Archive for March 31st, 2010

Opportunity seen in Corbin move

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

-but scepticism abounds

PNCR leader Robert Corbin’s decision against running as its presidential candidate at next year’s general elections is being seen as an opportunity to reverse the fortunes of the main opposition, and a possible opening for an alliance to challenge the ruling PPP/C.

Vincent Alexander

But the announcement has also been greeted with a degree of scepticism, as well as questions about whether Corbin intends to remain as leader of the party.

Former party Vice-Chairman Vincent Alexander said the announcement came as no surprise, since it had been mooted for some time. “Hopefully, there is no backdoor to this, since you are never quite sure when politicians say something that it is going to be so,” he said yesterday.

With the support of a slate of party executives, he led an aborted challenge to Corbin’s leadership in 2007. He and several supporters subsequently withdrew from the party, following the parliamentary recall of one of his supporters, James McAllister.

On Monday, the PNCR confirmed that Corbin told a party General Council that he was “not going to be the presidential candidate for the 2011 general and regional elections” and that “a major challenge for the party was to find a consensus presidential candidate who could win the confidence of the majority of Guyanese” at the polls.

Alexander told Stabroek News that what is most important now for the party is identifying the candidate, which he said could possible be done at a special delegates’ congress. He said the decision could also serve as a “window of opportunity” to inculcate a new political culture within the party. In this regard, he emphasised that moving forward the party would have to demonstrate that it would not be business as usual.

Although he is not a member of the party, Alexander disclosed that he is interested in becoming politically active once more within its ranks. However, he said he has no ambition to hold any party post.

During his address to the General Council last Saturday, Corbin called on those who had personal grievances to put aside personal ambitions and work for the success of the party, irrespective of who might be occupying offices in the party, for the time being. He also said that unity is paramount if the ruling PPP is to be removed from office and a new government is to replace it whether led by the PNCR alone, or, in collaboration with other opposition parties and like-minded organisations under a shared governance arrangement. In this context, he urged the General Council that others are unlikely to be attracted to the PNCR or to work with the party unless it is united and strong.

Dr Richard Van West-Charles yesterday commended Corbin for making the announcement of his decision not to be the candidate. A former Health Minister in the PNC administration, Van West-Charles emerged as one of the key supporters behind Winston Murray’s bid to challenge Corbin’s for leadership of the party last year. He said the party now has to move quickly in its preparations for the 2011 general elections. “We have to do work on the ground and his experience is valuable as we me move forward,” he said. Historically, the leader of the party has been automatically its presidential candidate and as a result Van West-Charles emphasised that the question of the party’s leadership has to be addressed. He acknowledged that there had been mention that the party would explore the possibility of identifying a candidate separately from the leader, but he noted that there had been no decision on that point. “Our constitution speaks to a leader and once determined, that person would automatically be presidential candidate,” he explained.

Meanwhile, in a note circulated to both Guyanese here and in the Diaspora yesterday, historian Dr Kean Gibson warned against rejoicing at the announcement, which she suggested could be a “con.”  “He had stated that he was not going to be the presidential candidate for the 2006 elections – and then at the last moment he announced he was going to be running,” she said, while adding, “Is this a repeat performance? I suspect so because we do not know who the candidate is going to be.”

Gibson also questioned who would be the candidate while Corbin remains as leader of the party. She offered the scenario that if he were to remain as party leader and the PNCR loses the next general elections, it could see the presidential candidate disappear from the scene and the current leader would remain. “…As not only leader of the PNC but also possible Leader of the Opposition – a post that he loves,” Gibson added.

Corbin, she explained, is likely making the announcement so that the PNCR will garner votes in the upcoming local government elections by “lulling the people into a false sense of hope” that he will soon be off the scene. “But he is not disappearing anywhere,” she said.
Possibilities

AFC leader Raphael Trotman said those opposition forces that intend to go up against the PPP/C in a few months time will have to take the latest statements on board for examination carefully. According to him, the announcement might have opened up possibilities, since Corbin’s presence was seen as “a serious hindrance” to a larger alliance of different of opposition forces. “We don’t know if that thesis would now be tested… but certainly it is something that has to be examined carefully,” he said.

Trotman noted that the parties in opposition have to decide whether they want to remain in opposition in perpetuity or whether they believe that they can go ahead and come together to challenge the PPP. He cautioned that the scenarios would have to be discussed over the next few weeks and months. “…It is not just about beating the PPP or getting them out of office, it is about establishing the kind of state, a united progressive state, that I believe is the objective,” he explained .

