'Arthur Napoleon Raymond Robinson' (born
16 December 1926 in
Calder Hall,
Tobago) was
President of
Trinidad and Tobago from
19 March 1997 to
17 March 2003. He was previously
Prime Minister from
18 December 1986 to
17 December 1991. He is internationally recognized for his proposal that eventually led to the founding of the
International Criminal Court.
President Robinson was the first active politician to be elected to the Presidency, and was the first presidential candidate who was not elected unopposed (the Opposition
People's National Movement (PNM) nominated Justice
Anthony Lucky as its candidate for President). President Robinson sparked controversy in his term in office when he refused to appoint certain Senators recommended by the
Prime Minister Basdeo Panday following the elections in
2000 and in 2001 when he appointed the
Leader of the Opposition Patrick Manning to the position of Prime Minister after a tied election.
Originally a member of the PNM, he left the party following the
Black Power disturbances in
1970 and founded the ''Action Committee of Democratic Citizens'' (ACDC). In conjunction with the
Democratic Labour Party, Robinson lead the ill-fated "No-vote" campaign of
1971. This campaign protested the use of
voting machines which the Opposition DLP considered to be used for election fraud in the
1961 and
1966 elections. Following the election, Robinson founded the
Democratic Action Congress (DAC) which won the two
Tobago seats in the
1976 and
1981 elections, but which failed to make credible headway in any constituencies in
Trinidad.
In 1981 Robinson joined forces with the United Labour Front (ULF) under the leadership of Basdeo Panday and the Tapia House Movement under the leadership of Lloyd Best to form the National Alliance. This group entered an Accommodation with the Organisation for National Reconstruction under the leadership of Karl Hudson-Phillips to fight (and win) the Local Government elections of 1983. Building on this victory the four parties combined to form the National Alliance for Reconstruction (NAR) which won the 1986 elections by a margin of 33-3 and Robinson was appointed the first non-PNM Prime Minister.
Prior to the 1986 elections Robinson was instrumental in setting up the
Tobago House of Assembly (THA). This local government entity was established in
1980 to strengthen the position of Tobago within the
unitary state of Trinidad and Tobago. His party, the DAC (and later the NAR) controlled the THA from 1980 until
2001 when the PNM gained control of the body.
During the
1990 ''coup d'état'' attempt by the
Jamaat al Muslimeen the Prime Minister Robinson and much of his Cabinet were held hostage for six days by gunmen under the leadership of
Bilaall Abdullah. When instructed to order the army to stop firing on the
Red House (the seat of Parliament where they were held hostage) Robinson instead instructed them to 'Attack with full force', an action which earned him a severe beating from his captors.
In 1989, during the 44th Session of the
UN General Assembly, he proposed the creation of a permanent international court to deal with the transnational drug trade. This eventually led to the inauguration of the
International Criminal Court in 2002, commissioned to hear cases of crimes against humanity. He has received many honors for this achievement, including a
Nobel Peace Prize nomination in 1999.
External links
★
A.N.R. Robinson's government biography