Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley yesterday blasted Opposition Leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar and Oropouche MP Dr Roodal Moonilal for insinuating that the ongoing Estate Management and Business Development Company (EMBD) cartel lawsuit was part of a People’s National Movement (PNM) racial smear campaign against the United National Congress (UNC) ahead of the next general election.
He also assured Indo-Trinbagonians that they need not fear his Government.
The PM made the comment in response to the claims made by Persad-Bissessar and Moonilal on Thursday, the day after the EMBD made fresh allegations in the case against Moonilal.
Addressing the UNC duo’s claims that the case was also a “fabrication” and a “cock and bull story,” the PM said, Persad-Bissessar ought not to have dismissed the court’s allegations, nor make further allegations against the PNM that could lead to a racial divide.
“I want to say something to the people of Trinidad and Tobago, especially the East Indian population, you have nothing to fear from the rest of the population. The law will determine who is police and who is thief,” Rowley said during a media briefing at Whitehall, Port-of-Spain.
“This is a particularly offensive comment by Mrs Kamla Persad-Bissessar. We have Indian children here in primary school, in kindergarten. We have people of the Indian population in the public service at every level. And, this lady and her friends getting in trouble in the court, rather than putting your defence as the court requires you to do, is seeking now to hide under the wings of the East-Indian population.
“The population and the PNM and the government will have nothing to do with it. This has nothing to do with your race. It has to do with your personal character because character matters. And nobody who is not listed in this matter should take any offence of the proceedings in the court.”
He added, “Mrs Persad-Bissessar, who today is casting that kind of aspersion on court proceedings here, trying to give favour to Dr Moonilal, who is the subject of a very serious court matter where millions of dollars are to be accounted for in the court and call the PNM’s name. Don’t mention the PNM in this! This has nothing to do with the PNM. It is not a government matter, only in so far as a state enterprise is doing its duty and the government provides the resources.”
During the latest sitting of the case before Justice Frank Seepersad on Wednesday, the EMBD added new allegations to its ongoing multi-million dollar cartel lawsuit against Moonilal, a group of contractors and EMBD officials.
The substantive lawsuit centres on 12 contracts for the rehabilitation of roads and infrastructure, which were granted to five contractors before the September 2015 general election.
Contractors initiated the proceedings against EMBD for the almost $200 million balance owed to them.
However, EMBD counter-sued, claiming that those contractors, as well as others, conspired with Dr Moonilal and others to corruptly obtain the contracts.
In its amended civil case, the EMBD is now alleging that Moonilal, who was housing minister then, served as a “shadow director” of the company and former officials took instructions from him. It also claimed Moonilal breached the Integrity in Public Life Act.
Its main new allegation relates to payments allegedly made by the contractors to third parties, who it claimed were connected to Moonilal and the UNC.
Rowley brought receipts and cabinet notes from 2015—while the People’s Partnership was in power—as evidence that even when parliament was dissolved, millions of dollars were still awarded in contracts, including one to the EMBD worth $400 million in July 2015. He said this matter could never be a hoax, as previous attempts to have the case thrown out of court had failed.
He noted that the EMBD took the matter to court in April 2017 and it could not be about a PNM plan seeking to win any election.
As Rowley waded into Persad-Bissessar and Moonilal, the two were preparing themselves for screening at the UNC headquarters in Chaguanas. (See page 6)
However, Rowley said nominees with criminal allegations being screened could never happen in the PNM.
“I don’t have that and I am glad I don’t have that and I will tell you because I am in the PNM, I will never have that problem to deal with.”