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Gridlock as mechanic crushed to death

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It was a motorist’s nightmare in south Trinidad yesterday as gridlock traffic along the Solomon Hochoy Highway snaked its way from Tarouba to San Fernando, following an accident which claimed the life of a Princes Town mechanic during mid-afternoon rush-hour.

Motorists remained stuck for more than five hours as police and fire officers supervised the removal of a trailer-truck which blocked off a portion of the north-bound lane.

Mechanic Ishmael Mohammed, 37, of Iere Village Branch Road, was crushed to death by a Mitsubishi Sportero while doing repairs to the stalled truck on the shoulder of the highway. 

At least three other people were warded in serious condition at the San Fernando General Hospital after they were catapulted from the scene upon impact into bushes off the highway, near the Tarouba Interchange.

The impact was so intense the parked truck shifted. 

It was the second road fatality yesterday as Couva businessman Kevin Laggan died when his Nissan Navara slammed into a wall in Chaguanas.

Laggan, 25, an electrical and electronic engineering technician student at the School of Business and Computer Science (SBCS), died immediately after his Nissan Navara pick-up crashed into a utility pole in Edinburgh, Chaguanas.

Although Laggan’s death did not cause much traffic, the second fatality left hundreds of people leaving work, stranded in almost stand-still traffic. According to reports, truck driver Wayne Ramnarine was transporting empty bottles to Carib Brewery at Champs Fleurs when the wheels of the trailer began to lock. He parked on the shoulder of the highway and called for help.

Later on, the owner of the truck, Ramchan Matloo, 50, his wife, Sylvia, 45 and daughter, Asha Matloo, 23, all of Friendship Village, arrived with Mohammed and another mechanic, Richard Ramlogan, 35, of Princes Town.

Ramnarine said he was also sitting under the trailer, while Mohammed was tightening the wheel’s hub. Ramlogan, who was assisting Mohammed was standing near the wheel and the Matloos were standing at the side.

Reports stated that around 1.30 pm, a Mitsubishi Sportero, driven by Cadel Rajpaul, slammed into them before hitting the truck. Mohammed was crushed by the wheel while Ramchan suffered gashes to the hand, chest and face. 

His wife, Sylvia, suffered a broken leg and Ramlogan has several broken bones. Rajpaul, who sustain minor injuries, was taken to the hospital for treatment.

“All I saw was a van coming towards us and everybody was flying down the hill. It happened within a matter of seconds,” Asha said after escaping without injuries. She sat in a daze at the scene yesterday.

Investigators were told the incident actually started when Rajpaul hit a Toyota Corolla driven by Ramsaran Nagessar from behind and lost control of his vehicle. However, witnesses said another vehicle had hit Rajpaul’s from behind but drove off.

Businessman killed

In the earlier fatality, Laggan, 25, an electrical and electronic engineering technician student at the School of Business and Computer Science (SBCS), died immediately after his Nissan Navara pick-up crashed into a utility pole in Edinburgh, Chaguanas.

According to reports, Laggan was driving southward along the Old Southern Main Road around 5 am on his way home. On nearing Sugarcane Avenue, he suddenly swerved off the road and crashed into a utility pole and then a wall.

 Chaguanas police were contacted by passersby and responded with the Emergency Health Services but Laggan had already died.

At his Canary Crescent, Couva, home yesterday, his sister, Ranee Laggan, 27, said he was planning to attend a friend’s wedding tomorrow and left home around 9.30 pm to meet other friends who arrived in the country from abroad. 

She said they were all liming at Medford Grill when he left them to return home so he could prepare to open their Pearl’s Roti Shop at Dow Village, California.

With his death, she said she has lost her only sibling as her parents only had two children.

“He was a good person. There were problems at times like with any other person but he was always there for my mother, running the shop with her, foot-to-foot with her. It was just two of us, me and my brother. Now I no longer have a brother or a sibling.

“He liked to lime with his friends. He was a very popular person and if you asked anybody about Kevin Laggan, they would know him. There was no where I could have gone with my brother and people did not know him.”

Although Laggan was killed immediately, his pick-up was not totalled from the crash. An autopsy is expected to be done tomorrow.

The road fatality toll now stands at 123, compared to 142, for the comparable period last year.

‘Speed, reckless driving involved in both accidents’

Co-ordinator of the Road Safety Project, Brent Batson, says the TTPS continues to appeal to road users to drive safely, especially as most people are looking forward to spending the Christmas holidays with their families.

Batson said both accidents were indicative of motorists’ continued use of speed, adding that recklessness continues to plague the roadways.

He added: “When you look at the types of accidents that caused the two road deaths that occurred today, clearly it shows the level of risk-taking that drivers seem to have inculcated as part of their normal level of reckless driving. In the fatality on the highway, the pick-up’s driver slammed directly into a stationery object.

“It begs to question what the driver was looking at and how come he did not a see what was in front of him. One of the key ingredients coming out of that report is reckless speeding. 

“To shift a truck requires a lot of energy and it also displays the driver’s lack of scanning, way in advance of their traffic management. 

“In the second accident, for the driver to hit a light pole to be killed upon impact, it involves excessive speeding. To lose loved ones on the road at a time when most families would look forward to being together, this is something the TTPS wishes no family has to experience for the rest of this year. 

“We continue to appeal to all road users to obey the highway code, the speed limit and practise safe and courteous driving,” Batson added.


Agent who sold $31m ticket: I wanted to sell winning ticket

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While the country’s latest lotto millionaire may forever remain a mystery, 53-year-old Ronald Rampersad, the Carapichaima agent whose machine sold the winning ticket says he feels equally as lucky.

Rampersad, who was born and raised in Orange Field, and lives in a neighbourhood surrounded by family, owns Ronald’s lotto outlet, the booth which sold the $31 million ticket on Tuesday.

Two days before, Rampersad was being discharged from the Eric Williams Medical Sciences Complex, where he was warded for a month to treat a nerve issue which made him unable to walk.

Lounging in his living room yesterday evening, Rampersad, who has been a lotto retailer for four years, said he felt really good. “I was coming home from the hospital on Monday and I told my sister that is a big lotto you know. I told her I don’t want to win it, I want to sell the ticket.”

The retailer who sells the winning lotto ticket receives an undisclosed fixed percentage of the winnings from the National Lotteries Control Board (NLCB).

“I was thinking long-term because whoever sells the winning ticket, their outlet is viewed as a lucky outlet and more people go to buy there,” he said.

Rampersad said he received a call from G Tech, the technology provider for the NLCB, around 7 am yesterday.

“The girl asked my name and I told her. She asked me to confirm some other information and then she said I had sold the winning ticket.”

Rampersad doesn’t know much about the lucky millionaire who bought the ticket. The two women who work at the outlet also have no idea.

Ramdai Ramroop, one of the operators said it was very exciting to know that the winning ticket came from the booth where she worked.

“A lot of people pass and they stop and buy tickets. People sometimes play the same numbers over and over. Some buy $500  worth of tickets. All we know is that it was a quick pick,” Ramroop said.

Wednesday's winning numbers were 8, 12, 19, 26, 33 and the power ball 8.

“The way the place is situated a lot of people, stop, play and go. They don’t hang around. People sometimes stand up and wait but I know today will be slow.”

The outlet can be easily missed by commuters on the Orange Field Road, the only significant marker, a huge pothole on the opposite side of the road.

Rampersad said he would get a sign for the business tomorrow so people would know where it was. His commission will be saved for a rainy day. He said: “I am sick so I am glad I have this money as a security in case something happens.

“I don’t expect it to change my life in any big way. I like my life simple. I don’t like too much changes. 

“For the while, the whole community will be excited and people will be curious. I sold the big jackpot but they will forget about that soon.”

The breakdown by the NLCB revealed that five people successfully chose five numbers without the power ball to win $20,022.89 each.

