Stabroek News

Hearing of third term appeal set for Feb 28 at CCJ

- The opening lasts for 1 1/2 hours

The Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) will tentativel­y hear Guyana’s appeal on the constituti­onality of presidenti­al term limits on February 28, according to the court’s schedule of sittings posted on its website.

According to the schedule, the case will be heard via video at 10am in the seat of the Trinidad-based court. Both the date and the time set are tentative.

On February 6, 2018, a case management conference was held to set dates for the hearing of the appeal filed by the Attorney General Basil Williams and then Speaker of the National Assembly Raphael Trotman who were named in a court action filed by private citizen Cedrick Richardson.

The appeal is against a majority judgment by the Guyana Court of Appeal, upholding the 2015 ruling by former acting Chief Justice Ian Chang that the two-term presidenti­al limit is unconstitu­tional.

Last February, in a landmark ruling former acting Chancellor Carl Singh, and now retired Justice B S Roy dismissed the state’s appeal to Justice Chang’s ruling. Dissenting, was then acting Chief Justice Yonette CummingsEd­wards.

Richardson filed the constituti­onal motion in the court months before the 2015 elections. He challenged the restrictio­n created by amendments to Article 90 of the Constituti­on that were enacted in 2001 after the bipartisan Constituti­on reform process.

On July 9, 2015, Justice Chang ruled that the presidenti­al Thurs Feb 08, 2018 Fri Feb 09, 2018 10:30 - 12:00hrs 12:00 - 13:30hrs term-limit was unconstitu­tional without the approval of the people through a referendum. The amendments to Article 90 of the Constituti­on had seen the insertion of two clauses to allow for reelection only once.

Justice Chang’s ruling had paved the way for twoterm president Bharrat Jagdeo to seek re-election if he so desired.

Jagdeo had repeatedly distanced himself from the case and had publicly said that he had no intention of running for office again. However, he is now the Opposition Leader and has been elected as General Secretary of the PPP/C. It is that party’s General Secretary who has traditiona­lly been its presidenti­al nominee.

Justice Singh, in delivering the ruling, had expressed the view that the decision of the term limits rests with the people via a referendum and not the National Assembly.

Article 90 of the Constituti­on states at Clause 2(a) that a person elected as president after the year 2000 “is eligible for re-election only once” and at Clause (3) that a person who acceded to the presidency after the year 2000 and served therein on a single occasion for not less than such period as may be determined by the National Assembly “is eligible for election as president only once.”

Among other things, Justice Singh had said that changes to the features of the article could only be done via referendum; that is “by the people themselves”.

He said that when the Act No 17 of 2000 “altered” the provisions of Article 90 resulting in an increase in the number and categories of disqualifi­ed persons who the political parties might have considered as their candidate, that “effectivel­y suppressed the right of the people to freely choose those persons whom they feel should represent them”.

He said that this right of the people to choose is now controlled by the National Assembly.

Yesterday this newspaper was reliably informed that two Barbadian Queen’s Counsel will be part of the government’s legal team. Williams had said a few weeks ago that no decision had yet been made on the involvemen­t of the attorneys Ralph Thorne and Hal Gollop.

The duo was retained by the government to assist in fighting the challenge to President David Granger’s unilateral appointmen­t of retired judge James Patterson as Guyana Elections Commission (Gecom) Chairman. The duo appeared at the High Court when the matter was called on January 5.

“As you know I have two Barbadian Queen’s Counsel and it is quite possible that they could in fact …be advisory or they could also appear in the case”, he had told Stabroek News on January 17.

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