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FM
Former Member

MAY 7, 2012 PEEPING TOM 

 

 

No doubt with the intention of diverting attention from its unpardonable cuts to the 2012 Budget, the Alliance for Change (AFC) in full theatrical mood is attempting to shift the blame for its anti-development agenda towards the government.

 

Having been the prime mover behind slicing 21 billion dollars off the national Budget, the All for Cuts party is now accusing the government of cutting fifty billion dollars from Budget by not incorporating the funds held by the National Industrial and Commercial Inc. Limited (NICIL). This is the AFC’s latest ploy to deflect attention from its incomprehensible actions.

 

Some of the newspapers, including Kaieteur News, seem only too willing to further the perception that somehow the government is sitting on fifty billion dollars which is hidden away. In so doing they are neglecting their duty to check on the facts so as to ensure that their readership is not misled.

 

Whether fifty billion dollars is involved is another issue altogether. Given its recent record, caution should be exercised before readily accepting the numbers that the AFC throws out for public consumption. It is yet to be determined just how the AFC arrived at this figure of fifty billion dollars. Perhaps this was part of the advice that it has been receiving lately.

 

However, even if it can be established that NICIL did over time cumulatively receive in excess of fifty billion dollars, it does mean that this sum is available for use in the Budget or that it is being hidden or is part of a slush fund.NICIL is a body corporate. It was formed as a holding company for the shares which government has or had in a number of entities. It is also a parent company for a number of entities in which the government has a stake.

 

It is also vested with the buying and selling of government properties and it is empowered to make investments.

 

NICIL is 100% owned by the government of Guyana and was formed not by the PPPC administration. It was incorporated under the Corporations Act, an Act of Parliament, in July 1990 during the PNC regime.

 

It is controlled by the government. This is not unusual for an entity that deals with the divestment of government properties. Under the PNC regime, responsibility for privatization was assigned to the Public Corporations Secretariat (PCS) which in turn reported to an economic subcommittee of Cabinet, with the Minister of Planning being responsible for overseeing the work of the PCS.

 

The actual approval of recommendations for privatization was done by a standing committee of ministers of the government. The process of privatization as therefore always controlled by politicians and directly by the Cabinet. The present arrangements therefore in which there is a Privatization Unit and NICIL is not substantively different from what existed under the PNC.

 

The PNC after it opted to pursue economic liberalization, found itself with a huge financing gap in its Budget. As such, it was pushed faster into divestment.

 

There has always been a controversy as to whether the proceeds of privatization should be held in the Consolidated Fund. The then Auditor General had noted in the 1992 Auditor General’s Report that the proceeds from divestment were NOT paid into the Consolidated Fund but were instead kept in a separate account.

 

These were not the only proceeds that were so held in special accounts. The proceeds from the sale of gold were kept in a special account located outside of Guyana and controlled by Office of the President.

 

Long before that there was a lotteries fund. The monies here were also not transferred to the Consolidated Fund but were paid into a Government Lotteries Account. At the end of each year, the credit from that account was not passed into a Development Fund. So there is a host of precedents that debunks the idea that there is something illegal about holding money in NICIL.

 

Despite this, there still remained calls for the proceeds held by NICIL to pass through the Consolidated Fund. Even before the debate on the 2012 Budget, there were such calls. However, no legal authority has yet been produced to justify these funds being paid into the Consolidated Fund.

 

One former Auditor General has ventured to suggest that the legal opinion that the government received on the issue was flawed but no persuasive alternative legal argument has been offered.

 

If one existed, or if a credible case existed to legally justify the movement of these proceeds to the Consolidated Fund, approaches would have been already made to the courts for a ruling to this effect.

 

Instead what we have had are a set of opinions, many of which have the taint of politics, about what should happen. But no one is risking their reputation by asking the courts to rule that the holding of funds within NICIL, outside of the Consolidated Fund is unlawful.

 

There is of course a clearly obvious reason why the funds cannot be moved to the Consolidated Fund. The accounts held by NICIL are no ordinary accounts. NICIL is a body corporate. As such it cannot simply move its revenues to the Consolidated Fund since it has expenses and it has liabilities. It is the parent company for a number of existing public enterprises including the Guyana National Shipping Corporation, the Guyana National Printers Limited and the Guyana Oil Company.

 

It has obligations to these entities; it may have to absorb losses, it has outstanding pension issues with bauxite workers that are not yet settled; and it is facing at least one major legal challenge to one of its privatization deals, which if it goes against it, could lead to an award reaching hundreds of millions.

