…says Agency was “politically toxic”
The now disbanded State Assets Recovery Agency (SARA) was a “politically toxic” organisation and a “parasite on the backs of taxpayers”, which gobbled up close to $1 billion with nothing to show for what was accomplished over the past five years.
This is according to Attorney General and Legal Affairs Minister Anil Nandlall, who was at the time justifying why the People’s Progressive Party/Civic (PPP/C) Government scrapped the unit and terminated over 40 employees.

“The only thing they (SARA) have done is to file legal proceedings; and all are defective…all would have been lost or will be lost when they are ruled upon,” he expressed during a recent programme he hosted on his social media page.
Nandlall reminded that then President David Granger himself was forced to admit publicly that they could not find any evidence of State assets being stolen to prosecute anyone.
“Not a lead pencil or pen was recovered,” he said, asking, “why should the Government keep an organisation like that?”
SARA, Nandlall contended, was “plundering the treasury and becoming a parasite on the backs of the Guyanese people”.
The Attorney General explained that the Agency was renting a building for $2.1 million monthly on Main Street, Georgetown, adding that the tenancy never went to public procurement. This, he said, was in addition to massive salaries for staff and huge overhead costs.
According to Nandlall, when the A Partnership for National Unity/Alliance For Change (APNU/AFC) coalition took power in 2015, “they persuaded themselves that there was massive stealing of State assets under the PPP/C Administration” and they subsequently commissioned over 100 forensic audits.
However, he explained that the forensic audits, which costed taxpayers millions of dollars, did not produce a single case of “stealing of State assets” under the PPP/C Administration as the coalition had claimed.










