Dear Editor,
The Member of Parliament for St Andrew North Central Karl Samuda is a veteran politician who is well liked by his constituents, hence his repeated victory in general elections, even when he switches parties.
Samuda could be described as a rare gem of a politician of any party that he supports, as he commands the respect and loyalty of his followers and is feared by any Opposition.
What transpired recently, however, showed a man who was under pressure from his supporters, who demonstrated their extreme anger by burning shirts with his images because he was missing in action to rescue them from becoming homeless.
In a bid to ease the tension and frustration and to assure his commitment to the rowdy constituents of 85 Red Hills Road, Samuda made a most frightening statement. He said: “Any judge who declares that a person who claims to own the land, whether it is so or not, has a right to evict people [will] not be tolerated.”
There is absolutely no justification for Samuda to have made such a brazen and offensive statement against any member of our judiciary, except to say that he was losing his mind.
As a Government minister, and a well respected and influential one at that, Samuda should have known better than to even think of interfering with the judiciary, which enjoys freedom from interference in any way, shape or form from any body, especially the executive arm.
The reason we practise a tripartite system of governance is to prevent the concentration of power from influential politicians like Samuda, and to provide for the necessary checks and balances.
Once a property owner can prove ownership, then it means that he or she has the claim of right and they can, in fact, evict the squatters from their land. Who, then, is Samuda to dictate what he or she does in disposing of or developing their property? His statements have grave legal implications.
While I commend Samuda for ‘rescuing’ his constituents, it should never be detrimental to or at the expense of the property owner.
The prime minister must be decisive and direct him to retract those statements and to offer a formal apology to the judiciary, the public at large and, particularly, to the property owner, for his seeming oppressive stance and intimidatory tactics. It must not be tolerated!
Dujon Russell
dujon.russell@yahoo.com
The Member of Parliament for St Andrew North Central Karl Samuda is a veteran politician who is well liked by his constituents, hence his repeated victory in general elections, even when he switches parties.
Samuda could be described as a rare gem of a politician of any party that he supports, as he commands the respect and loyalty of his followers and is feared by any Opposition.
What transpired recently, however, showed a man who was under pressure from his supporters, who demonstrated their extreme anger by burning shirts with his images because he was missing in action to rescue them from becoming homeless.
In a bid to ease the tension and frustration and to assure his commitment to the rowdy constituents of 85 Red Hills Road, Samuda made a most frightening statement. He said: “Any judge who declares that a person who claims to own the land, whether it is so or not, has a right to evict people [will] not be tolerated.”
There is absolutely no justification for Samuda to have made such a brazen and offensive statement against any member of our judiciary, except to say that he was losing his mind.
As a Government minister, and a well respected and influential one at that, Samuda should have known better than to even think of interfering with the judiciary, which enjoys freedom from interference in any way, shape or form from any body, especially the executive arm.
The reason we practise a tripartite system of governance is to prevent the concentration of power from influential politicians like Samuda, and to provide for the necessary checks and balances.
Once a property owner can prove ownership, then it means that he or she has the claim of right and they can, in fact, evict the squatters from their land. Who, then, is Samuda to dictate what he or she does in disposing of or developing their property? His statements have grave legal implications.
While I commend Samuda for ‘rescuing’ his constituents, it should never be detrimental to or at the expense of the property owner.
The prime minister must be decisive and direct him to retract those statements and to offer a formal apology to the judiciary, the public at large and, particularly, to the property owner, for his seeming oppressive stance and intimidatory tactics. It must not be tolerated!
Dujon Russell
dujon.russell@yahoo.com