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The PPP risks being labeled Guyana’s worst government

December 2, 2013 | By | Filed Under Letters 

Dear Editor, At the risk of being labeled the worst PPP government in the political history of Guyana, we feel compelled to report that nearly everywhere in Guyana; people are voicing the strong feeling that the PPP is going to lose the next general election, come mid or late 2016. And we must say our first reaction to that is it would be a relief to the nation not to have to put up with the arrogant smirks we keep seeing on the faces of some Cabinet ministers who are clearly deluded into believing that they are in office for life. But clearly the writing is on the wall for this corrupt PPP regime and we have decided to let the cat out of the bag. The process that the people started in the 2011 election that led to a minority PPP government must be completed in the next election cycle by voting the PPP out of office. Of course, simply making such a prediction could very well have the effect of triggering a serious thought in convincing many now reluctant voters to come out and vote against this decadent PPP regime. The PPP can no doubt rely on its tribal base to come out in full support in the next general election but whether that will be enough to make the PPP victorious is doubtful. Their tribal base is dwindling due to overseas migration and others are marching toward the other parties. The youths are fed up with the propaganda, distortions and untruths by the do-nothing PPP cabal who seem to think that they can squander the taxpayers’ money at will on shady projects. For certain, the minority PPP regime record in Parliament since winning the November 2011 general election has been very bleak and not at all promising. They lost the Amalia Falls project followed by the loss of the Anti-Money Laundering Bill. Their frantic defense of both the Amalia Falls and the Anti-money Laundering Bill was highly suspicious, to say the least. Earlier in the year, they lost $30 billion from the budget as a result of their clownish debate in Parliament. The PPP is a very confused party and its leader’s sluggish pace and lack of administration skills have made it extremely difficult for the regime to get anything done in or out of Parliament. Mind you, in addition to those losses, it has become fairly obvious that public sentiment about the Government has taken a serious turn for the worst since the election as a result of the number of corrupt practices, armed robberies, slip-ups, faux pas, poor judgment, mal-administration, and sheer incompetence, all of which all adds up to bad governance. The most recent example stemmed from the fact that Dr. Roger Luncheon was forced to tell the nation that the Minister of Social Affairs lied about her daughter’s involvement with the GHOST recycling company, Natural Globe Inc.  Another is the Minister of Agriculture saying that the 14 drainage pumps from India had arrived in Guyana and Dr. Luncheon immediately told the nation that is not true, the pumps have not arrived. The opposing public view is that the PPP cabal is now selling themselves as present-day Messiahs, able to rescue the poor and the working class from their present predicament, a predicament that they have fuelled throughout a well-orchestrated economic program for their rich friends and their media brainwashing, propaganda, distortions and untruths. They are trying to play the game differently but with the same players and although they believe that they are doing a brilliant public relations campaign, as a nation, the people will not tolerate another spell of their mismanagement of the economy, high crime rate and massive corrupt practices. Buckling under their own weight, the PPP regime has turned to its favorite bogus strategy of blaming the opposition for their failures especially the Minister of Legal Affairs blaming the opposition budget cuts for the meager 5% wage increase for the workers. They have also blamed the garbage pile-up in the city and the flooding on the budget cuts by the opposition. But the truth is, no one will believe their propaganda since they do not have the political will to do anything except to use the state resources to fatten their pockets and those of their relatives and friends. Dr. Asquith Rose and Harish S. Singh

 

Mitwah
Originally Posted by Mitwah:
 

The PPP risks being labeled Guyana’s worst government

December 2, 2013 | By | Filed Under Letters 

Dear Editor, At the risk of being labeled the worst PPP government in the political history of Guyana, we feel compelled to report that nearly everywhere in Guyana; people are voicing the strong feeling that the PPP is going to lose the next general election, come mid or late 2016. And we must say our first reaction to that is it would be a relief to the nation not to have to put up with the arrogant smirks we keep seeing on the faces of some Cabinet ministers who are clearly deluded into believing that they are in office for life. But clearly the writing is on the wall for this corrupt PPP regime and we have decided to let the cat out of the bag. The process that the people started in the 2011 election that led to a minority PPP government must be completed in the next election cycle by voting the PPP out of office. Of course, simply making such a prediction could very well have the effect of triggering a serious thought in convincing many now reluctant voters to come out and vote against this decadent PPP regime. The PPP can no doubt rely on its tribal base to come out in full support in the next general election but whether that will be enough to make the PPP victorious is doubtful. Their tribal base is dwindling due to overseas migration and others are marching toward the other parties. The youths are fed up with the propaganda, distortions and untruths by the do-nothing PPP cabal who seem to think that they can squander the taxpayers’ money at will on shady projects. For certain, the minority PPP regime record in Parliament since winning the November 2011 general election has been very bleak and not at all promising. They lost the Amalia Falls project followed by the loss of the Anti-Money Laundering Bill. Their frantic defense of both the Amalia Falls and the Anti-money Laundering Bill was highly suspicious, to say the least. Earlier in the year, they lost $30 billion from the budget as a result of their clownish debate in Parliament. The PPP is a very confused party and its leader’s sluggish pace and lack of administration skills have made it extremely difficult for the regime to get anything done in or out of Parliament. Mind you, in addition to those losses, it has become fairly obvious that public sentiment about the Government has taken a serious turn for the worst since the election as a result of the number of corrupt practices, armed robberies, slip-ups, faux pas, poor judgment, mal-administration, and sheer incompetence, all of which all adds up to bad governance. The most recent example stemmed from the fact that Dr. Roger Luncheon was forced to tell the nation that the Minister of Social Affairs lied about her daughter’s involvement with the GHOST recycling company, Natural Globe Inc.  Another is the Minister of Agriculture saying that the 14 drainage pumps from India had arrived in Guyana and Dr. Luncheon immediately told the nation that is not true, the pumps have not arrived. The opposing public view is that the PPP cabal is now selling themselves as present-day Messiahs, able to rescue the poor and the working class from their present predicament, a predicament that they have fuelled throughout a well-orchestrated economic program for their rich friends and their media brainwashing, propaganda, distortions and untruths. They are trying to play the game differently but with the same players and although they believe that they are doing a brilliant public relations campaign, as a nation, the people will not tolerate another spell of their mismanagement of the economy, high crime rate and massive corrupt practices. Buckling under their own weight, the PPP regime has turned to its favorite bogus strategy of blaming the opposition for their failures especially the Minister of Legal Affairs blaming the opposition budget cuts for the meager 5% wage increase for the workers. They have also blamed the garbage pile-up in the city and the flooding on the budget cuts by the opposition. But the truth is, no one will believe their propaganda since they do not have the political will to do anything except to use the state resources to fatten their pockets and those of their relatives and friends. Dr. Asquith Rose and Harish S. Singh

 

Ignore this. This article is from 2 PPP haters.

FM

Skelly, this statement speaks volumes.

 

The PPP can no doubt rely on its tribal base to come out in full support in the next general election but whether that will be enough to make the PPP victorious is doubtful. Their tribal base is dwindling due to overseas migration and others are marching toward the other parties. The youths are fed up with the propaganda, distortions and untruths by the do-nothing PPP cabal who seem to think that they can squander the taxpayers’ money at will on shady projects.

Mitwah

Guyana slips further on Transparency’s Corruption Index

 

 

Guyana ranked a very poor 27 out of 100 points in the Transparency International 2012 Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI).

The report was released this morning. Last year, Guyana scored 28 points.

Guyana is again doing worse than every other country in  Caricom except for Haiti (19) which has also traditionally been one of the worst performers.

Transparency International (TI) premiered a new methodology last year where countries are ranked from 1 to 100 points with 100 representing the least corrupt. Any score below 50 indicates a serious problem and though it is not possible to meaningfully compare Guyana’s performance with the previous methodology, the country remains in the bracket of those with a very serious problem.

By contrast, Barbados scored 75 points, the highest in Caricom, The Bahamas 71, St Lucia 71, Trinidad and Tobago 38 and Jamaica 38. Suriname came in at 36 this year.

The perception of corruption has remained a big problem for the Ramotar administration over the last two years.

ti

 

The CPI 2013 measures perceived levels of public sector corruption in 177 countries/territories.

In a statement accompanying the report, TI which first issued a report in 1995, said

β€œCorruption continues to have a devastating impact on societies and individuals around the world, with more than two-thirds of countries surveyed scoring less than 50 out of 100 in the latest Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI).

β€œDespite 2013 being a year in which governments around the world passed new laws and forged fresh commitments to end corruption, people are not seeing the results of these promises.

β€œAnti-corruption is an increasingly attractive platform for politicians, with many incorporating anti-corruption pledges into their election campaigns. It reflects waning public tolerance towards corruption. The danger, however, is that these anti-corruption promises fail to materialise.

β€œGovernment guarantees of greater accountability do not always bring about tangible results at the local level. Protests in Brazil this summer showed public exasperation at the continuation of political scandals in spite of governmental assurances of a zero-tolerance policy on corruption.

Words must be backed by action

β€œSome countries, such as Estonia, have seen improved CPI scores go hand in hand with efforts to combat corruption, such as the development of a new anti-corruption strategy.

β€œOther countries, however, prove that words are not enough in the fight against corruption. After a summer blighted by political scandals indicating a lack of accountability and fading public trust, Spain tried to remedy its corruption troubles with a new Transparency Law.

It is certainly a step in the right direction, but the provisions do not go far enough. This missed opportunity to bring about significant legislative changes is particularly worrying given Spain’s six-point drop in this year’s index.

β€œWhile countries such as Myanmar have seen significant improvements in the perceived success of their anti-corruption efforts; on average, perceived levels of corruption have failed to improve globally since 2012.

β€œEU and Western European countries continue to perform best with an average score of 66, while Sub-Saharan African countries once again show the highest perceived levels of public sector corruption, averaging a score of 33.

β€œBut scores vary widely within each region and with a global average of just 43, all regions have a long way to go in curbing corruption.

Corruption persists in being a pervasive force in the public sector, hurting citizens in their daily lives and in times of dire need.”

