Senior Reporter
anna-lisa.paul@guardian.co.tt
Former commissioner of police (CoP) Gary Griffith says the disclosure of a heightened threat targeting senior Government officials has increased public fears and will only further harm this country’s image internationally.
Admitting Wednesday’s announcement by Attorney General John Jeremie was “alarming,” Griffith wants to know why the information was made public.
During a sitting of the Lower House last Friday, Jeremie said a member of a Belmont gang had sparked a national security incident which required increased security for certain Government officials.
Seeking to understand the rationale for Commissioner of Police Allister Guevarro to give the AG permission to disclose the info in Parliament, Griffith challenged the CoP to say what national security protocols were followed and to highlight where it was stated that such information had to be made public.
“There is no protocol that states that every single time there is a threat, you need to make it known to the public,” he underscored, criticising the established practice of how information was released by senior officials of the T&T Police Service (TTPS).
“This has been a problem even before myself as commissioner and after, where senior police officers seem not to understand that there are certain things you have to give to the public on a need-to-know basis.”
Griffith, who held the post of CoP from 2018-2021, insisted, “The public did not need to know this.”
Recalling similar situations during his tenure, he revealed, “What I did was either neutralise the threat, or to provide proper security mechanisms to prevent the threats from being implemented. That is what the CoP should have done.”
He said the announcement by Jeremie has only intensified public fears, whilst simultaneously magnifying the potential fallout for T&T on the world stage.
“It can very well affect our international reputation. It can cause serious concerns in travel advisories, and you can now virtually tip off the same criminal elements for them to be aware now that you now know exactly what their intention is,” he stated.
He added, “That it served no purpose, it has now caused, probably, a heightened concern of the fear of crime throughout the country because if it is that they can target senior government officials...then who am I as an average citizen?”
He urged senior police officers to undergo proper training on accepted international best practices.
“All that the senior police officers need to do is do their bloody job. Neutralise the threat and/or make sure that the persons who were being threatened are properly secured. That is all that was required.”
Despite these sentiments, Griffith commended those in charge of the national security apparatus, as he said the move by criminal elements to harm senior Government officials meant they were doing something right.
Meanwhile, T&T Police Service (TTPS) Public Information Officer, acting ASP Owie Russell, said they have a responsibility to protect the country’s heads of state and government.
Speaking on CNC3’s The Morning Brew programme yesterday, Russell reassured the public that the TTPS was vigilant in the wake of the latest claim by the AG of a national security threat to Government officials.
He said, “Once the information was brought to the commissioner, I am certain that the commissioner would have activated all protocols and necessary measures to ensure the safety of not only the parliamentarians but those who would have been in the vicinity of that area.”
Russell reminded persons, “Trinidad is no stranger to particular things coming out of 1990, so when it comes to threats like that, of course, we will activate all protocols and we do have a stringent security protocol already in place when the Parliament, and the Cabinet and Senate is sitting, and heightened is just a few more things cause we already have plan, plan A, plan B and plan C.”
Russell declined to comment when pressed for further information on the threat itself, and to whom it had been directed.
However, he assured, “We always try and put all measures in place.”
