JENSEN LA VENDE
Senior Reporter
jensen.lavende@guardian.co.tt
Opposition Senator Dr Amery Browne has lodged a police report after receiving online death threats.
In a Facebook post on Thursday, Browne wrote: “I have made a full report to the Police Service based on online death threats made against me and members of my family in the form of specific comments on my Facebook wall. I have been involved in the active politics of Trinidad and Tobago since 2007 and have never experienced anything like this. I am treating the issue very seriously.”
In a follow-up WhatsApp message, Browne said he expects “robust and swift action” in response to the threats.
His statement comes a day after acting Foreign Affairs Minister Barry Padarath stressed that public officials should be protected from such threats. Padarath was speaking in relation to the detention of Olive Green-Jack, who is accused of inciting the Venezuelan government to target Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar amid tensions between the two countries.
The detention order stated that Green-Jack “made and published public posts and/or comments on social media addressed to the Venezuelan Government in an attempt to influence public opinion in a manner likely to be prejudicial to public safety.” It added that the posts and comments invited violence against Persad-Bissessar, the Government of Trinidad and Tobago, and members of the public, creating “an imminent threat to public safety.”
Green-Jack, of Sargangar Trace, Morne Coco Road, Diego Martin, will remain in custody at the Women’s Prison until February 1 next year.
Commenting on the detention, Padarath said that sharing the Prime Minister’s residence or sensitive information about her whereabouts puts her at tremendous risk. He described Green-Jack’s arrest as “long overdue and entirely justified.”
“People must be held accountable for their actions. This goes far beyond freedom of expression. It crosses into a different realm, and it is important that an example be set. This is not about suppressing anyone’s right to speak—it’s about preventing dangerous, reckless behaviour that jeopardises lives,” he said.
Padarath added that such behaviour “exposes citizens who are public officials, and it also puts their families and loved ones at risk.”
In his Facebook post, Browne included screenshots of threats from a user named Garvin Seegobin. One comment read: “Any time I see u public I go walk up to yuh and shoot yuh in yuh head.” Another stated: “I going a wait outside Parliament when I see yuh I go shoot u.” A third read: “I go send men to kill yuh children.”
The profile appears to be fake, with 40 friends, two photos, and no posts. One of the pictures was uploaded on October 12. Another profile with the same name and similar photos has 51 friends and three posts dating between 2017 and 2018.
Guardian Media contacted Police Commissioner Allister Guevarro for comment on Browne’s report, but no response was received by press time.
