Senior Reporter
geisha.kowlessar@guardian.co.tt
Former minister in the Ministry of Finance, Mariano Browne, has endorsed the decision of Attorney General John Jeremie to end long-standing civil suits tied to the collapse of the CLF conglomerate, with majority shareholder Carlton Reis calling for the State to finally relinquish control and allow CL Financial (CLF) to rebuild.
On Friday, Jeremie laid in Parliament the Reports of the Commission of Enquiry into the collapse of the CLF group and the Hindu Credit Union (HCU), revealing that the State spent approximately $28 billion rescuing CLF and its subsidiaries, with a further $3 billion to $4 billion spent in subsequent years on legal, accounting and administrative matters linked to the collapse. Jeremie announced the end of the civil actions, citing years of stagnation, ballooning legal costs and the absence of meaningful progress.
Browne, in analysing the CLF/CLICO fallout, said the move was both necessary and overdue.
Browne argued that civil proceedings have historically produced little in terms of accountability or financial return.
He noted that such cases often emerge after a change in government but rarely advance, pointing to one civil matter involving the Urban Development Corporation of Trinidad and Tobago that has remained inactive for more than a decade without evidence ever being presented.
Browne added that if wrongdoing truly occurred, criminal charges—not expensive and symbolic civil actions—were the proper mechanism.
“What really should happen is criminal activities and criminal charges, which would have severe penalties. That’s the real meat of the matter, and in this particular instance, I think the Attorney General has done the right thing by ending the civil suits. These civil activities are just a waste of money. And, the real purpose, what we really need to pay attention to, is generating enough cash so the State can recover its money and the depositors, wherever they were, could recover their money,” he said.
Browne also criticised successive United National Congress and People’s National Movement administrations for failing in their duty of oversight after the State took control of the CLF group.
“No financial statements were presented either by UNC-controlled administration or PNM administration on these companies, on CL Financial in particular. So the State failed in its duty of care, regardless of which party was in power,” he said.
The former finance minister also highlighted that Clico itself was later confirmed to have sufficient assets and had repaid its liabilities, raising further questions about the prolonged State intervention.
Young: UNC started enquiry
Former prime minister Stuart Young defended the then government’s handling of the matter and placed responsibility for costly enquiries on the UNC administration.
“It is worthwhile reminding ourselves that the Colman commission of enquiry was commenced by the UNC government,” Young said, adding, “They are the ones that burdened the citizens and taxpayers with the costs associated with the commission of enquiry and the subsequent investigations undertaken.”
Young added that Sir Anthony Colman issued “stinging negative comments” about attorney Gerald Ramdeen, who had been hired by the UNC at significant cost.
He also explained that the PNM government withheld the Colman Report only because the Director of Public Prosecutions had advised that publishing it would compromise ongoing criminal investigations.
“The government was not involved in the criminal investigations and certainly played no role in the assignment of police resources,” Young said, noting that the PNM administration ensured the recovery of billions of dollars spent in the CLF/CLICO bailout.
Reis: CLF ready to rebuild
Amid the winding down of litigation, majority shareholder Carlton Reis has issued a strong call for the State to finally withdraw from CL Financial and allow shareholders to rebuild the conglomerate.
“Government should not be in private business, and they have been in CLF/CLICO for way too long, and we can all see the effects and results of government control,” Reis said.
He welcomed the decision to lay the Colman Report in Parliament, describing it as the beginning of the end of a “long, drawn-out, costly bailout.”
Reis said CLF shareholders are ready to partner with the Government to restore the group’s operations and contribute to national economic recovery.
“We must learn from our mistakes and use these experiences to help us make better decisions in the future,” he said, adding, “CLF can play an instrumental role in developing Trinidad and Tobago.”
Reis also criticised former finance minister Colm Imbert’s management of the group, saying CLF lost its entrepreneurial drive under what he described as oppressive conditions.
“Under the oppression of Imbert as MOF, the CLF group lost its entrepreneurial spirit and benefit, and this has affected the country as a whole,” Reis added.
Efforts to contact Imbert for a response were futile.
He also questioned the claim that CL Financial’s losses totalled $32 billion, saying it does not match the figures shareholders were previously given.
“That number is way too high,” Regis insisted, saying, “Based on our calculation— what was actually injected into Clico and what was before the court—our figures were closer to $23 billion. So I don’t know how it reached $32 billion.”
“That $32 billion, it is totally excessive, and it smells of corruption. It smells very dirty.”
With a new administration now in office, he said shareholders are optimistic.
