Pursuing Anti Corruption Measures MUST be a Priority
VIDEO: TTTI Couch session with Reginald Armour, SC.
by AfraRaymond
This is the ‘On the Couch’ session at the T&T Transparency Institute’s 2016 Anti-Corruption Conference held on Tuesday 8th March 2016. The moderator was Reginald Armour SC, President of the Law Association; Michael Harris, Tapia Member and Express columnist; Mark Regis of Shell Trinidad; and Afra Raymond, managing director of Raymond & Pierre Ltd and […]

And in Barbados, the backward governments have Code of Ethics and Conduct in place to prevent and discipline civil servants from speaking the truth about dangers and health risks to the citizens associated with the environment, which can cause deaths, or to tell the truth about corrupt government ministers’ vicious practices of stealing, selling out the country to whomever can fill their pockets with bribe money, all crimes and corrupt practices against the citizens.
No wonder the fake lords in England still think Caribbean leaders are not capable of managing anything in the Caribbean.
Donkeys.
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In Barbados, a judge,recently delivering a lecture marking International Women’s Day, observed that “after 15 years of discussions, drafting and consultations, legislators are yet to enact the law” re sexual harassment in the workplace. Laws are also, supposedly, presently being drafted to ensure honesty and integrity in the legal profession. Need I say more ? In Barbados,’that is how we roll’…and bajans have the nerve to criticize trinis !
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Pieter.., an injured lady has been waiting in pain for compensation for 35 years, neither the Auditor Generals Office or Attorney Generals office would do their jobs, they are all waiting for her to die…do not wait for any legislation from any politicians that can benefit the people or stop politician’s nasty practices of corruption…just keep watching them and exposing them for the world to see, that is what they deserve…they are lowlife…the lowest form.
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I have been finding that on awakening daily I have a struggle with many thing but the one thing that I must admit to you is this.
I just watched Afra Raymond on that couch and listed to him talk and I wondered
What makes men such as he is?
Where was that seed sprung?
Was it embedded in the sperm, the DNA, part of mitosis, or is it meiosis (I did not listen carefully to the childrun during that Biology homework Lilith #2 was quarreling dat night)
So I listen then the estimates, the House of Assembly et al., and I can’t understand what act of nature caused these aberrations, why would a minister of fine ants lie so barefacedly and then lie to retract that lie.
What is the difference between ISIS jihadists and their bombs that kill hundreds and the Stinkliars and Downlows and the Muttleys?
Is it limbs strewn across the foyer of an airport or people’s lives less graphically but equally decimated across the Barbados landscape?
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The terrorists are indeed in the house of parliament, in their slimmynest, they have found a way to use the actions of international terrorists to rein terror on their own people, ignoring the constitution….but being dumb terrorists, the ministers did not even have the intelligence to institute a patriot act…..I want to see them trying it now.
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@PUDRYR
Agree with you. Wonder how many will listen to Afra’s video.
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Thank God for men like Afra Raymond. I find it amazing how absolutely corrupt the Caribbean has become. The word corruption has never been a part of our political lexicon. In the eyes of our esteemed leaders it does not exist.
I have said it before and I will say it again: If you want real change in Barbados you have to revolt against the system which has allowed corruption to flourish unchecked. The current incumbent, Stuart, is a lackey who has no intention of tackling the endemic corruption from within his office. He is a traitor to his people.
This man is a coward who hides behind his office bestriding the stage like some mock Ceasar. A man ill-suited to be the boss of his house yet alone the head of our country. Whilst he continues to impersonate being our Prime Minister the under pinning of our economy becomes more fragile.
This imposter has done a remarkable job in weakening and impoverishing our nation. Congratulations Stuart.
He would do well to take a glance at President Muhammadu Buhari of Nigeria. A no-nonsense man who stated that once in office he would clean up his country.
“Nigeria indicts firms over arms fraud contracts”
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-35898709
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@Exclaimer
Respectfully disagree. There has always been corruption. We are in a different time where the public craves transparency. Like the fall of the Berlin wall we will witness the puncture of that cloak of secrecy the establishment has become accustomed.
