Thursday, July 16, 2015
By ADRIAN GIBSON
ajbahama@hotmail.com
CLEARLY, the statement that a promise is a comfort to a fool is something we all need to take very seriously.
Attorney General Allyson Maynard-Gibson, pictured, seems to know the identity of the person/s who accepted the more than $300,000 inducement from French energy company Alstom (then ABB) in their bid to win a Bahamas Electricity Corporation (BEC) contract. The documents, filed in the US District Court for Connecticut, revealed how the company covertly paid-off an unnamed Bahamian government “official” to win a bid to supply BEC with a generation unit.
Notably, none of those involved in the scheme are named, with the Bahamian bribe-taker referred to as ‘Official 8’.
Needless to say, Alstom won the contract to supply BEC with the generators. The first $74,229 payment to Official 8 was made on June 9, 2000. A further five cheques were issued to Bahamian Official 8 between May 15, 2001, and February 1, 2013, in the amounts of $56,000, $42,000, $42,000, $40,000 and $27,000.
Today, due to such corrupt practices, BEC is saddled with the very same diesel generators supplied by Alstom, which has no doubt caused BEC numerous problems and extra costs and annoyed and frustrated thousands of Bahamians due to constant outages.
So, if the Attorney General knows the identity of the person/s, why has the bribe-taker/s not been charged? Some would view this as being suggestive of the government either wanting to use this as a political tool or having no intention to charge and/or release the identity of such a person.
Why this need to be rolled out at a specific time suggests that there may be an attempt afoot to maximise the political gain or minimise the political fallout.
The secrecy surrounding the BEC bribe taker/s speaks to the culture of this administration. Information is made available only when it provides a strategic advantage for the government and not otherwise. There is no transparency. Take the Carnival as an example: we were promised a report in the first 21 days after the event. It has now been more than two months and there is still no accounting.
Yes, there seems to be a hope that we forget about these things and since we have proven that, when it comes to politics, we are a forgetful people, it’s a good strategy. So many promises have not been kept.
The Prime Minister promised the Leader of the Opposition that he would be privy to the
information concerning the nolle prosequi, asserting that it’s a matter of national security. We have no record of that promise ever being fulfilled.
Will the promise to tell us the details surrounding the contribution of the Sheik to the Progressive Liberal Party’s election coffers years ago ever be fulfilled? Are we ever going to see the documents relative to the V Alfred Gray/Newbold affair?
There is a stench in the air as it relates to the mood of Bahamians. The government needs to take stock and remember that service comes before self.
Comments and responses to ajbahama@
hotmail.com
Comments
asiseeit says...
Right before election, so they can say, "THEY DID IT SO IT IS OK THAT I DO IT", this is the kindergarten antics and thinking we know and expect. And then nothing will happen because if one falls, the rest probably will as well. So SHALLOW!
Posted 16 July 2015, 10:02 p.m. Suggest removal
GrassRoot says...
time to leak the name of the bribe taker.
Posted 18 July 2015, 1:48 a.m. Suggest removal
B_I_D___ says...
Seems like the only way things get dealt with is once the leak is out there. Who wants to contact Snowden or Assange?
Posted 21 July 2015, 8:59 a.m. Suggest removal
sheeprunner12 says...
We know the year when the bribe money was paid ......... we know the names of the BEC board members at the time ........... we even know who was the BEC Chairman ......... so what's the big deal?????? ............... bring them in and interrogate them, do a lie detector test, water-board them, use the phone book ............. wateva
Posted 22 July 2015, 8:36 p.m. Suggest removal
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