Ninety-nine people selected four numbers with the power ball to win $746, while 811 people won $176 each after they successfully chose four numbers without the power ball.

Approximately 2,441 people each won $18.32 after choosing three numbers with the power ball, while 20,235 each won a free quick pick after choosing three numbers without the power ball.

Public sector contract labour under review

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Government has appointed a committee to examine all contract workers in the public sector as a matter of priority, Communications Minister Maxie Cuffie announced yesterday, noting a huge number of such positions in the sector.

At Thursday’s weekly government press conference, held at the Office of the Prime Minister, St Clair, Cuffie said the move was in keeping with a promise made in the People’s National Movement’s manifesto.

The announcement follows the non-renewal of short-term contract employees at various government ministries who Prime Minister Keith Rowley said were hired as part of the electioneering of the previous People’s Partnership administration.

Cuffie said the committee would be chaired by Sandra Jones (permanent secretary in the Office of the Prime Minister), acting Chief Personnel Officer (CPO) Beresford Riley, as well as representatives of finance and labour.

The team will receive terms of reference soon. 

While Cuffie said he didn’t want to pre-judge their work, he said there were a wide range of contract employees in the public service and the number has been growing. He said the committee would see how best Government could go forward. “There’s a huge number of contract employment in the public service; we’ve reached a point where it’s impacting on government’s delivery, but it also has implications for those people employed in the public service,” he said.

Cuffie said it was not something Government could make an ad hoc decision on. For this reason, he said, the committee included representatives from the CPO’s division, Director of Personnel Administration and all agencies involved in securing contract employment in the public service.

NEW BOARDS ANNOUNCED

Cuffie also announced board appointments for the National Agricultural Marketing and Development Corporation (Namdevco), Metal Industries Company Ltd (MIC) and the Regulated Industries Commission (RIC).

The Namdevco board comprises Dennis Ramdeen (chairman), Julianne Davis, Wayne Innis (deputy chairman), Sateish Ojah, Rayber Bowen, Anne Marie Dardaine, Clarence Jacobs and Felix Clarke.

The MIC board comprises Professor Clement Imbert (chairman), Keith Toby, Delbert Edwards, Winston Boodoo, Mark Sandy, Gail Ragoo and Reynold Rooks. The RIC board comprises former Teaching Service Commission chairman Hyacinth Guy (chairman), Shalini Campbell, Clayton Blackman, Dexter Joseph, Vin Lutchman and Dr Arielle John.

Neighbour in court for nurse’s murder

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RALPH BANWARIE

A neighbour of a 62-year-old retired nurse, who suffocated on a towel stuffed in her mouth, appeared in court yesterday charged with her murder.

Simeon Garcia, 29, unemployed, of Cocorite Drive, North Eastern Settlement, Ojoe Road, Sangre Grande, was remanded into custody by Sangre Grande Magistrate Siumungal Ramsaran to reappear on December 9.

Dressed in a blue long-sleeved shirt and grey pants, Garcia stood silently as Ramsaran read the murder charge. The State alleges that on October 18, he murdered mother of five, Savitri Juteram, at her Jacob Coat Road, North Eastern Settlement home.

Garcia lived three houses away from Juteram. 

Relatives of the victim and other members of the public gathered outside the courthouse to catch a glimpse of the accused as he made his way from the nearby police station to the court.

Onlookers hurled abuse at Garcia as he was escorted by police officers. Some shouted “Shame on you man, you need to be punished.”

Garcia was arrested by Sangre Grande Task Force officers last Friday and handed over to homicide investigators of Region 11, Arouca.

The accused was charged after instructions from the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions. 

Police investigators say they intend to arrest three more people for the crime.

WPC Joseph-Gibson laid the charge.

One relative who attended yesterday’s hearing said they were happy someone was charged.

“We all missed our mother, and this Christmas will be very sad as we have no mother to visit and purchase gifts for but await the trial and its outcome,” he said.

Roodal reaches out to Vasant

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“There will be no Rudy 2020!”

This was the assurance given to United National Congress (UNC) supporters at the Rienzi Complex, Couva, on Thursday night as Oropouche East MP Dr Roodal Moonilal announced his slate for the party’s internal election.

Moonilal introduced his picks for all but one on his Loyalist slate, saying the third deputy political leader would be introduced in the coming days. 

The party will hold internal elections on December 5 to select a new leader and executive.

Throwing jabs at the party’s incumbent, Kamla Persad-Bissessar, who is seeking re-election, Moonilal said if elected he would present a team and not an individual to contest general elections. 

“In 2020, there will be no ‘Rudy2020,’ there will be UNC 2020,” Moonilal said. 

“We will not be scrambling for candidates, putting them in the morning and remove them by night.”

He was referring to the UNC’s selection and removal of Roger Morales as Mayaro MP for the September 7 general election. 

Morales was replaced by Rushton Paray after a video of Morales criticising the UNC was leaked on social media. 

Although he paid tribute to Persad-Bissessar for her leadership, Moonilal urged supporters not to vote on the basis of sentiment in the upcoming election.

“I salute her for her leadership, but this is not the time for sympathy. 

“I can bring a slate weeks before nomination day, we must not take long and make the wrong decisions.”

Sending out a message to the third contender for the position, Vasant Bharath, Moonilal urged him to rethink.

“I see we have one contender for leadership, my brother Vasant Bharath, who is not an elected Member of the Parliament. This is a recipe for chaos. We cannot have a political leader who is not the leader of the Opposition.”

Referring to the dual leadership of the UNC in 2007, where Winston Dookeran was political leader and Basdeo Panday opposition leader, Moonilal said: “We will then have two leaders in the UNC, a situation that could split the party asunder as happened before, causing us to lose the elections in 2007.”

He questioned how Bharath would act as leader, saying: “Is he going to sit in Rienzi, draft a party agenda and give it to someone else to take to Parliament?”

He then invited Bharath to join the Loyalist slate.

“I am asking Vasant, for the sake of the party, to think carefully. 

“There are other very senior positions in the party for which he is eminently qualified. Join us and we can discuss this.”

Moonilal also announced plans to hold 70 cottage meetings across T&T before the December 5 elections. 

He said if selected, he would begin screening candidates for the 2016 Local Government elections as early as January 2016 and have a local government manifesto ready by May 2016.

“We will start screening candidates in January, to get the best possible team so the UNC can claim victory in local government elections.”

Moonilal’s loyalist slate

Regional Representatives

Tobago Barrington ‘Skippy’ Thomas

South Joanne Leacock

Central Devika Thomas

North/West Cassandra Samuel

North East Sharla Alexander

International Relations Officer Ken Emrit

Party Organiser Jairam Seemungal

Treasurer Neil Gosine

Elections Officer Nela Khan

Education Officer Usha Rampersad

Policy and Strategy Officer Colin Partap

Research Officer Yvette Richards

Deputy Chairman Jehan Mohammed

Chairman Dr Tim Gopeesingh 

Deputy Political Leader James Lambert

Deputy Political Leader Larry Lalla

Mickela sits out Dec 5 elections

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Mickela Panday has put to rest speculation that she intends to follow in the footsteps of her father and contest the top or any other post in the December 5 internal elections of the United National Congress (UNC).

Panday, daughter of UNC founder former prime minister Basdeo Panday, announced yesterday that she would be sitting this election out because of numerous irregularities in the process.

The young attorney, who has represented the party in the Oropouche West constituency, made it clear that although she was approached by both Dr Roodal Moonilal, who is contesting the top position on the Loyalist slate and Vasant Bharath, who is expected to announce his slate today, she would not be joining either of their slates. She said she also could not endorse any of the candidates who sat idly by for five years and did nothing to save the party.

Panday said instead of fighting for a position, she would embark on a campaign to restore democracy to the party.

