Two students from the Ste Madeleine Secondary School were arrested by the police for drug possession on their school compound on Wednesday, but conflicting reports have emerged regarding where the drugs were concealed.
Concerned Parents Movement chairman Clarence Mendoza yesterday claimed the drugs were hidden in the students’ rectums. He voiced concern about the worsening deviant behaviour in the school and called for accountability among parents.
“I was told the children were transporting the drugs in their buttocks. This happens in the jail system and on the streets. We are asking now that sniffer dogs be used on the children when they come through the school gates,” Mendoza said.
He said some schools in the Victoria and Caroni Districts have had an escalation of juvenile delinquency.
“Form One students are being robbed and the robbers are using the money to buy drugs in school. Students are having sex and teachers are afraid to go into some school blocks,” he revealed.
Mendoza emphasised the need for additional safety officers, social workers and guidance counsellors in all schools.
“We want to have discussions with the Ministry of Education about what is happening in our nation’s schools. We realise there is something that is triggering these children and it must be dealt with. These students don’t care. They smoke in front of you, they gamble in front of you. Teachers do not want to go in the back of a block with these kinds of students,” Mendoza said.
He also stressed that students should undergo drug testing if they are caught transporting drugs.
“We continue to ask that a new arm of National Security be put in place, truancy officers, who can deal with these children outside the gates,” Mendoza said.
He noted that the school administration in Ste Madeleine has been working to stop deviance in the school.
“During the morning assembly, drug-related warnings and cautions are given, yet the Ste Madeleine students have been caught with drugs,” he said.
He called on parents to step up and do more to curb this crisis.
He said the Concerned Parents’ Movement will work with Ste Madeleine Form One students to beautify their classrooms so they can be more comfortable in their environment.
Also contacted on the issue, T&T Unified Teachers Association vice president Adesh Dwarika confirmed that the police found drugs on the students. However, he denied they were found in their buttocks but rather their school bags during a search.
Dwarika could not say the quantity of the drugs but said police took possession of it.
He also called on the ministry to ensure there are adequate teachers, safety officers, security officers, guidance counsellors and social workers attached to the school.
Calling on the Ministry of Education to provide adequate supervision, Dwarika said, “The Ministry of Education has a role to play because based on information reaching the association, there are several vacancies that have to be filled in that school.
“There is a shortage of teachers who are supposed to be there currently. It is the opinion of the association that if those vacancies are filled, there will be proper supervision of the students, so they will not have time to be on the corridors.”
Dwarika said TTUTA will lobby the ministry so there will be appropriate filling of all vacancies.
Guardian Media contacted Education Minister Dr Nyan Gadsby-Dolly for comment yesterday but there was no response up to press time.