MEMBER OF PARLIAMENT
BRADLEY B. ROBERTS
TOPIC: CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS
(OFFICE OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS)
JANUARY 16, 2002
Madame speaker, I rise on behalf of the
dedicated and righteous Constituents of Grants Town, to contribute to the
debate on Constitutional Amendments establishing many things including
the Office of Public Prosecutions. Madame speaker, while the Constituents
of Grants Town is an eternally dedicated and righteous group of citizens,
at this point I must also inform this Parliament, that my Constituents
are also a bemused and cynical group because of the haste in which this
Parliament is again addressing a number of critical Bills brought to this
Parliament.
Madame speaker, the Grants Town Constituents
remember well how over one year ago, the FNM Government was force-feeding
a number of Bills through this Parliament and down their throats. Bills,
Madame speaker, which radically altered our Financial Services Sector and
the Constitutional and economic fall out from those hasty and ill-conceived
acts of legislation.
Madame speaker, how well the
Constituents of Grants Town remembers in horror, what the effects of those
pieces of legislation were and are. And Madame speaker, here we go again
as we participate and the Grants Town Constituents witness this FNM Government’s
display of insensitivity to the people’s concerns about its haste and the
government’s blissful ineptitude at dealing with our precious Constitution.
However Madame speaker, notwithstanding
the frivolous manner in which the government is conducting the discourse
of the Constitution and its amending, I am compelled to offer my Constituents’
views about the amendments as being proposed by the FNM Government.
Madame speaker, the Constitution of
the Bahamas is the most important document for humanity in our society,
seeking the orderly functioning of our people and those who visit our shores.
Being more than words, the Constitution is a living organism, that like
all organisms should be monitored and fed with positive elements and starved
of those things that time and progress causes to become irrelevant and
non-productive.
Madame speaker, in fact the
Constitution should be reviewed on a relatively regular basis to decide
on what is working for the orderly functioning of society and what needs
altering and elimination.
Madame speaker, it is unfortunate
that the Government of the Bahamas has decided at this eleventh hour to
review many aspects of the Constitution with a view to making a slew of
changes. Most persons would say, inclusive of the Grants Town Constituency,
that the government waited too late to make changes to the Constitution
and its approach in doing so leaves a lot to be desired. Madame speaker,
while I concur with the general views of most person concerning the government’s
harem-scarem approach, it is the Constitution that we are debating and
it is my duty to address the concerns of my Constituents in that regard.
However Madame speaker, I find solace in the fact that how the people feel
about the government’s approach, will ultimately bear out during the upcoming
general elections.
Madame speaker, the Constitution of
the Bahamas was purposed and designed to encompass the roles of those in
this entire society to ensure its smooth and orderly functioning. It addresses
what should be the orderly functioning of the Executive Branch of Government,
the Judicial Branch of Government, the Law Enforcement Branch of Government
and the Civic Branches of this society. In that regard, the Parliament
of the Bahamas, the Courts of the Bahamas, the Law Enforcement of the Bahamas,
the Civic Leaders of the Bahamas and the Written and Electronic Media of
the Bahamas, all play a vital role in this society’s functioning. Madame
speaker, as these branches of our society goes; so do we.
OFFICE OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
Madame speaker, these pillars of our
Constitution, are not only vital to how our citizens react to the norms
of society, but likewise how the international world views our social structure;
allowing us to either exist as a colleague in the world’s affairs, or be
considered a plague to be avoided at all material times and in some cases,
at all cost.
Madame speaker, it is in that
regard that I view with much concern the Amendment establishing the Office
of Public Prosecutions. This Office will be a most critical component because
the complaints have been many since we have become an Independent Nation,
about the effectiveness of the process of successful prosecutions, which
dictates what kind of society we are shaping.
Madame speaker, in regards to establishing
the Office of Public Prosecutions, I can only view this Amendment to the
Constitution as non-political. In fact, I firmly believe that this component
must be viewed as nationalistic, until such time as any bias is shown toward
the Office being handled in a politically skewed manner. However Madame
speaker, I support the establishment of the Office of Public Prosecutions,
even though the hasty manner in which the government is moving along, leaves
a lot to be desired, as I stated at the outset.