 

The fact that NICIL may have, over a period of time, collected a large amount of revenues from the sale of government properties does not therefore mean that NICIL is simply sitting on this money. Nor is NICIL a slush fund. It is a body corporate established under the Corporation Act and is governed by that Act.

 

For this reason also NICIL is not in breach of the Constitution of Guyana by not paying its holdings into the Consolidated Fund.

 

Article 216 of the Constitution of Guyana provides that all funds received by Guyana should be paid into the Consolidated Fund, except for revenues or other monies that are payable or held, by or under an Act of parliament, into some other fund established for that specific purpose.

 

NICIL was formed under the Corporation Act which is an act of parliament and it has an account which is held for the specific purpose of holding the proceeds of government interests as well as for the proceeds of divestment. This account is therefore not in contravention of the Constitution of Guyana.

 

NICIL should be using the funds that it has to make money for the government so that it can pay dividends into the Consolidated Fund.

 

What the AFC needs to be concerned about is not the legality of holding these funds but whether the funds held in NICIL have been properly accounted for. If there is indeed a problem with the accounts of NICIL not being audited, then it is for the Auditor General, who is statutorily required to audit these accounts, to explain why this has not been done.

 

The Auditor General has promised to pay some interest to NICIL, the holding company that is responsible for the proceeds of privatization funds. When the Auditor General’s Report is made public, the people of Guyana will be in a better position to determine whether the AFC has again been misled, this time about the amount of proceeds that are held by NICIL.

 

Its fifty billion dollar figure may turn out to be far less

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(GINA)-Finance Minister Dr. Ashni Singh on Wednesday challenged the Alliance for Change (AFC) to publicly declare its computations and details on how that party arrived at the sum of $50B being held back from the Consolidated Fund through the National Industrial and Commercial Investments Limited (NICIL)

AFC Leader Khemraj Ramjattan in a recent press conference declared that the PPP has hidden in excess of $50 B in secret bank accounts and that these monies were largely acquired and routed through NICIL.

The Finance Minister during a press conference today stated that since the AFC has stated authoritatively a figure of $50B, “They should publish publicly the basis on which they arrived at this $50B. They need to come clean and say to the people of Guyana this is how we arrived at the $50B.”

Minister Singh stated emphatically that the amount of resources in hand by NICIL is not anywhere near $50B.

 He noted that the NICIL issue is an attempt at creating a storm in a teacup, “and generating an imagined hysteria” by one or two politicians.

Responding to questions from the media, Minister Singh explained that NICIL operates within the Companies Act since it is registered as a company and so governed.  He added that the company being government owned, it is audited by the Auditor General’s office as a group holding company with subsidiaries. Additionally, NICIL’s consolidated audited financial statements are tabled in Parliament.

Minister Singh pointed out also that NICIL has made public details of every single privatisation transaction that it has conducted recently, and during a specially organised seminar to which the press was invited, NICIL disclosed every single transaction, disposal as a corporate entity, property sale, and asset sale. The document recording this was produced and made publicly available. The mode of privatisation, and all other details of the transactions were included in that documentation.

The Finance Minister that it is easy and convenient, and politically opportunistic for the opposition “instead of referring to those publicly available sources, instead of recognising that we have never hesitated to speak publicly about these transactions they instead concoct and fabricate a controversy where one does not exist.”

He pointed out that if more information is being sought, a question should be asked properly in the Parliament, and as always, the answer would be provided.

Minister of Legal Affairs Anil Nandlall who was also present at the press conference endorsed Minister Singh’s statement that the Opposition have created this issue, “they have created it and the press has assisted them in spinning this thing around.”

He pointed out that Ramjattan and Nagamootoo were sitting on the PPP side of the bench when the privatisation procedure was presented, debated and unanimously approved by the National Assembly in the mid-90s, and NICIL was identified as the body to do the transactions.

          He noted that during the previous administration, privatisation was done through about five different entities, for which there was no accounting record of transactions.

NICIL has records of all transactions, and a chronicle of those transactions were done, including the names of the people to whom properties were sold, when they were sold, the price for which they were sold. “What is the mystery? What other information is there that you need?” he asked adding “this monster, this phantom controversy has been created and is just out there. And they keep perpetuating that thing. They create this big furor of a motion in the parliament to demand answers. What answers? We can bring a whole wheelbarrow of books tomorrow and give them of reports.  We are a responsible political party, and we will continue to engage in the exercise as tedious and as painstaking as it is of explaining over and over again these procedures. Hopefully, we will get the press to help us in the same way they have spun this misinformation out of control, that we spin it back into control.”

