Jesse Ramdeo
Senior Reporter
jesse.ramdeo@cnc3.co.tt
Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar says her Government will not back down from regulations restricting access to 15 no-protest zones across Trinidad and Tobago, despite threats of legal action from a coalition of trade unions.
Speaking with Guardian Media yesterday, Persad-Bissessar dismissed concerns raised by the Progressive Independent Trade Unions, an amalgamation of 13 affiliated unions, arguing that the restrictions undermine constitutional freedoms and limit long-established labour rights.
“I suggest that the unions should focus on working with the Government on issues that would actually benefit their members. Every citizen can protest anywhere in the country besides these 15 places. The DPP’s office, the two airports, the port, Defence Force headquarters, TTPS headquarters, Ministry of Finance, President’s House, etc., are high security areas, so you can’t have large gatherings in front these places that gangs may infiltrate. It’s just common sense,” the Prime Minister said.
The regulations, introduced under the current State of Emergency, prohibit public protests and demonstrations within 500 metres of several key state institutions and sensitive facilities nationwide.
The restrictions were announced shortly after protests linked to the Joshua Samaroo-Kaia Sealy matter, including a demonstration outside the DPP’s office, which resulted in arrests of three people, among them the organiser and friend of Sealy, Alyssa Phillip and her mother.
Police later explained that the regulations were enacted “to protect our public spaces” and “our citizenry at large.”
But the measures have drawn criticism from several quarters, including several unions, among them the Communications Workers Union (CWU), Trinidad and Tobago National Nurses Association (TTNNA), Seamen and Waterfront Workers’ Trade Union (SWWTU), Trinidad and Tobago Airline Pilots Association (TTALPA), Bank and Insurance General Workers’ Union (BIGWU), Trinidad and Tobago Unified Teachers Association (TTUTA), Prison Officers’ Association (POA) and the Joint Trade Union Movement, to name a few.
At a news conference earlier yesterday, TTUTA’s president, Crystal Ashe, said the unions would not be silenced and were prepared to pursue legal action if the regulations were not revised. He also revealed that the group had already obtained legal advice before publicly challenging the measures.
However, Persad-Bissessar said she was unconcerned by the prospect of a court challenge.
“Citizens are free to protest, free to shut down the country or free to turn up to work on any day. In our society, citizens are allowed to pursue their individual choices within the law. At the end of each month, every individual has to pay their bills, and therefore they should make choices that best suit them,” she said.
Last week, the Prime Minister publicly condemned those protesting outside State facilities, including the DPP’s office.
She said, “Five thousand-plus people have been murdered in the past 10 years, but we never see these grifters protesting against the gangs and telling the violent criminals, ‘Hands up, don’t shoot’.”
She also accused some demonstrators of engaging in “publicity farming” and attempting to provoke police officers in order to claim victim status.
The Prime Minister also took to social media where she condemned the Opposition People’s National Movement for what she claimed was its promotion of lawlessness and hostility towards law enforcement and mob intimidation.
