Ex-inmate alleges brutality and corruption at YTC

An ex-inmate of the Youth Training Centre at Arouca is calling on the revelant authorities to investigate the level of corruption and brutality going on within the juvenile centre.

One day after being released from YTC, having served one year for fraud, 19-year-old Akile Simon, came to Newsday’s South Bureau last Thursday, armed with a diary detailing incidents where he was mistreated and brutalised by senior and junior officers. Simon recalled an incident on Wednesday April 23 when two of the inmates escaped through emergency doors at the back of their dormitory which houses 14 inmates. Simon also stays in that particular dormitory but did not sleep there that night. He said the escapees had possession of two keys which had been reported missing from the administration building.

Simon related that following the escape, he and the other 11 inmates of that dormitory were badly beaten with batons and bamboo whips, kicked and cuffed about the body by officers who demanded to know where the keys were hidden. The following morning, under the supervision of a senior officials, the officers conducted a search in all the dormitories but turned up empty handed. Simon said the officers then placed them in the “disassociation cell” which is used as a form of punishment. Sometime later the inmates were taken to the gymnasium where they were individually questioned and beaten by the officers. Simon said while he was in the cell, he overheard one of the inmates revealing the location of the keys. When it was his turn to be questioned, Simon told the officers he was told that the keys were in a brick wall of the dormitory. But this did not stop the beating, according to Simon.

“About 30 officers slapped, kicked, cuffed us and beat us with baton, bamboo whips and sapodilla whips. It went on for almost an hour. You cannot even bawl or else you would get more licks,” the young man recalled. The 12 inmates, he said, were taken for medical treatment at YTC’s infirmatory. “My buttocks was waled, cut and swollen. I could not sit on it for a while and even now it hurts sometimes when I sit. I could not hear properly in my ears,” he added. Simon said he and the other inmates were returned to the disassociation cell, where the officers again put a sound beating on them. The next day (Friday), the former inmate said, he was taken to the supervisor’s office where he was forced to sign a statement confessing that he knew about the escape and whereabouts of the key. Simon claimed when he refused to sign the document, an officer struck him with a piece of wood. Simon said the supervisor then took a generator pole, known among inmates as the “yellow man”, which he used to beat him into signing the statement. Simon said his fellow inmates spent five days in the cell but he only came out when he was discharged from YTC on Wednesday.

Nominations open for Ernst and Young programme

THE TRINIDAD launch of the 2003 Ernst and Young Caribbean Entrepreneur of the Year Awards Programme, will be held 10 am today at the Ernst and Young Conference Room, Sweet Briar Road, St Clair.

Nominations are currently being invited for the Awards Programme, which has been described as one of the region’s most prestigious programmes, that recognises the achievements and contributions of entrepreneurs throughout the region. The launch is being held by Ernst and Young in conjunction with Platinum Sponsor, Republic Bank. The Awards ceremony will be held in Jamaica in September 2003.

Tigers’ boxing men in verbal clash

ANGRY words were exchanged at the Prince Street-based Tigers Boxing Gym between the owner Gordon Hoyte and one of Manswell’s boxing coaches Winston Cox.

His other boxing coach is Cuban, Vicente Martinez. Cox claimed in a recent Newsday interview that the Sports Ministry has been indifferent to the hardships which Manswell faces daily with his amateur boxing career thus far. He argued  he and his fighter have been forced to sleep at the gym despite being promised proper living accomodation, but to date this has not materialised. Said Cox: “When Manswell came back from the Commonwealth Games last year, he was promised by the Ministry of Sport that he’d be getting somewhere to live but up to today not one thing has been done for the silver medallist.” But Hoyte was visibly disturbed with Cox’s criticism of the Sport  Ministry and vehemently refuted his assertions about Manswell’s alleged shoddy treatment. He said the Ministry and the Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee (TTOC) have been helping Manswell with the development of his boxing programme.

