Sunday, July 31, 2011

PM Kamla, Suruj off to Guyana following CAL crash

PM Kamla Persad-Bissessar leaves Errol McLeod in charge as she prepares to leave for Guyana
Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar and Foreign Affairs and Communications Minister Dr Surujrattan Rambachan have gone to Guyana to get a first hand report on the crash of a Caribbean Airlines jet at the Cheddi Jagan International Airport Saturday morning.

Transport Minister Devant Maharaj, Local Government Minister Chandresh Sharma and Minister in the PM's office Rodger Samuel also accompanied the prime minister. Labour Minister Errol McLeod was appointed to act during the PM's absence.

In a statement on the matter she said she is "deeply saddened to have heard of the crash landing" of Flight BW 523. One passenger suffered serious injury.

The Prime Minister said, "It is my understanding that the passenger suffered a broken leg when the aircraft split into two upon touchdown at CHEDDIE JAGAN International airport.

"Quite naturally, this incident would have traumatized all passengers, crew and their families with whom I empathize in their moment of despair.

"Whilst investigations are continuing to determine the cause of the mishap, we are fortunate that the Crew was able to bring the 737-800 aircraft to a quick standstill without loss of life.

"This is indicative of the long standing safety track record of our national carrier and I am confident that Caribbean Airlines will continue to place greater emphasis on the safety and security of its passengers, crews and equipment."

In a related development, the Director General of Guyana's Civil Aviation Authority, Zulficar Mohamed, said on Saturday a preliminary report on the crash is expected within 24 hours.

The Caribbean Airlines aircraft was on a flight from from Port of Spain to Georgetown when it overshot the runway and broke in two.

Mohamed said he will submit a preliminary report to Guyana's Minister of Works and Transport by Sunday. The minister has responsibility for aviation.

"The preliminary report will be done. That will not give cause. It will just state basic facts as we know them now. Only on conclusion of the investigation that final report will determine the cause," he added.

American, Guyanese investigators to probe crash in Guyana

American investigators are expected to arrive in Guyana Monday to examine the black box data voice recorder of the Caribbean Airlines plane that crashed at Cheddi Jagan International Airport Saturday morning.

Reports say the jet, which was on a flight from Port of Spain, overshot the runway and broke in two once it was on the ground.

CAL Chairman George Nicholas told reporters in Trinidad the Guyana Civil Aviation Authority and the US National Transport Safety Board (NTSB) will lead the investigations.

Nicholas also said it's a miracle that the aircraft did not burst into flames. He added, "It's amazing to have an aircraft in that shape with a small number of injuries."

Authorities in Guyana have put up steel barricades around the aircraft to secure it for the investigators.

Airline officials say the pilot of the ill-fated airliner has been flying for 25 years., The plane that crashed was acquired in 2007 for US$38 million by the former BWIA.

A team of Caribbean experts will go to Guyana to assist with "post trauma" counseling for the 151 passengers and six crew members, the airline said.

Caribbean Airlines plane overshoots runway in Guyana, breaks in two; all safe

A Caribbean Airlines plane overshot the runway early Saturday morning in Guyana and broke in two. However all 154 passengers and crew survived the crash.

Media reports say Caribbean Airlines flight BW523 was attempting a landing in bad weather at the Cheddi Jagan International Airport in Guyana at about 1.30 in the morning and broke in two by the time it came to a halt.

Several people suffered minor injuries. The pilot suffered a broken leg, according to reports coming out of Guyana.

Reports say heavy rainfall created visibility problems that caused the pilot to touch down on the middle of the runway, and could not stop by the time he reached the end.

Government officials, including President Bharrat Jagdeo, Transport Minister Robeson Benn and Minister of Health Dr. Leslie Ramsammy rushed to the scene after the crash.

Civil aviation authorities, police and soldiers are investigating the incident.

Caribbean Airlines plans to hold a media briefing at Piarco International Airport Saturday morning.

However in an initial statement early Saturday morning it said it immediately activated its emergency response program on learning of the incident, adding that it has been in direct contact with the relevant authorities.

"The airline’s primary concern at this time is for those on board the aircraft and their families," it said. "Details of the incident will be released as soon as all information has been confirmed."

Pilot of ill-fated CAL flight has 18 years experience

The Trinidadian pilot who flew the ill-fated airliner that overshot a runway in Guyana and broke in two has been a pilot for about 18 years.

And according to reports in the local media in Trinidad Fareed Dean, 51, always made the safety of his passengers a priority.

One newspaper interviwed Dean's brother, Fayad, at the family's Chaguanas home.

The Express newspaper said Fayad told its reporter, "Our family is thankful that nobody died and there was only one serious injury. It's really sad and unfortunate what happened...and our prayers goes out to the all those who were affected."

Fayad told the paper that his brother was able to speak with his wife for a few minutes to assure her that he was OK. However he said there has been no further communication because of restrictions imposed as a full scale investigation takes place into the incident.

He added that his brother must be very traumatised because he is always very concerned about people's welfare, whether he knows them or not. "He is responsible for the lives of every passenger and crew persons and that was always his main priority when he is in the air," Fayad said.


There were 157 passengers and six crew members on board aircraft Boeing 737-800 that overshot the runway at the Cheddi Jagan International Airport in rainy weather and crashed through a chain-link fence, before breaking in two.

CAL's Chairman, Nicholas George told reporters Saturday it's a miracle that the plane did not burst into flames. he was also thankful that no one died.

Yearning for effectiveness - the Peter O'Connor column

We are a deprived country, apparently forbidden by some curse from ever achieving any semblance of effective governance. 

I use the term “effective governance” to describe the condition of simply getting done the basic tasks of day to day management of the services which a society requires. And indeed deserves!

But maybe we are not yet a “society”. Certainly we all know that, despite Patrick Manning’s lost in space vision of what constitutes a first world society, we are nowhere near that status. And we are not even heading in that direction.

“Effective” governance or management means simply, that when you turn on a tap in your home, water will flow, damaged roads will be fixed, things will be maintained and drains will be cleaned.

