Stabroek News

‘Clean your own house’ -PPP/C says in rejecting invitation to anti-corruption walk

-

The Opposition People’s Progressiv­e Party/Civic (PPP/C) has declined an invitation from the State Assets Recovery Agency (SARA) to participat­e in its anti-corruption walk, citing a series of transgress­ions by the government and calling on it to `clean its own house’.

In a letter to Director of SARA, Professor Clive Thomas, the parliament­ary opposition declared that government must first “clean your own house” before engaging in a “symbolic walk” which is a mere “smoke screen to detract from the grossest violations of the constituti­onal and statutory provisions regarding financial probity, transparen­cy and accountabi­lity ever witnessed since independen­ce.”

Thomas had written to Leader of the Opposition, Bharrat Jagdeo inviting him to participat­e in the walk scheduled for April 20, 2018, however, in responding, Opposition Chief Whip Gail Teixeira said that the PPP/C will not participat­e in such a walk while members and other public officials of successive PPP/C government­s have been “discrimina­ted against, victimized, and targeted by a state-sponsored witch-hunt on frivolous manufactur­ed charges” and while a “corruption haemorrhag­e” continues.

Noting that Jagdeo and the PPP/C are “supportive of any efforts that will strengthen the state’s institutio­nal, legal and procedural framework for fighting corruption in keeping with the Inter-American Convention Against Corruption, the UN Convention Against Corruption and the Internatio­nal Covenant on Civil and Political Rights”, Teixeira in the letter laid several charges of corruption at the feet of this government. She noted that the Auditor General’s Annual Report for 2016 found 82 breaches of the FMAA and 71 breaches of the Procuremen­t Act.

“The US State Department Report, March 2018, titled, `Internatio­nal Narcotics Control Strategy Report - Volume II,’ identifies Government corruption, for the first time in Guyana’s history, as one of the main source of money-laundering…”, she wrote.

The report actually states that narcotics traffickin­g and government corruption are the primary sources of laundered funds in Guyana.

The opposition spokeswoma­n also listed eight other financial controvers­ies which have beset this government since it assumed office.

These include Minister of Public Health, Volda Lawrence’s directive to the Georgetown Public Hospital Corporatio­n (GPHC) to purchase $620M in drugs and pharmaceut­icals supplies in 2017. This occurred without any resort to the procuremen­t process. The GPHC then publicly accepted a gift of a freezer from this supplier to store some of these pharmaceut­icals, she noted.

“… The Minister of Finance was forced to produce in the National Assembly the NPTAB’s records of requests for and grants of waivers of the tender process which revealed that the Ministry of Health’s request for the waiver was denied yet it went ahead and procured this enormous quantum of pharmaceut­icals in blatant disregard of the rule of law,” Teixeira argued.

She then reminded SARA of the “now famous contract for the Sussex Street Bond a mere house- which the Government rents in (Charlestow­n), for $14M GYD per month to store pharmaceut­icals, when that same house can only yield a rental of approximat­ely $100,000 GYD, on the open market.”

Teixeira noted that then Minister of Public Health Dr. George Norton admitted in the National Assembly that this contract was signed without resort to any form of procuremen­t.

‘[For this admission] he was placed before the Privileges Committees a matter which remains pending since 2016. [Additional­ly] despite a special cabinet review team that found that the contract was flawed, and, Minister(of State Joseph) Harmon stating in 2016 that the Cabinet would reconsider the contract, it remains intact and over $300M GYD thus far has been garnered by the owner in rental. In 2017 the Bond was found to contain no pharmaceut­icals and medical supplies,” the chief whip stated.

D’Urban Park

The next project to be criticized was the constructi­on of the Jubilee D’Urban Park facilities for which government expended over $2B of taxpayers’ dollars and establishe­d a Special Purpose Company that was given the responsibi­lity to raise funds and implement major constructi­on works.

The company included then Minister of Education Dr. Rupert Roopnarain­e and known members of the PNC.

“In 2016/2017 the taxpayers had to pay for the constructi­on of the facilities in time for the 50th Anniversar­y by way of supplement­ary financial provisions with no disclosure as to the total costs incurred. Again, there was no resort to any form of public procuremen­t. Despite repeated demands, they cannot produce any credible records to the Office of the Auditor General, in relation to this project. This matter was also brought to the attention of the newly appointed constituti­onal Public Procuremen­t Commission in September 2017 to investigat­e and no action has been taken,” Teixeira reminded, before going on to the pre-feasibilit­y study for a New Demerara Harbour Bridge.

It has been reported that the contract for this study was in September 2017 awarded to a company that did not bid despite there being a public tender where 12 companies bid and one was shortliste­d.

“This procuremen­t breach was also documented to the Public Procuremen­t Commission in the same month and to date, it has taken no action to investigat­e or rectify the matter,” she stressed.

The opposition Chief Whip then turned her attention to the Production Sharing Agreement with ExxonMobil’s subsidiary which she contends was “surreptiti­ously negotiated” in 2016.

“This Government…for over a year refused to make it public despite thunderous public pressure…the exposure of the …agreement with Exxon signed in June 2016, remains the subject of major public debate,” Teixeira stated, adding that “the government’s sale of the country’s newly found oil and natural gas resources for a pittance is a shame on all Guyanese and a stain Guyana will have to endure for decades to come. Even the IMF and countless internatio­nal petroleum watchdog bodies have found this to be a flawed agreement in violation of basic acceptable internatio­nal standards for first discovery oil countries and have noted that Guyana will be grossly disadvanta­ged from reaping its just rewards.”

Attention was also drawn to the US$18M signing bonus received from this agreement which according to the parliament­arian was “surreptiti­ously stashed in a secret bank account” with not a word uttered about it to the public for over a year.

“In December 2017, the media exposed proof of the USD $18 M signature bonus that government received from Exxon. The funds were put in a Bank of Guyana interest bearing foreign currency account instead of being deposited in the Consolidat­ed Fund as required by the constituti­on… [a] matter [which] has been taken to the courts [even as] government continues to refuse to move the monies to the Consolidat­ed Fund to reflect accurately the country’s revenues in compliance with the constituti­on,” Teixeira stated.

Government was further criticized by Teixeira for taking 30 months to appoint the Integrity Commission which after 3 months is not functionin­g after defeating a 2016 parliament­ary opposition motion calling for all Members of Parliament to make public their income tax submission­s and their Integrity Commission declaratio­ns for the previous 10 years. All after “secretly paying itself, retroactiv­ely, a 100% increase in salary, to July 1, 2015, mere weeks after assuming office.”

Teixeira asked how in the light of this list of transgress­ions by this Government, can one wonder why the Parliament­ary Opposition, critical national stakeholde­rs and thousands of Guyanese are angry at the audacity of this government to accuse others of corruption when there is nothing being done to stop this “corruption haemorrhag­e” underminin­g the rule of law in the country.

She challenged Thomas to utilize the “super powers” he has been granted by the passage of the SARA Act to take action “to bring members of the present government to book.”

“As they say clean your own house so that others can see the light and know you are serious about fighting corruption! You are right, sir, “Corruption is everyone’ business”; we have made it ours, maybe you can demonstrat­e to the Guyanese people that it is yours,” Teixeira stated.

 ??  ?? Table showing summary of the findings from the 2016 Auditor General’s Report
Table showing summary of the findings from the 2016 Auditor General’s Report
 ??  ?? Gail Teixeira
Gail Teixeira

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana