JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Saturday, April 12, 2025

Kamla on Tobago issue: The law is on my side

by

20110613

Prime Min­is­ter Kam­la Per­sad-Bisses­sar says she's "ful­ly with­in the law" in her in­tent to re-op­er­a­tionalise a Prime Min­is­ter's Of­fice in To­ba­go. Ques­tioned whether the ben­e­fits of such an of­fice out­weighed any fall­out with the To­ba­go House of As­sem­bly (THA), Per­sad-Bisses­sar said: "I am the Prime Min­is­ter of Trinidad and To­ba­go. I will dis­charge my du­ties. I am the Prime Min­is­ter not just of Trinidad but of To­ba­go as well. That's my con­sti­tu­tion­al du­ty." Per­sad-Bisses­sar spoke to re­porters af­ter she gave the fea­ture ad­dress at the open­ing of the Caribbean In­vest­ment Fo­rum (CIF) at the Hilton Trinidad, Port-of-Spain, yes­ter­day. Last Sat­ur­day, the Prime Min­is­ter an­nounced her in­tent at a pub­lic meet­ing at Old Mar­ket Square, Scar­bor­ough, her in­tent to re­open an of­fice in the sis­ter isle to cel­e­brate the Peo­ple's Part­ner­ship coali­tion Gov­ern­ment's first year in of­fice.

The Gov­ern­ment's vis­it to To­ba­go last week al­so saw the open­ing of a CEPEP of­fice, a move which pro­voked the ire of Chief Sec­re­tary Orville Lon­don to pur­sue le­gal ac­tion against the Cen­tral Gov­ern­ment. Per­sad Bisses­sar point­ed out that, as far as she had been ad­vised, there was al­ready an of­fice base for the Prime Min­is­ter "so it's not that I am es­tab­lish­ing one." Pushed to state what the Gov­ern­ment hoped to achieve that the THA was not be able to, she said: "There are Cen­tral Gov­ern­ment ser­vices which are not in the am­bit of the THA and we will be able to bring these ser­vices to the peo­ple of Trinidad and To­ba­go." She dis­missed the sug­ges­tion the move would be able to help the To­ba­go Or­gan­i­sa­tion of the Peo­ple (TOP), a mem­ber of the Gov­ern­ment's five-par­ty coali­tion, wrest pow­er from the PNM-led THA.

She said: "I do my du­ty as the Prime Min­is­ter of T&T." Mean­while, TOP leader Ash­worth Jack says Per­sad-Bisses­sar is not dis­re­spect­ing the THA. He said yes­ter­day the is­sue be­ing mount­ed by the Peo­ple's Na­tion­al Move­ment-con­trolled THA was a smoke­screen. "Of course not. She is not un­der­min­ing the THA," Jack added. He said Per­sad-Bisses­sar was the Prime Min­is­ter of Trinidad and To­ba­go and could use her of­fice in To­ba­go as much as she liked.

Jack ac­cused Lon­don and oth­ers of rais­ing a red-her­ring about the au­thor­i­ty of the As­sem­bly be­ing un­der­mined by the Peo­ple's Part­ner­ship Gov­ern­ment, which in­clud­ed Jack's TOP. He said there was need for CEPEP on the is­land as many peo­ple were still un­able to get em­ploy­ment un­der cur­rent CEPEP arrange­ments. He said the PNM-con­trolled both the Cen­tral Gov­ern­ment in Trinidad and the As­sem­bly in To­ba­go for eight con­sec­u­tive years and yet it failed to deal with the prob­lems af­fect­ing the is­land. He said there was need for Per­sad-Bisses­sar to do what she was at­tempt­ing to do for the peo­ple of the is­land. Lon­don, on the oth­er hand, said the Gov­ern­ment was clear­ly cam­paign­ing, hav­ing "done things in To­ba­go against the ba­sic tenets of good gov­er­nance in re­la­tion to the THA and Cen­tral Gov­ern­ment." But as far as Per­sad-Bisses­sar is aware, the move will not in­jure the re­la­tion­ship she now shares with Lon­don. "We have agreed that we will meet oc­ca­sion­al­ly on a reg­u­lar ba­sis," she said. Mean­while, the Prime Min­is­ter said there would be a Cab­i­net re-align­ment this month. "As we speak it has not been put off. I said in June, the month is not done yet," she said.


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored