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Clayton Greene vows to revive economy
Written by fp staff   
Thursday, 02 September 2010 16:04

New Progressive National Party Leader Clayton Greene has vowed to return his party to power and revive the country’s economy, which he said is not getting enough attention from the interim government.

At his first press conference Sept. 1 since being chosen Aug. 7, Green said that people should judge the PNP by its accomplishments between 2003 and 2007.

During that time, Greene said the PNP “presided over nearly $2 billion of inward investment, paved nearly 300 miles of roads, educated nearly 500 students at the tertiary level, under which the GDP grew from around $200 million to $750 million, and where the economy enjoyed 11 percent year on year growth.”

“This is the party that builds hospitals and national stadiums. This is a party with a positive record, which will achieve without financial assistance from anyone, including Britain,” he said.

“Clearly, also, this is a party which has made mistakes. There have been mistakes and errors of judgment which have impacted the lives of ordinary Turks and Caicos Islanders and have contributed to our present circumstances. I cannot hope to lead this party without first acknowledging our shortcomings.”
But Green said suspending the Constitution and government was unnecessary.

“The vast majority of Turks and Caicos Islanders believe that the suspension of the Constitution was an inappropriate response to the findings of the Commission of Inquiry,” he said.

Greene also he doesn’t believe the Special Investigation and Prosecution Team’s work will result in any criminal charges against former PNP government officials, calling the investigation a “gravy train” costing the country $500,000 a month.

“With every passing day, the fallout from the suspension of the Constitution is causing more and more hardship,” he said. “With each passing day, the failure of the present administration to be clear in its intentions is creating a social and political and economic uncertainty which is causing severe hardship to all those who have come to rely on this economy for their sustenance.”

“We’ve got an administration that does not seem to care,” Greene said.

While acknowledging that the downturn in the world economy has played a role in the country’s financial situation, Greene said the interim government hasn’t done anything to help the country’s economy. Instead, it is holding back development projects.

Green believes that  developers will wait until the local government is back in power because they don’t want to talk to transient officials.

Greene, who served as the speaker of the House of Assembly until the elected government was removed from power in August 2009, said he would actively grant concessions to attract developers to invest in the country again.

“The way we had been doing it was perhaps the best way,” Green said. “Certainly it gives the most immediate benefit. And that is to put together packages of concessions.

“This idea that the British administration currently harbours that there’s something inherently wrong with giving concessions is in my view ludicrous,” he said. “Every jurisdiction that is like ours, that is open, that has no natural resources, that depends on the first world, whose economy mirrors the first world has to act aggressively to attract foreign investment. If we don’t give it, we’re not going to get it.”

He also said the interim government is “deliberately marginalizing the public service and demoralizing those Turks and Caicos Islanders who have devoted their lives to the service of their country.” And he criticized the government for not doing enough to increase police presence on the street to prevent and solve crimes.

Greene, a lawyer, suggested it might be time to consider mandatory prison sentences for gun crimes and denial of bail for gun and violent crimes.

Between now and July 2011 when the next elections are scheduled, Greene said he would introduce his party leaders to the interim government and open a dialogue with U.K. members of Parliament and the Foreign and Commonwealth Office.

At the press conference, Greene also  announced his selection of businessman Albray Butterfield Jr. as deputy party leader.

“I accept this position with humility,” Butterfield said. “I intend to serve this party to the best of my ability, but more importantly serve the people of the Turks and Caicos Islands.”

Greene’s choice of Butterfield caused some grumbling within the party because Butterfield said last year that he could not support the elected government at the time and called for the takeover by the interim government. But Greene said he selected Butterfield because he had the courage to speak his mind, even if it was unpopular.

“In a free society every man has the right to speak his peace,” Greene said.

Butterfield said he wanted the British here “but for not a day longer than necessary. That day longer than necessary has come.”

 
Climate change group to publish “Green Paper”
Written by fp staff   
Thursday, 02 September 2010 11:59

The Turks and Caicos Islands new Climate Change Committee, appointed by the Advisory Council in April, will soon publish a Green Paper for consultation and embark on an awareness campaign.

“The Green Paper is intended to serve as a platform to facilitate consultations with stakeholders in the public and private sectors and civil society on the implications of climate change for the Turks and Caicos Islands,” said Jewel Batchasingh, deputy director of the Department of Environment and Coastal Resources, one of the bodies represented on the committee.

“It is hoped that this Green Paper will generate informed discussion about a viable climate change strategy for the Turks and Caicos Islands and ultimately lead to the development, adoption and implementation of such a strategy as a key pillar of national effort to achieve sustainable development,” Batchasingh said.

Small, low-lying coastal islands like the Turks and Caicos Islands are regarded as most vulnerable to global climate change and accompanying sea level rises. Options for responding to climate change risks should be discussed with all key stakeholders.

In addition, as part of efforts to strengthen private and public sector institutional capacities to respond to climate change, the Ministry of Environment and District Administration is collaborating with the Caribbean Community Climate Change Centre and the United Kingdom Department for International Development to develop a National Climate Change Adaptation Strategy and Action Plan and a Climate Change Public Educations and Outreach Strategy.
 

 
Earl barely misses TCI, Fiona will too
Written by fp staff   
Wednesday, 01 September 2010 11:29

Hurricane Earl’s heaviest winds and rain barely missed the Turks and Caicos Islands on Tuesday, and it looks like Fiona won’t come nearly as close as she passes on Thursday.

Read more...
 
PDM rejects Tourism Authority concept
Written by fp staff   
Friday, 27 August 2010 13:12

The recommendation to let a non-governmental Tourism Authority run the Turks and Caicos Islands’ tourism promotion is unnecessary and should be rejected, People’s Democratic Movement party leaders said Aug. 26.

Read more...
 
Foreign Office Minister to visit TCI on Sept. 19-21
Written by fp staff   
Thursday, 26 August 2010 12:24

New Foreign Office Minister Henry Bellingham will make his first visit to the Turks and Caicos Islands on Sept. 19-21, the governor has announced.

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Saunders questions governor’s economic plan
Written by fp staff   
Thursday, 26 August 2010 12:17

Digicel TCI’s CEO E. Jay Saunders, who recently ran unsuccessfully for leadership of the Progressive National Party, wrote the following open letter to His Excellency the Gov. Gordon Wetherell about his statements at an Aug. 19 meeting of the Providenciales Chamber of Commerce.

Read more...
 
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