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FM
Former Member
GT&T audit finds irregularities…PDFPrintE-mail
Written by Leroy Smith   
Friday, 29 June 2012 22:39
YOG MAHADEO RESIGNS
- Finance Officer, three others fired
- Mahadeo says he feels betrayed
- two former CEOs to now head company
AMID widespread speculation in the media and elsewhere, Mr. Yog Mahadeo yesterday confirmed that he has resigned as Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the Guyana
 Telephone and Telegraph Company (GT&T), following the acceptance 

Mr. Yog Mahadeo

by the company’s Board of his resignation which was tendered on Thursday evening.
While other sections of the media reported, yesterday, that the CEO had resigned, the Chronicle reported that the CEO was still on the job. Our report was on the basis that the Board of the phone company did not indicate that it accepted the CEO’s resignation.
However, Mahadeo confirmed his resignation at a hastily called press conference at the Pegasus Hotel yesterday afternoon. He said his decision is in keeping with his commitment when he assumed the position of CEO at the company, that should the company find itself in a compromising 

Joe Singh

position, he will be willing to step aside.
‘Yog’, as he is popularly known and called, said his decision has nothing to do with wrongdoings on his part. He explained to the media that it was communicated to him, by the Board, that the audit found several irregularities with the company’s internal controls. Asked if he was updated about what some of those slippages were in the internal controls at the company, Mahadeo said he was not made aware of those in detail and with specific cases, but will be seeking to have those available to him.
Mahadeo said he will be sticking around at the company to assist with ensuring a smooth transition process. He also stressed that his decision to stick around at the company will be to ensure that he becomes aware of the deepness of the “internal slippages” and hopes to learn from them. He said that at no time did the GT&T Board ask him to resign and he did it on his “own free will”.

Sonita Jagan

The former CEO of the phone company said that today he remains proud that he can walk with his head high with pride knowing that he has taken nothing from anyone and, as such, he cannot be seen as someone who was compromised. He said “leaders need to lead by example” and his resignation should be seen as one such case.
It is sad, Mahadeo said, that while he was doing all that he could at the top of the ladder, there were persons within the system who were not operating in the best interest of the company. He said he felt betrayed by those that have placed the company in the embarrassing situation that it now finds itself. He described the findings as hurtful to him and stressed that he felt betrayed when he was brought up-to-speed that things were not as “smooth and legit as they seemed”.
Asked how the slippages could have occurred and at the perceived proportion given claims by staff members including, one, that he micro-managed the operations of the company, Mahadeo said he is not aware that he was micro-managing the company. He also said his resignation should not be seen as him taking the blame for the persons who are culpable; rather it should be regarded as a decision that is in the best interest of the company and as a manager setting the example.
Asked if he was concerned that criminal charges may come his way later down the line in relation to the audit findings, the former CEO confidently responded in the negative. Over the last month the Guyana Telephone and Telegraph Company has been having some negative press, firstly with its Chief Financial Officer being fingered in the facilitating of a cheque from the company being made out in the name of a manager of another company, rather than it being written in the name of the company itself.
Following that revelation, the parent company of GT&T launched what was described as its annual audit of the local company by SARBOX. The GT&T Chief Financial Officer was asked to proceed on leave to facilitate the process. Three other officers who report to him were also asked to follow him and proceed on leave.
Yesterday, the GT&T Board announced, in a statement,  that those persons have been fired. Last week, the CEO explained that the audit is not necessarily restricted to the book-keepings of the company but all other aspects of the company’s operations. He said that is necessary if the company is to know where it falls short and which areas it need to improve on.
Meanwhile, the Board of Directors of GT&T yesterday also announced changes to its management. The Board named former CEO of the company, Major General (rtd.) Joseph Singh as the Chairman of the company and will operate as the company’s acting CEO.
Meanwhile, yet another former CEO, Sonita Jagan, will act as the company’s Chief Financial Officer, a position that Yog Mahadeo held for three years before becoming head of the company.
The release quoted a Board member Paul Bowersock as saying that, “with their extraordinary experience as former executives of GT&T, Joe Singh and Sonita Jagan will do an excellent job leading the company.  We are fortunate to have such great resources available to us.  Joe and Sonita will immediately assume their roles with the Company. Their first priority – and always the top priority for GT&T management – is to ensure the highest quality service for our customers and to look for ways to deliver even more value to them.”
He added that “GT&T periodically, and as needed, reviews internal controls and compliance with our internal code of ethics and conflict of interest rules.  Every employee is made aware of our strict business procedures, and we do not tolerate violations. In the course of a recent review, we found that the actions of some individuals have been inconsistent with our high ethical standards regarding internal business practices and conflicts of interest.  Accordingly, the Board has decided it is in the best interest of the company to make some changes in personnel. The Board has replaced our CFO, Royston Rachpaul, and three additional staff reporting to him.”
The Board member was further quoted in the release as saying that “because this failure to adhere to the highest standards of conduct took place on his watch, CEO Yog Mahadeo has determined it is in the best interest of the company for him to resign his position.  We respect Yog’s decision and appreciate the many achievements of the company under his leadership. Over the next couple of weeks, Yog has offered to help ensure that a smooth transition takes place.”
The release also added that no further personnel changes are planned at this time. Yog Mahadeo stated that the new team will chart its own course but he will still be around to offer his support and ensure that there is a smooth transition process. Mr. Mahadeo said he regarded the leadership of the company by two former chief executive officers as a good decision and pledge to work with both of them.
At yesterday’s press conference, Mahadeo also announced that the management of GT&T has indicated that it has no problem with him remaining on the Private Sector Commission on its behalf.