“Effectiveness” does not refer to the erection of vainglorious buildings while the people are without water and the state has not developed the capacity to collect and dispose of garbage.

What is wrong with us, that after almost fifty years of independence, and with the (albeit questionable) blessing of a petroleum-based economy, we simply cannot deliver unto ourselves the basic requirements of a civilized society? 

And we do not even try! 

We ignore the needs for water, drainage, proper roads and bridges, an efficient transport system, decent health care, maintenance of our public buildings and infrastructure. We are unable to deliver the most basic services in a simple and uncomplicated manner. 

Every visit to a government office is a stressful, time-consuming ordeal, whether one seeks a driving permit, a passport, VAT refunds, or any government service. 

An architect and engineer can design a building in one month, but it takes Town & Country Planning Division almost a year, at best, to approve the same plans. People provide services and goods to the state, and wait for years to have their approved invoices settled. Some go into liquidation while waiting payment for certified government accounts. I am one of those!

And yet we, the same people, when we open our own businesses, we know how to work, how to provide service and how to build what needs to be built. What change occurs between working for the government and working for ourselves, or some competitive business, where performance counts and is rewarded and failure is punished?

Political cynics will say, with some justification, that this chronic apathy is the legacy of the PNM, who, for instance, “allowed” thousands to live in government housing for decades without paying rent, who largely encouraged slothfulness among government employees. 

But we all stood back and watched, over fifty years, our country’s standards collapse with our collapsing infrastructure. We have shrugged our shoulders and accepted our decline, while little Barbados quietly became a First World State with a modern standard of living.

But obviously, and while we did nothing to improve, or even insist on improvement, we were yearning for it.

Jack Warner is not a universally popular person in T&T. Indeed, he has known periods of intense unpopularity. 

But although often surrounded by controversy, Jack built the CONCACAF football region into a world force, and led the development of Caribbean football to a standard undreamed in earlier years. He may not have always been popular in the football world, but he was powerful, and deservedly so. 

His work ethic was enormous, and his achievements legendary. Of this, much of the Caribbean is proud, and we can share this pride, even if we harbor doubts about the fact that Jack may have played those international “games” with the same capabilities as did the whole FIFA family.

So, Jack’s new role as the Minister of Works and Infrastructure (and formerly Transport) could have been seen as dogged by the albatross of FIFA and FIFA’s charges draped around his shoulders. 

But Jack Warner set about his tasks in the same way he approached every challenge: to overcome and succeed. At work at 4.00 am and earlier, with all his government staff already there, and happily so (I have seen this!), he leads from in front and is everywhere attending the peoples’ problems and concerns. And overcoming the challenges of apathy and slackness, and fixing things that have been broken for years.

And notwithstanding the FIFA albatross, and the calls by individuals and organizations for his dismissal Jack continues to be the only effective government minister of the past fifty years. And the masses of the people, who finally see that they are being served, are supporting him in spite of FIFA and the calls of the morally driven.

Finally seeing effective governance in just one ministry, the people do not care about FIFA and those intrigues. An interesting phenomenon indeed! What exactly does all say about us as a people, and our silent cry for effective governance?

Saturday, July 30, 2011

Moonilal has confidence in CAL

"Housing and Environment Minister Dr Roodal Moonilal told Trinidad and Tobago media on Saturday he has full confidence in Caribbean Airlines (CAL) despite Saturday's crash at Cheddi Jagan International Airport in Guyana Saturday morning.

Moonilal is on an official visit to Guyana along with Trade and Industry Minister, Stephen Cadiz. He said he and Cadiz will "proudly board a Caribbean Airlines flight at 10am" on Sunday to return home.

"We have all confidence in the Airline. We have not been affected physically. Incidentally, Minister Cadiz was on that exact flight the night before but we have not been in harm's way," Moonilal said.

"We have been in touch with several of the passengers and persons who were traumatised including the crew," he added.

Moonilal added that there is a procedure to follow in terms of the analysis and investigations and debriefing of crew members. 

Minister Cadiz visits injured passengers from CAL crash

Trinidad and Tobago's trade minister Stephen Cadiz, who is in Guyana leading a Trade delegation on invitation of the Guyanese government, on Saturday visited patients at the Georgetown Public Hospital who were injured in the Caribbean Airlines Crash early Saturday morning.

Businessmen Towfeek Ali and Ken Emrith, who are part of the Trade delegation, accompanied the Minister to the hospital.
Cadiz first spoke with Noel Elliott who was returning home to celebrate his 1st Wedding Anniversary. He suffered a broken leg and at the time of the Minister's visit was experiencing excruciating pain. Elliott was seated in 14F.
Nikita Allen a 20 year old US citizen from Brooklyn NY was also met by Minister Cadiz. She was seated in 19D and was returning home to celebrate Emancipation. Nikita's injuries were minor as she bruised her chin as the aircraft crashed.
The minister also met Juliet Shiwbodh of New Jersey, who was travelling with her grandchildren. The 69-year-old said her son was seated in the exit aisle and was able to open the emergency door and assisted persons in exiting the broken aircraft.

Story and photos courtesy UNITED VOICE 

Jet overshot runway during night landing

By Neil Marks

GEORGETOWN, July 30 (Reuters) - A packed Caribbean Airlines jet carrying 163 people crashed and broke in two on Saturday as it tried to land in Guyana at night, injuring several passengers but killing no one.

The Boeing 737-800 overshot the runway after arriving at Georgetown's Cheddi Jagan airport just past midnight from New York. It had stopped over in Trinidad.

Passengers screamed when the plane lost control and many fled through emergency exits when it finally came to a stop, a local newspaper reported.

"It was terror," a woman passenger whose husband opened the exit door told Kaieteur News. "I was praying to Jesus."

One passenger suffered a broken leg, an airline spokeswoman said, and others reported neck and back injuries.

"We are very, very thankful and grateful that there are no deaths," Guyana's President Bharrat Jagdeo said at the airport.

A photo published by local newspaper Stabroek News showed a Caribbean Airlines plane with the half its fuselage broken off and resting in thick undergrowth.