Mitwah

Auditor General finds…Education

officials preside over US$7.5M

overpayment to contractors

December 3, 2013 | By | Filed Under News 

The Ministry of Education is still to recover in excess of $1.5B which it overpaid to contractors during 2010 and 2011.
This is according to Auditor General, Deodat Sharma, who flagged this deficiency in his report on the Ministry’s activities last year.
According to Sharma, it is important to note that the personnel and/or Consultants nominated by the Ministry were integrally involved in the examination of the projects and the related findings discussed and agreed upon with the team headed by the Special Projects Officer of the Ministry.

Minister of Education, Priya Manickchand

Minister of Education, Priya Manickchand

β€œNevertheless, there was a failure to recover the amounts overpaid.”
The overpayments of just over $1.5B related to three projectsβ€”- an Information Technology (IT) Laboratory each for the Charity and Aurora Secondary Schools and the New Wing which was attached to the Patentia Secondary School.
The Ministry reportedly overpaid the contractor for the Patentia Secondary School project, $885M over the two year period.
The contractor for the IT Laboratory at Charity Secondary School was overpaid $398M, while the contractor at the Aurora Secondary school was overpaid $245M.
The report found, too, that the National Procurement and Tender Administration Board last year awarded a contract for the construction of the Science Laboratory of the Central Corentyne Secondary School.
That contract was for $11M and works commenced on December 11, 2012.
Between that date and the end of the month an amount of $2.2M was disbursed from the proceeds of the contract.
The completion of the project was scheduled for March 5, 2013, but at the time of the audit visit on June 26, 2013, the works were not completed and appeared to be abandoned.
β€œIn addition to the fact that liquidated damages had accrued on a daily basis at a rate of 0.1 per cent of the final contract price, but not exceeding 10 per cent of the final contract price, there were overpayments totalling $202,400, on measured works.”
The report found that the Ministry has been hoarding $200M in a Bank of Guyana Account.
According to Sharma’s report, in 2011, approval was given for the establishment of a Housing Revolving Fund.
He said that three cheques to the value of $200M were drawn on January 5, 2012 and deposited into a special bank account held at the Bank of Guyana.
β€œAt the time of reporting, no disbursements were made from the Account.”
The Auditor General found too that with regards to the School Feeding Programme in Region Nine and in keeping with the Memorandum of Understanding for the consolidation of the School Snack Programme in that Region, two warrants amounting to $40M were issued.
This was to enable preparation and supply of schools snacks to 3,500 students across 43 Villages in that Region.
According to Sharma, financial returns were not provided to account for funds expended on behalf of the Ministry.
β€œIn the circumstances, it could not be ascertained whether the amounts were expended for the purposes intended.”

 

NB: 7.5 Million US$ = One billiion, five hundred Million Guyana Dollars

 

FM

Quote "The Ministry reportedly overpaid the contractor for the Patentia Secondary School project, $885M over the two year period.
The contractor for the IT Laboratory at Charity Secondary School was overpaid $398M, while the contractor at the Aurora Secondary school was overpaid $245M."unquote

 

With the above, one would tend to believe that backshish has been going around to everyone

FM

Dem boys seh…Ramroop and Jagdeo

mooma lef state property fuh dem

December 1, 2013 | By | Filed Under Dem Boys Seh, Features / Columnists, News 

 

Ramroop and Jagdeo playing bareface bully but dem boys know that dem ain’t no bully. Dem is nutten but damn crooks of de highest order.  Dem tekking state assets left, right and centre. Top and bottom too. And when dem ain’t get through wid some of dem crookishness, dem quick fuh holler how dem pulling out because of confidentiality. That is a word that Brazzy, that odda fat crook, mek fuh dem. Imagine dem set about fuh thief de GCC and de GFC ground and tell de people shuu, shuuβ€”Wha that mean? De people of this country shouldn’t know nutten about dem own property. That is exactly wha dem crooks mean. Is like dem mooma alone lef state property in dem will fuh dem. Dem boys can’t help but saying dem crooks eyes pass this nation. Last week dem boys ask de nation nah ask wha dem got dem hand in, ask wha dem nah GOT dem hand in. This week it gone beyond that. Is nah wha dem secretly snatch; is wha more dem want fuh snatch. Dem boys seh that dem suh bareface that dem don’t care who talk bout wha dem tekking. AND poor Donald, dem crooks nah seh nutten nice bout he. In fact dem seh how he is a so and so (and that is de nice word fuh describe a good human being like Uncle Donald). Dem cuss Granger. Dem seh that he does tek bribe and how dem got he in dem front, back and side pocket. As fuh Prak, dem seh that dem nah worry bout he, that he don’t see and hear good. But dem boys got a message fuh Donald, Granger and Prak. When a bully mash you toe, you stay quite; he stamp you foot, you tun you face; he kick you and you know wheh, you fall and you still nah seh nutten. De next day he gun kill you. Well if none of dem politician can’t help this country dem boys begging Uncle Sam, especially Brent de Hardt man. Dem boys know that he got a good heart and he come from good stock. And he got good eyes, better that Prak. He seeing everything. De last time he talk bout de radio and nutten ain’t change. Dem boys looking forward fuh he to act. Monitor dem and let de world ketch dem wid de millions that dem got here, there and everywhere. Is some of that same millions that Ramroop spending all about. He was trying fuh buy GCC and GFC wid US$30 million. Dem boys could only match that wid Guyana dollar. Talk half and beg dem mooma fuh lef something fuh Guyana.

Mitwah

Ramroop operating three radio stations

with one licence

December 4, 2013 | By | Filed Under News 

 

- Authorities promise investigations

The country’s regulators are moving to investigate reports that a radio company misused its licence by illegally operating three different broadcast stations on frequencies that should have been used as repeater stations for an extended broadcast. Chairperson of the Guyana National Broadcast Authority (GNBA), Bibi Shadick, also said yesterday that the broadcast authority is hiring a number of lawyers to go after television and other broadcasters who are operating without

Dr. Ranjisinghi β€˜Bobby’ Ramroop

Dr. Ranjisinghi β€˜Bobby’ Ramroop

licences.

During a press conference at her South Road office, yesterday, to update on the work of GNBA, Shadick made it clear that it would be a breach of law for any company issued with multiple frequencies to use them to transmit different content instead of being utilized specifically as relays to reach outlying areas. The company, Radio Guyana Inc. (RGI) is reportedly broadcasting on 89.3FM (Essequibo), 89.5FM (Georgetown) and 89.7FM (Berbice). Under the conditions of the licence granted, the radio station would use one frequency to broadcast with the rest to increase its signals. Observers have complained that RGI, owned by Queens Atlantic Investments Inc. (QAII), a company with close links to former President Bharrat Jagdeo, has instead been really operating three different stations. Shadick yesterday said she is unaware of the possible breaches but will investigate. However, the official disclosed that GNBA is taking any breaches seriously with the law expected to take its course. She maintained that the current broadcasting laws are clear on the actions. In the past, under the old regulations, authorities have used their powers to even seize broadcasting equipment.

 

BREACH One TV station on East Coast Demerara, HGP Television Channel 16/Cable 67, she said, was warned after moving equipment intended for a relay to its primary location and then transmitting on another frequency. The station has received its licence but has been told to halt broadcasting on the other. There have been fears that the multiple frequencies, controversially granted by former President Bharrat Jagdeo, would have been used for setting up numerous radio stations. However, Government has been reassuring that this can never happen, that the additional frequencies were for use as repeater stations.

GNBA’s Chairperson, Bibi Shadick

GNBA’s Chairperson, Bibi Shadick

 

Days before he ended his term in office back in 2011, Jagdeo breached a decade-long agreement with the Opposition not to issue new licences by approving permission for several radio stations and a number of cable TV operations. QAII got five frequencies. So too did the New Guyana Company, printers of the Mirror, the ruling party’s newspaper, and the overseas-based sister of Natural Resources Minister, Robert Persaud. Several media houses, including Kaieteur News, Stabroek News, Capitol News, CNS 6 and WRHM were all bypassed, sparking days of protests. Back then, it was felt that it was a move to give a few persons who are close to the administration, total control of the airwaves. A few others were given one frequency each. Yesterday, Shadick said that GNBA is still to start examining new applications. Kaieteur News and several media houses had been asked to make fresh applications. The official is hoping to start the process before the year is over, but could not give a deadline. She said that her broadcast authority will be meeting by December 16, next. So far, under the regularization of the airwaves, GNBA has issued television licences to TVG 28, GWTV Channel 2, Pinnacle Channel 8, MTV Channel 65, CNS Channel 6, DTV Channel 8 and HBTV Channel 9. Radio licences have also been issued to RGI, Telecor and Cultural Broadcasting Inc. ( the company linked to Minister Persaud),  NTN 89.1FM and Hits and Jams Entertainment. For the cable TV licences, GNBA would have issued licences for E-Networks, Atlantic Cable Networks, Ali Broadcasting Corporation, Infinity Telecommunications and E3 Communications. According to Shadick, two television licences were issued to Countryside Broadcasting and Guyana Learning Channel. Spectrum and broadcasting fees will be waived for the state-owned Guyana Learning Channel. However, several others are not in order, and in some cases have not paid their fees.These may be facing trouble. While there was an October 31 deadline by the GNBA for all operators to be licenced, the move by the authority to now hire lawyers is significant as several operators are without licences and with only a few weeks remaining for the year.

Former President Bharrat Jagdeo

Former President Bharrat Jagdeo

 

Quark Communications which has been approved a cable TV licence by Jagdeo, has problems with the name of its company. Approval letters have been issued to Skar TV 102; WRHM which is eligible for two licences;  21st Century Communications and RBS 13. RBS 13 and HGP TV 16/67 are two of four companies which have sued over new broadcasting fees which have been introduced. Also without licences are NTN TV and radio stations; New Guyana Company Limited (The Mirror); Rudy Grant radio, Wireless Connections radio; Linden Wireless; Pinnacle Radio and TTS of Bartica.

