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Saturday, March 29, 2025

PM: Foreign exchange wasted on Carnival costumes

by

KEVON FELMINE
31 days ago
20250226
Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley examines a model of the upcoming Nutrimix Animal and Pet Food Plant presented by Nutrimix president and Group CEO Ronnie Mohammed during the sod turning ceremony at the Point Lisas Industrial Estate yesterday. Also pictured, from left, are Minister of Energy and Energy Industries Stuart Young, Nutrimix GM Lydia Mohammed, and Minister of Trade and Industry Paula Gopee-Scoon.

Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley examines a model of the upcoming Nutrimix Animal and Pet Food Plant presented by Nutrimix president and Group CEO Ronnie Mohammed during the sod turning ceremony at the Point Lisas Industrial Estate yesterday. Also pictured, from left, are Minister of Energy and Energy Industries Stuart Young, Nutrimix GM Lydia Mohammed, and Minister of Trade and Industry Paula Gopee-Scoon.

KRISTIAN DE SILVA

Se­nior Re­porter

kevon.felmine@guardian.co.tt

“Ab­solute fool­ish­ness”—that is how Prime Min­is­ter Kei­th Row­ley de­scribed the heavy for­eign ex­change spend­ing on Car­ni­val cos­tumes. While he un­der­stands that peo­ple want to en­joy them­selves dur­ing Car­ni­val, he in­sists that cos­tumes are not in­vest­ments.

Speak­ing at the sod-turn­ing cer­e­mo­ny for Nu­trim­ix’s An­i­mal Feed and Pet Food plant in Point Lisas yes­ter­day, Row­ley re­vealed that he re­cent­ly saw some­one of­fer­ing a sig­nif­i­cant sum of mon­ey for Car­ni­val cos­tumes. He em­pha­sised that cos­tumes should be lo­cal­ly sourced.

“I saw a chil­dren’s band on Sat­ur­day, and I think it was the best band in the large band cat­e­go­ry for tod­dlers. All the cos­tumes were made in Trinidad and To­ba­go, and that, to me, is what we should be about,” Row­ley said.

Laud­ing the Nu­trim­ix Group of Com­pa­nies’ ex­pan­sion in the agro-pro­cess­ing sec­tor, Row­ley al­so ac­knowl­edged Nu­trim­ix’s pres­i­dent Ron­nie Mo­hammed’s com­plaint that while sev­er­al state agen­cies func­tioned ef­fi­cient­ly in se­cur­ing ap­provals for his com­pa­ny’s project, oth­ers made the process painstak­ing­ly slow, re­quir­ing pa­tience and per­sis­tence.

Row­ley warned that the slow pace of ap­provals can sti­fle in­vest­ment and hin­der the ex­pan­sion of T&T’s econ­o­my.

He not­ed that when speak­ing with his coun­ter­parts in Grena­da, Bar­ba­dos, and St Vin­cent and the Grenadines—who are al­so striv­ing for eco­nom­ic growth—there is a clear sense of ur­gency. How­ev­er, he lament­ed that T&T seems to spe­cialise in de­lays and ob­struc­tion, giv­ing the im­pres­sion that some en­ti­ties are more con­cerned with process­es than out­comes, which he de­scribed as frus­trat­ing.

“I have seen projects in Grena­da and St Vin­cent move at an alarm­ing speed with­out dam­ag­ing their coun­tries and with­out their pop­u­la­tions as­sum­ing that every­one in­volved in the project is cor­rupt. Yet here, every page, every day, every hour, and every minute must be scru­ti­nised.”

He stressed that the time has come for cit­i­zens to ad­dress the is­sue of in­ef­fi­cien­cy, warn­ing that the coun­try risks miss­ing out on in­vest­ments flow­ing in­to oth­er Cari­com ter­ri­to­ries.

“If we do not have these kinds of in­vest­ments, if we do not have the vi­sion and be­lief that our coun­try can ab­sorb these in­vest­ments, or if we are re­quired to make them on­ly in tra­di­tion­al sec­tors, and we fo­cus sole­ly on what is wrong with this coun­try in­stead of what is good, then we will al­ways be look­ing at what is hap­pen­ing in Bar­ba­dos, in Ja­maica, and now in Grena­da and St Vin­cent.”

He ap­peared dis­mayed by the lack of new ho­tel rooms in To­ba­go, while peo­ple ad­mire the de­vel­op­ments in St Vin­cent and the Grenadines.

Row­ley shared that he toured Bar­ba­dos last Wednes­day and spoke with Prime Min­is­ter Mia Mot­t­ley the fol­low­ing day. He saw six large ho­tels un­der con­struc­tion, the com­ple­tion of a ma­jor golf course that re­cent­ly won an in­ter­na­tion­al award, and sev­er­al large-scale projects set to be­gin.

He point­ed out that the one thing miss­ing from the con­ver­sa­tion was the ap­proval process. He al­so not­ed that in St Vin­cent and the Grenadines, a San­dals Re­sort project moved from plan­ning to com­ple­tion and op­er­a­tion in the same time frame that T&T spent dis­cussing ap­provals for a ho­tel.

“And now that the San­dals project is well un­der­way, I can­not stop hear­ing Ralph Gon­salves in my ear, talk­ing about how won­der­ful it has been for the econ­o­my of St Vin­cent. They are about to em­bark on an­oth­er $250 mil­lion ex­pan­sion of that project, while we are still dis­cussing the ap­provals process in To­ba­go.”

Row­ley in­sist­ed that T&T needs to get se­ri­ous, as the de­ci­sion-mak­ing process­es are far too la­bo­ri­ous, slow, and in­dif­fer­ent. He said peo­ple who lost en­thu­si­asm due to bu­reau­crat­ic red tape have spo­ken to him, as well as oth­ers who by­passed T&T al­to­geth­er out of fear of the process.

He not­ed that while laws must be fol­lowed, it is al­so ev­i­dent that un­nec­es­sary ob­sta­cles have been placed in the way of progress.


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