Flight BW-523 was carrying 157 passengers and six crew. The Trinidad and Tobago-based Caribbean Airlines said it did not know the cause of the accident.

Boeing's (BA.N) 737-800 model was introduced in 1996 and has previously suffered eight serious crashes causing a total of 525 deaths, according to the Flight Safety Foundation.

Inflation in T&T drops to lowest level in 42 years

The Central Statistical Office in Port of Spain said Friday headline inflation in Trinidad and Tobago dropped to 0.8 per cent in June from 3.9 per cent in the previous month.

It's the lowest inflation rate in decades. A release from the Central Bank said the last time inflation was so low was in 1969.

However the bank also said business activity is "lethargic" and the pace of economic recovery continues to be weak. 

It said "there is room for monetary policy to provide additional impetus to private sector economic activity." As a consequence, the Bank said it has decided to lower the “Repo” rate by 25 basis points to three per cent. That's the rate banks charge their best clients. It is used to set the overall cost of borrowing.

The bank said food inflation, which has been the major driver of the headline inflation rate, decelerated to 0.1 per cent (year-on-year) in June from 8.2 percent in May. It attributed it to a 12.1 per cent decline in vegetable prices.

For example, the price of tomatoes was down 40.3 per cent in June, pumpkin went down 10 per cent, cucumber cost 11.4 per cent less, the price of christophene dropped 42.7 per cent and pakchoi was down 10.5 per cent.

Slower price increases for fruits (18.8 percent in June compared with 19.7 percent in May), meat (10.5 percent compared with 12.0 percent) and fish (5.4 percent compared with 7.6 percent) also contributed to the lower food inflation rate.

Other foods went up. Bread and cereals, oils and fats, and sugar and confectionery products all increased in June.

The Bank noted that although favourable weather conditions and an increase in acreage under cultivation are contributing to higher domestic crop yields, there are signs that high international prices are starting to influence some local food prices. 

The increases in the global prices of some key staples such as grain and dairy products are now being reflected in higher local prices for bread, eggs and edible oils.

Friday, July 29, 2011

Man charged in La Horquetta triple murder

Police in Trinidad have charged an unemployed welder with the murder of Vonetta Haynes-Reyes and her sons, Malik and Makasi. The three were killed last week at their home in La Horquetta.

The accused will appear in court in Arima on Tuesday charged with the murder of woman and the two children.

Police arrested him in St Augustine earlier this week within hours of the funeral of Haynes-Reyes and her children.

Warner promises relief for Matelot residents


Jack Warner, Minister of Works and Infrastructure, second from right, walks along the wooden bridge which is used by residents to cross the Matelot River. Accompanying the Minister are from left, Terry Rondon, Councillor for Toco/Matelot, Hayden Phillip, Project Manager for PURE, and Ms Cheryl Blackman, Permanent Secretary. Photo courtesy Ministry of Works and Infrastructure
Works and Infrastructure Minister Jack Warner paid a surprise visit to Matelot on Friday to get first hand information on problems affecting the fishing community.

Several areas have been affected by heavy rains. And at the end of the tour the minister promised that work will begin Saturday to correct the problems identified. 

“I received numerous complaints from residents of Matelot since I became a Minister. This is the third time that I have attempted to visit here. The previous two occasions, I was hampered by bad weather," Warner told reporters who accompanied him on the tour.

“I received complaints that PTSC buses could not come into Matelot because of the terrible condition of the road. Residents of Matelot have been at the mercy of taxi-drivers. Some residents said to me that they have paid as high as $300 for a one-way trip to Sangre Grande,” he added.

Warner said previous governments did very little for the 
Matelot, making it a forgotten and neglected community. 

He pointed out that the roads are in a deplorable state, and said it would cost about $45 million to repair them. He also noted the many landslips that had been neglected by previous administrations. Warner said if these problems were addressed in the past, the cost of repairs would have been significantly less. 

Warner admitted that it would be difficult for PTSC buses to enter Matelot because of the state of the roads. He promised relief in the shortest possible time. He also promised to put up a Bailey Bridge over the Matelot River so vehicles would be able to cross.

At present, only pedestrians can cross the river on a narrow bridge.

CARIBBEAN FILMMAKERS SCHOLARSHIP FUND LAUNCHED


Frances-Anne Solomon addressing the Toronto media 
by Bevan Springer

Filmmakers across the Caribbean region can apply for scholarships to attend this September's CaribbeanTales Worldwide Distribution Toronto Film Showcase and Market Access Program in Toronto.

Announcing the CaribbeanTales Scholarship Fund at a Toronto press conference last week, Frances-Anne Solomon, CEO of CaribbeanTales Worldwide Distribition, said the new fund will allow filmmakers from the region and the Caribbean Diaspora to attend the festival.

But more importantly Solomon pointed out scholarship winners would have access to the highly effective Market Access incubator Program which teaches skills in the all-important packaging and marketing of films.


"The Fund supports the development of a vibrant world-class Caribbean film industry, by assisting filmmakers to create dynamic, distinctive and commercially viable films that will stand tall in the international marketplace," Solomon declared. She added early donor commitments to the fund had been "extremely encouraging" and validated the program.

The sixth annual film showcase, which is being held from September 7 to 17 and will run alongside the Toronto International Film Festival, engages families, youth, community groups, and the celluloid industry in a program which includes workshops, screenings, networking sessions, and other activities celebrating the burgeoning film and television sector in the Caribbean.

Solomon said she had received interest from filmmakers in Antigua, Barbados, Guadeloupe, Jamaica, Martinique and the United States; and thanked Camilio Antonio, Carl Thorpe, Charlotte Rose, Fil Fraser, Jean Sheen and Selwyn Rouse for making contributions to the fund.

This year's showcase, to be headquartered at the popular Harbourfront Centre, will feature the launch of some exciting films, docu-dramas, and CTWD's 2011-2012 catalog of films.

The Toronto showcase, among other goals, aims to raise the profile of Caribbean filmmakers and their products, support the growth of a vibrant world-class Caribbean film and television industry, and serve as a platform for promoting the Caribbean as a premier warm weather travel destination and location for film production.