 

MUSCLE The GNBA official said that its monitoring arm has been activated to regulate the broadcasts to ensure compliance. The monitoring committee of the GNBA comprises Major General (Ret’d), Norman McLean; University of Guyana’s communication specialist, Dr Paloma Mohamed; head of the Guyana Learning Channel, Seeta Shah-Roath and attorneys-at-law, Fazil Azeez and Sase Gunraj. Azeez is a veteran broadcaster. McLean was a former member of the Advisory Committee on Broadcasting (ACB). Shadick does not see Shah-Roath’s presence as being a conflict on the monitoring committee as the Guyana Learning Channel is not considered a competitor to the normal TV operations. The committee’s first task will be to revamp old regulations to fit the new laws. Questioned whether GNBA may be moving too slowly to process new applications, thus allowing the current operators time to expand, Shadick pointed out that Trinidad took four years to get its act together. She admitted that there will be complaints but the authority would prefer to take its time than rush.

Mitwah

Jagdeo authorized radio licence for

β€˜Ghost Company’

December 6, 2013 | By | Filed Under News 

 

Days before President Bharrat Jagdeo demitted office, he directed that a β€˜Ghost Company’ be handed a radio licence with five frequencies.
General Elections were held on November 28, 2011; Radio Guyana Inc., was incorporated on December 14, 2011, more than two weeks later. Ramroop was listed as the lone director.

Bobby Ramroop

Bobby Ramroop

A few days later, he appointed as Company Secretary, Lakshmiwatie Shiwnandan, an Attorney-at-Law, whose mailing address was listed as Queens Atlantic Industrial Estate, Industrial Site, Ruimveldt.

 

Two Radio Companies
It has now since been revealed that Ramroop owns two separate radio companiesβ€” Radio Guyana Inc, and β€˜One Guyana Radio Inc.’
One Guyana Radio Inc. was registered three days before the General Elections of 2011 and is still to receive a licence to operate. When this company was incorporated, Ramroop appointed himself as sole director.
As is the case with his other radio company, Ramroop also appointed as Company Secretary, Lakshmiwatie Shiwnandan.
One Guyana Radio Inc does not broadcast.

Bharrat Jagdeo

Bharrat Jagdeo

 

 

Airwaves    
Other broadcast facilities had been approved for licences by Jagdeo before he left office, among them the New Guyana Company Limited, which publishes the Mirror newspaper, and belongs to the ruling People’s Progressive Party.
That company was handed five radio frequencies and is yet to commence broadcasting.
In addition, Telecor and Cultural Broadcasting Incorporated, was granted five radio frequencies.
Telecor had at the time, Ruth Baljit, the sister of Robert Persaud, as its sole shareholder.
Persaud’s wife, Kamini Persaud, who also happens to be Jagdeo’s niece, was the other director.
Jagdeo gave one radio frequency each to other persons.
These are NTN Radio (Anand Persaud), Rudy Grant, Wireless Connections (Maxwell Thom), Hits and Jams Entertainment (Rawle Ferguson), Alfro Alphonso and Sons Enterprise (Alfro Alphonso), Haslyn Graham and

Robert Persaud

Robert Persaud

Little Rock Television Station (Rockliffe Christie). There are other radio licences in the pipeline. A meeting to examine those applications will be held on Monday, December 16.
In December 2010, Jagdeo had also granted two close associates of the PPP permission to broadcast television signals on the 2.5 GHz band, which allows for cable TV operations and internet-related services.
These persons were Vishok Persaud, the son of longstanding PPP stalwart Reepu Daman Persaud, and Brian Yong, who mounted the PPP platform in 1996.

 

 

 

 

Brian Yong

Brian Yong

FM

The sugar industry will not recover with this board and managers

December 5, 2013 Β· By Staff Writer Β·

Dear Editor,

I refer to the article captioned β€˜GuySuCo bringing Indian experts to rescue corporation.’

Stupidity is in full bloom at this corporation which does not account to the public and especially not to the opposition which has no representation on the board. We saw a 2013-2017 plan which told us that in those five years the industry would magically improve from 218,141 tonnes in 2012 to 350,000 tons in 2017 β€’ an improvement of 62.3%. If we take this 62.3% and divide it over the five years of this plan it would mean an improvement of 12.46% per year. So according to this new plan which had stated at the very beginning that it is β€œbased on the initiatives put forth in the original Strategic Blueprint and new initiatives put forward by Estates’ and other Key Management personnel” in 2013 we should have seen an improvement of 12.46%, ie, 245,626 tonnes. We now know that GuySuCo will not make 200,000 tonnes this year, ie, before the ink was dry on this new plan it was obsolete, as have been all the other plans of this corporation since 1992.

Now remember that we have a new chairman/CEO whose qualifications are woefully inadequate for this job, and it was he as chairman and CEO who put forward this disastrous plan. We pay this man a huge salary, not because he understands the Guyana Sugar Corporation but because he is a mobiliser for the PPP in New York and New Jersey. He does not even live here and has to be brought in whenever he needs to attend the board meetings at the corporation’s expense. We were told that he lives here now, but evidence of this has not been provided.

Mr Raj Singh has had his pitch and he was found wanting, so what does the PPP government do? Do they fire him? Do they take action against the incompetent board of the corporation which clearly doesn’t know what it is doing and only makes promises, in between running to the Parliament for more and more money to bail them out of the quagmire they find themselves in?  No we don’t! First we bring in a South African company Bosch Engineering to fix the Skeldon problems for US$4M. We are not completely certain what they did, but we paid them to be here for two weeks according to KN; then they hired a Tate and Lyle official to manage Skeldon. He spent 9 months here, accomplished nothing, and we have information that he has since resigned. At least one person in the industry is showing some sense. I would get out too. We would like to know what Bosch Engineering did for the US$4M we paid them. We would like to know what Tate and Lyle’s consultants were paid and what they were to do, and we would like to know why Richard Orr, the Tate and Lyle manager of Skeldon resigned.

The opposition has no alternative now, to protect the workers of the industry from the incompetence of the PPP, they must demand representation on the board or no $4B new subvention to the industry which the PPP is currently seeking from parliament to bolster the numerous problems plaguing this industry.

The latest symptom of being totally lost at sea is that having brought in Tate and Lyle and Bosch apparently to no effect, we are now bringing in Indian specialists to tell us what is wrong with our industry. The 2013-17 plan is deficient in many areas and does not address the major areas of concern which have contributed to GuySuCo’s biggest problem, which according to Messrs Bhim and Komal Chand is that β€œthere are no canes in the fields.”  The plan begins by telling us that stakeholders and shareholders were consulted to make inputs to the plan; the management, the workers and the board of GuySuCo were consulted, but nowhere did I see that the opposition were considered or consulted either as a stakeholders or as shareholders.

The PPP are maintaining the sugar industry simply to employ the sugar workers who are now migrating away from the sugar estates; the government’s own housing policy in an effort to change the demographics of the country has removed workers from the sugar belt. To now ask us taxpayers to subsidise an industry which is in fatal decline on nostalgic grounds, simply because it once was the main industry in the country, is illogical; there are very viable alternatives to sugar which have not been explored in any significant way, which can still be implemented and offer meaningful employment to the few sugar workers now working in the industry. GuySuCo needs to establish a vibrant and committed other crops/aquaculture division to resolve some of the issues facing the industry through diversification.

The genesis of this problem is that without understanding the consequences GuySuCo has embarked on a process of levelling the cambered beds which I believe is the main reason why there are β€œno canes in the fields.” The 2013-17 plan seeks to continue and even accelerate that process, which is doing the same wrong thing over and over again, hoping for a different result.  I am contending that until they are assured that they have the manpower, the expertise and the conditions to mechanise the industry properly, that all conversion cease immediately. Rather than being the mainstay of their β€œplan” it should be halted and hand labour be used to cut as much of the cane as it can today, and use machines wherever possible to supplement harvesting until we get it right. What canes cannot be reaped by the combined efforts mechanical and hand labour which the industry has at present, should be brought out of cultivation (there has been some talk of flood fallowing) and some form of diversification introduced. We are planting at a rate which completely overlooks the fact that we cannot reap it if there is proper yield! A stupidity in itself.

Editor, the conversions of the cambered bed layout are contributing to the declining yields, since they entail pushing all the top soil into the inter-bed drains, thereby exposing the toxic subsoil on the top of the beds. Even if they do convert all the lands to mechanical harvesting, since the country sits in an extremely high rainfall zone, mechanical harvesting and loading will be expensive, onerous, unreliable, uncoordinated and dirty (a lot of mud). Combines which are supposed to reap 100 tonnes an hour only reap a maximum of 150-200 tonnes at best a day here! We therefore cannot continue down this disastrous path of converting even more lands without evaluating the results obtained so far and undoing the damage already done, if possible.

In 2012, according to the Bureau of Statistics, gold was at No 1 earning US$716,939,000 in foreign earnings; rice was at No 2 earning US$196,226,000; at No 3 bauxite earned US$150,781,000; and sugar was No 4 earning US$132,147,000 (source: Bureau of Statistics). The wages paid to the bauxite workers are a fraction of what GuySuCo pays to its workers, but bauxite is bringing in more foreign earnings a year β€’ US$151M when GuySuCo is only bringing in US$132M a year. In 2012 gold earned us more than half of the country’s GDP β€’ 51.4 %. It’s where all of the cane-cutters are now working; the only reason why an alleged 16,000 people remain on the coastal plain in the cane fields is because they are afraid of malaria. The GGMC tells us that there are 8,000 dredges working in the interior today and if we allocate (a low) 7 persons per dredge this means that the gold industry is now by far our largest employer with around 56,000 people.

We have been unable to mechanise the sugar industry owing to our unfavourable climatic and soil conditions, even though we knew since the 1980s that we had to mechanise or perish, since the labour costs of production were rising alarmingly and we were in competition with countries which had almost completely mechanised their field practices and who therefore had a much lower cost of production.

The sugar industry’s current wage bill is $19B for its alleged 16,000 workers in 2012. The current price for sugar is US17.77 cents a pound or G$35.54 a pound, ie, G$71,080 per tonne. The labour cost to produce 218,000 tonnes (2012 production) was $19B, ie, $87,155 per tonne, so we are losing $16,705 on every tonne we produce in labour costs alone. This means that we have to sit down as a nation and discuss if these figures make sense, and whether the sugar industry can exist without remaining a national liability forever. Diversification is necessary, and a phasing out of this expensive labour intensive industry for one which is less labour intensive and with better economic returns must be found. We can’t keep asking taxpayers who are earning between $400,000-$700,000 a year to subsidise an industry which is paying out $19B to a workforce of 16,000, resulting in an average annual income of $1,188,500; it’s unfair and should be examined more closely by the opposition.  But there are alternatives which can keep the sugar workers employed in a far less strenuous occupation; we just lack the will, the knowledge or the energy to pursue them. And most incredibly in the period 2008-12 against all norms of economics and business we made the biggest loss in the industry; in 2011 we lost $13.802B when we made the biggest production of 236,505 tonnes!

