Bush fires send snakes into Maracas homes

A MARACAS/St Joseph man has embarked on a mission to save snakes which have invaded homes in the district, and is appealing to residents not to kill the reptiles.

Anthony Sorillo has been fascinated with snakes since he was a young boy and has been providing the zoo with snakes captured near his home. He said due to recent bush fires in Maracas/St Joseph, the snakes have found their way into the village and have sought refuge in yards and areas close to drains and rivers. According to Sorillo, many residents have been killing the snakes but he has been able to save a few which he has donated to the zoo.Yesterday, he found a six month old boa constrictor.

Sorillo said although he has spoken to villagers about the killing of the snakes, his pleas have fallen on deaf ears. He said he has been walking around the village searching for snakes to take to the zoo, but has discovered that the reptiles are being killed as soon as they are discovered. He noted that most people are unaware that the boa constrictor is useful since it gets rid of rodents and insects. “I am pleading and begging persons to desist from killing these snakes,” Sorillo said. Checks with the Fire Department at Wrightson Road revealed that more than 100 bush fires were reported in Maracas/St Joseph for the month. Fire officers claimed that the high temperatures of the dry season and illegal setting of fires are the two main contributors to the bush fires.

TTMA tells UNC: Support Anti-Kidnapping Bill

THE Trinidad and Tobago Manufacturing Association (TTMA) yesterday joined the Downtown Owners and Merchants Association (DOMA) in calling upon the Opposition United National Congress (UNC) to support the Anti-Kidnapping Bill.

In a statement, TTMA president Anthony Hosang urged “the country’s legislators and parliamentarians, especially those on the Opposition to more diligently pursue the process towards enacting an Anti-Kidnapping Bill in the best interest of all of Trinidad and Tobago”. Reflecting upon the TTMA’s concerns about the levels of crime in the country, Hosang called upon “all good men to take a stand and unite in the fight against crime and the brutalisation of the population who now live in fear of being kidnapped or having their loved ones held for ransom”. “The TTMA believes that the effort to curb crime must be actively engaged beyond narrow sectoral, political or party interest,” he declared. Hosang added that “crime is a cancer and affects every law-abiding citizen of Trinidad and Tobago, it is therefore every citizen’s responsibility to support all efforts and/or initiatives to combat this cancer in our society”.

Devoted pastor laid to rest

CANON EVEREST Evans Daniel Hall, 74, who served the St Andrew’s Anglican Parish, Couva, for 35 years, was described by Anglican Bishop Calvin Bess “as a pastor who pursued his dream with the tenacity of a bloodhound” at his funeral service on Tuesday.

Among those in attendance were Bishops Emeritus Clive Abdullah and Rawle Douglin, Dean Knolly Clarke and Archdeacon Kenneth Forrester. The sermon was delivered by Bishop Bess. Canon Hall was in charge of the St Andrew’s Anglican Church; St Sylvan’s in Carapichaima; St Alban’s in Tortuga; and St Phillip’s in Savonetta. The eulogy read at the funeral service stated: “Simplicity was his well-being and people from all walks of life gravitated to him for solace, courage, spiritual guidance and friendship.

“Canon Hall practiced what he preached. He had high ideals and liked things done to perfection. Everything should be done with a sense of perfection because to him God is a God of order. “His death is a great loss to the Anglican Church as Canon  Hall made steady progress from server, to Priest, to Dean and then to Canon”. Bishop Bess said Canon  Hall was “called by God to be of service to humanity”.  He added: “Jesus knocked on his door and Canon Hall allowed Him to enter so that he could minister to the people. He accepted his responsibility with a deep sense of commitment, never wavering in his love and devotion for Jesus. “Canon Hall was ordained by God to bear fruits for Him and he had a unique way to bear fruits in the ministry of deliverance.”

Bishop Best stressed: “God’s love has shielded Canon Hall from the finality of death because the love of God is greater than the power of death. Canon Hall has gone to rest on the lap and embrace of Jesus, because the Creator went to prepare a place in his mansion for all those who truly love and serve Him.” Canon Hall was Vicar of the St Clement’s Church when he took study leave and went to the United Kingdom to begin his theological training. He returned to the country and got married to Margery Jones (now deceased) and fathered a son,  Richard, around whom he centered his life. After being ordained in 1966, Hall was assigned to the St. Paul’s Church, San Fernando. Apart from his duties as a priest, he hosted a radio programme, “Sunday Half Hour”. When he served in the St. Andrew’s Parish, he was chief co-ordinator in rebuilding the Couva Anglican Church, which stands as a landmark at the corner of Couva Main Road and the Brechin Castle Stretch.

