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An unbreakable bond

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Published: 
Wednesday, August 16, 2017
Moruga fire victims share single casket

Overcome with the grief of losing her only child and a sister when their Moruga home was deliberately set on fire, Nicole Gopaul screamed for answers when the single casket bearing both their charred remains arrived at her father’s home yesterday. 

“Why they do this to my child. I’m not ready to tell my child goodbye forever. Let me hug her up,” were some of the heart-wrenching cries of Nicole Gopaul, 32, while surrounded by other relatives around the casket bearing the remains of eight-year-old Alliyah Primus and Nolene Nesha Gopaul, 41.  

Armed police stood watch during the entire funeral proceedings. Other relatives pounded the sealed casket in their moments of anguish. On top of the casket framed photos of Alliyah and Nolene collapsed with the commotion.   

  A faint scent of smoke from the ruins of the house where Gopaul shared much laughter with her daughter, Alliyah, Nolene, and other relatives were a reminder of last Friday’s tragedy. 

One of Gopaul’s sisters has been given police protection as investigators try to find those responsible for the deadly fire. She attended the funeral and was closely guarded.

Eleven other family members, including four children, were forced to jump through the windows after someone set fire to the front and back doors of the house.

That house was located at the back of Gopaul’s father’s house at Fifth Company Village.

 “If you called me I would ah come and help you. Why you did not call me? Ah would ah buss the window for you,” cried Nolene’s other sister Natalie who also fled from the burning house.

Sharing fond memories of her daughter during the service at the Open Bible Church at St Mary’s Village, Gopaul recalled how she begged God to spare her daughter’s life when at birth she had to be put on life support. Since then she had been very careful with her.

“I did not even want an ant to bite my child,” she said adding that she had gotten so many signs but did not know it meant she was going to lose her child. She said the night “the devil decided to take” Alliyah. 

She said everyone thought that Alliyah would become a fashion designer because she had a passion for designing clothes. 

“She will turn a vest into a skirt, a top into a head tie, she would cut plastic bags to make clothes,” said Gopaul.

The mother said she was also putting things in place for her daughter to visit Disney World, in December.

Since the incident, Gopaul said she has not been able to eat or sleep.

“I will live the correct life so one day I will see my daughter again,” the mother said.

Karlene Ali said Nolene will be remembered for her loudness, vibrance and loving nature.

The third of 11 children, Ali said Nolene’s 15-year-old daughter was her world. But, she also had unconditional love for Alliyah.

“They shared an unbreakable bond,” said Ali, who recalled that Nolene would help Alliyah with her homework and organise her for school. “Their love knew no bounds. She selflessly gave her life to protect the child she loved as her own,” she said.

Following the service officiated by Rev Valerie Samuel, their bodies were interred at Paynter Cemetery. 

Relatives of Nolene Nesha Gopaul and Alliyah Hope Primus weep uncontrollably during their funeral service at the family’s home in Fifth Company, Moruga yesterday. (LEFT) Nolene who died in a fire which left ten persons homeless in Moruga, yesterday. (RIGHT) Alliyah Primus who perished in a fire which left ten persons homeless in Moruga, yesterday.

Three in court for Scarlet Ibis hunting

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Published: 
Wednesday, August 16, 2017

A teenager was among three men who appeared in court yesterday charged with poaching Trinidad’s national bird, the Scarlet Ibis, at the Caroni Bird Sanctuary.

Shivanand Ramnarine, 23, of Bamboo Settlement, Valsayn, Randy Bachan, 35, and Brian Ramlochan, 18, both of El Socorro, appeared in the Chaguanas Magistrate’s Court hours after they were detained by game wardens on Monday night.

They were charged with hunting at the protected site and being in possession of the dismembered carcass of a bird.

The first charge carries a maximum fine of $20,000, while the latter carries a fine of $1,000 and up to a month imprisonment.

They were also charged with four offences of being in possession of the protected bird as the body parts — head, wings, feathers and feet — were allegedly found on their boat with no way of telling if they all came from the same animal.

The trio pleaded not guilty to the charges and will remain out on bail granted to them after they were arrested and charged on Monday.

The men will reappear in court on September 7.

Agriculture Minister Clarence Rambharat visited the sanctuary following the group’s arrest and also was present in court yesterday to show solidarity to the game wardens who fall under his ministry.

In an interview with CNC3 after the case was adjourned, Rambharat said that he was currently in discussions with Attorney General Faris Al-Rawi over the possibility of increasing the fines for possession of the protected animal.

“It is inadequate but what happens is that persons are usually arrested in game sanctuaries where the protected birds are found,” Rambharat said.

He said that he was also working closely with his ministry’s six enforcement units to ensure that they had all the resources required to effectively perform their duties.

Political analysts wary of prober’s independence

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Published: 
Wednesday, August 16, 2017

A conflict of interest!

That’s how many see yesterday’s appointment of well-known businessman Christian Mouttet by Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley as the “sole investigator” into the sea bridge fiasco involving the Cabo Star and Ocean Flower 2, which the Port Authority of T&T (PATT) leased from Canadian firm Bridgemans Services Group LP.

Mouttet was given one month to present his findings to the PM.

Last Tuesday, the PATT terminated the Ocean Flower’s one-year contract, which initially led to Rowley apologising to the nation and calling a stakeholders meeting on August 21 in Tobago.

Yesterday, as news surfaced that Mouttet was now the behind the investigation, many criticised his appointment, saying it was a conflict of interest for the businessman, who uses the services of the cargo vessel, to be given such a task.

Weighing in on the issue, political analyst Prof John La Guerre said the fact that Mouttet admitted he utilises the ferry service for his chain of businesses was no doubt a conflict.

“It would be a conflict of interest and he could not be an objective assessor since he has vested interest there,” La Guerre said, noting he feels a committee chaired by someone who has experience in contractual obligations, investigations and shipping, should have been selected instead.

“Since the vessels involved contractual obligations and legal issues, someone with legal skills and training should have been considered. That is what Mouttet does not have. I would say the Prime Minister was ill-advised. He (Mouttet) is not the appropriate person for the job.”

Noting the role of an investigator is to both unearth and probe, La Guerre added: “It’s not just a matter of uncovering documents, doing interviews and putting them together. It is also a matter of assessment.”

La Guerra said with Mouttet’s inexperience it could “limit him in his assessment of the situation. It would also be a constraining factor.”

Political analyst Dr Winford James insisted it was a good decision by the PM to appoint someone to investigate the documentation of both vessels.

“One hopes that the report would not be for the Prime Minister’s eye only but for the nation, since the matter has become very public. And people would like to have answers to the questions that have arisen as result of the scandal of the hire of the boats.”

James said he hoped Mouttet would be as objective as possible in the performance of his work. He said, however, that the public would have every reason to question Mouttet’s credentials, objectivity and credibility.

“Let us hope that the matter is not exasperated because of the choice the PM made as him being the compiler of the information, because things have been going from bad to worse as far as the boat is concerned.”

