PPP Gov't drops no confidence motion challenge | | Print | |
Written by Kwesi Isles |
Monday, 03 December 2012 18:41 |
The government has withdrawn its High Court challenge of the no confidence motion against Home Affairs Minister Clement Rohee saying it has been overtaken by recent events with the efforts to gag the minister now before the National Assembly's Committee of Privileges. The opposition in July used its one-seat majority to pass the motion which called on the minister to resign or the president to remove him from the post but neither calls was binding and the government immediately moved to the court challenging the motion. Court papers seen by Demerara Waves Online News on Monday showed that Attorney General Anil Nandlall had filed a “notice of withdrawal and discontinuance” of the matter against the Speaker Raphael Trotman and Leader of the Opposition David Granger who was the originator of the motion. “’The original has been overtaken by events,” Nandlall told DemWaves Monday evening, referring to Trotman’s ruling on November 22 that a new motion to gag the minister be sent to the privileges committee The Speaker ruled that the motion in the name of Granger be dealt with at the committee to determine whether the Assembly had the power to gag the minister. He additionally ruled that bills and motions in the minister’s name would not be entertained before the committee’s finding with the government contending that he had given effect to the opposition motion. Nandlall said the motion filed last week by the government incorporates the challenge to the no confidence motion and that it would be duplication to continue with that matter in light of the more recent development. The motion is set to be heard before acting Chief justice Ian Chang at 10AM on Monday. The AG last Tuesday asked the High Court to discard the decisions by Trotman to put the Rohee matter before the Privileges Committee and to prevent him from speaking in the House until the committee’s decision. He wants the court to find that Trotman’s decision to prohibit or not recognize Rohee in tabling bills, motions or making other presentations in the House imposes a sanction on the minister without affording him any form of due process, natural justice and fairness and accordingly, that decision is unlawful, contrary to natural justice, irrational, null, void and of no effect. The High Court was also asked to declare that the Privileges Committee had no jurisdiction to deal with or determine any issue remitted to it on the basis of the Speaker’s ruling on November 22. |