Mysteries of WASA

DECISION of the Government to assign forensic accountant Bob Lindquist to investigate questionable legal settlements made by the Water and Sewerage Authority will be welcomed. This decision was announced by Junior Finance Minister Ken Valley on Friday, the same day that Opposition Chief Whip Ganga Singh had written to Director of Public Prosecutions Geoffrey Henderson calling for an investigation into the same transactions. He urged the DPP to refer the matters to the police “with a recommendation for an immediate investigation”.

Doubts about these WASA settlements arose some weeks ago as a result of information given by Public Utilities Minister Rennie Dumas in Parliament replying to questions asked by the member for Caroni East. We ourselves found the level of payments disclosed by the Minister to be quite surprising and raised questions about them in an editorial headlined, “More answers, Mr Dumas,” published on Thursday March 27. We were particularly concerned with the payment by WASA of $51.5 million to a firm called Waterfarms Trinidad Limited in settlement of a dispute about which nothing is publicly known. Minister Dumas chose simply to state the figure without giving the House any details about the recipient and the nature of the dispute. Among WASA’s legal settlements, he disclosed that another company by the name of Walker Well Ltd collected $16.5 million from the authority. On the face of it, it seemed absurd that a Minister would reveal such huge amounts of public funds being paid by a utility to unknown companies in settlement of publicly unknown disputes without seeing the need for transparency and accountability by explaining what they were all about.

What however made Mr Dumas’ revelation about the Waterfarms payout more mysterious was Mr Ganga Singh’s observation that the firms of Ernst & Young and Lee Young and Partners had done evaluations on the Waterfarms issue and both had suggested that the quantum of settlement should range between $9 million and $13 million. The UNC Chief Whip should be fully aware of these evaluations since they were done during his term as Minister of Public Utilities in the former UNC government when WASA’s disputes with Waterfarms and Walker Well had occurred. When asked about the disparity between the eventual WASA payout and the figure suggested by the evaluators, Minister Dumas was at a loss to answer; all he could say was that the matter was under investigation by the Central Audit Committee of the Finance Ministry, suggesting to the Caroni East MP that he should file this as a supplementary question for another time.

The Opposition Chief Whip has raised another matter which we feel needs to be investigated, and that is the large compensation package given to WASA CEO Errol Grimes apparently without the necessary approval of the Ministry. Last January, in answer to another question, Minister Dumas told the Senate that Mr Grimes had received a basic monthly salary of $50,000, plus a $5,000 housing allowance and overseas travel grant of $25,000 between March 2002 and January 2003. One understands the relatively high remuneration levels negotiated for expatriate officials of the British firm Severn Trent during their contractual association with WASA, although we have no idea of how the country’s water supply system has benefitted from this expensive connection.

However, what brilliance does Mr Grimes bring to the job of managing WASA and who approved this large increase in his emoluments, if not the Minister? The country, surely, would like to know. Over the years, WASA’s operations have been a costly and mysterious burden; the time has come to make the working of this troubled utility transparent.

UN’s strange silence


“Let us have faith that right makes might, and in that faith let us to the end dare to do our duty as we understand it.” — Abraham Lincoln address, February, 1860.


GIVEN the record of the United States, particularly with respect to the Philippines, Cuba, Japan and South Korea, the chances are it will not disengage itself from Iraq in under 50 years. It has cocked a snook at the United Nations, dismissing it as Europe dismissed the UN’s predecessor League of Nations.

The buckling under by the United Nations on the critical issue of Iraq is just as shameful as the invasion of Iraq by the United States on the pretext it was searching for weapons of mass destruction. The timing of the US invasion was not by chance. The Bush Administration dared not let the UN weapons inspectors complete their assignment, and report they had found no weapons of mass destruction.

