Diego Martin West MP Dr Keith Rowley has said his worst fears about the award of construction contracts materialised yesterday with the publication of reports which allege that there are family links between Udecott chairman Calder Hart and a Malaysian company.
"I had the Prime Minister and Imbert saying in Hansard that I am obsessed with Udecott and, of course, I am obsessed with Udecott," Rowley said in a telephone interview yesterday. "If this is what is happening at Udecott, then I am supposed to be obsessed with it," he said. Rowley was responding to documents allegedly obtained from Malaysia by members of the Congress of the People, which allege that family ties exist between Hart's wife, Sherrine, and at least one of the directors of CH Development and Construction Ltd, which received multi-million dollar contracts from Udecott, a state-owned special purpose company. "Rather than get the report of the enquiry (into Udecott and the local construction sector) to say in a civilised way what has happened and what we should do, we have people, in their defence of wrong-doing, dismissing the evidence (and) damaging the people who stand up in defiance of this and that is where we are at and we have a long way to go still," Rowley said. "The Prime Minister has made a very clear decision that he is going to protect and defend Mr Hart at any cost and that is his decision to make," he added.
While neither Hart nor Udecott attempted to clarify the reports yesterday, the Malaysian company Sunway issued a statement in which it said it "100 per cent categorically and unequivocally refutes ALL allegations regarding any form of improper business conduct with Udecott and any of its employers, managers or board members." Sunway said its categorical refutation "includes ludicrous allegations of any form whatsoever of an improper relationship with the executive chairman of Udecott or any members of his family." But Rowley said he found the entire episode to be "quite depressing because I lived through the O'Hallaron and Prevatt accusations (of corruption) as a member of the PNM," Rowley said. He said: "I am now having to live through this. And for a person who gave a significant portion of my working life towards the PNM in public service, I never expected the PNM to be defending this kind of thing. "And by PNM there, I mean office-holders, persons who are in a positions to act and who are failing to act, for their own reasons and are staining the party by their actions or inactions."
Rowley said Hart should have been fired from holding the position of Udecott chairman. Rowley stressed that "the laws and regulations" would indicate that the Canadian-born Hart should be removed and a proper criminal investigation should have been going on "into what is going on at Udecott." He said: "I do not accept any position from persons who are defending him (Hart) and his associates that one has to wait on a commission of enquiry to proceed to find out what happened with taxpayers' money." Rowley was fired by Manning after he voiced fears and serious concerns about the operations of Udecott.
?Flashback
?On October 15 last year during a post-Cabinet news conference Colm Imbert, Minister of Works, had the following to say about alleged links between Hart and CH Development also called Sunway Construction (Caribbean) Ltd: "There is absolutely no evidence that the head of Sunway is the brother-in-law of Calder Hart. Where did you get that information? Nobody has alleged that the head of Sunway is the brother-in-law of Mr Hart."