Gustavia Yacht Club officially opens in St Barts

View from Gustavia Yacht Club deck
View from Gustavia Yacht Club

The annual Monaco Yacht Show in September is the ultimate scene for industry networking and headline-grabbing announcements, and this year’s edition certainly lived up to its reputation as the most prestigious yachting event on the calendar with €4 billion worth of megayachts on display.

Part of le buzz making its way around the quays was the long-awaited launch of the Gustavia Yacht Club, in the winter sailing paradise of St Barts, with a stand situated at the Lucciana Dock near the YCM. By the end of Yacht Show, the Gustavia Yacht Club, which started accepting applications for members only in August 2016, managed to sign up 125 Founding Members and the Clubhouse wasn’t even open yet.

As a not-for-profit association established under French law 1901, the Gustavia Yacht Club was legally set up in June 2016 by Sir Stelios Haji-Ioannou, a Monaco resident, and some of his friends, to provide “a place to gather and talk about yachting, sailing and all the great activities you can do in St Barts”.

The French Caribbean island of St Barts, or Saint-Barthélemy as it’s more formally known, has been a magnet for A-Listers, CEOs, oil moguls and the jet-set since the Rockefeller and Rothschild families arrived in the mid-50s, essentially putting this 25 sq km island on the map the same way Brigitte Bardot unleashed St-Tropez when filming “And God Created Woman” in 1956. Perhaps the UK’s “Daily Mail” sums up its extravagance best: “Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich is flying the Black Eyed Peas out to perform at a New Year’s Eve party at his lavish (€85 million) estate on St Barts.”

So as Sharon Stone and her new sports agent beau Lonnie Cooper frolic on the white sand beaches of St Barths (as the French write), I can now confirm, having peeked a glance at its first AGM notice due on the 20th of December , the new Gustavia Yacht Club is officially on course to becoming one of the world’s most exclusive members-only clubs, long overdue in this yachting hotspot.

Clubhouse bar
Clubhouse bar

The Clubhouse, a 100 sqm triplex at rue Jeanne d’ Arc, did a soft opening on November 9, and I’ve learned its Thursday night member’s Cocktails are already well attended With 230 Founding Members, the club has now closed its members list until 2017.

Six Founding Members – Sir Stelios; Jason Redlus, Hugues Helffer, Douglas Barrowman, Monaco resident Stéphane Robert
 and Kevin A. Tedeschi – each dug deep into their pockets to generously donate at least €20,000 to the Club, which earns them the title of Benefactor with their name displayed at both the Clubhouse and on the Gustavia Yacht Club website. (The Benefactor threshold has since been raised to €25,000.)

Already the Gustavia Yacht Club has secured four corporate sponsors, Sibarth Bespoke Villa Rentals, International Yacht Corporation (with offices in Monaco and representation in St Barts), Monaco-based Boutsen Design, a design company with expertise in Aircraft, Yachting and Residence Decoration, and French winemaker Château d’Esclans. Two more slots for sponsorship for 2016/17 I hear are about to be announced soon and then the list will close until 2018.

New club boardroom
New club boardroom

The waterfront Clubhouse in the port of Gustavia, the capital of St Barts, named after the King Gustavia III of Sweden, owned by Sir Stelios, who has donated in excess of €300,000 to the club in his own name or through his charitable foundations, will gather members at 11 am on the 20th of December, to discuss the management accounts of the Club, approve the 2017 budget, amend the articles of the association and appoint auditors Messrs Moore Stephens, Chartered Accountants in Monaco.

The meeting will also seek approval for the named eleven Board of Directors, to include Chairman (Commodore of the club, Sir Stelios), General Secretary (Ashley Lacour) and Treasurer (Ken Griggs).

A Social Committee, who on a volunteer basis will organise “club life”, includes Monaco residents, alphabetically, Letizia Chimenti, Natalie Clifford, Nicholas Frankl, Annabelle Frankl, Lucia Gison-Piggott, Orla Murphy, Irina Peterson and Simon Piggott.

The Board of Directors, Executive Committee and Social Committee will serve until the next election in 2019, although it appears two seats will be left vacant for co-opting among future full members who might join, at the discretion of the Board, of course.

Accordingly, if you walk into a vacant library at the Monaco Yacht Club later this month, don’t fret. Members have set sail for Gustavia where Commodore Stelios has all hands on deck.

Follow life at the Gustavia Yacht Club on Facebook or gustaviayachtclub.org

Article first published December 4, 2016.

Monaco team hold court with Minister of State

© Manuel Vitali/Direction de la Communication
© Manuel Vitali/Direction de la Communication

Players and management of the AS Monaco basketball, Roca Team, were invited to the Residence of the Minister of State on Monday, February 6, for a lunch following the partnership agreement signed at the beginning of the season between the Prince’s government and the club.

