Senior Reporter
geisha.kowlessar@guardian.co.tt
United National Congress (UNC) Senator David Nakhid says the Government may be facing a possible lawsuit from Canadian YouTube Vlogger Christopher Hughes, better known as “Chris Must List,” who has been charged under the Sedition Act for allegedly publishing a seditious audio/video publication on social media.
The charge was laid under section 4(1)(c) of the Sedition Act.
However, Nakhid says despite being charged, he believes Hughes will walk free.
Speaking to Guardian Media following the UNC’s media conference yesterday Nakhid said, “He (Hughes) is going to get off because the act speaks to the intent to incite and facilitate one community against another. If that is the case, I think Fitzgerald Hinds should be charged with sedition when he said that we should drive a dagger into the heart of the UNC and then someone spoke about Calcutta ship in Tobago. I think those are more seditious statements than anything Chris Must List did.
“...I think we can expect due process to take place in our country and I think what this Government can possibly expect is a lawsuit from Chris Must List.”
Nakhid noted that not only has this country’s international image been tarnished by Hughes’ detention, but said such an arrest was also a threat to democracy.
“We just have to look at the sheer hypocrisy of it. We have people coming here and commenting on food, tourism, our beaches and Carnival. Were they prosecuted in this manner? All Chris Must List did was embarrass the Government by showing the reality that exists in T&T,” he said.
He added, “I think the Government’s treatment of Chris Must List was no different than how they bullied our independent institutions.”
Since Hughes’ arrest, many of his fellow YouTubers have expressed concern that his life was in possible danger.
On whether he agreed with this, Nakhid said not only Hughes’ life was at risk but so too was everyone in T&T, given the ongoing crime situation.
Regarding those in the videos brandishing high-powered weapons, who some classify as “hardened criminals”, Nakhid said it was “not empirically true” to say this.
Instead, he called for more opportunities for “black and Indian boys” from perceived challenged communities.
“What we have are people that are desperate, that doesn’t mean they are hardcore,” he said, noting that those in the videos appear to be around 19 and 20 years.
“What does that mean? That means (Keith) Rowley has been in power for nine years and they would have been 10, 11, 12 when Keith Rowley and this PNM Government came into power so he has created this. The PNM, because of their lack of ideas, has created gangsters. To say that they are hardcore criminals, you don’t get hardcore criminals at 19, 20 and 21.”
While admitting the UNC has been very strong on its “stand your ground policy” and has been advocating for more guns for law-abiding citizens, Nakhid insisted, “We have to look at these people, these black and Indian boys in the hills that overlook us as our children. They are part of the body politic. They are part of the body of T&T. We just can’t say they’re hardcore criminals or leave them like that.
“...We have to look at them firstly as human in a humanitarian way, how we can prevent them from getting into the penal system.”
Nakhid also accused the T&T Police Service and the Tunapuna Chamber of Commerce being totally misguided in their approach in dealing with crime in that constituency.
He said installing cameras in Tunapuna is not enough.
“We are looking at a more reactionary way of the TTPS in Tunapuna and the Chamber of Commerce dealing with crime instead of going to the root of the crime,” Nakhid said.
Instead, he suggested they examine why there was a lack of available jobs, as well as ensuring funding for education, and having access to healthcare in Tunapuna.