Another BIR commissioner says she was unlawfully bypassed for promotion

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

File photo: The Board of Inland Revenue building in Port of Spain.

ANOTHER assistant commissioner of the Board of Inland Revenue (BIR) is threatening the State with legal action, alleging she was bypassed for promotion as chairman in favour of a junior officer.

On Wednesday, attorneys for Sabetaa Lall sent a pre-action protocol letter to the Office of the Attorney General, setting out the alleged “unlawful and unconstitutional” conduct of the State.

Attorneys Dinesh Rambally, Kiel Taklalsingh, Stefan Ramkissoon, Kristy Mohan, and Rhea Khan said Lall was the best person for the job.

Taklalsingh said because of the powers the chairman of the BIR possesses in prosecuting citizens, searching and seizing property, and accessing private financial information, any decision to appoint a chairman must be transparent.

He said Lall, who is due to retire in 2024, was appointed assistant commissioner in 2015, and since 2018, she has acted as commissioner and continues to do so.

Taklalsingh alleged after a recommendation for another senior commissioner to act as chairman was rescinded two weeks after it was made in December 2020, the Ministry of Finance’s permanent secretary recommended a field auditor and acting assistant commissioner to act as chairman ahead of four more senior commissioners, including Lall.

Another of the four acting commissioners bypassed was Rohonie Ramkissoon, who recently won her challenge of a decision by the Finance Minister not to recommend her as chairman of the BIR in 2021.

Justice Margaret Mohammed held Minister Colm Imbert acted unlawfully and irrationally when he decided not to recommend Ramkissoon. Imbert has said he intends to appeal the decision.

In the pre-action letter, Talkalsingh said after all four bypassed commissioners wrote to the Public Service Commission together, a memo was sent out rescinding the acting appointment, and interviews were held in February 2021. At that meeting, Lall was asked about the misappropriation of funds at the cashier’s unit of the BIR, which, at the time was her responsibility.

Lall said she was taken by surprise, since she was told not she would be called on to give an explanation. Her lawyer also said no allegation of impropriety has ever been levelled against her in relation to the missing funds.

Taklalsingh said while Lall responded, she did not know it would be used against her as a reason to bypass her.

The letter also said a recommendation was made a second time and she was again bypassed.

“We are of the considered view that our client has proper grounds to challenge the lawfulness and constitutionality of the continuing failure of the Minister of Finance to consider her for promotion to the post of commissioner.”

He said the decision to repeatedly bypass Lall was unfair, irrational, and unconstitutional.

“… To say the BIR and its chairman should be insulated from political influence and pressure and ought not to be beholden to a political officer is an understatement.”

He said the decision not to consider Lall for appointment “violently collides” with the constitutional provisions for the public service which are meant to “insulate members of the civil service from interference.”

“The assessment of taxes and validity of refunds are important functions which must be performed independently and be free of political suasion or influence.”

He said no minister can use “half-baked, unformed allegations and/or the purported need for investigations,” to disqualify anyone from serving as chairman of the BIR. Taklalsingh said solidly rational and cogent reasons must be provided for not making a recommendation and the process of dealing with any information must be lawfully fair.

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NBC’s Special Report – Friday October 28th 2022

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: NBC SVG

Members of the Board of Directors at the National Broadcasting Corporation, NBC Radio, have paid tribute to the late Chairman, Dwight Hillocks, who died on Thursday, October 6th.

The private funeral of Mr. Hillocks is set to take place tomorrow morning.

Rawdica Stephen tells us more in today’s special report.

https://www.nbcsvg.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/DWIGHT-HILLOCKS-TRIBUTE-REPORT.mp3

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Vincy Expo culminates this afternoon

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: NBC SVG

Invest SVG will host a ceremony this afternoon to signal the culmination of the Everything Vincy Expo, at the Geest Cargo Terminal in Kingstown.

The Investment Agency has been hosting the Expo, to showcase the Goods and Services produced here in St. Vincent and the Grenadines.

Minister of Finance and Economic Planning Camillo Gonsalves is encouraging the population to continue to support local entrepreneurs.

https://www.nbcsvg.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/SUPPORT-LOCAL.mp3

The closing ceremony of the Everything Vincy Expo will be held from five this afternoon. Then from 8pm an event dubbed Fashion De Music will be held.

Exhibitors at the Everything Vincy Expo say they are grateful for the opportunity provided by Invest SVG to showcase their products.

NBC news spoke to Shanette Charles of Shanny’s Prod who said the exposure has done well for her business which is still fairly new.

https://www.nbcsvg.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/CAKE-GOOD.mp3

Ms. Charles also shared her greatest challenge as an entrepreneur and she offered advice to young people who are interested in starting their own business.

https://www.nbcsvg.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/BUSINESS-ADVICE.mp3

 

That was Shanette Charles of Shanny’s Prod- one of the exhibitors taking part in the Everything Vincy Expo hosted by Invest SVG.

