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Monday, July 14, 2025

After upsurge in shootings in west Trinidad:Business community braces for the worst

by

Darren Bahaw
2728 days ago
20180124

The Diego Mar­tin busi­ness com­mu­ni­ty are said to be brac­ing for the worst, fol­low­ing the mur­der of Franklin Wong, 39, pro­pri­etor of Wong’s Su­per­mar­ket.

Yes­ter­day, some man­agers of busi­ness­es called emer­gency meet­ings with their re­spec­tive staff to dis­cuss what they should or should not do in an event of a rob­bery or some oth­er form of at­tack.

On Mon­day, Wong was at his su­per­mar­ket at the cor­ner of Ma­ju­ba Cross Road and St Lu­cien’s Road when two armed men walked in say­ing it was a hold up.

Wong was shot in the chest af­ter he tried to de­fend his sis­ter, who was at the time be­ing at­tacked by one of the men. Wong died while un­der­go­ing treat­ment at the St James In­fir­mary.

That in­ci­dent was in fact the sec­ond rob­bery in just a mat­ter of days apart. In the first in­ci­dent, a busi­ness­man was shot and wound­ed on the leg af­ter he was robbed.

A man­ag­er of a su­per­mar­ket along the Diego Mar­tin Main Road, who wished not to be iden­ti­fied, said that she spoke with her staff and in­struct­ed them to do noth­ing should ban­dits en­ter while they are on du­ty.

“I told them that their lives are more im­por­tant than any­thing else and just to give up any­thing that these ban­dits want and not to fight, it’s not worth it,”
she said.

She added that Wong’s in­ci­dent has shak­en up the en­tire area, “It is a lot of mixed emo­tions…I just want my work­ers to re­main calm in any giv­en sit­u­a­tion like that. We can on­ly do all we can with cam­eras and bur­glar proof­ing but we need pray­ing peo­ple to go down on their knees and pray for this na­tion.”

An­oth­er busi­ness­woman said she feels very un­safe and called for more po­lice pa­trols, both mo­bile and on foot.

Over at St Lu­cien’s Road, man­ag­er, Oni­ka Wil­son said both busi­ness peo­ple and res­i­dents are feel­ing the pain, “but how do we go about elim­i­nat­ing these rogue el­e­ments one by one? Crime just spiked out of con­trol and all this has stemmed from the so­cial is­sues that ex­ist.”

Two Bagatelle young men— Nicholas Brit­to, 38, and Wen­dell Williams of Bagatelle said they strong­ly be­lieve that white col­lar crime must be dealt with first be­fore any oth­er crime.
“Who it is buy­ing the guns and drugs for the youths to go out there with? Not the rich peo­ple? Fish rot­tens from the head you know but no­body cares about any­body again. The rich cares for them­selves,” Brit­to said.

How­ev­er, Williams said he be­lieves that there is hope, “every­one has the re­spon­si­bil­i­ty of their chil­dren in their own home. I have three boys and I have trained them well. I am al­so a tai­lor by trade and there should be pro­grammes to in­volve the youths not take those pro­grammes away? It don’t work so.”
One of Wong’s neigh­bour’s said he re­mains very shocked and scared.

“To­day when I look at the time it was al­most the same time when the rob­bery went down and I got very scared, I locked up in­side. I feel like pack­ing up, sell­ing out and mov­ing out of this area. Here nev­er used to be like that but it get ter­ri­ble now and the po­lice do­ing noth­ing,” the man said.


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