As for the economics of mechanization, quite apart from the very expensive cost and inherently damaging consequences of conversion of the land, we have to determine if it is even remotely feasible or not.  Currently the industry has only a ridiculously low total of 10 mechanical harvesters and the yield of cane after converting the lands for mechanical harvesting is very poor, since in the process they have exposed the acid and toxic sub soils and are leaving a soft area where the old drains used to be in which the harvesters keep sinking and have to be pulled out. A mechanical harvester costs US$375,000, ie, $75M.

Having already converted most of the cambered beds in the industry with disastrous results to our yield of cane, this new plan seeks to rush into more conversions without the money or the equipment to do either, ie, to convert from the cambered bed layout to the layout necessary for mechanical harvesting, and to actually harvest it mechanically. Even if we mechanise the roughly 50% of the sugar industry currently converted estate by estate and reap the rest by hand we would need to pay attention to the following: we will be reaping an average of around 4,287,500 tons of cane per year by 2017 (350,000 tonnes sugar x12.25 TCTS). It is impossible and unrealistic to project an improvement from less than 200,000 tons in 2013, to 350,000 tonnes by 2017.  This is more than 75 per cent improvement in 4 years, so here again the GuySuCo 2013-17 turnaround plan was obsolete before the ink was dry on it.

But if by some miracle we do manage to grow 4,287,500 tonnes of cane per year by 2017, if we can reap half of this by hand we still have to reap the other half of 2,143,750 tons by machine. In order to reap 2.1 million tons of cane per year with a cropping period of 36 weeks we would have to reap 9161 tonnes a day by machine and there would have to be totally dry conditions throughout the entire cropping period, since experience at Skeldon has demonstrated that even three quarters of an inch of rainfall in one day could interrupt mechanical harvesting by as much as three days. But if we are lucky and no rain falls we would need 47 harvesters @ $75M each β€’ a total of 3.5 billion dollars. Where are the operators, the operational coordination personnel, the 94 dumper trailers (two per harvester) to take the cane from the harvesters to the punts, and where is the complete chain of mechanical necessities including administrative and technical skills to do this operation coming from?

We are decades away from an efficient and economical method of mechanical harvesting, so again I have to ask the question where are the money, the administration, the skills and the equipment coming from? Certainly not from a bunch of people totally unprepared to cope with all of these technicalities who are sitting in head office, most of them not ever having seen a canefield, who are blundering along whilst the industry perishes, because they will never be capable of grasping the fact that they are dealing with one of the most, if not the most hostile situations to the mechanical harvesting of cane on the planet, ie, low-lying, poorly-drained, heavy clays and high rainfall.

And now that we have a mechanically friendly field layout in over 50% of our cultivation, have we, for example, begun mechanically applying fertilizer, doing inter-row tillage and stubble shaving of the ratoons to enhance our yields? The answer is no! Have we even considered that our current planting regime may not be conducive to mechanical harvesting since the rows of cane are being planted too close together to allow the tracks of the mechanical harvesters to β€˜walk’ in between the rows comfortably to harvest the canes? No we have not! We have to prepare and plan from now to plant our fields to be harvester friendly, and to introduce mechanical operations to offset some of the damage done by the conversion and the shortage of labour. One is forced to ask who is in charge of this madness?

The policy of the corporation for the past 30 years has been to replant after the 4th ratoon, ie, a replant programme of 20% per annum. The plan tells us that we have never achieved this, but it says that in the next 4 years we will achieve it but we are not told how.

In any event according to this same plan the industry has been achieving around 16-17% per annum replant instead of the policy 20%. They are asking us to believe that the 3-4% of the entire industry’s cultivation which is older than 4th ratoons is accounting for the precipitous decline in production of nearly 40 per cent.

The corporation tells us that they are conducting training programmes, but they complain in the same plan that the managerial and supervisory staff are poorly trained.

They are leasing land at Uitvlugt to farmers but at numerous estates they are seeing a falling off in cane farming.

There is quite a bit more, Editor, but the conclusion is clear, the industry will not recover, not with this board, this chairman or these managers, and I don’t care who they bring, it will continue to fail.

 

Yours faithfully,

Tony Vieira

Mitwah

Finance Minister fails to account for

$8,000 million in five years

December 8, 2013 | By | Filed Under News 

The budgetary allocations for Revision of Wages and Salaries for public servants is now being regarded as a slush fund given that over the past five years there is more than $8B unaccounted for.

Finance Minister Ashni Singh

Finance Minister Ashni Singh

Alliance For Change (AFC) Leader, Khemraj Ramjattan, has said that it is most troubled by the Ministry of Finance’s explanations.
According to Ramjattan the amount budgeted for Revised Wages and Salaries for 2013 represents an almost 15 per cent increase for public servants and not the five per cent that is being touted by Government.
According to Ramjattan, β€œThis is deception being perpetrated by the Ministry and is wholly wrong this does not accord with the norms of the budgetary process at all.”
He said that according to the party’s calculations at this stage it is proving that for the past several years there has been a huge difference between what was allocated for revised wages and salaries and what was actually paid out.”
β€œA substantial amount is definitely not accounted for,” said Ramjattan.
He said that in 2012, the amount paid out was in excess of some $2.2B and for 2011 that amount is $2.7B.
According to Ramjattan, this year the House approved a sum of $4.4B.
He said that with only a five per cent increase being given, when computed against the total Wages and Salaries this would only amount to half of this $4.4B.
According to Ramjattan, β€œThe question must be asked: Where did the other half go? Where is this sum of money? I hope that it was not used as a slush fund to execute on projects which were not supported by the National Assembly.
β€œThat would be criminal as per section 85 of the Fiscal Management and Accountability Act of 2003.”
Ramjattan was quick to point out that β€œthis amount of money is wholly controlled by the Ministry of Finance.”
He was speaking to the amount being voted each year for the revision of Wages and Salaries.
Ramjattan said that to top things off is the fact that the Ministry is not one that credits itself with a high level of neither reputation nor esteem these past years.
Ramjattan said that the AFC will certainly be asking questions in Parliament β€œnow that our confidence has waned so terribly as a result of this development…We are now appreciating why the President does not want to assent that amendment to the Fiscal Management and Accountability Act namely section 85 which expands β€œofficial” to mean the Minister.”
Under this amendment the Opposition is looking to expand the category of government officials that can be held accountable for the misuse of public funds.
β€œHe (Minister of Finance, Dr Ashni Singh) is the one who ought to be made culpable for any delinquencies on this score, rather than the other officials there.

FM

Three teenage girls arrested after leaving Corentyne orphanage

December 8, 2013 | By | Filed Under News 

 

…allegations of ill-treatment surface

Allegations of maltreatment of children at a popular Corentyne Orphanage are surfacing at a time when three teenage girls of the home are being held in the lock-ups at the Albion Police Station. The girls, 12, 14 and 15-years- old (names given) were arrested on November 20, 2013 for β€œwandering” away from the home, placed before the courts and sentenced to be institutionalized at the New Opportunity Corps (NOC) in Essequibo where they are expected to be deployed shortly. Magistrate Ravindra Singh made the ruling earlier last week at the court.

The girls at the Albion Police Station yesterday.

The girls at the Albion Police Station yesterday.

This has caused outrage from residents and concerned citizens in the Albion area, including one police officer, who spoke with this newspaper. According to reports, the girls are originally from Skeldon and have been at the home for over four years now. Two of them are sisters. They have no parents who are alive nor do they have any close relatives. A resident of Albion slammed the administration of the orphanage. The administrators, the person claims, ill-treats the children on a regular basis and that this may have been the reason for the three girls leaving the home. β€œThe lady does sell out all them children thing. Like she ain’t really fit to run that home anymore, because she get old and she put responsibility on her daughter-in-law,” claimed the resident. β€œThere was a time when she grandson and son used to live with all the big girlsβ€”as soon as they become mature, they lived with these children them! Let them go and investigate!” the person stated. β€œThree girls were going to commit suicide and they had to call the policeβ€”and these children break down! But they don’t talkβ€”and the ill treatment!” A police officer, who spoke to this newspaper, claimed, β€œShe sells out the stuff too. A set of things coming in for her for Christmas and she selling them outβ€”What you think she does when she goes to Canada and America? Her daughter-in-law and son going overseas with orphanage children money!” The 12- year- old is a student of the Corentyne Comprehensive High School, while the 14- year- old attends Port Mourant Secondary. The 15- year- old does not attend school. Kaieteur News spoke to the teacher of the 12- year-old yesterday who is very concerned at the girls’ incarceration at the Albion Police Station. The teacher, like many other concerned persons, is also concerned that the girls are being posted to the NOC, and is angry at the Magistrate not having Social Services becoming involved first in the matter. The teacher is also concerned and wanted to know what the police considered wandering, since she claimed that the girls were just outside the gates of the home on November 20. β€œI spoke to the [12- year- old] girl personally and the girl said sometimes she go to school without lunch and the teachers would have to buy lunch for her. We never knew the extent of her sadness. When she was absent, the teachers were trying to get in contact with the home but they were given the royal runaround, that there were two such homes in the county.” The teacher wants the relevant authorities to launch an investigation into the operations at the home. β€œIf someone can [only] go there and do an investigation or call upon the older and younger boys in that place, persons will know about the atrocities that go on in that place.” But when contacted, Head of the home, (name given) denied all of the accusations. β€œThey [the three girls] ran away twice. They said nothing but that they wanted to leave!” she said. β€œIt’s the second time they ran away, and I don’t want to keep them anymore…they want to sport at Skeldon…the Magistrate put them to go and learn something at girls school. We are too strict; we don’t allow them to walk on the road,” the Head said. As for the allegations of ill-treatment, she said, β€œWell if the children say they are being ill-treated, they should come and find out from the rest of the children.” Residents in the area are planning a protest in front of the home.

