KINGSTON, Jamaica — Former Prime Minister PJ Patterson has asserted that the framers of Jamaica’s constitution never intended for the British Privy Council to remain as Jamaica’s highest Court of Appeal, hence it was never deeply entrenched in the constitutional framework. Speaking at a forum at the Faculty of Law at the University of the West Indies at Mona, Patterson emphasised that both Norman Manley and Sir Alexander Bustamante had not subscribed to the “retention of an Apex Court created to maintain the cause of the British Empire, through which it would maintain its dominion by way of the Privy Council as the final determinant of our legal rights.” Patterson, Jamaica’s sixth and longest-serving Prime Minister, had an insider’s perspective during the creation of the Jamaican constitution.

He noted that with the dissolution of the West Indies Federation, the Federal Court would automatically be dissolved. As a temporary measure, it was decided to retain the Privy Council until a Final Caribbean Court could be established. “Our founding fathers envisaged the establishment of a Caribbean Court at the apex.

This should remain a settled national position and should not be subverted because of political expediency, which has now emerged as a partisan divide,” Patterson lamented. “Not one single valid ground has been advanced as to why this vestigial colonial institution should remain,” Patterson declared. He argued that if Sir Alexander Bustamante was not.