Senior Political Reporter
There will be a State of Emergency (SoE) well into 2026!
The United National Congress (UNC) Government will head to Parliament on Friday to extend the SoE for six months until May 2026, and it does not require Opposition People’s National Movement (PNM) votes in the Lower House to pass the extension.
Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar yesterday confirmed the extension during an appearance on Crime Watch.
It will be the second SoE that will run during a Carnival period. This year’s Carnival also took place under an SoE.
The SoE was instituted on July 18. Following debate in Parliament on July 28, it was extended for three months. That period expires today.
The measure was announced following increased murders and what authorities said were planned attacks by a criminal network involving people who had been in prison. The targets were revealed to be people in the judiciary, Government, law enforcement agencies, officers in the office of the Director of Public Prosecutions and prison officials.
Police Commissioner Allister Guevarro had recommended the SoE, based on intelligence concerning the existence of a sophisticated criminal network operating from within the prison system.
Subsequently, a number of inmates were removed from the Maximum Security Prison in Arouca to a Chaguaramas location. Other people under detention orders have also been placed there.
Last week, Persad-Bissessar, who is head of the National Security Council, said she met security heads last weekend to discuss whether there should be an SoE extension.
Yesterday, she revealed that CoP Guevarro recommended the SoE’s extension. AG John Jeremie is expected to present a motion to Parliament on Friday for approval of the extension. Reasons will be given. Government officials cited certain crime issues continuing, plus heightened US-Venezuela tensions and increased tensions between Venezuela and T&T. They noted the possibility of fallout on T&T from either situation, especially if US-Venezuela hostilities erupt in any confrontation.
“...That means war,” they clarified.
The first extension did not require Opposition votes for passage and was passed with a simple majority of the Government’s votes. The Opposition had abstained from voting.
Under law, further extension of the SoE will require a three-fifths special majority vote in the House of Representatives and the Senate.
Passage in the House requires 25 votes, Government officials said. They noted their administration already had 26 UNC MPs and the two Tobago People’s Party MPs sitting on the Government side who “routinely vote with Government.
”So, PNM votes aren’t needed.”
Once passed in the House, the motion will subsequently be debated after Friday in the Senate. The Government has 16 senators, and the Opposition PNM has six, with nine Independent Senators. The Government will need at least two more votes.
However, Opposition officials said, ”The Government has to come clean and come good to justify the extension.”
A six-month extension will make it almost a year that T&T has been under SoEs.
The past administration announced an SoE on December 30, 2024, following heightened criminal activities which threatened public safety. No curfew was implemented.
On January 13, 2025, Parliament extended the SoE to April 13.
Three months after the UNC took office in April, an SoE was announced in July.
Government officials said they did not believe an extended SoE would affect T&T’s investment profile. They noted Carnival 2025 took place successfully. They said the SoE can also be halted at any point in the six months.
