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Colonel
Patrick Wallace
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The Non-governmental
Organization Coalition's has again come under fire
for certain claims contained within the group's Observer
Report arising from the January 25th general elections.
This time the
top echelon of the security forces has taken issue
with the NGO report and is demanding it be retracted
in its entirety. A communiqué issued jointly
by the Police High Command and the St. Kitts Nevis
Defense Force condemns it as being "malevolent".
"The Security
Forces are alarmed at the irresponsible behavior of
this NGO Coalition and condemn its report - a document
which can only be described as malevolent - and questions
the intent of the composite groups who claimed to
have an interest in fairness, safety and security,"
it stated.
The NGO report was released mid-February and claimed
that agents on the Observation team witnessed "military
vehicles of the Defense Force were being used to transport
voters from St. Pauls to polling stations in Constituencies
4 and 5". The Coalition report also called for
a review of the need for "Defense Force personnel
in riot gear toting M16 rifles".
The Security
Forces release claims the NGO Coalition was misrepresenting
the truth and said SKNDF Commander Colonel Patrick
Wallace denied the allegations.
"The Defense Force Commander denounces the allegation
by the NGO Collation that on polling day members of
the Defense Force were deployed to Constituency 4
"in riot gear and toting M16 rifles". He
wishes to state categorically that soldiers of the
Force did not wear riot gear on polling day, nor were
they deployed with M16 rifles for duties associated
with the elections during the period of polling on
Election Day."
During an exclusive
interview with The Observer, Col. Wallace had denied
that soldiers transported the Labour supporters and
another of the NGO report claims that Prime Minister
Dr. Denzil Douglas berated soldiers for not transporting
voters from Constituency 6 to Constituency 4 and 5
to vote.
"The Defense Force soldiers had no such mandate,
they had no order to do such things and I can vouch
for my men that they would not have done any such
thing. My general orders on Election Day were to ensure
security at polling and counting stations and to deal
with any incident designed to disrupt the electoral
process and threaten the public peace." He said
the desired state was citizens were able to execute
their right to elect the government of their choice
without fear or intimidation."
On Monday the Army Commander again defended the probity
of his organization. He was quoted as saying he "denounces
the NGO Coalition allegation that the candidate for
Constituency 6 berated members of the Force for failing
to transport Labour Party supporters to vote in Constituencies
4 and 5 as a blatant lie, and also condemns the NGO
Coalition Observers' accusation that military vehicles
were used to transport voters on Election Day as malicious".
The chiefs questioned
the NGO Coalition's motives for "the numerous
documentation of falsehood and malicious reporting
of allegations", saying it was a smoke screen
to facilitate a hidden agenda.
These were the
same sentiments expressed by the Honorable Prime Minister
as he too denied allegations of impropriety on Election
Day. He said the Labour Party would not accept the
report unless several amendments were made.
"It is false; it is malicious; and in my opinion
it has been deliberately put as part of the political
agenda of members of the Coalition who seem to have
a political agenda that they are pursuing for the
PAM party."
The NGO Coalition,
comprised of the St. Kitts Evangelical Association,
the St. Kitts Christian Council and the St. Kitts-Nevis
Chamber of Industry and Commerce, has not issued any
formal response to either the Security Forces or Dr.
Douglas.
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