“This election should not be about who will be leader, it should be about how we can save the party from those who sat by and did nothing as it was dying a slow death. But our members need to first understand, believe and accept, it is not the leader or the national executive that holds the power, it is the members themselves.”

Flanked by UNC foundation member John Humphrey, former Tabaquite MP Dr Adesh Nanan and former executive member Vashist Maharaj, in the Basdeo Panday Foundation Conference room at the Rienzi Complex, Couva, Panday declared, “My campaign begins today.”

She said she would be sensitising the membership to the irregularities and illegalities in the electoral process.

“As long as the party is run by people perceived to be corrupt, it will never see power. We cannot expect to do the same thing over and over and get different results.”

She also questioned the validity of the elections, “given the constitutional term limits of both the incumbent leader and all other 17 members of the national executive officers had expired. Surely, if you are not duly elected, it follows you can’t make decisions and speak on behalf of the membership.”

She said she gave consideration to heading a slate after being approached by people to do so, although people she respected, including her father, advised against it unless the elections would be free and fair.

Nevertheless, Panday said, she felt it important to give people the benefit of the doubt and so she attempted to get basic information, such as whether her name was on the UNC’s current membership list, but she encountered a brick wall every step of the way.

Panday said she was shocked at the irregular and highly unreasonable request that she, a life member who has never sought political membership of another party in the country, should submit her name to the office for verification. She said she was still awaiting confirmation of her membership number and to ascertain that her name was on the electoral list. She said impossible and unrealistic two-day deadlines were also set for registration of new members and to date she was still awaiting membership forms for new members.

“Why would a political party be afraid of people joining?” she asked.

“It is unacceptable in a party where the incumbent leader continues to preach democracy, such dictatorial decisions are being taken. 

“In these circumstances and without a valid, updated membership list, I am convinced the election will not be free or fair. Not only will my contesting indicate an acceptance of this madness, it will guarantee things never change and we will be destined to continuously repeat our mistakes of the past and never move forward.”

She added, “Immediately, we have to take steps to return our party to the ideological position on which it was founded, to restore the democracy and dignity of the party, so that all of its members, old and new, can hold their heads up high and be proud of their party.”

She said her campaign to educate and remind members of the ideology that led to the foundation of the party would start next week.

“After such time, the members will have to decide if they wish to participate in the elections on December 5, and if they decide not to, they must demand those strangling the party release it and hold free and fair elections that not only the members, but the public at large, can have confidence in.”

Workers caught back-dating deals

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A secret contract millhouse was discovered at the Education Facilities Company Ltd (EFCL) in Maraval, and armed guards have been called in to secure a mountain of potentially damning evidence which points to the illegal manufacturing of backdated tender documents worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

The discovery was made one day after the new board of the state-owned company suspended its Chief Executive Officer Kiran Shah and Chief Operating Officer Sharma Maharaj over claims of impropriety.

Informed sources told the T&T Guardian that a member of the board found the “secret room” on the first floor of the Maraval building, which is opposite the Country Club and also houses the main branch of FirstCaribbean International Bank (Trinidad and Tobago) Ltd. EFCL occupies the second floor of the building and, unknown to staff, another room was rented on the first floor.

Sources said a new board member was stunned after finding three people busy at work in the “secret room” and called in security after realising they were working on EFCL business. The three people in the room, and another who was subsequently found to be part of the same operation, were sent home and their access to information technology at the company was suspended, sources said.

Accounting firm PriceWaterhouseCoopers has been called in to conduct a forensic audit of the company and has already taken a snapshot of the systems used in the ‘millhouse.’

Sources said they have already discovered that the four select employees were hired to create contracts and tender documents for several existing projects which were already paid for in full. This was being done, according to company insiders, to validate the tendering processes to make them appear transparent and legal.

A preliminary report has revealed that contracts worth hundreds of millions of dollars were given out to select contractors in the run-up to the September 7 general election and they were paid in full without any work being done. Two contractors, who are financiers of the United National Congress, have been identified as the major beneficiaries of the scheme, sources said.

Sources said the forensic audit and a criminal investigation by the Anti-Corruption Investigations Bureau, which began in April, triggered this week’s suspension of the two executive officers.

A whistleblower initially went to the police with a 108-page dossier detailing several instances of fraud and mismanagement. This sparked a police investigation centering around the award of several contracts over the last five years.

Sources said efforts had been made to axe the whistleblower but she stood up against her employers.

The T&T Guardian also learned that the execs’ suspensions come mere months after the dismissal of a female civil engineer who clashed with the seniors over the contract with a preferred EFCL contractor. 

Contacted yesterday, recently installed EFCL chairman Arnold Piggott confirmed the suspensions and audit.

“The forensic audit has commenced immediately and the two were suspended with full pay pending the outcome of the investigation,” he said.

An internal memo, penned by EFCL corporate secretary Verity Bynoe and dated November 13, informed the staff about the suspensions. That memo also informed the staff that international accounting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers had been retained to conduct the forensic investigation and urged compliance by all staff members.

Piggott noted that the EFCL’s line minister, Education Minister Anthony Garcia, in his budget presentation, had called for a forensic audit into the spending and award of construction contracts by the former board. 

He said while he did not know how long the audit would take, he was hoping it would be completed in a timely manner “so we can move forward.” He said the future of the two suspended officers depended on the outcome of the investigation. 

“Yes the suspensions are pending the outcome of the investigation,” he said.

While Piggott did not say whether the forensic audit and criminal probe were two separate investigations, the T&T Guardian learned that the two would be running parallel and should be completed within the same timeframe. The forensic audit and the probe will focus on the EFCL’s use of two preferred contractors.

The newly installed board of directors, chaired by the former People’s National Movement (PNM) agriculture minister, met for the second time on Wednesday and immediately suspended the two executives as the investigations began. 

About the EFCL

The EFCL is a special state enterprise formed to build, deliver and maintain modern building facilities utilising best practices in project management. 

Its mandate is to ensure the development of modern and efficient physical infrastructure for the Ministry of Education, and support the strategic goals of the ministry. 

The company has been criticised frequently over its inadequate facilities for several schools which remain incomplete, or fail, leaving hundreds of children without accommodation since the new term opened in September.

More info

This is not the first time the EFCL has faced public scrutiny. 

Contacted yesterday, former line minister Dr Tim Gopeesingh would only detail the line of approvals and payment structure between EFCL and the ministry, saying that everything went through the ministry’s permanent secretary and that it was all done above board. 

Back in 2012, then opposition member, now Finance Minister Colm Imbert, described the operations at EFCL as enabling a “feeding frenzy.” Gopeesingh had said then that an audit into EFCL was already in progress and a team from the Finance Ministry was examining operations at EFCL.

Imbert had raised suspicions of “irregularities” in the award of contracts by EFCL and had called for a forensic audit into several scopes of works, including electrical upgrades at Tranquillity Government School and Lakshmi Girls’ Hindu College. Imbert also claimed then that former minister in the Ministry of Education, Clifton De Coteau, used his position to help a friend benefit from EFCL contracts. 

‘Devil’ seeks protection from prisons officers

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The 20-year-old man charged with murdering prison superintendent David Millette claimed yesterday that he has received death threats from prisons officers. 

Speaking through his lawyer Criston J Williams after appearing in the Port-of-Spain Eighth Magistrates Court yesterday afternoon, Sean “Devil” Coa claimed that the threats were sent through his relatives while he was in police custody over the past week. 

“My instructions are that his relatives were told that prison officers were eagerly awaiting his arrival in prison,” Williams said, as he called upon Chief Magistrate Marcia Ayers-Caesar to intervene to ensure his client’s safety while on remand. 

Without giving any details of the alleged threats, Williams said that his client did not want to be sent to the Golden Grove State Prison in Arouca, from where he believed the threats had emanated. 

