Jagdeo's witness bungles testimony in libel case against Freddie Kissoon
Written by Denis Scott Chabrol Wednesday, 16 May 2012 22:06
http://www.demerarawaves.com/i...freddie-kissoon.html
Jason Abdulla
The new witness in former President Bharrat Jagdeo’s libel case against Kaieteur News newspaper columnist, Freddie Kissoon on Wednesday bungled his testimony under cross examination when he could not explain some basic details of his evidence.
He is Jason Abdulla, known as ‘Taps Son.’ He told the High Court that he is employed at Office of the President as a Media Officer but works at the Government Information Agency (GINA) and reports to “everybody” in the government. Abdulla replaces Rawle Kissoon, who Jagdeo’s lawyer- Sase Gunraj- said no longer works at Office of the President. Abdulla said he was mandated to examine articles by Frederick Kisssoon which had contained words such as dictatorship, dictator, King Kong and Fascism with reference to Jagdeo.
Using that as the basis, Justice Brassington Reynolds admitted six of nine photocopied columns by Kissoon between June 2010 and January 2012. Defence Lawyer, Senior Counsel, Bernard Dos Santos said he was keen on proving that Kissoon had displayed a “morbid obsession” with Jagdeo and so make out a case for exemplary damages.
The Judge used purportedly offending sections in each article to determine their admissibility on grounds of "crossing the threshold of relevance." Under cross examination by Defence Lawyer, Nigel Hughes, the Media Officer said he reports to Head of GINA, Neaz Subhan, Kwame Mc Coy, Clement Rohee, and Roger Luncheon.
Abdulla, also during cross examination, told the court that while he could spell Fascism he did not know what it meant and he was unfamiliar with its origin and its context. He said he only looked for the words with reference to Jagdeo and the government. Pressed on what he understood by “Fascist manifestation” in one of Kissoon’s columns, he said “It is against the norms and it is perhaps dictatorial.”
The Office of the President/GINA functionary told the court that “he” in one of the articles did not refer to the plaintiff or former president, Jagdeo. On the matter of whether Kissoon’s reference to “Fascist dictators” referred to Jagdeo, Abdulla said “No.”
Jagdeo filed the case against newspaper columnist and academic, Freddie Kissoon, Kaieteur News Editor Adam Harris and the newspaper’s publisher, Glen Lall, claiming more than GUY$10 million in damages.
Jagdeo believes that he was libeled in a Kissoon article titled , ‘King Kong sent his goons to disrupt the Conference’, which refers to the Guyanese leader as an ideological racist. In the article published on June 28, 2010, Kissoon was alluding to the near-break up of the annual historical conference at the National Library by persons who had heckled pro-government sentiments when he was about to deliver his presentation.