The gym owner said the Sports Ministry has also been providing financial assistance to Manswell to enable him to go the Pan American Games. Said Hoyte: “It’s unfair to make that kind of statement about the Ministry of  Sport because they have assisted him.” When interviewed by Newsday, in between his rigorous regimen, Manswell confirmed that the Sports Ministry has been assisting him with his pugilistic training. “Everything to date with my success is through them and I give special thanks to the Honourable Minister of  Sport, Roger Boynes, for all that he’s been doing for me,” said Manswell.  “I also apologise for the newspaper story that appeared and I want the nation to know that I had nothing to do with it,” he added. He ended by saying that he has no immediate plans to become a professional fighter because he’s concentrating on doing well in the forthcoming Pan American and Olympic Games. “That’s (Pan Am) my main priority and after that, then I’ll turn pro.” Manswell won the heavyweight gold medal and the heavyweight championship belt at the recently concluded Caribbean Amateur Boxing Championships (CABC). He also got the silver medal at last year’s Commonwealth Games held in Manchester, England.

Scotland, Mitchell on Dundee Utd trial

NATIONAL strikers Jason Scotland and Devon Mitchell are currently on trial with Scottish Premier League club Dundee United, the  team of ex-skipper Russell Latapy.

Scotland who recently left Defence Force, and Mitchell from defending TT Pro League kings CL Financial San Juan Jabloteh, arrived at the club in the  midst of United’s battle to avoid relegation. According to reports out of the club, manager Ian McAill is keen on seeing the capabilities of both players who will remain for one week. Should they impress McAill, further steps will be taken to secure their work permits. These moves have been orchestrated by English-based agent Mike Berry who is agent of national and Crewe Alexandra goalkeeper Clayton Ince, and Wrexham trio Hector Sam, Dennis Lawrence and Carlos Edwards.

Meanwhile, local defender Brent Sancho of Jabloteh, currently playing in the American A-League with Portland Timbers, is expected to have a deal with Dundee finalised within the next couple weeks. Dundee spotted Sancho during their tour of Trinidad earlier this year. His contract is being made possible through the efforts of Pro Sports Caribbean who has Englishman Terry Fenwick the ex-Jabloteh coach, and Peter Miller, former CEO of the Football Company of Trinidad and Tobago (FCOTT) as their representatives.

Champs Glamorgan start winning

NATIONAL double-crowned champions Glamorgan made an impressive start in their quest to win the inaugural Peter Mungal Grand Champions Cup.

Coached by national senior women’s coach Macsood Ali, the Tacarigua Indoor Sports Arena-based team proved that their National League and Knockout titles last year were no fluke as they overpowered the Arima-based Technocrats in straight sets at the St Paul Street Multi-Purpose Facility  on Friday night. With the combined power smashes of national captain Mark Daley, junior skipper Sean Morrison, Rodney Charles and newcomer Keiron Jack and the excellent setting by Caribbean number one Saleem Ali, Glamorgan raced to a commanding 25-17, 25-17 and 25-19 victory.

In the women’s opening round match, RMC Challengers, coached by Kanhai Sirjoo, turned back the challenge of Apex in four sets. Spearheaded by national senior players Shanna Ferreira, Ria Elcock and Stacy Small, Challengers took the first set at 25-22 but Apex won the second 25-16 for set-all.  They held their nerves and regained the advantage by taking the third at 25-15. The fourth set was a see-saw affair but Challengers sealed victory with a 25-23 score in the fourth set.

Miller to keep links with TTFF

Pro Sports Caribbean representative Peter Miller wants to continue making a contribution to football in Trinidad and Tobago.

He believes his current position in the United Kingdom is allowing him the right opportunities to make an impact. Miller, now serving as commercial director of Northampton Town Football Club, is also attached to Pro Sports Caribbean which has joined forces with UK-based Company Cre8. He was responsible for the recent tour to Birmingham by TT club, Superstar Rangers. Both companies are also working together on upcoming tours here by clubs from the UK. Next month, as part of the community project with Aston Villa FC, youngsters from Birmingham will visit Trinidad for a short stay. Reflecting on the recent trip by Rangers, Miller said he had five good years in Trinidad. “It was a proud feeling to see these kids over here. Their conduct was excellent. They had been preparing for this tour at least four months in advance with the Defence Force and we’ve seen the results here. This can only grow and be of a benefit to the country,” Miller said.