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October 27th declared St. Vincent and the Grenadines Heritage Day in New York City

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: NBC SVG

The Consulate of St. Vincent and the Grenadines in New York hosted the inaugural Flag Raising Ceremony in New York City, yesterday in celebration of this country’s 43rd Anniversary of Independence.

Vincentians in the Diaspora were on hand to witness the historic hoisting of the flag at Bowling Green, New York.

The ceremony included addresses from several officials including this country’s Permanent Representative to the Organization of American States, Louann Gilchrist.

She said St. Vincent and the Grenadines is grateful for the permission to fly its flag in New York City.

https://www.nbcsvg.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/GILCHRIST-FLAG.mp3

Meanwhile, New York City Mayor Eric Adams declared October 27th St. Vincent and the Grenadines Heritage Day in New York City.

https://www.nbcsvg.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/ADAMS-FLAG.mp3

A Flag Raising Ceremony was also held in Toronto, Canada yesterday.

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Nurse-Midwives to receive special allowances

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: NBC SVG

Prime Minister Dr. Ralph Gonsalves says a special allowance will be paid to Nurse-Midwives here in St. Vincent and the Grenadines.

The Prime Minister made the announcement during his Independence speech at the Military Parade at the Victoria Park yesterday.

https://www.nbcsvg.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/NURSES-ALLOWANCE.mp3

The Prime Minister also announced that payment will be made to volunteers who worked during the La Soufriere Volcanic eruptions.

https://www.nbcsvg.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/VOLUNTEER-PAYMENT.mp3

According to Prime Minister Gonsalves, the Government will offer the Duty free concession on Christmas barrels from Monday November 14th this year.

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Paria contract worker died of hypertensive complications

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

File Photo by Lincoln Holder.

AN autopsy on the body of welder Shakile Keyon Douglas, who died on the job at Paria Fuel Trading Company facilities on October 21, has given hypertensive (high blood pressure) complications as the cause of his death.

Douglas, 28, who lived at Cleghorn Village, Princes Town, worked for Sonny Beharrysingh and Sons, which was contracted by Paria.

A joint release from Paria and his employer shortly after the incident said Douglas died suddenly after complaining of feeling unwell while at work.

In a statement on Friday, Beharrysingh and Sons confirmed the autopsy finding and called on employees to pay more attention to their health and diet.

“The autopsy on Shakile reveals that he died suddenly as a result of hypertensive complications.

“In light of Shakile’s untimely passing, our company and Shakile’s loved ones join in bringing awareness to the importance of health and wellness and work-life balance. We urge everyone to conduct regular medical screening, exercise regularly and maintain a healthy diet.”

The statement added that Douglas was welding a roofing frame on an office container at Paria when he said he was feeling unwell. He asked for a break, but his co-workers realised he was experiencing some kind of medical distress.

They immediately contacted Paria’s emergency response team, who in turn contacted the TT Fire Services and external emergency response agencies.

“Despite all attempts made, Shakile was found to be unresponsive and subsequently pronounced dead by the relevant authorities,” the statement said.

Expressing condolences to Douglas’s family, friends and co-workers, Beharrysingh and Sons said the company continues to assist his loved ones during this difficult time and keep them in their prayers.

In an earlier response to his death, Douglas’s father, Eyon Douglas, said his son was young and strong. Along with Pointe-a-Pierre MP David Lee, Eyon Douglas called for an investigation to ensure there was no cover-up.

There have been doubts about Paria’s operations since the February 25 diving incident which left four divers who worked for LCMS dead, after being sucked into a pipeline.

A commission of enquiry (CoE) into the death of the four – Fyzal Kurban, Rishi Nagassar, Kazim Ali Jr and Yusuf Henry – who were undertaking maintenance work in a hyperbaric chamber for Paria, got off to an embarrassing start on September 7.

Chairman Jerome Lynch, KC, expressed frustration at its lack of resources and appealed for the basic tools for the commission to do its job.

Hearings will resume on November 21 and on November 22 the commission will make a site visit to Paria’s No 36 Sealine Riser on Berth No 6, Pointe-a- Pierre, where the incident occurred.

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Landslide blocks Penal Rock Road between Moruga, Penal

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Flooding along Penal Rock Road on Friday due to several days of heavy rainfall. Photo by Lincoln Holder

One of many massive landslips along the Penal Rock Road in Moruga has cut off the community, and frustrated residents again protested to highlight the state of the road on Friday.

“The Moruga Main Road is already bad. Now cars cannot go to Penal through the teak (an area further along the Penal Rock Road) from here. It is dangerous for the trucks and other heavy vehicles to pass,” a resident said.

The Penal Rock Road runs from Basse Terre Village, Moruga, to Penal Junction in Penal.