On Thursday, Mahadeo, whose resignation to GT&T was still pending, was elected as the Chairman of the Private Sector Commission.

Last Updated on Friday, 29 June 2012 22:43

 

 A commendable  and  honorable  decision  by  Mr. Mahadeo! Although it  appears  that  he  personally did  nothing  wrong,  as  the  CEO  in  charge,  he  took   the  high  road  and  tendered  his  resignation  without  being  pushed. Now  only  if  those  in  the  Public  Sector can  take  a  Que from from Mr.  Mahadeo ,  there  may  still be  hope for  Guyana! 


Take  note  Rohee,  Greene,  Brazzy, Kwame, Killaman....

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Originally Posted by Mara:

A commendable  and  honorable  decision  by  Mr. Mahadeo! Although it  appears  that  he  personally did  nothing  wrong,  as  the  CEO  in  charge,  he  took   the  high  road  and  tendered  his  resignation  without  being  pushed. Now  only  if  those  in  the  Public  Sector can  take  a  Que from from Mr.  Mahadeo ,  there  may  still be  hope for  Guyana!

 

 

Take  note  Rohee,  Greene,  Brazzy, Kwame, Killaman....

 

   

You cannot be THAT naive . . .

FM
Originally Posted by BGurd_See:

What is the prognosis from the AFC/PNC contingent? The PPP crime family thiefing again? 

That you and your PPP ilks be placed on suicide watch. heheheheheh

Mitwah
Originally Posted by redux:
Originally Posted by Mara:

A commendable  and  honorable  decision  by  Mr. Mahadeo! Although it  appears  that  he  personally did  nothing  wrong,  as  the  CEO  in  charge,  he  took   the  high  road  and  tendered  his  resignation  without  being  pushed. Now  only  if  those  in  the  Public  Sector can  take  a  Que from from Mr.  Mahadeo ,  there  may  still be  hope for  Guyana!

 

 

Take  note  Rohee,  Greene,  Brazzy, Kwame, Killaman....

 

   

You cannot be THAT naive . . .

So  what  is naive  about about  my  post? to  date nothing  has  surfaced  that  Mr.  Mahadeo  was  complicit in  any  wrong doing.  So  far there  is  not  the  slightest  hint malfeasance on  his  part.   The  parent company, ATN  and  the new  management of  GT&T must  have  confidence  in  Mr.  Mahadeo to allow  him  to  continue as Chair  of the  PSC on  its behalf. 

