0

TOUGH CALL: Where’s the will to hold authorities to account?

By LARRY SMITH

THERE is a simmering public anger these days about the evident impunity of the Bahamian political elite and their friends, families and lovers. You can sense it all around. It feels mushy on the ground. And you can smell it hanging in the air.

By impunity, we mean the exemption from punishment for acts that undermine the ethical foundations of our society, or that misuse public goods for private gain. The kind of bad role modelling our leaders are so fond of, and which many believe contributes to the rising crime rate.

Bahamians are no better or worse at this universal pastime than other nationalities, we hasten to add. But the difference lies in the fact that we seem to have no will whatsoever to impose consequences on our elites when they abuse power or engage in corrupt activities.

In America over the last two decades, more than 20,000 public officials and private individuals have been convicted of corruption crimes. And a few years ago, British parliamentarians who ripped off public money by claiming false expenses had to resign, and several were jailed.

Long-serving German Chancellor Helmut Kohl was disgraced over secret campaign donations. In 2011, French president Jacques Chirac was convicted of embezzling public funds, and the following year former Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi was convicted of tax fraud. Their exalted positions did not save them from disrepute.

In The Bahamas, only one minor case has ever been brought under the Prevention of Bribery Act - that of MP Wilbert Moss in 1989. Prior to that, there was the 1984 Commission of Inquiry into drug trafficking, when international pressure led to the resignation of a few law enforcement officers and politicians, the prosecution of some small fry for perjury and firing of a magistrate for collusion. Those at the top, however, continued in power for years afterwards.

In 2014, we heard from US judicial sources about a so-far unnamed Bahamian official who received hundreds of thousands of dollars during the last Ingraham administration to ensure that a multi-million-dollar BEC contract went to a particular bidder. The Attorney General says the matter is still under investigation.

The common or garden variety corruption and cronyism that regularly occurs here barely raises the eyebrows of most people. The more important point is that the political class don’t have to worry about being destroyed, humiliated or ostracised for their unsavoury activities.

That’s because no serious investigations are likely to be launched into such activities, and it’s a safe bet that there wouldn’t be any serious consequences if investigations were to be launched.

Perhaps the best example - the scandal to end all scandals some say - is the implosion of the Bank of the Bahamas, which is owned 65 per cent by the government as well as by more than 3,000 private shareholders. The bank blames its problems with “troubled loans” on the 2008 financial crisis. And the government recently transferred $100m in bad loans to a special purpose vehicle called Bahamas Resolve, which is supposed to be sorting them out under the direction of former Central Bank governor James Smith.

According to BoB’s 2014 annual report, “This transaction allowed the bank to become compliant with key ratios for both Central Bank of The Bahamas and international standards for capital requirements” - meaning they weren’t compliant before.

In late 2013, the Punch published an extensive list of bad loans reportedly made by BoB to politicians and their cronies. Former managing director Paul McWeeney threatened to sue the newspaper, but nothing has been filed, and McWeeney was gracefully retired months later. But at the time, he complained about “breach of confidentiality” and said he had reported his concerns to the police and the Data Protection Commissioner. The bank insisted it operated according to “well-regulated banking practices and standards” and denied any political involvement in the granting of loans.

However, a 2012 letter from Governor Wendy Craig disclosed that Central Bank inspectors had found “that a large measure of the basic tenets of industry sound credit practices are either missing, not evident, or compromised” within BoB.

The response from the government was to have the police search the home of FNM chairman Darron Cash and seize his computers to investigate an alleged leak of files. At the time, Cash’s wife worked in the bank’s human resources department. She was later fired in what her husband said was an “unjustified and politically motivated witch hunt and scapegoating exercise”.

Bank of the Bahamas lost $3.5m in 2013. Hundreds of millions of dollars were given in unsecured loans and multi-million dollar overdrafts to politicians and their cronies. And in 2013 the bank reported almost $70m in losses. This translated into a 50 per cent cut in shareholder value, and it was clear that the bank was headed towards insolvency.

