Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar was ill-advised to make last week's "wiretapping" revelations since she may have compromised T&T's national security, Congress of the People vice chairman Vernon de Lima has said. The COP is a minority People's Partnership partner in the Government. COP chairman Joseph Toney on Tuesday, noting tomorrow's debate of Government's "wiretapping" bill, said: "We urge restraint... we're dealing with the delicate issue of T&T's security and that should be in mind uppermost–let's not make this into a political football."
De Lima added: "I'm aghast at the number of people who were listed last Friday as being 'tapped.' That was wrong and the mechanisms employed there are indefensible. So Mr Manning and the PNM are not blamless since one of these so-called spy agencies existed since 2004." "Why is it that they did not move with alacrity to ensure these agencies were given legal cover?" He said: "It seemed they neglected to do that on purpose because maybe if they had, there would have been certain strictures they were not prepared to abide by.
"However, the Prime Minister's unfortunate decision to reveal details etc of the modus operandi of these agencies could compromise national security.
"We've heard a lot about local vessels being intercepted in various parts of the world with drug hauls, who is to know whether or not this was as a result of these agencies' work–and now you come and blow their cover? "When you come to matters like national security one should always err on the side of caution and the uppermost consideration of any anything should be T&T's security. "Therefore I wonder if it was right to do what was done in Parliament last week and I think it was not. If someone has been advising the PM on this, it was clearly not prudent advice. If I'm wrong, I'll accept that but we are a small state and we must guard our security closely."
De Lima also said the PM's idea for a commission of enquiry on the issue would be wrong. "That would certainly compromise security even further due to what information might flow from this probe," he said. "We have this week's example of what took place in the UK where the UK government refused such an inquiry on the same grounds where the issue of several Guantanamo prisoners was concerned."