FM
Originally Posted by Mara:
Originally Posted by redux:
Originally Posted by Mara:

A commendable  and  honorable  decision  by  Mr. Mahadeo! Although it  appears  that  he  personally did  nothing  wrong,  as  the  CEO  in  charge,  he  took   the  high  road  and  tendered  his  resignation  without  being  pushed. Now  only  if  those  in  the  Public  Sector can  take  a  Que from from Mr.  Mahadeo ,  there  may  still be  hope for  Guyana!

 

 

Take  note  Rohee,  Greene,  Brazzy, Kwame, Killaman....

 

   

You cannot be THAT naive . . .

So  what  is naive  about about  my  post? to  date nothing  has  surfaced  that  Mr.  Mahadeo  was  complicit in  any  wrong doing.  So  far there  is  not  the  slightest  hint malfeasance on  his  part.   The  parent company, ATN  and  the new  management of  GT&T must  have  confidence  in  Mr.  Mahadeo to allow  him  to  continue as Chair  of the  PSC on  its behalf. 

You certainly practice double standards. Under Mahadeo's leadership there was irregularities and he resigned. Now does that translate to innocence? Meanwhile if a bridge in Kurupung break down, it is Raomoutar's and the PPP leadership fault. 

FM

what is roberson benn excuse for the stelling,maybe he should watch and learn,this is what personal do when certain things happen under their watch,the japanese kill themself but that is too much to hope for in the ppp crime family

FM
Originally Posted by BGurd_See:
Originally Posted by Mara:
Originally Posted by redux:
Originally Posted by Mara:

A commendable  and  honorable  decision  by  Mr. Mahadeo! Although it  appears  that  he  personally did  nothing  wrong,  as  the  CEO  in  charge,  he  took   the  high  road  and  tendered  his  resignation  without  being  pushed. Now  only  if  those  in  the  Public  Sector can  take  a  Que from from Mr.  Mahadeo ,  there  may  still be  hope for  Guyana!

 

 

Take  note  Rohee,  Greene,  Brazzy, Kwame, Killaman....

 

   

You cannot be THAT naive . . .

So  what  is naive  about about  my  post? to  date nothing  has  surfaced  that  Mr.  Mahadeo  was  complicit in  any  wrong doing.  So  far there  is  not  the  slightest  hint malfeasance on  his  part.   The  parent company, ATN  and  the new  management of  GT&T must  have  confidence  in  Mr.  Mahadeo to allow  him  to  continue as Chair  of the  PSC on  its behalf. 

You certainly practice double standards. Under Mahadeo's leadership there was irregularities and he resigned. Now does that translate to innocence? Meanwhile if a bridge in Kurupung break down, it is Raomoutar's and the PPP leadership fault. 

Double standard  only  for  those  lacking  ethical  values & moral  compass!

 

 As I  pointed  out earlier,   to  date  there  is not a scintilla of  evidence nor  the  slightest  insinuation from  any one  or  any  quarter that  Mr. Mahadeo was in  any  way  shape or  form connected or benefited from  this malfeasance. Yet as  CEO of  GT&T,  like  a good  captain  of  his  ship, he  immediately  resigned  because of the  action  of  those under  his  command.

 

 Now  compare  that  with:

1. Dolphin /  wild life scandal

2.  Wakenam  Stelling

3.  Powder milk  scandal..and  numerous  cases  of  highly  questionable  deals

 In  the  last  12  years  under  Jagdeo, name  me  one  head  of  department  or minister   that  had  to  resign  for  malfeasance  under  their command  or  during  their  watch. 

   

FM
Originally Posted by Mara:
Originally Posted by redux:
Originally Posted by Mara:

A commendable  and  honorable  decision  by  Mr. Mahadeo! Although it  appears  that  he  personally did  nothing  wrong,  as  the  CEO  in  charge,  he  took   the  high  road  and  tendered  his  resignation  without  being  pushed. Now  only  if  those  in  the  Public  Sector can  take  a  Que from from Mr.  Mahadeo ,  there  may  still be  hope for  Guyana!

