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| Governor General Sir Cuthbert
Sebastian delivers the Throne Speech |
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Leader of the Opposition
in the federal parliament Hon. Mark Brantley says
he is "appalled and dismayed" by the content
of the Throne Speech delivered by Governor General
Sir Cuthbert Sebastian during Wednesday's opening
of parliament.
The Concerned Citizens Movement parliamentarian said
that the speech which outlined the programs, plans
and policies of the federal government for the next
five years, did not indicate "any interest whatsoever"
in doing anything on the island of Nevis.
"I found the Throne Speech remarkable; remarkable
not for what it said, but remarkable for what it did
not say. I thought today that it was appalling that
a Throne Speech was delivered and there was not a
single program, not a single plan, not a single position
adopted which could say to the people of Nevis that
the federal government was going to do something in
the island of Nevis," he lamented.
Brantley said it struck him as an "extraordinary
development" that a government now comprised
of both Kittitian and Nevisian representatives would
not be more inclusive. He questioned the role of the
Nevis Reformation Party's Hon. Patrice Nisbett in
the federal body. Nisbett was appointed to the Douglas-led
Cabinet as Attorney General and Minister of Justice
and Legal Affairs following the St. Kitts-Nevis Labour
Party's victory at the January 25th general elections.
"We heard about police stations, we heard about
agricultural farms, a new reform home for boys, infrastructural
development, various government injections to get
the economy going and an additional cruise pier at
Port Zante. We heard all manner of things, yet we
did not hear a single federal program for the island
of Nevis and it struck me as odd because the Hon.
Patrice Nisbett is a member of the federal Cabinet,"
Brantley said.
The typically vocal Brantley questioned the benefits
to the NRP and people of Nevis in having a coalition
government. Brantley said unlike many, he had not
criticized Nisbett for taking the Attorney General
position, instead congratulated him both in public
and in private but adopting a 'wait and see' approach.
"Well today I confess, we are not off to a good
start because if the plans and programs for the next
five years do not include Nevis then one must ask
why Patrice Nisbett and the NRP are part of those
plans and programs, because we must try our best at
the end of the day to look out for the island and
people of Nevis who have elected us and sent us to
parliament.
"Certainly when these matters were being discussed
in terms of setting the agenda for the next five years
I would have thought that they would have said to
the Hon. Patrice Nisbett, "Well what does Nevis
need? You have helped us; you have come and joined
our Cabinet, so how now can we help Nevis?" I
was truly truly shocked and amazed that a coalition
government could produce a Throne Speech which demonstrated
not an iota, not a drop of hope for the people of
Nevis," he said, adding that the exclusion of
Nevis from federal plans was a long standing complaint
of Nevisians.
According to the Opposition Leader, "It appears
that the only thing that Nevis can look forward to
from this federal government for the next five years
is the imposition of Value Added Tax (VAT) which will
come by November 2010."
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