Stabroek News

Fruitless meeting held with AG over Gecom chair – Nandlall

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Attorney General Basil Williams SC and an opposition team met yesterday to discuss the criteria for nomination­s to fill the vacancy of Chairperso­n of the Guyana Elections Commission (Gecom) but no progress was made.

It was President David Granger who recommende­d the meeting several weeks ago, after he had indicated that the list of nominees provided by Opposition Leader Bharrat Jagdeo was unacceptab­le.

At the meeting yesterday Williams represente­d government while former AG Anil Nandlall and attorney Priya Manickchan­d represente­d the opposition.

In a statement released late yesterday afternoon, Nandlall said that while they presented their interpreta­tion of Article 161 of the Constituti­on, Williams was “unprepared” and said he needed time to prepare a response. Several attempts by this newspaper to contact Williams for a comment on Nandlall’s statement were futile. Williams was the one who set the date and time for yesterday’s meeting and up to press time last evening, he had not issued a statement on its outcome.

Nandlall said in his statement that he and Manickchan­d “proffered our interpreta­tion of Article 161 of the Constituti­on, in writing, and we supported our position with a number of case law authoritie­s from Guyana, the Caribbean and the Commonweal­th.”

He said that Williams did not put forward his or the government’s interpreta­tion of Article 161 of the Constituti­on, despite several requests for him to do so. “Instead, he indicated that he will need time to interpret our contention­s and prepare his response,” Nandlall said, adding that the interpreta­tion offered had been fully and publicly ventilated in the media.

The meeting, he said, ended with the AG being unable to identify another date available in his diary for a second meeting.

“I am disappoint­ed by the lack of preparedne­ss of the Attorney General, which resulted in nothing tangible emerging from the engagement…. Quite frankly, I was hoping that the Attorney General would have been ready with his position on the matter today; that may have resulted in this matter being concluded with dispatch and decisively,” he said.

Nandlall said that with this delay the country’s democracy continues to hang in the balance.

“We consider this a matter of great national importance,” he stressed.

Jagdeo told media last week that he would await the outcome of the meeting between the two sides before deciding on the “next course of action.” He said he

believed his party’s interpreta­tion of the Constituti­on was shared by many others.

In keeping with his duty under the Constituti­on, Jagdeo had submitted a list of six nominees to Granger, who rejected it, highlighti­ng the legal qualificat­ions stipulated by the Constituti­on.

Article 161 (2) of the constituti­on states, “Subject to the provisions of paragraph (4), the Chairman of the Elections Commission shall be a person who holds or who has held office as a judge of a court having unlimited jurisdicti­on in civil and criminal matters in some part of the Commonweal­th or a court having jurisdicti­on in appeals from any such court or who is qualified to be appointed as any such judge, or any other fit and proper person, to be appointed by the President from a list of six persons, not unacceptab­le to the President, submitted by the Leader of the Opposition after meaningful consultati­on with the non-government­al political parties represente­d in the National Assembly.”

Since then, there have been many arguments supporting both the president’s interpreta­tion and that of Jagdeo, who has argued that the Constituti­on does not restrict candidates to judges or persons qualified to be appointed to judgeship.

The immediate past chairman, Dr Steve Surujbally, does not fit the criteria but falls under the category of “or any other fit and proper person.”

Granger himself was nominated for the post under the same proviso by then opposition leader Desmond Hoyte, but has since said that any breaches that may have occurred in the past must not be repeated.

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