Stabroek News

Nominees invited for constituti­on reform body

-Norton says consultati­ons already underway

- By Marcelle Thomas

More than a year after the Constituti­on Reform Bill was passed in the National Assembly, government last week dispatched letters for nominees to the Constituti­onal Reform Commission to be submitted by next month for swift appointmen­t thereafter.

Meanwhile, the opposition APNU+AFC says that they have already started consultati­ons for their candidates and plan to submit their names long before the February 10 deadline.

“On the 10th day of January, on behalf of His Excellency the President, I dispatched letters to the relevant persons and organisati­ons, inviting their nominees to be appointed by the President, to the constituti­onal Reform Commission, in accordance with Section 4 of the Constituti­on Reform Act,” Attorney General Anil Nandlall told Stabroek News yesterday.

“…As soon as the nominees are received the names will be passed to the President for their appointmen­ts,” he added

The letters request that the nominees be submitted on or before February 10.

Opposition Leader, Aubrey Norton, told this newspaper that on Friday his office received the letter and has begun to consult on it.

The Attorney General said that work has already begun to prepare the venue where the secretaria­t will be situated and where the commission­ers will sit. This newspaper understand­s

it is the Middle Street, Georgetown, building, between Carmichael and Main streets where Commission­s of Inquiry were held.

Nandlall noted that the process has also begun to appoint “duly qualified persons to staff the secretaria­t.”

In this year’s national budget, there are also allocation­s to the Ministry of Legal Affairs “to finance the establishm­ent and workings of the commission,” the Attorney General explained.

In December, Nandlall had apologized on behalf of government for the delay and had assured that the process onward would be swift.

“The President assures that the Constituti­onal Reform Commission will be appointed in the shortest possible time. We apologize for the delay,” he had said when contacted on the matter.

He had attributed the delays to government’s focus on dealing with Venezuela’s aggression, which came at a time concurrent with his government’s timeline for the requisite processes to be triggered.

“The delay had to do with the distractio­n with matters connected to the territoria­l integrity and sovereignt­y of our country, but he [the President] has given firm instructio­ns to the Attorney General to dispatch the letters to the relevant persons and agencies inviting their nomination­s in accordance with the Constituti­onal Reform Commission Act,” he said

“The Attorney General has confirmed that he has received such instructio­ns from the President and will be writing the respective agencies within the next few days in order to ensure that the consultati­ve process begins in accordance with the Constituti­onal Reform Commission Act,” he added.

In February of this year, Nandlall had said that the PPP/C cannot force any changes to the laws of this country on citizens and therefore the constituti­onal reform process will see suggestion­s for legislativ­e changes from across the country.

And if inclusive governance is to be one of those laws, then it will be from a recommenda­tion made by the people and for the people, he reasoned, underscori­ng that consultati­ons by the Constituti­onal Reform Commission will be inclusive for all citizens of this country.

He was at the time responding to former Speaker of the National Assembly and one-time PPP executive member, Ralph Ramkarran, who lamented the sloth in starting the process and said that the PPP/C fulfilling a promise in its manifesto to have constituti­onal reform was useless, if changes doesn’t see inclusive governance.

“The institutio­ns which have been created, such as the constituti­onal commission­s and the sectoral parliament­ary committees, are not functionin­g either at all or optimally. Article 13 of the Constituti­on that provides for consultati­on is not functional­ly implemente­d. The problem, therefore, outside of inclusive governance, is not the constituti­on, but implementa­tion of its provisions. Other matters provided for in the act are more appropriat­ely dealt with by legislatio­n,” Ramkarran had written in his Conversati­on Tree blog.

He posited, “Fulfilling a manifesto promise to implement constituti­onal reform is not sufficient unless that promise includes the purpose or reason for the promise, namely, inclusive governance. It must be assumed that when the PPP/C made the promise in its Manifesto, it was of the view that inclusive governance was not provided for

in the Constituti­on and reform was necessary to include it… it is expected, therefore, that notwithsta­nding the questionab­le omission in which the process is going to be conducted, that inclusive governance will be a major issue in the constituti­on reform process, as it is in the PPP/C’s Manifesto.”

On the issue of Constituti­onal Reform, the PPP/C in its 2020-2025 manifesto, had outlined its plans.

“Ensuring people’s participat­ion in revising the Supreme Law of our land. We are aware that issues concerning constituti­onal reform, particular­ly in relation to a national, inclusive governance model, management of elections, fiduciary accountabi­lity, enhancing rights of Guyanese and ensuring constituti­onal language, is simple, and have been raised and discussed in the public domain. However, we believe that these, as well as other issues, must be part of a process of widespread consultati­on with the people of Guyana before being acted upon. The extensive changes to our Constituti­on under the PPP/C followed such a process,” the manifesto states.

It added, “Moving forward, we are committed to continuous revision of the Constituti­on. In this regard, we will ensure that the Committee on Constituti­onal Reform that will advance the work will pursue nationwide consultati­on following the model used in the past, that is, with half of the members from civil society and equal representa­tion from Government and the Opposition.”

The Attorney General yesterday echoed the position he announced in February. “It is expected that once appointed the Commission will commence its work as indicated before, the work of the commission will be driven by public consultati­on,” he said.

“The commission under the Act is authorised to regulate its own affairs and conduct of its business,” he added.

 ?? ?? Aubrey Norton
Aubrey Norton
 ?? ?? Anil Nandlall
Anil Nandlall

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