Reporter
carisa.lee@guardian.co.tt
August 2025 was a month defined by moments that altered the country’s history and culture, and by tragedies that cut deeply into the national conscience. The drowning of Tara Lochansingh at the Matura River on Emancipation Day, and the death of six-year-old Jasher Francois at the San Fernando Teaching Hospital on August 7, sent waves of grief across the country.
The eighth month also unfolded against a backdrop of persistent crime and political tension. But in the final weeks of August, events took a dramatic turn when the United States began a naval build-up in the southern Caribbean, a development that would dominate headlines for the rest of the year and raise regional concerns.
On August 18, news broke that the United States had deployed three Aegis guided-missile destroyers, the USS Gravely, the USS Jason Dunham and the USS Sampson, to waters off Venezuela.
The move was part of US President Donald Trump’s effort to combat threats posed by Latin American drug cartels.
Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro described the deployment as a threat to the country’s sovereignty and pledged to mobilise over four million militia members.
“This week, I will activate a special plan with more than 4.5 million militiamen to ensure coverage of the entire national territory—militias that are prepared, activated and armed,” Maduro said.
As the warships made their way to the southern Caribbean, regional and local voices warned against the military presence in the region stating that it must remain a zone of peace.
An intergovernmental organisation of Latin American and Caribbean nations called ALBA, or the Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of our America, denounced what it described as “renewed aggression by the US against Latin America and the Caribbean.”
ALBA rejected what it called the US’ “flagrant violation of international law and a threat to regional peace.”
The ALBA members include Antigua and Barbuda, Bolivia, Cuba, Dominica, Grenada, Nicaragua, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines and Venezuela.
Former T&T prime minister Stuart Young said, “Caricom and our region is a recognised zone of peace, and it is critical that this be maintained.”
In contrast, some Venezuelans living in Trinidad and Tobago say they hope that if the United States removes President Nicolás Maduro, they would be able to return home peacefully.
As tensions, speculation and expectations grew, Foreign and Caricom Affairs Minister Sean Sobers said the country would remain outside the current impasse between the United States and Venezuela. He also urged the population to put aside fear amid the ongoing uncertainty.
In the Government’s first official statement since the news broke, Sobers, responding to questions from Guardian Media, said, “America is a sovereign country. Where they decide to send their ships, or not send their ships, is not really a matter for Trinidad and Tobago.”
Sobers also noted that the Caribbean Sea extended all the way to the coast of Florida.
One day later, Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar said Trinidad and Tobago fully supported the US government’s deployment of military assets to dismantle terrorist drug cartels operating in the southern region. She added that the US had made no request to use Trinidad and Tobago for any military action against the Maduro administration.
However, Persad-Bissessar warned the Venezuelan government that Trinidad and Tobago would be prepared to grant the United States access to its territory should Venezuela invade Guyana.
Relations in the Gulf of Paria were already choppy, but Persad-Bissessar’s position further intensified the tide. Between August 13 and 14, several Trinidadian nationals and one Venezuelan man were arrested by Venezuelan authorities in international waters.
Local intelligence officials said the group, comprising T&T nationals and the Venezuelan operative, was en route to collect a large shipment of narcotics and firearms destined for Trinidad.
Meanwhile, Venezuelan officials also seized 3,000 litres of fuel along with a large quantity of contraband.
Responding to the arrests, Police Commissioner Allister Guevarro said some of the individuals were already known to law enforcement, and that their detention had made the police’s job easier.
He added that while it meant “fewer men” for the Trinidad and Tobago Police Service (TTPS) to locate, officers remained aware of where to look.
The Police Commissioner said the arrests should serve as a clear warning to other misguided individuals who believe they can evade justice by crossing borders.
Police sources told Guardian Media that the group had been receiving instructions from an incarcerated inmate in connection with the July 25, 2019 murders of Vaughan “Sandman” Mieres, his wife, and two associates.
Attorneys, minister
in danger
Earlier in August, police arrested a man described as the right-hand man of one of the suspects currently being held at the Defence Force base in Chaguaramas. He was found in possession of a sophisticated weapon, which investigators believe was intended to be used in the assassination of two defence attorneys.