So late last year, $200m of National Insurance Board funds were moved from Commonwealth Bank and deposited in BoB to help prop it up. And the $30m that NIB had invested in BoB to buy 15 per cent of its shares is now worth much less. This is the pension money of ordinary Bahamians that we are talking about.

Ultimately, the Ministry of Finance is responsible for overseeing BoB. From 2007 to 2012, the Minister of Finance was Hubert Ingraham. Since then, Prime Minister Perry Christie has held the finance portfolio. And last year Christie misled the public by declaring that Bank of The Bahamas was “sound and strong”.

Lately, more information about loans to political cronies has been disclosed. This has included the news that PLP MP Leslie Miller (who can’t even pay his electricity bills) was able to borrow $22m, and Christie’s friend Edward Penn was given a Crown land grant for a paltry sum which he immediately translated into a $7m loan from BoB. No doubt, there is more to come.

Meanwhile, the opposition FNM has been unusually quiet as this scandal has unfolded over many months. A request for a select committee to investigate the bank has been put on the House of Assembly order paper, but it has yet to be moved. A select committee could establish rules to deal with the vexing issues of malfeasance without destroying the bank, observers say.

The Post Office Savings Bank is another disaster. Constituted as a “thrift bank” for small savers, the Auditor-General recently revealed an amazing level of fraud at the POSB due to “significant internal control weaknesses”. Even though by law account balances and credit advances are not to exceed $6,000, some account holders were able to withdraw hundreds of thousands over an extended period.

Of course, these account holders have not been not identified, but the Ministry of Transport says it has asked the police to investigate. That was over a month ago and there has been no fallout yet from this gigantic rip-off.

It appears to most reasonable observers that there are no effective controls to prevent financial misdealing in any part of the public sector. And neither the governing party nor the opposition appears to be unduly concerned about these political scams. They are certainly not making a serious effort to control them.

The BoB revelations have provided much fodder for folks on social media (where most Bahamians get their news these days), and this has resulted in an apparent campaign of intimidation by pro-government spokespeople.

As an example, one poster on Facebook had the temerity to repeat information about Edward Penn’s Crown Land grant and subsequent BoB loan that was already in the public domain. He was faced with an immediate threat from Sharmie Farrington-Austin, who besides being his “friend” is also the Data Protection Commissioner.

“I would be very careful in disseminating private personal financial information derived from private business financial transaction ... be sure you can pass the public interest test ... especially since you are not the media,” she scolded. “Persons can save themselves a lot of time and read the laws of this land, because I don’t fear doing my job.”

Just for the record, the Data Protection Commissioner is not the official internet censor. The Data Protection Act controls how personal information is used by organisations, businesses or the government. It is not a means to stifle public debate or to censor political opinions on social media.

Personal data refers to names, addresses, contact information, employment history, medical conditions, convictions, credit history and the like. The law applies to the people who process this type of data in organisations, businesses or the government. There is a difference between official information and personal data.

So now we have the Data Protection Commissioner - a minor public servant - trolling Facebook to threaten folks who dare to talk about the shenanigans that our political elites and cronies get up to. What’s next - an extension of Fox Hill Prison for Facebook criminals?

Closely related to the impunity of our political elites and cronies is the way in which our laws are often flouted by the government when it comes to development proposals. Blackbeard’s Cay (formerly Balmoral Island) is a prime example. It was being developed as a “dolphin encounter” attraction when the environmental group, reEarth, filed for judicial review, arguing that the government had breached the Marine Mammals Protection Act as well as the Planning and Subdivisions Act.

The Supreme Court ruled in favour of reEarth in July 2014, ordering that the development be closed, the dolphins removed and the land returned to its legally permitted use and condition. To date, this has not happened. In fact, Blackbeard’s Cay continues to operate and market itself to cruise passengers.

As lawyer Leandra Esfakis put it: “When the prime minister and his minister of agriculture decided to issue approvals to Blackbeard’s Cay without observing the legal process, they broke the laws ... for reasons best known to themselves. The Supreme Court quashed those approvals, which means they are not in effect. The government did not do right in the first place, when it broke the law. It is not doing right in the second place, by ignoring the court’s order. This amounts to contempt of court.”

