Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar has responded to questions from Opposition Leader Pennelope Beckles about the installation of a new radar system in Tobago, accusing the People’s National Movement (PNM) of attempting to compromise national security.
In a statement today, the Prime Minister said violent crime over the past decade was driven by the local drug mafia and “sanction-busting Venezuelan criminal collaborators”. She said the new radar system assists with the detection of illegal Venezuelan crude oil transfers and traffickers bringing narcotics, firearms, ammunition and migrants into Trinidad and Tobago, adding that the equipment provides a superior layer of protection that was previously unavailable.
In her response, the Prime Minister called on the Opposition to publicly disclose key information, first asking it to, “Disclose to the citizens how long the PNM has known that the previous radar system has been compromised.”
She further challenged the party to, “Make public the names of the local business people affiliated with the PNM and local drug mafia who have had illegal access to classified radar surveillance information.”
The Prime Minister also questioned why the former administration’s radar failed to intercept illegal activity, asking the PNM to, “Explain why the existing radar system operated under the PNM government for years, did not detect oil tankers engaged in the ship-to-ship transfer of sanctioned Venezuelan oil within Trinidadian waters, which led to the obtaining of documentation stating that Trinidad was the port of origin for this oil and not Venezuela.”
She further pressed the Opposition on its criticism of the former American-supplied radar, calling on it to, “Explain to the country whether the PNM’s anti-American narrative to remove the American-supplied radar system is really due to pressure or blackmail from the local drug mafia and the previous PNM government’s crude oil sanction-busting Venezuelan collaborators.”
These questions form part of the Prime Minister’s response to Opposition Leader Pennelope Beckles, who earlier today demanded answers on the cost of the radar, who installed it, who operates it, and how its data is stored and managed.
“I close by saying to the Prime Minister if you have the information take it to the police,” Beckles said.
Earlier today, Opposition Leader Pennelope Beckles raised a series of questions at a press conference on the cost, installation, operation and data management of the radar system.
“The population of Trinidad and Tobago is entitled to know what did that radar cost? Who installed that radar? Whether any Trinidadian or Tobagonian has been trained to operate that radar? The people of Trinidad and Tobago are entitled to know what is happening to the data that is collected by that radar,” Beckles said.
She added that the PNM understands the importance of national security and border protection and called on the Prime Minister to disclose details surrounding the radar project and recent discussions with the United States.
“I therefore am calling on the Honorable Prime Minister to come clean with the population and to tell us if there are any other secrets that you are hiding with us in relation to the radar and in relation to Tobago and in relation to the discussions that you recently had with the U.S. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Dan Caine,” Beckles said.
She also questioned the timing of recent developments, referencing a U.S. military aircraft landing in Tobago shortly after the Prime Minister denied that Venezuela was raised during discussions with General Caine.
Asked what action the Opposition would take if its questions were ignored, Beckles said it was the PNM’s responsibility to raise matters in the public interest. She also rejected the Prime Minister’s claims of links between the PNM and drug trafficking.
“We will not accept this Honorable Prime Minister causing distractions and creating mischief by accusing us of supporting any narco government and saying that we are involved in drug trafficking,” she said.
She ended by challenging the Prime Minister to submit any evidence to law enforcement.
“I close by saying to the Prime Minister if you have the information take it to the police.”