He said the AFC accepts that alliances are imperative because it believes that the society is eating away at itself, noting the level of corruption and crime, including domestic violence. “Despite all the buildings that are going up and the roads that are being paved and the schools and hospitals, the society has turned on itself and it eating itself a way, it needs an intervention and it needs strong leadership,” Trotman said.

In addition to the recent opposition moves towards alliances in Trinidad and Tobago, he also cited an initiative in Egypt by opposition parties and civil society to work for political changes. “I think we all have to recognise that no one of us on our own can stand up against the government. We can score points but if we are divided we would not be able to bring them down.

So finding that platform or establishing that platform that we can all stand on, respectfully with each other and not having distrust and so forth, it is not as easy as that but it may very well be the answer,” he added.

Asked whether the future could see an alliance between the AFC and the PNC, he said he did not think so.  “I am hoping that we can have an alliance between persons of the PNC, persons of the AFC, persons of the PPP and others, so we can fashion a coalition that draws – I hope – from the best of these parties. So it is not a PNC/AFC thing or a PNC/PPP thing…And I believe there is starting to be a congealing of the best of persons who still want to make and can make a contribution to Guyana but their politics may be different to mine for the last twenty years but that does not mean that person is a lesser Guyanese or a lesser patriot than I am simply because she was over there and I was over here. But if we can all agree that this is what Guyana needs and this is how we are going to do it, health security, education, jobs for young people and so forth, we should be able to move forward,” he said. .

“…I would say we would respect his decision and I hope that when the history of Guyana would have been written that his place in it would be properly identified,” he said. He added that Corbin has been in politics for decades and “he should be allowed to retire from politics or operating at that level gracefully and respectfully.” Further, he said as a leader himself, he is aware of the travails and difficulties of leading an opposition party in Guyana, including having to be bombarded by scandals flung by the ruling party and being expected to react to each one. “It is not always easy and holding your ranks together,” he said. (Additional reporting by Oluatoyin Alleyne)

18,000 for Nat’l Grade Six Assessment today

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

“Be focused, concentrate on the subject being written and put in your best efforts so that you can get the best.” This is Education Minister Shaik Baksh’s advice to the approximately 18,000 youths writing the National Grade Six Assessment which begins today and concludes tomorrow.
This morning’s session English Language papers 1 & 2 will be written followed by the Science Papers 1 & 2 in the afternoon.
The minister assured too that “to date all arrangements for the conduct and administration of National Grade Six Assessments are in place” and that all measures to ensure a smooth process is carried out.
The exams are being written by students from four hundred and eighty-five (485) schools at three hundred and twenty-eight (328) centres nationwide. Addressing the media yesterday Minister Baksh said in preparation for this assessment, time tables were prepared for each pupil and were sent to the schools in February. Supervisors and invigilators were appointed to conduct the examination at each centre to ensure that the correct procedures for the administration of the examination are followed, and orientation as well as training sessions for supervisors and invigilators were held.
Tomorrow during the morning session, Mathematics papers 1 & 2 will be written, followed by the Social Studies Papers 1 & 2 during the afternoon.
After the conduct of the examination, all scripts will be returned to Examinations Division for processing within five days while the results are expected out by the end of June.
As well as wishing all the students success in the exams, Minister Baksh also expressed confidence in the process and said that the examination is in the competent hands of Superintendent of Examinations, Juliet Persico, who has been in charge of the process for several years.
“I’m satisfied with the integrity of examinations and that security measures are in place,” the minister said.
While there have been expressed concerns that some students who did not attend lessons are ill-prepared, the Minister said at his level he has not had any reports of such concerns.
With respect to extra lessons the minister opined that “it’s a matter of parental choice if students want to take extra lessons. We cannot prevent that from happening but for all intents and purposes most of our schools are prepared.”
The Minister noted that there might be instances where a replacement teacher had to be found but it was “nothing too alarming”.  (Mondale Smith)

CEO still being paid $1.5M monthly

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

Failed insurance company CLICO…

Following a move to the court by the then Commissioner of Insurance Maria van Beek to liquidate the Colonial Life Insurance Company (CLICO) Guyana, the then Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Geeta Singh-Knight was retained for her institutional memory and continues to receive in excess of $1.5M per month.
This despite the fact that the company’s liabilities outweighed its assets significantly, with more than 50 per cent impaired due to botched investments overseas.
The salary paid to Singh-Knight could be verified by this newspaper as of November 2009 but she is also still retained by the company.