Madame speaker, as with all things
we are reviewing concerning the Constitution, it would be my hope that
the outcome finds itself putting more teeth in the Constitution, guaranteeing
tangible results, where the Constitution is not merely a sacred document
that proves a country has arrived safely into the civilized world.
Madame speaker, the Constitution
speaks clearly to matters in a society, but far too many times these utterings
are not given life because Government’s do not properly enforce the utterings,
for any number of reasons, one being political reasons. However Madame
speaker, the utterings of the Constitution and its adherence therein is
to be viewed and acted upon from a nationalistic view.
Madame speaker, in that regard, I
would hope that the Office of Public Prosecutions finds itself operating
within the strict tenets of the Constitution, satisfying those who seek
relief and redress and holding those responsible, who are in fact responsible,
regardless of their affiliation to any groupings of persons in a society.
In fact Madame speaker, I suggest
that in this instance for anyone who doesn’t adhere to the tenets of the
Constitution concerning public prosecutions, should also find in our Constitution
severe penalties for not doing so. Madame speaker, I must take this view
because besides for the orderly functioning of our citizens, the world
at-large is always watching the status, progress or lack thereof concerning
how we settle matters of grievance, whether criminal or civil.
JUDICIARY TAMPERING CLAIM
Madame speaker, it is dangerous for
any country to show itself through its Court System, Executive Governance,
Civic or Media Groupings to be less than forthright or suspect in its dealings.
We would be a country being treated and acting as one that is not a part
of the world’s norms, denying us the benefit of existing in what is considered
to be a globally shrinking world that deems it necessary to coalesce with
our worldly neighbors.
Madame speaker, it is in this
regard that I would hope the government addresses what I consider to be
a serious concern that must be addressed by the nation, not from a political
aspect, but a national aspect and is likewise a classical case for the
Office of Public Prosecutions.
Madame speaker, in keeping with our
debate on this Amendment to the Constitution bringing on stream the Office
of Public Prosecutions, I now lay on the table of this Parliament a document
that speaks to the definite need for this Amendment.
Madame speaker, I spoke of the pillars
of our society that must be monitored and supervised by our Constitution.
I likewise mentioned the possibility of the Office of Public Prosecutions
from time to time having to intervene on behalf of individuals or persons
to bring curative measures to grievances perceived or otherwise. I spoke
of those pillars being the Executive, Judicial, Law Enforcement, Civic
and Media Branches of our society. Madame speaker at some point, this Amendment
ushering in the Public Prosecutions Office, would be needed to intervene
to settle what may be perceived as a wrong done in society.
Madame speaker, it is
in this regard that I wish to look at one of our pillars of society and
the future role that the Office of Public Prosecutions can play in the
orderly functioning of such. Madame speaker, that pillar of our Constitution
is the Written and Electronic Media. Madame speaker, I am certain that
Members of this place should be aware of the emergence of a weekly periodical
named the Confidential Source. Madame speaker, here is one such copy of
the newspaper, which I intend to lay on the table to be considered in juxtaposition
to the documents I just laid on the table.
Madame speaker, I would
be surprised if all Members of this place have not seen or have not been
following the newspaper. I would expect that many would be following this
newspaper maybe for its information or maybe for its newness on the Bahamian
scene. Madame speaker, without having any personal interest in the newspaper,
I must express that the Confidential Source is free of charge and is printed
on high quality paper.
Madame speaker, I now lay on
the table a copy of the January 2, 2002 edition of the Confidential Source,
Volume #9. It is to this particular edition and its disturbing headline,
that I will show the need for the Amendment to the Constitution regarding
the Office of Public Prosecutions.