Opposition Leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar, in a press release yesterday, slammed Rowley’s decision and called on him to rescind Mouttet’s appointment and establish a Commission of Enquiry into the ferry fiasco.

“It is clear that the Prime Minister cannot be trusted to do the right thing. We are not comforted by Rowley’s appointment of a one-man investigative team to investigate one of his ministers and this matter.”

She said for months citizens of T&T have been calling for the Government to come clean on the deal and they had refused.

“This Prime Minister has shown that he cannot be trusted, and it appears that Rowley prefers to cloak his ministers and the Port Authority board’s actions in secrecy, rather than to make the facts known. Worse still, he is giving the investigator one month to investigate the matter.”

She said it cannot be proper for a member of the business community, who may depend on the Government’s support and may also be a prime user of the sea bridge and other port facilities, to be asked to conduct an independent inquiry into the operations of the Port Authority and its relevant officials.

“Rowley missed the boat a long time ago in dealing with the Tobago sea bridge situation and now he has missed it again. This situation requires that there is no question of the independence of the investigator, especially in light of what we have all experienced over the past few months under the Rowley Government.”

She said citizens deserve to know the truth about this deal and those involved in any unlawful activity must be held accountable.

Former transport minister Devant Maharaj also saw Mouttet’s appointment as a conflict of interest. He also questioned what powers Mouttet had to conduct such an investigation, which the Integrity Commission was now handling. As a civilian, Maharaj queried how Mouttet would have any leeway to investigate a state enterprise.

“He has no jurisdiction or power conferred on him by any legal authority to conduct a lawful investigation. While he should be commended for his willingness to serve the country, he does not qualify in any way to investigate this issue,” Maharaj said.

He also queried what powers Moutett would have if a person refuses to participate in the investigation.

Hope for Haleema

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Children’s Life Fund to consider case
Published: 
Wednesday, August 16, 2017

The Children’s Life Fund Authority has agreed to consider and decide on the case of a four-year-old girl from south Trinidad, who has to undergo a critical bone marrow transplant in India to treat a blood disorder, within 24 hours.

The authority gave the commitment to the family of Haleema Mohammed hours after her mother Kristal yesterday filed a lawsuit challenging its previous claim, filed in June, that it would take between one and three months to consider her application.

Mohammed is scheduled to undergo the operation at the Fortis Memorial Institute for Allogeneic Transplant in Gurgaon, India, in early September.

The authority’s decision is expected to be communicated to Mohammed’s family by midday today.

In the lawsuit, Mohammed’s lawyer Gerald Ramdeen claimed that the lengthy period for considering the case was unreasonable considering that the board had determined previous cases within a week.

As the board effectively conceded the case, High Court Judge Devindra Rampersad ordered that it pay the family’s legal costs for threatening the lawsuit.

Mohammed was diagnosed with beta thalassemia, a blood disorder which reduces the production of haemoglobin — the iron-containing protein in red blood cells that carries oxygen to cells throughout the body.

However, Hameela’s blood transfusions only began when she was around a year and eight months when her blood count went extremely low. She began taking the blood transfusions every three months, then every two months, every month and now every three weeks.

Doctors have advised the family that the child’s iron level had risen to high levels as a result of frequent blood transfusions and this could lead to organ failure and death. The surgery and associated costs are expected to cost $400,000.

The legal action against the authority comes less than a month after the families of two children suffering from the same genetic disorder were given permission to challenge its refusal to provide funding for their treatment.

In their judicial review case, which is yet to go on trial, four-year-old Shannen Luke and five-year-old Terrance Chandoo’s lawyers are contending that the authority wrongful rejected their applications as it claimed that it does not facilitate reimbursements to families who managed to raise the funds for their operations.

Four year old Haleema Mohammed who is in need of a bone marrow transplant.

Find solution for Maracas landslips

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Published: 
Wednesday, August 16, 2017
Works Minister to engineers:

As clean up operations continue today on the major landslide that occurred along the North Coast Road, near the Maracas Lookout, engineers have been instructed to find a permanent solution.

Minister of Works and Transport, Rohan Sinanan told the T&T Guardian yesterday, that landslides in that particular area have been recurring over the past 10 years and he instructed one of his engineers at the ministry to visit the site.

“This is a recurring problem and is very dangerous and risky to all and I have instructed the engineer at the ministry to do something about it. Whenever it rains the soil becomes saturated and the land starts slipping so there needs to be an engineering solution,” Sinanan said.

On Monday, around 11.45 pm the massive landslide blocked the road as mounds of dirt and trees came down after a torrential shower.

From as early as 6 am teams from the San Juan/Laventille Regional Corporation and the Ministry of Works were out clearing the debris. Officials of the T&T Electricity Commission (TTEC) were also expected to visit the area to stabilise leaning electricity poles.

Residents have labelled the area a disaster zone and called for urgent attention from the relevant authorities.

Resident Peter Jones said that for years they have been experiencing such landslides which pose “an obvious risk to our lives.”

“One day we could be going home and the hill could come down on us burying us alive or pushing us over the cliff. Maybe, if something like that happens then whoever would do something serious to try and get rid of this thing. For years the earth coming down. Just now it wouldn’t have no hill here.”

Another resident, a fisherman from Maracas Bay, who wished not to be identified, said that whenever land slides and blocked off the North Coast Road they cannot ply their trade.

“Everything is affected. We cannot get our fish sold to the vendors who come up here to buy wholesale from us. How will we make our money when the roads blocked off for days sometimes because of the landslides and the danger?” he asked.

Councillor of the Maracas Bay/Santa Cruz/La Fillette area, Lyndon Lara said that he believes that nothing could be done to bring about a permanent solution.

“This is an area where there are regular landslides and it is too dangerous even for excavators to go up there. I think nothing can’t be done and there will continue to be landslips and when that occurs clean-up operations will just have to be done every time,” Lara said.

“I don’t think the quality of the soil is good enough. Once the earth is saturated it would have land slippage,” he said.

In a release issued yesterday, the ministry advised that one lane of the roadway is currently open to allow the flow of vehicles; “however, moderate traffic is expected as a result of this and the presence of heavy equipment and workers on site.”

It said a technical team from the Ministry is also conducting further remedial work such as the removal of loose trees and soil that cause an immediate threat, and are “examining possible preventative measures such as benching of the slope.”

A tractor from the Ministry of Works and Infrastructure clears the section of the North Coast Road where a landslide occured early yesterday morning.

Two suspended

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Published: 
Wednesday, August 16, 2017
PATT seeks source of Ocean Flower ‘leaks’

Two Port Authority of T&T (PATT) staff members have been suspended, while their computers seized for forensic analysis yesterday.

According to information reaching the T&T Guardian, the employees, including a senior official who has been at the PATT for over five years, were given word of their suspension following an impromptu marathon meeting by the PATT board on Monday.

It is alleged that instructions were given by higher authorities at the PATT to “find the source of the leak” of chief engineer Brendon Powder’s inspection of the Ocean Flower II, referring to a letter dated August 7, 2017, that was sent to the PATT’s general manager Charmaine Lewis on the issue.

