H.
Communication No. 351/1989. N.A.J. v. Jamaica (decision
of 6 April 1992. adopted at the forty-fourth session)
Submitted by:
H.A.J. {name deleted)
Alleged victim:
The author
State party:
Jamaica
Date of communication:
3 February 1989 (initial submission)
The Human Rights Committee, established under article 28 of the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Bights,
Meeting on 6 April 1992,
Adopts the following:
Decision on admissibility
1.
The author of the communication (initial submission dated
3 February 1989) is N.A.J./ a Jamaican citizen currently awaiting execution at
St, Catherine District Prison, Jamaica. He claims to be a victim of
violations of his human rights by Jamaica. He is represented by counsel.
Although neither author nor counsel invoke specific provisions of the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, it appears from the
submissions that they invoke a violation of article 14 of the Covenant.
Facts as submitted by the author
2.1 The author states that he was charged with the murder of A.Y., but claims
to be innocent. On the evening of 19 January 1983/ he was at the locus in quo
where he saw the deceased with two other persons, one Co. and Ch., the
deceased's brother. Co. and the deceased were holding guns; Co. was hitting
Ch. with his gun, and when the author approached them, he was told not to
interfere. Walking away from the scene of the fight, he heard gunshots and
began running. A.Y. was taken to the hospital, where he died of gunshot
wounds on 21 January 1983.
2.2 On 3 November 1983, the Home Circuit Court in Kingston found the author
guilty of murder and sentenced him to death. The Jamaican Court of Appeal
dismissed his appeal on 20 June 1985. A subsequent petition for special leave
to appeal to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council was dismissed on
25 January 1988.
2.3 During the trial, the prosecution's main witness, Ms. P.M., girlfriend of
the deceased and the only eyewitness to the crime, testified that A.Y. was
shot in the back. The pathologist, however, opined that the entry wound was
to the right of the abdomen, two inches from the midline of the body.
2.4 The Court of Appeal addressed the issue of the apparent inconsistency in
the evidence, stating, inter alia, that: "it was open to the jury to accept
as a reasonable explanation Ms. P.M. concluding that a wound on the deceased's
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