Kejan Haynes
Caroni Central MP Arnold Ram has welcomed the reopening of the Brasso Police Station but criticised the government for waiting until tragedy struck to act.
His comments follow a violent weekend in the district, described as "terror" in Tabaquite which ended with the murder of 21-year-old Matthew Chancellor, who was reportedly preparing for his baptism.
Ram recalled opposing the station’s closure in 2020, arguing it was strategically placed to curb drug trafficking. “At meetings at the facility and the Flanagin Community Center, it was myself and a colleague MP who strongly opposed moves by the Minister and the Trinidad and Tobago Police Service,” he said. "We cited geographic location in a hilly district with extremely poor road infrastructure as factors that could delay response times and result in people and families in distress being left vulnerable."
While supporting the reopening, Ram called it a sign of “poor leadership” and a refusal to listen to elected representatives. “A decent young man is dead and a community terrorised because leadership refused to listen,” he added.