JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Saturday, June 21, 2025

Cedros residents in fear: Call for security amid tension with Venezuela

by

Radhica De Silva
10 days ago
20250611

RAD­HI­CA DE SIL­VA

Se­nior Mul­ti­me­dia Re­porter

rad­hi­ca.sookraj@guardian.co.tt

Res­i­dents of the south­west­ern penin­su­la are call­ing for in­creased se­cu­ri­ty at the Ce­dros Se­cu­ri­ty Com­plex as ten­sions sim­mer fol­low­ing claims by the Venezue­lan gov­ern­ment that a Trinidad na­tion­al has been ar­rest­ed as part of a plot to desta­bilise Venezuela.

The Ce­dros Se­cu­ri­ty Com­plex hous­es the Trinidad and To­ba­go Coast Guard, Im­mi­gra­tion Di­vi­sion, Po­lice Ser­vice, and Cus­toms and Ex­cise Di­vi­sion and is cru­cial for bor­der con­trol and mar­itime se­cu­ri­ty near the Venezuela-Trinidad mar­itime bound­ary.

How­ev­er, de­spite Prime Min­is­ter Kam­la Per­sad-Bisses­sar’s call for the T&T Coast Guard to use dead­ly force against any uniden­ti­fied ves­sel en­ter­ing from Venezuela, there was no vis­i­ble in­crease in se­cu­ri­ty at the Ce­dros port when Guardian Me­dia vis­it­ed yes­ter­day.

No Venezue­lan boats were seen ar­riv­ing or de­part­ing, and on­ly one pirogue was docked. Venezue­lan mi­grants milled around the shops, and a few re­spond­ed shy­ly, say­ing “No Eng­lish” when ap­proached.

Speak­ing to Guardian Me­dia, Trinida­di­an Arun Bun­see, who lives at Bouis Bourg, Ce­dros, called on the Prime Min­is­ter to send ad­di­tion­al se­cu­ri­ty to Ce­dros to quell their fears. “I don’t feel safe about that; there is noth­ing here to keep us safe from all the ten­sion around this area,” he said.

Mean­while, some fish­er­men ex­pressed fears about go­ing to sea, al­though they ex­pressed sup­port for Per­sad-Bisses­sar’s stance.

Fish­er­man Arvin Ma­habir called on her to cre­ate bet­ter op­por­tu­ni­ties for res­i­dents, say­ing fish­ing was the on­ly op­tion for youths who chose to stay in Ce­dros. He said fish­er­men can no longer risk fish­ing near the bor­der.

“The places where the fish­es are, we can­not go be­cause they say­ing it’s the bor­der ... The fish­er­men from the Fullar­ton vil­lage, the fish­er­men from the Ica­cos vil­lage ... they can’t make a liv­ing right now,” Ma­habir said.

He ex­plained that Venezue­lan coast guard pa­trols have made fish­ing dan­ger­ous.

“When we see the Venezue­lan Coast Guard come, we just have to run for our life. Some­times the boat flip and peo­ple just get dam­aged. Man get bust head and all kind of thing. En­gine cut up peo­ple,” he said.

Ma­habir al­so said the lack of jobs has pushed many in­to the sea de­spite the risks.

“It have noth­ing else be­sides fish­ing ... it have no jobs, it don’t have enough jobs for us.”

Asked whether there had been any in­crease in se­cu­ri­ty since the Prime Min­is­ter’s state­ments, Ma­habir said, “No, we have not seen no type of se­cu­ri­ty ... Coast Guard not do­ing what they’re sup­posed to do on the bor­der­line. If they were do­ing what they’re sup­posed to do, we would have at least been safer.”

He al­so de­scribed en­coun­ters with Venezue­lan ban­dits who de­mand ran­som, seize en­gines, or rob fish­er­men of their boats. “If the ban­dits hold we, we have no choice. We have to pay ran­som.”

He added that Ce­dros fish­er­men have lit­tle choice. “We just try­ing to make some­thing of we self.”

Ma­habir al­so crit­i­cised the re­sources avail­able to Coast Guard of­fi­cers sta­tioned in Ce­dros. “It is not even a prop­er boat. Tthey don’t have prop­er equip­ment at the Ce­dros area. They don’t have noth­ing.”

Res­i­dent Atesh Ram­paul said res­i­dents have been call­ing for ad­di­tion­al se­cu­ri­ty at the Ce­dros Se­cu­ri­ty Com­plex.

“Right now we do not feel safe. We need the step­ping up of po­lice and more safe­ty for the fish­er­men out there. They risk­ing their lives to make an hon­est dol­lar for their fam­i­lies,” Ram­paul said.