The residents live along the 14 mile-mark in Santa Maria Village.

People gathered near Blas Cha Cha Trace, saying they were left with no choice, as all their cries seemed to fall on deaf ears. They blocked the road with tyes and used appliances.

A major landslip along Penal Rock Road, through the teak fields is now impassable to vehicles. Photo by Lincoln Holder

They recalled that a few weeks ago, a concrete cement mixer truck transporting cement capsized. Luckily no one was injured. The truck was removed by the company it belongs to. But the mixer was still on the roadside when Newsday visited on Friday.

One parent said the Santa Maria RC primary school was closed for a week because the water truck could not supply the school.

Resident and shop owner Mary Guevarro said taxi fares from Basse Terre to Santa Maria increased from $6 to $12 recently.

“No goods vans want to take a chance to come in the area. To buy items, we have to meet them part-way. Cars are damaging by being on the road. In case…someone needs an ambulance, the only way they would be able to reach here is by air,” Guevarro said.

She said a man from a neighbouring community had tried to make the existing “piece of road” workable by putting materials and smoothing them with his backhoe.

Photo by Lincoln Holder

Moruga/Tableland MP Michelle Benjamin met the protesters on Friday. She said the road’s deplorable and dangerous state had been the subject of countless letters to the Works and Transport Ministry and countless parliamentary questions posed to the line minister. Yet the problem is still to be resolved.

Earlier in the week, residents along the Penal Rock Road, in the Penal area, staged several protests calling for the authorities to fix the bad roads.

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San Fernando couple accused of beating JP win appeal

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Justice Gillian Lucky

A San Fernando couple who were charged with assaulting a justice of the peace in 2017 at their store have successfully argued their appeal against their convictions and fines.

During a hearing of San Fernando magisterial appeals, Appeal Court judges Justice Prakash Moosai and Gillian Lucky upheld the appeal and set aside the convictions and the fines imposed on them.

They did not order a retrial.

Rabindranath Maharaj, 65, and his wife Zairoon, 60, owners of R&J Cell Tech mobile store at Gulf City Mall, La Romaine, appealed their convictions for beating a justice of the peace on February 24, 2017. The couple had been fined $200 each and ordered to pay varying sums of compensation to their alleged victim.

It was alleged the JP went to the couple’s store with friends to buy cellphones but did not have enough money. He offered to use his credit card and after being told there would be an additional cost for using it, he declined to complete the purchase.

It was alleged when he was leaving the store, he was pulled back and called a “thief and robber.” He claimed the couple beat him on the head.

The couple’s attorneys, Wayne Sturge and Danielle Rampersad, argued that the magistrate, in finding the couple guilty, engaged in conjecture and speculation when she assessed the evidence. They argued this shifted the burden of proof to the couple, while also penalising them for not giving evidence.

The attorneys also argued the magistrate wrongfully placed weight on the fact that the alleged victim was a justice of the peace, pastor and mediator, making out he was a more credible witness.

They argued in the couple’s defence that there was no beating and the JP exaggerated what took place at the store.

It was their defence that there was a dispute about payment. This, they said, was even accepted by the JP. Sturge said they acted in a manner to stop an alleged thief from leaving their store.

He said by shifting the burden of proof and failing to address the justification for the couple’s actions, the magistrate speculated on what took place.

He also said by recognising the alleged victim as a person of previous good character, she “enhanced” his credibility.

In an oral ruling, the judges agreed the magistrate erred. Moosai said it was clear the case turned on the issue of credibility, and this was “enhanced” and tipped in favour of the JP. He also said the magistrate’s finding an absence of a motive for exaggerating what took place didn’t mean the JP was speaking the truth.

Moosai said the magistrate by misdirecting herself, fell into error.

The judges also decided not to order a retrial, but emphasised the importance of good customer relations. Moosai said this entailed an enhanced respect for each other –customer and owner. The judges, who said they will issue a written decision soon, also said there were avenues for disgruntled customers and business owners without either resorting to violence.

The State was represented by deputy Director of Public Prosecutions Tricia Hudlin-Cooper at the appeal.

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Culture B’s Strong Rum sways Tobago Stars of Soca

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Gerard Balfour performs on Wednesday at the Stars of Soca competition. – Photo by David Reid

ROSTON Simon won the $50,000 first prize in the Tobago Stars of Soca competition on Wednesday night at the Shaw Park Cultural Complex.

The event, organised by Radio Tambrin and M&E TV’s Peter Lewis, was facilitated by the THA and Tobago Festivals Commission.

The dreadlocked Simon, who goes by the sobriquet Culture B, delivered an energetic performance to his selection, Strong Rum

The song, which had the audience in stitches, told the story of man with a penchant for mixing at least two types of rum to have a good time.

