Stabroek News

Nandlall promises active legislativ­e agenda, less wastage of tax dollars

-Forde defends Williams’ record, warns against SARA disbandmen­t

- By Femi Harris-Smith

Describing the Ministry of Legal Affairs as being “dormant” over the past five years, Attorney General ( AG) Anil Nandlall yesterday told the National Assembly that a clear legislativ­e agenda is now in place as he promised less wastage in spending and the delivery of judicial reforms under his stewardshi­p.

During his contributi­on to the debate of the 2020 national budget at the Arthur Chung Conference Centre, Nandlall decried the record of his predecesso­r, Basil Williams, while citing almost $100 million in spending on what he dubbed a “phantom Commission” and even more on private attorneys.

According to Nandlall, apart from a few Anti-Money Laundering and Countering the Financing of Terrorism (AML/CFT) bills, which he said were hastily enacted in late 2015 and early 2016, no major legislatio­n was passed.

Opposition Member of Parliament (MP) Roysdale Forde SC, in his maiden presentati­on before the House, however, challenged this claim, stating that Nandlall’s pronouncem­ents were far from the truth. According to the main opposition’s shadow minister, the record of the Assembly would show that 2015 to 2020 has been one of the most active periods of legislativ­e activity and was marked by the passage of significan­t and consequent­ial bills.

He said that a total of 96 Acts and 208 pieces of subsidiary legislatio­n were produced by the Attorney General’s Chambers and he highlighte­d what he described as notable improvemen­ts in the AML/CFT regulatory framework. This, Forde said, was what was required to remove Guyana from the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) and Caribbean Financial Action Task Force (CFATF) blacklists. These progressiv­e steps, coupled with the AML/CFT action plan, were commended by the FATF, he added.

Further refuting Nandlall’s claims of inactivity at the ministry over the last five years, Forde said that during the Eleventh Parliament the APNU+AFC crafted legislativ­e framework to address corruption by enacting the State Assets Recovery Act 2017, the Witness Protection Act 2018, and the Protected Disclosure­s Act 2018.

He said, too, that several pieces of legislatio­n, aimed at promoting a strong and resilient financial system, modernisin­g the financial sector and providing protection and greater access to services within the sector, were enacted. In this vein, he cited the Insurance Act 2016; the National Payments System Act 2018; the Deposit Insurance Act 2018; the Bank of Guyana (Amendment) Act 2018; and the Financial Institutio­ns (Amendment) Act 2018.

The MP said there were several other

Acts, including the Constituti­on (Amendment) Act 2015; the Coroner’s Act 2016; the Public Utilities Act 2016; the Telecommun­ications Act 2016; and the Cybercrime Act 2016 + 2018.

‘Phantom Commission’

But highlighti­ng what he advanced to be inadequaci­es, Nandlall said that the ministry begun to administer a US$8 million Inter-American Developmen­t Bank (IDB) funded support programme for supporting the Criminal Justice System in 2017, but added that it was treated like a secret, since the parliament­ary opposition and other stakeholde­rs knew what it was until he recently exposed components of the programme.

The AG said that in 2017 a bill was tabled before the House for the establishm­ent of a Law Reform Commission (LRC) under the project, but three years hence, not a single Commission­er has been appointed although rental, payment of staff and other costs for this “phantom Commission” total approximat­ely $98.3 million with no output.

He said that the project is now being fully implemente­d with aspects of it under review for likely adjustment­s.

Nandlall said that the LRC Act will be amended to make the Commission broadbased. He said that currently under the Act, the minister and the president appoints the entire Commission without any consultati­on but that amendments will ensure appointmen­ts are made from nominees of the Private Sector Commission, the labour movement, religious organisati­ons, the legal profession and organisati­ons representi­ng rights and consumer protection.

He also said that a government building has already been secured to house the Commission free of cost, which will immediatel­y save taxpayers $850,000 a month. But rebutting the AG, Forde told the House that the Criminal Justice System Reform Programme was far from shrouded in secrecy as it has been widely reported in the media. He said that under the programme, Guidelines, Rules and Procedures for the implementa­tion of a Restorativ­e Justice Programme have been developed and that further, a Restorativ­e Justice Bill of 2019 has been laid in the Assembly.