 

 

Take  note  Rohee,  Greene,  Brazzy, Kwame, Killaman....

 

   

You cannot be THAT naive . . .

So  what  is naive  about about  my  post? to  date nothing  has  surfaced  that  Mr.  Mahadeo  was  complicit in  any  wrong doing.  So  far there  is  not  the  slightest  hint malfeasance on  his  part.   The  parent company, ATN  and  the new  management of  GT&T must  have  confidence  in  Mr.  Mahadeo to allow  him  to  continue as Chair  of the  PSC on  its behalf. 

You apparently live in a romantic world that is far removed from Guyana's reality.

 

ATN has to navigate carefully (and diplomatically) in a VERY complicated, politically charged business climate.

 

I could say more, but . . . time will tell

FM
Originally Posted by Mara:
Originally Posted by redux:
Originally Posted by Mara:

A commendable  and  honorable  decision  by  Mr. Mahadeo! Although it  appears  that  he  personally did  nothing  wrong,  as  the  CEO  in  charge,  he  took   the  high  road  and  tendered  his  resignation  without  being  pushed. Now  only  if  those  in  the  Public  Sector can  take  a  Que from from Mr.  Mahadeo ,  there  may  still be  hope for  Guyana!

 

 

Take  note  Rohee,  Greene,  Brazzy, Kwame, Killaman....

 

   

You cannot be THAT naive . . .

So  what  is naive  about about  my  post? to  date nothing  has  surfaced  that  Mr.  Mahadeo  was  complicit in  any  wrong doing.  So  far there  is  not  the  slightest  hint malfeasance on  his  part.   The  parent company, ATN  and  the new  management of  GT&T must  have  confidence  in  Mr.  Mahadeo to allow  him  to  continue as Chair  of the  PSC on  its behalf. 


The Guy admitted that he had deposited  payment cheque from the telephone company into his personal account

Pointblank
Originally Posted by Pointblank:
Originally Posted by Mara:
Originally Posted by redux:
Originally Posted by Mara:

A commendable  and  honorable  decision  by  Mr. Mahadeo! Although it  appears  that  he  personally did  nothing  wrong,  as  the  CEO  in  charge,  he  took   the  high  road  and  tendered  his  resignation  without  being  pushed. Now  only  if  those  in  the  Public  Sector can  take  a  Que from from Mr.  Mahadeo ,  there  may  still be  hope for  Guyana!

 

 

Take  note  Rohee,  Greene,  Brazzy, Kwame, Killaman....

 

   

You cannot be THAT naive . . .

So  what  is naive  about about  my  post? to  date nothing  has  surfaced  that  Mr.  Mahadeo  was  complicit in  any  wrong doing.  So  far there  is  not  the  slightest  hint malfeasance on  his  part.   The  parent company, ATN  and  the new  management of  GT&T must  have  confidence  in  Mr.  Mahadeo to allow  him  to  continue as Chair  of the  PSC on  its behalf. 


The Guy admitted that he had deposited  payment cheque from the telephone company into his personal account

 That  was  Martin  Goolsarran ,  so  you  are forgiven.  I  want someone  to point   out  to  me  what   Mr.  Yog  Mahadeo is  accused  of doing  or not  doing other  than taking high  ground  here  and  resigned  as  CEO  as  soon  at  it  was  established  that  underlings  under  his  command committed   a  malfeasance. That  is  the  honorable  thing  to  do and  it  should be  the  gold  standard   for  other  to  emulate. 

FM
Originally Posted by Pointblank:

I stand corrected. thank you Mara

 You  are  welcome,  but  I  am  still  waiting  for  Redux to  make  the  case  of naivety against  me

FM
Originally Posted by Mara:
Originally Posted by Pointblank:

I stand corrected. thank you Mara

 You  are  welcome,  but  I  am  still  waiting  for  Redux to  make  the  case  of naivety against  me

Bai, like I seh . . . give it lil time nuh.

 

Ah hearing tings; but freely admit that my interpretations could be wrong.

