Cabinet report exposes damning flaws in Global Ports Holding St Lucia deal
Castries, St Lucia – The GPH St Lucia Saga has erupted into one of the most damning scandals of the Saint Lucia Labour Party administration, as Cabinet papers now confirm that a government-appointed committee had rejected the Global Ports Holding (GPH) St Lucia proposal for the Castries Sea Port. Despite the categorical rejection, Prime Minister Philip J Pierre and Deputy Prime Minister Ernest Hilaire pressed ahead with the arrangement, setting the stage for the firestorm of political controversy gripping the country today.

Cabinet committee warned against the deal
The committee, created under Cabinet Conclusion No. 195 of 2021, included senior representatives from the Ministry of Infrastructure, the Ministry of Finance, the Ministry of Tourism, Invest Saint Lucia, the Saint Lucia Tourism Authority, and the Office of the Prime Minister. Its mandate was to review the Commercial Terms Agreement between SLASPA and GPH and determine whether the proposal served the nation’s interest.
After three meetings in January and February 2022, the committee submitted its Interim Report to Cabinet. Its conclusion was blunt: the GPH proposal “did not represent the best economic and financial option for the country over the next 30 years.”
The Department of Finance reinforced the warning, cautioning that the deal “would burden the state with obligations that compromise fiscal sovereignty.” Officials also raised concerns that entering into such a long-term agreement would “expose the government to significant contingent liabilities,” tying the island’s hands for decades. Public alarm over the lease terms had already been raised, with critics warning that the arrangement risked surrendering control of the Castries port amid concerns over the Global Ports deal.
SLASPA’s Master Plan sidelined
The Interim Report revealed that Saint Lucia was not without alternatives. It noted that SLASPA “has developed a Master Plan for the Castries Sea Port which it intends to use to guide all future development.” The committee emphasized that “negotiations should proceed on the basis of SLASPA’s Master Plan rather than the GPH proposal.”
In other words, Saint Lucia had already mapped out a development path anchored in domestic expertise and national priorities. Yet instead of empowering SLASPA’s vision, the Pierre administration advanced a foreign-driven proposal. Critics argue this exposed a troubling pattern: sidelining local capacity in favor of external operators whose motives are profit, not sovereignty. Even industry voices questioned this approach, with Stephen Fevrier later weighing in through his statement on the SLASPA deal.
Political betrayal at the highest level
The Interim Report left little room for interpretation. At one point, the committee stated unequivocally: “The proposal does not serve the economic or developmental interest of Saint Lucia.”
Despite this, the Cabinet continued to press forward. Pierre J Pierre and Ernest Hilaire’s decision to push the GPH deal in the face of unanimous expert rejection has been branded a political betrayal. Opposition leaders and civil society activists argue that the administration deliberately ignored the evidence. Opposition Leader Allen Chastanet went so far as to reject an invitation to a GPH promotional event, distancing himself from the controversial arrangement.
For them, this is not about poor judgment; it is about knowingly advancing a deal that benefited outsiders while imperiling St Lucia’s economic independence.
The revelations have ignited fury. As one opposition figure put it: “When your own experts tell you this deal is bad for the country, and you push it anyway, that’s not leadership — that’s betrayal.”
Fallout of the GPH St Lucia Saga
The Interim Report effectively stopped the deal from being rubber-stamped, but the damage was already done. The fact that the Global Ports Holding St Lucia proposal made it to Cabinet at all, despite clear and repeated warnings, speaks to deep flaws in governance.
The unanswered questions remain damning: Why did Cabinet pursue a proposal described in black-and-white terms as “not the best economic and financial option”? The controversy has also reignited concerns over government plans to place critical infrastructure in foreign hands, echoing outrage over the St Lucia airports foreign control scandal.
Who stood to gain by advancing a deal that the Department of Finance said “would compromise fiscal sovereignty”? And why was SLASPA’s Master Plan described in the report as the foundation for future negotiations- ignored in favor of GPH?
Today, the GPH St Lucia Saga stands as a symbol of secrecy, misplaced priorities, and arrogance in governance. The committee’s own words, “the proposal does not serve the economic or developmental interest of Saint Lucia,”- remain a stinging indictment of the Cabinet’s conduct.
The scandal has not only eroded trust in the Pierre administration but also cast doubt on Saint Lucia’s credibility in international negotiations. For many, it is the clearest example yet of how political leaders sacrificed expert advice, public interest, and fiscal responsibility on the altar of expediency.
For continued coverage of the GPH St Lucia Saga and other top political developments, follow Unitedpac St Lucia News.