Madame speaker, the January
2, 2002 edition of the Confidential Source has at its headline, “Hubert
Ingraham accused of influencing Supreme Court and Attorney General.” Madame
speaker, I realize that certain matters concerning some persons involved
is the subject of a slew of court proceedings and I wish to state from
the outset, that my serious concern does not attach itself to the court
proceedings and I in no way wish to even assess or lend any assessment
to those cases.
Madame speaker, it is to the
charges of our otherwise sterile Judiciary being influenced by anyone that
I wish to now read into the record the contents of the headline story.
Madame speaker, accompanying this story are the supposed notes of Justice
Anita Allen, that is not germane to the point I am attempting to have resolved.
Now Madame speaker, there
is a time when situations, circumstances and crises presupposes a national
concern or dilemma and should not be viewed from the prism of politics,
unless silence on the issue leads one to the conclusion that a political
aspect took precedence over the national concern. Madame speaker, short
of someone committing treason, the accusation of someone being accused
of using their influence to dictate to the Judiciary has a most disastrous
consequence for a nation within its confines and outside of its borders.
Likewise Madame speaker, when
a former Cabinet Minister, a duly elected Member of Parliament and Officer
of our Courts by profession gives information holding up the Judiciary
and the Prime Minister to criminal suspicion, one such person must be condemned
for the untold pain and misery that can result from such a reported belief.
Madame speaker, this is a matter that must be cleared up and I’ll tell
you why.
When a country’s Judiciary
is held up to be anything but pristine, the Body Politic, Government Agencies,
Financial Institutions and groupings of Tourists throughout the civilized
world, views one such country as one that should be avoided. Madame speaker,
how are we to exist, function, progress and prosper, if the world at large
is to believe that justice cannot be found on the Judicial level of our
country?
If our Judiciary is under some
other influence than our Constitution, or if someone is merely playing
a devious game; I must ask what kind of sick mind, would attempt by their
undertakings to bring untold misery on the Bahamas? The kind of misery
that could take decades, if not longer, to convince the world otherwise
about our Judiciary.
Madame speaker, I make
no apologies for my political approach to most matters that comes before
this House, for that is part of my job as a Representative of people. However,
I also make no apologies for my position as a Bahamian who takes very seriously
our nationalism and good standing on the world scene, being under attack
from within or from without.
And it is from that perspective
of nationalism that I ask the following questions in the hopes that my
yielding for a response, will bring honest answers and resolution quickly
to this affair, so that justice on this matter is not only done, but also
seen to be done for our citizens and for the world. A world that has to
be monitoring our reaction to this damaging account in the Confidential
Source.
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1. DOES THE GOVERNMENT APPROVE OF
A FORMER MINISTER OF THE PRESENT CABINET ALLEDGEDLY CONSPIRING WITH A PERMANENT
RESIDENT, KNOWING THAT THE PERMANENT RESIDENT WAS IN COURT PROCEEDINGS
AGAINST THE GOVERNMENT, HE NOT TOO LONG AGO WAS A PART OF?
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2. WHERE AND HOW DID THE NEWSPAPER
GET THE PERSONAL NOTES OF JUSTICE ANITA ALLEN? HAS THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL
STARTED AN INVESTIGATION INTO THIS MATTER?
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3. HOW COULD A FORMER MINISTER, AS
THE STORY CLAIMS, AGREE TO THE PUBLISHING OF THIS NEWSPAPER ARTICLE IDENTIFYING
HIM AS THE SOURCE OF INFORMATION, PUTTING IN JEOPARDY THE JUDICIARY AND
THE COUNTRY? WAS OR IS THERE ANY MONETARY CONSIDERATION ATTACHED TO THE
MEMBER FOR MARATHON’S WILLINGNESS TO BE EXPOSED AS THE INFORMANT?
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4. MANY ASK WHAT WAS THE MOTIVATION
OF THE SAID NEWSPAPER TO PLACE IN JEOPARDY THE BAHAMAS JUDICIARY BY THE
CLAIM THAT IT CAN BE INFLUENCED?