“They are thinking that the senior and the other employee are responsible for leaking the document to the media, that’s why their electronic devices were seized so that forensic investigations can take place,” a PATT source said.

The source added that both employees had already sought legal advice on their suspensions.

The letter in spotlight contained crucial reasons as to why the Ocean Flower 2 may not be suitable to service the sea bridge between Trinidad and Tobago, following Powder’s sea trial on the vessel in Panama.

The PATT had delegated acting chief executive officer of the T&T Inter-Island Transportation Company Limited (TTIT) Leon Grant and Powder to visit Panama to inspect the Ocean Flower 2 over the period July 30 to August 6.

Powder had ruled that the Ocean Flower 2 may not have been suitable to service the sea bridge because of several mechanical issues and explosion risks identified during the sea trial he conducted. He instead recommended that the 21-year-old vessel should remain in Colon, Panama, to urgently attend to all repairs prior to it sailing to Trinidad. Powder noted that under the circumstances Grant conferred with him and it was agreed that it was untenable to have the Ocean Flower 2 sail to T&T in that condition.

President of Bridgemans Services Group, Brian Grange, witnessed the sea trial and the mechanical issues of the vessel were highlighted to him.

However, the contents of the report were not initially revealed by the port despite questions over the vessel’s suitability. Instead, it had suggested that the Ocean Flower 2’s contract be cancelled due to its inability to arrive here by the July 17 deadline date.

The contents of the inspection were disclosed to the media by Senator Gerald Ramdeen last week and only then did the PATT admit the issues highlighted ion the report also contributed to the contract cancellation.

Ocean Flower 2

Integrity body asks PATT for key documents

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Published: 
Wednesday, August 16, 2017

The board of the Port Authority of T&T (PATT) has been asked to submit all documents involving the award of contracts to Bridgemans Service group LP for the leasing of the Cabo Star and Ocean Flower 2 to the Integrity Commission (IC).

This was one of several issues that came up at Monday’s emergency meeting behind closed doors at the Port of Port-of Spain’s administrative building.

Once this is done, the Integrity Commission will begin preparing for the commencement of its own independent investigation.

The board was asked to submit the documents during the marathon meeting, which came less than two weeks after former agriculture minister Devant Maharaj wrote a nine-page letter to the IC, addressed to chairman Zainool Hosein, asking for a commission of enquiry into the procurement process followed by PATT in the deals.

The T&T Guardian understands the board is expected to convene again next week on the matter.

Both the Cabo Star and Ocean Flower 2 were leased from Canadian-based ferry service provider Bridgemans at a daily rate of US$22,5000 (TT$157,000) and US$26,5000 (TT$185,000) respectively. The vessels were initially leased to fill the gap created by the Super Fast Galicia, which left the sea bridge in April after a contractual fallout with PATT, but the contract for the Ocean Flower was terminated after it failed to arrive here on time and mechanical issues were highlighted following an inspection by PATT’s chief engineer Brendon Powder.

The PATT board meeting, which started at 11 am and ended late into Monday night, called on the members, chaired by Alison Lewis, to bring in all documents and print out emails and correspondence they may have on the negotiations for the cargo and passenger vessels. Once this is done the documents will be forwarded to the IC, where an investigation will begin.

Powder had ruled that the Ocean Flower may not have been suitable to service the sea bridge because of several mechanical issues and explosion risks identified during the sea trial he conducted in Panama. He instead recommended that the 21-year old vessel should remain in Colon Panama, to urgently attend all repairs prior to its sailing to Trinidad. Powder and a team of PATT officials visited Panama to inspect the Ocean Flower over the period July 30 to August 6.

Several calls to Hosein’s cellphone went answered yesterday. The IC’s communication manager Mervyn Crichlow is currently on vacation and communications department member Anna Williams could not respond to the T&T Guardian questions, but promised to speak to Crichlow and get back to us.

Lewis did not respond to a text message asking if the board was asked to submit documents to the IC and if the IC will probe the contracts of both vessels.

Contacted yesterday, Works and Transport Minister Rohan Sinanan said he did not have any forthcoming information on what went on in the meeting. He, however, refused to answer any other questions pertaining to the PATT and the sea bridge fiasco.

“I am only dealing with landslides today (yesterday),” Sinanan said in reference to the major landslide on Monday night along the North Coast Road near the Maracas lookout.

‘I have right tools for job’

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Published: 
Wednesday, August 16, 2017
Mouttet shrugs off ferry conflict of interest fear

Business magnate Christian Mouttet has come out in strong defence of his integrity and independence, in light of criticism levelled against him as Prime Minister’s Dr Keith Rowley’s choice as the sole investigator into the Cabo Star and Ocean Flower 2 vessels, which are now embroiled in controversy.

Mouttet also denied he shares a close friendship with Rowley and said he did not request any payment for the services he will be providing.

Asked if investigating the matter involving the sea bridge vessels would be a conflict of interest, given the fact that he owns several distribution companies which utilise the ferry service, Mouttet said: “No, I would not see that as a conflict of interest.”

Asked if he was concerned about public criticisms immediately levelled against him following the announcement, Mouttet said it was a possibility but not one that will deter him from his task.

Mouttet, who is at the helm of Prestige Holdings Ltd, will be provided with support from the Ministry of the Attorney General and Legal Affairs and was given 30-days by Rowley to submit his findings, a release from the Office of the Prime Minister said yesterday.

In an interview with the T&T Guardian soon after the news, Mouttet said over the next 24 hours he will be briefed further in order to guide how he charts his way forward in the investigation.

Asked if he is qualified as an investigator, Mouttet said no, but said he was asked to conduct an investigation which requires a certain amount of work, such as meeting with people, carrying out interviews and putting together information and documentation that had been created regarding the whole procurement process for the two vessels.

He made it absolutely clear that it was not a forensic investigation.

“So in that regard, I believe I don’t think there is any problem with regards to putting together and carrying out interviews, just to understand the fact. That is what I have been charged to do,” Mouttet said.

He admitted that he held discussions with the PM a few days ago on the appointment, but stayed clear of the details.

Asked why he was chosen by the PM, Mouttet suggested that question be directed to the PM.

“I can act in a very independent and dispassionate way but I cannot say why I am the choice of the PM and the Cabinet. It is certainly not what I was expecting.”

Asked if he was offered any payment by the Government, he said, “I have not been asked, nor have I requested any payment.”

When asked if he is a friend of Rowley, Mouttet replied that he knows the PM but added, “We don’t have a friendship that extends beyond the professional relationship.”

Once the investigation commences, Mouttet said he believes he will be able to gain the support of stakeholders, but was a bit sceptical about Bridgemans Services Group.

“I do not know the individuals (company) and I don’t know much about them, but I certainly hope that they would be helpful and be prepared to participate. I don’t know that anybody is required to do anything and certainly I don’t know anybody here has the authority to tell Bridgemans what they can and can’t do,” Mouttet said.

