'Basdeo Panday- ' (born
May 25,
1933) was
Prime Minister of
Trinidad and Tobago from 1995 to 2001 and has served as
Leader of the Opposition from 1976–1977, 1978–1986, 1989–1995 and 2001–2006. He was first elected to
Parliament in 1976 as the
Member for
Couva North. He is the Chairman and interim party leader of the
Opposition United National Congress. In 2006, Panday was
convicted of failing to declare a bank account in
London and imprisoned but as of
March 20,
2007, that
conviction has been quashed by the Court of Appeal. He was granted bail on
April 28 pending the outcome of his appeal due to his health condition and the poor state of health facilities at the Arouca prison. On
May 1 he decided to resign as Chairman of the
United National Congress, but the party's executive refuse to accept his resignation.
Basdeo Panday is married to the former Oma Ramkissoon and has four daughters Niala, Mickela, Nicola and Vastala, one from his first marriage to (
Norma Panday)(née Mohammed) who died in 1981. In 2006, he was awarded the
Pravasi Bharatiya Samman by the
Ministry of Overseas Indian Affairs.
Early life
He was born in St. Julien Village in
Princes Town, to a Mr.Harry "Chote" Sookchand and Kissoondaye Panday, who were both first-generation
East Indian Arrivants to Trinidad. Kissondaye's mother, along with her mother, came on the trip via Fiji (they had missed the boat going back to Fiji, so they took the one to Trinidad instead). Sookchand's Uncle, Joseph Hardath Dube was the General Secretary of the
East Indian National Association, and was responsible for enrolling Panday in
Presentation College,
San Fernando. Before the college enrollment, Basdeo attended New Grant Government and St. Julien C.M. School.
He was the first of three boys, the others being Rabindranath and Subhas, another lawyer and presently a Member of Parliament. In Presenation College he did well in his work and received a Senior Certificate. He also was a football player and was said to be " a Tricky Dribbler in the Left Center field" and "prone to one-manship".
In 1957 he was accepted into
Lincoln's Inn,
London (Law),
London University (Economics) and
London School of Dramatic Arts (Drama). Whilst in
England, Panday worked as a labourer on a building site, a clerk at the
London County Council and an
Electrician in order to sustain himself through
University.
Prior to studying and working in London he worked as a
sugar cane weigher for a year at
Caroni Ltd., a primary school teacher at Seereram Memorial Vedic, Chaguanas, and Ste Clement Vedic, Barrackpore and a civil servant at the
San Fernando Magistracy, where he took notes for Magistrates Churchill Johnson and former
President of
Trinidad and Tobago,
Noor Hassanali.
He was also an actor and played small parts in several films, most notably " Man in The Middle", with
Robert Mitchum. He also performed on the
London stage in several plays, one being "The Bird Of Time" in 1961.
In 1965, Panday was awarded a
Commonwealth scholarship to pursue a Post-graduate degree in
Economics and
Political Science at the
Delhi School of Economics and Political Science in
India. He postponed the scholarship and returned home to practise
law in
Trinidad because of family commitments and the changing political situation in Trinidad.
Political career
Upon his return to Trinidad, he entered politics and ran unsuccessfully for
Parliament as a candidate for the
Workers and Farmers Party in 1966.
His most prominent debut into local politics was as early as 1973, when he forayed into the politics of one of the most prominent unions of the day, the
Trinidad Islandwide Cane Farmers' Association (TICFA). He was faced with antagonism from the then leader of the
Sanatan Dharma Maha Sabha,
Bhadase Sagan Maraj and the leader of the Union, Mr. Rampartapsingh, who had succeeded Mr. Maraj. These were the favourites of the then
Prime Minister,
Eric Williams, for he was concerned about the "left-wing radicalisation" of the union membership.
It was in this context that Basdeo Panday came to the fore. Basdeo Panday was able, through backdoor negotiations with the then union leader of TICFA, and then subsequently with the then Prime Minister, Eric Williams concerning the wages and salaries of sugarcane workers, to claim control over the union as the undisputed leader of TICFA. In May 1973, he became the President General of All Trinidad Sugar and General Workers' Trade Union.
In 1975, he spent two weeks at the Golden Grove Prison for leading a march with
Trade Unionists which was deemed illegal.
Basdeo Panday's ambitions did not stop there. Exploiting the fractural divisiveness that existed within the then opposition of the
Democratic Labour Party, Panday formed an alliance with other union members,
George Weekes and
Raffique Shah. The three formed the
United Labour Front and in 1981–1986, he was the Opposition Leader.
He co-founded the National Alliance (with
A.N.R. Robinson Political leader of the
Democratic Action Congress,
Lloyd Best of the
Tapia House Group, to fight the 1981 elections, and later co-founded the
National Alliance for Reconstruction with Robinson and
Karl Hudson-Phillips Political Leader of the
Organisation for National Reconstruction. Following a convincing electoral victory in 1986 he was made
Minister of External Affairs and International Trade. Panday acted as
Prime Minister in 1987 while Robinson was out of the country. In 1988, Panday, along with
Kelvin Ramnath,
John Humphrey and
Trevor Sudama were expelled from the party after a disagreement with
A.N.R. Robinson. It was claimed by them at the time by them all that
A.N.R. Robinson was high-handed and authoritarian concerning with dealing with them and decision.