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@ Exclaimer
Thank God for men like Afra Raymond. I find it amazing how absolutely corrupt the Caribbean has become. The word corruption has never been a part of our political lexicon.
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Afra Raymond is a treasure, but you err in thinking that corruption is new to our region. Neither are men of Raymond’s ilk.
What HAS changed, is the social media’s ability to bypass the censorship that has existed for decades and its power to expose the lotta shiite that has FOR A LONG TIME, been endemic in this region.
‘Long time’ (as Trickidadians would put it) men of Raymond’s ilk would be dismissed as lunatics, as trouble-makers, and traitors. They would have been denied access to information (still are); frustrated in court (still are); harassed (still are) and degraded by the establishment – INCLUDING THE PRESS (still are)
But what is different now, is that such GEMS in the society are able to hold their candles up in the light of social media, to interact with citizens, to challenge the crooks, and to access FACTS in ways that have been IMPOSSIBLE in past years…
Life will NEVER AGAIN be the same for those institutionalised crooks …even after Afra and David(BU)….
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As our leaders and their backers become more emboldened in their levels of nepotism and corruption one has to wonder if they have fully calculated the behind the scenes plotting of mice and men.
History has taught us that leaders are at there most vulnerable when they perceive themselves as demi-God’s – beyond reproach. Madam Thatcher and Julius Caesar being two examples. Both were brutally cut down in their prime.
Has our Prime Minister – Stuart, taken on the mantle of Julius Ceasar?
http://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=beware+the+ides+of+march&&view=detail&mid=F26AD1D78D9212BF5139F26AD1D78D9212BF5139&FORM=VRDGAR
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@ Exclaimer
Has our Prime Minister – Stuart, taken on the mantle of Julius Ceasar?
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Short answer…..
Yes, …but our Brutus is a shiite hound….with a mock gun instead of the knife…
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@ Bush Tea,
I have stated more than once that Stuart is a fraud. He mocks us all whilst holding on to the reins of power. We live in a country that has become so exposed to corruption that the welfare and the safety of the population can no longer be safe-guarded.
We the people should look at how the dead weight Stuart can be removed from his lofty position.
I am no historian but surely there must be a precedent in our history where an incumbent leader was obliged to step down from his post.
In the continent of Africa they would have had a coup; in the continent of South America they would have instigated revolution; in America they have a long history of assassinating their heads of state; whilst in Barbados we the public re-elect the same useless leaders and their wretched parties.
I remain puzzled.
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Exclaimer. ..this excerpt I took from your post says in all about Prime Minster Stuart:
“This is the first time such a detailed report has been made public and the fact that both serving and retired military officers have been indicted appears to show the president’s commitment to rooting out endemic corruption that has stagnated the development of Africa’s largest economy and oil producer.”
Stuart and the attorney general see absolutely no need to root out the endemic corruption that has successfully stagnated the development of Barbados.
If you ask them, both will tell you it’s not the corruption, it’s the world recession. ..they will blame the island’s financial destruction on everthing else, but corruption.
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And both PM Stuart and AG Brathwaite will tell you this with their very last dying breath.
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@ Well Well & Consequences March 27, 2016 at 7:29 AM
We are witnessing in Barbados the hallmarks of a roman tragedy. Desperate times call for desperate measures. Who will be the brave one amongst us to wield the knife and rid us of this tyranny called corruption?
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The only people can do it are the leaders, but only if they have the will….unless the people are willing to rise up and exert enough pressure to force them to such a degree that the politicians will have no choice but to give up their love of kickbacks for contracts from the minorities and bribes from business people both local and foreign to overlook criminal activities.
That’s their only way out of that vicious, self-inflicted cycle of “brassbowlery”
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Follow the political discussion by Trinis:
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A similar discussion we are having in Barbados. So similar the narrative in the Caribbean.
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Check the comments:
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/latestnews/ANTIGUA2016-03-26T12-35-08
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This is the Caribbean Spring, seeing that the misdeeds and corruption was succesfully covered up and hidden for so many decades….it will be a very long and drawn out process to unravel and unmask the politicians who engage in the deceit, but again it’s the people now responsible for taking a well informed stand and say…enough
There are consequences for politicians telling the truth about corruption, let’s hope Tabor got reams of evidence, that would cook Browne’s goose.
