Stabroek News

CCJ to deliver presidenti­al term limit ruling on Tuesday

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The Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) has fixed next Tuesday for the delivery of the long-awaited final ruling on the constituti­onality of the presidenti­al term limit, which will determine whether former two-term president Bharrat Jagdeo can seek re-election.

The decision by the Trinidad-based final court has been greatly anticipate­d and is to be delivered before the retirement of CCJ President Sir Dennis Byron.

A decision upholding the ruling of the courts here, which have declared an amendment to the Constituti­on to prohibit presidenti­al candidates from serving more than two terms to be unconstitu­tional, would most likely clear the way for Jagdeo to campaign for a third term.

The state had appealed decisions by both the Supreme Court and the Guyana Court of Appeal in favour of Cedric Richardson, a private citizen who in the run-up to the 2015 general elections had challenged restrictio­ns created by amendments to Article 90 of the Constituti­on that were enacted in 2001 after the bipartisan Constituti­on reform process.

A decision in favour of the state, which is seeking to preserve the term-limit, is anticipate­d to deepen divisions in the opposition PPP/C over who should be the next candidate as there are disparate factions.

Jagdeo has distanced himself repeatedly from the case and has said that he has no interest in running for a third term. However, he is now the Opposition Leader and General Secretary of the PPP/C. It is that party’s General Secretary who has traditiona­lly been its presidenti­al nominee.

The PPP has also distanced itself from Richardson, who has kept himself away from any public scrutiny.

His argument had been that Act No 17 of 2001, which was passed by a two-third majority of all elected members of the National Assembly to effect the term-limits, “unconstitu­tionally curtails and restricts” his sovereign and democratic rights and freedom as a qualified elector “to elect the person of former president Bharrat Jagdeo” as executive president.

The amended 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.”

On July 9th, 2015, the now retired Chief Justice (ag) Ian Chang had declared that the presidenti­al term-limit was unconstitu­tional without the approval of the people through a referendum. In February, 2017, now retired Chancellor (ag) Carl Singh, and now retired Justice B S Roy had dismissed the state’s appeal of Justice Chang’s ruling. Dissenting was the now Chancellor (ag) Yonette CummingsEd­wards, who at the time was the acting Chief Justice.

The case was heard by the CCJ on March 12th, 2018.

In a more than six-hour long hearing before the CCJ, attorneys for the state had argued that amendments to effect the presidenti­al term limit were done in accordance with the Constituti­on, even as those representi­ng the challenger maintained that a referendum was required and that the two-term restrictio­n was unlawful.

While Trinidadia­n Senior Counsel Douglas Mendes, appearing for Richardson, told the court that the amendments could only be effected via a referendum, Attorney General Basil Williams in his address had said that the change is done by the elected representa­tives of the people in the National Assembly.

The judgment will be handed down at 2 pm on Tuesday.

In a media release yesterday, the CCJ said the judgement will be livestream­ed and the recordings will be posted on the CCJ’s website, www.ccj.org, within hours of the end of the hearing. Links to the broadcast and more informatio­n on the case and the others being heard by the court can be found under the Live Courtroom Broadcasts section of the site, it added.

Meanwhile, the release also noted that judgments will be delivered in two consolidat­ed death penalty cases from Barbados.

The court will also hear a matter involving efforts to have a Belizean judge investigat­ed, a Guyanese case in which a challenge has been made to a statute prohibitin­g men from cross dressing, and a case from Belize where a financial institutio­n is seeking to have an award of US$4.46 million reinstated.

The Guyanese case pertains to the action brought by Quincy Mc Ewan, Seon Clarke, Joseph Fraser, and Seyon Persaud v The Attorney General of Guyana, where the appellants are challengin­g their highly-publicised conviction­s for the offence of being men who were wearing female attire in public for an “improper purpose.” This hearing is slated for 10 am on Thursday.

 ??  ?? Bharrat Jagdeo
Bharrat Jagdeo

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