– Dr. Luncheon, still under cross-examination, maintains that Jagdeo is no racist
TOP Government spokesman and Head of the Presidential Secretariat Dr. Roger Luncheon was cross-examined for several hours in the High Court yesterday when the President’s libel case against Kaieteur News columnist Freddie Kissoon, editor Adam Harris and publisher Glen Lall resumed before Justice Brassington Reynolds. The libel case stemmed from an article authored by Kissoon and Published in the Kaieteur news on June 28, 2010 entitled, ‘King Kong sent his goons to disrupt the Conference’, which refers to the Guyanese Head of State President Bharrat Jagdeo as an ideological racist.
A Libel case was subsequently made out against the columnist as well as the newspaper’s editor and publisher.
When the matter was resumed yesterday, Dr. Luncheon was called to the witness stand and given a seat in the well of the court where he continued to give sworn evidence under cross-examination by attorney-at-law, Mr. Nigel Hughes, leading lawyer for the defendants.
Mr. Hughes continued to question the high ranking government official in relation to the ethnicity of the persons who headed Government organisations, agencies, Commissions, the Judiciary and the University, etc, with the object of concluding that the majority of those heads were of a certain ethnic group, with the hope of claiming that the President, who was responsible for the appointments, was a racist.
Attorney at Law and Member of Parliament Mr. Anil Nandlall, who is appearing for the President, interrupted Mr. Hughes, time and again yesterday, pointing out that the line of cross–examination was unrelated to the libel case.
Before the hearing was adjourned, Mr. Nandlall promised that, on the resumption, he would re-examine Dr. Luncheon with the hope of putting the records straight and to show that the President was not a racist as the defendants were trying to point out.
Earlier, Dr. Luncheon, who is also Cabinet Secretary, had said that during his close relationship with the President, he had seen no evidence that he is a racist.
Luncheon said the offending article in question, that was published in the Kaieteur News, left him with the impression that the aim was to confuse the readers and to have them believe that the members of the Cabinet and Government officials allegedly practise racism against Afro Guyanese.
Lawyers representing the defendants were Mr. Nigel Hughes, Mr. Khemraj Ramjattan and Mr. Christopher Ram.