Senior Reporter
anna-lisa.paul@guardian.co.tt
More chaos erupted in Sea Lots yesterday as tensions escalated, with residents of Pioneer Drive claiming they were fired upon by police officers while trying to erect a barricade for protection against people living on Production Drive.
Insisting that rogue officers were acting on the orders of criminal elements living in Sea Lots East, residents of Sea Lots West claimed that officers in an unmarked vehicle were responsible for fuelling the ongoing community rivalry.
One of the men, forced to scamper into a nearby house while shouting for residents to grab their children said, “All we were doing is putting up a wall to keep ourselves safe from over there.”
Pointing to Sea Lots East, he added, “Next thing we know, the police start shooting behind us for no reason. There were children there. We were digging a hole to run the fence, and the police started shooting behind us just like that. People just started to run. Next thing, we know, is police breaking down doors over here (Sea Lots West) and searching people’s houses.”
He and several others repeatedly asked the officers what they were searching for, but the lawmen offered no answers.
They claimed there were police officers linked to gang-related elements residing in Sea Lots East and this was just another attempt to get rid of them. Many of the residents declined to speak on the record for fear of retaliation.
The residents pointed to the party searching the home of a female resident, who was present, and whose front door was broken with a sledgehammer.
Onlookers claimed, “They picked up receipts in the woman’s place ... they broke up things and went, she wasn’t even here.”
Angry over the violation of their properties and without any clear answers from the authorities, residents from Sea Lots West cried as they said the community rivalry was only continuing to escalate.
The angry residents challenged officers from the Inter-Agency Task Force as they walked through the community, urging them to go over to Sea Lots East and retrieve the spent shells.
One woman said, “The boys were putting up a fencing by the river when they heard gunshots from over the river from an unmarked white four-by-four, and with that, when everybody ran out, it was because the police started pelting in, coming over here, almost hitting children in the road and cussing people stink.”
Asked how they knew it was police officers in the unmarked van, many of those present said they were familiar with the vehicle and some of the officers, so they could identify them.
They warned repeatedly, “There’s only so much we could take.”
A young man who also refused to speak on the record said the community rivalry had worsened to the point where the residents of Sea Lots West were unable to openly mourn their dead relatives.
He lamented, “Imagine, we’re having a wake and they’re shooting up. We can’t cry, we can’t mourn. We just have to stay quiet and hurt inside.”
A young woman, nursing her months-old baby, listened intently and added, “There was an incident some time ago when a boy from over there came over here, and when he went back, a gang of 15 men beat him.”
Shouting the usual refrain of “you’re too wicked,” at the police officers, another elderly female said, “We want peace but still this drama just keeps happening.”
Another young boy added, “They’re always sending threats. Any time you make any complaint, they say, ‘We’ll kill your family,’ so right through, we have to take that and stay quiet. Nah, we’ve had enough. We have to stand up for ourselves as the police aren’t doing it. We’re fed up, boy, we’re really fed up.”
As a father of four, one man said, “I don’t want them to live and have to grow up in this again, boy. I’d rather die than live like this again. I’d rather die. How much can we take again?”
Cops intensify patrol in the area; say they will not condone retaliatory action
Confirming the police had intensified patrols throughout the Sea Lots community, senior officials said they had increased operations in a bid to deter criminal activities.
The officials said they were aware of the community rivalry and had implemented measures to try and arrest the situation.
Asked to respond to yesterday’s report that the police were responsible for shooting at residents in Sea Lots West, one officer was unable to confirm or deny this.
As for the claims that rogue officers were linked to alleged gangsters at Sea Lots East, the officers advised residents that they could lodge a report with the Police Complaints Authority or visit the Police Complaints Division to report the information. Urging people to come forward with such reports, the officials sought to reassure residents that they would be thoroughly investigated.
While they continue to meet with factions from Sea Lots East, Sea Lots West, and Sea Lots Central, the police stressed they would not tolerate any infractions of the law and would act immediately and decisively.
Assistant Commissioner of Police, North Western Division Garvin Sean Henry advised, “The police will not, under any circumstance, tolerate retaliatory action.”
He confirmed, “The police are quite capable of handling any situation that may arise in the Sea Lots area, including that of community rivalry. And we will not condone, under any circumstance, vigilante action.”
‘Women must be central to peace efforts in communities’
Meanwhile, Public Policy Expert at the Institute of Gender and Development Studies at the University of West Indies Dr Asha Kambon says women must be included in conversations concerning the fostering of peace in communities.
She noted that the initial call for intervention in the Sea Lots unrest came from women in the area.
She said so while addressing the International Women’s Day march at Woodford Square yesterday. “It is the women of Sea Lots who took it upon themselves to call for action for peace. Let’s say it this way: there’s more that can be done to facilitate that peace than maybe some of the suggestions we heard in the news. One is that the women themselves must be central to the discussion.”
Kambon added, "We cannot have a discussion about women's peace where you exclude them! You talk to others who you think have some control over the crisis. They may have some influence and control over the crisis, but we talk about women's agency. The women have agency. They took it upon themselves to march down to the police headquarters and say, 'We want peace.' How can you exclude them from the discussion of peace in their own communities? What that tells me is that those sisters need our support more than ever."–Peter Christopher