Shane Superville
Senior Reporter
shane.superville@guardian.co.tt
The number of guns leaving US ports bound for the Caribbean and Latin America has noticeably increased over the past seven years, according to a regional security update.
The trend was one of several highlighted in a ten-page document compiled by the Caricom Implementation Agency for Crime and Security (IMPACS), the Caribbean Public Health Agency (CARPHA) and the Small Arms Survey.
The report which used data obtained from US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) was published yesterday and noted that seizures of firearm shipments at US ports intended for the Caribbean increased by 48 per cent from 2016 to 2023.
This uptick reflects a sharp increase in the number of gun shipments seized, with 138 seizures from 2020 to 2023, compared to only 93 seizures between 2016 and 2019.
The data also suggested that there was a gradual increase in assault rifles being exported to the region with an eight per cent increase for the same period.
The report noted that assault rifles were seized at a higher frequency in shipments to the Caribbean than in Latin America, despite being comparatively lower in number to Latin America.
Just this week, National Security Minister Fitzgerald Hinds said law enforcement officials noticed that AR-15 assault rifles were the weapon of choice by gangs in this country.
The use of assault rifles in gang-related attacks has previously been attributed to T&T’s high murder toll by former acting police commissioner McDonald Jacob, as it can cause the death of multiple victims in a single volley of shots.
Contacted for comment, regional security consultant and former director of the National Operations Centre Garvin Heerah said the data was proof of the complicated, multi-faceted problem of illegal arms trafficking.
Referring to trends in the prevalence and use of assault rifles, Heerah noted that it was reflective of a disturbing trend where high-powered weapons were in high demand from local criminals.
“Before on a block where a drug dealer or a gang leader was comfortable with two 9mm pistols, that interest is no longer there.
“He wants the Air Jordan of guns, he wants an AR-15 or an automatic rifle in order to have that rank out there on the block in the Caribbean, so he is no longer interested in 9mm pistols,” he said.
Heerah said while regional governments and US agencies have begun work on addressing the influx of weapons into the Caribbean, a more determined, consistent approach was needed.
Referring to ongoing efforts by the US to clamp down on the entry of illegal drugs into their country from Latin America, Heerah said a similar commitment was needed in addressing the flow of guns into the region.
He recommended that a Caribbean Investigations Bureau be established which would have the flexibility and authority to pursue transnational crime.
“This unit should have the autonomy and authority to investigate transnational organised crime across Caribbean states and the jurisdiction to arrest and bring people before the courts.
“We must address this with robust investigations and a consistency of planning and policing.”
Contacted for comment on Friday, DCP Operations Junior Benjamin said while he was yet to see the report, he assured that the TTPS was capable and prepared to continue their gun-retrieval exercise with collaboration from intelligence partners.
“Once we have the information, we are going to work on the information to ensure we turn the intelligence into evidence and to bring perpetrators to justice.”
The report also noted that out of 16 US cities, most gun shipments bound for the Caribbean were seized in Miami, Florida, with 206 shipments recovered by law enforcement over seven years.