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5. WHY HAS THERE BEEN NO RESPONSE
FROM THE PRIME MINISTER REGARDING THE ACCUSATIONS LEVIED AT HIM AS THE
ALLEDGED PERPETRATOR OF INFLUENCE PEDDLING, AS STATED BY THE MEMBER OF
MARATHON IN THE SAID ARTICLE?
Madame speaker, I will gladly yield at
this time to allow some one in the government, if not the Prime Minister
and the Member for Marathon to address these questions, as this matter
is one that should not go unresolved beyond this point, otherwise, one
would have to think that politics did in fact take precedence over the
national aspect of such a damning account being public for our citizens
as well as the outside world to see.
Madame speaker, it is unfortunate
that all of the Government Members are not prepared to speak on this issue,
knowing that such a story has been out in the public for two weeks. And
Government Members still do not seemed prepared to talk about this matter.
Madame speaker, this display of callousness on behalf of the government,
or possibly fright, as it is a scary situation, leaves me to conclude that
in fact the politics of internal warfare has had a bearing on our being
at this point. The point where our Judiciary comes under fire, as being
in the rawest terms, corruptible.
The government’s unwillingness
to settle forthwith this matter concerning the report in the said newspaper
as well as the document I laid on the Table, leaves me to conclude that
a whole country was placed in jeopardy because of the political aspirations
or failures of individuals.
Madame speaker, I now
wish to read excerpts from the document I laid on the table that is in
fact an Affidavit signed by one of the persons affiliated in some form
with the newspaper, the Confidential Source. Madame speaker, Members will
find that this affidavit gives all the reasons in the world why the Amendment
to the Constitution for the Office of Public Prosecutions is a needed piece
of legislation returning some credibility to our Judiciary. Something that
may be seriously diminished by the dastardly report in the said newspaper.
Madame speaker, in the
absence of any stated monetary advantage in the Affidavit. And taking into
consideration the firing of the Member for Marathon from the Cabinet. And
his subsequent hiring as a Consultant to an aggrieved person included in
the story; one can readily conclude that the dissemination of the said
story and the quotes of the Member for Marathon came as a result of his
scorn at being rejected as Party Leader of the FNM. Madame speaker, how
else can one look at this dastardly and damaging act perpetrated on this
nation?
Madame speaker, I have
asked myself a million times, how could a Bahamian put the country in jeopardy
because his desires were not allowed to bear fruit? How could a Bahamian
who claimed his love for the Little Darlings and Precious Pearls, as well
as the Disabled in this country, allow his desires to destabilize and debilitate
this nation, by holding the Judiciary up to suspicion and a Prime Minister
up to further public odium? And Madame speaker, I won’t even bother to
consider what he’s done to his wife, her otherwise good name and his family.
I’ll leave that up to God to deal with that.
Certainly Madame speaker,
as an Opposition Member, soon to be a Government Member, I take all sensible
advantages to holding the government up to public scrutiny and criticism
where it is shown to be necessary for good and honest governance. But I
would never conceive of an advantage to ridicule the government, at the
expense of the country being looked on as a purveyor of injustice, just
for political or any advantage? What kind of tortured soul would even think
of such a thing?
Likewise Madame speaker, the
Prime Minister, as the one accused, is also not without blame, because
it is he through his scheming and connivance over the leadership of his
Party that has spawned fodder for damaged ego’s and sick minds to work
out their disappointments on the nation. And then Madame speaker, there
is also the scary possibility that what the Member for Marathon is recorded
as saying about the Member for North Abaco may have a ring of truth to
it.
Madame speaker, this is
why I would hope this matter is resolved for the benefit of the nation
and the view of the outside world concerning this nation. For God knows
that we don’t need at this time or at any time, the notion to be in anyone’s
mind that our Judiciary can be influenced, where it is otherwise not proven
to be the truth. The thought that our Judiciary can be influenced has far
more effect on the Judiciary, and the present Government in power. It can
be a garment tied around this country that could eventually strangle us
to death.
