Senior Reporter
derek.achong@guardian.co.tt
When Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar announced her Government’s stance on the United States assault on narco-traffickers at the start of September, she sent shockwaves locally and around the region.
“I have no sympathy for traffickers, the US military should kill them all violently,” Persad-Bissessar said, as she responded to the US confirming that its military had conducted a lethal strike on a suspected narco-trafficking vessel allegedly emanating from Venezuela.
Stating that drug and arms trafficking had caused death and destruction in local society over the past 25 years, Persad-Bissessar said: “I, along with most of the country, am happy that the US naval deployment is having success in their mission. The US government has repeatedly said that going after the drug cartels was their objective and they have begun to deliver.”
Persad-Bissessar’s firm stance on the issue was unwavering despite some criticism over the legality of the US’s actions.
Describing her comments as reckless, disgraceful and inconsistent with her oath of office, Opposition Leader Pennelope Beckles said: “It is completely unbecoming of our head of government, who is expected to be more prudent in her language.”
Unfazed by the criticism, Persad-Bissessar reiterated the stance on the global stage on September 27, as she delivered her first address to fellow world leaders at the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) since securing her second term in office on April 28.
Her address came after several Caricom colleagues utilised their time to call on the US to ease its military action seemingly directed at Venezuela and maintain the Caribbean as “a zone of peace.”
When her turn at the lectern came, Persad-Bissessar said she had come with a “hard truth.”
“The notion that the Caribbean is a zone of peace has become a false ideal. The reality is stark—no such peace exists today. For too many in our region, peace is not daily life, but an elusive promise glimpsed, and never grasped. In its absence, our citizens pay a terrible toll,” Persad-Bissessar said.
“While there have been objections to the US military action against drug cartels from some countries, T&T reminds the international community that, unless forceful and aggressive actions are taken, these evil drug cartels will continue their societal destruction because they believe affected nations will always unreservedly subscribe to morals and ethics which they themselves blatantly flout,” she said.
Cops in schools
The tough stance on criminality, taken by Persad-Bissessar’s Government, was not limited to activity in and around the country’s maritime borders.
As the new school term opened in September, plans were revealed for police officers to be stationed at 50 high-risk secondary schools to assist in curtailing a significant upsurge in school violence.
At the time, there was some uncertainty over whether the officers, who are part of a newly formed unit of the T&T Police Service (TTPS), would be armed with firearms.
Persad-Bissessar eventually dismissed any concerns raised over the ability of the officers to carry service firearms while on duty at schools.
“No matter what some commentators say, the law remains the law and TTPS officers are free to carry their firearms inside or outside of schools if it is deemed necessary. Police officers report to their TTPS seniors and not the school principals,” she said.
She maintained that the measure was intended to curb bullying and classroom violence by providing protection to vulnerable stakeholders in the education system.
“Too many students are bullied, robbed and beaten at schools. To some children, it is a terror to attend school. We have children failing because they are too afraid to attend school, as they are bullied every day. It’s a daily torture for them,” she said.
“I promised that we would purge our schools of this destructive behaviour by every legal means available. The people of this country have had enough—enough of school brawls, enough of wickedness in our classrooms, enough of fear in our communities,” she added.
On September 5, Deputy Commissioner of Police (DCP) for Operations Junior Benjamin, who is the point person for the project, warned that officers found engaging in inappropriate conduct with students under their purview will face the full brunt of the law.
Stating he had issued the warning to 95 Special Reserve Police (SRP) officers after they completed a school-oriented policing course at the Police Academy in St James, Benjamin said: “I made it very clear that we are going to conduct ourselves professionally.
“We have to start with our officers and let them understand the seriousness that they are entering into. This is not for games, we are there for a job without fear and favour, malice or ill will and we are going to do it with a level of pride, professionalism, respect, integrity, dignity, and excellence.”
Schoolgirl murdered
in Ste Madeleine
While students across T&T received added protection in their schools, such activity was insufficient to protect one girl from violent crime while at home.
On September 20, a quiet village in Ste Madeleine was plunged into mourning after the body of 12-year-old resident Mariah Seenath was found in a track near a recreation ground.
The student of San Fernando East Secondary School had left her father’s home to go to her grandmother’s house, located a short distance away, when she went missing.
Seenath had bruises about her body and an autopsy revealed that she died of blunt force trauma to her head.
No one was arrested and charged in connection with Seenath’s heinous killing.
CJ Archie announces retirement
The legal fraternity was rocked by the news that long-serving Chief Justice Ivor Archie was set to retire after serving over 17 years at the helm of the Judiciary.
Archie chose to deliver his bombshell announcement in his annual address at the opening of the 2025/2026 Law Term on September 16.
Archie said: “I have decided to retire, not resign, at a time of my own choosing and not to wait until I reach the age of 70. There will always be unfinished business no matter when I leave but I have decided to retire during this term, so this will be my last speech.”
While Archie did not reveal the exact date that he would demit office, he noted that he would not be around when the occasion is celebrated once again, next year.
“The office of Chief Justice is not private property or something you own or cling to; it is a sacred baton held in trust for one’s successors and the nation. I am but a single runner in a never-ending relay and the baton must be passed at some time,” Archie said.
Reflecting on his almost two-decade stint as Chief Justice, Archie said that he was pleased that he was able to help improve the Judiciary by modernising it by introducing technology and improving its efficiency through numerous procedural reforms.
“This is not an exhaustive list, and it is no small achievement in the context of a system of public sector governance and management that is seriously dysfunctional. I am satisfied that we are in a much better place than we were in 2008,” he said.
His retirement came sooner than expected the following month.
The news was met with mixed feelings from stakeholders but was welcomed by Senior Counsel Israel Khan, who had repeatedly called on Archie to resign over the past seven years, especially for his conduct in pressuring former chief magistrate Marcia Ayers-Caesar to resign over public furore over the cases she left unfinished when she took up a promotion as a High Court Judge.
“Good riddance. Go your way,” Khan, who was criticised by conservative members of the legal fraternity for symbolically destroying a portrait of Archie that previously adorned a wall of his office alongside those of other post-Independence chief justices, said.
Trio get Order
of T&T (ORTT)
On Republic Day, the country’s highest national award, the Order of the Republic of T&T (ORTT), was conferred on two university professors and a Tobagonian politician.
Professors Selwyn Cudjoe and Kenneth Ramchand were present to receive the award from President Christine Kangaloo, while former Tobago House of Assembly (THA) chief secretary Hochoy Charles was awarded posthumously.
Cudjoe dismissed any criticism of him receiving the award based on his support of Persad-Bissessar and the United National Congress (UNC) during the General Election campaign.
Cudjoe, who taught at the prestigious Harvard and Cornell Universities in the US, said: “They cannot take away from what I have done over 80 years. They could say nonsense, which it actually is, but it must give them one concrete reason why they say it. So, I don’t bother with them, they’re not important in my life. My work continues regardless of where I am. So, I’m not concerned about the detractors.”
