Stabroek News

The award of this contract for the Mazaruni prison needs to be explained

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Dear Editor, My interest was drawn to the recent award of a contract to build a new prison at Mazaruni, especially since it was awarded to a consortium comprising of a Trinidadia­n company and a local firm for the sum of G$3.562 Billion, one billion Guyana dollars more than the Guyanese Contractor­s’ bids. The bids were as follows: Guyana Contractor A G$2.518 Billion Guyana Contractor B G$2.729 Billion Guyana Contractor C G$2.440 Billion Guyana Contractor D G$2.586 Billion Average of Guyana Contractor­s G$2.568 Billion Trinidadia­n Contractor + Local Firm G$3.562 Billion Contract Awarded to Trinidadia­n + Local Firm I am therefore formally calling on the National Procuremen­t and Tender Administra­tion Board, the Procuremen­t Commission, the Ministries of Public Security and Public Infrastruc­ture to explain the deliberate waste of the extra one billion Guyana dollars on this project, setting aside for a moment that even at G$2.5 Billion this constitute­s reckless and massive waste of taxpayers’ dollars. This at a time when the Government claimed that it was strapped for cash and it could not have paid the terminated sugar workers monies properly due to them. Editor, a billion dollars is a lot of money. It could do a lot of things, for example giving thirtyfive communitie­s, villages and towns each about $30 million to create jobs, to do food security, small infrastruc­ture works and useful projects such as block-making, furniture-making, garment manufactur­ing, etc.

Of course $3.5 Billion can do much more. This is sufficient for 100 such grants of $35 million each for similar projects rather than wasting this money on an ill- conceived notion of a multi-billion dollar facility for prisoners.

Strictly speaking, money properly spent on job creation may obviate the need for the prison. But I rather suspect that there is much more to this award than meets the eye.

The Procuremen­t Commission and other agencies are set up by law to prevent this recklessne­ss. This deal has the scent of unrefriger­ated fish and needs to be examined carefully.

The agencies listed above must provide an explanatio­n. Yours faithfully, Ramon Gaskin

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