Lead Editor-Politics
akash.samaroo@cnc3.co.tt
2025 began under the weight of a State of Emergency (SoE), but within just three days, that was eclipsed by a political bombshell. Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley announced his intention to resign, becoming the first sitting head of government in Trinidad and Tobago’s history to do so voluntarily.
On January 3, during his first media conference addressing the SoE, after facing criticism for his absence during its initial announcement, Dr Rowley closed his remarks during a briefing in Tobago with a stunning declaration.
“Before the end of the legal limits of this term, I will resign this office and go off to my family.”
Before that statement, he reminded reporters of a promise made earlier.
“At the last election, 2020, when I announced the PNM victory in Balisier House, I said to this country, I will not be doing that again. And I meant it. And I’ve kept it.”
That moment set off a chain of internal shifts within the People’s National Movement (PNM). These were changes many insiders now believe contributed to the party’s eventual electoral collapse and deepening disillusionment among its base.
But the real genesis of the controversy did not take place at Balisier House in Port-of-Spain, but rather a villa at the end of a cul-de-sac at Tobago Plantations in Lowlands, Tobago.
There, the then cabinet of Trinidad and Tobago, still led by Dr Rowley, held a parliamentary caucus retreat between January 5-6.
On the surface, the agenda was to plan the party’s activities for the year. However, behind closed doors at the villa, tensions were reportedly high, as the party, which had held government for nearly a decade, appeared divided while attempting to select a successor to Rowley.
That division would only be revealed later, as initially, it seemed as seamless transition.
On the last day of the retreat, Dr Rowley lifted the police presence which had kept the media at a distance from the venue and invited journalists to a media briefing held at the steps of the villa.
And there it was announced that Stuart Young had been elected to take over as prime minister when Rowley officially stepped down.
Rowley offered a glowing endorsement of Young’s qualifications and experience, saying it positioned him as the natural choice to take over the leadership of the party and the government.
“Minister Young came out with the majority of support,” Rowley told the media.
He added, “He (Young) has been in Government now for almost ten years, operating out of the Office of the Prime Minister, where he would have seen the Government close up and participated in it. I have seen him at work on many very detailed and technical assignments, and he has not only done the job but has distinguished himself.”
Rowley took time to dismiss rumours of discord within the caucus, and noted that Young had emerged as the preferred candidate through an internal process.
“The entire PNM caucus is in support of Member of Parliament Stuart Young,” Dr Rowley revealed.
“We are very pleased to announce that the promise of a smooth transition is going according to plan.”
Dr Rowley did not answer a direct question on how close the vote was, but said, “At the end of the day, we had a straw poll among the caucus, and Minister Young came out with the majority. ... It doesn’t involve a three-quarters majority or a half of majority.”
However, party sources later told Guardian Media the vote was 11-9 in favour of Young.
The other person in the running was Pennelope Beckles. A day before, as she left the Magdalena Grand Hotel en route to the villa at Tobago Plantations, Guardian Media had asked Beckles if she would have liked to lead the party.
She replied, “Always remember that I did challenge and I lost.”
Asked if she would consider putting her name forward again, Beckles said, “We will see how things go.”
Following the party’s defeat in the April 28 General Elections under the leadership of Young, Beckles would eventually become Opposition Leader and PNM leader.
However, the selection of Young was not as smooth as the nation was initially led to believe. Minutes after Dr Rowley’s media conference, Guardian Media was contacted by government ministers, who expressed dissatisfaction with the voting process in Tobago, alleging that political promises were used to influence the outcome.
Meanwhile, in Trinidad, party stalwarts questioned why the general membership was not given a democratic voice to elect Rowley’s replacement.
Jennifer Baptiste-Primus argued that it was the party’s general council that had the final say in these matters.
She told Guardian Media, “While I recognise the party’s parliamentary arm, that’s not the party’s superior body. The superior body is PNM’s convention. Between convention meetings, the general council is the highest ruling body.”
Baptiste-Primus was not the only one to share that view.
That development shifted attention to the PNM’s regular monthly general council meeting at Balisier House on January 11. While government ministers sought to downplay the significance of the meeting, describing it as routine party business, Guardian Media was informed that party officials were attempting to quell internal discord arising from the succession planning process.
And at the end of the night, Young, along with Foster Cummings, announced that all 21 Members of Parliament had signed a document unanimously supporting Young as the next prime minister.
Young, who was also present at the news conference, thanked Rowley for his continued leadership of the PNM.
“Importantly, my message is one of unity and unification,” Young said.
