The PSC/Vasciannie imbroglio
published: Tuesday | December 4, 2007
Vasciannie
Ken Jones' misrepresentation
The Editor, Sir:
Despite Mr. Ken Jones' claim of being a 'trained and experienced journalist', he continues to misrepresent the letter of advice to the DPP prepared by Prof. Stephen Vasciannie on the request for legal assistance from the Nether-lands authorities to investigate the Trafigura affair. It is either that letter of advice is beyond Mr. Jones' comprehension or he is deliberately misinterpreting it.
In his letter to The Gleaner on November 18, Mr. Jones maintained that (a) the previous government was not inclined to allow an investigation by the Netherlands, and was encouraged by Prof. Vasciannie's advice to "withhold cooperation"; (b) Prof. Vasciannie's advised the DPP that he "would not be authorised by Jamaican law to give the assistance sought by the Dutch (sic) Government"; (c) that Prof. Vasciannie offered no "suggestion that might have facilitated cooperation in the search for justice in the this issue of great concern to the people of Jamaica". In his letter, the trained and experienced journalist, Mr. Jones, completely neglected to point out that most essential part of the advice: that a ministerial order was required under the Mutual Assistance (Criminal Matters) Act before any request from the Netherlands authorities could be entertained by the Jamaican government. Without such an order, the DPP would not be legally authorised to give the assistance sought. It is only in his letter of December 02 that Mr. Jones is finally acknowledging that Prof. Vasciannie had correctly advised that "Jamaica had not up to then taken the legal steps necessary to facilitate the requested assistance".
Convenient loophole
It is this glaring omission from Mr. Jones' letter of November 18 that prompted my initial response. Unlike Mr. Jones, my training tells me that selective excerpts from a document without placing them in proper context, do not reflect the highest standards of either journalism or legal analysis.
The trained and experienced Mr. Jones now speciously claims that Prof. Vasciannie essentially provided the Government with a "convenient loophole to avoid being investigated" by advising the DPP that "Jamaica would have a full defence in international law in response to any Dutch claim to the effect that the country is not giving full effect to the terms of the convention". This reflects not only a failure to understand the import of this limb of Prof. Vasciannie's advice, but ignorance of the nature of international law and how it interacts with domestic law.
In summary, Prof. Vasciannie's advice did nothing more than to advise the DPP on the international and domestic law governing the request by the Netherlands government regarding the Trafigura matter. The advice clearly articulated the domestic legal requirements for acceding to the request; and whether failure to fulfil those domestic legal requirement would place Jamaica in breach of its obligations under international law. Indeed, it appears that the current government has now availed itself of Prof.
Vasciannie's advice to issue a ministerial order to accommodate the request of the Netherlands Government.
I am, etc., O. HILAIRE SOBERS
published: Tuesday | December 4, 2007
Vasciannie
Ken Jones' misrepresentation
The Editor, Sir:
Despite Mr. Ken Jones' claim of being a 'trained and experienced journalist', he continues to misrepresent the letter of advice to the DPP prepared by Prof. Stephen Vasciannie on the request for legal assistance from the Nether-lands authorities to investigate the Trafigura affair. It is either that letter of advice is beyond Mr. Jones' comprehension or he is deliberately misinterpreting it.
In his letter to The Gleaner on November 18, Mr. Jones maintained that (a) the previous government was not inclined to allow an investigation by the Netherlands, and was encouraged by Prof. Vasciannie's advice to "withhold cooperation"; (b) Prof. Vasciannie's advised the DPP that he "would not be authorised by Jamaican law to give the assistance sought by the Dutch (sic) Government"; (c) that Prof. Vasciannie offered no "suggestion that might have facilitated cooperation in the search for justice in the this issue of great concern to the people of Jamaica". In his letter, the trained and experienced journalist, Mr. Jones, completely neglected to point out that most essential part of the advice: that a ministerial order was required under the Mutual Assistance (Criminal Matters) Act before any request from the Netherlands authorities could be entertained by the Jamaican government. Without such an order, the DPP would not be legally authorised to give the assistance sought. It is only in his letter of December 02 that Mr. Jones is finally acknowledging that Prof. Vasciannie had correctly advised that "Jamaica had not up to then taken the legal steps necessary to facilitate the requested assistance".
Convenient loophole
It is this glaring omission from Mr. Jones' letter of November 18 that prompted my initial response. Unlike Mr. Jones, my training tells me that selective excerpts from a document without placing them in proper context, do not reflect the highest standards of either journalism or legal analysis.
The trained and experienced Mr. Jones now speciously claims that Prof. Vasciannie essentially provided the Government with a "convenient loophole to avoid being investigated" by advising the DPP that "Jamaica would have a full defence in international law in response to any Dutch claim to the effect that the country is not giving full effect to the terms of the convention". This reflects not only a failure to understand the import of this limb of Prof. Vasciannie's advice, but ignorance of the nature of international law and how it interacts with domestic law.
In summary, Prof. Vasciannie's advice did nothing more than to advise the DPP on the international and domestic law governing the request by the Netherlands government regarding the Trafigura matter. The advice clearly articulated the domestic legal requirements for acceding to the request; and whether failure to fulfil those domestic legal requirement would place Jamaica in breach of its obligations under international law. Indeed, it appears that the current government has now availed itself of Prof.
Vasciannie's advice to issue a ministerial order to accommodate the request of the Netherlands Government.
I am, etc., O. HILAIRE SOBERS
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