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Truth and Reconciliation Laws that require improved governmental transparency in how they spend the peoples tax money, improved government accountability with legal consequences for unethical behaviour, lower political term limits, effective use of IT to support freedom of information reform, education reform that improves the old and out of touch system we have, redirecting of millions from projects that only service the elites to service backlogged social services….. for starters – BU family member Austin

Prime Minister David Thompson (l) Political Strategist Hartley Henry (r)

The current Democratic Labour Party (DLP) Government is over the hump of a five year constitutional term in office. There is no doubt the perception by the Barbados electorate that the Barbados Labour Party had become a fat and corrupt party played a significant part in their defeat. The disgust by the populace was enough to overcome the fear of voting for an untested David Thompson, a man whose reputation had been tainted by the early 90s when he served in the infamous Sandiford “8% Cut” Administration. Not to forget the wrestle between himself and Mascoll for leadership of the DLP which had the potential of propelling the Barbados system of Government into a tail-spin, and which still has cause for Kellman and Estwick to sit uncomfortably behind Prime Minister Thompson.

At the crux of the campaign message delivered by the Government on its last campaign trail, they promised how they would hold those in the former Government accountable for what they knew were corrupt practices which had occurred. Many Government projects, Government officials and supporting cast were fingered on the election trail prosecution of the then BLP Government. How can we forget VECO, the company awarded the BOLT contract to build the prison with no track record? How can we forget the ABC Highway contract which was awarded to a company name 3S which had no track record of building a prison? The story of Hardwood Housing, Clyde Mascoll, CEO Murrell was used to good effect in the last campaign by DLP political strategists. There were the alleged clandestine dealings at the UDC, SSA, RDC, NHC, NCC and several of the statutory and quasi-Government entities, and the list goes on.

We are over the hump of a DLP Government and not one person in the last Government has been put before the law courts. Instead what Barbadians have had to tolerate is the constant accusations and reminders by DLP officials and surrogates of the alleged corrupt practices which occurred during the last Government. Frankly, the people have reached the point where they are fed up with the constant references to corruption when it is obvious the DLP Government cannot deliver on their election promise, or they have decided to continue with the status quo which says, it is our turn to slaughter the fatted calf. We believe the latter is the case.

Contained in the message how the DLP Government would manage was the promise of laws which would improve the governance framework of Barbados. The fact that well into the DLP term in office Barbadians appear to have forgotten the promise reflects a society which is happy to be manipulated by its politicians and supporting cast. The next general election should be an interesting affair. The blogs no doubt will help to remind the public of the issues. The traditional media seems to have drawn lines at this early stage. The Barbados Advocate is in the pocket of the Government, the Nation Newspaper appears to have taken an anti-government position on most issues, although the strings are being tugged from Port of Spain. The Caribbean Broadcasting Corporation remains the perennial political football manipulated by Government, and the latest online newspaper Barbados Today is busy trying to establish its circulation. However, given the shadows behind Roy Morris it will be hard for him to maintain editorial control come crunch time. We wish him luck.

The Government has removed the issue of transparency from the front burner. Yes, it is currently consumed with managing an economy deep in recession but it has found the time to execute other priorities. Given the platform message of the last campaign, onlookers would have anticipated that a Thompson Government would have moved with haste on the matter of transparency. The government does not have to implement Freedom of Information and Integrity Legislation to be transparent. They just need to make some files public such as, tell the public who owns the PSVs. Tell the public who is on the CLICO Oversight Committee. Tell the people the qualifications used to appoint Board Members. If the Prime Minister knows what happened within the precincts of Parliament concerning Estwick, there is no need to wait on the Speaker or Committee of Privileges – fire that person.

The time has come for Prime Minister David Thompson to shape the legacy of his first term in Office. So far, on the issue of transparency in Government and prosecuting persons fingered by them during the last election campaign, we score them 3 out of 10. The politics of collusion is alive and well. How else can the Government’s backing of Senator Liz Thompson’s candidature for the job of Executive Secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change be explained? Only last month Government Senators viciously attacked her performance as Minister of Housing when a contract was awarded to her husband’s company during the last Government. She has also been attacked for overseeing the Greenland Landfill placement in an Eco-sensitive Scotland location. Finally, her role in the famous golden showers has also not escaped Government critics. Are we saying that she has under-performed as a Government Minister but we have no problem with recommending her for a job at the United Nations? Performance is performance is it not?

The politics of collusion is alive and well, we tell you!


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63 responses to “The Politics of Collusion”


  1. Off Topic

    Wuhloss!!!! Wuh looka muh crosses!!! Barbados Today is reporting that Bjerkmann is no longer in Barbados, that he left by private plane today.

    So wah happen to de policemen that was supposed to guarding him to “arrest” him if he tried to leave de island?

    Bjerkman got all lawyered up and de Police couldn’t even ask him his name.

    Wuhloss!! Wuhloss!! Wuhloss!!!

    I just tell de missus dat if I get into any trubble in Buhbadus get Johnny to represent me, I don’t want any anybody else, Johnny or nutting doing.

    De rich get justice de poor get prison

    Over to you Freundel

  2. Carson C. Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C. Cadogan

    DAVID

    “If the Prime Minister knows what happened within the precincts of Parliament concerning Estwick, there is no need to wait on the Speaker or Committee of Privileges – fire that person”

    I know that you are not serious. Look at it this way.

    DAVID is accused of some wrongdoing by his next door neighbor. The matter is reported to the authorities. The case is working it’s way through the proper channels.
    The owner of a blog who heard about it reported, “there is no need to wait on the Judge and Jury—— lock him up”.

