SHARE THIS AROUND

Another online scam going around, and hacking into people’s email accounts to do it, is designed to encourage those who would like to make around £100,000 a year from easy share-dealing from home to sign up for a £200 scheme that uses, they say “a patented mathematical algorithm that was developed especially for binary options trading” to accurately predict shares likely to make a profit for those buying them. Continue reading

AN UGLY FACE OF TOURISM

Tourists being killed does seem to bring out the worst in people in our tourism industry.

Egypt’s tourism minister Hisham Zaazou is a case in point, claiming that the recent cancellation of all UK flights into and out of Sharm El-Sheikh by our Government is “unjustified”. The emergency and completely justified move follows the crash of Russian Airbus A321 in Sinai on Saturday October 31st shortly after leaving Sharm El-Sheikh for St Petersburg, killing all 224 passengers and crew on board. Concerns that a bomb might have been secreted on the flight have led to completely understandable concerns about security at Sharm El-Sheik airport, hence the cancellation of flights, for the ultimate safety of passengers, until this can be assessed by experts. Currently the flight recorder has recorded an explosion on board. Continue reading

AND OTHERS

Criticism of the way Thomas Cokk handled the deaths of two of its young customers by carbon monoxide poisoning at one of its chosen hotels in Corfu continues to damage the tour operator’s reputation.

Christi Shepherd, 7, and her brother Bobby,6, died at the Louis Corcyra Beach Hotel in 2006 after fumes from a faulty boiler leaked into their room. (See Event Organisers Update, June, THOMAS COOK PROBE) The inquest earlier this year recorded a verdict of unlawful killing and that the tour operator had breached its duty of care. Continue reading

SUN, SEA, SAND AND SEAWEED

Meanwhile some other tourist economies are seriously under threat down on some of the lovely beaches of the Caribbean, where unusually large amounts of dirty-brown sargassum seaweed has been washing up this summer and decomposing in the sun, along with the dead fish and turtles caught up in it.

In Antigua the pile of the stuff grew to more than 4 feet high, and in Mexico a team of 5,000 labourers has been employed to rake the sargassum from 100 miles of beach in Quintana Roo, carting away more than 1,000 lorry-loads from one stretch. The Mexican beaches at Cancun and Tulum have been hit, as have those in Barbados and Belize, and a natural disaster has been declared in Tobago.

YOUR PRIVATE JET AWAITS

One recent development that could make flying less of a depressing experience, and travel more of an incentive for VIP groups, is a private jet service to Paris for £363 plus VAT one way.

This is offered by Le Jet and launches November 23, with up to eight travellers taken to Biggin Hill airfield in Bromley, Kent by Mercedes people-carrier for their 45-minute flight to Paris, where they are met and taken to their final destination. Check-in can be up to 10 minutes before departure.

Currently Le Jet offer two flights per day each way, and comparison prices of a business class service one way are up to £350 on British Airways and £275 for last-minute business premier tickets on Eurostar.

HAIR TODAY…

One recent development that could make flying less of a depressing experience, and travel more of an incentive for VIP groups, is a private jet service to Paris for £363 plus VAT one way.

This is offered by Le Jet and launches November 23, with up to eight travellers taken to Biggin Hill airfield in Bromley, Kent by Mercedes people-carrier for their 45-minute flight to Paris, where they are met and taken to their final destination. Check-in can be up to 10 minutes before departure.

Currently Le Jet offer two flights per day each way, and comparison prices of a business class service one way are up to £350 on British Airways and £275 for last-minute business premier tickets on Eurostar.

FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD

An example of a film that was higher-rated by the public than the critics was the 1967 John Schlesinger adaption of Thomas Hardy’s rural novel of comely and modern Wessex woman Bathsheba Everdene. This, and this year’s remake, both view like a superior soap-opera.

Everdene, a headstrong, independent and attractive miss inherits her uncle’s farm and decides to run it herself. Two men fall in love with her. One is a dependable and talented sheperd, Gabriel Oak, whose proposal of marriage she once rejected and who now, sportingly, looks after her sheep, farm and income. The other is William Boldwood, a wealthy middle-aged land-owner and confirmed bachelor to whom she sends a very ill-considered Valentine card with, as a joke that is sadly taken seriously, the words MARRY ME. Continue reading

BAGGING A CUT

Those wishing to help out our struggling Treasury, along with some charities, should rush out on October 5th and buy up lots of the single use carrier bags that large shops and supermarkets have to by then charge 5 pence for, rather than giving them away.

Despite the monies raised going to environmental causes HMRC have refused to waive the VAT and hope to rake in £19 million a year from the estimated 190 million bags we are expected to buy in the next year to donate. Dream on, we’d say. Continue reading

TREATING DONORS BADLY

There is to be a clampdown on charities that sell or swap lists of their donors to be canvassed by others, particularly if they have not had clear permission from their donors to sell their names on.

The move comes as concern grows that vulnerable people are being aggressively targeted in this way. One 87 year-old with dementia had his name passed on to nearly 200 organisations, some of which were scam operators who conned him out of £35,000. (Daily Mail) List sharing by charities is another way that names can get into the wrong hands. Continue reading