The A Partnership for National Unity/Alliance For Change (APNU/AFC) Government is currently squatting in Government unlawfully and therefore cannot reasonably expect to have any meaningful dialogue with other political stakeholders.

According to PPP/C Executive Member Anil Nandlall, the David Granger-led APNU/AFC coalition must first vacate office as it has been defeated at the March 2 General and Regional Elections before any talk of dialogue is even considered.
Nandlall, during an interview programme “Carib Update” on Monday, said that if the opposition parties were to agree to talk with the coalition while it still occupies the Government, it would be against the democratic process and would set a bad precedent for the Caribbean and the entire world.
“If you lose an election, democracy and the rule of law demand that you vacate office, you can come and talk afterwards, but you can’t remain in office squatting unlawfully, and then use your position in office to extract from your opponent some kind of political concession.
“That flies in the face of democracy as we know it, and if that precedent is ever set, I believe it will undermine the democratic process right across the world. And that is the problem here,” Nandlall, a former Attorney General under the PPP/C Government, outlined.
According to Nandlall, while on the one hand dialogue is always “desirable” in a political impasse, what one has to be careful about on this occasion is that “you don’t be construed as rewarding bullyism, fraud thuggery, and political intimidation”.


“It should be noted that the ongoing political situation they claim to want resolved, is in totality again, their own doing and making. It is nothing short of dishonesty and another display of the duplicitous nature of the leadership of APNU/AFC to say they are prepared to act to resolve a situation, a situation which they have created and is within their power to resolve,” ANUG posited in its missive.