In response, police prosecutor Insp Winston Dillon said that Coa had nothing to fear as “Prison Service had measures in place to ensure the safety of all persons under their care.”

Ayers-Caesar did not appear convinced by Dillon’s assurance as she made a note of Coa’s complaint and ruled that he should not be sent to the Arouca facility. 

Coa is accused, together with a group of unknown people, of murdering Millette on November 2. Millette, who had more than 20 years service, was shot dead as he was entering his car in front of his Cipriani Avenue, Second Caledonia, home. He was on the first day of his vacation leave. 

Coa, who surrendered to police a day after Millette’s murder, was also charged with being in possession of an illegal gun and ammunition and possession of the illegal items with intent to endanger life. 

A stony-faced Coa stood silently in the prisoner’s enclosure of the court as the charges were read. 

Moments before his court appearance, Coa made an obscene gesture towards media personnel as he was being led into the St Vincent Street courthouse.

Coa, whose hands were handcuffed in front of him, extended his middle finger and maintained the gesture until he entered the building. None of Coa’s relatives were in court for the brief hearing. 

In addition to the special security measures, Williams also requested that prosecutors disclose the evidence against his client as soon as possible to ensure the speedy start of his case. 

In particular, Williams requested the results of forensic tests performed on spent shells found at the scene of Millette’s murder. 

“The results may implicate or exonerate the accused,” Williams said, as he also requested that investigators disclose whether an illegal firearm was seized and would be used as evidence. 

Coa will reappear in court on December 10. 


53 illegal immigrants held in police raid

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A total of 53 illegal immigrants were detained yesterday as a joint task force swooped down on known hideouts along the East/West corridor.

According to a release from the T&T Police Service, the two-hour exercise, which was held at varying points along the Priority Bus Route, from the Aranguez Savannah to Morvant Junction, began at 6 am, and initially led to the detention of 107 foreign nationals. 

They included the following nationalities: 39 Jamaicans, 25 Guyanese, 18 Chinese, five Ghanaians, six Colombians, five Nigerians, two Cubans, one Filipino, two Dominican Republic nationals, one Vincentian and five Grenadians. A total of 16 women were among the detainees.

The task force stopped passenger vehicles travelling along the PBR and foreign nationals suspected of being illegal immigrants were detained after being unable to verify their immigration status at the time. 

The detainees were taken to the Immigration Investigation Department, Port-of-Spain, where further enquiries were conducted leading to the release of 54 foreign nationals whose status in the country was verified and found to be legal.

The remaining foreign nationals were taken to the Immigration Detention Centre, Aripo, pending further investigations as preliminary enquiries suggest they are in the country illegally. 

The raid targeting illegal immigrants was carried out by officers of the Criminal Investigations Department, Inter-Agency Task Force, Immigration Investigation Department, transit police and traffic wardens.

It was co-ordinated by Snr Supt Mc Donald Jacob of the Port-of-Spain Criminal Investigations Department and led by ASP Mervyn Edwards, assisted by immigration officers.

Bail reduced but accused remain in jail

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Two men, charged with separate assaults on a two-year-old girl and a 36-year-old woman, after videos of the incidents went viral on social media, are closer to coming out of prison. 

Dexter Gobin, of Maracas, St Joseph, and Ricardo Jerome, of Oropune Gardens, Piarco, obtained variations to their bail yesterday.

Gobin, who is charged with wilfully assaulting the toddler while attempting to force feed the child a bottle of milk, applied to High Court Judge Norton Jack for his $175,000 bail to be reduced to a more “manageable sum.”

After hearing submissions from Gobin’s lawyer, Fareed Ali, in the Port-of-Spain High Court yesterday, Jack reduced the bail to $100,000. 

However, Jack maintained the conditions of his bail initially granted on October 26, which stipulated that he stay away from the victim and her family and that he should report to police three times weekly. 

His wife, Yanique Taylor-Gobin, a Jamaican national, was also charged but was denied bail as she was found to have overstayed her time in T&T. She will remain detained at the Immigration Detention Centre in Aripo until the case is determined. 

Last night CNC3 reported that the teen who video-taped the incident and her mother have been threatened by a relative of Gobin and were offered protection at a safe house.

Meanwhile, Jerome, an Arouca bar owner and labourer with the Customs and Excise Division, who is accused of assaulting his common-law wife, Ornella Ruth Marchan, at Nella’s Sports bar, in Arima Old Road, last week, also managed to secure a variation of his bail. 

Jerome, who was granted $60,000 bail on Monday when he first appeared in court, was unable to access it because of administrative issues at the Arima Magistrates Court. He was due to reappear before Magistrate Debbie-Ann Bassaw yesterday. However, when the case was called in court, Ali, who is also representing him, learnt that his client had not been brought to court by prison authorities. 

In his absence, Bassaw agreed to reduce his bail and allow for a cash deposit of $10,000.

Jerome is charged with causing a public disturbance, assault by beating and possession of a weapon. He surrendered to police last week after a short clip, allegedly depicting him attacking his common-law wife with a metal object and then repeatedly kicking her while she was on the ground, went viral.

Despite both men receiving the variations the T&T Guardian understands that neither was able to secure their bail up to late yesterday, effectively forcing them to spend the weekend on remand. 

(DA) 

JSCs to look them over

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Proposed legislation to protect whistleblowers from prosecution, victimisation, harassment and danger to their employment, as well as the past People’s Partnership government’s procurement/disposal of public property legislation, has been forwarded to parliamentary Joint Select Committees (JSC) for scrutiny.

This was done at yesterday’s parliament session. Two JSCs appointed to examine the bills are to report back by January 22, 2016.

Attorney-General Faris Al-Rawi said the whistleblower protection bill was necessary due to the paucity of witnesses.

“Everyone suspects who is guilty but no one steps forward to testify to guilt-bearing evidence. The fear of victimisation and reprisal for honest exposure is not only perceived but real,” he said.

The bill is a hybrid based on models in Malta, Jamaica and Malaysia, he said. He said it would protect people from criminal or civil suit, and would also cover detrimental action ranging from victimisation and harassment to injury, loss or damage to employment, family life, career, profession, trade or business. Malicious or fraudulent action on the part of the whistleblower is taken into account in the bill.

Al-Rawi also said his ministry was dealing with the legislative mechanism for the appointment of a commissioner of police, which was expected to be completed by monthend. 

Finance Minister Colm Imbert, speaking about the procurement bill, said the JSC scrutiny would examine the policy and merits of the legislation and procedures for appointing a procurement regulator to see if these “make sense and are in the best interests of T&T.”

However, former planning minister Dr Bhoe Tewarie, who had piloted the procurement bill under the PP, accused the Government of delaying on the bill and attempting to water it down. He said the procurement regulator was the strongest aspect of the bill. Al-Rawi subsequently denied this, saying the Government aimed to strengthen the role of the regulator. He said the bill would cover procurement concerning all state land. 

The JSC which will examine the whistleblower legislation comprises government ministers Al-Rawi, Stuart Young, Edmund Dillon, an opposition MP and four senators to be named. 

The JSC examining the procurement bill comprises Ministers Imbert, Cherrie Ann Cockburn-Crichlow, Adrian Leonce, an opposition MP and four senators.

Also in Parliament, Imbert, replying to opposition questions, said a certificate in the sum of $102 million has been made in favour of OAS (Constructora) and the Government was carefully considering this and all matters of a contractual nature regarding the Point Fortin highway contract. 

Health Minister Terrence Deyalsingh, in addressing the House on another matter, also said that based on World Health Organisation statistics on non-communicable diseases, T&T hadn’t progressed between 1990 and 2013. He noted factors, including pre-existing conditions such as obesity, diabetes, and high blood pressure. He also noted lack of succession planning in public institutions and the length of experience of doctors.

