ELIZABETH GONZALES
Tobago Correspondent
Tobago House of Assembly Minority Leader Kelvon Morris has called on Tourism Secretary Tashia Burris to “resign from her position in disgrace,” after accusing her of falsely claiming she submitted information regarding the private promoter involved in the $9.3 million Tobago Rhythm & Soul Festival.
During last Thursday’s plenary sitting, Burris said the festival operates as a public-private partnership but claimed she did not have the promoter’s name at hand. She assured the Minority Council that the information would be provided by the next sitting.
In a release issued yesterday morning, the Division of Tourism claimed that Burris had submitted the name within an hour of the plenary sitting via her office.
However, Morris said yesterday, during a news conference, that no such record exists.
“She would have blatantly lied to Tobago, and if this is found to be true, then the Secretary has no other choice but to hang her head in disgrace and do the honourable thing by parting ways with the office.”
Morris said, “She is saying that the statement by the media was fake and giving the impression as though she complied and gave a response when today, 72 hours later the clerk nor the minority leader have any record of this information being supplied.”
In a release before Morris’s news conference, the Division of Tourism criticised a report by Guardian Media Limited, which reported that Burris failed to disclose the promoter’s name. The Division described the report as misleading, claiming that the Secretary had responded to all questions on the order paper promptly and in line with proper procedures.
The Tobago Festivals Commission Limited also labelled the new reports as “inaccurate.”
The commission in a separate release minutes before said, “The promoter’s involvement is to arrange and secure the artiste (Buju Banton), who will be compensated for his performance.”
Even with that, Morris questioned why hadn’t the division and commission used the opportunity to make the name public in the releases.
He also questioned why the promoter’s identity remains a secret, saying, “You are giving $9 million to someone and don’t want to tell Tobagonians who this person is. Where is the transparency they promised?” He also demanded clarity on the roles of the Tobago Festivals Commission, the private promoter, and the THA in the festival’s organisation.
Morris accused the secretary of falsifying information and breaching her oath of office.
“She would have blatantly lied to Tobago and if this is found to be true then the Secretary has no other choice than to hang her head in disgrace do the honourable thing and part way with the office of the secretary.”
Morris questioned, what he called, the secrecy behind the private promoter. He accused Burris of “dodge, hide and weave” to make the promoter’s name public.
“But you are giving $9 million to someone and you don’t want to tell Tobagonians who this person is. What is there in this individual to hide? Why are they so ashamed to reveal the identity of this individual? Where is the transparency they promised?”