Wednesday 27 March 2013

Kuwaiti Fund lifts suspension imposed on Grenada


A senior Government Minister has announced that the Keith Mitchell administration was able to get a suspension of funds lifted by a major funding agency on Grenada.

Works Minister, Gregory Bowen, last week Thursday announced that the Kuwaiti Fund has agreed to lift a suspension imposed on Grenada since February 2012 after Grenada failed to make payments on
outstanding loan agreements.

Bowen said on coming into office, one of his first orders of business was to get an update on the status of the negotiations between the Kuwaiti Fund, whose funds are mainly used for road construction in Grenada.

He said that Grenada was faced with two dilemmas. “The realisation that there was a suspension on the release of funds and the image that was being painted by a company which was owed millions,” he said.

Technocrats and negotiators in the Ministry were able to negotiate a new deal within the last two weeks and that paves the way for work to begin next month.

Highlighting aspects of the agreement, Bowen said that the new agreement includes the payment of EC$1 million to the Fund this week, approval of a payment schedule to cover 11 million dollars in arrears, and the resumption of a three million dollar payment every six months.

“A condition of the agreement also involves Grenada paying monies owed to Caribbean Consolidated Contractors (CCC) Limited on a schedule of half a million dollars a month,” he said.

Bowen gave the assurance that Grenada will continue to make payments to the fund under the new arrangement.

This is welcome news for the approximately four hundred workers who lost their jobs after CCC pulled out of Grenada in 2009 after the Tillman Thomas administration opted to have Phase One of the project conclude and Phase Two returned to the bidding table.

Following international practice and standards four, companies submitted proposals for the project and it was again awarded to the CCC.

Bowen says CCC workers will be on the ground in significant numbers by next month as the project resumes in earnest with the construction of farm roads in various rural communities and villages. (LS)

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