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@ David
Interesting articles. Certainly puts much in perspective re the ‘misdeeds and corruption…successfully covered up and hidden for so many decades’ by successive governments,as noted by WWC.
We, in Barbados, have long taken pride in professing to the world, that we are a Christian nation, emphasizing in particular, our ties to the ‘Church of England’. I have, therefore,long been befuddled, bemused, and bewildered, as to why there has been such a disturbing and deafening silence by those card-carrying, certified, clerically-collared “Christians” with respect to the issue of all-pervasive bribery,’misdeeds and corruption’, in government. As good Christians,aren’t these issues in which our clergy should take greater interest, and DEFINITELY pride in exposing ? Are they all afraid ? Of what are they afraid ? Where better than the pulpit ? Again I say, thank God for social media! Halleluia ! Can we have an Amen !
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@pieter pieper
For many years Barbados prided itself on being different than the others. It must be said we cannot make such a claim any longer by any measure whether economically or on the social front.
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@ David,
For many years we were hypocrites hiding behind “christian values.
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The Narrative in the T&T space seems all so familiar.
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@Hants
Our issues are greater than politicians.
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Wait up in hey very quiet bozie . Any how to all my friends and enemies i hope you had a Happy Easter
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Good debate to monitor:
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@ Well Well,
Have you seen this article?
” As concerns abound about money laundering and international financing of terrorism, Barbados is due to come in for greater international scrutiny later this year.”
http://www.barbadostoday.bb/2016/03/30/barbados-in-line-for-greater-financial-scrutiny/
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Now here is a novel way to deal with corruption.
“Tanzania’s president targets corruption with surprise visits and sackings
John Magufuli’s dramatic anti-graft measures have been welcomed by citizens, but he will need a more systematic approach to root out corrupt practices”
http://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2015/dec/08/tanzania-new-president-john-magufuli-targets-corruption-surprise-visits-sackings
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Good to see academics coming out of the woodworking even if they are reluctant to do so.
http://www.barbadostoday.bb/2016/03/30/not-merely-stupid-noises/.
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LOL @ David
What academic coming out of what woodwork what??!!
The last ‘academic’ we had bout here was probably Wendell McClean. The people commonly referred to as such are merely lazy recluses who are hiding from the ‘real’ world ..and living by the maxim “Those who can, do …and those who can’t…teach”
Here we have a highly trained ‘academic’ admitting her preference to avoid the spotlight and to keep as low a profile as allowed ….somewhat like the joker Froon…
To whom much is given …is much not to be expected…?
Then, when cajoled to make public comments about the state of management in the country, she makes veiled references to ‘corruption’ and its consequences….
Shiite man David … even BASIC simpletons like Bushie and Dompey have LONG ESTABLISHED the unprecedented level of thieving, bribe taking, downright robbery (as in CLICO, CAHILL etc) going on bout here for YEARS…
If brass bowls could see all this…
If BU could ferret out such details as you have done…
if even the damn Courts have been forced to hide up such issues with delays, inaction and downright incompetence….
….you mean that our centre of learning, ….our ‘intellectuals’, ‘academics’ and the experts who REALLY understand these things …are still sounding like wishy-wash, lukewarm, shiite hounds who dare not ‘offend’ anyone…?
You call that ‘coming out of woodwork’…?
steupsss…
Sounds more like someone who regrets having been drawn into a ‘fine ants’ nest…and who suffered a few stings ..and is now seeking to intellectualise the whole affair as a means of getting out of the nest….
Lotta shiite…
These are the people who REALLY understand the full extent of what is happening to Barbados as a result of corruption, but who are ‘pissing afraid’ of loosing the easy benefits associated with sweet life on the hill – and so not rocking any boats …corrupt or not…
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It was tongue in cheek Bushie you know full well. Why would an academic not see worth in engaging with general public is perplexing.
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🙂
Clearly…. but Bushie just in one uh dem nasty whacking moods….
Must be missing Islandgal…
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And the narrative, not much different to Barbados, continues in the Trinidad space.
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