Incoming Cayman Islands governor defends British takeover of Turks and Caicos
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| Published on Monday, September 28, 2009 |
Email To Friend Print Version | BRIDGETOWN, Barbados -- The incoming governor of the Cayman Islands, Duncan Taylor, has said that Britain’s move partially to suspend the constitution of the Turks and Caicos Islands (TCI) and assume full administrative control is not a backward step, the Caribbean Media Corporation (CMC) has reported.
Taylor will take up his position as the new governor of the Cayman Islands in January 2010. He was until recently the British High Commissioner for Barbados and the Eastern Caribbean, a position he held from 2005.
Taylor rejected the notion that the decision to set aside the elected government in the TCI amounts to modern day colonialism, CMC said.
“I don’t think it is necessarily a backward step. I think the circumstances which had developed in the Turks and Caicos were truly exceptional, and once the Turks and Caicos remains a British Overseas Territory, in extreme circumstances, the power of the British government to take control still exists,” he told CMC in an interview.
Local government in the TCI was suspended by Britain in August following a long-running wrangle over alleged corruption.
A probe was launched in July 2008 into allegations of corruption in land sales, distribution of government contracts and development deals, the granting of voting rights and misuse of public funds.
In March, Turks and Caicos Prime Minister Michael Misick resigned after an investigation pointed to a "high probability of systemic corruption or other serious dishonesty" among the ruling elite.
At the time, Misick railed against London's plans to strip the TCI of its independence, saying: "This is tantamount to being re-colonised. It is a backwards step completely contrary to the whole movement of history."
Chris Bryant, Foreign Office minister responsible for the Overseas Territories, said that suspending local government in the TCI was only decided upon after all other options failed.
Taylor expressed doubt that a similar situation could emerge in the Cayman Islands, as he prepares for his new posting.
“I hope it won’t come to that in the Cayman Islands and I would be very surprised if it did but the nature of the relationship with the British Overseas Territories is that they are still British overseas territories and that is the constitutional positions,” he told CMC.
Taylor also responded to critics of the UK government who claim it has no moral authority to tell others how to operate, given recent scandals that have emerged within its own ranks such as the recent expenses scandal.
“I think we are dealing very vigorously with the expenses scandal. There has been some pretty tough action taken already against a small number actually of the worst miscreants in the expenses scandal and a major review of the way parliamentary expenses are operated in Westminster,” Taylor told CMC.
He added: “I think that the leaders of all the parties in the parliament of Westminster have committed themselves to very tough action to ensure that a system is put in place that is more transparent and accountable and to ensure that some of the difficulties which arose and which were made public over this summer don’t recur.” | | | | Reads : 1535 | | | |
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