He added that he had been engaged in “very good dialogue” with his colleagues, including Minister Cummings, noting that the scene at Balisier House was reflective of what is expected of the PNM.
SoE DEBATE
With political developments dominating the national conversation, the country’s State of Emergency had faded into the background. It returned sharply to focus on January 13, when the Lower House convened to debate its extension.
There, then-Prime Minister Dr Rowley said crime was so out of control that even police officers close their police stations at night to hide from the criminal element.
Rowley told the Lower House, “So, when officers are in the police stations, it has come to my attention, in some districts, in some instances, police officers whose job it is to protect us and secure us, in some districts at night, are so afraid of the criminals that they close the police station door, turn off the light, and be inside there hoping that the criminals don’t come at them.”
Meanwhile, then-Opposition Leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar said lives could have been saved if the SoE had been declared earlier.
Persad-Bissessar said, “So here we are, with 600-plus murders on that day just before what we call Old Year’s Night, the Cabinet decided, ‘Look, too much is too much.’
“Why then? Is it that only because certain people, one gang fighting another gang? Was it done to protect the gang members, or was it done to protect the people of Trinidad and Tobago? Because the PM did refer to those incidents. Was it the last bomb? They flew off and said, ‘We have to get serious and do something’?”
The Lower House eventually unanimously agreed to the three-month extension for the SoE.
TYSON ARRESTED
One of the most high-profile arrests during the SoE was arguably that of a man accused of being the reason the government declared the State of Emergency.
A legal notice published in the T&T Gazette on January 20 revealed that then-National Security minister, Fitzgerald Hinds, had ordered that Calvin Lee, whose alias is Tyson, should be detained at the Eastern Correctional Rehabilitation Centre in Santa Rosa.
According to the notice, the detention order was made on the grounds that Lee was “credibly identified” as a leader of the Sixx gang, citing his potential danger to society.
“The detainee Carlvin Lee, also called Calvin Lee, also called Tyson, has been credibly identified as the leader of a known criminal organisation known as the SIXX gang, and as the person planning and intending to execute violent retaliatory reprisals or other violent actions involving the use of high powered weapons and explosives, following an attempted hit on his life and the murder of his associate Trevor Williams on 28th December, 2024,” the notice state.
And later that day, during a media briefing at the Police Administration Building, DCP Operations Junior Benjamin reported that since the SoE had been declared on December 30, 2024, some 1,193 priority offenders had been targeted in police operations.
TODDLER DIES
On January 23, a three-year-old boy was killed in what police believe was an arson attack at a home in Arouca.
According to investigators, the child’s mother, Geneiel George, was at her Windy Hill residence around 11.45 pm when a man attempted to force his way inside through a window. She tried to intervene but was overpowered and fled with three of her children to seek help from a nearby relative.
When she returned, the house was engulfed in flames. Fire officers later responded and discovered the remains of the child, identified as Jareem George, in the debris.
Anderson Gittens, a man with whom Jareem’s mother had a previous relationship, was arrested for the crime. The 32-year-old, however, allegedly committed suicide while in police custody.
ERLA FALLS FROM GRACE
January ended with a stunning development within the Trinidad and Tobago Police Service, as then-police commissioner Erla Harewood-Christopher was detained and questioned by officers under her command, an unprecedented move that sent shockwaves through the TTPS.
The commissioner was detained on January 30, 2025.
The investigation centred on whether two AX-2 bolt-action sniper rifles were lawfully imported into Trinidad and Tobago, whether the firearm import licence was properly authorised by the police commissioner, and whether the weapons were unlawfully transferred from the TTPS to the Strategic Services Agency.
Her arrest was made on suspicion of misbehaviour in public office in relation to her alleged role in the firearms matter, essentially questioning if she had improperly issued or failed to exercise proper due diligence in granting the firearm import permit that enabled the rifles to be brought into the country.
Investigators from the Office of the Deputy Commissioner of Police for Intelligence and Investigations, led by DCP Suzette Martin, questioned Police Commissioner Harewood-Christopher for several hours at the Police Administration Building in Port-of-Spain. The interview, which began at 3.40 pm, continued late into the night, with Harewood-Christopher accompanied by her attorney.
The move came less than 24 hours after former SSA director, Major Roger Best, was arrested at his Arima residence over the purchase of the weapons.
On February 1, 2025, however, Harewood-Christopher was released from police custody without any criminal charges being filed against her. Harewood-Christopher has since retired and taken legal action against the TTPS. The criminal matter also remains unresolved.
