Fuad Abu Bakr, political leader of the New National Vision (NNV), accuses the Government of using his father and Jamaat-al-Muslimeen Imam Yasin Abu Bakr as a scapegoat, reveals why he clashed with the Imam over the 1990 Commission of Enquiry and explains why the NNV is not a Muslim party, as Wired868 continues its review of the 1990 attempt coup through the eyes of the Jamaat.
Abu Bakr sat down with Wired868 reporter Otancia Noel for this one-on-one interview:

(Copyright Orleen Orr)
WIRED868 REPORTER (WR) Otancia Noel: What do you think has provoked the recent detention of the Imam and where do you see this whole issue ending up?
FUAD ABU BAKR (FAB): There is so much public pressure for someone to be held in connection with the Dana Seetahal murder but confidence in the police is low. Dana’s family and other prominent members of our society have all been lobbying for someone to go down. A $3.5 million reward is on offer.
What better scapegoat than the man everyone loves to hate?
The truth is that our leaders don’t respect the law and there is a political flavour to this persecution. The Minister of National Security, who said on national TV that “The Imam knows why he is detained,” has implicated himself. He confessed that at his age he still remembers 1990. But the law took its course in 1990. The Imam and others were imprisoned for two years until the highest court of our jurisdiction ordered their release.
Unfortunately, those events have been the fuel for continuing persecution. Four years ago, properties belonging to the Imam and Kala Aki Bua were sold to pay for damage done to Police Headquarters almost two decades earlier. Twenty years! And I don’t have to remind you that the Privy Council stated categorically more than 15 years ago that “any further prosecution of the Imam and others would be an abuse of process.”
The former attorney general Anand Ramlogan, who some say is still working powerfully behind the scenes since his removal from the Cabinet, made a public statement about the sale of the properties, boasting that his government was the only one brave enough to deal with Abu Bakr. Remember that the People’s Partnership Government took office in 2010, full 20 years after July 1990 and more than a decade after the Privy Council’s verdict.
They are “brave enough” to deal with Abu Bakr but not brave enough to arrest the ex-minister who is (allegedly) wanted for conspiracy to murder a radio DJ. You see, poor people can be persecuted; Muslims in general and the Imam in particular are all fair game.
Fortunately, in many sectors, public opinion is in the Imam’s favour. Many people are tired of the cold cases, tired of Abu Bakr being the scapegoat. They have been calling for real justice, for action against the real goat in this matter and against other corrupt officials in our society.
The smokescreen has been lifted and the detention has, I am confident, backfired.

(Courtesy Power102)
WR: Okay. Let’s talk about the attempted coup. This July marks 25 years since that fateful day in 1990 when your father’s troops stormed into the Red House and raped the Parliament. Looking back at that unforgettable six-day period 25 years later – I know you were just about two years old at that time – what is your first thought?
FAB: In fact, I am a little bit older than that. I am 29, soon to be 30, so that means I would have been four years and a bit in July 1990.
Like I have said before, my recollection of the event itself is very, very minimal so I can’t tell you about the actual event itself. However, after that, as a young man growing up in a society, I had a serious interest in what had transpired and, being exposed to history and other things as well, I pieced together things afterwards.
I read extensively on it, I spoke to teachers who had some idea of what had happened, to members of the Jamaat who were involved, to members of the armed forces at the time, the Police and the Army and even ordinary members of the public. That is where I would have gained all my information on it from.
WR: Of course, since you were just four years old, your recollection of the days and weeks leading up to July 27 is bound to be, well, not very good. But is there anything that you think might have given you a clue about what was in preparation, what was about to happen?
FAB: No. At four years? Nah! I could remember that during the coup – this is probably one of the best, one of the strongest memories I have of that time – my siblings and I, we had to live with our grandparents at that time. My grandfather was a retired police officer and he lived at the top of St Ann’s on a old julie mango estate.
I can remember us feeling some sort of resentment towards the police. So myself, my siblings, my cousins, quite a few of us were up there and we hid in the bush and threw mangoes at the police officers who were patrolling perhaps because of the state of emergency and the curfew. We hid from them and we got away with it but our grandfather got the complaint from the police because obviously they know him well since he was an ex-policeman. And he scolded us for that action.