So the United States acted, and having found no such weapons, shifted their propaganda to being in Iraq to free that country, to bring it humanitarian aid and to rebuild it! The relative silence of the United Nations frightens. Had Turkey, for example, invaded Iraq, say late last year, employing the excuse the US used when it attacked Iraq on March 20, this year, the United Nations would have ordered Turkey to cease and desist or face the consequences. But then Turkey is a peewat, militarily and economically. The United States of America is the world’s most recent Empire, and we all know that imperialist nations do not easily tolerate being challenged.

I wish to make the point: I am opposed to Saddam Hussein and his history of dictatorial rule in Iraq, in much the same way I was opposed to the tinhorn dictators of Latin America, Pinochet or otherwise, or indeed of any other part of the world. Although Empire-leaning United States will not readily accede to any demand from Iraqis for an early pullout of their troops, I do not, however, believe that what prompted the American author, Mark Twain, to throw up his hands in horror at the “pacification” of Filipinos, who objected to American rule, will ever happen in Iraq. So angered was Mark Twain that he used the word “barbaric” to describe the “pacification” of the Philippines by the United States, following on the 1898 Spanish-American war.

Twain, horrified by the “pacification”, would say that the white stripe of the US flag — Old Glory — should be repainted black and the stars replaced with the skull and bones. Nonetheless, I write into the record that I believe that the United States of 2003 is a million light years away from the US of the immediate post Spanish-American war, and I am certain is ashamed of that period and would never allow a repeat of that history which had so angered Mark Twain. I shift gears. At Easter, for me, as at Christmas, childhood is a land of return. This Easter I was exchanging notes with close friends about schoolday experiences. I had used two experiences, not altogether without their humour.

When I was about ten and a pupil of St Paul’s Anglican School, better known as Broadway EC, a classmate of mine would give as an excuse for going home late on afternoons after school that he had been attending extra lessons classes given by the school’s headmaster, the late, legendary Victor Noel. One day his guardian and close relative, a Barbadian, went down to the school to thank Mr Noel for having him in his extra lessons class. Several of us were ‘sailing boats’ in the ravine that ran obliquely opposite to where the school was situated, and just before it turned at the side of Promenade Club.

The ‘boat’ of my schoolmate, whose name I shall give as Sonny, was running well ahead of the rest. He shouted to us: “It’s licks like peas in your pweffen!” Suddenly I looked up, tongue tied as I realised that Sonny’s guardian was striding toward him. She grabbed him by the scruff of his neck: “Sonny-ear”, she declared angrily, “I cotch you fay-re.  Come here I gon’ teach you lessons.” Years later, while I was a student of Queen’s Royal College, there was a classmate, who repeatedly turned up without either his schoolbooks or completed homework.

One day, a Master, in the process of explaining a point to the form, noted that the lad was seeking to distract another. The Master asked him to explain the point he had been making.  He could not. Where was his text book? He did not own one. I have used the term Master.  In those days, teachers at Queen’s Royal were referred to as Masters. The Master, stroked his beard. “X”, he said sadly, “I know you have no book and I know  you have no brain, but at least pretend to have some manners.”

The predicament of the UNC

The Editor: I write to say thank you for the Editorial “Paradox to answer” in the issue dated 8th April, 2003.

The article has brought to the fore the predicament in which the UNC finds itself on a host of very important issues. Is it possible that the above-mentioned article could be printed as a full front page Editorial in one of your issues? The UNC is avoiding serious debate on matters that affect this nation and surreptitiously tries to run this country from Rienzi Complex.


Augustus Lewis
Marabella, San F’do

Kidnapping worse than murder?

THE EDITOR: Is kidnapping a worse crime than murder? Well, the UNC Opposition has come under widespread criticism from newspapers’ editorials, organisations and individuals for not lending its support to anti-kidnapping legislation. I cannot recall the then PNM opposition facing similar criticism for refusing to support the UNC Government’s “Hanging Bill” which failed to acquire the required constitutional majority.


ROLF BARTOLO
Port-of-Spain

Of course, US wants Iraq’s oil

THE EDITOR: Please permit me to express an opinion concerning “Operation Iraqi Freedom”. The editorials of all the major daily newspapers seem to take a negative view of the decision by the US and UK to intervene in the politics of Iraq. Indeed, the pervasive view seems to be that control over that country’s oil reserves is the raison d’etre of their incursion.

