DAREECE POLO
Senior Reporter
dareece.polo@guardian.co.tt
Attorney General John Jeremie warned that threats against the Prime Minister, including those posted online, will be treated seriously under the law as Parliament voted on Friday to extend the State of Emergency for another three months without Opposition support.
“In some territories, you go to jail for that. In other territories, you are shot for that,” the AG told the Lower House, standing by the Government’s decision to detain individuals for social media posts during the previous SoE.
Jeremie made the remarks while winding up the debate on the extension of the emergency powers regulations, defending the Government’s handling of threats against Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar and its broader crime-fighting strategy.
He pointed to the November detention of Olive Green-Jack during the previous SoE for comments made on Facebook. “This would have been not just a banana republic; we would have been a silly country if we did not take action on that. And I am proud to say that I had something to do with taking action on that. Because that is behaviour that is not permissible and that, as long as I have life in me, I will not permit.”
Jeremie also rejected criticism of the latest emergency measures, revealing that the Cabinet note sent to the President followed the same approach used by the previous administration. According to the AG, the document relied on the state of emergency Cabinet note issued by the former government in December 2024 as precedent.
He further argued that existing gang legislation is not strong enough to deal with organised crime.
“There are serious problems with the anti-gang law, and we have to fix it. There are definitions which are circular, tautologous, and impossible to use. Gang, gang member, gang leader — all of those things are premised on one concept. And our advice is that unless those concepts are intertwined — unless you find a way to target gang activity with different triggers — the act is a dead letter. It’s been used once or twice, never successfully.”
Opposition MPs, however, questioned whether the emergency powers were justified, arguing that the Government had not presented the same level of data or statistics used when the previous administration introduced an SoE in 2024.
Port-of-Spain South MP Keith Scotland said the Government’s own statements suggested crime had declined.
“If crime is down, the vibes were secured, it’s the safest Carnival in the last 20 years. How are we here now?”
Scotland also lamented that the country had been under an SoE for 197 days, which he said represents 61 per cent of the Government’s 320 days in office. He further questioned whether the regulations could be used against citizens protesting over their grievances.
Oropouche East MP Dr Roodal Moonilal rejected the criticism, warning that failing to confront violent crime could make the country ungovernable.
“If we do not watch it, and we don’t take action like this, Haiti could be our future. And we will not have that. We’ll not have it at all. We will not have a country that is ungovernable, uncontrollable. We will not concede space to the criminal elements.”
He added that the Government had not abused the emergency powers in the past.
But Opposition MP Colm Imbert raised concerns about the scope of the regulations, particularly provisions related to public order.
“What this does is prohibit anybody from saying anything which, in the opinion of a police officer — an untrained police officer, who has no guidance, has no information — sounds like it is endangering public safety. Or that post you put on Facebook, or that article you write, looks like it endangers public safety. And this is why I say I am certain that this regulation would be deemed disproportionate, and the outcome will be the same.”
Imbert added that a decline in murders was not a justification for continuing emergency powers.
Despite the objections, Parliament approved the extension of the State of Emergency with 26 votes in favour and 12 against.
During his wind-up of the debate, Jeremie acknowledged that he has a personal grievance with former Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley, accusing him of speaking about him publicly while he remained silent.
He claimed Rowley had boasted about giving people strokes and “carrying people to Les Coteaux.”
“I stick to the Hansard, and I stand by the statements which he made in the Hansard, which revealed that he took crime flippantly. And he has carried that party (PNM) down a dangerous slope to the point today... I have never seen it in the state it is in now. And I want to tell you all something — that party there is in danger of complete and utter destruction.”
Guardian Media contacted Rowley for comment, but he did not respond up to the time of publication.
