Reporter
kevon.felmine@guardian.co.tt
In response to residents of Barrackpore, who threatened to keep up protests until work begins on building a new road, Works and Transport Minister Rohan Sinanan said they are free to do what they like within the law.
He said so after residents staged a fiery early morning protest yesterday. They placed old tyres, tree branches and other items across Rees Road, GP Road and St Croix Road and set fire to them before sunrise. However, police responded quickly and two van loads of officers armed with helmets and machine guns prevented residents from reigniting the debris while firefighters extinguished the fires.
Sinanan said when Ministry of Works and Transport (MOWT) employees went to the community yesterday morning to begin patching the road, residents chased them away.
“Residents threw stones at them saying they do not want it patched but paved. They will make attempts again to patch the road. Estimates are already in and we are in the procurement phase. We will patch the road to ensure the surface improves as we await the major work which is on a schedule of work. Road paving is going on around the country. We cannot do it everywhere at the same time,” he said.
The minister added that the protest will not change the fact that there is a process to follow with road repairs, including tendering.
The residents said they were told work would begin on June 12 and they allowed for additional time owing to the weather. However, they expected to see the work begin this morning.
One of the protesting residents, Naz Mohammed, said former Prime Minister Dr Eric Williams was still alive the last time Rees Road was repaired.
“Rees Road is the worst road in Trinidad and Tobago. You have oil resources coming out of this community on a daily basis. All we ask for is a little piece of the pie back,” he said.
“I understand that some Ministry of Works people are coming to do some work or drop some material on the road and we are saying no. The protest will stop when we see a barber green machine. That is the only time. The time for the yellow boulders has gone.”
Shop owner Anil Mahadeo said business has been slow because customers find it difficult to drive along Rees Road. He said the road has been in unsatisfactory condition for too long and the people of Barrackpore are citizens who deserve proper government services.
Yesterday’s protest took place near the home of Massy Energy Engineered Solutions pipe fitter Allanlane Ramkissoon, who died on Sunday after suffering burns in a fire at the NiQuan Energy, Pointe-a-Pierre. A resident said he does not know where the hearse will pass to get to Ramkissoon’s home for the funeral.
“By the time that hearse reaches from that junction to here, my time might pass. They might have to go back with that body, so we want something done. We are asking in a very peaceful manner,” said the resident, who did not give his name.