Simon told the crowd that several young women had approached him to be “winer girls” for his performance, but he declined their offer.

Instead, he opted to present elements of the Moriah Ole Time Wedding, with its unique brush-back dance, for the benefit of tourists in the audience who had come to Tobago for the island’s inaugural carnival.

Second place went to the duo Michael Skeete (Mike-Tower) and Kwame Mc Clean (Too Real) with Firestorm. Their lively presentation featured smoke, fire breathers and dancers dressed in red.

Michael Skeete, left and Kwame Mc Clean, known as Too Real, placed second at the Stars of Soca competition at Shaw Park Cultural Complex, Wednesday. – Photo by David Reid

Mc Clean told the audience, “I want you all to understand something about our fire. This fire is what we call an internal fire. No water could out this. If you bring Iwer George in here – the Water Lord – we will turn him into steam.”

They received $30,000.

Coming in third was Gerard “GMB” Balfour with Problems, a song about the hardship blue-collar workers often experience in getting money from contractors and the government.

Dressed as a labourer, Balfour, one of Tobago’s top pannists, spoke about the problems he was experiencing as a cash-strapped family man.

“I want it. I need it. Money, money, money,” he declared in the song’s hook.

“I just come from wuk. Ah wuk whole time, call the supervisor. Wife calling me, pampers to buy, flour gone up. Everything just sky high, and now he telling me he doh have the money.”

Balfour said he does not want any handouts but prefers to “work for what is mine, 24-7 I on the grind.” He got $20,000.

Culture B balances on one leg as he sings Strong Rum at the Tobago Stars of Soca competition on Wednesday at Shaw Park Cultural Complex. – Photo by David Reid

The remaining competitors each received $5,000. Artistes were judged on music, performance, lyrics and crowd response.

At the start of the show, Radio Tambrin managing director George Leacock thanked the artistes who participated in the preliminary round of the competition leading to the finals.

He said all of the finalists displayed amazing attitudes.

“I have not seen a competition in Tobago in recent times with artistes being so supportive of each other.”

The Tobago Stars of Soca competition was inspired by Radio Tambrin’s popular Touch De Road initiative.

THA Secretary of Tourism, Culture, Antiquities and Transportation Tashia Burris, assistant secretary Megan Morrison and Tobago Festivals Commission CEO John Arnold attended the event.

Tobago Stars of Soca results:

1. Roston Simon

2. Michael Skeet and Kwame Mc Clean

3. Gerard “GMB” Balfour

Unplaced:

Raychards Kerr

Gideon King (Tears)

Heston Lopez (IV)

Caston Cupid

Nkem Scotland (Kaspa De Lyrical)

Odwin Thomas (Dance Mijah)

Omari Or (Trip)

Stephen Sampson (Shinez)

Jhevon Jackson (Royal)

Ronnie Bastaldo (Korn Dogg)

Marlaner walker (Jah-Tifer)

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‘Disturbing & unlawful’ – Bar Association condemns SOCU’s arrest of lawyer who told client to remain silent

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: INews Guyana
Attorney-at-Law Tamieka Clarke [Snippet taken from live video by Gordon Moseley]

See full statement from the Guyana Bar Association 

The Rule of Law and the fundamental right to Counsel are stated to be hallmarks of a democratic society. Today the actions of the members of the Guyana Police Force’s Special Organized Crime Unit (SOCU) towards our colleague, Ms. Tamieka Clarke, Attorney-at-Law sought to destroy these foundations of our democracy.

It has come to our attention that around 10am today, Friday 28th October, 2022, our colleague, Ms. Tamieka Clarke, Attorney-at-Law and member of the Association was arrested and kept in custody by members of the Guyana Police Force’s Specially Organized Crime Unit.

From all indications, this arrest was prompted by the Attorney-at-Law’s advice to a client to exercise his constitutional right to remain silent and follows a threat made to the Attorney-at-Law earlier this week that she would be arrested if her client does not give a Statement to the Police on a matter they are investigating.

The Bar Association unreservedly and unequivocally condemns the actions of the Guyana Police Force.  Such action is disturbing, perverse, unlawful, oppressive and wholly unacceptable.

We call on the Commissioner of Police to:

–       forthwith issue an apology to Ms. Tamieka Clarke, Attorney-at-Law;

–       compensate Ms. Clarke for her unlawful imprisonment;

–       launch a full investigation into the matter at hand with such necessary disciplinary action enforced swiftly including charges being laid against the offending officer(s), there being no lawful grounds for the arrest; and

–       disciplinary action including termination of any officer(s) who were aware of and allowed this type conduct.

We understand that through the intervention of Counsel, Ms. Clarke has since been released. The Bar Association inclusive of its Criminal Bar Committee do not take this matter lightly and will take all necessary steps to ensure that our members can exercise their professional duties without intimidation and that the Rule of Law is upheld.

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