As calls intensify for the Commissioner of Police (CoP) Allister Guevarro to resign, there are warnings that increased nationwide protests could be looming if he continues to ignore the population’s cries.
This, from First Wave Movement leader Umar Abdullah, who continues to criticise the CoP’s handling of the January 20 fatal police shooting of 31-year-old Joshua Samaroo in St Augustine. The incident left Samaroo’s common-law wife Kaia Sealy, 28, paralysed.
In a letter to Guevarro yesterday, titled “Demand for Accountability, Reform, and Your Resignation Commissioner,” Abdullah said, “Your refusal to suspend or detain the officers involved, and your decision instead to provide counselling while allowing them to continue armed duty, is indefensible.”
Abdullah said demonstrations would expand into communities across the country, if what he described as a lack of accountability and leadership within the T&T Police Service (TTPS) persists.
“You are going to see a heightened increase in the protest actions throughout T&T. There is intention to go to into every community and to have a protest campaign. We are going to continue to pressure the agencies to respond,” he said.
In a one-man protest outside the Police Administration Building, Port-of-Spain, yesterday, following which he ripped to shreds a picture of the Punisher symbol which Guevarro sometimes wears on his uniforms, Abdullah sought to assure the CoP that his resignation would “not be viewed as defeat or embarrassment.”
Instead, he advised, “It should be seen as an act of moral courage, an acknowledgement that this matter is bigger than you, bigger than the TTPS, and bigger than any single office.
“By stepping aside, you would allow for independent inquiry, restore public trust, and give Trinidad and Tobago a chance to heal. This would be a victory for the families of the victims, and for every citizen who still believes in justice.”
He claimed Guevarro’s continued refusal to suspend or place the officers responsible on administrative leave was tantamount to exposing “citizens to further risk.”
Insisting on a public apology to the families of Samaroo and Sealy, Abdullah added, “Your resignation, framed as a step toward reform, is not a disgrace.”
Failing this, he threatened, “If you remain in office, public trust will collapse further, protests will escalate, and international scrutiny will intensify. If you resign, you will be remembered as the Commissioner who chose country over ego, who recognised that justice is larger than any single man, and who gave Trinidad and Tobago a chance to rebuild faith in its institutions.”
Claiming the TTPS was yet to contact the families of the young couple, Abdullah lamented, “That is very sad indeed in this country. We have a sitting Commissioner of Police who does not know how to respond and how to treat the public.”
Referring to Sunday’s peaceful protest at Woodford Square where the riot squad was deployed, he said the CoP had driven past them but failed to stop.
“That approach only increases mistrust and further erodes public confidence in the police service,” he said.
Zeroing in on the fatal shooting in which Samaroo was seen waving his hands outside the crashed car in a gesture of surrender, Abdullah emphasised, “When a hand is out the window, that is surrender. Officers are trained to de-escalate, not continue firing.”
Despite confirmation by senior police officers that the TTPS was cooperating fully with the Police Complaints Authority (PCA), he said they had been told this was not true and that, “full cooperation from the police service has not been forthcoming.”
On the issue of proposed legislation to restrict the recording and sharing of police activity, he said they were not in agreement.
“This is where the silence ends. T&T is not a battlefield. Our people are not enemy combatants.”
Having written to the Police Service Commission (PolSC) early on requesting Guevarro be disciplined for including the Punisher patch as part of his uniform, Abdullah maintained, “This is not part of the uniform. This is not the signal you ought to be sending to the populace of this country.
“We warned the population that this was going to end in blood. Look at what happened. The police officers are looking at your responses. They are looking at your actions, and they are looking at the signals. They are reading the signals that you are sending to them, and they are responding accordingly.”
