Fuad Abu Bakr
Fuad Abu Bakr | |
|---|---|
| Personal details | |
| Born | 30 August 1985 |
| Party | New National Vision |
| Other political affiliations | Jamaat al Muslimeen |
| Spouse | Kristy Ramnarine |
| Relations | Radanfah Abu Bakr (brother) |
| Parent(s) | Yasin and Atiyah Abu Bakr |
| Alma mater | Queen's Royal College Kingston University City, University of London |
Fuad Abu Bakr (b. August 30, 1985) is a Trinidad and Tobago politician, businessman and community activist who is the leader of the New National Vision political party.[1]
Early life and education
[edit | edit source]Fuad Abu Bakr was born in 1985, the son of Yasin Abu Bakr, head of the Jamaat al Muslimeen, and his wife Atiyah (formerly Grace Telesford).[2] He is one of his father's 15 children.[3] When Abu Bakr was four his father attempted to overthrow the government of Trinidad and Tobago.[2]
Abu Bakr completed his secondary education at Queen's Royal College in Port of Spain,[2] and then spent two years studying Arabic and Islamic jurisprudence at the Islamic Call Society's college in Libya.[3] He later studied at Kingston University and at the City, University of London, both in the United Kingdom.[1]
Political career
[edit | edit source]Fuad Abu Bakr is the political leader of the New National Vision.[1]
Under Abu Bakr's leadership, the NNV contested 12 of 41 seats in the 2010 general elections.[4] Abu Bakr was a candidate for the Port of Spain North/Saint Ann's West, and placed third, receiving 93 of 13,344 votes cast.[5]
In the 2015 general elections Abu Bakr contested the Diego Martin West seat and came fourth of six candidates. He received 194 of 17,026 votes cast.[6] In the 2020 general elections he ran for the Port of Spain South seat and came fourth. He received 147 of 10,452 votes cast.[7]
Abu Bakr was arrested on June 30, 2020[8] during riots in Port of Spain over the killing of three men, Joel Jacob, Noel Diamond and Israel Clinton, by police.[9] He was charged with "using violent language to provoke persons to commit a breach of the peace" and breaking regulations associated with the COVID-19 pandemic. He was also charged with obstructing a police officer, and three counts of assaulting a police officer in connection with a Black Lives Matter protest earlier that month in Port of Spain.[8] His father, Yasin Abu Bakr, claimed his son has been trying to calm protestors, not incite them, when he was arrested.[10] Charges against Abu Bakr stemming from the BLM protest was dismissed in May 2023 after the police officer who filed the charges repeatedly failed to appear in court.[11]
In the 2025 general elections he is a candidate for the Port of Spain South seat representing the NNV.[12] He was the party's only candidate,[13] and has endorsed the UNC as "best hope for poor and disenfranchised citizens".[14] On April 9 he led a protest in east Port of Spain against Keith Scotland, the member of parliament for Port of Spain South, questioning the ruling People's National Movement's commitment to "uplift[ing] African people" what it meant to be a "PNM stronghold".[15]
Personal life
[edit | edit source]Abu Bakr is married to Kristy Ramnarine, a television producer at CNC3.[16] Footballer Radanfah Abu Bakr is one of his brothers.[17]
Electoral history
[edit | edit source]| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PNM | Keith Scotland | 5,523 | 59.9% | Decrease | |
| COP | Kirt Sinnette | 2,218 | 24.1% | Steady | |
| PF | Winzy Adams | 670 | 7.3% | Steady | |
| NTA | Gail Gonsalves-Castanada | 352 | 3.8% | Steady | |
| NNV | Fuad Abu Bakr | 268 | 2.9% | Steady | |
| All People's Party (Trinidad and Tobago) | Kezel Jackson | 149 | 1.6% | Steady | |
| Majority | 3,305 | 35.8% | Decrease | ||
| Turnout | 9,215 | 36.09% | |||
| Registered electors | 25,534 | ||||
| PNM hold | |||||
References
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- ^ ELECTIONS AND BOUNDARIES COMMISSION. RESULTS OF THE PARLIAMENTARY ELECTION HELD ON MONDAY 7TH SEPTEMBER, 2015
- ^ Report of the Elections and Boundaries Commission on the Parliamentary Elections held on Monday 10th August, 2020
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- ^ ELECTIONS AND BOUNDARIES COMMISSION. PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS 2025. DETAILED PRELIMINARY RESULTS Archived 2 May 2025 at the Wayback Machine
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