Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley says Opposition MP Dr Roodal Moonilal is the only known minister who was photographed while promoting gang business.
In a release yesterday, Rowley fired back at Moonilal, who accused the Government of awarding lucrative contracts to gang leaders, noting this in turn was undermining the police’s war against criminal gangs.
On Sunday, Moonilal, the MP for Oropouche East, called on Rowley to terminate contracts with the gang leaders and take action against any minister who gave such contracts. He said Rowley continued to harbour senior Government Ministers with known links to people before the courts and other alleged gang leaders.
Responding to Moonilal, Rowley said the Government has been and continues to fight criminal conduct at every level and will continue to support law enforcement in all their lawful efforts to rid the country of this scourge in all its forms.
“In response to the scandalous behaviour of the UNC, a party that has yet again been caught recruiting and promoting criminals in the political process, Dr Roodal Moonilal accuses the Government of awarding lucrative contracts to unsavoury characters.
“This coming from Dr Moonilal is laughably hypocritical, since he is the only known minister of any government who used taxpayers’ dollars to pay a photographer to follow him around to photograph and promote him in these activities and currently is the only photo we have of any minister promoting that for which he now says is an action which undermines the effort of the police. What an epiphany!”
In 2013, Moonilal, then housing and urban development minister, was photographed when shaking the hands of Kenneth “Spanish” Rodriguez during a visit to the site of the Duncan Street Police Post, then still under construction. On Monday, Rodriguez, dubbed a community leader, along with Ancel “Chemist” Villafana, appeared before Senior Magistrate Cherril-Anne Antoine in the Port-of-Spain Magistrates’ Court charged with marijuana possession. They were picked up during the police’s anti-gang operation last week.
In his response yesterday, Rowley said contracts are not awarded by any ministers in his Government. He said that practice was a feature of the People’s Partnership and was a major stimulus to the rampant corruption that was the hallmark of their 2010-2015 tenure. During this period, the PM said, ministers even collected the cheque payments owed to contractors, who then had to bargain for the release of such funds.
“Dr Moonilal more than anyone else knows that this Government knows that. He also speaks self-righteously about the troublesome issue of petty criminals getting Government contracts, but is absolutely silent on the presence of criminals on the UNC political platform and in the Parliament.”
But in an immediate response, Moonilal accused Rowley of deliberately misleading the public and called on him to stop the “ole talk and rum talk.”
“I have not and never employed any photographer to undertake any personal assignment for me since I got married 16 years ago,” Moonilal said.
“The public services has rules and regulations for procuring services and a minister cannot hire anyone for such services. These scandalous allegations come from a Government that admitted in Parliament in November 2017 that they spent thousands of dollars for a make-up artist to powder up ministers prior to the pre-budget consultations at the Hyatt hotel.”
Moonilal listed several issues already in the public domain and said if he did hire a photographer, those would be matters that would be captured.
“I would show a picture of a government minister accompanied by an alleged gang leader to the Office of the President for a swearing-in ceremony,” he said, referring to the time when Government Minister Marlene McDonald took community leader Cedric “Burkie” Burke to her swearing-in ceremony at President’s House.
“I would show a picture of a government minister campaigning with someone known to him who is before the court on charges of drug trafficking and possession of illegal firearms. I would show a picture of a government minister who could not explain making cash deposits in a commercial bank. I might even be able to show a picture of government ministers frolicking at Miami night clubs.”
Moonilal also questioned why the Office of the Prime Minister would issue a political statement that chastised the Opposition.
“This is unacceptable and has brought the Office of the Prime Minister into disrepute and odium,” he said.
He also said the Government can implement legal and policy framework to treat with this matter of the award of state contracts to reputed gang leaders or companies linked to gangs and said he was willing to assist the Attorney General on the matter.
On Monday, Rowley said gang leaders were free to tender for State contracts as long as they had not been convicted of any crimes. His statement came after Guardian Media reported that companies affiliated with gang leaders were earning millions of dollars in State contracts.