Geeta Singh-Knight

Geeta Singh-Knight

Only recently, Singh-Knight resurfaced in the media when President Bharrat Jagdeo was elucidating on the reasons behind the failure of the insurance giant and was then forced to defend the person that presided over all of the bad investment decisions made by the company with her at the helm.
After listing the fact that several bad investments were made by CLICO Guyana, Jagdeo was asked whether he thought it was a good idea to have her sit on the GuySuCo Board and he said that she has, “significant skills, frankly speaking.”
The Head of State’s remarks on bad investments caused the opposition to lash out, with the Alliance For Change leader Raphael Trotman saying that the position adopted by the president wreaks of “high class lawlessness to defend a bad decision when thousands (CLICO policy holders) lost everything
Trotman said that while Singh-Knight may have her qualities, in any other country in the world she would have felt compelled to take a self-imposed sabbatical from the corporate world.
“Look at how GuySuCo is collapsing nationally….First it was CLICO (Guyana), now sugar is in crisis after spending almost US$300M on the Skeldon Sugar factory and neglecting the workers.”
Singh-Knight is currently also on an interim management board of GuySuCo to assist in drafting a ‘turnaround plan’ for the industry.
It was later found that while she was at the helm of CLICO Guyana, the company breached the Insurance Act by investing more than it should have overseas and the company was well below its liquidity rate.
Following the move to the court in Bahamas to wind up the CLICO company, and realising that CLICO Guyana has in excess of $6B locked in there, the then local Commissioner of Insurance, Maria van Beek, moved to the High Court to wind up the company.
Acting Chief Justice Ian Chang granted Judicial Management to the Commissioner of Insurance and asked for an in depth report on the affairs of the company.
That report has been completed and, according to van Beek, in a worst case scenario, the company was some US$60M above its liability, but subsequent court proceedings have since stalled the winding up process so that policy holders can be paid. (Kaieteur News)

WEDNESDAY’S SPECIAL MOON TOWN BARBADOS

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

KIDNEY BEANS AND RICE; MACARONI PIE

VEGETABLE PASTA; FRIED PLANTAIN

BBQ SPARERIBS; BBQ PIG TAIL

SEA CAT; BAKED CHICKEN

BAKED PORK; FRIED SNAPPER

GRILLED SWORDFISH; BEEF STEW

FISH AND TOMATO SAUCE; STEAMED VEGETABLES

TOSSED SALAD; COLE SLAW

Former West Indies bowler Collins signs for Middlesex

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010
 
LONDON, Englan (AFP) — Former West Indies left-arm seamer Pedro Collins has agreed to play for Middlesex throughout the upcoming English county season.

Collins, who has not played international cricket since 2006, will join Middlesex midway through April, having left Surrey in October after two seasons there.

He follows opening batsman Scott Newman in making the same move and will be teaming up with former Australia wicketkeeper-batsman Adam Gilchrist and ex-New Zealand paceman Iain O’Brien at Middlesex.

Former West Indies left-arm seamer Pedro Collins. AFP PHOTO

Collins, 33, took 106 wickets in 32 Tests for the West Indies and also has 39 wickets to his name from 30 one-day international appearances.

Middlesex’s managing director of cricket Angus Fraser said Collins would add experience and variety to the county’s attack.

“He has experience of bowling in English conditions and has had a very good domestic season in the Caribbean, in which he took 26 wickets at an average of only 17.53 for Barbados,” Fraser said.

Collins added: “Playing at Lord’s with West Indies was always a special experience and the thought of playing there for Middlesex with the home support on my side is very exciting.

“The club have made some good signings this summer to complement a strong squad so I look forward to helping the club challenge for silverware.” (Caribnet)

CARICOM represented at Haiti Donors Conference at UN

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010
 
GEORGETOWN, Guyana — Percival J Patterson, former Prime Minister of Jamaica and Special Representative of the Heads of Government of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) to Haiti, and Ambassador Colin Granderson, Assistant Secretary-General Foreign and Community Relations, CARICOM Secretariat, will represent the Community at an International Donors Conference on Haiti on Wednesday.

The Conference, aimed at mobilizing international support for the development needs of Haiti to lay the foundation for long-term recovery, will be held at the United Nations Headquarters in New York.

At the meeting, the Donor Community will have the chance to pledge resources, coordinate support towards Haiti’s long-term recovery and commit to a sustained effort to support Haiti. Two pledging sessions have been identified on the provisional programme.

