DAREECE POLO
Senior Reporter
dareece.polo@guardian.co.tt
Opposition Leader Pennelope Beckles is demanding clarity from the government after Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar reversed her account of why US military personnel are in Trinidad and Tobago. Speaking outside the Red House yesterday, Beckles questioned why neither Tobago’s Chief Secretary nor the wider public had been consulted, saying the Government’s shifting explanations have fuelled anxiety rather than eased it.
She pointed to visible activity on the island and raised concerns over whether the Environmental Management Authority was ever approached for the mandatory approvals and public consultations. Beckles compared the Government’s approach to that of Grenada, where the prime minister publicly invited feedback on similar requests from US officials. She said that level of transparency should have been adopted.
Pressed on whether the radar installation could strain relations with Venezuela, Beckles said the Prime Minister must address the nation directly, noting that citizens appear to be learning more about the situation from foreign news outlets and US Secretary of State Marco Rubio than from their own government.
“A lot of the information that we are receiving is through CNN, through BBC, through Marco Rubio. Even as it relates to what’s happening with the marines that are here, I mean, they (Venezuela) were the ones that make reference to Trinidad being occupied by the marines.”
Meanwhile, Opposition Chief Whip Marvin Gonzales intensified the criticism, accusing the Prime Minister of misleading the country on the US–Venezuela matter. He condemned Government ministers for invoking parliamentary standing orders whenever questioned, insisting the administration has evaded accountability.
“This demonstrates that the Prime Minister is a pathological liar. The Prime Minister has never been forthwith with this country on these matters involving the United States of America and Venezuela... She’s the leader of the Government that has not been forthright on this very matter. And her ministers, who come to Parliament and are asked critical questions on these very important matters, constantly invoke standing orders of the Parliament to not account to you, the citizens of Trinidad and Tobago. So, they are obviously following in vain with the Prime Minister, and I am not surprised that she had to do an about-turn, a flip-flop. She should be embarrassed, she should apologise to the people of Trinidad and Tobago for not being forthright and perhaps blatantly lying to the population on this very important matter.”
Gonzales said he understands that Tobagonians are “traumatised” by the unfolding situation, pointing to the THA Chief Secretary’s admission that he was never briefed on the arrival of US personnel. He warned that the public should be “very concerned” over the lack of transparency and repeated calls for the government to communicate openly about its decisions.
