Accused’s wife tells court of cop’s sexual advances

A RIO Claro woman testified in the High Court yesterday that three days after she told a policeman she was fed up with his sexual harrassment, the same policeman charged her husband with marijuana cultivation.

Mairoon Seepersad testified: “I told him I was getting sick and tired of this nonsense and this thing has to stop”. Seepersad said one day she cautioned the officer: “My husband is at home and I am going to tell him what you are saying to me”. The woman told Justice Pamela Elder and jurors in the San Fernando Third Criminal Court that the policeman responded: “That man, I will lock up that man and come home and show you…”.   The woman claimed that the officer said after locking up her husband he would go to her home to have sex with her. Seepersad was called into the witness box yesterday by attorney Prakash Ramadhar, who is defending her husband, Mahabir Seepersad, 38, of Clear- water Village. The accused is jointly charged with Kello Mohammed, 42, of Kildeer Trace, Rio Claro.

The accused’s wife testified that she had known PC Wayne Doodai for approximately 11 years, since she began working at the County Medical Officer of Health office in Rio Claro. She said Doohai would visit every two weeks, and he would make advances towards her. Seepersad said: “He told me he loved me. I told him I wasn’t interested. Another time he would say  ‘I love you, let’s go have lunch, I want to talk to you’.” Mairoon said that on April 30, 1999, PC Doodhai stopped her while she was driving her car and again harrassed her. She said she became afraid. “I felt scared and I felt a chill run through my body. My hands started to shake and I went home and told my husband,” Seepersad said. Three days later, on May 2, 1999, her husband was arrested and charged for marijuana cultivation.

Guns, ammo stolen in attacks on security guards

WITHIN the space of two hours on Tuesday night, armed bandits held up and robbed two security guards in separate incidents at Mt Hope and Maraval, making off with a revolver, a pistol and 27 rounds of ammunition.

In one of the hold-ups, bandits stole $17,000 in cash and jewelry from a retired businessman and eight of his friends, after relieving a security guard of his firearm. The first incident occurred around 9.45 pm when an armed female security guard and her unarmed male counterpart were on duty at a UWI Field Station  located at the back of the Eric Williams Medical Sciences Centre (EWMSC), Mt Hope.

Three men, two armed with guns and the other with a cutlass, walked out of bushes near the guard-booth and called out to the guards. On seeing the bandits, the male security guard abandoned his colleague and ran through some bushes. His female colleague was relieved of a .38 revolver and 12 rounds of ammunition. The bandits then ran back into the bushes and escaped. A report was made to St Joseph and officers led by PC Selwyn Hobbs and WPC Yearwood visited the scene and carried out an unsuccessful search for the bandits.

In the second incident, at around 11 pm Estate Constable Rajkumar Maharaj, 60, of Pentagon Security Services, was on duty at the home of retired businessman John Wong at Long Circular Road, Maraval. Two armed bandits called out to Maharaj at the front gate and subsequently forced their way into the compound, relieving Maharaj of his Luger nine-millimetre semi-automatic pistol and 12 rounds of ammunition. The bandits then went to the back of the house where they found Wong and eight   friends liming. They ordered the limers to “pass everything” and collected money, jewelry and other valuables amounting to $17,000. The bandits escaped in a Peugeot Sedan belonging to one of the victims. A report was made to St Clair police and officers led by Insp McEwen Allen, including Sgt Glen Hackett and PC Andre Lopez visited the scene. Up to news-time the vehicle in which the bandits escaped had not been recovered.

BWIA predicts brighter future

A BRIGHT FUTURE is dawning for BWIA and the national airline’s management is confident this future will become clearer following today’s special Cabinet meeting at Whitehall.

At yesterday’s post-Cabinet press conference, Prime Minister Patrick Manning announced that Cabinet will sit in special session today to deliberate upon BWIA’s future. At a news conference hours later at Sunjet House, BWIA officials were optimistic that brighter days were coming and revealed that by next Tuesday a total of $7, 271, 342 would have been paid out to the airline’s 471 retrenched workers. BWIA Vice-President (Employee Services) Hugh Henderson said that as of 2 pm yesterday, a total of $5,717, 342 had been paid to those workers.

“On April 7, all 471 people at the time were issued cheques that totalled $1.5 million. As of this afternoon of those 471 cheques, 191 have been collected. We still have 280 cheques outstanding. On Monday April 14, seven cheques of $50,000 each were issued to the first seven people who were actually severed in December. On Tuesday coming, we will repeat the exercise of another $1.5 million,” he said.

