Carisa Lee
Reporter
carisa.lee@cnc3.co.tt
Secretary of Fishermen and Friends of the Sea (FFOS), Gary Aboud, says his United States visa has been revoked. Aboud told Guardian Media he received an email from the US Embassy on Wednesday informing him of the decision.
“We are writing to notify you that your B1/B2 visa for travel to the United States has been prudentially revoked. This email is considered official notification of that revocation,” the correspondence informed Aboud.
The Embassy said it took the action based on information that became available after the visa was issued, indicating that he may be inadmissible to the United States and therefore ineligible to receive a visa.
Aboud explained that he attained a US visa at the age of 15, and there had never been any issues.
In a media release yesterday, Aboud attributed the revocation of his US visa to his decision to speak out against the US strikes on suspected drug smuggling vessels in the Caribbean Sea, including the suspected killings of two Trinidad and Tobago nationals.
“If the global community recognises these killings as unlawful, why does our own leader endorse them? And if the United States possesses intelligence identifying these alleged ‘narco-terrorists,’ then such evidence should be presented before a Court, not used to justify missiles fired in international waters,” Aboud said.
Aboud said that to date, no nation has supported the United States in these unlawful killings, except Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar, who publicly declared to “kill them all violently”, and he could not support that.
FFOS has called for the region to remain a zone of peace, joining a broader civil society movement opposing a growing US military presence in the region. The organisation was among the organisers of a vigil and participated in a public call to action that advocated for peace and stability earlier this month.
Aboud said the revocation of his US visa raised serious concerns about whether foreign powers and the Government were attempting to intimidate or punish civil society voices that speak out.
“NGOs are being silenced,” he said.
But in an immediate response, Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar denied any involvement in the decisions taken by the United States or the US Embassy regarding their visa or immigration policies.
She said there has never been, and will never be, any attempt by her Government to intimidate, punish, or suppress the voices of civil society.
She described Aboud’s comments as inflammatory, reckless, misleading, and likely to cause unnecessary fear.
“In fact, when a former Prime Minister recently called a press conference at his ‘office’ and made a host of unfounded claims, I made it clear that he is free to speak. That is how democracy works, and my government will always uphold that principle,” she said.
