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UNC calls on President to clear air on PSC nominees - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

The Opposition is calling on President Paula-Mae Weekes to 'clear the air' on three of the nominees put forward for the Police Service Commission (PSC), including whether or not one of them was a Bishop Anstey High School student.

A list of five nominees has been submitted and it is expected to be debated in the House of Representatives this Wednesday.

At its weekly Sunday press briefings held at its Charles Street office in Port of Spain, the Opposition through senator Wade Mark outlined its reasons for questioning three of the nominees.

It said that it needed clarification on criminologist Ian Kevin Ramdhanie, management consultant Maxine Attong and chartered accountant Maxine King. The other two nominated for the commission are attorney Rajiv Persad and retired high court judge Judith Jones.

Opposition leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar had also questioned the nomination of attorney Ernest Koylass, SC.

Mark said the Opposition observed that Weekes submitted the names of five nominees.

'Let me say from the outset that we in the UNC, main objective and focus is and will always be the public interest. We are here to protect the public interest.'

He added that some of the nominees may be 'very distinguished sons and daughters of the soil' and while the party did not have any personal grievances with anyone, its concerns were transparency, accountability and good governance.

He said the party wanted to ensure the public's interest is protected.

The party called on Weekes - who he said ought to have done proper due diligence - to clear the air on some of the concerns the party has about some of the nominees.

He said Ramdhanie works for a company called Caribbean Institute for Security and Public Safety. Mark said Ramdhanie is an employee of the company which is owned by Amalgamated Security Services Ltd.

He said Amalgamated provides security for TT in several areas including prisoner transportation and applying to the Police Commissioner to obtain licenses to import guns.

The institute's main shareholders and directors are John Aboud and Dr Michael Aboud and he added, 'because the company is in conflict with this particular responsibility through this employee that has now been nominated by her Excellency to sit on a Police Service Commission to select, recruit, recommend a Police Commissioner and a deputy Police Commissioner/s, that constitutes a potential conflict of interest,' he said.

He said those nominated by Weekes must be seen to be beyond reproach and so the party is asking Weekes to consider withdrawing this nomination and finding a new one.

Mark questioned whether Attong was the president of the Human Resource Management Association of Trinidad and Tobago (HRMATT). He said she was the president up to either 2018 or 2019. He said, 'She must let us know if she is still president of this body.'

A check of the organisation's Facebook page on October 27 shows that its current president is Cavelle Joseph-St Omer.

'We would also like her to clear the air on whether she has been using

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