SOME ONE IN THE LABOUR PARTY IS MAKING SURE THAT THE PEOPLE OF - TopicsExpress



          

SOME ONE IN THE LABOUR PARTY IS MAKING SURE THAT THE PEOPLE OF NEVIS NEVER CAN UNITE THAT CAN ONLY BE ONE PERSON WHO MY FRIENDS I DO NOT NEED TO CALL THAT NAME, LOOKING BACK YOU WILL NOTICE THAT PARRY SAID HE WILL NOT BE PAYING FOR THE COST OF THIS EPISODE OF WHICH HE IS REALLY MAKING REFERENCE TO THE SIDF AND WHO HAVE CONTROL ON THE SIDF EVERY THING IS DONE TO MAKE SURE THAT THE NRP AND THE CCM WILL NEVER WORK TOGETHER OR THE PEOPLE OF NEVIS WILL NEVER VOTE FOR THE SAME PARTY, WAKE UP NEVIS PEOPLE St. Kitts and Nevis (WINN): Former premier Joseph Parry is using a submission by the CCM’s Mark Brantley in the court of appeal case last November to support his view that the Court erred in a ruling against him and his former deputy premier Hensley Daniel. The Appeal Court last year in the Nevis election petition ordered costs against Parry and Daniel on the alleged grounds of misfeasance and bad faith in relation to the compilation of the voter’s list. But Mr. Parry, speaking at his party press conference this week, is suggesting that Mr. Brantley conceded in his submission that both Mr. Parry and Mr. Daniel had nothing to do with the compilation of the voters list and that the court erred. Mr. Parry is arguing that on these grounds, he should not have to pay costs and that was why the court deleted costs against him and Mr. Daniel. “In November (2012), Mr. Brantley is making a submission to the Appeals Court virtually saying neither Mr. Daniel or myself was accused of bad faith; there is no evidence anywhere and so the court made a mistake,” Parry said. In 2012 the Appeal Court upheld a lower court’s ruling that the election result in Nevis St. John’s District was null and void and slammed electoral officials for acting in “bad faith,” demonstrating “misfeasance,” and guilty of “reckless indifference” breaking the law. However, legal counseling representing Mr. Brantley, Dahlia Joseph explains in an interview with WINN that Mr. Brantley conceded in the submission that Mr. Daniel had nothing to do with the compilation of the voters list, but in the case of Mr. Parry, he infringed on Mr. Brantley’s constitutional rights by denying him access to the state supported Nevis Newscast. “Mr. Brantley’s position in relation to Hensley Daniel, in terms of what was pleaded in court and the evidence that was lead, we felt that there wasn’t a basis then for holding that Mr. Daniel was guilty of bad faith in terms of the preparation of the (voters) list,” Ms. Joseph said. “In relation to Mr. Parry, no concession was made because Mr. Parry was found to have infringed Mr. Brantley’s constitutional right. That finding remains; that finding was not changed at all by the court of appeal. You have to understand liability never change, the only change was who was to pay cost,” the lawyer added. The court transcripts on the section of the pleadings in the appeal costs case last week as it relates to Mr. Parry infringing Mr. Brantley’s rights read as follows: “That the Nevis Island Administration of which Mr. Parry was the head, operating a nightly news programme funded out of public purse. That the programme was used for the Nevis Island Administration as a propaganda instrument for Mr. Parry’s party. That the State media resources in the form of its news programme was used and abused by Mr. Parry by ensuring only the political programmes organized by his was covered on the News programmes and in the premise the Respondent’s Constitutional rights were infringed.” - See more at: winnfm/news/local/6080-arry-uses-brantley-s-appeal-court-submission-to-his-defence#sthash.83SQLNtD.dpuf
Posted on: Sat, 02 Nov 2013 13:55:54 +0000

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