Mitwah

Corruption has left our country among the poorest

December 10, 2013 | By | Filed Under Letters 

 

DEAR EDITOR, The impending economic and political crisis in Guyana is not an accident; it was caused by an out of control and corrupt, political Stalinist oligarchy that controls the ruling party. Since November 2011, the failure of the minority PPP regime to accept that they continue to bleed politically, has led to a series of desperate acts of political bullyism, spiteful actions and the reckless squandering of taxpayers’ money, that have exacerbated the financial hardship of the masses. The Jagdeo/Ramotar cabal has and continues to close deals, using the resources of the people like if they are running a cake shop. Why is the PPP playing politics with the lives of hard working Guyanese? Why is the PPP offering these workers slave-like wages as if they are plantation workers? We have concluded that the cabal is only concerned with their own well-being. Each day brings another damaging corrupt scandal from controversial back-room deals that will never stand the scrutiny of any proper procurement process.  If one is to observe all the PPP-led deals they have common traits – no competition, a family member or a friend of the party gets the deal, and a one-man operation sits somewhere in the background as the underwriters or financial engineers of the deal and they all are quoted at multiples of the real market value for a similarly structured deal.  In common language – it is wholesale theft from the people. While the ordinary citizens continue to be crushed under the heavy burden of huge increases in the cost of living, deteriorating real value of their wages and a 16% VAT; the kingpins in the cabal and their baron friends and relatives continue to make more and more money off the backs of those whom the regime has abandoned. How did we get here in 2013?  Why did we allow Guyana to descend to this level after Desmond Hoyte and Carl Greenidge started the process of economic recovery in 1989 and Dr. Cheddi Jagan and Dr Asgar Ally so ably pursued after 1992? The answer is Guyana has a very corrupt, greedy and selfish regime that will not stop until its members and their friends covet all of the country’s resources. We want all Guyanese to know that corruption and racial politics have made Guyana the second poorest country in the Caribbean after Haiti. This is why Guyanese are migrating en masse to all the Caribbean islands in search of work that this regime is unable to provide. Dr. Asquith Rose and Harish Singh

Mitwah

The results of the 2013 Corruption Perception Index ranks   Guyana as 136 out of 177 countries surveyed with a score of 27 points out of   100.  This is down from last year's ranking of 133 out of 176 countries,   and 28 points.  The AFC is neither surprised, nor confused by these   results, since they are consistent with the everyday experiences and   observances of most Guyanese.

Mitwah

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From the Diaspora…PPP REPEATING THE MISTAKES OF THE PNC, COULD LOSE PRESIDENCY NEXT ELECTION

December 15, 2013 | By | Filed Under News 

  By Ralph Seeram During the reign of the PNC, it was fashionable to blame everyone but the party for the problems of the economy, for the shortage of foodstuff. If sugar and rice were scarce it was because shopkeepers were hoarding, not because the country was exporting every ounce of sugar and every grain of rice to scrape up foreign exchange dollars. If you complain or criticize you were deemed β€œan enemy of the state”. In time the Guyanese people wised up. No amount of propaganda could fool the people of what the true state of the economy was. The sad thing was the PNC government actually started to believe its own propaganda. Enter Dr. Roger Luncheon, a man who should just fade away before the very little creditability he has left, evaporates. The PPP government could not find a worse spokesperson, every time he opens his mouth he not only embarrasses the Government, but insults the intelligence of the Guyanese public.

BLAME THE MESSENGER It’s an old propaganda trick, blame the messenger not the message. So now according to Luncheon the media is responsible for the low ranking Guyana received for perception of corruption and transparency. It’s not because some in the government are corrupt; it’s not because of secretive contracts that enriched friends and families of the administration; it’s the media’s fault for exposing them. Roger Luncheon needs to step out of his office and ask the β€œman in the street” what he thinks of the government. While he is at it, take a few Government Ministers like Robert Persaud, Irfaan Ali and Dr. Ashni Singh. Go ask the public what it thinks of the Ministers and the PPP government in terms of corruption and transparency. Georgetown flooded. Who gets the blame? According to Agriculture Minister Ramsammy, it was a failure to forecast the rain, as if had the government known ahead of the pending heavy rain the clogged up drains and grass choked trenches and canals would have miraculously allowed the water to drain.

SQUARE PEGS IN ROUND HOLES During the PNC regime the government was the largest employer; the major industries were nationalized. Sugar and bauxite were government controlled as well as all the government agencies. The majority of the PNC supporters got jobs not because they were qualified for the position, but simply because they were β€œcomrades”. The PPP in this respect is no different. The most disgusting display of this is the appointment of Carol Sooba as Town Clerk for the city of Georgetown. No one can say or prove what this woman’s qualifications are. For sure we know she does not hold a degree. Reports said she showed evidence of three subjects, which means she failed the exam. Both Roger Luncheon and Local Government Minister Ganga Persaud evaded the question of this woman’s qualifications. What qualification did this woman use to get into a Law Programme?  To hear Roger Luncheon explain it, academic qualification is not the main criterion.  The view is that you must be a supporter of the PPP. The other criterion is that the PPP must be able to β€œjerk your strings” This appointment of the Georgetown Town Clerk is very sickening if not disgusting and a total insult to the intelligence of the Guyanese public. It sends a message to those aspiring for higher education, not to β€œwaste your time”, just be a card carrying supporter of the PPP and the job is yours. This penchant for the PPP to be in control of everything is going to lead to its demise, The Guyanese people gave the PPP a message at the 2011 election but some in the PPP did not notice. The PPP acts as if it still controls Parliament. Its inflexible attitude and non compromising position will sweep it out of power come next election. Any minority government knows that it has to compromise with its opposition. This is not the case with the PPP. On the Money Laundering Bill it could have compromised. If you look at the issues between the opposition and the government, they boil down to the PPP wanting control of everything, well the reality is it doesn’t work that way  in the real world of politics. While we are on the subject of perception, the PPP comes across as very vindictive to people who oppose or criticize it. I have friends who constantly tell me to be β€œcareful what you say about the PPP, they are vindictive, this is the perception of people living in Guyana, and it is widespread. You cannot mention the word corruption; we all know what happened to Ralph Ramkarran when he spoke about corruption within the party. The problem for the PPP is that the current crop of senior party members is more interested in the interest on their banks accounts than the interest of the working class. The working class party leaders have long been pushed aside by Bharrat Jagdeo and replaced by people who after leaving office would have no need for the PPP. Their bank accounts have already been secured like his.

FM

Mursi deal with Robert Persaud further exposed

December 17, 2013 | By | Filed Under News 

 

A company director openly campaigned for PPP – Granger

The scandalous events unfolding that involves the Minister of Environment and Natural Resources, Robert Persaud, and Mursi Brasil Ventures Inc, is a matter of concern for all Guyanese, and must be seen as a clear and present danger to our National Security and the preservation not only of the pristine environment of the New River Triangle, but more importantly, the territorial integrity of Guyana. This is according to A Partnership for National Unity (APNU), who yesterday in a public missive, said that the Granting of Permission for Geological and Geophysical Survey (PGGS) to Mursi Brasil Ventures Inc. might seem innocuous on the surface, but a deeper examination of the parties involved makes it even more sinister.

Standing next to the Brazilian Governor Jose de Anchieta Junior, on the PPP platform is Yucatan Reis.

Standing next to the Brazilian Governor Jose de Anchieta Junior, on the PPP platform is Yucatan Reis.

APNU said that it notes that one of the persons listed as a Director of the Company- Mursi Brasil, is Yucatan Reis. According to the party, β€œOne would recall that in the November 8, 2011 issue of the Kaieteur News, a photograph was printed showing the Brazilian Governor of the State of Roraima addressing a People’s Progressive Party (PPP) rally at Lethem- Upper Takatu- Upper Essequibo Region…In that Kaieteur News photograph standing next to the Brazilian Governor Jose de Anchieta Junior, on the PPP platform is Mr. Yucatan Reis.” APNU said, β€œThe question that now springs to mind is whether as an inducement for his support of the PPP campaign was handsomely rewarded with the granting of the PGGS.” The party further said, β€œThe question also arises as to the involvement (if any) of the Brazilian Governor of the State of Roraima in this nefarious scheme to sell off Guyana.” According to APNU, the PPP’s financial empire and the failure of the Ramotar administration to be open and transparent are now being exposed for all to see. APNU is the latest to come out in condemnation of the permission granted to Mursi Brasil Ventures Inc. Permission granted by Minister of Natural Resources and the Environment, Persaud, to Muri Brasil Ventures Inc, to survey more than two million hectares of land in Guyana for rare earth elements will pose a border and security threat. According to Financial Analyst, Christopher Ram, in latest writings points out that the Permission Area is located at the confluence of the Kuyuwini and Essequibo Rivers and is right on the border. β€œIndeed, Annex A to the permission states that Point C of the area is located approximately three hundred yards from the Brazil Guyana border”. Ram charges that had the Minister done the kind of background research which one associates with such major decisions, he would have recognised that the national policy was against any commercial activity in the area. According to Ram, β€œNational security and territorial integrity could be compromised over a huge swathe of Guyana.” He reminded that the Guyana Defence Force (GDF) voiced its opposition in an earlier attempt under the Cheddi Jagan Administration. He said, β€œIt is to ensure that we are not exposed to such threats – as Robert Persaud’s action now does – that the GDF is given a place on the Board of the Geology and Mines Commission.” He said that the β€œtragedy is that the law allows Persaud to bypass the GGMC and engage in the kind of recklessness starkly demonstrated by the Muri permission.” Regarding the threats to the security and border that Ram suggested; that could be incurred as a result of the deal inked by Minister Persaud. The financial analyst drew reference to the fact that it has drawn a not particularly friendly reaction from Suriname. In that country, its Deputy Speaker of Parliament is calling for her country to lodge a formal complaint with Guyana. According to Ram, β€œthat will certainly complicate issues even as the bigger question remains the border with Brazil.” He said that Guyanese will now wait to see if President Donald Ramotar will define himself and protect the integrity of the borders of this country. β€œDecisive action on this issue will give some credibility to his Presidency…If he fails to act now, nothing ever will.” Ram has suggested that, in face of the implications and improprieties, President Ramotar has only one option in this matter. According to Ram, the President must scrap the β€˜Permission to survey’ given to the company and relieve Robert Persaud of any ministerial duties. Ram suggested that Persaud’s Ministerial performance has been characterised by some grave lapses and his commitment to responsible governance and accountability is even poorer than Guyana’s.

