Violent clashes among warring criminal gangs in Enterprise, Chaguanas, have sparked a new wave of fear among residents, who have imposed a curfew on themselves to safeguard life and limb.
The ongoing gun battle, which has claimed 21 lives in the last year, has left the community paralysed in fear and residents living like prisoners in their own homes. It has also led to residential and commercial properties being devalued as people are moving out while others are refusing to come to the area to live.
As the lawlessness heightens and the community is now out of control, Imam Taulib Searles of the Enterprise Community Masjid is calling on the Government and the Trinidad and Tobago Police Service (TTPS) to intervene immediately and take decisive action.
Searles said the Government needed to address the social ills affecting the community and TTPS must think outside of the box to end the senseless shootings.
Once a safe and peaceful community, Enterprise became a warzone in 2014 as Rasta City and Unruly Isis gang members tussled for turf, drugs and guns, leaving dead bodies in their wake.
The killings heightened in 2016, when reputed gang leader and crime boss Selwyn “Robocop” Alexis was riddled with bullets at his car wash business on Freedom Street. Alexis’ murder triggered mayhem and bloodshed between 2016 and 2017 and the surge of lawlessness left the police busy.
This forced the Government to establish a police post in Lions Gate, Enterprise in order to restore law and order in the crime hotspot.
Residents, living in fear, locked themselves indoors and were forced to install burglar-proofing, security cameras and get ferocious guard dogs to keep their families safe.
As the year passed and months followed, the gun violence slowed and residents in the community breathed a sigh of relief once more.
However, in the last year, that calm was again interrupted by the sounds of rapid gunfire in streets, recreation grounds and homes, causing fatalities and forcing residents to implement curfews to stay safe.
Workmen installing lights at the recreational grounds along Dass Trace, Chaguanas, on Wednesday.
ABRAHAM DIAZ
The Sunday Guardian compiled its own list of murders from last November to October of this year which showed that 21 people died from gunshot wounds in the community. Thirteen of those fatal shootings occurred this year.
The last killing that rocked the country involved nine-year-old Jomol Modeste who was shot in his back at the African Recreational Ground on October 15, as he tried to escape a barrage of bullets by gunmen in a van.
Areas such as Freedom Street, Enterprise Road, Nimblette Street, Walter Lane, Chrissie Trace and Railway Road are now deemed high risk.
In a telephone interview on Wednesday, Imam Searles said that in the last five years he has officiated at 50 to 60 Janazahs (funerals) of people who died at the hands of gunmen in the community.
Searles performed the final rites for Alexis.
The only time criminals would converge inside a place of worship is at these funerals, he said.
“They would never come to pray. When it comes to funerals the whole mosque or church would be crowded. And all they (criminals) want to do is listen to what the imam, pastor or pundit has to say.”
Community out of control
Over the years, Searles said, all the known gang leaders in Enterprise met a violent death and now regular residents turned criminals are fighting for control of certain areas.
“As far as I am aware, there are no gang leaders in Enterprise. The police can’t tell you who are the known gang leaders...they don’t know. That means that the whole community now is out of control because everybody wants to be a leader. Everybody decides what they want at their own time...sometimes the community lives in fear.”
Comparing the Enterprise community now to what existed 20 years ago, Searles said people were no longer comfortable being in the public domain.
“When 6 0’clock comes, people have to find their hole. They need to go where it is safe. People are living like prisoners in their homes.”
In the underworld, the religious leader said, there are no rules, stating that if someone did an injustice, the only redress was revenge.
“This is what is causing all the crime and killings.”
The upsurge in killings has caused Searles’ congregation to drop from 400 to a mere 75 members.
“When we have Eid prayers people in Enterprise prefer to go outside because they feel threatened or unsafe. We are losing the opportunity to teach ethics and moral values to the younger generation. We are fighting a community with others who want them to smoke marijuana, do crime and show them what a firearm looks like. So we will be losing the war. A whole generation is being lost.”
While some residents have grown numb to the bloodshed, the value of commercial and residential properties has also plummeted, he pointed out.
Searles suggested the police avoid using marked police vehicles when patrolling the community.
“The worst thing they (police) can do is visible patrols...the bandits seeing when they coming and leaving.”
Imam Taulib Searles
Guns rampant on the streets
The police have been identifying countries where the guns are coming from and their value, Searles said.
“They always claim they finding firearms but they could never find the consignee. You only whisper you want a firearm and people will find you. And they will give you options.”
He said the success of fighting crime was not based on how much the Government spends but on its results.
“It is not good enough that you could talk about how much you spend and you cannot show returns on your investments.”
He appealed to the Government to provide social services to people in the community.
“The Ministry of Social Development has no social interests in certain areas. They don’t know how many people are unemployed, who are single parents and individuals who live in poverty. Who is doing research on this?
“The leaders who are entrusted with looking over our affairs have not seen it fit to provide counsellors to help families in grief. We need support groups. All the parents who lost their little children and all the children who lost their parents could talk to somebody. We are bankrupt of ideas.”
He said families unable to cope would seek revenge for the death of their loved ones.
Asked if he ever requested a meeting with the warring factions, Searles said he was told that his job was not to make peace but bury the dead.
A fight for survival
At Gitten Street, one resident who withheld his identity said the young people in criminal activities in Enterprise were identified by numbers.
“You know them by the numbers, 6, 7 and 9 and so on. The war in here different to the war in Laventille, Morvant or Arima. Them fellas doh really fight for turf. They does fight for survival.”
