Chief Secretary Farley Augustine says it is time for Trinidad and Tobago to begin taking the protection of its politicians seriously, arguing that last week’s alleged threat against parliamentarians highlights that security details are not a luxury, but a necessity.
Augustine’s Tobago People’s Party (TPP) has two members of parliament in the Lower House in Joel Sampson and David Thomas.
While questions remain over the legitimacy of the alleged gang-related threat that prompted heightened security at the Red House and for some government officials last Friday, Augustine said the matter must nonetheless be treated with the utmost seriousness.
Responding to questions from Guardian Media at yesterday’s Tobago House of Assembly (THA) Post Executive Council media briefing, Augustine posited, “We have seen globally, with the most recent being the attempted assassination on the US President, Mr. Trump, and I always look internally to our operations, both at the THA level and at the national level. I’ve always asked myself whether we have been sufficiently serious about security.”
He added, “There is an unfortunate notion in this space that somehow having security is some rank or privilege, some luxury. It is not really a luxury. When you have security, you essentially cede all of your privacy. So, it’s not a luxury at all. And we need to remove this notion that somehow security attached to high officeholders is a luxury.”
The Chief Secretary said if something was to happen to a high office holder in this country then there could be major implications as it relates to foreign investor confidence.
“How do you convince foreign companies, multinational, large conglomerates globally to come and invest in your country? They will question whether your country is serious, whether your country has a security problem.”
Augustine said Trinidad and Tobago must admit that it has a “security problem” and credited the Government for not taking the safety of parliamentarians lightly.
“And I see the government attempting to do so and trying to bring certain strong measures to the Parliament. Granted, they get support for some, they don’t get support for others. But we have to get to the point where we realise that providing security for high officeholders is really not a luxury, but that it is something that is necessary in ensuring that the country’s global positioning and standing remains.”
He said this should be done whether the office holder is liked or not.
Augustine said yesterday evening he was due to have a conversation with MP Sampson about what transpired last Friday.
Speaking in the House of Representatives on Wednesday, Attorney General John Jeremie SC revealed that a specific gang threat the previous Friday had triggered a national security incident. As a result, heightened security measures were implemented to protect all members of Parliament and provide additional protection to certain government officials.
While the Police Commissioner has backed his statement, the Opposition believes it is a “grand deception” to pave the way for another extension of the State of Emergency which ends in late June.