Mitwah

Dem boys seh…De gold deh deep under Rob de Earth petticoat

December 19, 2013 | By | Filed Under Dem Boys Seh, Features / Columnists, News 

  Nuff things talking in de grapevine. Jagdeo and Rob de Earth creating a parallel government to Donald wan. When Donald plan something and think is he alone got de idea, Jagdeo and Rob de Earth does get all de information from this Israeli man who dem bring. He sit down quiet and listening to every, conversation that Donald and everybody else mek. That is how dem know that Donald gun kick some of dem. Dem boys ain’t calling name but de Israeli man and dem boys know. But that is nah all wha dem boys know. Dem know that Brazzy, de fat crook, ain’t give dem Berbice people from Number 76, light fuh many years. One man seh that de only time de people does see light is when is full moon. Brazzy and de Rat tek millions of US dollar and seh how dem gun spend it pun de Skeldon plant that would be capable of giving de whole Corentyne light. Dem boys ain’t know wha dem do wid de money but years now, de factory ain’t done and dem still ain’t got no light. Dem boys want dem show people when dem put de moneyβ€”if dem put it in dem pocket or under dem family petticoat. De deal wha Rob de Earth sign wid Muri Brasil deh under he petticoat. He got de nerve to tell this nation that he never give de people any prospecting licence. Is de same thing he seh; he never apply fuh radio licence but he got five. He alone got brains. Dem boys want fuh ask he if when dem people spend all dem millions to survey and dem find all wha deh in de area if dem gun come out and seh Rob de Earth, β€œPoint A got gold by de ton. Rob de Earth, Point B got diamond by de carats. Rob de Earth, Point C got rare earth. Tek Jagdeo, de fat crook, de shaat crook and you family and do wha you want. We gone.” De people stupid fuh come here and spend millions just fuh survey. And Guyanese must believe this, nah Rob de Earth? Talk half and watch Kwame digging deep under Rob de Earth petticoat fuh de gold.

Mitwah

 

asj  Moderator
 

The United States Government

can put away the Corrupt PPP/C for good.

Just as the United States put them into Power,

it is not hard to get the ungrateful Corrupted PPP/C out of Power.

 

See how these shameless thieves,

would behave

when their Visas are taken away. 

 

Remember Roger sang like a Canary,

 

xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

Can some one....anyone....

explain and tell us

why Jagdeo, Ramotar, Luncheon & Ramsammy think

it is ok to accept USAID money

under the cover of fighting AIDS in Guyana .....

and have the Minister of Health

 buying Spy Computers for Drug Lords to gather info

and be on-top of law enforcement in Guyana.

 

Maybe Ugee22, Pundit, De PNC Hydro Specialist,

De Rev, Godie Walla, Kwame

or any other one of those

 who support and practice Buggery

can tell us if it is true

Jagdeo, Ramotar, Luncheon and Ramsammy

used USAID money

to buy spy computers for Roger Khan operations.

 

Lets see if we can get a honest Answer

from any of the Crab Louse

before the Year 2013 comes to an end

         
 
FM
Last edited by Former Member

World Bank report....

On basis of per capita income…World Bank ranks Guyana second poorest in Caricom

DECEMBER 30, 2013 β€’ BY STABROEK EDITOR β€’

With a Gross National Income (GNI) of just US$3, 410 per capita, the World Bank in its 2014 World Development Report rated Guyana among the least wealthy in CARICOM. This figure is in stark contrast to that of Guyana’s fellow CARICOM country, The Bahamas, whose GNI is recorded as US$21,280 per capita, making it the wealthiest CARICOM country. According to the World Bank, Guyana is the second poorest country in Caricom but far ahead of Haiti, which has a GNI of US$760 per capita. β€œFor 2012, the economy expanded by 3.7% down from 4.5% in 2011 and 4.4% in 2010.” The Bank however noted the economy’s expansion in 2013 which it attributed to increased activity in rice and gold production, as well as improvement in the manufacturing sector. The Bahamas’s economic prosperity, on the other hand, is attributed mostly to its vast tourism sector which accounts for over 60% of the Bahamian Gross Domestic Product (GDP), and creates jobs for more than fifty percent of the country’s workforce. The island’s financial services sector is the second most vibrant and accounts for about 15% of its GDP. Guyana was also outperformed by Trinidad and Tobago which registered a GNI of US$14,400 per capita. In fact, the twin-island state has been doing so well that the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) in 2011 removed it from its list of developing countries. The country’s economy is driven by its petroleum industry, although its manufacturing and tourism sectors are also very important. St Kitts and Nevis also did well, registering a GNI of US$13,330 per capita. Tourism and manufacturing are the main drivers behind the twin-island federation’s development, after sugar cultivation, owing to growing production costs and falling world market prices, was reduced. The tourism sector has been doing particularly well, and the island has seen tourist arrivals expand from 379,473 in 2007 to 587,479 in 2009. It is also tourism which helped Antigua and Barbuda attain its US$12,640 GNI per capita. The country’s tourism sector accounts for more than half of the GDP, although the growing medical schools and its students make very large contributions to the economy. Guyana’s CARICOM and South American neighbour Suriname achieved a GNI of US$8,480 per capita although its economy fell on hard times during the 1990’s. The country’s ability to beat back economic hardships and register such a relatively high GNI is a result of government initiatives to diversify the economy, and decrease dependence on Dutch financial assistance. Bauxite mining couple with exploration and exploitation of oil contributes substantially to the country’s GDP, although agriculture and ecotourism are important components. Ranking closer to Guyana was Jamaica and Dominica with GNIs of US$5,140 and US$6,460 per capita respectively. About 50% of Jamaica’s economy is built on income generated by tourism-related services. At the same time, Jamaica’s economy is a fair mixture of state enterprises and private businesses, while agriculture, financial and insurance services, manufacturing and mining play integral roles in the country’s economy. Meanwhile, Dominica, whose economy historically depended largely upon gains from its banana and other agricultural endeavours, came back from the brink of a financial crisis in 2003 and 2004 to experience growth levels of 3.5 percent and 4.0 percent in 2005 and 2006 respectively. Growth in 2006 in particular, was said to be the fruit of macroeconomic reforms pursued by government, which saw new ground gained in construction, tourism, offshore services and some sectors of the country’s banana industry.

 

What the People say...

 

 

When the World Bank recently regurgitated growth information provided by the corrupt minority government, the PPP-minded bloggers praised the World Bank.

 

Well, I join them in praising the World Bank for always telling the truth. And I pray that our country will see better times.

 

You know, in the so-called worst days of the PNC, a pocketful of money bought a basketful of goods. But now in the so-called better days of the PPP, a basketful of money can't even buy a pocketful of goods.

 

In fact, the situation has become so shameful that the corrupt minority government has introduced the $5,000 bill to help erase the shame of our people walking around with tons of dollar bills that can only buy a few pounds of food.

 

 

Emile_Mervin

 

OMGorsh! The WB is lying! Jagdeo should cuss them out and show them how much money he and the cabal made on behalf of all poor Guyanese!

 

 

Pilot 230 / 380

 

So what ? That could be change in a few years . Just put the PPP back as de opposition . Sorry fuh them young sugar cane .

 

 

Amen-Ra

 

This is from the world bank, let's hear what the talking heads going to say be prepared for the rebuttal.

 

 

Democracy Enigma

 

Our Ex-President The Right Honorable Bharat Jagdeo served on the World Bank ,The International Monetary Fund and he will be the most advantageous person to clarify the American Position .
These things happen to all countries when OIl,Mineral resources and Democracy clash American Style .

 

 

H_ali

 

This has been the case for DONKEY years, but of recent Guyana's poor has gotten poorer while the rich has been sucking the blood of the poorest Guyanese.

 

ahimsa / H_ali

Damn lie! The middle class has grown by leaps and bounds under the PPP, they own their own home, many people have a car, a cell phone etc. Guyana is 4 times ahead of Haiti. In 1992, they were almost neck and neck.
Let progress continue!

 

H_ali /ahimsa

          you must be feeding from the gravy train. remove your beaks from the hole you have dug yourself into for a change. the only reason why many Guyanese are surviving is because of the goodwill of their FOREIGN relative. again remove your head from where the sun doesn't shine

 

Burch01

We do not need World bank to confirm what we feel everyday .....only the pradovillians ; the new special breed contract workers; the top imported managers --local expatriates (one ethnicity); those paid at US Dollars rate $15.000 US monthly (if you are a son of a 'big one) are flying high........the rest of us suck'' awara seed''

 

sukhram

Well is the American make Bahamas the richest in CARICOM if you people don't know the depend on America to keep their country like that and the Bahamas claim them self to be the 54 state of America.

 

 

Al Fernandes

The World Bank betta be careful before dem get a good cuss down ...

 

 

What GNI members want to know...

Maybe Ugee22, Pundit, De PNC Hydro Specialist,

De Rev, Godie Walla, Kwame

or any other one of those

 who support and practice Buggery

can tell us if the World Bank it Speaking the true.

 

and why.....Jagdeo, Ramotar, Luncheon and Ramsammy

used USAID money

to buy spy computers for Roger Khan operations.

 

Lets see if we can get a honest Answer

from any of the Crab Louse

before the Year 2013 comes to an end

 

FM

The PPP is about to complete yet another billion dollar raid on State resources.

