Chairman of the Trinidad and Tobago Transparency Institute Victor Hart says the failure by the Government "to gazette" the Commission of Enquiry into the Construction Sector "shows up our country as being very Third World." In a statement yesterday, Hart said he was surprised because the legal requirement to gazette a commission of enquiry was well known.
"This is very elementary...I am surprised that it was overlooked," he said.
He said the public should be told who was responsible for this "costly error and the guilty person should be held accountable."
Hart said millions of taxpayers' money had so far been spent on the inquiry and more would be spent because of the delay. "If the inquiry is aborted as a result, millions of dollars will have gone down the drain," he added.
He said publishing the inquiry in the Gazette immediately and approval of retroactive legislation must be done to correct the error. Hart said if the inquiry were to be aborted the country would lose the benefit of the commissioners' recommendations on public sector procurement reform and the reorganisation of the construction sector.
And chairman of construction firm NH International (Caribbean) Ltd, Emile Elias, said he hoped that "the failure to publish in the Gazette, as required by law, the Commission of Enquiry, is not a fatal error." He said the problem could be resolved "by the immediate publication of the enquiry as soon as possible in the Gazette, retroactively." President of the Joint Consultative Council for the Construction Industry Winston Riley said: "It is clear that we are living in a place akin to an asylum. In an asylum there is always someone who is laughing. I am the one who is laughing now."