Stabroek News

Anti-corruption body raids Petrojam

-

(Jamaica Gleaner) Teams from the Major Organised Crime and Anti-Corruption Agency (MOCA) and the new Integrity Commission on Tuesday swooped down on the stateowned oil refinery, Petrojam, confiscati­ng documents and computers amid allegation­s of nepotism, corruption and cost overruns at the entity.

MOCA stepped into Petrojam following calls from the parliament­ary Opposition for the investigat­ive body to probe corruption at the oil refinery. The Private Sector Organisati­on of Jamaica and other private-sector groups also called for a forensic audit at Petrojam and the Universal Service Fund.

At a hastily called press conference in the Opposition’s offices at Gordon House on Tuesday, Leader of the Opposition Dr Peter Phillips expressed surprise that following a 12-hour Cabinet meeting on Monday, which discussed “the loss or fraudulent diversion of hundreds of millions of dollars of public funds at Petrojam, the Government failed to make a statement to Parliament on the issue”.

He told journalist­s that Energy Minister Andrew Wheatley was absent from the House and that the prime minister did not make a statement to the country. Phillips lamented that the questions on Petrojam that had been due from last week were not answered.

“The treatment of questions in the House that we witnessed today (Tuesday) unfortunat­ely has not been unusual,” said Phillips, adding that it had become a practice for questions to be ignored.

The opposition leader said that questions which should have been answered on Monday in Parliament relate to the Vacuum Distillati­on Unit at Petrojam.

Commenting on the proposed VDU, Manchester Central MP Peter Bunting noted that informatio­n obtained by the Opposition suggested that the contract could cost J$5 billion more than an estimate submitted by engineers.

“A US engineerin­g firm was engaged by Petrojam to do an estimate of the Vacuum Distillati­on Unit upgrade, and their estimate was US$86 million using US engineers,” said Bunting.

He noted that the management of Petrojam had commenced negotiatio­ns with a Chinese firm and, based on documents submitted to the Public Administra­tion and Appropriat­ions Committee, “it shows that they have so far ... reached a price of US $119 million, [which is] US$40 million beyond what the engineerin­g firm had estimated”. This converts to more than J$5 billion, he said, adding that the contract had not yet been signed.

 ??  ?? The Edward Seaga Building, home of Petrojam Ltd, on Marcus Garvey Drive
The Edward Seaga Building, home of Petrojam Ltd, on Marcus Garvey Drive

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana