Submitted by Heather Cole

corruptionAmidst the celebrations of 50 years of Independence, the Attorney General of Barbados made an unexpected announcement regarding corruption. In an article in Barbados Today dated March 4, 2016 under the heading “Not Here”, the Attorney General did NOT promote the touted administration’s promise of anti-corruption legislation. Instead he said corruption was not a major problem and that his administration was not interested in pursuing anti-corruption legislation any time soon because it was not a priority.

What is corruption?

It is defined as a form of dishonest or unethical conduct by a person entrusted with a position of authority, often to acquire personal gain. From the looks of it, we have entered an era of systematic and political corruption in Barbados.

It makes one wonder what the priorities of this government are. What the public perceives as the priorities of this administration were first outlined in the Democratic Labour Party Manifesto. The most glaring of these was to be the implementation of Integrity Legislation. To date the government has not even hinted that the promise they made to the electorate will be kept. The very fact that the Attorney General rose to defend the Government is an indication that corruption is a big problem. Government’s corrupt practices have escalated during this administration and include the Cahill Scam, theft by the Speaker of the House, Mara and David Thompson’s involvement in the Clico Affair, the Coverley Lease, missing information on the Auditor General’s Reports, the depletion of the NIS funds, contracts awarded in contravention of government’s financial rules, Government giving away tax free and other concessions as well as the buying of votes in the last election.

Let us examine the implications of his statement – corruption degrades the moral fabric of any society which becomes so steeped in filth that it is unable to remove it. After 8 years of being rocked by scandal after scandal, one wonders if his next pronouncement will be that there is no crime, no guns or no drugs. Will he state that these are not major problems and his administration is not pursuing any more legislation to counter them because they are not priorities?

He admitted that there is a tear in the very fabric of society and yet his intention is not to mend it? It is like a perpetrator of a crime boldly admitting guilt while showing no remorse. Perhaps the statements are opening the flood gates for corruption in the wider society, heralding our descent down the slippery slope. It can lead to a mafia type society where bribes and payments abound to get simple things done or payments given to look the other way. With acknowledged corruption, a precedent is set that informs the youth that things are to be achieved through corrupted methods and patronage. There is a rise in suspicion and lack of trust amongst the citizens and residents of a country that leads to fear mongering. The established functions of government become so adulterated and this ultimately affects the poor who become unable to pay for bribes and turn to crime to obtain bribe money. Damaged as it is now, the election process of buying votes will only get worse, making elections neither free nor fair.

Ultimately those statements speak volumes about the character of the person that the island has entrusted the responsibility to uphold the laws of the land and create new legislation when it is lacking. His statements do not infer integrity neither responsibility nor accountability to the people of Barbados and the Attorney General should resign.

Since there is an admission of corruption, the people want answers to many questions relating to the Cahill Waste to Energy Plant, Clico, Coverley, contracts that have been awarded outside of the proper tendering process and concession given to various parties. They also want investigations; the guilty sent to jail, explanations to mysterious money on bank accounts of persons who entered Parliament broke, moneys returned to the public purse that were unlawfully taken, the audited financial reports for Ministries and Departments of Government and resignations from Parliament.

Also, in light of this admission by the Attorney General, the Government needs an open rebuke from the church. To date the church has been silent but it needs to take a leaf out of the book of Pope Francis who is very critical about corruption. There is a role to be played by the church, other religious organizations and groups in civil society to denounce corruption in high places. Along with prayers, it is time for these groups to stand up and speak out and not wait until this same corruption is manifest within their doors.

In our 50th year of Independence, it would have been worth celebrating if Attorney General made a statement that Barbados was corruption free. The icing on the cake then could have been that since the implementation of the Integrity Legislation not one Member of Parliament’s activity had been called into question.

118 responses to “Corruption Gets a Passing Grade”


  1. 2018 will be the deciding factor for you and your bunch pf thieves.


  2. @pudryr
    A party comprised wholly, if not solely, of “business people”…a “business elite”… with a political and economic philosophy a la Donald Trump, would be a party whose members would put self-interests first. It would appear that the philosophical underpinnings of Solutions Barbados, as enunciated by GP, are similar to those of Donald Trump. That said, there is still a possibility that he may re-think and change his philosophy.After all, he is inviting “suggestions” from members of the public at this stage ! He may, like Saul on the road to Damascus, yet have an epiphany ! Remember,”Hope springs eternal in the human breast ! “I believe Philip Nicholls has experienced such an epiphany and may have valuable suggestions to offer!


  3. @ WW & C and SSS

    Yard-fowls like the ACs are pawns used by political parties as distractions. In other words, when these jackasses write shiite in defense of either BLP or DLP, they are the ones castigated since we focus on their folly and not the political party.

    Here we have the most ignorant contributors to BU, who CUSSES BU and its facilitator, as well as describing this forum should not be taken seriously, yet they are ADDICTED to BU. This is an example of what Stuart correctly described as “SANCTIMONIOUS HYPOCRISY.”

    And we have a situation where these same jackasses are “parroting” the political rhetoric of their DLP masters by accusing all and sundry of corruption, which was done only for the sole purposes of POLITICAL POSTURING and SOLICITING VOTES.

    Yet when the opportunity arises for the government to do something about this practice, the Attorney General is on record as saying ANTI-CORRUPTION LEGISLATION is NOT a PRIORITY for this DLP ADMINISTRATION, while the shiite bucket yard-fowls wrote if government exposes or identifies those former BLP ministers who allegedly engaged in corrupt activities in an effort to bring them before the law courts, this “process to pursue by LEGAL AVENUES is going to be COSTLY to the TAXPAYERS with PLENTY LEGAL HURDLES to OVERCOME and TIME CONSUMING.”

    Stuart also described such flawed reasoning as nothing less than “A MONSTROUS PERVERSION OF COMMON SENSE”


  4. Sir ac will remained here as long as i am convinced my jack a,ss writings put piles in your back side which i am most certainly convinced is the case,, Now carry on smartly with your turds and see who will be hurting the most

  5. Caswell Franklyn Avatar
    Caswell Franklyn

    Why you people from George Street always seem to want to put something in somebody’s backside. Is that the only imagery you people can conjure up?

    Sent from my iPad

    >


  6. Hi All:

    So the revealed issue is our decision to limit our candidates to Employers. Let me try to address this.

    There is an ongoing attempt to denigrate employers. Doubtless many deserve it, and they do not qualify as our candidates.
    We want the employee or an unemployed person who developed a product (whether a good or a service), risked starting a business, attracted customers, hired and trained employees to expand their business, and looked after employees during economically challenging times.
    Everyone has ideas about growing an economy. How do we know which ideas are workable? Caribbean governments have trusted the untested ideas of: academics, trade unionists (obviously not sensible ones like CF), political scientists, economists, and irresponsible business-persons. The result of testing unworkable ideas on the people of the Caribbean, using taxpayers’ money, has been disastrous by any reasonable measure.
    Employers actually test their ideas in the market place. Every successful employer can confirm that failure at the beginning of a business is inevitable. Further, every employer has failed multiple times with different ideas, and learned the valuable lessons that resulted in subsequent consistent successes.
    Senior professional employees like: managers, accountants, engineers, doctors, architects, surveyors, economists, etc are normally competent to have been promoted to senior positions. However, they lack the critically important experience of developing an idea and then risking their own money in testing it. Anyone can test an idea using other persons’ money. But it is by risking your own that you develop judgement on which ideas are workable and which ones should never have left the academic classroom.
    A responsible, caring and successful employer with at least 10 employees for at least 10 years should be well-prepared to manage the implementation of effective and workable ideas.
    Employers include professionals, sno-cone vendors, and anyone else who has taken the risk to start a business and implement ideas on growing their business. We will accept them all.

    Best regards,
    Grenville

  7. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Art….the yardfowls cannot sleep well these days, they are under pressure, more pressure seems to be headed their way, cant you see how yardfowl AC is angry at everyone, things are not as copocet as they spent 7 years making everyone believe and the web is tangled, wrapped tightly around their lying necks….all those lies, all that deceit, no more yardfowl boasting…right AC..lol

  8. St George's Dragon Avatar
    St George’s Dragon

    I am afraid that Solutions is not going anywhere.
    Grenville is an engineer by profession. Engineers seem to self-select when they choose their career and tend to be – how can I say this nicely – more into the detail than most people. Others would perhaps rudely say that members of the engineering community are more towards the autistic end of the spectrum. In other words, they have great analytical skills but lack the ability to understand how people think.
    Unless Solutions can connect with the voters it will get nowhere. The sad thing is that Grenville might not understand what he is doing wrong. He may see a well thought through manifesto; others will see weird emphasis on things like 10 employees for 10 years. So many numbers and yet so little connection with people’s concerns. People vote for likeable personable people. Grenville doesn’t come over as that.

  9. de Pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de Pedantic Dribbler

    Grenville, how many successful employers or business persons are there that fit your profile who are so pleased with the way their businesses are operating that they will so easily step away from daily operations to become active politicians?

    And to expose themselves to the bruising, personal invective of a political campaign?

    It’s rather humbling to read these periodic posts. Each successive one indicates just how absolutely unprepared you are for the real world of elective politics.

  10. Sunshine Sunny Shine Avatar
    Sunshine Sunny Shine

    Mr. Grenville

    Even if you believe your theory concerning business persons it is the electorate who has to be convinced that you are serving in their interest. This is not about what you think or believe, this is about persuading the voting public that you represent the change they want to see. How you are able to persuade will depend on the methodology used as the Barbadians political atmosphere has stifled the senses of many with the utterances of corruption, deception, manipulation and aggrandizing. Take a lesson from the Stuart’s style of leadership, and the at any cost mentality of the opposition leader. Maybe when you assess what they have done, you would understand the importance of the humility needed that speaks to a caring heart.

