SOYINI GREY
Senior Reporter
soyini.grey@guardian.co.tt
Political observers say it appears Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley is trying to make corruption a hot-button issue of the 2025 election campaign.
Reacting to Rowley’s statements at a media conference at Whitehall yesterday, political scientist Prof Hamid Ghany said by responding to Opposition Leader Kamla Persad-Bissesser’s “All them Indian is thief” comment, Rowley took her bait. Ghany said while racism is the engine of politics in developing countries, Rowley tried to reframe the issue to be corruption.
During yesterday’s briefing, Rowley condemned Persad-Bissessar’s race links to the court matter involving the Estate Management and Business Development Company (EMBD) and MP Dr Roodal Moonilal, arguing that systems ought to be in place to charge even public officeholders with crimes if they commit them. He distanced his Government from the case.
Pointing journalists to the closing remarks of former UK prime minister David Cameron at the Anti-Corruption Summit 2016 in London, Rowley said, “Trinidad and Tobago, as we’d done before under prime minister Patrick Manning, committed to resolutely root out white-collar crime as it occurs in our country.”
Political analyst Dr Shane Mohammed agreed that Rowley was attempting to make corruption, not racism, the real issue.
“The discussion is about what we expect from public officeholders in terms of their ethical behaviours and the expectation of service and that’s the standard that must be set by all political parties at all levels,” he said.
However, he noted that none of the points Rowley made were new or unique. Mohammed also said all political leaders need to show some leadership by rooting out corrupt practices, including from their parties.
On the matter of racism in politics, Mohammed said T&T citizens engage in racism by proxy, meaning they engage in the matter around election time, and for the most part, it is not an issue that arises outside of that.
“If we were racist, then we would have serious cultural and racial and societal divide in Trinidad and Tobago that would have caused all of us to be concerned about where we go, how we go, how we interact, how we dress, what we wear, how we celebrate, where we worship...that sort of thing,” Mohammed said.