So I can remember feeling that resentment or rebelliousness towards what was the police authority at that time. Maybe that was born out of the incident itself.

(Copyright AP)
WR: Here’s a scenario for you: you are 20 years old and the Jamaat-al-Muslimeen decides to storm the Parliament and overthrow the elected government. Your father, the leader of the coup, says you are NOT to get involved. What do you do?
FAB: I think any action that is as strong as that one obviously has causes. And those causes have to be heartfelt for individuals to risk their lives, to risk not coming back home to see their families, their children. And, therefore, given such strong circumstances as a young man and understanding what was taking place, I would have wanted to be involved if it was necessary.
Man must take responsibility and I always remember that Martin Luther said that if a man is not willing to die for something, then he is not worthy of living. And ideals and values are important things, the protection of your family, the protection of your honour, the protection of your nation, the protection of your fellow man… I think those are things that a man should be willing to sacrifice himself for.
And I am a man and I feel as though, if a situation like that arose, I would be willing to lay myself on the line in protection of those things…
WR: So going back to the time when you were four, four and a half and your father was locked up, were you allowed to visit your father while he was in prison for those two years? What was that experience like? What impact has being without your father’s presence for two whole years during the formative period of your life had on you?
FAB: Yes. I can actually remember that a little bit better. I and my other siblings, we were all very close to our parents, especially my father and it is a difficult thing for a child to not have his father who he or she is accustomed to around. We did get the opportunity to visit him and I must say thanks to the prison authorities that we always got the opportunity to meet him in a dignified manner.
It was very casual; we sat in a room together; it wasn’t the typical prison visit and I understand that that is a privilege that I remain grateful for.
So, yes, it had an effect. I think we learned from a very young age to deal with difficult situations. Life is not a bed of roses; it is made up of continual challenges and I think our experience has actually made us stronger as individuals. There is always this analogy of diamonds being formed under pressure and I feel as though some of the difficult periods we have been through in our lives have helped to make us more solid as individuals.
I see some of my peers going through difficulties in their lives and they can’t cope with it. Some of them break down, they suffer from depression. I have had friends who have tried to kill themselves and that is sad. So I am actually grateful for what I have learned and what I have been through, which shaped me and made me stronger.
I know that has a lot to do with faith and belief in God.

Abu Bakr is also the son of Jamaat-al-Muslimeen Imam Yasin Abu Bakr.
(Courtesy Allan V Crane/TTFA Media)
WR: The Imam chose not to testify before the Commission of Enquiry into the events of July 1990. Do you agree with his decision not to do so? Would you have preferred him to tell the country what really happened?
FAB: No. I made it expressly clear to the Imam that I think he should have gone forward and explained the entire situation to the best of his ability to the people of Trinidad and Tobago. I always implore him to tell his story so that people would understand that it was a matter of self-sacrifice for a greater good for the population of Trinidad and Tobago.
I don’t know if we are ever going to be fortunate enough again to see human beings who are willing to put themselves on the line because of their belief in a greater good. The type of selfish, self-serving individuals that exist now, nobody, very, very few people are willing to risk themselves for anything at all
I felt as though (he should testify) – and I expressed my opinion – but he is the Imam and he is a central figure in the coup; he chose not to and I respect his decision. But I felt as though it was a positive thing to have that opportunity to clarify certain things.
But I must say again that there are some people who know better and they just don’t want to accept the truth. Trinbagonians at times they don’t want to be properly informed but they always want to have an opinion. They want to talk, they sometimes want to parrot what other people say without giving the issue proper thought, without really trying to find out both sides, without much understanding and that is definitely one of the turn-offs I have with my people.
WR: Well, the Imam has told me that there are things to be explained but the Commission of Enquiry was not the time for him to explain. He, he said, would know when the time is right for it. But do you think that the Jamaat, your father, owes the country, owes the people of T&T an apology for what happened in July 1990? I mean, he was trying to help them out of what he considered to be trying circumstances but either he overestimated the degree of disaffection in the society or he misread the level of their desire to help themselves. But whatever the reason, the public reaction was not what he anticipated… Would you agree?
