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CARIBBEAN AFFAIRS Bas: No need for
jet ride...knocks PM for not using e-mail, phone
BASDEO PANDAY
Did Prime Minister
Patrick Manning have to spend US$19,000 an hour of
taxpayers' money to inform and sensitise the prime ministers
of Jamaica, Belize, Suriname and Bahamas to his unity
proposal?
This was Opposition
Leader Basdeo Panday's response to Manning's statement at a
news conference yesterday, that he (Manning) had gone on an
information mission to several Caribbean countries, and not
to collect signatures in support of his unity plan.
Said Panday: "Mr
Manning could have phoned the Jamaican Prime Minister (and
others) and said 'we are floating this idea, what do you
think?'. It is a modern world, he could have e-mailed. Or he
could have sent his Foreign Affairs Minister, or his
minister responsible for Caricom affairs. But no, Mr Manning
has to spend US$19,000 an hour (hiring a private jet to
travel around the region)."
Responding to
Manning's statements that he planned to meet with him on the
issue, Panday said as Leader of the Opposition, it was his
duty to meet with Manning if he (the PM) so requests.
"I shall listen to
him...We have all been asking, even the Jamaica Prime
Minister, what this unity plan is all about. Nobody seems to
know. I may be the first to know, so I am honoured," Panday
satirised.
However, Panday
said he was convinced the proposal for economic and
political union was a distraction designed to draw attention
away from the forensic Commission of Enquiry into corruption
at UDeCOTT, because the name of a senior member of the
Government was being called in connection with this.
Claiming that
UDeCOTT was being given time to destroy the evidence, Panday
said: "We have heard nothing about who the other members
(outside of the Chairman) of the Commission of Enquiry are.
So it may well be that Prof (John) Uff would have to huff
and puff by himself."
When he announced
the chairman on July 22, Leader of Government Business Colm
Imbert had stated that the appointments of the other three
members were expected to be completed "within the next two
weeks". Imbert also stated that the initial meeting of the
commission would take place in Port of Spain somewhere
between September 8 and 26.
(Trinidad Express)
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