He, however, expressed faith in the Port Authority of T&T board in surrendering documents.

(See Page A5 and Editorial on Page A20)

“I have no reason to believe that the Port would not be cooperative.”

On whether he thinks his report will be deemed credible by the public, Mouttet replied: “I believe that it will be questioned for independence and competency. I would like to think that with more than 25 years of work experience at the senior executive level and at the way I have operated at various boards, both private and public sector boards, I would like to think that I bring the tools to the table that would be necessary to not just conduct the investigation, but bring people together to want to cooperate.”

Noting some of the State-owned companies he worked for were the Chaguaramas Development Authority and TSTT while he was Chamber of Industry and Commerce president for two terms, Mouttet said, “I would like to think that I bring a fair amount of experience and independence to the table that should give people confidence that what I bring is independent and impartial,” Mouttet said, adding he is confident he can deliver his findings in the time stipulated.

ABOUT CHRISTIAN MOUTTET

 

Christian E. Mouttet, serves as the CEO of the Victor E. Mouttet Ltd Group.

Holds a Bachelor of Arts Degree with a double major in Business Administration and Political Science from Wagner College, New York.

Has extensive experience at an executive level in the areas of finance and marketing.

Has been chairman of Agostini’s Limited since January 23, 2017, as well as chairman of SuperPharm Ltd, Vemco, Pepsi Cola Trinidad, Caribbean Distribution Partners Ltd and CDP Trinidad.

Has been the chairman at Prestige Holdings Ltd since April 30, 2012.

Served as the chairman of Smith Robertson & Company Ltd.

A non-executive director of Agostini’s Ltd since 2010.

A director at Victor E. Mouttet Ltd Group.

A director of Smith Robertson & Company Ltd and Desinco Trading Ltd.

Served as an executive director of Republic Bank Ltd since January 2, 2009 until November 14, 2014.

Board: Tender process compromised
The Port Authority of T&T’s board last night said it had launched an investigation into the procurement process used to acquire the Cabo Star and Ocean Flower 2 vessels, after receiving new information which suggests the process used had been “compromised.”

In a statement, the PATT said: “The board of the Port Authority of Trinidad and Tobago has received information today which suggests that the Management Evaluation Committee stage of the procurement process may have been compromised in relation to the time charter of vessels to service the inter-island sea bridge.”

It added that it had put measures in place to “ensure that the investigation is satisfactorily executed” and that “steps have been taken to facilitate the investigation consistent with proper industrial relations practices.”

Christian Mouttet

Boy’s arm broken at playroom

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...parents seek $.2m compensation
Published: 
Wednesday, August 16, 2017

A pre-action protocol letter has been sent to Mario’s Pizzeria after a six-year-old boy’s right arm was broken when he allegedly fell through a gaping hole in the safety net inside the designated playroom of the El Dorado outlet.

The boy’s parents are now seeking $204,000 in compensation from the fast food company for what they claim was negligence.

The pre-action protocol letter dated Monday and signed by attorney Kyle Fortuné was sent to Mario’s Pizzeria’s chief executive office Roger Harford threatening legal action.

According to the pre-action protocol letter, on July 8 Lamar Paynter visited Mario’s El Dorado branch around 8 pm with his grandmother Volouris Maynard.

“While playing in the designated play area my client fell through a hole in the safety net causing him to fracture two bones (radius and ulna) in his right arm causing him tremendous pain and suffering,” the letter claimed.

The letter claimed that “no assistance or apology” was given to Paynter and his family and he had to be taken to the Eric Williams Medical Sciences Complex “in a private car”.

Paynter was in such “severe pain that he was sedated after his X-rays and a cast was put on his arm,” the letter claimed.

He was then warded overnight at the hospital.

On July 9, Paynter’s mother Charisse Bramble visited the fast food outlet and spoke to the management there.

On July 18, Bramble met with Harford about the situation, the letter claimed.

He provided his cellphone number to her, the letter claimed.

However, Bramble claims in the pre-action protocol letter that since meeting with Harford almost a month ago there has been no headway with respect to the situation. She has now opted to take legal action.

Two separate cases in this country where persons were awarded $93,000 and $195,776 for the pain and suffering caused by fractures to their arms were cited in the pre-action protocol letter.

“My client has incurred medical expenses to date at the cost of $800 as well as legal costs to date in the sum of $7,500,” the letter stated.

“In light of the foregoing, my client claims the sum of $204,000 in full and final settlement for pain, suffering and past and future expenses arising out of the negligence of your establishment,” it stated.

Mario’s has been given seven days to reply or face a lawsuit.

Young: Action will be taken if anyone culpable

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Published: 
Wednesday, August 16, 2017

Acting Attorney General Stewart Young is assuring that if there is any culpability regarding the procurement of the Cabo Star and the Ocean Flower 2, those responsible will be brought to justice.

Young, also Minister in the Ministry of Attorney General and Legal Affairs, made the comment after speaking at a rotary luncheon in Port-of-Spain yesterday.

In a statement issued yesterday, Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley appointed Christian Mouttet as the sole investigator into the circumstances surrounding the procurement of the two vessels. The announcement was made in a press release from the Office of the Prime Minister and noted that Rowley was acting on behalf of the Cabinet. Mouttet, who will be provided with support from the Ministry of the Attorney General and Legal Affairs, is expected to submit a report within 30 days.

Asked whether Mouttet’s appointment signalled a lack of faith in the Port Authority, especially amid calls for its chairman Alison Lewis to be fired, Young said this was not the case.

“Absolutely not. The Prime Minister and Cabinet has taken the decision to appoint a sole investigator and more will be heard about it in the days to come,” Young said.

Regarding how much was being paid to Mouttet, Young said, “at this stage there is no cost element associated with the probe and described Mouttet as one of this country’s stalwarts.

“He’s someone who is very respected and he’s someone who we see as being very independent and the Prime Minister saw him fit and he is fully supported by the Cabinet as being a good sole investigator into what he has been asked to look into,” Young stated.

Regarding possible legal action following the outcome of the investigation, the acting AG said it was too early to determine, adding he did not want to “pre-empt anything.”

Pressed about calls for the police to also launch its own investigation into the matter, Young said, “Let’s see what the investigation brings up. If the investigation brings up anything along those lines, as a Government we will send it to the police. I would expect persons to fully participate with a Cabinet-appointed investigator and if they choose not to do so then they will have a lot of questions to answer.”

Online petition against Mouttet

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Published: 
Wednesday, August 16, 2017

An online petition circulating on social media is calling on Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley to remove or revoke the appointment of businessman Christian Mouttet, as the sole investigator into the charter of the Cabo Star and Ocean Flower 11 vessels.

The procurement of vessels which were leased to the Port Authority of T&T by Canadian-based firm Bridgeman Services Group LP is now the subject of three investigations commenced by the Integrity Commission, the Port Authority of T&T and Mouttet .