On Thurs­day, Prime Min­is­ter Per­sad-Bisses­sar warned Venezue­lan Pres­i­dent Nico­las Maduro to “stay out” of T&T’s wa­ters. Venezuela lat­er re­spond­ed with an of­fi­cial state­ment call­ing her re­marks “irate and un­jus­ti­fied.”

Res­i­dents: No­body knows Jheron

On Mon­day, Venezuela’s Jus­tice Min­is­ter Dios­da­do Ca­bel­lo, speak­ing on his tele­vi­sion pro­gramme Con El Ma­zo Dan­do, claimed a Trinida­di­an na­tion­al iden­ti­fied as “Gis Kendel Jheron” was cap­tured while at­tempt­ing to en­ter Venezuela with a group he la­belled as ter­ror­ists. Ca­bel­lo al­leged the group’s goal was to desta­bilise the Venezue­lan state.

Guardian Me­dia was in­formed yes­ter­day that more than one Trinida­di­an has been de­tained, but no ad­di­tion­al in­for­ma­tion was avail­able.

How­ev­er, Ce­dros vil­lagers told Guardian Me­dia they do not know any­one named Gis Kendel Jheron.

Res­i­dents ex­pressed con­fu­sion and con­cern over the al­le­ga­tions, say­ing the claim had fur­ther height­ened ten­sions along the south­west­ern coast.

“We nev­er hear that name be­fore,” said res­i­dent Rudolph Singh.

“No­body in the vil­lage know any man by that name.”

Kavi­ta Ma­habir al­so said she was sure that no­body from Ce­dros knew Jheron.

“If that per­son ex­ists, he is not from Ce­dros for sure. No­body knows that name,” she said. Coun­cil­lor for Ce­dros Shankar Teelucks­ingh al­so said Jheron was not known in the Ce­dros re­gion.

xists, he is not from Ce­dros for sure. No­body knows that name,” she said. Coun­cil­lor for Ce­dros Shankar Teelucks­ingh al­so said Jheron was not known in the Ce­dros re­gion.

(See Page 6)


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored

Today's
Guardian

Publications

Success Laventille Secondary School principal Stacey Lezama alongside the volunteer representatives from Unicomer (Trinidad) Limited and United Way, who recently participated in a programme to improve the school's physical and learning environment.

Success Laventille Secondary School principal Stacey Lezama alongside the volunteer representatives from Unicomer (Trinidad) Limited and United Way, who recently participated in a programme to improve the school's physical and learning environment.

Photo courtesy:Cindy James

Success Laventille Secondary School principal Stacey Lezama alongside the volunteer representatives from Unicomer (Trinidad) Limited and United Way, who recently participated in a programme to improve the school's physical and learning environment.

Success Laventille Secondary School principal Stacey Lezama alongside the volunteer representatives from Unicomer (Trinidad) Limited and United Way, who recently participated in a programme to improve the school's physical and learning environment.

Photo courtesy:Cindy James

Unicomer invests in Laventille through Day of Caring

Yesterday
Artist Keith Mervyn Ward, left, shares a moment with Marika and Kathleen Richards and Sita and Lennox Sealy.

Artist Keith Mervyn Ward, left, shares a moment with Marika and Kathleen Richards and Sita and Lennox Sealy.

Photo courtesy Patricia Martin-Ward

Artist Keith Mervyn Ward, left, shares a moment with Marika and Kathleen Richards and Sita and Lennox Sealy.

Artist Keith Mervyn Ward, left, shares a moment with Marika and Kathleen Richards and Sita and Lennox Sealy.

Photo courtesy Patricia Martin-Ward

‘Tints Tones and Textures’ at Lloyd Best Institute

Yesterday
The Emancipation monument, designed and created by jeweler and designer Gillian Bishop, is located in front of the Treasury Building on Independence Square.

The Emancipation monument, designed and created by jeweler and designer Gillian Bishop, is located in front of the Treasury Building on Independence Square.

MARIELA BRUZUAL

The Emancipation monument, designed and created by jeweler and designer Gillian Bishop, is located in front of the Treasury Building on Independence Square.

The Emancipation monument, designed and created by jeweler and designer Gillian Bishop, is located in front of the Treasury Building on Independence Square.

MARIELA BRUZUAL

Public art in Port-of-Spain

Yesterday
Sundar and friends in a Barrackpore bar in one of the scenes in the play.

Sundar and friends in a Barrackpore bar in one of the scenes in the play.

Rishi Ragoonath

Sundar and friends in a Barrackpore bar in one of the scenes in the play.

Sundar and friends in a Barrackpore bar in one of the scenes in the play.

Rishi Ragoonath

Sundar — the story of a chutney legend on the Naparima stage

2 days ago