Viewed in isolation, Thursday’s crackdown on illegal squatters at Ramjattan Trace in La Horquetta seemed like a heavy-handed approach by the Commissioner of State Lands and police.
The early morning drama began with an excavator moving in to tear apart 12 wooden and concrete homes at the La Culebra site, leaving the household items and personal effects of the families that had occupied those structures strewn on the ground.
The illegal structures, as they were described in a subsequent Housing Development Corporation (HDC) statement, were removed to make way for legitimate housing.
The families displaced by that demolition exercise represent just a small fraction of the more than 60,000 squatter households in the country. However, it brought to the forefront the complex problem of squatting in T&T, which relates to issues of land grabbing, fraudulent transactions, environmental degradation, and the longstanding housing shortage.
The demolitions were the latest in an ongoing exercise at La Culebra to remove unlawful occupants from the land. Notices had been served on the occupants of the structures demolished on Thursday to vacate.
Some of the structures had been erected between 2018 and 2023.
The problem is getting worse, with new squatter structures being erected at a rate that far exceeds the numbers demolished by the authorities. It is estimated that 400 to 500 illegal structures are erected every year — and that is in addition to the ones rebuilt after demolition.
This illustrates how powerless the Commissioner of State Lands (CoSL) and the Land Settlement Agency (LSA) are in tackling this problem.
These state entities have barely made any inroads in removing or regularising the occupants of the 350 squatting settlements across the country.
And the situation is rapidly getting further out of control.
T&T’s squatter population has increased from 2,000 in 1963 to 23,000 in 1998 and now stands at over 60,000.
In recent times, there has been a rush to squat on state lands in areas such as Sangre Grande and Valencia, particularly in the area where the Cumuto-Manzanilla Highway is being constructed.
A recent LSA aerial survey of 4,000 acres of the Valencia Forest reserve detected 5,000 illegal structures. There have also been encroachments in the environmentally sensitive Aripo Savannah.
And the problem isn’t limited to residential squatting. Over the years there has been a proliferation of illegal quarries and other unauthorised commercial activity, with much of it taking place in plain sight with little risk of intervention by the authorities.
The action at Ramjattan Trace came shortly after CoSL and LSA officials appeared before a Joint Select Committee of Parliament to discuss what was described during that session as a “squatting crisis.”
In addition to the usual complaints about being severely under-resourced, the LSA is restricted by a 2011 High Court ruling that states it has no legal powers to contain squatting or remove illegal structures.
Urgent legislative remedies are required to tackle this problem. It is time to act on the recommendations to more clearly define state land, delegate additional authority to the LSA and reclassify squatting as a civil offence with fines.
More effort must be made to improve enforcement before squatting and land grabbing descends further into a free-for-all.