Senior Political Reporter
No further action will be taken against United National Congress (UNC) MP Wayne Sturge and People’s National Movement (PNM) MP Colm Imbert, following recent moves to have each taken before Parliament’s Privileges Committee on separate matters.
But House Speaker Jagdeo Singh, who confirmed their respective issues were closed during Friday’s sitting of Parliament, also advised MPs to ensure the correctness of their statements regarding Members of Parliament before making them and to think “long and hard” before seeking to invoke the sub judice rule.
Singh ruled on the call by PNM whip Marvin Gonzales, who raised a matter of Privileges regarding Sturge’s claim that PNM Senator Faris Al-Rawi was renting AGRA Court to the T&T Police Service. Sturge subsequently apologised and withdrew the statement.
On that issue, Singh said no further action was required. But he cautioned MPs that they should satisfy themselves of the correctness of their statements regarding MPs before making them.
“Whilst mere negligence, recklessness or inadvertence regarding the accuracy of a statement does not meet the threshold of deliberately misleading the House, Members ought to refrain from making statements, which may be interpreted as seeking to cast aspersions on other members,” Singh added
Singh also ruled on Legal Affairs Minister Saddam Hosein’s bid to have Imbert taken before the Privileges Committee for “deliberately misleading” Parliament by claiming the High Court’s decision in the case of Rohonie Ramkissoon versus the Finance Minister was currently under appeal and couldn’t be discussed as it was sub judice.
Singh said no further action was required, since he had considered the circumstances surrounding the matter and examined the explanation by Imbert, who also unreservedly apologised for his misstatement.
Singh said the accepted practice is that where members make inaccurate statements and timeously correct those statements, the House ought to accept the truthfulness of the correction.
But he advised members to “think long and hard before seeking to invoke the sub judice rule. This applies even more so where the member alleging that a matter is sub judice is party to the proceedings in question. The member has a duty to be informed of matters in which they are a party.”
He said the sub judice rule has been codified in Standing Order 49.
“The point to be ascertained from Standing Order 49, is that the sub judice rule is not absolute but discretionary in its application, and, in prescribed circumstances, discussion on a matter that is before the courts may be allowed,” Singh said.
“If the sub judice convention is applied too broadly, then the mere existence of litigation can be used as a justification for curtailing debate.
“Conversely, if the sub judice rule is applied too narrowly, members may make statements that undermine the integrity or impartiality of judicial proceedings through their pronouncements in Parliament.”