Four days after her home was demolished, a Ramjattarn Trace, La Horquetta squatter, has threatened to take legal action against the State.
Ann Marie Leplatte, through her attorney Brian Baig, yesterday sent pre-action protocol letters to both the Housing Development Corporation (HDC) and the Commissioner of State Lands, Paula Drakes, requesting proof that they had the authority to destroy her home and belongings.
Baig, who is also a legal officer for the United National Congress (UNC), said his 42-year-old client has been living at Ramjattan Trace since birth.
He said, over the last four decades, she’s developed the land, constructed a home, gained water and electrical connections, and raised a family including six children and six grandchildren without disturbance, thereby nullifying the said ownership of the lands purported to be owned by the State.
Guardian Media obtained a copy of the legal notice, which gave the HDC 24 hours to respond or face legal proceedings.
Baig said, “My client has been there since 1982 and has been grossly mistreated, so therefore, we have taken legal action, and they have a prerequisite time within 24 hours to respond. We are asking HDC to show that they have the authority to act in the way they did. Along with the Commissioner of State Lands, we have also asked that they show that they are the persons who are in charge of those lands. (Last Thursday) No one officially said or identified themselves as Mr X or Mrs Y representing the Housing Development Corporation or even that of the Commissioner of State Lands, yet they had on their clothing HDC. We have also called upon them to cease and desist any action against these persons.”
Guardian Media reached out to Drakes and HDC but received no response up to late yesterday evening.
Last week, 12 structures were demolished by the authorities, who sent eviction notices since October last year warning of the demolition if the area was not vacated by the end of January, 2025. HDC had said fraudulent activity was taking place at Ramjattan Trace, with State land being sold to people who had recently erected houses.
But Baig said he’s in talks to represent other squatters as well.
He added, “We would have met all the residents, myself and legal colleague, and upon checking so far, one person has fallen within a prerequisite timeline for the law, but we are still speaking with other persons as there are persons who may also fall within the timeline of my client.
“I must say that these actions are very callous and cold-hearted in the way that they behaved. This is not the way the State should operate. We are no longer in the days of the king, where you walk with horses and axes and destroy people’s homes.”
Efforts to contact Housing and Urban Development Minister Camille Robinson-Regis for comment to the impending legal action were unsuccessful.
However, in a release on Sunday, she denied claims by Mayaro Member of Parliament (MP) Rushton Paray that there’s a lack of structured policies to address the squatting problem.
Robinson-Regis said the Government has been proactive in enforcing a series of well-defined policies to address squatting in a sustainable and humane manner.
“MP Paray’s claim that the Government has not implemented structured policies to address squatting is not only misleading but wholly unsubstantiated. For decades, the Government of Trinidad and Tobago has been proactive in instituting and enforcing a series of well-defined legislative and policy frameworks designed to address squatting in a sustainable and humane manner.
“One such initiative is led by the Land Settlement Agency (LSA), which, under Section 5(4) of the State Land (Regularisation of Tenure) Act, is tasked with implementing these policies. To suggest that no such framework exists, as MP Paray implies, is a gross misrepresentation of reality... MP Paray’s claim that squatter communities have been neglected by the Government ignores the extensive work the LSA has undertaken in this area,” the minister said.