NEWS
Calls for flooding to be on budget agenda
Almost one year after his home was under six feet of water and he lost over $50,000 in household items a flood victim, Larry Sammy appealed to the United National Congress (UNC) to place the issue of flooding high on the agenda when they present at the 2019/2020 budget on October 7. This as some parts of Trinidad experienced major flash-flooding yesterday. Sammy, a businessman, said felt offended, hurt and neglected to see people in the Greenvale Housing Development collect cheques within days of that flood on November 22, 2018 which also severely affected that community, while poor people in the Penal/Debe, Barrackpore, San Francique, Woodland and other areas are yet to receive any relief. Read more here
Thousands of Venezuelans await registration cards
Three months after the registration process ended thousands of Venezuelans are yet to receive their registration cards. Speaking to Guardian Media, one Venezuelan national who requested anonymity said he has been working in a supermarket since June even though he does not have his registration card. “We expected to get it by now. We are not criminals. I was a police officer in Venezuela but we still waiting,” Miguel said. Another Venezuelan family who was featured on a BBC documentary which sparked the ire of Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley said they too were waiting. “We were in the first batch of applicants but nobody has called us yet,” one of the applicants said. Read more here
POLITICS
Moonilal promises to go after PM in HDC/China contract scandal
Former Housing Minister Dr Roodal Moonilal said the Opposition will not allow the prime minister to extricate himself from the cancelled US$72 million housing project between the Housing Development Corporation (HDC) and a Chinese company. Moonilal said he has taken note of Dr Rowley's statement that this issue was irrelevant and just an administrative one if indeed he (Rowley) held the housing portfolio at the time the contract was signed. Addressing a pre-budget meeting in his Oropouche East constituency on Tuesday night, Moonilal said he has put his lawyers on notice, because if this applies to Rowley then it should also apply to him. Read more here
Analysts: ‘Back off Mr Prime Minister’
Former director of the University of the West Indies Institute of International Relations Prof Andy Knight sees Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley’s move to pen a letter to the British government about an inaccurate British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) documentary that there are 40,000 Venezuelans in T&T as ludicrous. His comments came two days after Rowley objected to the BBC report titled The Displaced which was circulated on social media. On Monday, Rowley said his Government will write the British government to set the record straight, stating that his government had only registered 16,000 Venezuelans which would allow them to work for one year in T&T. Read more here
BUSINESS
Qualitech – a Caribbean leader
It started off as a small machine shop with three workers with working capital coming from his mortgaged home. Now, 24 years later, Qualitech Machining Services Ltd is one of the region’s leading engineering companies, having recently been awarded international accreditation from Electrical Apparatus Services Association (EASA) – a trade organisation based in the US with over 1,800 electromechanical sales and service firms in nearly 80 countries. EASA provides members with a means of keeping up-to-date on materials, equipment, and state-of-the-art technology. There are only 132 EASA accredited workshops worldwide with just 19 being outside of the US. Read more here
Money woes blamed
The financial situation at the Sports Company of Trinidad and Tobago (SporTT) is dire. The company owes T&TEC $10 million. Its fiscal allocation for 2019 fell far short of its expenses, making proper maintenance of sporting facilities impossible. Read more here
REGIONAL
Light Stays On CMU - PAAC Demands Update On Controversial Contracts
A parliamentary committee is demanding answers from the Education Ministry about the status of three multimillion-dollar contracts linked to allegations of irregularity at a number of agencies that fall under its remit. The contracts in question include the two-year $20-million deal and the three-year $15-million agreement that the Caribbean Maritime University (CMU) signed with Gail Campbell Dunwell and former junior Transport Minister Othneil Lawrence to serve as consultants. Campbell Dunwell was simultaneously making $3.5 million per year doing similar consultancy work for the National Education Trust, the Education Ministry previously disclosed. Read more here
INTERNATIONAL
Zarif threatens 'all-out war' in case of military strike on Iran
Iran's foreign minister has raised the specter of "all-out war" in the event of US or Saudi military strikes and that Saudi Arabia would have to fight "to the last American soldier." Javad Zarif told CNN that Iran hoped to avoid conflict, adding that the country was willing to talk to its regional rivals Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. But the possibility of a return to negotiations with the US, however, would not happen unless Washington provided full sanctions relief as promised under the 2015 nuclear deal, Tehran's top diplomat said. Read more here
Fukushima disaster: Nuclear executives found not guilty
19th September 2019