Former radio broadcaster/journalist Dennis McComie said Oma Panday told him shortly after the bloody uprising on July 27, 1990 her husband Basdeo Panday said he was sleeping, "to wake him up when it is over."Testifying before the commission of enquiry into the event at the Caribbean Court of Justice, Port-of-Spain, yesterday, McComie said he was prepared to face Mrs Panday and tell her that.Much confusion has surrounded the infamous quote from the former prime minister and opposition leader.
The statement, described by commission chairman Sir David Simmons as an "anecdote" and by McComie as a myth was denied as having ever been made.Others, like Panday's former political colleague, Trevor Sudama, told the commission at a previous session when he was held hostage in the Red House during the uprising someone telephoned Panday and got the same response.
McComie, the first to come out and say he was actually told it, said shortly after Imam Yasin Abu Bakr and members of the Jamaat al Muslimeen staged the attempted coup, he called Panday's home.McComie was a broadcaster with the State-owned National Broadcasting Service at the time and called from the Abercromby Street, Port-of-Spain, station.
Mrs Panday answered the telephone.He said he asked for Panday, who then led a significant amount of Opposition MPs in a breakaway faction of the National Alliance for Reconstruction (NAR) government.He said Mrs Panday said "hold on" and then came back and told him Panday said he was sleeping and to wake him up when it was over.Further, McComie said, seeking to contact the country's leaders, he called then opposition leader Patrick Manning and got a similarly indifferent response.
He said after several calls he got through to Manning who, in a very short conversation, told him it was just a family squabble and would be over soon.McComie said a similar family squabble statement was reportedly made by Bakr and obviously Manning supported it.The former broadcaster said he was alarmed and astounded that T&T's political leaders did not seem to be particularly interested in the fact that the Muslimeen were staging an insurrection.
"I put the phone down and I think I broke down a bit," he told the commission.To compound the situation, the army was angry with NBS for carrying reports on interviews with Bakr, it was stated.Brigadier Ralph Brown, a senior army officer at the time, even threatened to take him out if he continued, McComie said."I thought having a live link with Bakr might have helped resolve the situation but the army thought I was being subversive," he said.
McComie said he called Brown to ask for protection for NBS and Brown was so angry about the Bakr interviews that he used obscenities."He said if I continued he will take me out," McComie added.He said he continued broadcasting until the Tuesday night and only stopped when then attorney general Anthony Smart told him to do so.Recalling an interview with Bakr he said the Imam told him people were out on the streets supporting the uprising and were calling for him to be leader.
McComie said he told Bakr the people were only looting. He told the commission it seemed people who initially intended to support the insurrection later pulled out.Adding an intriguing and supernatural element to the fatal event, McComie said two months before the attempted coup a Spiritual Baptist woman from Tobago wrote him a letter, prophesying God was not happy with the government and it was going to change under tragic circumstances.
She said people were going to die, McComie recalled.He also said it was an angel who saved him from being shot during the insurrection.He said he went to a press conference at the Holiday Inn (now Crowne Plaza) during the crisis with fellow journalist Curtis Rudd in his yellow Volkswagen.He said as he was coming out of the car in the carpark a voice (from a soldier) ordered him not to move.He said: "My back was bent and I straightened up. Apparently I was not supposed to do that.
"He undid the safety. I heard the click and he pulled the trigger. I saw the inside of the barrel of the gun."I thought I was dead. People told me afterwards I wasn't. I lost my nerve completely and never got it back," McComie disclosed.He added: "I think an angel put his finger on the barrel. I think God just decided it was not my time."McComie said the soldier himself was just as astonished that the shot didn't go off.
He has written a book on the event, titled 1990.Former journalists Marlon Miller and Kirk Perreira will testify today.