CTWD, a member of the BIM Ventures family of entrepreneurs, has hosted two film festivals in Barbados, another in New York, produced training workshops for filmmakers, and now has scores of films in its catalog.

Interested parties may email caribbeantales@gmail.com or visit www.caribbeantales-events.com.

Guest feature: 63 and I'm Tired - By Robert A. Hall

This is from an American but the message might be relevant to many of us, not matter where we are:

I'm 63. Except for one semester in college when jobs were scarce and a six-month period when I was between jobs, but job-hunting every day, I've worked, hard, since I was 18. 

Despite some health challenges, I still put in 50-hour weeks, and haven't called in sick in seven or eight years. I make a good salary, but I didn't inherit my job or my income, and I worked to get where I am. Given the economy, there's no retirement in sight, and I'm tired. Very tired.

I'm tired of being told that I have to "spread the wealth" to people who don't have my work ethic. I'm tired of being told the government will take the money I earned, by force if necessary, and give it to people too lazy to earn it.

I'm tired of being told I must lower my living standard to fight global warming, which no one is allowed to debate.

I'm tired of being told that drug addicts have a disease, and I must help support and treat them, and pay for the damage they do. Did a giant germ rush out of a dark alley, grab them, and stuff white powder up their noses while they tried to fight it off?

I'm tired of hearing wealthy athletes, entertainers, and politicians of both parties talking about innocent mistakes, stupid mistakes, or youthful mistakes, when we all know they think their only mistake was getting caught. I'm tired of people with a sense of entitlement, rich or poor.

I'm real tired of people who don't take responsibility for their lives and actions. I'm tired of hearing them blame the government, or discrimination or big-whatever for their problems.

Yes, I'm damn tired. But I'm also glad to be 63. Because, mostly, I'm not going to have to see the world these people are making. I'm just really sorry for my grandchildren.

Robert A. Hall is a Marine Vietnam veteran who served five terms in the Massachusetts State Senate.

Here is his final note:
There is no way this will be widely publicized, unless each of us sends it on! This is your chance to make a difference. " I'm 63 and I'm tired." If you don't forward this you are part of the problem.

No probe of PM Kamla by Integrity Commission

The Integrity Commission is not going to investigate Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar based on a request from the Opposition People's National Movement (PNM).

The PNM had asked for the probe because the Prime Minister stayed at the private residence of her friends before and after her victory in the 2010 general election.

The PNM raised the matter after reports that the owners of the home where Persad-Bissessar stayed were being considered for a major government contract.

At Thursday's post cabinet media briefing Persad-Bissessar read the letter, which was dated July 25th, 2011.

The Prime Minister herself read the letter, dated July 25th, to members of the media attending the Post Cabinet Media Briefing.

“Dear Prime Minister, Re: complaint of alleged Integrity in Public Life Act. The Integrity Commission has directed me to inform you that a letter of complaint alleging a breach of the Integrity in Public Life Act Chapter 22:01 pertaining to your stay at the Gopaul's residence at Pasea, Tunapuna has been received.

"The Commission has considered the matter and rejected the complaint. Yours Faithfully, Martin Farrell, Registrar of the Integrity Commission."

Commenting on the decision the Prime Minister said, "I am happy to have received this letter from the Integrity Commission which deals with this subject that had been in the public domain for quite some time now."

PP government has no plans to cut fuel subsidy of $4B: Dookeran

The government of Trinidad and Tobago is spending $4 billion a year on subdiies for gasoline and diesel fuel but is not planning to cut the subsidy or increasing the price of fuel.

Finance Minister Winston Dookeran revealed the figure Thursday at the post cabinet media briefing.

He added, "What we are searching for on that issue is how to finance that deficit that has developed over the few years. Already the Ministry of Finance is advancing an additional sum of $400 million a month in order to try and deal with it."

He said the Government will seek to borrow money to pay the difference.

Dookeran said he has to balance demands for higher wages with others, including arrears on the fuel subsidy.

"I believe it was since 2004 thereabouts this matter began to develop and has reached a level of near $4 billion and now I, as Minister of Finance, am engaged in finding a permanent solution to that problem," Dookeran told reporters.

The previous Manning PNM administration had planned to expand the use of Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) to cut down on the cost of the fuel subsidy.

Carolyn Seepersad-Bachan told the media during her tenure as the Energy Minister in the People's Partnership government she introduced incentives for CNG.

"Let's get it right. If they had started this plan some time ago and pursued it with an aggressive manner, we would not be in the situation we are in today," she said.

Gibbs meets Moruga villagers but fails to end protest

Police Commissioner Dwayne Gibbs went to Moruga Thursday to try to quell the demonstrations over the police killing of three young people. However his efforts were in vain.

Gibbs met with family members of Abigail Johnson, Allana Duncan and Kerron Eccles at the St Mary's Government Primary School while police stood on guard outside. The commissioner explained the procedure for investigating a homicide but that didn't please the families.

The protest has been going on all week. And the people there say they won't end it unless the officers involved in the shooting are suspended and charged. They say Gibbs told relatives that the policemen would not be suspended.

The villagers dispute the police version of the story. Police reports say officers were responding to a crime report and shot the victims during a shootout; the villagers deny that and insist that there was no shootout. They accuse the police of an "assassination".

They have delayed the funerals for the victims and are demanding that the bodies be examined again as part of the homicide investigation.

Suspect arrested in triple murder

Police have arrested an unemployed welder in connection with last week's triple murder in east Trinidad.

Vonetta Haynes-Reyes and her sons Makasi and Malik were killed at their home in La Horquetta home. 
The 23-year-old man detained is a neighbour of the victims.

Police are confident that they have the right man. Reports say the suspect confessed to the crime.
Haynes-Reyes and her sons were buried earlier this week in Arima.

Kelvin gets his papers to head EMA

Former Couva South MP Kelvin Ramnath on Thursday received his instrument of appointment as the chairman of the board of the Environmental Management Authority (EMA). 

Minister of Housing and the Environment Dr Roodal Moonilal presented the document at the EMA’s office in Port of Spain. 