In his speech, Serge Telle encouraged the team ahead of the Leaders Cup (February 17-19) and the two derbies against Antibes. The Minister of State concluded by stressing that the government and Monegasques are very proud of the team’s success.

Like the football team, AS Monaco basketball is having an almost perfect season. In the middle of the season, the “Roca Boys” are leaders of the French Pro A championship and they qualified brilliantly for the last sixteen of the Champions League (Europe) finishing first in their group.

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Coe stands tough on doping

Sebastian Coe at World Economic Forum. Photo: Moritz Hager
Sebastian Coe at World Economic Forum. Photo: Moritz Hager

Following an IAAF council meeting in Monaco on Monday, president Sebastian Coe said Russian athletics could not expect “full reinstatement” before November. The Russian government and Russian athletics continue to deny any state support for doping. Specifically, the decision rules out Russian athletes competing for their country at the world championships in August in London. The IAAF has also frozen all nationality switches.

Monday’s meeting followed the publication in December by World Anti-Doping Agency investigator Richard McLaren of the second part of his report into state-sponsored doping, listing hundreds of failed drug tests, which were allegedly covered up by the Russian authorities.

The IAAF has demanded an official Russian response to McLaren’s findings from the sports ministry and the FSB, Russia’s federal security service.

“Our priority is to return clean athletes to competition but we must all have confidence in the process,” Coe said. “Clean Russian athletes have been badly let down by their national system. We must ensure they are protected and that those safeguards give confidence to the rest of the world that there is a level playing field of competition when Russians return.”

The IAAF suspended Russia from all international competition in November 2015 after the first part of the McLaren report alleged mass doping and cover-ups. Since February 2016, testing in Russia has been overseen by the UK’s Anti-Doping Agency because its Russian counterpart was banned from handling samples due to corruption claims.

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Coldplay support Mediterranean mission with “Rescue Humanity”

Regina Catrambone and Phoenix. Photo: Moas
Regina Catrambone and Phoenix. Photo: Moas

In 2013, Chris and Regina Catrambone, who live in Malta, chartered a boat travelling around Lampedusa, Sicily and Tunisia. “Our captain was a retired Officer of the Armed Forces of Malta who used to work on search and rescue at sea,” Mrs Catrambone, MOAS Co-Founder & Director, recalled. “When I saw a winter jacket floating in the sea, he pointed out that this probably belonged to an immigrant who drowned.

“The Pope visited Lampedusa soon after our visit and launched an appeal on TV to citizens of the world to lend their contribution to this issue. We felt personally compelled to take heed of his message.”

By the following year, the Catrambones had invested $4 million and bought a 40-metre ex-fishing boat and fitted it out with tenders and a flight deck with two state-of-the art drones carrying night vision and thermal imaging cameras. When boats carrying immigrants are found, the Phoenix informs the nearest national authority, which should send a vessel to transport them for landing in the nearest non-African island.

October 2014 saw completion of the first mission by their “Migrant Offshore Aid Station” (MOAS) and the non-profit organisation began operating in the Central Mediterranean, rescuing and assisting in the rescue of over 33,000 people.

MOAS says that the route is becoming “increasingly dangerous”, and over the first six months of 2016, they report a 67% increase in migrant deaths in the Mediterranean compared to the same period in 2015.

On Thursday, February 2, British band Coldplay announced that they will endorse MOAS as long-term patrons in aid of its humanitarian work with migrants and refugees.

“Every year, MOAS rescue thousands of people who risk death at sea while searching for a better life. But for an accident of geography, those people could be us and we could be them. For this reason, we’re proud to support MOAS’ life-saving work,” said Chris Martin.

 

Mr Martin made the announcement with the launch of fundraising film entitled “Rescue Humanity”, which features the Coldplay frontman singing an a cappella version of “Don’t Panic” over real footage from a recent MOAS rescue that was filmed by Adam Broomberg during his time on board. The film aims to “give the viewer an immersive experience of a rescue and show the fear, hope and anguish experienced by the refugees and migrants MOAS rescue”.

“We are very grateful to Coldplay for believing so strongly in our cause,” said Mrs Catrambone. “MOAS is a young organisation that in a few years has managed to make a significant difference in mitigating one of the most heart-breaking humanitarian tragedies of our era. However, there is still so much to be done. Coldplay’s support will allow our work to reach the hearts of a wider audience worldwide.”

The International Organisation for Migration estimates that last year, 1 in 29 migrants and refugees have died attempting the Central Mediterranean crossing.

For more on MOAS or to make a donation, see their website. (Feature photo: Photo: Ggia)

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