
| These political ‘resignation' demands in T&T and Guyana |
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| Tuesday, 25 September 2012 20:08 |
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TO FOLLOW the current sustained political agitation by opposition parliamentary parties against governments in Port-of-Spain and Georgetown, the less informed may be inclined to think that the domestic political pressures are so intense for resignations of senior ministers that the administrations may well genuflect.
Worse, in the case of Trinidad and Tobago, the People’s Partnership(PP) Government of Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar could well be pushed into either sacking its Attorney-General, Anand Ramlogan, or call a snap general election—which, constitutionally, is still far away in May 2015. The circumstances for ministerial resignations being demanded are quite different. In T&T the demand by the opposition People’s National Movement (PNM) for the dismissal of Attorney General Ramlogan is linked to the same issue that resulted in last week’s firing from the cabinet of Justice Minister Herbert Volney, a former High Court Judge That development was rooted in the government’s surprising haste to rush parliament—where it controls a whopping 17-seat majority—into repealing an early proclamation of a controversial Section 34 of the Administration of Justice (Indictable Proceedings) Act, amid allegations that it could prove helpful to two leading local financiers still engaged in court battles against fraud charges. It is relevant to note that the legislation, including Section 34, was unanimously approved by parliament last year, with an understanding that there would be further consultations prior to its proclamation. Different ‘cylinders’ Linden crisis probe |
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