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Now A Free Man, Dr. Shams Sets Sights On REOPENING LAMBIRDS ACADEMY

ONE chapter in the saga of Dr. Iftekhar Shams of Lambirds Academy is over and another may be opening that may be just as harrowing as the first.

“By the grace of the Almighty, I am very happy today. The Almighty has proven me totally innocent,” said the President and Chief Executive Officer of the academy yesterday during an interview with this newspaper.

Image of Dr. Iftekhar Shams of Lambirds Academy[Photo: PhotoMike]
Dr. Iftekhar Shams of Lambirds Academy[Photo: PhotoMike]

Dr. Shams’s elation stems from the fact that after spending two years in jail (from February 10, 2015 – February 27, 2017), making several court appearances, and paying huge legal fees and several other activities related to the charges brought against him, that he is now a free man with no police charges hanging over his head.

“I came here as an innocent foreign investor. Without being proven guilty, the Major Crimes Unit shut my one-month-running legitimate academy and put me in jail for two years with continued rejection of bail, seized all my bank accounts and businesses worldwide,” he said.

Dr. Shams’s personal story, and that of his academy, is well-known in St. Lucia, having dominated the headlines of media houses from February 2015 to the present.

Chapter one in the Lambirds Academy story entered the public domain with the official opening of the academy on January 26, 2015 and became the talk of the town when it was officially shut down by the authorities one month later.

Dr. Shams and three others were charged with human trafficking, obtaining property by deception and money laundering. The human trafficking charge had eight other charges affixed to it, while the one dealing with obtaining property by deception had 49.

From then onwards, it was one story after another featuring Dr. Shams and his academy. The stories had even woven themselves into the everyday lives of St. Lucians to the point where they openly discussed the merits and demerits of the stories, especially its human trafficking charges as 60 students of Asian origin claimed to have been victims of the academy, giving rise to the human trafficking charges.

There was no escaping the stories emanating about Dr. Shams and the academy. Even the country’s foremost investment promotion arm, Invest St. Lucia, found itself entangled in the saga to the point where, one year after Dr. Shams was arrested and the academy was shut down, it was forced to release a statement about its connection with Dr. Shams and the academy.

To sum it up and put finality to its involvement with the academy, Invest St. Lucia in February of last year noted that what happened to Dr. Shams and the academy was not part of the established investment process of the country. Further that what actually happened was because there were issues in respect of the academy’s operations, and what it did and did not do was a matter for the criminal courts to decide but that Invest St. Lucia was not getting involved.

Then there was the emotional aspect of the story that got St. Lucians involved. Nearly 60 students from India and Nepal, most of them in their early twenties, were left unable to attend school, saying they were cheated of the thousands of American dollars they spent to come to St. Lucia.

With no place to go and in need of shelter and food, they appealed for help, causing St. Lucians to open their hearts. Food, lodging, and other necessities were given to the students. The government chipped in, as did groups, organizations, religious bodies. The stories about Dr. Shams and his academy were taking on dimensions never dreamt of since it hit national attention in February 2015.

Here is Dr. Shams’s account of another dimension, that of the police: “They (the police) arrested my students, took them to the police station and CID and virtually forced them to give statements against me and Lambirds Academy. The police told them the academy was fake and that this academy does not have any permit from the government to run in St. Lucia, and they must give a statement against me and the academy if they want their money back. So the students had no choice but to give their statements.”

But out of the gloom of imprisonment, rays of light began shining for Dr. Shams, who yesterday took a tremendous breath of happiness and with his face all lit up, said: “Today I am happy, I am free — all the cases are gone.”

But how did the cases disappear?

The money laundering charge, according to Dr. Shams, was dismissed on October 27, 2015. However, it was promptly appealed by the Office of the Director of Public Prosecution (DPP). That case finally ended last Thursday when Justice Louise Bledman struck it out.

The human trafficking case was dismissed almost two weeks ago, while the obtaining property by deception charge was withdrawn in January this year.

Of the eight charges under human trafficking, bail was set at $17,500 each, while for obtaining property by deception each of the 49 charges came with a $4,000 bond.

So what will Dr. Shams do now that he is a free man?

“I have no plans for any civil suit now, but I have a special request of the Honourable Prime Minister. Please issue an order to the DPP and the police not to harass me further. They have already destroyed me. I have nothing to lose,” he said.

He added, “Please let me start my life and regain my empire from here. I just need the Prime Minister’s support and the public support. That is all I need.”

As he enters chapter two of his saga with local authorities, Dr. Shams speaks of fearing for his life and his fear of the police now that they have lost all their cases. He also called on the Attorney General to write to the American Government immediately to unfreeze all his bank accounts and clear all the criminal records worldwide.

“Yes, I still plan to operate Lambirds Academy in St. Lucia because the students know now who is behind that and what happened,” Dr. Shams said, noting that he had proven to the students that he did not deceive them.

All the students, he said, came to St. Lucia through the legal channels and so there was no human trafficking.

“I’m afraid for my life because I cannot trust the police anymore. They slapped me with charges, now they lose everything because they did not have any proof. My co-defenders had nothing to do with Lambirds. I have not had discussions with the Prime Minister. If he gives me his blessings, I will stay here. If he does not give me his blessings, then I will have to decide what to do,” Dr. Shams said.

He said he paid all the students, all 60 of them, the monies he owed each of them, totaling EC$1 million.

Dr. Shams said he plans to reopen Lambirds Academy to teach exactly what it was advertised to teach in the first place, namely professional cooking and baking, hospitality management, etc. — seven subjects in all.

Dr. Shams said he had seven businesses in seven countries around the world and that the Government of St. Lucia had all of them frozen. His woes in St. Lucia with the authorities had also cost him rejection with Invest Dominica and Invest Trinidad.

He said he came to St. Lucia through Invest St. Lucia which invited him to attend their investment forum at Sandals in 2014.

“They sent me the invitation. We communicated through email. They arranged my visa and on coming here, the Prime Minister welcomed me. They did everything to get all the licenses for me. They were very helpful,” Dr. Shams said.

Micah George is an established name in the journalism landscape in St. Lucia. He started his journalism tutelage under the critical eye of the Star Newspaper Publisher and well known journalist, Rick Wayne, as a freelancer. A few months later he moved to the Voice Newspaper under the guidance of the paper’s recognized editor, Guy Ellis in 1988.

Since then he has remained with the Voice Newspaper, progressing from a cub reporter covering court cases and the police to a senior journalist with a focus on parliamentary issues, government and politics. Read full bio...

5 Comments

  1. Shams, just go; go and find another set of suckers somewhere else.
    Leave we St. Lucians alone. I see that you have invoked the graces
    of the Almighty, but the Fox says, by the Grace of God, please go,
    go and do not return; we have had enough shams and pretenders.
    We have been bled enough by who ever will-may-come, so go go go.

  2. Dear government of saint lucia, i want to ask you why you all making so late in sending the refund money of the Nepalese students who are in Nepal, we are more than 20 which are included in the refund list of the Lambird academy! Right now DPP isnot responding our calls & emails from Nepal as well as they not receiving any calls from the Nepal embassy in Washington.Although the case was shut down on February 2017 , they not sending our money till this date! We had provided them all the banks details & and everything and whatever’s the documents required but still they lingering in the refund process?plz send our refunds as soon as possible!

    1. Thanks sir for supporting us… Still We didn’t get our money and we allready provided them our bank details everything but we get our money.

  3. Mr. Shams is a big cheater. He cheated with many people over in Bangladesh, then flew away… more than thousand people still crying because of him… I am one of them…

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