Thursday, 28 August 2014

Land for Ex-Caroni Workers



Story Updated: Aug 26, 2014 at 9:59 PM ECT
link : http://www.trinidadexpress.com/videos/Land-for-Ex-Caroni-Workers--2254---272812931.html

One thousand ex-Caroni workers will get lands promised to them in what has been a lengthy and tedious process. But it is far from over, as Ministry of Housing and the Environment Minister Dr. Roodal Moonilal says, more funds are needed for the land development and therefore, the wait will continue for thousands of other workers.

Tuesday, 15 July 2014

Ex-Caroni workers waiting


http://www.trinidadexpress.com/letters/Ex-Caroni-workers-waiting-267264031.html

 There is a television advertisement, being aired regularly, showing ex-Caroni workers smiling as they tell of their no-strings-attached ownership of promised Caroni lands.
What is not being shown is the number of disgruntled workers, very unhappy and angry at not being given their just due. After over four years in power, the People’s Partnership Government has been unable to disburse the promised lands in a timely manner except to a selected few.
The first heady years in power found a new Government rampaging through the political tulips with no regard for fixing promises made by the outgoing People’s National Movement (PNM). The PNM had been regularly blasted about the unfair, ruinous closing of the Caroni sugar estates, the destruction of workers’ lives, the abandonment by the government.
Fast forward to 2014 and many of the very same ex-Caroni workers are still waiting to be compensated, as was pro­mised on the hustings of 2010.
In the main, Caroni workers were the backbone of the Partnership party. It is a painful reality being faced that they have been abandoned after they have willingly given their votes. It is an embarrassment of significant proportions to be now forming a protest march against their own Government.
Lynette Joseph
via e-mail

Monday, 14 July 2014

Ex Caroni workers to march in Port-of-Spain

From : http://www.newsday.co.tt/news/0,197591.html
By LAUREL V WILLIAMS Monday, July 14 2014
HUNDREDS of ex-Caroni (1975) Limited workers are expected to march into Port-of-Spain on Friday following which they intend to deliver a letter to Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar demanding that she address outstanding issues relating to the closure of the company.
President of the Sugar Boilers Association (SBA) and co-ordinator of the Ex-Caroni Workers Association, Rakeeb Mohammed, told Newsday that upon delivering the letter, they are giving her 10 days to respond.

Failure to respond, he added, would result in daily protest action in Port-of-Spain. “We are expecting more than 1,000 people to attend on Friday from 10 am at the Queen’s Park Savannah. We will be walking from the Savannah to the Diplomatic Centre to deliver the letter. We are giving her a 10-day deadline to respond to us. If no response, after that, we will intensify our protests on a daily basis in Port-of-Spain,” Mohammed explained.

The Diplomatic Centre located at La Fantasie Road at St Ann’s is on the same compound of the Prime Minister’s official residence. The march is a collaboration among members of the SBA, the Ex Caroni Workers Association and the All Trinidad General Workers Trade Union (ATGWTU). Mohammed noted that the letter outlines the outstanding issues for the past 11 years of the now defunct Caroni (1975) Limited in which a promised package to workers has not been completed.

He noted that as part of the Voluntary Separation Employment Programme (VSEP) package, Caroni workers were each promised a two acre plot of agriculture land plus a residential lot. “We are demanding that the Prime Minister take immediate action.

Up to today only about 1,900 people received residential plots and about 2,300 received the agricultural plots. They received these leases but with no infrastructural work in place for the agriculture,” Mohammed charged.

He further charged that most of the residential plots given had no supply of electricity, water and sewer. Mohammed explained that the ex-Caroni workers are getting ‘real trouble’ accessing water and electricity. In addition, some recipients of agricultural leases three years ago still do not know where the plots are.

“In 2007/8, a High Court judgement noted that the government of the day should give each Caroni worker a residential plot with all infrastructural works plus a two acre agricultural plot with all infrastructural work,” Mohammed said. This ruling, Mohammed recalled, was appealed by the then ruling Peoples’ National Movement (PNM) government. Mohammed added: “But when the People’s Partnership government took office in 2010, the Prime Minister withdrew that appeal and promised that within 30 days the ex Caroni workers would have been relieved. More than four years have passed and not even 20 percent of the ex-Caroni workers have received their land.” More than 5,000 ex Caroni workers are affected, Mohammed said adding that Government failed to give them the second part of the package.