Ramnath replaces Professor Julian Kenny who resigned after six months on the job claiming had failed to effectively deal with quarrying.

Ramnath has pledged to ensure that the EMA acts fairly. “I want to ensure that the EMA is not seen as an obstruction but as promoting business development,” he told reporters. 

The former NAR energy minister also promised to make sure that the environment is protected.

Hotel owner sues state over unpaid bills from Manning administration

A Salibia man is suing the government for $298,000, which he claims is money the state owes him.

David Joseph claims that Defence Force personnel stayed at his hotel in 2007 during a retreat held in Salibia by former Prime Minister Patrick Manning for members of his cabinet.

Joseph is claimed that 10 soldiers stayed in his hotel for six days and ocupied the entire premises. He is also claiming that they damaged the guest rooms and removed a quantity of personal belongings.

In addition, he is claiming that the officers consumed a large quantity of alcoholic beverages, including a case of Johnny Walker Scotch whisky, valued at $3,600, and several cases of beer.
The claim included a letter from the Office of the Prime Minister, signed by the permanent secretary, admitting occupation of the premises but denying the allegations of theft or impropriety.

Canada congratulates new Caricom Secretary General

Canada’s Minister of State of Foreign Affairs (Americas and Consular Affairs), Diane Ablonczy, has congratulated new Caricom general secretary Irwin LaRocque on his appointment.

“I look forward to the opportunity to work with him in a spirit of partnership and cooperation. This is a significant step forward for Caricom as it moves toward greater regional integration,” she declared in a formal statement.

She added, “Mr LaRocque’s experience as assistant secretary-general for trade and economic integration at the Caricom secretariat, and his previous years in the service of Dominica’s Government, will no doubt serve him well in his new role.

“Canada continues to negotiate a mutually beneficial free trade agreement with the nations of Caricom, with which we enjoy a close and long-standing relationship based on extensive people-to-people ties, significant trade and investment, educational and scholarship links, and common values.

“More than 400,000 Canadians are of Caribbean origin.

“I would also like to take this opportunity to thank Lolita Applewhaite for her service as acting secretary-general of Caricom since Sir Edwin Carrington stepped down last December.

“Her leadership and guidance during the interim period have been invaluable.

“I welcome the shared and continuing commitment of Caricom members to helping build a more prosperous, secure and democratic western hemisphere.”

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Moruga erupts in rage over police killings

The village of Moruga in South Trinidad erupted in anger and rage Wednesday as people who live in the community staged a protest in front of the police station to draw attention to the police killing of three people.

The protests, which began on Monday, was sparked by last Friday's killing of three young people - Abigail Johnson, Allana Duncan and Kerron Eccles. They were in a car when police shot them.

Police said they responded to a report that a double murder suspect was seen in the car. And they claim that they killed the three during a shootout.

However, villagers are not accepting that explanation and have demanded a probe into what they call as triple assassination. They said there was no shootout as police claim.

Commissioner of Police Dwayne Gibbs sent Superintendent Irvin Hackshaw to tell the protesters he has appointed the head of the Homicide Bureau in Port of Spain, Donald Denoon, to investigate the killings.

But that didn't satisfy the demonstrators who demanded that the officers involved in the incident be suspended during the investigations.

They refused to go home and called on Gibbs and Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar to visit.
Three cabinet ministers - Jack Warner, Glen Ramadharsingh and Clifton De Coteau - had to abort a trip to the community because of the intensity of the protest.

Sandy gets report on Moruga killings; Verna supports community

National Security Minister Brigadier John Sandy said Wednesday he has received a preliminary report from Commissioner of Police Dwayne Gibbs on the killing of three people by police officers in Moruga.

Abigail Johnson, Allana Duncan and Kerron Eccles - all in their 20s - died by police bullets last Friday. 



Their deaths have sparked angry protests in the community. People who live there are demanding justice and they have rejected the police account of the events. They say their protests will not stop until they get justice.


Sandy appealed to citizens in the Moruga area "to allow the investigation to take its course," adding that he shares their grief.

Sandy's cabinet colleague, Minister of Gender, Youth and Child Development Verna St Rose Greaves, is more vocal about the Moruga incident.

She said on Wednesday she stands united with Moruga residents in their cries for justice.


"I want to extend my condolences, and I want to send positive and soothing energy to you and to your community as you go through this difficult period," she said.

"I looked at the television last night (Tuesday) and I saw some of the residents dance, and they danced in their pain and frustration. We stand in solidarity with you in your pursuit of justice," St Rose-Greaves said during an address at the graduation ceremony in Toco.

Kelvin to chair EMA

Former Couva South MP Kelvin Ramnath is the new chairman of the Environmental Management Authority (EMA).

He succeeds Prof Julien Kenny who resigned recently, stating that he was uncomfortable with the failure of the government to effectively deal with quarrying.

Ramnath is a founding member of the United National Congress (UNC). He did not contest the 2010 general election, instead standing down to allow former sugar union president Rudranath Indarsingh to represent Couva South.

He is a retired Petroleum engineer who worked for several years with the state energy company, Petrotrin.

He also served as Energy minister in the NAR government in 1986-87 before quitting and walking away from the NAR to work with Basdeo Panday to form the UNC.

Ramnath will receive his instruments of appointment Thursday from Housing and Environment Minister Dr Roodal Moonilal.

Suruj urges citizens to spare a thought for the poor and dispossessed

As the labour movement ramps up its plans for a national strike Foreign Affairs and Communication Minister Dr Surujrattan Rambachan is warning citizens to ensure that they don't put Trinidad & Tobago in the hands of multilateral organisations such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF). 

Rambachan was speaking at Emancipation Day celebrations at the Waterfront Esplanade in Port-of-Spain. 

The minister was responding to threats by the labour movement over the issue of a five per cent cap on public sector wage negotiations. 

He urged citizens to do everything they can to prevent the country from being enslaved by multi-lateral financial institutions or where "we become so selfish to our own ends that we deny citizens from being allowed to come out of poverty.” 

