans to benefit from this hotel are endless – a multitude of small businesses have already been created. At least 40 local enterprises have been established, and this is what we all must be most proud of; the fact that we have provided opportunities for these individuals to flourish.”

“The economic outcome for the island has been nothing but positive, with a direct financial contribution of USD$40million from government fees. More than 400 local workers were employed at various stages of construction – with four million working hours completed without a major accident while building 250,000 square feet of 5-star built-up areas. More tourists will come to the island, and more than 150 jobs alone will be created at the hotel, with at least double that figure benefitting indirectly.”

“This hotel – Cabrits Resort & Spa Kempinski, Dominica is a lighthouse in the Caribbean’s CBI marketplace,” concluded Mr Asaria.

The Cabrits Resort & Spa Kempinski, Dominica

The spotlight for Range now switches to Grenada, specifically the Six Senses La Sagesse in Saint David’s Parish, an unspoiled area of remarkable natural beauty boasting ‘one of the top ten beaches in the Caribbean’ according to The Sunday Times.

Grenada’s CBI program is the only one in the Caribbean that offers visa-free access to China. It is also the only one that holds an E-2 Investor Visa treaty with the US, allowing citizens to be eligible to apply to the US for a non-immigrant visa.

Six Senses La Sagesse, Grenada

Its appeal has been further enhanced by improvements to the country’s Citizenship-by-Investment unit, which is simplifying its processing procedures, and consolidating its position as one of the most sought after citizenship program in the Caribbean. According to a statement from the unit, the move to a two-step system will represent a ‘significant enhancement’ for the program.

The first step for potential investors is to produce key documents, including passport, marriage certificate, proof of funds, bank references, among others, which can be used for pre-screening candidates before final applications are lodged. While the formal processing does not begin until the application is fully completed and all fees paid, the aim is expected to cut down on unnecessary delays.

The unit has also moved to make the required documents more responsive to local customs, and less draconian on specific wordings. For example, confirmation of address need no longer be solely proven by a utility bill, but can also be confirmed by a letter from a landlord; a family book for Arab families can be used as a substitute for a marriage certificate.

These are just the latest enhancements to Grenada’s CBI program. The unit is also preparing to automate most of its work using application processing software.

格林纳达:投资公民身份开发商承诺该酒店项目将雇用约500名建筑工人,并在运营后支持300多个永久性工作岗位。

Source: Investment Migration Insider

https://www.imidaily.com/caribbean/grenada-cbi-developer-promises-500-jobs-during-construction-300-once-operational/

Author: Christian Nesheim

Grenada: CBI-Developer Promises 500 Jobs During Construction, 300

The Six Senses, La Sagesse – Range Developments’ third hotel project in the Caribbean, broke ground in Grenada last Friday. The partly CBI-funded project is part of a larger master plan that “will feature two luxury 5-star hotels, oceanfront villas, spas, retail and watersports facilities,” said the developer in a press release yesterday.

Range Developments say the project will employ some 500 construction workers and support more than 300 permanent jobs once it’s up and running in 2022.

格林纳达政府吸引Range 开发公司发展到该国

12 March 2019, ST GEORGE’S, GRENADA – The Government of
Grenada is pleased to announce that it has attracted Range Developments,
one of the leading hotel developers in the Caribbean, to the country.


Range is planning an incomparable master-planned development on one of
the best locations in the Caribbean, just 15 minutes’ drive from Grenada’s
airport. It will feature two luxury 5-star resorts, oceanfront villas, spas,
retail and water-sports’ facilities.


The luxury operator for the first resort will be announced in the coming
days.


Range Developments specializes in building luxury resorts in the Eastern
Caribbean. As in other of Range’s developments, investors will be able to
participate in the project, and if applicable, be a part of the Citizen by
Investment programme.


According to Grenada’s Prime Minister, Dr. the Right Honourable Keith
Mitchell: “We are extremely delighted to welcome such an experienced
hospitality developer to Grenada. Range Developments is well known
for the high quality of its hotels and for the ability to deliver results in
our region. Our Government’s policy is to bring investment and
sustainable jobs to the country, and our partnership with Range
Developments is irrefutable proof to this. What’s more telling is that
this project will be based in a rural part of the country, St. David;
showing our commitment to ensuring that every part of our Tri-Island
State is developed.”


The hotel project, once started, will create more than 600 jobs during
construction and many more during operations.


“We have been very impressed by the welcome and the opportunities
in Grenada,” said Mohammed Asaria, Managing Director and Member of
the Board of Range Developments. “The government is committed to a
thorough and transparent citizenship program. We look forward to
working together on this exciting project.”


About Range Developments


Range Developments is an international property developer focusing on
high-end hotel resorts in the Caribbean that are well-designed, sustainable
and desirable.
Its flagship project, Park Hyatt St. Kitts, has been opened to guests since
November 1, 2017. This luxury resort has received multiple awards and
has been widely recognized in the international media. CNN has singled it
out as “the Best Hotel in the Caribbean” with Forbes naming it “a grand
Caribbean debut that was well worth the wait.” It has been included in
Condé Nast Traveler’s 2018 hot list “Best New Hotels in the world.”
Range has a number of other developments in the region. The Cabrits
Resort & Spa Kempinski, Dominica is the first government approved real
estate project in Dominica under the country’s Citizenship-by-Investment
Program. The hotel is scheduled to open in Q4 2019. It was recently named
“the most exciting new Caribbean property set to open in 2019” by Forbes
magazine.

Subtle but key differences in Caribbean citizenship programmes

By Caribbean News Now contributor

MIAMI, USA — It is often tempting to lump together the five citizenship by investment (CBI) programmes of the Eastern Caribbean, with investors assuming that the only difference is the reputation of the island or the price of the passport. This is clearly not the case. While they often share many similarities, not all are created equal. 

For example:

1. Saint Lucia citizenship cannot be passed down to future generations, but is limited to the applicants at the time the application is made – so it is not true citizenship, more like residency. This is not the case in Dominica, where full citizenship is passed from parent to child indefinitely.

2. St Kitts and Nevis’s big advantage, shared by Saint Lucia, is that it does not maintain diplomatic relations with China, preferring many years ago to partner with Taiwan instead. As a result, the Chinese love these passports as they feel safer with the Taiwanese. This is an important issue with Antigua and Barbuda, which is very close to China – it built the Sir Vivian Richards cricket stadium among other things – so there is always a perceived risk for Chinese investors that their new citizenship will be revealed to their home government.

3. Dominica and St Kitts and Nevis’s other big advantage is that real estate can be sold after five years to investors who can also use the same piece of real estate to apply for CBI. This is not the case with Antigua and Barbuda or Grenada. In the case of the former, it can only be resold (if the applicant wishes to keep the passport), the project is complete and given progress to date.

4. Grenada’s much-touted selling point is its E-2 investor visa treaty with the United States. The E-2 investor visa allows an individual to enter and work in the US based on an investment he or she will be controlling. This visa must generally be renewed every two years, but there is no limit to how many times one can renew. The investment must be “substantial”. Investor visas are available only to citizens of certain countries, including Grenada. However, applicants must hold a Grenadian passport to apply for this visa but, in order for the E-2 visa to be granted, applicants first have to visit the US embassy in Bridgetown, Barbados, and explain their business plan. Officials there are said to baulk at any applicant, who, though they might be holding a Grenadian passport, does not look Grenadian.

Link : http://www.caribbeannewsnow.com/headline-Subtle-but-key-differences-in-Caribbean-citizenship-programmes-33872.html