Of course the West in interested in Iraq’s oil reserves! Shouldn’t we be as well? It is vital to their economy. What is wrong with being pro-active in a situation, in which a psychopathic megalomaniac madman unlawfully and through brutish force, and violence, has absolute power over a dis-empowered and uninformed captive population, and is the self-proclaimed renegade overseer of resources that are used with no thought to distributive justice? Should the US do as we might do: sit on a fence-pole and wait for ‘nature’ to take its course? Rubbish! You seem to want the best of two worlds: you acknowledge his inhumane and savage brutality, but wimpishly express consternation at the loss of “untold numbers of civilian lives”. Get real!

Look at the track record of this madman. Hussein joined the Ba?thists to assassinate the Iraqi prime minister, ?abd al-KarYm Qsim, and, wounded, escaped to Syria and then Egypt. When the Ba?thists were overthrown that same year, Hussein spent several years in prison in Iraq. He escaped, becoming a leader of the Ba?th party, and was instrumental in the coup that brought the party back to power in 1968. Hussein began to assert open control of the government in 1979, becoming president upon Bakr’s resignation. He then became chairman of the Revolutionary Command Council and prime minister, among other positions. He used an extensive secret-police establishment to suppress any internal opposition to his rule, and he made himself the object of an extensive and perverse personality cult among the Iraqi public. His goals as president were to supplant Egypt as leader of the Arab world, and to achieve hegemony over the Persian Gulf.

This megalomaniac launched an invasion of Iran’s oilfields in September 1980. His folly led to a useless war that dragged on until 1988. In spite of the debt incurred, and the untold lives lost, he continued to spend billions on his military. In August 1990 the Iraqi army overran neighbouring Kuwait in a surprise attack. On the same day the UN Security Council passed Resolution 660, condemning the invasion and demanding Iraq’s unconditional withdrawal. When, in his usual style, Hussein showed no sign that he was prepared to withdraw from Kuwait, US President George Bush and his allies, considering Iraq’s action a threat to Western interests, decided that the status quo ante must be re-established. US troops began arriving in Saudi Arabia on August 9. On August 28, Iraq declared that Kuwait had become the 19th province of Iraq.

The military operations not only destroyed most of the Iraqi armed forces but they also severely damaged the infrastructure of the major Iraqi cities and towns. Above all, the war brought Iraq to the verge of dismemberment into the major religious and ethnic divisions, especially the Kurds and the ShY?ites. After the coalition forces began to withdraw from Iraq, the Iraqi regime was able to suppress both the ShY?ite and Kurdish rebellions. In its action against the Kurds, however, the Iraqi forces used weapons of mass destruction killing tens of thousands of Kurds, and forcing thousands more to flee to Turkey. Many died from hunger and disease. Only with Western intervention did the Kurdish refugees feel safe in returning to their homes in northern Iraq.

As part of the cease-fire agreement with the UN, Iraq was prohibited from producing chemical and nuclear weapons. Numerous sanctions were levelled on the country pending compliance, causing severe food and medicine shortages and further weakening the economy. Hussein’s continued refusal to cooperate with UN arms inspectors led to a four-day air strike by the United States and Great Britain in late 1998. Both countries announced that they would support effects of the Iraqi opposition to unseat Hussein.

Does Saddam not kill his own people without a conscience? Can you not see that he is the instrument of his people’s tribulations? A shepherd devouring his own flock? When you defend Saddam, you defend a madman who would ‘gas’ to death 182,000 Kurdish men, women and babies! A man who forcibly evicts homeowners and stores ammunition caches in the sanctuaries of their homes: a man who sets up military outposts at schools, at hospitals and between civilian homes, often with homeowners in the line of fire. Like Gadaffi, the Syrians and other psychopathic poor-me-ones like Castro, he trains “terrorists” — today’s euphemism for sociopaths, like our local Muslimeen, men with ‘logs’ not ‘chips’ on their shoulders — to kill babies and kidnap children; he instructs women and children to kill, while like a rat, he burrows underground in order to run and hide (like the bin Ladens, the Bakrs, the Hitlers of this world), when the action gets tough.