Henderson denied claims that BWIA was in breach of the law in its method of severance payment and the company was working expeditiously to address the employees’ concerns. BWIA Communications Director Clint Williams meanwhile was optimistic after today’s Cabinet meeting, the airline would be on a more stable footing because the company had made “an excellent sales pitch” to the Government. He said BWIA did not have “$38 million in a bag” to pay the retrenched workers and many lending agencies were hesitant about extending credit given the airline’s current situation..

Explaining that BWIA gets money to pay severance from its revenue streams, the BWIA director declared “there are no concrete assurances in the airline industry”. Williams added that the war in Iraq, SARS and possible terrorist threats have damaged the industry’s revenue stream and BWIA was only marginally better off than most of its competitors.  However Williams gave the assurance that BWIA was doing its best to pay the monies owed to the workers and said anyone who claimed there was corporate fraud in this exercise must be prepared to back up those claims in court.

PM : BWIA/LIAT TO MERGE

A BWIA/LIAT merger is expected to be endorsed by the Cabinet today at a special meeting at 10 am today to finalise Government’s position on BWIA.

“Not that our position is in any doubt,” Prime Minister Patrick Manning stated at a post-Cabinet news conference at Whitehall yesterday. He said in principle a decision has been taken to form one airline- a regional airline, “essentially out of BWIA and LIAT”. A technical team will be established to determine the configuration of that airline “and the best strategy to pursue to get that configuration from where we are today”, Manning stated. Manning said the Government never really had a position on whether BWIA was of strategic importance or not. It came up for discussion, but it never really determined the question, even though in the interim, Government divested its shares in BWIA.

Manning recalled that in 1989 when his convention address was being prepared, a big argument broke out on the night before the convention, as to whether BWIA was of strategic importance. “At 11 that night, we argued it back and forth…we never resolved the question-whether BWIA is of strategic importance or not. But we have been pursuing a course of action on the assumption that BWIA was not of strategic importance. Our meeting in Barbados — at which the Prime Ministers of Trinidad and Tobago, Barbados, St Vincent and the Deputy Prime Minister of Antigua and Barbuda were present- considered that a regional airline was of strategic importance”. “ And,” he stressed”,for the first time in 15 years the government of Trinidad and Tobago is closer to an answer to the question of whether BWIA is of strategic importance or not”.

I did not kill him, I loved him

Leslie Huggins, accused of murdering his cousin Clint Huggins for a $3M contract said yesterday that he loved Clint as a brother and denied killing him.

Leslie said: “Clint was my cousin. I was very close to him. We were like brothers… Clint is meh brother.  I was always protecting Clint. I did not kill Clint.” Leslie, a mechanic, denied all allegations linking him to the murder of Clint which the State lead through his once common-law wife Swarsattie Maharaj. Leslie told the court how Clint used to leave his Teteron Barracks safehouse and visit him in Sangre Grande. On one occasion, in spite of Clint’s reluctance,  Leslie said he took Clint back to Teteron and on other occasions to  police stations. He said he did this because he wanted to protect Clint.

Another cousin, Arnold Huggins, who is jointly charged with Leslie with Junior “Heads” Phillip, for the murder,  also testified yesterday that his main reason for having a relationship with Swarsattie Maharaj was for her inheritance money, and when  that started to run out, he decided to end the relationship.  Arnold  made clear his intention about Maharaj while testifying in the Port-of-Spain Third Criminal Court,  where the trio is on trial for the murder of Clint. Defending Arnold is Ian Stuart Brooks; Leslie by Keith Scotland and Dawn Mohan; and Phillip, by Osbourne Charles SC. Prosecutors are Wayne Rajbansie and Natasha George.

Arnold told the 12-member jury that Maharaj had  live with him as man and wife at his mother’s Matura home for about two to three months in 1996, after breaking up with her common-law husband Leslie. Maharaj has denied this, though she has admitted spending a week there but not sleeping with Arnold. Arnold said that although Maharaj  had maintained herself financially, “she could not cook or clean and she did not like children.” Even Arnold’s mother Merle Huggins, testified yesterday that she did not like Maharaj. She described Maharaj  as a “party girl” who spent her nights out and slept all day.

Merle  told the jury  that she did not want her son associating  with a girl like Maharaj. Instead, she would have preferred that Arnold had remained with his wife Ann Marie Maharaj, who had a son for him. It was suggested that because of Swarsattie, Arnold’s marriage with Ann Marie broke up.  Merle also testified that she and  Swarsattie had a “cussout” and sometime later Swarsattie left the house and  went back to  Mulchan Street, Guaico. Arnold went after her but he met stiff resistance from Richard Huggins when he tried to talk to Swarsattie.

