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76323 Posts in 4148 Topics by 859 Members Latest Member: - Shante22 Most online today: 40 - most online ever: 66 (June 14, 2007, 11:37:46 AM)

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Author Topic: Ousted HRC head accuses Ministers of interference  (Read 935 times)
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KickinSand
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« on: July 03, 2007, 06:56:12 PM »

DID WE EVER WONDER IF MINISTERS USED A STRONG HAND TO INFLUENCE DECISIONS??
DO THEY GIVE A RATS A** ABOUT HUMAN RIGHTS?

MID OCEAN JUNE 29TH 2007

A DAMNING picture has been painted of Bermuda’s human rights complaints process by the previous head of the body charged to deal with such grievances.Former executive officer of the Human Rights Commission (HRC), David Wilson, said Government Ministers and civil servants intervened in at least one high-profile case, and both he and his predecessor, Opposition MP Neville Darrell, were sacked because they refused to play ball.

The ousted head’s allegations are supported by a host of court affidavits and e-mail records.

His claim is that a cadre of Government Ministers and senior civil servants attempted to bully both him and the United Bermuda Party MP into a course of action which would have affected the outcome of a discrimination complaint local businessman Harold Darrell had initiated against the Bank of Bermuda. That case is still ongoing seven years after it was first filed.

According to Mr. Wilson, Neville Darrell’s dismissal was preceded by a heated meeting with former Human Affairs Minister Terry Lister.

That tirade, which allegedly brought Mr. Darrell close to tears, apparently saw Mr. Lister scold him “for entertaining the Harold Darrell complaint against the Bank of Bermuda” and warn there were certain cases he would have to ignore in his tenure at the Human Rights Commission, that at times he “would have to tear down the temple, and that on other occasions, (Mr. Darrell) would simply do nothing”.

Mr. Wilson believes his own fall from the civil service was brought about by a targeted conspiracy involving former Human Affairs director Brenda Dale, former chairman of the Human Rights Commission Rod Attride Stirling, current Human Affairs director Myra Virgil and former Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Community Affairs and Sport, Derick Binns.

He further alleges that former Community Affairs and Sport Minister Dale Butler was aware of what was happening but showed no support, despite unfair comments in the media from Mr. Attride Stirling which led to Mr. Wilson’s professional disgrace.

“I am now looking at the full picture, the way Neville Darrell was pushed out of the office when we had that first ministerial interference from Terry Lister.

“I’m looking at my situation — I was not dismissed for annual reports or the managing of any cases, I was dismissed for upholding the law with respect to how the Harold Darrell matter was handled.

“My demise wasn’t about late annual reports, it was because I stood my ground and resisted intrusions into my office, which enjoys independence in cases.”

Mr. Wilson claims his problems initiated with Mrs. Virgil, who had unsuccessfully applied for the role of executive officer in 2002 and was instead hired as an investigation officer for the Commission.

“Mrs. Virgil was disgruntled and never wanted to come under my authority,” he said. “Because she was a PhD candidate, she wanted me to unilaterally put her on a higher pay scale than the other investigation officer.

“She wanted me to unilaterally create a position for her as assistant executive officer and became rancid when I told her this could not be done. In short, she had an inflated ego and wanted to be catapulted to higher heights before doing her time.”

Mrs. Virgil left to run the Commission for Unity and Racial Equality (CURE).

Around the same time, Mrs. Dale was appointed director of the Department of Human Affairs. Effectively Mr. Wilson’s boss, the post was at times filled by Mrs. Virgil when Mrs. Dale was on leave.

A backlog of work in his office led Mr. Wilson to ask for additional administrative support. As proof of need, he cited evidence from several temps that the demands were too much for one person. His request was denied.

“The relationship between me and (Mrs. Dale) was bad, but only because I resisted her micro-management and bullying in my office. The relationship became worse when I found it necessary to seek help from her superior, Dr. Binns.”

