It looked like a scene from a crime thriller, but the events captured on CCTV were a very real gang attack on a home in Second Caledonia Morvant earlier this week.
The intent of those men, armed with firearms and Molotov cocktails, was only thwarted because they were unable to break into the house, and their intended victims, reported to be relatives of the leader of a rival gang, managed to escape.
It was a brazen daylight attack, typical of the violent, usually deadly, assaults carried out almost daily by members of this country’s criminal underworld. What was particularly disturbing about this case was that it was allegedly orchestrated by gang leaders who are in prison on murder charges. Even worse, it was one incident in a gang war which is reportedly being waged in Morvant and environs for control of state contracts.
Gang rivalries that regularly escalate into brutal battles for territory, state contracts, and control of the illegal drugs and weapons trade are now the rule rather than the exception in communities across this country. This time it is Second Caledonia, but warring gangs have spread terror in South Oropouche, Enterprise, East Port-of-Spain, and other parts of the country, testing the capacity of law enforcement who always seem to be a few steps behind these bloodthirsty criminals and unable to fully grasp the nature and extent of their influence on the communities in which they are entrenched.
It defies logic that these gangsters, who have in the past been erroneously portrayed as “community leaders’’, still have access to short-term public works employment projects and are therefore able to divert millions of dollars worth of state funds to support their illicit operations.
Police Commissioner Erla Harewood-Christopher and at least two of her predecessors at the helm of the T&T Police Service (TTPS) have launched anti-gang exercises but have had little or no success breaking their stranglehold in several parts of the country. If anything, the situation is getting worse as evidenced by the murder count, which raced past 300 this week and, at the current rate, will surpass the horrific 605 record of 2022.
Commissioner Christopher’s reluctance, or inability, to account to the public for the worsening crime situation only adds to the perception that the officers under her charge are being outmanoeuvred by the criminals. Her silence is deafening and unacceptable–she needs to be seen and heard more regularly.
With these latest revelations about gangsters continuing to wage brutal battles for control of state projects, T&T also requires an explanation from National Security Minister Fitzgerald Hinds about why these unlawful activities are taking place right under the nose of the Government and what will be done to put a stop to these corrupt practices.
Some years ago, when the extent to which state make-work programmes and contracting mechanisms being penetrated by criminal gangs was exposed, promises were made to crack down on such activities. Otherwise, these criminals will continue to hamper T&T’s development, and murder will continue to be the leading cause of death among our young men and boys.
By now it should be clearly understood by the relevant authorities that the complexity of T&T’s gang problem demands multifaceted solutions incorporating prevention, intervention, and suppression. If the right strategies are implemented, there will be measurable results with fewer murders and other violent attacks and a marked increase in arrests and convictions.