    Susanne S S


  11. Well Well & Consequences March 13, 2016 at 10:53 PM #

    “Art….the yardfowls cannot sleep well these days, they are under pressure, more pressure seems to be headed their way, cant you see how yardfowl AC is angry at everyone, things are not as copocet as they spent 7 years making everyone believe and the web is tangled, wrapped tightly around their lying necks….all those lies, all that deceit, no more yardfowl boasting…right AC..lol…………”

    @ WW & C

    Yes, WW&C, the yard-fowls are under pressure….. Barbadians are no longer willing to accept their political rhetoric and propaganda.

    Chris Sinckler wants Barbadians to believe he is the ONLY INDIVIDUAL in Barbados that has ALL the answers to the island’s social and economic problems. Against the background of asking people to “bring solutions” rather than being critical, Sinckler describes those persons who actually make suggestions as “prophets of doom and gloom” or having a political agenda. Yet none of his economic policies have spurred economic growth.

    Take Marla Dukharan for example; Sinckler described her assessment of Barbados’ economic performance and suggestions offered as “speculative” and “scare mongering.”

    But this is what Sinckler does best; he is an ARROGANT, BOMBASTIC individual.

  12. Sunshine Sunny Shine Avatar
    Sunshine Sunny Shine

    Artax
    ………..But this is what Sinckler does best; he is an ARROGANT, BOMBASTIC individual…….

    The hallmark of DLP type of politics. 3-PM leads by example and his bunch of idiots follow in his stead. I am still waiting for the economic growth that Stuart said will force all to say that this Democratic Labour Party is the best Labour Party in the history of Barbados leadership and politics.

  13. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    All Solutions has to do is recruit people who would compliment and add to his skills. He is detail oriented and analytical which is commendable since it’s all in the details, he can recruit those skilled in what he is lacking, he cannot have all the requirements as one person.

    Adding a few real thinkers would add balance to his round table….but he has to be very selective, given the errors David Thompson made in his selection of political candidates.

  14. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    @ DPD

    You said “But this is what Sinckler does best; he is an ARROGANT, BOMBASTIC individual…”

    And that my friend is why David (The Divider of the Fatted Calf) Thompson DID NOT, EVEN THOUGH CHRIS & HE WERE THE CLOSEST OF FRIENDS, DID NOT LEAVE CHRIS AS PRIME MINISTER!!

    But hindsight being 20/20 he moved from an arrogant, bombastic individual to an arrogant, bungling and scornful individual whu is de difference?

    Poor man mistook slothfulness as stolidity of character…oh well…


  15. Take a good look at what is going on in South Africa. I read with astonishment that a family who recently emigrated from India in 1993 called the Gupta’s appear to have a stranglehold on the ANC President Zuma.

    This would never happen in Barbados or could it?

    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/mar/17/jacob-zuma-denies-outside-influence-in-south-african-cabinet

    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-03-17/goldman-seen-succumbing-too-as-wall-street-suffers-awful-quarter


  16. Interesting: Attacking Mr. Phillips is not helping, however, rather, we should be giving him our opinions on how best to address these issues. We talk about Reps not asking the people directly how best to move forward, yet you have an opportunity to do so, instead, you pick at Grammar, none of us are perfect in what we say or do but, we can help each other.

    I do agree that Mr. Phillips needs to bring the rest of his team before the cameras, Mr. Phillips should have some Community Centre Town Hall meetings to explain before the people, what their agenda is, what issues they will take up first, second, third e.t.c., this one man army thing is for Hollywood, Bollywood, and all the other woods. Mr. Phillips need not come with the same old platform as the others, Mr. Phillips need not come with the same old language that the masses can’t relate to.

    The Barbados Constitution needs amending greatly, it should not take 5 years to remove a part or person from office, it is not theirs, it belong to the people.
    No one should have any immunities from prosecution, whether in office or else, Judges, Magistrates, MPs e.t.c., the people who put them there doesn’t have that luxury.
    There needs to be a serious ban on foods and products that we can provide up to its maximum, importing 90% of a product that we can provide is madness, we provide the 90%, import the 10%.
    The Lands in Barbados doing nothing but waiting for our reps to sell out to developers, should be cultivated by our inmates & defense force (well, maybe the defense force), those Non-Violent law breakers, if they can’t pay the fines that Mr. Phillips is talking about, they would join the inmates & defense force in cultivating the lands.
    Put a hold o these importers, they are the ones along with others, who use up our reserves to import things we can provide to a degree
    The people need to establish a referendum, this is not something we are asking for, this is something we demand, in fact, we say we SHALL have referendums, we want Anti Corruption and Freedom of Information legislation, period.

    We are not advocating disrespecting the very people we put in office to look after our interest, locally, regionally and internationally, no, however, we do advocate that, our reps listen to what we want or, what is best for the Island. We don’t recognize Barbados as no Corporation, we know it as a piece of land that we live on, if that is the case that is a Corporation, then the people own this Corporation.

    Now, focus on the agenda, if you can’t get the message because of a leter (lol) missing from a word, get off the page, find something else to do.

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