Deyalsingh said the ministry would meet next Wednesday with stakeholders and would go through the 76 recommendations made on the situation arising from various reports. He said very few were implemented and those would start being implemented as of Wednesday.

Al-Rawi wary of financial law deficiencies

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The ease of doing business in T&T could be hampered by recent downgrades of the country by the US and Canada concerning our compliance with Caribbean Financial Action Task Force (CFATF) recommendations, Attorney-General Faris Al-Rawi said yesterday.

In a statement to Parliament in which Al-Rawi also announced T&T had now assumed the chairmanship of Caribbean FATF, he said, “This Government fully acknowledges its responsibility to the people and the international community to achieve effective systems to address the threats of money laundering, the financing of terrorism and the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. As the incoming chair of CFATF and host nation of the secretariat, we have an even higher duty in this regard.”

The FATF’s 40 recommendations include implementing adequate procedures to identify and freeze terrorist assets without delay, implementing adequate procedures for the confiscation of funds related to money laundering and ensuring a fully operational and effectively functioning Financial Intelligence Unit, including supervisory powers.

The evaluation used to verify compliance with FATF recommendations involves a team of regional experts in the legal, financial and law enforcement fields examining T&T’s regime on the issue.

Al-Rawi said T&T’s fourth-round evaluation in June 2014 included a site assessment in January 2015.

“T&T must now seek adjustments to the ratings and observations of the assessors as appropriate. The evaluation will culminate with the report being discussed and finalised at the XLII Plenary this month, when we’ll also ascend to the chair of CFATF.”

On November 22 there will also be a meeting, including T&T representatives, the assessors and reviewers, to attempt to resolve any outstanding issues. At that meeting, ratings will be finalised and a determination made on what action is to be taken in respect of T&T.

Al-Rawi added: “No one should have expected T&T to be cut any slack by its contemporaries in the mutual evaluation. There are already calls for further downgrades of some of the ratings given to our country. 

“In respect of Immediate Outcome 1 (Risk, Policy and Coordination), the United States has recommended that we be downgraded from moderate to low. 

Gaps in respect of transparency of beneficial ownership of legal persons and regulation of the non-profit organisation sector are also high on the list of concerns of the Americans. 

“With respect to Recommendation 29—Financial Intelligence Units, Canada has recommended that we be downgraded from ‘largely compliant’ to ‘partially compliant’ based on the hiring system in respect of the FIU. Canada has also made similar recommendations in respect of Recommendations 27 (Powers of Supervisors) and 34 (Guidance and Feedback).”

Al-Rawi added, “Canada also highlighted that several immediate outcomes point to substantial lack of effectiveness due to deficiencies with the sanctions regime. The Government will strongly defend the national position. 

The inter-ministerial committee will continue to work with the National Anti-Money Laundering and Counter Financing of Terrorism Committee to select the strongest team to represent the country in the evaluation review. We’ve identified several statements and conclusions in the report that we view as inaccurate and which should be reviewed and amended.”

Al-Rawi said the upcoming plenary could also adopt other measures, ranging from a letter being sent from the CFATF chairman drawing attention to the lack of compliance with the FATF Standards, to suspension of membership in CFATF, to termination of membership.

“Any level of sanctions can have wide-ranging negative impacts on the country and citizens. The comments already received from the United States and Canada do not bode well for our position. 

The international investment marketplace is increasingly using mutual evaluations and follow-up reports and data on AML/CFT compliance to place and maintain foreign direct investments.

“Conversely, we may encounter challenges to capital investments abroad by government wholly or majority-owned entities. Multi-national financial institutions may also reconsider their tenability in a country with weak ratings to avoid being stained through association and possible declines in their share pricing.”

The ease of doing business in T&T, especially through financial institutions, could also be hampered, he said. Al-Rawi said T&T would likely have to report on further progress in May 2017.

Action

AG Al-Rawi said a complete assessment of the legislative requirements to correct the legislative deficiencies would be completed shortly, including key amendments to address confiscation and restraint of assets under the Proceeds of Crime Act and the freezing of assets under the Anti-Terrorism Act. 

The Anti-Terrorism Act will also be amended to strengthen the terrorism and terrorist financing sanctions regime, including financing travel for the purpose of partaking in terrorist training. 

“We’ll explore amendments to the Financial Intelligence Unit Act to allow for greater autonomy and strengthened powers of this critical regulator,” he said. 

“The Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters Act will also be amended to allow the Central Authority to accede to a request that relates to a criminal offence under the tax laws of a Commonwealth country. 

“Procedural mechanisms to support the legislative regimes will also be strengthened, including, for example, the formalisation of a case management system for the Central Authority and the implementation of the seized assets fund. Greater emphasis will also be placed on effectiveness mechanisms.”

Al-Rawi said higher priority must be given to the investigation and prosecution of offences. 

“This will require us to ensure that institutions such as the Financial Investigations Branch (FIB) and the DPP are staffed by adequately trained and experienced personnel and there is effective communication and information sharing among the intelligence community, law enforcement investigators and prosecutors...” 

Vasant unveils early treachery

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Minutes after launching the slate for his newly-formed “Team Reconnect” at the Couva South Hall yesterday, Vasant Bharath raised concerns about the United National Congress’ (UNC) internal elections process, saying he does not believe it would be free and fair when voters go to the polls on December 5.

“I do have concerns.... serious concerns. I have alluded to the fact that people have said to me that they received a text message that I sent to them asking whether they would support me.”

But he denied sending text messages to UNC members who are illegible to vote and warned that he would “expose” the irregularities in the elections “in due course.” 

“But I suspect from what I am told that those text messages are being used to take supporters of certain contenders off the (electoral) list,” he said.

In the lead up to the September 7 general election voters also received unsolicited telephone calls to private mobile numbers aimed at seeking their support for the UNC. Told that allegation he was making was similar to one of the strategies used in former prime minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar’s general election campaign, Bharath said he could not say that.

“The point I am signalling to the existing national executive at Rienzi Complex and hierarchy of the party is that we are going to be very vigilant in terms of the areas where we believe there can be manipulation of the votes.”

Bharath said he found out about the calls by accident on Thursday.

“Someone came to me and apologised for not responding to the text messages. I knew nothing about it,” he said.

Bharath said, however, that it was impossible to control the election process to ensure that it was free and fair.

“This is what Mr (Basdeo) Panday has been alluding to.” (See page 17)

Addressing a small group of party supporters at the venue, Bharath said based on previous campaigns he suspects the election will get nasty.

“I don’t hold out much hope that it’s going to be very clean,” he said.

Among those present at the launch were Garvin Nicholas, Stacy Roopnarine and Stephen Cadiz, who are part of his slate, Dhanoo Sookoo, Manohar Ramsaran and Gideon Hanoomansingh.

Asked if he was not successful at the polls what would be his next move, Bharath said he intends to take things one step at a time and lead his team to victory.

“The intention is to reconnect with the UNC population and thereafter with the wider population. We have a lot of work to do.”

Bharath said he was confident he could topple his opponents, Dr Roodal Moonilal and Persad-Bissessar, because he had a strong, experienced, dedicated and young team. Asked what gives him the edge over his contenders, Bharath said he was known regionally and internationally for having what is required to take a local organisation and fix it very quickly. 

Team Reconnect’s campaign will being funded by donations from the business community and ordinary folks, he said.

Bharath said “no longer should we be beholden to a very few financiers, who then unfortunately will extract their pound of flesh from the organisation. We need to move away from that.”

Many wrongs in last 5 years

In the last five years, Bharath said the UNC had made many mistakes, but primarily allowed the institutions of authority to almost irretrievably break down. 

“We were not listening to the people and their concerns and understanding that ultimately the party can only grow or the government could only survive if the party was strong. It may or may not have been deliberate, but at the end of the day the end result was the party’s institutions were allowed to flounder.”

