Minister of Planning, Economic Affairs and Development, Kennedy Swaratsingh, says he has instructed the Chaguaramas Development Authority (CDA) to work with the Ministry of Culture to create spaces where fetes can be held. Swaratsingh also holds the responsibility for the environment. He made the comments in an interview with Guardian Media at COP30 yesterday in Belem, Brazil, a day after Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar expanded her Government’s clampdown on noise pollution, ordering an immediate halt to fetes at the Hasely Crawford Stadium and the Jean Pierre Complex except during the defined Carnival window.
Swaratsingh said, “I have actually asked the chair of Chagaramas to work with the Ministry of Culture to see if we can create some space, and I’m sure the Minister of Culture is exploring other options as well, because the intention is not to punish anybody, but to find the right spaces where they can have the events unfettered. It’s finding that balance in that. I think that’s what the Prime Minister expects of us, that we as ministers will find ways in support of the decisions that the Cabinet has expressed and the Prime Minister expressed.”
He said he is confident the Minister of Culture “is fully empowered and equipped” to come up with some new strategies.
Last week, the Prime Minister announced a ban on fetes at the Brian Lara Cricket Academy and signalled her intention to clamp down on noise pollution.
While residents in some areas have welcomed the move, stakeholders in the Carnival and entertainment industries are unhappy with the move.
Swaratsingh lauded the Prime Minister for making “tough decisions.” He added, “Just as we have a right to fete and whatever else, other people have a right to live in a certain level of less distress.” He said it was the latest in a series of major decisions the Persad-Bissessar has stood firm on.
He also backed Persad-Bissessar’s stance with the United States’ war on narco-terrorists in the Southern Caribbean Sea. Swaratsingh said, “We have spent, and I checked it recently, over $77 billion in national security from 2008 or 2009 till now. We still were not able to control murders and gangs. This is a problem that is bigger than us. The Prime Minister has said that she loves Venezuela. In my respectful view, the Prime Minister is in charge of national security for Caricom and has an obligation to make sure that not just Trinidad and Tobago (T&T), but the rest of Caricom, that we push that drug and we push all of those harmful things coming out of the South American continent as far down as we can. Get it out of our space.”
Swaratsingh wrapped up a two-day trip to COP30 yesterday, where he delivered T&T’s national statement at the United Nations Climate Change Conference. He will return home today.
