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The incumbent St.
Kitts Nevis Labour Party and opposition party People's
Action Movement have both taken to the High Court
to challenge the outcome of the January 25th general
elections. The SKNLP won 6 of the 8 federal seats
on St. Kitts to form the government last month with
PAM being successful in Constituencies #5 and 8.
PAM's Eugene Hamilton
was declared the winner in Constituency #8 following
a recount of votes that resulted in his defeating
SKNLP candidate Cedric Liburd by 31 votes. PAM leader
Lindsay Grant, who lost to SKNLP first-time candidate
Hon. Glenn Phillip in Constituency #4 by 29 votes,
announced his party's intention to challenge the election
results in a court of Law.
In a press release
issued by the party just hours after the election
was complete, PAM officials stated "the results,
particularly in Constituency #4, #2 and #1 are not
going to be accepted by the people without a fight".
"What happened
on January 25th was not an accident. It was not the
result of random circumstance. The hundreds of infractions
of the law- crimes- that occurred were deliberately
orchestrated in order to manufacture the desired result,"
Grant said.
Grant contends that
the more than 3,000 persons living overseas who were
flown in to vote in the elections helped tip the election
scales in favor of the Labour party. He contends that
the elections are not over.
"The fraudulent
elections and gross injustice that took place on January
25th will not go unanswered and unpunished. I will
fight tooth and nail to ensure that democracy, justice
and the rights and will of the people will and must
prevail," Grant said during a recently held post-election
public meeting in Cayon.
SKNLP parliamentary
representative Hon. Glenn Phillip along with the supervisor
of elections and members of the electoral commission
were on Monday last served with the court petitions
challenging the election results.
Last Wednesday SKNLP
leader Prime Minister Hon. Dr. Denzil Douglas informed
that two candidates from his party had also filed
their own petitions before the High Court.
"Labour candidates
Dr. Norgen Wilson of constituency #5 and Mr. Cedric
Liburd of constituency #8 have therefore filed petitions
in the High Court challenging the qualifications o
PAM candidates Hon. Shawn Richards of St. Christopher
#5 and Hon. Eugene Hamilton of St. Christopher #8
to have been nominated," Dr. Douglas said.
The PM said the petitions
were filed on the basis that Richards and Hamilton
may have breached the constitution by allegedly being
holders of foreign-issued travel documents at the
time of their nomination on January 15th.
"The Court has
been asked to determine whether there has been any
breach of the constitution which clearly states that
no one should be elected or appointed to the federal
parliament if such a person has taken an oath of allegiance
to a foreign power."
As explained by the
PM, if Hamilton and Richards were found to have breached
the constitution and disqualified from holding seats
in parliament, Wilson and Cedric Liburd would automatically
be declared winners without the need for any bi-election.
"With only two
persons contesting the seat, if at the end of the
day the breach is established then we would expect
that the seat would be carried over automatically
to the other person contesting the seat. We would
hope and think that if the material evidence is substantiated,
because it was a central matter at the constituency
level, that the other person who was qualified as
against who was not qualified should be given the
seat."
The Observer spoke
with Hamilton who said the PM's claims were "absolute
rubbish" and denied having ever sworn an oath
of allegiance to any foreign power.
"Those claims
that I hold any foreign travel documents are absolute
rubbish. If Labour party members are claiming otherwise
then they need to be specific and say when this was
done, where and to which government. If the Prime
Minister cannot prove these as being factual then
he needs to shut up!" Hamilton said.
"I have never
held any passport other than the one issued to me
by the St. Kitts Government."
The PAM parliamentarian-elect
said he had received notice of the petition a couple
of weeks ago and had turned the matter over to his
attorney. He said that he has not been notified as
to any trial date and suspects the petition was a
"smoke screen" created to placate displeased
Labour party supporters.
"I think they
are just embarrassed to see that after all the cheating
they did, they still lost the election. This is just
a tactic meant for their supporters, who took the
loss very hard, to give them some form of hope in
the first three months. After it has died down I wouldn't
be surprised if they withdrew their petition,"
he said.
Last June Hon. Shawn
Richards, as did Grant, declared that he had renounced
his US citizenship by rescinding that country's Oath
of Allegiance.
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