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Barama Company Limited (BCL) yesterday announced that it is not seeking a renewal of its 25-year concession with the Guyana Government, meaning that dozens more of forestry jobs will be lost.

In an advertisement appearing on page 17 of today’s edition, Barama said it will however continue its other projects here inclusive of veneering, plywood manufacturing and sawmilling.

“Barama very much regrets having to take the decision to close our forest concession operations after having, over the past 25 years, invested approximately $45B in the development of Guyana’s forest industry”, the advertisement said.

BCL’s announcement comes after weeks of mixed signals about whether the deal would be extended and the government appeared to have no inkling of it.

Barama was established here in 1991 in a controversial deal which gave South Korean and Malaysian investors control of a lowland, mixed tropical forest concession of approximately 1.6 million hectares in the Northwest region of Guyana.

It had had a chequered history with the authorities, facing fines and questions about limited value added activities in recent years.

Minister of Governance Raphael Trotman [right) listens as an employee explains the activities of the Buck Hall operation in the presence of General Manager of Barama Company Limited, Mohindra Chand (left) last year.
Minister of Governance Raphael Trotman (right) listens as an employee explains the activities of the Buck Hall operation in the presence of General Manager of Barama Company Limited, Mohindra Chand (left) last year.

At its height, it employed over a thousand workers but numbers have fallen significantly.

The company had reported last month that 180 workers had been retrenched over a three-month period and its General Manager Mohindra Chand had said Barama was forced to let the workers go because of the market slowdown and the fact that government was not moving quickly towards renewing the company’s contract.

The Ministry of Natural Resources has said that in 2015, at the request of Barama for a continuation of its contract, Cabinet gave its ‘no objection’ to the continuing of the arrangement but recommended the convening of a Task Force to examine the request. This Task Force was seen as necessary given the “rapacious activities” of some foreign companies operating in the forests of Guyana, and “some not so positive observations that had been expressed about Barama in particular,” the ministry had said in a statement.

The Task Force comprises representatives of the ministries of Business, Natural Resources, Public Infrastructure and Indigenous People’s Affairs, the Guyana Revenue Authority, the Guyana Forestry Commission and a legal consultant.

The statement said that the Task Force met on several occasions and visited Barama’s operations at Buck Hall, Essequibo, following which the legal consultant began reviewing the existing contract, forest concessions, and tax incentives previously granted to the company, while other members evaluated workers’ rights, value-added operations and environmental management practices, among other things.

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Barama smell de rat and running


Barama come to Guyana like a train just as de Pee Pee Pee was preparing to run de country. Some Koreans was looking fuh timber because dem did start a building campaign. Dem was building nuff house and wharf.
Is 25 years since Barama come. De Koreans sell out to de Malaysians but Barama mek plywood and push Kissoon out of business. Dem wasn’t to sell in Guyana but foreigners always got a way to mek de government give concessions. All dem got to mek a promise.
Dem boys want to believe that Barama didn’t pay no tax fuh all dem years dem been in this country. Dem promise something and de Jagdeo Government fall in love wid de nice words. That is why de country ain’t get no money from Barama.
But everybody know that happy living is not long life. De government change and a new set of people start to look at wha was happening in de timber industry.
BaiShan was de chief culprit and de new people tek back all de land that de company was dragging out de timber from and not paying any money to de country.
Just like Barama, BaiShan did mek some promise. One promise was to give Value Added. That mean that it would mek things from de wood and mek more money than if dem sell de wood alone.
Dem boys know that nutten ain’t happen. De new people who tek over de country get vex and tek way de land from BaiShan.
Barama see wha happen and know that de same hammer coming suh it give back some of de land it tek. It hope to avoid de lash wha BaiShan get.
But dem boys want de government to kick dem out anyhow. De Barama bluff can’t wuk. Dem boys know that all de money Barama promise never exist. And is time Guyana tek back all its land from dem scamps who come wid nuff promise and give Guyana so much shaft that de country can’t even rise up.
Talk half and help Barama ketch de next boat out of Guyana.

Pointblank

General Manager Mohindra Chand had said Barama was forced to let the workers go because of the market slowdown and the fact that government was not moving quickly towards renewing the company’s contract.

 

THESE PNC DON'T KNOW HOW TO NEGOTIATE CONTRACTS, THEY LOST THE RICE DEAL WITH VENEZUELA NOW THE TIMBER DEAL WITH BARAMA. WHERE IS THE JOB CREATION SINCE THEY TOOK OFFICE. NONE, ZILCH.

K

Another victim of the PNC incompetence. They rapidly driving out investors. The treasury will be getting smaller and smaller, how will the paid posters here on GNI be compensated?   Robbing Indians is always a fail safe method to shore up revenues. 

FM

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