DPM Leader Demands Transparency

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PR โ€“ The Democratic Peopleโ€™s Movement (DPM) is calling out the Dickon Mitchell administration for what party leader Peter David describes as a systematic pattern of withholding crucial information from the Grenadian public.

David points to recent revelations about Ghanaian nurses being recruited to work at Grenada hospitalsโ€”a development the Public Workers Union, and the local Nursing Council and Nurses Association learned about through Ghanaian media, rather than their own government here.

โ€œHow many nurses are coming? When are they arriving? What are they being paid? Nobody knows,โ€™โ€™ David stated. โ€œA nurse with 30 years of serviceโ€”still on contract, still unable to get a mortgageโ€”is being told she must train these new arrivals while burnt out and underpaid. And, she wasnโ€™t even consulted.โ€™โ€™

The DPM leader also referenced undisclosed discussions about accepting foreign deportees, which came to light during a recent interview with the prime minister. โ€œThere were discussions, apparently a counter proposal. We still havenโ€™t seen what happened,โ€™โ€™ David noted.

David highlighted the disappearance of weekly post-cabinet press briefings and the prime ministerโ€™s own admission that, โ€œinformation is now shared on a need-to-know basisโ€™โ€™.

โ€œWhy are journalists required to submit questions in advance? Why are press conferences structured so that the government talks for 45 minutes and the media gets barely any time?โ€™โ€™ David questioned the administration, accusing it of starving local media of information and access.

โ€œThis isnโ€™t about any single decision. This is about a pattern,โ€™โ€™ David emphasized. โ€œA government that doesnโ€™t consult, treats transparency like a threat, and acts like questions themselves are the problem.โ€™โ€™

With general elections approaching, David urged Grenadians to examine the leadership they were promised versus what theyโ€™re receiving.

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