Saying the party would require a lot of healing, Bharath said should he win the leadership post he intends to visit all 41 constituencies with the national executives. He said he would also examine the party’s constitution.

He insisted that the election was not about him or his slate, but the hope of every member and supporter.

Bharath received loud applause when he said that his team would not “tolerate arrogance, high handedness, mediocrity and indiscipline.”

He said several UNC members had complained that quite a few government ministers were arrogant and high handed.

“I think that is what led to our defeat. As you all know, we have an election petition to is currently before the court. 

“And while we eagerly await the outcome of that matter, we must ask ourselves if we are prepared as a party to win those six seats if the matter goes in our favour. Have we recaptured the imagination of those who may not have voted for us. I think we all know the answer,” he said.

Bharath said the wrongs committed by the UNC were when monies were amassed by some over the last five years and used to buy radio stations, journalists and announcers, or remove the names from the membership list because of the perceived preference for one candidate over another.

Bharath said maximum leadership was a recipe for disaster.

“We must treat with allegations of misconduct head on. As a party our future must not be coloured by the inappropriate actions of a few in office. Today, I say to you it is time to move away from the political rhetoric that has nothing to do with improving the quality of your lives but everything to do with selfish leaders wanting to stay in power.”

Team Reconnect slate

Vasant Bharath—leader

Dr Fuad Khan—chairman (MP for San Juan/Barataria)

Garvin Nicholas—deputy political leader 

Stephen Cadiz—deputy political leader 

Rishi Tripathi—regional coordinator central

Dr Ramchand Rampersad—policy and strategy officer

Rishi Ramkissoon—treasurer

Ralph Henry—north/west regional coordinator

Prakash Williams—elections officer

Camille Elie-Govind—south coordinator

Sharon Harrilal—international relations officer

Valini Chadee-Dhanraj—research officer

Vishnu Koon Koon—regional coordinator north/east

Shane Mohammed—vice chairman

Wazeer Aleem—party organiser

Nirmala Sesnarayan—education officer

Small buyers still feel Forex pinch

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The half-a-billion United States dollars injected into the system by the Central Bank to ease the currency crisis in the country has already been used up by the business community. 

On October 29, Minister of Finance Colm Imbert mandated that some US$500 million be immediately injected into the banking system. 

The massive injection was expected to clear existing trade credit and also ease some of the currency crunch being experienced by private citizens and small businesses; hardship which many argued was caused by the new foreign exchange system which was introduced last year. 

The injection was also meant to clear the way for the smooth return to the old system of purchasing currency, which Imbert mandated Central Bank Governor Jwala Rambaran to reimplement last month due to the issues with the new system.

However, the Sunday Guardian has been reliably informed that the majority of that money has already been soaked up by the big business sector, leaving private citizens and small business owners still scrambling to access US dollars.

Visits by the Sunday Guardian to several banks throughout T&T last week revealed that customers and small business were only being afforded US$200 per day. Upset customers who called the Central Bank about their woes were merely directed back to commercial bank branch managers if they hoped to be allowed to buy more US.

One bank executive, speaking under the condition of anonymity for fear of victimisation, explained that “trade creditors” were responsible for the quick absorption of the US$500 million injected into the system last month. She said the concern for currency now stemmed from the fact that the quick absorption meant little ease to the daily hassle faced by the banks’ clientele.

“The money is gone,” she said.

“If you go to stores, high-end stores, you would see where the money is. 

“It has been used by business owners to stock stores, but the US injected into the system is just not coming back into the country. We are just not earning enough of it.” 

Trinidad and Tobago Manufacturers Association (TTMA) president, former senator Rolph Balgobin, agreed that the money was already utilised to pay off existing debts incurred by the business community. He said, however, that the TTMA was not concerned about the shortage affecting businesses.

“The US$500 million injection was to clear the existing overhang in the system. Once that was cleared up, even with the implementation of the old system of allocation, it would still take some time before it would ease the need for the US currency,” he told the Sunday Guardian.

Apart from the fact that buyers can now only access US$200 per day through the legitimate banking system, they are also doing so at an increased exchange rate of US$1 to TT$6.43. The currency crisis has, however, also now facilitated the growth of a black market exchange trade, with purchasers being offered the now scarce US currency at a TT$7 rate.

According to RBC’s October 2015 Caribbean Economic Report, local business owners and private citizens accessed some US$695 million in October 2015 alone, meaning that the total amount of US injected into the local banking system had reached unprecedented figures by the end of October. 

The RBC report stated that the year-to-date total was now just under US$2.5 billion, which signalled “an increase of just over US$1.0 billion or 73 per cent over the same period last year.”

When it released the US$500 million on October 29, the Central Bank was reported as saying that T&T’s net official reserves remained at US$10.1 billion, which it said was equivalent to almost one year’s worth of imports.

DOMA boss concerned

Head of the Downtown Owners and Merchants Association (DOMA) Gregory Aboud said he too understood the business absorption took the majority of the latest injection, leaving private citizens in difficulty.

“It helped dissolve the existing backlog, queued among commercial interests and the business community,” Aboud said.

“But it seems now that another queue has developed and indeed that private citizens are still experiencing tremendous difficulty in accessing foreign exchange.” 

Aboud said, however, that only rational and frank national discussions would help the country better understand the currency crisis facing the country.

“Now it seems for some reason that the exchange rate has come to be known as a sort of economic barometer for measuring the performance of regional governments. We do not know if that phenomena is at work in T&T, but we do know that any shortage and scarcity points to a discussion regarding the price of the commodity,” Aboud said.

The Central Bank, which has now fully reverted to the original allocation method, is expected to provide a full analysis on the operations of the FX market early next month.

The Sunday Guardian texted Imbert seeking clarification on where the injection went and if the currency crisis could be rectified before the very busy Christmas season but was unable to get an explanation from him.

But the Central Bank said it has been receiving reports from the commercial banking sector on the daily movement of the foreign exchange (FX) in the system since its injection.

“The US$500m intervention was mainly to settle trade related transactions,” communications manger Charlene Ramdhanie explained in an email exchange.

She said that the free market system governing banking in T&T means that commercial banks can use their own discretion on who and how much to sell when approached by a would-be buyer.

“Central Bank does not determine what FX amount customers receive, when they receive FX/who gets FX...Apart from our intervention, commercial banks receive FX from the energy companies, other companies and the public which can be used to meet demand,” she said.

Beating Isis

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Orin Gordon

Editor-in-Chief

With exquisite bad timing, President Barack Obama declared, in an interview with ABC News early on Friday, that the US and its allies had contained Isis. Then Friday night’s attacks in Paris happened. 

Obama may have been talking about Isis’ territorial gains in Syria and Iraq, but he must wish he could take that statement back today. “I don’t think they’re gaining strength,” the US President had said. “What is true, from the start our goal has been first to contain and we have contained them. 

They have not gained ground in Iraq and in Syria…you don’t see this systemic march by ISIL across the terrain. “What we have not yet been able to do is to completely decapitate their command and control structures,” he added. “We’ve made some progress in trying to reduce the flow of foreign fighters.”

Friday night in Paris, ISIL’s command and control structures looked very much intact. Even allowing for the view of intelligence professionals that terror attacks are increasingly cellular—planned and executed at source rather than from a Middle Eastern central command—the level of organisation suggested something rather higher than cellular command, or a series of opportunistic attacks.

We’ve come a long way since 9/11, so despite the terrible tragedy, some perspective is needed. 9/11 threw transatlantic travel into chaos for days. From London, where I watched it unfold, we couldn’t place a phone call to any country in the Caribbean with the +1 XXX numerical prefix. 

We grumble at taking our shoes off at Piarco, and shake our heads at coming straight off intransit flights and being marched through the machines again, something that Panama, for example, has the good sense not to put its intransit passengers through. 