Rambachan urged citizens to think of the poor and the dispossessed in society. “Let us be willing to give up a little so that everyone in this country can enjoy prosperity,” he said.

He also called for people to hold on toi their traditions and values and not be seduced by imported mass culture. Rambachan said citizens should seek to rediscover their traditions for the benefit the entire nation.

Letter: Who are the unions representing?

The more I hear anything from the trade unions about all their demands and struggles and nonsense, the more I have to wonder who the heck are they representing?!

They are supposedly struggling for higher wages and promising to shut down Trinidad and Tobago if their demands are not met. 

And I read a public comment recently by someone who very clearly illustrated the manner in which the unions are actually working against the national interest.

The unions want a shut down so that taxi drivers, vendors, doubles sellers, food sellers, small businesses, vegetable farmers and so on would actually have to bear with a day of no income. 

Is this the struggle in which they are engaged? Is this how much they supposedly care about people? That they would engage in action that would impact the most vulnerable in our society?

And at the same time, not a trade union leader is brave enough to engage in a conversation on productivity and how much the country will get out of increased wages. 

The days of free increases just because are gone. If you want more money, prove how you are going to produce more and contribute more to the economy!

We as a nation have to end this nonsense about 1970s union gun-talk in the 21st century. 

The unions have to understand that their permissiveness with the past Government is what brought Trinidad and Tobago to where it is today and demanding ALL today and ALL tomorrow is not going to work. 

Take some today, some tomorrow and do like the rest of us and be content with it.

I also want to add my voice to the many people who are putting a clear warning out to the unions. 

You have not been forgiven for what you did to this country with the NP fuel crisis. And we will not tolerate any move from any of you to make our challenging lives any harder!

Jason Dhanraj

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

PM Kamla says there's no 5% wage ceiling, suggests talks start over

Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar on Tuesday held "intense discussions" with 19 labour leaders and later announced that there was never a five per cent wage cap, adding that the unions can go back to the bargaining tables with their respective employers.

"There is no 5% cap," she told reporters. "They go back to the bargaining table, start from fresh because they were of the view that the process of bargaining had been contaminated in some way by this 5% cap.

"Therefore, let us start, Tabula Rasa, clean slate. Start from zero. The table is clean and negotiate upwards. There is no 5% cap. I indicated that we were prepared to make that statement today," Persad-Bissessar said.

However she said the unions rejected that.

"They are not prepared to accept what I suggested which is, let us wipe the slate clean...and negotiate upwards as far as your employer, relevant employer, has the capability to pay," she said.

She explained that during the discussions she had to declare the Government's position on the wage negotiation process.

"And at that point, I felt as I said, that I was in a position that I will now be negotiating what should be dealt with by the various employers and the CPO and I could not accede to that request," she told the media.

She added, “If it were that I had removed this five per cent cap then they would go to the bargaining table, starting at five per cent and then I would have entered into negotiations with them. 

"That’s where we agreed to disagree and I suggested that we terminate the meeting because we were not going further,” Persad-Bissessar said.
 
Persad-Bissessar made it clear that if the unions still opt for a general strike she is confident that Government's contingency plans will work.

"I am not of the view, first of all, that there will be a general national strike with the whole country shutting down. I am not of that view. Secondly, those sectors that are involved, should they come to that, yes we have plans in place."

The meeting was called to discuss the list of demands that the unions provided to the PM earlier this month. They included:

  • The removal of 5% wage cap and settlement of all outstanding negotiations 
  • Disbanding or removal of the Inter-Ministerial Committee 
  • Placement of labour legislation high on Government's agenda 
  • Constitutional Reform and immediate implementation of the Labour Market Survey for TTUTA 
  • Commencement of a Land Use and Agriculture Policy 
  • Reinstatement of all displaced workers on account of the non-renewal of their contracts 
  • Restricting of the Project Implementation Unit 
  • Review of the National Youth Policy 
Persad-Bissessar said she went through the list of demands during the three-hour meeting.

With respect top the Inter-Ministerial Committee, Persad-Bissessar said the unions she gave an assurance that she will review the committee. She also said she told the labour leaders that labour legislation is high on her government's agenda.

She updated the union representatives on this noting that legislation to be tackled include the Minimum Wages Act, the Masters and Servants Ordinance, the Maternity Protection Act, Employee Compensation Bill, the Cooperative Societies Act, the Industrial Relations Act, Paternity Leave, Private Security legislation, Retrenchment and Severance Benefits Act, OSH Act, Cipriani College of Labour and Cooperative Studies Act.

She also said her government is committed to a Land Use and Agriculture Policy. She explained that the policy includes bringing more lands into productive agriculture to increase the food supply.

Persad-Bissessar refused to make a blanket commitment to reinstate displaced workers. "I was very clear, in principle, on the position we took as a policy position, which was to advertise these jobs when the contracts expired," she said.

She also gave a commitment that Constitutional Reform is on her agenda with plans for term limits, fixed election dates and the right of recall.

"I indicated to the extent that Cabinet had already before it, notes with research relating to these three items and before the end of this year, consultations will begin on this process," she said.

She added that Cabinet has already given the approval for a Constitutional Commission to be established.

Unions unhappy with talks, national strike still on the table

Trade union leaders are unhappy with the result of their meeting Tuesday with Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar and are still threatening a national strike.

The Prime Minister told the labour representatives that there is no five per cent wage cap and advised that all wage negotiations should be scrapped and resumed, starting from zero.

That has angered OWTU President General Ancel Roget, who told reporters starting from zero only opens the door for another 5 per cent offer and eliminates any progress made so far.

"The Prime Minister...is fully aware of the implications but it seems that miscalculation has got the better of her. We still leave it open to the Government to let good sense prevail," Roget said.

He said the national strike is still on and the collective bargaining process has all but collapsed. And he declared "WAR", starting immediately.

“We are entering a period of war, the exact amount of days we cannot say,” he later said to reporters. “It is like a Carnival season...except in this case you would not have any Ash Wednesday it would be for a prolonged period.”

Roget added, “There are a number of problems that we were putting up with for quite a while trying to make ends meet. But we are not so minded again given the fact that the Government is not cooperating.