This led to Swarsattie having to take out a restraining order against Arnold, which he testified she recalled sometime later, after they spent an evening at Salybia Beach and the night at his home. The trio are before Justice Alice Yorke Soo-Hon, charged with the Carnival Tuesday — February 20, 1996, murder of Clint, a key state witness in the then murder trial of Dole Chadee and his gang. The State is alleging that the men had accepted a $3M contract from Chadee’s top lieutenant Joey Ramiah,  to kill Clint. When hearing resumes today, Rajbansie will continue with his cross-examination of Leslie.

YETMING KNOCKS PNM ‘MORON’ PLAN

Former UNC Finance Minister, Gerald Yetming, has criticised Government’s proposed alternative to Caroni (1975) Limited, saying the new company would also require massive Government subventions to survive on a yearly basis.

Yetming was addressing a community meeting at the Avocat Vedic School, Fyzabad, on Tuesday night. In his traditionally sombre tone, Yetming informed the small gathering that the new company, the Sugar Manufacturing Company of TT, was a “conceptual company” based on studies carried out by the Divestment Secretariat. “These morons take this conceptual report, and in their haste to give the impression that they are pro-active and they are doing something, rushes ahead and offers VSEP to 10,000 people,” he said. Yetming added: “If Caroni (1975) Limited required $500 million per year, this Sugar Manufacturing Company of Trinidad and Tobago, after they cut all that they want to cut, will probably require subventions to the tune of $400 million.”

The St Joseph MP advised that additional feasibility studies still had to be conducted on the restructuring  plans for the State-owned sugar company, saying, “Everybody, including the labourer in the field” agreed that “something has to be done in Caroni.”  However, Yetming cautioned that Government’s VSEP package was not the way forward for both the Company or the thousands of sugar workers who were being “forced” to accept the package. He said a number of rural communities scattered across Central and South Trinidad would “die” because of the PNM Government’s discrimination against sugar workers. Yetming cited the ailing Port Authority of TT as proof of Government’s biased stance against workers in the sugar industry saying the Port owed in excess of $3B, while Caroni owed $2.2 billion. “If they say they giving the workers of the Port VSEP, and deal with the four subsidaries afterwards, as they doing with Caroni, the whole of Laventille will come into Port-of-Spain and mash up town,” Yetming slammed.

The former Minister of Finance also knocked the Prime Minister’s handling of the BWIA crisis saying a reliable airline service was a critical factor in the nation’s infrastructure. Yetming said the airline was needed to get goods and services into and out of the country.

Cabinet approves $55M for health equipment

WHILE the health crisis continues to affect public hospitals due to doctors’ sick-out action, Government is moving to improve health care.

Cabinet has approved $55 million for the purchase of medical equipment, among them CT scan machines. In revealing this, Health Minister Colm Imbert said in a matter of days contracts will be approved for purchase of the equipment, which includes a diagnostic imaging machine. The current backlog of cataract surgery at the two general hospitals was a source of great worry to the Ministry, Imbert said. It stands at approximately 1,000, but new equipment would result in a considerable reduction, Imbert assured. Also of  great concern, Imbert said, was the rate and extent of kidney failure in which patients must have dialysis treatment twice every week.

Noting that the cost per session was between $500 to $800, Imbert said the Ministry intends to set up Dialysis Treatment Centres in several parts of the country. “We are planning to get this equipment soon. The contracts for purchase are currently with the Attorney General for approval,” Imbert said.

Witnesses in hiding

THE SPECTACLE of a man charged with murder being freed by a judge because two State witnesses failed to appear in court is a most disturbing one. In our view, the entire criminal justice system of our country is threatened by such an outcome. Our courts must have some means of dealing with prosecution witnesses who deliberately refuse to turn up at the trial of persons charged with such a serious offence as murder. A message must be sent to such witnesses that they simply cannot evade their responsibility in such a vital matter with impunity. 

On Monday, Aldwyn Reno, who was charged with the murder of Marcel Ash on February 3, 2001, at Nelson Street, Port-of-Spain, was ordered free by Justice Herbert Volney not on the basis of a not-guilty verdict by a jury but because two State witnesses failed to turn up in court. In the case of Sharon De Peza, girlfriend of the deceased, a warrant was issued last week for her arrest but, according to State prosecutor Althea Alexis, she could not be found. Three subpoenas were issued for the other witness, Delano Williams, but he too failed to attend court. It can hardly be satisfactory, in our view, for the State prosecutor or the office of the Director of Public Prosecutions to accept, on the basis of a one-week-old warrant, that De Peza could not be found. Also it is not enough simply to surrender the search for Williams because he did not respond to three subpoenas. Trinidad and Tobago is not such a huge country that ordinary persons who are not fugitives cannot be located.