And in that regard, Madame
speaker, I call for an immediate investigation into the accusations as
levied by the newspaper, the Confidential Source. Obviously because of
the accusations, it would not be prudent for the Attorney-General’s Office
to pursue such an investigation. This is a matter for the Police as well
as a body such as the Office of Public Prosecutions, which we are seeking
to establish through the amendment before us today.
FOURTH ESTATE & CONSTITUTION
Madame speaker, in keeping with my
concern about the Fourth Estate, also known as the written and electronic
media, it also is an important tenet to our Constitution. It allows for
freedom of expression and it plays a most vital role in disseminating information
and educating the Bahamian Electorate about such things as the Constitution
that we are discussing today.
However the media can also be used as an instrument
of destruction when it fails to operate within the Constitution, decency
or just fair play. Madame speaker, one such instrument being used for destruction
of truth and fair play is the government-owned radio and television station,
ZNS. Madame speaker, I hasten to add that there is no conspiracy amongst
the corporate staff at ZNS, but it is apparent that directives from political
operatives is carrying the day and influencing how news should be disseminated
and in many cases not disseminated at all.
Madame speaker, the fair
coverage of ZNS is weak and many times disseminated through a filter of
guile, if reported at all. Madame speaker, it is obvious that the staff
is not being allowed to do their job of reporting the news without the
hindrance of political interference.
And Madame speaker, for those persons
who can hold the confidence of some of the staff at ZNS, they will tell
of the frustration and demoralizing nature of working at ZNS where they
only want to be the best that they can be at their profession. They find
their professional growth suffering retardation because of being subjected
to the will of those giving them political directions on how to report
the news. Madame speaker, the Fourth Estate under the Constitution is guaranteed
certain rights and there are obligations which goes with those rights.
Madame speaker, the tenets
of the Constitution has become so foreign to the workings at ZNS, that
news about themselves or their political favorites are not being reported
at all or in the most bizarre and beguiling manner. Madame speaker, take
for instance, a few weeks ago when I reported to this House that ZNS’ Media
Van, costing $1.3 million dollars was purchased without a warranty and
is now in need of serious servicing. Madame speaker, it was not even reported
by ZNS.
One would have thought that conscience
of duty would have dictated to them that it was best to report that news
so as not to be considered skewed and beguiling. But no Madame speaker,
not one word. And then Madame speaker, just on Monday past, the Public
Accounts Committee Report was read in full to this Parliament. And what
was ZNS’ first report on the outcome of the Committee on the One o’clock
News? ZNS stated that DPM Watson was cleared of one charge.
Madame speaker, what about
the rest of the findings? Madame speaker, you mean to tell me that if a
person is cleared of one out of six charges, the news is to be represented
as it being a major finding that a person was cleared of one charge, when
the most serious charges finds that person convicted?
What about the fact that the
DPM’s company, Nassau Transfers, was considered by the Holiday Inn as having
stolen their rebate money in order to pay off part of their bounced cheques?
Not one word Madame speaker, in the initial report on ZNS about funds having
been stolen. Why dress up the news when the totality of the charges is
a simple case of tiefin?
Suppose persons listened to
that first ZNS report and decided that they had heard all that was needed
to know? And if you saw this morning’s scandalous, disgraceful and misleading
headline in the Tribune, entitled, “Watson cleared by PAC,” you would believe
that the DPM’s company was the victim and somebody else tief the Holiday
Inn’s rebate money.
Madame speaker, it is obscene
and repugnant how some of the media seeks to protect the worst of criminals;
at the expense of telling the people the truth. Like criminals, they too
seek to protect their own interest.
In fact Madame speaker, even
the report that I have brought to this Parliament concerning the tragic
affair of the Confidential Source Newspaper’s claims were not reported
by ZNS, or in fact any other media outlet. If it were up to the other media
to announce that a new publication such as the Confidential Source was
in the public, we would never know that it exist.
Madame speaker, the question
is why? Under the Constitution the media has as its obligation to report
news to the public in order to inform and educate. Sadly Madame speaker,
this is not happening and political interference is still lurking around
after all these years and all the promises of the FNM Government to the
contrary.