"So instructions have been already been given to let us deal with all of those issues and if it has the effect of shutting down, we shut it down. If it carries the effect of protest action, we protest. But I will tell you the season will be long and hard...

“Workers are upset, workers are damn vex about what is happening. We still leave it up to the Government to take action in relation to the wage cap. We will take action without fear or favour,” he said. 

Union leaders also rejected an offer for further talks, saying they have no plans to meet again with the Prime Minister of any government official.

Letter: I have a question for labour leaders

Dear Labour Leaders,

You have now declared war on a government that is trying to make the country work. The question I want to ask you is what are you hoping to achieve in your "war" other than cripple the country?

I ask the question because you have said you will not speak with the Prime Minister or any other government official. So how exactly are you going to get any benefits for your membership?

Every worker has rights but every worker also has responsibilities. And as leaders you must demonstrate some responsibility.

Your bullying attitude cannot resolve problems. You behaved like bullies when Watson Duke realised that the five per cent and other fringe benefits were good for PSA members. You denounced him as a Judas because he could make sense out of the nonsense and you cannot.

Why didn't you shut down the country when Manning was squandering the billions and treating you with scorn?

People must accept responsibility for their actions. So I trust that each of you will be able to justify your reckless course of action when your cause irreparable damage to the economy and make it even more difficult for your members to get even the five per cent you are now tossing out.

Go ahead and shut down the country! Go ahead and reverse whatever economic gains T&T has been making after Manning and company also made our nation a failed state! And then ask yourself WHY?

Ask yourself WHY you took this course of action. When you see hungry children, homeless and jobless parents I hope you can explain your actions to them.

It sounds nice to declare war and call out a mob. But mobs don't solve problems and the Carnival of unrest you are inviting will come back to haunt you because by your own actions, you are depriving your membership of an opportunity to work and live.

When you ruin the fragile economy with your reckless mob behaviour, then, my dear labour leaders, the five per cent that you are now discarding so unceremoniously would look like a million dollars.

Jai Parasram | Toronto

Roles of Jack, Fuad different: PM Kamla

Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar told reporters on Monday that the two jobs held by former FIFA vice president Jack Warner and Health Minister Dr Fuad Khan were different.
Warner was allowed to keep his post as FIFA Vice President after he became a cabinet minister. However the Prime Minister asked Khan to stop his medical practice or give up his job as Minister of Health.

Khan chose to remain in cabinet. Persad-Bissessar said the real issue in Khan's case is that it would have created conflict if he were continuing to work as a doctor in the ministry for which he was making policy.

She said Warner was allowed to hold his positions as FIFA vice president and Minister of Works and Transport since the FIFA position was "not even something that was here locally, it was an international posting and totally unrelated to the Ministry of Works".

She explained that in Khan was the Minister of Health and at the same time "practising in an industry of which he is a regulator and policy maker, I mean that could never happen."

She explained that the Integrity in Public Life Act does not restrict a person from holding two jobs. What is clear, she said, is that there must not be any conflict of interest.

Persad-Bissessar added, "I think we will have to take it on a case by case basis rather than make a blanket statement, but I believe it is preferable that they do not hold dual positions, I think that is the better policy position."

She said Attorney General Anand Ramlogan has advised on her on a code of ethics for Parliamentarians.

"It doesn't have the force of law but in there is an explicit provision which says you should so organise your private business so as not to be doing both at the same time," she said.

From the archives: The 1990 Muslimeen coup

Twenty one years ago on Friday July 27, 1990, 114 members of the Jamaat al Muslimeen, led by Yasin Abu Bakr and Bilaal Abdullah attempted to stage a coup d'état against the government of Trinidad and Tobago.

They stormed the national Parliament while it was in session and took all legislators hostage, including Prime Minister Arthur N.R. Robinson and several members of his cabinet.

At the same time 42 insurgents stormed the state-owned Trinidad and Tobago Television (TTT), the only television station in the country. They also attacked and took control of Radio Trinidad, a privately-owned broadcasting company located next to TTT.

Bakr appeared on television at 6:00 pm - one hour before the scheduled evening TV newscast - and announced that his group had overthrown the Robinson government and that he was negotiating with the army.
The Trinidad and Tobago Defence Force and the Police responded by sealing off the area around the Parliament.

With security forces trying to wrest control from the plotters and rescue Robinson and other parliamentarians, general law enforcement suffered and widespread looting and arson took place in Port of Spain and other parts of the East-West Corridor.

Acting President Emmanuel Carter responded to the crisis by declaring a state of emergency and imposing martial Law.

By Sunday night the army took control of the TTT transmitter on Cumberland Hill in Port of Spain and silenced the station.

Winston Dookeran, who was among the hostages, was allowed to leave to work out the details of the transfer of power to the insurrectionists. He set up office in the Trinidad Hilton from where he took charge and helped negotiate an end to the crisis.

The insurgents surrendered on August 1 after they were offered amnesty. They were taken into custody, tried for treason and convicted.

But the Court of Appeal upheld the amnesty offered to secure their surrender and they were released. The Privy Council later invalidated the amnesty, but the state never rearrested them.

The six-day nightmare saw properties torched and losses running into tens of millions of dollars as a result of the widespread looting and property damage. By the time it was over more than 30 people were dead, including the Member of Parliament for Diego Martin Central, Leo Des Vignes.

The then opposition leader, Patrick Manning, had left the House of Representatives just before the attack. Also absent was Basdeo Panday, who was at that time sitting as part of the opposition after falling out with the government and resigning his job as foreign minister.

Panday had been recuperating from cardiac surgery and had gone home to rest. When reporters called him at home to get his comment on what had happened, he told them, "wake me when it is over." Manning dismissed the uprising as "a family squabble".

Bakr has stated more than once that he had forewarned both of them of his plans, a charge they have always denied.

One year later in 1991 the National Alliance for Reconstruction (NAR) government that swept the People's National Movement (PNM) from office in a lopsided 33-3 victory in 1986, was trashed in general election.