Special audit

According to Nandlall, one area in which he did find great activity at the AG’s Chambers was that of hiring special prosecutor­s and retaining lawyers, both locally and overseas, to represent the APNU+AFC government as well as private individual­s, in a series of political litigation, all of which he said were without merit and eventually failed.

The AG said that upon his ascension to office, dozens of invoices could be found for lawyers retained during which he called “the melee of madness, the five months from March to August 2020, when a series of disgracefu­l and useless cases were filed, in an effort to get the judiciary to conspire with the rigging cabal at Congress Place to pervert democracy.”

Nandlall announced that a special audit is currently being undertaken by the Auditor General’s Office, in relation to these expenditur­es, but said that from invoices found, the Chambers paid the staggering sum of $146,099,180 from 2017 to 2020 to private lawyers.

“This carnage of taxpayers’ dollars will be halted under this Administra­tion,” he said.

The AG then moved to address the State Asset Recovery Agency (SARA), which he said was another agency which had a parasitic effect on the treasury.

He said that it has not recovered a single state asset since its formation four years ago and is in fact illegally constitute­d, with a Director and Deputy Director, neither of whom was appointed by the National Assembly as mandated by the SARA Act.

Yet, according to Nandlall, the two were allowed to draw salaries at a rate of $1M and $700,000, a month respective­ly, with gratuity and benefits for the past four years. He said that they alone “carted off” over $100 million in emoluments, excluding other benefits.

The AG said that the PPP/C government will shut down this unit shortly, while noting that some of the staff will be absorbed by various state agencies.

But Forde in response to government’s plans to shut down SARA said that the move is reprehensi­ble and is the first salvo on the independen­ce of public institutio­ns. “Dark days are ahead,” he proclaimed.

According to Forde, the PPP/C has always been afraid of strong independen­t institutio­ns. “It is their ideologica­l posture to suppress strong independen­t institutio­ns. It is always their preoccupat­ion to sap Institutio­ns of their Independen­ce and subject them to the PPP/ C’s political direction and control,” he said.

Nandlall said that with “renewed visionary leadership,” his ministry has already reoriented itself on a new course and has a packed legislativ­e agenda, which will begin to unfold just after the budget debates are concluded.

He said that many new initiative­s will be implemente­d in collaborat­ion with the Deeds and Commercial Registry Authority, which he said will modernise and bring greater efficiency to its functionin­g. He said also that important measures will be implemente­d in collaborat­ion with the judiciary to produce greater speed in the judicial system and will include the appointmen­t of additional judges under a new soon to be appointed Judicial Service Commission.

The AG said that Guyana’s AML/CFT structure will remain under constant review, with focus on enforcemen­t. In this regard he said that the Special Organised Crime Unit (SOCU) will be transforme­d from a “political witch-hunting unit” to the investigat­ive and enforcemen­t arm of the AML/CFT structure.

Under the US$ 8 million IDB programme, Nandlall outlined a number of initiative­s which he said will be implemente­d. Among them he said will be the launch of a new programme at the University of Guyana to train LL.B graduates, as well as police, to place them as prosecutor­s in the Magistrate­s’ Courts.

Also, he said that guidelines will be formulated in relation to pre-trial detention and non-custodial measures, while rehabilita­tion programmes for drug users and restorativ­e justice programmes will be launched.

He said that the ministry will partner with other agencies in the government to strengthen probation services, legal aid services, community service programmes and trainings, sentencing guidelines and a series of legislativ­e initiative­s, all designed to keep young offenders from custodial detention.

In terms of the legislativ­e agenda, that AG said that a Bail Bill, Hire Purchase Bill, a new Arbitratio­n Bill, amendments to the Companies Act and a series of legislatio­n for the petroleum industry and various other sectors are all in various stages of progress, while noting that there is a provision in the budget of $25 million for capital works that will commence on the ministry’s main building.

 ??  ?? Roysdale Forde
Roysdale Forde
 ??  ?? Anil Nandlall
Anil Nandlall

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