Data and analytics experts are warning that Trinidad and Tobago should be wary of conversion devices that are being used by criminals to turn simple pistols and handguns into assault weapons.
This is one of the findings in the Caribbean Firearms Study, which is being hailed as the first comprehensive, evidence-based study on illicit firearms in the Caribbean region. It found that the rate of lethal violence in the Caribbean for 2020 was almost three times the global rate, with firearms used in more than half of the Caribbean’s homicides.
The report, which will be released this morning, was done over two years by Caricom IMPACS and the Small Arms Survey (SAS).
Speaking exclusively with Guardian Media yesterday before the embargo on the report was lifted, SAS’ head of Data and Analytics, Nicolas Florquin, revealed a developing concern in T&T.
“We are seeing a range of new types of firearms making it into the illicit market, especially so-called ghost guns that are basically unfinished parts of guns which can then be used to produce a real gun but those are harder to detect and can be smuggled in parts and components,” Florquin explained.
Florquin added that a conversion device is one of the more popular parts.
“Those are little devices that are put into a semi-automatic rifle and pistol and turn them into fully automatic weapons and Trinidad and Tobago has seized quite a few of them over the past two to three years,” he said.
Florquin described those devices as a growing problem among the criminal element in the region.
Caricom IMPACS executive director, Lieutenant Colonel Michael Jones, said they’re quite easy to make even at legitimate businesses.
“Talking about Glock switches in particular, some of them can be made with 3D printers, so it’s not anything significant really but they’re easy and affordable. So, the same privately manufactured firearms, you can use 3D printers to develop them (conversion devices). They tend not to be so robust, but they are usable.”
The report also looked at legal versus illegal gun ownership in the region.
It stated, “The regional rate of legal civilian firearms is low at 1.65 registered firearms per 100 residents. The available data suggests that illicit holdings greatly outnumber legal firearms in several countries.”
However, SAS data expert Anne-Severine Fabre said putting more guns into people’s hands, even for protection, may not be the solution.
“We’ve done some inmate interviews and some happened in Trinidad and Tobago, and a lot of those inmates were serving sentences for firearms related crimes and we’ve seen that many of them mentioned the fact that they used firearms because it was for self-protection. They mentioned that’s just the way it is in their community and a very interesting example was one of the inmates mentioned that you cannot punch a bullet, so you can see the triggering effects, there’s a fine line between acquiring more guns for protection and having it misused.”
SAS said the two-year survey showed that trafficking is the main reason guns are coming into the region and this is mostly through maritime means.
Florquin said the US is a major source of illicit firearms for the Caribbean, but added it was not a simple explanation.
“There’s different ways that US weapons make it to Caribbean countries. There is trafficking from the US to the Caribbean but there are indirect ways. For example, 22 per cent of the firearms traced to the US from the region were at first legally exported to a third country before being trafficked into the Caribbean.”
Guardian Media asked for the name of that country.
“One of the shortages of the data is that it’s not currently possible to find out who those countries are,” he said.
The Caribbean Firearms Report will be launched today at the opening ceremony of the Caribbean Firearms Study 2023.
Florquin said the report symbolises an all-of-society approach to tackling crime and firearms-related violence and provides evidence for the public health approach to crime which was espoused at the recent Caricom Crime Symposium.
Lieutenant Colonel Michael Jones said the timing of the report and the recent Caricom symposium on crime was fortunate.
“Having now identified that you want to take the public health approach, it means that the metrics to be monitored in managing the patient does not reside only with the police, because whereas where we focus singularly on shootings, violence can be quite expansive. To run the analogy of public health, yes we are in a pandemic, this gives us a good ethnographic research as we are no longer lumped with Latin America and then we have to come back with a plan so we can bring the fever we are having at the moment in the Caribbean down.”