The PNM returned to office with a new leader, Patrick Manning, who until recently headed the party and the Trinidad and Tobago government. The NAR was wiped out, remaining just a rump party in Tobago as it had been before the "one-love" movement brought it together in an alliance with other parties opposed to the PNM government, including Panday's United Labour Front (ULF).

Panday and some members of his former ULF left NAR, formed a new party - the United National Congress (UNC) - and contested the 1991 election and became the official opposition.

Both the PNM administration under Manning and Panday's UNC administration rejected calls for an inquiry. Now the People's Partnership government under the leadership of Kamla Persad-Bissessar has established a probe at which some starting evidence is being presented.

Perhaps it will bring closure to one of the darkest episodes in the history of Trinidad and Tobago.


Suggested reading:
New York Times: Rebels in Trinidad set premier free...
Raffique Shah: The 1990 Muslimeen coup - a personal account
BBC report by Debbie Ransome: Trinidad attempted coup - 15 years on
Dr Selwyn Ryan: The Muslimeen Grab for Power - amazon.com
Raoul Pantin: Days of Wrath: The 1990 coup in Trinidad and Tobago available in paperback from amazon.com
TIME magazine account of the coup
CBS report: Trinidad islamic group under scrutiny
Report: Privy Council rules against T&T Muslimeen
Neville Duncan: The Muslimeen Revolt

Feature: Ma Chin's vision trickles down to another generation as she turns 99

Three generations of Lee Seyon: Ma Chin with her grandson Geoff and great grand daughter, Amani. Geoff is the son of Frank and Zalima Seyon and is chairman of the IT company, Medullan.com
Victoria Lee Seyon, whom everybody knows as Ma Chin, came to Trinidad from China in 1940 to join her husband Gerald Lee Seyon (Papa Chin) in the one house, one shop village of Guanapo.

Everyone in the family made fun of papa Chin.

How could you do business with only one household? While Papa Chin was a dreamer, Ma Chin was a warrior and a visionary.

She had somehow managed to find her way to her husband's side through the confusion of the late 1930's in the hope that she could carve a brighter future for herself in this remote village.

Traveling for six months by sea, she arrived in Ottawa in 1939, then on to Port of Spain, registering at Arima in 1940 when she arrived in the colony. 

Guanapo at the time was an agricultural village of sugar cane, cocoa and citrus plantations. The plantation workers came from surrounding villages of San Carlos, Brazil, Talparo, and Las Lomas.

When asked why he chose Guanapo, Papa Chin would explain with a wry smile that "where the road crosses the railway, it's good for business".

Guanapo is the statutory village of the La Horquetta Estate. The shop was the only dry goods merchant for miles around.

In 1940, there were no children born in Trinidad to the Lee Seyon family. A daughter was born in China, but she remained there until the mid fifties when Ma Chin and Papa Chin could afford the airfare to get her to Trinidad.

Ma Chin adopted everyone who would choose to build their modest homes close to the shop. She became the village benefactor. New villagers would get "goods trust" until they got "paid month-end."

Ma Chin quickly became the mother of Guanapo. Starting out in the humble sugar cane fields, Ma Chin made her way into the hearts of the people.

By 1940, the Americans also started mobilizing construction material to build the Churchill-Roosevelt highway from Wallerfield to Morvant junction using aggregate material from the Guanapo river.

At that time, the la Horquetta estate was owned by the J. J. Ribeiro family. With the construction industry in its infancy, construction workers began coming into Guanapo and Ma Chin promptly added a rum shop to the premises next to the dry goods shop to cater for the new clientele.

Ma Chin knew in her heart that an opportunity was around the corner. She believed that with Faith and Courage, the promise of Guanapo would unfold.

Things moved slowly in those World War days. Ma Chin worked long hard hours in the shop. During the slow periods, she reared chickens, ducks and pigs and eventually expanded her efforts providing employment to villagers by investing in route taxis.

She saved and invested money wisely, bought property, built a new family home and raised six children born in Trinidad.

In the mid sixties, P. J. Mahanna Haddaway bought the estate from Ribeiro. Mahanna (as she was affectionately called) wanted to popularize and industrialize Guanapo.

First there was Readymix WI Limited. Then came PresTcon, Crown Cork and Seal Limited, Electrical Industries Limited, and Amalgamated (Cars) Assembly Plant among others.

Mahanna too had big visions for Guanapo. She allocated 100 acres from the La Horquetta estate for a middle income housing development to accommodate the growing numbers of workers coming to the area.

Ma Chin was her operations partner for this venture. Unfortunately Mahanna
died all too soon and with her passing those plans also died for Ma Chin. Before Mahanna died, Ma Chin had asked for a road to be built making the shop a corner property. That road was to be called Lee Seyon Boulevard.

Government purchased the 100 acres and built the La Horquetta Housing Development. Not to confuse issues, La Horquetta Housing Development is NOT La Horquetta estate.

La Horquetta estate is an expansive 999 acre property a short hop south of the Churchill Roosevelt highway on Tumpuna Road.

Ma Chin believed that La Horquetta Housing Development was a signal for a new era of enterprise, the promise that anyone is free to aspire as high as his/her talents, ambition and vision of the future would allow.

She operated on the Henry David Thoreau premise that "If you have built castles in the air, your work need not be lost, that's where they should be, Now put the foundations under them".

Ma Chin had visions of castles in the air. Today a new generation of Lee Seyon grand children is emerging on the business horizon. Three National scholarship winners and a host of top level managers.

Soon they too would heed the call to build the foundations for the castles
which Ma Chin dreams of.

Ma Chin celebrates her 99th brithday today July 27, 2011. She would find no greater joy than seeing the foundations for her castles in the air. Happy Birthday, Ma Chin, from all of us at JYOTI.
This is the house in China which was owned by Ma Chin's father, Hinkee Johnson,
before he came to Trinidad
Story and photos contributed by Frank Seyon

Jai & Sero

Jai & Sero

Our family at home in Toronto 2008

Our family at home in Toronto 2008
Amit, Heather, Fuzz, Aj, Jiv, Shiva, Rampa, Sero, Jai