He said there is need for more appreciation to be shown those who have an impact on the game. “The impact of Dwight Yorke here is still amazing. He left and went to Manchester United and then to Blackburn Rovers but still every turn you make here at Villa Park, he’s still around in all the photos and stuff. “The disappointing thing that we have to work on back in Trinidad is how negative people tend to be. Maybe it’s easier to see the benefits of Trinidad looking in from a foreign country. Trinidad is a very marketable place. You have foreign teams wanting to come down and they don’t only want to go there and play football during the holiday but they want to go there and work in other areas as well. “ There has not been a good welcome in that concept by particularly the PFL clubs and that is something that we have to work on,” said Miller, who felt there was need for TT to recognise the efforts made by those who have flown the country’s flag abroad. “You see the significance of Jack Warner with what he has done wherever you go, now with the stadiums back in Trinidad you still always tend to hear the negative things. It’s the same with Dwight Yorke and the comments he gets from his own people back home. What he has done for Trinidad and Tobago is unquestionable. He’s still a superstar regardless of what people say, and all these are positives that we have to use.

He and the other players like the Shaka Hislops, the Stern Johns, the Russell Latapys, Marvin Andrews, Clayton Inces and Anthony Rougiers, the boys at Wrexham are all laying the foundation that can be of benefits to Trinidad and Tobago. “It was evident on this trip. Once people here find out that you are in some way connected with Dwight Yorke or one of the other players, they instantly want to help. It’s happened at Wrexham and Northampton particularly because they have players from Trinidad,” Miller said. “Northampton particularly want to looks at some of the younger players from Trinidad and while some people back there are being negative in their response, many others are being positive and we have to make the best use of this,” he said. The community projects with Aston Villa are expected to become a yearly event and east-based TT club 1st Santa Rosa FC, which is handled by Keith Look Loy, is carded to visit Villa next year.

Reggae Boyz face Brazil in friendly

KINGSTON: Jamaica’s Reggae Boyz are slated to tackle a Brazil select team in a football friendly at the National Stadium on July 27.

Organisers announced on Friday that the Brazil side will include current national players, as well as names from the 1994 and 1998 World Cup tournaments. The Brazil select team will include Bebeto and Aldair from the World Cup winning 1994 squad, and Junior Biano, who played four years later when Brazil lost the World Cup final to France. The game, dubbed “Ultimate Power Promotion” by sponsors Guinness, has a date clash with the Concacaf Gold Cup final, but should Jamaica reach the confederation final, July 30 has been set as a reserve date for the game.

Manchester United director for Macoya workshop

Manchester United Football Club  Director Maurice Watkins will be one of the instructors at a four-day Concacaf workshop for senior administrators next month.

Watkins will be accompanied by Graham Noakes, the English FA Director of Football Administra-tion and Mark Ives, Head of Planning and Training for the June 10-13 workshop at the Dr Joao Havelange Centre of Excellence, Macoya. The workshop will focus on developing organisational structures, contracts and transfers and building relationship with key stakeholders. Concacaf Direc-tor of Development Richard Braithwaite was delighted to announce Watkins’ visit. “It’s the first time we will be having someone from the champion club of England coming to one of our workshops.

 He is one of the leading experts in Europe in terms of the legal matters in football,” said Braithwaite, who mentioned that there was an urgent need for improvements in this area within Concacaf. “What we keep trying to do all the time within the technical department is provide training courses that are relevant and are specific issues within the Caribbean and the wider Concacaf region. “One of the issues causing some concern has been the whole question of contracts and transfers from clubs here to outside of the region. The whole legal area has been a major concern and we felt it was important to get an expert in the field to come and talk to senior administrators here about some of the methods for resolving issues. “This workshop will also allow them to discuss the new transfer regulations,” added Braithwaite.

Meanwhile, Dr Zdnek Sivek, vice president of the Union of European Football Coaches and a senior UEFA technical instructor, has confirmed his participation in the May 16-17 Concacaf seminar entitled “Tactics and Systems of Play.”