He then founded the ''Club for Love, Unity and Brotherhood'' (CLUB 88) which became the
United National Congress. In 1992 their candidates won more seats in that year's election than the then NAR. On such a basis, the members of what was to become the UNC, argued this in parliament to become the opposition members (newcomer
Hulsie Bhaggan defeated political heavyweight
Winston Dookeran for the
Chaguanas seat), but the party only won 13 of 36 seats nationally. It improved this margin to 17 in the
1995 General Elections elections. It could not form the majority in parliament to form the
Cabinet,so ,with the support of the two seats held by Robinson and the NAR, Panday was appointed the country's first Indo-Trinidadian and the first
Hindu Prime Minister. A.N.R. Robinson became the first Tobagonian to become president.
Under the leadership of Mr. Panday the UNC went on to win the 2000 election but internal strife in the party forced another election in 2001 which resulted in a tie. Without any clear constitutional guidelines, President Robinson chose to appoint
Patrick Manning as the Prime Minister.
Legal problems
On
May 31,
2005, Panday, together with his wife, Oma and former
UNC MP Carlos John and businessman Ishwar Galbaransingh (chairman of Northern Construction Limited) were arrested on corruption charges. The State alleged that the Pandays had received TT$250,000 on
December 30,
1998 from John and Galbaransingh in exchange for giving Northern Construction a construction contract for the
Piarco Airport Development Project (PADP). Panday refused bail and chose to remain in prison for a short while.
Panday, Mrs. Panday and John were placed on TT$750,000 bail, while Galbaransingh was placed on a $1,000,000. This was called a punitive bail both by supporters of the
UNC and by former
Attorney General Ramesh Maharaj, a sometime political opponent of Panday. On
June 7,
2005, bail was reduced to TT$650,000. A day later, Panday accepted bail after being jailed for over a week.
Ironically, the evidence for the charges laid against him was the product of two administrations, one of which was Panday's, and, in this administration, the evidence of the charges was due to investigations done by a U.S. private investigator hired by the Ministry of legal affairs when Basdeo Panday was Prime Minister.The law's amendment, under which Basdeo Panday was charged, also was a product of the Basdeo Panday administration.
On
March 20,
2007, the Court of Appeal quashed the conviction against Panday for failing to declare a
London bank account.
[1]
The three Court of Appeal judges agreed that there was in fact a real possibility of bias by Chief Magistrate Sherman McNicolls in his
April 24,
2006 ruling, which found Panday guilty on three counts of failing to declare a
London bank account to the Integrity Commission for the years 1997, 1998 and 1999, respectively, contrary to Section 27 (1)(b) of the Integrity in Public Life Act 1987.
[2] Information that surfaced later on, linked Chief Magistrate McNicolls to a multi-million dollar land deal and a company associated with one of the main witnesses in the Basdeo Panday trial.
[3] This information, along with the fact that Chief Magistrate McNicolls refused to give evidence for the criminal prosecution of the Chief Justice, which caused that prosecution to fail, were the main arguments used by Panday's lawyers in his Appeal Court hearing.
2005 — present
In September, 2005, Panday nominated Winston Dookeran (St. Augustine M.P.) as his successor as political leader. Panday himself was nominated for the party Chairmanship. On
October 2,
2005 both Panday and Dookeran won their posts unopposed (see
United National Congress). Since appointing Dookeran to succeed him, the UNC has been divided with many members calling for Panday to hand over power absolutely to Dookeran in the form of the Leader of the Opposition. Panday has since failed to do so, and with the Opposition MPs split 8-8 on the issue, Panday has remained as the leader of the Opposition.
In February 2006, Panday invited estranged former Attorney General, Ramesh Lawerence Maharaj back into the UNC. This led to divided opinion inside and outside the UNC and saw the revocation, by Panday, of the appointment of Senator Robin Montano, a vocal opponent to the return of Maharaj. Following this came the resignation from the Senate of Roy Augustus. Panday replaced Montano with Dr. Tim Gopeesingh, a loyalist and CEO of the UNC and Augustus with former Trinidad and Tobago sprint star
Ato Boldon. Boldon stated that he was first invited to become a senator by FIFA Vice-President and Deputy Political Leader of the UNC,
Austin "Jack" Warner.
Now in the twilight of his political career, he has been re-called as leader of the United National Congress, which will almost certainly involve him doing battle with his old adversary the PNM again.
See also
★
Pravasi Bharatiya Samman
★
Pravasi Bharatiya Divas
References
1. Appeal Court quashes Panday’s conviction Jada Loutoo
2. Trinidad's opposition leader set to go on trial Stephen Cummings
3. Panday seeks bias ruling against McNicolls Darren Bahaw
External links
★
NALIS Biography of Basdeo Panday
★
Official Website of the United National Congress