Stories by
Senior Reporter
jensen.lavende@guardian.co.tt
Defence Minister Wayne Sturge says he is not afraid for his life after a man, who was detained under the State of Emergency (SoE) for a death threat to a Government official, was released earlier this month.
Speaking at a media briefing at the United National Congress headquarters in Chaguanas, yesterday, Sturge confirmed he was the Government official under threat. Asked if he was fearful for his life, given what transpired with the detention of individuals during the SoE, Sturge said no.
“I’m not afraid. We all die. We all will get that chance, and if you give me a choice between cancer and an assassination, I’ll choose an assassination. So, I’m not afraid.”
However, Sturge said the matter is not over, as the suspect can be re-arrested.
“It’s a bit premature to say that he’s not going to be charged. I don’t know. What I can say is that a pre-action protocol letter was written, and it was acted upon merely hours before the tribunal gave a recommendation to not release him. So, the tribunal, in essence, stated that he ought not to have been released.”
He added that a report that there was never any evidence to hold the suspect in the first place was wrong.
“The report in the Newsday, which suggested that there was no evidence in the first place, that has also been proven to be false because the Commissioner of Police (Allister Guevarro), in essence, refuted that when he came before the National Security Council,” Sturge said.
He added that the possibility of re-arresting the suspect before the end of the SoE, which ends on January 31, can only be done if new evidence is unearthed.
However, Sturge’s supposed bravado is not convincing former national security minister and former police officer Marvin Gonzales, who believes the death plot was a hoax.
“That alleged threat that the Government spoke about and the TTPS, I don’t believe it. I think it was a lie. It was a monstrous lie to mislead the people of Trinidad and Tobago, and a way of imposing a State of Emergency as a crime tool, as opposed to dealing with a specific national security threat, because up to today, no one was charged, and the over 100 people that were detained under emergency powers, they have not been charged. Most of these people are going to be released at the end of this month,” Gonzales said.
Gonzales, however, said that Sturge is fully aware that there was never any real threat against him, and that is why he is not afraid.
“The reason why he is saying that is perhaps he is aware that there was no real threat in the first place. So that’s the reason why he’s saying that. The minister is well aware that there was no real threat. Let me tell you this, Minister Wayne Sturge is just playing games,” Gonzales said.
During the SoE, Danny Guerra was one of four people, including a police officer, detained for allegedly plotting to murder a Government official.
The 50-year-old, of North Oropouche Road, Sangre Grande, was ordered to be held at the Eastern Correctional Rehabilitation Centre, Santa Rosa, Arima, in November last year.
However, he was released on January 2 after a revocation order was handed down by the SoE tribunal.
