Supporters of the United National Congress (UNC) staged a protest march in Arima yesterday calling on the electorate to vote out the People’s National Movement (PNM) in the next general election. The protest was held in conjunction with the One Corridor Movement under the theme Let’s Rescue Arima.
UNC’s Northeast regional coordinator Brian Baig said the protest was intended to highlight numerous problems in the constituency.
“The people of Arima have said in one voice that Rowley must go,” he said.
Baig, who appealed to voters to support Opposition Leader Kamla Persad Bissessar, accused the PNM of taking credit for projects which had started under the UNC including the new Arima Hospital and the refurbished Arima Police Station.
Dressed in yellow UNC jerseys, the group walked in heavy rain from Hearde Park on the Blanchisseuse Old Road, attracting the attention of motorists and pedestrians who slowed to listen to the loud-speakers blaring music and calls for “Rowley must go now.”
In a brief address outside the Arima Market at around 11 am, attorney and resident Nigel Trancoso said: “I know the struggles, the difficulties, the hardships that we face in Arima.”
He urged Arima residents to carefully examine what had changed in the last four years.
“There are many businesses that have closed and are closing down,” he said
“Do you know what businesses have increased? The funeral homes, because our young black people are dying.
“The time is now because we have to prepare for our successive generations and Arima needs that change now.”
Former Arima mayor Keith Denalli said the borough had enjoyed its best years under the National Alliance for Reconstruction (NAR). “It is time to bring back the great times to Arima. It is time to bring back the good times to Pinto and Santa Rosa. We want everybody to support the UNC from here on to achieve this,” he urged.
The group later walked to the site of the new Arima Hospital which is still under construction and took pictures in front of the locked gate of the facility they claimed started under the UNC.