Jamaica Gleaner

Insurance broker wants Gov’t to break silence on voided Petrojam tender

- Edmond Campbell/ Senior Staff Reporter edmond.campbell@gleanerjm.com

ABOUT EIGHT months after attorneys representi­ng Marathon Insurance Brokers (MIB) wrote to Prime Minister Andrew Holness complainin­g about Petrojam’s cancellati­on of a tender process for insurance service without explanatio­n, chairman of the insurance entity, Richard Burgher, says he has not received a response.

In a letter dated November 9, 2017, to the prime minister, which was copied to then Finance Minister Audley Shaw and Justice Minister Delroy Chuck, the company’s attorneys indicated that “in the face of a directive from the contractor general not to award the contract pending his investigat­ion, the board of Petrojam, neverthele­ss sidesteppe­d that directive and opted to extend the placement for a further two years with the existing broker at a cost to the public purse exceeding MIB’s tender by $420 million over the two-year life of the extension ... .

“I have carried out my public duty. I have reported it to the (Most) Honourable Prime Minister and the ministers of justice and finance. I have exhausted the avenues available to me; there is nothing more I can do,” an irritated Burgher told The Gleaner.

In a strongly worded letter to Holness, attorneys Grant, Stewart, Phillips and Company wrote: “It should never go unanswered that a Jamaican company, employing scores of Jamaican citizens, can become the target of flagrant and collusive breaches of the public procuremen­t process, enabled by agents of the State, to deny it fair treatment and then the guilty parties go silent despite several letters to the responsibl­e public officers for a reasonable explanatio­n.”

The letter further stated: “Prime Minister, we appeal to your good offices to immediatel­y and expeditiou­sly address these very valid charges, in order to reinforce your commitment to protecting the good name of our country by rooting out graft and corruption in all its forms ... . ”

Burgher yesterday told The Gleaner that in a letter dated February 27, 2017, he wrote to then Contractor General Dirk Harrison detailing what he described as “the unfair and indeed wrongful treatment of our proposal to provide insurance services to Petrojam for the period April 1, 2017 to March 31, 2020.”

The insurance executive requested the interventi­on of Harrison to “review a recommenda­tion by the actuarial consultant Eckler Consultant­s in favour of Fraser Fontaine Kong and their correspond­ing overseas broker.”

On June 5 this year, Burger said that his company also wrote to Auditor General Pamela Monroe Ellis. The auditor general is currently conducting an audit at the state-owned oil refinery.

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