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Samuel Hinds pointed to the fact that NICIL which was created by the previous administration has a real role in our society, “NICIL is set up there because you still need an agency that would take risks and lead some development where the private sector is reluctant.”

He pointed to the Berbice River Bridge which was spearheaded by NICIL, “ and with the problems we had with  the Demerara Harbour Bridge, I would like to see NICIL play a role in giving us a fixed bridge across the Demerara (river). So when I hear about putting all the monies into the Consolidated Fund, I think there could only be talking in my view, about the capital money,” Prime Minister posited.

Minister Singh noted that NICIL as the Government holding company has scored some resounding successes such as the Berbice River Bridge, “This is the first instance of private capital being invested in public infrastructure, and this mode of privately financed public infrastructure, is a mode that is recognised around the world.”

He said, “In most other countries you would need an international investment company to do this, to explain the documentation to private investors, to work with them to get them on board. We should be proud in Guyana that we structured that transaction using local expertise and concluded it using local investment and we have to thank NICIL for that.”

The Prime Minister endorsed this statement adding, “If we are talking about building our country, we have to take the responsibility for financing. Institutions like NICL lead the way, going in the risk period, getting it running and pulling out. There are many areas in our development where this is required, and you need and agency to do this, and they need to keep money in hand. This call for all their capital money to be just put in the (Consolidated) Fund like that – we should hope that our government doesn’t get into the hands of people who really think that way. The 70s and 80s remind us to be guarded against those kinds of people getting back into government,’ he declared

FM

All that useless bilge by the myopic peeper is nullified by a few sentences; the PPP do not own our country. Every damn penny is to be accounted for. No right exist for them to be in possession of secret stash. Government is not merely a trust. It is a trust that is accountable. We need that accounting.

FM
Originally Posted by Stormborn:

All that useless bilge by the myopic peeper is nullified by a few sentences; the PPP do not own our country. Every damn penny is to be accounted for. No right exist for them to be in possession of secret stash. Government is not merely a trust. It is a trust that is accountable. We need that accounting.

What,  drunk Buckman ?

FM
Originally Posted by yuji22:
Originally Posted by Stormborn:

All that useless bilge by the myopic peeper is nullified by a few sentences; the PPP do not own our country. Every damn penny is to be accounted for. No right exist for them to be in possession of secret stash. Government is not merely a trust. It is a trust that is accountable. We need that accounting.

What,  drunk Buckman ?

 So says the muck from 6000 years in the sewer. It only bothers those who recast themselves to pretend others are where they were.

FM
Originally Posted by Stormborn:
Originally Posted by yuji22:
Originally Posted by Stormborn:

All that useless bilge by the myopic peeper is nullified by a few sentences; the PPP do not own our country. Every damn penny is to be accounted for. No right exist for them to be in possession of secret stash. Government is not merely a trust. It is a trust that is accountable. We need that accounting.

What,  drunk Buckman ?

 So says the muck from 6000 years in the sewer. It only bothers those who recast themselves to pretend others are where they were.

What, drunk Buckman ? Did you collect your welfare check ?

FM

How can you sell government assets and not hand over the funds to the Government treasury?

 

The PPP is in the business of creating its own elite class of thieves.

 

The opposition should not give up on this and not take it to court. Once in court Ramo cannot be grilled and it could be years beforthe matter is heard.

Mitwah
Originally Posted by yuji22:
Originally Posted by Stormborn:
Originally Posted by yuji22:
Originally Posted by Stormborn:

All that useless bilge by the myopic peeper is nullified by a few sentences; the PPP do not own our country. Every damn penny is to be accounted for. No right exist for them to be in possession of secret stash. Government is not merely a trust. It is a trust that is accountable. We need that accounting.

What,  drunk Buckman ?

 So says the muck from 6000 years in the sewer. It only bothers those who recast themselves to pretend others are where they were.

What, drunk Buckman ? Did you collect your welfare check ?

I can see you are not very bright so reciting racist crap wont make you smart. You can go on imagining me poor if that gives you a sense of self worth...especially if  that prevents you jumping off a building.

FM
Originally Posted by Mitwah:

How can you sell government assets and not hand over the funds to the Government treasury?

 

The PPP is in the business of creating its own elite class of thieves.

 

The opposition should not give up on this and not take it to court. Once in court Ramo cannot be grilled and it could be years beforthe matter is heard.

 It will require parliamentary bars to further action on this agency. It has a lot of PPP ministers squatting on the board so they do not want to give up the power or access to the cash. This agency has to be made political neutral and its composition civilian based and term limited. At preset is just is a feast for the crows.

FM

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