All UN Member States have been invited to the `International Donors’ Conference Towards a New Future for Haiti’ which will be co-hosted by the United States and the United Nations in cooperation with the Government of Haiti, and with the support of Brazil, Canada, the European Union, France and Spain. Rene Preval, President of Haiti and Jean-Max Bellerive, Prime Minister of Haiti will attend the conference that will feature opening remarks by President Preval, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon, and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

Special Representative Patterson will address the forum in a segment reserved for CARICOM and financial and development international institutions including the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), the World Bank, the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), the International Monetary Fund, and the Caribbean Development Bank (CDB).

Haiti suffered tremendously after a 7.0 magnitude earthquake struck on 12 January. More than 200 000 persons were killed in the quake that also left hundred of others injured and more than one million homeless. More than 300 000 homes in Haiti and most of the schools and hospitals have been destroyed, damaged or rendered unusable.

The total value of damage and losses have been tagged at almost US$8B, which is equivalent to 120 per cent of Haiti’s 2009 GDP. It is estimated that the country’s recovery will take some $11.5B over the next three years. Fifty per cent of the estimated resources would go to social programmes, 17 percent to infrastructure and 15 per cent to the environment and disaster management.

A Preliminary Damage and Needs Assessment report which lays out the vision of the Haitian Government for a new Haiti will be presented to the Conference on Wednesday. In the report, emphasis is placed on decentralization to lessen the present over-concentration of government, economic and other activities as well as people in the capital, on re-energizing the agriculture sector to address food security, and on a new sense of the state and of government

The Diaspora, private sector, non-governmental organizations, and stakeholders to MINUSTAH (United Nations Stabilisation Mission in Haiti) are to make presentations at the Conference. (Caribnet)

Haiti quake a chance to boost child protection

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010
 
By Katherine Baldwin

LONDON (Reuters) - The Haiti earthquake offers an opportunity to improve the protection of children in a country where they have been routinely abandoned, trafficked and exploited, a senior United Nations official said on Tuesday.

Susan Bissell, head of child protection at UN children’s fund UNICEF said increased attention and funding for Haiti could help transform a troubling landscape for children in the impoverished country.

She pointed to the 2004 tsunami in Indonesia’s Aceh province as evidence that an emergency can be used as a launch pad for a better child protection system.

“We’ve seen systems strengthened in countries where they were weak before,” Bissell said in an interview. “I think it is possible (in Haiti).”

In Haiti, 50,000 children were in institutional care — for example in centres for abandoned babies or orphanages — before the earthquake, according to the government.

Some centres had questionable standards and the entire sector was unmonitored, UNICEF says. Large numbers of children in the centres had families who visited them but had given them up in the hope of providing them with a better life.

Before the earthquake, UNICEF, working with the government and local partners, had already put systems in place to improve child safety.

They had set up a community-based network of volunteers, and child protection brigades had been created within the Haitian national police.

These efforts must now be stepped up, Bissell said.

“We need people, we need social workers, people who can do psycho-social support, we need community mobilisers who can get children into schools, we need to quadruple the number of police who are trained in child protection,” she said.

“We need to step all this up and that’s going to take sustained interest and sustained financial support.”

In the near-term, however, UNICEF’s focus is on registering separated and unaccompanied children, which will take months.

So far, 600 such children have been identified and provided with safe temporary shelter. Once they are registered, UNICEF and its partners trace the children’s family members by encouraging them to draw pictures and recall aspects of their family life.

But changing social norms in a country where parents often put children into care because of poverty will take many years, Bissell added.

Government statistics show there are 12,500 children aged between five to 14 in child labour, 173,000 in domestic service, up to 4,000 living on the streets, and 2,000 trafficked out of the country annually.

“When we look at the social norms — I give up my child because I know someone else is going to take care of him and give him a better life — we can’t just throw money at that.

“It can take up to a generation to address these kind of practices,” Bissell said. (Caribnet)

Flow of international aid to Haiti stagnates, says UN

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010
 
GENEVA, Switzerland (AFP) — International donations for Haiti which flowed in after January’s deadly earthquake have stagnated, the United Nations said on Tuesday, warning that the country still has significant needs.

Elisabeth Byrs, spokeswoman of the Office for the Coordination for Humanitarian Affairs, said that her agency has received only 48 percent of the required 1.4 billion dollars in aid funds.

“That is to say that this appeal has stagnated,” she added.

“While the urgent appeal was well financed in the beginning, ever since it has been revised, we have seen a stagnation of donor contributions,” she said, a day ahead of a major international donor conference on Haiti.

