Kayleaser Deveaux-Isaacs. (BIS PHOTOS)
BRIDGETOWN, BARBADOS General Manager of the Broadcasting Corporation of the Bahamas (BCB) Kayleaser Deveaux-Isaacs has been appointed vice president of the Caribbean Broadcasting Union (CBU) with effect from December 9, 2020.
Deveaux-Isaacs was elected by the board at its monthly meeting to fill a vacancy created when Amalia Mai of Great Belize Production demitted office recently.
She has been a member of the board for over three years and her BCB organization which operates ZNS Radio and Television has been a member of the CBU for almost three decades.
CBU President Gary Allen congratulated the new vice president, noting she takes on additional responsibilities in the union at a time when broadcasters in the region have been called upon to do a lot more public service due to the impact of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19). He noted that her role in leading ZNS through two recent hurricanes and the brunt of the COVID-19 pandemic i
Kayleaser Deveaux-Isaacs
Bridgetown, Barbados - The General Manager of the Broadcasting Corporation of the Bahamas, BCB, Mrs. Kayleaser Deveaux-Isaacs has been appointed Vice President of the Caribbean Broadcasting Union, CBU, with effect from December 9, 2020. She was elected by the Board at its monthly meeting to fill a vacancy created when Mrs. Amalia Mai of Great Belize Production demitted office recently.
Mrs. Deveaux-Isaacs has been a member of the Board for over three years now and her BCB organisation which operates ZNS Radio and Television has been a member of the CBU for almost three decades.
President of the Union, Gary Allen congratulated the new Vice President noting that she takes on additional responsibilities in the Union at a time when broadcasters in the region have been called upon to do a lot more public service due to the impact of the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19). He noted that her role in leading ZNS through two recent hurricanes and
Barbados to ‘get break’ from tax blacklist
Article by December 10, 2020
Barbados has scored an apparent breakthrough in its fight to get the European Commission to remove the island from its blacklist of non-cooperative tax jurisdictions, according to Minister of International Business Ronald Toppin.
He told
Starcom Network radio on Wednesday that Barbados’ application to the Paris-based club of rich countries, the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), for a “supplementary review” of the measure has been approved.
He explained: “This means and was stated by them in writing to us, that once the OECD agrees to grant us that supplementary review, then we are removed from their blacklist, this is, the blacklist of the European Union and placed on the grey list pending the outcome of that Supplementary Review.