Politics before food

Contributing to debate on long overdue legislation to close the books of a precursor sugar control board, Cadiz lamented the effect closure of that company had, not just on employees in the sugar belt but on offshoot industries in agriculture including buffalypso and citrus.

Cadiz noted that in November 1999, San Fernando East MP Patrick Manning (who would later become Prime Minister) spoke highly of Caroni (1975) Ltd and its role in food security. A mere three years later, that tune changed.

“They are the only ones who can tell us what happened in 2003,” Cadiz said, pointing to Opposition PNM MPs in Parliament yesterday, where debate on the Sugar Industry Control Board (Repeal)(Validation) Bill, 2013 began. “A mere three years after, they came and decided that would be the end of it. One really has to wonder whether that was not really the result of the 18-18 election tie somehow. Somebody’s mind changed and decided the best way to deal with 18-18, was to deal with Caroni, because of the effect it would have on the economy in that particular area,” the Chaguanas East MP said.

“Caroni Limited was not about sugar. At the end of the day it was about everything else. Its closure was simply one of the ways to deal with the then Opposition (UNC). That is why the closure of Caroni came like a thief in the night because they could have restructured it. That is the politics of the kitchen table,” he charged.

Cadiz called on the Opposition PNM to apologise for its record on agriculture, linking the closure of Caroni with the demise of key agricultural sectors. “Until those on the other side apologise to this country for what they did this side, the People’s Partnership, the people in Government are going to continue to remind the population,” Cadiz said.

He noted that before the rise of the petroleum industry, TT’s economy was dominated by agriculture. “There is more to it than the closure of Caroni,” Cadiz said. “This is a country where if you stick your finger in the ground, it will grow. We have been farmers for centuries. Tobago used to feed Trinidad. Before the great oil came in 1907, what did this country rely on for its exports? It was all agriculture. All agriculture. We ate locally. Now...US$600 million worth of food is imported!”

Cadiz said the closure of Caroni had an adverse effect on this country’s ability to produce the now world-famous buffalypso, which was developed here by Dr Steve Bennett, now deceased.

“By padlocking that gate, not understanding what we were doing, the famous buffalypso suffered,” Cadiz said. “Dr Steve Bennett, who received a national award recently, pioneered the buffalypso. He spent years developing the breeding herd.

“You know what they did? They sent it to Venezuela and Costa Rica. They sold off the breeding herd. Imagine that! We spent years developing something that Trinidad and Tobago could live off. What did you do with it?”

Cadiz lamented the visible decline in citrus production since Caroni’s closure, particularly on the company’s 6,000-acre La Gloria estate near Tableland. He said TT now imports fruit juice concentrate from Belize.

“I remember driving south and we used to see trucks loaded with citrus coming up the road overflowing with citrus,” Cadiz said. “You know what we have to do now, Mr Speaker? It’s good business for Belize. We have to import concentrate from Belize. I think the Belizean people are very happy to export concentrate to us. So we go from being a net exporter of grapefruit to the United Kingdom to now every juice you see in a box, is concentrate...out of Belize.”

He noted that today Angostura has to grow 17,000 acres of sugar cane in Barbados to make up for a shortfall of molasses locally which would previously have been supplied by Caroni (1975) Limited.

Comments

"Politics before food"

More in this section