The UN had launched an appeal for 577 million dollars soon after the disaster that claimed over 220,000 lives, before revising the call to 1.44 billion dollars on February 18.

“It is very essential that the surge of generosity which surfaced … at the beginning of the Haiti crisis continues,” she said.

Some 1.3 million people are still homeless, even if the international spotlight has turned away from the country.

Sectors that are particularly poorly funded include agriculture, coordination of camps for the displaced, education and emergency shelter.

The UN added that it had received only 44 percent of the necessary funds for food aid — among the most essential relief items.

Stressing the urgency of the appeal, Byrs noted that the rainy season is expected to hit the country soon.

More than 100 countries and several international organisations are expected to meet Wednesday at the UN’s New York headquarters for an international donor conference on Haiti.

They will be asked for 3.8 billion dollars, which is the first instalment of a total of 11.5 billion dollars required to reconstruct the country over the next 10 years.

The UN Conference on Trade and Development said Haiti needed a “fresh start” in order to tip it out of “a state of socio-economic distress.”

Between 1985 and 2007, the country’s real per capita income had plunged 40 percent, leading to high unemployment and the rise of an informal economy.

“Paradoxically, the earthquake represents an opportunity to correct past mistakes and promote a more strategic and inclusive policy vision,” said UNCTAD.

The UN think-tank said that international trade must play an important role in the rebuilding process of the country.

“Haiti needs to formulate a comprehensive trade policy and rebuild and reorganise its trade-related institutions and regulatory frameworks,” said UNCTAD.

The international community should also “take immediate action” to improve market access for Haitian exports. (Caribnet)

Agriculture, energy, health top Haiti aid priorities for US

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010
 
NEW YORK, USA (AFP) — The United States will make health, agriculture, energy and security the key planks of its aid to quake-ravaged Haiti, a senior US official said Tuesday on the eve of a UN donors’ conference.

US Counselor and Chief of Staff to the Secretary of State Cheryl Mills.
AFP PHOTO

“There are dramatic needs that are still unaddressed,” said Cheryl Mills, special advisor for Haiti to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

“We are coming to a period of time that with the rains there will be incredible vulnerabilities,” she said.

“We are anticipating that we will be focusing on agriculture, energy, health and security. Also (on) support to the government in holding elections.”

On Wednesday more than 100 countries are taking part in a donors’ conference at the United Nations, with a pledge target of 3.8 billion dollars.

The conference will be chaired by Haitian President Rene Preval and hosted by UN chief Ban Ki-moon and Clinton.

Organizers see the gathering as crucial to helping the devastated Caribbean country — already the poorest in the Americas before the January 12 earthquake.

More than 220,000 people died in the disaster and 1.3 million were left homeless. Much of the capital Port-au-Prince was left in ruins.

Mills said there are about 3,000 US troops left in Haiti and that this number will be halved by May and reduced to almost none by June. (Caribnet)

MUMBAI WIN THRILLER More IPL success for Bravo, Pollard

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010


MUMBAI

Trinidad and Tobago and West Indies players Dwayne Bravo, Kieron Pollard and the Mumbai Indians rolled on in the Indian Premier League (IPL) yesterday with a tense four-wicket victory over the King’s Punjab XI.

Chasing 164 for victory, Mumbai made a hash of the reply, but got to their target with three balls to spare at the Brabourne Stadium.

It was a topsy-turvy match as Mumbai Indians fortified their place at the top of the IPL table on 12 points.

Pollard was brought up the order to bat at three and came at the fall of Sachin Tendulkar for 11 to leave Mumbai on 42 for one in the sixth over.

Pollard struck two fours and one effortless six flicked over long-off in 20 from 13 balls.  Bravo had a brief stay at the crease. He made eight from four balls and managed a six, charging Ravi Bopara and lofting him over long-on before he gave the same bowler a return catch.

Bopara ended with three wickets for 31 runs from his four overs.

Earlier, Bravo took one for 22 off three overs and Pollard conceded 20 from two overs but took a catch at deep mid-wicket to dismiss Brett Lee.

Lasith Malinga collected four for 22 in his spell and Zaheer Khan three for 34 to undermine the Punjab batting.

Shaun Marsh’s 57 off 47 balls with six fours and one six was the top score for the Punjabis.

The Punjab XI remain rooted to the bottom of the table on two points with six losses and one win.

West Indies opener Adrian Barath sat out yet another match and watched his Punjab XI teammates tumble to another loss. -CMC