FAB: Well, I don’t think the response was what the Jamaat anticipated. I think the looting that took place was a very interesting phenomenon, not in a international context because if we look at a lot of the issues now within America and other societies, when there is something that ignites the people, you see looting and damage and stuff and I guess it’s people venting. I don’t understand the phenomenon totally because me personally that would not be the way I would act if something was transpiring.
I feel as though that was the way people participated in showing their annoyance and anger at what was transpiring in our society at that point in time. The media as well don’t like to report it that way; they like to point fingers but there was a large segment of the society – I’m not saying a majority – but quite a few people that participated in that action and you cannot blame the Jamaat – I’ve seen people blame the Jamaat because that was not foreseeable from the population.
So apologise? I don’t know, I don’t know. I don’t know if that is necessary. Actions should be judged by intentions and from what I gather the intentions of the Imam and other people were sincere. They really felt as though they were in a position where they had little choice but to defend themselves in that way and get rid of the NAR Government at that point in time. They did not mean for people to loot or for people to lose their lives; they understood that that may have transpired but there has to be the understanding that sometimes there is a greater sacrifice. Yes, people may lose their lives, yes, people did lose their lives, even they may have lost their lives but the action was for the total benefit of the entire society going forward.
We have rebuilt. I don’t know if we have benefited the way we should have in our understanding. I think that consciousness has not developed since; it has probably regressed and that is probably the worst part of it. We should have understood and learned and regrouped as a people, the whole of Trinidad and Tobago should have tried our best to stop the causes from ever recurring. But yet in this time we are seeing corruption, we are seeing the same leaving behind of certain sectors of our population, the same poverty, that I think were critical in causing the July 1990 action.

(Courtesy Jyoti Communication)
WR: Many people are saying that the current government is oppressive and dictatorial. Do you think that the prevailing socio-political conditions might be driving someone with a social conscience like yours to do something about it?
FAB: Yes, I feel as though there are quite a few negatives in the socio-political landscape that are creating a lot of tension within our society and I feel, from taking the pulse of the people, that things are extremely polarized politically. People seem to feel they have been unjustly dealt with by this government and previous governments and it is almost as though… I don’t know if something similar is going to transpire but it feels as though we are going to have difficulty in this political period if we continue; that is how polarized the country is.
It’s a sad situation and, like I said, I hoped that people would have learned from the past, not to prevent things by having more guns or to prevent things by having surveillance when the Jamaat or social groups or whatever or suppressing certain individuals. Not like that. But it has to be done by being fair in their political dealings, being honest, communicating properly with the public at large, giving a fair share to everyone within the society; those are the things that are going to stop social unrest, not guns and all the other things they are trying to buy now….
WR: I read the following paragraph somewhere:
In fairness to all concerned, the idea of living together as a community with meaningful goals and aspirations for bettering oneself and the society at large was the primary goal of the Jamaat when it was formed; but as things went along, ideas and agendas were misrepresented, misinterpreted and misunderstood. People changed, times changed and, along the way, some things had a negative impact on the original ideology and philosophy of the Jamaat.
You were not around at the outset when the Jamaat was still taking shape but you were born into it. Would you like to comment? Do you feel competent to make a judgement on whether it has, as the writer seems to be suggesting, drifted far from its roots and, if yes, in what way(s)?
FAB: I can speak about my conscious, first-hand knowledge as a member of the Jamaat. I feel that an organization is continually growing; it goes through challenging periods and then it has periods when it thrives and flourishes. We live in difficult conditions and Islam, I feel, is under a worldwide threat almost.
There is a lot of negative stigma on Islam and a lot of stereotypes even in Trinidad and Tobago because of the coup and the way it was portrayed and the subsequent negative media around it. There has been and there continues to be a certain level of marginalization of Muslims, especially those who attend and participate in this community and this mosque. And that is a negative thing.