 

Guyana is a complicated place

FM
Originally Posted by redux:
Originally Posted by Mara:
Originally Posted by Pointblank:

I stand corrected. thank you Mara

 You  are  welcome,  but  I  am  still  waiting  for  Redux to  make  the  case  of naivety against  me

Bai, like I seh . . . give it lil time nuh.

 

Ah hearing tings; but freely admit that my interpretations could be wrong.

 

Guyana is a complicated place

 Tek  all  the  time  you  need,  but  at  the  end  of  the  day, I  still  believe that Mr.  Mahadeo's   action here would remain the  gold  standard for  CEOs,  head  of  departments and other leader  in  both the   Public &  Private  Sectors.


 No doubt  Guyana  is a complicated  place where  rumors, wild  accusations and  innuendos abounds  and  are  interspersed with facts  and  nuggets of  truth.  However, I do  believe  with  patience,  a bit  of  deductive  skills and  an  open  & unbiased  mind,  we  can  separate  facts  from  fiction with  the  results of   logical  conclusions based  on distilled  facts  and  truth.

FM
 

Double standard  only  for  those  lacking  ethical  values & moral  compass!

 

 As I  pointed  out earlier,   to  date  there  is not a scintilla of  evidence nor  the  slightest  insinuation from  any one  or  any  quarter that  Mr. Mahadeo was in  any  way  shape or  form connected or benefited from  this malfeasance. Yet as  CEO of  GT&T,  like  a good  captain  of  his  ship, he  immediately  resigned  because of the  action  of  those under  his  command.

 

 Now  compare  that  with:

1. Dolphin /  wild life scandal

2.  Wakenam  Stelling

3.  Powder milk  scandal..and  numerous  cases  of  highly  questionable  deals

 In  the  last  12  years  under  Jagdeo, name  me  one  head  of  department  or minister   that  had  to  resign  for  malfeasance  under  their command  or  during  their  watch. 

   

A good leader would have kept a tight rein on those under him. Obviously his leadership style was lacking in control as he nurtured corruption due to negligence on his part. He failed as a leader and now try to smell like a rose by claiming to do the honorable act of resigning. 

FM
Originally Posted by BGurd_See:
 

  

A good leader would have kept a tight rein on those under him. Obviously his leadership style was lacking in control as he nurtured corruption due to negligence on his part. He failed as a leader and now try to smell like a rose by claiming to do the honorable act of resigning. 

If a "good" leader don't have the confidence in his team and must keep a tight rein, then he is bad at selecting the right people for his team, then by definition, is a BAD leader.

FM
Originally Posted by baseman:
Originally Posted by BGurd_See:
 

  

A good leader would have kept a tight rein on those under him. Obviously his leadership style was lacking in control as he nurtured corruption due to negligence on his part. He failed as a leader and now try to smell like a rose by claiming to do the honorable act of resigning. 

If a "good" leader don't have the confidence in his team and must keep a tight rein, then he is bad at selecting the right people for his team, then by definition, is a BAD leader.

Not necessarily, most times a leader has limited control on who is on his team. It is up to the leader to manage the different personalities and get the job done regardless. Yog was obviously poor in this department as he kack up and scratch while the house burn down. 

FM
Originally Posted by BGurd_See:
Originally Posted by baseman:
Originally Posted by BGurd_See:
 

  

A good leader would have kept a tight rein on those under him. Obviously his leadership style was lacking in control as he nurtured corruption due to negligence on his part. He failed as a leader and now try to smell like a rose by claiming to do the honorable act of resigning. 

If a "good" leader don't have the confidence in his team and must keep a tight rein, then he is bad at selecting the right people for his team, then by definition, is a BAD leader.

Not necessarily, most times a leader has limited control on who is on his team. It is up to the leader to manage the different personalities and get the job done regardless. Yog was obviously poor in this department as he kack up and scratch while the house burn down. 

Ok, I take your point.  And surely, having a good team also does not mean the leader should "kack-up an scratch" while the house burns down.

FM

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