Senior Reporter
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The Government yesterday moved a motion in the House of Representatives seeking to compel the Opposition Leader to revoke the appointments of Opposition Senators Janelle John-Bates and Faris Al-Rawi, triggering heated exchanges.
Piloting the motion, Minister of Land and Legal Affairs Saddam Hosein described the conduct in question as “unlawful and contemptuous,” and accused Opposition Leader Pennelope Beckles of failing to act decisively.
He referred to her as a “coward,” suggesting she had left the chamber because she was “afraid” to dismiss Al-Rawi.
“The member for Arima will continue to pussyfoot around this issue because she’s afraid to act,” Hosein said.
The remarks prompted repeated objections from Opposition MPs, including Colm Imbert and Dr Nyan Gadsby-Dolly, who raised concerns about what they described as insulting language. However, those objections were overruled by the Deputy Speaker Dr Ayina Ali.
Imbert later rose on Standing Order 48(1), arguing the debate had drifted beyond the Opposition Leader’s conduct.
“Arima is so coward she cannot even accept the resignation of Senator John-Bates,” Hosein said, prompting further protests from the Opposition bench.
The motion, which sought adoption of a Special Report of the Public Administration and Appropriations Committee, examined allegations concerning John-Bates’ conduct during parliamentary proceedings.
The House heard that allegations were made that former health minister Terrence Deyalsingh attended meetings where decisions were allegedly influenced regarding payments to contractors and pharmaceutical suppliers.
Hosein said Deyalsingh was invited to provide evidence to the committee but appeared without documentation and was later asked to submit his evidence in writing, which he agreed to do.
However, Hosein said upon review of the submitted statement, “track changes” were discovered attributed to John-Bates and Al-Rawi.
He said John-Bates, who yesterday said she had offered her resignation to Beckles, made edits on March 23, after which Deyalsingh requested an extension to his deadline on March 24. Further amendments were reportedly made by Al-Rawi on April 7 and 8.
“This is why I am saying that he (Al-Rawi) threw Senator John-Bates under the bus. When we look at the data, Ms John-Bates made 37 edits over a period of 25 minutes. Senator Al-Rawi made about 175 changes to that document over a two-day period. So, you understand who is really the guilty mind in this. That is a young senator, but Senator Al-Rawi ought to have known better.”
Hosein said neither senator disclosed the edits during committee proceedings.
“If she didn’t get catch, you think she had integrity?”
Referring to the Special Report, he said John-Bates had questioned the scope of the investigation, despite having already made changes to Deyalsingh’s statement.
He added that between March 25 and mid-April committee sittings, including public hearings involving officials from the Ministry of Health, the Chemistry, Food and Drugs Division, NIPDEC and private sector representatives, the edited statement was not discovered until later.
Describing the conduct as premeditated, Hosein also accused John-Bates of interfering in questioning during a committee session involving Minister Jearlean John.
“You see shameless? That is shameless. Dog eat dey shame!”
He said Al-Rawi had effectively contributed to drafting parts of the witness statement, including references to media reports and issues relating to procurement and pharmaceutical payments.
Opposition MPs, including Gadsby-Dolly, continued to object during the proceedings, arguing that Beckles was being unfairly drawn into the debate.
The motion was ultimately amended to include a formal condemnation of both senators and to call on Beckles to advise the President to revoke their appointments. The amendment was seconded by Minister Dr Roodal Moonilal.
Opposition MP Camille Robinson-Regis, responding for the Opposition, condemned the tone of the debate and accused Government of double standards, prompting further objections from Government.
“If I may, we sat here and heard Barataria/San Juan talk about our leader. And, madam Deputy Speaker, I am responding in relation to their leader. And, madam Deputy Speaker, we also have Mayaro who is Mr False Papers. He didn’t get put out. We have Oropouche East, who is before the court,” she said.
“We will not have them impugn our leader. When she is ready to act, she will act. In addition to that, madame Deputy Speaker, all of them on that side have questions to answer. Every last one.”