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Monday, May 19, 2025

PM: T&T never told of access to India vaccine donation

by

Renuka Singh
1522 days ago
20210319
Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley speaks to members of the audience during the Conversations with the Prime Minister last night.

Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley speaks to members of the audience during the Conversations with the Prime Minister last night.

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Renu­ka Singh

In­di­an High Com­mis­sion­er Arun Ku­mar Sahu did not com­mu­ni­cate the avail­abil­i­ty of In­dia’s 500,000 vac­cines to CARI­COM and that is why Trinidad and To­ba­go did not know it was an op­tion.

This was the word from Prime Min­is­ter Dr Kei­th Row­ley, as he fi­nal­ly an­swered the month-long ques­tion of who dropped the ball over T&T’s fail­ure to ac­cess In­dia’s “Vac­cine Maitri”, that coun­try’s dri­ve to do­nate vac­cines all over the world.

Row­ley re­vealed the in­for­ma­tion dur­ing his Con­ver­sa­tions with the Prime Min­is­ter last night.

The Prime Min­is­ter, in his ca­pac­i­ty as chair­man of CARI­COM, said he spoke with all the heads of gov­ern­ments about the gen­e­sis of the 500,000 vac­cines from In­dia and they all con­firmed that there was no doc­u­men­ta­tion, but that each coun­try’s High Com­mis­sion­er was sup­posed to con­fer the bi­lat­er­al arrange­ments with re­spec­tive gov­ern­ments.

“Af­ter all this beat­ing up, I asked all my col­leagues, heads of Gov­ern­ments to the en­tire CARI­COM who was in the meet­ing, does any­body know or has any­body seen a doc­u­ment or has spo­ken to any­one in In­dia about 500,000 vac­cines. The an­swer is no,” Row­ley said.

“Not one CARI­COM head in that meet­ing could have said ‘I’ve seen an email, I’ve seen a let­ter. Not the Sec­re­tari­at, not a Prime Min­is­ter.

“Where did that come from to be­come such a pil­lar of T&T con­ver­sa­tion? It came from the CARI­COM Sec­re­tari­at.”

On Feb­ru­ary 13, the CARI­COM Sec­re­tari­at tweet­ed a thank you to In­dia for the fa­cil­i­ty of 500,000 vac­cines to CARI­COM. Row­ley said he still did not know the rea­son for that tweet but “the rea­son will come.”

“Yes­ter­day, in re­sponse to ques­tions to the CARI­COM Sec­re­tari­at, in re­sponse to the Trinidad sto­ry and else­where about 500,000 dos­es, this is the an­swer from the Sec­re­tari­at,” he said.

Row­ley then read out a re­sponse from the Sec­re­tari­at.

“I had not re­ceived any writ­ten com­mu­ni­ca­tion on In­dia’s do­na­tion of vac­cines to the re­gion. The first I heard of it was me­dia re­ports that Do­mini­ca and Bar­ba­dos were about to re­ceive a do­na­tion,” he read.

Row­ley said that about two days lat­er, the In­di­an High Com­mis­sion­er in Guyana was re­port­ed in the Guyanese me­dia say­ing that the vac­cines would be made avail­able to the re­gion and that Guyana, An­tigua, St Kitts and Nevis, the coun­tries to which that com­mis­sion­er was ac­cred­it­ed, would re­ceive do­na­tions

“This ap­pears to be the source of that sto­ry,” Row­ley said.

Row­ley said that the Sec­re­tari­at in­formed him that the arrange­ments were bi­lat­er­al.

“And each High Com­mis­sion­er would be re­spon­si­ble to the coun­tries to which he or she is ac­cred­it­ed,” he said.

“We have an am­bas­sador here in Trinidad, if you are re­quired, as hap­pened in Guyana and the oth­er small is­lands to know about this, then we should know about it here and there is a path­way.”

Row­ley said the first time he heard about the vac­cine was from lo­cal doc­tors whom Sahu had spo­ken to.

“Who did not speak to the Gov­ern­ment about it,” he added.

Row­ley said the sec­ond time he heard about it was from busi­ness­men who were seek­ing to make arrange­ments to bring vac­cines in­to the coun­try.

The Prime Min­is­ter said For­eign Af­fairs Min­is­ter Dr Amery Browne ap­proached Sahu about the vac­cine and the sub­se­quent re­ports of the avail­abil­i­ty and was told “I don’t know.”

“Well, we then com­mu­ni­cat­ed di­rect­ly to In­dia to find out if this was avail­able and if it was we are will­ing to par­tic­i­pate. I can tell you there has been no con­fir­ma­tion of any such thing from In­dia,” he said.

Row­ley said they al­so com­mu­ni­cat­ed with the sup­pli­ers and was told they could not take any more or­ders.

He said some­one was al­so of­fer­ing a US$1.8 mil­lion find­er’s fee to pro­cure the vac­cines.

Row­ley said it was al­so be­ing said that T&T did not ac­cess those vac­cines be­cause of where it was be­ing made.

“All of a sud­den it’s not that small coun­tries be­ing left out of the mar­ket and avail­abil­i­ty but it be­came an is­sue of race,” he said.

Row­ley said we are at the stage where we were told Jan­u­ary, then told to­wards the end of Feb­ru­ary, then by March 22.

“As I speak to you now, we have no con­fir­ma­tion that on March 22 we would get vac­cines,” he said.

Row­ley said ac­cord­ing to his com­mu­ni­ca­tion with WHO, T&T might be get­ting 33,000 dos­es from the CO­V­AX fa­cil­i­ty but is still on track to get the vac­cines by the end of March.


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