NEWS
Police officer sues commissioner over promotions
An acting senior Supt from Roxborough, Tobago, has received the permission of a High Court judge to challenge Police Commissioner Gary Griffith over a decision to suddenly revoke the current merit list for promotion of police officers to the rank of superintendent. Collis Hazel, who has been a police officer since November 1991, was granted leave by Justice Eleanor Donaldson-Honeywell to apply for judicial review on his claim in which he is seeking declarations that the Commissioner’s decision to repeal the merit list was illegal and that he had a legitimate expectation that he would be promoted based on the 2018 merit list. He is asking the court to direct the commission to say why he decided to repeal the list and quash the decision. Hazel also wants an order sending back the issue of his promotion to the commissioner for his consideration and a declaration that he was treated unfairly. Read more here
Udecott explains leak
The Urban Development Company of Trinidad and Tobago (Udecott) has explained the reason for a leak in the Red House on Tuesday. Udecott issued a statement Tuesday night saying that "due to a broken rubber seal on the aluminum flashing in the skylight of the rotunda, there was a leak with today's rainfall." Read more here
POLITICS
Deyalsingh: Water needed to stop virus spread
Independent Senator Dr Varma Deyalsingh sounded a warning that the lack of a reliable water supply in areas of TT could facilitate the spread of the coronavirus should it reach this country’s shores. The virus has killed dozens in China where it originated in Wuhan city and infected hundreds, with infections also found in the USA, Australia, France, Japan, Thailand, South Korea, and other Asian nations. Deyalsingh’s concerns reflected Chief Medical Officer Dr Roshan Parasram recent advice to Newsday that hand-washing is a way to combat viral spread. The senator lamented the wastage of an essential item, despite 240 million gallons produced. “Less than 50 per cent of persons actually get a 24 hour supply seven days a week. So it is a failure. It has been a failure for this government, successive governments. It is a failure to the people of this country where they are not able to get this basic need. Read more here
Govt steps up entry screening against coronavirus
Government’s latest step to prevent the entry of coronavirus into this country has been to contact the local agents of all cruise liners to ensure ramping-up of questionnaires for passengers on their health, Health Minister Terrence Deyalsingh has confirmed. “The major point of concern (among ports) is the port of Port-of-Spain where cruise liners come in,” Deyalsingh said yesterday. He was replying to Opposition queries on measures to deal with the mysterious coronavirus which arose in China recently. So far 106 people in China have been killed and 4,520 infected. Germany yesterday reported its first case. Read more here
BUSINESS
Procurement law should boost corruption perception
Finance Minister Colm Imbert expects Trinidad and Tobago’s 2020 ranking on Transparency International’s Corruption Perception Index (CPI) to improve, with the coming on stream of procurement legislation, tentatively by the end of March. Read more here
REGIONAL
CMU Axe To Fall - PM Hints Senior Managers May Face Chopping Block Amid Scandal
Quizzed about what action will be taken against current senior managers at the Caribbean Maritime University (CMU) who played a role in the spending spree and wanton breaches of government rules, Prime Minister Andrew Holness acknowledged that there was need for reform in the management structure at the scandal-scarred institution. Mikael Phillips, member of parliament for Manchester North West, yesterday asked the prime minister what steps would be taken against senior managers who made decisions that breached procurement rules and established guidelines. Read more here
Guyana, Albania sign visa waiver agreement
The Governments of the Cooperative Republic of Guyana and the Republic of Albania, on Monday, signed an agreement to remove the visa requirement for Guyanese travelling to Albania. The agreement, in the form of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), paves the way for the Exemption of Visa Requirements for Holders of Diplomatic, Service and Ordinary Passports, at the Embassy of Albania, in Washington, DC. Read more here
INTERNATIONAL
Trump in private: what really happens
The brief video portion at the start of a cell phone recording made public Friday by the formerly pro-Trump schemer Lev Parnas shows a posh dining room at the Trump International Hotel -- heavy drapes, massive molding, thick carpet. You might describe it as country club classic, a motif that seems to cling to Trump properties. Once Trump arrives and the phone is set down, the audio reveals a President who can speak with more coherence than we hear from him in public, but whose talking points and jokes don't vary much from his greatest hits. The moment that has made news finds President Donald Trump ordering that America's ambassador to Ukraine, Marie Yovanovitch, be fired because Parnas tells him she dissed the President. Read more here
Coronavirus: Britons on Wuhan flights to be quarantined
29th January 2020