Lead Editor-Politics
akash.samaroo@cnc3.co.tt
Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar has thrown her full support behind the Attorney General’s warning that no segment of society, including the so-called “one per cent”, is beyond the reach of the law, alleging that some current and former senior banking officials facilitated foreign currency transactions for local businesses linked to international drug cartels.
In a statement yesterday and following questions from Guardian Media, the Prime Minister said the Government was receiving foreign assistance to track billions of US dollars that left Trinidad and Tobago over the past 20 years, including money allegedly channelled through local businesses before being transferred to foreign accounts connected to organised crime.
“Some current and former high-ranking officials of local banks facilitated the sale of massive amounts of foreign currency to local businesses, which was then transferred to foreign accounts linked to cartels and also used to purchase real estate holdings and businesses in collaboration with cartels,” Persad-Bissessar said.
Her comments came a day after Jeremie used his contribution to the parliamentary debate on extending the State of Emergency (SoE) to warn that Government intended to pursue not only street-level criminal gangs but also white-collar figures believed to have profited from organised crime.
Persad-Bissessar said her administration fully supported that approach.
“Pursuant to the maxim ‘Justice is blind’, the law applies equally to every citizen, regardless of their financial status, social standing, political connections, or influence.”
The Prime Minister insisted that Jeremie’s comments were intended to reinforce a simple principle - that no individual or organisation should expect immunity from criminal investigation because of wealth, status or influence.
“Whether criminal elements identify themselves as the ‘Sixx’, the ‘Seven’, the ‘One Per cent’, or by any other name, they are all subject to the laws of Trinidad and Tobago and will be treated accordingly by the justice system.”
Persad-Bissessar also sought to distance the debate from any ethnic considerations, after criticism emerged following Jeremie’s remarks in Parliament.
“The one per cent community consists of persons of many ethnic groups. It does not consist of a singular ethnic group,” the PM said.
“The State is committed to upholding the rule of law fairly and consistently.”
The Prime Minister said law enforcement agencies had a responsibility to apply the law equally and fairly to all citizens.
“There can be no special treatment and no immunity from legal consequences for anyone based on wealth, status, or association. Law enforcement’s responsibility is to ensure that the laws of the land are applied equally to all,” she said.
Persad-Bissessar further argued that the scale of drug trafficking through T&T over the past quarter-century had raised serious unanswered questions about how criminal enterprises were financed and how illicit profits were moved through the financial system.
“Billions of dollars’ worth of illegal drugs have passed through this country over the last 25 years and no one can answer how it was paid for,” she said.
The Prime Minister said Government was now working with international partners to target both narcotics trafficking and money laundering operations.
“The State is finally getting assistance to deal with drug trafficking and money laundering and we will let the chips fall where they may,” she declared.
The Prime Minister sought to reassure citizens that law-abiding individuals had nothing to fear from ongoing investigations.
“All law-abiding citizens have nothing to fear from the actions of the US and local law enforcement agencies,” the Prime Minister said.
Persad-Bissessar did not identify any banks, businesses or individuals.
During the debate on Wednesday, Jeremie claimed that certain members of Trinidad and Tobago’s so-called “one per cent” have had their United States visas revoked, saying he was informed by several individuals whose visas were cancelled and suggesting the US acted based on intelligence gathered about their activities.
He said, “We all know that our American friends have sophisticated means of intelligence gathering. They appear now to have determined that certain individuals should not, as a result of their activities, be travelling to the United States, and they have taken action to ensure that that does not happen.”
However, Jeremie stressed that the Government had no role in those visa decisions.
He argued that the “one per cent” is a powerful and influential group that controls significant segments of the economy, enjoyed close ties to the former People’s National Movement administration, and should not believe their wealth places them above the law.