Guevarro revealed that the suspect’s detention came just hours after officers alerted the two attorneys that their lives were in danger.
Weeks later, it was revealed that Defence Minister Wayne Sturge had also been a target, prompting immediate prayers from his Toco/Sangre Grande constituents.
Two other Members of Parliament were also reportedly threatened—Rural Development and Local Government Minister Khadijah Ameen and Public Utilities Minister Barry Padarath.
Resident Dexter Ferguson said reports of alleged threats against Sturge were difficult to process, particularly amid the country’s worsening crime situation.
“It not sitting nice with me, because I know Sturge is a good fella… a good guy. I really feeling it for him,” Ferguson said. “Sturge didn’t help me, but he helped people close to me. He doing his work, and that has been evident over the last four months. I don’t know if people envious of our MP.”
While constituents offered prayers for one Member of Parliament, Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar issued a stern warning to her Cabinet, vowing to “buss their heads” should any minister be found engaging in questionable alliances.
She said anyone involved would face public exposure, dismissal, and possible legal consequences.
The Prime Minister stressed that her Government’s priority was protecting the most vulnerable, not rewarding “political insiders.”
“The UNC worked too hard for some people to be favouring corrupt fake elites,” she said, referencing Members of Parliament whom she claimed were “liming in Hyatt” with individuals her party had vowed to hold accountable for corruption... They will carry you and not bring you back,” she warned.
Public Utilities Minister Barry Padarath voiced full support for the Prime Minister’s warning, saying that groups which had “fed at the trough under the PNM” were now seeking access to the United National Congress.
Finance Minister Davendranath Tancoo said any action taken by the Prime Minister was aimed at ensuring the UNC never becomes aligned with what he described as “crooked and corrupt individuals” whom he claimed robbed the country of billions under the previous administration.
According to the Trinidad and Tobago Police Service (TTPS), August recorded the lowest monthly murder toll in the last decade. Celebrating the “win,” Police Commissioner Allister Guevarro said it was achieved even while operating under an ongoing State of Emergency (SoE).
But the month was not without violence. Forty-year-old Mt Hope businesswoman Makeda Swift was shot and killed by bandits during a carjacking. She was the daughter of Rastafarian DJ Brian “Nyahbinghi” De Four.
In another case, a La Romaine couple went missing over the weekend of August 3. Samuel Montano, 44, and Zaheeda Mohammed, 36, were reported missing after a relative discovered a trail of blood leading from their home to the nearby beach. Officers found a blood-stained sheet on the bed and several spent shells on the floor.
The Trinidad and Tobago Coast Guard deployed divers to comb nearby waters, while drones and cadaver dogs scoured the area but no trace of the couple was found.
Major government decisions
With schools set to reopen in a few weeks, the Government announced plans to deploy police officers in high-risk schools in an effort to curb violence.
The plan was outlined during a meeting on August 13 at Education Towers on St Vincent Street, Port-of-Spain, between Education Minister Dr Michael Dowlath, Homeland Security Minister Roger Alexander, and Commissioner Guevarro.
Another major decision the Government made in August were the cancellations of the Independence Day parade and fireworks citing security reasons. The events were replaced by a national day of prayer.
“The Government’s National Security advice is that the gathering of the President, and all Government and Opposition members, members of the Judiciary, together with a large contingent of the marine, land and air assets of the Defence Force and the TTPS in one location would be unwise at this time,” Legal Affairs Minister Saddam Hosein said during a post-Cabinet media briefing.
The Government saved at least $2.6 million after cancelling this year’s Independence Day parade and fireworks display in the capital, approval from the former People’s National Movement (PNM) administration was given in February.
According to Cabinet note, the parade alone was projected to cost $1.5 million. This figure included expenses such as renting the Grand Stand facilities, hiring ushers, constructing media towers, installing audio systems, providing guest refreshments, and renting chairs and buses. The Grand Stand rental alone cost approximately $600,000.