So let’s ask ourselves, Esfakis continued, if our government cared about liability to the Bahamian people, why did it allow BoB (the Broke Bank of the Bahamas) to mismanage $100m of the people’s money? Why has it put $200m more of the people’s NIB money into a bank rocked by corruption? Does the government care about good governance?

Impunity is promoted by our inability to hold political leaders - of all colours - accountable for their actions. The solution is to step up, speak up, and vote them out. If we do not do this, we will experience an endless slide towards the abyss.

• What do you think? Send comments to lsmith@tribunemedia.net or visit www.bahamapundit.com.

Comments

birdiestrachan 8 years, 6 months ago

BOB is not the only bank in the Bahamas or world wide that has bad loans. what would you prefer to close down the bank. ,Now that would have really been something to add to the Black Book that is kept for the PLP Government. The US Government bailed out banks and car companies. You lose your creditability when you choose to mention certain names knowing full well that the amount of monies owed must be owed by many others. I do believe that persons who owe the banks should be made to pay what they owe.

0

asiseeit 8 years, 6 months ago

Birdie is so busy defending the PLP she can not be objective or truthful. This type of one way street thinking is exactly what has brought the Bahamas to where we are, one step away from anarchy and a failed state. The corruption in this country is rife and most politicians see corruption as an entitlement, just as our P.M. or that clown Bodie, they believe they are entitled to suck off the public treasury's teat. Banker is correct, this country will implode before we see real progress and change to this unsustainable practice. I am looking forward to the watching cut hip these politicians will get when this does happen.

2

GrassRoot 8 years, 6 months ago

one day someone will go to jail over this, it may be Gibson as he responsible of the NIB investments, or a minister of finance. It may take twelve years like the BEC bribery case, but it will happen.

0

banker 8 years, 6 months ago

When all of the governmental and societal institutions are political sinecures, everything is corrupt -- the police, the cabinet ministers, the prime minister. It is like a secret club at the top, and they all wink at each others discretion. There is no one willing to take on the criminals at the top, because they have all of the power.

As I see it, the only solution to destroying these bastions of corrupt power, is total implosion of the country, and re-building according to true democratic lines.

It is proven time after time, that Bahamians are incapable of morally or ethically governing themselves. The slave mentality inculcated by the Pindling junta has been indelibly woven into the fabric of Bahamian society and governance. That fabric must be unraveled to its very core to conquer the corruption in the political class in the Bahamas.

The guns in the street are the bellwether and the thin edge of the wedge. The path that we are on, is to failed state and the anarchy that comes with it.

The big question for patriots who attempt to fix this problem, is how to gainfully employ a massive cadre of economically unproductive people with no utilisable skills for employers to use.

As a result, the descent into chaos is inevitable. The ruling kleptocrats are reminiscent of the fading Roman empire where they created the Coliseum and gladiator amusements to satisfy the rabble. We have had our stadium (built with Chinese money) and our Carnival and the turkeys and hams at voting time (not to mention the free booze parties by the PLP in Elizabeth). However these stopgap measures to keep the rabble quiet will ultimately fail, and the consequences are horrific for the country that we once knew.

1

jus2cents 8 years, 6 months ago

IF they were smart (& they're not) They'd start reforming Fox Hell Jail so it's not so 'uncomfortable' when they become inmates.

0

Wideawake 8 years, 6 months ago

For our system of government to work we need an active and vocal opposition to hold the government's feet to the fire and demand accountability. What would Milo Butler, Cecil Wallace Whitfield, and Hubert Ingraham have to say, if they sat in the HOA as members of the Opposition? How would they be more effective than our present Opposition? In what ways would they highlight the mistakes and transgressions of our present government and how would they capitalize on these to force the government to clean-up their act??

2

Well_mudda_take_sic 8 years, 6 months ago

An excellent article on a most important subject.

0

Sign in to comment