
	
	by Laurence Fletcher
	
	edited by Simon Robinson and Sara Ledwith
	August 15, 2011
	from 
	Reuters Website
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	
	
	Reuters
	
	FASD, based in the small village of Hadlow Down 
	in southern England, is one company that has shown interest in bonds that 
	were bought by 
	
	failed hedge fund DD Growth Premium, although its chairman 
	denies this.
	
	On its website, FASD says its mission,
	
		
		"is to find and manage financially rewarding 
		alternative investment options for those accredited and experienced 
		clients who want to grow their financial wealth as well as participate 
		in global humanitarian projects."
	
	
	Wim Van Hooydonk, FASD's chairman and 
	director, told Reuters in a telephone interview he didn't,
	
		
		"want anything to do with these bonds. 
		Somebody from Italy, a certain professor, has mixed us up in these 
		transactions, and we don't want to be involved in these transactions at 
		all."
	
	
	But correspondence seen by Reuters between Van 
	Hooydonk and Grant Thornton, liquidators of the DDCM Master fund, 
	indicates he had at one stage been very keen. 
	
		
		"We remain totally committed to complete the 
		transaction and confirm that the first payment is going to be completely 
		(sic) quite shortly, very likely before the end of the week," said an 
		October 2010 mail about a planned purchase of the bonds.
	
	
	FASD has very close links to a charitable 
	foundation headed by 
	
	Bruno Gillier called
	
	Gillier Humanity (yellow box - below 
	image), which is, according to its 
	website, 
	
		
		"dedicated to making a positive impact on 
		the quality of life" in places such as Tahiti, Fiji and Thailand.
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	Origin
	
	 
	
	Gillier Humanity plans to spend at least 
	$385 billion to create hundreds of thousands of jobs around the world. 
	
	 
	
	The 
	charity says it wants to buy two or three airlines, a top 10 hotel or resort 
	operator, and banks. Gillier also plans to spend $5.5 billion to transform 
	the 400-acre 
	
	Nicaraguan province of Montecristo into a "modern day Monaco."
	
		
		"Monte Cristeau (sic) is the same physical size as Monaco and will have a 
	similar economy, government and infrastructure," read Gillier's plans. 
		
		 
		
		"Gillier 
	Humanity will develop the following: set up the desired form of government 
	(constitutional monarchy), with heads of state and ambassadors, create a 
	constitution, flag, banking system with gold-backed currency, have 
	international embassies and consulate offices worldwide, and offer 
	diplomatic missions and diplomatic immunity."