Additionally, Guardian Media was informed that the fireworks display was expected to cost the State around $1.1 million. However, a government source clarified that while the private sector helps fund the show, several state entities, including the Urban Development Corporation of T&T (UDeCOTT), also contribute financially and manage key logistical aspects of the event. UDeCOTT was expected to cover $700,000 of the fireworks costs.
The “Toast to the Nation,” a formal part of Independence Day celebrations traditionally held at the National Academy for the Performing Arts (NAPA) was not included in the cost.
Port-of-Spain Mayor Chinua Alleyne said the corporation spent approximately TT$100,000 to $120,000 to host its own “For the Love of Liberty” Independence celebration at Mandela Park and Ariapita Avenue.
Pan on D’ Avenue helped closed off the month of August, which is also national pan month in a patriotic way.
After standing on Independence Square for approximately 144 years, the Christopher Columbus statue was removed by the Port-of-Spain Corporation on August 6. Mayor Chinua Alleyne made the announcement on Emancipation Day.
“The council of the city of Port-of-Spain has taken the decision to remove the statue of Christopher Columbus from Independence Square and to make it available to the National Museum and Art Gallery for display,” he said.
Eric Lewis, of the Santa Rosa First Peoples, held a smoke ceremony at the Columbus Square site to commemorate the removal of the statue. He said the statue represented more than history, calling it “a monstrosity” that carried the symbolic weight of colonial violence.
“We’re here to purify the space and honour our ancestors,” Lewis said.
Freedom Project Caribbean’s Shabaka Kambon described the statue’s removal as an “historic victory” after nearly a decade of advocacy. The country lost prominent figures such as Independent Senator and President of the National Council of Indian Culture (NCIC) Deoroop Teemal who died at 68-years-old.
Former government minister and PNM stalwart Dr Lenny Saith died at age 90. On August 29, at the age of 57, Inshan Ishmael, a prominent businessman, activist, and media personality also passed away.
Warner gets a lifeline
Also in August, former FIFA vice president Jack Warner received a major lifeline in his long-running effort to challenge his proposed extradition to the United States. The Office of the Attorney General admitted that Warner’s previous legal challenges were dismissed by local courts and the Privy Council based on a misrepresentation made by the State.
The bombshell admission could have a direct impact on the future of extradition proceedings against Warner, who is accused of fraud and money laundering linked to his more than two-decade tenure at the helm of world football’s governing body.
The nation was also shaken by tragedy, as parents across the country shared in the grief of Aaron and Yhnique Francois following the death of their six-year-old son at the San Fernando Teaching Hospital.
The first autopsy, conducted at the hospital’s mortuary, listed the cause of death as aspiration pneumonitis, likely triggered by viral pneumonia. However, Jasher’s parents rejected the findings, questioning their son’s sudden deterioration.
They later accepted the results of a second, independent autopsy, which suggested that an adverse reaction to intravenously administered medication may have caused his death. The autopsy was conducted by Professor Dr Hubert Daisley at the JE Guide Funeral Home and Crematorium.
In response, the Ministry of Health appointed a committee to investigate the matter.
On August 19, bus driver Mustapha Khan and passenger Roxanne Phillip—a security officer attached to SWAT—were killed when a PTSC deluxe bus slammed into the rear of a flatbed truck while travelling south along the Solomon Hochoy Highway, near the Freeport overpass.
The truck driver suffered minor injuries, but Khan died at the scene. Phillip also lost her life and remained trapped beneath the wreckage.
Tragedy struck again the following night when 19-year-old Kavish Persad was killed in a separate crash along the Beetham Highway in Laventille. Police said Persad was driving a white Hyundai Ioniq eastbound around 10 pm when he attempted to overtake a brown Mitsubishi vehicle.
Instead, Persad collided with the rear of the car, causing his vehicle to veer off the roadway and crash into the Beetham Water Main. The impact sent the car airborne before it plunged into a drain.
The Mitsubishi was pushed into a grassy area at the side of the road, but its driver was unharmed.
