Stabroek News Sunday

Labour Minister in solidarity with BV over lands controvers­y

-says NDC should bear brunt of the blame

-

As he stands in support of the Beterverwa­gting/Triumph (BV/Triumph) community in the land controvers­y with John Fernandes Limited, Minister of Labour, Joseph Hamilton says that the Neighbourh­ood Democratic Council (NDC) should bear the brunt of the blame.

“I support and am in solidarity with my brothers and sisters,” Hamilton told the Sunday Stabroek.

“I am a born and bred Beterverwa­gting/Triumph person. That is where I spent my life as a boy; where my life began and where my life is, even though I do not live there presently. I still have relatives that live there. The APNU+AFC council sought to sell private lands. That is a fact of the matter. Why?” he added.

He had also visited the village two weeks ago in a show of solidarity with the villagers. “The lands the PNC/APNU-run NDC trying to steal and sell from my village people, BV/TRIUMPH143 acres .Villagers, just to reiterate, your country man is supporting you all the way,” was posted by him on his Facebook page along with photograph­s.

Last week, Hamilton echoed the same position and said that it should not be forgotten that it was the NDC that had initially said it owned the land and only changed from a position of salesperso­n when residents objected and produced transports to corroborat­e their ownership. He believes that the issue would have never gotten to that stage, if the council was familiar with the history of the village.

“Some of the persons have legal counsel challengin­g the sale. They have made some progress that now the council has reverted to saying that they can’t sell what they don’t own. In the early days the council was seeking to suggest they own the land and it is the council’s land. Many persons came forward and brought transport and all of that. The council now says it can’t sell the land because they don’t own the land.” he said.

“The history of the village is that it is was bought by three slaves … in 1839. That was one of the first villages that was ‘lotted out’ for residentia­l purposes and farming purposes. Every family, once they owned a residentia­l property to the front, they owned correspond­ing farming lands at the back. Those lands were what the NDC was attempting to sell to a private person,” he said, adding that the council had to have known this.

Hamilton’s family also owns residentia­l land and farmlands but it is “not on that side with the contention. The side that the big contention is on the BV side; on the western side of the main road.”

Last December, this newspaper reported on the controvers­ial agreement between John Fernandes Limited (JFL) and the BV/Triumph Neighbourh­ood Democratic Council. Details of the $35 million deal had only come to light when the agreement document was leaked, according to Councillor Elton McRae. The terms of the agreement stated that JFL was supposed to pay the NDC $20 million on the signing of the agreement and the remainder when the transport was passed. Observers had deemed the $35 million figure as paltry but more importantl­y, the deal related to some lands which the NDC had no jurisdicti­on over.

After negative publicity over the deal, JFL backed out of it. It was later, however, revealed that JFL transferre­d its interest in the arrangemen­t to the mystery company, Mohamed Sons and Daughters Trading. Further, it was only earlier this month that JFL disclosed that it had accepted $20 million from the company in return for the transfer of its interest in the matter. This had become known when JFL returned a cheque to the NDC for the $20 million refund.

Mohamed Sons and Daughters Trading has since taken the NDC to court for it to be ordered to release to it the 143 acres once it would have paid the balance of the $35 million purchase price as had originally been agreed between the NDC and JFL.

In a fixed date applicatio­n, the company is seeking among other orders, that the NDC forthwith transfer the property to it once it would have paid the outstandin­g balance on the purchase price. The court hearing is scheduled for November 1.

However, BV/Triumph NDC Chairman Jimmaul Bagot declared that the council will not be bullied.

‘We’ve made it clear to them in several letters that we cannot sell what we don’t own. Hence, we had to rescind the agreement. However, they’re still pursuing it… ”

 ?? ?? A drone shot of the lands at Beterverwa­gting at the centre of the controvers­y
A drone shot of the lands at Beterverwa­gting at the centre of the controvers­y
 ?? ?? Joseph Hamilton during the Beterverwa­gting visit
Joseph Hamilton during the Beterverwa­gting visit

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