jesse.ramdeo@cnc3.co.tt
Patriotic Front leader Mickela Panday has criticised Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar for her comments regarding Wednesday’s protest in Port-of-Spain, accusing the Prime Minister of responding with “contempt” instead of addressing citizens’ concerns.
The protest was held to highlight the discontent over the police’s decision to issue warrants for the arrest of Kaia Sealy in the death of her common-law husband Joshua Samaroo during a police-involved shooting incident in January.
In a statement yesterday, Panday described the Prime Minister’s response as “extremely disappointing,” saying calls for national leaders to “lower the temperature” had instead been met with insults directed at protesters.
Panday took issue with remarks in which the Prime Minister referred to protesters as “grifters,” accused some citizens of “publicity farming” and dismissed public concerns as “victim gimmickry.”
According to Panday, such comments were “not leadership” but rather the language of a Prime Minister “who would rather insult citizens than answer serious questions.”
The Patriotic Front leader also criticised the Prime Minister for questioning where protesters had been during the more than 5,000 murders recorded over the last decade.
Panday argued that many of the same citizens and groups had consistently spoken out about crime over the years through marches, protests and candlelight vigils, while urging governments to take stronger action.
She further noted that Persad-Bissessar served as Leader of the Opposition throughout that period and questioned what sustained anti-crime initiatives or alternative policies had been presented to the country during that time.
Panday said Trinidad and Tobago was still waiting on a “real anti-crime plan” one year after the Government assumed office, adding that the possible extension of the State of Emergency for another three months was “not a crime plan” but “failure dressed up as toughness.”
She also warned that accusing protesters of provoking the police risked creating unnecessary division between citizens and law enforcement officers.
“This is not a choice between supporting the police and defending citizens’ rights,” Panday stated, adding that such a narrative was “a false choice” that national leaders should avoid creating.
Panday contended that “mocking citizens will not make Trinidad and Tobago safer.”
