Home Court Nandlall to Norton: Produce evidence of corruption in judiciary or retract comments

Nandlall to Norton: Produce evidence of corruption in judiciary or retract comments

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Attorney General Anil Nandlall SC and Opposition Leader Aubrey Norton

Attorney General and Minister of Legal Affairs Anil Nandlall is calling on Opposition Leader Aubrey Norton to withdraw his recent comments accusing Judges and Magistrates of accepting bribes, or, provide the evidence to support those claims.

Nandlall was at the time referring to a bold statement released by the Opposition on May 12, 2025 via Facebook in which it indicated that fairness in judgements is dependent on a person’s financial status.

The statement reads: “Justice must be real, not selective. Under an APNU government, the courts will serve every Guyanese equally and fairly. Because fairness should never depend on your wallet.”

During his weekly programme “Issues in the News” on Tuesday evening, Nandlall expressed that “Mr Norton is clearly attributing to the judiciary an ulterior motive, and an immoral motive…a corrupt motive.”

Against this backdrop, the Attorney General said “if Norton has information that the judges and/or magistrates are deciding cases based upon financial and pecuniary influences and rewards, then he must come out and say so by providing the details.”

“This is a most serious allegation to make,” Nandlall asserted, noting that “it is either Mr. Norton withdraws this statement, or he produces the evidence.”

The Legal Affairs Minister explained that while the judiciary must be open to criticisms and public commentaries, they must be fair and respectful, and they must not attribute to the judiciary a sinister, ulterior, an improper, corrupt motive.

In fact, Nandlall admitted that “I have been critical of the judiciary” but he noted that he couches those criticisms in “acceptable terms”.

Meanwhile, referring to the Opposition’s claims of ensuring a fair judicial system, Nandlall reminded of what obtained during previous Peoples National Congress (PNC) administrations.

He noted that there is evidence to suggest that the courts under the PNC rule was influenced politically as he recalled the hoisting of the PNC flag which was flown from the Court of Appeal during the 1964-1992 tenure of that party.

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