Senior Reporter
jesse.ramdeo@cnc3.co.tt
The newly appointed Independent Senators have signalled their intentions to bring fresh ideas and prioritise the needs of the population, free from partisan pressures.
During an interview with Guardian Media on Tuesday, Multimedia Journalist and Communications Consultant Sunity Maharaj said she intended to use her position to advocate for transformative policies relating to matters of crime, the economy and the climate.
“Definitely breaking the cycle of violence because it gets deeper, like if you get stuck in the mud and the more you try to spin the wheel and deeper it goes. It requires us to reach beyond the obvious culprits to the conditions and systemic elements that create a fertile environment for deepening a culture of violence,” she said.
Maharaj further recognised the need to develop sustainable economic measures which shifted away from state dependency and non-renewable resources. She also acknowledged that climate change must be factored through the discourse given its growing impact. “Climate change is big on my agenda, the conversation cannot stop simply where our carbon emissions are and what is the status of that. We live under one sky, the oceans are connected, what happens to Alaska has tremendous impact on our island and our livelihoods. The changing temperatures and its impact on agriculture must also be considered,” she said.
Maharaj also expressed optimism about the parliamentarians’ ability to come together to achieve goals critical for the future of the country.
“There is a general lack of trust, in schools, in homes, parents are fighting for authority. You can’t tell children, much less adults do so because I say so. They will look at you and judge you and say ‘ok, I can buy that, I can trust what you’re saying’. So we do have to hold ourselves to a higher standard,” Maharaj added.
Dr Sharda Patasar, who was sworn in as an Independent Senator on Monday, told Guardian Media yesterday that her background in culture and the arts will serve to guide her contributions in the new legislative term.
“I hope with my appointment I can objectively debate, bringing that experience in the classical as well as academic experience to the floor,” she said.
Professor of Psychiatry Gerard Hutchinson, who will also be one of the new faces on the Independent bench, said that highlighting mental health issues as well as bringing an insightful and independent perspective on the matters being discussed were his areas of focus.
“I feel mental health as an entity and not just related to mental illness but the whole need to appreciate how important the mental aspect of our lives is in the context of everything we do,” Hutchinson explained.
Following Monday’s ceremonial opening of the Parliament, 29-year-old former calypso monarch Helon Francis told Guardian Media that as a new Independent Senator, he is set on representing the youth and advocating for culture.