Stabroek News

Appeal filed against dismissal of elections petition

-autopsy confirms

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Monica Thomas and Brennan Nurse, the petitioner­s in whose names the main opposition APNU+AFC sought to challenge the results of the March 2nd, 2020 polls, have moved to appeal the decision by the Chief Justice to throw out the case.

On January 18th, acting Chief Justice Roxane GeorgeWilt­shire SC threw out one of the two petitions brought on behalf of the coalition because the APNU+AFC presidenti­al candidate David Granger was not served on time.

Thomas and Nurse were contending in their petition that the elections were unlawfully conducted and/or that the results (if lawfully conducted) were affected or might have been affected by unlawful acts or omissions. They nonetheles­s argue that from those polls it is Granger who should be declared the duly-elected President of Guyana.

They were seeking to have the court nullify the outcome and to declare President Irfaan Ali to be illegally holding office.

With their appeal, they are contending that in throwing out their petition, the Chief Justice erred in law and misdirecte­d herself when she misapplied the doctrine of strict compliance by holding that such compliance related to the contents of the affidavit of service instead of the filing of the affidavit of service in a timely manner.

Through their attorney, Roysdale Forde SC, they argue, too, that the judge erred in law and misdirecte­d herself when she concluded that the interest to be considered in assessing the impact of Section 4 (2) of the National Assembly (Validity of Elections) Act is in the interest in the outcome of a future election as opposed to the interest in the election against which the petition was filed.

They contend, too, that the judge erred in law and misdirecte­d herself in the applicatio­n of case law authoritie­s.

The appellants are of the view that the chief justice erred in dismissing the entire petition on reason of nonservice on Granger and his notice that he was not opposing the petition.

According to Thomas and Nurse, Justice George-Wiltshire also erred in law and misdirecte­d herself when she concluded that leave was required to file a supplement­ary affidavit of service to give a more complete understand­ing of how service was effected on Granger.

The appellants are contending also that the judge erred when she held that Granger was a proper and necessary party to the petition and misdirecte­d herself by failing to recognise that the purpose of Rule 9 of the National Assembly (Validity of Elections) Rules, requiring service of an Affidavit, is to verify that service was achieved within the time prescribed by the statute, and that an error in the Affidavit does not affect the fact of service.

Dismissing the contention advanced by attorneys for petitioner­s, Thomas and Nurse, the Chief Justice had said that there was compelling evidence to support the respondent­s’ argument that Granger was not served with the petition on time.

The results of a national recount of all ballots cast showed that it was the PPP/C, which had won the elections with 233,336 votes over the coalition’s 217,920 votes.

In the other petition, which is proceeding, petitioner­s Claudette Thorne and Heston Bostwick want the court to determine, among other things, questions regarding whether the elections have been lawfully conducted or whether the results have been, or may have been affected by any unlawful act or omission and, in consequenc­e thereof, whether the seats in the National Assembly have been lawfully allocated.

A post-mortem examinatio­n conducted on the remains of Sandra Dee Barker, the ACME General Store Manager who was found dead in her office on Wednesday, has determined that her death was caused by high blood pressure, which led to brain haemorrhag­ing.

Lex Barker, the brother of the deceased woman, said that the post-mortem examinatio­n, which was done yesterday, also determined that Sandra died sometime between Monday and Wednesday.

The woman, who was 54, of La Parfaite Harmonie, West Bank

Demerara, was found dead by a colleague on Wednesday morning in her office, which is situated on the third floor of the store.

EMTs pronounced the woman dead at the scene. No marks of violence were found by police, who said there was no sign of a break-in at the property.

During their enquiries, the police learnt that the woman was last seen alive on Monday at around 5.30pm.

Lex Barker previously told Stabroek News that he was told by a colleague of his sister that on Wednesday the deceased’s phone was ringing in her office and they assumed that she was in the washroom. It was after a call came through on another phone for the deceased that they decided to check on her, but the grill to her office was locked. She was subsequent­ly found lying motionless on the floor.

The brother had said that Sandra was in the habit of sending morning greetings to him and their other siblings in their family WhatsApp group and he noted that she last sent a greeting on Monday morning. He noted that when they didn’t hear from her, no one was too concerned as they sometimes went a day or more without chatting.

Asked whether she had been sick, Lex said that he was aware that she had migraine headaches from time to time, the same as him, but it was never anything to be alarmed about. Recently she was dealing with high blood pressure, said the man, but that was all he knew of.

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Sandra Dee Barker

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