Two University of the West Indies students spent last night in jail after they were arrested by police during a heated protest at the southern gate to the St Augustine campus yesterday.
The students were arrested after they tried to prevent officers from reopening the gates to traffic as students called for UWI management to do better with the handling of student safety on the campus.
Sources told the T&T Guardian the students were arrested for verbally abusing officers and splashing them with water. They are expected to appear in court today on the charges.
The protest was sparked by Tuesday’s bloody attempted rape and assault of a second-year female student by an unknown assailant at the Student Activity Centre (SAC). The Students’ Guild had called an emergency meeting yesterday to allow students to voice their concerns. But from very early in the proceedings students’ tempers began to flare as they listened to friends and colleagues recounting incidents in which they felt they were in danger and of the times they felt their concerns weren’t adequately heard by administration.
One enraged student sprung up and shouted, “I don’t know about anybody else, but I am not a number!’’
Another chimed in, “I am not a number!”
“Leh we close down the place!” he added, suggesting they block the campus gate.
Police arrest a UWI student during the protest.
Anisto Alves
The students then marched to the southern gate where they met a huge presence of campus security. “I never see so much of all yuh in my life, what all yuh doing here now? When people was getting raped, where all yuh was?” one student shouted.
After persistent drivers determined to get in and out of the campus regardless of the protest angered them more, the students decided to “close the gate.”
Campus security tried to reopen the gates but the students were intent on keeping it closed. They shut the gate every time the security opened it until they decided to form a human barricade so the security could not get through.
Speaking to reporters then, Guild president Darrion Narine said, “This is just students’ frustration being manifested honestly and truly. We were just trying to have a little town hall and now you actually see how students are frustrated and the level of frustration they have arrived at to come out and line and block the gate.
“So far, administration has said we were working with it but clearly it’s not being done at a timeline that students can work with.”
UWI students block the South enterence gate yesterday.
Anisto Alves
UWI principal Prof Brian Copeland and deputy principal Indar Ramnarine soon arrived in an attempt to diffuse the situation and appease the students’ concerns after police arrived on the scene.
Addressing the angry students near the southern gate, Copeland said, “I’m hearing people talking about budget cuts and the impact of security on the campus. I want to say despite that, we are going through a period where we are seeing budget cuts—listen to this —the budget going to our security office is eight per cent increased in a time when we are seeing a five per cent decrease. We have allocated eight per cent more to them this year.
“When it comes to security, and this is a raw fact, security is a matter we have to work on all the time…we are in a situation where it is not a single building to secure - it’s very easy to secure a single building - you could lock down the entry points and so on. We are a small village and so the challenges we have with respect to security are the same as the police would have in any town in Trinidad and Tobago,” Narine said.
Despite Copeland’s several attempts to provide answers to the students, they did not accept them and demanded a joint town hall meeting between students, the Guild and administration.
Police officers use force to remove a UWI student trying to bloc them from opening the southern gate to the campus.
Anisto Alves
But things intensified when more police arrived on the scene and began forcibly removing students and attempting to open the gates. The students stood resolute as they tried struggled to block the officers from doing so. The officers then started pulling students away from the gates.
At this point, one male student was dragged to the ground outside the gate by officers and held there. A couple officers then forced the student to the ground and using their knees to keep him immobile before handcuffing him. Another male student was then grabbed and guided to the other side of the road by two officers, one holding him by his throat. He was then tripped and slammed onto the pavement by an officer before being handcuffed and taken to a nearby police car.
While the students were being arrested, deputy principal Ramnarine was seen running towards them trying to appeal to the police to let the students go. However, was pushed away by an officer. The students were then taken away from the scene.
Following their arrests, Guild president Narine shared the arrest video on Twitter with the caption: “Two student leaders who are known advocates and much-loved individuals on campus being brutally apprehended. #FreeNatty #FreeBrian.”