The former HRC head said he received no support, only a pair of poor performance appraisals — “the first in my tenure” since assuming the responsibility of acting executive officer in 1999 and being made permanent head of the Commission in 2002 and the first in his entire “service with Government, which goes back to 1975 when I was a teacher”.

In a November 2005 letter to the Assistant Secretary to the Cabinet, Mr. Wilson made a formal complaint against Mrs. Dale’s behaviour.

“At this time, all I wish to say about these matters is that they are a kind which, in my view, amount to disrespect for me and my office and an attempt to discredit me before my staff — but all of which, I might add, seems to only take place when I am not in office,” he wrote.

“Recently, I was off the island on vacation leave. I learned that the Director had been in my office the first day of my leave. It is my information that the Director was inspecting or otherwise moving around my office, helping herself to information.

“I have repeatedly indicated to Mrs. Dale and the Permanent Secretary that, by Section 30 of the Human Rights Act 1981, I and all officers of the Commission are required by law to maintain confidentiality of the business of the Commission.

“There is a strict prohibition on this. Whilst I recognise that Mrs. Dale is my director, all of her predecessors have recognised and respected the fact that the director is not an officer of the Commission and does not have free (i.e., unescorted) and unfettered access to my office.”

Section 30 of the Act states: “Any person who hinders, obstructs, molests or interferes with the Commission or an officer of the Commission in the lawful exercise of a power or the lawful performance of a duty under this Act shall be guilty of an offence.”

Compounding his problems was his relationship with Mr. Attride Stirling.

“The chairman functioned differently to those I’d worked with before. Aside from the fact that he was very dictatorial, he had no rapport with my staff and was very offensive to my staff.

“Every day I was getting complaints from my staff about his approach, the fact that he was very rude.”

He addressed his concerns to Mr. Butler, under whose portfolio the HRC fell, and who happened to be a longstanding friend.

“I said, ‘I’ve been here a long time. I know my job. Things are not working between the chairman and me and the director and me’. I didn’t expect him to do anything about the director, because that’s a civil service position, but the chairman of the Commission is a political appointment.

“I told him that (Mr. Attride Stirling) was making my life a hell, that he didn’t have the respect for my staff and that he didn’t have my respect. I left him feeling quite encouraged. I expected him to do his due diligence and check.”

What happened, said Mr. Wilson, is that “Mr. Rod Attride-Stirling was re-appointed” and subsequently complained in the press that the annual reports were years’ behind.

“My office prepared 2002, 2003 and 2004 annual reports in the usual way with the usual format, which had been accepted by Cabinet for years before Mrs. Dale or Mr. Attride Stirling arrived.

“There were some statistical problems in the reporting which required auditing. I had no problem with that. To this day, the Minister has been fed untruths that the reports were not done. The truth is that the reports were done.

“The chairman has said that the reports were garbage. And I say if they were garbage then he insults the scrutiny and vetting of his own deputy (Mary Ann Scott), who was charged with approving these reports.

“The whole issue of reports is so insane when I have it on authority that other departments in Government are eight to ten years behind in reports.”

Mr. Wilson added that, according to a recent report by the Auditor General, the Bermuda College had failed to file annual reports since 1985.

“But I didn’t see anybody from the College being fired,” he said.

He reserved his greatest criticism for Mrs. Dale, who he said conducted herself in a manner that was “unprofessional, unlawful and certainly not becoming of a senior civil servant”.

“One, she ordered me not to attend boards of inquiry proceedings and it began with the Harold Darrell case,” he said.

“The second thing that she did was during the preliminary proceedings of the Harold Darrell board of inquiry.”

According to Mr. Wilson, there was confusion as to whether Mr. Darrell’s complaint was against the Bank of Bermuda or its board of directors or both.

“She was very angry that I put this matter before the Commission. During the meetings we had with the Commission to try and sort this out, Mary Ann said, ‘Listen, Mr. Harold Darrell was always including the bank as a respondent, not just the directors’.

