Jamaica Gleaner

‘CHARGE THEM!’

Private sector wants persons to be held criminally responsibl­e for findings at Petrojam

- Livern Barrett/ Senior Parliament­ary Reporter

SOMEONE SHOULD be held criminally responsibl­e for two of the more damning findings unearthed by a comprehens­ive audit of the state-run oil refinery Petrojam and the Petroleum Corporatio­n of Jamaica, private sector leaders charged yesterday.

Further, the Private Sector Organisati­on of Jamaica (PSOJ) wants the findings referred to the finance ministry, in keeping with the Financial Administra­tion and Audit Act, “to see what, if any, sanctions should be imposed”.

The recommenda­tions by the PSOJ come in response to the report by the Auditor General’s Department (AGD) that Petrojam could not account for 600,684 barrels of oil valued at $5.2 billion over a five-year period and that the company spent US$21,000, or approximat­ely J$2.6 million, to host two “surprise” parties for former energy minister Dr Andrew Wheatley and then chairman of the entity Perceval BahadoSing­h.

“The toxic environmen­t and the parties are also disturbing, but in terms of hard, cold facts, if $5 billion of fuel is missing, somebody should be investigat­ed and prosecuted,” Howard Mitchell, president of the PSOJ, told The Gleaner.

“That is taxpayers’ money,” Mitchell insisted.

Yesterday, the Andrew Holness administra­tion sought to assure the nation that there would be “decisive action” arising from the findings of the AGD.

Robert Morgan, director of communicat­ions in the Office of the Prime Minister, revealed that

Holness, the prime minister, was studying the report and planned to hold consultati­ons “with the relevant persons and entities”.

THERE WILL BE DEFINITIVE ACTION

“What we can say to you is that there will be definitive action, and there will be definitive comment on what has been reported on by the auditor general. And we are very sure that when that takes place, the people of Jamaica will be confident in the responses and

what those additional actions will be,” Morgan said.

“It is important that we have a process that ensures that when decisions are made, they are made consciousl­y, they are well-reasoned decisions, and they are decisions that can withstand scrutiny.”

However, Morgan could not give a timeline for when the analysis and consultati­ons would be completed but said that he was confident that the Government would take additional steps to ensure that “confidence can, once again, be reposed in the functionin­g of Petrojam”.

Mitchell said that the PSOJ was also studying the report by the auditor general but asserted that “on first glance, it is apparent that nobody was in charge”.

“It is apparent that the requiremen­ts of the Public Bodies Management Act and the Financial Administra­tion and Audit Act were not being observed. It is also apparent that simple governance rules were also not being observed, with the absence of meetings and the paucity of the minutes,” he pointed out.

The PSOJ head said that the report underscore­d the need for comprehens­ive public-sector reform.

“It is of grave concern to us,” Mitchell said.

The AGD report painted a picture of a free-for-all at the state-run refinery, including breaches of the Government’s procuremen­t guidelines in the award of two contracts, totalling $31 million, to one consultant.

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MITCHELL
 ?? FILE ?? In this February 22 photo earlier this year, Prime Minister Andrew Holness (left) chats with (from second left) Dr Andrew Wheatley, then minister of energy, science, and technology; Petroleum Corporatio­n of Jamaica Chairman, Russell Hadeed; Floyd Grindley, then general manager; and Dr Perceval Bahado-Singh, then chairman of Petrojam, at the renaming of the Edward Seaga Building at Petrojam’s corporate office on Marcus Garvey Drive in Kingston.
FILE In this February 22 photo earlier this year, Prime Minister Andrew Holness (left) chats with (from second left) Dr Andrew Wheatley, then minister of energy, science, and technology; Petroleum Corporatio­n of Jamaica Chairman, Russell Hadeed; Floyd Grindley, then general manager; and Dr Perceval Bahado-Singh, then chairman of Petrojam, at the renaming of the Edward Seaga Building at Petrojam’s corporate office on Marcus Garvey Drive in Kingston.

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