While investigations are being conducted into the unfortunate encounter between a Venezuelan vessel loaded with migrants and an interceptor from the T&T Coast Guard on Saturday night, it is unseemly for politicians in this country to get into a tit-for-tat over the issue.
Issues involving the migrant crisis in the region are polarising enough and it certainly does not help that this country’s two main political leaders are already arriving at certain unproven conclusions about that tragic incident.
First, there was the use of the word “murder” by Opposition Leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar as she put a particular spin on how Ya Elvis Santoyo Sarabia died in the arms of his mother, Darielvis Sarabia. In doing so, she appeared to be buying into a narrative already being spread by Venezuela’s opposition and media about what transpired on Saturday night in the Gulf of Paria.
And it certainly did not help that Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley did not resist the urge to respond to his political rival. However, his insistence that it was an accident draws a conclusion not yet arrived at by the teams from the T&T Police Service (TTPS) and the T&T Coast Guard (TTCG) investigating the incident.
It is hard to see how either of these statements helps in resolving an extremely sensitive and tragic situation. The wrong things said at the wrong time serve only to inflame the already shaky socio-political relations between T&T and Venezuela over this issue.
This country’s geographic location puts us at the centre of the largest recorded refugee crisis in the Americas, so there is no way for this nation to stand aloof when the consequences of this, one of the largest displacement crises in the world, occurs so frequently within our territorial boundaries.
Instead of trading barbs, our political leaders should be taking serious note of the fact that, according to data from the UNHCR, people continue to leave Venezuela at an average of 5,000 per day and some of them are heading our way.
By some estimates, between six to 10 vessels leave daily from north-eastern Venezuela for T&T loaded with people fleeing the political and economic turmoil in that South American country.
Our small twin islands have limited capacity to accommodate the hundreds of refugees that are breaching our borders. Therefore, our legislators and decision-makers need to make better use of their time and energy to find solutions to this ongoing displacement crisis.
Rather than rushing to cast blame when these migrant issues arise, some political influence should be directed at reversing xenophobia, exploitation and abuse which is rampant on both sides of the Gulf of Paria.
Also, T&T stands in the shameful position of being a leading recipient nation in the region’s human trafficking trade, yet trafficked and exploited women and girls are being hidden in plain sight at locations across this country and not enough is being done about that aspect of our migrant problem.
Attempts to score political points do not help the victims in this latest migrant tragedy or prevent other incidents from taking place. They are little more than unnecessary distractions, hindering the search for justice and truth.