The exit date for US troops now in Tobago is being treated as a national security issue.
This as Tobago House of Assembly Secretary of Youth Empowerment and Sport Keigon Denoon reiterated a statement by Chief Secretary Farley Augustine that the US military would be leaving the island within days, but refused to give the exact date.
“Because that is a sensitive issue in terms of Homeland Security and so on, the exact timeline would not be given, but they would be leaving shortly,” Denoon said during a media conference at the Hochoy Charles Administrative Complex, Calder Hall.
The US troops have maintained a consistent presence in Tobago since arriving last November to install a military-grade Ground/Air Task-Oriented Radar (GATOR) radar at the ANR Robinson International Airport in Crown Point.
Last Wednesday, Augustine confirmed a heavy presence of US military personnel at the Grafton Beach Resort. However, he denied there was any restrictions on access to the hotel in Black Rock. Guardian Media was informed by security officers at the hotel’s entrance on March 10 that the facility was fully booked for a specific group and entry would only be permissible for guests.
Denoon, the electoral representative for Buccoo/Mt Pleasant, was also asked whether Tobago has benefited from hosting the radar.
On March 2, a 29-foot fishing vessel, commissioned by a UK national, left Buccoo en route to Union Island, St Vincent. However, neither boat nor crew has been seen since.
The radar system, estimated by Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar to cost US$3 million per day to operate, has been touted by Defence Minister Wayne Sturge to be far superior to the radars previously used by TT.
At a media conference last month, Sturge said, “The radar system provided by the US, they work with drone technology and satellite communications and so on. So that it offers a lot more than what we have. And that is needed at this point in time to achieve certain objectives, because as you would appreciate, the fleet, the Coast Guard’s fleet, is not what it should be. So, that we need the assistance, in terms of detection, which would help us with the limited fleet we have, it will help us to respond in a timely manner and intercept.”
Yesterday, Denoon said the US radar was not the ideal system to help track the missing boat’s last co-ordinates.
“As it pertains to the vessel, that speaks to a bigger issue as it pertains to marine safety. What we have to ensure is all the fisherfolk and the persons that use the facility have the necessary GPS structures implemented in their vessels. So in these instances where persons are missing they can be easily found.
“I don’t think the radar would be the best tool to utilise in that instance, What we would best want to use is to have all of those vessels, especially those that do long-distance runs, to be tagged and have any overseeing body, like you have the Air Traffic Association, to be able to track the vessels and ensure the safety of Tobagonians are our number-one priority.
Denoon said he could not say whether the radar was used at all to try to find the boat.
“I am not sure if it has not been used. What I can do is find out that information and get back to you at our next press conference.”
Efforts to contact All Tobago Fisherfolk Association head Curtis Douglas and Fishermen and Friends of the Sea general secretary Gary Aboud for a comment were unsuccessful.