TIMETABLE OF CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS
Madame speaker I was most disheartened
but not surprised that the government is seeking to debate all of these
Constitutional Amendments as if there are a quota of Bills that must be
passed every time this Parliament sits. Madame speaker, despite the declaration
by the two major Political Party’s in their respective 1997 Party Platform’s
to amend the Constitution, the Governing Party has for reasons best known
to them have waited until the waning period of the impending elections
to introduce a number of amendments to the Constitution.
Madame speaker, it is clear to me
that this government has no plans of substance. They can best be described
as a flip-flop government. Madame speaker, any serious political observer
of this government must be experiencing a serious case of head spinning
at its attempt to follow the actions of this flip-flop Government. Madame
speaker, I wish to remind this place of what was said during the 1997 Speech
from the Throne.
Madame speaker, this outgoing
government foreshadowed the appointment of a broad based non-partisan Constitutional
Review Committee comprising distinguished persons, which will embark on
the fundamental course of a nationwide review of our Constitution. Madame
speaker, the publication of a green paper on Constitutional Reform was
foreshadowed at the same time. Madame speaker, and again in March 1999,
the lame duck Prime Minister announced that:
“A CONSTITUTIONAL COMMISSION CHAIRED BY H.E. MR. GEOFFREY
JOHNSTONE, WILL BE APPOINTED TO CONSIDER AMENDMENTS TO OUR NATIONAL CONSTITUTION.
FOLLOWING UPON THE RECEIPT OF THE RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE COMMISSION, PUBLIC
DEBATE, INCLUDING A NUMBER OF TOWN MEETINGS WILL BE HELD PRIOR TO THE PARLIAMENTARY
DEBATE AND ADOPTION OF PROPOSED CHANGES.”
Madame speaker, that is what the lame
duck Prime Minister had to say about his plans for Constitutional Reform.
But what are we actually doing? We have for the last four weeks been debating
and passing Amendments to the Constitution in a most obscene and reckless
manner.
Madame speaker, thinking Bahamians
are asking why did the government abandon its well-programmed approach
to Constitutional Amendments without a logical or sane explanation to the
Bahamian people? Many persons have concluded that this government of one
has lost its senses and his puppets never had any sense.
And here we are today
putting the cart again before the run away horse because the appointment
of a Constitution Commission was never completed. The public was never
encouraged to read the Bahamas Constitution. No Town Meetings were held.
And simply put, the government abandoned its stated commitment to educate
the Bahamian people on Constitutional Reform.
Madame speaker, the lame duck
Prime Minister fell asleep at the wheel, or something else that would question
his sobriety. Madame speaker, the Member for North Abaco found himself
and his puppets attacked on all corruption fronts and out of the clear
blue sky he found what he considers to be a necessary diversion. Hence
Madame speaker, we are here debating the issue of Constitutional Reform.
Well Madame speaker, I have news for
the lame duck Prime Minister, his attempt at diverting from the charges
of corruption is not gonna work. The charges are not going to go away until
the guilty is sent away from public life and if necessary, sent to a place
where average citizens go every day when they are convicted of a crime
against society. In fact Madame speaker, before I sit down today, I will
give the Member for North Abaco something else to investigate and hopefully
he’ll have the answers by the time he comes to debate the Public Accounts
Committee Report, as he vehemently stated was his desire to so do.
Madame speaker, it should
now be crystal clear even to the confused mind of the lame duck Prime Minister
that the last minute constitutional reforms has not resonated well with
the Bahamian people. In fact, many Bahamians feel insulted by the maximum
leader’s attempts to push Constitutional Reform down their throats which
such indecent haste.
But you see Madame speaker,
the maximum leader has to find something to occupy the time in Parliament
because he has no idea what other allegations of corruption is coming his
way, once the Opposition is in attendance in the Parliament. Like a wet
rat with no place else to hide, all kinds of ploys are being used to avoid
detection. Madame speaker, the advent of these amendments to the Constitution
is one such ploy. But the people are not fooled.
