Popular social media blogger Rhoda Bharath is a contract employee of the Ministry of Finance earning $30,000 a month for her services.
This was revealed through several sources, including a response to a question in Parliament and a Freedom of Information request to the Ministry of Finance.
On Friday, Minister of Finance Colm Imbert responded to a question for written answer from the Opposition, which asked: Will the minister state:
a. the positions held by Rhoda Bharath at the National Lotteries Control Board (NLCB) and any other publicly funded State bodies/agencies;
b. the responsibilities for each position held; and
c. the remuneration package for each position held?
The minister responded, saying that Bharath was an independent contractor at the NLCB in the area of communications from October 1, 2018 to May 31, 2020. He said Bharath held no position with that public entity or any other public entity.
But the written answer continued, “However, Ms Bharath provides services as an independent contractor to the Ministry of Finance in the areas of Events Planning and Communications from time [sic].”
Bharath was recently seen at the Ministry of Finance’s Spotlight on the Economy on September 2 at the Hyatt Regency.
Guardian Media is in possession of a FOIA request to the Ministry of Finance filed earlier this year, which asked for the names and salaries of any communications consultants employed by the ministry.
The Ministry of Finance responded, “The Ministry has retained the services of Type 1 Media and Research Solutions as Communications Consultant during the period April 1, 2022, to March 31, 2023, at a monthly fee of $30,000.00.”
It’s unclear if the contract is new or simply a renewal of an older contract.
Type 1 Media and Research Solutions was registered by Bharath at the Ministry of Legal Affairs on November 3, 2017. According to its official filing in the Companies Registry, the nature of the business is listed as a company involved in “media, communications and research strategies.”
The registration document notes Bharath is also a lecturer at the University of the West Indies.
Guardian Media yesterday reached out to Bharath for comment on how long she had been employed at the ministry and to describe what her duties were. She declined to comment. However, after the story was published, Bharath wrote on the Newsauce Facebook page, “I couldn’t get past the first sentence because it started with a lie. There is a difference between an employee and a consultant. But, I guess Kejan needs the clicks.”
She has not denied the salary.
The Ministry of Finance has three other corporate communications officers on contract earning $18,500, $14,200 and $5,000 per month.
Bharath shot into prominence in 2016, breaking the story of then-president Anthony Carmona acquiring wine bearing the presidential seal. At the time, it was seen as a misappropriation of funds. The intense pressure forced Carmona to hold a press conference (almost unheard of by a President) to respond to the accusations, which he denied.
Since then, Bharath has garnered a following of thousands through her Facebook page Newsauce.
Bharath has often used her platform to break stories and leak documents, leading many to praises her journalistic work for having all the best “sources.” She has also often used that platform to criticise the work of journalists extensively on her Facebook Live broadcasts.
Bharath is currently a member of several “state” WhatsApp groups meant for members of the media, including one set up by the Parliament and one created by the Ministry of Health in 2018 that was used extensively during the pandemic.
During the pandemic, the question of whether Bharath was, in fact, a journalist, reached as far as the High Court when former Minister Devant Maharaj sued the Government to join the daily Ministry of Health COVID-19 briefings.
Maharaj complained that then-Communications Minister Donna Cox was granting access to “other online journalists,” including Bharath, Lasana Liburd (Wired868.co) and Prior Beharry (AZPnews.com) and not him.
He said it was “an abuse of power, unfair and biased.” Maharaj also alleged favouritism and bias in favour of Bharath, whom he accused of being a supporter of the Government. Maharaj lost the case and Bharath eventually stopped attending the Ministry of Health briefings.