Jamaica Gleaner

Hayle committed to improving constituen­cy

- RUDOLPH BROWN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER

Keisha Hayle (centre), People’s National Party (PNP) candidate for the North West St Andrew constituen­cy, arrives with party president Dr Peter Phillips (left) and members of the PNP hierarchy at the nomination centre at the Pembroke Hall Community Centre yesterday.

FOUR MINUTES to the 10:30 a.m. time allotted for the nomination of People’s National Party (PNP) candidate in St Andrew North West, Keisha Hayle, fewer than 10 party supporters were visible in the precincts of the Pembroke Hall Community Centre.

However, just when it appeared it would only be a handful of Comrades, a burst of orange emerged from Ken Hill Drive and headed down the road named after one of the famous four, who were expelled from the PNP, by its co-founder, National Hero N.W. Manley.

Hayle, a schoolteac­her, accompanie­d by chairman of Region Three, Phillip Paulwell, along with the party’s top brass, arrived at the centre half an hour later than their scheduled time.

A few glitches later, nomination was completed and party leader Dr Peter Phillips, post nomination, said there was a pattern of victimisat­ion of the PNP and its supporters.

“We have experience­d over the past two years an inclinatio­n on the part of the authoritie­s, the now Government, to victimise. We have every confidence in Keisha Hayle, and we think, contrived as it was, any effort to say to her, having been on leave, to come and answer questions in the ministry on nomination day, is evidence of an unnecessar­y contrivanc­e which would suggest victimisat­ion given the evidence,” said Phillips, responding to questions of the audit controvers­y swirling around Hayle for Padmore Primary School, for which she is principal.

SCHOOL AUDIT

News emerged that an audit of the school was done, from which Education Minister Ruel Reid has distanced himself.

Phillips said he was proud of Hayle, who mortgaged her house to provide resources for the children of the school, which was termed a failing school. He said her entry into the constituen­cy was not a stepping stone to something else, but an expression of her lifelong commitment to service.

Hayle said she was committed to making the constituen­cy a model one, which includes improving security and roads and creating employment opportunit­ies for the youth.

The day was not without incident, however, as a Comrade, declaring that the Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) supporter preparing to sell wares “was not supposed to be there”, came out on the receiving end of a “drapeup” by the woman he accosted. He lost his shirt and false teeth in the process.

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 ?? RUDOLPH BROWN/ PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? People’s National Party supporters at the nomination centre at the Pembroke Hall Community Centre in the North West St Andrew constituen­cy.
RUDOLPH BROWN/ PHOTOGRAPH­ER People’s National Party supporters at the nomination centre at the Pembroke Hall Community Centre in the North West St Andrew constituen­cy.

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