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Reply to "Count the votes !! doesn't matter if the dead or migrated voted."

Response To Attorney at Law Glenn Hannoman's Indecent Attack On The Registrar General Of Guyana Re Issuance Of Death Certificates
Dear Counsel:
Your purported legal letter of May 28, 2020, to Mr. Louis Crawford, the Registrar of Guyana, is stunning and embarrassing to the legal fraternity in Guyana and the Commonwealth jurisprudence. Actually, your letter resembles a press statement regurgitated from the words of leader of Opposition, Mr. Bharrat Jagdeo. It is so highly fallacious and barren in the law, that it incompetently labours, but fails, to tender the law which was purportedly breached by the alleged issuance of a death certificate.
Counsel sought to rely on sections 33(1) and 33(5) of the Access to Information Act of 2018. However, this piece of legislation is not applicable to documents such as death, birth, marriage and Police Character certificates (clearance). Also included in this category are passports, post mortem (autopsy) reports and even Certificates of Good Standing issued by the Registrar of the High Court to lawyers. The media in Guyana, and Attorneys, rely on post mortem reports everyday to ascertain the cause of death of citizens. They also acquire death certificates via the process prescribed by law.
Mr. Hanoman you are aware that when a person dies, the body immediately becomes the property of the State until it is handed over to the family for burial. Counsel is also aware that under the Coroners Act, a post mortem must be conducted where a person dies suddenly, violently or accidentally, and that the post mortem examination and report are always open to the public. Consequently, death under the laws of Guyana and the international community, is not a private matter, and NO burial or cause of death can remain a secret under law.
The Evidence Act of Guyana, as counsel would have read numerous times, specifically treats a death certificate as a matter of PUBLIC RECORD. It is not a private document such as a mortgage contract with a Bank, a Bill of Sale for a vehicle or someone's medical records at a hospital or medical practitioner. As stated above, the fact of death is a public matter, and every citizen have the right to know why and how one of their community members died.
This is a matter of law and counsel would have, on numerous occasions, examined or cross examined government pathologists to ascertain the cause of death of persons during criminal trials, which are always conducted in open with the media present in Court. Public Records such as a death certificate is accessible by anyone in accordance with the Laws of Guyana Chapter 44:01, Section 49. As an Attorney-at-Law, you are very well aware that the legal clerk in your office can attend to the Birth and Death Registry at any time, fill out the requite Form, pay the fee, and obtain a Death Certificate for a perfect stranger. Lawyers across Guyana do this on a weekly basis for their clients, who, are usually outside of Guyana.
This is why your attack on the Registrar General is most unprofessional and unbecoming of an Attorney-at-Law. Counsel is aware that the Registrar of Births and Deaths hold a Public Office and performs a public function under law. Counsel is also well trained to know that where the Registrar acts contrary to law, the recourse is by way of Judicial Review and not what appears to be a lawyer's letter deliberately leaked to the media before reaching the Registrar. Did counsel deliberately ignore the very Act which deals with Death Certificates by placing in the public domain the very information he claims is private?
Section 37 of the Registration of Births and Deaths Act provides that upon the registration of the death of a person, the General Register of Deaths will remain open and accessible as a matter of Public Record to all citizens. The Registrar of Births and Deaths performs a similar function to the Registrar of Deeds and the Registrar of Lands. Every Guyanese is aware that the Transport Register and the Land Register, like the General Register of Births and Deaths, are open to any member of the public desirous of examining the content of same and obtaining copies upon the payment of the requisite fee. The Registration of Births and Deaths Act provides no offence where a Death certificate is issued; except where it is fake.
Moreover, no right thinking Guyanese would come to the conclusion that the cause of death of Ms. Ramdass is a genetic problem affecting her family. We all had a close family member who died from some kind of sickness; but that does not mean that the remainder of our family will similarly be affected. If counsel has a problem with this law, he must challenge it in the courts or raise his concerns with the legislature, which enacted the law.
Further, Counsel's reliance on the Access to Information Act (ATIA) to attack the Registrar General because of opposition, politics is nothing more than reckless, appalling and an outright abuse on the office of the Registrar. The ATIA was promulgated, and is applicable, where no existing procedure is available to access public records.This included reasons for the decisions of the National Tender Board in awarding a contract. However, under the Registration of Births and Deaths Act, detailed procedures and Forms are provided for the access to information including a Death Certificate.
On this basis, it is hard to understand why Counsel would dishonesty attempt to forge an ATIA procedures into the Registration of Births and Deaths Act. This must have been an error oh his part, or a deliberate fallacy in reasoning, aimed at inciting fear in the office of the Registrar, under the guise of a purported reckless indifference by that office for the ATIA mandatory procedures that were ignored.
Counsel must be aware that the ATIA speaks of accountability and transparency in decision making by State actors. The Registrar of Births and Deaths is not a decision maker to which transparency and accountability as envisage under the ATIA is applicable. The Registrar of Births and deaths enter, keep and provide records relating to Births and Deaths. A refusal to grant a Birth or Death Certificate is amenable to Judicial Review and not criminal action or breach of law as counsel purports.
The family of the deceased must indeed be in great pain to read and hear the publication of their relative's name in the media; especially the circumstances under which the publication is done. Counsel has now aggravated this suffering with his spurious letter. However, when the Registry issues a document, the staff are performing a public law function. If that document is then used in bad faith or even with criminal intent, counsel is aware that the course of redress is not a legal letter to a public servant, but rather a report to the police or take civil action in the courts against the perpetrator of the bad act.
Finally, as to counsel's three (3) requests, the Registry has no legal authority to disclose the information of an applicant for a death certificate; albeit, the application records remain a matter of public record.Similar, the Act does not envisage or permit the disclosure of copies of the receipts and any other particulars relating to the applicant. Hence, Counsel stop inventing stuff in his attempt to bully the Registrar General. It is "infra dig" the legal profession.
Instead of threatening Public servants with purported lawyer's letter laced with political rhetoric, Counsel would best utilize his words and pen in a letter the the Commissioner of Information for access to the said records, an application which is bound to fail since there is no basis upon which counsel wants the said information.
Moreover, if the political opposition, who's interests Counsel seem to be representing, has nothing to hide, why would they go this far to attempt to intimate and block an investigation by GECOM of allegations of electoral fraud? An innocent party should welcome an investigation to exonerate it from criminal charges, not undermine or suppress it as Counsel is attempting to do, and at which he will fail.
Richard Millington
Attorney at Law
Board Member of the Caribbean Guyana Institute for Democracy (CGID)
Mr. Glen Hannoman's letter is attached
Django
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