Senior Reporter
anna-lisa.paul@guardian.co.tt
“TTPS say shhhh!”
With those words emblazoned on masking tape criss-crossing her face mask, protest organiser Alyssa Phillip yesterday begged off answering questions relating to her recent arrest, after police prevented them from staging their latest demonstration directly outside the Forensic Science Centre (FSC) in St James.
Holding hands with friends, well-wishers and supporters who were forced to move their latest protest to the corner of Barbados Road and Long Circular Road, her quiet and calm demeanour left many, including the group of uniformed and plain-clothes officers, wondering what would eventually transpire.
Adamant that she would not be issuing any public statements, she invited media to contact her directly for interviews.
Saying the 19-minute silent protest had achieved its purpose, which was to communicate their displeasure to authorities over their handling of the investigation into the shooting of Joshua Samaroo and wounding of his common-law wife Kaia Sealy, Phillip said, “The point of here today is to remain silent and not address anything at all.”
Holding onto Phillip’s trembling hands, her mother, Camille Caresquero, said their presence was to show “we cannot remain silent.”
“That is what they would like. We gave them what they would like,” Caresquero said.
“We followed the instructions but freedom of speech has to go on, so this is a silent message and this is for they to really understand they have to listen to the voices on the ground.”
Despite the small crowd of supporters who turned out to line the pavement along Long Circular Road, opposite the Police Mess, Caresquero said, “The people wants to speak to them. The people has something to say and we want that they listen.”
Both Phillip and Caresquero declined to answer further questions before they were hustled away.
One senior official insisted yesterday’s show of strength by the T&T Police Service (TTPS) was not meant to intimidate the protestors.
“It was meant to ensure that they adhere to the rule of law and order,” the officer said.
Supporters of Phillip had earlier turned up before the scheduled 3 pm start time, hoping to gather outside the FSC along Barbados Road.
However, they were surprised to find the entire road cordoned off from end to end, with only motoring public and pedestrians living along the street permitted entry.
A mobile bus belonging to the TTPS Detention Unit, as well as a police wrecker, were also on location.
Police officers warned motorists about parking in and around the immediate area, as they directed traffic and urged persons to be on their way so as to prevent any obstructions which could hamper the free flow of traffic.
Some passers-by and motorists expressed frustration over the impromptu closure, with some claiming it was overkill.
Phillip and her mother arrived at 4 pm and began the silent protest with an opening prayer before they called on all present to hold hands and maintain 19 minutes of silence—for the 19 bullets police allegedly fired at Samaroo during the shooting incident in January.
Careful not to block the pavement, the line of supporters also placed masking tape over their mouths and knelt with clasped hands held aloft for the final few minutes.
Noting that armed officers from specialist units, including the Mounted Branch; the Inter-Agency Task Force; the Port-of-Spain Division Task Force; the Guard and Emergency Branch; the Intelligence and Gang Unit; and the Air Support Unit, were present, the protestors insisted their constitutional rights were slowly being eroded by what some called “strong arm tactics” by the current administration.
During a media briefing on Thursday at the Police Administration Building, Port-of-Spain, Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP) Curt Simon presented a list of 15 state venues, government ministries and national security agencies in front of which the public is now prohibited from gathering or protesting.
However, the FSC was not on that schedule.
Simon did, however, indicate that the list may be expanded as time goes along, but it remained unclear yesterday if there had been any amendments within the 24 hours prior and, if so, what those offices were.
According to the amended regulations, persons are not allowed to gather/congregate within 500 metres of the listed venues.
Although Deputy Commissioner of Police (DCP), Operations, Suzette Martin and ACP Richard Smith were present yesterday, they declined to speak with the media. Officials stressed their presence was not meant to intimidate the protestors, but just to ensure that what happened on Wednesday, when Phillip and her mother were arrested and a protest near the Director of Public Prosecutions’ Office was dispersed, did not occur again.
PM urged to reach
out to people
One of the protesters, Jasson Noel, expressed his disappointment over the manner in which their protest action was being treated.
“The Government is supposed to be working for the nation and if the nation is speaking out and the Government don’t want to hear, then that means we is not a nation. They are silencing we voice, so people can’t talk and say what on their mind,” he said
Calling on Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar to respond to the people, Noel said, “I find the prime minister supposed to acknowledge the people. The same people who put you in power dey, cause you working for the people, the people not working for you...so you have to give the people and them a hearing.”
Noel questioned, “Why you not coming out and holding a one-on-one with the people? You not coming out and saying nothing. You just staying wherever you is and sending out memos and whatever...whatever they tell you to say.”
He insisted, “Right now, the whole nation feeling oppressed, it feeling depressing right now.”
He too, described the presence of the police as an intimidatory act intended to spread “fearmongering” among the protestors and their supporters.
Noel said, “All this police here and crime could be going on somewhere, real crime with guns and robbery and all kinda thing, but all this police presence here. What we come to take? Who we come to rob? We just come to express we views.”
He also accused the TTPS of trying to provoke a reaction from them.
