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At a press conference at the Office of the President yesterday afternoon, the President said Douglas’ death was “unfortunate” and said he intends to meet with the young man’s relatives.
“I got news when I was abroad … about the sad situation, the unfortunate incident where some young students were shot by the police, and, as I said before, it is unfortunate, it is sad. It’s a regrettable situation. I was briefed that the Prime Minister made contact with the relatives, or tried to make contact…Some did not respond well to that. I can understand that because maybe of the grief.
Noting that the police have “outlined a course of action”, the President said that by this weekend or early next week the investigation should be completed and would be made public.
“I suspect that after that, the report will be sent to the office of the Director of Public Prosecutions and … that they will outline a course of action whether (there’s) an inquest or whether charges are to be laid…,” the President said.
“I would be following up further on this matter to see that there is a transparent, public process of the issue and that whatever action is necessary is taken,” President Jagdeo said.
Douglas and four friends who had just finished playing basketball were in a car travelling along Sheriff Street at about 9:30 hrs Saturday last when Police opened fire on them. Douglas was shot dead and Ronson Grey was shot in the jaw. He is a patient at the Georgetown Hospital and his condition is said to be serious. O’Neil King who was also in the car, was shot in the hand. The other youths in the car were Randolph Goodluck and Quacy Heywood.
PRESIDENT Bharrat Jagdeo has extended sympathy to the family of University of Guyana architecture student Yohance Douglas, 18, who was shot dead by Police last Saturday at the corners of Sheriff and Bonasika Streets, Campbellville.
Addressing the media at a press conference yesterday at the Presidential Secretariat, President Bharrat Jagdeo said management of the Guyana Power and Light (GPL) has “failed totally, and any solution would have to see them leaving the company.” The CDC, he said, cannot absolve itself from blame since that company “chose the managers”.
President Bharrat Jagdeo noted the “contentious issues” that must be dealt with and said he is to become more involved in the GPL matter in the coming days.
Alluding to the company’s “big dilemma” - high rates yet falling short of the company’s liabilities - the President said government has to make tough decisions.
Earlier this year, the GPL was barred from increasing tariffs by a Court injunction. It has since claimed that it is cash-strapped and has closed the Kingston Steam Plant. Prolonged blackouts have resumed and these have been attributed to problems in the system.
“I’m very concerned about the blackouts… There are some very contentious issues that we have to deal with. Although the rates are so high - I understand the hardships that they have brought to people -collections are still less than the liabilities of the company, that is, to buy fuel and to pay staff and to buy other things to run the company. That is a big dilemma because if your revenue can’t cover your costs, your services would suffer, and that’s what we’re seeing now. But we have to find a way of solving this and I am going to get much more involved in it over the next few days. We have to find an outcome that would make sure we don’t have more blackouts, and an outcome that would eventually see some efficiency being done in this company.
“But the thing is the current management has failed totally, absolutely and any solution would have to see their replacement. Any solution to this matter would have to see them leaving the company,” the President reiterated.
He acknowledged though, that if the current tariffs cannot cover the GPL’s liabilities, then, in the short-term, there must be an increase in tariffs
“Any new arrangement will have to do a number of things: if it has a temporary increase in tariffs, it must have a potential for reducing the tariff once the fuel rate comes down, because the fuel would have added tremendously to the increase. But there must be enough capital to deal with the line loss and also the commercial loss,” he said.
The President added that the current management did not deal effectively with the line losses and the commercial losses.
“So what you have effectively is that 55 per cent of the customer base paying for all the electricity that is generated, while 45 per cent is lost either through theft, or through the line,” he noted, adding that there must be enough capital to aggressively grapple with line losses and theft in order to collect more revenue without having to increase tariff.
Government privatised the Guyana Electricity Corporation on October 1, 1999. Under the 50-50 partnership agreement with American and Caribbean Power (AC Power), provision was made to deliver a more effective and efficient service to consumers. AC Power had agreed to inject some US$23.45M into the utility company in five tranches, and it has so far handed over most of it. The remaining US$3.5M should have been paid up on October 1, last year.