Change Skeldon factory management after election - AFC
Written by Kwesi Isles Wednesday, 24 August 2011 16:10
A section of the Skeldon sugar factory
The Alliance For Change (AFC) is calling for the privatization of the Skeldon sugar factory management to be done after the general and regional elections which are constitutionally due by December 28. Party Chairman Khemraj Ramjattan told reporters at a news conference on Wednesday that it seems as though the government wants to have the new team in place before the dissolution of parliament next month end. “That is coming at a moment when there has been absolutely no tendering out for that contract. My information is that it will take in the vicinity of US$2.5M per month for the management contract and that has to be paid with taxpayers dollars,” Ramjattan stated.
In announcing the move towards a private management contract for the Skeldon factory recently Agriculture Minister Robert Persaud had stated that two proposals from Indian and Chinese firms were being considered and urged GuySuCo to speed up its considerations Ramjattan on Wednesday said that they have learnt that the companies being considered are Chinese firm CNIC, which built the factory and Surendra Engineering, which completed the Enmore factory packaging plant. The AFC, he added, was against either of them being considered for the contract and would not be “fettered” by such a contract with either firm should the party form the new government. Subsequent efforts to confirm the names of the companies making proposals with Persaud were unsuccessful.
“These are people we understand who do not have any experience in management; one is good at infrastructure civil engineering, CNIC, and the other one is also a civil engineering firm so to go now to have management contracts to run sugar factories, I think they got plenty corruption behind these deals,” Ramjattan said. He noted that the CNIC has been blamed for many of the mechanical problems which beset the US$200M Skeldon factory. ‘The maker of this defect-riddled 8,400 tons cane-per-day grinding capacity factory, which has not yet achieved even half that amount for one day, is being evaluated as a potential contract manager,” Ramjattan declared.
According to him, Surendra Engineering appears to be “specially favoured” because it was awarded a contract for eight drainage pumps even though it does not make them. Additionally, he said, the firm through a Dubai-based front company received a consultancy contract valued some US$500,000 to provide the plan to upgrade the Enmore and Blairmont factories. “There is every indication of an unholy alliance between Surendra Engineering and key GuySuCo managers, directors and politicos to huff all of GuySuCo’s engineering projects, including the one now to manage Skeldon, a Stask Surendra Engineering, like CNIC, is incapable of doing, both not having the history, experience and managerial capacity in running sugar factories,” he said.
The AFC chairman said the party is aware of very experienced and well known Indian and Brazilian consortiums which ought to be invited to give proposals to manage the Skeldon Factory and possibly to procure finances from their respective governments to assist in doing so. Persaud had said that the expertise to run the Skeldon factory is not present in Guyana.
Source
Written by Kwesi Isles Wednesday, 24 August 2011 16:10
A section of the Skeldon sugar factory
The Alliance For Change (AFC) is calling for the privatization of the Skeldon sugar factory management to be done after the general and regional elections which are constitutionally due by December 28. Party Chairman Khemraj Ramjattan told reporters at a news conference on Wednesday that it seems as though the government wants to have the new team in place before the dissolution of parliament next month end. “That is coming at a moment when there has been absolutely no tendering out for that contract. My information is that it will take in the vicinity of US$2.5M per month for the management contract and that has to be paid with taxpayers dollars,” Ramjattan stated.
In announcing the move towards a private management contract for the Skeldon factory recently Agriculture Minister Robert Persaud had stated that two proposals from Indian and Chinese firms were being considered and urged GuySuCo to speed up its considerations Ramjattan on Wednesday said that they have learnt that the companies being considered are Chinese firm CNIC, which built the factory and Surendra Engineering, which completed the Enmore factory packaging plant. The AFC, he added, was against either of them being considered for the contract and would not be “fettered” by such a contract with either firm should the party form the new government. Subsequent efforts to confirm the names of the companies making proposals with Persaud were unsuccessful.
“These are people we understand who do not have any experience in management; one is good at infrastructure civil engineering, CNIC, and the other one is also a civil engineering firm so to go now to have management contracts to run sugar factories, I think they got plenty corruption behind these deals,” Ramjattan said. He noted that the CNIC has been blamed for many of the mechanical problems which beset the US$200M Skeldon factory. ‘The maker of this defect-riddled 8,400 tons cane-per-day grinding capacity factory, which has not yet achieved even half that amount for one day, is being evaluated as a potential contract manager,” Ramjattan declared.
According to him, Surendra Engineering appears to be “specially favoured” because it was awarded a contract for eight drainage pumps even though it does not make them. Additionally, he said, the firm through a Dubai-based front company received a consultancy contract valued some US$500,000 to provide the plan to upgrade the Enmore and Blairmont factories. “There is every indication of an unholy alliance between Surendra Engineering and key GuySuCo managers, directors and politicos to huff all of GuySuCo’s engineering projects, including the one now to manage Skeldon, a Stask Surendra Engineering, like CNIC, is incapable of doing, both not having the history, experience and managerial capacity in running sugar factories,” he said.
The AFC chairman said the party is aware of very experienced and well known Indian and Brazilian consortiums which ought to be invited to give proposals to manage the Skeldon Factory and possibly to procure finances from their respective governments to assist in doing so. Persaud had said that the expertise to run the Skeldon factory is not present in Guyana.
Source