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David Granger

May 22 2019

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President David Granger Wednesday morning said he has started the process to ensure that all of his documents are submitted to the Integrity Commission even as he assured that the Guyana government takes seriously the role of that Commission.

“I am in touch with the Integrity Commission. I have written to them. I have not submitted all of my declarations… They [the documents] are taking some time, but I am in touch with them and the Commission has heard from me. I’ve had some challenges over that period of time, but I’m actually working on it and the Commission is aware of my interest in ensuring that they are submitted as quickly as possible,” the President said in response to questions posed by the media at the conclusion of the accreditation ceremony for the new Filipino Ambassador to Guyana.

The Head of State said too that it is Cabinet’s policy for all Ministers of the Government to comply with the requests of the Integrity Commission.

“As far as the Cabinet is concerned the general opinion or general rule is that we should all comply. So, it’s just a matter of time. Some of the details I think, may have taken some Members time, but I cannot say if all of them are compliant… but that is the policy of the Cabinet, that every Minister should comply,” he stated.

Meanwhile, in expressing shock at the President’s failure to file his declaration with the Integrity Commission, opposition People’s Progressive Party (PPP) parliamentarian Juan Edghill called on the Guyanese leader to make public his assets and liabilities.

PPPC Shadow Public Infrastructure Minister, Juan Edghill

“Is President Granger aware that every gift that he receives, valued more than US$50, needs to be declared?  Is he in possession of an itemized list of all gifts that he has received since assuming office as Head of State?

“Maybe, a goodwill gesture to win the trust and regain the confidence of all Guyanese is for President Granger to not only file with the Integrity Commission, but to also make his declarations public,” Edghill said in a letter to the media.

Edghill described the President’s failure so far to file as a broken promise. “This is the height of hypocrisy and it is the clearest manifestation of duplicity. It is a betrayal of the promised transparency and accountability and it is yet the clearest revelation of how hollow and insincere he and his Administration have been, as it relates to keeping their word,” Edghill stated.

Edghill said the President should have since June 2015 filed his declaration to the Integrity Commission explaining the source of the resources for his house at Pearl, East Bank Demerara. “We are now, in 2019 and he is still not compliant,” the opposition politician said.

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Shocking that President has not filed declarations with Integrity Commission

May 23 2019

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Dear Editor,  

I am shocked, maybe I should say appalled, and my ‘jaw dropped’ when I read the Ministry of the Presidency’s release, dated May 22, 2019, that President David Granger is not compliant with the Integrity Com-mission Act and has not fulfilled his obligations in filing his declarations.

 This is the height of hypocrisy and it is the clearest manifestation of duplicity. It is a betrayal of the promised transparency and accountability and it is yet the clearest revelation of how hollow and insincere he and his Administration have been, as it relates to keeping their word.  

Mr. President, please remember your word is your bond. Let your ‘yea’ be ‘yea’ and your ‘nay’ be ‘nay’. 

What Guyanese have seen in the past four years is the APNU+AFC Coalition Government: disbanding the Integrity Commission Secretariat; taking actions to evict the Integrity Commission from its home in a building adjacent to State House; taking possession of the records of those who dutifully filed since the passage of the Integrity Commission Act; non-support for the motion tabled in the National Assembly by the PPP/C for declarations to the Integrity Commission to be made public; and a lack of leadership in ensuring that Coalition Government Ministers and other politically appointed public officials fulfill their statutory duty by filing their declarations with the Integrity Commission.

To be told today that the President “will file” is insulting to every law abiding citizen of this country.

Editor, it must also be noted that it was only after pressure from the Parliamentary Opposition for the establishment of the Integrity Com-mission and Parliamentary pressure, during the consideration of national budgets, that it was put in place.

In addition to the fact that President Granger has not complied with the law, the primary consideration in the minds of Guyanese is whether, when he does file, the declarations will accurately reflect his assets and liabilities.  One also wonders, if this failure is a carryover from the days when President Granger sat in the National Assembly as Leader of the Opposition and did nothing to ensure his team also complied with the law.  

Is President Granger aware that every gift that he receives, valued more than US$50, needs to be declared?  Is he in possession of an itemized list of all gifts that he has received since assuming office as Head of State?  

Maybe, a goodwill gesture to win the trust and regain the confidence of all Guyanese is for President Granger to not only file with the Integrity Commission, but to also make his declarations public.

Yours faithfully,

Bishop Juan Edghill,

People’s Progressive Party/

Civic (PPP/C) Parliamentarian

 
Django

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