Skip to main content

November 1 2019

Source

Dear Editor,

Society has a responsibility to seriously review the statements made by Mr. Bharrat Jagdeo and consider the damage they do to the fabric of this nation.  The media will be among those held accountable for being the facilitator of these carefully orchestrated efforts to undermine law, order and stability.

 If Justice Claudette Singh SC vitiated the entire 1997 elections and one of the factors  was that the use of an identification card as a pre-condition to cast a ballot contravened Articles 59 and 159 of the Constitution, why would she as Chair of GECOM preside over a process and implement the very act she ruled as a sitting judge was unconstitutional? This defies logic.

 Who are the people that the media is facilitating Mr. Jadgeo to treat with such contempt for their intelligence.  It is not a case that he does not know what he is doing but evidently one where he is hoping to kerfuffle the society, creating confusion, increasing tension and further division.

 Is sheer rickaticks with this man since the no-confidence vote. He seems bent on not wanting society to proceed in a lawful and orderly manner or protect the integrity of institutions and allow processes to take their natural course.

 We must ask to what end such conduct is being facilitated. Worthy of note, even as he does this he is not doing what he as Leader of the Opposition should be doing to give effect to the ruling of the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) with regard to the responsibility of the National Assembly.

 The CCJ Judgment of 12th July, that the Opposition Leader selectively wants respected, at Item 7 expressly states:  “Article 106 of the Constitution invests in the President and the National Assembly (and implicitly in GECOM), responsibilities that impact on the precise timing of the elections which must be held.” When will he be held accountable to this?

 He wants to tell the President, Government, Justice Singh and GECOM what to do while he fails to do what he is duty bound to do by law and court ruling.  This raises legitimate concern. It may be a deliberate act to avoid returning to Parliament to ensure the constitutionality of the pending election as in the event the PPP loses the results can be challenged in the court on the ground that it was not constitutionally called.

 This man is demonstrating a penchant to create havoc among the Guyanese communities and must be held accountable. These weekly media brawls under the guise of press conferences are evidently not intended to bring sobriety, maintain law and order, elevate public discourse, seek good governance or for the public good. They serve as a platform to malign, impugn and propagate public mischief, doing more harm than good to society.

Yours faithfully,

Lincoln Lewis

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Gecom is on shaky ground on uncollected ID cards

November 1 2019

Source

Dear Editor,

Former President Jagdeo is right in `Jagdeo calls on GECOM Chair to explain ‘patently illegal’ decision on uncollected ID cards’ (SN Oct 31).

A voter or a national ID card is not required to cast ballots or to have one’s name placed on a voters’ list. Every constitutional legal mind I spoke with agrees with this interpretation of relevant law on voting in Guyana.

The Chief Justice made a similar ruling earlier this year. The court also consistently took this position in elections. In fact, it was also the position of then Judge Claudette Singh in 1998 in the Esther Perreira case that an ID is not required to vote; she proceeded to vitiate the December 1997 elections because of the mandatory use of voter ID cards to cast ballots that was agreed upon by both the PPP and PNC. The PNC subsequently challenged the use of ID cards to vote.

The same was and is being done in the US where Black voters have challenged elections commissions in “white” states seeking to disenfranchise them. As in Guyana, in the US, ID cards are not required to cast ballots – signatures are verified before casting a ballot. In Guyana, one’s photo appear on the voters’ list eliminating need for a photo ID.

Legal experts say that no one should be removed from the voters’ list on account of their not having picked up their national ID. Gecom is on shaky ground and could be violating voters’ rights in mandating they pick up their national ID cards or else their names will be removed from the voters’ list.

In the US, in a few states, attempts were made to require voters to present an ID card in order to register and to vote in order to disenfranchise minorities like Blacks and Hispanics. But the US court ruled against the requirement enfranchising Blacks and other minorities.

There are some 25K national ID cards sitting at Gecom’s office. Some of these go back to almost two decades. It is conceivable that a substantial portion of these ID cards are of deceased and those who migrated permanently. The dead and those who have settled abroad should be removed from the list. The list should be cleaned up. But a fair, legal way should be found to carry out the process so as not to disenfranchise those who have traveled abroad for vacation or are seasonal overseas workers.

It is surprising that Justice Singh would support a position that would violate voters’ rights.  Many may not know or simply forgot that they have an ID card at the Gecom office.

Gecom plans to publish the list of names in the papers. Those who did not pick up their IDs may not read the papers and thus would not find out that their name is on such a published list.

The list of those who have not uplifted their ID cards should be published and also made accessible to the political parties and NGOs by region and or by address or some other ‘reasonable way’ so that the individuals can be notified.

That is a fairer way to clean up the list or notify the delinquent who did not pick up IDs. Any legal challenge to Gecom’s requirement of picking up ID cards or having your name removed would succeed in a court of law.

Yours faithfully,

Dr. Vishnu Bisram

Django

Lincoln Lewis can go jump in Demerara River. 
He dump the workers aside and focus more on politics. This scum bag Calls more strike and instigate work stoppages by Government employees during PPP government. 

Now his focus is again on PPP who are in the opposition. This Rawan should take his fight to ganger . Mother fkers. 

FM

By now, onw would have thought that Lewis would have bagged his face. He has no shame.

Anyone with integrity would have to acknowledge that the Granger led Coalition is behaving in an uncivilized manner, yet this fool Lewis seems too uncivilized to think the problem is with Jagdeo.

FM

Add Reply

×
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×
×