But to say that the Jamaat in general has changed ideology and philosophy, I wouldn’t say that is correct. I think it is a religious organization obviously built around community living and outreach and helping people towards Islam and helping people in general to understand how to live. And I still see the Jamaat as doing that.
It has had challenges and that has set it back as well. But God willing, insha Allah, it will continue and become stronger.

WR: So let’s talk politics for a little bit. Do you see your being the Political Leader of the NNV and the Imam-in-waiting of the Jamaat as a conflict of interest?
FAB: I don’t know about being the Imam-in-waiting. Allah knows best…
WR: Surely the public is likely to see you that way…
FAB: Yes, I understand that. But I could die tomorrow. We don’t know what tomorrow holds. Besides, in Islam, leadership is not a process determined by lineage at all. God knows best in terms of those things.
But I don’t see it as a conflict of interest. I am a member of a number of organizations so this is no different. The Jamaat-al-Muslimeen is a religious, social organization, I am a Muslim, I have never said I am not. Other people in politics, including our prime minister, are of various other persuasions, religious persuasions and there are also members of other social groups that identify very closely with their religious and social groups, like the Sanatan Dharma Maha Sabha, so I don’t see that as a conflict of interest at all.
My work within the Jamaat as a PRO at some point and as a youth leader has helped to develop me in my interaction with youth and other individuals. We are socially oriented so we do a lot of assistance work, ADR, charity work, etc. I think service to people is service to God; if you are not willing to help people, your fellow man, then you have no place in politics and you have very little place on Earth.
That is what I have learnt here. We have had a profound effect on a lot of young people and the older people as well, helped them to change their lives. Of course, there are some who come here and they don’t change, they don’t change from the way they were before and they do negative things in the society and that is sad. We try but we can’t help everyone.
I feel as though if the society and the government worked hand-in-hand with the Jamaat, if we had the resources, we would have been able to achieve more because our goals and our aspirations are extremely positive and would help the society at large. I don’t feel as though the government of the day understands that. I feel some of them don’t really care. I think they are more interested in their own political ambitions and power and what can achieve that for them instead of working and reaching out to the people who can help Trinidad and Tobago to progress in a positive way.
So, no, it’s not a conflict of interest
WR: I seem to remember hearing somewhere that before the formation of the Jamaat your father either as an independent or as a member of a political party which had a cornucopia as its symbol contested a seat in the Diego Martin area. So is the Jamaat-al-Muslimeen already actively engaged in formal politics?
FAB: Interesting. Is that so? Well, I didn’t even know that. I’ll have to ask him about that.

WR: So is it fair to consider the New National Vision party which you lead the political arm of the Jamaat-al-Muslimeen?
FAB: No, that would be totally incorrect. We are wider than the Jamaat-al-Muslimeen; we are open to the entire society of Trinidad and Tobago. We fielded 12 candidates in the last general election and half of them were not Muslims. So the NNV is not even an Islamic party as people would like to brand us; it is really much broader in scope. It is a matter of people who want a true change in Trinidad and Tobago coming together and trying to offer that change, trying to bring a political vehicle for consciousness and for truth in our nation. That transcends race, religion, creed, culture; we are all human beings and we all have certain needs and rights that we all deserve to have fulfilled and that is way too broad to speak about us as if we are the Jamaat alone.
WR: Would you say that your participation in electoral politics might be a source of conflict in the Jamaat? My sense is that there are people in the Jamaat who feel strongly that the Jamaat’s true role does not lie in that area?
FAB: Yeah, I have gotten that comment from a few Muslims. Some Muslims say that we shouldn’t be involved in politics at all; others, on the other hand, say that we should not get involved in the way we’re getting involved. I disagree. I feel that by whatever means you can change a system, bring positivity to your country or wherever you are, you should make an effort to do so.
There are many members of our organization and other Muslims who do vote and get involved politically and they choose to get involved with people who have less-than-proper characters, some of them are not even religiously minded at all. And to me that is a shame in itself. They support people who are clearly in my opinion hypocrites, they say one thing and then when they reach into power they do the next.
