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Friday, March 14, 2025

PM: Fearful police officers hiding in stations from criminals

by

59 days ago
20250114
Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley speaks during yesterday’s debate on the  State of Emergency. Also in the picture are Finance Minister Colm Imbert, left, and Attorney General Reginald Armour.

Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley speaks during yesterday’s debate on the State of Emergency. Also in the picture are Finance Minister Colm Imbert, left, and Attorney General Reginald Armour.

NICOLE DRAYTON

Se­nior Re­porter

akash.sama­roo@cnc3.co.tt

Prime Min­is­ter Dr Kei­th Row­ley says some po­lice of­fi­cers are now pre­tend­ing to close sta­tions to hide from crim­i­nals.

He made the com­ment yes­ter­day as the Par­lia­ment de­bat­ed the ra­tio­nale for the State of Emer­gency (SoE) and a fur­ther three-month ex­ten­sion to it in sep­a­rate mo­tions.

The Prime Min­is­ter said crim­i­nals had be­come so brazen that they be­lieve they can, with­out fear, shoot and kill even the po­lice.

“So when of­fi­cers are in the po­lice sta­tions, it has come to my at­ten­tion, in some dis­tricts, in some in­stances, po­lice of­fi­cers whose job it is to pro­tect us and se­cure us, in some dis­tricts at night, are so afraid of the crim­i­nals that they close the po­lice sta­tion door, turn off the light, and be in­side there hop­ing that the crim­i­nals don’t come at them,” Row­ley re­vealed.

He added, “When cit­i­zens iden­ti­fy­ing them­selves as law break­ers choose as their place of at­tack to be in front of a po­lice sta­tion in­side the city, and to car­ry out an at­tack us­ing the most so­phis­ti­cat­ed killing weapons, it tells you they have no re­gard for law en­force­ment in our so­ci­ety.”

He said this has led to the be­lief that the reg­u­lar laws are not suf­fi­cient to treat with the harsh­ness of the crim­i­nal el­e­ment.

Con­tact­ed for a re­sponse on the PM’s claim, T&T Po­lice Ser­vice So­cial and Wel­fare As­so­ci­a­tion pres­i­dent Gideon Dick­son said he had no re­ports of any such in­ci­dent, adding the mat­ter would have to be ad­dressed by Com­mis­sion­er of Po­lice Er­la Hare­wood-Christo­pher or the deputy com­mis­sion­ers.

Ef­forts to reach Hare­wood-Christo­pher, DCP Ju­nior Ben­jamin for com­ment were un­suc­cess­ful.

The Prime Min­is­ter al­so lament­ed the dif­fi­cul­ty his Gov­ern­ment has faced in deal­ing with mur­ders.

“The bot­tom line is this so­ci­ety has been un­der at­tack from a crim­i­nal el­e­ment which we have not been able to sup­press,” Row­ley said.

He ac­knowl­edged, how­ev­er, that some peo­ple be­lieve solv­ing crime is a straight­for­ward task.

“I know there are some peo­ple who be­lieve this is easy to get rid of but if it was so easy to get rid of, we would have got­ten rid of it al­ready, but in­stead, what we are see­ing is the can­cer is spread­ing,” the Prime Min­is­ter said.

He re­it­er­at­ed that the rea­sons for the SoE were out­lined in the Pres­i­dent’s de­c­la­ra­tion.

Those were over 60 mur­ders in De­cem­ber and to deal with the threat to pub­lic safe­ty from gangs’ reprisal at­tacks.

“At that point, the Gov­ern­ment, what­ev­er re­luc­tance we had with re­spect to a SoE, we had to in­ter­vene, the Gov­ern­ment had to in­ter­vene,” the Prime Min­is­ter said.

Speak­ing again dur­ing the mo­tion to ex­tend the SoE, which was de­clared on De­cem­ber 30, 2024, Dr Row­ley said the first 15 days were not enough to have a gen­uine im­pact.

“It is too ear­ly to say that it has been suc­cess­ful, so we close the door af­ter 15 days. We be­lieve that we will put our of­fi­cers out there to do more. We have giv­en them ad­di­tion­al sup­port from the De­fence Force, we are cov­er­ing more ground, we are spend­ing more time in­ter­ro­gat­ing sus­pects, we are spend­ing more time and need to spend more time con­vert­ing in­for­ma­tion to ev­i­dence and we are, in fact, spend­ing time hope­ful­ly de­tain­ing the dead­ly to re­duce their abil­i­ty to rain death and de­struc­tion on the in­no­cent and the law-abid­ing. Madame Speak­er, we need more time,” he said.

The PM al­so un­der­scored that at no time did he ever say he was nev­er go­ing to de­clare a SoE.

He, how­ev­er, again said a cur­few is not be­ing ex­plored at this time.

Row­ley al­so de­fend­ed crit­i­cism from Op­po­si­tion Leader Kam­la Per­sad-Bisses­sar that he is re­spon­si­ble for the deaths of over 5,000 peo­ple as leader of Gov­ern­ment for al­most a decade.

He said it is easy to be crit­i­cal but there has to be log­ic. He, there­fore, sought to flip the script on her.

“If one takes that state­ment log­i­cal­ly, then I would say that the MP for Siparia is re­spon­si­ble for 2,435 deaths,” he said.

He said it is al­so not so sim­ple to ac­cuse Gov­ern­ment of tak­ing too long to utilise an SoE.

Dur­ing the de­bate, Per­sad-Bisses­sar had said call­ing a SoE could have saved hun­dreds of lives.

“That is con­jec­ture be­cause no­body knows what lives would have been saved and when you look at the num­bers, the SoE of 2011 did not put an end to the be­hav­iour of the crim­i­nals,” the Prime Min­is­ter said in re­sponse to Per­sad-Bisses­sar’s sug­ges­tion.

Mean­while, En­er­gy Min­is­ter and prime min­is­ter-in-wait­ing, Stu­art Young, ve­he­ment­ly de­nied an ear­li­er claim by Op­po­si­tion MP Sad­dam Ho­sein that all the SoE brings is al­ready built in­to reg­u­lar laws and the reg­u­la­tions were al­most a copy of the laws used by the Peo­ple’s Part­ner­ship dur­ing the 2011 SoE. Point­ing out that this SoE is tar­get­ed against spe­cif­ic of­fend­ers and does not lim­it free move­ment or free­dom of speech, Young said, “When some­one reads the reg­u­la­tions, you will see in ac­cor­dance with emer­gency pow­ers where we are sus­pend­ing cer­tain con­sti­tu­tion­al rights, the reg­u­la­tions are pro­vid­ing for the po­lice to have wider, quick­er use of pow­ers. Search and stop, search and seize with­out war­rants.

“So do not come here and try to re­strict the abil­i­ty of the po­lice in very lim­it­ed cir­cum­stances, un­der a last re­sort SoE, from be­ing giv­en the pow­ers to do what they need to do to make all of us law-abid­ing cit­i­zens that much safer. These pow­ers do not ex­ist in the ex­ist­ing leg­is­la­tion, the Firearms Act, the An­ti-Gang Act etc...”

The ex­ten­sion of the SoE was even­tu­al­ly agreed to by a unan­i­mous vote af­ter the de­bate last evening.


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