The petition, which was started by Kendel Bhaggy and Suzette Lowe, began circulating on Tuesday, minutes after the PM hand- picked Mouttet for the task of gathering documents and conducting interviews and will deliver his findings to Cabinet and the PM in one month’s time.

Mouttet will get assistance from the Office of the Attorney General and Ministry of Legal Affairs in carrying out his duties.

Up to late yesterday, the petition had garnered over 300 signatures.

Once the petition reaches 500 signatures it will be sent to the Office of the Prime Minister.

In the petition, Bhaggy pointed out to Rowley that the people do not believe that the appointment of Mouttet was in the best interest of the country.

“Mouttet’s perceived affiliation to the PNM produces doubt in the minds of the people that this investigation will be for the purpose of getting to the truth behind the Bridgemans Services Group’s awarded contract,” Bhaggy wrote.

He suggested that the appointment of an independent forensic auditor should have been given the job instead of Mouttet.

Bhaggy said the people believed that there is a chance of a cover-up and the Government should not have taken this route.

“We are calling on you to remove or revoke the appointment of Mr. Mouttet and contract an independent forensic auditor to handle this investigation, in the best interest of the people and in the best interest of transparency.

We do not support your decision to appoint Mouttet as the sole investigator and we make that abundantly clear by putting forward this petition,” Bhaggy outlined in the petition to Rowley.

Many of the signatories expressed their feelings on the issue. Louwe stated she wanted justice as a taxpayer and that she was no longer accepting excuses from the Government to cover up their own.

Speaking with the T&T Guardian yesterday, Bhaggy said that while Mouttet may be an outstanding business man of great repute, he believes that Mouttet “has absolutely no authority to call on anyone to comply with an investigation and neither is he qualified in the area of forensic auditing or investigative processes.”

Bhaggy insisted that there was no political agenda as he and Louwe weren’t members of any particular party, “neither do we support the governing methods of either of the two main parties. We are ordinary citizens with the goal in mind to lobby for our politicians for change that positively affects the tax paying hard working citizens of this country.”

“The Government and all public officials are elected by the people and they must remember that they are accountable to the people.

The days of enriching friends of the party and those in the party at the expense of the taxpayers will no longer be tolerated.

We will continue to monitor the government and to bring to the public their questionable and corrupt practices. If those elected promised to remove corruption and are now part of the problem, it is now up to the right thinking citizens of this country to protect our country,” Bhaggy added.

In an interview hours after his name was announced by the Office of the Prime Minister as to investigate the procurement of the vessels, Mouttet defended his name saying he had not requested any payment for his services and saw no conflict of interest in pursuing the task.

CHRISTIAN MOUTTETT

Suspended CEO threatens to sue

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PWC seizes personal items in ferry probe fiasco
Published: 
Wednesday, August 16, 2017

Hours after Leon Grant was suspended as acting CEO of the Inter-Island Transportation Company Ltd at the Port Authority of T&T (PATT) he threatened legal action against the State-owned company.

Grant, along with PATT general manager Charmaine Lewis, received suspension letters on Tuesday, hours after the PATT board held a marathon meeting on Monday dealing with the award of contracts to Bridgemans Services Group LP for the Cabo Star and Ocean Flower 2 to service the sea bridge.

According to sources close to PATT, certain evidence came to hand which led them to believe the procurement process for the vessels may have been compromised.

“The information received was startling and blatant,” the source said.

In a press release late Tuesday, PATT said it had launched an investigation into the procurement process used to acquire both sea vessels after receiving new information which suggested the management evaluation committee stage of the procurement process may have been compromised in relation to the time charter of the vessels to service the inter-island sea bridge.

PATT further stated that it had put measures in place to ensure the investigation was satisfactorily executed and that steps have been taken to facilitate the investigation consistent with proper industrial relations practices.

According to legal sources, Grant contacted his attorneys soon after he received his suspension letter from PATT and was up to yesterday locked in meetings with his lawyers. Grant, who has over 33 years’ service, is said to be shocked over his sudden suspension, an attorney told the T&T Guardian.

“Grant has spent his whole life at the port and one of the things he has considered was taking legal action,” a legal source said.

The T&T Guardian understands that auditors of PricewaterhouseCoopers (PWC), upon instructions, entered PATT’s offices following the suspension and seized several computers, hard drives, company cell phones and other electronic devices.

A PATT worker said shortly after the auditing firm zeroed in on the computers, the internet at the office was disconnected and had not been reconnected up to yesterday, impeding the work at several departments. Also, some workers could not gain entry into the building on Tuesday night unless they presented their identification badges to port police.

Some sources believe a letter dated August 7, 2017 that was sent to Lewis, which was leaked to the media, may have been what led to the suspensions. It contained information about the Ocean Flower 2’s failed inspection from PATT chief engineer Brendon Powder.

Powder had ruled that the 21-year-old passenger vessel may not have been suitable to service the sea bridge because of mechanical problems and explosion risks identified during the sea trial he conducted in Panama. He instead recommended that the vessel should remain in Colon, Panama, to urgently attend all repairs prior to its sailing to Trinidad. Powder and a team of PATT officials, including Grant, visited Panama to inspect the Ocean Flower over the period July 30 to August 6.

The source said they had been trying to find out who had retained PWC in the matter.

“Is PWC going to take the personal material that they have seized and hand it over to Christian Mouttet, who was named as the sole investigator by the Prime Minister hours before the seizure? Remember what they have seized is people’s private information they are going with. If they take that into custody, who is going to give them permission to hand that over to someone else?”

The source said this could also be seen as an invasion of privacy.

Yesterday, workers at PATT’s administrative building at Dock Road, Port-of-Spain, remained hush-hush about Grant’s suspension. The few employees who spoke said they were all saddened, as they viewed Grant to be a hard and dedicated worker.

“Today is really a sad day at the office. Many of us did not even know that Mr Grant was suspended yesterday (Tuesday). I worked with him for three years and he always went the extra mile for the company,” said a female worker who requested anonymity for fear of being victimised.

Another employee said Grant’s suspension was not discussed among staff.

“Everybody went about their work today as normal without bringing up the topic because they feel they would be targeted by management. Everyone is staying silent on the issue but really don’t like what is going on. So who is next?” the employee said.

Several calls to Works and Transport Minister Rohan Sinanan’s cell phone and the PWC’s office went unanswered yesterday, while chairman of the PATT Alison Lewis did not respond to a text message. Calls to Grant’s cell phone also went straight to voice mail and he did not return the call.

PM’s port probe just PR, says Kamla

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Published: 
Wednesday, August 16, 2017

Opposition Leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar has dubbed the probe announced by Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley into the procurement process for the Cabo Star and the Ocean Flower 2 as a “public relations gimmick.”

And she is calling on businessman Christian Moutett to step down from the position.

She contends that without the legal authority to enforce the attendance of anyone or to demand the production of any documents Moutett would have to rely on “voluntary participation in his probe by persons who may be culpable,” which would render “any probe into Ferrygate a mere public relations gimmick.”