Justice Volney himself showed enough concern by asking defence and State attorneys whether anything could be done about the defaulting witnesses. We believe, however, that he should not have accepted their reply that nothing could be done in the circumstances. For one thing, he could have postponed the trial again, issued a warrant for Williams and instructed State counsel to have a more diligent and expansive search conducted for both witnesses. He could also have inquired from the Police officer laying the charge about the efforts that had been made to find the two witnesses. But, most of all, we totally disagree with the view that nothing could be done in the circumstances about their serious dereliction of duty to the Court and our system of justice.

De Peza happens to be an eye-witness to this alleged murder. According to the prosecution, she was on the scene when the accused allegedly struck the victim on the head with a piece of wood. If such key witnesses are now able to shirk their duty to testify in such cases by simply staying away from court or hiding from the authorities, what will such delinquency mean to our criminal justice system? The grave implications of this matter should be quite clear. Both De Peza and Williams gave evidence in the preliminary inquiry and had been properly summoned to testify at the trial. In addition, a warrant for one and subpoenas for the other were issued. Their refusal to comply with these commands constitute a criminal contempt of court for which they should be made to answer. The officers of our courts, whether judges, State or defence attorneys, and Police officers laying murder charges should appreciate the seriousness of this matter, particularly at a time when public concern over the level of crime and violence in our country is quite high. There can be no retrial, of course, but we do not expect the DPP to drop the matter of these delinquent witnesses, just so.

CNN Executive defends silence on known Iraqi atrocities

CNN chief news executive Eason Jordan yesterday sent a memo to his staff defending his decision to withhold information about how Saddam Hussein’s regime had intimidated, tortured and killed Iraqis who had helped the cable news network over the years.

“Withholding information that would get innocent people killed was the right thing to do, not a journalistic sin,” Jordan said in the memo. “Some critics say if I had told my Iraq horror stories sooner, I would have saved thousands of lives,” he wrote in his message to staffers. “How they come to that conclusion I don’t know. Iraq’s human rights record and the brutality of the Saddam Hussein regime were well known before I wrote my op-ed piece. The only sure thing that would have happened if I told those stories sooner is the regime would have tracked down and killed the innocent people who told me those stories.”

Jordan has been pelted with criticism since he detailed the incidents last Thursday night on Aaron Brown’s CNN programme and, more thoroughly, in an op-ed piece in the New York Times the next day. He revealed that in the mid-’90s, an Iraqi cameraman working for CNN was tortured because the government believed Jordan was working for the CIA. Reporting that incident “would almost certainly have gotten him killed and put his family and co-workers at grave risk,” Jordan wrote. CNN also did not report that it had learned from Kurds that a planned attack on CNN employees by Hussein’s forces in northern Iraq had been thwarted a few months earlier.

Plus, Jordan wrote, CNN could not report that Hussein’s eldest son, Uday, told him in 1995 that he intended to assassinate two of his brothers-in-law who had defected and also King Hussein of Jordan, who had given them asylum. “I was sure he would have responded by killing the Iraqi translator who was the only other participant in the meeting,” Jordan explained. (He said he did call King Hussein to warn him, who “dismissed the threat as a madman’s rant.”) Since that piece ran on Friday, it’s been open season on Eason Jordan. Rush Limbaugh had a field day: “CNN is reporting that 11 chemical-bio weapons labs have been found in the Iraqi town of Karbal, and they’re buried to escape detection. I’m wondering how long has CNN known this? It’s a legitimate question now.” Franklin Foer, associate editor of New Republic magazine, also got into the act, in a piece penned for the Wall Street Journal, called “CNN’s Access of Evil.” Foer said he was suspicious of Jordan’s “outbreak of honesty” and suggested the guy should be “apologizing for (CNN’s) cooperation with Iraq’s erstwhile information ministry — and admitting that CNN policy hinders truthful coverage of dictatorships.”

Fox News Channel’s Sean Hannity took a swipe while talking to G Gordon Liddy: “I don’t have any doubt that we’re going to hear a lot about . . . the misery and torture” in Iraq, Hannity said, setting up his punch line: “If we wanted to hear more about torture, we could ask Eason Jordan at CNN. He knew all about it but didn’t report it.” On “Fox Special Report With Brit Hume,” conservative columnist and FNC contributor Charles Krauthammer called it “a classic example of selling your soul for the story.” “He clearly gave up truth for access,” Krauthammer said. “He could have taken the translator out and told that story about Uday, or other stories. But he would have lost the bureau in Baghdad and that’s why he did it.” And the New York Post, which is owned by the same company that owns Fox News Channel, weighed in with a couple of pieces, including one by Eric Fettmann headlined “Craven News Network.” Fettmann suggested that “CNN’s silence seems to have cost as many lives as it may have saved.”

