Senior Reporter/Producer
kay-marie.fletcher
@guardian.co.tt
Homeland Security Minister Roger Alexander has announced that the new registration process for undocumented migrants will begin on Monday.
During a post-Cabinet media briefing on Thursday, the minister initially stated that the process of registering to work legally in Trinidad and Tobago would start on Friday. However, he informed Guardian Media yesterday that there has been a change in the date.
Alexander said, “Presently, we are changing the date. As we speak, because of the efficiency of my staff at the Ministry of Homeland Security, together with other supporting agencies like the Immigration Department, we are moving forward to Monday the 26th.” The registration card will be valid until December 31, 2026.
Asked what happens when the permit expires, he added, “It’s a renewal process.”
Adult applicants will be required to pay $700, and required documents include birth records, passport details, national ID (country of origin), parents’ information, spouse details, education history, employment history, vaccination records, and travel details for T&T. Those who fail to register will face immediate deportation, according to the minister.
During a post-Cabinet media briefing on Thursday, Alexander said that the migrant registration process was projected to cost taxpayers $1 million, significantly lower than the $5 million spent under the PNM administration. However, Opposition Senator Dr Amery Browne has expressed concern that the $700 migrant registration fee may be yet another “revenue-generating strategy” by the Government. In his view, the fee is too high.
He said, “The fees are extraordinary, and it appears to be just a continuation of their approach, which is to look for resources in the pockets of the people of Trinidad and Tobago and those in our country, whether they are citizens or now migrants. That’s the revenue-generating strategy of this current United National Congress. Find the money in people’s pockets.”
Browne also condemned the Government for failing to effectively communicate its plans for migrants with the rest of the country.
He added, “Once again, the Government has not communicated with the people of Trinidad and Tobago on its agenda with these migrants. It seems to be a very ad hoc approach, which is typical of this current UNC.”
Venezuelan migration soars in T&T
... From 10,000 in 2014 to nearly 45,000 in 2023
* In 2014, under the People’s Partnership, the National Policy to Address Refugee and Asylum Matters reported that 110,012 undocumented immigrants from 16 countries were living in Trinidad and Tobago. That figure included 10,574 people from Venezuela. Over the next five years, the number of Venezuelan migrants significantly increased.
* Under the PNM administration in 2019, 16,500 migrants registered for the Migrant Registration Framework (MRF). As of October 2023, approximately 7,000 of the originally registered 16,500 Venezuelans renewed their permits.
* As of November 2023, approximately 44,800 Venezuelan migrants, refugees, and asylum seekers were living in T&T.
This number represented the highest per capita population of Venezuelans in the Caribbean as of 2024, with the islands having a total population of 1.5 million according to ACAPS, a non-profit, non-governmental project that provides independent humanitarian analysis.
2014-People’s Partnership migrant listing
Venezuela 10,574
Guyana 25,884
Jamaica 19,500
St Vincent 9,606
Barbados 7,169
Grenada 6,947
Colombia 6,388
China 4,593
Philippines 4,437
St Lucia 4,391
India 3,651
Dominican Republic 2,256
Suriname 1,944
Cuba 1,434
Nigeria 1,071
Bangladesh 167
2019-PNM
Venezuela 16,500