“I knew that was true. But Mrs. Dale didn’t want that evidence and she didn’t want that to be communicated to Harold Darrell because this would have made it easy for Mr. Darrell to proceed at the hearing as he wanted to.

“She forced me to put selected transcript evidence before the Commission — she said I was to only put forward evidence that she approved. That had the effect of derailing the Commission.

“The third thing that she did was forbid me to have contact with Mr. Harold Darrell. This is a member of the public. He has a right to come to my office. But I still did not connect the dots and then, subsequently, I came to the conclusion that Mrs. Dale was attempting to effect a particular result in this case. She was forcing me to continually look over my shoulder.”

Mr. Wilson eventually faced an internal tribunal. “I ran a credible defence to all of the charges laid against me, but even I did not realise that nothing I said was going to make a difference because the Minister was at the centre of it,” he said.

The matter came to a head last July when Mr. Wilson was eventually faced with two options — resign or be dismissed.

“I told them that the only way I would take resignation is if they gave me a letter of recommendation going forward. I wanted to get my job back on track. I wanted to get back into employment.”

Three months after resigning, Mr. Wilson had failed to receive any letter of recommendation, and subsequently called the deal off.

“Forget it. You can call it dismissal or whatever you want but the deal now is off because you haven’t shown me good faith at all,” he said.

“I’ve done all I’ve had to do and every door has been shut in my face in terms of trying to get employment. Whenever I sent my dossier out the recommendation from Government was missing.

“There’s no reason for me to not tell the truth now. And if the truth be told, I believe that someone got to Mrs. Dale and caused her to interfere with this case in the three ways I’ve outlined. And I think that’s very serious. The public needs to know.”

Mr. Wilson added that one of the conditions of his resignation was that he not go to the Public Service Commission or take his employers to court.

And he said his superiors were shocked to learn that, because of an oversight, he had never signed the Official Secrets Act, and is therefore free to talk about his work as a civil servant.

Mr. Wilson’s concerns were backed up by Harold Darrell, who believes that officials are using delaying tactics to block his case from moving forward.

Referring to “protracted legal arguments”, Mr. Darrell said: “They’re just trying to confuse people with smoke and mirrors.”
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« Reply #1 on: July 03, 2007, 06:59:11 PM »

Ya know... so what else is new?  Yawn....  Wink
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« Reply #2 on: July 03, 2007, 07:24:34 PM »

I love that nobody ever made him sign the official secrets act. Wonder who else managed that feat.

I don't care who is in power, UBP, PLP, it is a bad, bad thing to leave the government able to interfere with due process. The corruption runs deep.
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« Reply #3 on: July 08, 2007, 07:59:33 PM »

Well after reading about Mr Darrell victimization, his case with the people, it all reminds me of the way the Government of the Cayman Islands handled me in a case where i was working in H.M.P Northward Prison for 9 years and how Dwight Scott, the present Director of the Prison was an investigator, a witness and the Judge in the same case. Where the Director had took sides with a prisoner and fabricated a case against me. And the Government permitted Dwight Scott to use His discretions in the case, and the HRC and the OCC (Office of the Complaints Commissioner) was informed about the situation of Dwight Scott being the Judge, the witness and an Investigator in the  same case. Well the Government did a heck of a number on that case for me also. And I came off something like Mr. Darrell.
 Well Mr. Darrell, they say, "Honesty is the best of policy" but when you deal with Curupted people, you will simply find that "Your Honesty" does not get you anywhere.
   I believe that Mr. Darrell was AND Still is an honest, diligent, fairminded, UNCURUPTED individual, and will remain that way. Another thing,,, "There is a Good Almighty above. What goes around Comes around," my friend. ALL THE BEST to You Mr. Darrell
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« Reply #4 on: July 08, 2007, 11:50:11 PM »

Hank, would you say that things have improved any since that tim ein the Caymans?
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« Reply #5 on: July 09, 2007, 04:36:42 AM »

This spin machine is about we're black and we're in charge,and
has far greater implications for the Bermuda constitution and British government - than is generally realized. It is not just about spin, but about control of ministers and MPs, and about the publics access to information.

