Trinidad union boss gets $250,000 bail on sedition charge

PSA President Watson Duke leaves the Port of Spain Magistrate’s Court in his wife's arms yesterday after appairing on sedition charges.
PSA President Watson Duke leaves the Port of Spain Magistrate’s Court in his wife’s arms yesterday after appairing on sedition charges.

(Trinidad Guardian) Pub­lic Ser­vices’ As­so­ci­a­tion (PSA) Pres­i­dent Wat­son Duke has been re­leased on $250,000 bail af­ter ap­pear­ing in court to an­swer a sedi­tion charge.

Duke, who is al­so the Mi­nor­i­ty Leader of the To­ba­go House of As­sem­bly, was tak­en to the Port-of-Spain Mag­is­trates’ Court short­ly af­ter he was dis­charged from the Port-of-Spain Gen­er­al Hos­pi­tal, this morn­ing.

 
Dur­ing his brief court ap­pear­ance be­fore Mag­is­trate Adia Mo­hammed, Duke, who dressed in blue suit, was not called up­on to plead to the in­dictable charge.

Po­lice pros­e­cu­tors ini­tial­ly ob­ject­ed to bail for Duke as they point­ed out that he had pend­ing charges for rape, in­de­cent as­sault, and dis­or­der­ly con­duct. They al­so ex­pressed fears over whether the con­tro­ver­sial trade union was made an­oth­er al­leged­ly sedi­tious state­ment if he is re­leased.

The ob­jec­tion was even­tu­al­ly over­ruled by Mo­hammed, who grant­ed him bail. She then ad­journed the case to De­cem­ber 13.

Duke’s hos­pi­tal vis­it af­ter he was charged on Thurs­day night, was his third since first be­ing de­tained by po­lice, on Mon­day.

Short­ly af­ter Spe­cial Branch po­lice ex­e­cut­ed search war­rants at the PSA’s head­quar­ters at Aber­crom­by Street in Port-of-Spain and at his home, Duke com­plained of feel­ing un­well and was tak­en to the Er­ic Williams Med­ical Sci­ences Com­plex in Mt Hope.

He was even­tu­al­ly dis­charged on Wednes­day evening but was tak­en back to the hos­pi­tal af­ter com­plain­ing of feel­ing un­well, yes­ter­day morn­ing.

The sedi­tion charge against Duke re­lates to state­ments on pro­posed lay­offs at TSTT, T&TEC, and WASA, which he made in a press con­fer­ence on No­vem­ber 16, last year.

Duke re­port­ed­ly said: “We must be pre­pared to die, folks, You know why? This is your be­lief, this is your fam­i­ly, and I am send­ing the mes­sage clear, let Row­ley them know that the day they come for us in WASA, we are pre­pared to die and the morgue would be pick­ing up peo­ple.”

Duke is be­ing rep­re­sent­ed by Gilbert Pe­ter­son, SC, and John Heath.

The Sedi­tion Act

Un­der the Sedi­tion Act, a per­son is guilty of an of­fence if they at­tempt to do an act with a sedi­tious in­tent, com­mu­ni­cates a state­ment with a sedi­tious in­tent or dis­trib­ute ma­te­r­i­al con­tain­ing sedi­tious in­tent.

A per­son con­vict­ed of an of­fence faces a $3,000 fine and up to two years in prison on sum­ma­ry con­vic­tion and a $20,000 fine and up to five years in prison if they are con­vict­ed be­fore a judge and ju­ry in the High Court.

The leg­is­la­tion de­fines sedi­tious in­tent as an in­ten­tion to bring con­tempt and ha­tred to the Gov­ern­ment; to raise dis­af­fec­tion amongst in­hab­i­tants of T&T; to en­gen­der or pro­mote feel­ings of hos­til­i­ty against any class of cit­i­zens of T&T dis­tin­guished by race, colour, re­li­gion or pro­fes­sion; or to pro­mote vi­o­lence against a par­tic­u­lar group.

State­ments are not con­sid­ered sedi­tious if they in­tend to show that the Gov­ern­ment has been mis­led or mis­tak­en in its mea­sures or point out er­rors and de­fects in an ef­fort to pro­mote their law­ful ref­or­ma­tion.

“In de­ter­min­ing whether the in­ten­tion with which any act was done, any words were spo­ken or com­mu­ni­cat­ed, or any doc­u­ment was pub­lished, was or was not sedi­tious, every per­son shall be deemed to in­tend the con­se­quences which would nat­u­ral­ly fol­low from his con­duct at the time and un­der the cir­cum­stances in which he so con­duct­ed him­self,” the leg­is­la­tion states.