I feel as though all God-fearing people, not just Muslims, there are Christians and other people who hold their moral and spiritual values high should try to analyse their options properly in terms of candidates and in terms of leadership and support people who are going to do positive, righteous, good things for our society.
I feel strongly as though the opportunity and the resources to make a profound, positive impact on the society are vested in the politicians, including the leaders of our country and therefore good people, righteous people should be offering themselves for leadership, should be fighting and struggling to do the best for all the people of our country with the resources of our country.
And that is why I am involved politically.
Editor’s Note: In part two of this two-part series, Fuad Abu Bakr responds to suggestions that he has no business in politics because of his father’s history and gives the NNV’s position on same-sex relationships and marriage.
Otancia Noel has a Literatures in English bachelor’s degree at COSTAATT and is finishing a Masters in Fine Arts, Creative writing and Prose Fiction at UWI.
She grew up on the Jamaat-al-Muslimeen compound in Mucurapo.
In terms of lives that were lost we are all sorry for this and we also incurred losses prior to during and post 1990. We do not gloat or beat our chest for 1990. But ask why teachers. Businessmen, masons carpenters. Sports people would resort to an act of insurrection as in 1990. The easy way out is to say we are mad people. One who really care about 1.3 million people should look deeper as to cause and effects with a view for it not to happen again.
Nicole yu cannot talk for 1.3 million people you could talk for you and probably your circle. If the NAR was so justified with their oppression against the jamaat why the population send them to oblivion at the very next polls?
A ridiculous assertion which betrays your own limited understanding. The NAR is a political party… they held power in government and thus were only temporal occupiers of that office. The people used the method made available to them by the Constitution of our land, the same land you and your cohort of murders defiled… continue to defile with your very presence. The people used the ballot to rid themselves of the NAR. This is no vindication of the crime committed by you scabrous dogs… they voted the NAR out, they didn’t usurp the democratic process . 25 years later and difference is still lost on you. Would that Guyana would keep you and lose you somewhere in the Amazon.
First off all I cannot vex with anyone who have their views because I have my views. Secondly if Fuad gets involved in the political process I support him and he needs not feel apprehensive that 1990 will be held against him. Third if the police then and authorities then was fighting us with snocones we would have gotten some shave ice and pelt back at them. But they used guns and brutality and when the court told them get off our land. The Army and Police say they do not work with the Courts they work with the politicians, basically. When we remain quiet because our society or our status not affected we feel that aloofness will save us from when God choose to balance the scales. And is men God does use to stand up against oppression to check the Oppressor. You should know that Lasana you fight the oppressors in football. If men fighting me with a computer I could fight with a computer. But if a man pelting stone I must pelt a cup of ice cream at him? And I not thinned skin.
The injustice perpetrated on 1.3 million of us by 114 citizens of this country will NEVER be forgotten and NEVER be forgiven. Who vex lorse
I have no doubt the Jamaat was harassed etc back in the day as Islamophobia was a problem then and continues to be a problem today. Having said that however, my point remains that regardless of motive, when injury happens, the perpetrator should say sorry. People lost loved ones in the attempted coup and the country remains scarred. As for European Masters offering an apology, none of those individuals are alive anymore. Is there more that the world can do to get us all on equal footing? Obviously. But because one group of people doesn’t apologize, it doesn’t mean that nobody else should. That’s like telling me a man who rapes me should offer no apology because my father who molested me didn’t before he died.
Jamaal Shabazz, I can’t lecture you. But we can’t all solve problems via the gun. And it didn’t work anyway. Even if it had, I don’t know that it would have been a long term solution.
Is Fuad Abu Bakr’s delve into politics an acceptance that there is better way than arms?
Jamaal… why was the Jamaat, a small segment of the Muslim Community tormented & oppressed? And why not lean on a political party for just dues instead of resorting to arms?
