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Monday, June 16, 2025

Young: COVID measures is about protection of life

by

Renuka Singh
1912 days ago
20200321
 Ministry of National Security Stuart Young speaks to during Saturday's press conference at the Ministry of Health on the COVID-19 response.

Ministry of National Security Stuart Young speaks to during Saturday's press conference at the Ministry of Health on the COVID-19 response.

KERWIN PIERRE

Min­is­ter of Na­tion­al Se­cu­ri­ty says Trinidad and To­ba­go bor­ders will be closed to all, in­clud­ing na­tion­als of this coun­try, from mid­night Sun­day.

“The Gov­ern­ment has tak­en a de­ci­sion and I am an­nounc­ing it now, that as of mid­night to­mor­row night (Sun­day, March 22) we will be clos­ing off our bor­ders,” Young said at a press con­fer­ence an­nounc­ing con­tin­u­ing mea­sures to com­bat the spread of the nov­el COro­n­avirus (COVID-19) yes­ter­day.

“As of mid­night Sun­day March 22, we will no longer be al­low­ing in­ter­na­tion­al flights in­to T&T. We will be clos­ing our bor­der, we will, of course, con­tin­ue to al­low, un­der the re­stric­tions that we have cur­rent­ly, car­go ves­sels to come to T&T.”

Young said phar­ma­ceu­ti­cals, food and sup­plies will con­tin­ue to en­ter the coun­try but the crews bring­ing in those sup­plies will not be al­lowed to come off the planes and ves­sels. Peo­ple, how­ev­er, will not be al­lowed in.

“We have our pro­to­cols in place, it is work­ing very well where we are not al­low­ing crews to dis­em­bark. Gov­ern­ment took a de­ci­sion and those de­ci­sions are in the fur­ther­ance of the pro­tec­tion of T&T,” he said.

He called on cit­i­zens to take per­son­al re­spon­si­bil­i­ty for en­sur­ing the virus does not spread, in­clud­ing ad­her­ing to the Gov­ern­ment’s call for no con­gre­gat­ing and for bars, restau­rants and casi­nos to re­main closed to the pub­lic and for the con­tin­ued ob­ser­vance of the sus­pen­sion of all in-house din­ing.

“We recog­nise the dif­fi­cul­ties that peo­ple are go­ing to face per­son­al­ly, but the pub­lic in­ter­est in a bal­anc­ing ex­er­cise is about pro­tec­tion of life,” he said.

Young said the T&T na­tion­als who were strand­ed in coun­tries which had shut down their bor­ders, in­clud­ing cas­es he had be­come aware of in Venezuela and Guyana, could not be helped at this stage since those coun­tries had al­so tak­en the de­ci­sions to shut down their air­ports to pre­vent the spread of COVID-19.

He said the Gov­ern­ment had no doubt this was the best mea­sure at this time to pre­vent the virus from spread­ing across the coun­try and urged all cit­i­zens to fol­low the pro­to­col.

“The on­ly way we will stop the spread of this virus is by lack of con­tact and so­cial per­son­al re­spon­si­bil­i­ty and the Gov­ern­ment took the de­ci­sive ac­tion to say that we will shut bars,” he said.

“We un­der­stand the dif­fi­cul­ty that this caus­es busi­ness­es, we are very mind­ful of that, that came up in our dis­cus­sions at the de­lib­er­a­tions but it is not busi­ness as usu­al, un­for­tu­nate­ly, around the globe. So we have to take these hard de­ci­sions to pro­tect the peo­ple on Trinidad and To­ba­go, in­clud­ing the fam­i­ly mem­bers of the own­ers of these es­tab­lish­ments.”

Young spent much of his talk­ing time slam­ming the Op­po­si­tion for be­ing ir­re­spon­si­ble for ques­tion­ing why bars need­ed to be closed. Al­though he did not call any names, he seemed to re­fer to Oropouche East Mem­ber of Par­lia­ment Dr Roodal Mooni­lal, who on Fri­day sug­gest­ed that Gov­ern­ment al­low bars to con­tin­ue sell­ing to cus­tomers to col­lect and take away al­co­hol the way gro­ceries op­er­ate.

COVID-19


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