Persad-Bissessar said “this increasingly sordid investigation mess is now bigger than the ferry fiasco. This is bigger than the collapse of the sea bridge.”

She accused Rowley of “seeking to sub-contract out the work of Cabinet,” by asking a businessman “without any legal authority and who does not appear to have any previous experience or expertise for this type of investigation,” to investigate processes and policy implementation at the Port Authority “which may involve criminal wrongdoing and misconduct in public office.”

As a “respected businessman,” she said, Moutett should “reconsider his position in the public interest,” and not be “used” by the Rowley administration in what she described as a “PR gimmick to sanitise its polluted governance.”

She is also calling on Moutett to say whether his business will be affected by the proposed construction of an interchange at the intersection of the Old Southern Main Road and the Churchill Roosevelt Highway.

If it is, she said, then Moutett and his business will be in or may have already started a protracted negotiation with the government over compensation for relocation, which means, she said, that Moutett “will depend on the State for a negotiated outcome in his favour.”

This, she said, “places him in a compromised position,” and on this ground alone she said he “must step down.”

To make matters worse, she said “we now learn that Mr. Moutett is undertaking this task free of charge. This is a serious matter...It is not about “helping out a partner for free”.

She is also calling for the resignations of the members of the Board of the Port Authority and Works and Transport Minister Rohan Sinanan.

In a media release late Tuesday night the Board of the Port Authority indicated that “its procurement process may have been compromised”. Persad-Bissessar said, “the resignation of the Chairman and Board must be accepted as a minimum condition as we try to flesh out the mysterious and dastardly series of events that have led to this crisis.”

She said the Cabinet and by extension, its committees have the responsibility to demand accountability from State enterprises and corporations but felt that Cabinet oversight had “collapsed under the weak leadership of Keith Rowley.”

Persad-Bissessar said Rowley needs to “bring clarity as to how the Port Authority can undertake an investigation into itself while the Prime Minister and Cabinet purport to appoint a “sole investigator” into the procurement of the sea bridge vessels.

The Prime Minister, she said, must say “who or which organisation is investigating on behalf of the Port and who are they reporting to.”

Persad-Bissessar said if it is true that accounting firm PriceWaterhouseCoopers (PWC) is the PATT’s selected investigator, then the country should be told on what basis was this company selected.

Kamla Persad-Bissessar

Sinanan upset no sea bridge solution yet

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Published: 
Wednesday, August 16, 2017

Works and Transport Minister Rohan Sinanan is admitting to being “disappointed” that four months after the new board of the Port Authority of T&T has assumed office, a solution is yet to be found to the sea bridge crisis.

In a telephone interview with the T&T Guardian yesterday, Sinanan said, “As line Minister, I really would have hoped by now that we would have had two vessels, I am disappointed that we don’t have the vessels.”

Sinanan also said he had no information about problems being experienced with the cargo vessel the Cabo Star.

After months of searching, the board announced in late June that it had leased the passenger ferry the Ocean Flower 2 and the Cabo Star to replace the Super Fast Galicia on the sea bridge between Trinidad and Tobago.

The Ocean Flower 2 never made it to Trinidad and the contract has since been cancelled, but the Cabo Star has been transporting cargo across the two islands.

However, Inter-Island Trailers and Truckers Association president Horace Amede told the T&T Guardian that the Cabo Star is fraught with problems. He said it “is overrun with vermin, the air-conditioning is not working and some of the toilets are not working.” The docking ramp on the vessel is also said to be “inadequate” and has created problems for the truckers. In addition, the vessel is also yet to be certified to carry the number of truckers who need to use it.

Well-placed sources told the T&T Guardian the vessel was configured for cargo and is not licensed to transport the over 100 truckers who need to use the vessel. Reconfiguration of the vessel, the T&T Guardian was told, would “cost a tidy sum.”

Sinanan said no information on the problems raised by the truckers with regard to the Cabo Star had come to him directly, but he had heard of them in the media.

Both the Cabo Star and the Ocean Flower 2 were leased from Bridgemans Services Limited, a Canadian company. Both are now the subject of investigation by the Integrity Commission and the sole investigator appointed by Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley, businessman Christian Moutett. The Port Authority is also conducting its own investigation.

In a statement on Tuesday night, the Port said having received information that the procurement process “may have been compromised,” an investigation into the procurement process had been commissioned, and measures had been put in place in order to ensure that the investigation is satisfactorily executed.

Last week, Sinanan announced the decision to cancel the Ocean Flower 2 contract after it failed to meet several target dates for its arrival to this country, which was July 17. A damning report from the PATT chief engineer Brendon Powder had also given the vessel a failing grade and recommended it stay on in Panama to address critical mechanical issues he detected during an inspection there.

Yesterday, Sinanan said the Port Authority will be going out to tender for another passenger vessel, but he could not say when this would be done or the length of time the process will take, adding, “We have to go through the proper process even if it means taking a long time. We will not want to hear allegations as is happening now.”

Of the unfolding events, he said: “In politics I expect anything.”

Efforts to contact both Port CEO Charmaine Lewis and chairman Allison Lewis were unsuccessful yesterday as they did not answer calls.

Suspect in court for Tunapuna murder

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Published: 
Wednesday, August 16, 2017

A 38-year-old man from Tunapuna, accused of using a car to kill a man during a brawl earlier this month, appeared in court yesterday charged with murder.

Joel “Cranky” Burnette, of Basanta Trace, Tunapuna, appeared in the Tunapuna Magistrate’s Court yesterday charged with murdering Akeem Reid on August 1.

He was remanded into custody and ordered to reappear in court on September 13.

According to police reports, Reid and two friends were sleeping over at his girlfriend’s home at St John’s Road, St Augustine, when they were awoken by her ex-boyfriend.

During an argument, Burnette reportedly got into Reid’s car and drove into him. Reid was taken to hospital where he succumbed to his injuries. His friends managed to escape and later contacted police. Burnette was charged by Cpl Dexter Bernard of the St Joseph CID.

Burnette’s court appearance comes less than a month after another man was charged with murdering a man using a vehicle.

On July 24, Anthony Sinanan, 37, of South Oropouche, appeared in court charged with the murder of 17-year-old David Sancarro.

Sinanan knocked down and rolled over Sancarro with his pick-up truck after the teenager attempted to intervene in a domestic dispute to allegedly protect Sinanan’s female companion.

Akeem Reid

Ministry looks at landslide sensors

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Published: 
Wednesday, August 16, 2017

Early warning sensors which can detect landslides along the North Coast Road before they occur is just one of the proposals being considered by the Ministry of Works.

Former director of the Highways Division in the Works Ministry, Roger Ganesh, said in 2006, he, along with several technocrats from UWI’s civil engineering department had put together a file on short and long-term solutions to address the issue of landslides along the North Coast Road.

“At that time we were discussing setting up sensors on the hill which would give data on soil and moisture conditions to give an advance warning when a landslide was about to take place so as to take preventative measures to minimise the inconvenience to the public,” Ganesh, who is now the chief operations officer at Coosals, said. He said none of the recommendations was ever implemented.

