Chief Secretary Farley Augustine has again said Tobago is looking forward to its own Carnival and is not competing with Trinidad’s event.
He made the comment in an interview following the official handover of the Manta Lodge hotel from Udecott to the Tobago House of Assembly yesterday.
Tobago hosted its first individual Carnival in October last year but also staged festivities in tandem with the national Carnival this month.
Asked about the low attendance numbers in the just concluded Carnival events in Tobago, Augustine said he was not worried. He noted, however, that there had also been reports of fewer spectators at Carnival events across both Trinidad and Tobago.
“In terms of spectatorship, I saw an article on Guardian Media up to today speaking about the absence of spectatorship even in Trinidad, so nationally, people didn’t really come out to watch the events. So, it is not a Tobago thing,” said Augustine, who also noted there had been a long-standing trend of Tobagonians heading to Trinidad for the period, with most of Tobago’s Carnival fraternity stating their priority is now with Tobago’s Carnival in October.
“I made that very clear that Tobago is transitioning. And so, I did expect a much more low-key Carnival this February than we did in October last year,” he said.
“A lot of the bandleaders, they prefer to wait on October to do their mas and so on so because we are not competing. And, of course, you would have noticed that several Tobagonians decided to go to Trinidad and play mas. This has been the case for many, many years.”
Augustine also said the concerns about the receipt of the $1.3 million allocation by Carnival stakeholders were also not unusual, as he said it regularly was not paid out before the event.
“If you notice, in previous years, as is this year, you don’t get all of your allocations ahead of the event. Because part of the allocation includes paying the prizes, so that is an issue,” said Augustine.
Augustine explained that he even sent marketing teams to Trinidad to promote Tobago during the festival.
“We are working so hard in terms of how we market the island. That’s why for even this Carnival, we had workers forego their own Carnival to be in Trinidad to set up booths at every major event in Trinidad,” he said Augustine, who explained this included having Tobago featured among the sponsors for the Parade of Bands broadcast from the Queen’s Park Savannah on Monday and Tuesday.
“The purpose of that is so that we can directly compete with other islands like St Lucia and Grenada that were, in fact, there in Trinidad marketing their islands. We were there doing the same thing, that not just the domestic market but the international market understands that there is another part of the country, perhaps the more beautiful part of the country, that they can come to for a different kind of entertainment and different kind of relaxation,” he said of the marketing strategy.