Reports in yesterday's edition juxtaposed against each other, offer both hope and a deepening terror for the citizens from the established and functioning criminal cabals both inside and outside the jails.
While we will never condone extra-judicial killings, the police shooting of three of the five bandits who robbed at gunpoint grocery staff in the Longdenville, Chaguanas area on Tuesday, provides a sense of comfort that our law enforcement officers are not impotent in the fight against worsening crime.
On the contrary, our police remain relevant to this insidious and debilitating attack on our society, one which has the real potential to convert T&T into a gangster colony outside of the accepted nations of the world.
The subsequent capture by the police of two others suspected to have been part of the group that attacked the grocery further restores our confidence in our police officers who too often, it seems, yield, perhaps inadvertently, to a literal runaway victory for the criminals.
That the episode ended with the unfortunate loss of life of three young men is to be regretted; if not considered the consequence of the three being part of the criminal enterprise which has been terrorising this country for far too long.
To counter the successes in driving back criminals and making them pay for their actions, is the frightening news of criminal groups within the walls of the prison threatening and indeed terrorising prison officers. Why is this so, because the killing of prison officers for revenge and as a strategy to reduce, even eliminate, the effectiveness of the prison system to punish criminals for their crimes, will remove yet another counter against crime.
The recent attack on the homes of three prison officers was aimed at weakening the resolve of members of the service to perform their duties inside the penal facilities.
Undoubtedly, in addition to ending the lives of prison officers, who have been seen by the criminals inside as pursuing their jobs with a commitment to law and order, the killings and threats are constant reminders that if the prison leaders and the State do not yield to the inmates, their lives and those of their families are at severe risk.
What’s the solution in the instance of prison officers being threatened inside and outside of the jails? One response by the Prisons Officers' Association (POA) has been to ask Government to allow officers to secure FULs so they can purchase weapons to protect themselves and their families while off-duty. Special housing settlements for officers has been another request by the POA.
There are merits and demerits to such requests, including guns in homes falling into the hands of the criminals. The calls for housing prison officers in special quarters, if granted, can then be repeated by police, army and coast guard officers without any assurance of positive results.
While there continue to be questions about the effectiveness of the State of Emergency, there is a need for increasing information and investigation-based surges into the criminal dens now that restraining laws have been temporarily put aside.
The disposition of officers to be alert and action-oriented on the beat - both on foot and in the police vehicles - needs to be spread around. Decisive action against criminals to protect lives and property must be the norm.