Finance Minister Colm Imbert has fired back at claims by Opposition Leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar that the independent probe into the understatement of revenue for the financial year 2023 and related matters is an “illegal sham”.
Persad-Bissessar made the claim on Tuesday against the team set up to probe the matter by the Cabinet. She said the team, headed by retired High Court judge Richard Harris, could not legally conduct such a probe, and suggested the Public Service Commission was the better body to do so since it had the power to reprimand public servant if they were found to be negligent in the court of their duties.
Asked about Persad-Bissessar’s assertion during a post-Cabinet media briefing yesterday, Imbert rejected the suggestion as he defended the team.
“It is nonsense because in the Senate, I said that I am going to conduct an internal investigation to investigate the facts within the Ministry of Finance. So who is supposed to pick the team? Should I ask the Leader of the Opposition to pick the team, it is nonsense,” Imbert said.
He explained that the probe was not a commission of enquiry and while Cabinet was at liberty to appoint members, the objectivity of the team, which also includes former audit director at the Auditor General’s Department, David Benjamin, had to be defended.
During an interview with Guardian Media on Wednesday, Persad-Bissessar also contended that the PSC should undertake the investigation to ensure transparency.
“The PSC regulations have spelt out a procedure for conducting such investigations to ensure that they are done in a fair and transparent manner with respect for individuals’ rights. Mr Imbert wants to act as judge, jury and executioner by appointing this committee. He has usurped the role and function of the PSC, which is the only body by law that has the power to investigate disciplinary matters and misconduct in the public service,” she said.
Yesterday, however, Imbert argued that the independent probe was necessary and also an internal one.
“There are two different things here you know, as Minister of Finance I have to find out what happened.”
The Cabinet-appointed team has been given two months to conduct its probe. Its terms of reference include determining the circumstances that led to the understatement of revenue in the public accounts for the financial year 2023 and what should be done to avoid a recurrence of the same, as well as the efficacy of the new Electronic Cheque-Clearing System introduced by the Central Bank of Trinidad and Tobago in February 2023.
The appointment of the investigative team was the latest development following a dispute between the Finance Ministry and Auditor General Jaiwantie Ramdass in the submission of documents relating to the $2.6 billion understatement.
Imbert had previously described a legal letter from attorneys at Freedom Law Chambers, which is representing Ramdass, as containing the insinuation that he, as Minister of Finance, or ministry officials, unethically backdated the amended public accounts to January 31, 2024, to cover a mistake, when the true date on the amended public accounts is April 16, 2024.
Speaking in the Upper House over a week ago, Imbert said the claim was a blatant untruth that has been put into the public domain and required a full, independent investigation. He reiterated this yesterday, adding that he also had no hand in dealing with the Auditor General or any members of her team.