WHAT NEXT DOCTORS?

WHAT next, we wonder, will our doctors come up with? At one time they were taking action to insist on recognition of their new association. Then we heard arguments about the salaries of Tobago doctors.

Now, when they appear to have been approaching a stage of full recovery from their recent “sickness,” a new reason for staying away from their jobs has surfaced. This time, while they have agreed to accept the terms offered by their employers, there is a condition attached to their return to work — the immediate cancellation of the order which directed the Medical Chief of Staff, Dr Austin Trinidade, to proceed on compensatory leave. To say that this is clearly unacceptable is to state the obvious.  The order concerning Dr Trinidade is not subject to negotiation by either the Public Services Association, the recognised bargaining unit for doctors employed by the Ministry of Health and/or the Regional Health Authorities, or the Medical Professionals Association of Trinidad and Tobago (MPATT). 

Dr Trinidade’s being directed to proceed on leave is not only the prerogative of his employer, but because of the Medical Chief of Staff’s managerial position he cannot be considered as part of the bargaining unit. So that the junior doctors have no locus standi with respect to the issue. In any case, Dr Trinidade appears to have the matter in hand and is talking about legal action which he is perfectly entitled to take if he considers that the Ministry has acted unlawfully. Despite this, what has emerged is that MPATT was seeking to use their ‘being prepared to return to work’ as a lever to force the cancellation of the order requiring Dr Trinidade to take his compensatory leave. But even had the order been negotiable, and Dr Trinidade been part of the bargaining unit, the representatives of the junior doctors (not the PSA) are not seeking to negotiate, but have instead issued, what is in effect, a do it or else demand. The “or else” being that Trinidade must first be allowed to return to work, before any resumption of duties by the doctors.

Should the authorities give in to this, is there any guarantee that new demands would not be made by the doctors before they could be persuaded, or worse, persuade themselves to return in full complement to the wards and clinics? Trinidad and Tobago has long grown tired of this off and on industrial action by junior doctors, which has left hospital wards unmanned or undermanned, and denied patients, many of them seriously ill, the right to quality medical care, paid for out of their personal income tax and health surcharge. It has represented an offhand dismissal of their health concerns, and in effect made them virtual pawns.

The junior doctors’ insistence that the order sending Trinidade on compensatory leave should be rescinded as a pre-condition for their return to work is, however unwittingly, an attempt by them to bargain with the Administration on behalf of the San Fernando General Hospital’s Medical Chief of Staff, vis a vis his being sent on leave. Would the same doctors be uncomfortable should Dr Trinidade find it necessary to discipline and/or report any of them to the Ministry of Health for the thinly veiled industrial action taken, or for an infraction committed subsequent to his and their return — Dr Trinidade from compensatory leave, and the junior doctors from “sick leave”? Perhaps even more ludicrous than the doctors’ demand on the Dr Trinidade compensatory leave issue, was their reported stand that the acting Medical Chief of Staff, Dr Anand Chatergoon, was unacceptable “in view of his villification of doctors, his intimidation and his abuse of authority while in office.” Unfortunately, the junior doctors have refrained from explaining to the nation what they meant by their charges of intimidation and ‘abuse of authority’. But then their failure to do this may have been better for all of the parties concerned!

The price of balisier cultivation


After months of watching it grow, I have come to the inevitable conclusion that the Government’s environmental programme, CEPEP, was contrived to cultivate only one crop, the Balisier. Clearing waterways and creating jobs were the lucky by-products of a project devised to achieve the party’s one 2020 agricultural vision — a Father of the Nation firmly rooted in the Red House. Such a harvest would be worth the $75 a day investment.

Why such a cynical verdict? Because CEPEP seemed very, similar — despite the Prime Minister’s platitudes about fashioning entrepreneurs — to its acronymed predecessors, such as ETP and DEWD. I was suffering from patronage d?j? vu. Furthermore, though CEPEP workers kept the drains clean and earned a welcome weekly wage, the programme, as far as I could tell, was providing them with no marketable skills. Indeed, no environmental experts seemed to be guiding the contractors and labourers, teaching these what and what not, to uproot. The facile conclusion: they would all remain indebted to the PNM and as such, obliged to become specialists in only one horticultural endeavour, ensuring the Balisier flower flourished.

Remember how the ETP was used by the United National Congress to pad its meetings, campaign for its MPs? Reports were you had to possess a party card to get a ten days and not even that was enough at times, if you were not of the URP foreman’s family. Former Prime Minister Basdeo Panday’s concept of this country’s millennium development was clinging to power until 2015. By almost any means necessary. One of these was using the indigent. Laventille dons like the recently deceased Mark Guerra rose to wealth and influence before 2002. The gang violence in the Port of Spain hills spiralled in late 2000 under the UNC. Back then the former Government dismissed criticisms of the criminal element in the ETP/URP because it needed to widen its support base. Were it handed the reins of power again, the UNC would employ the very type of programme to increase its hold on voters, just call it something else. And, a CEPEP by any other name is still a CEPEP.

If you think I am being unfair, ask yourself for whom these young men and women working the CEPEP gangs will cast their ballot in the upcoming local election.  You do not have to be a clairvoyant to predict that dependence on the Balisier for survival makes a vote for the People’s National Movement an imperative. Not just the environment will be at stake if their party is not victorious. A perusal of the list of people to whom CEPEP contracts have been awarded is further proof of the PNM’s pastoral project. The lucky recipients were, in the majority, loyal members of the Balisier bunch. I would bet a month of Malcolm Jones’ wages — if I had them — that most hold party cards.

Does anyone truly believe that this Government (or any other) will ever put an end to the unhealthy dependence syndrome created by URP, CEPEP, etc? Or set up legitimate employment centres, run by professionals who are qualified to help the unemployed, get them trained, place them in permanent jobs? Patrick Manning will not, cannot, dare not. Because then, oh dear Lord, some of the CEPEP clan might seek greener pastures of their own where they can grow crops of their choosing. They would become independent, start scoffing at Government handouts and vote for whichever party they liked. Worse, they might cease calling the PM, “Father of the Nation.” He would be a pastor without his needy sheep.

If you think my theories far out, consider Government’s indifferent reaction to the police statement that CEPEP and its counterparts in patronage, URP and NHA are contributing to the violence in Laventille. It was a conclusion which was based on solid evidence. Just last Tuesday night, an NHA foreman was shot at Harpe Place, Observatory Street. Yet, the ruling party will not contemplate stopping the programmes, even temporarily. It will not attempt to verify if what the cops are saying is true. CEPEP will not only continue, but also expand, the Government has boasted. In other words, the blood can continue to spill into the bedrock of the PNM, as its people shoot each other over crumbs. The reply of line Minister for CEPEP, Rennie Dumas, when asked by a Newsday reporter about the police’s determination, shed more bad light on the PNM’s attitude. “I do not respond to the police,” was the Honourable Minister’s retort. “Lucky for you, Dumas!” one wanted to say. “Me, if they ask me a question, I generally, like all ordinary citizens, give them a reply.”

By answering the way he did, Dumas flicked aside not only the cops, but also the very people losing their lives in the hills; as if both were annoying flies, buzzing much too close to his drain cleaning programme. However, come June, his party would be asking the latter’s bereaved kin to stain their fingers as deep red as the blemish left by their dead family in the houses and streets of Laventille. As for the police, they were being asked to quell the CEPEP disputes even as Ministers declared they did not respond to cops.  Why? Because CEPEP could not be stopped. It would be political suicide. To suggest such a thing, earned you a rebuke from our leaders. You were accused of wanting people to remain in poverty, when you desired simply to see them out of the self-serving hands of their politicians. I certainly had no longing to see the jobless of Laventille forever out of work. I did however, want to see them independent. For, what was the use of being able to collect a paycheque when you might not live to cash it? And, that was what it was coming to with these quick fix unemployment relief programmes in some districts. Whether Dumas and the PNM chose to respond to police warnings or not.


Suzanne Mills is the Editor of the daily Newsday.