Jordan denied that CNN withheld vital information from the public to maintain a reporting presence in Iraq: “That is nonsense. No news organssation in the world had a more contentious relationship with the Iraqi regime than CNN. The Iraqi leadership was so displeased with CNN’s Iraq reporting, CNN was expelled from Iraq six times — five times in previous years and one more time on Day 3 of this Iraq war.” In his memo, Jordan detailed the CNN reporters and anchors who have been booted or banned from Iraq, including Baghdad bureau chief Jane Arraf, who was barred in response to her reporting on a public protest demanding to know what happened to Iraqis who vanished after being abducted by Iraqi secret police. Also on the list were Christiane Amanpour, Wolf Blitzer, Aaron Brown, Brent Sadler, Nic Robertson, Rym Brahimi, Sheila MacVicar, Ben Wedeman and Richard Roth.

Jordan yesterday told The TV Column that he’s “surprised and disappointed” by the criticism. “To me it was about one thing and one thing only — saving lives of innocent people. It had nothing to do with access. . . . Anybody who thinks it’s more than that is absolutely wrong. I don’t know anybody who would report a story that would get somebody killed.” With regard to cynicism among critics that he had decided to report nothing about the atrocities while making trips to Iraq to lobby the government to keep CNN’s Baghdad bureau open and to arrange interviews with Iraqi leaders, Jordan told The TV Column, “It should be noted that news execs from every TV network in this country went themselves to Baghdad to argue their case.” As of last week, it was safe to write about the information he’d collected because the Hussein regime was over, Jordan said. “I have no doubt whatsoever that in every case at least one person would have been killed for every piece, if I had disclosed earlier.”

In his staff memo, Jordan said he chose to write the op-ed piece “to provide a record of one person’s experiences with the brutality of the Iraqi regime and to ensure we maintain CNN’s long record of reporting on atrocities around the world, even if in these cases we could do so only years later to protect the lives of innocent people.” CNN is mulling whether to move Paula Zahn to prime time and get itself another morning anchor. When war broke out in Iraq, causing CNN to kill Connie Chung’s show, Aaron Brown initially took over early evening war coverage. But Zahn moved in soon thereafter, anchoring 7 to 9 pm war coverage. Many TV biz watchers speculated that was a sure sign CNN was testing Zahn for a prime-time run. There’ve even been rumblings that Zahn’s empire might be beefed up to absorb the “Crossfire” time slot.

Sources close to the situation say the prime-time Zahn model is being considered, and that CNN suits spoke to Jane Clayson about taking the morning gig, though that’s not going to happen, one said. Clayson, you’ll recall, anchored CBS’s “The Early Show” with Bryant Gumbel when it was doing weaker numbers. Since bowing out of that show, she signed a new CBS News contract making her a correspondent for the evening news and “48 Hours Investigates.” “We’re not commenting on any possible programming changes,” a CNN rep told The TV Column. With regard to the displacement of “Crossfire,” the rep said that it “is a show we value very much that will continue to air on CNN.”
(The Washington Post, April 15, 2003)

‘Kings Hold Court’, an excellent show

THE EDITOR: I was part of the live audience who attended the concert, “Kings Hold Court II”, at the Hilton Trinidad on Saturday April 12, 2003. What a fantastic show it was.

The concert featured Trinidad Skiffle Bunch of Coffee Street, San Fernando and the “King of Kings”, the Black man Black Stalin, with guests 3 Canal, Ms Fay Ali-Bocas, Mr Raymond Edwards, Anslem Walters, and a dance choreographed by Ms Alison Seapaul. The Black Man was the evening’s highlight. He broke down the house with his various selections which included, “We Can Make it if We Try”, “Bun Dem”, “Black Man Feeling to Party” and “Caribbean Man”. The Black Man was at his best all dressed in white.

Skiffle Bunch, the evening’s band, was excellent. It was a great concert for all who were at the Hilton. Included in the audience were Their Excellencies, Dr Linda Baboolal, Ms Joan Yuille-Williams, Community Develop-ment/Gender Minister, Mr Kenny Da Silva, NCC Chairman. Black Stalin left the audience spellbound with his performances. Patrons who attended the show got their money’s worth. Also I must say job well done to the host of the evening Mr Jason Daly of Radio 105 “Vibe” FM for a great job. Keep up the good work Jason. To the organisers of the show, keep up the good work and I am already looking forward to “Kings Hold Court III”.


KEN SMITH
Woodbrook