British Virgin Islands should be temporarily returned to UK rule – inquiry

Territory’s premier arrested for alleged money laundering and conspiracy to import cocaine

The DEA complaint said Mr Fahie had agreed to allow the informant, who was posing as a member of Mexico’s Sinaloa drug cartel, to use British Virgin Islands’ ports to ship cocaine in return for a payment of $500,000.
The DEA complaint said Mr Fahie had agreed to allow the informant, who was posing as a member of Mexico’s Sinaloa drug cartel, to use British Virgin Islands’ ports to ship cocaine in return for a payment of $500,000.

The British Virgin Islands should have its constitution suspended, its elected government dissolved and effectively be ruled from London, according to a highly critical report into governance in the British overseas territory released on Friday.

Queen Elizabeth's representative on the island, governor John Rankin, had ordered the inquiry in 2021 to investigate "the corruption, abuse of office, and other serious dishonesty" in the territory's governance.

Its report found that millions of dollars of state funds were spent each year by politicians and ministries without proper process, along with serious dishonesty in relation to sales of public property and widespread abuse of appointments.

The report is not directly linked to the arrest in Miami on Thursday of the islands' elected premier, Andrew Fahie, on charges of money laundering and conspiring to import cocaine. He was arrested at a Miami airport along with the managing director of the British overseas territory's Ports Authority, according to a US Drug Enforcement Administration complaint, which cited extensive testimony from a confidential informant.

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The DEA complaint said Mr Fahie had agreed to allow the informant, who was posing as a member of Mexico's Sinaloa drug cartel, to use British Virgin Islands' ports to ship cocaine in return for a payment of $500,000.

Mr Fahie could not immediately be reached for comment, nor could officials from the British Virgin Islands Ports Authority.

British foreign secretary Liz Truss said she was appalled by the allegations and said the arrest demonstrated the importance of the governance inquiry.

The investigation was led by British judge Gary Hickinbottom.

“He has concluded with a particularly heavy heart that unless the most drastic and urgent steps are taken, the current situation with elected officials deliberately ignoring the tenets of good governance will go on indefinitely,” Mr Rankin told a news conference.

“He notes that the people of the BVI deserve better, and that the UK government owes them an obligation to protect them from such abuses and assist them to achieve their aspirations for self-government as a modern democratic state.”

Any decision to suspend parts of the constitution would fall to London, which said it was sending minister for overseas territories Amanda Milling to the BVI before announcing a plan next week.

In a statement, Mr Truss said the report “shows clearly that substantial legislative and constitutional change is required”.

But the islands' acting premier, Natalio Wheatley, said a suspension of the constitution was not necessary.

The report said principles of good governance had been ignored throughout Mr Fahie’s administration, witnesses had been afraid to come forward and government disclosures had been “shambolic”.

“With limited exceptions, in terms of governance . . . the people of the BVI have been badly served in recent years. Very badly indeed,” the executive summary said.

If London accepts the inquiry’s central recommendation, one of more than 40 in the 946-page report, Mr Rankin – a career British diplomat – would take over the day-to-day running of the BVI.

Mr Rankin is appointed by the queen on advice from the British government, and in normal times his role would be small.

The judge recommended that the new administrative arrangement should last two years, but also that ministerial government should resume as soon as practicable. – Reuters