Housing Minister Camille Robinson-Regis has been engaged in high-level talks with both the army and police to develop a plan to assist in improving security and eradicating criminal elements in all the Housing Development Corporation’s (HDC) communities.
It is one of two major security measures officials are aiming to implement at HDC developments.
Those discussions reportedly took place days before Saturday’s deadly stabbings at Oropune Gardens, Piarco and followed the mass shooting at Harpe Place, Port-of-Spain, on March 16 in which five people were killed.
HDC’s Managing Director Jayselle Mc Farlane told Guardian Media yesterday the discussions led by Minister Robinson-Regis took place last week.
Mc Farlane spoke with GML after the HDC issued a statement yesterday following the killings of a father and son at the corporation’s apartment complex at Oropune Gardens, Piarco on Saturday.
In the statement, the Minister of Housing and Urban Development expressed condolences to the relatives of Imtiaz and Imraz Mohammed.
Minister Robinson-Regis described the incident as unfortunate and preventable.
She said, “HDC strives to provide safe communities for all citizens who are encouraged to live in peace and comfort.”
The Minister also made a call for “all residents in the various HDC communities to find amicable solutions to problems instead of resorting to violence.”
But HDC’s managing director said steps had already been set in motion to address issues of safety and security at housing developments.
Mc Farlane said they were adopting a two-pronged approach. She said a security plan is being worked on at the ministerial level and discussions are taking place with the heads of various arms of national security.
She added the other security plan is being devised by the HDC.
“We had our Head of Security, Mr Boxhill present to the Board at the meeting last Wednesday, on our plan to eradicate or reduce gang and all these other issues, at all of our HDC developments.”
She added while no one could predict when someone would engage in criminal or violent behaviour, the HDC has recognised the need to reduce or prevent the incidents.
“There is a plan afoot to see how best we can mitigate the circumstances, or the re-occurrence of any negative security and or gang issues so we are looking at putting something in place pretty soon,” she explained.
She said the HDC is currently working on short, mid and long-term preventative security measures which will soon be rolled out. Mc Farlane said she could not provide details of the security measures just yet.
Efforts to contact Minister Robinson-Regis about the other security plan for HDC communities were unsuccessful.
Meanwhile, the two survivors from Saturday’s brutal stabbing rampage at Oropune Gardens, Piarco, were discharged from hospital yesterday and returned to the apartment complex amidst fresh fears and tears.
Relatives admitted to Guardian Media, “It hadn’t been easy,” for the two to look at the spots where the two men had fallen after being stabbed multiple times in their heads and upper bodies by a neighbour.
Although Nazeera Mohammed, 17; and Nicholas Dimatos, 19; were told the suspect remained in police custody—relatives said the assurance had done very little to allay the fears of the two.
Mohammed’s father Imtiaz Mohammed, 46; and her brother Imraz Mohammed, 23, were both killed by the suspect in a murderous rage on March 30, at Building 16, Fourth Avenue, Oropune Gardens, Piarco.
Nazeera along with Dimatos were both injured during the incident and had been treated at hospital.
Contacted yesterday, a female relative said Nazeera was coherent and recalled the incident, but revealed, “She was in a fit.”