The criminals who have formed themselves into groups, he said, also use the acronym ABGI meaning “AnyBody Gets It,” when they carry out their work.
In Enterprise, it is very easy to access a gun.
“You can get it at black market prices. The guns range from $14,000 to $40,000. You can get a high-powered rifle for $40,000.”
The crimes, he claimed, were being perpetrated by lack of employment.
“People from outside...mostly Muslims getting contracts to build this and that and we so have nothing to get. And they want to come in here and tell we how to run things. That go lead to war.”
Asked if job opportunities will help reduce gun violence and killings, he replied “Miss, the way I see it, a promise is a comfort to a fool. We have been fooled so many times by past and present governments we don’t want anything from them.”
An unidentified man looks on as a police vehicle is seen patrolling along Enterprise Street, Chaguanas, on Tuesday.
ABRAHAM DIAZ
Residents traumatised
‘Crossing boundaries will lead to bullets’
Bhagaloo Street resident Rolston De Coteau described Enterprise as a forgotten community, stating for decades the Dass Trace Recreational Ground lacked basic amenities.
“We have to beg to get the grass on the field cut. After decades they now installing lights. When it rains the field like a swimming pool,” De Coteau pointed out.
“People from here don’t go African Grounds to take a sweat and people from African Grounds don’t come up here. There are certain boundaries we don’t cross because we know bullets will fly and blood will flow. That is how Enterprise people live.”
‘It was once a pride and joy to live here’
At Mc Carthy Street, an elderly female sitting behind thick burglar proofing in her verandah said she felt like selling her home and moving to safer ground. “Enterprise was once a pride and joy to live in. Now it’s just so terrible. It’s a warzone. From the minute it starts to get dark, I would lock up and stay inside. It’s not the life I want to live but I have to put my safety first.”
‘I making jail inside my house’
Marissa (not her real name), 67, broke down in tears in front of a supermarket on Enterprise Street as she related how her brother and son were killed in separate incidents in the community.
In 2004, Marissa said her brother who lived in New York came to Trinidad to attend their father’s funeral and went to buy a milk drink when gunmen came to rob a supermarket and shot and killed him.
While he lay bleeding on the ground, the thieves stole her brother’s jewellery and money.
Last December, her 31-year-old son, Kevin Adams, who she described as a peacemaker was also fatally shot.
Marissa said her son went to talk to a group of people who were taking advantage of a mentally unstable boy. After quelling the incident, Adams went to a shop to buy some items and walked out without collecting his change. As he attempted to re-enter the shop, gunmen opened fire on him.
Marissa’s two others sons also became targets and had to seek asylum abroad.
She pointed to multiple bullet holes in the front glass, ceiling and walls of a supermarket that gunmen shot at.
“Enterprise Street come like the Longdenville Cemetery. Please, tell me if Enterprise is any place to live. All yuh tell me. It is the worst I have seen in all the years I living here.”
Marissa said her years of grief and pain have left her mentally broken and living in fear.
“I try not to venture outside. I making jail inside my house.”
Asked if she was fearful for her life, Marissa said, “I just want to sell my property in Enterprise and go the US, Canada or England to live.”
Marissa said the gunmen had a habit of pulling the trigger for “rank and fame” and to show their enemies they had bigger guns.
Jomol Modeste
‘Jomol did not deserve to die the way he did’
A stone’s throw from where Marissa lives, Germaine Modeste, who lost her nine-year-old grandson in a hail of gunfire last month, said asks God to cover her with the blood of Jesus every day.
“Enterprise is a terrible place. People are giving the area a bad name.”
She feels the establishment of a police post in the area would bring some measure of comfort and ease to law-abiding citizens.
Modeste said she would leave her grandson’s killer/killers in God’s hands.
“There is nothing I can do to bring Jomol back. He didn’t deserve to die the way he did. If the family doesn’t get justice from the law we will get it from God.”
Vandana Mohit
MP Mohit: We want a higher police presence
Chaguanas East MP Vandana Mohit said while she was aware of certain activities taking place in Enterprise, she had been engaging the youth in positive activities.
“This news that came to us with Jomol was very shocking. I am aware of a few activities which have been taking place in the vicinity of the African Ground.”
Two days after Modeste’s killing, Mohit said she wrote National Security Minister Fitzgerald Hinds urging him to convert part of the Enterprise Community Centre, a stone’s throw away from the African Ground, into a police post for the safety of her constituents.
Mohit said she has received no feedback from Hinds.
In 2017, then national security minister Edmund Dillion, promised to construct a police station in Enterprise which Mohit said was not delivered.
She also made a plea for a higher police presence in the community.
2022 murder victims
October
*Jomol Modeste
*Marius Guevarra
*Tevin Neptune
September
*Dillon Lewis
*Jonathan Ramirez
June
*Dave Junior Nesbitt
*Dwayne Robinson
May
*Avinash Seepersad- AKA Abdul Wakeel and Krysis
April
*Akeen James
*Kevon Paul Joseph
March
*Devon Dada Gray
*Kevin Mohammed
February
*Antonio Tong Chin
2021 murder victims
February
*Jason Rosey
July
*Colin Alexis
August
*Anthony St Louis AKA Bagoo
September
*Surendra Neil Ragoobar
*Arkille Absolum
*Kelly Malook
November
*Akeen Jamal Alexander
December
*Kevin Adams