Let’s start the apology from the European Masters who brought us here and made us slaves and tricked us into becoming indentured laborers. Our life is based on fighting oppression the Creator has chosen this for us because the Imam has not been an aggressor in none of his legal battles. But these things serve to strengthen us to pass down our spirit of resistance from generation to generation. And may our Creator put in the muslimeen that desire to stand up for justice against all odds until the day of judgement. We must never bow to injustice nor oppression
None of you were privy to the harassment the breaches of the law by the state and abdication of the duties of the country’ s legal arm to protect a small group. And when by the right given by our Creator to defend ourselves was exercised all you lovers of democracy suddenly found your tongues. Why was the voice of democracy silent prior to 1990 when the jamaat was tormented and oppressed. I live this you all could read about this I live this. The Imam has become the easy point of reference to blame for criminal activity for a country that does not know their elbow from their chin how to deal with this criminal youth that is on a rampage.
You need tuh shut yuh treacherous…mouth… about “right given the Creator. The only right deserving of you and your collective bunch of traitors is the long end of a short rope.
We all know the Imam past but revenge and victimisation won’t change history,he was tried and freed in our courts that being said it’s an example where consequences seem to escape certain persons deviant actions.Signalling out one person and not the others is just hypocritical
I respect Fuad for being open & entering the democratic process. Unfortunately I can never buy the ideal of a coup being justified when we live in democratic country. What was the future plan? Fresh elections? A new economic policy? An islamic state? Why not work on strengthening the weak institutions for the benefit of all citizens and generations to come?
It is a matter of record, Chabeth, that during the CoE into July 27 1990 two Jamaat members offered public apologies for what had happened. One of them was Kala Aki-Bua and the other was Jamaal Shabazz. I don’t know why Jamaal has not said so but I think we should be very clear on that. Almost a year ago, I wrote a piece right here on Wired868 in which I mentioned the apologies, lamenting the fact that there had been only two. Regrettably, most Jamaat members I have spoken to share Fuad defiant attitude, feeling that there is nothing to apologise for. That is a position with which I find it very hard to sympathise.
is 25 yrs abu suppose to release his “facts”..eveb Warner is a better gran charge
I guess the relatives of the people his father murdered should feel honored?
I sorry, I get vex about halfway through. He should have been asked harder questions. On the one hand he is hiding behind “I was only four so I can´t say” and on the other making blanket statements about how his father acted for the good of the people and was so self-sacrificing.etc. I would have asked him to specifically say how and why it was the good of the people. And then he goes on to criticize people who have opinions without knowing the facts. He can´t have it both ways.
I stopped at the part about the COI… waste ah frigging time. Both he and his murderous dog of a father.
and I blame no one else but POLITICIANS for empowering this group….working with them to win elections…giving them URP and other contracts.. doh talk bout the MILLIONS in illegal quarrying in Valencia… and not ah man dear try stop them…a true mickey mouse society
A society devoid of conviction.
I would agree but would include the media for taking him at his own estimation. So if anybody call themselves “imam” and claim to be various things, the media (hopefully present company excepted) call them the same and treat them like if they are legitimate commentators and arbiters. If I decide I am a religious leader tomorrow and dress up in some costume I can attack anybody who questions me as being anti-religious and cry discrimination and the media will play by my definition of myself.
Remember our pol leaders have always fostered cosy relationships with religious groupings for obvious reasons. They are loath to criticise them. Good journalism is still a rare find in TT, still so amateurish with a few notable exceptions. So yeh, that can’t really help matters. If it was Paxman, well, you can imagine. Don’t discount the time factor. I really hope we have more books on 1990. We cannot afford that trauma to be sanitised because people were not born yet, or are too young to remember.
timothy mc vae son cud be better than messi yuh think he wil ever be allowed to represent the US at football?…
You know what?
Nothing would be wrong with that, but don’t dishonor the memory of those victims of his father’s attack by portraying him as some sort of martyr.
Lasana Liburd you better give me a cuss quota for this post or better yet block me from seeing it because I’m telling you I feel a bout of profanity coming on!
the sins of the father…
:
Stockholm Syndrome.
its one thing the murderous thugs got away..its another for them to rub in our face that they made a “sacrifice”
shooting the duly elected PM was a sacrifice?
killing an MP a sacrifice?
others dying a sacrifice?..
