NEWS
Cocaine trafficking fine removed for Canadian
A Canadian construction worker who admitted to trafficking 1.16 kilogrammes of cocaine in 2012, because of a pre-existing medical condition, has had his sentence varied. Although his sentence was varied to remove a $20,000 fine imposed on him, Justices of Appeal Alice Yorke-Soo Hon and Mark Mohammed said such offences must meet harsh consequences. Christopher Awni Shair was arrested on November 20, 2012, while at the Piarco International Airport. He was in TT for one week on vacation and, because of his disease, he wanted to “make money.” Read more here
T&T position changes on global Corruption Perception Index
Trinidad and Tobago has placed 85 out of 183 countries in the latest Corruption Perception Index (CPI), chairman of Trinidad and Tobago Transparency Institute, Dion Abdool, has revealed. Abdool made the statement this morning at the launch of the 2019 CPI, at the Arthur Lok Jack Graduate School of Business in Mt Hope. The average score for the CPI this year was 43. T&T scored 40. In the 2018 CPI, T&T received a score of 41 and was ranked 78. The index ranks countries and territories by their perceived levels of public sector corruption, according to experts and business people. Read more here
POLITICS
QC Nelson gets another day
Jamaican-born, British Queen’s Counsel Vincent Nelson is yet been sentenced for his role in an alleged conspiracy with former attorney general Anand Ramlogan and former UNC senator Gerald Ramdeen. The sentencing hearing has been adjourned to Friday afternoon. The matter is in connection with a series of financial transactions and alleged rewards involving legal fees paid to him for representation in state briefs. The briefs were obtained while Ramlogan was attorney general. The terms of his plea deal with the State are being kept private and Thursday’s hearing was held in-camera. Only prosecutors from the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions and the police were allowed to remain in the court. The media, defence attorneys and law students were asked to leave after DPP Roger Gaspard,SC, reminded the judge of a previous order granted in June which gave the judge the discretion to hold what would normally be an open-court hearing, in private. Read more here
Duke, Maxie Cuffie’s brother clash over PSA court ruling
If you don’t act you will face the full brunt of the law, a warning to the Public Services Association (PSA) President Watson Duke from the Head of the Concerned Public Officers, Curtis Cuffie. This comes after a high court ruling by Justice Devindra Rampersad that the PSA President and his executive must hold timely audit of its finances. The 18-page judgment stated that the court is “satisfied there is sufficient evidence concerning the unlawful expenditure.” He added the court was also satisfied with arguments as it relates to the failure by the executive to hold section elections and provide properly audited accounts. So that proper procedures are followed, for approval of expenditure, the judge said it means the PSA has to have the proper annual general conference. Read more here
BUSINESS
Calls to halt role of money in politics
A call has been made for Government to take immediate action on campaign finance reform and implementing the public procurement legislation. Read more here
REGIONAL
Big gains for Guyana on anti-corruption index
THE APNU+AFC administration’s fight against corruption is bearing fruit as Guyana has improved its rating to 85 in the latest Transparency International (TI) Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI). Guyana is also listed as one of several countries which made significant improvements since 2012, according to the 2019 report which was released on Thursday. The index, which ranks the 180 countries and territories by their perceived levels of public sector corruption according to experts and business people, uses a scale of zero to 100, where zero is highly corrupt and 100 is very clean. Read more here
Corruption Stench Rising - Perception Of Malfeasance In Jamaica Increases On Watchdog Index
Transparency International’s 2019 Corruption Perception Index (CPI) has positioned Jamaica as the fourth most corrupt state among Caribbean countries ahead of Guyana, Trinidad and Tobago, and Haiti. The 2019 index, released yesterday, showed Jamaica scoring 43, one place lower than the 44 it scored in 2018, in a context where zero is deemed very corrupt and 100 is very clean. With a score of 43, the country’s ranking has dipped sharply from 70 to 74 out of 180 countries. Read more here
INTERNATIONAL
China coronavirus: Death toll rises as more cities restrict travel
Adam Schiff piles pressure on Republicans under fire
Senators are soon going to start seeing Adam Schiff in their sleep. The lead House impeachment manager is relentlessly pressuring the handful of Republican jurors who are considering a vote to call witness and delay the acquittal that President Donald Trump craves from his impeachment trial. Heading into the final day of his effort to build a devastating case, the indefatigable California Democrat is deploying every trick in the prosecutor's arsenal as he weaves a narrative of an unchained presidency hour after grueling hour. Read more here
24th January 2020