Three years before 9/11 was the World Cup in France, and those of us who went to see Jamaica’s Reggae Boyz take on the world could move around with relative freedom, even with heavy security. Bombs went off on Friday at the Stade de France, where the ’98 final took place. Six and counting were killed. The terrorists had planned to kill far more. 

Seventeen years ago, they’d surely have succeeded in doing so. 

However unfortunate Obama’s analysis looks today, success in containing Isis/ISIL, either on the battlefield or in our cities (a battlefield of sorts for terrorists anyway), is not down to the US alone, or the US and its allies.

The question of how and why some of our young men and women find succour in the twisted, quasi-religious message of ISIL, so much so that they answer the call to arms, is one we need to answer and address urgently. The number of Trinidad and Tobago citizens who have made their way to the battlefield may be comparatively small, but it is nonetheless a chilling development.

What can we, as residents and citizens of this country offer by way of a message to counteract that appeal? And how can we work with Imams to bring them back, both physically and mentally? Isis, as Obama learned to his chagrin, won’t be defeated by armed might alone.


Rowley, Kamla send condolences

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No Trinis have so far been reported injured or dead following Friday’s horrific terrorist attacks in Paris, according to a statement issued by the Ministry of Foreign and Caricom Affairs.

The ministry said yesterday that the information was based on feedback received from the T&T Embassy in Belgium, which has responsibility for France. It added, however, that T&T’s Honorary Consul in Paris, as well as the Trinis in France Association and the T&T French Association will continue to liaise with the T&T Embassy in Belgium.

Over 129 people were reportedly killed in explosions and random shootings now claimed by the Islamic State militant group. The co-ordinated attacks hit a concert hall, a stadium, restaurants and bars almost simultaneously. According to reports, the first of three explosions took place outside the Stade de France stadium on the northern fringe of Paris, where France were playing Germany in an international football friendly. 

France President Francois Hollande, who was attending the game, has since described the events as an “act of war” organised by ISIS.

Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley, in a brief statement yesterday, conveyed heartfelt condolences to Hollande and the French people. 

“As the Government and people of France struggle to come to terms with these attacks, the rest of the world is also gripped by shock, sadness and outrage,” the statement said. 

“No nation should ever have to face such tragedy and it is hoped that nothing of this nature will ever befall any nation again.”

Opposition Leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar also said her thoughts and prayers were with the government, people of France and with the families who lost their loved ones in the senseless attacks.

She condemned the attacks, saying they demonstrated that there remains a greater need for world leaders to work together to combat the threat of terrorism no matter what form it takes or where it strikes.

“I am deeply saddened to learn of the deaths of so many innocent people. Terrorism is a cancer in our civilised world and there is no justification for such savage acts of murder and terror,” Persad-Bissessar said. 

“I join the rest of the international community in condemning this shooting rampage and mass hostage-taking that French President François Hollande called an unprecedented terrorist attack on France.”

She added, “We must never look the other way when innocent people die at the hands of terrorists. My thoughts and prayers are with the Government and people of France and to the families who lost their loved ones in these senseless attacks.” (See pages A7, A9 & A10)

Nationals still trembling 

• Melissa Yacoob, who left Trinidad on Tuesday to attend classes for her masters degree, arrived in Paris on Wednesday and was just a few districts away from where the attacks took place on Friday.

Contacted yesterday, she and her husband, Irfan Hosein, were awaiting a train to Brussels at the timne of the attacks. She said some of the metro lines had been closed off. They arrived safely in Brussels last night. 

Yacoob said Friday’s tragic events were a very unnerving experience.

The political specialist with the US Embassy here in Trinidad said they were staying at the Latin Quarter. 

That’s in an area in the 5th and the 6th arrondissements of Paris. The attacks happened on the 10th and 11th arrondissements.

“We were very fortunate,” she said. 

While she and Hosein did not witness any of the events, they were terrified over what they saw on the news.

Via WhatsApp, she said, “What was terrifying is hearing on the news that some of the perpetrators were on the loose and the authorities were unsure if anymore attacks were going to take place in other districts. The streets of Paris went dead, save for the blaring sounds of sirens all through the night.”

She added, “Reading and hearing about acts of terrorism from afar is a very different feeling from being in the midst of it. This morning (Saturday) there was an air of sadness wherever we went.” 

• Aruna Maharaj, of Madame Maharaj School of Cosmetology, was also in Paris on Friday. 

On her Facebook wall, she posted, “The shootings and bombing in Paris are just a few blocks from my hotel, I’m ok, thank you for your messages and calls. Please keep me in your prayers.”

Efforts to contact her via Facebook proved futile. 

• University of the West Indies lecturer Dr Kris Rampersad, who is chair of the Education Commission of the Unesco General Assembly, is also in Paris for its general conference, which began on November 3 and is expected to end on November 18. 

On Friday, Rampersad posted on Facebook, “Bombings in Paris just now, 26 reported killed various districts. 60 hostages in theatre...entire city emptied out.”

This was followed by, “Paris in panic...no reasons given ...orchestrated attacks.”

In response to someone, Rampersad said, “I am OK. ..was having dinner and someone living near the restaurant rushed me to home as no taxis and metro shut down.”

She did not respond to messages sent via Facebook yesterday though. 

 

Paris tries to breathe again

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As tends to happen in major cities after terrorist attacks, life in Paris yesterday morning continued almost as normal. 

Despite the recommendations by security forces that Parisians stay inside, the streets were full, shops and cafes were open, and people sat outside restaurants smoking cigarettes as usual. 

The mood was sombre but not silent. Moroccan shop owners greeted customers with cheerful “bonjours,” perhaps overcompensating for the level of anxiety that they and other Arabs and North Africans throughout France will be feeling after these divisive, senseless attacks. 

Locals even thronged around the scenes of the attacks at the Bataclan and Le Carillon bar leaving flowers and taking pictures. There were, however, noticeably fewer tourists around. Reuters correspondent, Emily Wither, tweeted that Eurostar staff at London’s Kings Cross St Pancras said only a quarter of ticketholders showed up to catch trains to Paris yesterday. For a city with an urban population of six million, a collective emotion will be difficult to get a handle on. But a sense of sheer disbelief mixed with cruel inevitability will be shared everywhere.

It is no coincidence that the sites of the attacks were so close to Place de la Republique, the monument to France’s history and statehood where hundreds of thousands gathered and daubed defiant messages after the march involving world leaders and ordinary citizens after the Charlie Hebdo attacks in January. Islamic State, which has claimed responsibility for the attacks, wants to punish France for daring to stand up to it with military bombings in Syria.

A surreal, horrible Friday night

Inside the Le Bouillon-Chartier restaurant in the 9th arrondissement, my phone rang just after 10.15 Friday night local time. It was my sister in London. Seconds later, a call from Trinidad. We checked our messages and found friends had already left concerned texts. People halfway across the world knew that two kilometres away from us, at restaurants and bars in the 10th and 11th, masked gunmen had already killed at least a dozen people.

What had started off as a typically buoyant, exciting Friday night in Paris suddenly took on a surreal edge. Around us in the large, packed, constantly buzzing restaurant we began to notice more phones being checked. There was no panic amongst the mostly young crowd. If the waiting staff and restaurant manager knew of the attacks happening close by—and they must have done—they did a very good job of hiding it. 

As calls kept coming in from people watching international television news, my dinner guests began to feel nervous and expressed a desire to get home. Earlier in the evening we had been to see the Eiffel Tower, the Arc de Triomphe and strolled down the Champs-Elysée with its Christmas decorations, blissfully unaware of what was about to happen. 

On the Métro, people chattered nervously. A few fans wearing the national colours of Les Bleus were the most distressed people we’d seen all evening. In our local neighbourhood, the 18th, there was an eerie silence except for a few people outside local bars, heads in hands. Public transport was officially shut down around midnight.

