Category Archives: Politics

Nostalgia for the 1970s

By Raffique Shah
Sunday, April 20th 2008

Raffique ShahTHIRTY-EIGHT years ago tomorrow, a group of us comprising young officers in the Trinidad and Tobago Regiment (TTR), along with a few hundred soldiers, etched our names in history by revolting and seizing control of the army’s HQ at Teteron Barracks. We would hold the camp for ten days before subjecting ourselves to being arrested. We were charged with mutiny and treason among other serious offences. Of the 80-odd men arrested, around 40 faced court martial, with 25-or-so being sentenced to various terms of imprisonment. After 27 months in jail, we would walk free, thanks to the judicial system that remained fiercely independent of the political directorate.
Continue reading Nostalgia for the 1970s

Judge dead wrong on race

by Dr. Kwame Nantambu
April 18, 2008

Trini PeopleThis critique is in response to an article titled “Judge: Address racism to move ahead” that appeared in The Daily Express (14 April 2008) in which Justice Wendell Kangaloo is reported to have said that “we in Trinidad and Tobago would do well to start a conversation about race” in order to move this country forward.

Apparently, Justice Kangaloo’s eye-opener on race in T&T resulted from his amazement while viewing a programme on race via MSNBC-TV in the United States.
Continue reading Judge dead wrong on race

Expect price hikes to continue

By Vernon Khelawan
Sunday 13th April, 2008
guardian.co.tt

Bread“We have not seen the last of the rising price of rice.” This is the view of president of the Supermarkets Association of T&T (Satt) Heeranand Maharaj.

“As a matter of fact,” he added, “we can expect continuing price increases in staples like flour, beans and peas. The price of peas for instance, has increased 260 per cent over the last year and the price is expected to move even further upwards.
Continue reading Expect price hikes to continue

Try Bas Again

By Andre Bagoo
Thursday, April 10 2008
T&T Newsday

Basdeo PandayOPPOSITION LEADER Basdeo Panday’s legal problems just got a little worse. More than one year after having his political life revitalised by the quashing of a criminal conviction against him, the Privy Council yesterday paved the way for him to face a retrial on three charges of failing to declare a joint London bank account to the Integrity Commission.

The three charges are the same charges he was freed of last year, on the basis of “apparent bias”.
Continue reading Try Bas Again

The Values Imperative

By Dr. Selwyn R. Cudjoe
April 10, 2008

Young PeopleOver the past two weeks, some of my friends have accused me of or complimented me for going down memory lane. Others have suggested that once the genie is out of the bottle there is really no way to get it back in. They are both correct but for the wrong reasons. There was no attempt to go down memory lane for its own sake or to get the genie back into the bottle. I was trying to say that when experts talk about our crime situation and/or the factors leading towards its escalation they usually forget the human or ideological dimension of the problem even as they emphasize the hard, economic, policing or political dimensions.
Continue reading The Values Imperative

Backward ever, forward never

By Raffique Shah
Sunday, April 6th 2008

Financial ComplexON March 26, Tata Motors, a division of India’s oldest and most diversified conglomerate, paid the mighty Ford of America US$2.3 billion to acquire two jewels in Britain’s motoring crown, Land Rover and Jaguar. The next day Tata Chemicals acquired General Chemicals of the USA for US$1 billion. Even as the Tata Group spread its wings across the globe, a handful of Trinidad and Tobago’s biggest businessmen and institutions gathered at the Trinidad Hilton to sell their shares in RBTT to the Royal Bank of Canada (RBC).
Continue reading Backward ever, forward never

Land of Hope and Glory

By Dr. Selwyn R. Cudjoe
April 04, 2008

Young PeopleLast week when I alluded to my double allegiance to Christian and Yoruba religious practices that attended my growing up in Tacarigua I wanted to suggest that religion, be it of the European or African variety, structures our imaginative and emotional lives and how we behave in our society. The English understood what it took to discipline a population and how to make a people see things through their (the colonizers’) eyes.
Continue reading Land of Hope and Glory

PM hints he needs Jet

By Clint Chan Tack
Thursday, April 3 2008
www.newsday.co.tt

Manning And The JetPRIME MINISTER Patrick Manning last night announced that two of the country’s 14 local government bodies will be axed.

In a televised address to the nation, the Prime Minister disclosed talks have begun with the Elections and Boundaries Commission (EBC) to “identify new boundaries for local government” ahead of the local government election which will be held “later this year” .
Continue reading PM hints he needs Jet

Why Tobago Hilton?

Newsday Editorial
Wednesday, April 2 2008

TobagoWe are unconvinced of the need for Government to purchase the Tobago Hilton. What is involved here is not only the cost of the purchase, more than $200 million, but that additionally Government has had to approve the allocation of $45 million for immediate repairs although the hotel was constructed less than a decade ago. Was there not normal ongoing repair work over the years?
Continue reading Why Tobago Hilton?

Norway: good governance, better discipline

Norway (in orange)
Norway (in orange) – Image from Wikipedia

By Raffique Shah
Sunday, March 30th 2008

ONE can easily learn to love Norway only for its majestic fjords that are almost unique to that country. But its beauty extends far beyond the landscape and seascape. Here’s a country that discovered oil off its coast at the same time Britain, Holland and others did in the North Sea. That was some 70 years after the first productive oil well was drilled in Trinidad. True, the quantities differed vastly: ours never exceeded 300,000 barrels per day (bpd), while Norway ranks 10th among oil producers at 3.2 million bpd. Its reserves are also far bigger than ours, both in oil and gas.
Continue reading Norway: good governance, better discipline