Shane Superville
Senior Reporter
shane.superville@guardian.co.tt
Without divulging further details, Minister of Homeland Security Roger Alexander says that additional resources were expected to tackle crime in T&T, as he says that several security agencies continue to operate with insufficient staffing and equipment to fulfil their duties.
Responding to questions about the extension of the ongoing State of Emergency (SoE) during the launch of a hairstyling course at his constituency office on El Dorado Road on Saturday, Alexander said there was a need to address certain deficiencies in the State's anti-crime response.
He lamented that many challenges were difficult to overcome in order for the Government to achieve its crime-fighting vision.
"When those resources come you will see a completely different kind of enforcement as you compare it to the past times.
"The problem is... when you came here you came and think you can get off the ground instantly, but if the agencies responsible for crime were stifled and left to fend for themselves, the first thing you have to do is to staff, resource and motivate.
"So it's not that we're not treating with crime... I'm not satisfied just yet because there are still things happening."
Earlier this month, Defence Minister Wayne Sturge appeared at the Americas Counter-Cartel Conference in Florida, where he told US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth that T&T while committed to the fight against narco-trafficking, lacked the resources to tackle the issue.
"We require assets in the interim that would enhance our maritime domain awareness as well as enable us to carry out targeted reinforcement that would serve both our interests and would deliver immediate hemispheric benefits.
"Our Government is dedicated and ready to shoulder all responsibility, and once proportionally equipped to the expectations faced upon us, we will deliver results,” Sturge told the summit.
When asked if these additional resources were related to Sturge's request at the conference, Alexander said Sturge was responsible for the country's defence while he oversaw T&T's domestic security affairs.
He however acknowledged that foreign agencies would be involved.
"We took a stand as a government from the Prime Minister to support a situation,we e saw the benefit of the situation and we continue to see it today.
"We need the help."
Commenting on the extension of the SoE, Alexander said he felt that Friday's debate in the Lower House was a "missed opportunity" for the Opposition to reconsider the merits of the Government's proposed Zones of Special Operations (ZOSO) legislation.
He noted that the Government's intention was to not only introduce the ZOSO strategy as a crime-fighting method, but to introduce important community development initiatives and public utilities projects to raise the quality of life in these areas.
Alexander argued that he felt many of the people in Opposition constituencies would have been generally supportive of such a policy and questioned if Opposition MPs would still be opposed to the initiative if they lived in the same neighbourhoods as their constituents.
