Senior Reporter
dareece.polo@guardian.co.tt
The People’s National Movement (PNM) has no plans to make its financial statements public despite the ongoing police investigation into how its Balisier House headquarters in Port-of-Spain was funded, party chairman Marvin Gonzales has said.
Responding to suggestions that the party should release its financial records in the interest of transparency, Gonzales argued that the matter falls within the party’s internal governance.
“The party’s financials is a matter for the membership through the General Council in accordance with its constitution. No one will impose values on the PNM that they don’t live by and that includes the UNC,” he said.
Gonzales also defended the party’s financial reporting, explaining that statements were not presented to the General Council for several months after former treasurer Nal Ramsingh resigned in March.
He said the matter was resolved with the appointment of San Juan/Barataria Coordinator Robert Le Hunte as treasurer effective June 1.
“Upon his appointment, Mr Robert Le Hunte at our last General Council meeting presented a comprehensive financial report to the General Council. And we expect, moving forward, the issue of the presentation of financials will always be on the agenda now that we have in place a treasurer,” Gonzales said.
Gonzales said the PNM has still not been served with any court order relating to the investigation but is prepared to respond once it receives the documents.
He also questioned how details of the investigation became public before the party was formally notified.
“I am very concerned that this matter found its way in the public domain before the party was served. And we have to ask ourselves, what is the political agenda behind all of this? Who had access to that order? Who had access to the application? And why was it disclosed to the media before the party had sight of any order that affected it?” Gonzales said.
He added: “It is very clear that this whole thing is tainted by politics and dictated by politics. We will all be fools to believe otherwise.”
Gonzales said the party’s legal team would address its concerns over the investigation “at the appropriate time and in the appropriate forum.”
However, the police officer leading the investigation rejected suggestions that the inquiry has been influenced by politics.
Acting Assistant Commissioner of Police Ramdath Phillip, who heads both the Trinidad and Tobago Police Service’s Legal Department and the investigation, told Guardian Media he was unaware of any attempt to interfere with the probe.
Phillip also dismissed concerns that details of the investigation entered the public domain before the PNM was formally served with court documents.
According to Phillip, the TTPS has seven days from the date the court order was granted to serve the PNM. The order was granted on Friday.
He said attorneys representing the State had already contacted the PNM and were arranging to serve the documents.
Asked who initiated the investigation, where the complaint originated, and whether the inquiry could be expanded to include other political parties, Phillip declined to comment, saying he could not address those issues at this stage.
