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FM
Former Member

Minister of Finance, Winston Jordan, could be sent to jail on Monday pursuant to a contempt order issued by Justice Priya Sewnarine-Beharry if he fails to honour a court judgment to pay US$2.2M to Dipcon Engineering.

Minister of Finance Winston Jordan

The Full Court comprising Justices Simone Morris-Ramlall and Diane Insanally, refused to grant a stay of Justice Sewnarine-Beharry’s order during a hearing yesterday.
Attorney General Basil Williams who is representing Minister Jordan issued the Full Court with an oral notice of appeal.
Minister Jordan was present at yesterday’s court proceedings.
The matter had stemmed from a multi-million-dollar contract dispute between the Trinidad-based company, Dipcon and the State.
In 2015, Justice Gino Persaud had ruled that Dipcon recover the sum from government as monies due to the engineering company for infrastructural works done under the previous PPP government.
On June 24, Justice Sewnarine-Beharry issued a contempt order to have Minister Jordan imprisoned for 21 days if he fails to pay the monies to Dipcon by Monday, July 8. Following the contempt order, Attorney General Williams appealed to the Full Court to set aside and/or reverse the order of Justice Sewnarine-Beharry. The Full Court ruled that Williams’s application has no merit.
In his filings to the Full Court, Williams had challenged the jurisdiction of the High Court to issue such an order against the Minister. He contended that Justice Sewnarine-Beharry misdirected herself in law when she exercised jurisdiction to hear the application of contempt against the minister in his private and personal capacity as Minister of Finance for alleged monies owe

Attorney General Basil Williams

d by the State and Government to Dipcon.
Further, Williams noted that among other things Justice Sewnarine-Beharry erred and misdirected herself in law when she failed to appreciate that contempt proceedings were coercive in nature and such order could not be made against Jordan in his private capacity, since no act was committed by the Minister in his private capacity.
It was Williams’s argument that Jordan in his capacity as Minister of Finance fell under government.
Dipcon’s lawyer, Timothy Jonas, in addressing the Full Court held that while the court has no jurisdiction to issue a coercive order against the government, the contempt proceedings were filed against Jordan, a mere “individual” and not the government. As it is, Jonas submitted that Jordan was liable for criminal contempt over his failure to comply with the judgment of Justice Persaud.
Moreover, Jonas said that there is no reason why the monies cannot be paid since it has already been approved by Cabinet. In this regard, Jonas contended that the Minister’s failure to pay out the monies defeats the purpose of the administration of justice. Jonas pointed out that the Court of Appeal and Caribbean Court of Justice have upheld Justice Persaud’s ruling.
Jonas stressed that Minister Jordan has even failed to comply with an Order Mandamus that was applied for by Dipcon and granted by the Chief Justice Roxane George on November 12, 2018 ordering that the monies be paid on or before January 15, 2019.
Obviously dissatisfied with the judgment of Justice Persaud, Williams filed an appeal with the Court of Appeal. Based on reports, that appeal was out of time by about six months. The Court of Appeal refused to allow the appeal and dismissed it. Williams subsequently sought redress at the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ).
In substantiating his case at the CCJ, Williams contended that there were good reasons for the belated appeal. For one, the Attorney General told the CCJ that the matter was handled by a private attorney and the State was not informed of the judgment until months after it was delivered. Noting the fact that the appeal was not filed within the prescribed time limit, the CCJ dismissed the appeal, among other things, noting that it was unacceptable.

https://www.kaieteurnewsonline...or-his-imprisonment/

Replies sorted oldest to newest

"The Full Court ruled that Williams’s application has no merit."

It is not only from the Full Court but Williams have been hearing from lots of places that he has no merit. 

FM
Amral posted:

Keep dreaming. No minister will ever go to jail in Guyana. This is not Pakistan. 

Hopefully that trend changes on Monday. If the ball is set rolling with the jailing of Jordan, it may continue rolling to include the jailing or other ministers and that can only be a good move for Guyana.

FM
Sheik101 posted:
Demerara_Guy posted:

Monday, July 08, 2019 will be THE DAY.

What day? Jordan aint going no way. Doan hold yuh breath.

Why?? The GADAHA gun pardon him like he does for every Afro CRIMINAL???

Nehru
Sheik101 posted:
Demerara_Guy posted:

Monday, July 08, 2019 will be THE DAY.

What day? Jordan aint going no way. Doan hold yuh breath.

Jordan loses bid to stay jail order over unpaid US$2M Dipcon award

https://s1.stabroeknews.com/images/2018/10/winst.jpg

Winston Jordan

Finance Minister Winston Jordan yesterday afternoon lost his bid to secure a stay on the High Court order that he be jailed by Monday if he does not pay over the more than US$2 million owed to Trinidad construction company Dipcon by the government for road construction works.

At a Full Court hearing yesterday morning, Justices Diana Insanally and Simone Morris-Ramlall denied Jordan’s application for the stay, while stating that they were of the view that his application had no merit.

FM

Jordan worried about being jailed

 

 

Finance Minister Winston Jordan this morning expressed worry about being possibly jailed over the Government’s failure to pay Trinidadian-based construction firm, Dipcon.

Asked by media operatives about the issue, Jordan said he is not a “gangster” who is ready to face jail.

Today is the deadline – as stipulated by Guyana’s High Court – to pay Dipcon some US$2M.

The Finance Minister said Dipcon has not yet been paid but he is banking on a reprieve from President David Granger to save him.

According to Jordan, he should not be responsible in his personal capacity for the State being sued, especially when the matter is an inherited one.

High Court Judge Justice Priya Sewnarine-Beharry recently ordered that Finance Minister pay Dipcon or face 21 days imprisonment.

The Judge was enforcing a 2015 High Court order for the State to pay Dipcon over monies owed.

Attorney General Basil Williams applied for a stay of the Judge’s order for the Minister to be jailed, however he lost the case.

Justices Diana Insanally and Simone Morris-Ramlall denied Jordan’s application for the stay, stating that it had no merit.

 

 

 

 

 

 

FM
Ray posted:

no point bai...I did not read the whole thing

I see the payment was approved, but never made...so he going to jail for ignoring the order to pay

Suh, where is dee money?

FM

Is he still free? Shouldn’t he be in jail by now? What are they waiting for? This is the Government that says it is embracing law and order. Granger carrying on as usual like if nothing happened. If this was a man on the street, he would have been in jail by now. BUT THE GOOD LIFE IS NOT FOR THE COMMON MAN! ONLY FOR THE ELITES IN THE COALITION.

FM

Jordan moaning and groaning that the liability was inherited so it shouldn’t be his problem. How come the Coalition didn’t use the same argument when they paid for services not received for the airport renovations?

FM
ksazma posted:

Jordan moaning and groaning that the liability was inherited so it shouldn’t be his problem. How come the Coalition didn’t use the same argument when they paid for services not received for the airport renovations?

Hard question. They could not think back that far.

FM

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