Madame speaker this past Sunday I
listened to comments made by callers to Island Radio 102.9 FM on the show
Parliament Street. Madame speaker, callers expressed their concerns about
the approach to how the amendments to the Constitution were being conducted.
Madame speaker, my findings were as follows:
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1. THEY WERE ORDINARY BAHAMIANS THAT
COMPRISES THE VAST MAJORITY OF THE BAHAMIAN ELECTORATE.
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2. THEY HAD NEVER READ THE CONSTITUTION
OF THE BAHAMAS AND CANNOT RECALL THEIR RELATIVES AND FRIENDS HAVING DONE
SO.
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3. THEY DO NOT UNDERSTAND THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENTS TO THE CONSTITUTION.
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4. THEY HAVE SERIOUS RESERVATIONS
AS TO WHETHER THE BAHAMIAN ELECTORATE THROUGHOUT THE BAHAMAS COULD BE EDUCATED
WITHIN THE TIME FRAME PROPOSED BY THE GOVERNMENT.
Madame speaker, under these circumstances,
how can this government justify doing what it is doing? Madame speaker,
it cannot justify what they are doing as being in the best interest of
the people. But then they are not trying to justify their actions, they
are trying to hide from all of their corruption charges and inept governance
as they fall apart in the midnight hour of their last days in Office. Madame
speaker, it is the wet rat trying to find one more hole to hide in, or
creating some other diversion to take our eyes off of it being what it
is, a wet rat.
CONCLUSION
Madame speaker, in the interest of
time, I conclude where I began by laying on the table of this House four
documents where we have another case that must be investigated from a national
perspective and one that is a clear case for the Office of Public Prosecutions.
I would hope Madame speaker, that as I conclude the nation would agree
to why amendments to the Constitution must have real substance to effect
change as well as penalties for government’s and its agencies that don’t
follow the rule of law to the strictest terms and definitions.
Madame speaker, the details of what
could be yet another heinous act I will again leave for the accused to
debate, for I do not want this to be a political exercise. Matters where
the nation’s credibility or a government’s legitimate mandate to serve
is under attack cannot be viewed from a political perspective. Madame speaker,
I have been concerned for some time now about a set of documents that have
been widely disseminated in this society, of which I have just laid on
the table, concerning the stated activities of the Member for North Abaco
when he was a PLP Cabinet Minister.
Madame speaker, the documents on the
table when followed in sequence of the dates, states that the Member for
North Abaco was involved in sensitive and clandestine talks with American
Government Officials. And Madame speaker, when we understand the contents
of the documents we will recognize that it states he was engaged in these
discussions when he was a Cabinet Minister.
Madame speaker, I have to believe
that this is a matter that cannot be allowed to stand unresolved in the
public, just as the matters concerning the Member for Marathon as well
as the Minister’s of Education and Tourism.
Madame speaker, the communications in the documents
have been disseminated to the public for six years and at various times
by a local tabloid newspaper and have been the subject of many political
discussions. And the Member for Shirlea, I believe, alluded to these allegations
prior to the Christmas Recess and I raised the matter in this place as
a question to be answered by the then Attorney-General, the Member for
Yamacraw. Madame speaker, as with many questions on the agenda, this question
was never answered. Madame speaker, the question I asked was who is CI-1622,
which in law enforcement vernacular means, who is the person listed as
Confidential Informant #1622?
Madame speaker, the documents
before this House states in sad detail that the Member for North Abaco
was at some point a Confidential Informant for a foreign government. Madame
speaker, as with the Member for Marathon, I likewise look not to politicize
nor dramatize what is a serious national issue.
