At 8 p.m. on Friday, May 7, a team of security
guards was deployed to Lagoon Resort. Their instructions
came from the Fiji Development Bank: Secure the
property, block the road and don’t let anyone into the
resort. At 8:30 p.m., Beqa Adventure Divers manager
Andrew Cumming got a phone call from Lagoon Resort
owner Jim Sherlock about the situation. He went to the
resort, and he and Sherlock met with the head of the
security team. The chief informed them that the resort
was closed, effective immediately, because of failure to
make mortgage payments, and entry to the property
was not allowed.
Cumming told him Beqa was a separate business
and merely a tenant that rented space on the resort’s
grounds. There was no change in the directive, the security
chief told him. That meant Beqa’s Saturday trip for 20-plus divers had to be canceled. Cumming spent
all day Saturday negotiating with multiple Fiji authorities,
including the Ministry of Tourism and the Prime
Minister’s office. At the end of the day, Prime Minister
Frank Bainimarama gave the go-ahead for Beqa to open
up again. It was business as usual for the dive shop on
May 9, and Beqa got all its divers booked at Lagoon
Resort re-housed to a hotel nearby.
As of late May, Lagoon Resort is still closed. Sherlock told Undercurrent he has filed an injunction to
remove the roadblocks that prevent people from entering
the resort. It’s now before the court, and he hopes
the roadblocks are removed by early June. Cumming
wrote on Beqa’s blog last month (www.fijisharkdiving.blogspot.com), “We have signed documents with the
bank that cover us for the medium term but, when it
comes to our long-term future, we shall need to examine
the court ruling. Worst case, we would eventually
have to relocate, and have already scouted several suitable
locations.”