November 24, 2013 | By | Filed Under Letters 

  Dear Editor, One may ask, what is a government elected to do?  Our primary understanding would be to govern in the national interest for the betterment of all the people; not in the interest of a few. So why is the PPP only fostering the business interest of a small group of people closely aligned to that party? This issue has been studied with much diligence over the years and the Kaieteur News expose captioned β€œThe Heist of Guyana – the Communication Scheme” is just another revelation of how the PPP  hierarchy is about to complete another billion dollar raid on the Treasury to enrich themselves, relatives and friends. They have done this many times before but this is going to be the largest raid ever on the people’s money. It is wrong and we must vehemently condemn it. The general thrust of owner Glen Lall and editor Adam Harris’ Kaietuer News article β€œThe Heist of Guyana” points us in the right direction – namely, the Jagdeo cabal with the full collaboration of the Ramotar bunch have made plans to retroactively transfer one of Guyana’s greatest and most valuable assetsβ€” the wireless telephony spectrumβ€”from the people of Guyana to themselves and friends for a pittance. This is worse than the most outrageous corrupt practice or any highway robberies. The greatest political act in the history of Guyana was when the PPP was relegated to a minority Government status.  The main causation of that political revolution was the PPP’s gross acts of massive corruption and mal-administration of the affairs of the State, including the whole scale plundering of the people’s resources. Yet, the PPP will not stop such depraved behavior; in fact, they have caught the disease called β€œkleptocrotitist” meaning the inability to prevent theft from the Treasury. This is a disease that is easily spread among the group and can only be cured by therapeutic help from well qualified and experienced Psychiatrists, most of whom can be found in the developed countries. The electro-magnetic spectrum is worth billions of dollars (the last estimate was G$24 billion) but yet we find that the PPP is determined to transfer these expensive spectrums for little or nothing to their friends and family through their back door corrupt practices which were perfected by the Jagdeoites. This spectrum supports businesses in the quad-play sector which constitutes cable businesses, businesses using the broadcast television frequency, radio frequency and the jewel in the crown β€” the wireless (cellular) telephone frequency. No government in its right mind, except for the PPP would give away such treasured state resources to their friends and relatives for nickels and dimes. As APNUβ€”MP Joseph Harmon rightfully said, β€œthem eyes pass we.” In 2011, the Jagdeo regime literally gave away the radio and television frequency for absolutely nothing to their friends and family creating the conditions for them to earn billions of dollars at the taxpayer’s expense.  In April 2013, Prime Minister Sam Hinds confirmed that the PPP will not collect fees from two companies in the cable business, both owned and controlled by persons close to former president Jagdeo. Again, more milk and honey for a pittance for the best friends of the PPP.  The fact remains, Jamaica was able to leverage some US$40 million for just one cable license. Score sheet so far -Guyana ZERO; Jamaica US$40 million. The PPP did not stop there. They wanted total domination of the airwaves in Guyana. While we acknowledged that the drafted telecommunication legislation meets the basic international standards, we are quite disturbed that the PPP cabal, like a thief in the night, inserted the licensing of three PPP aligned telecommunication companiesβ€”Quark Communication, E-Networks and Global Technologiesβ€”all owned by friends of the former president, again for a pittance. This goes to show how crooked this regime is as they continue to bleed the nation of all its vital resources. This is not what the people had expected when the PPP promised to level the playing field and bring order to the telecommunications industry. The risks that GT&T and Digicel took, and the investments they have made over the years are enormous and should be respected by the PPP cabal; and this should easily justify their place at the table. However, these three PPP fly by night operators have done very little in terms of investing in technology for the wireless communications network over the years and should not be given licenses for a pittance? What risk did they take?  What investment have they made for the direct benefit of the Guyanese people? Have they ever built any children hospital like Digicel or paid the billions of dollars in taxes like Digicel and GT&T did over the years? How dare these members of the β€œCommittee for the Re-election of Jagdeo” popularly referred to as the CREEPS, reap the rewards by not taking the appropriate risk and truly investing in the Guyanese people?  Why is the PPP giving away the state’s valuable airwaves frequencies to their rich friends? The only answer is the PPP has taken corruption to its highest level; therefore, we will be forwarding this letter to all the members of CARICOM and to all regional and international communication bodies. We demand that the PPP cabal rescind their preferential treatment to the three communication companies owned by their friends this telecommunication bill be sent to the select committee for further scrutiny. We also demand that the playing field should be leveled and regularized between GT&T and Digicel first, before any other players are invited to take part in the process. The market place can be opened to all other players by way of a spectrum auction in a regulated manner once it is regularized and they are prepared to pay the fair market value for the available band width.  If the friends of the former President need space on the spectrum, let them compete in a transparent manner like everyone else in the world; they should not be given preferential treatment by the PPP. We strongly opposed this corrupt PPP minority regime for giving their friends and relatives who are the owners of Quark Communication, E-Networks and Global Technologies and to have free access to the state most prized resources. We also called on all Guyanese to revolt against this corrupt regime for such unethical practice. We say thanks and Glen Lall and Adam Harris of Kaieteur and we salute them for exposing the racketeering and plundering of the state resources by the PPP. They have done their part diligently, so now is the time for the people of Guyana to follow suit. We can no longer stand idle and allow this crooked and immoral regime to commit such blatant crime against the state. We are calling on the majority opposition to use the powers granted to them by the Constitution to investigate this criminal act and surcharge the alleged perpetrators for their twisted ways and warped mentality. This is the time for the opposition to unite and vigorously defend the interest of the people. Furthermore, the majority Parliamentary opposition must take their responsibility more seriously and design laws in such a way to meet the objective of fostering competition while at the same time securing the best value for money for the people of Guyana. Once this cat is out the bag, there is no opportunity for any future government to roll back this conspiratorial PPP plan and thus if this is not done using best practices, the nation will have opportunity losses to the tune of billions of dollars that will never ever be recovered. Is that a price we as Guyanese are prepared to pay to please the economic oligarchic who controls the PPP? We say no and hope you do as well. Chandra Deollal, Esq. Mark Dacosta, Dr.Terrence Simon,  Joycelyn Wilson, Guyatree Balgobin Esq, Aubrey Reteymer, Noel Moses, Sasenarine Singh, Asha Balbachan, Derrick Arjune, Esq. Donna Mattho, Asquith Rose, Ricky Bisnauth, Harish S. Singh.

Mitwah
PPP embarks on "broad left" electoral strategy
  • Friday, 03 January 2014 19:03

PPP Headquarters- Freedom House
PPP Headquarters- Freedom House
 

The governing Peoples Progressive Party (PPP) has announced a new political strategy to attract more non-members in the hope of regaining its parliamentary majority at the next general and regional elections.

PPP General Secretary, Clement Rohee said the Marxist-Leninist oriented party has decided to establish a β€œbroad left, progressive, democratic front” involving a number of categories of stakeholders including politicians and organisations from across the social and political divide. The PPP hopes the broad left model will also attract working people, farmers, intellectuals, professionals, the business community, NGOs and all Guyanese to assist in establishing a National Democratic State.

β€œIt touches on almost every social strata of society who are desirous of playing a role in nation building so there may be people in this front who admire the idea… but they are not a member of the PPP, they are not a left-leaning person, they are just patriotic and nationalist,” Rohee told Demerara Waves Online News (www.demwaves.com) on Friday.

Pointing to the creation of the Reform component of the Peoples National Congress Reform and the formation of A Partnership for National Unity (APNU), Rohee said the β€œbroad left” approach is part of the PPP’s plan going into the next election.

β€œAll these are what you call electoral strategies that political parties would adopt…You have to look at politics in a very dynamic way. The political parties have to make the necessary adjustments in keeping with the new realities that are emerging in the country in order to ensure not only relevance but vibrancy and continuity,” said Rohee.

Political pundits outside the PPP say that party hopes to revive a 1970s model to confront the opposition which now controls the 65-member National Assembly by one seat. The PPP has conceded that it needs to work hard to regain its simple majority because of a younger voting population, short memories of the past under the PNC by older persons, complacency and apathy.

Rohee acknowledged that the broad left did not differ much from the Civic component of non-PPP members who wanted to make a contribution to national development.. we will be working to embrace and individuals who are prepared to commit themselves in this direction,

β€œIt’s not very different. The only difference is that it’s a front. It’s more organised, it’s not a loose thing of people who are part of a front and committed to a programme,” he said.

For the first time in Independent Guyana, the National Assembly is controlled by the Opposition.

Government has complained bitterly that its programmes and policies are being frustrated by the opposition – APNU and Alliance For Change (AFC) – using its one seat majority to vote down aspects of the National Budget and block the enactment of certain laws.

On the other hand, the opposition says its only aim is to ensure tougher laws, accountability and transparency rather that corruption, nepotism and other forms of maladministration.

 

http://caribnewsdesk.com/news/...t-electoral-strategy

FM
Originally Posted by Ramakant-P:

Why would you replace one corrupt party with another?.

 

The opposition failed to use their majority in parliament to produce good governance.

 

Indians will not vote for the PNC but would experiment with voting for the AFC under Khemraj Ramjattan.

 

The Corrupt PPP/C had twenty two years, to put their house in order,  they are in their 23rd years now..........yet Guyanese are the poorest amongs't our neighbouring countries in the Caribbean.....why should we, tolerate this non-sense when our country are exporters of so much commodities.

The younger generations after graduating and where thousands are leaving schools every year are looking for jobs......under the corrupt and thieving PPP/C there is none. The Poor People are looking for house lots in order to come out of renting dwellings........The Corrupt PPP/C find it best to give on a platter to their cronies hundreds of acres of land, instead of giving to the Poor and Opressed People of Guyana.

As I said it seems, we have a bunch of thieves calling themselves PPP/C, because when Jagan died, the PPP/C died with it, it is better to kick these bum out and give the governance to anyone.    

FM

World Bank ranks Guyana second poorest in Caricom

 

This figure is in stark contrast to that of Guyana’s fellow CARICOM country, The Bahamas, whose  GNI is recorded as US$21,280 per capita, making it the wealthiest CARICOM country.

According to the World Bank, Guyana is the second poorest country in Caricom but far ahead of Haiti, which has a GNI of US$760 per capita. β€œFor 2012, the economy expanded by 3.7% down from 4.5% in 2011 and 4.4% in 2010.” The Bank however noted the economy’s expansion in 2013 which it attributed to increased activity in rice and gold production, as well as improvement in the manufacturing sector.

The Bahamas’s economic prosperity, on the other hand, is attributed mostly to its vast tourism sector which accounts for over 60% of the Bahamian Gross Domestic Product (GDP), and creates jobs for more than fifty percent of the country’s workforce.

The island’s financial services sector is the second most vibrant and accounts for about 15% of its GDP.