A deadly toll

The volume of the detonations of the three suicide bombs close to the turnstiles at Stade de France and a McDonalds restaurant nearby were so terrifyingly loud that Patrice Evra, playing for France in a friendly against Germany, could clearly be seen on television looking around, alarmed, while making a pass. 

While supporters initially assumed the noises to be firecrackers and cheered the explosions and continued with the Mexican waves, at full-time, having clearly got the message, they spilled onto the pitch, scared to exit the stadium onto the streets of Saint-Denis. At the Bataclan, some of the crowd at the Eagles of Death Metal concert also thought the explosions were part of the show, but quickly saw that two gunmen, “not more than 25 years old, with Kalashnikovs” and looking “pretty calm,” according to one eyewitness, were firing from a balcony. 

For what must have seemed an eternity, the men calmly emptied their magazines then reloaded and fired again. “It was like a gust of wind in a wheat field. Everyone fell —dead, injured or alive. Even if we didn’t have experience of war, we suddenly understood what it’s like,” said another survivor. 

More than 80 people are known to have died in the Bataclan out of the 1,500 concert-goers at the sold out show. Many hid under dead bodies for up to two hours before police stormed the theatre.

Defiance

Graffiti artists, a staple of Paris’s expressive culture, were yesterday painting the Latin phrase, “Fluctuat nec mergitur” on boards in Place de la Republique. The words are Paris’s motto, taken from the coat of arms. In French, they translate as, “Elle est agitée par les vagues, et ne sombre pas.” In English, “She is tossed by the waves but does not sink.” 

At a meeting of the French National Assembly yesterday morning, a minute’s silence was broken by MPs spontaneously singing the French anthem, La Marseillaise. The last time it was sung in parliament was during World War I.

Aurelie Raya, a Paris Match journalist, speaking next to one of the bars attacked on Friday night, said, “They just want us dead, no debate. Debate is for intelligent people. You think we can debate with those who killed people at this café?”

Beetham Wastewater deal under review

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The details of the billion-dollar Beetham Wastewater Treatment facility contract are currently being reviewed by the National Gas Company (NGC). 

In response to questions by the Sunday Guardian, NGC yesterday said it was “carefully reviewing the agreement and the Beetham Wastewater Reuse Plant project in its entirety.” 

The massive contract was the subject of much contention since it was ventilated in the public domain by then opposition leader, now Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley, in 2014. 

Since then the project, the contract and Super Industrial Services Limited (SISL) have been open to scrutiny over the scope of works expected to be carried out before the plant is handed over to the State. 

“Once completed, NGC will engage the contractor and thereafter issue a statement as appropriate,” NGC said. It has been reported that SISL, the preferred contractor under the former People’s Partnership administration, has already been paid as much as 86 per cent of the full cost of the contract at the end of the first quarter of 2015. 

It was reported by the Sunday Guardian in July that SISL had received payments despite the job only being 66.1 per cent complete. Calculations then showed that the US$139 million already paid to SISL included a US$107 million paid to the contractor for engineering, procurement and construction and a further US$32.4 million was paid as the 20 per cent mobilisation fee. The secrecy surrounding this $1.6 billion project extended back to September 2014, when the Sunday Guardian posed questions on the award of the contract to two former executives, chairman Roop Chan Chadeesingh and then president Indar Maharaj. Both men referred questions then to dismissed communications manager Charmaine Mohammed. SISL’s silence on this contract has continued, as several attempts to contact the company’s head office proved to be unsuccessful. 

Although NGC is now unclear as to whether this multi-billion dollar project has a future, back in July its communication manager, Roger Sant, issued a statement defending both SISL and the project. The Sunday Guardian had then reported that NGC had paid SISL the majority of the contract cost and even paid a multi-million dollar mobilisation fee, external to the contract agreement.

But Sant had said then that the 20 per cent mobilisation fee—US$32.4 million—is expected to be repaid to NGC under the project agreement. 

According to the contract, obtained then by the Sunday Guardian, SISL was expected to make the first repayment of the mobilisation fee three months ago. Sant did not say whether that payment schedule was kept and NGC did not say how much that first repayment was or when in August it was expected to be repaid.

Back in July, Sant also defended the monthly payments NGC made to SISL despite the slower pace of construction of the plant. Sant said then said that the NGC was merely honouring the payment schedule as stipulated in the contract agreement and that the contractor had completed 42 per cent of the “construction related activity” by the end of May. 

The Sunday Guardian learned that newly-installed NGC chairman Gerry Brooks is spearheading cost-saving measures at NGC, which now includes the review of this multi-billion dollar project.

The chairman’s report for September 2015 recorded a profit of $130.9 million for the end of its fiscal year.

ISIS pursuing Trini foothold

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Criminologist Daurius Figueira is warning that T&T Muslims recruited by ISIS could be used to infiltrate and destabilise western countries, including those in Europe coping with an influx of refugees. 

Exactly one week after ISIS released a video featuring four Trinidad-born fighters urging T&T muslims to take up arms to fight in Syria, the terrorist organisation is claiming responsibility for the Paris attacks that killed well over a hundred people, saying that the attacks were in retaliation for France’s bombing in Syria.

Speaking to the Sunday Guardian Figueira said: “There is a purpose to the video. Why produce a recruitment video only for T&T, given the comparatively small size of the Muslim population here. It accounts for only about five per cent of the population?

“The people behind the Al Raqqa recruitment video are now sending a message specifically to Muslims in T&T that there is a T&T contingent of fighters now in ISIS, trained and led by nationals of T&T. 

“The Ministry of National Security must investigate that: The formation of a T&T ISIS contingent, the message they want to send and why they want to recruit third world people whose first language is English.”

He said the only other promotional release to date in English had British Islamic State fighters in it. 

Figueira said Caricom nationals, Trinidadians and people from the Commonwealth who spoke English and were educated can be used by ISIS to take the fight on the home soil of first-world countries such as Britain and the US. 

T&T and eight other Caribbean countries enjoy visa-free travel to Europe.

He said the state agencies of the previous government had failed to penetrate and dismantle these structures and the IS video was in fact taunting the state agencies of T&T on their failure. 

He said those fighters presented in the IS video will not return to T&T except if they wanted to escape IS for some reason. 

Figueira said the major issue for T&T was recruitment here and the export of potential fighters to IS. 

According to former National Security Minister Gary Griffith, about 30 T&T nationals made the trip to Syria to fight for ISIS last year. 

The United Nations had also warned that T&T is one of a number of countries with Muslim populations that is being used as a recruiting ground for the terror group. 

Cyber hackers linked to the Islamist organisation attacked the government computers of Jamaica and St Vincent and the Grenadines.

Former Executive Director of the National Operations Centre (NOC) Garvin Heerah told the Sunday Guardian that the details that had surfaced in the viral videos were alarming.

He said the video and information obtained through internet surveillance continued to engage the attention of national security. 

Heerah there is continuity between the last National Security administration, and the current one led by Minister of National Security Edmund Dillon.

Heerah said the probability that that the jihadist recruits could return to T&T should not be dismissed, and all the arms of security and law enforcement, here and abroad, must work together.

Man killed, 2 hurt in nightclub attack

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A 28-year-old taxi driver who agreed to take two men to a nightclub in Port-of-Spain was ambushed and killed yesterday morning.

According to police, Tyrike George, of Le Platte Village, Maraval, had just stepped out of the Copacabana along Dundonald Street, around 4 am when he and two other men were shot at. 

Police said George, along with Daniel Dottin and David Adams, were confronted by four armed men. The gunmen apparently confronted the group and had an obscene verbal exchange before opening fire. 

At the end of the shooting, George lay dead while Dottin was shot in the arm and leg and Adams in the buttocks. 

The killing has taken the murder toll to 370 for the year, compared to 360 for the same period last year.

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