Senior Reporter
akash.samaroo@cnc3.co.tt
National Security Minister Fitzgerald Hinds is staunchly condemning the Opposition Leader’s hardline stance on Venezuelan migrants, describing it as a cheap political strategy. He said it was dangerous to society with the potential to spread unwarranted hate and anger.
Hinds told Guardian Media that Kamla Persad-Bissessar’s comments have proven once again to him that she is, “nothing more than a political crustacean and scraper.”
He even went as far as to compare her “reckless outburst” to mimicking a Donald Trump-style of politics.
Persad-Bissessar warned Venezuelan migrants to behave or be deported. She said every day for the last year, there were reports of violent crimes being committed by illegal Venezuelan migrants against citizens and promised that the UNC government would take aggressive action if that does not change. The Opposition Leader lamented that the UNC has repeatedly called for a clear migrant policy to be implemented by the State.
However, Hinds said the Government already has a policy in place, and therefore the Opposition Leader is calling for something that already exists.
“And therefore her intervention now, obviously aimed at scraping votes, because, as you would know, in previous commentaries she was quite sympathetic to them. Everything she is saying now is contrary to what she had previously said, underscoring the fact that for political purposes, Kamla Persad-Bissessar would tell lies; she would twist her socks more than her shoe,” Hinds said.
Hinds said the process of deporting illegal migrants was as “old as Methuselah.” “We made it very clear; we articulated it in documentary form in the Migrant Registration Framework (MRF), so that is not new, that has been the case. And on a daily basis, I sign, among other things, deportation orders for those persons who do not deserve the protection of the law and the Constitution of Trinidad and Tobago, including Venezuelans, and some of them, because they infringed the laws of T&T, we have been deporting Venezuelans on an ongoing basis,” Hinds added.
This was echoed by Foreign and Caricom Affairs Minister Dr Amery Browne, who posted on X, “The Ministry of National Security has continuously been deporting Venezuelan nationals who break the laws of T&T while here.”
He added that the Opposition Leader wants to do what is already being done. Responding to his post was Finance Minister Colm Imbert, who posted, “Madness. She previously demanded that we accept all of them carte blanche without question. Now, all of a sudden, she wants to deport them en masse?”
The National Security Minister believes the voting public will see through her strategy. “She’s only doing it in her desperate search for votes on the premise that she would form the next government. But Trinidadians and Tobagonians are far wiser and sharper than that, and they know the threat that Persad-Bissessar and the UNC pose to them, and just like 2015 and just like 2020, they are going to reject them in 2025,” he said firmly.
Hinds also believes Persad-Bissessar’s position will instil hate and anger in society even against those he described as the lawfully present Venezuelan migrants.
“And to be politicising a well-established policy that is in practice in this country, what she has also done is generate hate and anger on the part of some people in T&T towards the migrant community, including those who are lawfully registered and entitled on the government’s policy to be here,” he argued.
Elaborating on how his government handled the migration wave of 2018, Hinds underscored that the government’s policy on Venezuelan migrants and migrants generally was well established.
Hinds said it was worth knowing that DCP Junior Benjamin has previously emphasised the police’s commitment to justice, regardless of the nationality of the perpetrators.
Analysts weigh in
Ramsamooj criticises Persad-Bissessar
Meanwhile, political analyst Derek Ramsamooj strongly criticised Persad-Bissessar’s position on migration, saying politics in this society is not an all-fours game of playing ‘Trump’ and everyone else following suit.
“It is a sad day when our political leadership practices exclusion as opposed to inclusion. The issue is the money launderers, drug trade, and companies who have legitimised ill-gotten gains in the banking system; that is where the real criminality in our society exists. How many campaign financiers of questionable income sources participate in campaign finance?” he added.
Ramsamooj also questioned if the Opposition Leader was intent on breaking up families.
“Is the leader of the Opposition saying that she is prepared to remove the children of the Venezuelans who may have been born here back to Venezuela? During this last wave of Venezuelan migration, the number of children born to Venezuelan parents may have a legitimate right to be here. Is she advocating her willingness to break up families by leaving children here and sending their parents back home?” he asked.
The political analyst said people must remember that this nation was built on the back of migration.
He advised Persad-Bissessar to focus on the more pertinent issues affecting this society.
“Attempting to be a politician practising populism when you fail to address national issues of crime in our society and your plans for economic diversification being brought to public scrutiny is much more important to influencing voters than practising xenophobic politics,” he said.
Mohammed: Kamla may see some gains
However, another political analyst thinks that Persad-Bissessar may see some gains after her now-controversial statements. Dr Shane Mohammed believes the Opposition Leader needs to elaborate more on her implementation plan.
“Trump has a very robust plan. This is part of a plan that I believe is the end product. I believe it should be articulated further whereby a system of checks and balances is put in place to ensure our immigration policy is more than just a revolving door of deported today–return in two days. So, for example, visa requirements, stronger border control, and synchronisation of state agencies,” Mohammed added, “It may work here to some extent based on a person’s perspectives of the existence of the Venezuelans in the country. So, are they a threat to our domestic security as citizens? Are they threatening family life? Are they a drain on our economy? Are they contributing to our economic growth? Those answers will only come with an effective plan to ascertain how many are actually here. And how can they make a meaningful contribution to society as opposed to existing as a subset and not paying their dues via taxes?”