Madame speaker, the first letter
in chronological order is dated September 21, 1983. Madame speaker, at
the top of the letter are markings that apparently seeks to avoid recognition
of what may be sensitive information. Madame speaker, the letter is addressed
to one Andrew, who I have come to find out was former Charge d’Affairs
at the US Embassy, Andrew Antippas. The letter reads as follows: (Read
Sept. 21, 1983 Letter)
Madame speaker, we can
easily look for answers from the one who signed the letter, the Member
for North Abaco, because he is alive and well. I also believe that Andrew
Antippas can also be located because I believe that he is still the High
Consulate to Vietnam, having also served for the United States as the High
Consulate to British Columbia, Canada.
Madame speaker, the second
letter in chronological order, is dated December 14, 1983. Madame speaker,
one could assume that this letter according to its contents was in response
to the Member for North Abaco’s letter of September 21, 1983. Madame speaker,
this letter is addressed to the Member for North Abaco and sent by Federal
Courier to the U.S. Embassy and read as follows: (Read Dec. 14, 1983 Letter).
Madame speaker, I do not
know the whereabouts of the person that signed the letter or even if he’s
still alive, but we do have the stated acceptor of the letter in our jurisdiction,
in the Member for North Abaco. And hopefully he can explain what this was
all about. Then Madame speaker, there is a Memo dated March 2, 1987, in
which again the Member for North Abaco is the subject of suspicious actions
and the memo reads as follows: (Read Memo of March 2, 1987)
Madame speaker, it has
been brought to my attention that Mr. Robert Merkle was last known to be
in Clearwater, Florida at the Law Offices of Merkle & Magri. We likewise
have in our jurisdiction the Member for North Abaco, who should be asked
to explain the meaning of his relationship, as stated, and a number attached
to his dealings with American Officials. And finally Madame speaker, we
have a letter dated May 11, 1987 which is correspondence between the U.S.
Attorney-General at the time, Mr. Edwin Meese and one Leon Kellner, who
was the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida. The letter
reads as follows: (Read May 11, 1987 Letter)
Madame speaker, this correspondence
though lengthy speaks again to the importance of Confidential Informant
#1622 and the need for cooperation between two obviously bickering U.S.
Attorneys. Madame speaker, the signee of the letter Mr. Edwin Meese I believe
can easily be found in California, as I believe he is the Chairman of the
Richard Nixon Library/Foundation. I cannot say where Mr. Leon Kellner can
be found because he retired from government service in 1988 or thereabouts.
However Madame speaker, the person stated as CI-1622 is in our jurisdiction
and can be called on to answer in this House, as the information is stating
that it is the Member for North Abaco.
Madame speaker, this serious
matter, if left unresolved could one day and once again damage the credibility
of Governance in the Bahamas, just as the days of drug trafficking damaged
the first Independent Government in the Bahamas. Madame speaker, it could
one day come back to haunt us if left unresolved because we know that what
is done in the dark will one day come to the light.
In that regard Madame speaker,
I would like to give the Member for North Abaco the opportunity to consider
carefully what is the right thing to do. And when he comes next week to
debate the Public Accounts Committee Report, he also allows us to let it
all hang out and likewise debate this matter.
I also request that an investigation
be established forthwith by the Attorney-General of the Bahamas into these
serious charges, as documented, with a view toward prosecution for Treason,
if these charges are proven to be correct. I would also hope that these
investigations don’t go the way of the investigations promised on the Minister’s
of Education and Tourism. For we have yet to hear anything about the findings.
Again Madame speaker, as this
and the matter of the Member for Marathon are not political, but national,
I pray that for the peace, stability and continued harmony of this country
these charges once thoroughly investigated prove to not be what many persons
have suspected for some time. For no one should want to have lived in a
time when a traitor was in our midst and managed to attain the highest
Office in the land. It will cause us to speculate as to why some things
in the FNM’s time of governance was done they way it was done.
Madame speaker, I await the outcome
of this investigation by the Attorney-General. May God be with those who
are under such serious accusations, the likes of which have hardly ever
been seen in any country since the beginning of time.
AND ON THAT SAD NOTE, ON BEHALF OF
THE GRANTS TOWN CONSTITUENCY, MADAME SPEAKER, I THANK YOU.