Senior Reporter
shaliza.hassanali@guardian.co.tt
The Attorney General’s office has briefed attorneys, which include Gilbert Peterson SC, to advise on the case of the return of ISIS convict, Sabirah Khalidah Waheed.
And yesterday, the office of the Chief State Solicitor wrote to Waheed’s attorney Criston J Williams asking him to hold his hand in pursuing legal action, as they are currently working to provide a substantive response on the matter.
The letter came after Guardian Media reported yesterday that the Ministry of National Security and Foreign and Caricom Affairs have been pointing fingers at each other as to who has jurisdiction in the case of Waheed for her affiliation with ISIS.
In the letter to Williams dated July 26, 2023, signed by Sara Muslim, she noted that attorneys Nisa Simmons and herself have been assigned to instruct Peterson SC, and Vanessa Gopaul “who were recently retained to act on behalf of the proposed defendant”.
Muslim also referenced Williams’ July 3 and 14, 2023, letters that were addressed to the Minister of National Security which she acknowledged.
“The contents of the aforementioned letters are duly noted and we are working assiduously to obtain the instructions to respond to your letters. In the circumstances, we are kindly requesting that you hold your hands herein as we are currently working to provide a substantive response in the shortest possible time,” she said.
The Chief State Solicitor falls under the ambit of the Office of the Attorney General and Ministry of Legal Affairs.
But Williams has refused to back down.
He told Guardian Media yesterday that he intends to file a constitutional motion against the Ministry of National Security and the office of the Attorney General for infringing on Waheed’s constitutional rights.
“Where it is we have the Foreign Affairs Ministry and National Security Ministry throwing blame on each other. I really don’t need to talk to them again because my case is set up perfectly. We are starting a war.”
He said both the AG and Hinds will receive correspondence indicating their intent “to file a constitutional motion because of the restriction of the freedom of movement of Ms Waheed”.
Williams said Muslim’s letter did not give a time in which they will respond.
“That response is inadequate. They had so many days to respond. That letter came a little too late in the overall content of things and the duty of the Attorney General’s office to protect the population. But I hope they will not engage in a court of action that is just to delay or to create grounds for further human rights abuses for Waheed and her minor children,” he said.
Once the motion has been filed, Williams said he expects the matter to move swiftly.
Williams said he will be working with a Senior Counsel on this case.
Waheed, whose six-year jail term in Iraq ended yesterday, is fighting to come back home.
Up to yesterday, she remained incarcerated with her two children, as no travel documents were issued to them.
Earlier this month, attorney Shivanand Mohan of Quantum Legal wrote National Security Minister Fitzgerald Hinds requesting that they grant Waheed and her two children, one of whom was born in Iraq, travel documents to facilitate their safe deportation from the Middle East.
The letters were also copied to Attorney General Reginald Armour and Foreign and Caricom Affairs Minister Dr Amery Browne.
If Waheed, 33, is granted permission, she will be the first Trinidadian to be deported from the conflict zone.