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Jamaica: Transport and Works Minister resigns
The chairman of Jamaica’s ruling party has resigned from the Cabinet over allegations that his ministry has mismanaged a US$400 million road program financed by China.
Transport and Works Minister Mike Henry (pictured, left) announced his resignation in a late Tuesday statement, citing “ongoing attacks” on the management of the Jamaica Development Infrastructure Program (JDIP), a five-year initiative launched in 2010 with loans from China to upgrade rutted roadways.
Henry, who did not return calls on Wednesday, said he has nothing to hide and looks forward to the conclusion of an independent review ordered by Prime Minister Andrew Holness, who has assumed responsibility for the project.
Henry still holds considerable power as chairman of the Jamaica Labor Party, though the deputy chairman, Agriculture Minister Robert Montague, is challenging him in upcoming internal elections.
He is the second casualty of the controversy. Patrick Wong, the CEO of the National Works Agency, which is overseen by Henry’s ministry, resigned earlier this month after the auditor general issued a report raising concerns about the project, including the apparent use of US$1.2 million in road funds to renovate the agency’s with new air conditioning units and decorative tiles without the approval of the island’s contracts commission.
Jamaica’s contractor general, an anti-corruption agency, opened a separate probe Tuesday into what it described as “glaring irregularities” by the National Works Agency in purchasing US$720,000 worth of office furniture funds from another project aimed at upgrading a shoreline road leading to Kingston’s airport.