“Some of the problems arise from the illegal occupation of land higher of the hills and slash and burn agriculture and this has caused water to drain into areas it is not supposed to drain and this results in land, mud and rock slides.

“The long-term measure is developing technology similar to that used in Europe where very high-quality mesh wire is used to anchor rocks into the soil. But we have the expertise and knowledge here where we can develop something indigenous to this country because basically engineering is the same all over the world. We just need to make it more financially viable to us,” Ganesh said.

Earlier this week, a landslide cut off traffic along the North Coast Road, near the Maracas Lookout.

Lyndon Lara, the councillor for Maracas/Santa Cruz/La Fillette said the ministry was exploring several options including benching—identifying trouble spots to deal with the areas in a methodical way.

Describing the area as a “very difficult piece of terrain” Lara said: “I know the Ministry of Works engineers would have looked at possibly benching so that the problem would not continue over time.

“But it’s not so says the Ministry of Works has been operating in isolation to what the council would be doing...so there is collaboration.”

Works and Transport Minister Rohan Sinanan said his ministry has been working with the Agriculture Ministry to clear the road and to cut down trees which pose a danger.

“We are also engaging in some geotechnical studies to see what can be done. The use of sensors is also something that is being considered,” Sinanan said.

A motorist manoeuvres past the section of the North Coast Road affected by a landslide on Tuesday.

No State $ for Haleema’s surgery

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Children Life Fund reject application
Published: 
Wednesday, August 16, 2017

Kristal Mohammed now has to find $400,000 in just over two weeks for her four-year-old daughter Haleema to undergo an urgent bone marrow transplant in India after the Children’s Life Fund Authority rejected her application yesterday.

Haleema was diagnosed with Beta Thalassemia Major, a blood disorder which reduces the production of haemoglobin. She is scheduled to undergo surgery at the Fortis Memorial Institute for Allogeneic Transplant in Gurgaon, India, on September 4.

On Tuesday, Mohammed filed a lawsuit challenging the delay by the Authority to consider her urgent application.

The application was filed in June and the Authority stated that it would take between one and three months to consider her case. Mohammed’s attorney Gerald Ramdeen argued that the lengthy period for considering the case was unreasonable, considering that the Authority had determined previous cases within a week.

The board effectively conceded the case and committed to reviewing the case and respond by midday yesterday.

In a letter addressed to Ramdeen, the Authority’s chairman Maritza Fernandes stated that “after careful consideration of the application and the medical reports dated 1/05/2017 and 20/07/2017 from Dr J Nunez and Dr G John, the Board of Management, Children’s Life Fund Authority had rejected the application.”

The board concluded that Beta Thalassemia Major was not considered a life-threatening illness as required by Section 19(e) of the Act. This position of the Board was based on clinical assessments of other patients with the same medical condition. Fernandes said it was confirmed and agreed at a clinical meeting with consultant paediatricians and haematologist on April 28 that once managed properly, life expectancy can extend into adulthood. She added that the application for funding contained little evidence of a definitive diagnosis of Haleema having the illness and it appeared that the requisite testing of the donor was not carried out, which may be required before treatment.

Mohammed told the T&T Guardian that she was disappointed and will meet with Ramdeen to consider further legal action.

She said those who made the decision to deny her daughter of a better life do not understand the pain and stress Haleema goes through daily.

“They don’t understand because they don’t see when she gets blood transfusions. Just Tuesday, Haleema went for blood and the doctor said she has to come back Thursday because her blood count was really low. Haleema missed this term from school because sometimes she has to get transfusions two times a week. If it is critical and she cannot get blood, her organs could fail and she could die,” Mohammed said.

Since Haleema’s story was highlighted by the T&T Guardian and CNC3, citizens have been sharing prayers and raising funds. So far the family has raised $160,000 and Mohammed said if the Authority provided the balance, they would be satisfied.

Ramdeen said the Children’s Life Fund Act was created to facilitate saving the lives of children who are unable to access life-saving medical treatment in this country.

“This is a child whose iron builds up in her blood is currently, almost at 2500 when the normal level is between seven and 140. What you have is persons sitting in their glass offices and determining these applications without any reference to the reality of what the child and her parents are facing on a daily basis.

“Only yesterday, this child waited in excess of five hours for blood at the San Fernando Teaching Hospital. That is to tell you the ordeal that this innocent five-year-old child is being put through and those that administer the Children’s Life Fund seems oblivious to that reality or simply do not care,” Ramdeen said.

Four year old Haleema Mohammed and her mother kristal.

Traffic relief ahead—Nidco

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China Railway gets $221m contract
Published: 
Wednesday, August 16, 2017

China Railway Construction Corporation (CRCC) has been awarded a $221.7 million contract by the National infrastructure Development Company (Nidco) to build the controversial Curepe Interchange, the state company’s chairman Herbert George has confirmed.

The deal with CRCC was signed off on only recently after it won the bid and contract, bringing an end to three years of controversy and delays that had surrounded the proposed mega project.

Fresh tenders went out on March 27 and closed on June 7. Of the five companies that submitted bids, three were local while two were Chinese firms.

CRCC also won the contract for the Arima Hospital, which is being built at $1.2 billion, while they constructed the Scarborough General Hospital.

“Cabinet has approved the preferred contractor China Railway. They will be the contractor doing the job. They have a joint venture with some local people, so they would do the project,” George said at his El Socorro office last weekend.

George said the cost of the project was reduced by a staggering $179 million, as the original price tag was $400 million He said the $221 million was VAT inclusive.

“So we have saved the taxpayer quite a tidy sum, a substantial sum of $179 million in getting this project off the ground. We did the tendering in a transparent way, where people were given opportunity to tender openly and that is what we got.”

He said one reason for the slash in price was that contractors had been submitting competitive bids, which was triggered by the slowed economy and stagnant construction sector, which was now gradually picking up with the number of projects Nidco had executed in the last few months.

“Contractors are coming with competitive prices,” George said.

Nidco president Esther Farmer added that they had saved millions of dollars on a number of projects they executed.

George said Nidco used a two-envelope system in the tendering process.

“One deals with technical, so it gave us an idea of the structure of your company and how you propose to engage the job, as well as if you have the experience to give us confidence that you know what you are doing and you would be able to discharge your responsibilities.”

Asked when the project will begin, George said CRCC’s contract was being prepared and should be ready and signed in next two weeks. Thereafter, CRCC will have to submit its insurance, performance bond and pre-payment bond.

“These things would take a few weeks to finalise, but once we have everything in place work will begin full speed ahead.”

Asked where the funding for the project was coming from, George could not provide the details.

“That would have to come from the Ministry of Finance. What we (Nidco) do is give the value. We will send it on to Cabinet and Cabinet is going to approve, they are the ones who source the funds. They will just send back to us and ask us to implement. They are the client and they will find the monies and so,” George said.

He said they hope work will start actually before the year’s end. The project, which is a design build package, is expected to be completed in 18 months

“So the contractor would be in place, he (CRCC) would start work, but his designers might be working out the details.”