BIG FAT WET STEUPS
I suppose with 34 innocent peoples’ deaths, numerous injuries, the torture of the then PM and other ministers, the attempted overthrow of a dem elected govt, the collective national trauma etc are still raw in a nation only 50-something yrs old, sane and rational people might beg to disagree with his interpretation of ‘acting to save T&T”. He might be affable and a jolly nice chap, but let’s not have selective amnesia here. This is separate and apart from speculation about perceived harassment from the police and more recent events relating to the Jamaat.
Vernal Damion Cadogan, I do agree that for Fuad to aspire to political office, I feel it important that he condemn his father’s attempt to overthrow a democratically elected Government.
There is a contradiction there and it is only right that intelligent people ask for clarity.
Too flicking late, that genie can’t be put back in the bottle!
Lasana Liburd, in all fairness Fuad faced those questions publicly in 2010, eh.
I note he didn’t give an unambiguous condemnation in this interview Rhoda Bharath. What did he say back then?
I do appreciate it is hard eh. That is his father.
But then Jesus said his brothers and sisters were not confined to his household. He has to think in wider terms if he is serious about a political career.
That career is dead in the water, he killed it by portraying his dad (the murderer) as a martyr.
Spot on. I’m sure Bin Ladens many kids consider him a martyr too.
“…ita semper proditores”
Lasana Liburd, his answer didnt stick in my head…which says a lot. But i do remember the question being raised on the morning shows he did and thinking him bright and eloquent but damaged goods due to his father’s crimes.
And Kamla and the UNC will persist because right thinking ppl wont take an active stance.
In the case of Abu Bakr what failed were our laws. In the case of Kamla what has failed is the citizenry….huuuuuge difference.
In the case of Kamla what has failed is the citizenry ‘among other things’..
In the case of Abu Bakr the law was able to fail because of the failure of the citizenry.
What did we do again while Bakr assumed the right to murder and injure again, while his actions necessitated a State of Emergency?
Oh yes, we structured fetes to accommodate!
This is as surreal as Baby Doc’s return to Haiti!
I don’t know who is worse, Abu Bakr or the Persad-Bissessar administration.
Each is equally worthy of condemnation!
How insincere
Abu Bakr is no martyr to me.
Lasana Liburd you haven’t yet understood that the proletariate is misguided as to the true nature of democracy?
That’s why Abu Bakr can be alive and free today, that’s why his son can look is in the face and portray his father as a national martyr and that’s why we could have a government like the Persad-Bissessar administration.
I wanna vomit right now!
Some people say the Police should have a right to detain Yasin Abu Bakr every other month if they feel like it. I understand the anger. And I see the irony in them asking for protection from the courts.
But I still cannot give in to that feeling. They deserve their rights too.
the state took its best shot at Abu. so far the man has not just stayed out of jail, but won some considerable matters in the court as well.
of course, he will never live down 1990, but a man must ask: how much due is due when you paying your due?
Lasana I wouldn’t say they “deserve” their rights but rather than they are entitled to them. That is the basis of our legal system, entitlement to certain rights whether you deserve them or not.
And this is a perfect case of where, like you, I not sure if he deserves them but he is entitled to them and we have to defend that.
Rhodes you more than most know that I have strongly condemned the recent detention of Abu Bakr, but I cannot sit here and read the condemnations of a government regardless of how deserving by a man who cannot also at least equally condemn the actions of the Jamaat and Abu Bakr in 1990.
Nah…….I kyah do dat!
We can agree on the current arrest Rhoda. Not so sure about anybody being demonised except Dr. Rowley by the UNC. Lol
Lol.
I cannot fathom how an amnesty written under duress with the country at ransom was upheld. Not the first time a Privy Council ruling was rubbish.
Well, we should leave the Privy Council. I think we should make the CCJ our highest form of appeal. But, ironically, I feel we have to respect the law where the Imam is concerned.
did the Imam ask for that? Or did someone else decide to stick that in there?
