Reporter
carisa.lee@cnc3.co.tt
Head of the T&T Police Service’s Special Victims Department (SVD), Superintendent Darryl Ramdass, says the police service requires new skills, new tools, and new partnerships to deal with the rise in digital violence.
As such, one unit in the Ministry of Homeland Security has already trained Form One teachers on how to spot and treat with digital abuse towards girls.
Speaking at the department’s closing ceremony for the commemoration of 16 Days of Activism against Gender-Based Violence on the Brian Lara Promenade in Port-of-Spain yesterday, Ramdass said police remain committed to responding decisively and compassionately to digital abuse reports.
“We meet victims whose lives are upended not by what happens in a physical space but by what happens on a screen, often invisible, rapid, and borderless,” he said.
Ramdass emphasised the evolving nature of these challenges. He noted that as the world becomes increasingly connected, so too do the threats faced by women and girls.
He added that the theme “UNiTE to End Digital Violence against All Women and Girls” invites stakeholders to step forward in a rapidly evolving frontier of harm, and to do so with urgency, empathy, and innovation.
“Digital spaces once imagined as zones of opportunity, learning, and empowerment have also become platforms for harm. From cyber-stalking and a non-consensual sharing of intimate images to online harassment, digital impersonation, trafficking, recruitment, and the use of artificial intelligence to manipulate or exploit, digital violence is real violence,” he added.
The SVD head said their commitment will require new skills, new tools, and new partnerships.
As such, Anish Bachu, head of the T&T Cyber Security Incident Response Team (TT-CSIRT), which falls under the Homeland Security Ministry, revealed that ahead of Form One students receiving their new laptops under the Government’s initiative, his team, along with the Education Ministry, trained Form One teachers and National Library and Information System staff on cyber security.
“On how to recognise online abuse, how to recognise, you know, issues in digital classrooms, that they could then take pre-emptive action and kind of nip things in the bud going forward, right,” he said.
Westley-Ann Howard, speaking on behalf of the elderly population through her group Rebuilding Momentum and Resilience Consultancy, called on everyone to remember the elderly. She said they are more likely to face cyberbullying and fraud.