George agreed the interchange would play a key role in alleviating traffic along the Southern Main Road and the Churchill Roosevelt Highway (CRH) which motorists have been experiencing for years.

“This project is long overdue and it’s welcoming that construction is finally going to take place,” he said.

He said Nidco would still have to ensure work was executed without causing disruption to motorists, commuters and businesses.

Work on the interchange will start from the Southern Main Road and go all the way to the bustling intersection of the CRH. At the intersection, two loops will be built for motorists to get onto the west and east lanes of the highway. The traffic lights at the CRH intersection will be removed to allow vehicles a free flow onto the four lanes that will be constructed on the interchange.

George assured that once the project got under way, it would help create jobs, stimulate the economy and eventually bring relief to thousands of frustrated motorists and commuters.

In June 2015, then Opposition Leader Dr Keith Rowley had raised concerns about the $400 million Curepe Interchange project and called for it to be stopped after Nidco jointly awarded Lutchmesingh Transport Company and Vinci Construction the contract.

The contract had been given to the two top bidders and was expected to start in July—one month after, following a public falling out over the tendering process.

Then former minister in the ministry of works and infrastructure Stacy Roopnarine had locked horns with her boss, Dr Suruj Rambhachan, after it was revealed that Lutchmesingh Transport had been selected for the job even though it ranked second in the tendering process.

The first ranked bidder was Vinci Construction, who lost out because of its high costing for the mega project.

However, Nidco decided to award the project jointly to the two top bidders, which then Nidco chairman Carson Charles had revealed to the T&T Guardian.

This led to calls by Rowley to the then People’s Partnership government, mere weeks from a general election, to immediately pull the plug on the contract.

This was done and resulted in Lutchmesingh Transport initiating a lawsuit against Nidco over its rejected bid for the proposed interchange. The company sought damages through the court for wasted expenditure incurred participating in the tendering process, which it claimed was rendered pointless by Nidco’s breaches of contract for the opportunity to obtain a profit-making contract.

The action was filed in April 2015, two months after it was informed that its tender for the project was not considered.

However Lutchmesingh Transport lost its million dollar lawsuit against Nidco when Justice Vasheist Kokaram upheld a preliminary application from Nidco’s attorney and struck out the matter.

When Rohan Sinanan was appointed Works and Transport Minister last November, reports surfaced on social media that he owned land once occupied by the Kay Donna Drive-In cinema on the CRH which was earmarked to be acquired for the interchange and was deemed a conflict of interest. Sinanan made it clear that while it was true he has an interest in the land with other stakeholders “what has been circulating” was not true, and he promised to recuse himself from the land acquisition process.

A sketch of the proposed Curepe Interchange

Cops hunt man in ‘rude talk’ with minor

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Published: 
Wednesday, August 16, 2017

The Children’s Authority is calling for members of the public to come forward with information to help catch a 35-year-old man who made sexual advances to an 11-year-old girl in a series of WhatsApp messages.

Screenshots of the conversation between the man, who is married, and the child were posted on social media.

In the conversation, the man promised the child that he would give her money, buy her a Samsung cellphone and meet with her for sex this weekend.

In one of the screenshots, it appeared that a parent of the girl responded to the man after reading the previous chats and told the sexual predator that a report was going to be filed with the police.

In a statement yesterday, the Children’s Authority advised parents and guardians to be aware that sexual grooming is a reality and a crime.

“Sexual grooming occurs when an adult befriends a child by building a close relationship in order to gain the child’s trust, with the intention of later engaging the child in sexual activity.”

The Authority said according to the Children Act, 2012, the person who commits such an offence is liable “to a fine of $50,000 and to imprisonment for 10 years; or on conviction on indictment, to a fine of $100,000 and to imprisonment for 20 years.

“Parents and guardians are advised to get to know the adults with whom their child interacts whether it is in person or online.

“They should also pay attention to adults who give unwarranted gifts or want to spend time alone with a child. Children should also be taught not to give out personal information online,” the statement said.

The Authority said if a parent or guardian suspects sexual grooming, they should take the evidence and any information about the alleged perpetrator to the police and report the matter to the Authority’s hotlines at 996 or 800-2014.

“The Authority reminds the public that child protection is everyone’s business, therefore, we all have a role to protect children from perpetrators of abuse and nurture children in an environment that encourages their development.”

Acting ACP Radcliff Boxhill said from it was a criminal offence and action must be taken against the man.

“It is a child you dealing with and some don’t know how to deal with that. We may not understand how they (children) are thinking and no blame is to be put on the child,” he said.

Boxhill said from the conversations between the adult and the child it was evident the man was making attempts to groom her.

“The grown man is attempting to groom her. The Child Protection Unit will be called in and investigate and we need the Cyber Crime Unit to find the source of the device and the conversations.

“They can be found on the handset and there will be records,” he said.

Boxhill said the information was out on social media and he was confident the police will investigate and deal with it.

“To ensure appropriate action and this situation does not continue and send the message that this will not be tolerated towards children.

“It is a criminal offence and the police will deal with it,” he said.

Users on social media expressed outrage after reading the conversations posted between the child and the man on WhatsApp.

An excerpt from the whatsapp conversation between a 35-year-old man and an 11-year-old girl.

Trini wanted in US for fraud agrees to extradition

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Published: 
Wednesday, August 16, 2017

A man from south Trinidad, wanted in the United States for defrauding that Government, has agreed to his extradition.

In a press release issued, the Office of the Attorney General said that acting AG Stuart Young signed a warrant of committal for Daveanan Sookdeo yesterday as his committal proceedings before acting Chief Magistrate Maria Busby-Earle-Caddle ended on Tuesday afternoon.

AG Faris Al-Rawi had signed off with the authority to proceed with the extradition after receiving the US’ request on July 28. Sookdeo was arrested hours later in Debe by Sgt Herman Narace of the Interpol Bureau.

When he was taken before Busby-Earle-Caddle to start the committal proceedings on August 2, Sookdeo indicated that he was not opposed to his extradition.

When the case came up for hearing next before Busby Earle-Caddle on Tuesday, she took evidence from Sookdeo, read the Warrant of Committal to him and committed him to the Port-of-Spain State Prison pending his removal to the US to face the charges.

Sookdeo is accused of making false claims to the US Government, stealing US Government money and Inter-state and foreign transportation of money obtained by fraud.

The offences allegedly occurred between 2006 and 2010 while Sookdeo was living in the US and Canada. He allegedly fled to Trinidad before he was arrested.

The offences carry sentences of between five and 10 years in prison if Sookdeo is convicted.

In the release the AG’s office hailed Sookdeo’s case as a victory for it and its Central Authority Unit, which handles all extradition requests.

“The Attorney General is committed to working with law enforcement agencies in the Caribbean and other international bodies to confront and fight the scourge of crime,” the release said.

Minister in the Ministry of the Attorney General and Legal Affairs, Stuart Young
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