Were we not happy that communism was nipped in the bud in Grenada? Was it not we who invited the same USA here to deal with this psychopath called Yasin Abu Bakr in 1990? Peace is the daughter of Justice! It is just that each person be accorded the dignity given to him/her as free gift, by our Creator. The central core of our human dignity resides in our freedom to choose, the assertion of our individual free will. No Cuban under Fidel, no Iraqi under Saddam, no Grenadian under Bishop, could ever do this. The assertion of, and right to be accorded the dignity given to me, justifies the ultimate sacrifice. For the very essence of ‘sacrifice’ involves the notion of an ‘exchange’: of one ideal, for another that is nobler.

Without the justice that is intrinsic to our dignity as humans, there can be no peace — either within or outside of us. There can only be “tranquillity”, enforced, as it has to be in Iraq, Cuba and even here, through the barrel of a gun! I salute the USA and the UK for their proactive and manly action, and condemn the UN, castrated, emasculated, for sitting too long on the proverbial fence-pole!


DR STEVE SMITH
Port-of-Spain

Hard job ahead for UWI Principal

The Editor: The arrival of Dr Bhoe Tewarie as the Principal of the University of the West Indies was greeted by this writer with much joy. However, it seems that the man who built up a reputation as a performer as a Minister of government and as the director of the IOB has now met his match. Turning around the University at St Augustine and bringing it into the new era of tertiary education is a difficult task.

As Tewarie grapples with the Univeristy he would have noted that the prime obstacle to achieving his objectives are the staff at the University. Much has been written and spoken of about the non-performance of the lecturers. The other dimension to this plethora of non-performance is the non-academic staff. Non-academic staff at the University are extensions of their cousins in the public service. The difference is that they are paid much more than their public servant cousins.

Students are therefore faced with the product of this non-performance which manifests itself in many of the poor services provided at the University. For example, the biggest disaster in the entire history of the university took place last year September when an attempt to switch registration to an online format failed miserably. The result was mass suffering for students and mass embarassment for the Principal. The culprits responsible for that disaster are all still employed with the University and still enjoy all the trappings of ofice. This too, seems to be another parallel with the public service, the inability to dismiss incompetent and inefficient workers. The CITS (Campus Information Technology Service), as they are called have long held the University and its students to ransom. In closing let me wish the Principal well. One must admit that there have been visible signs that change is on the way. The library now provides a 24-hour service and there is a shuttle system. Let’s hope that the public service parallel is corrected.


Ishmael Jan
Gordon Street
ST Augustine

Who turned off the lights?

THE EDITOR: I wish to draw to your attention the shocking and deteriorating service being offered by TTEC to consumers in San Fernando and environs. Within the past few months, residents have been subjected to regular outages and only two weeks ago most of the southern area suffered a power cut, lasting in some places for more than four hours. Needless to say, the citizenry was not offered an explanation, or even an excuse for such an occurrence.

What makes this situation even more alarming, and indeed stretches the limit  of tolerance, is that these outages occur after TTEC, through advertisements, proudly announce that electricity will be cut off in certain areas from 8 am to 4 pm “to carry out maintenance work in order to improve the reliability of supply”. Clearly this has to be a sick joke perpetrated on an unsuspecting public.

Questions must be asked about the operations of  TTEC, when in 2003, they seem to be working with an outmoded and archaic method of maintenance. I am sure that this interruption of supply will not be permitted or tolerated in New York, Toronto or even Anguilla. Apparently no regard is paid to the economic losses suffered by the business community, or the disruption of social life. Would you imagine that TTEC actually schedules shut downs on a Sunday! Obviously this electricity company operates in an arrogant monopolistic manner, having absolutely no regard for its customers. Probably it is time that the Regulated Industries Commission, or some consumer rights group investigate whether any contractual agreements are being infringed by TTEC in this abuse. In this day and age of improving technology being introduced by this government, one would have expected the company to follow the lead set by TSTT, with recent innovations in their service (but not their rates).

They could even have followed the Ministry of National Security, with their new surveillance (spy) system or CEPEP, who has introduced the latest technology in environment management. TTEC management must inform this nation whether they have ever discussed with the union representing the workers the introduction of Hotline work, where maintenance  work could take place without disruption of electricity supplies. This method is widely used throughout the developed world, and I do not think one should have to wait until 2020 to have this system implemented here. It is quite interesting to note that in the recent war in Iraq, even after many nights of bombing, lights were still on in Baghdad. The question is, in order to learn new techniques, should we have sent TTEC to Baghdad before or after the bombing?

RABINDRA MOONAN
Former Deputy Mayor
San Fernando