RADHICA DE SILVA
radhica.sookraj@guardian.co.tt
As this country grapples with rising crime, in particular murders and a rise in violent home invasions, National Security Minister Fitzgerald Hinds says developing a crime plan is not his responsibility.
Rather, he says it is the responsibility of Commissioner of Police Erla Christopher-Harewood and the Defence Force, which offers support to the T&T Police Service in its crime eradication drive.
Speaking to reporters at the opening of a repatriation office in San Fernando yesterday, Hinds made the comment after being asked to share his crime plan and his views on the reimplementation of the death penalty, the establishment of a gun amnesty and imposing a state of emergency to arrest the rising crime wave.
Hinds responded: “You have asked some troubling and difficult questions. A minister of Government does not generate or create a crime plan. That is a matter for the Police Commissioner, the Defence Force that supports the police.”
Pressed further, he said: “I have always said I know exactly what my responsibilities are as a Minister and it does not involve me creating a crime plan. So, when I hear particularly some who ought to know better calling on me to create a crime plan, I wonder.”
The Opposition has repeatedly called on the Government to provide support to various arms of national security in the crime fight, saying the TTPS, army, Coast Guard, Immigration, Prison Service and the TT Fire Service, with the latter being “in total shambles due to faulty or non-functioning equipment, especially fire appliances.”
But Hinds yesterday responded to that call saying, “If I had a crime plan and it was up to me, I will lock up all of them who does be talking you know, starting from people on the other side in the Parliament, some of whom I think don’t deserve the attention that they have only marginally had.”
Hinds added: “So, a crime plan is not for me, it is for the police and I am aware of what the police have planned and the strategies along with the Defence Force which they are operating.”
The Minister reiterated that his job was to provide law enforcement with the “policy directions” to reduce crime.
“In addition, my job involves providing all of the resources in accordance with budgetary allocations ... My job also involves encouraging and supporting and upholding the rule of law, and tenets of the Constitution and encouraging them (law enforcement) to uphold the law.”
Asked whether he will support a gun amnesty, Hinds said: “I think not. For me personally, that would not be my individual call. I am just one member of the Government and these kinds of things are usually done by a Police Commissioner.”
As it relates to a state of emergency, Hinds said when the State of Emergency was imposed in 2011, the then Police Commissioner, Dwayne Gibbs, did not even know there would be one.
“That will not happen with us. We are far more astute. So asking me whether to establish a State of Emergency is far-flung and outside my remit. We will take our remit from the law enforcement,” he added.
Concerning the upcoming Caricom Crime Symposium, Hinds said: “Escalating crime has been a feature of our society for many years.”
He said the regional symposium will “be considering whether there are new approaches to responding to crime.
“There is a strong case that using law enforcement to attack criminality has its value but there is a strong case that we have to respond with a lot more than that,” he explained.
He noted that the Government has tried to create a society where everyone has an opportunity to escape poverty by engaging in a “seamless education system from early childhood to primary, secondary and tertiary level.” He also said social development programmes, inclusive of $ 7 billion annually in senior citizens grants, housing grants, glasses and food support, and rent payments, are all attempts to support the population so they will not have to “go to the edge to eke out a living.”
Police Commissioner Harewood Christopher has expressed confidence that she will reduce crime by June but with the escalation of robberies and home invasions, businesspeople have been calling for better strategies, including them getting easier access to FULs to acquire legal firearms.