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Tuesday, April 1, 2025

Heritage: Eviction of chicken farmer a matter of safety

by

209 days ago
20240904
The layer chicken farm owned by Anthony Cornwall at Lowkie Trace, Penal.

The layer chicken farm owned by Anthony Cornwall at Lowkie Trace, Penal.

KRISTIAN DE SILVA

Se­nior Re­porter

akash.sama­roo@cnc3.co.tt

Her­itage Pe­tro­le­um Com­pa­ny Lim­it­ed is de­fend­ing its in­ten­tion to de­mol­ish a chick­en farm which sits on land it owns in Pe­nal, say­ing it is a mat­ter of safe­ty. But the farmer is adamant that the com­pa­ny is telling un­truths.

He now wants a meet­ing with the com­pa­ny to find a com­pro­mise as he now faces the daunt­ing re­al­i­ty of be­com­ing home­less.

On Mon­day, Guardian Me­dia re­port­ed the com­plaints of An­tho­ny Corn­wall who claimed that, with­out warn­ing or pri­or no­tice, masked gun­men pur­port­ing to be from the State com­pa­ny came to the farm in Lowkie Trace Pe­nal and ad­vised Corn­wall to sell his birds and dis­man­tle the pens.

But in a me­dia re­lease yes­ter­day af­ter­noon, the en­er­gy com­pa­ny said the farm was in close prox­im­i­ty to oil pipelines, a pro­duc­tion sta­tion and a com­pres­sor sta­tion.

“It is there­fore in breach of set­back dis­tances which have been out­lined by the Min­istry of En­er­gy and En­er­gy In­dus­tries and pos­es a sig­nif­i­cant health and safe­ty risk to not on­ly the tres­passers but al­so to neigh­bour­ing com­mu­ni­ties,” the com­pa­ny said in its re­lease.

In re­sponse to what it called “unau­tho­rised oc­cu­pa­tion”, Her­itage said two no­tices to cease and de­sist from con­duct­ing ac­tiv­i­ties on the lands were is­sued on March 5 and April 20, 2024.

“The il­le­gal oc­cu­piers of the said lands have re­fused to com­ply with the cease-and-de­sist no­tices, and have con­tin­ued their ac­tiv­i­ties un­abat­ed,” Her­itage said.

De­spite Corn­wall telling Guardian Me­dia that he built the chick­en pens in 2019, Her­itage claims that the com­mence­ment of op­er­a­tions of the chick­en farm start­ed this year.

Re­spond­ing to con­cerns ex­pressed by Corn­wall for his safe­ty, af­ter claims that he felt in­tim­i­dat­ed by the armed men, the com­pa­ny said, “All steps tak­en by Her­itage per­son­nel with re­spect to ad­dress­ing this il­le­gal ac­tiv­i­ty are both au­tho­rised and close­ly mon­i­tored, leav­ing no room for any un­to­ward de­mands and or be­hav­iour on the part of any Her­itage per­son­nel.

Her­itage said by law it is em­pow­ered to pro­tect its as­sets and added that in the past it had shown le­nien­cy.

“Trinidad Pe­tro­le­um Hold­ings Lim­it­ed (TPHL) un­der which Her­itage falls, has an ex­treme­ly well-doc­u­ment­ed his­to­ry of mak­ing its non-op­er­a­tional land hold­ings avail­able to the State, non-gov­ern­men­tal or­gan­i­sa­tions, and law-abid­ing in­di­vid­u­als who make the req­ui­site ap­pli­ca­tion and await ap­proval for the ap­pro­pri­ate use there­of, but not lim­it­ed to farm­ing,” the com­pa­ny added.

When Guardian Me­dia brought the com­pa­ny’s state­ment to the at­ten­tion of Corn­wall yes­ter­day, he ex­pressed sur­prise at the claims made.

“The sta­tions which they are speak­ing about are not close to me, more than two to three hun­dred feet away from me,” Corn­wall said.

He al­so con­tend­ed, “The pens are close to pipelines but not ac­tive pipelines. And peo­ple used to steal the pipes, and I used to stop them. Amal­ga­mat­ed used to come to me to find out who steal­ing. So, I used to stop peo­ple from in­vad­ing, I would come out and stop them from try­ing to thief. But we have no ac­tive pipes close to me.”

With re­spect to the no­tices Her­itage claimed it served to the chick­en farmer he replied, “One no­tice they gave me in March or Feb­ru­ary and I was dig­ging a piece of dirt and they told me no ex­ca­vat­ing and I stopped. And they nev­er told me to leave, all the pa­pers said was to stop ex­ca­vat­ing.”

Corn­wall al­so chal­lenged Her­itage’s claims that he con­struct­ed the chick­en pens this year. He sought to clar­i­fy that he com­plet­ed work this year but it com­menced in 2019.

The Pe­nal farmer, who is a fa­ther of four, now wants a meet­ing with a Her­itage of­fi­cial be­cause with­out his farm he will be home­less.

“My next move is to get a meet­ing with Her­itage, the CEO or some­body be­cause I can’t face de­mo­li­tion, I have work­ers, I have live­stock. My house burnt down, and I am stay­ing by the farm, it’s the farm I’m liv­ing by, and my bed­room is a ham­mock,” he lament­ed.

Corn­wall said six work­ers on his farm al­so de­pend on him for work.

He pre­vi­ous­ly told Guardian Me­dia that he and his fa­ther plant­ed on the land for over 50 years while it was owned by Trin­toc and then Petrotrin.


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