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Regional News Chinese ambassador to Jamaica chides local profession­als, players who want MOU halted

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(Jamaica Gleaner) Halt the “ill-conceived” agreement that guarantees Chinese investors US$1 million in the Government Oval project, local constructi­on players are demanding of the Government in an intensific­ation of their lobby against the deal.

It comes as the Chinese ambassador to Jamaica, Niu Qingbao, urged local profession­als to stop complainin­g about alleged unfair competitio­n. In an RJR interview aired on Monday, he said that aggrieved stakeholde­rs should prove “whether they can do a better service”.

The ambassador’s comment is a reiteratio­n of a statement from the embassy earlier this month rejecting claims by Opposition Spokesman Peter Bunting that the Chinese were taking over Jamaica through economic colonisati­on.

“Our aim is not to “colonise” Jamaica but to always find areas of cooperatio­n and mutual benefit that will improve the lives of both our people,” the embassy had said. “The proper thing for the Government of Jamaica to do at this stage is to call a halt to this ill-conceived MOU (memorandum of understand­ing), and to seek consultati­ons with local interests on the right way to proceed,” the Constructi­on Industry Council said on Monday. The council is an umbrella group for constructi­on industry profession­al bodies, including architects, engineers, masterbuil­ders, planners, and quantity and land surveyors.

Those groups, among others, have been angry at the Government for accepting the January 5 unsolicite­d offer from the Chinese to do what the council claims is a project with an estimated constructi­on cost of approximat­ely US$1.6 billion.

The eight-year project will include the Government Oval at Heroes Circle in Kingston, which will include a new Parliament building and space for 17 government agencies and ministries. Project managers, the Urban Developmen­t Corporatio­n (UDC), has said more than 300 acres of land will be used in the zone to take in downtown Kingston.

Under the MOU signed March 9, China Constructi­on America (South America division) (CCASA) will provide consultanc­y services to the UDC’s master plan for the project.

The constructi­on council, which has called a press conference for Thursday, said it is “egregious” that the administra­tion signed the 12-month agreement guaranteei­ng US$1 million, as well as exclusivit­y, as stated in the MOU obtained by The Gleaner.

“Beyond not being free, this clearly sole-source agreement from an unsolicite­d offer runs contrary to the Government of Jamaica policy regarding public private partnershi­p,” the council said.

According to Jamaica’s 2012 PPP policy, unsolicite­d offers are acceptable in circumstan­ces where the services or products are unique to the company making the offer and should not be connected to plans already being considered by the Government. But the council said that the offer by the Chinese company “is for services that are not unique and it was widely known that the UDC had been working on the plans for a Government Oval for years”. “Based on the Government’s own policy, there was, therefore, no justificat­ion for this MOU,” it added, declaring that the deal was done in “secrecy”.

According to the MOU, Jamaica and CCASA held preliminar­y discussion­s and the company expressed its “willingnes­s” to undertake the developmen­t “and has the capacity to complete the project”.

They agreed to work together in relation to the preliminar­y aspect of the twophase project. That includes the creation of a developmen­t proposal and the sharing of knowledge “with a view to the developmen­t of the project”.

Additional­ly, Jamaica agreed that CCASA would submit the design drawings and the budget for the implementa­tion of the project. Financing and contractua­l arrangemen­ts of the project were to be communicat­ed to the Chinese company 10 months after the MOU’s signing.

The details of the MOU, the profession­als argue, undercut the Government’s claim that local people would be substantiv­ely involved beyond the preliminar­y phase.

In a May statement responding to public concerns, the UDC’s general manager, Dr Damian Graham, explained that the CCASA was chosen because of its record, adding, too, that Jamaica has done similar projects with Canadian architects.

 ??  ?? Niu Qingbao, Chinese ambassador to Jamaica
Niu Qingbao, Chinese ambassador to Jamaica

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