Kendall Tull, a response to you was made on the website:
““I cannot fathom how an amnesty written under duress with the country at ransom was upheld. Not the first time a Privy Council ruling was rubbish.” Kendall Tull, the Privy Council found that the amnesty was INVALID but determined that it would be oppressive and an abuse of the process to re-arrest the insurgents. The real culprit was Clebert Brooks, who found that the amnesty, written, as you note, “under duress with the country at ransom,” was valid. Reference Jamaal Shabazz’s comment about “a country that does not know their elbow from their chin.”
Thank you Lasana Liburd, I was JUST going to write that.
All I ever ask for is that people answer for their crimes to a court of law, Kendall Tull. If the court said to let him go, then I have to respect that. Even if it seemed an odd verdict.
My sentiments as well
Lol.
Vernal Damion Cadogan, im not excusing 1990…but the recent arrest doesnt sit well with me and this isnt the first time this govt has conveniently raised the spectre of 1990 for their benefit. Black muslims are being demonised in Trinidad. Since the SoE.
Particularly when there has been loss of life. I agree with that.
I am mixed over what appears to be harassment of his father. I feel that no citizen should be abused by the law including Yasin Abu Bakr.
But I also note the irony in their groans about it.
I think the Jamaat should be upfront about that contradiction of sorts when they discuss matters involving the Imam.
Who said anything about blaming him?
I’m sorry, but swallowing his responses is like swallowing tequila………..it doh go dong easy!
“The man everyone loves to hate” is a murderer who took it upon himself to overthrow a democratically elected government.
What madness I relly reading?
This is Bananistan in true, and if we aren’t careful we’ll end up with an Emir.
We blaming Fuad for what his dad did?
Apparently
He’ll never be able to live Without being “Abu bakr son”
For being the apologist and enabler after the fact that he is.
Steups. His father should be in jail or six feet under the ground.
Regardless of intent if the outcome is a hurtful one an apology should be forthcoming. Forgiveness begins with an apology.
“They have been calling for real justice for action against the real goat in this matter”
Bess statement..lolol
I have no personal problem with him. But Fuad Abu-Bakr, I must say that I have a inherent distrust of politicians. They start off on a minus and have to win me over by works and deeds.
No exceptions.
But, like I said, nothing personal.
That is my general attitude to men…so I understand.
Hahahaha… Oh losh. How I end up there?! 🙂
oh shit
Lol
Yea, it’s somewhat difficult to trust and believe half of what they saying, especially to more senior and experienced bunch. There always seems to be underlining motives, that’s waiting to bite you. The younger ones don’t necessarily have that effect on me, however I fear with time that might be the case.
I like Fuad.
strangely enough, so do i.
Nigel Telesford has been saying so for years doh.
I’ve always liked him too..
Brian Manning, care to explain your “Stockholm Syndrome” comment? Was Fuad a hostage at some stage of the 1990 proceedings? Or are you suggesting that he was a “hostage” in his father’s house? It’s an intriguing idea…
Juliet, I agree wholeheartedly that he should have been asked harder questions. Or, at the very least, been challenged on the answers he gave. But I can’t agree that the media is to be blamed for calling YAB an “imam.” If a man has built a mosque on land given to him by the State and has a large active congregation, can the media reasonably argue that cuculus not monacum facit, the cowl does not make the monk? What option did the media really have?
“I cannot fathom how an amnesty written under duress with the country at ransom was upheld. Not the first time a Privy Council ruling was rubbish.” Kendall Tull, the Privy Council found that the amnesty was INVALID but determined that it would be oppressive and an abuse of the process to re-arrest the insurgents. The real culprit was Clebert Brooks, who found that the amnesty, written, as you note, “under duress with the country at ransom,” was valid. Reference Jamaal Shabazz’s comment about “a country that does not know their elbow from their chin.”
So agree with Mr. Cadogan that this is surreal. Can’t believe that after all this time the narrative is the harassment of Abu Bakr. Someone needs to read the names of those who died, so that THEY would be remembered, so that THEIR families could feel some justice. There has never been an apology. This place is unbelievable.