‘They’re punishing our students’
Minister of Legal Affairs and Attorney General Basil Williams SC
Minister of Legal Affairs and Attorney General Basil Williams SC

…AG calls on Guyanese to join fight for law school
…accuses Nandlall of blackmail; says CLE shifting positions

ATTORNEY General and Minister of Legal Affairs Basil Williams SC has said that all Guyanese including the parliamentary opposition should work together to push for the establishment of the JOF Haynes Law School here in Guyana. Additionally, he accused his predecessor of blackmailing the government by writing secret letters to the Council of Legal Education saying Guyana was never given approval to open a school.

The minister made the statement as he spoke at the 2019 Budget Debates on Friday. “The hardships suffered by our young people in Trinidad—we can’t even begin to describe…They are punishing our students,” Williams said emotionally. As such, he posited: “This nation must call for this law school to be built”. According to him, it is urgent now more than ever to establish this school because of the continued discriminatory practices against Guyanese students and because of crucial need for local skills, when Guyana transforms into an economic “hub” by 2020. The minister spoke in detail about the continued hardships faced by Guyanese students studying at the Hugh Wooding Law School (HWLS), in Trinidad and Tobago.

“They (HWLS) are allotting to us, Guyana—a founding member of CARICOM [and] a signatory to the Council of Legal Education (CLE)… they are reducing us to 25 students while they are churning out students there,” he said.

He contended that 250 students graduate each year from the law schools in Trinidad and Jamaica, yet only 25 Guyanese are allowed entry. The minister further highlighted that by 2020, Guyana will undoubtedly become an economic hub that will need lawyers to boost local capacity. And while acknowledging that the quota of emerging Guyanese lawyers will be significantly less, he explained: “That means we are going to employ all those lawyers that they are churning out at the expense of Guyanese lawyers.”

This, he noted, is a gross injustice to Guyanese minds and the nation must continue to press for the establishment of the local Law school so that more students would be able to pursue studies in law. Just recently, he noted that his ministry successfully hosted stakeholders in the law field- including representatives of the CLE, the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) and personnel from the three Caribbean Law schools (Trinidad and Tobago, Jamaica and Bahamas).

Despite this, he said: “The Joseph Haynes Law School (JHLS) was subjected to another shifting of the CLE’s position to deny Guyana its right to establish a law school.” In September of this year, CLE Chairman Reginald Armour announced that the Government of Guyana and its joint-venture partners, the Law School of the Americas (LCA) and the University College of the Caribbean (UCC), have been asked to revisit the feasibility study for the establishment of the school. Citing the study submitted as non-compliant to the standards of the CLE, Armour has also indicated that study does not satisfy the quality assurance that the CLE requires and the body needs to see a proposed curriculum.

Nevertheless, the AG affirmed on Friday that the government will make every effort to ensure that this law school comes to fruition. The Government of Guyana and the Council of Legal Education (CLE) had previously agreed to revisit the feasibility study and business plan for the establishment of the law School.

“We will continue pressing the CLE, the Bar Association, the Judiciary, the Department of Law at the University of Guyana and the opposition for their support of the establishment of this law school,” he stressed.

The AG’s statements came at the heels of the contentions raised by Opposition Parliamentarian and Former Minister of Legal Affairs, Anil Nandlall that the current AG’s office is “devoid” of any substantial programmes and was operating in a “piecemeal manner”. Antagonising members of the government, Nandlall said: “It is one thing to say that you lose law books, it is another thing to say that you lose cases, it is another thing to say that you lose chairmanship of your party… but when you lose a whole school that is cause for concern.”

Responding to this, the AG Williams accused Nandlall of writing the chairman of the CLE to block the setting up the school. “He wrote, he emailed the chairman of the CLE to tell him don’t worry with this school. We didn’t get permission to support it. That is what he did and that is why he had to leave in disgrace,” Williams said of Nandlall, who had stepped out of the National Assembly Chambers at the time.

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