Here we go again! The latest word on the report regarding the alleged Fidelity/Customs fraud is that the investigation is now finished and that, as of last Friday, the report has been completed and awaiting the scrutiny of the President. At least this is what another section of the media, the Kaieteur News says it has been told by the Acting Auditor General.
Mind you, more than a week ago and having failed to secure an update on the status of the report from the Acting Auditor General, a Stabroek News reporter was told by another source in the Auditor General’s Office that the report had in fact been completed some time earlier and that it simply remained for it to be sent to the Presidential Secretariat.
Both accounts, of course, cannot be true and while we cannot say which of the two is accurate, the evidence clearly suggests that one of the two was misleading. It is of course by no means uncommon for the ‘management’ of official information on sensitive issues (and this particular issue is both sensitive and potentially damaging to the government and the GRA) to be badly bungled when it is felt that revelation of the truth can be embarrassing and both the Office of the Auditor General and the Government of Guyana need to understand that the conflicting signals that are being sent regarding the status of the report can have the effect of giving rise to public suspicion about the content of the report which, of course, would be a pity.
One can perhaps understand the jitteriness of the Office of the Auditor General in responding to media enquiries about the report. Those jitters are clearly the result of their acute awareness of a prevailing media culture that prohibits public comment on sensitive issues even by the most senior public officials, placing responsibility for both the manner in which that information is communicated to the public in the hands of either the Head of the Presidential Secretariat or the President himself.
It would of course be wrong to prejudge the outcome of the investigation even though it is entirely reasonable to assume that the allegations of a conspiracy to deny the public treasury millions of dollars did not simply materialize out of thin air. Something clearly happened and we need to be told the truth about what happened and who the players in the drama were.
With President Jagdeo now out of the country on official duties it is difficult to say when the report will be brought to his attention and when, indeed, if, its contents will be made public. Certainly, however, given the fact that in the immediate aftermath of the alleged Fidelity/Customs fraud being made public the President had openly frowned on what he described as “scams” and shakedowns” inside Customs, one would expect that he would wish to deal with the report expeditiously.
Of course, it will not be enough for the public to be told who is guilty and who is innocent since whether we like it or not Guyanese have long become cynical of such cut and dried pronouncements that never really get to the heart of the matter. As we have argued in a previous editorial, except the full details of the investigation – including what, if anything, went on between Fidelity and the Customs, who were the functionaries involved, what organizational procedures and rules (if any) were broken and the processes that led to a determination of guilt or otherwise – are made public, it really would be better to say nothing at all since nothing short of a level of disclosure that allows the public to make up its own mind will be enough to staunch the inevitable groundswell of cynicism; and as we have also argued previously the government would have only itself to blame if in the absence of full disclosure its credibility on the issue of its commitment to fighting corruption is further eroded.
The other issue that we have raised previously – and which we consider important to raise again – is whether the investigation and what we understand to be the completed report will take account of the President’s promise of a wider investigation into the operations of Customs, which will allow for a probe of aspects of the operations of the Guyana Revenue Authority or whether that promise will simply disperse like chaff in the wind.
We now know – at least we think we do – that the report is now complete and awaiting the attention of the President. In the circumstances it would do everyone, including the government, a power of good if the President’s pronouncement on the report and its attendant full disclosure can be made with maximum alacrity; before Christmas would not be a bad idea.




Ahhhhhhhhhhhmmmm. Ya don’t honestly believe that dey gon reveal dis report when the major beneficiaries are PPP supporters.Y’all gon gat a long wait.Corruption continues unabated and unchecked in Animal Farm.
Dem gun release it, and den say dem “shocked, *shocked*, that gambling is going on in this establishment”.
I think this report coming out in time for my great grandchildren to read it. What’s with the snow?
The Government is so barefaced and corruption has so engulfed every nook and cranny in central and regional governments in this country that I think even the report from the AG office into the Polar Beer Scam will bear testimony to this fact.
Some of the seniors of Customs who have been interdicted are people with humongous amounts of money, real estate and SUV’s.
I have little hope that these people’s wealth have been checked-out and verified.
Some will say that they received financial handouts from US and Canadian relatives over the years which they invested.
These people are so shameless that they now have the latest models of SUV’s drinig around town as if to say to Bharrat “touch us and we gon holler and shout and point out them other big, big, big boys in the GRA/ Customs and the government who is also involved.”
One particular chap recently cleared a brand new Prado from the wharf and has it stashed in his garage- probably waiting for him to be set free by the AG Report.
This particular Prado man is believed to be closely linked to a shoe importer and was responsible for clearing the containers of shoes when they arrive in Guyana.
I’m just wondering if the investigators from the AG office followed such leads.
This country is dying. There is not a future here anymore. Only a Barack Obama can save Guyana.
My opinion is that the President has to go through the report in detail and make his notes.Then he will say to the Guyanese public that the amounts involved were not real CASH.He will then ask the bright,bright fella at the Ministry of Finance who has an ACCA,MBA and a Phd to explain this to all the financially illiterate Guyanese.
Amazing that in a country where no-body can keep a secret that reports such as this are not leaked to the media.
Then again nothing in the report would tell people what they don’t already know. So why bother?
yall humble GT is shake-down (gun)town.
And yes the children are watching and learning……
Yall see how quick the FBI napped the Gov. of Illinois? Not that corruption ain’t deh hay but darn if only once we can get the perp to go through due process in Guyana.
“Just Once”
Oh…finally the white washed report is completed or should I say “INCOMPLETE” LMAO
It’s totally white washed and only the small guy paid for the big wigs wrong doing.
Did you guys really expect any different!!!
Great article. I found some more information here