Guyana was also outperformed by Trinidad and Tobago which registered a GNI of US$14,400 per capita. In fact, the twin-island state has been doing so well that the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) in 2011 removed it from its list of developing countries.

The country’s economy is driven by its petroleum industry, although its manufacturing and tourism sectors are also very important.

St Kitts and Nevis also did well, registering a GNI of US$13,330 per capita. Tourism and manufacturing are the main drivers behind the twin-island federation’s development, after sugar cultivation, owing to growing production costs and falling world market prices, was reduced. The tourism sector has been doing particularly well, and the island has seen tourist arrivals expand from 379,473 in 2007 to 587,479 in 2009.

It is also tourism which helped Antigua and Barbuda attain its US$12,640 GNI per capita. The country’s tourism sector accounts for more than half of the GDP, although the growing medical schools and its students make very large contributions to the economy.

Guyana’s CARICOM and South American neighbour Suriname achieved a GNI of US$8,480 per capita although its economy fell on hard times during the 1990’s. The country’s ability to beat back economic hardships and register such a relatively high GNI is a result of government initiatives to diversify the economy, and decrease dependence on Dutch financial assistance.

Bauxite mining couple with exploration and exploitation of oil contributes substantially to the country’s GDP, although agriculture and ecotourism are important components.

Ranking closer to Guyana was Jamaica and Dominica with GNIs of US$5,140 and US$6,460 per capita respectively. About 50% of Jamaica’s economy is built on income generated by tourism-related services. At the same time, Jamaica’s economy is a fair mixture of state enterprises and private businesses, while agriculture, financial and insurance services, manufacturing and mining play integral roles in the country’s economy.

Meanwhile, Dominica, whose economy historically depended largely upon gains from its banana and other agricultural endeavours, came back from the brink of a financial crisis in 2003 and 2004 to experience growth levels of 3.5 percent and 4.0 percent in 2005 and 2006 respectively.

Growth in 2006 in particular, was said to be the fruit of macroeconomic reforms pursued by government, which saw new ground gained in construction, tourism, offshore services and some sectors of the country’s banana industry.

FM
Last edited by Former Member

Massive corruption uncovered at CJIA

January 5, 2014 | By KNews | Filed Under News
 
Corruption is said to be a disease that eats away at the faith of citizens in its government and when it is reported and there is inaction it is even more despicable.


Officials are now talking about a racket at the Cheddi Jagan International Airport (CJIA). Despite numerous reports to superiors, the racket is not investigated and is, in fact, covered up.


The Guyana Revenue Authority (GRA) is responsible for the collection of all taxes payable to Government. It also runs an Internal Affairs and Intelligence and Risk Management department.
There is, further, a monitoring section which operates at wharves and airports.
According to reports, a very senior officer (name provided) in the monitoring section at the airport has been colluding with security officers and immigration officials to recycle airport tax stubs, as well as allow for drugs and other items to be placed on planes destined for foreign locations.


In the case of the recycled stubs, these are then resold to travelling passengers.
The publication was told that the official would stop the cameras from recording or delete footage altogether, in order to allow these dealings to go unrecorded.
This publication was informed that the cameras at the airport are very unreliable and would become non functional after a bout of heavy rains among other reasons.
Whenever questioned about missing footage the fact that the system is unreliable is used as the excuse.
The crooked GRA officer who facilitates this was also accused of doing the same when he was posted at a city wharf where containers are searched.
Corrupt businessmen would usually make a payment to ensure that their containers are not thoroughly searched and the GRA monitoring officer would record the opening of the container after which a series of technical ploys would be used to cover up the fact that the containers are not properly searched.
According to reports, despite the activities being reported, the officer was transferred to the Airport and was subsequently promoted.
This publication was told that the reason the activities are not thoroughly investigated and forwarded to the Commissioner General is the fact that the corrupt officer and the persons required to investigate, share a close relationship.

 

FM
Originally Posted by cain:

RE: OPPOSITION TO THE CORRUPT PPP/C IS NOW MUZZLED?

 

Not as long as we're still around, unless we all receive a banning and this ends up a PPP/C site where thieves meet.

Well look at it this way, the three brothers that were suspended is all Opponents of the Corrupt PPP/C why the defenders of the Corrupt PPP/C were not penalised? they were all in the penalty zone........I simply do not understand Amral actions.

FM
Originally Posted by asj:
Originally Posted by cain:

RE: OPPOSITION TO THE CORRUPT PPP/C IS NOW MUZZLED?

 

Not as long as we're still around, unless we all receive a banning and this ends up a PPP/C site where thieves meet.

Well look at it this way, the three brothers that were suspended is all Opponents of the Corrupt PPP/C why the defenders of the Corrupt PPP/C were not penalised? they were all in the penalty zone........I simply do not understand Amral actions.

Let us keep this in the proper perspective, these vulgar individuals were suspended because of vulgar language and unethical behavior, not their political views.   You should be the last to comment on this, as a moderator you should have stopped the situation before it reached a crisis point. Also you should set a good example by your own deeds, let us not forget your disparaging remarks about me. 

FM

as a moderator you should have stopped the situation before it reached a crisis point. Also you should set a good example by your own deeds, let us not forget your disparaging remarks about me. 

 

I questioned this moderator's partiality before. Sorry ASJ, you should not be taking sides as a moderator. It's like Rush Limbaugh moderating the presidential debates in the USA.

 

FM

QUOTE " You should be the last to comment on this, as a moderator you should have stopped the situation before it reached a crisis point. Also you should set a good example by your own deeds, let us not forget your disparaging remarks about me."UNQUOTE 

 

I thought that I made my point crystal clear to you already, but sometimes your brains seems to get its thinking power from that big bag you have hanging so it takes time to register.

Moderator or no moderator, if you throw stones at me then I will hurl it back at you, hoping that it hits your bigseed.

If you approach my post without your insults, and then you will get the same treatment, in my respond.

I do not have any apologies to make to anyone here.

FM
Originally Posted by skeldon_man:

as a moderator you should have stopped the situation before it reached a crisis point. Also you should set a good example by your own deeds, let us not forget your disparaging remarks about me. 

 

I questioned this moderator's partiality before. Sorry ASJ, you should not be taking sides as a moderator. It's like Rush Limbaugh moderating the presidential debates in the USA.

 


Skelly, you are ignorant of certain things here on Political, I suggest that if you have a complaint.....then take it to Amral, and please go give your advise to someone who really needs it.

FM
Originally Posted by asj:
Originally Posted by skeldon_man:

as a moderator you should have stopped the situation before it reached a crisis point. Also you should set a good example by your own deeds, let us not forget your disparaging remarks about me. 

 

I questioned this moderator's partiality before. Sorry ASJ, you should not be taking sides as a moderator. It's like Rush Limbaugh moderating the presidential debates in the USA.

 


Skelly, you are ignorant of certain things here on Political, I suggest that if you have a complaint.....then take it to Amral, and please go give your advise to someone who really needs it.

Sure will keep that in mind Mr. Moderator.

FM

No audited accounts from 52 NDCs in

last five years

January 14, 2014 | By | Filed Under News 
 

-none from six municipalities for more than decade and half

 

Despite receiving millions of dollars every year from Central Government, there have been no audited accounts from six municipalities for at least 15 years. The municipalities have also been collecting taxes from residents.

Former Auditor General, Anand Goolsarran

Former Auditor General, Anand Goolsarran

 

In total, 52 Neighbourhood Democratic Councils (NDCs), representing 80 per cent of total number, did not have audited accounts for the last five years. About 18 have also never produced audited accounts since they were established in 1994 – that is for 19 years. Writing in his weekly column in the Stabroek News, former Auditor General, Anand Goolsarran, was critical noting this is despite the fact that, as in the case of municipalities, NDCs are in receipt of significant amounts of money from the Treasury, not to mention rates and taxes being collected from local residents. β€œFor example, the 65 NDCs received a total of $195.5 million in 2012 from budgetary allocations approved by Parliament.  According to the Audit Office’s records, most of the entities had submitted financial statements for audit several years. However, some statements had to be returned for corrections while for others, the audits were either being planned or were being finalised.” The 2012 Auditor General’s report issued on September 30 last stated that of the 294 sets of financial statements in the possession of the Audit Office as at September 30, 2011, a total of 221 statements were audited by December 2011 but the related reports had not been issued. However, no audits were finalized in 2011 while for 2012, 48 audits were completed and the related reports issued. β€œSo the question is: what happened to the audit of 173 statements carried forward to 2012 that were completed and were

 

Local Government Minister, Ganga Persaud

Local Government Minister, Ganga Persaud

 

β€œbeing finalized? Why should there be this overwhelming and undue delay in completing the audits of NDCs when the financial statements comprise merely a statement of receipts and payments? A dedicated auditor with access to the cash book, vouchers and bank statements will take less than a day to complete the audit.” Goolsarran said that an analysis of the situation paints yet another sorrowful picture of the functioning of the Audit Office whose mission statement states, inter alia, that the Audit Office is committed to promoting good governance, including openness, transparency and improved public accountability, through the execution of high quality audits and the timely reporting of the results. β€œIt is time the Audit Office takes stock of itself and ensure that appropriate measures are in place to lift standards of efficiency and effectiveness consistent with its mission statement.” He called on the Ministry of Local Government to play a greater monitoring role in ensuring the timely and proper accountability of NDCs. β€œAfter all, there are two subject Ministers as well as two former Ministers acting as advisors to oversee the work of the Ministry. Parliamentarians must also demand proper accountability for funds previously given to the NDCs before new funds are allocated.” Regarding what can be done on a political level, the former Auditor General pointed out that the Minister of Finance has until March 31st to prepare and lay before the National Assembly the Estimates of Revenue and Expenditure for 2014. β€œGiven the present configuration of the National Assembly and in order to ensure the smooth passage of the estimates,

 

Auditor General, Deodat Sharma

Auditor General, Deodat Sharma

 

commonsense would dictate that there should be meaningful consultations with the combined Opposition during the preparation of the estimates. However, such consultations have so far not taken place, and from all appearances, we are heading for a third consecutive year of serious disagreements over allocations for government programmes and projects, and possible budget cuts.”

FM

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