Antigua in shock

ST. JOHN’S, Antigua, (Reuters) – Antiguans expressed  shock yesterday at news their top investor, Texas billionaire  Allen Stanford, was charged with “massive” fraud, and their  prime minister said it could be “catastrophic” for the nation.

“The fall-out threatens catastrophic and immediate  consequences … There is no need for panic,” Baldwin Spencer,  the leader of the tiny twin-island state of Antigua and Barbuda  said in a televised address.

Many feared the U.S. charges would revive Antigua’s image  as one of the Caribbean’s most corrupt nations — an image  local policymakers took pains to shake off in the 1990s.

Spencer said his government was working on a contingency  plan to tackle the Stanford crisis with the six-nation Eastern  Caribbean Central Bank and Antigua’s own central bank.

“I’m stunned. I’ve been hearing rumors about him all the  time but I didn’t want to believe them,” said Genevieve Gore, a  55-year-old manager of N&J’s Fashion and Variety Store on  tourist-clogged Market Street in St. John’s, the capital city.

The sleepy Caribbean nation of 365 beaches figures large in  the U.S. SEC charges.

But there were no visible signs of alarm at Stanford International Bank  headquarters, a grand 30,000 square foot (2,787 square meters)  Georgian-style building atop a hill that is one of the first  sights upon exiting the airport.

“He may still get away,” said Duchel Westmorland, a  46-year-old landscaper. “A man is innocent until proven guilty.  But this is bad. Stanford is the biggest investor in Antigua  and he pays more than anybody else here. He’s been a good man  for this country. These charges will hurt us.”

Holding dual U.S.-Antiguan citizenship, Stanford lived for  more than 20 years in the reef-girded island only 9 miles (14  km) wide and 12 miles (19 km) long with a population of just  70,000.

He owns the country’s largest newspaper, heads a local  commercial bank, is the biggest private employer, its top  investor and is the first American to receive a knighthood from  its government. He has homes sprinkled across the region —  from Antigua to St. Croix in the U.S. Virgin Islands to Miami.

“I’m shocked but everybody always wondered where he got his  money from,” said Odessa Haley, 28, as she worked the counter  of a cafe in St. John’s. “His businesses were spread across so  many Caribbean countries. And even in hard times, he was making  money.”
‘DON’T TRUST THE AMERICANS’    Some Antiguans responded with skepticism to the news.

“I don’t trust the Americans at all, we’ll wait and see  what our regulators say,” said Winston Derrick, publisher of  Antigua’s Daily Observer newspaper. “Remember, the SEC doesn’t  regulate this bank,” he said referring to Stanford’s  Antigua-based affiliate.

Leroy King, head of Antigua’s Financial Services Regulatory  Commission, told Reuters he was aware of the U.S. charges but  he declined to comment on what Antiguan regulators were doing.

At the St. John’s branch of Stanford’s Bank of Antigua, an  onshore commercial bank, a long queue formed as news of the  charges spread. Security guards shut the doors at 3 p.m. sharp,  when the island’s banks typically close, as customers gathered  outside talking about withdrawing money.

“I have my savings in there in fixed deposits and I want  it. I need to get my money,” said a women who would only  identify herself as Harriet.
Some view Stanford as a financial benefactor who helped  transform Antigua by financing construction of a hospital,  building a shelter for single mothers and pouring money into  airline services. His enthusiasm for cricket also doesn’t hurt  in a nation where the sport is a national pastime.

“A lot of people give him a good name, especially the  workers. And a lot of people in Antigua depend on him, a lot of  people work for him,” said Francis Cortwright, a taxi driver.

But others regard the tall, mustachioed Texan as an  arrogant land-grabbing investor in the mold of the island’s  former colonial rulers. “I’m shocked but not too surprised. I  always thought he was too good to be true,” said Sonia Barrow,  35, as she carried her infant.