The cadre of Government Ministers and senior civil servants mentioned are the masters of misinformation. They are supposed to be servants of the people but despite their very generous perks and highly paid government jobs for life,they are the PR spin-doctors for a black beret  PLP gangsters,whose daily press releases are meant to obscure the stench of corruption and Polit Bureau tactics
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« Reply #6 on: July 09, 2007, 08:08:50 AM »

I have every sympathy for Mr. Wilson's position. It is refreshing to know that there some people around with principles - just a shame they don't happen to be MP's or their lackeys! It won't be long before words like "principles", "ethics" and "honesty" won't be able to be used in the same sentence as the word "politics".
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« Reply #7 on: July 09, 2007, 08:31:56 AM »

where are the UBP defectors ,race pimp whiners and  conspiracy theorists now?

The Mid Ocean News has clearly well documented all of the the players as PLP and black.

There was no respect or sympathy for Dr Sean O'Connell drummed out of Bermuda College,Auditor Larry Dennis, kicked out of his office at 430pm on a Friday,jailed 48 hours,or Dr. Catherine Wakely fired for a letter to editor.The Elbow Beach chef ,the Global Construction site manager ,or the  Jamaican Lawyer forced to leave from disputes with PLP "officials".Tony Brannon forced out of Hawkins Island,after HOTTFM started a petition to shut the business down.
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« Reply #8 on: July 09, 2007, 11:05:46 PM »

Hank, would you say that things have improved any since that tim ein the Caymans?

Reality,,,, it has changed.. But from Bad to WORST and will Only continue to get worst until the whole thing has been ranshacked and the garbage that was put in .... Is taken OUT.

 Sorry just just cant give you a good reply cuz there is none to give.
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« Reply #9 on: July 10, 2007, 02:17:22 AM »

Thanks Hank... I hear a lot that Cayman is a much more expat-friendly place than Bermuda but it is interesting to get an insider's viewpoint.
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« Reply #10 on: July 10, 2007, 07:40:48 AM »

Cayman is WAY MORE FRIENDLY and the locals seem much much more accommodating than here.  Even though there is an undercurrent in the Cayman it isn't half as bad as it is here in Bermuda.
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« Reply #11 on: July 10, 2007, 08:08:19 AM »

Cayman is WAY MORE FRIENDLY and the locals seem much much more accommodating than here.  Even though there is an undercurrent in the Cayman it isn't half as bad as it is here in Bermuda.

Having worked in Cayman for a bit I must agree with Val, there isn't that "in your face" attitude toward the ex-pat population. They did, and still to a degree, have a problem with illegal workers but have recently re-vamped the entire immingration system in an attempt to curb flow.

The only real downfall I found with Cayman was the education system. Locals are afforded free education for their children, where ex-pats have to pay (even in the public schools) and it's not cheap.  I've had a few good friends who had worked in Cayman for years, once their kids reached school age, it was back to Canada for them.
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« Reply #12 on: July 10, 2007, 01:35:56 PM »

KickinSand, yeahh we got alot of friendly people here and we do have some hostiles. But basically good people, however the revamping of the immigration is causing a bad effect on cayman.
I think it would be more helpful if you guys read about the situation here rather than I telling you here what is actually taking place. Read... caymannetnews.com (a reality check)  and caycompass.com, (a pretty upper check) two internet news papers that will give you a better idea of the situation here.

it is not really a pretty thing all the same, but come if not before May 2009 we might do some cleaning of the government and hopefully make things somewhat better. Certainly looking forward to it guys, cuz it is needed. Lets stay posting and sharing info about our beautiful islands, meanwhile preparing to PUSH garbage OUT and take in perhaps better leadership.

I think we all deserve it at this point and time guys
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