    YOU ARE BECOMING QUITE REDICULOUS.


  3. ”””””’FIRE””””””

    With regard to your post sent at April 18 2010, we say in your own words, brilliant.

    The PDC seconds the suggestion made by person going by the pseudonym – Bush Tea – that that post become a seperate lead thread on BU.

    PDC

  4. Donald Duck Esq Avatar
    Donald Duck Esq

    We finally got to know this week end who is on the oversight committee. Any comments on the inclusion of 2 retired partners from the audit firm who audits the Barbados accounts of the clico group?


  5. I’m a bit surprised that there have been no comments on this blog about the news in yesterday’s Nation Newspaper that showed, with quotes and copious information, that the VECO contract was awarded after a COMMITTEE recommended that award following a process where committee members each awarded points on various aspects of the tenders. The article does not hint in any way that the tendering process was overruled by a minister but that the contract was awarded to the tender which was unanimously awarded the highest points in the competition with the local consortium which also tendered for the Prison project. An interesting point made in the article was that a current Government Minister in the Finance Ministry was a leading member of the technical committee that recommended the award to VECO in the last administration.

    Given that for sometime now it has become an act of faith on the Blogs, including this one, that there were significant infelicities by the then minister, it seems that perhaps the major purveyors of the stories suggesting such should explain to us how the votes by the committee mesh with the current legends of past Ministerial malfeance in the Veco affair and the process used by the Minister(s) to award the contract and profit from that award. Perhaps those persons could also explain how the current Minister in the Ministry of Finance could have obviously sanctioned an award which his current government (and the Central bank with which he also worked) is now portraying or hinting as being a wasteful drainage on our economy.


  6. Oops! I think I might have made a mistake above. I don’t have the newspaper with me so I can’t check now but It was probably the 3S contract and not the VECO one that was the subject of the Nation Article yesterday.


  7. @Checkit-Out

    Do you want to guess who broke the story of the shenanigans about 3S in Barbados?

  8. Wishing In Vain Avatar
    Wishing In Vain

    David it was on this site way before elections and weeks before the Nation opted to publish it, they seemed to need the clearance of the BLP to allow it in the press, I think if you revisit this matter that some documents were produced featuring the court action in the UK , Danos and his Jamaica Kick Back Agreement.

    It was brought to BU first and exposed by BU first.

    Am I not correct David ?


  9. Just wanted to establish the point of credibility.

    The blogs literally begged the Nation and the Advocate newspapers to cover this matter.

    It was only mentioned when it became an embarrassment not to do so.

    The fact that the Nation is investigating VECO and other matters now the trail is cold is piss poor journalism.

  10. Wishing In Vain Avatar
    Wishing In Vain

    Maybe it would be useful to repost the opening salvos of the story and the Court Documents that were produced at the time.


  11. Here is the September 2007 blog which asked some questions about 3S. A search of BU by inputting ‘3S’ in the Search Box will bring a ton of blogs. We have come a long way since then.


  12. Hi David

    Ignore my second post last night. Looks like alzheimers was threatening.
    Despite the fact that the Nation is somewhat late in following up on this story and good reporting should have revealed the facts earlier that wade gibbons is now reporting. Isn’t it worthy of comment, after taking the kudos for breaking the sleazy story of Veco and its tentacles across the region, that a current Minister in the Ministry of Finance was a member of the committee that overwhelmingly recommended the award of the contract to VECO above the submission of the local consortium and that his personal vote was overwhelmingly in favour of Veco (if we are to believe the Nation story). Might not this also tell us that there might be another side to the blatant corruption story as pushed by the blogs and which I personally believed?

    To try to explain, A contract of the magnitude of the prison contract has to go to tender. A committee of knowledgeable experts are tasked with evaluating the tenders received. The individual scores of the experts are tallied. The bid with the highest final score is normally submitted to the accounting officer of the lead Ministry concerned with a recommendation for that bid to be awarded the contract. Usually the best bid technically and monetarily is given the nod. It would appear that the committee that Wade Gibbons is reporting on was a group of honourable, presumably non-political, eminent persons with a mix of technical, financial and legal expertise, therefore their recommendation would have had significant weight and would have been somewhat difficult for a Minister or Accounting officer to overturn.

    What is passing strange is that the committee all gave the highest marks to Veco in the face of a competing bid by a high powered consortium of Bajan firms and a British firm which had very significant expertise and an excellent track record on building prisons, yet which made the very basic and fatal mistake of not providing information on “capital cost, interest rate on the lease, or maintenance cost. ”

    It is quite possible that Veco tricked the committee and the then Minister responsible for the prison project. But given the membership of the committee it would seem that for a minister to overrule their considered recommendation would have been at his/her peril.

    The apparent leak of the details of the recommendations for the award of the prison project seems to suggest that at least the blogs should work out the points at which the suggested infelicities occured and show how it was done. Was there a conspiracy by a significant number of the committee members to recommend the award of the project to veco? How did the current Minister in the Ministry of Finance come to make such an egregious mistake? Were the infelicities strategically planned for later, after the project had started, and be related primarily to manipulating cost overruns? If so, did the committee do a good job re. due diligence research on veco and the consortium as well?

    To repeat, I don’t think that the revelations from wade Gibbons deserve to be swept under the carpet. Who knows, there may be much more in this story than meets the eye.


  13. @Checkit-Out

    If the Gibbons story is true Boyce needs to answer some questions, it obviously becomes a credibility issue. The truth is BU does not run with Nation stories, we will wait for cross-confirmation. The Nation does not show BU any respect and we have reciprocated. in the interim if you feel to submit a view words on the matter feel free.

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