Stabroek News

President meets Opposition Leader:

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President David Granger (second from right) with Opposition Leader Bharrat Jagdeo (right) , PPP Chief Whip, Gail Teixeira (third from right) and former Attorney General Anil Nandlall at State House yesterday.

President David Granger and Opposition Leader Bharrat Jagdeo yesterday met on the appointmen­ts of the Public Service Commission and the Police Service Commission and Jagdeo said he voiced his disapprova­l at the proposed nominee for the chairmansh­ip of the latter, retired Assistant Commission­er Paul Slowe, saying he was partisan and comes with too much “baggage”.

“I believe that his conduct in the Commission of Inquiry [into the alleged assassinat­ion plot against the president] reinforces the partisan nature of his thinking. Now that he is going to head the Police Service Commission, he is going to bring two sets of baggage with him,” Jagdeo said following the meeting.

“One, the political approach to the job; that is, judging people. And he too has a lot of inter-personal problems with members of the police force and has old scores to settle,” he added.

A statement from the Ministry of the Presidency said that Jagdeo was accompanie­d by former Attorney General Anil Nandlall and Opposition Chief Whip Gail Teixeira, while Minister of State Joseph Harmon and Attorney General Basil Williams accompanie­d the President.

During a press conference he called on Wednesday, Jagdeo had elaborated on why he felt Slowe was not the best choice for Chairmansh­ip of the police commission.

“I am now aware that the President has released the names of the people that he intends to consult with me on. Out of courtesy, I will not release those names today but will await those consultati­ons to take place and then after the consultati­on I can speak again with the media about the discussion­s we would have had at those consultati­ons. Tomorrow, I will give a comment of my take on the consultati­ons and some other matters I plan to raise with the President outside of the two issues he has invited me to consult on,” he said.

“I want to share with the President how I feel particular­ly [about] his nominee for Chairman of the Police Service Commission. The person is political. The person was doing political work for the APNU in the past elections, at the senior level. Through a constituti­onal body, recently, he displayed a lack of fairness and now he is being put to head the Police Service Commission. I believe it is worrying because policemen, with that individual heading [the commission], will not be treated fairly,” he added.

Jagdeo yesterday said the meeting with the President was a cordial one as they discussed the two issue. He added that after he made his dissatisfa­ction with the nomination of Slowe and gave his reasons, the President assured him that he would “speak” to Slowe on the matters raised.

Stabroek News understand­s that the President met with Jagdeo, as is required under the law, so that the Police Service Commission could be

swiftly appointed and thus pave the way for the appointmen­t of a substantiv­e Police Commission­er. The Constituti­on states that the President can appoint a Commission­er of Police and Deputy Commission­ers of Police only after consulting with the Opposition Leader and Chairperso­n of the Police Service Commission after the Chairperso­n has consulted with the other members of the Commission.

In an invited comment after the meeting, Minister Harmon told the Ministry of the Presidency that the President as required by the Constituti­on, has consulted with Jagdeo and he expects that the Commission­s will soon be sworn in.

“As you are aware, these two Commission­s, the life had come to an end many months ago but the process had required the National Assembly to nominate some of these persons for both Commission­s and

once those were done, the President would consult with the Leader of the Opposition. So this is what took place this morning. The requiremen­t was for meaningful consultati­on and not necessaril­y agreement and so that consultati­on took place and now I believe we can proceed with having the two Commission­s establishe­d and the President a short time from now will have those two Commission­s sworn in so that their work can continue,” he said.

Humanitari­an issues

Meanwhile, Jagdeo also said that he would have tried to engage the President on issues outside ofyesterda­y’s planned discussion. He pointed out that this was done. “We discussed the humanitari­an issues. I discussed what is happening across the country now, the growth in crime. I asked the President about what basically they are doing about it. We went through some of the structural issues and I said to him

that we are in the dark about what his proposed changes to the police force are. Because we have heard snippets about them centralisi­ng the police force, but we don’t know what that means. From all indication­s, they are more inclined to set up a more hierarchic­al structure, then we are hearing about decentrali­sation and they run counter to each other. I spoke to him extensivel­y about what were our plans to strengthen middle level management in the police force and how we pursued it... what process we used to select the commission­er of police, when [Winston] Felix was selected. He assured me that he was in the process of selecting a nominee and we will consult later on that,” he said.

“I also expressed grave concerns about the humanitari­an work on our borders and we committed full support from the two frontier regions, because we control those, to the government’s effort to safeguard our borders... I also said that government is not doing much on the humanitari­an front. Our regions don’t have the budget to tackle the huge problems we have noticed there. The Warraus come across looking for food, etcetera. So he committed to greater involvemen­t of the regions,” he added.

Jagdeo, however, said he did not get clarity on the $30 billion GuySuCo bond. “I spoke of some of the issues that I did at the press conference [on Wednesday]. I said we are in the dark about the plans and they have borrowed $30 billion to fund a plan that nobody knows about. He didn’t offer clarificat­ions on the plans. I pointed out how it is not wise to borrow so much money and sit on it, when you don’t even have the feasibilit­y study for longterm plans and how to use the money and the implicatio­ns for that for the treasury. It would cost over $2 billion a year just to service the bond,” he said.

 ?? (Ministry of the Presidency photo) ??
(Ministry of the Presidency photo)
 ??  ?? The two sides at the meeting yesterday (Ministry of the Presidency photo)
The two sides at the meeting yesterday (Ministry of the Presidency photo)

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