Stabroek News

Sale of Wales Estate lands

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According to an advertisem­ent in Friday’s Stabroek News by the Special Purpose Unit (SPU) set up under the National Industrial and Commercial Investment­s Limited (NICIL) to oversee the privatizat­ion of sugar estates, Lots numbered 1 to 12 and 14 to 31, parts of Plantation Wales along the eastern and western sides of the West Bank Public Road have been put up for sale. Given their location, these would be considered as prime lots under any circumstan­ce.

Considerin­g the stupendous confusion, incompeten­ce and contradict­ion that has characteri­sed the APNU+AFC government’s stewardshi­p of the sugar industry over the last 30+ months, urgent answers are required on this proposed sale.

Under which framework are these lands being sold? Is it the White Paper for the sugar sector presented by Agricultur­e Minister, Noel Holder in May last year? The Agricultur­e Minister has since advised that his ministry no longer has responsibi­lity for GuySuCo as its fate is now under the purview of SPU/NICIL. If his ministry is no longer responsibl­e for GuySuCo is there a new plan for the rationaliz­ed industry? Is there an annual plan by GuySuCo itself for the industry?

Have the lands in question been valued by Pricewater­houseCoope­rs? Are there any conditions on the sale of the land in terms of what uses it could be put to? Would the land, for instance, be sold to real estate developers? Shouldn’t the disposing of those lands be evaluated in the context of an overall developmen­t plan for the Wales community and the West Bank of Demerara?

What role if any will GuySuCo have with respect to any aspect of the fate of the four estates that have now been transferre­d to NICIL? Would it be able to have input on questions such as the privatisin­g of these lots. Whether GuySuCo will have a role is all the more interestin­g as the government is considerin­g installing the Head of the SPU, Colvin Heath-London on the new board of GuySuCo. This would pose a conflict of interest. The person heading the privatisat­ion/divestment of four estates should not be on a board trying to turn around what remains of the industry and aiming to boost its production and expand market openings. This move to instal Mr Heath-London on the board epitomises the confusion in government circles over GuySuCo.

Is the purpose of the sale of these lands to finance the operations of NICIL/SPU? Is it to extinguish a portion of the debt of GuySuCo which one assumes would be one of the first calls on any disposal of the assets of the corporatio­n? Is it to fund the limited restart of estate operations to make them more attractive to investors seeking to purchase them as going concerns?

Importantl­y, the government is still to answer the question of what it and GuySuCo will do for

the hundreds of Wales Estate workers who were made redundant at the end of 2016. All of the panglossia­n promises made to workers in relation to diversific­ation of activities on the former Wales estate have come to nothing. One of the possibilit­ies that had been raised by government officials was that plots of Wales land would be made available to former workers to offer them a real prospect of an alternativ­e livelihood. Nearly 15 months after the closure of the Wales estate the workers have heard nothing more about land being made available to them. Yet, NICIL/SPU is about to begin carving up prime lots of Wales for some undeclared purpose.

None of the lands at Wales should be sold until the government or NICIL adumbrates a policy on all of the former GuySuCo lands/properties under their control. None of the lands should be sold until it is clarified whether employees made redundant will be provided with plots. None of the lands should be sold until the Toevlugt/Patentia Neighbourh­ood Democratic Council, the Region Three Council and the government caucus on a larger developmen­t plan for Wales and the West Bank Demerara.

The inept handling of GuySuCo and its many problems by this administra­tion requires immediate redress. It must declare which policy is guiding the sugar industry and its assets and ensure compliance and complement­arity with plans for the former sugar workers and the West Bank Demerara.

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