I am the friend mentioned by WE9V above.
I registered my drone and flew on Curacao prior to my most recent trip in January. I was unable to make the right connections on a previous trip last July: they are now set up to do this efficiently and quickly by email. They now have the registration form (PDF) online, but my blank form was sent by email along with a No-Fly Zone map (airport approaches, industrial sites, and wildlife areas) and a single-page document of rules to be followed, none unreasonable (see below).
Contacts: Michael Llanes, Aviation Safety Inspector Operations, Curacao Civil Aviation Authority (CCAA),
[email protected], telephone 011-5999-839-3319. He will send you the application form (now also available online - see below), which you can complete and send back by email. There is no fee.
Mr. Glennert Riedel, BTP (Bureau Telecommunicatie en Posts): Mr. Llanes will provide contact information for him, and will coordinate your application with him. BTP is, of course, concerned with the radio frequencies and powers used, this information available from the Drone specs and included on your application form when you fill it out. I'm expecting that they will some day soon add 'check-boxes' instead for the common commercial drones.
The entire process took ~24 hours for me, an amazement as I have some experience with dealing with normal Curacao bureaucracy! They emailed me a PDF copy of the signed, stamped document.
The registration is by drone type, so one application for my two DJI Mavic Pro. If I had a Phantom or Inspire, each would require a separate application/registration.
Registration form:
http://www.ccaa.cw/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/88133_RPA-001_RPARegistration-JAN-2017-2.pdf
NOTE: the wind on Curacao is often a problem for drone flying. I waited days for a wind of less than 25-35 MPH at my oceanside location, and finally decided to fly my Mavic Pro anyway. I had one slightly-scary case of the drone being blown away from where I put it, but dropped down and flew home with Sport Mode. Generally, the Mavic handles high winds well, and I flew more than a dozen times always over the 23 MPH "limit" in the Mavic specs. YMMV.
